The Coast News, July 3, 2020

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SERVING NORTH COUNTY SINCE 1987

VOL. 34, N0. 27

JULY 3, 2020

SAN Escondido MARCOS City -NEWS Manager . to retire set

com

By Tigist Layne

ESCONDIDO — Escondido City Manager Jeffrey Epp willTHE officially retire on July 11 after 35 VISTA years of serving EsconNEWS dido’s city government, but he will stay on temporarily to help the city transition to a new city manager. Epp has served as both city manager and city attorney of Escondido and is eligible for retirement this summer.RANCHO However,SFNEWS Epp has agreed to stay on as a retired annuitant, citing unprecedent- EPP ed times due to an ongoing pandemic and recent increased social unrest in the community. “With COVID-19 still being a big problem nationwide, as well as the recent protests, it seemed wise to wait,” Epp said. “I just want stability for the city, and I want to do what I can to help create a smooth transition.” The City Council unanimously approved the decision at its June 24 meeting, agreeing that Epp’s temporary position will go into effect on July 12. “It’s very bittersweet,” Epp said. “Although I look forward to doing something different and hopefully something exciting, the years I’ve spent serving the city have been outstanding and extremely fulfilling, and we’ve done a lot of cool things during my time here.”

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Protests drive alternatives to forefront of local policing debate By Jordan P. Ingram

REGION — A popular rallying cry at Black Lives Matter protests — “Defund the police” — has sparked a fusillade of policing reform proposals in San Diego County, ranging from citizen oversight committees and divestment to outright abolition of modern law enforcement. As thousands of protesters have voiced their frustrations in the streets and at virtual city council meetings over the past few weeks, leaders are feeling a push to reform local police departments and redirect portions of city budgets away from law enforcement and toward community outreach programs and alternative crisis intervention

A WORKER at CAHOOTS, a crisis intervention program in Eugene, Oregon. The program has received national attention for its work with law enforcement. Courtesy photo

methods. The Escondido City Council received almost 400 public comments at its June 10 budget meeting, opposing the city’s $45.6

million police department budget. Members of Showing up For Racial Justice have organized skate-ins for youngsters against racism

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and called repeatedly into Vista City Council meetings demanding police reform. And in some cases, the pressure campaigns have worked. Approximately one week after the death of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer, 15 law enforcement agencies countywide, including San Diego, Carlsbad, Escondido and Oceanside police departments, banned the carotid restraint. While Floyd’s death was not the result of a carotid restraint, the Minneapolis police officer, now facing second-degree murder charges, had pressed and held his knee against Floyd’s neck for nearly nine

minutes, cutting off his ability to breathe. Michael Gennaco, a former Chief Attorney of the Office of Independent Review for Los Angeles County and founding principal of OIR Group, said more has been accomplished in San Diego County in the last 30 days than during the past decade. During his career as a federal prosecutor, Gennaco conducted reviews of officer-involved shootings, systems of accountability, complaint processes, useof-force incidents and other systems within Southern California police agencies. “It’s remarkable the Sheriff’s Department and TURN TO POLICE REFORM ON A13


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JULY 3, 2020

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There’s nothing quite as resilient as a small business owner. During these unprecedented times, watching new businesses open their doors for the first time, is nothing short of awe inspiring. The Carlsbad Village Association is pleased to introduce you to four new businesses that are now calling downtown Carlsbad their new home. We hope you will visit them soon and welcome them to the Village. Froglanders Crepes & Yogurt (2992 State St.) Wicked Main Lobster (3040 Carlsbad Blvd.) the Strawberry Shack (2906 Carlsbad Blvd.) and Adore Boutique (2744 Carlsbad Blvd. #106). For more information on the Carlsbad Village Association, please visit www.carlsbad-village.com.

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Beach vigil honors Carlsbad teen killed in crash By Steve Puterski

CARLSBAD — Hundreds poured onto the beach for an emotional and heartfelt vigil to remember a Carlsbad teenager who died after a car accident on June 24. The rollover crash in Carlsbad claimed the life of Jack Munday, described as a vibrant, gregarious and funny 16-year-old. Another teen in the vehicle, Ethan Prestage, remains in a coma after suffering serious injuries including bleeding on the brain, according to friends. Six other teens were injured, and Carlsbad police are still investigating the cause of the accident, which occurred at 2:20 a.m. At the June 26 vigil, friends and family gathered at Hemlock Avenue and Carlsbad Boulevard and Munday’s parents, Trey and Joanna, led the group down the stairs to the beach, where they circled around a photo of Jack Munday illuminated by numerous can-

JACK MUNDAY, 16, a Carlsbad teenager who died in a rollover car accident last week, was remembered during a June 26 beach vigil. Photo by Steve Puterski

dles. “Jack is looking down on us,” said Trey Munday. “To see this amazing support means so much to us.” After the beach vigil, many in the group visited

the memorial on Carlsbad Village Drive near Valley Street, where the accident occurred. Jack Munday was an avid surfer, skateboarder and baseball player, his

friends and family said. They said he was the funniest person they knew and are devastated at his loss. When Joanna Munday, Jack’s mother, began to speak, the crowd raised

their candles in solidarity with the grieving family and to show their support. Joanna Munday said Jack was her best friend and, fighting through tears, asked for those present to always remember her son. She recalled his sense of humor, his engaging and caring personality and the love he had for his family. “I am overwhelmed by the support,” Joanna Munday said. “The agony of losing Jack is unbearable. I ask that you never forget my son.” Trey Munday read a letter from a former baseball coach recalling Jack Munday’s outgoing and lively personality. The coach described Jack as a great allaround player and said his appreciation for the teenager extends “beyond the baseball field.” Friends have set up two GoFundMe accounts, one to cover Jack Munday’s memorial service costs and another for Ethan Prestage’s medical expenses.

Encinitas rolls out ‘Shared Streets’ pilot program to help businesses By Caitlin Steinberg

ENCINITAS — The Encinitas City Council has greenlit a new “Shared Streets” pilot program, opening up both outermost north and southbound lanes of South Coast Highway 101, between D and E Street, for restaurant and retail use. Working in consultation with the Encinitas 101 Mainstreet Association, the City of Encinitas announced the plan in a June 25 press release with the intention of rolling out such street dining the week prior to the Fourth of July holiday. The program is par-

tially funded by an $8,200 SANDAG grant, will reduce traffic to one lane in each direction, allowing shops and restaurants to “create an expanded seven-foot outdoor dining and retail space on each side of the street.” “New wheel stops will be placed in each parking space to create the new dining and retail area. Barricades and large boxed trees will be placed at intervals” to differentiate between dining, retail, and parking, according to the city’s release. The new street plan will “remain in place until physical distancing is no longer necessary.”

Irene Puyn, executive director of Encinitas 101, spoke to the Coast News about how the pilot program took shape and how the concept is a lifeline for struggling local businesses. “We thought it was such a great idea to allow businesses to make up for their loss in revenue due to COVID-19,” Puyn said. “By allowing restaurants and businesses to expand their square footage temporarily, it allows them to get as close to full capacity as possible while keeping social distancing procedures.” According to Puyn, the city chose the stretch of 101 between D and E street due

to the high concentration of businesses that could benefit, however if successful, Shared Streets could be expanded to further streets in upcoming weeks. “The only concern from business owners was about a lack of parking, however the city was able to create an alternative where no downtown parking was eliminated,” Puyn said. “I do know for a fact that the city is very open to the idea of expanding the program to other blocks of businesses in the future, especially if they’re able to come up with the funding,” Puyn said. “This is the city’s way of trying to

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help small businesses and mitigate their losses after Covid-19. It’s exciting.” The Coast News reached out to the City of Encinitas for further details on the program, however they were unable to officially comment. It is unknown whether restaurant’s alcohol permits will extend onto the public right of way. In a City Council meeting held on June 17, Councilmembers discussed the issue, stating that currently it is not legal for establishments to serve alcohol on public streets, however they were open to discussing the issue in the future.

SDG&E to drop summer prices for customers By City News Service

REGION — San Diego Gas & Electric announced June 29 that its residential customers will get a 5% reduction in pricing starting July 1 to help them deal with hot weather while spending more time at home during the COVID-19 pandemic. The new pricing for customers enrolled in the Time-of-Use DR1 pricing plan will last through Oct. 31 and applies to all three time-of-use periods: on- peak, off-peak and super off-peak, according to SDG&E. With the new pricing, a customer using an average of 400 kWh per month could see a bill decrease of about $5.80 per month, according to the company. For customers in the California Alternate Rates for Energy Program—a bill discount program that offers a reduction of 30% or more on monthly bills—an average usage of 400 kWh per month could see a bill decrease of about $3.96 per month with the new pricing. “Given the financial hardships the pandemic has caused, providing some bill relief to our customers as summer approaches was a priority for us, and we are appreciative that the CPUC agreed,” said Dan Skopec, SDG&E’s vice president of regulatory affairs. Two other energy bill payment assistance programs are available for customers who meet income eligibility criteria. More information is available at sdge.com/assistance.

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JULY 3, 2020

Opinion & Editorial

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

A sure loser in November

H

Levin’s SONGS report should inform Coastal Commission vote By Bart Ziegler, PhD

Rep. Mike Levin’s task force issued a scalding report June 24 on our nation’s handling of nuclear waste. One of its many warnings is the lack of facilities and procedures to contain radiation if storage systems fail. That red flag is especially urgent at San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, where the California Coastal Commission is set to act July 16 on the sufficiency of Southern California Edison’s management plan for 3.6 million pounds of radioactive waste at the shuttered plant. Levin’s “Report of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station Task Force” blames the nuclear industry’s “lack of forethought” for stranding thousands of canisters of deadly waste at locations across the country. Thin-walled containers provide only a single layer of defense between radioactive material and the environment. That’s the case at San Onofre, where 3.6 million pounds of nuclear waste is packed inside of steel canisters in a vault 100 feet from the ocean. The report says nuclear

plant owners admit to not having developed procedures to replace canisters fully loaded with radioactive material. Swell. The Levin report rips Edison for being unable to monitor or test the behemoth waste canisters once they are entombed within the concrete, dry-storage vault. Edison never implemented — much less tested — such protocols for fully loaded canisters, according to the report. “This is of serious concern because on-site storage of SONGS’s spent nuclear fuel is expected for an indefinite period of time,” the report states. At San Onofre, spent fuel cooling pools provide our last option for dealing with a damaged canister. But Edison — with the blessing of the Coastal Commission’s staff — is one approval action away from green lights to remove the pools as part of its 8-year decommissioning project. Will commissioners demand that Edison produce a contingency plan to deal with a disaster? They should, especially in light of the near-disaster at the plant in August 2018,

when the utility’s contractor came within a quarter-inch of letting a fully loaded canister free-fall 18 feet into the storage vault. Before the spent fuel pools are removed, will commissioners require Edison to build an enclosed handling facility, or “hot cell,” where damaged canisters could be repaired or replaced? They should. Any contingency plan that does not allow for on-site handling of damaged containers and spent fuel assemblies must be rejected. Before they vote, commissioners should read the report of Levin’s task force and its warnings about concrete and steel degradation, fragile sandstone bluffs and other obstacles to moving the waste off of the beach and away from the rising sea. To address the commission during its remote meeting 9 a.m. July 16, register a request before 5 p.m. July 15 at www.coastal.ca.gov. Learn more at www.samuellawrencefoundation.org. Bart Ziegler is president of the Samuel Lawrence Foundation.

Letters to the Editor

A sad day for Encinitas’ character

I

was saddened to see an overall lack of leadership by our Mayor and City Council members last week regarding funding for public safety and marijuana sales in Encinitas. As a former City of Encinitas Fire Chief, I spent my entire 35-year career evaluating risks vs. benefits before taking necessary actions. The use of any drug, be it medical or recreational, involves risk. Marijuana is not automatically safe just because a state declares it to be legal. In California, the line between safety and risk became instantly blurred. I can unequivocally

offer my professional experience in sharing the many personal and community risks of allowing marijuana businesses: impaired driving, fatal crashes, addiction, schizophrenia, psychosis, cognitive impairment, lower IQ, normalization to our youth, and reduced home values. These risks strongly outweigh the benefits of a small sales tax increase, which will quickly evaporate with the costly rise in both law and code enforcement. The Mayor and City Council (with the exception of Councilmember Kranz), were unwilling to oppose the upcoming Encinitas bal-

lot measure on legalizing cultivation and distribution of Marijuana within our City. In addition, the Mayor failed to publicly disclose that she has accepted money from the Marijuana ballot initiative organizers. These actions represent a catastrophic failure in leadership to protect our community. If you want marijuana, order it online, if you want to live in a marijuana free city, get in line and vote against this initiative! Mark Muir is a former Encinitas City Councilman and retired Encinitas Fire Chief.

eedless of informed advice about conditions in California, labor unions behind the Split Roll ballot initiative are now persisting in their attempt to fundamentally alter the landmark Proposition 13. Their measure would remove the 1978 ballot initiative’s property tax protections from commercial and industrial property, while leaving residential levies untouched. If this passes, commercial land and buildings would be taxed based on current market values, while yearly residential property taxes would still be based on 1% of the latest purchase price or 1% of their 1975 assessed value if ownership has not changed. Residential levies can climb by no more than 2% per year. This alteration would give local governments and public schools an additional $11 billion to $12 billion annually, sponsors say. It would do nothing about the longtime Proposition 13 inequity which sees neighbors in similar properties paying wildly different property taxes, depending on when they bought. But the alleged commercial property tax total is fictitious at this moment, the remnant of a bygone era that ended with the coronavirus shelter-at-home order issued in March by Gov. Gavin Newsom. The governor, using emergency powers, coupled his stay-home order with others allowing tenants, both individual and commercial, to delay paying rent for months at a minimum. With much of the withheld rent money — perhaps 15% of all that tenants normally pay — now in limbo, property owners and appraisers can’t accurately

california focus thomas d. elias assess the value of commercial property. Owners don’t know how much they will really get if tenants like the Cheesecake Factory restaurant chain, which refused to pay rent while its eateries were shuttered, don’t eventually pay up. Other commercial tenants withholding rent will likely let it pile up, then negotiate settlements with building managers. Owners of many buildings will never get the full rent they were due. Also, because corporations like Twitter, Facebook and many more have told white collar workers to keep working from home as long as they like — and many like it much better than commuting — a healthy percentage of office building owners have no idea how much of their space may soon be vacant. Taken together, this makes it almost impossible for owners or appraisers to calculate the actual value of much of California’s commercial property, since office buildings' value depends largely on income they produce. This makes the numbers often purveyed by Split Roll sponsors completely speculative. Into this quagmire steps the new ballot measure, pushing a fundamentally good idea, but one that will be slammed mercilessly in television and social media advertising as landlords fear high taxes that might force them out of business. When, not if, this proposition loses at the polls,

it will become virtually impossible politically to tinker with Proposition 13 for years to come, as the initiative most likely returns to its prior status as the untouchable third rail in California politics. The measure was nearly sacrosanct in Sacramento for more than 40 years, legislators of all political persuasions fearing the wrath of homeowners, who always cast ballots in higher proportions than other groups. Standing by to help dump the Split Roll into a deep grave is the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, named for the more famous of Proposition 13’s two authors. For decades, this outfit has opposed anything that looks like it might alter even the tiniest aspect of its pet law. The Jarvis organization frequently sends mailers to property owners warning them any attack on any part of Proposition 13 promises to send their taxes through the roof. That’s happening again now, as official-looking mailings from the group turn up from time to time in homeowner mailboxes. These will become more frequent as November nears. The din around Split Roll might even drown out presidential balloting, which figures to be among the noisiest in years. The bottom line: Sponsors believe the financial needs of schools in the wake of the coronavirus-caused recession, plus a rising sense of general resentment of injustice, will push this initiative over the top even in this very odd election year. The betting here is that they are dead wrong. Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com.

The CoasT News P.O. Box 232550, Encinitas, CA 92023-2550 • 760-436-9737 www.thecoastnews.com • Fax: 760-274-2353

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 CLASSIFIED SALES Ben Petrella

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JULY 3, 2020

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Coronavirus Health officials pause reopening as county nears 15K cases By City News Service

REGION — The COVID-19 case total in San Diego County is quickly approaching the 15,000 mark as health officials reported over 400 new cases for the fifth time in six days. Health officials on Wednesday reported 474 new COVID-19 cases and seven additional deaths, raising the totals to 14,623 COVID-19 cases and 372 deaths. The seven deaths occurred between June 26 and June 30 and the ages of the deceased — three men and four women — ranged from 57 to 89. Of the 7,825 tests reported Wednesday, 6% came back positive. The 14day rolling average percentage of positive tests is 4.5%. Starting Wednesday, restaurants countywide are now required to close at 10 p.m. each day. That followed action earlier this week to halt all reopenings until at least Aug. 1 and to shutter all bars, breweries and wineries not licensed to serve food. County Public Health Officer Dr. Wilma Wooten said patrons already inside eateries by 10 p.m. may stay inside until 11 p.m., but those locations must be closed from then until 5 a.m. each day. Staff required to clean those facilities may remain inside after closing hours. According to County Supervisor Greg Cox, the longer people stay at restaurants, particularly if they are drinking alcohol, the more relaxed they get with social distancing, face coverings and other public health orders.

Data graphic by Brad Rollins

Other businesses that serve food and alcohol now have restrictions in place as well. Customers purchasing alcohol on-site must also purchase food, and both drinks and food must be consumed sitting down. While cases have spiked in San Diego County, it was the sole county in Southern California not named by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday. The 19 counties on Newsom’s list were ordered to halt much

of their indoor business activity for at least three weeks. “We’re the only Southern California county not forced to take action by the governor,” County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher said Wednesday. “I think that is partly because of proactive steps we took before other counties.” But San Diego is not immune. According to the state’s metrics, San Diego County is officially

North County Covid 19 Testing Sites QUEST DIAGNOSTICS - OCEANSIDE VISTA 3601 Vista Way Ste 104, Oceanside 92056 COVID-19 testing only (no screening) Physician referral required Testing by appointment only Test type: Antibody Test Hours: 7:00 AM-4:00 PM Monday-Friday CVS HEALTH 1980 College Boulevard, Oceanside 92056 COVID-19 Drive Thru Testing Site By Appointment Only COVID-19 testing only (no screening) No physician referral required Test type: Molecular Test CVS HEALTH 635 South Melrose Drive, Vista 92081 COVID-19 Drive Thru Testing Site By Appointment Only COVID-19 testing only (no screening) No physician referral required Test type: Molecular Test CVS HEALTH 4615 Frazee Road, Oceanside 92057 COVID-19 Drive Thru Testing Site By Appointment Only COVID-19 testing only (no screening) No physician referral required Test type: Molecular Test CVS HEALTH Drive-up testing for COVID-19 7740 Rancho Santa Fe Road, Carlsbad 92009 Hours: By appointment only CVS HEALTH 2650 Gateway Road, Carlsbad 92009 COVID-19 Drive Thru Testing Site Appointment Only. No physician referral required COVID-19 testing only (no screening) Test type: Molecular Test

QUEST DIAGNOSTICS - VISTA SYCAMORE Scheduled to Begin Testing COVID-19 testing only (no screening) Physician referral required Test type: Antibody Test 902 Sycamore Ave Ste 201, Vista 92081 CVS HEALTH COVID-19 Drive Thru Testing Site By Appointment Only COVID-19 testing only (no screening) No physician referral required Test type: Molecular Test 1302 West Mission Road, San Marcos 92069 Hours: By appointment only CVS HEALTH COVID-19 Drive Thru Testing Site By Appointment Only COVID-19 testing only (no screening) No physician referral required Test type: Molecular Test QUEST DIAGNOSTICS ENCINITAS EL CAMINO REAL COVID-19 testing only (no screening) Physician referral required Testing by appointment only No drive-through testing Test type: Antibody Test 477 N El Camino Real Ste B201, Encinitas 92024 Hours: 7:30 AM-4:30 PM Monday-Friday 8:00 AM-12:00 PM Saturday MEDICAL ONE 4505 La Jolla Village Drive, C5 San Diego 92122 619-232-3500

“flagged” for recording positive COVID-19 cases at a rate of more than 100 per 100,000 people. The county reported a rate of 105 positive cases per 100,000 Wednesday. If that holds through today — a trend Wooten said she and county officials are already anticipating — the county will be placed on a watchlist, which could then lead to the more strict orders. In short, unless case numbers and hospitalizations change, San Diego County could be forced to restrict dine-in seating and other indoor business activities as soon as Monday. Another three community outbreaks were reported Wednesday, raising the one-week count to 13, well over the limit of seven San Diego County set for itself with a series of 13 triggers. The outbreaks came in a restaurant, a “food source” and an unspecified business. Of the week’s 13 outbreaks, six were traced to restaurants or bars. Tuesday marked the highest number of patients in local hospitals on any given day due to COVID-19, with 493 hospitalized. Wednesday saw a drop to 453, but still a number considerably higher than a previous “peak” in late April. Oceanside announced Wednesday that it will close beach parking lots over the July Fourth weekend to minimize crowds, increase physical distancing and slow the spread of COVID-19. City officials said beach parking lots west of the train tracks, with the exception of certain harbor lots near the Harbor Village, will be closed from 8 a.m. Friday until 8 a.m. Monday. Newsom also an-

nounced Wednesday that Members attend an onall state beach parking lots site charter school one day will be closed Friday, Satur- a week and work in the field day and Sunday. four days a week on a variety of job training projects, COVID-19 fund donates such as fire fuel reduction, tree planting, habitat resto$150K to Urban Corps ration, graffiti removal and for wildland fire jobs recycling. “SDG&E and the San REGION — The Urban Diego Foundation’s grant to Corps of San Diego Coun- the Urban Corps will create ty announced today it has a triple benefit,’’ said Tracey received a $150,000 grant Williams, president of the from the San Diego Foun- Urban Corps Board of Direcdation’s COVID-19 Commu- tors. “It will generate jobs nity Response Fund to pro- at a time when they are desvide jobs for young adults, perately needed. It will imwho will help homeowners prove wildfire safety, and it create “defensible space’’ in will give young adults paid wildfire-prone areas. work experience while proUrban Corps will em- viding critical services to ploy adults ages 18-26 to our communities in need.’’ improve wildfire safety in wildland-urban interface Supervisor Fletcher, areas, such as canyon rims, Asm. Gonzalez disclose where homes border natural possible virus exposure terrain covered in vegetation. REGION — San Diego They will create up to County Supervisor Nathan 100 feet of defensible space Fletcher and his wife, Asaround high-risk homes semblywoman Lorena Gonthrough thinning, pruning, zalez, announced June 25 clearing and chipping vegthey are going into quaranetation. The focus will be tine due to possible coronaon serving low-income and virus exposure. elderly homeowners whose “We were notified tohomes are surrounded by day that we had close condangerous build-ups of tact with an individual brush. who has tested positive for According to an Urban COVID-19,’’ Fletcher and Corps statement, work is exGonzalez said in a joint pected to begin within the statement. “While we have next several weeks. both tested negative and The COVID-19 fund have no symptoms, we will awards grants to local nonbe following the public profits that are supporting health guidance of a 14-day low-income workers, famiquarantine for those who lies and vulnerable commuhave been in contact with a nities most affected by the positive case.’’ coronavirus crisis. To date, Fletcher and Gonzalez, the fund has raised $16.8 D-San Diego, used the anmillion and distributed nouncement to emphasize $13.7 million in grants. government-issued calls for San Diego Gas & Elecpublic diligence in following tric has donated $2 million measures to avoid contractto the fund, withplans to doing the disease. nate another $1 million in “As we see increases 2021. in positive cases, outbreaks “Getting San Diegans and hospitalizations due to back to work is a critical COVID-19, we all face highpiece of our region’s ecoer potential for exposure nomic recovery from the & continue to encourage pandemic,’’ said SDG&E everyone to take seriously President Scott Drury. the risks associated with “Young adults with COVID and (the) need for little to no job experience us all to follow public health are especially challenged guidance,’’ they said. in finding employment. Programs like Urban Corps give young job seekers a leg up by providing them with real-world job experience and the opportunity to earn a high school diploma, making them more employable.’’ Urban Corps operates a work-learn program that allows young adults ages to finish high school while earning a paycheck, learning job skills and working Join with for the community through professional services. in Killing Covid’s Kill Rate. Researches find those dying are deficient in Vitamin K which you get from Also MTH, Amer. Flyer, LGB Spinach and Kale.

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T he C oast News

JULY 3, 2020

Encinitas may benefit from recycled portion of Housing Element By Dan Brendel

ENCINITAS — Encinitas updated its state-mandated affordable housing plan so late that it can now potentially count the same lower-income housing blueprint for the next planning cycle, without risking a further need to increase residential density. Local jurisdictions must periodically, to the state government’s satisfaction, update the Housing Element (or chapter) of their General Plans. These updates— though unenforceable and only marginally effectual— mean to ensure that cities’ land-use policies reasonably enable private sector housing production to satisfy forecasted demand affordably, and at all income levels. Encinitas failed to adopt its state-mandated Housing Element covering 2013 to 2021 until 2019 — seven years into an eightyear planning period. The city finalized its plan only after a superior court judge compelled it to do so, overriding the city’s otherwise deadlocked system of rezoning by referendum. Now local governments are updating their Housing Elements again, this time covering 2021 to 2029. While they have until next April to pass state muster, Encinitas submitted its plan for state review on

THE ECHTER PROPERTY, at 1150 Quail Gardens Drive, is among the very low and low-income sites inventory for the city’s Housing Element update. Photo courtesy of City of Encinitas

THE HOUSING ELEMENT update site inventory was submitted June 16 for state approval. Thick black outlines indicate new sites not in the 2013-21 inventory. Data graphic by Dan Brendel

June 16, months ahead of other North County cities. This early submission owes in part to the city having committed in its 2019 update to adopt its subsequent Housing Element “in a timely fashion.” City planning staff told The Coast News they want to allow adequate time for revisions. But also, the faster the city moves, the more likely it is that no developer will build on one of the sites the city zoned in 2019 for high-

er-density, lower-income housing. In that case, the city could potentially reuse its entire lower-income site inventory from the last cycle in the next. “We’re much better off, in my opinion, getting this [next update] … behind us as fast as possible, while we can still take full credit for our [previously identified] units,” Councilwoman Jody Hubbard said at a council meeting Dec. 11, the last time the Housing Element

update appeared on the agenda. No new sites to meet lower-income housing targets would mean no possibility of “up-zoning” additional parcels to allow higher-density construction — and no accompanying political backlash. “The city intends to utilize the sites rezoned as a part of the [last] cycle Housing Element update,” according to the city’s web site. “It will not be neces-

sary to identify new additional sites zoned at 30 units per acre or more ….” Encinitas’ maximum density zoning designation used to be R-25, which allowed 25 residential units per acre. But the city’s coerced 2019 update required rezoning certain parcels under a newly created R-30 designation, which allows 30 dwelling units per acre and taller buildings. As a guideline, the state considers 30 units per acre the minimum density to achieve affordability at lower incomes in metropolitan areas. The rationale is that, with more income-generating units builders can spread project costs — land, materials, labor, debt — while still keeping at least some prices low enough to be considered affordable. Encinitas’ 2019 up-zoning to meet the state’s den-

sity threshold proved widely unpopular. “Encinitas was incorporated to maintain local growth, that’s what Encinitas is for,” city resident Dan Vaughn told councilmembers during a Dec. 11 meeting. “The housing issue is not a technical task, it is a political project,” Juliana Maxim told the council. The 2019 update process “left most of us thoroughly alienated.” Several residents cited a proposal—since aborted by developer Randy Goodson—to build 277 apartments, of which 236 would’ve been market-rate and 41 affordable — a ratio of 6 to 1. Extrapolating this proportion, Maxim believed the “R-30 strategy requires us to enlarge the city by TURN TO HOUSING ON A13

Educational Opportunities Summer Science & Sports Academy

Supports local non-profit organizations ENCINITAS — Encinitas Charities Consulting Group (ECCG) is behind an annual fundraising event called the Summer Science & Sports Academy benefiting the community in three ways: engaging Kindergarteners through 8th Graders in science and sports education, providing access to high quality enrichment education to low-income households and offering cash-strapped non-profit organizations a new avenue for earning income. The Summer Science & Sports Academy will take place from July 13 - 31, 2020. Each week will contain unique content such that a student could attend all three weeks without repeating any material. Enrolling in the Academy means students will get 15 hours of pre-recorded STEM and sports content delivered to their inbox. They have the option to complete labs and activities that day or whenever their schedule allows. Experts will be available throughout the week for live sessions to discuss the day’s activities and answer questions. Scholarships will be awarded to Title 1 students who qualify for free or reduced lunch programs at school. These households will be able to access all three weeks of Academy content

at no charge. ECCG decided to create a program combining science and sports to provide a well-rounded camp-style experience for students. Research shows exercise temporarily increases blood flow to the brain, ensuring better performance and making it easier to focus on academic learning. STEM

Scholarships will be awarded to Title 1 students who qualify for free or reduced lunch programs at school. education enrichment programs lead to better academic outcomes for both advanced students and those who have shown less interest in science and related subjects. Non-profit organizations will benefit by partnering with ECCG to spread the word about the Academy. Participating charities are known as Beneficiary Partners. Tickets for each week cost $150 or $400 for all three weeks. Beneficiary Partners keep 80% of their ticket sales and 90% of sponsorship amounts they bring in;

the fundraising opportunity for each charity is unlimited and there is no minimum amount Partners have to raise. Encinitas 101 MainStreet Association, Encinitas Chamber of Commerce, Encinitas Educational Foundation, Coast Digital, Patrons of Encinitas Parks, Rancho Coastal Humane Society, San Diego Botanic Garden, San Diego LabRats, Studio ACE and The San Dieguito Heritage Museum have confirmed their participation as Beneficiary Partners. “The COVID-19 pandemic is affecting all of us and our local non-profits are being hit especially hard since support needed from them is at an all-time high while the economic impact of this virus has caused a dramatic drop in charitable giving. Let’s all come together to support families in need and the charities that support the most vulnerable in our community,” said Jim Merrill, Executive Director of ECCG. Enrollment is now open at sdlabrats.org/science-sports-academy. Charitable organizations interested in partnering with ECCG should visit sdlabrats.org/ beneficiary-partners. Those interested in sponsorship opportunities should contact Jason Merrill at (760) 420-4772.

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JULY 3, 2020

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T he C oast News

Welcome to ‘no-touch’ farmers market By Samantha Nelson

JEUNE ET JOLIE is one of several restaurants using the city’s temporary program to expand capacity. Photo by Kylie Sebree

Carlsbad gets creative with public spaces for businesses By Steve Puterski

CARLSBAD — An increase of COVID-19 cases in San Diego County has led to the closure for some sectors of the economy such as bars, wineries and breweries. However, restaurants are still open and in Carlsbad, expanding their footprint outside to recapture the lost indoor space and seating capacity. The city, in coordination with the Carlsbad Chamber of Commerce and Carlsbad Village Association, has been aggressive in its search for creative solutions, according to David Graham, Carlsbad’s chief innovation officer. Those include allowing businesses to expand onto public sidewalks and private parking lots to mitigate the loss of indoor seating due to state and county health orders. It’s a temporary program until the health orders are lifted, Graham said. “The Community Development Department and myself were tasked with ways of being able to activate public space,” Graham said. “Fortunately, the city already had on the books regulations for … curbside cafés. We had regulations we could look at and use.” One of the first to take advantage of the new city policy and fast-tracked permitting process was John Resnick, owner of the popular five-star French restaurant Jeune et Jolie. He said he has a solid relationship with the city and when w the idea came to move to an outdoor-only setting, he dialed up the planning department.

He then spoke to a city councilmember and then was connected to Graham, who proceeded to work to make it happen. Resnick received the permit the week before the restaurant reopened, even though he had already spent the money to transform the patio. And since they move guests outside, Resnick coined the concept “Starry Night.” The restaurant reopened June 22. “The decision to move Jeune outside was a fairly easy one,” Resnick said via email. “Without much airflow into the restaurant from the outdoors due to the nature of our space, I simply did not feel comfortable seating guests inside the restaurant. Everything I’ve read says that fresh air and the outdoors is much safer and much more difficult for the virus to spread.” Graham said the city has been agile during the past three months and working diligently with the business community on best practices to safely open and staying open. Numerous businesses have completed the process, which started June 9. “We were able to find ways they were able to expand outdoors or private areas they already had,” Graham added. “We think allowing for the activation of these spaces is eexactly the sort of thing that reduces the transmission (of COVID-19) if people are following public health orders.” Businesses interested in the private parking lot option can get the details on the city’s website and fill out the application.

OCEANSIDE — Things are moving forward for the Oceanside Farmers Market, which reopened in late May after the statewide COVID-19 shutdown orders. The market, held every Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., first reopened on May 21 as a “no-touch market.” The market is currently operating in three different sections reaching from Ditmar Street to Tremont Street on Pier View Way. Two of the sections are on the east side of North Coast Highway and one is on the west side. Social distancing is enforced throughout the market with only 50 people allowed in each section, and hand-washing stations have been placed throughout the market. Masks are required for visitors to enter the market, and vendors are required to have hand-washing stations at their booths and to wear masks and gloves as well. On-site sampling of products is not allowed at the farmers market at this time. Additionally, no pets with the exception of service animals are allowed, and only vendors are allowed to handle selected produce or products. As a “no-touch market,” MainStreet Oceanside wants market visitors to refrain from touching pro-

Encinitas offers business relief grant ENCINITAS — The city of Encinitas received a portion of the Coronavirus Relief Fund allocation from the county of San Diego, which is part of the federal CARES Act. The Encinitas City Council approved an expenditure of $500,000 on June 10, to provide direct assistance to businesses within the city that have 25 or fewer employees. On a first-come, firstserved basis, 200 local businesses will receive a grant of $2,500 to be used as rent or mortgage payments, inventory support, working capital, or payroll costs.

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The market is also selling plants and has two mask vendors near the market’s entrances. Lowell Cohen is one of the markets’ vendors. He sells Goldie Pops, his gourmet craft popcorn. Cohen primarily spent his time as a vendor at the Sunset Market, but with that market closed he has tried his hand at the farmers market. “It’s an excellent farmers market,” Cohen said. Mark Bendixen, manager of the Oceanside Farmers Market, would like to see the market open up and grow a lot faster. “There are a lot of hoops to jump through to make this happen,” Bendixen said. “We’re making it happen but it’s not like what it used to be.” Bendixen said the THE LOOSE LEAF co-owner Meghan Dolly will continue to county health department sell her company’s herbal blends at the Oceanside Farmers said it could be another Market, which reopened as a no-touch. Photo via Facebook month or two before the next phase of reopening duce and items they want on its website. happens. Nykiel said the county to purchase, and instead point to the item they want supervisors recently refor the vendors to handle. quested the state to consid- KEEPING PATIENTS “Our goal is no-touch er reopening non-essential HEALTHY & HAPPY even though people like to events like the Sunset Martouch,” said Cathy Nykiel, ket. Nykiel hopes to see AT HOME ! manager of the Sunset Mar- that happen soon. Call us today! Nykiel said the farmers ket. “We’re trying to do our 760-632-8746 best to make that happen.” market has been able to inThe Sunset Market, crease the number of venheld every Thursday eve- dors at the market, which ning, remains physically has increased the variety of products being sold. closed for now. “We have a farm secMainStreet Oceanside 1991 Village Park Way, Ste. 2L currently offers a virtual tion, hot food, a little music ENCINITAS tour of the Sunset Market keep it happy,” Nykiel said.

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T he C oast News

JULY 3, 2020

It’s Right Under Your Nose — Complete Health Dentistry

Dr. Mark T. Galli, D.D.S. has over 20 years of experience providing state-of-the-art aesthetic and family dentistry for patients in Encinitas, Carlsbad and North County. Dr. Galli graduated from UC San Diego in 1990, UCLA dental school in 1994, and started his private practice in Encinitas in 2001. Dr. Galli’s team utilizes the most advanced technology to make patient visits easier, faster and more convenient. The office is fully digital, from patient charts and X-rays to smile simulations and even digital crown design and fabrication. Dr. Galli and his staff pride themselves in making patients of all ages feel welcome, comfortable and well-served during their visit. Some of the services they provide include Preventive care, CEREC* One Visit Porcelain Crowns, Invisalign, Porcelain Veneers, Whitening, Fillings, Gum/Periodontal treatment, Digital Custom Smile Design, Sedation Dentistry, and more.

ENCINITAS — Com plete Health Dentistry is a health advocacy movement among compassionate Dental professionals to ensure that a dental patient’s entire health is improved as much as possible through the practice of preventive dentistry. The Surgeon General reports that 80 percent of Americans have some form of inflamed gums or gum disease. Research has shown links between gum health and conditions such as heart disease and high blood pressure. Gum inflammation can increase your risk for diabetes, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, rheumatoid arthritis and low birth weight and premature births. “Many people are at risk for systemic disease because of the condition of their mouths,” said Dr. Mark T. Galli, DDS, of Encinitas. “And for those who don’t have a dentist, or are having trouble keeping their gums healthy, the risks are cumulative.” Dr. Galli wants to make sure patients understand how important the health of the mouth is, as it is the gateway to the rest of the body. Chronic inflammation is the root of many diseases that can be improved if that inflammation is healed.

Complete Health Dentistry is a health advocacy movement among compassionate Dental professionals to ensure that a dental patient’s entire health is improved as much as possible through the practice of preventive dentistry.” Dr. Mark T. Galli, DDS

To learn more, or to schedule an appointment, visit www.gallidds.com or call (760) 943-1449.

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and the progress an individual makes toward their overall health. Through accurate screening and personalized treatment recommendations, effort is directed towards the total health of the patient (as opposed to just the teeth). In turn, the Dentist can work more closely with the Physician to achieve more optimal Dental and Medical health for the patient. Complete Health Dentists are helping to screen and identify risk factors in everyday dental patients from the very beginning of the appointment. Every procedure starts by taking the patient’s blood pressure. Blood pressure is a very important and often over-looked baseline indicator of a patient’s overall health. It can identify patients at risk for cardiovascular disease, stroke, sleep apnea and even diabetes. Other procedures that identify disease and risk factors are the screening for head and neck cancer, a thorough exam of the teeth and intraoral structures, and the periodontal screening. By looking thoroughly at all the associated structures of the mouth, the Complete Health Dentist can identify dental and

The surface area of the gum tissue in your mouth is about the same size as the palm of your hand. Now imagine if you had a wound the size of the palm of your hand on your body. This would allow bacteria to enter your bloodstream and would create chronic inflammation not only in the area of the wound, but all the other systems of the body where the bacteria can reach.This compromises your immune system and its ability to fight illness all over your body. “Very often, we see new patients who are on medications for blood pressure, diabetes,and cardio-vascular disease who have inflammation in their gum tissue as well, and we know that their Doctor wants them to manage their disease and their medications better, so we help them get rid of the chronic inflammation in their mouth as a way of helping this process.” The mouth and associated structures may well be one of the most telling indicators of a patient’s Dental and Medical health. It provides a wealth of evidence, which allows the Dental practitioner to identify active disease, risk factors,

health issues early, often before they get potentially serious. By working together, the Dentist, the patient and the Doctor can help to reduce inflammation in the mouth, inflammation in the body and improve the patient’s overall health. Dr. Galli and his family are Encinitas residents, and he is happy to be able to help out his local community. “We are excited to provide complete health dentistry for your whole family.” A graduate of UCSD and then UCLA Dental School, Dr. Galli has been practicing for 23 years and in Encinitas since 2001. “Dentistry is a career I really love,” he said. Dr. Galli’s services range from cleanings to cosmetic dentistry, including veneers, invisalign, CEREC one-visit porcelain crowns, and sedation dentistry for your comfort and convenience. Mark T. Galli, DDS, is located at 477 N. El Camino Real, Suite B207 in Encinitas. Call (760) 943-1449 or visit gallidds.com for a complete list of services and other helpful information.


JULY 3, 2020

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T he C oast News

Medicinal requirement removed for pot cultivation By Samantha Nelson

OCEANSIDE — Cannabis cultivation facilities in town will be able to provide product for both medical and recreational cultivation uses. City Council introduced an ordinance that removes the medical restriction for cultivation facilities. The action follows a direction Council gave to staff in August 2019 to bring forward a code amendment that would remove the medical restriction for cultivation to allow for “adult use” or recreational use. Cultivation facilities must continue to follow all existing requirements, according to Stefanie Cervantes, a planner with the city. The city previously increased the number of cultivation licenses from five to 12 last August. As of right now, the city has issued 12 local licenses for cultivation facilities and has received five conditional use permit applications. The Council voted 4-1 to introduce the ordinance at its June 24 meeting with only Deputy Mayor Jack Feller opposed. Feller has been vocal about his opposition to recreational cannabis and regrets his past vote approving medicinal cannabis uses in the city. “I fell for the bait,” Feller said. “It’s a true bait

and switch from what was initially brought before us.” Councilmember Chris Rodriguez believes that local control of cannabis businesses will reduce the amount of illegal cannabis operations in the city. “You will not find an 11th grader walking into a dispensary in Vista because that business will lose its license immediately,” Rodriguez said. “There are too many adults available to patronize those businesses.” A more effective way of protecting children from cannabis use would be to stop the “black market” cannabis operations, Rodriguez said. “We’re not expanding the black market, we’re getting rid of it,” Rodriguez said. Rodriguez also noted that by opening cultivation for recreational purposes would help bring in revenue to the city to make up for financial losses from COVID-19. Councilmember Esther Sanchez said she supported the ordinance because it helps to support the city’s agricultural uses. Mayor Peter Weiss made a motion to hold a special meeting in July to discuss a potential cannabis ballot measure, but that vote failed with Feller, Sanchez and Councilmember Ryan Keim opposed.

San Marcos delivers on small business aid By Dan Brendel

SAN MARCOS — Over the past three months, the City of San Marcos has distributed nearly $3 million in low interest loans to 120 local businesses, as part of its COVID-19 Business Sustainability Program. The program, launched March 24, gave first priority to businesses especially impacted by government ordered lockdowns, according to the city’s web site. San Marcos’ $3 million to small businesses more than doubles Oceanside’s $1.2 million through a similar loan program, though Oceanside’s population of roughly 176,000 nearly doubles San Marcos’ 97,000. In San Marcos, loan amounts range from $2,000 to $50,000, with a median of $24,000, according to the city’s June 29 response to The Coast News’ public records request. Interest rates range from zero percent to 3.5 percent, depending on the loan amount and repayment duration. Loan recipients include a number of eateries, gyms, salons and barbers. Numerous other kinds of businesses also received city loans, such as San Diego Music Studio, Advanced Veterinary Care of San Elijo, Sun Smile Dental Group, Bassett (home furnishings), Black Oxide Service (industrial met-

DIAMOND ENVIRONMENTAL Services’ loan request was denied to help other businesses in greater need. File photo

al coating), Christenson Surfboards, GotUWired (audio/video/security) and Digitainment (home entertainment). The city denied applications from 15 businesses, most often because the city wished to reserve program capacity for businesses with greater need. Denied businesses include, for example, Diamond Environmental Services (porta-potty rentals and other services), Mitre’s Fence, Statewide Fumigation, and ASAP Drain Guys & Plumbing. In order to receive a city loan, businesses had to promise to spend the money “to the benefit of

omy in recovery, the city would like to provide relief to our [COVID-19 Business Sustainability Program] borrowers by utilizing a portion of the CARES sub-grant funds to turn a portion of their loans into grants. Essentially, utilizing the CARES sub-grant funds to pay off a portion of their individual loan amount, for them.” The city also earmarked portions of its CARES dollars for paid sick/family/medical leave for public employees (13 percent); disinfection of public areas/facilities and other coronavirus related public safety measures (12 percent); telework capabilities for public employees (10 percent); and the remainder for various other purposes. The city did not earmark any CARES funding for medical and protective supplies, COVID-19 frontline worker payroll, or COVID-19 mitigation for homeless populations.

the business physically located in San Marcos,” according to the city’s web site. The program has exhausted its city council approved funding and stopped accepting applications May 7. The county govern- Carlsbad Divorce Mentors ment on May 20 allotted * Certified Divorce Coach * to San Marcos $1.7 million Specializing in: from the federal Corona➢ Emotional Support virus Aid, Relief and Eco➢ Process Organization nomic Security (CARES) ➢ Goal Setting Act. Of that amount, council on June 23 unanimously approved $1 million (58 percent) as additional aid to local businesses. According to the city’s For a FREE consult call expenditure plan: “To fur760-685-2651 www.carlsbaddivorcementors.com ther assist our local econ-

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A10

T he C oast News

JULY 3, 2020

N OP OW DA EN IL Y

Discover San Diego’s newest treasure! GOODONYA owners Kris and Bren Buchanan, of Encinitas, shared a photo from their wedding day in 2011 with their customers in celebration of Pride Month. Courtesy photo

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Encinitas leaders, business owners reflect on Pride Month

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6/29/20 10:33 AM

ENCINITAS — After the City of Encinitas proclaimed June as Pride Month, local politicians and business owners are reflecting on how the city will move forward in honoring LGBTQ persons during a summer of COVID and social unrest. For Encinitas residents in the LGBTQ community, raising the Pride flag on the flag pole at City Hall, along-side the American and California State Flag for the second year in a row, was significant. Encinitas Councilman Joe Mosca, a proud father and husband, was instrumental in raising the issue with City Council in 2019. “I serve with some very progressive and good, decent people who thought it was extremely important to have the flag right where it is at, to stand up and show that we support equality for all, especially LGBTQ civil rights,” Mosca said. In a City Council meeting on June 10, Mayor Catherine Blakespear proclaimed the, “month of June as LGBTQ Pride Month in the city of Encinitas and invite everyone to respect, honor and celebrate our diverse community and to continue building a culture of inclusiveness and acceptance of the for the LGBTQ community.” The council’s proclamation came just days before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the 1964 Civil Rights Act protections extend to LGBTQ employees, prohibiting discrimination based on sex, race, religion, or national orientation. The verdict was widely celebrated as “remarkable,” as almost half the states in America still lacked legal protection for LGBTQ employees. The new ruling now protects employees in workplaces in all 50 states. Encinitas resident and restaurant owner, Kris Buchanan, married her wife Bren in 2011. The two have run the successful restaurant, Goodonya, in downtown Encinitas for years. Buchanan spoke to the Coast News about her im-

mense pride in running a restaurant in Encinitas, a city she views as forward thinking and welcoming. “By flying the Pride flag, it really puts it in front of people driving down the road and you see it clearly, this is a progressive town,” Buchanan said. “With the Supreme Court’s decision, I mean, I own my own business so there’s no threat in me treating my employees that way,” Buchanan said. “But it’s a real thing in the rest of the world. The discrimination is real.” Buchanan also found a great deal of significance in celebrating Pride Month during the same weeks as Black Lives Matter protests. “This year has really got us thinking as a company about how we can actively be a good ally as opposed to just making a couple of social media posts,” Buchanan said. “When you give money to a company, you need to know it’s not going to fund any politician or proposition that suppresses people’s rights.” “It’s important for companies to stand up and let people know who they are.” Mosca also found a deeper significance in celebrating June as Pride Month this summer. “I think it’s important to partner with Black Lives Matter and other groups that are saying, ‘enough is enough’,” Mosca said. “There are many people still being discriminated in this state, this country, and around the world,” Mosca said. “We have an obligation to stand up, demand equality, and say that systemic and structural discrimination are unacceptable, for not only the LGBTQ community for every marginalized community in our nation.” The City of Encinitas and the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department will be hosting a forum to discuss race and discriminatory relations in North County in the upcoming months. The City has not yet announced details, however they have announced more information will be released in the future.


JULY 3, 2020

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T he C oast News

More questions than answers with upcoming school year By Lexy Brodt

REGION – The San Dieguito Union High School District is considering a hybrid approach to instruction for the 2020-2021 school year, although area schools still face far more questions than answers due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Students will likely return to campus on Aug. 25 – the scheduled first day of class for the district’s 10 middle and high schools. However, there would still be an option to do distance learning on the same bell schedule. But given the oft-changing nature of the COVID-19 crisis, very little is certain, including what exactly the school environment will look like come fall. “Staff is being asked to plan for everything, without very clear orders or guidance coming from the Department of Public Health, either at the state or county level, or the governor’s office,” said District Superintendent Robert Haley. And regardless of the logistics or educational structures they opt to pursue, the district also has to remain alert to the possibility that schools could be shut down again at a moment’s notice.

Learning models According to a recent survey conducted by the district, the vast majority of parents and students are

ready to get back on campus. Of the survey’s nearly 6,000 respondents, 84.6% supported on-campus, inclass learning with “reasonable precautions.” 13.9% supported distance learning that would follow the school’s normal bell schedule, with an opportunity for on-campus (“hybrid”) learning, with the remainder supporting independent study. At the district board’s June 18 meeting, Haley said the district is “quite certain that we will need to provide some kind of on-campus, in-class instruction.” But the district will also have to allow distance learning for students with health concerns, or who may have a high-risk family member at home. According to District Board President Beth Hergesheimer, the district will eventually have to communicate with parents over which options are right for their children. “We will likely seek a commitment from parents as to which mode of learning their students will participate in for at least a semester at a time so that our district can plan and staff accordingly,” she said, in an e-mail to The Coast News. In terms of grading policy – which caused quite the stir during the spring semester – Haley said the school will need a grading

system to apply to both inclass instruction and distance learning. However, he said a credit/no credit structure has not been ruled out.

Wearing masks Some of the district’s key sticking points relate to mask-wearing and social distancing -- particularly when and where such spacing will be required. In an interview with The Coast News, Haley said the district has been hearing a lot of “should’s” from public health officials, with few concrete guidelines. According to the county’s June 19 public health orders, “all public, charter and private schools may hold classes or school business operations on the school campus,” provided the school complies with measures in the State COVID-19 Industry Guidance: Schools and SchoolBased Programs issued by the California Department of Public Health, and incorporates guidelines from the department’s “Stronger Together” guidebook. The 14-page industry guidance document, released on June 5, outlines general recommendations for reopening campuses, including recommendations for staff and student hygiene, cleaning, social distancing inside and outside the classroom, and planning for when students or staff become sick.

The guiding document says that schools should “teach and reinforce use of cloth face coverings, masks or face shields,” particularly when “physical distancing is not practicable.” The report says all staff “should” use cloth face coverings and students “should be encouraged” to use them. Some are concerned with this vagueness – including parent Joshua Graff Zivin, who spoke during public comments at the June virtual board meeting. “I understand that it is neither practical nor condu-

cive to learning to have students wear masks all day long,” he said. “However, a hybrid policy – one that requires masks during class transition times when students are crowded together in hallways…does not seem unduly burdensome and would substantially reduce the risk to students, staff and all of their families.” On June 18, state’s Department of Public Health announced that California residents and visitors “must wear face coverings when they are in high-risk situations,” which includes being in enclosed rooms or common areas.

Social distancing 24/7 As far as classroom spaces go, the state’s report recommends that students stay in the same place throughout the day to minimize movement, and remain in small groups. Space should be maximized between desks, and staff should consider separation of students through six feet between desks, partitions between desks, or arranging desks in such a way as to minimize face-toface contact. According to Haley, this kind of distancing TURN TO QUESTIONS ON A13

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A12 LEGALS NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Trustee Sale No. : 00000007507890 Title Order No.: 180167884 FHA/VA/PMI No.: ATTENTION RECORDER: THE FOLLOWING REFERENCE TO AN ATTACHED SUMMARY APPLIES ONLY TO COPIES PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR, NOT TO THIS RECORDED ORIGINAL NOTICE. NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED 03/27/2006. 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. BARRETT DAFFIN FRAPPIER TREDER and WEISS, LLP, as duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust Recorded on 04/04/2006 as Instrument No. 2006-0230291 and Page No. 7947 of official records in the office of the County Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, State of CALIFORNIA. EXECUTED BY: DANIEL C. MATTEAO, A MARRIED MAN, AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK/ CASH EQUIVALENT or other form of payment authorized by California Civil Code 2924h(b), (payable at time of sale in lawful money of the United States). DATE OF SALE: 08/07/2020 TIME OF SALE: 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. STREET ADDRESS and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 520 FALLBROOK STREET 22, FALLBROOK, CALIFORNIA 92028 APN#: 104-111-20-00 THE WEST 62.08 FEET OF THAT PORTION OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 24, TOWNSHIP 9 SOUTH, RANGE 4 WEST, SAN BERNARDINO MERIDIAN, IN THE UNINCORPORATED AREA OF THE COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT THEREOF. BEGINNING AT A POINT ON THE NORTHERLY LINE OF SAID NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SOUTHWEST QUARTER, DISTANT THEREON, SOUTH 89° 06’ EAST 287.72 FEET FROM THE NORTHWEST CORNER THEREOF; THENCE CONTINUING ALONG SAID NORTHERLY LINE, SOUTH 89° 06’ EAST 186.25 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 0° 26’ 30” WEST 163.64 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89° 37’ 40” WEST 186.24 FEET TO AN INTERSECTION WITH A LINE THAT BEARS SOUTH 02° 26’ 30” WEST FROM THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE NORTH 0° 26’ 30” EAST 165.35 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. EXCEPTING THEREFROM THE SOUTHERLY 27.00 FEET. 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 note(s) secured by said Deed of Trust, with interest thereon, as provided in said note(s), advances, under the terms of said Deed of Trust, fees, charges

T he C oast News LEGALS

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LEGALS

JULY 3, 2020

LEGALS

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LEGALS

CITY OF ENCINITAS NOTICE OF ELECTION

CIUDAD DE ENCINITAS AVISO DE ELECCIÓN

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a General Municipal Election will be held in the City of Encinitas on Tuesday, November 3, 2020 for the following Elective Offices: • One (1) Mayor for a full term of two years with a term expiring November 2022 • Two (2) Council Members: • One (1) Council Member to represent District 1 for a full four-year term with a term expiring November 2024 • One (1) Council Member to represent District 2 for a full four-year term with a term expiring November 2024 • One citizen initiative qualified Ballot Measure to appear on the ballot as follows:

SE NOTIFICA POR MEDIO DEL PRESENTE que el martes, 3 de noviembre de 2020, se celebrará una Elección Municipal General en la Ciudad de Encinitas para los siguientes Cargos Electivos: • Un (1) Alcalde por un término completo de dos años con un término que finaliza en noviembre de 2022 • Dos (2) Miembros del Concejo: • Un (1) Miembro del Concejo para representar al Distrito 1 por un término completo de cuatro años con un término que finaliza en noviembre de 2024 • Un (1) Miembro del Concejo para representar al Distrito 2 por un término completo de cuatro años con un término que finaliza en noviembre de 2024 • Una iniciativa ciudadana calificó la Propuesta de Ley para que aparezca en la boleta electoral de la siguiente manera:

Shall the electors of the City of Encinitas adopt the citizen initiative titled “An Ordinance of the City of Encinitas Authorizing Commercial Cannabis Activities Involving Retail Sales, Cultivation, Manufacturing, Cannabis Kitchens and Distribution, and Personal Use Cultivation, Subject to Certain Regulations and Restrictions.”

YES NO

The nomination period for the Office of Mayor and Members of the City Council begins on July 13, 2020 and closes on August 7, 2020 at 4:30 p.m. No person may file nomination papers for more than one office at the same election. If nomination papers for the incumbent Mayor are not filed by August 7, 2020 (the 88th day before the election) the filing deadline shall be extended to August 12, 2020 for non-incumbents (the 83rd day before the election). If nomination papers for the incumbent Members of the City Council are not filed by August 7, 2020 (the 88th day before the election) the filing deadline shall be extended to August 12, 2020 for non-incumbents (the 83rd day before the election). If no one or only one person is nominated for an elective office, appointment to the elective office may be made as prescribed by Elections Code Section 10229 of the State of California. The polls will be open between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. on Election Day (for information regarding registering to vote or polls contact the San Diego County Registrar of Voters at https://www.sdvote.com. For additional information, visit the City of Encinitas Municipal Elections website page located at http://www.encinitasca.gov/ Government/Municipal-Elections or contact the City Clerk’s Department at 760-6332601. \Kathy Hollywood, City Clerk, Dated: June 18, 2020 07/03/2020 CN 24621 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 $464,349.91. The beneficiary under said Deed of Trust heretofore executed and delivered to the undersigned a written Declaration of Default and Demand for Sale, and a written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned caused said Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. 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 714-730-2727 for information regarding the trustee’s sale or visit this Internet Web site www.servicelinkASAP.com for

information regarding the sale of this property, using the file number assigned to this case 00000007507890. 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. FOR TRUSTEE SALE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: AGENCY SALES and POSTING 714-7302727 www.servicelinkASAP. com BARRETT DAFFIN FRAPPIER TREDER and WEISS, LLP IS ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. BARRETT DAFFIN FRAPPIER TREDER and WEISS, LLP as Trustee 3990 E. Concours Street, Suite 350 Ontario, CA 91764 (866) 795-1852 Dated: 06/25/2020 A-4724924 07/03/2020, 07/10/2020, 07/17/2020 CN 24617 T.S. No. 091043-CA APN: 158570-39 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED 11/14/2005. 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 7/17/2020 at 10:00 AM, CLEAR RECON CORP, as duly appointed trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust recorded 11/18/2005 as Instrument No. 2005-1002778 of Official Records in the office of the County Recorder of San Diego County, State of CALIFORNIA executed by: CHRISTY R. DORAN AND JEFFREY DORAN, WIFE AND HUSBAND AS JOINT TENANTS 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, SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, OR SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF THE

FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE: At the entrance to the East County Regional Center by statue, 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: MORE ACCURATELY DESCRIBED IN SAID DEED OF TRUST. The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 4628 DORAL COURT OCEANSIDE, CA 92057 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 held, but without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, condition, or encumbrances, including fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust, to pay the remaining principal sums of the note(s) secured 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: $627,148.12 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 a written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned or its predecessor caused said Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. 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

Deben los votantes de la Ciudad de Encinitas adoptar la iniciativa ciudadana titulada “Una Ordenanza de la Ciudad de Encinitas que Autoriza las Actividades Comerciales de Cannabis, las cuales Comprenden Ventas Minoristas, Cultivo, Fabricación, Cocinas y Distribución de Cannabis, y el Cultivo para Uso Personal, Sujeto a Ciertas Regulaciones y Restricciones”.

SÍ NO

El período de nominación para el Cargo de Alcalde y Miembros del Concejo de la Ciudad comienza el 13 de julio de 2020 y cierra el 7 de agosto de 2020 a las 4:30 p.m. Ninguna persona puede presentar papeles de nominación para más de un cargo en la misma elección. Si el Alcalde titular no presentó los papeles de nominación hasta el 7 de agosto, 2020 (88 días antes de la elección), el plazo de presentación se extenderá hasta el 12 de agosto 2020 para los no titulares (83 días antes de la elección). Si los Miembros del Concejo de la Ciudad titulares no presentaron los papeles de nominación hasta el 7 de agosto, 2020 (88 días antes de la elección), el plazo de presentación se extenderá hasta el 12 de agosto 2020 para los no titulares (83 días antes de la elección). Si ninguna o sólo una persona es nominada para un cargo electivo, el nombramiento a dicho cargo se hará conforme lo prescrito en la Sección 10229 del Código Electoral del Estado de California. Los centros de votación estarán abiertos entre las 7:00 a.m. y las 8:00 p.m. el Día de las Elecciones (para obtener información sobre cómo registrarse para votar o sobre los centros de votación, comuníquese con el Registro Electoral del Condado de San Diego en https://www.sdvote.com. Para obtener información adicional, visite la página web de las Elecciones Municipales de la Ciudad de Encinitas ubicada en http://www.encinitasca.gov/Government/Municipal-Elections o comuníquese con el Departamento de la Secretaría de la Ciudad al 760-633-2601. \Kathy Hollywood, Secretaria de la Ciudad, Fechado: 18 de junio de 2020 07/03/2020 CN 24622 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 1-866-539-4173 or visit this Internet Web site WWW. S E RV I C E L I N K AU C T I O N. COM, using the file number assigned to this case 091043CA. 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. FOR SALES INFORMATION: 1-866-539-4173 CLEAR RECON CORP 4375 Jutland Drive San Diego, California 92117 STOX 926012 06/26/2020, 07/03/2020, 07/10/2020 CN 24591 Title Order No. 05941306 Trustee Sale No. 84521 Loan No. 399173926 APN: 219-390-31-00 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 12/20/2017. 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

PROCEEDINGS AGAINST YOU,YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. On 7/13/2020 at 1:00 PM, CALIFORNIA TD SPECIALISTS as the duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust Recorded on 1/5/2018 as Instrument No. 2018-0006264 in book N/A, page N/A of official records in the Office of the Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, California, executed by: STANLEY L. HUDSON, AN UNMARRIED MAN , as Trustor JAN R. BEVERLY, TRUSTEE OF THE JAN R. BEVERLY REVOCABLE TRUST DATED MARCH 22, 2013 , as Beneficiary WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (payable at time of sale in lawful money of the United States, by cash, a cashier’s check drawn by 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). At: OUTSIDE THE MAIN ENTRANCE AT THE SUPERIOR COURT NORTH COUNTY DIVISION LOCATED AT 325 SOUTH MELROSE DRIVE, VISTA, CA 92081, NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE – continued all right, title and interest conveyed to and now held by it under said Deed of Trust in the property situated in said County, California described the land therein: LOT 9 OF LA SIERRA ESTATES, IN THE CITY OF SAN MARCOS, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING TO THE MAP THEREOF NO. 8085, FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY RECORDER OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY, MARCH 14, 1975. The property heretofore described is being sold “as is”. The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 3868 LA CAMPANA CT SAN MARCOS, CA 92078. 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 note(s) secured by said Deed of Trust, with interest thereon, as provided in said note(s), advances, if any, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, estimated fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of trusts created by said Deed of Trust, to-wit $293,069.88 (Estimated). Accrued interest and additional advances, if any, will increase this figure prior to sale. The beneficiary under said Deed of Trust heretofore executed and delivered to the undersigned a written Declaration of Default and Demand for Sale, and a written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned caused said Notice of Default and Election of Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located and more than three months have elapsed since such recordation. DATE: 6/10/2020 CALIFORNIA TD SPECIALIST, as Trustee 8190 EAST KAISER BLVD., ANAHEIM HILLS, CA 92808 PHONE: 714283-2180 FOR TRUSTEE SALE INFORMATION LOG ON TO: www.stoxposting. com CALL: 844-477-7869 PATRICIO S. INCE’, VICE PRESIDENT CALIFORNIA TD SPECIALIST IS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL 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

Coast News legals continued on page B6


JULY 3, 2020

POLICE REFORM CONTINUED FROM A1

all the police departments banned the carotid hold in the aftermath of the (George Floyd) incident,” Gennaco said. “That kind of change is remarkable.” Carlsbad Police Department took one step further on June 4 by implementing Campaign Zero’s “8 Can’t Wait” initiative to promote accountability, increase oversight and prevent officer-involved incidents involving excessive force. But on the same day the initiative was adopted, a cell phone video depicting two Carlsbad police officers tasing, physically restraining and arresting an intoxicated Black male went viral on social media. Within 48 hours, the department released body-camera footage from both officers and a timeline of events involving the arrest of Marcel CoxHarshaw, a 27-year-old San Diego resident. A police spokesperson said the officers followed the department’s use-offorce protocols, describing Cox-Harshaw as “extremely agitated,” fueled by a blood-alcohol content three times the legal driving limit. Representatives from the North County Civil Liberties Coalition, North San Diego County NAACP, Moms Demand Action and Racial Justice Coalition held a press conference on June 19, stating that “the incident was escalated into conflict,” and CoxHarshaw’s state of mind should have been taken into consideration by law enforcement officers prior to engagement. This type of public engagement with law enforcement, such as civic discourse and ad hoc protests, can help effect policy changes, influence electoral processes and determine how to allocate public safety resources, Gennaco told The Coast News. “Some officials have heard loud and clear,” Gennaco said. “It’s not coincidental that Sheriff (Wil-

QUESTIONS

CONTINUED FROM A11

would allow “at best” 10 students at a time in the district’s average 960-squarefoot classroom, with the instructor also six feet away. So, for example, at a school like Torrey Pines High School — which has about 2,600 students – you might only be able to have a third or a fourth of the students on campus at a time. This might allow students to be on campus only one day a week. Haley said that adhering to six feet of social distancing at all times, and enforcing that throughout the day, will pose a challenge to districts. “Most of our education is project-based, with teachers moving throughout the classroom, students working with each other, and that does not match up with six feet apart at all times, or desks in rows,” he said. “It

A13

T he C oast News

KIMBER HAWES, agency outreach manager at CAHOOTS (center), said a successful crisis intervention program requires community resources and support from law enforcement. Photo courtesy of CAHOOTS

liam) Gore and the chiefs of police around the county chose to ban the carotid hold.”

according to city budget documents for fiscal years 2019-20 and 2020-21. Property crime has dropped from a 21% clearance rate in 2014 to just 12% in 2019. By comparison, the city spent $2 million on Neighborhood Services in FY 2019-20, which includes establishing grants for community events and providing for engagement resources, community service programs, volunteer services, community education, code enforcement and mediation. “Certainly, there should be a discussion about where tax dollars are best spent for any city or county,” Gennaco said. “There are gaps in our social services support system in any jurisdiction, whether it’s the homeless situation, poverty, income disparity — those are all larger issues. Because there has been insufficient support for that programming and social services, oftentimes the issue is left for the police to handle when they get a call for service.”

police brutality and amid calls to defund the police, some cities are looking for solutions outside of traditional law enforcement. A program that has garMoney nered national attention in Since 2017, the city recent weeks is White Bird of Carlsbad’s budget for Clinic’s CAHOOTS (Crisis its police department has Assistance Helping Out On grown from $34 million to The Streets), a program a projected $45 million, based in Eugene, Ore. with a majority of its fundOriginating from the larger ing going to personnel sercounterculture movement vices, including salaries, in the 1960s, the founders retirement benefits and of White Bird Clinic did not health insurance. trust police and wanted to In the same timeprovide a free, humanistic frame, the Carlsbad Police and compassionate health Department has added 14 service to residents. new full-time positions, Kimber Hawes, agency including three full-time outreach manager at CApolice officers to bolster HOOTS since 2015, said the department’s Homeless shortly after opening a Outreach Team (HOT). crisis line, the clinic estabAccording to this lished its mobile response year’s point-in-time count, team, known locally as the the city had 147 homeless “Bummer Squad.” individuals, with 94 of Teams were disthem living unsheltered. patched to nonviolent sitBut as costs have uations in used vans, protrended upward, the crime viding assistance to people clearance rate has mostsuffering from medical and ly gone down. In 2014, the mental health emergencies Carlsbad police had a 92% in Eugene and neighboring clearance rate for violent Springfield, responding crimes. to approximately 23,000 Since then, the clearcalls between both cities in ance rate declined, hitting 2018. a five-year low of 46% in Solutions The success rate caught In the wake of ongo2018 before rebounding to 58% the following year, ing public outcry against the attention of the Eugene goes against everything we know about how students learn.” This requirement also butts heads with what has been the desire of most parents in the district: to have students on campus every day of the week. This approach was recently approved by San Diego Unified School District. “Most of the energy that we’ve had has asked, please just allow there to be a full-time distance learning option, and a lot of people (saying), I want my kid on campus, five days a week,” Haley said at the board meeting.

Looking ahead The district has been working daily to meet this uncertain future, having assembled a working group of staff and teachers to provide input on instructional models. They’ve also put together a steering committee of

key district directors and associate superintendents that meets every day, “trying to figure out how to get kids back to school.” With the start of school still about two months away, the district is planning steps forward without overpreparing, with the concern that things could change drastically in that time period. “Trying to put too much information out right now with specifics really runs the danger of having orders and guidance render it obsolete,” Haley said at the meeting. “The state’s going to pass, I’m sure, bills, trailer bills to implement the budget that will impact what we’re able to do as a school district or what we’re required to do as a school district.” The district is hoping to communicate a more concrete future to students and parents by early August, pending more information from the governor’s office

and state and county health authorities. “In the meantime, we’re building out scenarios and really lobbying and advocating on the part of our students for more clear and more firm guidelines.” According to Haley, the district has yet to receive any funding under the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act to respond to COVID-19-related district needs. This week, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced that the state’s 2020-21 budget will preserve spending for K-12 schools, amidst initial concerns that K-12 spending would need to be cut by 8% or $6.5 billion. “It’s more beneficial for schools than the original proposal from the governor,” said Haley. “But it’s still going to present challenges to school districts across the state – being asked to do more with less.”

Police Department, which elected to fund a partnership with CAHOOTS instead of hiring additional police officers. Since then, the nonprofit has established 30 partnerships in the area, including with several school districts, public transportation agencies, hospitals and drug addiction treatment facilities. Hawes said the Eugene police go through Crisis Intervention Training, hearing from different community groups and learning de-escalation tactics and how to best utilize services such as CAHOOTS. “Most of the cops in Eugene are open to that feedback and seek it out,” Hawes said. According to Eugene newspaper The Register Guard, officials from nearly 20 cities—including Austin, Chicago, Oakland, Denver, New York City and Portland — have reached out to learn more about CAHOOTS. But Hawes, who serves as both a crisis worker and EMT, said a program like CAHOOTS requires community resources and support. “The CAHOOTS team is a group of (police) abolitionists, just to be clear, but the process with abolition is that it takes a long time and it takes buy-in from the community,” Hawes said. “And this thought process that we completely need to disband the police right now, that is totally unrealistic. As a crisis worker, I don’t want to respond to a call where a man has a gun and is beating his wife. I’ve fought for my life at my job and I’m glad I could call the police. It’s not as simple as that. “I think our entire society is a gray area and people like to take mental shortcuts and think in the extremes, but it’s gray.

HOUSING

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almost a third,” calling it “Robin Hood for speculators.” Prior to the 2019 update, several builders wrote to the city government, expressing their interest to redevelop their Encinitas properties at higher densities. So did a hodgepodge of other owners, including a garden nursery, a flower grower and two churches. In recycling its lower-income site inventory, Encinitas would surpass its next-cycle obligation. Last cycle, Encinitas had to plan for 1,449 lower-income units. This cycle, its obligation falls by 42 percent to 838 units. So, the same inventory this time would yield a 611-unit surplus. By comparison, Carlsbad’s obligation in the same categories increased by 31 percent. Encinitas needs to identify additional sites only in the state’s highest income category, priced for a family of four earning roughly $111,000 or more. The city’s proposal to the state puts those new sites

And what gray looks like is transitioning. So, what we need to focus on is yes, defunding, but also reforming what’s happening right now in order to move towards abolition.” But as cities have reached out to CAHOOTS for consulting and advice regarding alternative public safety measures and services, Hawes worries the program’s ethos may change within these newly adopted models. For Hawes, it’s not about just establishing underfunded outreach teams. “What I’m concerned about is that people are going to see this model and then put together some … Band-Aid version,” Hawes said. “(CAHOOTS) is not a Band-Aid solution. Every community is different. So, the Eugene community has certain needs. We have a large population of unhoused folks, so we need services for that. But I’m only as strong as our community resources. CAHOOTS is only as strong as its community resources.” However, things get complicated in each jurisdiction’s “gray area,” including the ongoing need for offering traditional police services. According to Gennaco, one of the factors that makes American policing so difficult has to do with the prevalence of firearms, which “presents a real challenge on how to keep everyone safe and find a way to problematically reduce crime,” something Gennaco thinks is still achievable. “This all gets very complicated but when it comes to diverting those resources in another way, what are we going to do with the basic police services the majority of people want,” Gennaco said. “There are some basic services, and if not the police, who?” especially in the Leucadia and Olivenhain neighborhoods, but without requiring any rezoning. Encinitas’ reduced lower-income housing obligation owes to a change in how quotas are allocated as a function of proximity to transit and jobs, according to a statement from SANDAG, the regional agency in charge of countywide allocations. Moreover, “it is not as simple as rolling over sites from a previous Housing Element, and Encinitas will need to work with the [state] to ensure compliance” with state housing law amended in 2017, according to SANDAG. Attorneys on behalf of the city rebuffed “repeated attempts to portray the city as a bad actor on housing issues” in a March 6 letter to the state’s Department of Housing and Community Development. They highlighted Encinitas’ approval of bonus density projects, inclusionary housing policy, and “permit ready” accessory dwelling unit program. The Encinitas City Council did not substantively respond to a request for comment.


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Carlsbad pizza shop, a favorite of local sports teams, closes By Steve Puterski

CARLSBAD — The lines were long and their memories even longer. Thousands of customers plowed through the doors of That Pizza Place last weekend to say goodbye after the ownership announced it would be closing due to the COVID-19 pandemic. For 43 years, the pizzeria has been a Carlsbad staple, where families and athletic teams would gather to celebrate milestones, wins and more. But like many small, family-owned businesses, That Pizza Place fell victim to the brutal economic fallout of the pandemic. Its final day of busi-

THAT PIZZA PLACE served its final pie on June 28. The 43-year-old restaurant sponsored hundreds of youth sports teams over the years. Photo by Steve Puterski

ness was June 28. “We knew from the beginning it was going to be hard,” Jenny Smart, whose father opened That Pizza

Place, told Fox 5 San Diego. “We tried and we fought.” Messages left with the ownership were not returned prior to deadline.

The business has been in the family for decades as it opened in 1978 and resided off El Camino Real and Hosp Way. The aesthetic was something from yesteryear, with road signs and vintage farm equipment hanging from the walls and ceiling. Not to mention the trophies. Wall shelves packed with trophies from the youth sports team and adult softball teams That Pizza Place happily sponsored over the years. Smart told the iconic spot couldn’t recover from shutting down due to the pandemic. At the end of May, the restaurant reopened for dine-in cus-

tomers, but Smart said the traffic and orders weren’t there, noting the loss of reliable sources such as youth teams and parties. Keith and Crystal Silvas and their two kids were just several of the more than 100 people waiting in line on June 25. The line snaked around the strip mall to the front doors of Sprouts grocery store. The couple lives within walking distance and were heartbroken when they saw the news through the restaurant’s Facebook page. “We were pretty bummed about it because we’ve been coming here to celebrate different things,” Crystal Silvas

said. “We were like we got to go one last time before it closes.” Keith Silvas echoed his wife’s comments and the two said That Pizza Place was older than they were. He said the restaurant helped with school fundraisers, noting how That Pizza Place did a lot to give back to the community. “It’s sad to see,” he said. “A lot of people in the community are going to miss it.” Chloe Silvas, Keith and Crystal Silvas’ daughter, said she will miss the pizza and the claw game, where an individual attempts to pluck a prize with a mechanical arm.

Encinitas OKs homeless action plans, backs Waldorf school build By Caitlin Steinberg

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ENCINITAS — The Encinitas City Council voted unanimously to approve several homeless action plans, a motion proposing a pedestrian railroad crossing in Northwest Leucadia, and a motion to support the construction of Sanderling Waldorf School during two meetings occurring the week of June 22. In the first meeting occurring on June 24, dozens of public letters from residents were read aloud expressing their frustration with a lack of Leucadia railroad crossings, the council opened discussion on the issue. Councilman Tony Kranz recalled his time as a member of the Leucadia Town Council, organizing petitions calling for the installation of crossings. “My hope is that during the next couple of months, we can put together numbers that allow us to advance a few ideas to the city council and consider possibilities that would include an under crossing at certain locations,” Kranz said. Mayor Catherine Blakespear was in full support of adding a motion directing the City Manager to organize a report and timeline for such a project. “This is 100% in line with the goals of this council and the mobility improvements that we are aiming for throughout the city,” Blakespear said. “Staff will put together a plan and talk to SANDAG… evaluating the circumstances around the area and data already collected.” In regards to residents’ complaints that no crossing has been built years, Deputy Mayor Kelli Hinze remarked how Encinitas’ most recent budget finally allowed for a backlog of projects to be completed, thus making space for a future project such as rail crossings. “That’s what I like about this budget,” Hinze said, “It’s a conservative budget based on the projects we want to know and knowing the next area to focus on is Northwestern Leucadia.” In addition, the council heard a presentation on Encinitas’ Homelessness Ac-

tion Plan detailing the city’s demographics and gaps in social services as well as the different methods of breaking down those statistics. For example, in 2019 the CRC reported 572 homeless-family “household” units in Encinitas, totaling 860 total people. Of those, the most frequently provided service included food and medical benefits as well as counseling and domestic violence services. The council also discussed the public’s wish to include faith organizations already involved in aiding the homeless in future discussions. “There are a lot of folks in our community that really want to be a part of this,” Councilman Joe Mosca said. “We need to bring folks from faith-based organizations into the fold and really strengthen these partnerships we’re going to be talking about under the action plan.” The other Commissioners and the Mayor agreed, future community conversations on solutions for Encinitas’ homelessness problem will be open to the public. The next step for the City of Encinitas is to finalize draft a plan based on said presentation. Then, present the draft plan to the community, receive their input, and resubmit a final plan to the City Council for implementation. The council also approved a series of City Hall renovations including replacing segments of an outdated fire sprinkler system as well as removing mold and asbestos. In a second session on June 29, the City Council heard four appeals to the Planning Commission’s previous decisions approving the construction of Sanderling Waldorf School. The four residents’ appeals covered environmental concerns, the impact on local species, and traffic among other issues. After the applicant, discussion, the council voted unanimously supported the Planning Commission’s decision and determining the project in compliance with CEQA requirements.


JULY 3, 2020

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National park is petrified, painted and photogenic hit the road e’louise ondash

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he sign at the Painted Desert overlook — our first stop in the Petrified Forest National Park — says that sometimes you can see 100 miles from this vantage point. I’m not sure I’d know 100 miles away if I saw it. But it’s safe to say that, from where we stand, we can see a whole lot of the northeastern Arizona landscape. The reds, oranges, browns and grays of the strata in the sculpted rock formations and the contrasting wisps of clouds floating above in the sky-dome are at once earthy and ethereal, sober and flamboyant, apparent and mystical. It’s no mystery, though, why this is called the Painted Desert; Mother Nature’s paintbrush has given us a canvas worthy of the millions of photos that the 800,000 annual visitors here bring home to share. In truth, this vast, flamboyant terrain looks unreal — more like the backdrop for an elaborate Broadway production. It’s also hard to understand that what we see spread before us was formed

BLUE MESA TRAIL offers a 3.5-mile route that takes visitors close to millions-of-years-old landforms that mesmerize hikers and photographers alike. Photo by Jerry Ondash

REMNANTS of tree trunks from a pre-historic forest are strewn about throughout the southern portion of Petrified Forest National Park in eastern Arizona. Various minerals account for the different colors. Photo by Jerry Ondash

between 227 million and 205 million years ago. Thankfully, in 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt saw its value and declared that it be preserved in perpetuity. Originally a national monument, the Petrified Forest, which contains the Painted Desert, was named a national park in 1962. It is early June, and we are especially lucky to be here because there are few visitors (the park reopened three days before our visit) and exploring it can largely be done while maintaining social distancing.

The visitors’ map clearly delineates all the stops along the 28-mile park road, which runs north and south of Interstate 40. For some years, the Petrified Forest was the only national park that included a portion of the old Route 66. Today, a rusted-out 1932 Studebaker marks the portion of the Mother Road that crossed the park, which accommodates both the adventurous and non-adventurous. For the latter, there is a multitude of photogenic vistas that can be captured from your car.

If you want to explore further, though, there are numerous, easily accessed, clean trails that measure from 0.3 to 3.5 miles that will take you close to some bizarre and colorful rock formations and lots of petrified wood. As we follow some of these paths through the petrified wood areas (at the southern end of the park), we are buffeted by strong winds that challenge us to stay upright. Scattered about are various sizes of 200 millionyear-old petrified wood remnants — from chips to entire

tree trunks, some of them glittering in the sun. The wood-to-rock transformation took place when, after the trees were felled by wind or water and carried downstream (this area once was a hot, humid rainforest), the trees were buried by layers of sediment. Over time, the logs soaked up ground water and silica from volcanic ash (eastern Arizona and western New Mexico were hotbeds of volcanoes), and over time, these elements crystalized into quartz. Some logs hold multiple hues of orange, red, yellow, brown and even green and purple. It’s no wonder these specimens are highly prized, but don’t touch or take. You can legally purchase petrified wood bookends, lamps and tchotchkes from the park’s gift shop. Trails also take visitors

close to sites of ancient settlements and petroglyphs, left by those who inhabited the area up to 2,000 years ago. Don’t miss “Newspaper Rock,” which contains more than 650 petroglyphs. Visit https://www.nps. gov/pefo/index.htm. For more photos and commentary, visit www.facebook. com/elouise.ondash.

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Activists file petition to protect endangered butterfly By City News Service

REGION — The Center for Biological Diversity and Endangered Habitats League filed a joint petition June 29 to protect Quino checkerspot butterflies— now found only in southern San Diego County and southwestern Riverside County in the United States—under the California Endangered Species Act. The petition, filed with the California Fish and Game Commission, notes that the Quino checkerspot was once one of the most common butterflies in Southern California. But with the rapid spread of urban sprawl, the butterfly has lost more than 75% of its historic habitat and in 1997 was listed as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act. “It’s alarming that a butterfly that once filled the skies of Southern California is now only found in pockets of its former range,’’ said Dr. Tara Cornelisse, an insect scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Even more alarming is that some of those few critical patches of remaining habitat are slated to be developed. The Center for Biological Diversity is an Arizona-based nonprofit organization known for its work protecting endangered species through legal action and scientific petitions. The Endangered Habitats League is a similar organization focused specifically on Southern California.

McClellan QUINO CHECKERSPOT is one of the most common butterfles in Southern California. Courtesy photo

Despite federal protection, the Quino checkerspot butterfly remains at risk due to continued habitat destruction and fragmentation, climate change, nitrogen pollution, invasive species and lack of enforced protections, a statement from the center said. In the past decade, the butterfly has only been observed in 33 of 62 historic sites and only inhabits patches of southern San Diego and southwest Riverside counties, according to the center. It is a subspecies of the Edith’s checkerspot butterfly and is distinguished by its checkerboard pattern of white and orange spots on its black wings. According to the activists, several major development projects totaling more than 6,500 acres and President Donald Trump’s planned border wall could negatively impact the butterfly’s remaining habitat. “By first decreasing

the butterfly’s designated critical habitat and then allowing large-scale development projects within its few remaining strongholds, the Trump administration has failed to protect this endangered butterfly,’’ said Dan Silver, petition coauthor and executive director of Endangered Habitats League. “To have a chance at surviving rampant development and other threats like climate change and invasive species, the Quino checkerspot butterfly urgently needs California state protection.’’ Under the California Endangered Species Act, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife has three months to make an initial recommendation to the Fish and Game Commission, which will then vote on the petition at a public hearing. If the Quino checkerspot butterfly wins protection under the act, the state can enact its own protections.

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T he C oast News

JULY 3, 2020

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JULY 3, 2020

SECTION

Encinitas boy wins national history bee By Samantha Nelson

ENCINITAS — When it comes to history trivia, sixth-grader Quade Kelley cannot be stumped. Both of his parents, as well as the librarians at the Carlsbad Public Library, have tried to stump the young historian but to no avail. The constant quizzing helped Kelley to study for the Who Was? History Bee, a nationwide trivia contest. The contest is based on the “Who Was?” history and biography book series. Kelley, a huge fan of the book series, was one of more than 25,000 students from 49 states who participated in the contest. Kelley, a homeschool student with Pacific Coast Academy Inspire Family of Schools, was selected as one of the top 10 finalists and was originally supposed to go to New York City for the History Bee championship, but the live event was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, all 10 finalists were named winners of the contest, including Kelley. Kelley said it was “exhilarating and shocking” for him when he found out

QUADE KELLEY of Encinitas is one of 10 winners nationwide in the Who Was? History Bee competition. Courtesy photo

he was a winner. As one of the winners, Kelley received $2,000 in prize money and got to choose where to send 50 Who Was? books to his previous schools and the li-

brary. He also got an extra $500 to send to a nonprofit organization of his choice. Kelley isn’t sure what he is going to do with the $2,000, but the $500 is going to United Through

Reading, an organization that helps military families who are separated to connect with each other through reading. He chose that organization as a way to honor his late grandfa-

By City News Service

REGION — San Diego County beaches earned nearly one-fourth of the spots on Heal the Bay’s annual Honor Roll for excellent year-round water quality, according to the environmental group report released June 30. According to Santa Monica-based Heal the Bay, 42 out of more than 500 beaches across the state

Courtesy photo

earned spots on the Honor Roll, which is reserved for beaches that score grades of A+ for water quality during all seasons and weather conditions. Of those 42 beaches, 20 are in Orange County, the most for any county in the state. San Diego County has 10 beaches on the list, all in North County — five in Carlsbad, three in Encinitas and one each in Solana

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ther, who helped found the organization. Kelley is a big fan of history. “I really like history,” he said. “It’s super fun and it’s actually really important.” According to Kelley, historians have one of the most important jobs. He explained what he learned when listening to a speech by Eva Schloss, the stepsister of Anne Frank. “We’re all little links on the giant chain of life, and there’s times when there’s giant, broken parts of links like World War II, but then it gets put back together by people who do amazing things,” Kelley said. “We can learn from them, and that’s why history is important: If we repeat the good things, we can keep going, but if we repeat the bad things, we can’t.” Kelley said more kids his age should be interested in history. “There were 25,000 kids who participated but I think there should have been more,” he said. Kelley is also a big fan

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Pet of the Week She’s sweet, she’s snuggly and she’s smart. But super Samantha’s greatest power is her ability to make friends. At just 14 months old, this gentle cutie with a beautiful silky black coat is looking for a sidekick who can join her for lots of cuddle time. She’s waiting to meet you at Helen Woodward Animal Center. Her adoption fee is $129. All pets adopted from Helen Woodward Animal Center are neutered, vaccinated

HISTORY BEE CONTINUED FROM B1

of the Who Was? books, a series that he said everyone can read and enjoy. His mother, Carrie Kelley, has started reading the books to catch up with her son.

JULY 3, 2020

Summer is the season for young surfers waterspot

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and micro-chipped for identification. For more information call (858) 756-4117, option #1 or visit animalcenter. org. “He knew more about history than I did when I got out of college,” she said. Quade Kelley has many people who he considers his favorite “historic heroes,” but he named Mother Teresa as his top hero for the History Bee. “I admire Mother Teresa because she was an ordinary person who showed great compassion and is an example of how love can change the world and make the world a better place,” Kelley explained in his winning statement for the History Bee. Kelley said he often favors historic people who showed compassion and mercy, like Mother Teresa or Mahatma Gandhi. “That’s what I would want to be,” Kelley said. “I want to be kind and have all those traits they have.”

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hink of all the great firsts in your life: First date, first kiss, first wave ridden. If you’re like most of us who grew up on the coast, you know that if the best of your life were to flash before your eyes, it would be an endless reel of summers. Starting with that summer day in 1962 when I began surfing in earnest until last week when I came to my feet and managed a few small turns, the thrill has never deserted me. But while I continue to play at riding waves, I concede that summer is meant primarily for children. It is their gift from heaven. It’s been decades since I was a kid, hitchhiking to the beach and borrowing a surfboard. It was a magical time filled with new sites and sounds, a great adventure that would shape the rest of my life. Now, with all the bad news and restrictions in the world, I wondered if summer was being put on hold. I mean, we recently witnessed virtual proms and graduations, and you can surf virtually. No, you can’t. Being locked into an artificial computer world may

NEW SURFERS Samara Diggs and Mia Haugen join their instructor after an afternoon in the waves. Photo by Dana Abplanalp-Diggs

be fun, but it is not really surfing. Still, I wondered if the second wave of cancellations might bring a new ban on the world’s best cure for everything including boredom, surfing. I was drifting toward a deep funk when I received a text from Grauer School principal Dana Abplanalp-Diggs. She wondered if I was available to teach her daughter Samara and her friends Mia and Jack Haugen to surf. Even though I fall into the “at risk” category, I said yes, without considering the possibility of infection. No, not that type of infection, but that seasonal illness that leads to joy-filled days and pleasant dreams. The sky was overcast and the surf was small and blown out when we arrived. One of the joys of be-

ing a beginner, however, is that conditions have zero bearing on the fun quotient. And the fun was on, on to the point where none from the trio returned from their romp in the water for over two hours. Countless smiles later, surfing had three new converts, drying off in the evening sun before dragging their feet in the sand as they were coaxed toward home and dinner. Everyone knows that there are risks associated with surfing: stingrays, jellyfish, the rare shark sighting and the equally rare possibility of drowning. There is also a good possibility of getting sunburned and, these days, catching a disease. Then there’s the painful possibility of being hit by your own or someone else’s surfboard.

During my first two years as a surfer, I had stitches in my head twice after colliding with a loose board and received another set of stitches on the opposite side of my body after stepping on a broken bottle. But surf stoke prevailed to the point that I surfed the very next weekend even after ripping the stitches out of my foot and filling it with sand. Few risks were too great to keep me out of the water. On our last day of surf lessons, Samara Diggs got closer to her board than she planned. The result was a bruised lip. I know it hurt, but judging by her smile at day’s end I also know that she’ll be back on the ocean soon. Happy summer Samara, Mia, Jack and every kid seeking an endless summer. This one’s for you.

LOCAL FAMILIES NEED YOUR HELP!

The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted our homes, our schools and our communities in ways we are just beginning to understand. While many of us struggle to manage the challenges brought on by school closures, workplace adjustments, and social distancing, the COVID-19 pandemic has further strained many of our local families through food insecurity; job loss, and housing uncertainty. Be Strong/Se Fuerte is a collaborative effort led by the Encinitas Educational Foundation (EEF) to support those families most in need. Through financial contributions from our community, EEF will provide funding to impacted families through the Encinitas Union School District's Community Liaison Program. All donations to Be Strong/Se Fuerte are Tax Deductible (EIN# 33-0178719)

URL is case sensitive

Donation receipts available through request at info@eefonline.org


JULY 3, 2020

Who’s

• University of Findlay students Mary Jo Addy of Encinitas and Ashley Allen of Oceanside recently participated in the annual SymBusiness news and special posium for Scholarship and achievements for North San Diego County. Send information Creativity. via email to community@ CONGRATS TO GRADUATES coastnewsgroup.com. • Dean College recognized Nathan Kai Chan and NEW VILLAGE EATERIES For your next date night Wai Yan Ko of Carlsbad in the Carlsbad Village, con- among the May 2020 gradusider Wicked Maine Lob- ating Honors Scholars. • Lucia Vecchio, of Encister followed by strawberry shortcake at the Strawberry nitas, graduated from Ithaca Shack. Wicked Maine Lob- College with a bachelor of ster, at 3040 Carlsbad Blvd., fine arts degree in acting • Jannis Lee of Oceansopened just three weeks ago at the front of Park 101 ide graduated from Baldwin with easy walk-up service. Wallace University in Berea, The Strawberry Shack, Ohio, with a master of sci2906 Carlsbad Blvd., opened ence in speech-language pashortly thereafter and fea- thology. • Local students gradtures local, farm-fresh strawberries in all of their dishes uating in Oregon State and refreshing drinks. They University’s class of 2020, are adjacent to Sleeping Ti- include: from Cardiff-byger Coffees and also offer the-Sea, Michael S. Barden, bachelor of science, summa easy walk-up service. cum laude, mechanical engineering; from Carlsbad, OMWD EARNS AAA At Olivenhain Munic- Spencer R. Dalton, bachipal Water District’s June elor of science, recreation 17 board meeting, staff no- resource management and tified its board of directors Collin Walker, bachelor of that Fitch Ratings, a global science, geography and georating agency that offers in- spatial science; from Encindependent credit opinions, itas, Sabrina K. Gust, bachhas reaffirmed the district’s elor of science, cum laude, “AAA” bond rating with a animal sciences; Katelyn stable outlook. AAA is the N. Hostetler, bachelor of highest possible rating as- science, biology; and Alan L. Pacheco, bachelor of scisigned by Fitch. ence, zoology; from Oceanside, Hunter Biskup, bachelor KUDOS FOR WATER USE The WateReuse Asso- of science, mechanical enciation of California rec- gineering; Kaitlin M. Mcognized San Diego County Connell, master of science, Department of Parks and microbiology; Shaun Cabral, Recreation as a 2020 Recy- bachelor of science, fisheries cled Water Customer of the and wildlife sciences; Isaac Year. Olivenhain Municipal J. Hinsley, bachelor of arts, Water District nominated magna cum laude, speech the county for its dedication communication; and Jonato using sustainable recy- than P. Sutherland, bachelor cled water to irrigate county of science, finance.

NEWS?

parks in OMWD’s service SMART COOKIES area. • Austin Carl Macdonald-Shedd of Carlsbad was OCEANSIDE MICROGRANTS named to the President’s MainStreet Oceanside List at Clemson University. awarded $10,500 in Keep • Jessica Vos of OceansIt Local Oceanside Micro- ide was named to the Changrants to 13 Oceanside small cellor’s List at Troy Univerbusinesses and nonprofit sity for the spring semester. organizations. Funded by • Trevor Dalton of Carlsdonations and purchases bad, at the University of to MainStreet’s Oceanside Rhode Island, was named to Strong fundraising cam- the Spring 2020 Dean’s List. paign, microgrant program • Worcester Polytechwas established to help local nic Institute named William small businesses affected by Schwend of San Marcos, OlCOVID-19 closures. iver Thode of Rancho Santa Fe, Olivia Bell of Carlsbad ALCOHOL-RELATED CRIME and Jonathan Shiery of San The California Depart- Marcos to the university’s ment of Alcoholic Beverage Dean’s List for academic exControl (ABC) has awarded cellence for the spring 2020 state funding to the Oceans- semester. ide Police Department to re• Ella Chambers, from duce alcohol-related crime Solana Beach, was named to in its jurisdiction. ABC Miami University’s spring awarded $95,858 to the 2019-20 president’s list. Oceanside Police Depart• On the Dean Colment via the Alcohol Polic- lege President’s list for the ing Partnership program. spring 2020 semester were Carlsbad students Nathan STANDOUT SCHOLARS Kai, Kento Fukuoka, Sato• For the third consecu- ru Hanakawa, Tetsuya Imutive year, Jaime Jacob (En- ra, Wai Yan Ko, Ka Yu Luk, cinitas) of the Cal State San Chan Hoi Ng, Fumiya Sato, Marcos women’s golf team Si Hang So, Ching Hong and has been named to the Aca- Brian Yeung. demic All-America Division • Making the Dean’s II Women’s At-Large Team List at Rochester Institute by the College Sports Infor- of Technology for the 2020 mation Directors of Amer- Spring semester were Lauica. She earned first-team ra Moon of Rancho Santa honors. Fe, Nicholas Gardner of • Scholar-athlete Nicole San Marcos, Justin Vaughn Bowman (Carlsbad) at Car- of Carlsbad, Kyra Ayala of thage College was named a San Marcos, Shawn Struble Chatham Family Most Valu- of Oceanside, Kevin Li of able Performer in Women’s Encinitas and Lin Welsh of Lacrosse. Encinitas.

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Student publishes book about refugee experience SOLANA BEACH — Volunteer hours aren’t about building a resume or getting into college for Daniel John, a Carmel Valley resident and recent graduate of Santa Fe Christian School (SFC). Through the non-profit that he and his friend Andrew Chiang started called Nova Spero (New Hope), John volunteers his weekends to serve a refugee community in City Heights. His team provides school enrichment, JOHN mentorship, and outdoor activities for families there. In an effort to help others understand the complexities of a refugee’s journey in a simple way, he co-authored “Leo’s New Hope,” a children’s book about a fictional young refugee. John also teamed up with SFC’s art department to illustrate the book. “Leo’s New Hope” was published in March 2020 and is available to purchase on Amazon. “My zeal for refugees

DANIIEL JOHN, above right, works with refugee children through his nonprofit, Nova Spero The recent Santa Fe Christian School grad is headed to UCSD this fall. Courtesy photo

was inspired by my French teacher at SFC,” John said. “Her work with communities in City Heights and passion for refugees gave me the idea to start Nova Spero. This work has changed my perspective on the world and I hope to raise awareness through

publishing the book.” Everyone involved with the publishing of the book donated time and talents. All proceeds are applied to helping the refugee community. In addition to running Nova Spero, John is a National Merit Commend-

State to fund more housing for area veterans REGION — State Sen. Patricia Bates (R-Laguna Niguel) announced June 22 that the state of California has awarded almost $20 million to help house military veterans in San Diego and Orange counties who are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless. “Our military veterans have made significant sacrifices to serve our country and no one should be left behind,” said Bates, a member of the Senate Housing Committee. “I am grateful that projects in San Diego and

Orange counties will receive additional voter-approved funding to house more veterans who are struggling to keep a roof over their heads. This funding is another step in the right direction to take care of every veteran.” The Post 310 Project in San Diego County will receive $9.2 million and the North Harbor Village project in Orange County will receive $10 million. These grants are part of more than $83 million in the latest round of funding to help create housing op-

portunities for veterans. The program’s funding comes from Proposition 41, passed by California voters in 2014 to provide $600 million for the development of affordable housing for veterans and their families. The awards go to qualified developers and nonprofits to build, acquire, rehabilitate or preserve affordable multifamily housing. The latest round of awards will help fund projects in 10 California counties and will create a total of 421 units for veterans.

ed Scholar, winner of the Princeton Prize on Race Relations, a musician (saxophone and piano), and a driven scientist. He interned at Salk Institute’s Busch Lab and will attend University of California, San Diego as a bioengineering major in the fall.

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

www.kindnessmeters.com


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JULY 3, 2020

Sports

Workinger’s takes road less traveled to Braves New pro Saggese fueled by his mother’s memory sports talk

jay paris

E

than “EQ” Workinger’s path to pro baseball came with a curve or two. Fortunately for Workinger, an Encinitas resident, he declined to flinch. Workinger, who didn’t play for a high school team during his junior and senior years, is a freshly minted member of the Atlanta Braves organization. He recently signed a freeagent contract and now the speedy outfielder awaits his orders of when and where to report. “I’ll probably be headed out to an instructional league but first they have to figure out what the bigleaguers are going to do,” Workinger, 18, said. “I’ve even heard some talk that they might send us to Australia to play in a league.” COVID-19 has flipped the baseball world to a degree that Workinger could go Down Under. After his peculiar route, it’s just another bend in the road. Workinger’s final two prep years were spent staring into a computer instead of sitting in a North County classroom. He earned a high school diploma through California Connections Academy. But his online institution didn’t have a spot for him between the chalk lines. Devoid of school ath-

Jacob Bruce McClure, 68 Oceanside June 7, 2020

ETHAN ‘EQ’ WORKINGER, of Encinitas, recently signed a free-agent contract with the Atlanta Braves. Workinger’s path to pro ball was unique as he didn’t play for a high school team in his final two years. Courtesy photo

letics, Workinger had to hustle for his at-bats. “I started playing in a league up in Orange County,” Workinger said. “And I started hitting home runs and the scouts started showing up for the games.” It was a stretch of Workinger smacking eight dingers in 17 contests that originally caught the Braves’ eye. They kept in touch with him and in some ways led Workinger to believe he might be selected in the 2019 June draft. Instead he was blown away when the Braves didn’t clear their throat to say his name. While there are supposed to be no misty eyes in baseball, Workinger admits that’s not always the case. “It was definitely a

Karen Annette Hurley-Brown, 71 Oceanside June 10, 2020

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downer, for sure, and I cried a little bit when I didn’t get the call,” Workinger said. “Then I got fired up and decided I was going to work even harder because I wanted to make it happen.” That patience paid off as Workinger wore out opposing pitchers. He showed the pop in his bat in various amateur leagues and briefly when playing for San Diego City College prior to the schedule being canceled due to COVID-19. SDCC got in roughly 20 games and Workinger flirted with a .400 batting average before the chair was pulled out on the season. Then when this June’s draft rolled around, it was restricted to just five rounds, instead of 40, as the owners saved money.

While Workinger, again, didn’t get selected in the annual dispersal of talent, this one didn’t come with a haymaker to the polite teenager. Instead he was among six non-drafted players to be signed and get invited into the home of the Braves. “It was the best decision I ever made to not play in high school,” said Workinger, who bats right-handed. “Playing in those different leagues made me a better player.” Workinger’s overnight success was years in the making. As a 12-year-old in Encinitas Little League, his All-Star team went to the Western Regional finals in San Bernardino. The following year, the Juniors squad he played on advanced to the regional finals in Vancouver, Washington. “He hit many home runs on ESPN,” his mother, Rachel, said with a smile. Workinger’s grin wears well in a Braves uniform, although its flashed in the knowledge that the hard work awaits. Bring it on, says Workinger. “I’ve been playing baseball since I was 4 years old,” he said, “and I just love it.” Love sometimes hurts and Workinger can attest to that. After last year’s heartbreaking June, this one arrived with the Braves swooning for Workinger. Contact Jay Paris at jparis8@aol.com. Follow him at jparis_sports.

Let the bells ring forth throughout the length and breadth of this, our magnificent land! As Americans, we give daily thanks for our great heritage. All that we have, all that we are, is because we are fortunate enough to be part of this vast country. From the mountains to the sea, we are as one, united in thought and spirit, and are, first and foremost, Americans. With great pride, we salute Uncle Sam - for indeed he symbolizes a benevolent uncle to all the world. We pause to give thanks for our blessings and count them one by one! America, the Beautiful! How proud and lucky we are to be a part of thee! Enjoy a safe and happy Fourth of July! ALLEN BROTHERS MORTUARY, INC. VISTA CHAPEL FD-1120

1315 S. Santa Fe Ave Vista, CA 92083

760-726-2555

SAN MARCOS CHAPEL FD-1378 435 N. Twin Oaks Valley Rd San Marcos, CA 92069

760-744-4522

www.allenbrothersmortuary.com

By Steve Puterski

CARLSBAD — He plays for two. Thomas Saggese maintained his path on the field as his mother succumbed last year after a battle with cancer. The weight of her passing, while devastating, gives Saggese the fuel he needs on the field. On June 11, his dream was realized when the Carlsbad High School standout shortstop was drafted by the Texas Rangers in the fifth round, the 145th pick, of the Major League Baseball draft. Saggese, who had committed to play for Pepperdine University, agreed to an $800,000 bonus, according to MLB.com. The slot value for pick No. 145 was $375,200. “It’s been hard and doesn’t get easier,” Saggese said of his mom’s death. “She was my best friend and that was tough. There’s nobody else that you love more than your mom. Every game I play is for her. At the end of the day, the baseball field is where I was at peace.” Ever since he can remember, Saggese has played baseball. He steadily got better, starting in youth leagues before skyrocketing up the draft board last month. He’s always played shortstop and his talent started to take off the winter of his junior year at Carlsbad High. Prior to CHS, Saggese was enrolled at Rancho Bernardo High School, known for its development of baseball players. However, when his mother was diagnosed, the family moved back to Carlsbad. Saggese found solace CROP on the diamond and he took .93 his game to new heights that .93 spring, he said. Saggese 4.17 said he noticed the difference 4.28 in his game as his arm grew stronger and the ball was jumping off his bat. The results followed. Saggese was named the Most Valuable Player of the Avocado West League as

SMALL TALK CONTINUED FROM B1

enough gel, hairspray and barrettes, I can get it up out of my face. This is a major victory. The downside is that I have to use a few curlers to give the still-too-short back some shape. I rather hoped I would never encounter a prickly, time-consuming curler again. They remain the nightmare of my teenage years. But at least I am over that horrible hump and think I can stick with it. How do I know I won’t be tempted to run back to my miracle-working haircutter? Because, to my horror, she retired during quarantine. It was not easy to pro-

THOMAS SAGGESE

a junior after batting .422 with 10 home runs and 26 RBI. His senior season was off the sizzling start, too, but was shut down due to the COVID-19 pandemic. “I think it really clicked my junior year,” Saggese said. “I started hitting balls a little harder, making solid contact. It was kind of fast and I really don’t see it. I just started seeing the ball real well and it slowed the game down a lot.” Carlsbad coach Jake Savicki said Saggese has the tools to play shortstop at the next level but needs to work on his range and arm strength. The seventh-year coach, though, said he has no doubts his star player will remain a shortstop thanks to his work ethic and humble approach. It’s difficult for Saggese to explain his talents, a characteristic his coach echoed. What is difficult for others comes more naturally and easily to the 18-year-old talent. “He just did everything right,” Savicki said. “As a person, he’s resilient. I’m thankful I was able to coach him and be around him.” As for 2020, while big league clubs are allowed to have 60-man rosters for the upcoming shortened season, the minor league season has been canceled. Unless Saggese is added to the 60-man roster for the Rangers, he likely will not start his professional career until next year. cess this news, even though I was shooting toward longer hair. I did see it as a pretty solid sign I am bunward bound. Seeing almost no one during quarantine certainly made it easier, but having my hairstyle change every week remains an exercise in patience, which I hate but can always use. Surely by 2021, I will manage a graceful, Audrey Hepburn French roll. At the very least, I will look like Alice on “The Brady Bunch.” Really, either will do. Jean Gillette is a freelance writer who is definitely no relation to Rapunzel. Contact her at jean@coastnewgroup.com.


JULY 3, 2020

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Explore the world of the garden with your children

I

f you have youngsters at home this summer, now is a great time for a kids’ gardening project. Not only can you create an ongoing family project that can last all summer, but you can also teach them an important lesson about where food comes from. Recently, I visited a local elementary school as part of the Master Gardener Program and was asked to give a vegetable gardening presentation to a group of third-graders. I always start with an exercise in nutrition, and the results always surprise us. I brought in a platter with a loaf of bread, a plate of French fries and a bottle of ketchup. When asked where these foods came from, one of the students answered, in this order. “Well, the bread comes from the grocery store, the fries are from McDonald’s and the ketchup is from Burger King.” Then, I presented a new platter that included a raw potato, a bunch of oats on their stems, and raw tomatoes. The group was directed to work together to match the raw foods with the finished food products, and the process took quite a while. “One of the best ways we have found to teach young people about the importance of agriculture is

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on the list were also on the list last year—Dana Point Harbor Youth Dock, Dana Strands Beach and San Clemente at Avenida Calafia. But the news wasn't all glowing for Orange County in the report. Two O.C. beaches landed on Heal the Bay’s “Beach Bummers”list of the most polluted water. Poche Beach landed on the list for the fifth time, while the San Clemente Pier made the list for the second straight year. San Diego County lone entry on the list was Mission Bay’s Vacation Isle North Cove. Los Angeles County had one beach on the “Bummers” list—Topanga Beach, which has earned the distinction regularly over the years. According to Heal the Bay, San Diego County beaches received excellent grades during dry months, but the ratings were still lower than the five-year average. The county received good to above-average grades during wet weather, with 82% of beaches receiving grades of A or B. Despite the generally

THE AUTHOR shares her greenhouse experience with young students in New York.

by having them grow food themselves,” says Nancy Schaff, former director of the Kids Growing Food Project at Cornell University in New York. “The students no longer take food for granted. With a garden, children learn that food doesn’t magically appear in the grocery store — the farmer has worked hard to get it there.” Now is a great time of year to observe seeds in gardens and parks nearby, which can be the beginning of your kids’ gardening project. Take your child on a walk, equipped with a magnifying glass and collection bags or pails. Look for sunflowers or poppies that might be going to seed at this time of year. If you have neighbors with vegetable gardens, ask if you can go on a seed hunt for peas or beans to pick and observe. Take a trip to

the grocery store and have your child choose vegetables that might have seeds. Some suggestions might be peas, beans, winter squash, peppers and oranges. Bring your goodies home and “dissect” the flowers and vegetables to find the seeds inside. Ask your child what they think the purpose of the seed might be, and dry and store the larger seeds for future planting. The drying process takes a few weeks, but many of the seeds will reproduce. For an intensive introduction to seed production, check out the Cornell Cooperative website, at www. cce.cornell.edu or books such as “Beyond the Bean Seed,” (Jurenka & Blass, 1996) and “Park’s Success with Seeds” (Park Seed Co., 1990). One of the most satisfying aspects of my job

high marks, Heal the Bay raised concerns about conditions at Trestles Beach, noting that sewage spills last year sent roughly 90,000 of sewage cascading to the beach. “Unfortunately, the beach was never closed, and county health officials do not monitor water quality at this popular beach,” according to the report. “This is highly alarming, and we urge San Diego County to begin monitoring Trestles and develop a sewage spill protocol for spills that occur upstream from a beach.” Although the report

is based on water-quality samples from 2019, before the coronavirus pandemic, it includes a discussion of potential risks, noting that “COVID-19 has been detected in sewage, indicating that fecal matter from infected individuals can contain the virus.” “As we have shown in this report, millions of gallons of raw sewage is spilled into the ocean every year,'' according to the report. “We do not know how long the virus survives in sewage or in the ocean, and we do not know if someone can contract COVID-19 from ocean water.”

VOLUNTEER

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.

Courtesy photo

as Director of the Cornell Master Gardener Program in New York was developing gardening activities for children. “The Great Pole Bean Race” was a favorite among all the schools we visited and can easily be duplicated for your home gardening project. GREAT POLE BEAN RACE This project is best achieved with two or three children, or an adult and children. The supplies are minimal and can be purchased at most garden centers. Supplies • Package

of

beans (not bush beans) or snap peas • 8-10 large plastic cups with lids (recycled takeout cups work great) • Small watering can • Rulers to share • Pencils and graph paper • Large bag of potting soil (any potting soil, don’t use garden soil)

2. With a pencil, make three holes 1-inch deep, using rulers to measure. 3. Place two pole bean seeds in each hole. Cover gently. Do not re-water. 4. Cover cup tightly with plastic wrap or lid. 5. Place in a warm room indoors, not in direct sunlight. 6. Do not remove wrap until sprouts can be seen. Record each child’s date of sprout activity on graph paper. Water only when dry. 7. After sprouts emerge, have children measure the height each day with a ruler. Use the graph paper to record the days and height. 8. Each day, have children compare growth charts. 9. After all beans have sprouted, move to sunny window. When beans reach height of 4-6 inches, transplant outdoors. This project is one of many that can start your family off into the world of discovery in the garden. Feel free to contact me if you would like more lesson plans for your family or school project. Contact me at: janosgarden@hotmail.com.

Directions 1. Give each child two Jano Nightingale is a Mascups and write name and date on cup. Poke holes in ter Gardener and horticulturist and works on community all cups beforehand and fill each three-quarters full gardens in North County. She with potting soil. Water un- previously served as director of the Cornell Master Gardener til water comes out of botProgram in Cooperstown, NY. pole tom.

The Coast News Group presents a 3-week series on

INNOVATION IN EDUCATION July 17th, July 24th, and July 31st

Readers are encouraged to join us as we explore content on STEM education in San Diego including features on: • Financial Literacy • STEM-related Job Growth in San Diego • Local Women in Science • Virtual Learning Innovations • Charter Schools vs. Public Schools • AI & Robotics • Interactive labs for parents and young learners In addition to these features, the Innovation in Education series will also share what local technology companies are doing to invest in workers of the future. The goal is to connect STEM-related employers in San Diego with parents of STEM learners. This series is part of a larger community project that raises funds for education-related non-profits in and around North County, all while sending needy kids to the Summer Sports & Science Academy with SD Labrats.

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Coast News legals continued from page A12 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 or 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 T.S.# 84521. 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.” STOX 925977 06/19/2020, 06/26/2020, 07/03/2020 CN 24577 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Trustee Sale No. 20-2870 Rouse Loan No. 17-8886 Rouse Title Order No. 200126335 APN 226660-37-00 TRA No. 13260 NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED* ‘PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE Section 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION REFERRED TO ABOVE IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE RECORDED COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 07/06/2017. 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 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. On 07/15/2020 at 02:00PM, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA MORTGAGE SERVICE INC as the duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust Recorded on July 11, 2017 as document #2017-0312076 of official records in the Office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, executed by: Sheila N. Rouse, an unmarried woman as her sole and separate property, as Trustor, Charles Carr, Trustee of the Carr Family Trust dated 09-28-2002, as Beneficiary, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (payable at time of sale in lawful money of the United States, by cash, a cashier’s check drawn by 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). At: The front of the building

LEGALS located at 11839 Sorrento Valley Road, San Diego, CA 92121, all right, title and interest conveyed to and now held by it under said Deed of Trust in the property situated in said County, California describing the land therein: Lot 129 of San Marcos Woods Unit No. 4, in the City of San Marcos, County of San Diego, State of California, according to Map thereof No. 8490, filed in the Office of the County Recorder of San Diego County on February 11, 1977. The property heretofore described is being sold “as is”. The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 1408 Shadow Hills Drive, San Marcos, CA 92069. 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 note(s) secured by said Deed of Trust, with interest thereon, as provided in said note(s), advances, if any, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, estimated fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust, to-wit: $338,598.64 (Estimated). Accrued interest and additional advances, if any, will increase this figure prior to sale. The Beneficiary may elect to bid less than the full credit bid. The beneficiary under said Deed of Trust heretofore executed and delivered to the undersigned a written Declaration of Default and Demand for Sale, and a written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned caused said Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located and more than three months have elapsed since such recordation. 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 (858) 565-4466 or visit this Internet Web site www.scmssd. com using the file number assigned to this case 20-2870 Rouse. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur

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JULY 3, 2020

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CITY OF CARLSBAD NOTICE OF HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on June 9, 2020, the City Council of the City of Carlsbad adopted Resolution No. 2020-102, regarding the city’s consideration to levy and collect annual assessments within Lighting and Landscaping District No. 1, a Special Assessment District, and setting a public hearing date for 3:00 p.m. on July 14, 2020, at 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad, California.

sis, and is ordered to be filed in the office of the City Clerk as a permanent record and to remain open to public inspection. Reference is made to the Report for a full and detailed description of the improvements to be maintained, the boundaries of the Assessment District and any zones therein, and the proposed assessments upon assessable lots and parcels of land within the Assessment District. All Street Lighting Improvement Zone, Street Tree Improvement Zone and Median Landscaping Improvement Zone assessments are to remain the same as the previous year and all new assessments added to the tax roll will be calculated at the same unit rates as the previous year. 6. Notice is hereby given that a public hearing is scheduled in the regular meeting place of the City Council on the following date: Tuesday, July 14, 2020 At that time the City Council will hear protests or objections in reference to the annual levy of assessments and to any other matters contained in this resolution. Any persons who wish to object to the proceedings or the annual levy should file a written protest with the City Clerk prior to the time set for the public hearing. If there is a majority protest against the levy of an annual assessment that is increased from the previous year, the proposed increase in the assessments shall be abandoned. A majority protest exists if, upon the conclusion of the hearing, written protests filed and not withdrawn, represent property owners owning more than 50% of the assessable area of land within the Assessment District. 7. That the City Clerk is authorized and directed to give notice as required by law by causing a copy of this Resolution to be published in a newspaper of general circulation within the City of Carlsbad not less than 10 days prior to the date set for the public hearing. 8. For any and all information relating to these proceedings, including information relating to protest procedure, your attention is directed to the persons designated below: CITY OF CARLSBAD, CITY CLERK 1200 CARLSBAD VILLAGE DRIVE, CARLSBAD, CA 92008

RESOLUTION NO. 2020-102 provides as follows: A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF CARLSBAD, CALIFORNIA, INITIATING THE PROCEEDINGS, APPROVING THE PRELIMINARY ENGINEER’S REPORT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2020-21 AND SETTING A PUBLIC HEARING FOR JULY 14, 2020 FOR THE ANNUAL LEVY OF ASSESSMENTS WITHIN LIGHTING AND LANDSCAPING DISTRICT NO. 1, A SPECIAL ASSESSMENT DISTRICT WHEREAS, the City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California previously formed a special assessment district pursuant to the terms of the Landscaping and Lighting Act of 1972 (Division 15, Part 2 of the State Streets and Highways Code, commencing with Section 22500), known and designated as City of Carlsbad Street Lighting and Landscaping District No. 1 (“Assessment District”); and WHEREAS, the Assessment District is an existing assessment district in which assessments are not proposed to be increased as defined by Article XIIID of the California Constitution (Proposition 218) and the Proposition 218 Omnibus Implementation Act (California Government Code Section 53750 et seq.), and is therefore exempt from the procedures and requirements pursuant to California Constitution Article XIIID § 5, subdivision (a); and WHEREAS, the City Council wishes to initiate proceedings to provide for the annual levy of assessments for the next ensuing fiscal year to provide for the annual costs for maintenance of improvements, defined as existing street lighting, median landscaping and street trees (“Improvements”), within the Assessment District; and WHEREAS, a preliminary Engineer’s Report (the “Report”) has been prepared and is presented to the City Council and is attached as Attachment A (on file in the Office of the City Clerk), as required by law, and the City Council is desirous of continuing with the proceedings for the annual levy; and WHEREAS, the improvements to be maintained shall consist of all originally designated and authorized improvements, as well as certain new and additional improvements; and WHEREAS, the City Council has carefully examined and reviewed the Report as presented, and is satisfied with each and all of the items and documents as set forth within it, and is satisfied that the assessments, on a preliminary basis, have been distributed in accordance with the benefits received from the improvements to be maintained, as set forth in the Report. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California, as follows: 1. That the above recitations are true and correct. 2. That the public interest and convenience requires, and it is the intention of this legislative body to levy and collect assessments to pay the annual costs and expenses for the maintenance and/or servicing of the Improvements for the Assessment District, with the Improvements generally described as follows: the maintenance of certain street lighting improvements, street trees, and median landscaping improvements, as set forth and described in the Report. The proposed new improvements to be maintained and serviced caused generally by new development within the Assessment District are described as follows: the maintenance of certain additional street lighting improvements and additional landscaping improvements, including replacement of street trees and median landscaping improvements, all as set forth and described in the Report. 3. That said improvements are of direct benefit to the properties within the boundaries of the Assessment District, which the legislative body previously declared to be the area benefited by the improvement, as identified and referenced in the boundary map previously approved by the City Council, a copy of which is on file in the office of the City Clerk and open for public inspection, and which is designated by the name of this Assessment District. 4. That the Improvements are referred to Harris & Associates, who is directed to make and file the Report generally containing the following: A. Plans and specifications describing the general nature, location and extent of the Improvements within the Assessment District; B. A diagram for the Assessment District, showing the area and properties proposed to be assessed; C. An estimate of the cost of the maintenance and/or servicing of the Improvements for the Assessment District for the Fiscal Year commencing July 1, 2020 and ending June 30, 2021; and D. An assessment of the estimated costs of the maintenance and/or servicing, assessing the net amount upon all assessable lots and/or parcels within the Assessment District in proportion to the benefits received. 5. That the Report, as presented, is approved on a preliminary baclose 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. 6/9/20 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA MORTGAGE SERVICE 11839 Sorrento Valley Road Suite 903 SAN DIEGO, CA 92121 (858) 665-4466 Paul Rios, Vice President (858) 565-4466 Phone (858) 565-2137 Fax Paul@1stsecuritymortgage. com A-4724539 06/19/2020, 06/26/2020, 07/03/2020 CN 24573 NOTICE OF LIEN SALES DATE & TIME OF SALE: DATE: 07/12/2020 TIME: 10:00 am LIENHOLDER:

CALIFORNIA TRUCK PARKING LOCATION: 9015 AIRWAY RD SAN DIEGO CA 92154 VIN: 3HSCWAPRX9N049837 MAKE: INTL 2009 MODEL: PROSTAR DS 07/03/2020 CN 24629 NOTICE OF LIEN SALE Notice is hereby given pursuant to Sections 3071 and 3072 of the Civil Code of the State of California that First Platinum Properties, located at 427 Redlands Street, Vista, CA 92083, will sell at public auction on July 15, 2020, at 10:00 A.M. the following: 2013 Chrysler 200; Lic.#14CK353; VIN; 1C3BCBFG0DN683475. Said sale is for the purpose of satisfying a lien of First

and ANNA TAN-GATUE, PROJECT ENGINEER HARRIS & ASSOCIATES TELEPHONE: (800) 827-4901 EXT. 2344 Owners of property within the Assessment District may mail written protests to the following address: CITY OF CARLSBAD, CITY CLERK 1200 CARLSBAD VILLAGE DRIVE, CARLSBAD, CA 92008 PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED at a Regular Meeting of the City Council of the City of Carlsbad on the 9th day of June 2020, by the following vote, to wit: AYES: Hall, Blackburn, Bhat-Patel, Schumacher. NAYS: None. ABSENT: None. Copies of the staff report will be available on and after July 10, 2020. If you have any questions, please contact Jason Rosado in the Finance Department at 760-602-2473 or jason.rosado@carlsbadca.gov. Per State of California Executive Order N-29-20, and in the interest of public health and safety, we are temporarily taking actions to prevent and mitigate the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic by holding City Council and other public meetings electronically or by teleconferencing. The meeting can be viewed online at www.carlsbadca.gov or on the city’s cable channel. The Carlsbad City Council welcomes your participation. During the COVID-19 public health emergency, the city has provided two easy ways for community members to provide comments during a City Council meeting: Verbally Sign up to provide verbal comments by phone by filling out an online registration form by 2 p.m. the day of the meeting. You will receive a confirmation message with instruction about how to call into the meeting. In writing E-mail your comments to clerk@carlsbadca.gov. Emails received by 2 p.m. will be provided to the City Council prior to the start of the meeting. Other comments will be included with the meeting record. Emailed comments will not be read out loud during the meeting. Please indicate the agenda item number in your email subject line. If you challenge the program budgets 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. PUBLISH DATE: July 3, 2020 CITY OF CARLSBAD CITY COUNCIL

Platinum Properties in the amount of $3,610.00 together with the costs of advertising and expenses of sale. 07/03/2020 CN 24620

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF TONY CHRISTOPHER ZAFFINA [IMAGED] Case# 37-2020-00019176-PR-LACTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Tony Christopher Zaffina. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Edward Michael Zaffina II, in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego. The Petition for Probate requests that Edward Michael Zaffina II, be appointed as

07/03/2020 CN 24623 personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The 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 on Sept. 17, 2020 at 1:30 PM in Dept. 503 located at 1100 Union St., San Diego CA 92101, Central Courthouse, 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


JULY 3, 2020

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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: Rich Gaines, Esq. 5900 La Place Ct., Ste 105 Carlsbad CA 92008 Telephone: 760.931.9923 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24619

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: Russell E. Griffith, Esq., 1991 Village Park Way, Ste 105, Encinitas CA 92024 Telephone: 760.944.9901 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24607

NOTICE OF PUBLIC LIEN SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the contents of the following storage units will be offered for sale at public auction for enforcement of storage lien. The Online Auction will be held Friday, July 10, 2020 at 1:00 PM. Location of Online Auction: www.storagetreasures. com. Storage address: 1566 E. Valley Parkway, Escondido, CA 92027. Terms are CASH ONLY! Valley Rose Self Storage reserves the right to refuse any bid or cancel the auction. The following units may include, but not limited to electronic items, furniture, & household items, unless otherwise stated. Josie Mikoczi E-338 Josie Mikoczi RS-303 Katherine Deuel E-124 Rachel Ornelas C-315 Natalie Alexander S-11 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24613

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF ANNE ELIZA SOUTTER [IMAGED] Case # 37-2020-00018616-PR-PWCTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Anne Eliza Soutter. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Lelia Drysdale Soutter Glass in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego. The Petition for Probate requests that Lelia Drysdale Soutter Glass 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 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: Aug. 25, 2020; Time: 11:00 AM, Dept.: 504, 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

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NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF NICOLE PORTIA LYNN BROWNE CASE# 37-2020-00014252-PR-LACTL [IMAGED] To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Nicole Portia Lynn Browne. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Stephen Browne, in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego. The Petition for Probate requests that Stephen Browne, be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The 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 on Aug. 18, 2020 at 11:00 AM in Dept. 504: located at 1100 Union St., San Diego CA 92101, Central Courthouse, Probate. REMOTE APPEARANCES AVAILABLE VIA COURT CALL 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

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CITY OF CARLSBAD NOTICE OF HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on June 9, 2020, the City Council of the 5. City of Carlsbad adopted Resolution No. 2020-103, regarding the city’s consideration to levy and collect annual assessments within Lighting and Landscaping District No. 2, a Special Assessment District, and setting a public hearing date for 3:00 p.m. on July 14, 2020, at 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad, California.

That the Report, as presented, is approved on a preliminary basis, and is ordered to be filed in the office of the City Clerk as a permanent record and to remain open to public inspection. Reference is made to the Report for a full and detailed description of the improvements to be maintained, the boundaries of the Assessment District and any zones therein, and the proposed assessments upon assessable lots and parcels of land within the Assessment District. The Assessment District is an existing assessment district in which assessments are not proposed to be increased as defined by Article XIIID of the California Constitution (Proposition 218) and the Proposition 218 Omnibus Implementation Act. Notice is hereby given that a public hearing is scheduled in the regular meeting place of the City Council on the following date: Tuesday, July 14, 2020 At that time this legislative body will hear protests or objections in reference to the annual levy of assessments and to any other matters contained in this resolution. Any persons who wish to object to the proceedings or the annual levy should file a written protest with the City Clerk prior to the time set for the public hearing. If there is a majority protest against the levy of an annual assessment that is increased from the previous year, the proposed increase in the assessments shall be abandoned. A majority protest exists if, upon the conclusion of the hearing, written protests filed and not withdrawn, represent property owners owning more than 50% of the assessable area of land within the Assessment District. That the City Clerk is authorized and directed to give notice as required by law by causing a copy of this Resolution to be published in a newspaper of general circulation within the City of Carlsbad, not less than 10 days prior to the date set for the public hearing. For any and all information relating to these proceedings, including information relating to protest procedure, your attention is directed to the persons designated below: CITY OF CARLSBAD, CITY CLERK 1200 CARLSBAD VILLAGE DRIVE, CARLSBAD, CA 92008

RESOLUTION NO. 2020-103 provides as follows: A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF CARLSBAD, CALIFORNIA, INITIATING THE PROCEEDINGS, APPROVING THE PRELIMINARY ENGINEER’S REPORT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2020-21 AND SETTING A PUBLIC HEARING FOR JULY 14, 2020 FOR THE AN- 6. NUAL LEVY OF ASSESSMENTS WITHIN LIGHTING AND LANDSCAPING DISTRICT NO. 2, A SPECIAL ASSESSMENT DISTRICT WHEREAS, the City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California previously formed a special assessment district pursuant to the terms of the Landscaping and Lighting Act of 1972 (Division 15, Part 2 of the State Streets and Highways Code, commencing with Section 22500), known and designated as City of Carlsbad Street Lighting and Landscaping District No. 2 (“Assessment District”); and WHEREAS, the Assessment District is an existing assessment district in which assessments are not proposed to be increased as defined by Article XIIID of the California Constitution (Proposition 218) and the Proposition 218 Omnibus Implementation Act (California Government Code Section 53750 et seq.), and is therefore exempt from the procedures and requirements pursuant to California Constitution Article XIIID § 5, subdivision (a); and WHEREAS, the City Council wishes to initiate proceedings to provide for the annual levy of assessments for the next ensuing fiscal year to provide for the annual costs for maintenance of improvements, defined as existing street lighting, median landscaping and street trees (“Improvements”), within the Assessment District; and WHEREAS, a preliminary Engineer’s Report (the “Report”) has been prepared and is presented to the City Council and is attached as Attachment A (on file in the Office of the City Clerk), as required by law, and the City Council is desirous of continuing with the proceedings for the annual levy; and WHEREAS, the improvements to be maintained shall consist of all originally designated and authorized improvements, as well as certain new and additional improvements; and WHEREAS, the City Council has carefully examined and reviewed the Report as presented, and is satisfied with each and all of the items and documents as set forth within it, and is satisfied that the assessments, on a preliminary basis, have been distributed in accordance with the benefits received from the improvements to be maintained, as set forth in the Report. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California, as follows: 1. That the above recitations are true and correct. 2. That the public interest and convenience requires, and it is the intention of this legislative body to levy and collect assessments to pay the annual costs and expenses for the maintenance and/or servicing of the Improvements for the Assessment District, with the Improvements generally described as follows: the maintenance of certain street lighting improvements, street trees, and median landscaping improvements, as set forth and described in the Report. The proposed new improvements to be maintained and serviced caused generally by new development within the Assessment District are described as follows: the maintenance of certain additional street lighting improvements and additional landscaping improvements, including replacement of street trees and median landscaping improvements, all as set forth and described in the Report. 3. That said improvements are of direct benefit to the properties within the boundaries of the Assessment District, which the legislative body previously declared to be the area benefited by the improvement, as identified and referenced in the boundary map previously approved by the City Council, a copy of which is on file in the office of the City Clerk and open for public inspection, and which is designated by the name of this Assessment District. 4. That the Improvements are referred to Harris & Associates, who is directed to make and file the Report generally containing the following: A. Plans and specifications describing the general nature, location and extent of the Improvements within the Assessment District; B. A diagram for the Assessment District, showing the area and properties proposed to be assessed; C. An estimate of the cost of the maintenance and/or servicing of the Improvements for the Assessment District for the Fiscal Year commencing July 1, 2020 and ending June 30, 2021; D. An assessment of the estimated costs of the maintenance and/or servicing, assessing the net amount upon all assessable lots and/or parcels within the Assessment District in proportion to the benefits received. 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: Caron Calabrese 105 West F St., Suite 213 San Diego CA 92101 Telephone: 858.598.5552 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24580 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010967 Filed: Jun 25, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A.

Del Mar Inn; B. Hotel Del Mar; C. Best Western Premier Hotel Del Mar; D. BWP Hotel Del Mar. Located at: 720 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar CA San Diego 92014. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Del Mar Inn GP, LLC, 720 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar CA 92014. This business is conducted by: Limited Partnership. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/01/2007 S/ Thomas Mackey 07/03, 07/10, 07/17, 07/24/2020 CN 24628 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010512 Filed: Jun 22, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Dusty Reins Repurposed Leather Jewelry Designs. Located at: 20461 Elfin Forest Rd., Escondido CA San Diego

7.

8.

and ANNA TAN-GATUE, PROJECT ENGINEER HARRIS & ASSOCIATES TELEPHONE: (800) 827-4901 EXT. 2344 Owners of property within the Assessment District may mail written protests to the following address: CITY OF CARLSBAD, CITY CLERK 1200 CARLSBAD VILLAGE DRIVE, CARLSBAD, CA 92008 PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED at a Regular Meeting of the City Council of the City of Carlsbad on the 9th day of June 2020, by the following vote, to wit: AYES: Hall, Blackburn, Bhat-Patel, Schumacher. NAYS: None. ABSENT: None. Copies of the staff report will be available on and after July 10, 2020. If you have any questions, please contact Jason Rosado in the Finance Department at 760-602-2473 or jason.rosado@carlsbadca.gov. Per State of California Executive Order N-29-20, and in the interest of public health and safety, we are temporarily taking actions to prevent and mitigate the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic by holding City Council and other public meetings electronically or by teleconferencing. The meeting can be viewed online at www.carlsbadca.gov or on the city’s cable channel. The Carlsbad City Council welcomes your participation. During the COVID-19 public health emergency, the city has provided two easy ways for community members to provide comments during a City Council meeting: Verbally Sign up to provide verbal comments by phone by filling out an online registration form by 2 p.m. the day of the meeting. You will receive a confirmation message with instruction about how to call into the meeting. In writing E-mail your comments to clerk@carlsbadca.gov. Emails received by 2 p.m. will be provided to the City Council prior to the start of the meeting. Other comments will be included with the meeting record. Emailed comments will not be read out loud during the meeting. Please indicate the agenda item number in your email subject line. If you challenge the program budgets 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. PUBLISH DATE: July 3, 2020 CITY OF CARLSBAD CITY COUNCIL

92029. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Jennifer Hess Schroeder, 20461 Elfin Forest Rd., Escondido CA 92029. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Jennifer Hess Schroeder 07/03, 07/10, 07/17, 07/24/2020 CN 24627 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010409 Filed: Jun 19, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Top’s One Hour Cleaners. Located at: 267 N El Camino Real #F, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Taewoo Kim, 1406 Green Oak Rd., Vista CA 92081; 2. Hyungsin Sim, 1406

07/03/2020 CN 24624 Green Oak Rd., Vista CA 92081. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/19/2020 S/ Taewoo Kim 07/03, 07/10, 07/17, 07/24/2020 CN 24626 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010800 Filed: Jun 23, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Quick Response Home Services. Located at: 2708 Flower Fields Way, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92010. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Braeden Jeffrey Dargi, 2708 Flower Fields Way, Carlsbad CA 92010. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of:

06/23/2020 S/Braeden Jeffrey Dargi 07/03, 07/10, 07/17, 07/24/2020 CN 24625 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010882 Filed: Jun 24, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. The Formulators Lab LLC; B. Joan Morais Cosmetics School. Located at: 7209 Pintail Dr., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92011. Mailing Address: PO Box 131192, Carlsbad CA 92013. Registrant Information: 1. The Formulators Lab LLC, 7209 Pintail Dr., Carlsbad CA 92011. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company.

Coast News legals continued on page B10


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T he C oast News

JULY 3, 2020

Food &Wine

Luna Grill offering Beyond Meat bowl lick the plate david boylan

DAOU BELL TOWER, with a bell made in 1740, has breathtaking views of DAOU Mountain. Courtesy photo

Top tastes so far in 2020 taste of wine

B

ack in the first week of January of this catastrophic year, I signaled that “2020 would be the year of the visionaries” frank mangio with a major publication choosing “52 places to go this year.” for visionaries. One of them was NOT Rico and I have 10 “shelter at home” and no fantastic wines we want to one could have imagined TURN TO TASTE OF WINE ON B11 what was ahead. So much

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’m not a chain restaurant kind of guy, but when one comes along that does it right, I’m on board. A few years back I described the perfect restaurant to have lunch at that combined fresh, flavorful ingredients prepared and presented in a manner that does not induce a mid-afternoon food coma, and that was Luna Grill. We’ve all have had that conundrum of having a huge appetite at lunch, then over-indulging in food that weighs us down and can be a detriment to afternoon productivity. Luna Grill has a menu full of options that offer healthy yet satisfying options that solve that problem in a delicious way. I’ve actually since expanded my Luna Grill love to dinner, which has proven to be equally rewarding. Their newish location in Encinitas is quite convenient as well. Recently, continuing the latest evolution in its popular bowl line, Luna Grill announced the rollout of the new Beyond Meat Coastal Med Bowl across all locations. Priced at a modest (considering the ingredients) $9.95, the bowl features a bounty of complementary ingredients, including Beyond Meat's seasoned Beyond Beef, basmati rice, torshi, Greek cabbage, tomato and cucumber medley and pickled onions drizzled with tzatziki and Mediterranean pesto. It’s definitely a unique flavor, and I’m still not clear what the seasoning is in the Beyond Beef, but it’s pretty darn good. For those of you who have been living under a rock for the past couple of years, Beyond Beef is 100% plant-based ground meat

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THE NEW Beyond Meat Coastal Med Bowl at Luna Grill. Photo courtesy Aim Communications

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hummus, pickled onions and olives, drizzled with Mediterranean pesto and topped with either grilled chicken or falafel for a vegetarian option.

For those of you who have been living under a rock for the past couple of years, Beyond Beef is 100% plant-based ...” gredients. An easy substitution of tahini for the tzatziki creates a completely vegan dish that is sure to go over big in these parts. The new Coastal Med Bowl is Luna Grill’s first bowl to feature Beyond Meat products, and it offers a whopping 24 grams of completely plant-based protein. This is their second menu item featuring a Beyond Meat protein — following the addition of the Beyond Burger in 2018. Another newer addition to the already fabulous menu is the Santorini Bowl, filled with rice, kale, Greek cabbage, couscous, tzatziki,

Other bowl line items include a Better Beet Bowl and the El Greco Bowl. I could eat a different one of these bowls for lunch or dinner daily. And let’s not forget their signature kabob plates, gourmet salads, appetizers (including organic hummus and falafel), wraps, desserts, craft beer and wine. One of my favorites that goes back a few years and a great example of what I have described as the perfect lunch is their Mediterranean Chicken Salad. It combines chopped all-natural chicken, Israeli couscous, tomato, cucumber, red onion, fresh mint,

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Italian parsley, green onion and feta cheese tossed in a house vinaigrette and served on a bed of lettuce. It’s such a flavorful combination of textures and it accomplishes that elusive appetite quelling yet not over-full feeling that I detailed. I could eat this salad several times a week and be perfectly content, but the beauty of Luna Grill is they have an entire menu full of similar dishes. Another favorite is the sampler platter, which is a good way to get a few tastes and textures on one plate — including the falafel, grape leaves, couscous medley, hummus and pita bread. When doing dinner at Luna, this is consistently ordered to get things started. Their signature plates include a selection of kabobs, gyros, and seafood options. They all come with a house salad, basmati rice, pita bread, cucumber-yogurt dip, and your choice of carrots or grilled tomato garnish. Dessert options consist of mini baklava, an amazing carrot cake cookie sandwich, mini- cupcakes and more. Dessert should not be an afterthought here; I sampled one of everything and will be doing more of that as the cookie sandwiches are crazy good. Luna Grill is really quite affordable given the quality of ingredients and the fast casual service. They have a full catering menu available as well, which would be a perfect option for business lunches or other events. Check out North County locations and the full menu at www.lunagrill. com.


JULY 3, 2020

B9

T he C oast News

Food &Wine

From Lebowski to Bond: A look at signature drinks in film Cheers! North County

Ryan Woldt

O

n the mantel bar, below the framed poster of then-President Nixon bowling, in the home of one Jeffrey Lebowski, there are two large bottles of Kahlua, two large and many mini bottles of vodka, and a carton of recently purchased half & half along with a bucket of ice. All the makings of a classic White Russian cocktail. The Dude drinks White Russians. He drinks only White Russians. It is his signature drink, and an inspired choice in an era that had largely forgotten the cocktail. Jeff Bridges character is so associated with the drink it would feel blasphemous to consider a substitute. The Dude drinks Grasshoppers? I don’t think so. James Bond drinks martinis. Always shaken. Never stirred, until he famously doesn’t in Casino Royale when he gives up the pretense. Jack Nicholson had his handle of Jim Beam in “Easy Rider.” George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez drink bourbon neat in what is probably the sexiest bank robber film of all time, “Out of Sight,” and Clooney goes back to the well when as Danny Ocean he orders a “whiskey, and a whiskey” when seeing his ex-wife for the first time.

THE DUDE, Jeff Bridges’ character in “The Big Lebowski,” enjoys a White Russian, a cocktail he drank with regularity throughout the film. Courtesy photo

Drinking in the movies inspires. I decided to be a bartender after watching “Cocktail” with Tom Cruise. Not a joke. More than a few kids ended up in the hospital after mimicking Belushi drinking a full bottle of Jack Daniels in “Animal House.” Unfortunately, true. “The Hangover,” a true cinematic warning to appreciate the little things you have in life, starts with shots of Jägermeister on the roof, inspiring a new generation to see Vegas as the place to go for bachelor or bachelorette parties. I was going to create a list of the best drinking scenes in movies this week, but quickly got overwhelmed. What would be included? Spirits, wine and beer? Are we including documentaries? Any drinking, or only crafted beverages? Is the drink the important part? Or is it the impact the beverage has on the scene, or how it changes our im-

SINGLE SHOT of whiskey. Photo by Anastasia Zhenina via Unsplash

pression of the character. If James Bond ordered a whiskey with a pickleback and a Miller High Life chaser, would we look at him the same way? For those unfamiliar, a pickleback is a shot of pickle brine traditionally taken after a shot of whiskey.

My lists quickly got out of control. There are great movies specifically about wine including “Bottle Shock,” “Uncorked,” “Sideways.” A few about beer, mostly comedies including “Strange Brew,” “Beerfest” and the dramatic outlier,

“Drinking Buddies.” Cocktails, however, find their place within the films themselves, and I’d say are better off for it. The natural inclusion into a moment gives the audience a chance to take a breath before taking us along on whatever journey the hero, or sometimes the tragic figure, decides to take. A fancy cocktail with a smile doesn’t have the same implication as the same drink with an untucked button-down and loosened tie. Like the big-screen heroes, I wanted to have a signature drink, and for the better part of a decade I settled on the Vodka Gimlet. A classic that had fallen out of style. Two fingers of vodka, a splash of simple syrup and a fresh squeeze of lime. I felt cool ordering it. No one my age knew what it was, so I’d get to describe it, the taste was refreshing, and I never had to bother with a menu. At a dinner or on the back porch, if I was drinking a cocktail, I was drinking a gimlet. It was my drinking version of Steve Jobs’ black turtleneck. Then one day I was watching that scene from “Ocean’s Eleven,” and I decided I should learn to like whiskey. Michter’s Rye was the first whiskey I tried without all the bells and whistles. A single shot on an ice cube. I learned quickly that ordering that second “and a whiskey” wasn’t as good of an idea for me as it was for Danny Ocean. As I go into this next phase of my drinking life, I’m a whiskey, preferably

rye, on an ice cube guy, and it’s because of the movies. • Local bars, wineries and breweries that do not serve food are closing again effective Wednesday, July 1. San Diego County announced the closure is due to recent spikes in positive cases of coronavirus and four outbreaks directly connected to bars and restaurants. If you plan on going to your favorite eating establishment, please wear a mask, social distance and be smart out there.

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B10

T he C oast News

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

Coast News legals continued from page B7

County Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s) To Be Abandoned: A. familyvariations.com. Located at: 971 Borden Rd. #25, San Marcos CA San Diego 92069. Mailing Address: Same. The Fictitious Business Name Referred to Above was Filed in San Diego County on: 01/08/2018 and assigned File #2018-9000600. The Fictitious Business Name is being Abandoned by: 1. Rizzi International LLC, 971 Borden Rd. #25, San Marcos CA 92069. The Business is Conducted by: A Limited Liability Company S/Michael Joseph Rizzi 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24611

Names(s) as of: 05/07/2020 S/ David Hruby 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24606

Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 05/27/2020 S/Joan J Morais 07/03, 07/10, 07/17, 07/24/2020 CN 24618 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010058 Filed: Jun 17, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Thrusteez Publishing. Located at: 1698 Aryana Dr., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Cameron Wayne Zirbel, 1698 Aryana Dr., 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/Cameron Wayne Zirbel 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24616 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010782 Filed: Jun 23, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Sea and Sparrow. Located at: 1838 Stonebrook Ln., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Crystal Yvette Sandoval, 1838 Stonebrook Ln., 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/Crystal Yvette Sandoval 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24615 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009867 Filed: Jun 16, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Drolet Construction Company. Located at: 1047 Golden Rd. #A, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: PO Box 1175, Cardiff CA 92007. Registrant Information: 1. Mark Barlow Drolet, 1047 Golden Rd. #A, Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/16/2020 S/ Mark Barlow Drolet 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24614 Statement of Abandonment of Use of Fictitious Business Name #2020-9010073 Filed: Jun 17, 2020 with San Diego

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010074 Filed: Jun 17, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. bloomingminddesigns. com. Located at: 971 Borden Rd. #25, San Marcos CA San Diego 92069. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Michael Joseph Rizzi, 971 Borden Rd. #25, San Marcos CA 92069. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Michael Joseph Rizzi 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24610 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009003 Filed: May 29, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Dixieline Lumber Company. Located at: 3250 Sports Arena Blvd., San Diego CA San Diego 92110. Mailing Address: 2001 Bryan St. #1600, Attn: Legal, Dallas TX 75201. Registrant Information: 1. ProBuild Company LLC, 2001 Bryan St. #1600, Dallas TX 75201. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 09/19/2018 S/Deryl Ward 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24609 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010206 Filed: Jun 18, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Visualize It Built. Located at: 1041 Saint Albans Dr. #2, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Daniel Hruby Architects APC, 1041 Saint Albans Dr. #2, Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above

JULY 3, 2020

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

NOTICE INVITING BIDS CITY OF ENCINITAS TRAIL 95 - El Camino Del Norte Improvements (CP00F)

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010117 Filed: Jun 17, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Alca Marketing. Located at: 1332 Enchante Way, Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Allison Christina Caffrey, 1332 Enchante Way, 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/Allison Christina Caffrey 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24605 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010487 Filed: Jun 22, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Four Boys of Summer LLC. Located at: 11232 Corte Isabelino, San Diego CA San Diego 92130. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Four Boys of Summer LLC, 11232 Corte Isabelino, San Diego CA 92130. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 05/18/2020 S/ Timothy M Maus 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24604 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009223 Filed: Jun 04, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Rise Above Counseling Services. Located at: 701 S Nardo Ave., Solana Beach CA San Diego 92075. Mailing Address: PO Box 910953, San Diego CA 92191. Registrant Information: 1. Patricia Michelle Kaiulani O’Brien, 725 S Nardo Ave. #J7, Solana Beach CA 92075. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Patricia Michelle Kaiulani O’Brien 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24603 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009987 Filed: Jun 17, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Cusstom Mask. Located at: 260 Buena Creek Rd., San Marcos CA San Diego 92069. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Patricia Ann Jepson, 260 Buena Creek Rd., San Marcos CA 92069. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 05/11/2020 S/ Patricia Ann Jepson 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24602 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010050 Filed: Jun 17, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Lifes Hidden Luxuries; B. Lifes Hidden Luxuries Magazine. Located at: 856 2nd St., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Jessie Orocio Aguayo, 856 2nd St., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/17/2020 S/ Jessie Orocio Aguayo 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24601 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010051 Filed:

Notice is hereby given that the City of Encinitas will receive ELECTRONIC BIDS ONLY, via the on-line bidding service PlanetBids, up to 2:00 p.m., on July 27, 2020. The bid results will be posted on PlanetBids immediately at close of solicitation. WORK TO BE DONE: The work to be done generally includes: The work to be completed involves clearing and grubbing, grading, construction of stabilized decomposed granite trail, masonry retaining wall, concrete pedestrian ramps, asphalt concrete curbs, asphalt concrete paving, impressed thermoplastic crosswalks, solar powered rapid flashing beacons, wood fencing, drainage infrastructure, signing, striping, and related trail appurtenances not mentioned above but required in accordance with the Contract Documents. The Contractor shall complete the proposed work in its entirety. Should any detail or details be omitted from the Contract Documents which are essential to its functional completeness, then it shall be the responsibility of the Contractor to furnish and install such detail or request such details from the City Engineer so that upon completion of the proposed work, the work will be acceptable and ready for use. Engineer’s Estimate - $510,392 LOWEST RESPONSIVE AND RESPONSIBLE BIDDER: All bids are to be compared on the basis of the City Engineer’s estimate of the quantities of work to be done and the unit prices bid by the bidder. The award of the contract, if it is awarded, will be to the responsive and responsible bidder submitting a Bid whose summation of the base bid and the five additive alternative bids is the lowest. Pursuant to Public Contract Code Section 1103, a “Responsible Bidder”, means a bidder who has demonstrated the attributes of trustworthiness, as well as quality, fitness, capacity, and experience to satisfactorily perform this public works contract. OBTAINING CONTRACT DOCUMENTS: The website for this advertisement and related documents is PlanetBids (http://www.encinitasca.gov/bids). All bid documents and project correspondence will be posted on the PlanetBids website. It is the responsibility of Proposed Bidders to check the website regularly for information updates and Bid Clarifications, as well as any addenda. To submit a bid, a bidder must be registered with the City of Encinitas as a vendor. To register as a vendor, go to http://www.encinitasca.gov/bids and then proceed to the “Register as a Vendor” link. The City makes no representation regarding the accuracy of Contract Documents received from third party plan rooms and Contractor accepts bid documents from third parties at its own risk. Should contractors choose to pick up project plans and specifications at Plan Rooms, the contractors shall still be responsible for obtaining all addenda for the project and signing and submitting all addendums with their bid. Any contractor that does not acknowledge receipt of all addendums by signing and submitting all addendums with their bid shall be deemed a non-responsive bidder and their bid will be rejected. PREVAILING WAGE: This is a prevailing wage project and prevailing wage rates for this locality and project as determined by the Director of Industrial Relations apply, pursuant to labor code section 1770, et. Seq. A copy of the prevailing wage rates shall be posted on the job site by the contractor. A schedule of prevailing wage rates is available for review at the California Department of Industrial Relations web site found on the internet at http://www.dir.ca.gov/ Public-Works/Prevailing-Wage.html. The successful bidder shall be required to pay at least the wage rates set forth in that schedule. Certified Payroll records shall be maintained by the contractor and copies of the certified payroll shall be electronically sent to the Department of Industrial Relations and be delivered to the City at the end of each month during the entire duration of the project. Notice: Subject to exceptions as set forth in Labor Code section 1771.1, contractor or subcontractor shall not be qualified to bid on, be listed in a bid proposal, subject to the requirements of Section 4104 of the Public Contract Code, or engage in the performance of any contract for public work, as defined by statute, unless it is currently registered and qualified to perform public work pursuant to Labor Code Section 1725.5. The City may not accept a bid nor any contract or subcontract entered into without proof of the contractor or subcontractor’s current registration to perform public work pursuant to Section 1725.5. For more information, go to http://www.dir.ca.gov/Public-Works/Certified-Payroll-Reporting.html COMPLIANCE WITH LABOR LAWS: The prime contractor shall be responsible for insuring compliance with all applicable provisions of the Labor Code, including, but not limited to, section 1777.5. Please also see INFORMATION AND INSTRUCTIONS FOR BIDDERS in bid documents for additional bid information and requirements. City of Encinitas BY:

Edward J. Wimmer, PE City Engineer

DATE: ____11/8/19____ END OF NOTICE INVITING BIDS 06/26/2020, 07/03/2020 CN 24608

Jun 17, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Krystal Productions; B. Krystal Development. Located at: 856 2nd St., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Jessie Orocio Aguayo, 856 2nd St., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/01/2010 S/ Jessie Orocio Aguayo 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24600

Filed: Jun 18, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Assisted Living Locators Encinitas-Oceanside. Located at: 4868 Fir St., San Diego CA San Diego 92102. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Trahan Consulting LLC, 4868 Fir St., San Diego CA 92102. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/18/2020 S/Steven Trahan 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24598

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009346 Filed: Jun 05, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Jump @ The Chance Riding Service. Located at: 7544 Navigator Cir., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92011. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Patricia Sue Lautenbach, 7544 Navigator Cir., Carlsbad CA 92011. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Patricia Sue Lautenbach 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24599

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010013 Filed: Jun 17, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Big Development Services. Located at: 6550 Ponto Dr. #71, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92011. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Richard K Bigham, 6550 Ponto Dr. #71, Carlsbad CA 92011. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/29/2008 S/ Richard K Bigham 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24597

Fictitious Statement

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009444 Filed:

Business Name #2020-9010285

Jun 08, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. AKS Consulting. Located at: 5142 Frost Ave., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Ali Sadiri, 5142 Frost Ave., 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/Ali Sadiri 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24596

of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Sushi on the Go. Located at: 1520 Linda Vista Dr., San Marcos CA San Diego 92078. Mailing Address: 3586 Mesa Dr. #2, Oceanside CA 92054. Registrant Information: 1. Alberto Campos, 3586 Mesa Dr. #2, 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/Alberto Campos 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24594

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009067 Filed: Jun 02, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. West Coast SelfStorage Carlsbad. Located at: 2405 Cougar Dr., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: 808 134th St. SW #211, Everett WA 98204. Registrant Information: 1. NWB Carlsbad LLC, 801 2nd Ave. #1300, Seattle WA 98104. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 03/05/2020 S/ Mike Spaulding 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24595

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009587 Filed: Jun 10, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. IDA Tax. Located at: 6130 Innovation Way, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: 17516 St Andrews Dr., Poway CA 92064. Registrant Information: 1. Willits & Associates PC, 6130 Innovation Way, 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/Clayton S Willits 06/26, 07/03,

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9010066 Filed: Jun 17, 2020 with County

Coast News legals continued on page B14


JULY 3, 2020

The Rincon del Diablo Chapter, National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, continues its fundraising efforts with the sale of the newly published “Quarantine Cookbook, Rincon del Diablo Colonial Tavern.” The cookbooks can be ordered online at quarantinecookbooksd.org/ for $16, with payment via PayPal. For more information, visit rincondeldiablodar.com.

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

JULY 3

FAIR FOOD FIX

We know it’s “no fair!” there won’t be a San Diego County Fair this year, and you’ve been dreaming of tasty Fair food – All. Year. Long. You can still grab a taste of all your favorite Fair foods July 3 through July 5, from noon to 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday in the main fairgrounds parking lot. So we’ve made it possible for you get your Fair Food Fix in our drive-thru food experience, including Copper Kettle, California Corn Dog Company, Chicken Charlie’s, Roxy’s, Golden West BBQ, Snax Shack (Funnel Cake), Tasti Chips, Dole Whip, Country Fair Cinnamon Roll and Sugar Bear. For more information, please contact sdfair.com.

FLEET IS BACK

The Fleet Science Center building in Balboa Park will reopen to the general public July 3. More at fleetscience.org.

JULY 4

FIREWORKS IN VISTA

The city of Vista is planning a fireworks display for its annual Independence Day Celebration on July 4 from Brengle Terrace Park, with reservations required. Fireworks will start at 9 p.m. and radio station 94.1 FM will broadcast a simulcast of music during the fireworks. There will also be displays in Poway and Santee.

GALLERY OPENS

Off Track Gallery is now open every day, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at 937 S. Coast Highway 101, suite 103, Encinitas. It offers ceramics, jewelry, gourd art, glass, photography, watercolor, wood working, oil paintings, prints, greeting cards, silk, THE CITY OF VISTA is one of a few cities in the county holding July 4 fireworks. Vista has fiber and more.

scheduled its display for 9 p.m. at Brengle Terrace Park.

JULY 7

SHARE YOUR HISTORY

As part of summer programming, Oceanside Public Library invites you to share your thoughts and experiences about this unique time in history, held via Zoom, and preregistration is required in order to receive the Zoom link. Tell your stories that reflect on these past few months spent social distancing and/or in quarantine. Submissions accepted through July 31. Visit https : / /oceanside.librariesshare.com/digdeeper/ to submit stories, There will be workshops at 11 a.m. July 7 and July 28 to help writers begin the writing process.

Courtesy photo

Botanical Gardens will be July 11, at 1270 Vale Terrace Drive, Vista, focused on birds, feathers and nests. Pre-registration is required at altavistabotanicalgardens.org. Class fee is $5 per person or free with AVBG membership.

ONGOING

CRC RESALE ASKS FOR BREAK

The Community Resource Center asks for the community’s help by reviewing the new donation guidelines and holding their donations for a few weeks to help staff process and sell current inventory. As more customers purchase items, space is freed up to display more donations. North County’s Community KIDS IN THE GARDEN Resource Center reopened The next Kids in the their three resale stores on Garden class at Alta Vista May 29, at 1331 Encinitas

JULY 11

CONTINUED FROM B8

share with you in our Ten Best Wines, lined up on Taste of Wine and Food’s top shelf, each one selected for superior bouquet, flavor, body and value. And let’s not forget that “wow” factor that makes you want to shout, “One more time!” My picks include two Cabs and a Petite Sirah from Napa Valley, a Malbec from Mendoza and a legendary original “Super Tuscan” from Italy. Let’s get to them!

Fifty Row Petite Sirah, Napa Valley, 2017. $65 Petite Sirah is basically Syrah, but with smaller grapes that deliver a high-octane concentration of flavor. It was created in France. Winemaker Paul

HOSPICE STORE REOPENS

The Hospice of the North Coast Resale Shop at 278-B North El Camino Real, Encinitas, celebrated its grand re-opening June 10. Hours are Monday to Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

QUARANTINE COOKBOOK

Septima Malbec, Mendoza, Argentina, 2018. $14 Septima is located at the foot of the Andes Mountains. Mendoza’s climate allows Septima to blossom into a lush, spicy, velvety wine. It’s easy to love with its soft, lush tannins. It’s hot here, but its altitude with vines at 3,300 feet above sea level captures more acidity. Check out Septima’s long and persistent finish. bodegaseptima.com.

ITALY’S MASTERMIND of “Super Tuscan” Tignanello wines in the 1970s is Piero Antinori, shown near his hometown of Florence. Courtesy photo

Johnson presents a dense, and Oakville. Bold aromas massive, rich and rustic of blackberry, blueberry and raspberry are sustainwine. fiftyrow.com. ably farmed. florasprings. com. Flora Springs Cabernet Sauvignon, Napa Valley, Goldschmidt Vineyards 2017. $40 Flora Springs should Yoeman Cabernet Sauvineed no introduction. It won gnon, Sonoma, 2016. $75 This is a Sonoma Cab the “Best Hidden Gem” winery in Napa Valley. Located at its best, made in the most in St. Helena, a visit reveals acclaimed harvest year in hillside caves, a historic tast- a long while, 2016. Flavor ing room and the region’s development comes from premier natural hot springs. an east-facing morning Flora Springs has vineyards sun. Barrel aging was 30 in Rutherford, St. Helena months for this 100% Cab.

VISTA MUSEUM OPEN

The Vista Historical Blvd, Encinitas; 1065 Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad Museum is now open for and 210 S. Rancho Santa Fe scheduled tours, on most Wednesdays, Thursdays and Road, San Marcos. Fridays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tours of up to two hours CHAT WITH THE CAST for up to four people can be The cast and crew of booked by calling (760) 630North Coast Repertory The- 0444 or e- mailing vistahisatre’s production of “Human torical@gmail.com at least Error” talk about the un- 48 hours in advance. precedented experience of recording the play on Zoom, LEGOLAND AQUARIUM OPEN with no one in the company Sea Life Aquarium ever in the same room. Part at Legoland, officially reof the Theatre Conversations series at northcoas- opened June 20. For more information, visit legoland. trep.org. com/california.

Goldschmidt is a worldclass winemaker, supervising some 16 vineyards over three continents. goldschmidtvineyards.com.

TASTE OF WINE

Antinori Tignanello, Tuscany, Italy, 2016. $135 A product of disgruntled winemakers in the 1970s led by the brilliant Piero Antinori. They revolted against Italian government authorities who demanded purity in the Sangiovese-made Chianti Classico, with aging not less than four years in barrel. Antinori and others produced “Super Tuscans,” blends of Sangiovese with Italian Cabernet and Cab Franc, with two years aging. It was a revolution in highend winemaking. antinori. it/en/wines.

B11

T he C oast News

CRUISE NIGHTS PAUSED

The E101’s traditional summertime Encinitas Cruise Nights have been canceled until further notice. The state of California has yet to lift the ban on large events, so until then, events will be on pause.

mas with soft gentle flavors and tannins. The Catena Zapata brand uses plant by plant selection from the best estate vineyards lots with 210 microvinifications for perfect blends. catenawines. com. DAOU Seventeen Forty, Paso Robles, 2017. $75 This is a Cabernet Franc (60%) and Merlot (40%) blend that is decadent and rich along with spices typically found in Cab Franc wines. However, winemaker Daniel Daou softens and perfects the tannins that can get hot with a Cab Franc. The varietal is named after the DAOU bell made in 1740 that sits prominently in the bell tower on the property with breathtaking views. It’s rung three times per year, at the start and end of harvest and on the anniversary of Daniel and Georges’ parents (Joseph and Marie). daouvineyards.com.

Rico’s Picks: Taking the handoff from Frank, my five picks include a Mendoza Cabernet Sauvignon blend, a Paso Robles Cab Franc blend, a Shiraz from down under and two Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignons. All but one of these we had at wine dinners, which are great opportunities to take Mollydooker, The Boxer, in several courses of top McLaren Vale, Australia, -helf food and wine pairings. 2017. $30 Giddy up! This is a great value Shiraz from down under. Nicolas Catena Zapata, The Boxer sports maraschiMendoza, Argentina, 2016. no cherry, fresh plum and $99 rich dark chocolate on the Like Septima, Zapata palate. Those with a bit wines benefit from Andes more budget can also try Mountains altitude as high their Blue Eyed Boy Shiraz as 4,757 feet. This Cabernet ($55), one of my faves, that Sauvignon (61%) dominant incorporates blueberry, blend with Malbec (31%) caramel and vanilla bean and a splash of Cabernet with ink color. mollydookerFranc (8%) has intense aro- wines.com.

Teens invited to volunteer this summer REGION — The state of California invites teenagers to start the summer with purpose. The governor’s wife, First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom, and Chief Service Officer Josh Fryday invite students, teens, and young adults across the state to join the #CaliforniansForAll Summer of Service. Given the challenges of COVID-19, #CaliforniansForAll Summer of Service allows young Californians the opportunity to support organizations providing essential services and to receive recognition from the First Partner and California Volunteers, office of the Governor for their commitment. Young Californians can volunteer through Aug. 31. The number of hours they commit is at their or their parents’ discretion. They will receive recognition based on the number of hours they serve — volunteer (10 hours), leader (50 hours) or ambassador (100 hours). Those interested can visit californiavolunteers. ca.gov/summerofservice to learn more and sign up. Young Californians ages 13 to 17 must have a parent sign up on their behalf. Californians ages 18 to 25 can sign up directly with #CaliforniansForAll. In-person and virtual opportunities are available. Orin Swift Mercury Head Cabernet Sauvignon, Napa Valley, 2017. $130 Dave Phinney, originator of The Prisoner, is at the helm of Orin Swift , which he sold to E.&J. Gallo and for whom he became winemaker again after the sale. He is a true wine innovator and visionary. Mercury Head is one of those top -shelf wines that one savors. One experiences a nose of raspberry, black currant and spices with a lingering deep and layered palate of berry, raspberry and a finish of baking chocolate. Put one in a cellar and open on a special event. orinswift. com. Stag’s Leap Artemis Cabernet Sauvignon, Napa Valley, 2016. $75. Frank and I enjoyed this wine at a Morton’s The Steakhouse Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars Dinner in March. This Napa Valley vineyard’s Cabernet Sauvignon won a blind wine tasting at the 1976 Judgment of Paris and recently celebrated its 50-year anniversary. These chops carry into Artemis. Raspberry, boysenberry and chocolate aromas and plum, dried fruit and a hint of toasted oak perfectly complemented our Morton’s Filet Mignon. stagsleapwinecellars.com. Reach Frank Mangio at frank@tasteofwineandfood.com


B12

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It’s a jung

le In ther

Emi Gannod , 11, observe exhibit is s a Banded open now through April 10. Purple Wing butterfl Full story y at the on page A2. Photo San Diego Zoo Safari Park’s by Tony Cagala Butterfly

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Commun Vista teacity rallies behind her placed on leave

Jungle exhibit. The

By Hoa Quach

i ESCON enviro amendment DIDO — An port nmental impact to the lution of from April 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 compatible omissionsclerical error, be most the est with attached of deeds to public good the greatbe private and least adjustm to the land. The injury, ent said. ” Lundy parcel beingis the only acquired fee the city, which is by city She also reporte ty, she added. a necess and proper d the i- have ty owners had The project, eminent domain meetings inmore than 35 the past in the which has been years to develo four works for years, will However, p the plan. 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 ry offer and AndreVillage Parkw - April 14, 2015. on ason Drive. ay to Lundy, Accord The the owners ing not feel a review city conduc did the ted offer matche which was of the project what the land , outlined is worth, d in the alTURN TO

Republic ans endors Abed ove r Gaspar e EXTENSION

ON A3

VISTA — Curren former t ents are students and and pardemanding social studies a teacher Vista lowed to be alkeep his the admin job. Vincen By Aaron Romero istration to keep has workedt Romero, Burgin at Ranch Vista High o for the who REGIO Unified School. Buena Vista ty Repub N — The Coun- Krvaric A protest since 1990,School Distric lican Party Sam Abed’ssaid. “Clear thrown at the school was also held paid admin was placed t ly has its suppor long-ti . Escondido on t behind steadfast commi me and istrative “This from his Republican leave Mayor tment Abed in gry,” wrotemakes me so na Vistajob at Rancho BueSam anprinciples to ty Dist. the race for Coun- values earned of Fallbro Jeffrey Bright 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 ago. “I tures is than 1,900 signa-n fear that it that our endorse ucation Gaspar’s istration asking the admin A social Abed overvoted to reache edcampa Republican apart. I system is falling d fellow back to to bring Romer - placed on studies teacher pressed this week ign and the classro at Rancho adminis tas Mayor not goingworry my kids o dents disappointme exBuena Vista are om. On his last to get a and parentstrative leave in Kristin Encini- not receivi who educat early nt in Gaspar, is also to launch ro told day, Rome- Romero. Photo March. The High School ion at publicvaluable ng the nomina 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— we’re It’s not “(They a polariz who has been “While ign. “This is confidence ) no longer have it goes.” , but it’s the way until there’s going to fight I’m a teache his two ing figure during pointed not genuin 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 record have theI’m very the of Romer remark emotional ts, an ment by party endors joyed his o and greatly had support Mayor students o also urged on Facebo ed and posteds to fight the Romero vowed Faulco ene- the class.” his to be kind than two receiving more administratio four Repub ner and new A former like what ok. “They don’t “I’m not Counc lican City n. but social studies to their mine studen committee’s thirds of I do. They ing,” like the the tors ilmembers, don’t not said Romer disappear- pal to give “hell” teacher RomerVelare of Vista,t, Jasvotes, threshold Senais what way I do it. So, to Princio Charles the and Bates and Anders said going away.o, 55. “I’m happens. this someth candidate required for teacher.” was “an amazin Schindler. Assemblyman on, Follow ing I’m really This is a Chavez g to receive ing endorsement Rocky nounce ,” “I that’s what I can fight, the the an- get himwas lucky enough party membe over a fellow “I’ve been Gaspar said. we’re goingand ture, a ment of his deparmyself to petition tive Repub a very effecr. to on Petitio was created “He truly cares,” she wrote. “Endorsing lican mayor nSite.com, publican for what one Re- a Democratic in urging he city ing on quires a over another balanced by focusTURN TO TEACHER budgets, — and 2/3 vote thresh re- economic ON A15 rarely happenold and GOP quality development, Chairman s,” continu of life Tony Board e to do so and will on the of Superv isors.”

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B14

T he C oast News

JULY 3, 2020

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

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LEGALS

Coast News legals continued from page B10

This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 10/01/2005 S/ Jeffrey A Mersky 06/19, 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24586

Ross Harold Frank 06/19, 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24584

Names(s) as of: 11/26/2002 S/ Sherwin Lisker 06/19, 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24582

06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24578

07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24593

CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 03/01/2020 S/David Leon 06/19, 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24589

Information: 1. Rodzinc, 598 Hermes Ave., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/02/2015 S/Rodney Charles 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24562

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009494 Filed: Jun 09, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. And Furthermore. Located at: 639 Stratford Ct. #1, Del Mar CA San Diego 92014. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Sandra Lee Vaniglia, 639 Stratford Ct. #1, Del Mar CA 92014.This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Sandra Lee Vaniglia 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2020 CN 24592

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009551 Filed: Jun 10, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Stars Align Co-Op. Located at: 3990 Park Dr., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Aileen Naoko Burns, 3990 Park Dr., 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/Aileen Naoko Burns 06/19, 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24587

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009737 Filed: Jun 15, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Project Biome; B. Farmer’s Footprint; C. NonToxic Neighborhoods. Located at: 1302 N Coast Hwy 101, #102, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: 237 A St. PMB 51154, San Diego CA 92101. Registrant Information: 1. Project Biome Inc., 1302 N Coast Hwy 101 #102, Encinitas

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009127 Filed: Jun 02, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. The Natural Path. Located at: 12865 Pointe Del Mar Way #170, Del Mar CA San Diego 92014. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Jeffrey A Mersky, 3912 Caminito Del Mar Cove, San Diego CA 92130; 2. Judy A Mersky, 3912 Caminito Del Mar Cove, San Diego CA 92130.

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009648 Filed: Jun 11, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Aarogya Vahini. Located at: 1038 Cottage Way, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Divine Will Foundation, 1038 Cottage Way, Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/David Cornsweet 06/19, 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24585 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009428 Filed: Jun 08, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. RedBear. Located at: 2722 La Gran Via, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Ross Harold Frank, 2722 La Gran Via, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 08/28/2000 S/

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009007 Filed: May 29, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Aloha Tropicals. Located at: 903 Granada Dr., Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Andrew Wacil Zuckowich, 903 Granada Dr., Oceanside CA 92056; 2. Chiratchaya Zuckowich, 903 Granada Dr., Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/02/1993 S/ Andrew Wacil Zuckowich / Chiratchaya Zuckowich 06/19, 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24583 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009324 Filed: Jun 04, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Palomar Group Consulting Inc. Located at: 1124 Ocean Ridge Ct., Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Palomar Group Consulting Inc., 1124 Ocean Ridge Ct., Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009119 Filed: Jun 02, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. The Little Bake House. Located at: 7521 Solana St., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: PO Box 131059, Carlsbad CA 92013. Registrant Information: 1. Colleen A Kirchner, 7521 Solano St., 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/Colleen A Kirchner 06/19, 06/26, 07/03, 07/10/2020 CN 24579 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009271 Filed: Jun 04, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Tender Teething. Located at: 207 Joyner St., Oceanside CA San Diego 92058. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Haley Alcalde Gervacio, 207 Joyner St., Oceanside CA 92058. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/13/2020 S/ Haley Alcalde Gervacio 06/19,

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Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009079 Filed: Jun 02, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. David and Sons. Located at: 7812 Gaviota Circle, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. David Sesti, 7812 Gaviota Circle, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/01/1999 S/David Sesti 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24572 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9008890 Filed: May 27, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Simple is Good. Located at: 4528 Tonopah Ave., San Diego CA San Diego 92110. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Liam John Galbraith, 4528 Tonopah Ave., San Diego CA 92110. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Liam John Galbraith 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24569 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009101 Filed: Jun 02, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Bohemianas. Located at: 534 Smilax Rd., San Marcos CA San Diego 92078. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Lara A Doronzo, 534 Smilax Rd., San Marcos CA 92078. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 12/01/2019 S/ Lara A Doronzo 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24568 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9008961 Filed: May 29, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Old School Iron Inc. Located at: 1338 N Melrose Dr. #L, Vista CA San Diego 92083. Mailing Address: 1108 Evergreen Ln., Vista CA 92084. Registrant Information: 1. Old School Iron Inc., 1108 Evergreen Ln., Vista CA 92084. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 10/01/2008 S/Charles Valterza 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24567 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009224 Filed: Jun 04, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Creative Juke Joint; B. Nena Anderson. Located at: 391 Ocean View Ave., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Nena Lee Cote, 391 Ocean View Ave., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 05/28/2020 S/Nena Lee Cote 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24566 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9008977 Filed: May 29, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Rodzinc. Located at: 598 Hermes Ave., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant

Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9009274 Filed: Jun 04, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. TelComTec. Located at: 120 N Pacific St. #J-2, San Marcos CA San Diego 92069. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. T & J Communications Inc., 120 N Pacific St. #J-2, San Marcos CA 92069. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 10/01/1986 S/Ronald Garrett 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24561 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9008583 Filed: May 18, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Starburst Insurance Services. Located at: 551 Seeforever Dr., San Marcos CA San Diego 92078. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Cadic Holdings Inc., 551 Seeforever Dr., San Marcos CA 92078. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Jacqueline Cadic 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24560 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9008666 Filed: May 20, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Garrett Electric. Located at: 7668 El Camino Real Ste 104 #450, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. AJLMG Inc., 7668 El Camino Real Ste 104 #450, Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 11/01/1987 S/ Lisa Garrett 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24559 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9008954 Filed: May 29, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Chubasco Sportfishing. Located at: 315 Harbor Dr. S, Oceanside CA San Diego 92054. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Ernest Anthony Prieto III, 1445 Faith Circle, Oceanside CA 92054; 2. Lisa M Prieto, 1445 Faith Circle, Oceanside CA 92054. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 12/05/2017 S/Ernest Anthony Prieto III 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24558 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9008577 Filed: May 18, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/ County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. San Diego Realty Inspections; B. SDRI. Located at: 2402 Sarbonne Dr., Oceanside CA San Diego 92054. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Charles Paul Oey, 2402 Sarbonne Dr,, 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/Charles Paul Oey 06/12, 06/19, 06/26, 07/03/2020 CN 24556


B15

T he C oast News

1. GEOGRAPHY: What was the former name of the Hawaiian Islands? 2. MOVIES Which Elvis Presley movie features the theme song “Can’t Help Falling in Love”? 3. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: What color is fuchsia? 4. TELEVISION: What was the real name of the Skipper’s character on “Gilligan’s Island”? 5. GEOLOGY: What kind of rock is sandstone? 6. FOOD & DRINK: Which country has a wine-producing region called the Rapel Valley? 7. MEDICAL: What kind of insect can transmit diseases such as cholera and typhoid fever? 8. MEASUREMENTS: How many standard bottles are contained in a magnum of champagne? 9. LITERARY: Who was the first official poet laureate of England? 10. HISTORY: Which treaty ended the American Revolution?

ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Although you don’t like to change plans once they’re set, once again, you might find that doing so can make a big difference in your favor. Family matters dominate the weekend. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You continue to get encouragement for your proposals, including some support from unlikely sources. Use this positive flow to move forward with your plans. Good luck. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Family matters are dominant this week. It’s a good time to be with those you love. It’s also a good time to contact loved ones with whom you’ve lost touch. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Be careful not to allow differences of opinion to create unpleasant feelings, especially in the workplace. A neutral observer could check out the situation and suggest a resolution. LEO (July 23 to August 22) While the Lion’s Den is the center of attention this week, with family matters dominating much of your time, workplace issues are also important. Try to find a balance between them. VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) The future of a new relationship could depend on how much the usually impatient-to-get-things-done Virgo is willing to stop pushing and let things happen naturally.

LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) Worry over a loved one’s well-being is eased with good news from a sympathetic source. Your continued show of love and support is important. Stay with it. SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) This is a good time to consider mending fences with someone you wish was back in your life. Forget about blame, and focus on the good things you once shared. SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) This is a good week to start researching information regarding whatever changes you’re considering, whether it involves a new home, a new location or a new job. CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) A long-anticipated job opportunity could turn out to be less than you expected. But appearances might be deceiving. Check it out before you decide it’s not for you. AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) Good news: Adapting to a new situation might come more easily than you expected. You can look for continued support from colleagues who appreciate your contributions. PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Someone you care for might need more reassurance from the typically “unemotional” Pisces. Go ahead. Open up, and you might be surprised at what you find when you do. BORN THIS WEEK: You are a romantic at heart, although you can be amazingly practical when you need to be. © 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.

TRIVIA TEST ANSWERS 1. The Sandwich Islands 2. “Blue Hawaii” 3. Purplish red 4. Jonas Grumby 5. Sedimentary 6. Chile 7. Houseflies 8. Two 9. John Dryden 10. The Treaty of Paris

JULY 3, 2020


B16

T he C oast News

JULY 3, 2020

Monthly payment of $15.87 per $1,000 borrowed. No down payment required. Offer may vary by location. Other rates and payment terms available. Cannot be combined with any other incentive. Financing for well-qualified applicants only. Length of contract is limited. Subject to credit approval, vehicle insurance approval and vehicle availability. See participating retailers for details. Must take delivery from retailer stock by July 5, 2020.

Car Country Drive

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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 12-31-2020 and reside within the promotional area. At participating dealers only. See dealer for program details and eligibility.

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e-Golf: On all in stock with MSRP of $39,925 Example VIN: WVWPR7AU0KW919396 Stock: VK1773 GTI: Example: VIN: 3VW5T7AU4KM036486 Stock: VK1732 *Closed end lease Lease offer through VW Credit.available through July 5th 2020 for a new, unused 2019 GTI S on approved credit to highly qualified customers by Volkswagen Credit. Monthly lease payment based on MSRP of $29,210 and destination charges less a suggested dealer contribution resulting in a capitalized cost of $28,321 Excludes tax, title, license, options, and dealer fees. Amount due at signing excludes first month’s payment, customer down payment of $0, and acquisition fee of $675. Monthly payments total $11984. Your payment will vary based on final negotiated price. At lease end, lessee responsible for disposition fee of $395, $0.20/mile over 24,375 miles and excessive wear and use. See your Bob Baker Volkswagen dealer for details or, for general product information, call 1-800-Drive-VW.

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