The Coast News, April 26, 2019

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APRIL 26, 2019

Hotel talks reignite a fierce debate

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By Aaron Burgin

ENCINITAS — A twoyear hiatus hasn’t cooled the debate over a proposed renovation of a Coast Highway 101 hotel. The proposed Portofino Beach Inn conversion into a luxury hotel returned to the Encinitas Planning Commission on April 18, and neighbors resumed their opposition. This time, however, one prominent property owner came armed with an attorney and several experts who disputed the findings in the city staff’s recommendation to approve the project. The Planning Commission continued the hearing to May 2 after its marathon meeting reached the midnight cutoff. But two hours of discussion have set the stage for what will likely be a contentious discussion and decision that — one way or another — will likely be appealed to the City Council. The Planning Commission tabled the project — which has been in process since January 2015 — in May 2017 after residents raised concerns about traffic that the project would divert onto a residential street that runs parallel to Coast Highway 101. After pushing the hearing off until June, July and then September 2017, the city and applicant decided to take the hearing off the calendar to give the developer more time to redesign the project. A spokeswoman for the ownership behind the project, 101 Hotel, Inc., said the TURN TO PORTOFINO ON A9

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‘WINGS OF FREEDOM’ TOUR will arrive on Thursday, May 2, at McClellan-Palomar Airport to honor World War II veterans, featuring planes such as the P-40 Warhawk “Jaws,” shown above, P-51 Mustang “Toulouse Nuts,” B-17 Flying Fortress “Nine O Nine,” B-24 Liberator “Witchcraft” and B-25 Mitchell “Tondelayo” bomber. See Page B23 for more information. Photo courtesy of the Collings Foundation

Senior care facility faces growing ire By Lexy Brodt

SOLANA BEACH — A senior care facility proposed for a vacant lot east of the I-5 is facing growing ire from its potential neighbors, with a special election to determine the fate of its specific plan less than two weeks away. Developer RhodesMoore LLC has proposed an assisted living facility with 96 beds for a 2.9-acre lot off of Genevieve Street RHODES MOORE Principal John DeWald explains the routes and Marine View Avenue. encouraged for staff and visitors to reach the proposed So- A third of the facility would lana Beach facility. Photo by Lexy Brodt serve memory care pa-

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tients. In the upcoming allmail ballot election — which will be held on May 7 — residents will determine the outcome of Measure B. The measure’s approval would expand the lot’s zoning to allow for a state-licensed residential care facility with up to 99 beds. The vote is a mandate of Proposition T — a voter initiative approved in 2000 that requires a public vote for projects that would alter the zoning allowances of a property.

The vote would approve a specific plan overlay on top of the site’s current estate residential zoning, which allows for one to two dwelling units per acre. If approved by voters, the project would still face the Solana Beach City Council and California Coastal Commission for final approvals. The proposed lot has long been vacant — overgrown with foliage and home to only the former TURN TO SENIOR CARE ON A11

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Carlsbad Unified addresses special education services By Steve Puterski

CARLSBAD — The population of special needs students is growing, according to a report Carlsbad Unified School District staff presented to the board of trustees April 17. Dr. Rob Nye, assistant superintendent of Instructional Services, said the district reviewed nine areas of special education, assessing the services for the 1,383 students, who make up 12.1% of the total student population in the district. Many of the special needs students attend Kelly Elementary School, but with a growing population and longer-term enrollment forecasts once Robertson Ranch and the Marja Acres developments are realized, at least 10 students will transition to Jefferson Elementary School in 2021 due to space restrictions and construction related to school modernization efforts, Nye said. “It’s two instructional classrooms and a sensory classroom,” he explained. He added that with those factors, staff felt like the students who are the “more fragile population” should be moved to a site with more space. The district also covers transportation costs for 275 qualified students. The cost has increased 13% since the 2014-15 school year, although the district has managed to decrease the cost per trip even though the number of students is up over the past three years. One concern is the rapid growth of special needs students. Tim Evanson, director

of pupil services, said preschool enrollment is rising, although the district could not totally pinpoint the cause. One reason, he theorized, is parents are getting earlier intervention and diagnoses, noting diagnoses such as autism are rising. For example, the population of special needs students at Buena Vista Elementary School has risen from 55 students to 83 over the past four years. Another challenge the district faces is the cost of students engaged in nonpublic schools and agencies. In nonpublic schools, the average cost for the district is about $54,000 per year per student, for residential treatment centers it is about $106,409 and for nonpublic agencies services it is between $280,000 and $400,000. A nonpublic agency covers residential treatment centers for students afflicted with more severe conditions needing resources the district cannot provide. Evanson said there are layers to the nonpublic entities, which provide support in classrooms or an external setting. For some students, for various reasons, those needs are not met in the classroom. Treatment centers provide services for a variety of issues, from mental to physical. In short, Nye said, when the district cannot meet those needs, outside resources are brought in. “They are really when we can’t service the needs of those students through

an agency,” he added. “We need to bring in an outside agency or they need to be educated through another school that we currently can’t provide for their needs.” The growing concern for the board is the lack of funding increases from the state and federal sources. Nye said state and federal funding has increased just 10.4% since 2014-15 and has been outpaced by rising costs for other ser-

vices and personnel. Conversely, the general fund expenditures for Carlsbad Unified have risen 35.4%, while special education costs have increased by 48% over the same time span. Nye said it’s not specific to the district, saying it’s a statewide problem as the state and federal funding barely even matches a cost of living raise. One area of cost savings, though, is at the ele-

mentary level, where the Social Emotional Academic Support (SEAS) program requires a special day class due to the disability. The program allowed the district to hire more staff resulting in about $50,000 in savings. Nye recommended hiring two full-time psychologists to offset some costs in using outside service providers. Still, the positions result in a $100,000 net

cost to the district. Another cost-saving move will be attempting to convert some of the contracted workers with the North Coastal Consortium for Special Education (NCCSE) into district employees, Evanson said. “We are trying to, at some point and whenever we can, to bring some of our NCCSE employees on board,” Nye added. “There tends to be a cost savings when we do that.”

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APRIL 26, 2019

Opinion & Editorial

Views expressed in Opinion & Editorial do not reflect the views of The Coast News

When will fire disaster buck-passing stop in state?

O Yes vote best way to ensure senior facility is done right By Dave Roberts

From my many years serving on both the Solana Beach City Council and the San Diego County Board of Supervisors, I learned that making land use decisions is tough. When 62 percent of voters approved Proposition T in 2000, it gave all voters in Solana Beach a voice in making changes to land uses. This means that a majority of voters will have to support the direction for land use changes proposed within the city. From my many conversations with residents and from attending two community forums, I think most of us can agree that quality, safe senior care is strongly needed in Solana Beach due to the increasing number of seniors in the coming decades. We also have limited undeveloped parcels of land. Currently, voters are being asked to vote yes or no on changing the land use for a 2-plus acre parcel east of I-5 that has been vacant for years and has been an eyesore on our community. If passed, this vote will allow

a local developer to propose to the City Council a senior care facility for a site that provides a perfect transition between pure residential and pure commercial zoning, at the edge of a single family home residential neighborhood (not in it). Like the Timbers Building next door, this proposed project would also provide a good buffer to the noise of the freeway. Should the proposed project advance to the City Council, the city of Solana Beach engineers will require the developer to make necessary changes to the two roads leading into the facility (Marine View and Genevieve) to ensure safety of new seniors, staff, and existing neighborhood residents, as they do for any new development. There are always some who oppose new development. A few neighbors say they really like the proposed facility, just not in their neighborhood. I would point out that Prop T says that a vote of the people would NOT be required to change zoning in order to meet state

mandates, such as low income affordable apartments. Thus, if this vote fails, a developer could propose a project to the City Council without a public vote and the project could be much more intrusive on the neighborhood. I hope voters will consider all the facts on this proposal and understand that Prop T was implemented to allow all (not just those in the immediate neighborhood) city voters to decide (with the entire process funded by the developer per law) on major land use changes. I think then they will agree that this project offers many enhancements (sound barrier, quality care, road improvements, increased tax revenue, jobs) for Solana Beach and can be conditioned by the City Council to mitigate any local neighbors’ concerns. Dave Roberts formerly served on the San Diego County Board of Supervisors, representing the Third District, which includes Solana Beach

***

Harbaugh Trails a model for Ponto property The proposed project, to build out the vacant land at Ponto, has been flying under the radar for some time. It was the subject of a recent article in the Coast News, 4/19/19 (“City Stands Firm on Ponto Development,” Page A1). I doubt many people realize that this property is set to be developed, or the extent of the proposed development. A site plan was published in the paper a number of years ago, and it revealed little public open space. It was more a 1/99 than an 85/15. The article indicates that the proposed development has been approved, and would require a General Plan amendment to change the land use, which might create a legal liability for

the city, by reducing the land value. It also says that, people in the neighborhood have raised objections to the project; that they paid fees for a park in their neighborhood, not in a remote location. In order to keep this as open space, the developers would need to be paid for the property. A possible model for acquiring this property might be The Harbaugh Trails property, at the south end of Solana Beach across from Seaside. The lagoon foundation raised money from private donors as well as businesses, and sold the naming rights. Perhaps some park money from both Encinitas and Carlsbad could be kicked in as well. This is an iconic prop-

erty for the region, that provides breathing space between Leucadia and Carlsbad. It belongs to Leucadia as much as it does Carlsbad, and is a part of the character of the coastal landscape. It is more critical than the 85/15 property, just voted down. The major loss there, was the view corridor from the freeway, in trade for some permanent open space. The Ponto development would cost not only the view, but the open space, and irreparably change the face of the coast in this area. As the hotel project under construction on the bluff, just south of Ponto reminds us, once land is developed, it’s gone. Pat Sheehy Encinitas

ne unspoken concept was conspicuously missing the other day, when Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a wildfire mitigation plan he had loudly touted: responsibility. Instead, there were multiple forms of passing the buck. The Newsom-spurred plan has at least three prongs. Even though he didn’t quite endorse them, the governor wants the proposals acted on long before the next potentially massive wildfire season arrives in summer and early fall. One plan element would see some mitigation of liability for utility companies when their electric lines start fires, especially if the companies are not found at fault. Another envisions a new state wildfire fund created with state money and funds from utility customers statewide, with needy fire victims somehow able to benefit. A third would let insurance companies refuse to sell policies in fire areas or charge more there. It’s fair to sum up these three plan portions as two bailouts and a license to gouge. Incentives are also recommended for utilities switching to renewable energy sources faster than now required, hopefully reducing the climate change that helped the swift spread of disastrously huge fires in 2017 and 2018. One group that could benefit from all this: The victims, even though most knew or should have known just what they were getting into. The biggest blazes of the last two years occurred in or near areas that have burned before. People living there had every reason to know the dangers they faced. Wrote one local colum-

california focus thomas d. elias nist in a fire area: “I told (my wife), ‘This neighborhood is going to burn to the ground someday.’ We bought the house anyway.” But the proposed plan would have taxpayers and utility customers who deliberately refuse to live in fire-prone areas share the cost when homes there burn. Already, prices for everyone’s property insurance tend to climb when insurers make multibillion-dollar payoffs on existing policies. That’s just one feature of the Newsom task force plan for a wildfire disaster fund. But why should taxpayers in historically safe areas pay into this? Newsom’s response is that “We’re all in this together …” But he doesn’t explain why that should be true for folks who deliberately avoid fire areas. They don’t live in lovely forests, with scenic streams and gullies and thick woods, sweeping mountain views or ocean vistas. Reporters who visit just-burned fire areas often hear residents say something like this in virtually every fire-prone part of California: “We love the lifestyle and the ambience here and we won’t be driven out by any disaster.” Most taxpayers and utility customers get neither those vistas nor their ambiance. Why should they subsidize a lifestyle they don’t have and usually can’t afford? If people voluntarily help homeowning fire victims, that’s admirable, but why use tax dollars? Deploying tax money

after earthquakes and hurricanes is very different, since they can hit almost anywhere and can’t with any certainty be avoided like fire areas. Then there’s the Newsom task force approach to the big privately owned utilities, Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric: A suggested lessening of their liabilities in big fires. All have lately been found at fault or admitted fault in fires. Legislators last year refused to let them completely off the hook, and likely also won’t this year. Instead, lawmakers should clear the way for relatively new publicly owned Community Choice Aggregation electric providers to buy up transmission lines and other equipment, so long as they maintain it safely. Existing utilities could use money from this to pay for damage they caused. Newsom said “No single stakeholder created this crisis, and no single stakeholder should bear its full cost.” He called for costs to be shared by, among others, local governments (read: taxpayers) and utility ratepayers in general. But while no single group created the crisis, plenty of taxpayers and utility customers deliberately avoid fire danger. Newsom didn’t adequately or credibly explain why they should pay. In a way, this scene stems from today’s societal reluctance to hold individuals and companies responsible for their actions and behavior. But passing the buck eventually stops somewhere, sometime, and California might now be at one of those seminal moments. Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com.

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PUBLISHER Jim Kydd ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Chris Kydd MANAGING EDITOR Jordan P. Ingram ACCOUNTING Becky Roland COMMUNITY NEWS EDITOR Jean Gillette GRAPHIC ARTIST Phyllis Mitchell ADVERTISING SALES Sue Otto Chris Kydd Brendan Dimitro Gina Onori CIRCULATION MANAGER Bret Wise

The Coast News is a legally adjudicated newspaper published weekly on Fridays by The Coast News Group. It is qualified to publish notices required by law to be published in a newspaper of general circulation (Case No. 677114). Subscriptions: 1 year/$45; 6 mos./$34; 3 mos./$27 Send check or money order to: The Coast News, P.O. Box 232550, Encinitas, CA 92023-2550. In addition to mail subscriptions, more than 30,000 copies are distributed to approximately 700 locations in the beach communities from Oceanside to Carmel Valley. The classified advertising deadlines are the Mondays before each Friday’s publication.

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APRIL 26, 2019

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ENCINITAS CITY COUNCIL members Kelli Shay Hinze, Joe Mosca, Jody Hubbard and Mayor Catherine Blakespear join Encinitas 101 Mainstreet executive director Irene Pyun and president Tom Cozens to celebrate new wayfinding signs (pictured above in the background). Photo by Jordan P. Ingram

Wayfinding signs go up in downtown By Aaron Burgin

ENCINITAS — Making one’s way around downtown Encinitas just got a lot easier. The city recently installed a series of “wayfinding” signs and monuments throughout downtown, which were the fruits of a partnership between the city and the Encinitas 101 MainStreet Association. The City Council and E101 celebrated the installation on Earth Day, two weeks after the signs were installed. “We are thrilled to have our highly anticipated wayfinding signs go up,” E101 Executive Director Irene Pyun said. “These eye-catching signs will help guide visitors and residents to unique and important areas in downtown. We saw a need for comprehensive sig-

nage in downtown and with the help of our E101 board and the city of Encinitas, we were able to successfully implement this program while incorporating colorful artwork.” The city on April 9 began installing the freshly designed signs and monuments, which are color coded to guide visitors to destinations such as the beach, parking lots, City Hall and the library; landmarks such as the Boat Houses; preferred bike routes and the downtown business district. They finished on April 11. Most prominent among the new signs would be three so-called “monument signs,” located at the northern and southern edge of downtown at Coast Highway 101 and Encinitas Boulevard and the Santa Fe Pedestrian

undercrossing, respectively, and one at the corner of Vulcan Avenue and Encinitas Boulevard, the vehicular gateway to downtown. The City Council approved the signs, which E101 donated to the city, in August 2018. E101 created them as part of a $15,000 grant it received in October 2017 from the San Diego County Neighborhood Reinvestment Program. Pyun said the signs have a tangible financial benefit to the city. “Wayfinding signs improve the local economy by encouraging exploration of an urban area while providing useful information to make the urban experience more enjoyable,” Pyun said. “We are excited to put a modern twist on the designs to reflect our unique beach town.”

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APRIL 26, 2019

Planning continues for Del Mar Heights rebuild By Lexy Brodt

DEL MAR — Walk into the Del Mar Heights School multipurpose room and you’ll be met with a wall of color, a bulletin board of bright Post-its and PowerPoint slides. At first glance, it looks like any other school project that might grace the room’s walls. But this is no typical endeavor: the hodgepodge of goals, facts and ideas represent the early building blocks of the Del Mar Heights rebuild – a long-anticipated project largely made possible by the voter approval of Measure MM in November. Measure MM authorized the Del Mar Union School District to issue $186 million in bonds, to be spent on the remodel or reconstruction of the district’s eight existing campuses — as well as to fund the building of a new school in East Pacific Highlands Ranch. A similar measure was also on the ballot in 2012, but failed by about 100 votes. Since then, the district developed a Facilities Master Plan, which evaluated the different campuses and their needs — determining that every campus was in need of at least a remodel. The Measure was placed on the ballot again in 2018 and passed by 61% — it needed 55% voter approval to pass. Now Del Mar Heights — the oldest school in the

AT THE FIRST Del Mar Heights School rebuild meeting, participating residents, teachers and staff drafted a variety of goals for the new campus. Photo by Lexy Brodt

district — will undergo a complete facelift. The campus will be razed and rebuilt, with a $42 million construction budget. The Facilities Master Plan envisions a new layout for the 10.85-acre campus, with “a central indoor/outdoor hub, a new Innovation Center, Modern Learning Studios and indoor/outdoor learning environments throughout.” The plan also proposes a larger parking lot with safer drop off zones — a clear community priority,

according to Chris Delehanty, the district’s executive director of capital programs and technology. The rebuild is currently in the planning stages. The district brought on architect BakerNowicki design studio in April, and the design team has been conducting meetings to gain community feedback and develop a conceptual plan. According to Superintendent Holly McClurg, the district is working with the team of architects to take community and student in-

put and “make it a reality.” The district anticipates the architect will come back with a proposed design by fall. Delehanty anticipates the rebuilt campus could open as soon as August 2022. Although details are still up in the air, McClurg envisions creating “flexible and adaptable” spaces that can accommodate different learning styles, as well as more useable outdoor space. She said the school’s teachers are excited about being able to reimagine the

school’s classrooms, which are currently oddly shaped, dark and “pretty isolated,” McClurg said. The new school will have 33 classrooms in total. In gauging community feedback, McClurg said one thing is clear: the community is looking forward to not having portable classrooms. When Del Mar Heights was first built in 1959, it was not made to accommodate its current count of 531 students. As the campus started growing, the school brought in portable classrooms to accommodate. The portables encompass about a third of the campus and are in dire disrepair — two were condemned this year. “We need to have safe classrooms for our kids,” district board President Erica Halpern, who has two children currently enrolled at the school, said. The district and architects are also working on ways to “preserve the magic!” — as one meeting participant put it. McClurg said capturing the school’s “rich history” will be part of the design process — the architects are looking at preserving beloved campus assets such as a serpent reading bench on the school’s eastern edge and the garden. The next meeting will occur at 4 p.m. May 1 in the Del Mar Heights Multi-purpose room. For more information visit: https://www. dmusd.org/Page/8763

Study: County has sixth-highest ozone pollution rate in U.S. REGION — San Diego County had the sixth-highest rate of ozone pollution in the country from 2015 to 2017, according to data released on April 24 by the American Lung Association. The data comes from the ALA’s 2019 State of the Air Report, an annual study of air quality and pollution in cities across the country. The report found that ozone and particle pollution reached record highs in multiple cities during the observed three-year stretch. San Diego County was one of 17 regions among the top-25 to see an increase in their average number of days with high ozone days over the ALA’s 2018 report, which covered 2014-2016. The ALA gave San Diego an “F” for its air quality. “We must confront the reality that climate change is making the job of cleaning our air much more difficult,” said Will Barrett, ALA’s director of clean advocacy in California. “We need our leaders to ensure all Californians benefit from sustainable development, zero emission transportation options and the transition away from fossil fuels to protect public health.” — City News Service

MiraCosta College to offer Costs of alt energy have some city leaders pumping brakes students 2 years tuition-free By Steve Puterski

By Samantha Taylor

OCEANSIDE — Beginning this fall, the first two years of college will be free for first-time, full-time MiraCosta students. MiraCosta College recently announced its expansion of the MiraCosta College Promise to include subsidizing tuition and mandatory fees for all firsttime, full-time students for two years. The MiraCosta Promise, first initiated in fall 2017, originally provided one year of tuition-free college to financially eligible students, along with up to $1,000 for textbooks and other supplies. According to Kristen Huyck, communications director for MiraCosta, a student had to graduate from an accredited high school or live within the MiraCosta Community College District boundaries to be eligible for the Promise before this expansion. Now, in order to be eligible, a student must be a first-time college student, apply to MiraCosta for the fall 2019 and spring 2020 semesters and commit to enrolling in 12 units, be a California resident and file a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) or a California Dream Act Application (CADAA). “Income is not a requirement” under MiraCosta’s expanded Promise, Huyck said via email.

The second year of subsidized tuition and fees is contingent upon the state’s pending budget approval. If passed, Assembly Bill 2 would expand the 2017 bill that dispersed $46 million to the state’s community colleges with the option to cover the first year of tuition fees for students to two years instead of just one. AB2 mirrors Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposal to make a full two years of community college free for students, which included an additional $40 million in his budget to fund the second year. “MiraCosta College is committed to expanding opportunities for students to complete a degree and/ or certificate,” Huyck said. “While the outcome in the passage of AB 2 is in the hands of the state legislature and potentially the governor, the district is hopeful that AB 2 funding can assist in the removal of one of the financial barriers for future students.” According to Huyck, the MiraCosta Promise will subsidize tuition and mandatory fees for all first-time, full-time college students for only one year if AB2 fails. Additionally, MiraCosta already provides students free access to support services such as academic counseling and educational planning.

CARLSBAD — Community Choice Energy is one of the hottest topics in the city and county. It would provide the ability for Carlsbad, along with Encinitas and Del Mar, to potentially form a joint-powers agreement, join an existing JPA or form a stand-alone energy service for residents. A CCE allows local governments control over energy procurement with an emphasis on renewable and green energy sources. Revenue and profit estimates conducted by EES Consulting, who was hired by those three cities and Oceanside to conduct a feasibility study in 2017, show potential. However, Mayor Matt Hall has voiced concerns with the apparent rush to form a CCE, also known as Community Choice Aggregation, noting a project of this magnitude must be finely studied and the financials carefully considered. Other residents spoke during last week’s City Council meeting urging a more cautious approach as well. During a March community meeting at the Carlsbad Senior Center, EES President Gary Saleba said the project has potential to become a $100 million to a $200 million entity. The $200 million comment peaked ears, but Ja-

Mayor Matt Hall son Haber, assistant to the city manager and project lead for Carlsbad on CCE, said it was more likely just Saleba rounding up. Revenue projections show growth from 2021 — the first year a CCE could start — until 2030, according to Appendix C, the renewable PPA Alternative Pricing Pro Forma Analyses, Haber said. They range from $103.5 million in 2021 to $141.1 million in 2030. Operation costs are estimated at $70.2 million in the first year and $115.5 million by 2030. As for operating and administration costs, those remain relatively flat as they are considered more of a “fixed” cost, Haber added. Those costs begin at $1.7 million and climb to $2.8 million by 2030. Another big topic surrounding the feasibility is the potential surplus,

which could only be used for energy-related programs and projects, he said. Those surpluses begin at an estimated $11.4 million and rise to $17.2 million by 2030. “This is a nonprofit undertaking,” he said. “Any excess revenues … could be available for a variety of uses, but they have to be energy related.” But these estimates must be taken with the likelihood Oceanside will not join any CCE — standalone or JPA with Carlsbad, Encinitas and Del Mar or other — right off the bat. Haber said his discussions with Oceanside officials have been robust and they believe the feasibility; although it appears likely the city will take a wait-and-see approach. Oceanside’s staff has a workshop in front of its council May 1, Haber added. Currently, the cost and revenue projections have not been adjusted to incorporate Oceanside’s position. “They will be presenting information on the feasibility study to their council,” he said. “Staff is convinced the feasibility study is valid and indicates CCE has potential value. But they, more than likely, will not be involved in the earliest launch of that, which could be 2021. We haven’t worked them in cost sharing for the governance study or legal stud-

ies, as well.” Oceanside and Carlsbad account for about 80% of the energy load capacity detailed in the study, with Carlsbad contributing 736 gigawatts. So, revenue, surplus and other non-fixed cost projections must be reduced by about 40%, or what the exact total is, Haber said. Encinitas has under 20% percent of the load and Del Mar, due to its small population, has just a few percent. As such, revenue projections for the first year would be around $62.1 million and $84.6 million by 2030. Still, the three remaining cities are now moving forward with researching governance options, resolutions to pursue CCE and discussing the matter with other governments, Haber said. Carlsbad officials and city staff are continuing open talks with the city of San Diego, county of San Diego and other municipalities about CCE, JPAs and other issues regarding the energy market. As for the governance study, Haber said it is expected to be completed at the end of May and presented to the City Council in June. In addition, the city is looking at more public outreach efforts or meetings, although none have been scheduled yet.


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City split on spouse appointments By Lexy Brodt

LODEN AT OLIVENHAIN development proposal features 16 estate homes on 10,000- to 16,000-square-foot lots and a trail and paseo system, according to developer Woodbridge Pacific Group’s website. Residents launched formal opposition to the project called Save Desert Rose in 2012. Courtesy photo/Woodbridge

Desert Rose gets unanimous approval By Aaron Burgin

ENCINITAS — After more than 10 years of planning and a lawsuit that made it to the doorstep of the State Supreme Court, an Olivenhain 16-unit subdivision received the final approval needed to move forward. The Encinitas Planning Commission voted 4-0 April 18 to approve the design review for the homes and the landscaping plan for the Desert Rose development. “It takes 10 years to get 16 homes built in Encinitas, for good or ill,” said Marco Gonzalez, an attorney representing the developer, Woodbridge Pacific Group. “Being here today to see this as the final discretionary hearing, it is a good thing, despite the fact that it took us so long to get here.” State law allows for developers to build extra, or “bonus” homes on land if one or more of the homes are earmarked for low-income residents. Encinitas residents have complained the projects alter the character of the community with oversized and super-dense units and cause other environmental woes, such as increased traffic, fire hazards and damage to

SITE PLAN for Loden at Olivenhain development at Dove Song Way and Desert Rose Way in Encinitas. Courtesy photo

wetlands in the case of Desert Rose. Neighbors launched formal opposition to the project by way of a citizens group called Save Desert Rose in 2012, after it began to make its way through the approval process. After the city approved

Desert Rose and the companion environmental report in 2013, Save Desert Rose filed a lawsuit against the city and developer to compel an environmental report. In 2014, Superior Court Judge Judith Hayes ruled in the citizens group’s favor. The developer then

appealed to the Fourth District Court of Appeal, which unanimously reversed the lower court’s decision in late 2015. Save Desert Rose then filed for the state Supreme Court to review the case, but the state’s high court declined review in late January 2016. At the April 18 hearing, one of Save Desert Rose’s most active members, Julie Graboi, urged the planning commission to deny the design review, arguing that the project’s density didn’t fit the surrounding communities, and that the developer’s community character analysis included denser communities that were outside of the 500-foot radius that was to be used for the purpose of the analysis. Graboi and former Mayor Sheila Cameron also said that the project shouldn’t be approved until the developer received approval from the City of Carlsbad to connect a trail that would otherwise dead end in the project. The five feet of land needed to connect the Encinitas and Carlsbad trails is in the Carlsbad city limits. Graboi called the trail connection “the only public

Oceanside school district consolidates alt ed programs By Samantha Taylor

OCEANSIDE — Oceanside Unified School District Board of Education approved a plan April 16 to consolidate the district’s alternative education programs and house them under one roof. Beginning next year school year, the district’s alternative education program will be housed at Ditmar Elementary. Previously, the district established an Alternative Education Committee to discuss the need for a “consolidated, unified and comprehensive alternative education program” that would provide personalized learning to meet its students’ needs. The committee met on three occasions and reviewed data regarding the district’s various alternative education programs.

Currently, the district offers alternative education through its Clair Burgener Academy Academic Acceleration and Recovery Center (AARC), an independent study-based program that gives students in grades six to 12 an alternative instructional strategy meant to respond to the student’s educational needs, interests and abilities. Both El Camino and Oceanside high schools have AARC programs as well. The district also offers alternative education at Ocean Shores, its continuation high school, which includes a childcare program for teen parents and its Alternative to Suspension program for middle and high school students. Additionally, Ditmar’s transitional K-5 home-school program and the California

Street Academy of Science & Engineering, which is a high school housed in Lincoln Middle School, are also considered alternative education programs. Consolidation and alignment of the district’s alternative education programs would assist with “maximizing resources, unified choice locations and ability to market.” The committee met with staff at both Ocean Shores and Clair Burgener to discuss consolidation. Staff requested the district have a safe, clean and compliant facility that provides a neutral location for scholars and maintains the integrity of existing programs. Staff requested the consolidated program leave room for growth and expansion of programs and the continuation high school,

to establish and maintain a play area for scholars and babies, dual enrollment with MiraCosta and to allow for teacher input for consolidating administrators. According to the committee, consolidation could possibly result in reassigning some employees to other openings in the district. In addition to recommending the consolidation of the district’s alternative education programs, staff also recommended consolidating students from California Street Academy of Science & Engineering to other options because the academy’s “sustainability is not foreseeable” given its enrollment numbers. Currently, 17 students are enrolled and two teachers are staffed there. The board unanimously approved the alternative learning consolidation.

benefit that was promised with this project.” Gonzalez countered, and the commission agreed, that the courts had already ruled on the project density and therefore they had no authority to alter it, and that the approval could not be contingent on the trail issue. “Your job here tonight is to assess compliance with the guidelines and consistency with the general plan,” Gonzalez said. “The density is what the density is, that has been litigated, that is done.” Gonzalez and the city both agreed to continue to negotiate with Carlsbad to connect the trails. The commission briefly discussed questions about the backyard landscaping and an invasive plant that was included in the design review, but quickly voted in favor of the application.

DEL MAR — The interview and appointment process for a seat on the city’s Design Review Board endured for almost two hours at the Apr. 15 City Council meeting, drawing over 20 public speakers and ending in a stalemate vote. The Design Review Board is a nine-member body that evaluates proposed structures — whether of homeowners or larger development projects — to ensure their designs are in spirit with the character of the city. The reappointment process comes in the wake of a continued discussion over whether the spouses of council members should be appointed to either the Design Review Board or the Planning Commission. The dialogue first took off at a March 4 City Council meeting, after Mayor Dave Druker and Councilwoman Terry Gaasterland proposed the consideration of a policy to prohibit a council member’s spouse from serving concurrently on the other quasi-judicial bodies. The two council members and several residents expressed concern that spouses’ simultaneous service would create a perception of bias or actual bias, particularly if a decision made by the board or commission is appealed to the council for a De Novo hearing. They argued that such perceptions could create potential for liability. Others called the TURN TO SPOUSES ON A22


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‘Equal pay’ bill faces opposition by former supporters By Jordan P. Ingram

ENCINITAS — A women’s surfing advocacy group has withdrawn its endorsement of a state bill requiring equal pay for female athletes over concerns the legislation does not go far enough to protect women from gender-based discrimination. Sabrina Brennan, co-founder of Committee for Equity in Women’s Surfing (CEWS), said the nonprofit group will oppose Assembly Bill 467, known as the Equal Play for Equal Pay Act, unless amended to provide equal access for men and women in all pro surf competitions. Eleven organizations and businesses joined CEWS in opposition to the bill, including the Homestretch Foundation, IAP Films and Surf Club of the Claremont Colleges, according to the release. The Wahine Project, which originally joined the opposition to AB 467, walked back their previous statement and said the group now supports the bill. “First we have to get the women into the competition, then we can get equal pay,” Brennan said. “I don’t understand why the bill wouldn’t be both things.” AB 467 would amend the state Fish and Game Code to require equal compensation and prize money for any competition featuring both male and female divisions. The bill would not apply

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group has taken the last two years to make the project responsive to both neighbors and the Planning Commission’s concerns. The previous project iteration called for visitors to enter the hotel on Melrose, where a valet service would park cars off-site. Neighbors and other opponents argued that increasing traffic along the street violated a document that governs development in the city’s downtown area known as the specific plan, which they said specifically called for less traffic on Melrose. Since then, the ownership group has addressed nearly 40 of the residents’ and city’s concerns, including reconfiguring the plan to eliminate the valet service and replacing it with a parking operation management plan that designates a bellman to direct a guest to their assigned parking space or park the car for the guest. Entrance to the property has been restricted to only Coast Highway 101, and an electronically controlled gate in the rear of the property would limit the Melrose access point to cars exiting the hotel, eliminating cut-through traffic on the property that was the cause of many complaints. Additionally, the group eliminated the western-facing balconies and the large

First we have to get the women into the competition, then we can get equal pay.”

to male- or female-only competitions, raising questions from some supporters about the ability to facilitate pay equity without first establishing equal access. According to Brennan, the bill’s authors refuse to prohibit gender-based discrimination in an effort to preserve all-female sporting events such as Supergirl Surf Pro. Brennan’s public announcement comes just days after AB 467 was unanimously passed out of committee and scheduled for an assembly appropriations hearing on Wednesday, April 24, at the state capitol. The San Mateo harbor commissioner also recommended AB 467 be amended to “require businesses and organizations that manage and promote athletic competitions on California state lands comply with the Unruh Civil Rights Act.” The Unruh Act outlaws discrimination based on sex, race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, mental or physical disability, age or medical condition in California. Earlier this year, assembly members Tasha Boerner Horvath (D-Encinitas) and Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego), announced the introduction of AB 467 on Feb. 14 during a news conference in Encinitas, which Brennan was invited to attend as a guest speaker. Since the event, Brennan has spoken out against

the bill, saying that it doesn’t prevent athletic organizations from simply excluding women altogether from competitions. “It’s not just about surfing,” Brennan said. “It’s about all sports on state lands and that includes state highways and includes bicycle racing among other things.” Kathryn Bertine, retired pro cyclist and CEO of the Homestretch Foundation, wrote a letter to Gonzalez urging the assemblywoman to close loopholes of gender exclusion. Bertine said female athletes are marginalized at the highest levels of competition, namely cycling’s prestigious AMGEN Tour of California, noting that women race fewer days and shorter distances for less prize money at AMGEN. Dionne Ybarra, founding director of Monterey-based The Wahine Project, previously withdrew her support for AB 467 saying at the time she believed this was a missed opportunity to better protect athletes in the future. “We think an amend-

ground-level pool, replacing it with a smaller, boutique rooftop pool that she said is also shielded so as to limit noise from it to the surrounding community. Finally, they reduced the room count from 45 to 35 units, with 10 private suites. But on the eve of the hearing, property owner Don McPherson and his attorney Felix Tinkov submitted a massive report, compiled by several hired experts, that they said revealed flaws (or as they called them, violations) in the project and the conclusions drawn in the noise, traffic and parking studies. One neighbor, in an email to the group of Melrose Avenue neighbors opposed to the project, referred to the hotel as a “proposed party house/hotel/bar.” “This will inundate the residential communities east and west of its location with excessive noise, massive parking overflow, and set a precedent for future development along the 101 Corridor to designate nonconforming existing properties with substandard and inadequate facilities for their patrons, and neighbors,” Benjamin Gershman wrote to the group in an email on April 14. Tinkov at the April 18 meeting outlined the deficiencies: • An acoustical engineer’s report, Tinkov said, drew its sound con-

clusions by using a 19-foot wall in the simulation that would crest 12 feet above the city’s 30-foot height limit. • The parking and traffic estimates did not account for visitors to the hotel’s bar and restaurant areas, which the hotel owners said are not open to the public, Tinkov said. But the hotel was applying for a type of liquor license that requires the use to be open to the public. • And the project expands what is currently a legal nonconforming, or “grandfathered” use beyond the limits prescribed by city code, he said. Tammy Temple, who represents the hotel group, said the group plans to respond to the claims presented by the project opponents at the May 2 meeting. “When we get back, our experts ... will have a formal response to the things that Mr. McPherson’s experts claim,” she said. “We have been working with the city for four years now, and the project has been vetted many times in front of engineers, consultants and we have gone above and beyond ... to put for a project that was well programmed and something staff could recommend. “I understand what Mr. Tinkov is doing, but we stand by the fact that we have been thoroughly vetted and under a microscope all these years,” Temple said.

Sabrina Brennan co-founder of Committee for Equity in Women’s Surfing

ment (to the bill) is important,” Ybarra told The Coast News. “It’s missing that extra element where it can provide continued protection. I think in anything, people are going to try and find a way around the rules, work another angle and then women will be excluded again.” But despite a flurry of reversals, Boerner Horvath said the language in the bill hasn’t changed and was never intended to address all of the inequities women face in professional sports. The former Encinitas councilwoman said that she hopes supporters can stay focused on the bill’s primary objective: achieving prize equity for women. “My issue is about pay equity and that’s what AB 467 does,” Boerner Horvath told The Coast News. “I think everybody is entitled to their perspective. But I would hope we stay focused on the importance of the bill alone. If we lose sight of the goal, to establish pay equity for women on state lands, I worry we could throw the baby out with the bathwater.”

Boerner Horvath acknowledged there is more work to do in the fight for equality in sports but believes her legislation is an important first step towards creating a level-playing field for female athletes. “There is no other area where we would ever accept this type of pay disparity between men and women,” Boerner Horvath said. “It’s a timely bill and I will work my darndest to create a coalition to move it along to the governor’s desk.” But Brennan suggests that members of Boerner Horvath’s staff, specifically Carlsbad Councilwoman Cori Schumacher, refused to consider equal-access provisions in an effort to protect all-female competitions from adding a male division. Schumacher, a threetime women’s longboarding champion, also serves as a field representative for Boerner Horvath in the district and helped draft the bill. In a series of email correspondences between Brennan and Schumacher obtained by The Coast News, Schumacher expressed her reluctance to widen the bill’s scope to address gender equality. “Concerns exist regarding ‘equal access’ and how that would impair female-only events/spaces/ leagues/business events… it is of major concern to a number of my colleagues in the sports gender equi-

ty realm, and the assembly members,” Schumacher said in an email. Schumacher listed Supergirl Surf Pro, an international female surf competition in Oceanside, and Carlsbad’s All Girls Skate Jam, as examples of female-only competitions that would be negatively affected by equal-access legislation. When Brennan told Schumacher she considered gender-specific events on public lands a form of discrimination, Schumacher responded with another email: “It sounds like you might be making a case for the elimination of gendered categories? Just received your last email. There is quite a bit of commentary and academic research around the impacts of the erasure of difference and who it impacts. The beneficiaries of this erasure of difference continues to be white males, which is why equity remains a focus for social and environmental justice advocates in many social institutions, established and emerging.” Brennan said Schumacher has since blocked her on social media accounts but said she would still support AB 467 if certain changes were made. “We really wanted to work collaboratively with these women,” Brennan said. “We think (AB 467) could be great but it’s a message with significant loopholes.”

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SENIOR CARE CONTINUED FROM A1

caretaker’s abandoned house. The surrounding neighborhood is rural in nature: winding streets with few sidewalks, quiet and dense with trees and plants. The neighbors like it that way — and worry what a 99-bed facility might mean for the character of their neighborhood. Marcia Smerican, a former Solana Beach Mayor and 33-year resident of Marine View Avenue, worries the zoning changes will “transform our rural property … into something that’s just not compatible.” At an April 16 community meeting with the developers, area residents toted signs and flyers stating “Vote NO on Measure B!” Members of the Marine View Homeowners Association are leading the neighborhood opposition, maintaining a website titled “Keep Solana Safe” to outline the neighbors’ concerns. Their No. 1 qualm? Traffic. The project’s draft Environmental Impact Report anticipates the facility would prompt 263 additional trips per day, almost doubling the amount of traffic through the area. This number falls well below the road’s stated capacity (2,000), as outlined by the city’s Circulation Element. “The traffic volumes are very low,” said RhodesMoore Inc. Principal John DeWald at the April 16

RESIDENTS GATHERED at a community meeting on Apr. 16 to give input and ask questions about a proposed senior care facility off Marine View Avenue. The proposed facility’s specific plan overlay faces a special election on May 7 — if approved by voters, the project will go on to the City Council and California Coastal Commission. Photo by Lexy Brodt

meeting, prompting “no ways” from the audience. “It probably has the least impact from a traffic perspective.” The approximately one-hour meeting was led by DeWald; RhodesMoore Asset Manager Josh Buller; and Greg Roderick, the president and CEO of the site’s potential operator,

Frontier Management. The trio outlined the facility’s planned design (“residential and not institutional”), discussed the lifestyle that would be available to residents (“Montessori-inspired”), and highlighted the need in Solana Beach for housing — particularly housing for seniors. But the meeting also

San Marcos rollover crash kills 1, injures 3 SAN MARCOS — A rollover crash in an open area in San Marcos on April 21 left one person dead, a sheriff’s deputy said. It happened in a hilly area west of North Twin Oaks Valley Road and north of Bel Esprit Circle, in an area where a neighborhood of single-family homes abuts open chaparral. It wasn’t clear how the single vehicle involved in the accident ended up in the area it was found in, San Diego sheriff’s Lt. Chris May said — it may have been driving off-road, or could have somehow come off a nearby street or driveway, although it appears most of

the open area is uphill from nearby roadways. A passenger in the Chevrolet truck involved in the crash called 911 just before 8 a.m. and told dispatchers the driver of the pickup was trapped inside the overturned vehicle, San Diego sheriff’s Sgt. Nicholas Maryn said. The man was unable to give dispatchers an exact location for the crash scene at the time, Maryn said. Firefighters and paramedics were able to locate the vehicle once they got to the area. “Due to its remote location, emergency units utilized the hiking trails to

access the heavily damaged Chevrolet and the injured vehicle occupants,” Maryn said. All four occupants of the truck, including the driver, were taken to Palomar Medical Center. The driver, a 25-yearold man, died of his injuries at the hospital, Maryn said. The rest of the people in the pickup were all men aged 25 to 26, and all had moderate but non-life-threatening injuries, the deputy said. Alcohol was a suspected factor in the crash, according to Maryn.

prompted a lengthy backand-forth on how potential visitors and staff would reach the facility, and how such traffic would impact local neighborhoods. Would facility staff driving north on the I-5 take the Lomas Santa Fe Drive exit and veer south to Marine View Avenue, as the developer anticipates?

Or would they dodge traffic and take the Via de la Valle exit and find their way toward Highland Drive, as the residents fear? “The idea that visitors, delivery trucks, staff, etc. will come from only the north and not the south is illogical,” Rosemary Linden, Marine View HOA board member, wrote in an email to The Coast News. Developers have highlighted roadway improvements that would be generated by the project, specifically along Genevieve Street and its intersection with Marine View. And DeWald said the project’s team has been on the lookout for other community enhancements: such as speed limit indicator signs, roadway striping and bike lane markings. Although not outlined as necessary by the draft EIR, such alterations could ultimately be a bargaining chip if the project goes before the city council. But such potential improvements have not quelled residents’ concerns, with some interpreting potential efforts at mitigation as a lose-lose situation. In a phone call with The Coast News, resident Perry Sexton said the most dangerous aspect of Marine View is the 90-degree turn north of the lot, which redirects the road south. However, widening the road to mitigate the lack of visibility might negatively impact neighborhood character, he said. “There is not going to be any change that the

developer can make that would be sufficient to make it safe,” Sexton said. But the developer said these concerns don’t hold water: in an email to The Coast News, DeWald said the developers have worked closely with the city’s Fire Department, Engineering Department and the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, “who are all qualified to make safety assessments.” “Neighbors have no such qualification, and no basis in fact for their claims.” The project’s opposition and the developer continue to disagree over the project’s potential impact, with residents like Sexton stating that neighbors will feel the project’s impacts “dramatically,” and developers and supporters foreseeing low impact due to its location toward the edge of the neighborhood. Although the April 16 meeting witnessed mostly opposition to the project, resident Caroline Demar urged attendees to consider the community’s greater good in judging the project. “I know it’s hard to have this stuff happen in your backward, but I think there’s a time we as citizens have to think bigger,” she said. The special election is slated for May 7 — which means all ballots must be returned by mail or in person to the San Diego County Registrar of Voters’ office by 8 p.m. on election day, according to the city’s website.

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A14

T he C oast News

APRIL 26, 2019

Sports Ace of an idea: Bringing warriors, tennis together North County sending six to prestigious golf tourney sports talk jay paris

T

his marks the fifth year that Beth Dammeyer has volunteered for the Wounded Warrior Tennis Camp. That, in our eyes, deserves a high-five. “The amazing part about this program is that it gives these warriors a chance to recover emotionally and physically,” Dammeyer said. It’s an ace of an endeavor and thanks to volunteers like Dammeyer the national camp is returning for its eighth year, May 6 to May 9, at the Balboa Tennis Club. More than 50 veterans will be flown in and put up — all expenses paid — as they are introduced to tennis. It not only helps these men and women get moving, but it often moves them from a dark place. “You see a transformation like that all the time,” said Dammeyer, a Carmel Valley resident who plays out of the San Dieguito Tennis Club in Encinitas. “It’s so amazing for people to build up their courage to travel here because some of them have post-traumatic stress

disorder or they have wheelchairs and care providers — it’s a big deal for them to attend. But they want to feel better. Although they don’t know what to expect so they are trusting us with their well-being.” It’s Dammeyer’s exposure to the military which has drawn her to help others through tennis. One of her g r a nd f at he r s was a World War II hero and the other a Purple Heart recipient. Her brother also served his nation. “This really struck a chord with me,” Dammeyer said. So she struck up a conversation one Tuesday when watching the military personnel play tennis during a weekly clinic at Balboa. Dammeyer’s offer to help segue into her joining the eight-person steering committee to put on the national event. “I saw the need for fundraising because we are a self-supported, grass-roots organization,” she said. “I put the word out and the tennis community in North County has been amazing.” For two years Dammeyer held events at Rancho Santa Fe’s Morgan Golf Resort, collecting north

of $7,000. This year she worked her magic at the San Dieguito Tennis Club and collected the same amount of much-needed cash, with more than 40 players taking part. “We’re not affiliated with the national Wounded Warriors organization,” she

said. “Instead we operate thanks to donations from the tennis community that embraces the opportunity to support our veterans through the game of tennis.” It’s a hug which goes both ways. “Thank you just isn’t enough to say for accepting me into your program,” said a military tennis player who wished to stay anonymous. “Moving forward can be so difficult with PTSD and severe depression. Your camp made me laugh and live again.” There are plenty of smiles, on and off the court,

with tennis bringing out the best in the best our nation has to offer. “The positive feedback we have received from past camp participants has been overwhelming,” said Steve Kappes, the San Diego District Tennis Association’s director of military outreach. “Many participants have told us that the sport of tennis has changed their lives for the better, and in some cases, has saved their lives.” Wow, all because of a fuzzy yellow ball and the caring actions of those that play tennis on a regular basis. It’s people like Dammeyer, her co-members at San Dieguito, and Steve Leffler at Rancho Penasquitos Tennis Club, that do the heavy lifting to make the Wounded Warrior Tennis Camp a hit. Want to help and why wouldn’t you? Donations are accepted at sdwoundedwarriortennis.org/donate.html. It’s easy to let your fingers type it in so you can pitch in. But only after those same digits give Dammeyer and crew a high-five. Follow him @jparis_sports

GARY MARTIN 760.436.2219

www.garymartin.com

REGION — Young North County golfers Jackson Rivera of Rancho Santa Fe, Bo Jin and Luke Potter of Encinitas, Alexander Yang and Dylan Menante of Carlsbad and Andi Xu of Carmel Valley, are among the 54 junior golfers who earned a spot to compete for the “Golden Jacket.” The golfers will compete at Sage Valley Golf Club in Graniteville, S.C., at the Junior Invitational, April 25-April 27. The Junior Invitational is one of the most exclusive and competitive annual junior events. Eligibility for the 54hole stroke-play Junior Invitational is rigorous, with 17 automatic qualifiers produced from the 2018 Junior Invitational Champion, 2018 Boys Junior PGA Champion, and furthest advancing junior in the 2018 U.S. Amateur, among others. Remaining slots are filled based upon year-todate rankings. S eventeen-yea r- old Akshay Bhatia of Wake Forest, North Carolina, donned the Golden Jacket in 2018, after finishing 2-under 214 for the tournament. Bhatia, the first back-to-back Boys Junior

AKSHAY BHATIA, 17, last year’s winner of the Golden Jacket, is back to defend his Junior Invitational title. The North Carolina resident plans to turn pro when he turns 18. Photo via Twitter

PGA Champion and highest-ranked member of the 2018 Boys U.S. Junior Ryder Cup team, recently elected to forgo college and will turn professional when he turns 18 in 2020. The champion and runner-up at the Junior Invitational will earn exemptions into the Boys Junior PGA Championship. The 44th Boys Junior PGA Championship will be held July 30 to Aug. 2 in Hartford, Connecticut. Golf fans can follow the competition at JuniorInvitational.com.

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APRIL 26, 2019

A15

T he C oast News

M arketplace News

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Cypress Court of Escondido resident shares his Pearl Harbor experience Cypress Court Recognized for Outstanding Resident Satisfaction ESCONDIDO — Tom Foreman doesn’t consider himself a hero. But the 97-year-old World War II veteran’s stories say otherwise. He is just one of Cypress Court senior living community’s many residents with an extraordinary story. A San Diego resident since high school, Foreman has plenty to share about his time both here and in Pearl Harbor. The Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, considered a turning point in the war efforts in the Pacific, took place between Nov. 12 and Nov. 15, 1942. The Japanese launched air attacks on U.S. ships in an attempt to bring reinforcements to Guadalcanal and retake the Henderson Airfield. Foreman was on the front lines of the battle.

Two CHP officers injured by suspect during pursuit SOLANA BEACH — A man was arrested April 25 on suspicion of leading authorities on a pursuit from Orange County to Solana Beach, where two California Highway Patrol officers attempting to stop the pursuit suffered moderate injuries when the man allegedly struck them with his vehicle, authorities said. Dispatchers received a call around 4:20 a.m. from a person who reported an armed robbery at a Chevron on Alicia Parkway near Interstate 5 in the Laguna Hills area, Orange County Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman Carrie Braun said. The caller also reported that a man armed with a gun left the area in a vehicle, described as a black Dodge Charger, Braun said, adding that investigators later determined that the suspect was involved in a road rage incident — not a robbery — and threatened the victims with a gun in the Chevron parking lot before taking off. No injuries were reported from that incident. Deputies responded to the area and located the vehicle a short time later, but the vehicle entered southbound Interstate 5 and sped off, Braun said. The driver continued southbound on Interstate 5 then exited at Lomas Santa Fe Drive around 5 a.m., San Diego County Sheriff’s Lt. Fran Passalacqua said. On Lomas Santa Fe Drive, two CHP officers spotted the car and were on foot when they tried to confront the driver, but the driver sped off, striking the officers, 10News reported. — City News Service

Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Foreman was a child of the Depression. “My older brother joined the Navy because he couldn’t find a job,” he said. The Foreman family moved to San Diego to be closer to his brother who was stationed here. “As I recall, San Diego had a population of 180,000 in 1937,” he said. Foreman graduated from Sweetwater High, and like his brother joined the Navy right after high school. At his home port at Pearl Harbor he was a gun director on top of the bridge. Foreman remembers vividly the night the Battle of Guadalcanal began. “Luckily we had gone out to sea and the destroyer that tied up where we had been got blown up,” he recalled. “We were the lead destroyer because that was when radar had just come out,” he said. Foreman was on midwatch that night. “I had the radar in front of me … it was showing ships everywhere.”

MANY RESIDENTS living at the Cypress Court senior living community have extraordinary stories. Courtesy photo

He initially thought the radar wasn’t functioning properly. “I thought this can’t be right,” he said. “I counted 22 ships. We had eight destroyers and two light cruisers and three heavy cruisers.” “We saw the destroyer coming down our port side,” he continued. “We got hit. After several hits we lost power. The official count, I saw it later, we took 52 hits.” While helping a fellow

sailor who had been badly injured, Foreman was hit with shrapnel in the leg. In the chaos of the gunfire and loss of power, Foreman was told to abandon ship. “I just jumped overboard,” he said. “I had a life jacket on. I tried to swim away. Finally, I got out about 100 yards out.” In the ocean on a moonless night, Foreman saw a beacon of hope. “It was real dark. I saw some yellow out

of the corner of my eye. I saw a small donut shaped raft…. I paddled around and I picked up three other fellas. ... Two were badly injured. We paddled around all night. We got on about 1:30 in the morning and got picked up late afternoon.” Throughout the battle, Foreman never contemplated dying. “I just felt that I was going to make it,” he said. “I don’t know why … But I was

young and didn’t know any better.” Though many lives were lost in that battle, and many saved thanks to brave acts like his own, Foreman says he’s just an average person. “I just did what I had to do to survive,” he said. “I just tried to do my job that’s all. In any war like that, that’s about all you can do.” Foreman is one of two Cypress Court residents who will participate in a May Honor Flight. This is thanks to Honor Flight San Diego, a nonprofit team of volunteers dedicated to escorting San Diego County Veterans to Washington, D.C. to visit and reflect at the memorials dedicated to their service and sacrifice. Cypress Court of Escondido is located at 1255 North Broadway in Escondido. For more information about the exceptional senior living community, or to find out how to hear Tom’s full incredible interview, call (760) 747-1940 or visit www.LifeatCypressCourt.com.

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A16

T he C oast News

APRIL 26, 2019

City officials take first steps on Village H property Burgan given

second chance on probation

By Steve Puterski

CARLSBAD — A popular, yet quiet, piece of land has been a source of concern for dog lovers over the past several months. Known as Village H, the 60.9 acres of land is split on the north and south side of Carlsbad Village Drive and Victoria Lane. The city is in the midst purchasing the property from Presidio Cornerstone following a legal settlement with Preserve Calavera over the environmental impact report from the Quarry Creek development. But dog owners are championing the continued use of dogs off leash. On March 12, the City Council approved to leave the property in its current use until residents had a chance to speak on the matter. On April 23, the council approved moving forward with community input, design options and staff returning in the fall with those data points. “What we are entering into is not simplistic, but very complex,” Mayor Matt Hall said. “Somehow all these groups are going to have to come together and find some middle ground.” Kyle Lancaster, Carlsbad’s interim Parks and Recreation director, said the city was delayed in taking ownership due to several easements. However, the city is expected to record the deed in the next two weeks. In the meantime, the

By Aaron Burgin

A WOMAN walks through the Village H property April 20 with two dogs off leash, one on leash. The site, owned by the city of Carlsbad, is subject to public debate over restoration plans and whether dogs should remain off leash. Photo by Steve Puterski

city will move forward with maintenance and cleanup of the property once the deed is recorded. The section of concern would be off limits to the public during the improvements. In addition, Lancaster said before any official development of a dog park, the city must conduct environmental studies in accordance with the California Environmental Act (CEQA), as two dog parks detailed may affect a wild-

life corridor and the neighboring preserve. The process would take between two to three years, as he compared it to the ongoing process with the Poinsettia Park dog park. At Village H, Lancaster said those reviews and reports would also include storm water, noise, air quality, a conditional use permit, an amendment to the Calavera Hills Master Plan along with other issues related to CEQA and

COMMUNITY MEMBER OPENING ON TRI-CITY HEALTHCARE DISTRICT BOARD OF DIRECTORS COMMITTEE The Tri-City Healthcare District Board of Directors currently has a community membership opening on the following working Committee: 1.

Audit/Compliance/Ethics Committee – one opening. This Committee meets quarterly and as needed. Applicants shall have a basic understanding of finance and accounting and be able to read and understand financial statements, and shall have experience and familiarity with the specialized issues relating to health care financial issues. Applicants will be expected to attain a basic understanding of the design and operation of an Internal Audit Program and Ethics & Compliance Program, including: (1) review of Office of Inspector General/AHLA materials for Boards; (2) review of OIG compliance program guidance; and (3) attendance at relevant educational sessions presented by the Chief Compliance Officer, Internal Auditor, and/or the Health Care Compliance Association or similar organizations. If members of the public have an interest in serving as a community member on the above listed Committee, please send a resume or biography delineating your experience relevant to this Committee to: Teri Donnellan, Executive Assistant Tri-City Medical Center 4002 Vista Way Oceanside, CA 92056

Your information will be forwarded to the Chairperson of the Committee and Board Chairperson for review and consideration. After consideration by the full Committee, a recommendation will be forwarded to the full Board of Directors for final approval/appointment. All appointments are voluntary and do not include compensation. Community members shall serve a term of two years, with an option to renew the appointment for one additional two year term. At the conclusion of the second term, the community member shall not be eligible to serve on the same Board Committee for at least two years. It is preferable that a community member shall be a member of no more than one Board Committee at a time. The Board of Directors of Tri-City Healthcare District desires to ensure that its Committee community members are knowledgeable as to the issues that face the District. Therefore, only applications submitted by persons residing within the boundaries of the Tri-City Healthcare District will be considered.

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amenities. “We would require a CEQA process,” Lancaster said. “We don’t necessarily want to put up a fence and call it a day. We’d want to consider water facilities for the dogs, perhaps shade structures.” Once the deed is recorded, however, dogs will not be allowed off leash or on in the “remaining balance,” (preserve) of the site. He presented two dog park options, one a more “square” configuration and the other a linear design. The linear park resonated more with the City Council and dozens of residents from the neighborhood in attendance. The linear option would in essence keep one of the half-mile trail loops. Numerous residents, meanwhile, spoke in favor of keeping the area an offleash site for dogs, Diane Nygaard of Preserve Calavera cautioned the council in making a rushed decision. She said it is critical for the city to conduct the environmental reviews and consult with the Habitat Management Plan. She noted the city has not conducted analysis on several issues including impacts from dogs on the habitat, public safety and liability and said there is no clear vision for the property.

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“The question isn’t about an off-leash dog park, it’s about how you do that,” she added. “All stakeholders must be included. There are numerous reasons to take extra care of this and do this right.” Those in support said it is a great place to run their dogs and kids and is a part of their quality of life. Corey (he declined to give his last name), said he just recently moved back to the city and lives nearby. He and his husky-Australian shepherd mix, Seymour, enjoy near daily walks and runs off leash through the property, which has no fence line on its southern border. The trail dumps into a neighborhood where residents also have access. Corey said he wasn’t sure of what the rules where, even though two signs are posted. Regardless, he said his encounters with dogs have been friendly and fights are rare. He said there may be a compromise, perhaps, if the city fenced in the backside of the property, thus effectively making it a dog park. “It’s not too noticeable,” Corey said. “The reason I like it is because it seems like a secret spot. I probably wouldn’t be coming here if leashes were enforced.” City code requires dogs to be leashed on city property, outside of an enclosed dog park.

ENCINITAS — A Superior Court judge has reinstated the probation of a woman who falsely accused former State Assembly candidate Phil Graham of sexual misconduct, giving her a second chance to comply with the requirements. Nichole Burgan was sentenced in February to two days in county jail and three years probation after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor charge of filing a false report with the Sheriff’s Department in connection to her allegations against Graham. Her sentence included a 90-day jail term that was stayed pending completion of her probation, $655 fine, 10 days public works service and a mental health evaluation. Earlier this week, a different judge ruled that Burgan has already violated the terms of her probation and scheduled an evidentiary hearing April 19 to determine if Burgan will go to jail for the full 90 days. At Friday’s hearing, it was revealed that Burgan had only completed half of her two-day sentence and had not started the process of her mental health evaluation with the County Department of Behavioral Health Services. Burgan, according to her attorney, said she hadn’t started the evaluation because she hadn’t received the paperwork from the public defender’s office. Judge Sim Von Kalinowski, who conducted Friday’s hearing and also sentenced Burgan in February, reinstated the probation, but ordered her to serve her custody beginning 8 p.m. April 19 and to at least the process of scheduling the mental health evaluation by no later than Monday, April 22. Von Kalinowski also gave Burgan 30 days to complete the mental health evaluation and ordered that she follow through on any recommendations that arise from the evaluation. If Burgan fails to comply with the conditions, Von Kalinowski said it would result in Burgan likely going to jail for at least some of the 90 days, which remain stayed. Burgan in 2018 told the media that Graham, the Republican front runner in the assembly race, forcibly kissed her during the early morning hours of May 14, 2018, after a night of drinking at the 1st Street Bar in Encinitas. She later filed a police report, which prompted a San Diego Sheriff’s Department investigation of her claims.


APRIL 26, 2019

A17

T he C oast News

Private feud between city official, resident goes public By Steve Puterski

CARLSBAD — A disagreement between a city official and a resident has unfolded on social media and has captured the public’s attention, for better or worse. The spat began last summer in the general eleciton but gained significant attention after Carlsbad Councilwoman Cori Schumacher posted a message to her official City Council Facebook page on April 17 regarding alleged “attacks” from Linda Breen, a former candidate for the City Council. “After a year of constant public attacks, I want to take a moment to make something very clear,” Schumacher wrote. “I have tried to ignore a series of attacks that began during the campaign season and has persisted past this point, and is spilling over into our Council meetings and at our community meetings here in Carlsbad.” Schumacher suggested that Linda and Noel Breen have launched a campaign of “bullying, outright lies, projections and manipulations” against the councilwoman following her

Cori Schumacher

Linda Breen

endorsement of Barbara Hamilton in the last election. Hamilton went on to defeat Linda Breen to claim the District 1 seat. Supporters applauded the councilwoman defending herself from a steady stream of perceived transgressions by the Breens over the past several months. But others chided Schumacher, suggesting it was “inappropriate” and “distasteful” for a public official to “call out” private residents using an official city social media account. Schumacher did not respond to requests for comment. The Breens said they are in disbelief that a public

figure would so brazenly attack private residents. Several points of contention, ranging from the 49th Congressional race to questions about Schumacher’s financial projections on several projects, have only heightened tensions. The simmering discord boiled over when Noel Breen was allegedley “called out” by Schumacher during an April 14 Town Hall meeting. The Breens said Schumacher’s public attempts to publicly humiliate them sends a negative message to residents who disagree with her position. As a result, the Breens are moving out of Carlsbad, in part, due to harassment from Schumacher’s support-

M arketplace News

ers online and in person. Noel Breen said he knows he’s made a lot of people upset over the years, but there must be a line for public officials. The Breens also took issue with being blocked from Schumacher’s personal Facebook page, which they contend is used as a source of delivering information on official city issues and her work for Assemblywoman Tasha Boerner Horvath (D-Encinitas). “Donald (Trump) uses his personal Twitter and it’s pretty unprecedented. I’ve never seen anything like it,” Noel Breen said comparing the president and Schumacher. “We used to be one of them. The message she’s sending is, if you make her mad enough, she’ll embarrass you in public … and put you on blast. They know what they’re doing.” In her post, Schumacher said the attacks “are couched as issues-oriented, but they are driven by personal animus that stems from a vindictiveness tied to feeling entitled to my support for a candidate during the last campaign season.” Schumacher continued with an allegation con-

tained within a letter from Linda Breen to Schumacher saying Noel Breen was ready to “initiate a vendetta.” “It is crystal clear Ms. Breen remains very unhappy about my endorsement of Ms. Hamilton. As she said in her letter, ‘I deserve the Democratic endorsement, and you know I do. I also deserve your support,’” Schumacher wrote. “I am hoping that with this post, folks who have seen this play out over time will understand the Breens’ behavior for what it is: revenge for not supporting Ms. Breen.” Schumacher’s open letter said the Breens have gone after other candidates, but have upped their rhetoric in their interactions with her. Schumacher later addressed Linda Breen and others who questioned her statements regarding Community Choice Energy. In a post published in March, Schumacher touted a possibility of $200 million in revenue, although the feasibility study projections do not reveal such a number. Schumacher cited a KPBS story where Gary Sa-

balea, a consultant for EES Consulting who conducted the study, said a joint-powers agreement with Carlsbad, Encinitas, Del Mar and Oceanside could be a $200 million outfit in the future. The Breens said pushing that narrative will hurt the community choice energy effort as residents begin to ask more probing questions from their elected officials. Noel Breen said this isn’t the first time he has been critical of Schumacher’s remarks on financial matters. The Breens recalled Schumacher’s mayoral campaign when the councilwoman claimed a battery farm in Australia could generate about $450 million per year, and should be applied to Carlsbad. Another example came during the Jan. 8 City Council meeting where Schumacher claimed an $18 billion deficit for the San Diego Association of Governments, then corrected herself saying she was mistaken and it may be $18 million. Minutes later, Schumacher “clarified” that it was between $15 billion to $18 billion.

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San Elijo Lagoon highway bridge taking shape During the month of April, nearly 300 hundred concrete trucks delivered thousands of cubic yards of concrete to the Interstate 5 (I-5) highway bridge over the San Elijo Lagoon. Across three nights, crews successfully poured and formed the new bridge span for the outside of the new bridge on southbound I-5. The bridge span is formed with the help of wooden falsework (temporary wooden support structures) and the concrete is embedded with rebar for increased bridge support and strength. Unlike more common road or rail bridge replacement projects that typically consist of building a new bridge structure beside an existing bridge, construction of the San Elijo Lagoon highway bridge replacement project stands apart because it requires a uniquely differ-

Courtesy photo

CREWS USE EXTENDED concrete pumps to pour and form the southbound side of the San Elijo Lagoon highway bridge span. Courtesy photo

ent approach. This bridge replacement project requires building the two exterior portions of the bridge for northbound and southbound traffic, diverting traffic to

these completed exterior bridges, demolishing the original bridge interior, and constructing the two interior portions of the bridge. Once complete in 2021,

these four separate pours (two northbound and two southbound) will connect to form the new San Elijo Lagoon highway bridge. The new bridge will be lon-

ger to help improve lagoon tidal flow and overall lagoon health, and wider to accommodate future HOV/ Carpool Lanes in both the northbound and southbound directions. What makes this approach unique is that the construction crews will have completed the bridge project without ever needing to plan a freeway closure along one of the most heavily travelled highway corridors in Southern California. In addition, the completed San Elijo Lagoon bridge will feature a new suspended bicycle and pedestrian bridge underneath that will connect Manchester Avenue to the San Elijo Lagoon trail network and North Coast Bike Trail. For more information about the San Elijo Lagoon Highway Bridge Replacement Project or the Build NCC program, please visit KeepSanDiegoMoving.

com/BuildNCC. About Build NCC Build NCC is a collaborative effort between the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG), Caltrans, and the United States Department of Transportation. The first phase of construction is in the cities of Solana Beach, Encinitas, and Carlsbad as part of the North Coast Corridor Program. Build NCC includes extending the existing carpool lane on I-5 in each direction from Lomas Santa Fe Drive to State Route 78, double tracking the rail line and replacing the highway and rail bridges at the San Elijo Lagoon, restoring the San Elijo Lagoon, and constructing nearly seven miles of new bike and pedestrian trails. Construction on Build NCC began in early 2017 and will be complete by 2022.

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A18 LEGALS T.S. No.: 2018-02180-CA A.P.N.: 128-360-12-00 Property Address: 11927 Keys Creek Road, Valley Center, CA 92082 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE § 2923.3(a) and (d), THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION REFERRED TO BELOW IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE RECORDED COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR. NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED 本文件包含一个信息摘要 참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보 요약서가 있습니다 NOTA: SE ADJUNTA UN RESUMEN DE LA INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE DOCUMENTO TALA: MAYROONG BUOD NG IMPORMASYON SA DOKUMENTONG ITO NA NAKALAKIP LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI LIỆU NÀY IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 10/19/2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Trustor: THOMAS W. CURRAN, A SINGLE MAN Duly Appointed Trustee: Western Progressive, LLC Deed of Trust Recorded 10/27/2006 as Instrument No. 2006-0762559 in book ---, page--- and of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 05/30/2019 at 10:30 AM Place of Sale: AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE EAST COUNTY REGIONAL CENTER BY THE STATUE, 250 E. MAIN STREET, EL CAJON, CA 92020 Estimated amount of unpaid balance, reasonably estimated costs and other charges: $ 355,271.97 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE THE TRUSTEE WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN ON A STATE OR NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, OR A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF THE FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE: All right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described as: More fully described in said Deed of Trust. Street Address or other common designation of real property: 11927 Keys Creek Road, Valley Center, CA 92082 A.P.N.: 128360-12-00 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust with interest thereon, as provided in said note(s), advances, under the terms of said Deed of Trust, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication

T he C oast News LEGALS

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APRIL 26, 2019

LEGALS

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CITY OF ENCINITAS DEVELOPMENT SERVICES DEPARTMENT LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BY THE CITY COUNCIL PLACE OF MEETING:

LEGALS

CITY OF CARLSBAD NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Council Chambers, Civic Center 505 South Vulcan Avenue Encinitas, CA 92024

THE ABOVE MENTIONED AGENCY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY PUBLIC ENTITY AND DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE ON THE BASIS OF RACE, COLOR, ETHNIC ORIGIN, NATIONAL ORIGIN, SEX, RELIGION, VETERANS STATUS OR PHYSICAL OR MENTAL DISABILITY IN EMPLOYMENT OR THE PROVISION OF SERVICE. IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT/SECTION 504 REHABILITATION ACT OF 1973, IF YOU NEED SPECIAL ASSISTANCE TO PARTICIPATE IN THESE MEETINGS, PLEASE CONTACT THE CITY CLERK AT (760) 633-2601. It is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held on Wednesday, May 8, 2019, at 6 p.m. by the Encinitas City Council to discuss the following items: 1. CASE NUMBER: 14-287 DR/V/CDP; APPLICANT: Hosseini; APPELLANT: Hosseini; LOCATION: 2155 Manchester Avenue (APN: 261-062-07); ZONING/ OVERLAY: The project site is located in the Residential 15 (R-15) Zone and the Coastal Zone; DESCRIPTION: Public hearing to consider an appeal of Specific Condition SCA2 of Planning Commission Resolution No. PC2019-04 (related to a sewer easement requirement) for the construction of a Twinhome with side yard setback Variance requests; ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project has been determined to be exempt from environmental review pursuant to California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) Guidelines. STAFF CONTACT: Todd Mierau, Associate Planner: (760) 633-2693 or tmierau@ encinitasca.gov 2. CASE NUMBER: 17-206 TPM; APPLICANT: Lewis Bernard Massie; APPELLANT: Darren Kimble c/o The Law Office of Julie M. Hamilton; LOCATION: 2218 13th Street (APN: 264-143-41); ZONING: The property is located within the Rural Residential 2 (RR-2) Zone, the Hillside/Inland Bluff Overlay (H/ IBO) Zone, Cultural Resources Overlay Zone and the Scenic/Visual Corridor Overlay (S/VCO) Zone.; DESCRIPTION: Public hearing to consider an appeal of the Development Services Director’s approval of a Tentative Parcel Map to subdivide an existing parcel into two parcels with associated improvements; ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project has been determined to be exempt from environmental review pursuant to California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) Guidelines. STAFF CONTACT: Todd Mierau, Associate Planner: (760) 633-2693 or tmierau@ encinitasca.gov These appeals will be considered by the City Council pursuant to Chapter 1.12 of the Municipal Code. Any person who wishes to submit a written position with arguments, documents, exhibits, letters, photos, charts, diagrams, videos, etc., addressing the challenged determination MUST submit these to the City Clerk by 5:00 P.M. on Wednesday, May 1, 2019, seven calendar days prior to this hearing. No new information will be considered by the City Council after this deadline. Upon filing with the City Clerk, those items will be available to the public. Any questions, please contact the City Clerk at (760) 633-2601.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to you, because your interest may be affected, that the City Council of the City of Carlsbad will hold a public hearing at the Council Chamber, 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad, California, at 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday, May 7, 2019 to consider approving a Precise Development Plan Amendment and a Coastal Development Permit Amendment to allow for the: 1) construction of a new grit and screenings annex including applicable equipment; 2) repair, rehabilitation and replacement of existing aging infrastructure through the preliminary and primary areas; 3) construction of 21 new parking spaces to the east of the existing administration building; and 4) construction of a waste hauling truck turn-around area, all located at 6200 Avenida Encinas and more particularly described as: Property identified by Assessor’s Parcel Numbers 214-010-9500, 211-030-0600 and 211-030-0800 Whereas, on April 3, 2019 the City of Carlsbad Planning Commission voted 6-0-1 to recommend approval of a Precise Development Plan Amendment and a Coastal Development Permit Amendment to allow for the: 1) construction of a new grit and screenings annex including applicable equipment; 2) repair, rehabilitation and replacement of existing aging infrastructure through the preliminary and primary areas; 3) construction of 21 new parking spaces to the east of the existing administration building; and 4) construction of a waste hauling truck turn-around area, all within the Mello II Segment of the city’s Local Coastal Program and located at 6200 Avenida Encinas within Local Facilities Management Zone 3. The project is appealable to the California Coastal Commission per Section 30603(a)(5) of the Public Resources Code of the California Coastal Act, which states any development which constitutes a major public works project or major energy facility costing $100,000 or more is appealable to the Commission. The City Planner has determined that the project belongs to a class of projects that the State Secretary for Resources has found do not have a significant impact on the environment, and it is therefore categorically exempt from the requirement for the preparation of environmental documents pursuant to Section 15301 (Existing Facilities). Those persons wishing to speak on this proposal are cordially invited to attend the public hearing. Copies of the staff report will be available on and after Thursday, May 2, 2019. If you have any questions, please contact Pam Drew in the Planning Division at (760) 602-4644 or pam.drew@carlsbadca.gov. If you challenge the Precise Development Plan Amendment and Coastal Development Permit Amendment in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice or in written correspondence delivered to the City of Carlsbad, Attn: City Clerk’s Office, 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad, CA 92008, at or prior to the public hearing. CASE FILE:

AMEND 2018-0007/AMEND 2018-0008 (DEV2018-173)

CASE NAME:

ENCINA WATER POLLUTION CONTROL FACILITY

PUBLISH:

FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2019

CITY OF CARLSBAD CITY COUNCIL

Item 1 is located within the Coastal Zone and requires the issuance of a regular Coastal Development Permit. The action of the City may not be appealed to the California Coastal Commission. Under California Government Code Section 65009, if you challenge the nature of the proposed action in court, you may be limited to raising only the issues you or someone else raised regarding the matter described in this notice or written correspondence delivered to the City at or before the time and date of the determination. For further information, or to review the application prior to the hearing, please contact staff, or contact the Development Services Department, 505 South Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024 at (760) 633-2710 or by email at planning@encinitasca.gov. 04/26/19 CN 23180 of the Notice of Sale is: $ 355,271.97. Note: Because the Beneficiary reserves the right to bid less than the total debt owed, it is possible that at the time of the sale the opening bid may be less than the total debt. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. The beneficiary of the Deed of Trust has executed and delivered to the undersigned a written request to commence foreclosure, and the undersigned caused a Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the

existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on this property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (866)960-8299 or visit this Internet Web site http://www.altisource. com/MortgageServices/ DefaultManagement/ TrusteeServices.aspx using the file number assigned to this case 2018-02180-CA. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: April

19, 2019 Western Progressive, LLC, as Trustee for beneficiary C/o 1500 Palma Drive, Suite 237 Ventura, CA 93003 Sale Information Line: (866) 9608299 http://www.altisource. com/MortgageServices/ DefaultManagement/ TrusteeServices.aspx Trustee Sale Assistant WESTERN PROGRESSIVE, LLC MAY BE ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. 04/26/19, 05/03/19, 05/10/19 CN 23181 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE T.S. No. 18-20975-SP-CA Title No. 180558935-CA-VOI A.P.N. 222-631-07-00 ATTENTION RECORDER: THE FOLLOWING REFERENCE TO AN ATTACHED SUMMARY IS APPLICABLE TO THE NOTICE PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR ONLY PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE 2923.3 NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 12/31/2004. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for

04/26/19 CN 23161 cash, (cashier’s check(s) must be made payable to National Default Servicing Corporation), drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state; will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made in an “as is” condition, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of

sale. Trustor: Cheryl Ann Myers and Phillip R. Myers, wife and husband as joint tenants Duly Appointed Trustee: National Default Servicing Corporation Recorded 01/12/2005 as Instrument No. 2005-0029832 (or Book, Page) of the Official Records of San Diego County, California. Date of Sale: 05/24/2019 at 10:00 AM Place of Sale: At the entrance to the East County Regional Center by statue, 250 E. Main Street, El Cajon, CA 92020 Estimated amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $930,970.79 Street Address or other common designation of real property: 793 Trailside Place, San Marcos, CA 92078-6907 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further

recourse. The requirements of California Civil Code Section 2923.5(b)/2923.55(c) were fulfilled when the Notice of Default was recorded. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property.


APRIL 26, 2019

A19

T he C oast News

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NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 714-7302727 or visit this Internet Web site www.ndscorp.com/sales, using the file number assigned to this case 18-20975-SPCA. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: 04/18/2019 National Default Servicing Corporation c/o Tiffany and Bosco, P.A., its agent, 1455 Frazee Road, Suite 820 San Diego, CA 92108 Toll Free Phone: 888-264-4010 Sales Line 714-730-2727; Sales Website: www.ndscorp.com Rachael Hamilton, Trustee Sales Representative A-4691524 04/26/2019, 05/03/2019, 05/10/2019 CN 23159

CREDIT UNION, OR A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF THE FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE: All right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described as: More fully described in said Deed of Trust. Street Address or other common designation of real property: 527 Chinquapin Avenue, Carlsbad, CA 92008 A.P.N.: 206-101-16-00 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust with interest thereon, as provided in said note(s), advances, under the terms of said Deed of Trust, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is: $ 588,272.59. Note: Because the Beneficiary reserves the right to bid less than the total debt owed, it is possible that at the time of the sale the opening bid may be less than the total debt. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. The beneficiary of the Deed of Trust has executed and delivered to the undersigned a written request to commence foreclosure, and the undersigned caused a Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on this property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and,

if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (866)960-8299 or visit this Internet Web site http://www.altisource. com/MortgageServices/ DefaultManagement/ TrusteeServices.aspx using the file number assigned to this case 2018-03023-CA. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: April 13, 2019 Western Progressive, LLC, as Trustee for beneficiary C/o 1500 Palma Drive, Suite 237 Ventura, CA 93003 Sale Information Line: (866) 9608299 http://www.altisource. com/MortgageServices/ DefaultManagement/ TrusteeServices.aspx Trustee Sale Assistant WESTERN PROGRESSIVE, LLC MAY BE ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. 04/26/19, 05/03/19, 05/10/19 CN 23158

SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF THE FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE: All right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described as: More fully described in said Deed of Trust. Street Address or other common designation of real property: 5715 Derby Court, Oceanside, CA 92057 A.P.N.: 157-861-18-00 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust with interest thereon, as provided in said note(s), advances, under the terms of said Deed of Trust, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is: $ 608,103.73. Note: Because the Beneficiary reserves the right to bid less than the total debt owed, it is possible that at the time of the sale the opening bid may be less than the total debt. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. The beneficiary of the Deed of Trust has executed and delivered to the undersigned a written request to commence foreclosure, and the undersigned caused a Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on this property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (866)960-8299 or visit this Internet Web site http://www.altisource.

com/MortgageServices/ DefaultManagement/ TrusteeServices.aspx using the file number assigned to this case 2014-06653-CA. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: April 13, 2019 Western Progressive, LLC, as Trustee for beneficiary C/o 1500 Palma Drive, Suite 237 Ventura, CA 93003 Sale Information Line: (866) 9608299 http://www.altisource. com/MortgageServices/ DefaultManagement/ TrusteeServices.aspx Trustee Sale Assistant WESTERN PROGRESSIVE, LLC MAY BE ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. 04/19/19, 04/26/19, 05/03/19 CN 23153

the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. Notice To Potential Bidders: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. Notice To Property Owner: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (877) 4404460 or visit this Internet Web site www.mkconsultantsinc. com, using the file number assigned to this case 190102003. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: 4/10/2019 Del Toro Loan Servicing, Inc., by Total Lender Solutions, Inc., its authorized agent 10951 Sorrento Valley Road, Suite 2F San Diego, CA 92121 Phone: 866-535-3736 Sale Line: (877) 440-4460 By: /s/ Chelcey Romeril, Trustee Sale Officer MK-95521294 04/19/19, 04/26/19, 05/03/19 CN 23139

regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Trustor: OLMOS & ASSOCIATES, LLC A CALIFORNIA LIMITED LIABLITY COMPANY Duly Appointed Trustee: WESTERN FIDELITY TRUSTEES Recorded 12/3/2015 as Instrument No. 2015-0621582 in book , page of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 5/13/2019 at 1:00 PM Place of Sale: Outside the Main entrance at the Superior Court North County Division located at 325 South Melrose Drive, Vista, CA 92081 Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $218,876.42 Street Address or other common designation of real property: 514 VALLEY DRIVE VISTA, CA 92084 A.P.N.: 177-203-1400 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 844-477-7869 or visit this Internet Web site www. stoxposting.com, using the file number assigned to this case 2019-0101. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet

T.S. No.: 2018-03023-CA A.P.N.: 206-101-16-00 Property Address: 527 Chinquapin Avenue, Carlsbad, CA 92008 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE § 2923.3(a) and (d), THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION REFERRED TO BELOW IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE RECORDED COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR. NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED 本文件包含一个信息摘要 참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보 요약서가 있습니다 NOTA: SE ADJUNTA UN RESUMEN DE LA INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE DOCUMENTO TALA: MAYROONG BUOD NG IMPORMASYON SA DOKUMENTONG ITO NA NAKALAKIP LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI LIỆU NÀY IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 08/01/2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Trustor: Michelle Heil, A Married Woman as Her Sole and Separate Property Duly Appointed Trustee: Western Progressive, LLC Deed of Trust Recorded 08/15/2006 as Instrument No. 2006-0578490 in book ---, page--- and of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 06/03/2019 at 10:30 AM Place of Sale: AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE EAST COUNTY REGIONAL CENTER BY THE STATUE, 250 E. MAIN STREET, EL CAJON, CA 92020 Estimated amount of unpaid balance, reasonably estimated costs and other charges: $ 588,272.59 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE THE TRUSTEE WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN ON A STATE OR NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL

T.S. No.: 2014-06653CA A.P.N.: 157-861-18-00 Property Address: 5715 Derby Court, Oceanside, CA 92057 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE § 2923.3(a) and (d), THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION REFERRED TO BELOW IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE RECORDED COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR. NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED 本文件包含一个信息摘要 참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보 요약서가 있습니다 NOTA: SE ADJUNTA UN RESUMEN DE LA INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE DOCUMENTO TALA: MAYROONG BUOD NG IMPORMASYON SA DOKUMENTONG ITO NA NAKALAKIP LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI LIỆU NÀY IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 01/31/2007. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Trustor: RUBEN P. MEDINA AND RICARDA C. ALONZO-MEDINA, HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS Duly Appointed Trustee: Western Progressive, LLC Deed of Trust Recorded 02/06/2007 as Instrument No. 2007-0084666 in book ---, page-- and of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 05/29/2019 at 10:30 AM Place of Sale: AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE EAST COUNTY REGIONAL CENTER BY THE STATUE, 250 E. MAIN STREET, EL CAJON, CA 92020 Estimated amount of unpaid balance, reasonably estimated costs and other charges: $ 608,103.73 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE THE TRUSTEE WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN ON A STATE OR NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, OR A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR

T.S. No.: 190102003 Notice Of Trustee’s Sale Loan No.: 17-1147 Order No. 95521294 APN: 265-220-24-00 You Are In Default Under A Deed Of Trust Dated 3/7/2017. Unless You Take Action To Protect Your Property, It May Be Sold At A Public Sale. If You Need An Explanation Of The Nature Of The Proceeding Against You, You Should Contact A Lawyer. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, cashier’s check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a cashier’s check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Trustor: Francisco Claisse Bou and Patricia Davis, Husband and Wife as Community Property Duly Appointed Trustee: Del Toro Loan Servicing, Inc. Recorded 3/13/2017 as Instrument No. 2017-0114582 in book , page The subject Deed of Trust was modified by Loan Modification recorded as Instrument 20180088312 and recorded on 03/07/2018. of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 5/14/2019 at 10:30 AM Place of Sale: by the statue at entrance to East County Regional Center, 250 East Main Street, El Cajon, CA Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $1,497,630.02 Street Address or other common designation of real property: 6840 Paseo Delicias Rancho Santa Fe Area, CA 92067 A.P.N.: 265-220-24-00 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of

T.S. No.: 2019-0101 Loan No.: VALLEY DRIVE APN: 177-20314-00 Property Address: 514 VALLEY DRIVE, VISTA, CA 92084 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 11/25/2015. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied,

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T he C oast News

APRIL 26, 2019

Planning Commission approves Cardiff school project By Aaron Burgin

ENCINITAS — Cardiff School District’s plans to redesign the campus cleared a critical hurdle as the Encinitas Planning Commission voted April 18 to approve the project. But the Planning Commission’s vote sidesteps the controversial issue of the school’s proposed boundary adjustment and construction of a multi-purpose room on a section of George Berkich Park. The rare 3-0 Planning Commission vote — commissioner Brett Farrow abstained because he lives across the street from the school and Bruce Ehlers was absent — splits the project into two phases. Phase 1 includes the demolition and construction of eight buildings on campus, while Phase 2 — the multipurpose room,

What’s more important to community than educating its children in an updated and safe environment?” Kurt Groseclose former Encinitas Planning Commissioner and resident

expanded parking lot and boundary adjustment — would be contingent upon City Council, state and federal approval. “We don’t need to adjudicate the park boundary tonight,” Commissioner Kevin Doyle said. “Even with reservations ... I am leaning towards approval, but with that being said, it’s a thorny, thorny issue. “It’s a nicely designed school, and I wish we didn’t

have the park complication here, because it is a complication and it isn’t something we can just wish away,” Doyle said. Cardiff School District officials have been working on the campus overhaul since 2016, when voters passed Measure GG, a $22 million bond measure. The plan includes the construction of new buildings and the construction of a new multi-purpose room and out-

door terrace-style seating on land that is currently part of the district-owned George Berkich Park. The park’s baseball field would be eliminated under the proposal, and the district would join the two grass fields, currently separated by playground equipment, to create a longer, contiguous field that could be host to two simultaneous soccer matches. The district needs the approval of both the state and National Park Service for the project’s second phase because of a 1993 federal grant agreement that requires the park remain in perpetuity unless the agencies endorse a boundary change. That agreement requires the district to replace the lost park land with a corresponding amount of land. School district officials

have proposed redrawing the boundary to include the school’s parking lot, which would double in size in the new plan, as well as opening the school’s garden for community use. The city of Encinitas, which also would have to endorse the proposal. A packed and divided council chambers on April 18 pitted school supporters, donning powder-blue T-shirts, against project opponents in a sometimes heated hourlong discussion. Supporters echoed a common refrain: the district has been responsive to the community, and has developed a project favored by a majority of the community that balances the community’s feedback with the district’s desire to create a safe and modern campus for its pupils. “We have a 100-year-old

school that has fallen into disrepair with 50-year-old classrooms that are outdated, and a potential safety issue under the current design, all of which will be resolved with this remodel,” said Kurt Groseclose, a former planning commissioner and resident. “What’s more important to community than educating its children in an updated and safe environment?” A no vote, school officials said, would set the project back at least a year due to construction timing and would increase the project’s overall price tag by at least $1 million. Opponents, many of whom are part of the group Cardiff Preservation Society, continued to rail against the project, which they said was flawed and won’t gain the approvals needed to proceed with the second phase. Officials with the Department of State Parks in a letter earlier this month expressed skepticism in the district’s boundary adjustment largely because the parking lot, they said, would serve the school more so than the park users. In addition to questions as to whether the state and federal agencies will sign off on the boundary change, opponents have amended a lawsuit they filed against the district to include a bond challenge, arguing that the district has included several buildings that were not mentioned in the language of Measure GG. “There are too many unresolved issues at this time, there is a likelihood the plan will require revision, so approval of the permit at this time is premature,” said Eleanor Musick, one of the more vocal opponents of the project. “This can needs to be kicked down the road.” Supporters acknowledged that the opposition group early on did add a lot of suggestions that contributed to an improved proposal, but said the latest complaints and lawsuits were “grasping at legal straws,” with one speaker likening it to Monty Python and the Black Knight “who has his limbs cut off but he keeps fighting.” “To pretend now that people haven’t been heard is an absolute fiction,” one of the speakers said. Commissioners said they believed the plan was compliant with city codes and said that if the second phase didn’t receive approval, the district would have to return for an amendment to the first phase. Commissioner Al Apuzzo said he appreciated that the district was not trying to build a super-dense campus with two-story buildings. “What I recognize is that if this were a private developer, the buildings would be 30-feet high, they would have 50% lot coverage,” Apuzzo said. “I appreciate the sensitivity to the community ... and I think the overriding effort of the school district and its community outreach leads me to support what’s laid out.”


APRIL 26, 2019

CALENDAR Know something that’s going on? Send it to calendar@ coastnewsgroup.com

APRIL 26

SMELL THE ROSES

fly Encounter and a Makers’ org/classes.htm. Market. For more information, visit eventsforumcarlsbad.com.

APRIL 29

RESUME WORKSHOP ARCHAEOLOGY BARBECUE

The San Diego Archaeological Center invites the community to its 16th annual barbecue from noon to 3 p.m. April 27, At 16666 San Pasqual Valley Road, Escondido. There will also be a free Employment Seminar at 10:30 a.m. at the center. For more information, visit sandiegoarchaeology.org.

The Del Mar Rose Society will have locally grown roses on exhibit from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 26 at the Del Mar County Library, 1309 Camino del Mar, Del Mar. This exhibition consists of entries by members of the Del Mar Rose Society for its ON THE OREGON TRAIL 2014 Rose Show. The Escondido Genealogical Society will meet at YOUR TICKET TO RIDE If you are planning your 10 am April 27 at Park Avevisit to the San Diego Coun- nue Community Center, 210 ty Fair, make a note that you Park Ave., Escondido. Topic can get tickets, now through will be “Oregon Trail and a April 30, for the June 5 and whole lot more,” based on a June 6 “Pay One Price” Ride family member’s diary from Days, offering unlimited 1854.

rides from noon to 8 p.m. Get tickets at https://sdfair.com/ TIME TO SHRED The Vista Village office tickets/unlimited-rides/. of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage is inviting WIDOWS, WIDOWERS MEET North County Widows community members to its and Widowers Club will at- Free Shredding Community tend the Oceanside Twilight Event from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Dinner Dance at 5 p.m. April April 27, at 40 Main St., Suite 26 at the Oceanside Elks, E-100, Vista. For more infor444 Country Club Lane, mation, visit ColdwellBankOceanside. Prime rib dinner, erHomes.com. $15. RSVP to (760) 438-5491.

APRIL 27

CREEK TO BAY IN CARLSBAD

EARTH DAY FESTIVAL

An Earth Day Festival will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 27 at Alta Vista Botanical Gardens, 1270 Vale Terrace Drive, Vista. For more information, call Farmer Jones at (760) 8226824.

The city of Carlsbad Watershed Protection Program is hosting a Creek to Bay Clean Up event from 9 a.m. to noon April 27 at Haymar Drive, Carlsbad. Participation is free. Advanced registration at carlsbadca.gov/ TIME FOR BAGS & BAUBLES You are invited, April earthmonth but walk-ups are 28, to spend the day shopwelcome. ping for a cause at a private estate in Rancho Santa Fe. ENCINITAS STREET FAIR The Encinitas Spring FACE’s Bags & Baubles siStreet Fair, sponsored by lent auction will feature a Scripps Health, returns to collection of new and “gently Downtown Encinitas from 9 loved” designer handbags, a.m. to 5 p.m. April 27 and vegan handbags, jewelry, April 28 along Coast High- accessories, sunglasses, and way 101 from D Street to J men’s items. Guests will be Street, with more than 450 treated to wine, appetizers, vendors, plus a Beer Garden. and desserts. and opportunity drawing prizes.

APRIL 28

FRIENDSHIP GARDENERS

Friendship Gardeners of Del Mar will hold its next meeting from 1 to 3 p.m. April 27, for a presentation, “Attracting Birds to Your Yard.” Call (858) 755-6570 for meeting location.

WINGS OF HOPE

The Elizabeth Hospice hosts the “Wings of Hope” butterfly release from 1 to 3 p.m. April 28 at the California Center for the Arts, 340 N. Escondido Blvd., Escondido. Attendees will have the opportunity to rememNATIONAL HORSE SHOW ber, honor and celebrate The Del Mar National the special people who have Horse Show is back through touched their life. Admission May 5 at the Del Mar Fair- and parking are free. grounds, Del Mar. The Evening Of Musical Freestyles FAITH AND FRIENDS will be at 7 p.m. April 27. The Catholic Widows This Dressage event features and Widowers of North CounOlympic and World Chamty support group for those pion horse and rider pairs displaying strength and el- who desire to foster friendegance in detailed routines ships through various social set to music. At 6:45 p.m. activities will attend Mass May 4 will feature the speed, at St. Thomas More Catholic agility, and show jumping Church and lunch at Nucci's $100,000 Grand Prix of Del Italian Cafe, Carlsbad April Mar competition. More in- 28 and meet for Bocce Ball formation at (858) 792-4288; and dinner at Elk's Club, Vista April 30. Reservations are or delmarnational.com. necessary at (858) 674-4324. FLOWERS AND FASHION

The Forum Carlsbad is hosting a nine-day public celebration called “April in Bloom” from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 27 through May 5 at 1923 Calle Barcelona, Carlsbad, with flowers, a fashion show and a Butter-

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T he C oast News

A hands–on resume workshop is being held at 1 p.m. April 29 in the Foundation Room of the Oceanside Civic Center Library, 330 N. Coast Highway. This free program is sponsored by the Friends of the Oceanside Public Library and is open to all. Registration is required at (760) 435-5600. For more information, visit oceansidepubliclibrary.org.

APRIL 30 HIT THE ROAD

The Carlsbad/North County Travel Club meets at 4 p.m. April 30 in Swami's Restaurant, 1506 Encinitas Blvd., Encinitas. The program includes a presentation on trips within the USA including Fall Foliage; Nashville; Texas and New Orleans; National Parks; New England: Hot Air Balloon Festival; tours to Canada and final details tor a trip to Israel, the Holy Land. All interested travelers are welcome. There is no fee. For reservations or information, call (760) 603-8030.

Taste of Cardiff from 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. May 2. Join the community in celebrating the local culinary flavors and crafted libations that make the Cardiff-by-the-Sea district unique. For more information and to buy tickets, visit cardiff101.com. Taste tickets are $30. Taste & Sip tickets are $40.

BLOW-OUT BOOK SALE PRAYER BREAKFAST

Encinitas Mayor Catherine Blakespear invites you to the Mayor's Interfaith Community Prayer Breakfast 7:30 to 9 a.m. May 2, at the Encinitas Community and Senior Center, 1140 Oakcrest Park Drive, Encinitas, in cooperation with the San Dieguito Interfaith Ministerial Association on the National Day of Prayer. Guest speaker, Rev. Beth Johnson on “Unity in Community.”

‘I’M SORRY, WHAT?’

The Gloria McClellan Center will hold free hearing screenings and hearing aid cleanings from 9:30to 11:30 a.m. May 2 at 1400 Vale Terrace Drive, Vista. An appointment is required at (760) 643-5288.

MAY 3

‘PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN VET’ CHABAD SUMMER CAMPS

Join Oceanside Public Library for an unveiling of the exhibit “Portrait of a Woman Veteran” at 6 p.m. May 3 at the Civic Center Library, 330 N. Coast Highway, during ArtWalk. Female veterans were paired with local artists to discuss what it means to be a veteran. Artists then created portraits inspired by the conversation to honor the veteran.

MAY 1

LIFE LECTURES

Chabad of Oceanside/ Vista is accepting registration for summer camps, July 22 through Aug. 2 at 1930 Sunset Drive, Vista, including Arts 'n Crafts, trips, Shabbat parties, creative movement, swimming, sports, drama and more. Register at JewishOceanside.com.

PARKINSON’S SUPPORT

The La Costa chapter of the North County Parkinson's Support group meets at 1 p.m. May 1 at Christ Presbyterian Church, 7807 Centella St., Carlsbad. The featured speaker is Irene Litvan of the UCSD Movements Disorders group. Call (760) 519-9588 or visit ncpsg. org/ for more information.

WELCOME COFFEE

A Carlsbad Newcomers Coffee will be held at 9:45 a.m. May 1 at the Carlsbad Senior Center, 799 Pine Ave., with guest speaker Lyn Berry and her puppy-in-training, Wallace. Come learn about the volunteers and dogs who have assisted people with disabilities to live with more independence.

Hear Kait Cole, Aquaponics program manager on “ECOLIFE Aquaponics” at 1 p.m. May 3, with Katie Sanderson, Oceanside Museum of Art’s Program Manager at 2:30 p.m. on “What’s Happening this Spring at OMA.” Administration Bldg. at the Oceanside College Campus, 1 Barnard Drive. Pick up a $1 parking permit in Lot 1 A and park in Lot 1A. Check us out at miracosta.edu/life or call (760) 757-2121, ext. 6972.

MAY 4

ICE CREAM SOCIAL

Come celebrate Cardiff Schools' 43rd annual Ice Cream Social from 10a.m. to 3 p.m. May 4 at Cardiff Elementary, 1888 Montgomery Ave., Cardiff. There will be a silent auction, opportunity drawing, games, jumpies, live entertainment, food, ice REPUBLICAN WOMEN MEET Reservations are due cream sundaes and more. by May 1 for the Republican All proceeds support Cardiff Women of California-San Schools. Marcos meeting at 11 a.m., May 6 at St. Mark Country GET EMPOWERED Club, 1750 San Pablo Drive, The city of Carlsbad is San Marcos. The featured hosting the “Joy of Living,” a speakers will be “Coach” special author talk with Lisa Dennis Snyder and June Druxman, the founder of Cutter, candidate for the FIT4MOM, at 6:30 p.m. May 77th California State As- 4 at Carlsbad City Library, sembly District in 2020. Res- 1775 Dove Lane, Carlsbad. ervations must include $30 Admission is free. For more to RWC-SM sent to S. Glass, information, call (760) 6021164 Sunrise Way, San Mar- 2024 or visit carlsbadlibrary. BE ONE WITH THE GARDEN Try some Forest/Nature cos, Ca. 92078. Questions to org. Bathing - Shinrin-yoku, 9 to (760) 744-0953. SAN ELIJO COUNTRY FAIR 11 a.m. April 28 at the San Enjoy the free San EliDiego Botanic Garden, 230 jo Elementary Country Fair Quail Gardens Drive, EnciMay 3 and 4, carnival thrill nitas. Cost is $40. For more TASTE OF CARDIFF Cardiff 101 Main Street rides, petting zoo, pony information, visit sdbgarden. presents the 10th annual rides, carnival games, arts

MAY 2

and crafts, live auction, entertainment, food trucks and more. Attraction tickets (for rides, games, etc.) can be purchased at the event or online at seesfair.com. For more information, contact Malia Goss, vice president of Country Fair at seescountryfairpto@gmail.com. Encinitas Friends of the Library Bookstore will hold a book sale from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 4, 540 Cornish Drive, Encinitas. Most books will be from 25 cents to $1. Visit encinitaslibfriends.org.

FUN WITH BAGS N’ BREWS

Bags N’ Brews Cornhole Tournament is coming to San Marcos from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Hollandia Park, 12 Mission Hills Court, San Marcos. There will be a prize pool of $1,500, local craft breweries, food trucks and family activities including lawn games and jump houses. There is no charge for admission or parking. for more information, visit san-marcos.net/ Home/Components/Calendar/Event/9200/5347?curm=5&cury=2019.

HERITAGE PARK DAY

Join the Heritage Park Day event from noon to 4 p.m. May 4 at 220 Peyri Road, Oceanside. Enjoy live music, dance performances, an antique car show, historic building tours, food booths and vendors. Admission is $5 for adults and $1 for children. Proceeds go to Friends of Oceanside Parks and Recreation. For more information, visit oceansiderec.com or call (760) 435-5041.

MAY 6

SUPPORT FOR PARKINSON’S

North County Parkinson’s Support Group meets from 10 a.m. to noon May 6 at San Rafael Church, 17252 Bernardo Center Drive in the Parish Hall. Call (858) 354-2498 or (760) 749-8234.

MAY 7

WIDOWS, WIDOWERS MEET

Suite 130, Escondido. To register, call (760) 644-4426 or contact Lisa.Marcolongo@ ehospice.org.

MAY 8

INSIDE TIPS ON TRAVEL

Learn how to plan an exciting, affordable vacation, how to book travel on land and sea using reputable online travel companies, travel rewards credit cards, and discounted flight options at a free presentation with Barbara Smith, Community College instructor and world traveler at 1 p.m. May 8 at the Mission Branch Library Community Room, 3861 Mission Ave., Oceanside.

HEALTH WORKSHOPS

Registration is open now the Encinitas Community Center health workshops with workbooks, handouts and healthy snack samples with GO Health Coaching from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Wednesdays, May 8 through May 29 at 1140 Oakcrest Park Drive, Encinitas. Cost is $181.50. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/GOHealthCoaching-Workshops

MAY 9

MENTAL HEALTH FAIR

The Oceanside Public Library will host a Mental Health Resource Fair, to raise awareness of local mental health organizations and destigmatizing mental illness, from 2 to 6 p.m. May 9 at the Civic Center Library Community Rooms, 330 N. Coast Highway, Oceanside. Visit oceansidepubliclibrary.org for more information.

MAY 11

JOBS AT SUMMER FAIR

The Del Mar Fairgrounds is hosting a Job Fair from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. May 11 at the fairgrounds, for positions at this year’s San Diego County Fair. Representatives from several departments will be on hand looking for ambassadors, guest services reps., info booth reps., midway ticket sellers, parking directors, parking cashiers, facility workers, EMTs, traffic controllers, shuttle drivers, tram drivers and security guards (both armed and unarmed).

North County Widows and Widowers Club will host a “Come along with Shirley” event. The bus leaves at 9 a.m. May 7 from the Vista Senior Center, 1400 Vale Terrace Drive, Vista, for a desalination plant tour and visit to Hubbs Seaworld Research Center. RSVP to (760) 643-2828. Cost is $43 to include breakfast at “Beach GET IN ON GOLF BALL DROP Break.” Encinitas Coastal Rotary Club invites you to sign up for its fifth annual Golf EXPLORE YOUR MIND Learn the benefits of Ball Drop May 11 at Encinibeing around water, at the tas Ranch Golf Course, 1275 “Blue Mind, Red Mind” Quail Gardens Drive, Encinevent with guest speakers itas. Grand prize is $2,000. from Wallace Nichol’s Blue Register at encinitascoastalMind Team, at 7 p.m. May 7 rotary.org. at the San Marcos Theater, hosted by Natural Healthy TASTE OF VISTA Haven. Cost is $15. For more Early-bird Tickets are information, Visit http://nat- available now for the Taste uralhealthyhaven.com. of Vista, planned from 5 to 8 p.m. June 19. For questions, e-mail downtownvistavilVOLUNTEER AT HOSPICE The Elizabeth Hospice lage@gmail.com. invites individuals interested in helping adults and chil- SUMMER SOLSTICE COMING dren impacted by serious Tickets are on sale now illness and those grieving at https://visitdelmarvillage. the death of a loved one, to com/summersolstice2019/ a free volunteer orientation for the Del Mar Village Sumsession. from 1 to 2:30 p.m. mer Solstice 2019, from 5 to 8 May 7 at Elizabeth Hospice p.m. June 20 at Powerhouse office, 500 La Terraza Blvd., Park, Del Mar.

SAVE THE DATE


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APRIL 26, 2019

SPOUSES

Unemployment rate ticks up despite job gains

CONTINUED FROM A7

item a solution in search of a problem. Although the discussion was mostly limited to the abstract, the item preceded and was largely prompted by the potential reappointment of Design Review Board chair Tim Haviland — the spouse of Councilwoman Ellie Haviland. Four candidates applied for the position and interviewed in front of the council on April 15: Haviland, Gala Yayla, Karen Lare and Terri Pavelko. Lare won the vote of Druker and Gaasterland, while council members Dwight Worden and Sherryl Parks supported Haviland’s reappointment: a 2-2 vote. The split vote left the council with the option to either resubmit their votes or leave the window open for three months — with Haviland still seated as chair. They opted for the latter, in the hopes that other candidates might come out of the woodwork. Of the 21 residents who addressed the item, all but one spoke in support of Tim Haviland’s reappointment. Some residents lamented that recent dialogues on conflict of interest would impact said reappointment. “I think there’s some effort being made to politicize this and I think that’s

DEL MAR City Council members, from left, Terry Gaasterland, Dave Druker, Sherryl Parks, Dwight Worden and Ellie Haviland. Two council members and several residents expressed concern that spouses’ simultaneous service on quasi-judicial city boards would create a perception of bias or actual bias. Photo by Lexy Brodt

too risky, to play politics with something that’s so vital to this community,” said resident Bud Emerson. Laura DiMarco, who spoke in support of a po-

tential policy at the March meeting, said the city has long had an “unwritten rule” of prohibiting spouses from serving concurrently on City Council and one of the quasi-judicial bodies. “The reason why this unwritten rule was so important is because it would prevent the kind of hard feelings that could develop with the City Council, within the community, because you’re forced into … a very personal decision about whether you should vote for or against the relative of a colleague,” she said. About 70 residents

submitted red dots on the item in March, with approximately 50 supporting at the least a consideration of a policy prohibiting the appointment of significant others. In April, an anonymous local newsletter titled the Woodpecker conducted a survey on the issue, and reported that of the 391 respondents, 83% believe Del Mar should adopt a policy prohibiting a significant other of a council member from concurrently serving on the Design Review Board or Planning Commission. The newsletter asserts that the City Council ought to consider the majority

take: “City council members do not serve our city well by ignoring a voice that offers a valid or majority point of view,” it reads. In early April, City Attorney Leslie Devaney released a memo in response to the topic, saying that the lack of a policy does not expose the city to liability, but that the presence of two household members on two quasi-judicial bodies does “(present) special challenges to ensure that due-process rights of parties subject to quasi-judicial processes are preserved.” “Even where actual bias cannot be avoided, due process can be preserved through recusal,” the memo reads. “For this reason, there is no requirement that a City prohibit concurrent service.” Several community members pointed out at the March 4 meeting that recusal might pose an issue for a small city like Del Mar, where a recused council member might mean a 2-2 vote during a De Novo hearing. With the issue reigniting an ever-present, but often dormant divisiveness in the coastal city, Worden said the council bears some responsibility in mending the divide. “I think we will get through it,” he said. Although he laments the way the policy was brought forward, he said he would be willing to discuss a policy that deals with recusal in the case of a De Novo hearing. However, he said prohibiting significant others from serving simultaneously on two decision-making bodies would make for “a bad policy.”

REGION — San Diego County’s unadjusted unemployment edged up slightly to 3.7% in March, despite both farm and nonfarm employment showing gains, according to figures released April 19 by the California Employment Development Department. The region’s unemployment rate was up from a revised 3.5% in February and above the March 2018 rate of 3.4%. In January, the county's unemployment rate was 3.8% — its highest rate since the third quarter of 2017. The latest figures show that nonfarm employment increased by 4,300 jobs from 1,489,700 in February to 1,494,000 in March, while farm jobs increased by 200, from 8,500 to 8,700. Government jobs increased by 1,700 from February to March, the most of any industry in the county. According to the EDD, 1,400 of those government jobs were added in local government. The leisure and hospitality and educational and health services industries also showed gains of 1,600 and 1,500 jobs, respectively. “Despite a modest increase in the unemployment rate, the report still shows that San Diego added jobs both monthover-month, and year-overyear,” said Sean Karafin, the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce's vice president of policy and economic research. “The market is still essentially at full employment and talent attraction and retention continues to be an area of focus for growing employers.” Construction jobs decreased by 1,300 from February to March, the largest cutback of any industry. Trade, transportation and utilities jobs also decreased by 1,200 monthover-month. Farm employment dropped by 500 jobs, from 9,200 to 8,700. Year-over-year employment in the manufacturing, professional and business services, educational and health services, leisure and hospitality and government industries all increased by at least 3,000 jobs. Construction jobs also fell by 1,100 while information and financial activities jobs fell by 400 and 100, respectively. The state’s unemployment rate ticked up slightly from an adjusted 4.2% in February to an unadjusted 4.3% in March. Nationwide, unemployment held steady at 3.8%. — City News Service

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APRIL 26, 2019

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Odd Files Entrepreneurial Spirit Scientists are aghast at an eBay listing offering a rare baby T-rex fossil for a $2.95 million buy-it-now price. Fossil hunter Alan Detrich, who discovered the fossil in 2013, is believed to have created the listing in February for the 68 million-year-old artifact, which until recently had been on loan to the Natural History Museum at the University of Kansas. CNBC reported the specimen has a 15-footlong body, 21-inch skull and serrated teeth, and Detrich estimates its age at death to be about 4 years. The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology issued a statement expressing concerns that “the fossil, which represents a unique part of life’s past, may be lost from the public trust. ... Only casts and other replicas of vertebrate fossils should be traded, not the fossils themselves.” [CNBC, 4/17/2019] Another Day at Walmart At around 8:30 p.m. on April 10, things got interesting at an Eau Claire, Wisconsin, Walmart store. Lisa Smith, 46, entered the store with her unleashed dog, Bo, according to police, and as Bo distracted shoppers and store staff, Smith pulled apart store displays, putting them in her cart.

After being asked by workers to leave the store, Smith went out to the parking lot and started practicing karate moves. Bo grabbed a box of Jiffy Cornbread Muffin Mix and also attempted to leave the store. Meanwhile, Smith’s son, Benny Vann, 25, had made his way to the back of the store, where he completely undressed, exposing himself to other shoppers, and grabbed new clothes from store racks before attempting to run over police officers with his scooter. WHO TV reported Smith was charged with disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and misdemeanor bail jumping. Vann racked up charges of lewd and lascivious behavior, disorderly conduct and retail theft. Bo, police said, received only a warning for his theft of the muffin mix. [WHO TV, 4/13/2019] — Crossville, Tennessee, police officers pulled over Sally Selby, 45, at 5 a.m. on April 5 as she motored down Highway 127 — in the slow lane — driving a Walmart mobility scooter. She was on her way to the Waffle House, she said, to buy a cup of coffee. WTVF reported that Selby initially told officers she had built the scooter, but Walmart confirmed it was one of theirs and had surveillance video of Selby driving the scooter out of the store to back up their story. She was arrested for theft. [WTVF, 4/9/2019]

The Continuing Crisis In Cary, North Carolina, Wake County Deputy J. Rattelade, responding to a report of a car crash on the evening of April 5, found one of the drivers, Derwood Johnson, 36, of Fort Worth, Texas, had gotten out of his car and removed all his clothes before starting to walk across the street. As Deputy Rattelade tried to arrest him, Johnson hit her on the head, reported WTVD. With the help of other first responders and some pepper spray, Rattelade was able to subdue Johnson, who was charged with assault on a government official. Rattelade was unhurt; Johnson was taken to an area hospital for further evaluation. [WTVD, 4/6/2019] — On April 13, a family in Newtown, Connecticut, returned home from a morning shopping trip to find Joseph Achenbach, 35, wandering around inside their home naked. The Watertown man had crashed his SUV in the homeowners’ backyard and moseyed inside through an unlocked glass door. Achenbach’s clothes could not be found at the scene, leading police to believe he had been naked when he crashed. FOX61 reported that he was charged with second-degree criminal trespassing and driving while intoxicated. [FOX61, 4/15/2019]

Stay in School When the Wilkinson School in El Granada, California, received a bomb threat on the morning of April 11, it didn’t take long for administrators to empty the building of staff and students. But law officers searching the grounds found nothing — because the threatening phone call actually came from 2,100 miles away, in Woodville, Mississippi. That’s where a 15-yearold student intended to threaten her own Wilkinson County High School, reported The San Jose Mercury News, but apparently didn’t check her Google search thoroughly enough before dialing. [San Jose Mercury News, 4/13/2019] Ewwwww! We’ve all swatted at pesky sweat bees buzzing around our heads, but a Taiwanese woman suffered a more invasive form of irritation after participating in the Qingming Festival, or Tomb Sweeping Day, when Taiwanese people visit their families’ graves to spruce them up. The 29-year-old woman, identified by her surname, He, thought she had gotten dirt in her eye, but when the eye later swelled shut, she went to Fooyin University Hospital for help, The Washington Post reported. Hung Chi-ting, the hospital’s head of ophthalmology, looked in her eye through a microscope and

was startled to see insect legs wiggling in her eye socket. The doctor eventually extracted four sweat bees from her eyelid. The bees, which crave salt, were feeding off of He’s tears, he explained. He is expected to fully recover, and the bees, still alive, were kept for further study. [The Washington Post, 4/10/2019]

Suspicions Confirmed A concerned animal lover in Devon, England, contacted authorities on April 8 to report that a fox she had been watching hadn’t moved for several days, reported Fox News. In response, Ellie

Burt, an officer with the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals, suggested trying the “broom test,” which didn’t make the fox stir, but Burt was told it “tracked them with its eyes and seemed to be breathing well.” When Burt arrived on the scene, she quickly diagnosed the problem: The fox was a fake, “stuffed by a taxidermist. He’d clearly been placed under a bush outside of the houses as a prank,” Burt said. “Someone had been moving it around the neighborhood.” Burt discarded the fox “to avoid any further calls.” [Fox News, 4/12/2019]

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APRIL 26, 2019

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APRIL 26, 2019

SECTION

Beach soccer returns to Oceanside By Lucia Viti

Oceanside is revving up its beachfront fun factor with the Beach Soccer Championships scheduled for the weekend of Cinco de Mayo. The Beach Soccer Championships will host amateur youth and coed games, as well as professional domestic and international players. A beer garden, live Mariachi bands, food, music, and retail vendors will sidle the nonstop action. Owned and operated by Frank Zimmerman Sr., and operated and marketed by Frankie Zimmerman Jr., the annual event, now its fifth year, has been ranked among the top three beach soccer club events in the world. Boasting the elite of the elites, the competitive tournament will showcase American and international players from Mexico, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Netherlands, UAE, Brazil, Colombia, Canada, Peru, Senegal, Japan, Tahiti and Switzerland. Over 250 teams will compete on 28 beachfront courts. Spectators will enjoy a ringside view from a stadium built specifically for the showdown. Touting its nickname, BeSoCha (Beach Soccer Championships), the father and son duo describe the weekend as the “perfect summer kick-off beach party,” filled with healthy lifestyle components. “Merging the beach culture with the soccer community is the perfect concoction for the cool energy and healthy lifestyle components that surround the BeSoCha lifestyle,” they said. Senior admits that while many Americans have never heard of beach soccer, the game’s extremely popular in South America. Born on the beaches of Brazil, it’s one of the fastest growing sports of the past decade. Challenging in ways that moving on sand will challenge any athlete, beach soccer doubles as a cross-training tool for grass soccer players. “Beach soccer’s a great cross training tool,” Zimmerman Sr. said. “Because moving on sand is unpredictably variable and you can’t roll the ball

jean gillette

Sprinting into spring

I

on the sand the way you do on grass, it’s played primarily in the air. Athletes are forced to use different playing techniques and skill sets. Juggling air balls doesn’t bother beach soccer players the way it challenges those playing on grass.” Brimming with nonstop hustle, the sand-floor game is everything but boring. “Everyone loves the excitement of watching the beach soccer pros fly through the air with their overhead kicks,” he continued. The high school, college and youth-group soccer coach described the weekend as an idea that stemmed from “an effort to add fun into this crazy youth-sports world that we live in.” “Statistics show that 3.3 million kids quit youth soccer before the age of TURN TO BEACH SOCCER ON B4

don’t believe I have seen a child walk through the library in two weeks. That is to say, they hurtle through at top speed. I protest. I holler. I plead, to no avail. Spring has sprung and whatever signal goes off inside of us when the weather turns mild, is loudly ringing inside every kid between 5 and 25. I suspect some of the younger teachers would like to run, too. I actually view this time of the year with a hidden smile. I love watching the youngsters start to gambol like new lambs. The older ones gather in small, all-girl or all-boy groups to whisper and giggle as they sneak looks at, or occasionally chase, each other. It is also the time of year when the boys compete to see who can leap up and touch to top of the library door. And now, in the 21st century, it is a time of equal exhibitions of girl power. I needed to rearrange some rather large bookcases in the school’s library. I thought about waiting until some willing grown-ups were at hand, but waiting is not my favorite thing. So, when a group of high-energy, adorable sixthgrade girls wandered in and asked if they could do anything to help, I decided to go with some female muscle. Worry not. I was very cautious. I had no desire to have anyone pull a muscle, female or otherwise. But these girls were amazing. They listened to what I asked, did what I told them, worked as a unit, and, by George, we moved bookcases. And they did it without breaking a sweat. I nearly broke into a Spice Girls song. I was that

THE BEACH SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIPS will attract more than 250 teams for the competition May 3 to May 5 at North Pacific Street in Oceanside. Courtesy photos

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T he C oast News

APRIL 26, 2019

ARCOSANTI is an experiment in sustainable urban living situated 70 miles north of Phoenix. The community hosts more than 40,000 visitors annually, and more than 8,000 have participated in workshops. Monthly arts festivals are held on the grounds. Photos by E’Louise Ondash

Experimental Arizona ‘city’ ahead of its time hit the road e’louise ondash

W

e can’t see the skyline of Arcosanti from the road or even from the parking lot. We find the best view is from a trail on the opposite slope across a shallow valley. From here, the futuristic concrete-paneled buildings and arches, settled among the boulders and the antithetical Italian cypresses — are more easily

visible. It’s been several decades (let’s just say it was sometime in the last millennium) since we last visited Arcosanti, an experiment in sustainable urban living founded in 1970 by Italian architect Paolo Soleri (19192013). The word “urban” might seem incongruous, since this “city” sits in the wide-open Arizona desert and has only about 70 year-round residents, but Soleri’s vision was for an eventual population of 5,000. This would be accomplished through the concept of “arcology” — the melding of architecture and ecology — which calls for cost-ef-

fective, pedestrian-friendly, dense housing surrounded by large open spaces to encourage socialization and provide easy access to the natural world. Arcosanti then and now operates on a code of reducing energy use, waste and pollution, recycling water and cultivating gardens to supply food for residents. Now nearly 50 years old, the community has accomplished some of these goals on a limited basis. While the permanent population remains tiny, the number of annual visitors has ballooned to 40,000-plus, and more than 8,000 have participated in workshops over the

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years. You could say that Arcosanti is on track when it comes to its mission, which is “to explore the experiential and educational benefits of combining architecture with ecology,” explains our guide, 31-year-old Tim Bell who arrived at Arcosanti in 2017. He and his wife, whom he met at Arcosanti, live in a 1,000-square-foot apartment that features four bedrooms, a bathroom, a kitchen, two living rooms and a balcony that overlooks the canyon. Arcosanti’s property stretches over 865 acres; 15 of the 25 proposed acres have been developed. Ironically, though Bell spent some of his formative years only an hour from Arcosanti, he didn’t learn about it until he was living in New York City. “I was attracted to the project because years of urban living left me feeling very disconnected from the natural world,” explains Bell, who has a background in theater, writing and producing. “I like that at Arcosanti I am constantly aware of my own behavior and how it might impact both the environment and the people who I share the planet with. Living (here) often feels like living in a city… where nature has been so holistically taken into account that you can't ignore its presence and value.” Bell is Arcosanti’s di-

PRE-CAST CONCRETE panels, painted in the colors of the desert, are assembled to create a futuristic-looking space for large work projects, events and performances.

rector of community engagement. Part of that job is raising money for the self-funded project, which is supported by its café; workshops; overnight stays in bedrooms, suites and dorms; art, music and film festivals; and donations and grants. And then there are the iconic Cosanti windbells, cast from clay and bronze in the on-site foundry. Sizes range from small to massive, and each is unique. The bells have become the symbol of Soleri, Arcosanti and its goals. “We seek to prove, through intelligent and thoughtful urban design,

that people can live in a city and have a close relationship with nature,” Bell says. Arcosanti’s board meets this spring to decide where to go from here, and Bell believes that Arcosanti’s mission will remain chiefly educational. As for his personal future, “my wife and I plan to stay for at least five years. After that, we’ll pause to reflect on if we still have value to bring the project, and if the project is still providing value for us.” For info on tours, events and stays, visit arcosanti. org. For more photos and commentary, visit www.facebook.com/elouise.ondash.

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achievements for North San Construction is underDiego County. Send information way at McKellar McGowan’s via email to community@ New Home Community, coastnewsgroup.com. Carlyle, a collection of 33 single-level residences, three single-family and two duplex townhomes in the FRIENDS SALUTE BILL The community is hon- village of Carlsbad. Robert oring Bill Milholich, of El Hidey Architects designed Camino Rental, 833 Oceans- the structures, and Dawn ide Blvd., Oceanside, who Davidson of DLI consulted is retiring after 43 years. on the interiors. “Dusty shoe” tours will Milholich, his wife Candy, and right-hand man Ted take place in May and June, Donnelly, are longstanding and pre-sales will begin members of Oceanside’s in summer 2019. For more Chamber of Commerce, and information, visit CarlyleMilholich has sold the busi- CarlsbadVillage.com or call (760) 810-4442. ness to Sunbelt rentals. Friends remember Christmas parties where all FREE MIRACOSTA TUITION you had to do is tell a joke Starting fall 2019, and get $50, family days in MiraCosta College is subSan Diego on a chartered sidizing tuition for all firstbus, “and many other great time, full-time college stuthings he has done for the dents to attend MiraCosta community.” College for two years. All first-time students who attend college, and COOKE SCHOLARS NAMED MiraCosta College enroll in at least 12 units students Julie Hernandez, per semester, at MiraCosta Vanessa Newman and Nhi College are eligible to reTran were awarded the Un- ceive tuition fees waived. dergraduate Transfer Schol- For more information, visit arship of up to $40,000 from miracosta.edu /officeoftthe Jack Kent Cooke Foun- hepresident/pio/press.aspx?id=1756. dation April 24. In addition to the monetary award, these new LOCALS JOIN PHI KAPPA PHI Cooke Transfer Scholars North County residents will receive comprehensive initiated into the Honor Soeducational advising from ciety of Phi Kappa Phi, inFoundation staff to guide clude Havilah Steinman of them through the process of Oceanside, at San Jose State transitioning to a four-year University; Noufel Maalal school and preparing for of Carlsbad, at Florida Institheir careers. tute of Technology; Shannon The Foundation will ad- Baker of Oceanside, at Caliditionally provide opportu- fornia State University, Fulnities for internships, study lerton; Carlos Hernandez of abroad, and graduate school Oceanside, at Florida Instifunding, as well as connec- tute of Technology, Austin tion to a thriving network Moser of San Diego, at San of nearly 2,500 fellow Cooke Diego State University, JonScholars and alumni. athan Babad of San Marcos, at University of Michigan and Jamie O’Grady of RanKUDOS FOR OMWD PLANT Olivenhain Municipal cho Santa Fe, at East CaroliWater District’s 4S Ranch na University. Water Reclamation Facility was recognized by Califor- OLIVENHAIN HOME TURNS 53 nia Water Environment AsOlivenhain Guest sociation as its 2019 Small Home, one of Encinitas’ oldPlant of the Year, which ac- est businesses, at 350 Cole knowledges OMWD’s efforts Ranch Road, Encinitas, is to increase water supply celebrating its 53rd year of reliability by reducing im- serving senior residents. ported water demand. OMTo celebrate its position WD’s 4S WRF can produce as the region’s first assisted up to two million gallons of living community, it will high-quality recycled water be hosting an Open House each day. May 9, Alzheimer’s Longest This alternative water Day Team Sign Up on May supply is used for irrigation 23 and a Hospice/Palliative purposes at schools, parks, CBD Oil workshop on July golf courses, streetscapes, 18. and homeowner association common areas in the south- MIRACOSTA MAKES CITIZENS eastern portion of OMWD's April is California service area. OMWD serves Community College Month approximately 14 percent and MiraCosta College and of its overall demand from 45 graduates of MiraCosta recycled water treated College’s citizenship course through its 4S facility and have successfully obtained agreements with neighbor- their U.S. citizenship and ing recycled water provid- were honored April 20, at ers. the MiraCosta College Community Learning Center, NEW WEBSITE FOR NCTD 1831 Mission Ave., OceansOn April 11, the North ide. County Transit District his year’s students (NCTD) retired the current came to MiraCosta from version of GoNCTD.com, Iran, China, the Philippines, and launched a new website. Vietnam, Mexico, and El The former website, in Salvador. They came to the place for more than 5 years, North County Immigration utilized three different sites and Citizenship Center from – a desktop version, a lim- Mexico, El Salvador, Guateited access mobile version, mala, Iran, Great Britain, and a news center for press South Africa, Cambodia and releases. The redesigned France.

ans

NEWS? Business news and special

site merges all of these into one contemporary website, still at GoNCTD.com.

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BEACH SOCCER CONTINUED FROM B1

12,” he said. “They burn out from the grind of the same ole’, same ole. Programmed into a ton of structured activity to gain a competitive edge, kids lose the reason why we play – to have fun.” High school soccer is not immune to this sport fatigue, he said. “Those stats carry through high school,” Zimmerman Sr. said. “Soccer coaches and players live in a world of practice and tournaments. We drive in, we drive out.” Enter beach soccer. “Beach soccer is a true, lifestyle get-away from that daily grind,” he continued. “Beach soccer injects fun into a sport that allows kids to play in an unstructured environment.” “Too often are we caught up in being the best at all costs,” added the younger Zimmerman. “I hope that by bringing soccer to the beach for one weekend out of the year, families and athletes will all remember to enjoy the game.” The crowd-pleasing sports party will also great-

OVER 250 teams will compete on 28 beachfront courts at the Beach Soccer Championships in Oceanside. Courtesy photo

ly — and positively — impact the city of Oceanside. Last year’s financial effect injected $2.2 million into the community. Hotel occupancy rose to 90 percent. The city “happily” complied by providing shuttles from designated locations to cart spectators directly to the beach to avoid traffic and parking congestion. The BeSoCha spectacle also serves as a fundraiser

for the Oceanside Breakers and the Youth Group of Mission San Luis Rey. Last year the Zimmermans awarded more than $15,000 to ensure that these organizations learn how to “use soccer to impact their life and help prepare them for their future.” Father and son both expressed their excitement and somewhat surprise at the event’s “explosive”

APRIL 26, 2019

growth. “We’ve transplanted a piece of Brazil into the sands of Oceanside, added the incredible fun factor and created a party on the beach,” Zimmerman Sr. said. “The Beach Soccer Championships are new, fun, and relatable to the games of Southern Cal. We never expected the event to explode into this huge monster, jam-packed with soccer players, their families and locals who love watching the pros play.” Zimmerman Jr. added that he loves “showing off my favorite California harbor.” While the championship’s “exponential growth,” may outgrow the Oceanside Harbor, the father and son team will “never leave Oceanside.” They will simply add a second weekend. “In a nutshell, beach soccer’s a fun way to play a game that prepares kids for their future,” Zimmerman Sr. said. The Beach Soccer Championships will be held in Oceanside May 3 to May 5, at North Pacific Street. For more information, visit https://beachsoccerusa.org/

Help When You Need It… And When You Don’t In loving memory of

Michael “Mike” Charles Caracappa, 95, of Oceanside, a loving husband and retired Marine Gunnery Sergeant, passed peacefully on Wednesday, March 27, 2019. Mike was born on July 18, 1923, in Norristown, PA, to Vito and Josephine (Buttera) Caracappa. He grew up in Norristown and attended local schools. Mike served in the Marine Corps from 19421962, with three years in the Pacific during WWII; nearly a decade in China, Japan, and Korea; and sev-

eral years at Camp Pendleton, Twentynine Palms, and MCRD San Diego, where he was a Drill Instructor from 1957-1959. He had 13 additional years of Federal Civil Service at Camp Pendleton. In 1955, Mike married the love of his life, Shigeko Anna “Annie” Izumisawa, in Yokosuka, Japan. He was a member of Old Mission San Luis Rey Church in Oceanside, the 8th Defense/ AAA Battalion Reunion Association, and the Oceanside Elks Club. Mike is survived by his wife of 63 years, Annie Caracappa of Oceanside, CA; many extended family members; and several friends. He was preceded in death by his parents; a sister, Carmella Sabatino; and three brothers: Frank, Charles, and Salvatore Caracappa. A Funeral Mass and Rite of Committal with Marine Corps honors were held on Thursday, April 25, 2019, at Old Mission San Luis Rey in Oceanside, CA. Arrangements were by Eternal Hills Memorial Park, (760) 754-6600.

Kasey Ann Cinciarelli, 62 Carlsbad April 6, 2019 George John Wooldridge, 82 Carlsbad April 8, 2019 Theodore Hertz Bonn, 95 Carlsbad April 11, 2019 Sandra Sandy Vaughan, 58 Carlsbad April 12, 2019

Milton Carl Craighead, 83 Encinitas April 9, 2019 Melissa Dawn Brydle, 37 Vista April 9, 2019 Hamida H. Assil, 70 Escondido April 11, 2019 Jon J. Mitthof, 50 Escondido April 12, 2019

Michael Charles Caracappa July 18, 1923 March 27, 2019

When a loved one has died, the staff at Allen Brothers are here to take your call 24 hours a day, every day. You’ll never get an answering service or a machine because we know you need and want information and answers right away. Our Allen Brothers family is here to provide you with the professional guidance, understanding and dignified care your family deserves in your time of need. Of course, many people prefer meeting prior to need, when arrangements may be made at one’s leisure, without urgency. We are happy to offer - without any cost or obligation - complete information on options for prearrangements. Prearrangements are perhaps the greatest gift we can give our families because it allows your loved ones to focus on the memories of your life rather than the details of your death. Please feel welcome to contact us at either chapel. We’re here to help... when you need us and when you don’t.

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Please email obits @ coastnewsgroup.com or call (760) 436-9737 x100. All photo attachments should be sent in jpeg format, no larger than 3MB. the photo will print 1.625” wide by 1.5” tall inh black and white.

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OCEANSIDE HIGH SCHOOL students in the public service pathway staged a mock zombie apocalypse to learn how to set up a real-life emergency and decontamination shelter. Photo by Samantha Taylor

Zombies teach high school students valuable lesson By Samantha Taylor

OCEANSIDE — The zombie apocalypse befell downtown in the early hours of April 19, but Oceanside High School’s public service pathway students were ready. As both surviving humans and a horde of zombies approached the school, a triage station intercepted them. There, they were diagnosed and assigned treatment — or a body bag — by students dressed in full HAZMAT CROP gear. Some of the surviving .93 humans .93 had to go through a decontamination pro4.17 cess4.28 that included taking a shower. A survivor would step behind a barrier to change into shower clothes in private, then would emerge

and be scrubbed down by other HAZMAT-protected students. Once the decontamination process was finished, those survivors went into safe harbor inside. Even more students were on the roof surveying the area and calculating when zombies were on the move. Once they figured out the zombies’ point of entrance, they would radio down to the other emergency responders below to let them know where the zombies were coming. The zombies were catatonic and not “attack zombies,” according to onscene teacher Chandra Faist, so they moved slowly and made grunting noisTURN TO ZOMBIES ON B7

Pet of

the week Kazoo is pet of the week at your Rancho Coastal Humane Society. He’s a 3-1/2-month old, 24-pound, male, miniature Schnauzer mix. Remember that Kazoo is a puppy, but he needs a family willing to make a lifelong commitment. That starts with training, a routine, and lots of positive reinforcement. The $195 adoption fee includes medical exams, vaccinations, neuter, and registered microchip.

VOLUNTEER

For more information call (760) 753-6413, visit Rancho Coastal Humane Society at 389 Requeza St., Encinitas, or log on to SDpets.org.

JOIN THE NORTH COASTAL SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT SENIOR VOLUNTEER PATROL

The Senior Volunteer Patrol of the North Coastal Sheriff’s Station performs home vacation security checks, assists with traffic control, enforces disabled parking regulations, patrols neighborhoods, schools, parks and shopping centers and visits homebound seniors who live alone for the communities of Encinitas, Solana Beach, Del Mar.& portions of the county’s unincorporated areas. Volunteers must be at least age 50, be in good health, pass a background check, have auto insurance & a valid California driver’s license. Training includes a two week academy plus training patrols. The minimum commitment is 24 hours per month, & attendance at a monthly meeting. Interested parties should call (760) 966-3579 to arrange an information meeting.


APRIL 26, 2019

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Del Mar man to plead guilty in admissions scandal

SUSAN RUSTHOVEN and Stephanie Forman at The Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club’s Coffee in the Garden. Photo by Christina Macone-Greene

Coffee in the Garden event draws a crowd By Christina Macone-Greene club,” Guthrie said.

RANCHO SANTA FE — A manicured garden, panoramic views, hors d'oeuvres and mimosas set the scene at The Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club’s Coffee in the Garden. The April 8 event was held at the private estate of Kate Marbles in Cielo, the coastal community of Rancho Santa Fe. As guests arrived, they were greeted by Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club Executive Director Thora Guthrie. From there, they passed a crystal-clear koi pond into a one-of-a-kind estate brimming with oldworld charm with soaring ceilings and classic stonework. More than 380 people attended including garden club members and those seriously interested in becoming future members. “This home is so luxurious that it’s such a special opportunity for our members to be in a home and garden like this,” Guthrie said. Guthrie said in addition to viewing the estate, Coffee in the Garden also offered an opportunity for members to socialize in an extraordinary setting. “Members had a wonderful time hearing about Kate Marbles' home including how it took nearly eight years to build as well as the gorgeous ocean views on a clear day,” she said. “This event really creates a sense of community among our garden members.” Guthrie said the club’s special events have revitalized it in various ways including attracting new members. “Our garden club members look forward to more events like this in 2019 as we build a sense of camaraderie within the

Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club board member Adrienne Falzon said she was introduced to the club years ago after attending a Coffee in the Garden event. “I attended Coffee in the Garden several years ago when my husband and I first moved to California here in Rancho Santa Fe,” Falzon said. “It was such a delightful experience whereby I met the nicest ladies who became my closest friends today. In the intimacy of someone’s garden, we get to not only enjoy the beauty of nature, but we get to socialize and make new friends.” Falzon described the Cielo estate as an amazing treat in every way possible from architecture, ambiance, décor, views and more. Guthrie pointed out that there is so much going on at the club from outings and more. “The demographics of the club has changed in a big way with 60-plus new members in the past several months,” she said. Guthrie is quick to point out that the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club also supports the community. She explained how the increase in events, programs and field trips is drawing members to join and become involved. “But our philanthropy is really attracting support for membership,” she said. “The fact that we are giving out $100,000 in grants to local nonprofit organizations this year is a definite source of pride among our members.” To learn more about The Garden Club including its upcoming Architecture in Bloom on May 11, visit www.rsfgardenclub. org.

SMALL TALK

and I love that. It’s good to know powerful young women have my back.

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proud of them. I reward them with goofy stuff from the $1 store and maybe, a candy bar. They have decided that they are now my go-to muscle crew for any project I might have in the future,

Jean Gillette is a freelance writer who is sorry these sweet kids are about to hit junior high. Contact her at jean@ coastnewsgroup.com.

REGION — A former assistant women's soccer coach at USC and a Del Mar man have agreed to plead guilty in the ongoing college admissions probe, federal prosecutors said April 23. Laura Janke, 36, of North Hollywood will plead guilty to conspiracy to commit racketeering and will cooperate with the government's investigation, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts. Janke — an assistant soccer coach at USC from 2007 to 2014 — was previously indicted along with multiple co-defendants. Toby MacFarlane, 56, a former senior executive at a title insurance company, has agreed to plead guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit mail fraud and honest services mail fraud, prosecutors said. The defendants were charged in March with conspiring with William “Rick” Singer, 58, of Newport Beach and other parents, coaches and university administrators, to use bribery and other forms of fraud to secure the admission of students to selective colleges and universities and to cheat on college entrance exams. According to court documents, MacFarlane paid $450,000 to facilitate the admission of his children to USC as purported athletic recruits. Prosecutors allege that on Oct. 3, 2013, Singer — who pleaded guilty last month to charges, including racketeering conspiracy and obstruction of justice — emailed MacFarlane’s daughter’s high school transcript and college exam scores to Janke and another defendant. Soon after, Singer caused a purported charitable organization he cre-

ated, the Key Worldwide Foundation, to wire $50,000 to a private soccer club controlled by Janke and the other defendant, according to prosecutors. Using materials provided by MacFarlane and Singer, Janke then allegedly created a falsified soccer profile for MacFarlane's daughter, falsely describing her as a “US Club Soccer All American” in high school. MacFarlane's daughter was presented to the USC subcommittee for athletic admissions as a soccer recruit, and was accepted to USC in March 2014, according to court papers. On May 2, 2014, MacFarlane issued a $200,000 check to the Edge College & Career Network — known as “The Key,” Singer’s for-profit college counseling and preparation business — with “Real Estate Consulting & Analysis” written in the memo line, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. On May 12, 2014, Singer issued a $100,000 payment to the private soccer club which Janke partly controlled, prosecutors say. Also, in November

Feed Darlene...

"Because Kindness Matters"

Kindness Meters found at these North County locations:

Tip Top Meats • Agua Hedionda Lagoon Foundation • Boy’s & Girls Club of C’bad (Bressi Ranch) Moonlight Amphitheater The Lund Team Office and Downtown Carlsbad (at the sign) 100% of the proceeds benefit 7charitable organizations in the community including the Carlsbad Charitable Foundation, Carlsbad Educational Foundation, Agua Hedionda Lagoon Foundation, and The Moonlight Cultural Foundation, Kids for Peace and Boys and Girls Club of Carlsbad

2016, Singer allegedly directed Janke to create a falsified basketball profile for MacFarlane's son. Singer then emailed the profile to a USC administrator to present to the USC subcommittee for athletic admissions as a basketball recruit. In February 2017, USC issued a conditional acceptance to MacFarlane’s son as a student-athlete. The same month, MacFarlane sent a $50,000 check to USC Athletics, and the following month USC mailed MacFarlane’s son a formal acceptance letter. In April

2017, MacFarlane issued a $200,000 check to KWF with “Real Estate Consulting” written in the memo line, federal prosecutors said. Court dates for Janke and MacFarlane to plead guilty before a federal judge in Boston are pending. Fifty people across the country have been implicated in the scandal, and some have also struck plea deals with prosecutors, including “Desperate Housewives” actress Felicity Huffman. — City News Service

KOCT.ORG - The Voice of North County is a non - profit, live stream PEG outlet funded by the City of Oceanside and powered by Cox Cable. Since 1984, KOCT.ORG has produced and programmed the issues that directly affect our daily life, keeping us locals well informed & engaged as a continual voice for the North County community. By becoming a Friend of KOCT, you help insure the future of quality KOCT productions, an access to The KOCT Community Calendar, a dedicated airtime for submitted programming, discounts on KOCT production services and many other great benefits. Show your support and become a Friend of KOCT! Tune into to watch KOCT, The Voice of North County on Community Channel 18 and Government Channel 19 on Cox Cable in Oceanside or AT&T Channel 99 Countywide. Visit KOCT.ORG! Like us on Facebook @KOCTTV Follow us on Instagram @KOCTTELEVISION Find us on Twitter @KOCTTV And call us at 760.722.4433 with comments or questions. We thank you for your support.

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Ask the Doctors by Eve Glazier, M.D. , MBA & Elizabeth Ko, M.D.

Stem cell therapies need more research DEAR DOCTOR: Stem cell therapies are being heavily marketed here in Florida as promising treatments for a variety of illnesses, but I have my doubts. As a retired doctor, I hate to see people go into debt to pay for something fraudulent or unsafe. Am I being too critical? DEAR READER: Stem cell therapies are making headlines right now in two very different ways. One is the news that a patient infected with HIV has been in remission for 18 months following a stem cell transplant. The other stem cell news arises from the subject of your letter. That is, unproven and unapproved stem cell treatments. These are being widely marketed as miracle cures for everything from Parkinson's disease, autism, arthritis and dementia to depression, multiple sclerosis, macular degeneration and traumatic brain injury. Although the use of embryonic stem cells is federally monitored, adult stem cells can be extracted from

a patient's own body. That makes regulation and oversight challenging. Despite extravagant claims of success by stem cell clinics, outcomes are largely unproven. However, the potential dangers are clear. In the past year, at least 17 people in five states have become gravely ill following stem cell treatments that used injections of umbilical cord blood and required hospitalization. In one such case, a man who received an injection of umbilical cord blood to address joint pain developed sepsis, a life-threatening infection. He spent 58 days in the hospital. Last December, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published a report warning about unapproved stem cell treatments. The Food and Drug Administration has issued numerous warnings on the issue as well. The allure of stem cells is that they are a kind of blank canvas. These "unprogrammed" cells divide rapidly and have the ability to change into other types of cells, such as bone, brain or muscle cells. As a result, stem cells are the centerpiece of regenerative medicine, in which disease and injury are treated by growing new cells, or by replacing or repairing those that are dead and damaged. Thanks to their unique properties, stem cells are seen as important tools in potential new therapies for diabetes, Parkinson's and heart disease, among others. But because stem

cells are undifferentiated, they must first go through a special process, somewhat like programming, in which they are prepared to become specific types of cells. It is during this process, as well as during the act of transplantation, that potential risks to patients can arise. According to the CDC, a number of vials of stem cell products made from umbilical cord blood were found to be contaminated with E. coli. Even before this latest spate of bad news, various unapproved stem cell treatments were found to cause harm to patients that included severe respiratory illness, blindness and even death. With few consumer protections in place at this time, the FDA recommends that patients avoid stem cell therapies that are not part of an approved clinical trial. To find ongoing and upcoming clinical trials that use stem cells, visit clinicaltrials.gov. The home page contains a form that you can use to focus your search. Eve Glazier, M.D., MBA, is an internist and associate professor of medicine at UCLA Health. Elizabeth Ko, M.D., is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at UCLA Health.

APRIL 26, 2019

Sense & Sensitivity by Harriette Cole

After intervention, reader questions going to therapy DEAR HARRIETTE: I am nervous about the idea of going to therapy. I was invited to go in order to build a stronger relationship with a family member, but I cannot imagine how talking to a stranger will help. Whenever my relative and I are around each other for more than a couple of hours, we get into it, and it gets ugly. We seem to pick at each other relentlessly. The rest of the family staged an intervention and told us we have to get it together. They want us to go to therapy. Considering that therapy is an actual profession where people get paid, I question whether the sessions would be personal or just a person doing their job? -- Does Therapy Work? DEAR DOES THERAPY WORK? Many people are nervous about therapy before they try it, which is understandable. It requires you to open up about your feelings and experiences. Usually people go to therapy when they have reached

a crossroads in their lives and need outside help. Given that your family intervened to get you to deal with your issues, it sounds like you are at that place. The good news is that a professional therapist is trained to listen and support people as they address their personal issues. Because the therapist doesn't know you and has been professionally educated on how to address a broad variety of challenges that people face, he or she will likely be able to help you and your family member talk objectively about whatever is going on. Objectivity is key in sorting through emotionally charged issues. I recommend that you go to the therapy sessions with the belief that you will gain tools for how to build a more loving, respectful bond with your family. DEAR HARRIETTE: I sometimes find myself struggling with time management. I know the feeling of being ahead of the game and prepared, and it is great. However, I always find myself procrastinating. Sometimes it is because I can lose all internal motivation. I do want to make a change in the long

run. I need advice on how I should better myself. -Stuck DEAR STUCK: I am a big believer in lists. I make a to-do list every single day, including weekends, that outlines what I have to accomplish. I include personal care, work projects, family -- everything that is important to me that needs to be addressed. Then I check off each item as I accomplish it. This provides motivation to move on to the next item on the list. It is important to break down your tasks into manageable bits. If you put a whole project as one item, it will be harder to see small victories. Break down a big job into smaller parts. In this way, you can monitor your progress. This should help you to conquer procrastination. What's key is that you actually make the list EVERY DAY, and that you check it off. Don't avoid the tool that can help you. Make your list right now! Harriette Cole is a lifestylist and founder of DREAMLEAPERS, an initiative to help people access and activate their dreams.

facebook.com/ coastnewsgroup

NCICC presents a Latin-inspired Benefit Concert Featuring:

CSUSM WOMEN GOLF TAKE FIRST

The No. 3 Cal State San Marcos women’s golf team defended its California Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA) team title April 17, winning the conference tournament by 21 strokes with an even-par 284 on the final day to finish at 20-over 872. The Cougars went 1-2-3 with junior Jaime Jacob, above, defending her individual title with 1-over 214, followed by last year’s runner-up, sophomore Claire Hogle (216, 3 over), and freshman Breann Horn (218, 5 over). Courtesy photo

Sunday, May 19, 5-8pm 120 Stevens Ave., Solana Beach www.northcountycitizenship.org for tickets & information

The CoasT News Trustworthy...Verifiable... ACCURATE (Because we live here, too)


APRIL 26, 2019

Mayes’ love for Italy continues in a new novel By Christina Macone-Greene

RANCHO SANTA FE — On April 16, the Rancho Santa Fe Library Guild in partnership with Warwick’s, welcomed prolific author Frances Mayes to speak at its Author Talk Series regarding her newest work. The talk was held at the Rancho Santa Fe Golf Club, Mayes’ latest novel is again a love letter to Italy. Many know Mayes from her book “Under the Tuscan Sun,” which was adapted into a screenplay and released in 2003. She has authored numerous books, and several are dedicated to Italy. Her seventh is titled “See You in the Piazza.” Born and raised in Fitzgerald, Georgia, Mayes knew there was a bigger world than her hometown when she connected her love of travel from the books she read at her local library. When Mayes visited Italy many years ago, the Renaissance architecture and art was an immediate draw, but other characteristics surfaced such as the vivacity of Italian life. “That’s the reason I kept returning — I still love the art, architecture and so forth, but it’s the people that animate the place in such a special way,” Mayes said. “It’s amazing to me Mayes how even in places with tons of tourists, they (Italians) often really maintain their humanism and I found that really all over Italy — it’s still such a deeply humanistic country — I’ve always gone back whenever I could because it makes sense.” Her passion for Italy triggered a home purchase in 1990 in Bramasole, Tuscany, based on her novel, “Under the Tuscan Sun.” Conversely, “See You in the Piazza” unveils unique hidden places in Italy which are, for the most part in plain sight, but with a particular genesis in Puglia, Mayes said. “My husband Ed and I were on a trip down there, and we were absolutely loving the tiny towns that we didn’t even intend to go to that we just happened upon,” she said, adding there were wonderful Romanesque churches. “Puglia is no longer an undiscovered place, but we were going to these little tiny coves where there was no one and jumping in the water. It’s that kind of spontaneity in travel that really means so much to me, and we were finding it off the road in Puglia.” She said in a little tiny town, Troia, had an enor-

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mous rose window in its church right on the piazza. “You sit there, and you think of all the people since the 1100s who have sat there and looked up at that rose window,” she said. In a neighboring town, Osara, Mayes said she and her husband stumbled upon a bread oven that had been in operation since the 1500s. “They make these huge loaves of bread that weigh 10 pounds, and they throw in a handful of straw just before they put in the bread, so it browns the crust with this burning straw. It was so interesting to realize what bread means in that culture, how all over Puglia they love their bread, and they bring back these old traditions such as the gathering of orzo was what originally made the Puglian bread so good,” she said. It was these discoveries in these out-of-the-way places which fueled a sense of travel which rediscovered a sense of spontaneity that led to the creation of “See You in the Piazza.” Mayes visited and wrote about more than 50 small towns 13 regions in Italy. These included Gaeta, Torino, Trento, Asolo, Parma, Trani, Santadi, Catania and more. On her travels, she asked some of the local chefs if they would consider allowing her to use their recipes in her upcoming novel. She was pleasantly surprised when all of them agreed. “These recipes are not typical Italian recipes — they are what the chef really wanted to represent as his region and what he did with the local ingredients,” she said. “So, if you feel an interest, try some of these recipes, and I promise you’ll learn some new things.” Mayes said the end of her travels for “See You in the Piazza,” confirmed what she already knew: Italy is the most diverse country in the world. “So, travel by all means, but my proposal is to get into some of these little places where you can restore this kind of authentic sense of the place and discover these little things that give the heart to travel,” Mayes said.

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es instead of running and pouncing on prey. That made things a little easier for emergency responders. Faist is the coordinator for the Academy of Justice, one of the programs within the public service pathway at Oceanside High. The other two programs in the pathway include the Health Careers Academy and STEM Teach 2 Learn education academy. Students from all three programs in the public service pathway were tasked with staging the school’s mock zombie apocalypse decontamination and safe harbor shelter to learn what to do in times of emergency. While a zombie apocalypse is a far-fetched notion, natural disasters like fires, tsunamis and other emergency situations could actually affect Oceanside residents. Students in the public service pathway are going into careers that will be called upon during those times of need, Faist said. Oceanside High School recently served as an evacuation shelter during the Lilac fires a few years ago. The school was at its maximum capacity with 500 people (plus their pets) sheltered there. This is the first year Oceanside High School has staged a mock zombie apocalypse event for the public service pathway students. Faist said teachers in the pathway brainstormed and came up with the idea. “It’s giving them project-based learning of a hands-on nature,” Faist said. “That’s the best way for them to absorb the information — just learning out of a book or watching a film, they’re not going to learn it.” Faist said all the materials, including the decontamination showers, medical supplies and HAZMAT suits, are real. Real emergency professionals were also on the scene. Sophomore Madison Matella, a student in the Health Careers Academy, served as an incident commander during the zombie crisis. She was responsible for overseeing all of the different stations and making sure everything was running smoothly. Matella had to do some problem solving during the mock apocalypse. “Earlier we had a situation where we had some zombies walking around, and we figured out that there wasn’t clear direction of where people should go after they went to the medical station,” Matella said. “So we had to solve the problem by having escorts — who are in the jumpsuits — take people to the correct tarps or to the safe harbor depending on if they’re exposed or non-exposed.” Students who acted as zombies had to go to the black tarp, where body bags awaited them.

SOPHOMORE Adanya Davis undergoes triage to determine if the zombie virus has infected her. Photo by Samantha Taylor

Senior Damaris Rivas, who was part of the decontamination shelter staff, was tasked with helping those who were unsure about what to do. Rather than tell them the answer outright, she asked them questions that got them thinking about how to correctly do it. “If they get stuck, I lead them and get their minds on the right path so they start thinking about the right answer,” she said. For example, she helped other shelter staff to properly fasten a splint

on an injured survivor. “They were actually tying it wrong, so I told them to check how they’re tying it,” Rivas said. Once the other students realized their mistake, “they were tying it the right way next time.” Both Matella and Rivas said the exercise helped them learn how to set up and operate an emergency shelter during times of crisis. “It’s been really good practice just learning how to adapt,” Matella said, noting that plans can and

sometimes have to change to fit present needs. “It’s also important to learn how to communicate because when you’re in a stressful situation like this, all the team leaders and all of the workers are under a lot of anxiety so you have to make sure everyone is calm and everything is running smoothly at all times,” she added. Rivas said she could use what she learned during the exercise to set up a shelter during a real emergency. “Now, I know how to set up a whole shelter, what we need, how many teams we need, how many members we need to keep it running,” she said. Rivas also gained communication skills during the exercise. “It also helps with my communication with the community because you have to help them through every single process and make sure they’re OK, make sure they’re fed, make sure they’re hydrated — anything they need,” she said. That was the exercise’s goal: to give students a hands-on learning experience they would remember. “These kids are going to remember for the rest of their lives, ‘I actually worked a decon shelter one time’,” Faist said. “Even though it wasn’t real, they still know how to do it now, so should something happen that is possible they’re ready to serve their community.”

COMMUNITY MEMBER OPENING ON TRI-CITY HEALTHCARE DISTRICT BOARD OF DIRECTORS COMMITTEE The Tri-City Healthcare District Board of Directors currently has one community membership opening on the following working Committee: Finance, Operations & Planning Committee – one open community seat. This Committee meets monthly to review Hospital finances, operational issues and strategic planning issues, including but not limited to budgets, operating performance and proposals for new capital. Applicants should have a background in finance. If members of the public have an interest in serving as a community member on the above listed Committee, please send a resume or biography delineating your experience relevant to this Committee to: Teri Donnellan. Executive Assistant Tri-City Medical Center - Administration 4002 Vista Way Oceanside, CA 92056 Your information will be forwarded to the Chairperson of the Committee and Board Chairperson for review and consideration. After consideration by the full Committee, a recommendation will be forwarded to the full Board of Directors for final approval/ appointment. All appointments are voluntary and do not include compensation. Community members shall serve a term of two years, with an option to renew the appointment for one additional two year term. At the conclusion of the second term, the community member shall not be eligible to serve on the same Board Committee for at least two years. It is preferable that a community member shall be a member of no more than one Board Committee at a time. The Board of Directors of Tri-City Healthcare District desires to ensure that its Committee community members are knowledgeable as to the issues that face the District. Therefore, only applications submitted by persons residing within the boundaries of the Tri-City Healthcare District will be considered.

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note(s) secured by said Deed of Trust, with interest thereon, as provided in said note(s), advances, if any, under the terms of said Deed of Trust, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is: $351,711.21 If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. The beneficiary under said Deed of Trust heretofore executed and delivered to the undersigned a written Declaration of Default and Demand for Sale, and written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned caused a Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. Dated: 4/5/2019 THE MORTGAGE LAW FIRM, PLC Adriana Durham/ Authorized Signature 27455 TIERRA ALTA WAY, STE. B, TEMECULA, CA 92590 (619) 465-8200 FOR TRUSTEE’S SALE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL (800) 2802832 The Mortgage Law Firm, PLC. may be attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained may be used for that purpose. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary,

trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (800) 280-2832 for information regarding the trustee’s sale or visit this Internet Web site - www.Auction.com - for information regarding the sale of this property, using the file number assigned to this case: 136547. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. A-4690364 04/12/2019, 04/19/2019, 04/26/2019 CN 23117

Notice of Sale Take notice that on Saturday, May 18, 2019 at 10:00 a.m., goods held on account of Tiffany Millburn will be sold by public auction at Chipman Relocation & Logistics, 1320 Air Wing Road, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92154 in satisfaction of unpaid charges incurred in connection with storage and transportation services. The following is a brief description of the goods that are to be sold: one container of personal household goods, including items to be used in a bedroom, dining room, living room, kitchen, and office. 04/26/19, 05/03/19 CN 23163

contact the Oregon State Bar’s Lawyer Referral Service online at www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. Date of first publication: April 26, 2019. s/ Jeffrey M. Clayson, OSB# 183239 Attorney for Petitioner 80 E. Maple Street, Lebanon, OR 97355 Telephone: (541) 258-3194 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23157

podra quitar su sueldo, dinero y bienes sin mas advertencia. Hay otros requisitos legales. Es recomendable que llame a un abogado inmediatamente. Si no conoce a un abogado, puede llamar a un servicio de remision a abogados. Si no puede pagar a un abogado, es posible que cumpla con los requisitos para obtener servicios legales gratuitos de un programa de servicios legales sin fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro en el sitio web de California Legal Services, (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California, (www. sucorte.ca.gov) o poniendose en contacto con la corte o el colegio de abogados locales. AVISO: Por ley, la corte tiene derecho a reclamar las cuotas y los costos exentos por imponer un gravamen sobre cualquier recuperacion de $10,000 o mas de valor recibida mediante un acuerdo o una concesion de arbitraje en un caso de derecho civil. Tiene que pagar el gravamen de la corte antes de que la corte pueda desechar el caso. The name and address of the court is: (El nombre y direccion de la corte es): Superior Court of California, San Diego County Hall of Justice, 330 W. Broadway, San Diego CA 92101. .The name, address, and telephone number of plaintiff’s attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney, is: (El nombre, la direccion y el numero de telefono del abogado del demandante, o del demandante que no tiene abogado, es): Joan T. Jackson, 5737 Alta Vista Ave., San Diego CA 92114. Telephone: 619.991.1118 Date: 07/31/2018 Clerk (Secretario), by J. Ledbetter, Deputy (Adjunto) NOTICE TO THE PERSON SERVED: You are served as an individual defendant. 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23154

Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: 4/4/2019 WESTERN FIDELITY TRUSTEES 1222 Crenshaw Blvd., SUITE B Torrance, California 90501 Sale Line: (310)212-0700 Kathleen Herrera, Trustee Officer STOX 917940 / 2019-0101 04/19/19, 04/26/19, 05/03/19 CN 23136 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Trustee Sale No. 136547 Title No. 8721533 NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED 10/13/2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. On 05/10/2019 at 9:00 AM, The Mortgage Law Firm, PLC, as duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust recorded 10/19/2006, as Instrument No. 2006-0744878, in book xx, page xx, of Official Records in the office of the County Recorder of San Diego County, State of California, executed by Pedro M. Marquez, a Single Man, Maria Monroy, a Single Woman as Joint Tenants, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK/ CASH EQUIVALENT or other form of payment authorized by 2924h(b), (payable at time of sale in lawful money of the United States), At the entrance to the East County Regional Center, 250 E. Main Street, El Cajon, CA 92020. All right, title and interest conveyed to and now held by it under said Deed of Trust in the property situated in said County and State, described as: FULLY DESCRIBED IN THE ABOVE DEED OF TRUST. APN 161-290-75-00 The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 934 North Santa Fe Avenue, Vista, CA 92083 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. Said sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the

Notice of Sale Take notice that on Saturday, May 18, 2019 at 10:00 a.m., goods held on account of Gilbert Oaks will be sold by public auction at Chipman Relocation & Logistics, 1320 Air Wing Road, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92154 in satisfaction of unpaid charges incurred in connection with storage and transportation services. The following is a brief description of the goods that are to be sold: two containers of personal household goods, including items to be used in a bedroom, dining room, living room, kitchen, and office. 04/26/19, 05/03/19 CN 23167 Notice of Sale Take notice that on Saturday, May 18, 2019 at 10:00 a.m., goods held on account of Cynthia Shafer will be sold by public auction at Chipman Relocation & Logistics, 1320 Air Wing Road, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92154 in satisfaction of unpaid charges incurred in connection with storage and transportation services. The following is a brief description of the goods that are to be sold: one container of personal household goods, including items to be used in a bedroom, dining room, living room, kitchen, and office. 04/26/19, 05/03/19 CN 23166 Notice of Sale Take notice that on Saturday, May 18, 2019 at 10:00 a.m., goods held on account of Patrick Maloy will be sold by public auction at Chipman Relocation & Logistics, 1320 Air Wing Road, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92154 in satisfaction of unpaid charges incurred in connection with storage and transportation services. The following is a brief description of the goods that are to be sold: one container of personal household goods, including items to be used in a bedroom, dining room, living room, kitchen, and office. 04/26/19, 05/03/19 CN 23165 Notice of Sale Take notice that on Saturday, May 18, 2019 at 10:00 a.m., goods held on account of Thomas Coyle will be sold by public auction at Chipman Relocation & Logistics, 1320 Air Wing Road, Suite 100, San Diego, CA 92154 in satisfaction of unpaid charges incurred in connection with storage and transportation services. The following is a brief description of the goods that are to be sold: one container of personal household goods, including items to be used in a bedroom, dining room, living room, kitchen, and office. 04/26/19, 05/03/19 CN 23164

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE# 37-2019-00020269-CUPT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Jayahna Mahal Navarro filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: a. Present name: Jayahna Mahal Navarro change to proposed name: Jayahna Mahal Navarro-Jimenez. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this Court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for a change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: On June 18, 2019 at 8:30 a.m., in Dept. 23 of the Superior Court of California, 325 S Melrose Dr., Vista CA 92081, North County Regional Division. Date: Apr 19, 2019 Sim von Kalinowski Judge of the Superior Court. 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23162 NOTICE OF LIEN SALE Notice is hereby given pursuant to Sections 3071 and 3072 of the Civil Code of the State of California that DH Wholesale, located at 2015 Oceanside Blvd., Oceanside, CA 92054, will sell at public auction on May 1, 2019, at 10:00 A.M. the following: 2017 Jeep Grand Cherokee; Lic.# 754097X; VIN;1C4RJFAGXHC754097. Said sale is for the purpose of satisfying a lien of DH Wholesale in the amount of $5,050.00 together with the costs of advertising and expenses of sale. 04/26/19 CN 23160 SUMMONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF LINN TOBY DELAPEÑA, Petitioner, and RICHARD QUIBRERA, Respondent. Case No. 19DR06201 NOTICE TO RESPONDENT: READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! Your spouse has filed a petition for the dissolution of your marriage. You must “appear” in this case or the other side will win automatically. To “appear” you must file with the court a legal document called a “motion” or “answer.” The “motion” or “answer” must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff’s attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may

SUMMONS (CITACION JUDICIAL) CASE #: 37-2018-00038014-CU-BC-CTL NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (AVISO AL DEMANDADO): PATRICK LAWRENCE, ACCESS PLATINUM, AND DOES 1 - 20, YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: (LO ESTA DEMANDANDO EL DEMANDANTE): LYNNE ZIMET. NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online SelfHelp Center (www.courtinfo. ca.gov/selfhelp), your county law library, or the courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may want to call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia. org), the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www. courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees and costs on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil. case. The court’s lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case. AVISO! Lo han demandado. Si no responde dentro de 30 dias, la corte puede decidir en su contra sin escuchar su version. Lea la informacion a continuacion. Tiene 30 DIAS DE CALENDARIO despues de que le entreguen esta citacion y papeles legales para presentar una respuesta por escrito en esta corte y hacer que se entregue una copia al demandante. Una carta o una llamada telefonica no lo protegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene que estar en formato legal correcto si desea que procesen su caso en la corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar para su respuesta.Puede encontrar estos formularios de la corte y mas informacion en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www.sucorte. ca.gov), en la biblioteca de leyes de su condado o en la corte que le quede mas cerca. Si no puede pagar la cuota de presentacion, pida al secretario de la corte que le de un formulario de exencion de pago de cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a tiempo, puede perder el caso por incumplimiento y la corte le

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE# 37-2019-00019190-CUPT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Goulda Selene Angelique Aban filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present name: Goulda Selene Angelique Aban changed to proposed name: Selene Angelique Goulda Aban. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this Court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for a change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: On Jun 20, 2019 at 9:00 AM, Dept. 903 of the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, 1100 Union St., San Diego CA 92101, Central. Date: Apr 15, 2019 Peter C .Deddeh Judge of the Superior Court 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23152 NOTICE OF LIEN SALE Notice is hereby given that pursuant to Section 217012171 of the business and Professions Code, Section 2382 of the Commercial Code, Section 535 of the Penal Code, Solana Beach Storage 545 Stevens Ave Solana Beach, CA 92075 will sell by competitive bidding on 05-04-2019, 11:00am. Auction to be held online at www.storagetreasures.com. Property to be sold as follows: miscellaneous household goods, personal items, furniture, and clothing belonging to the

LEGALS following: Room # Tenant Name 1. 127 Marshal Parker 4/19, 4/26/19 CNS-3242794# CN 23137 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE# 37-2019-00018106-CUPT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Karen Sze-Yao Lam aka Karen SzeYao Lam filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present name: Karen SzeYao Lam changed to proposed name: Karen Yikwan Lam; b. Present name: Karen SzeYao Lam changed to proposed name: Karen Yikwan Lam. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this Court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for a change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: On Jun 13, 2019 at 9:00 AM, Dept. 903 of the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, 1100 Union St., San Diego CA 92101, Central. Date: Apr 08, 2019 Peter C .Deddeh Judge of the Superior Court 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23119 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE# 37-2019-00016552-CUPT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Elizabeth Ayrin Glenn filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: a. Present name: Elizabeth Ayrin Glenn change to proposed name: Elizabeth Ayrin Even. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this Court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for a change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: On May 28, 2019 at 8:30 a.m., in Dept. 23 of the Superior Court of California, 325 S Melrose Dr., Vista CA 92081, North County Regional Division. Date: Mar 29, 2019 Sim von Kalinowski Judge of the Superior Court. 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23116

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF PEARL HARDY Case # 37-2019-00016334-PRPW-CTL [IMAGED] To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Pearl Hardy. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Alison Hardy in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego. The Petition for Probate requests that Alison Hardy be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. The


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petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: May 02, 2019; Time: 1:30 PM, Dept.: 503, located at: Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, 1100 Union St, San Diego CA 92101 Probate. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Marlene Sanborn, Sanborn Law, PC, 2998 Douglas Blvd Suite 305, Roseville CA 95661 Telephone: 916.782.8188 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23115

Elizabeth Smith, 314 Acacia Ave. #D, Carlsbad CA 92008. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Kelly Elizabeth Smith, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23179

Pacific Debt Management. Located at: 825 College Blvd. #102, Oceanside CA San Diego 92057. Mailing Address: Same. The Fictitious Business Name Referred to Above was Filed in San Diego County on: 10/02/2014 and assigned File #2014-026313. The Fictitious Business Name is being Abandoned by: 1. No Failing Inc., 825 College Blvd. #102, Oceanside CA 92057. The Business is Conducted by: Corporation S/Michael J Reminger, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23175

1. Eunice M Garcia, 7968 Los Pinos Circle, Carlsbad CA 92009; 2. Ismael V Garcia, 7968 Los Pinos Circle, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Eunice M Garcia, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23170

Rd. #603, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: General Partnership. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Janette Uy, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23150

1. Luminous Nails & Spa LLC, 427 Santa Fe Dr., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 03/15/2019 S/ Kaitlyn Nguyen, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23145

by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 02/11/2019 S/ Lauren Andriany, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23133

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9010410 Filed: Apr 22, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Dog Puck Toys. Located at: 314 Acacia Ave. #D, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Kelly

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009629 Filed: Apr 12, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Trove MarketPlace. Located at: 2832 #B State St., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Carrie Ann Moore, 7767 Caminito Monarca #107, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 05/01/2018 S/ Carrie Ann Moore, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23178 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009840 Filed: Apr 15, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. The Rob Fournier. Located at: 121 W E St., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: 208 W J St., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Robert J Fournier, 208 W J St., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 04/15/2019 S/Robert J Fournier, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23177 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008668 Filed: Apr 04, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Sacred Mama Healing. Located at: 4014 Wooster Dr., Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Jamie Linn Meekins, 4014 Wooster Dr., Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 04/01/2019 S/ Jamie Linn Meekins, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23176 Statement of Abandonment of Use of Fictitious Business Name #2019-9010441 Filed: Apr 22, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s) To Be Abandoned: A. Pacific Business Management; B.

Statement of Abandonment of Use of Fictitious Business Name #2019-9010440 Filed: Apr 22, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s) To Be Abandoned: A. Oceanside Debt; B. Oceanside Business Management. Located at: 4224 Oceanside Blvd. #H, Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. The Fictitious Business Name Referred to Above was Filed in San Diego County on: 09/21/2015 and assigned File #2015-024526. The Fictitious Business Name is being Abandoned by: 1. Debt Doctors Inc., 4225 Oceanside Blvd. #H, Oceanside CA 92056. The Business is Conducted by: Corporation S/Michael J Reminger, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23174 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9010173 Filed: Apr 18, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Nido Plumbing and Mechanical. Located at: 2451 Bella Vista Dr., Vista CA San Diego 92084. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Pedro Nido, 2451 Bella Vista Dr., Vista CA 92084. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Pedro Nido, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23173 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9010191 Filed: Apr 18, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. iAuto. Located at: 502 S Coast Hwy, Oceanside CA San Diego 92054. Mailing Address: 60 Kingsbury, Irvine CA 92620. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. iAuto Inc., 60 Kingsbury, Irvine CA 92620. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Anthony Korona, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23172 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9010201 Filed: Apr 18, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. GEMRIDES. Located at: 3850 El Cajon Blvd #A, San Diego CA San Diego 92105. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Indivision Inc., 1723 Lahoud Dr., Cardiff CA 92007. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 02/08/2019 S/Joe Miller, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23171 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9010047 Filed: Apr 17, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Garcia Wellness. Located at: 7968 Los Pinos Circle, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following:

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009948 Filed: Apr 16, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. BG PhoDOGraphy. Located at: 166 Harding St., Oceanside CA San Diego 92057. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Niccola Lee Gentile, 166 Harding St., Oceanside CA 92057. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 04/16/2019 S/ Niccola Lee Gentile, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23169 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9010404 Filed: Apr 22, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Angel Print; B. Angel Printing; C. Los Angeles Printers. Located at: 237 Luiseno Ave, Oceanside CA San Diego 92057. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Printing CEO Inc, 237 Luiseno Ave., Oceanside CA 92057. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 04/15/2019 S/ Vladimir Medvinsky, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10, 05/17/19 CN 23168 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009855 Filed: Apr 16, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Sweet Nana. Located at: 6441 Goldenbush Dr., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92011. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Amai LLC, 6441 Goldenbush Dr., Carlsbad CA 92011. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Jeannine M Davison, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23156 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009766 Filed: Apr 15, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Mystic Growth. Located at: 1778 Orchard Wood Rd., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Heidi Kristine Lebherz, 1778 Orchard Wood Rd., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 04/15/2019 S/Heidi Kristine Lebherz, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23151 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009277 Filed: Apr 10, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Trendsetter Galz. Located at: 1314 Oro Vista Rd. #110, San Diego CA San Diego 92154. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Janette Uy, 1314 Oro Vista Rd. #110, San Diego CA 92154; 2. Gladys Mission, 2005 Costa Del Mar

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009128 Filed: Apr 09, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Thomas Tool Co.. Located at: 1732 Avenida Segovia, Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Tommy David McDonald, 1732 Avenida Segovia, Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Tommy David McDonald, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23149 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008214 Filed: Mar 29, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. The Karma Building. Located at: 1645 Village Center Cir., Las Vegas NV Clark 89134. Mailing Address: 125 N Acacia Ave., #103, Solana Beach CA 92075. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Jean Ann Balgresky Himshaw, 1645 Village Center Cir., Las Vegas NV 89134; 2. Dorrell Parker Hinshaw, 1645 Village Center Cir., Las Vegas NV 89134. This business is conducted by: Limited Partnership. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/01/2012 S/ Jean Ann Balgresky Hinshaw, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23148 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009719 Filed: Apr 15, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Premier Home Mortgage Loans. Located at: 1902 Wright Pl., 2nd Floor, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: 2744 Llama Ct., Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Andrew Movsesian, 2744 Llama Ct., Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Andrew Movsesian, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23147 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007361 Filed: Mar 21, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Pegasus Pilates. Located at: 205 N Highway 101, Solana Beach CA San Diego 92075. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Living Light LLC, 205 N Highway 101, Solana Beach CA 92075. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 10/31/2002 S/ Jennifer Van Deausen, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23146 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009600 Filed: Apr 12, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Luminous Nails & Spa. Located at: 427 Santa Fe Dr., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: 10437 Greenford Dr., San Diego CA 92126. This business is hereby registered by the following:

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009282 Filed: Apr 10, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Judaic Paper Arts. Located at: 7110 Daffodil Pl., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92011. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Barbara Irene Schenker Johnson, 7110 Daffodil Pl., Carlsbad CA 92011. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 04/09/2019 S/Barbara Irene Schenker Johnson, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23144 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007637 Filed: Mar 25, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Estars LLC. Located at: 3960 Howard Hughes Pkwy #290, Las Vegas NV Clark 89169. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Estars LLC, 3960 Howard Hughes Pkwy #290, Las Vegas NV 89169. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Elizabeth Wood, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23143 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008736 Filed: Apr 04, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Chef 4 Souls. Located at: 2022 Thibodo Rd., Vista CA San Diego 92081. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Lance Evan Roll, 2022 Thibodo Rd., Vista CA 92081. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 04/04/2019 S/Lance Evan Roll, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23142 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9009279 Filed: Apr 10, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Arasmas Publications. Located at: 221 Witham Rd., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Gary Joseph Crowley, 221 Witham Rd., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Gary Joseph Crowley, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03, 05/10/19 CN 23141 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008188 Filed: Mar 29, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Willow and Jade Interiors; B. Willow + Jade Interiors. Located at: 7329 Alicante Rd. #C, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Lauren Andriany, 7329 Alicante Rd. #C, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008508 Filed: Apr 03, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Summer Creations. Located at: 11082 Caminito Dulce, San Diego CA San Diego 92131. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Jumin Jin, 11082 Caminito Dulce, San Diego CA 92131. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Jumin Jin, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23132 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008786 Filed: Apr 05, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Realty Yuan. Located at: 7313 Calle Conifera, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Wedoglobalization Inc., 7313 Calle Conifera, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Qingjiang Yuan, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23131 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008337 Filed: Apr 02, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Phase Next Investment Group LLC. Located at: 3573 Ridge Rd., Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: 3460 Marron Rd. #103239, Oceanside CA 92056. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Phase Next Investment Group LLC, 3573 Ridge Rd., Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 02/20/2019 S/Jessica Lynn Engelman, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23130 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008772 Filed: Apr 04, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Ocean Air Counseling. Located at: 531 Encinitas Blvd, #200, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: PO Box 1363, Rancho Santa Fe CA 92067. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Paul Andrew Clonts, LCSW, 5331 La Glorietta, Rancho Santa Fe CA 92067. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 04/04/2019 S/Paul Andrew Clonts, LCSW, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23129 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008762 Filed: Apr 04, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Move With Terra. Located at: 2921 Valley St., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by

Coast News legals continued on page B16


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T he C oast News

APRIL 26, 2019

El Camino High selected in Vans shoe design contest By Samantha Taylor

OCEANSIDE — Using the talent of two art students and two pairs of Vans shoes, El Camino High School was selected as one of 500 schools to participate in a nationwide competition. El Camino was selected to participate in the Vans Custom Culture high school shoe design contest earlier this year. The competition gives participating high schools two pairs of white Vans shoes and asks that they submit designs on them with different themes. For this year’s competition, one shoe design had to represent the “local flavor” of a school’s community, and the other pair of shoes had to have an “off the wall” design. According to art teacher Diego De La Luz, this is the first year the school was selected to participate. The competition was open to El Camino’s stu-

EL CAMINO HIGH SCHOOL junior Maritza Diaz submitted this design for the competition’s “off the wall” theme. Photo by Samantha Taylor

signs, and more than 200 dent body. De La Luz created a entries were submitted. From those designs, website where students could submit their de- De La Luz and other art de-

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partment staff narrowed it down to 10 finalists for the “local flavor” design and another 10 for the “off the wall” design. School staff helped to select the finalists for each shoe design. Sophomore Isiah Duran designed his “local flavor” submission in ceramics class. Bright yellow fades into orange in his depiction of a sunset contrasted by the bold blue of the ocean horizon on the shoes. Little palm trees and even the pier are also featured in Duran’s design, which won under its category. “When I think of

Oceanside, I think of all the nice sunsets, the beach,” he said. “That’s kind of what our city is with all the nice colors and everything.” Art may not be Duran’s career choice when he is older, but it is a hobby that he hopes to continue. “It’s just something I like to do on my own,” he said. “I just doodle whatever is on my mind.” Junior Maritza Diaz’s design was selected as the school’s winner for the “off the wall” themed shoe. Her design features horned and winged fantasy characters on an eye-catching red backdrop. “Some time ago me and my friend jokingly designed some kind of fantasy thing, so l just kind of took that and ran with it,” Diaz said, explaining how she came up with the idea. Art could be a possible career choice for the quiet, young student in the future, though it isn’t her only talent. “Not only does she excel in art but she also excels in math,” De La Luz said about Diaz. “She produces some excellent work.” The Vans competition is now in its public voting phase until May 3 to determine which of the top 50 finalists could win $75,000 for their art programs. Though El Camino was not selected as one of the 50 finalists, the school made it further into the competition this year than

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in past years. The Vans competition was created to bring attention to diminishing arts education budgets. The $75,000 prize could go a long way for a school’s art program. De La Luz said each teacher in the department is only allotted about $1,200 to spend on all five sections each teaches. If funds are spread evenly, that’s only about $240 spending available per section. If the school had won the $75,000, De La Luz said that money could have gone to creating a more robust art program by expanding what technologies are accessible to students, like design laptops or 3D printers. “The art program is looking into the future by using more technology to amplify those qualities students bring to the classroom,” he said. The money could have also helped to replace or refurbish the desks in his classroom, which date back to the 1960s. The school could have put that money back into the community, De La Luz said, explaining they could have hired a local carpenter to refurbish the desks. Duran likes his school’s art program but thinks many of peers don’t know enough about art. A more robust art program could attract more students, he explained. “We could show other people what we can do,” he said. De La Luz wants the community to be more engaged in the school’s art program as well and learn more about what art is. “I think there is not much awareness to what art is,” he said. “With today’s technology and media exposure, including social media, art has taken many forms.”

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APRIL 26, 2019

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T he C oast News

Co-chairs steer 64th annual Art of Fashion show of Fashion a success. The committee’s diligent work to put an event of this magnitude is incredible, they said. Becerra said that the Art of Fashion is such an impressive event that when someone attends, they get hooked and people naturally start attending the other events hosted by The Country Friends throughout the year. “There is no better way to do something good for people and also have fun at the same time,” Becerra said. To learn more about The Country Friends, The Art of Fashion, and sponsorship opportunities, visit https://thecountryfriends. org/

By Christina Macone-Greene

RANCHO SANTA FE — The 2019 Art of Fashion Committee is moving full speed ahead with its Sept. 12 fundraiser with co-chairs Erika Fetter and Elaine Becerra leading the way. The 64th annual Art of Fashion at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe showcases top designer fashions on the catwalk followed by a luncheon and boutique shopping on the inn’s expansive lawn. This year marks the 15th time that The Country Friends has partnered with South Coast Plaza for the event. “The Country Friends has been doing this (Art of Fashion) for a very long time, and what’s really exciting for Erika and I is that we can take something so strong already and take this event to the next level,” Becerra said. “So, we brought in some new people, and our main goal is to bring in the most amount of money while spending the least amount of money.” Fetter said she has been attending the annual fashion show for many years. She said to be leading such a fantastic team has been an invaluable experience. “We can’t wait to raise a ton of funds so we can give back to the community,” Fetter said. Headquartered in Rancho Santa Fe, The Country Friends has funded more than $16 million to local organizations. The Art of Fashion is one of its largest fundraisers of the year. Fetter said what makes The Country Friends so special is that the nonprofit chooses a variety of organizations to fund every year and is very specific to the

ERIKA FETTER and Elaine Becerra are co-chairing the 64th annual art of Fashion, one of the largest fundraisers of the year for The Country Friends. Photo by Christina Macone-Greene

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Man pleads guilty to catching, killing great white off O’side pier OCEANSIDE — A man who caught and killed a juvenile great white shark off the Oceanside pier pleaded guilty April 19 to a misdemeanor count of unlawfully taking a shark without a permit and was immediately sentenced to three years probation. Bodi Dee Roberts, 21, was also ordered to pay a $250 fine and to stay away from the pier, where prosecutors say he snagged a juvenile female great white on Jan. 5. According to Deputy District Attorney Michael McCann, Roberts hooked the fish and brought it onto the pier, killed it, then along with several friends, posed and took pictures with the corpse. He was planning to bring the shark home when he was confronted by bystanders in the pier’s parking lot, and eventually officers from California Fish and Game, the prosecutor said. According to the state’s Department of Fish and Wildlife, white sharks

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lighted their dedicated needs of the community. “We have long-standing committee who volunteer relationships with many of their time to make The Art the charity groups that we donate to, and we can dive deeply into the details of the organization,” she said. The Country Friends funds organizations based on projects and how they will make a positive impact in the San Diego Community. Becerra said guests for the Art of Fashion can expect the same wonderA Protea Senior Living Community ful event beginning with a champagne reception upon arrival, beautiful designs Ocean Hills is dedicated to senior living with luxurious services on the runway, upscale boutique shopping and a deliand amenities. Choosing to move or place your loved one into cious luncheon. Both co-chairs want to this community will be the most meaningful decision you can make. remind individuals, families and businesses that sponsorship opportunities are ideal for the demographic in attendance. “Sponsoring is extremely important because it motivates other people to do the same and it shows that there are wonderful ways to help make a difference in the community,” Becerra said. While Becerra and Fetter admit they work well together, they also high-

are protected by federal regulations, have been protected in California since 1994 and must be released immediately if caught. The sharks cannot be hunted or fished for recreational purposes, though permits can be obtained to catch the sharks for scientific study, or by commercial fisheries that might catch the sharks unintentionally, according to the Department of Fish and Wildlife. Prior to his Friday morning plea, Roberts was facing three other misdemeanors, including unlawful possession of game, deterioration and waste of a fish, and destroying or concealing documentary evidence. Though Roberts was ordered to stay away from the Oceanside pier, he will be permitted to fish elsewhere, but must obtain a proper fish and game permit to do so, according to McCann. — City News Service

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T he C oast News

APRIL 26, 2019

Food &Wine

Gianni Buonomo Vintners voted San Diego’s best winery taste of wine

up was in the rewards and outreach for wine club members. With PAON, it’s not just one winery, it’s over 550 wines of the world with the reputation of PAON behind each one. There’s weekly wine tastings, monthly tastings with special reduced pricing and big-event dinners like the one with Laird Family Estate of Napa Valley on the April 24 with Rebecca Laird. Club members received a nearly 25% discount off the price of the wine dinner. This and other discounts make the wait over for a perfect wine club membership at PAON. On April 29 Riboli Family Wines with Anthony Riboli will be pouring their best. Check out the details with Kate Edgecomb at info@paoncarlsbad.com or call (760) 729-7377.

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T

his is one of those “couldn’t happen to a nicer guy” announcements. San Diego Magazine coordinates all its resources annually in a comprehensive polling of “best” categories in San Diego County. According to its readers and website followers, Gianni Buonomo has been voted in as Best San Diego Winery. Taste of Wine and Food has written a number of times on this vibrant fouryear-old winery located in the Ocean Beach district of San Diego. Owner Keith Rolle caught our attention some eight years ago, after he started making his Gianni Buonomo wines in San Diego with grapes from Washington state. They were delicious high quality varietals from the getgo. Some 14 varietals are now on his wine menu and recently the awards have been rolling in. The latest win on his wine was the 2014 Charbono red. The prestigious San Francisco Chronicle competition presented this wine a Double Gold Medal. On being the top winery in San Diego, Rolle, who makes all his wines, had this to say. “With over 100 wineries in this region, I’m humbled to receive all

THE WINNER of the annual San Diego Magazine reader poll for Best San Diego Winery for 2019 is Gianni Buonomo, owned and operated by Keith Rolle. Courtesy photo

this recognition in only our fourth year of operation. The San Diego wine scene is thriving right now and we’re excited to help bolster its growth.” On bringing in grapes from the Northwest, he stated that “the natural acidity of Washington fruit is the game changer. Up there, we’re able to get more hang time without having to worry too much about getting raisins or losing the acid. This allows for denser and more complex

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flavors to develop while still maintaining balance.” Congratulations to Rolle and his team at Gianni Buonomo. Visit at gbvintners.com. PAON Carlsbad offers try before you buy events

The wine program at PAON has taken on a life of its own since the kickoff of its customer-first Wine Club and the arrival of Kate Edgecombe as Wine Director. PAON had always been known for its upscale excellence with a fine dining room and a special selections wine shop. Where the customer service ramped

Wine Bytes

• 333 Pacific in Oceanside has an Australian fivecourse wine dinner starting at 6 p.m. April 26. Some of the top “down under” wines will rock you, along with unforgettable cuisine. For an RSVP, call (760) 4333333. • Il Fornaio in Coronado brings in Pegasus Estate Wines from the Santa Ynez Valley, a runaway award winner from 3 to 5:30 p.m. April 27. This is a seated wine tasting with live jazz. Meet Pegasus owners Mike and Peggy Crowley. Perfectly paired small bites included. For your place at this event, call (858) 945-2399. • Fleming’s in La Jolla has a classic burger and wine glass special going, now through May 10 in the bar. The burger is USDA prime beef with Wisconsin cheddar and peppered bacon. The wine is Paraduxx, a red blend from Duckhorn in Napa Valley. Both just $25 per person. • Daou wines from Paso Robles comes to Orange County at the Oak Grill for a four-course wine dinner starting at 6 p.m. April 30 in the Fashion Island Hotel. Special guest will be Katherine Daou bringing a premium selection of her wines. Cost is $145 per person. For tickets, go to oakgrillnb.com or call (877) 630-3531.

EIGHT North County breweries combined to win 24 awards at the 2019 Los Angeles International Beer Competition. Courtesy photo

San Diego breweries win big at L.A. festival craft beer in North County Bill Vanderburgh

T

wenty-five San Diego breweries won 71 of the 287 awards given at the 2019 Los Angeles International Beer Competition. That’s 24.7% of all awards going to San Diego breweries, including 26 of the 97 gold medals awarded (26.8%). San Diego County has 158 breweries, or about 16% of California’s approximately 980 breweries. Eight North County breweries together won 24 awards. San Diego breweries won at least one award in 54 of the 100 beer style categories in the competition. Gold, Silver and Bronze medals were available in each category, but the judges decided that some categories did not have three medal-deserving beers according to competition style guidelines. Three categories added an Honorable Mention for a beer that was very close to medaling. San Diego breweries brought home 55 LAIBC awards in 2018, 60 in

Artisan shortbread for yourself or the special people in your life. Look for us at the Flower Fields every Sat and Sunday or order online!

858.755.5292 www.fidelslittlemexico.com (760) 824-3030 CARLSBADCOOKIECOMPANY.COM

2017, and 43 in 2016. 2019 represents the best collective performance to date at this competition hosted by the LA County Fair. Especially notable results are San Diego cleansweeps of all three medals in both the Rye Beer and the American-Style Stout categories, and six medals for Deft Brewing (3 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze). Three San Diego County Pizza Port locations combined for 10 medals (5 gold, 4 silver, 1 bronze); the Pizza Port location in San Clemente (just outside the boundaries of San Diego County) added two more silver medals. Only two other breweries in the competition won 6 medals: Figueroa Mountain Brewing of Buellton (3 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze), and Garage Brewing of Temecula (1 gold, 3 silver, 2 bronze). Both Figueroa and Garage are considerably older and larger than Deft. Breweries who make their home in San Diego Brewery Igniter locations did very well. Papa Marces, their Carlsbad neighbor Rouleur, and their North Park cousin Eppig won 13 awards among them (3 gold, 2 silver, 7 bronze and 1 honorable mention). The full results are available at labeercomp. com.


APRIL 26, 2019

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The perfect baguette at Le Rendez-Vous in Oceanside

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y Sunday morning routine involves hopping on my bike and peddling over to the Leucadia Farmers Market. If I’m solo, I power through it with three or four regular stops that always include Le Ren dez-Vous for what I consider to be one of the best baguettes in North County. Given that Prager Brothers is at the same market and makes a damn fine baguette, it’s quite a claim but I’m sticking with it. Maybe it’s the French background of the proprietors, but there are many details about the rustic baguette from Le Rendez-Vous that keep me coming back every week. First off, it’s a bit smaller than the standard baguette which makes it perfect for one or two people to enjoy over a couple of days. It also has a bit more crunch to the crust while maintaining the soft and fluffy inside. One of my favorite parts of the experience is snapping off the well-done, crunchy ends of the

LE RENDEZ-VOUS offers fresh-baked baguettes on Oceanside Boulevard. Photo via Facebook

baguette as I make my way around the market. I’ve tried in the past to wait until I got home but that did not last long. I’ll put this experience right up there in my top 10 culinary delights. I always incorporate the fresh baguette into my Sunday dinner, and it’s best paired with some type of sauce, soup or stew based entrÊe that trans-

forms the baguette into the best dipping vessel ever. If a portion makes it past Sunday dinner, I’ve discovered a trick that brings the baguette back to life on the second or even third day after purchase. Simply cut in half length-wise, like you would for a sandwich, slather it up with real but-

Mother’s Day Weekend

Art, Garden & Studio Tour

ter, and press it into a hot pan with a tea kettle or other heavy pan smashing the baguette down. The butter softens it up and it becomes soft and pliable again, with a toasty goodness. This also works in a toaster oven, but not as well. Keep this technique in mind for day-old bagels as well as it works wonders on h ati l wit n do oo s! 50 sch ner 2 $ ny run a + to 25

Self-guided, driving tour 8 homes Carlsbad / Encinitas area

for them also. I should note that they have a nice selection of French pastries happening at their farmers market outpost and I occasionally indulge in those as well. There is some serious French baking talent going on at Le Rendez-Vous and knowing that made me want to explore their Oceanside cafÊ where all the baking happens and some savory delights are offered along with the sweets. Their Oceanside cafÊ is in an Oceanside Boulevard strip mall, but don’t let that deter you, this is place is the real deal with a family of authentic French bakers working their magic. Baguettes are stacked and they share the stage with eye-candy delicacies that pop out of the deli case. Some of the sweets include layered Êclairs, fruit tarts, tiramisus, rainbowed macarons and bread pudding just to list a few. On the savory side of things, one item that I had my eyes on is their classic quiche — and oh my, is it delightful. It is not a large slice by any means but it is so rich and decadent that it’s modest size is more than enough. I’m putting this quiche in my top five for sure, maybe even top three and

I’m hoping they can bring this dish to the farmers market on Sunday. The classic French baguette sandwich is also available and because of the quality of the baguette they serve it on, it is a very solid sandwich. It had been a while since I’ve had a Croque-Monsieur so we added that to our lunch order as well. For those unfamiliar, it translates loosely into “mister crunchâ€? and is baked or fried ham and cheese sandwich. It originated in French cafes and bars as a quick snack a quick snack. A Croque Madame is a variant of the dish topped with an egg. It’s a delight and worth trying. There are also Paninis, Tartine Campagnarde and Croissant au BĂŠchamel on the savory side of the menu. The Oceanside location is worth the drive for sure and their outpost at the Leucadia Farmers Market should be a regular stop as you make your rounds through the market. It should be noted they will cater events and make amazing cakes for special occasions including weddings. Find them at 4225 Oceanside Blvd. Suite Q in Oceanside, visit www.lerendezvousfrenchbakery. com or call (760) 414-9109.

L A U N N A H T F I F

T S O P A D N A AM T E E M K C A R T Presented by Amanda Post Foundation & the La Costa Canyon H.S. Foundation

Sat & Sun May 11 & 12 10am to 4pm Tickets $30 OffTrackGallery.com

WHO:

3rd through 8th grade students

WHEN: SATURDAY, June 1, 2019 Check in: 8:00 AM | Start: 9:00 AM - 2:00 PM WHERE: La Costa Canyon High School Track

All boys and girls in 3rd-8th grade are welcome to enter. No prior running experience necessary. REGISTER at the Amanda Post Foundation website:

www.amandapostfoundation.com THERE IS A MODEST ENTRY FEE OF

5

$ 00

Registration closes:

PER EVENT

Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at 5PM

Questions?

Greg Post at (760) 942-3008 or Email: gmpost6@gmail.com John Cotter at (619) 992-8875 or Email: john@jcglobalconsulting.com


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APRIL 26, 2019

Join the Oceanside ambassador program

WALMART will donate $10 to Helen Woodward Animal Center every time a customer posts a photo of their pet to social media. Courtesy photo

Animal center joins Walmart in latest campaign REGION — The Helen Woodward Animal Center on April 18 launched a social media campaign with Walmart to raise money for the shelter’s efforts to find adoptive homes for animals. According to the Helen Woodward Animal Center, the shelter and Walmart forged the partnership to celebrate the launch of Blue Buffalo pet food in Walmart stores across the country. Blue Buffalo and the shelter have had a partnership since 2012 and the shelter is a participant in

the company’s annual Home 4 the Holidays Campaign, a three-month adoption drive during the holiday season. Walmart will donate $10 to the shelter every time a customer posts a photo of their pet to social media with the accompanying hashtag #BlueBuffaloAtWalmart. The company will donate up to $300,000 to the shelter by the end of the campaign. “We are honored to be a part of this launch of Blue Buffalo pet food in

Walmart stores and we are very touched that Walmart wants to help orphan pets with this incredibly generous launch promotion,” said shelter President and CEO Mike Arms. “The social media buzz is a great way to remind people to adopt their next pet and the funds raised will save the lives of thousands of homeless dogs and cats.” The campaign is scheduled to run through June 30. — City News Service

OCEANSIDE — MainStreet Oceanside, Visit Oceanside and city of Oceanside Economic Development are bringing back the volunteer-driven Downtown Ambassador Program. Ambassadors will staff the information booth at the entrance to the Oceanside Pier to welcome visitors to the downtown area of the city and provide any information needed to make the time in Downtown Oceanside the best it can be. Starting May 28 through Aug. 31, the program will operate Tuesdays through Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Thursdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The planners are looking for highly enthusiastic individuals, ages 16 and older, to serve in the ambassador positions. Ambassadors will guide visitors to restaurants, museums, retail shops, public parking and public transportation as well as provide general event information. Ambassadors will also provide information about current and future developments in Downtown Oceanside and will be tasked with collecting pertinent data from our visitors. Ambassadors will be trained in all aspects of the

Summer F un & L earning The THEATRE SCHOOL@NORTH COAST REP

SUMMER THEATRE CAMP 2019

AGES 4–8

One-Week, 9:30 am–12:30 pm & 12:30–3:30 pm Jungle Book Jam . . . . . . . . . . . June 24–28, a .m . Dumbo’s Circus Celebration . . June 24–28, p .m . Toy Story Alien Adventure . . . . . . July 8 – 12, a .m . Robotic Rumbles Through Space . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . July 8 – 12, p .m . Captain Jack’s Pirate Parade . . . July 22–26, a .m . Many Mumbling Mice . . . . . . . . . July 22–26, p .m .

AGES 8–12

Two-Week, 9:30 am–3:30 pm

Miss Nelson is Missing . . . . . . . . . . . . June 17–28 Rock Around the Block . . . . . . . . . . . . . July 8–19 Disney’s Cinderella Kids . . . . . . . . .July 22–Aug 2

AGES 12–19

Two-Week, 9:30 am–3:30 pm

Shrek the Musical, Jr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . June 17–28 The Hobbit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . July 8–19 The Addams Family . . . . . . . . . . . .July 22–Aug 2

Registration & Information: (858) 481-1055 | NorthCoastRepTheatreSchool.org

program and will be provided with the tools necessary to relay the best information to our visitors. High school students may be able to fulfill their community service requirement by participating in the program. Planners are requesting that interested community members fill out a volunteer application and

attend a training session at 2 p.m. May 14, at 2 p.m. May 15, or at 6 p.m. May 22 at the MainStreet Oceanside office, 701 Mission Ave., Oceanside. Applicants can also request a copy via e-mail. For more information, contact Crystal Rodriguez at (760) 754-4512 or crystal@mainstreetoceanside. com.

UNDERWATER ROBOTICS STARS

Pacific Ridge Middle School students, from left, Drake Archbold, Cole Pashkow and Nick Sanford, of team Seagulls, won the SeaPerch regional underwater robotics competition April 13. They will compete in the national SeaPerch competition in June at the University of Maryland. Courtesy photo

Items on this page are paid for by the provider of the article. If you would like an article on this page, please call (760) 436-9737

Theatre Camps for ages 4-8 & 8-12 Want your child to stay busy and learn some new skills this summer? The Theatre School @ North Coast Rep has an exciting summer of theatre day-camps! Their performance-based classes will give your child a fun, playful, and skill-building summer. Director of Education, Ben Cole, encourages students of all experience levels to join. “Whether your child has exceptional theatre skills already and is looking to take their training to the next level, or whether your child is brand new to the theatre world, there will be active chal-

lenges and opportunities for everyone.” The dedicated and encouraging staff of theatre educators and teaching artists work professionally

Our Theatre School offers students the skills and confidence they need to excel in any profession. as actors, directors, and designers in and around San Diego’s thriving theatre scene. For Broadway Babies, ages 4-8, check out six different one-week half-day camps, where students will

have fun building confidence and playing as an ensemble. For greater playful release of energy, find three different two-week full day fun production camps for ages 8-12. Students will work on putting together a short version of one of your family’s best-loved stories. All camps focus on actor training, not on spectacle, and culminate in a showcase for family and friends. For full camp descriptions and to register, call 858-481-1055 or www.northcoastreptheatreschool.org or email Ben@northcoastrep.org with questions.

Summer is a great time to hone your MUSIC AND ACTING skills! Summer can be a great opportunity to take your skills to the next level. Schools out, the days are longer, and the focus is on FUN! This is the time to practice smarter, not harder. The instructors at Norwood Music Studios are skilled in working with students of all levels, from complete beginners to working professionals. Norwood Music Studios offers private lessons in Voice, Guitar, Piano and Acting. Voice lessons are taught by Virginia Norwood and Jessica Allen,

both trained in the Speech Level Singing method; the most effective method for singers today. Vocal workouts are customized for each student’s needs, to progressively train the voice toward it’s potential. Students leave each lesson with an understanding of what and HOW to practice. Jessica also teaches piano. Joe Norwood teaches acoustic, electric and slide guitar. His experience as a professional guitarist, ongoing technical study, and

being a dad, have equipped him with the knowledge, skill, and patience, to be an effective teacher and earned him the reputation as one of San Diego’s leading guitarists. Acting classes are provided by Al Valletta, of The Valletta Actors Studio. Mr. Valletta is an experienced and admired director, actor, and acting coach, who can help one transition from the class environment to the world of professional acting. Learn more at NorwoodMusicStudios.com or call/text 858-876-7464.


APRIL 26, 2019

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Even on flat days, if you wait long enough you’ll catch a wave waterspot

chris ahrens

I

no longer remember the name of the surfer who lived directly above Swami’s in the early 1970s. I do, however, recall that he surfed the reef every day, regardless of the size. When I questioned his devotion, even on flat days, he replied, “It’s never really flat; a wave of at least 3 feet will break here at least once a day, especially when the tide moves in.” Living a few blocks from the beach at the time, I had ample opportunity to test his theory and, sure enough, if you wait long enough, there will be a wave worth riding. While I was never that patient, I now realize that even on the smallest of days a quick incoming tide will bring the surf up. I have been the beneficiary of this shift on numerous occasions as crowds

TINY SURF enjoyed by a longboard and a stand-up paddle board.

check out the waves at low tide and leave before it fills in and waves appear. The opposite can occur at certain places where dropping tides focus a swell better. When the ocean is between swells and seems half asleep, there are still

ripples worth riding if you have the right equipment, and, more importantly, the right attitude. Longboards, stand-up paddleboards and other high-volume surf craft are common choices for small surf, but other alternatives don’t require length or

Photo by Chris Ahrens

thickness to get you moving. I have been a fan of the Paipo board ever since shaper Jon Wegener gifted me one several years ago. The board (it is literally a board), which measures 4 feet long and is a quarter inch thick, floats only a lit-

Summer F un & L earning

tle better than a rock of the same size. Still, when the tide is high, and the waves are lapping near shore, it catches waves easily and allows for surprisingly long rides. Small, high-tide surf is also suitable for hand

planes. Those little wrist rockets, which are about twice the size of your hand, make Paipos look massive by comparison. While I have yet to master the hand plane, I appreciate the abilities of those who have. From the hand plane, it’s a short jump to bodysurfing, the purest form of wave riding that does not even require fins for those who have mastered the art. Of course, there are those times when the ocean is genuinely flat for at least a few hours. On such occasions, it may not be possible to ride a wave at all. If the sea still beckons, however, swimming is an excellent way to go. While this exercise will help get you in shape for the next big swells, it is also an enjoyable and worthwhile activity all on its own. While unnecessary, an investment in a pair of goggles is beneficial as you move over the sea on your own power and view some of the best scenery in North County, much of which is under water.

Summer Fun and Learning articles are paid content. If you would like to advertise on this page, please call (760) 436-9737

Best Tutoring BestService Tutoring Service Learning center as good as gold on the North Coast for the 4th Year in a Row! 2018

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As the gold medal winner 4 years in a row, Rebecca Hayes, Founder and Director, and her team of Academic Specialists have shown time and time again that they know the keys to academic success. e3 Consulting has set the golden standard for all aspects of educational support, tutoring, and consultation in San Diego for the past 17 years. The core component of the practice is to provide consistent, first-rate academic tutoring, consultation, and therapy for students, kindergarten through college. e3 provides an individ-

on the North Coast for the 4th Year in a Row!

young citizens. e3 employs a highly At e3 Consulting, we incorporate a comprehensive qualified staff of Academic Specialists, who provide approach to learning and overall wellness. educate • enrich • empower unique approaches to teaching and learning, which are customized for each Consultation • SAT/ACT Test Preparation • Educational student’s needs, goals, and • College Counseling • Academic Enrichment (All Subjects) interests. e3 closely collabo• Adult Services • Executive rates with our community’sFunctioning Skills schools and professionals • Child & Family Counseling • Study Skills, Organization, & in an effort to extend an ac• Social Skills & Self Advocacy Management tive safety net Time of support for their students. • School Placement • Social Skills & Self Advocacy Hayes’ passionate and • Grade Level Assessment • Home Schooling dedicated goals to provide a community hub that wholly serves a family’s mind, www.ethreeconsulting.com | (858) 755-7877 body, and soul SERVING can be found OUR SAN DIEGO 2190 Carmel Valley Road, Suite A | Del Mar, CA 92014 at their Del Mar and Encion a daily FOR OVER 17 YEARS cal community in an effort nitas branches COMMUNITY 681 Encinitas Blvd, Suite 304 | Encinitas, CA 92024 to create healthy, happy basis. ualized, holistic approach to educational, therapeutic, and additional supportive services for children and their families within our lo-

Our goal is to facilitate individual growth, self-awareness, and exceptional academic achievement.

‘Music for Life’ at Leading Note Studios We at Leading Note Studios believe that music is to be enjoyed throughout your entire lifetime. Since opening in 2009, we have a proven track record of excellence in music education and stability. We are the largest music school in North County San Diego providing lessons for every type of instrument. We offer private lessons, semi-private, and group lessons, camps and recitals. All this ensuring a variety of ways to incorporate music into you daily lifestyle. And we are the ONLY music school with an in-house recording studio, where we help students

understand and de-mystify the recording process. With 20+ music teachers, all with either college training or professional performance experience, our teachers are dedicat-

We are the ONLY music school with an in-house recording studio ed to learning about your personal musical goals and helping you to achieve them. Students learn the foundation of musicianship and performance providing, the foundation for a lifetime of music practice and enjoyment.

We have several music teachers for every instrument and for every age, from Kindermusik, to adult performers. We are confident that we have the right teacher to meet any music lesson needs. Our staff will speak with you about your student’s goals, musical interests, and your unique learning style to make sure it’s a wonderful, rewarding, and lifelong experience. Having so many teachers and so many options to learn, many students often switch over to another instrument, ensuring that they find the right fit to continue their musical experience throughout their life.

Summer Music Camps Half Day or Full Day Weekly Music Camps

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760-753-7002 www.LeadingNoteStudios.com/summer-music-camps Call or Text


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T he C oast News

LEGALS Coast News legals continued from page B9 the following: 1. Terra Louise Burke, 2921 Valley St., Carlsbad CA 92008. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Terra Louise Burke, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23128 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008241 Filed: Mar 29, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Merkaba Artistry. Located at: 3471 Caminito Sierra #303, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Jaimy Lorraine Martinez, 3471 Caminito Sierra #303, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact

LEGALS

LEGALS

Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 03/29/2019 S/ Jaimy Lorraine Martinez, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23127

Magdalena #211, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. CKR LLC, 187 Calle Magdalena #211, Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/01/2011 S/Stephen Lebherz, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23125

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007839 Filed: Mar 26, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Excelarace; B. Walk For The Fallen. Located at: 187 Calle Magdalena #211, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Dental Club One, Inc., 187 Calle Magdalena #211, Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/01/2000 S/ Stephen Lebherz, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23126 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007840 Filed: Mar 26, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Encinitas Cupid Run. Located at: 187 Calle

LEGALS

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9006999 Filed: Mar 18, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Constant Service. Located at: 700 W. Harbor Dr., San Diego CA San Diego 92101. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Michael Sosinsky, 700 W. Harbor Dr., San Diego CA 92101. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Michael Sosinsky, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN

23124 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008320 Filed: Apr 02, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Bearmug. Located at: 440 Saxony Rd., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Donald James Cecil, 440 Saxony Rd., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 03/22/2019 S/Donald James Cecil, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23123 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007809 Filed: Mar 26, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. 264 Fresco. Located at: 264 Carlsbad Village Dr., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Tiberius Antro

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APRIL 26, 2019

LEGALS Restaurants Inc., 264 Carlsbad Village Dr., Carlsbad CA 92008. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/01/2017 S/ Elmerinda DiNitto, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26, 05/03/19 CN 23122 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007759 Filed: Mar 26, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. We The People Insider. Located at: 2323 Nicklaus Dr., Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: 2588 El Camino Real Ste F #604, Carlsbad CA 92008. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Relentless Ventures LLC, 2323 Nicklaus Dr., Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Justin French, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23109 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008237 Filed: Mar 29, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Tap Into Truth. Located at: 7801 Paseo La Jolla, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Cynthia Peterson Espino, 7801 Paseo La Jolla, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Cynthia Peterson Espino, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23108 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008341 Filed: Apr 02, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Northstar Distributors. Located at: 718 Sycamore Ave. #30, Vista CA San Diego 92083. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. David Keith La Comb, 718 Sycamore Ave. #30, Vista CA 92083. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 12/19/2018 S/David Keith La Comb, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23107 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007552 Filed: Mar 22, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. NewCali Company. Located at: 4700 Lanai Way, Oceanside CA San Diego 92057. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Annais J Granato, 4700 Lanai Way, Oceanside CA 92057; 2. Rocco S Granato, 4700 Lanai Way, Oceanside CA 92057. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Annais J Granato, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23106 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007602 Filed: Mar 25, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. My Global Gifts. Located at: 2367 Manchester Ave. #A, Cardiff CA San Diego 92007. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Jonathan Faiella, 2367 Manchester Ave. #A, Cardiff CA 92007; 2. Ann-Louise Strandberg, 2367 Manchester Ave. #A, Cardiff CA 92007. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 10/12/2016 S/Jonathan Faiella, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23105

LEGALS Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007893 Filed: Mar 27, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. MOE. Located at: 2195 San Dieguito Dr. #1, Del Mar CA San Diego 92014. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Mikhail Ogawa Engineering Inc., 2195 San Dieguito Dr. #1, Del Mar CA 92014. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/01/2014 S/Mikhail Ogawa, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23104 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007648 Filed: Mar 25, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. MajesticRC. Located at: 3210 Production Ave. #C, Oceanside CA San Diego 92058. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Michael I Frandsen, 404 Encinitas Blvd. #256, Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Michael I Frandsen, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23103 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008183 Filed: Mar 29, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. KiddoCaps; B. Kiddo Caps. Located at: 201 Los Arbolitos Blvd. #152, Oceanside CA San Diego 92058. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Shayla RandiKalee Ragone, 201 Los Arbolitos Blvd. #152, Oceanside CA 92058. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Shayla RandiKalee Ragone, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23102 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9006668 Filed: Mar 13, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. I Do Flowers For You LLC. Located at: 7912 Mission Vista Dr., San Diego CA San Diego 92120. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. I Do Flowers For You LLC, 7912 Mission Vista Dr., San Diego CA 92120. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 02/14/2014 S/Jennifer Ikel, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23101 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9008099 Filed: Mar 28, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Hello Beautiful Beautique. Located at: 2213 S El Camino Real #121, Oceanside CA San Diego 92054. Mailing Address: 1036 S Pacific St. #1, Oceanside CA 92054. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Darcy Ann Thompson, 1036 S Pacific St. #1, Oceanside CA 92054. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Darcy Ann Thompson, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23100 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007603 Filed: Mar 25, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Handline. Located at: 3773 Via Cabrillo, Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the

LEGALS following: 1. Monica Anne Schwaner, 3773 Via Cabrillo, Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Monica Anne Schwaner, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23099 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9006898 Filed: Mar 15, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Gratitude Junky. Located at: 29572 Lilac Rd., Valley Center CA San Diego 92082. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Lisa Anne Solano, 29572 Lilac Rd., Valley Center CA 92082; 2. Jairo M. Solano, 29572 Lilac Rd., Valley Center CA 92082. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Lisa Anne Solano, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23098 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007762 Filed: Mar 26, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Fluidra. Located at: 2882 Whiptail Loop East #100, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92010. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Zodiac Pool Systems LLC, 2882 Whiptail Loop East #100, Carlsbad CA 92010. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 02/25/2019 S/David D. McKenery Jr, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23097 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007698 Filed: Mar 25, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Fantasy Travel & Tours LLC. Located at: 6474 Ambrosia Dr. #5310, San Diego CA San Diego 92124. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Fantasy Travel & Tours LLC, 6474 Ambrosia Dr. #5310, San Diego CA 92124. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Nagy Guirguis Salib, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23096 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007711 Filed: Mar 25, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Discover Vista Village. Located at: 209 E Broadway #B, Vista CA San Diego 92084. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Vista Village Business Association, 209 E Broadway #B, Vista CA 92084. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/01/2019 S/Traci Lawson, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23095 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2019-9007953 Filed: Mar 27, 2019 with County of the San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Carlsbad Water Heaters. Located at: 2579 Navarro Dr. #B, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. This business is hereby registered by the following: 1. Nicolas Jeffrey Kimball, 2579 Navarro Dr. #B, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 03/27/2019 S/Nicolas Jeffrey Kimball, 04/05, 04/12, 04/19, 04/26/19 CN 23094


APRIL 26, 2019

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Add a little spice to your ... pound cake? TasteFood by Lynda Balslev

Who doesn't like a buttery, rich pound cake? Simple and pleasingly plain, it's comfort food for adults and kids alike. While a winner as-is, a pound cake's simplicity is also an inviting canvas, amenable to garnishes (whipped cream, anyone?) and fruity additions, such as citrus and berries. A brush of syrup on the just-baked cake takes it to yet another level, infusing each crumbly bite with the tang of flavor (lemon? orange?) and saturating the entire loaf with a luscious stickiness. With all of these choices for inspiration, I went all out and piled on the extras in this fragrant pound cake recipe, with orange zest and ground coriander infusing the batter, and a pile of syrupy strawberries and fluffy cream adorning the plate. The coriander might sound unusual, but it's a dark horse worth considering when it comes to desserts. Often associated with savory food and Asian cuisines, ground coriander is mildly floral and nutty, and brings a subtle perfume and flavor to sweets. It's also exceptionally compatible with citrus, such as orange. For this recipe, I relied on a favorite tried-and-true

pound cake method by Rose Levy Beranbaum, in which she uses lemon syrup to brush her cake. I used an orange and coriander syrup to moisten the cake and coat fresh strawberries, which are spooned over the cake before serving.

Coriander Spiced Pound Cake With Strawberries

Makes one 8-by-4-inch loaf -- approximately 8 servings SYRUP: 2/3 cup sugar 2/3 cup water 1 teaspoon coriander seeds, lightly toasted, coarsely chopped POUND CAKE: 3 large eggs, room temperature 1/4 cup whole milk 2 teaspoons finely grated orange zest 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 1 1/2 cups cake flour 3/4 cup granulated sugar 1 teaspoon ground coriander 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/2 teaspoon salt 3/4 cup unsalted butter, room temperature GARNISHES: 1 pound strawberries, hulled, halved (or quartered if large) 1 cup heavy cream

with parchment paper: Butter the paper and lightly dust the pan with flour. Whisk the eggs, milk, zest and vanilla in a small bowl. Briefly mix the flour, sugar, coriander, baking powder and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer to blend. Add the butter and half of the egg mixture and beat for 1 minute to aerate. Add the remaining egg mixture in 2 batches, beating 20 seconds after each addition. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and spread evenly. Bake until a bamboo skewer inserted in the center comes out clean, 50 to 60 minutes. Transfer to a rack, pierce the top of the cake with the skewer, and brush the top of the cake with some of the syrup. Cool for 10 minutes, and then turn the cake out onto the rack. Pierce the sides and bottom of the cake with the skewer and brush with more of the syrup. Cool completely. (The flavors will develop as the cake cools.) Before serving, prepare the garnishes. Toss the strawberries and the 2 tablespoons syrup in a bowl. Beat the cream, A TRIED-AND-TRUE pound cake method by Rose Levy Beranbaum. Photo by Lynda Balslev sugar and vanilla in the bowl of an electric mixer until soft peaks form. To serve, cut the pound seeds in a small saucepan. the strawberries. 2 teaspoons sugar cake into 3/4-inch slices. 1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract Bring to a boil, stirring to Spoon some of the strawberdissolve the sugar. PREPARE THE Finely grated orange zest ries over the cake. Remove from the heat POUND CAKE: Top with a dollop of and cool completely. Strain Preheat the oven to 350 PREPARE THE SYRUP: Combine the sugar, wa- the syrup into a bowl and set degrees. Butter and flour an whipped cream and garnish ter and ground coriander aside 2 tablespoons syrup for 8-by-4-inch loaf pan lined with orange zest.

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sT New s PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID ENCINITAS , CA PERMIT NO. 92025 94

VOL. 3, N0. 7

Inside: 2016 Sprin g Home & Gard en Secti

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MARCH 25, 2016

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By Hoa Quach

i ESCON environ amendment DIDO — mental An port to the lution of from Aprilimpact rereso- ternati 2012. AlCitracado necessity for ves the sion projectParkway exten- with residenwere discussed ts in four munity Wednesday was approv ed of publicmeetings and comby the Council. gatherings. a trio City “The project Debra rently Lundy, property real cated designed as curcity, said manager for and plannewas lothe it was due to a needed manner that will d in a clerica compat omissions l error, ible with be most the est attached of deeds to public good the greatbe private and least adjustm to the land. The injury,” ent is the parcel being Lundy only fee said. acquired the city, She also which is by reported ty, she added. a necessi city and proper the - have ty owners had The project, eminent domain meetings inmore than 35 the past in the which has been years to develop four works for the plan. years, will However, several erty complete the missing the mit owners did not proproadway section of a counte subthe ny Grove, between Harmo city’s statutoroffer to the Village ry offer and Andrea Parkway- April 14, 2015. on son Drive. to Lundy, Accord The the owners ing not feel a review city conduc did the offer ted matched which was of the project what the land , outlined is worth, in the alTURN TO

Republica Abed ove ns endorse r Gaspar EXTENSION

ON A3 VISTA — Curren former t ents are students and and pardemanding social studies a teacher Vista lowed to be alkeep his the admini job. Vincen stration By Aaron Romero to keep has workedt Romero, Burgin at Rancho Vista High for the who REGIO Unified School. Buena Vista ty Republ N — The Coun- Krvaric A protest since 1990,School Distric ican Party Sam Abed’ssaid. “Clear thrown at the school. was also held t paid adminiwas placed ly has its suppor long-tim Escondido on t behind steadfast commi e and strative “This makes from his Republ leave Mayor tment job Abed gry,” me so anat Rancho ican princip in na Vista wrote to Sam Buety Dist. the race for Coun- values earned of Fallbro Jeffrey Bright les and March 7. High School 3 Superv him port of on graduated ok, who said isor. The committeethe suphe Now, of San Republican Party bers and we more than from the school memwith morean online petitio 20 years last weekDiego announced endorse him.” are proud to already than 1,900 n ago. tures is that it signaendorse ucation fear that our “I Gaspar’s istration asking the admin- A social Abed overvoted to reache edcampaign Republican apart. I system is falling studies d this fellow back to to bring Romer placed teacher week and Encini pressed disapp the classro tas Mayor not goingworry my kids o dents on administrative at Rancho Buena are om. On and parents leave ointment exVista High who is also Kristin Gaspar - not receivi education to get a valuab to launch in early March. ro told his last day, Rome- Romero. Photo in ng the School le , nomina at public The an online was anymo supervisor running for by Hoa Quach party’s schools leaving students he re.” petition move prompted seat currenthe several tion, but touted in support stuwas sorry held by David Whidd key endors nization because “the orgaof Vincent tly she I can’t be is seekinDave Roberts, who Marcos ements has receive with the rest change.” decided to make g re-elec called on of San out the campa d throug of the year. you for do “shameful.” a my choice, tion. the move Abed, h— “(They ign. a polariz who has been but it’s It’s not until we’re going to “While “This confidence ) no longer have it goes.” the way there’s is a teache fight genuin I’m his two ing figure during pointed not fight with. nothing left know what in me that r that terms as In the to get thedisapto wrote. ely cares,” Whidd I plan to Escondido, roughly I ute speech mayor in ty endorsement, I’m doing,” for your parRomero, “Both be back senior year.” proud to secured said coveted Mr. Romer of my sons on whose to studen4-minwere recorde have theI’m very the of Romer remark emotional Romer ts, an ment by party endors joyed his o and greatly had support Mayor students o also urged d and posteds to fight on Facebo Faulco ene- the class.” the adminio vowed new his to be kind than two receiving more four Republ ner and like what ok. “They don’t stration. to their mineA former studen social studies “I’m not Councilmemb ican City committee’s thirds of I do. They but ing,” like the the tors ers, don’t not said Romer disappear- pal to give “hell” teacher RomerVelare of Vista,t, Jasvotes, threshold Senais what way I do it. So, o, 55. “I’m to Princio Charles the and Bates and Anders said going happens. this candidate required for teacher.” was “an amazin Schind ler. Assemb on, Follow ing I’m really something away. This is a Chavez lyman Rocky g to receive endorsement nounce ,” “I that’s what I can fight, the the an- get himwas lucky enough party membe over a fellow “I’ve been Gaspar we’re goingand ture, a ment of his deparsaid. myself,” to petition tive Republ a very effecr. to on Petitio “He truly she was “Endorsing ican mayor cares for wrote. nSite.com, created publican one Re- a Democratic what he in urging city ing on quires a over another balanced by focusTURN TO re2/3 vote econom TEACHER budgets, — and threshold ic ON A15 rarely happen and quality development, GOP Chairman s,” continu of life Tony Board e to do so and will on the of Superv isors.”

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APRIL 26, 2019

THATABABY by Paul Trap

fusing to let anyone lead you astray may be difficult, but it’s also necessary. Learn from experience.

By Eugenia Last FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2019

FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves

THE BORN LOSER by Art & Chip Sansom

BIG NATE by Lincoln Peirce

MONTY by Jim Meddick

ARLO & JANIS by Jimmy Johnson

THE GRIZZWELLS by Bill Schorr

ALLEY OOP byJack & Carole Bender

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Personal gains should be your focus. People who are enthusiastic and supportive will offer suggestions that will encourage you to be practical, efficient and successful.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Set the standard and don’t look back or let anyMaking a move for the wrong reason will one persuade you to do things otherthrow a wrench in your plans. Control wise. An emotional incident should not your emotions and refuse to let incidents be allowed to interfere with your progress. of a personal nature or ego interfere in what you are trying to accomplish. Take SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Put responsibility for your actions and walk your energy into home, domestic and relationship improvements. Discuss away from manipulative situations. your intentions, listen to feedback and TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Don’t let work as a team player. A romantic gessomeone else’s actions ruin your plans. ture will enhance your life. A last-minute change should raise questions regarding who is doing what CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Not everyone will be happy with your plans and how best to move forward. or decisions, but you have to set goals GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Take your that are both doable and in your best intime when making decisions. If you terest. Live life your way and do what’s make a move prematurely, you’ll end best for you. up backtracking. Associate with people who share your concerns and are work- AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Personal gains are heading your way, and ing toward similar life goals. improvements can be made. Alter your CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Your living space or arrangements to suit self-esteem will get a boost if you make your goals. Romance is on the rise, and subtle adjustments to the way you do nurturing an important relationship is things and how you present yourself to encouraged. others, and by handling your financial PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Make matters stringently. change happen. Stop dreaming and LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Evaluate what start doing. Don’t let someone else you’ve accomplished and what remains make decisions for you or push you in a on your to-do list. Put your energy into direction that you do not like. realizing your dreams, and invite friends ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Expand or partners to help you. Progress can be your mind, explore new possibilities made. and try something you’ve never done VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Gauge before. Get in the game and see what what’s possible and put your plans in transpires. Live life instead of watching motion. Sticking to a guideline and re- it pass you by.


APRIL 26, 2019

arts CALENDAR Know something that’s going on? Send it to calendar@ coastnewsgroup.com

APRIL 26

CIRQUE DE SOLEIL

Energetic, urban and contemporary Cirque de Soleil’s VOLTA has show times at 4:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. through May 5, under the Big Top at the Del Mar Fairgrounds, 2260 Jimmy Durante Blvd., Del Mar. Tickets range from $49-$240 at cirquedusoleil.com. Parking: $17.

Chuck Wagon snack bar offers refreshments. Bring a beach or camp chair. San Diego Botanic Garden will host how to make a Living Wall/Vertical Garden, 9 a.m. to noon April 27 at 230 Quail Gardens Drive, Encinitas. Cost is $36, plus an $80 materials fee paid directly to instructor on day of class. (Ages 18+). To register, visit sdbgarden.org/classes. htm.

The Música en la Plaza music series continues as the Manny Cepeda Orchestra performs at 7 p.m. April 26 for a night of classic salsa and merengue at the California Center for the Arts, Escondido. Although no RSVP is required and admission is free, you can RSVP at http:// artcenter.org/event/musica-en-la-plaza-manny-cepeda-orchestra/. Seating at bistro tables is also available for $12/seat or $40 for a table for four at https://bit. ly/2N3Ba0i.

APRIL 28

SALUTE TO YOUNG MUSICIANS

The Coastal Community Concert Band Salutes Young Musicians with an Encinitas Pops Concert at 2 p.m. April 28 at the San Dieguito Academy Gym, 800 Santa Fe Drive, Encinitas. Tickets $20, $15, students free at (760) 436-6137. More information at CCCBand. com.

YOUNG ARTIST SHOWCASE

Carlsbad Oceanside Art League is calling young artists, Pre-K to eighth grade, to participate in the 24th annual COAL Children’s Art Show May 8 through June 2. From 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 28 young artists can enter one piece created during the last year and teachers can enter up to 10 pieces of student art. Acceptance guidelines and entry forms at coalartgallery.com or can be picked-up at COAL Gallery, 300 Carlsbad Village Drive, Suite #101 Carlsbad. E-mail charlotte.charcee@ OMA DOES EARTH DAY gmail.com or arayazi@aol. Oceanside Museum Of com with questions. Art will be hosting an art project from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. MAINLY MOZART April 27, for kids to create Mainly Mozart Festival fused plastic-pendant neck- presents “Two Pianos - Eight laces, as part of the Oceans- Hands,” for Spotlight Chamide Earth Day Festival, 704 ber Music from 5 to 7 p.m. Pier View Way, Oceanside. April 28 at Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club, 17025 Avenida FOLK-COUNTRY DUO de Acacias, Rancho Santa San Diego Folk Heri- Fe. Tickets $78 at https:// tage presents folk-country mainlymozart.org/. For more duo Robin and Linda Wil- information, call (619) 239liams, stars of “A Prairie 0100, ext. 2. Home Companion,” at 7:30 p.m. April 27 at the Pilgrim United Church of Christ, BANDS, BANDS, BANDS Eclectic Lawn Concerts 2020 Chestnut Ave., Carlsbad. General admission $18 continue from 1 to 5 p.m. April 28 at the St. Michael’s at ticketweb.com. by-the-Sea Chapel, 2775 Carlsbad Blvd, Carlsbad. On HERITAGE RANCH CONCERT stage will be Sibarg EnsemCarlos Olmeda will be in ble at 1 p.m., Matt McBane + concert 3:30 to 6 p.m. April Build at 2 p.m., Diana Gam27 at The Heritage Ranch, eros at 3 p.m. and Trouble in 450 Quail Gardens Drive. the Wind at 4 p.m. ReservaTickets $20 at sdheritage. tions at carlsbadmusicfestiorg or (760) 632-9711. The val.org/eclectic-lawn-2019/.

APRIL 27

COWBOY TIME

Cowboy Jack will perform solo from noon to 1 p.m. May 4, at Heritage Village Park, 220 Peyri Drive, Oceanside.

POET READS

‘THOROUGHLY MODERN’

BAILE SALSA Y MERENGUE

Of Art Summer Art Camp from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, July 8 to July 26. Cost is $350 per week. Young artists ages 7 to 15 can choose from Week At The Living Museum July 8 to July 12, Sky-High Puppet Masters July 15 to July 19 or DIY Fashion Week, July 22 to July 26. Register at http:// oma-online.org/camp/.

GARDEN ART

Oceanside Public Library welcomes poet Karla Cordero at 11 a.m. April 27, as she shares her poetry and reads from her recent book, “How to Pull Apart THE OCEANSIDE the Earth,” at the Civic CenMuseum of Art is call- ter Library at 330 N. Coast ing for artwork submissions Highway, Oceanside. through July 7 to https:// oma-online.org/six/, for an ART ON THE GREEN exhibition of six-word stories Every Saturday and that will accompany selected Sunday (weather permitphotographs. Southern Cal- ting), COAL Gallery memifornia artists are invited to ber artists display their artsubmit artwork and stories work for sale on the lawn with a creative, whimsical, in front of the Carlsbad Inn and introspective interpre- Beach Resort, 3075 Carlsbad tation of the culturally-di- Blvd., Carlsbad. The gallery verse theme. Entries are due at 300 Carlsbad Village Dr. by May 7 to be considered Suite 101, Carlsbad, will be for marketing use. open for the Carlsbad Cruzing the Art Scene April 26. Community Players Theatre will stage “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” at 7 p.m. April 26 and April 27, at 2 p.m. April 28, 7 p.m. May 4 and 2 p.m. May 5 at Community Lutheran Church, 3575 E. Valley Parkway, Escondido. Tickets: $18 reserved, $15 general admission, at the door and at clcfamily. org.

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SEEGER CELEBRATION

The Encinitas Branch of the San Diego County Library presents “Pete Seeger@100! A Celebration of Song and Clean Water” from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. May 4 at the Encinitas Library. 540 Cornish Drive, Encinitas. The family-friendly event includes a musical story time and sing-along, eco-empowerment stations, talks and presentations, community art projects, giveaways, as well as live music all day.

ROBIN AND LINDA WILLIAMS, folk-country stars of “A Prairie Home Companion,” will perform at the Pilgrim United Church of Christ, 2020 Chestnut Ave., Carlsbad, April 27 at 7:30 p.m. General admission is $18 at ticketweb.com. Courtesy photo LUX MULTIMEDIA CONCERT

Enjoy “Pictures at an Exhibition,” a Lux Art Institute benefit multimedia concert at 2 p.m. April 28 at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of San Dieguito, 1036 Solana Drive, Solana Beach. Tickets $40 to $10 at https://uufsdpictures.bpt. me or (760) 822-3399.

GARDEN OF SCULPTURE

Sculpture in the Garden IX will run from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through April 30 at San Diego Botanic Garden, 230 Quail Gardens Drive, Encinitas. This exhibition showcases 50 sculptures from 30 artists set against the backdrop of San Diego Botanic Garden. All sculptures are for sale. Naomi Nussbaum, Curator. Free with paid admission or membership. For a sculpture map, visit PLAYREADERS Carlsbad Playreaders https://bit.ly/2tXmjLL. present “In a Word,” by Lauren Yee at 7 p.m. April 29 at the Schulman Auditorium, 1775 Dove Lane, Carls- BLUE CREEK BAND bad. No reservations. SugThe Friends of the Cargested donation: $1 student, diff-by-the-Sea Library will be hosting a free concert $5 adult. Cash only. from 7 to 8 p.m. May 1 at the Cardiff Library, 2081 New‘TAKEN AT MIDNIGHT’ See “Taken At Mid- castle Ave., Cardiff-by-thenight,” based on true events Sea, featuring the blue-grass in 1931 Berlin, at North and Americana stylings of Coast Repertory Theatre Blue Creek Band. For more at 7:30 p.m. April 29 at 987 information, contact Friends Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Suite of the Cardiff Library/Book D, Solana Beach. Tickets at Store at (760) 635-1000. (858) 481-1055 or northcoasTHEATER CAMP trep.org. Get an Early Bird discount before May 15 for any of three Village Church Community Theater SumNIGHT OF LAUGHTER Tuesday Night Comics mer Theater Camps, 6225 will be at 7:30 p.m. April Paseo Delicias, Rancho 30 at the North Coast Rep- Santa Fe. Youth, Teens, ertory Theatre, 987 Lomas and Tech (also teens) in Santa Fe Drive, Suite D, So- workshops, classes and relana Beach, hosted by Mark hearsals to expose them to Christopher Lawrence. a broad theater experience Come at 6:30 p.m. for $3 of acting, music, movement beer and appetizers. Rated and tech. A scholarship application form is available R. on-line at villagechurchcommunitytheater.org ‘ART IN BLOOM’ San Dieguito Art Guild is showing “Art In Bloom,” CARMEL VALLEY ARTISTS Coastal Artists will exthrough April 30 at the San Diego Botanic Garden, 230 hibit artworks at the CarmQuail Gardens Drive, Encin- el Valley Library from May itas. Enjoy the work of 24 lo- 1 through June 30. Titled cal artists showcasing more “Spring ArtFling ‘19” the than 50 botanic-themed exhibit will be open daioriginal paintings in oil, ly, with a reception for the acrylic, watercolor, mixed artists and visitors from 2 media and encaustic. Ecke to 4:30 p.m. June 9 at 3919 Building daily, 9 a.m. to 5 Townsgate Drive, San Diego. p.m. Free with paid admis- For more information, visit coastal-artists.org or call the sion or membership. Carmel Valley library (858)

APRIL 29

MAY 1

APRIL 30

552-1668. DOWNTOWN SHOW

MAY 5

FIRST SUNDAY MUSIC

Friends of the Encinitas Library First Sunday Music Series presents vocalist Robin Adler and her husband, guitarist Dave Blackburn at 2 p.m. May 5 in the Encinitas Library, 540 Cornish Drive, Encinitas. For more information, contact (760) 753-7376 or encinitaslibfriends.org.

Multiple artists from North County will be showcasing artwork at Mission Federal ArtWalk, April 27 and April 28, in San Diego’s Little Italy, including four Carlsbad artists, four Encinitas artists, five from Escondido and three from Oceans- NEW SHOW AT NEW VILLAGE ide. New Village Arts presents a commedia dell’arte, “The Servant Of Two Masters,” through May 5 with GAME SHOW FOR RESEARCH showtimes Thursdays, 7:30 Sanford Burnham Pre- p.m.; Fridays/Saturdays 8 bys Medical Discovery Insti- p.m.; Saturday Matinees 3 tute invites all to “Bring It!” p.m.; Sunday Matinees 2 an interactive, game-show p.m. Visit newvillagearts. from 5:30 to 10 p.m. May 2, org for tickets: $25 to $36 Del Mar Fairgrounds, 2260 or at New Village Arts, 2787 Jimmy Durante Blvd., Del State St., Carlsbad, or at Mar. The competition sup- (760) 433-3245 ports medical research. To register or become a sponsor COMEDY AT NCRT visit https://sbpdiscovery. The North Coast Reperorg/support-us/bringit. For tory Theatre presents “All questions or more informa- in the Timing,” a sextet of tion, contact Heather Buth- comedies, running through mann, (858)795-5348. May 5 at 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Suite D, Solana Beach. Tickets are $42 at tickets.northcoastrep.org.

MAY 2

MAY 3

AT THE BELLY UP

The Expanders and Ginger Roots & the Protectors play the Belly Up at 9 p.m. May 3, 143 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach. For tickets and Information, visit http://bellyup.com/.

MAY 4

MAY THE FOURTH BE WITH YOU

Moonlight Amphitheatre presents a “May the Fourth Be With You” celebration with a concert 6:30 p.m. by The Millennial Falcons and “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” on the big screen at 8 p.m. May 4 at 1250 Vale Terrace Drive, Vista. Tickets: $10 & $15 at VisTix, the box office at 200 Civic Center Drive, Vista or moonlightstage.com.

OMA SUMMER CAMP

You may register now for the Oceanside Museum

COAL GALLERY

The Carlsbad-Oceanside Arts League Gallery Monthly Fine Art Show will be ”Black & White,” a Showin-Show with featured artist John Linthurst through May 5 at 300 Carlsbad Village Drive, Suite 101, Carlsbad. Open every day except Tuesday, Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. DANCE AT OMA

Alyssa Junious will be creating movement based around “Valya: She” from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. May 5, at the Oceanside Museum Of Art, 704 Pier View Way, Oceanside. She will solicit and incorporate audience response to her finished work, which will be presented in full on July 7. Museum visitors will be offered various ways to contribute feedback, from suggesting songs for TURN TO ARTS CALENDAR ON B22


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APRIL 26, 2019

19th annual Pet Day on the Bay is Saturday RANCHO SANTA FE — Helen Woodward Animal Center encourages animal lovers to gather their pets and set sail from 9:30 a.m. to 2:45 p.m. April 27 on Hornblower’s 19th annual Pet Day on the Bay with a “Pirates and Mermaids” theme, a pet-friendly boat tour around the San Diego Bay. HWAC receives a portion of the proceeds to support the center’s orphan pets and programs. This year, canine crew members are encouraged to sport their best pirate and mermaid attire and pose for photos. Humans will get “hooked” on the beautiful Bay views and cash snack bar on board while four-legged sailors will find a treasure of treats on the deck. Voyages depart at 9:30 a.m., 11:15 a.m., 1 p.m. and 2:45 p.m. from 1800 N. Harbor Drive, San Diego. A free canine ticket is included with the purchase of one $28

adult ticket. Adoptable pups will be portside to wave a paw to human and canine guests as they depart from the dock. Before jumping on board, sea rovers are encouraged to make a donation of a gently used blanket or towel. Well-behaved dogs of all sizes and breeds are welcome for Hornblower’s Pet Day cruises. Canines must be kept on a leash throughout the ride. Guests can board without dogs, as well, or simply stop by the ticket booth between 9:30 a.m. and 3:15 p.m. to drop off blankets, towels or financial donations for Helen Woodward Animal Center. Tickets are $28 for adults, $14 for children 4-12, and $26 for seniors and the military. To make reservations, visit hornblower.com/ port/overview/sd+petdayonbay. For more information on Helen Woodward Animal Center, call (858) 756-4117 or visit animalcenter.org.

LITTLE FREE LIBRARY OPENS

On April 13, Girl Scout Brownie Troop 1501 had a grand opening and ribbon-cutting ceremony for its Little Free Library, built for the Altamira community in Carlsbad. The girls used a portion of their cookie sales money to pay for the library. The celebration included a talk from children’s author Emma Lesko and included members of the Carlsbad Police Department. Everyone celebrated with a book swap, bookmark and chalk art. Courtesy photo

Pamper the planet at Earth Festival OCEANSIDE — Celebrating 10 years of promoting environmental sustainability, the city of Oceanside’s annual “Earth Festival” returns 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 27, at Pier View Way and Tremont Street. This year’s themes focus on a sustainable food system, zero waste, water conserva-

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tion, watershed protection and climate action. The Earth Festival offers over 100 booths and vendors offering ways to increase sustainability efforts, a vintage market for upcycled items, live local bands and Jesse Lozano of Star 94.1. The Green Oceanside booth will feature the Wyland Foundation’s Mayor’s Challenge for Water Conservation, watershed protection, how to incorporate other eco-friendly options into healthy daily habits and an activity on reducing single-use plastics. Zero waste cooking demonstrations, from Oside Kitchen Collaborative, will

offer dishes prepared using every part of the produce. Vermicomposting presentations from The Ecology Center will teach participants how to compost with worms. ProduceGood — a local nonprofit that rescues viable produce from farmers and residents and distributes it to feeding agencies — will showcase its food recovery efforts and how the community can help. Solana Center for Environmental Innovation will be collecting all of the food waste generated from the event and composting it. For more info or to volunteer, visit greenoceanside. org.

ARTS CALENDAR CONTINUED FROM B21

the artist to use as a score to drawing images based around what they see.

MAY 6

ROCKY MOUNTAIN HIGH

A John Denver Tribute, starring Jim Curry, will play at 7:30 p.m. May 6 and May 7 at North Coast Repertory Theatre, 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach. Box Office: (858) 481-1055 or northcoastrep.org. GOURDS AND BASKETS

The Misti Washington Gourd and Basket Guild presents an art show, from noon to 5 p.m. through May 22 in the Encinitas Community Center, 1140 Oakcrest Park Drive, Encinitas. The Community Center is open Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. This exhibit is free and open to the public.

MAY 7

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Oceanside Museum Of Art offers a two-Day Life Drawing Workshop, Tuesday and Thursday, 1 to 4 p.m. May 7 and May 9. Cost is $90. All materials provided. Register at http://oma-online.org/ calendar/. Join Robin Douglas and a professional female model to use a variety of techniques and materials to create images of the human form. TINTA Y LUCHA

The city of Carlsbad is hosting “Entre Tinta y Lucha: 45 Years of SelfHelp Graphics & Art” through June 9 at William D. Cannon Art Gallery, Carlsbad City Library complex, 1775 Dove Lane, Carlsbad. Admission is free.


APRIL 26, 2019

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Marisa Moris

DISCOVER INTUITION (Offices/Staff/Studio/Consultation Located on 1054 2nd Street, Encinitas, CA

WINGS OF FREEDOM TOUR, coming to McClellan-Palomar Airport May 2-5, features planes like a B-17 Flying Fortress “Nine O Nine,” B-24 Liberator “Witchcraft,” B-25 Mitchell “Tondelayo” bomber, P-51 Mustang “Toulouse Nuts” and P-40 Warhawk “Jaws” fighter. Courtesy photo

‘Wings of Freedom’ returns CARLSBAD — The Wings Of Freedom Tour will be landing at 2 p.m. May 2 at McClellan-Palomar Airport on the Western Flight ramp at 2210 Palomar Airport Road and will be on display until the aircrafts depart on May 5 after operations. Hours of ground tours and display will be from 2 to 5 p.m. May 2, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 3 to May 5. The 30-minute flight experiences are normally scheduled before and after the ground tour times above. In honor of World War II veterans, the Wings of Freedom Tour will include a WWII Vintage Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, Consolidated B-24 Liberator, Curtiss P40 Warhawk,

North American B-25 Mitchell and P-51 Mustang. The B-17 is one of only 9 in flying condition in the United States. The B-24J Liberator is the sole remaining example of its type flying in the World. The B-25 is best known for being used in the daring Doolittle raid. The P-51 “Toulouse Nuts” fighter received the prestigious Grand Champion Award for restoration. New to the tour is the legendary P-40 Warhawk fighter. Visitors are invited to explore the aircraft inside and out, at a cost of $15 for adults and $5 for children under 12. Discounted rates for

school groups. Visitors may also experience the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to actually take a 30-minute flight aboard these rare aircraft. Flights on either the B-17 or B-24 are $450 per person. Get some “stick time” in the world’s greatest fighters! P-51 flight training is $2,400 for a half hour and $3,400 for a full hour. P-40 Warhawk flight training is $2,200 for a half hour and $3,200 for a full hour. B-25 flights are $400 per person. For reservations and information on flight experiences call (800) 568-8924. Find out more by visiting collingsfoundation. org.

Marisa is a renowned spiritual intuitive, channel and master reiki instructor with 15 books and counting Through her books, classes, and one-on-one classes, Marisa will teach and heal your mind body and soul by introducing you to your higher self / soul / angelic team Joe Moris, Marisa’s dad, is a Christian. Together through Joe’s questions and comments and Marisa’s channelled responses, have penned the “Bible Speaks” series based upon interviews with Christ and the New Testament Authors. Quotes, lessons, and new parables can be found in “Ask Jesus” Marisa, together with renowned author and publisher, William Gladstone, have penned non-biblical but thoroughly spiritual books called the “Skeptics” series. These books on numerous subjects will blow your mind. Must reads!

Bring your ‘buds’ to Taste of Cardiff CARDIFF — The tastiest time of the year is here at the Cardiff 101 Main Street 10th annual Taste of Cardiff from 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. May 2. Join the community for local culinary flavors and crafted libations, live music, and photos with friends in the Vintage Camera Camper. Local restaurants will whip up their special tastes – and you get to vote to name the winner of the Taste of Cardiff Golden Fork Award. Local Sip Stops will offer you samples of North County beer, wine, hard kombucha and kombucha. Each Sip Stop will be hosted by a local business, which means you’ll have a chance to check out Cardiff shops as well as restaurants. Stop by the Rooftop Libation Lounge at the Cardiff Lodge to enjoy amazing views of the Pacific Ocean while sipping on a variety of libations and dancing to live music. Avoid parking by riding your bike to this year’s event. Free bike valet courtesy of Electra Bicycle

TASTE OF CARDIFF begins at 5 p.m. on May 2 and features live music, food, beverages and more. Courtesy photo

Company will be in front of Harbaugh Parkway on the corner of Chesterfield Drive and San Elijo Ave. For more information and to buy tickets, visit cardiff101.com.

All Access tickets are $40. Taste tickets are $30. Sip tickets $30. Follow Cardiff 101 on Instagram for tasty updates and a chance to win Taste of Cardiff tickets! @cardiff101mainstreet

WEEKEND TEACHING CLASSES AND SEMINARS WEDNESDAY NIGHT WORLD-WIDE ONLINE CLASSES ONE-ON-ONE SESSIONS ALL BOOKS AVAILABLE ON KINDLE AND AUDIOBOOK AND AVAILABLE THROUGH:

DiscoverIntuition.com, Amazon.com Barnes & Noble & Soulscape Encinitas

Listen to Marisa at 1:00 PM, Tuesdays on Hay House Radio (through App)

In-Depth. Independent. THE COAST NEWS thecoastnews.com

Archived shows available on

Patreon.com and DailyAttunement.com

www.DiscoverIntuition.com


B24

T he C oast News

APRIL 26, 2019

1 at this payement KH499526 MSRP $26,921 (incl. $975 freight charge). (Standard model, code KFB). $0 due at lease signing. Net cap cost & monthly payment excludes 1st payment, tax, license, title, registration, retailer fees, options, insuranc $0 security deposit. Lease end purchase option is $17,549.44. Cannot be combined with any other incentives. Special lease rates extended to well-qualified buyers. Subject to credit approval, vehicle insurance approval & vehicle availability. Not all buyers may qualify. Net cap cost & monthly payment excludes tax, license, title, registration, retailer fees, options, insurance & the like. Retailer participation may affect final cost. At lease end, lessee responsible for vehicle maintenance/ repairs not covered by warranty, excessive wear/tear, 15 cents/ mile over 10,000 miles/year and $300 disposition fee. Lessee pays personal property and ad valorem taxes (where applies) & insurance. Model not shown. Expires 4/28 /19

Car Country Drive

Car Country Carlsbad

Car Country Drive

760-438-2200 5500 Paseo Del Norte

Purchase or lease any new (previously untitled) Subaru and receive a complimentary factory scheduled maintenance plan for 2 years or 24,000 miles (whichever comes first.) See Subaru Added Security Maintenance Plan for intervals, coverages and limitations. Customer must take delivery before 12-31-2019 and reside within the promotional area. At participating dealers only. See dealer for program details and eligibility.

www.bobbakersubaru.com

** EPA-estimated fuel economy. Actual mileage may vary. Subaru Tribeca, Forester, Impreza & Outback are registered trademarks. All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. Expires 4/28/2019.

ar Country Drive

Car Country Drive

6 Years/72,000 Miles Transferable Bumper-to-Bumper Limited Warranty

0

$

per month lease +tax 36 Months $0 Due at Signing!

down payment

JEEP • CHRYSLER • MITSUBISHI

JEEPCHRYSLER MITS

0

$

due at signing*

0

$

security deposit*

0

$

first month’s payment*

Excludes TDI® Clean Diesel and Hybrid models. Lessee responsible for insurance. Closed-end lease offered to highly qualified lessees on approved credit by Volkswagen Credit/VCI. Supplies limited. U.S. cars only. Additional charges may apply at lease end. See dealer for financing details.

On all in stock with MSRP of $20,160. Lease a 2019 Volkswagen Jetta S for $201* a month. 36-month lease. $0 Customer Cash due at signing. No security deposit required. For highly qualified customers through Volkswagen Credit. *Closed end lease financing available through April 28, 2019 for a new, unused 2019 Volkswagen Jetta S, on approved c redit by Volkswagen Credit. Monthly lease payment based on MSRP of $20,160 and destination charges. Amount due at signing includes first month’s payment, capitalized cost reduction, and acquisition fee of $350. Monthly payments total $7039 Your payment will vary based on dealer contribution and the final negotiated price. Lessee responsible for insurance, maintenance and repairs. At lease end, lessee responsible for disposition fee of $350, $0.20/mile over for miles driven in excess of 22,500 miles and excessive wear and use. Excludes taxes, title and other government fees. Offer expires 4/28/19

760-438-2200 VOLKSWAGEN

5500 Paseo Del Norte Car Country Carlsbad

BobBakerVW.com

* 6 years/72,000 miles (whichever occurs first) New Vehicle Limited Warranty on MY2018 and newer VW vehicles, excluding e-Golf. See owner’s literature or dealer for warranty exclusions and limitations. All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. Expires 4-28-2019.

ar Country Drive

201

$

ar Country Drive

2019 Volkswagen Jetta S


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