PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID ENCINITAS, CA 92024 PERMIT NO. 94
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By Samantha Nelson
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SAN MARCOS -NEWS
Left Coast to open cannabis business OCEANSIDE — Oceanside City Council narrowly approved a conditional use permit and a waiver of locational criteria for a medical cannabis manufacturing facility at 1629 Ord Way during its Oct. 7 meeting. The CUP and waiver were submitted by Left Coast, LLC, which obtained a local license for operation in May 2019. The facility will be located within an existing industrial building at 1629 Ord Way near Oceanside Boulevard. The building is within an industrial park zoned for limited industrial use, which is also surrounded by similar zoning to the north, west and east. To the south of the facility across the Sprinter railroad tracks is a residentially zoned area. The facility will manufacture cannabis vaporizer cartridges, isolate, tinctures and topicals as well as package flower and concentrates for medical use only. Due to its nature, the facility is classified as a “Regulated Use” under the city’s zoning ordinance, which requires the Council-approved CUP. For cannabis uses with the exception of testing labs must stay 1,000 feet away from any other regulated use business as well as public and private schools, childcare facilities, public recreation facilities, religious worship facilities and residential zoning districts. The facility did not meet the minimum separation distances for regulat-
THE COAST NEWS
Shades of conflict
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The Coast News investigates a Tri-City candidate’s conflicts of interest, accusations of election meddling.RANCHO
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Encinitas candidates attend virtual forum By Caitlin Steinberg
THE COAST NEWS held its first Clean Campaign Virtual Forum on October 13 via Zoom. Graphic by Ryan Woldt
ENCINITAS — At times engaging in vigorous debate and discussing election toxicity, Encinitas mayoral and council candidates participated in the Coast News Clean Campaign Virtual Forum on October 13 in honor of their pledges to maintain Clean Campaign policies. Those participating included mayoral candidates, incumbent Mayor Catherine Blakespear and challenger Julie Thunder, District 1 candidates Councilman Tony Kranz and
challenger Alex Riley, and District 2 candidates Deputy Mayor Kellie Hinze and challenger Susan Turney. Moderated by reporter Caitlin Steinberg and Kelli Kyle, host of the North County BEAT podcast, the Zoom forum was divided into a general discussion followed by a public Q&A. During the event, participants were offered several minutes to speak on each issue as well as an opportunity for possible rebuttal, lasting over two hours. The full forum can be
viewed in its entirety on both The Coast News’ Facebook and Youtube pages. Candidates agreed upon three pre-determined topics, including online harassment and hate speech, the negative impact of misinformation on local elections, and how to work through hard conversations with dissenting residents. On several occasions, the discussion strayed to issues including campaign finance, endorsements, abuse from supporters, and TURN TO FORUM ON A22
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Three Key Differences Between Nursing Homes, Senior Living SAN MARCOS, CA – October 16, 2020 – As nursing homes around the country continue to be affected by the coronavirus, many families face confusion about the differences between nursing homes and assisted living communities. Typically, families have very little experience with either type of care. Here’s a closer look at the key differences between the two: #1 Key Difference – Personal Choice vs. Medical Necessity The main difference between assisted living and nursing home care is assisted living offers personal care in a home-like, social setting while nursing homes provide medical and personal care in a clinical setting. In general, living in an assisted living community is a personal choice, whereas entering a nursing home usually follows a significant medical event like a stroke, heart attack or surgery. Since assisted living communities maximize quality of life and foster a more independent lifestyle, families often prefer them over nursing home care when possible. #2 Key Difference: Levels of Care & Length of Stay While assisted living communities and nursing homes both offer healthcare services, the levels of care and length of time a senior stays are considerably different. Seniors residing in an assisted living community are often inde-
As always,
pendent or require some assistance with activities of daily living (or ADLs), like medication management, mobility or memory loss. By contrast, care levels at nursing homes, also known as skilled nursing, administer to more serious medical conditions. Patients often require around-the-clock care and monitoring, to oversee more complex health care conditions such as respiratory care, rehabilitation from surgery and physical or speech therapy. Nursing homes usually tend to all or most of the ADLs seniors face each day. About a quarter of people in nursing homes stay for less than three months according to CareConversations.org, a trade association website, which makes nursing homes a necessary option for complex or advanced medical care. #3 Key Difference: Active Lifestyle vs. Isolated Recovery Assisted living usually resembles an upscale apartment community and is built to meet the needs of a more demanding senior consumer. They can feel more resort-like with stylish, contemporary apartment homes that can be personally furnished, decorated and have a key to the front door. These vibrant communities offer events, activities and the opportunity for new friendships all while providing added peace of mind knowing that their future care needs are met. Nursing care centers are more institutional because of the type of care being provided to
the most vulnerable seniors. Patients are more likely to be isolated as a result of their weakened conditioned and even share a room with others. They receive their meals in-room to accommodate recovery efforts, and there is limited engagement in activities and socialization. Assisted Living Communities – A Safe Solution As families learn more about the real differences between assisted living and nursing homes, they can have greater confidence in the safety of assisted living communities for their loved ones. Experienced operators like Silvergate Retirement Residences, an award-winning senior living provider across north county San Diego, have enacted the highest health standards to protect their residents during the stay-at-home order. With daily monitoring, families enjoy greater peace of mind knowing that their loved one is being watched over carefully. Silvergate San Marcos offers independent living, assisted living and memory care apart-ment homes. During the state stay-at-home order, Silvergate is offering Virtual Tours of the community to provide a video view of floorplans and highlights of the community. For advice or assistance with a Virtual Tour, please call community Marketing Director, David Nelson at (760) 744-4484 or visit www.Silvergaterr.com.
We’re Here For You For more than 30 years, Silvergate Retirement Residences has been woven into the fabric of the communities we serve. Today, in this environment of uncertainty, we continue to be a trusted solution for seniors and their families. If you or your loved one are in need of senior living care, reach out to us. As always...
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OCT. 16, 2020
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Tri-City candidate’s past reveals potential conflict of interest By Jordan P. Ingram & Catherine Allen
OCEANSIDE — Just weeks before the Nov. 3 election, a Tri-City Healthcare District Board of Directors candidate’s alleged election meddling and past legal entanglements with the hospital have raised questions about a potential conflict of interest and his motivations for seeking a seat on the board. The Coast News has reviewed court documents that shed light on the origins of Oceanside resident Jim Burlew’s employment as Tri-City’s facilities director in 2013 and his subsequent firing from the hospital, revealing Tri-City’s claims of his lack of professional qualifications and alleged criminal conduct in the days shortly after his removal. “They were trying to bully me and bleed me dry, and it didn’t work,” Burlew, a District 1 candidate, told The Coast News. “[Tri-City] started the lawsuits and they ended up settling and paying me because their claims were found to be false.” A spokesperson at TriCity declined to comment about Burlew’s employment history due to privacy rights. According to Tri-City’s legal filings, Burlew was hired in 2013 as Tri-City’s director of facilities, despite a lack of basic job proficiency or previous management experience in a hospital facilities department. Approximately one year later, Burlew was fired in 2014 for violating the hospital’s nepotism and conflict of interest policies after hiring several of his relatives to work under his supervision and lying about it. After hiring his wife’s niece and nephew, Burlew maintained that he did not know he was related to them. Previously, Burlew had been placed on administrative leave for falsifying employee time cards and “mistreatment of employees.” Shortly after his dis-
BURLEW
missal from Tri-City, Burlew came to retrieve his personal belongings on Aug. 8, 2014, from his office at the facilities department, but left the hospital with a stack of emergency department transfer logs containing the personal information of 35,000 patients, according to court documents. The documents had been temporarily stored on the lower shelf of a cart Burlew used to transport personal items to his car, but the files did not belong to him. When a staff member accompanying Burlew during one of his trips asked him about the folders, Burlew reportedly told him, “They [Tri-City] would really be after me if I took those books.” Burlew allegedly kept the logs in his home for several days and shared them with Luis Montulli, a former member of Tri-City’s Governance Committee, who was later fired for his role in the patient data breach. Burlew denied taking the files, claiming he discovered the documents in his truck after arriving home. “The records that mysteriously showed up in my truck were from the emergency department,” Burlew said. “They don’t belong in the facilities department. I’ve never seen them. Somebody tried to stick them in my truck.” Burlew denied sharing the documents with anyone and said he returned the records to the California Department of Public Health shortly thereafter. Burlew's refusal to re-
turn the emergency logs violated his confidentiality agreement with the hospital, according to court documents. Tri-City filed a complaint against Burlew on Oct. 7, 2014, in Vista Superior Court, alleging negligence, breach of contract, receiving stolen property, misappropriation of trade secrets and conversion. Burlew filed a counter-complaint against the hospital for wrongful termination, which ultimately resulted in a settlement agreement. For Burlew, none of his past legal wranglings with the hospital constitutes a conflict of interest with his candidacy for the board. “No, there is no conflict of interest at all because none of that’s actually true,” Burlew said. “I’ve moved on, past that whole thing. You don’t dwell on things like that.” Burlew established a website (tricity2020.com) for his campaign, which includes his policy recommendations for hospital board candidates and a laundry list of allegations against Tri-City. Some of his allegations include falsifying public financial documents and closing the hospital’s Behavioral Health Unit under “false pretenses” in an effort to secure a hospital mortgage insurance loan from Housing and Urban Development (HUD). According to Burlew’s website, the public “needs to hire a forensic accountant to explain why there appears to be more than $4.5 million in cash and cash equivalents missing from the general fund.” However, Burlew incorrectly juxtaposes two different financial reports — a 2019 Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD) financial report for the hospital itself and a consolidated audit for the entire Tri-City Healthcare District and its properties. The Coast News reviewed the correct financial documents and found the Healthcare District’s
cash and cash equivalents ($40,281,780) and short-term investments ($5,414,483) — which are combined under state reporting guidelines — in 2018 added up to a total of $45,696,263 — an exact match. Burlew’s website also claims the public “needs to find out where the $85 million HUD loan money went since leadership has never explained where it went.”
Aaron Byzak, Tri-City’s chief external affairs officer, explained the $85.8 million Housing and Urban Development (HUD) refinancing loan was discussed publicly on dozens of occasions and was eventually approved during a 2017 public board meeting. The HUD loan money is reported annually in financial statement reports, which are public records available for review, pro-
vided by public accounting firm Moss Adams. Publicly available documents also include the settlement statement which describes exactly where the loan proceeds were distributed, Byzak said. “The (HUD mortgage insurance loan) program is a refinancing program under which Tri-City refinanced its shorter-term, TURN TO CONFLICT ON A9
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OCT. 16, 2020
Opinion & Editorial
Views expressed in Opinion & Editorial do not reflect the views of The Coast News
Vote No on Prop 19:
A bad deal for California By Virginia Perkins
Vote No on Prop 15:
An unaffordable tax increase
P
rop 15 is a property tax increase on the ballot this November. It is being sold as more money for government and schools. That is true. Unfortunately, Prop 15 hides that it is the largest property tax increase in California history that will crush our neighborhood small businesses and farms. As your elected Assessor, responsible for administering this tax increase, I have read the fine print of Prop 15 and want to share what it really does. The proponents promise billions for government and schools, it will close a “corporate tax loophole,” and only make millionaires, billionaires and big corporations pay with no tax increases on small businesses.
san diego county assessor Ernie Dronenburg
are required to own property in California. The California Business RoundTable found that 78% of small businesses are renters. If you rent and don’t own property in California, then you are not classified as a small business and not protected from Prop 15’s huge tax increases. That’s why the NAACP opposes Prop 15. The NAACP in their Berkley Research study found that minority and women-owned businesses will be disproportionately hurt by the $12 HERE ARE THE FACTS: billion tax increase. Even First, Prop 15 is a tax worse, Prop 15 will lead increase. I found Prop 15 will be to the loss of an estimated an unaffordable tidal wave 120,000 private-sector jobs. of tax increases that will Third, small businesses wipe out small businesses already drowning from the will pay the Prop 15 properCOVID-19 pandemic shut- ty tax increase. I found the proponents down. need small businesses and Second, it does not pro- farms to pay this huge tax increase in order to genertect small businesses. To qualify as a small ate the $12 billion in revebusiness under Prop 15, you nue they want.
the , opinions beliefs
& viewpoints
expressed by various participants on the Op Ed page in this newspaper do not reflect the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints of The Coast News. The Coast News will exercise editorial discretion if comments are determined solely to injure, malign, defame or slander any religious group, ethnic group, club, organization, company or individual.
They could have written the Prop 15 to only be limited to millionaires, billionaires and big corporations, but did not. They talk about Exxon and Amazon paying the bill; in reality I found it to be many of our favorite neighborhood small businesses like Pizza Port, The Original Pancake House, Swami’s Café, and Fred’s Mexican Cafe that will be picking up the tab. I found due to Prop 15, there will be small businesses facing annual rent and property tax increases of $20,000, $30,000 and even $50,000 on a single small business. For example, DiMille’s Italian Restaurant on Adams Avenue will pay an estimated $43,651 property tax increase annually. These are not the billionaires and big corporations, but the face of the small businesses that may close their doors if Prop 15 passes. Fourth, Prop 15 does protect our farmers. The initiative only excludes agriculture land. Their claim of protecting farms is false advertising because it will increase property taxes on barns, dairies, fruit trees, and wineries. Prop 15 will hurt farmers with increased property taxes and leaving consumers to pay more for milk, eggs and wine. The truth is, Prop 15 is a tax increase that does not protect our small businesses, it hurts our farmers, it hurts minority- and women-owned businesses. I even found it to make our housing and homeless solutions more unaffordable. As your property tax expert, I say vote no on Prop 15. Let’s protect our neighborhood businesses and farms. These neighborhood mom and pop shops are t he fabric of our community. Small businesses can’t afford to pick up the tab for the badly written Prop 15. This is the wrong idea at the wrong time.
Proposition 19 is a flawed, multi-issue proposition put together at the last minute by our Legislators and Realtors in a backroom deal. Prop. 19 includes a property tax increase that could eventually cost California families about TWO BILLION DOLLARS ANNUALLY. Prop. 19 is deceptively publicized by Realtors and other special interest groups with an approximately $41 million campaign fund. Realtors will receive exorbitant amounts of commissions from sales of “tens of thousands” of homes, farms, businesses, often forced sales. Seniors and disabled who relocate will pay an estimated 10% of the home’s sale price for Realtor commissions (a big chunk) and relocation costs. Those who move into more expensive houses will pay higher property taxes. Prop. 19 repeals Prop. 58, 75.7% voter approval, and Prop. 193, 67% voter approval. Prop. 19 changes the rules on the purchase or transfer of family home, farm or business between parents/children and grandparents /qualifying grandchildren. ALL family properties are reassessed to market value at transfer or purchase. There may be some relief for the family home IF the child/qualifying grandchild can meet strict new conditions that include moving into the principal residence and filing a homeowner’s exemption (an owner-occupier declaration) within 1 year. Families will be sub-
ject to tremendous uncertainties. What if child temporarily lives out of area or goes away to college? Does the child give up the job and relocate the family to the family home or are they forced to sell the home due to high property taxes? What if child is 10? Prop. 19 creates NO NEW HOUSING, it displaces families unable to meet strict new conditions—to where? Prop. 19 CLOSES NO LOOPHOLES as claimed.
To the wealthy, increased property taxes are annoying, to others, life altering. Prop. 19 increases and magnifies housing and social problems: • Prop. 19 “would increase inequity and widen the wealth gap” per the ACLU of Southern California; • Government is intruding into family affairs and family uses of the home; • Forces low and moderate income earners to relocate; • Speeds up gentrification of older neighborhoods; • Family businesses may be forced to close; • Will require more g o v e r n m e n t- m a nd at e d housing for families displaced by Prop. 19. Prop. 19 increases taxes that are already among the highest in the country.
San Diego County Assessor Ernie Dronenburg has written “San Diego’s experience with Proposition 13, as with most California counties, should lay to rest the notion that Proposition 13 has starved local government of revenue. Since 1978, increases in property tax revenue for local governments have far exceeded population and inflation.” Prop. 19 firefighting funds do not meet League of Women Voters of California criteria that “earmarked funds or taxes should be adopted sparingly, be subject to periodic review, and have a fixed sunset date…. Alarmingly, no one has even estimated the probable dollar amount that would be automatically appropriated into these funds. California has faced many disasters… power shortages, earthquakes, and a pandemic as well as forest fires. The legislature needs the flexibility to budget based on current needs and priorities." League of Women Voters recommend a NO vote on Prop. 19. Prop. 19 would increase County costs by “tens of millions of dollars per year,” per the non-partisan Legislative Analyst’s Office. Prop. 19 “eliminates one of the best tools parents have to help their children,” important to millennials, unemployed, students with large loans, children with disabilities. Keep families alive and well! Get the message out to voters! VOTE NO ON PROP. 19! Virginia Perkins is a resident of Encinitas
The CoasT News P.O. Box 232550, Encinitas, CA 92023-2550 • 760-436-9737 www.thecoastnews.com • Fax: 760-274-2353
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OCT. 16, 2020
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ENCINITAS 101 MainStreet Association board selections bring “great expertise” and a “range of perspective,” a spokesperson said. Courtesy photo
Encinitas 101 MainStreet elects new board members By Caitlin Steinberg
ENCINITAS — The Encinitas 101 MainStreet Association recently held elections for three seats on its board of directors, selecting Dave Peck, of the Coast Law Group, Adam Robinson, of RPG, and John Van Cleef, CEO of the Community Resource Center. According to E101 Executive Director Irene Pyun, the organization is happy to bring on members with fresh ideas on relevant issues, sharing the member’s personal statements with The Coast News. The E101 is welcoming back Peck, who previously served on the board of directors, and newcomers Robinson and Van Cleef. Peck ran for reelection to preserve specific elements of Encinitas, including the La Paloma property, clean and safe sidewalks and a mix of retailers. “I was honored to serve on the Encinitas 101 Board of Directors from 20132019, including a term as Board President,” Peck said.“Those of us who have lived here for decades miss the Encinitas of yesteryear. We recall a less crowded, slower-paced downtown with ample parking, funky shops, familiar faces and locally-owned restaurants. But while much has changed along the 101 corridor, our historic town’s deep roots remain viable under the new stucco and concrete.” Robinson, president of RPG, is dedicated to attending to the interests of small businesses.
“I love Encinitas and have made it a goal of mine to transform pieces of real estate into spaces that add to the already unique character of our town," Robinson said. "Creating spaces where locals and visitors can enjoy themselves while supporting small businesses is important to me. " Van Cleef said he is dedicated to “maintaining a strong relationship with our businesses [as] is important to CRC and me. By joining the E101 board of Directors, I want to understand: the needs of our local businesses, create awareness about people who are experiencing homelessness, and join the people who are already working toward creating brighter futures for our community.” According to Pyun, the E101 board selections bring, “great expertise, especially in their field, and also give a range of perspective,” Pyun said. “Having [Van Cleef] from the Community Resource Center with their expertise and resources, especially during the pandemic when we’ve seen an increase in homeless in our downtown, is a great partnership to have.” “We need to be creative this year,” Pyun said. “Thankfully our board members are dedicated to our organization and more importantly, our larger downtown business community. We’re really looking forward to our board retreat this January of 2021 so we can reevaluate E101’s priorities this coming year with all things considered.
PEANUT BUTTER DRIVE
The Vista Chamber of Commerce announced the North County Food Bank “Scare Away Hunger” Peanut Butter Drive to collect jars of peanut butter at the Chamber office and Food Bank storefront. Donate peanut butter and other food items throughout October. Photo by Ivonne Kydd
A GROUP takes part in the Carlsbad Food Tours’ Oct. 9 tour in Carlsbad Village. The group stopped at Froglanders for crepes before heading off to Witch Creek Winery. The tours restarted Sept. 14 after closing due to COVID-19 health orders. Photo by Steve Puterski
Carlsbad Food Tours returns to the streets By Steve Puterski
CARLSBAD — Every couple of days a group of 10 or fewer people will casually walk the streets, bouncing from restaurant to restaurant. It marks the return of the Carlsbad Food Tours, which offers residents opportunities to visit a number of Carlsbad Village eateries for three hours. The small operation returned Sept. 14 after several months on hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to owner Cherimarie Poulos, who started the tours in 2014. Poulos said her goal is to introduce her customers to the food and history of the city. With the tours returning, everyone is required to wear masks or a face shield and the guides have hand sanitizer. “I was getting ready
to retire and I went on one of these tours in Carmel, Calif., and I thought, ‘now this is a fun job for retirement,’” Poulos said. “I said, ‘I think I want to start one of these.’” After taking a course from Shane Coast, who owns Chicago Food Planet, she came back to Carlsbad and started the tours. Being a new concept, though, had its challenges, but the tours picked up momentum and at its height even hosting company parties of up to 60 people. Poulos said her company was running five to six tours per week, which run from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in Carlsbad Village. But since the pandemic, Poulos shut down and had to re-evaluate. Several places had to drop off due to the economics, but most have re-engaged with the
tour, Poulos said. She started selling Taste of Carlsbad boxes, which featured a number of different products. “I just kept track of what was going on in the Village,” Poulos said. “We waited longer than some businesses because we are associated with restaurants.” Tour guide Ben Mastracco, who also hosts the YouTube channel “Comedy Kitchen,” said the tour is slowly starting to pick up as people adjust to safety protocols and health guidelines. After thorough COVID-19 training and working in a grocery store, he said it feels good to be back, even if on a limited basis. A tour features five restaurant stops and one wine tasting to give the at-
tendees a variety of foods and drink in Carlsbad. Additionally, each tour guide adds in a bit of city history and notes about the architecture. Poulos said her favorite piece of Carlsbad's history is how the city was named. When Carlsbad was founded and the mineral water discovered, news traveled about another city in Europe that had similar water. The town of Karlovy Vary, Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic), established in 1350, is also known as Carlsbad, leading to the naming of Carlsbad, Calif. “The water is 8.67, which is very alkalotic,” Poulos said. “Pretty soon people came to the train station to get the water and eventually we became a spa destination city.”
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T he C oast News
OCT. 16, 2020
County to remain in red tier as 278 cases, 14 deaths reported By City News Service
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rate of the county's least healthy quartile. San Diego County's health equity is 5.7%, slightly less than double the county's positive testing average. The metric will be used to determine how quickly a county may advance through the reopening plan, San Diego Public Health Officer Dr. Wilma Wooten said last Wednesday. A community can only be as well as its unhealthiest quartile, she said, and while counties with a large disparity between the least and most sick members of a community will not be punished for the disparity by sliding back into more restrictive tiers, such a disparity will stop counties from advancing to less-restrictive tiers. To advance to the orange tier, the county would need to report a metric of less than 5.3%. According to the state guidelines, the health equity metric will measure socially determined health circumstances, such as a community's transportation, housing, access to health care and testing, access to healthy food and parks. Neighborhoods are grouped and scored by census tracts on the Healthy Places Index, healthyplacesindex.org. Some of the unhealthiest neighborhoods include Logan Heights, Valencia Park, downtown El Cajon and National City. The California Department of Public Health will Also MTH, Amer. Flyer, LGB
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grade school. In the past seven days, 52 community outbreaks were confirmed, well above the trigger of seven or more in a week's time. A community setting outbreak is defined as three or more COVID-19 cases in a setting and in people of different households over the past 14 days. Students living in three residence halls at Point Loma Nazarene University were ordered to shelter in place on Tuesday after ``an increase of 12 cases on the Point Loma campus,'' according to university officials. The latest cases brings the university's case total to 16, according to the university's COVID dashboard. No employees have tested positive for the illness. In a news release Tuesday, campus officials said they identified three positive cases in Klassen Hall (3rd North), four positive cases in Hendricks Hall (1st South), three positive cases in Young Hall (4th Floor) and two unrelated cases in Nease Hall. Campus officials also said that 50 students had been identified as ``close contacts,'' meaning they were within 6 feet of an infected person for at least 15 minutes, either with or without a face covering. Another metric the state released Tuesday is the health equity metric, which finds the positivity
Lionel Trains
REGION — San Diego County will remain in the red, or substantial, tier of the state's four-tier COVID-19 reopening plan for at least another week, and public health officials have reported 278 new COVID-19 infections and 14 deaths from the illness. According to the California Department of Public Health, San Diego County's state-calculated, adjusted case rate is 6.8 daily infections per 100,000 residents, up from 6.5 the previous week. The unadjusted case rate was 7.2, up from 6.9 last Tuesday. The adjusted rate is due to San Diego County's high volume of tests, but still leaves the county on the precipice of the state's most restrictive tier -- purple. The testing positivity percentage is 3%, below last week's 3.5%, and is in the third -- or orange -- tier. To remain in the second tier of the four-tier COVID-19 reopening plan, the county must continue to have an adjusted case rate of less than 7.0 per 100,000 residents and a testing positivity percentage of less than 5%. The new cases and deaths reported Tuesday raised the total for the region to 51,024 cases and 840 deaths. Eight women and six men died between Oct. 3 and Sunday. Their ages ranged from the early 50s to early 100s. All but one had underlying medical conditions. Of the 10,078 tests reported Tuesday, 3% returned positive, keeping the 14-day rolling average percentage of positive cases at 2.9%. The seven-day daily average of tests was 10,608. Of the total number of cases in the county, 3,702 -- or 7.3% -- have required hospitalization and 857 -- or 1.7% of all cases -- had to be admitted to an intensive care unit. Six new community outbreaks were reported Tuesday -- three in restaurant/ bar settings, two in private residences and one in a kindergarten through 12th
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
update the county's data next Tuesday. Participants in a gathering need to stay at least six feet apart from non-household members and wear face coverings. Gatherings should be kept to two hours or less, the new guidelines state. Over the weekend, the county allowed private gatherings of up to three households, based on the state's new guidance issued Friday. The gatherings must take place outdoors. If at someone's home, guests may go inside to use the bathroom.
Jurors report for first San Diego criminal trial since pandemic began
Call Bob
760.579.2234
r.shultz760@gmail.com
REGION — Jury selection began Oct. 13 for the first criminal trial to be held in San Diego Superior Court since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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
About 40 people reported for jury duty at the downtown San Diego courthouse Tuesday morning, a stark contrast from typical times, when the court can rely on a pool of around 400 prospective jurors to choose from. The prospective panelists were escorted to a retro-fitted courtroom featuring plexiglass panels between each seat in the jury box, and panels cordoning off the attorneys, judge and court staff from one another. Jurors not seated in the jury box were spaced out throughout the courtroom. San Diego Superior Court Judge Frederic Link thanked those who reported for the inaugural pandemic trial, assuring the group that ``everything in this room has been sanitized this morning ...We’re trying to take every precaution we can to make this safe for you.’’ Since March, San Diego County courthouses have
been largely closed to the general public, with most matters held remotely, in which neither defendants, nor attorneys have appeared in person. Trials have been on hold as the court system grappled with the obstacles involved with bringing members of the public into the courthouses for jury duty. Following nearly six months without trials, jury summons were mailed out last month for the first time since the pandemic began. The prospective panelists that arrived at the courthouse this morning will be screened for the trial of 61-year-old John Homer Scarborough, who is charged with assault with a deadly weapon and elder abuse. With Scarborough’s trial, San Diego County courts will begin chipping away at an ever-increasing trial backlog, with the trial possibly serving as a test case for restarting jury trials at the county’s other courthouses in Chula Vista, El Cajon and Vista. ``As we safely and cautiously resume trials with a smaller potential juror pool, we will start by seating our first jury at the Central Courthouse before we expand to the other courthouses,’’ Superior Court Presiding Judge Lorna Alksne said. ``We know this will be an uphill battle to work through all of the pending jury trials and we will only be able to accomplish this with the support of jurors willing to fulfill this public service. It is more critical than ever that you report for jury duty if summoned.’’ While Scarborough’s case is the first criminal trial in San Diego state court, the local federal courts have been holding a limited number of jury trials and other in-person proceedings. The San Diego Superior Court also brought one jury panel back into the courthouse this summer to render a verdict on a murder trial that was interrupted by the pandemic.
In-home COVID-19 test study REGION — Join a Research Project by Encinitas-based Psy-Tek Laboratories at https://psy-tek.com. Psy-Tek Labs is performing an Independent Research Study testing Covid-19 Test Kits for “ease of use and reliability” of Covid-19 virus antibodies detection. The kits are developed and manufactured by a U.S. provider of diagnostic test products with 20 year’s experience. This antibody test has more than 95% specificity and sensitivity to Covid-19. Results are displayed in 10 minutes. The test is a finger prick that you self-administer in the privacy of home or office. These kits are currently available for professionals and research only. The test detects IgG and lgM antibodies to Covid-19. The lgG antibody represents the late stage response to a disease; whereas, lgM is produced immediately after exposure.
OCT. 16, 2020
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O’side Turkey Trot goes virtual this year
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ed uses, which is why Left Coast applied for the waver of locational criteria. The existing building is located approximately 150 feet to the nearest residential district to the south, 870 feet to the north and 450 feet to the northwest. The building is also located 350 feet from a church and 550 feet from a massage business. According to Stefanie Cervantes, a city planner, staff found the project complies with the city’s General Plan policies, which includes requirements preventing harmful emissions or impacts. She said the facility is located within an industrial district and was found not detrimental to public health or the property. Cervantes added that the business is screened from Oceanside Boulevard’s view and has no visible signage. “The railroad track to the south also creates a barrier from the nearest residential uses,” Cervantes said. Currently, Left Coast’s state license is considered inactive pending improvements to the facility. Gina Austin, an attorney representing Left Coast, said the company has been in discussions with the state and will have its license reinstated as soon as the building is built to standard. “Changes have to be made to make it consistent with state guidelines,” Austin said. According to Austin, all of the operations will be conducted indoors, including the pickup and delivery of products, which is unique for a business like this. “Most manufacturing facilities that you will find in neighboring cities — San Diego, La Mesa and a few others — all have their manufacturing indoors but the pickup occurs outside,” Austin said. Austin also addressed the concern of odor, explaining that Left Coast has had no issues with its La Quinta facility regarding odor control. She explained that the facility will use an activated carbon, multi-unit filtration system that will eliminate 99.5% of all odors.
By Samantha Nelson
NAVAL AIR Crewman 2nd Class Joseph Rivera, a search and rescue swimmer, looks out of a helicopter while conducting search and rescue operations following an assault amphibious vehicle mishap off the coast of Encinitas in July. U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Mackenzie Binion
Marine commander relieved of duty after deadly ocean training accident By City News Service
CAMP PENDLETON — The commander of I Marine Expeditionary Force on Oct. 13 relieved from duty the commander of a landing team involved in a training accident that killed nine young servicemen in the ocean near San Clemente Island, the Marine Corps announced. USMC Lt. Gen. Karsten Heckl removed Lt. Col. Michael Regner from his post as commanding officer of Battalion Landing Team, 1st Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit "due to a loss in trust and confidence in his ability to command'' following the sinking of an assault amphibious vehicle about 80 miles west of Encinitas. “Although the command investigation (into
the accident) has compiled a substantial amount of information and data which formed the basis for Heckl's decision, it is still ongoing as the Marine Corps continues to investigate, assess all relevant information and take appropriate actions,'' I MEF public affairs advised in a prepared statement. The amphibious troop-transport vehicle carrying the Camp Pendleton- based personnel — eight Marine riflemen and a Navy hospital corpsman, ranging in age from 18 to 22 — foundered for unknown reasons about 5:45 p.m. July 30 during a maritime training mission and went down in water nearly 400 feet deep. One Marine was pronounced dead at the scene of the accident. The naval
Undersea Rescue Command recovered the other victims' remains from the seafloor eight days later. Seven members of the crew aboard the AAV were able to escape the sinking craft and survived. The Marine Corps has not released an official determination of the cause of the accident.
OCEANSIDE — The 15th annual O’side Turkey Trot, held every year in downtown Oceanside, is going virtual this Thanksgiving. For 14 years, the O’side Turkey Trot has attracted thousands of participants from North County and beyond to take on its 5K competition and other running and walking challenges. In recent years, the O’side Turkey Trot has attracted more than 10,000 participants dressed in various costumes and teams representing Oceanside’s numerous non-profits and businesses. Due to COVID-19 state and local mandates that prohibit mass gatherings, the O’side Turkey Trot cannot meet as usual. According to Director Kathy Kinane, due to popular demand the Move Your Feet Before You Eat! Foundation decided to host a virtual Turkey Trot event this year. The Turkey Trot encourages participants to run or walk anywhere, anytime and to post their times and photos online on the Turkey Trot’s registration page. They also encourage participants to post their trots on social media using the hashtag #osideturkeytrot. Participants can take on the Turkey Trot and post their results anytime between Nov. 14 and 29. Kinane said registration prices are a “record low” this year, with prices starting at $22 and capping at $48, depending on which age group a participant be-
Courtesy photo
longs to and which event the participant chooses. Of that amount, $5 will go to a charity of the participant’s choice. Those who register will also receive a finisher shirt, a medal, bib number, finisher certificate and virtual coupons. Kinane told City Council at its Oct. 7 meeting that the O’side Turkey Trot has raised more than $370,000 for local schools and non-profit organizations over the past 14 years. “Our team is so sad to miss the opportunity to cheer our trotters on Thanksgiving morning, but we will be offering some really fun RaceJoy messaging to trotters during their virtual trot,” Kinane said. RaceJoy is an interactive app that tracks a runner or walker’s time via GPS. Trotters can download the app and use it during their own personal trot. The Encinitas Turkey Trot is also offering a virtual version of its annual event at 7:30 a.m. on Nov. 26. For more information and to register for the race, visit encinitasturkeytrot. org.
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OCT. 16, 2020
Surfrider faults states for insufficient policies on sea-level rise By City News Service
REGION — The states most impacted by extreme weather events associated with climate change remain the least prepared because they lack solid coastal preservation and policies to deal with the rise in sea level, according to a report out Oct. 14 from the Surfrider Foundation. The 2020 State of the Beach Report grades 31 U.S. states and the territory of Puerto Rico on their policies to protect our nation’s beaches from coastal erosion, sea-level rise, and poorly planned development. Although California receives an A grade, the overall results found that 74% of coastal states are doing a mediocre to poor job of managing shorelines and preparing for future sea-level rise. Most of the lowest grades are in regions heavily impacted by extreme weather events. These states — many facing the Gulf of Mexico or Atlantic Ocean — tend to have less stringent policies regarding development in hazardous coastal zones, sediment management, in-
THE REPORT also posits that in the future, the United States will experience drastically more flooding than previously calculated by FEMA. File graphic
effective or nonexistent regulations on coastal armoring, and little in the way of policies that require the incorporation of sea-level
rise projections into coastal planning, according to the foundation. Eight states are doing a “good or better” job of pro-
tecting beaches, including California, which was the only state to receive an A grade. The higher-scoring states had strong policies
regarding coastal building setbacks, prohibitions against coastal armoring and rebuilding in coastal hazard areas, and support
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for incorporating sea-level rise and coastal adaptation into planning documents. States receiving F grades included Georgia, Alabama, Ohio and Indiana. “From unprecedented fires, to extreme hurricanes, and increasing sea level rise, local communities are presently experiencing climate change impacts,” said Stefanie Sekich-Quinn, coastal preservation manager at the Surfrider Foundation. “Scientists predict these impacts will continue to grow, especially for coastal communities. “Therefore, it is imperative that states and municipalities improve shoreline management practices by curtailing poorly planned development, planning for sea-level rise, and investing in proactive, nature-based solutions. Our report recommendations aim to improve responses to coastal threats, thereby ensuring strong, resilient coastlines for future generations.” The report also posits that in the future, the United States will experience drastically more flooding than previously calculated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The conclusions estimate that 14.6 million properties are at risk from a “100-year flood,” far more than the 8.7 million properties estimated by FEMA. The Surfrider Foundation is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the protection and enjoyment of the planet’s ocean, waves and beaches. It was founded in 1984 in Malibu, and now maintains more than one million supporters, activists and members.
Riverside County
ENCINITAS — Solana Center for Environmental Innovation and the County of San Diego are offering discounted rain barrels to encourage harvesting of rainwater. Rain barrels can help reduce runoff from dirtying our beaches and waterways, collecting many different types of pollutants before reaching the ocean, rivers, lakes and lagoons. Just 1 inch of rain yields 600 gallons per every 1,000 square feet of roof space. “This is a remarkable opportunity to save money while reusing water resources on your property, reducing waste and keeping harmful pollutants from reaching nearby waterways,” said Jessica Toth, Solana Center executive director. Here’s how the program works. Choose your rain barrel pick-up location as Encinitas, any Thursday or Saturday weekly. Pre-orders are required online at solanacenter.org/rain-barrels. Residents will pay $55 per rain barrel (after rebate) on up to two rain barrels per household.
OCT. 16, 2020
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O’side fire chief: New construction in S. Morro Hills not a hazard By Samantha Nelson
OCEANSIDE — Fire Chief Rick Robinson wrote a letter in late September suggesting a community like North River Farms would not be at greater risk for wildfires in an area like South Morro Hills. The letter, dated Sept. 24, addresses a “concern among some constituents that future developments in South Morro Hills pose significant fire and evacuation risks to surrounding communities.” According to Robinson, significant fires in new construction areas are rare. All new homes and commercial properties are built with automatic fire sprinkler systems, and buildings within wildland-urban interface areas like South Morro Hills are built to meet fire codes for those areas. “Should a fire occur and should the protective systems operate as designed, occupants will receive early fire warning and have egress protection to facilitate a safe evacuation,” Robinson said. “Any fire is undesirable and while we are never totally safe from such an event, survivability of occupants will be improved and total fire loss should be significantly less than homes and businesses without such
systems.” Fires represent less than 800 or 2% of the Oceanside Fire Department’s responses in 2019. To prevent the threat of vegetation or other external fires, new developments must install fire-resistive plant pallets and clear vegetation around the communities. Additionally, the building code requires buildings to have non-combustible roof coverings, enclosed eaves, vent protection and other engineering that minimizes fire spread. According to Robinson, these precautions mean fires that burn into communities will not have the same impacts as they have on older homes in California. It’s also less likely for a fire that starts in a new community to spread outside of that community. Robinson also addressed concern regarding vegetation within the San Luis Rey River posing a fire threat, noting that he could not find an instance where fire escaped the riverbed and caused significant property damage. There was one incident in 2014 when a fire escaped from the riverbank in the area where North River Farms would be located and was carried to North River Road. Robinson said the fire was controlled at
UCSD begins Mexico violence research project By City News Service
REGION — UC San Diego’s Center for U.S.-Mexican Studies launched a research project today to provide data and analysis on the escalation of violence in Mexico related to narcotrafficking and its impact on the population. Center officials said the Mexico Violence Resource Project is intended to be a reliable database for policymakers and journalists and will begin its efforts with new insights into the chaos that erupted in the city of Culiacan one year ago when Sinaloa cartel gunmen successfully thwarted the government’s attempt to arrest one of narcotrafficker Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman's sons. In addition to providing statistical data, the initiative will provide analysis to help assess facts on the ground. Though popular portrayals of the bloodshed depict it as a product of cinematic-type conflicts between cartels, experts involved with the project now recognize that the drivers of violence are more nuanced, according to Rafael Fernandez de Castro, director of the center, part of UCSD's School of Global Policy and Strategy. “As expert understandings of criminal activity have evolved, media portrayals and public debate have often retained a static conception of the causes and consequences of violence,” de Castro said.
The initiative intends to assist researchers or institutions focusing on specific issues by facilitating binational efforts to contextualize issues such as gender violence or money laundering. The aim is to give policymakers, journalists and scholars the tools to develop deeper understandings and smarter solutions, according to de Castro. The project’s website serves as a database of facts and statistics surrounding violence, sourcing information from civil society, government and academia. Statistics include the number of homicides, missing persons, costs of violence, judicial records and firearm information. Another component is the project’s efforts to provide original interviews from a range of voices to illuminate specific causes of violence to explore strategies for building peace. The examination of the events of Oct. 17, 2019, in Culiacan is the first such endeavor. After Mexican government forces detained one of “El Chapo’s” sons, members of the Sinaloa Cartel took to the streets with high-powered weapons, forcing President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to release Ovidio Guzman. “Ultimately, it matters a great deal how we tell stories about violence in Mexico,'' said Cecilia Farfan-Mendez, head of security research programs at the center.
the road and caused no structural damage on that side of the river. Two homes on the opposite side were damaged due to ember cast onto shake shingle roofs, but there was no total structural loss. Robinson suggested that new construction like
experienced evacuation issues during that fire and many fear the new community will only make such procedures worse. “The Lilac Fire in 2017 did create an evacuation challenge for Oceanside residents,” Robinson said. Hundreds of vehicles
Should a fire occur and should the protective systems operate as designed, occupants will receive early fire warning and have egress protection to facilitate a safe evacuation.” Fire Chief Rick Robinson Oceanside Fire Department
North River Farms would have helped firefighters in that area. “New construction, access roads and fire-resistive plantings in this same area would have allowed firefighters to hold the fire at the river banks with less active fire spread,” Robinson said. Concerns about fires in the South Morro Hills area have also cited the 2017 Lilac Fire as an example of why the new community isn’t a good fit. Residents
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higher-interest debt (along with debt requiring cash restricted collateral) to longer-term, fixed-rate debt, which released the cash collateral requirement and improved operating liquidity,” Byzak said. Rocky Chavez, current Tri-City Healthcare District board member and Oceanside mayoral candidate, believes Burlew’s allegations are likely steeped in his personal experiences with the hospital. In 2018, Burlew, then running as a union-backed Democrat, lost his bid for the District 2 board seat to Chavez. This year, Burlew was endorsed by the San Diego County Republican Party. “It’s very upsetting when he attacks the hospital, for people like me to hear what he's saying, because he’s just wrong,” Chavez said. “Burlew has an objective to get on the board and hopefully he’ll have [votes] to fire people who fired him. That’s no reason to get on the board.” In recent years, Burlew has gone into business with former Tri-City CEO Larry Anderson and Medical Acquisition Company (MAC) Founder Charles Perez, creating the company Healthcare Compliance 365. In 2013, Anderson was fired from Tri-City due to alleged conflicts of interest with Perez that resulted in a lawsuit settlement, but with a recent appeal,
from neighboring communities of Bonsall, Fallbrook, Vista, Rainbow and South Morro Hills were directed into downtown Oceanside by a Command Post located off of I-15 but not by city orders. Robinson said some residents in Vista and Oceanside were given evacuation orders even though they were never likely in danger or at direct threat from the fire. “The result was too many cars trying to go in the same direction at the the case is still ongoing. The Coast News reported in 2015 that Anderson advocated for a lease agreement between Tri-City and MAC — an agreement that would have secured Anderson’s employment for eight more years. During negotiations of the agreement, Anderson allegedly misled the Tri-City board about MAC’s experience, while at the same time accepting a number of gifts from Perez. More recently, Burlew’s opponents have accused him of sending campaign emails posing as other candidates. One email sent in September claiming to be from District 1 candidate Colleen O’Harra, an attorney and four-year board member of the TriCity Hospital Foundation, attacked District 1 candidate and former Tri-City nurse Adela Sanchez with false claims. The email included O’Harra’s home address, which she said she never puts on her campaign emails, adding that Burlew’s emails typically include his business address. “I thought, well, this is interesting, because that's the way Burlew always ends his emails,” O’Harra said. Though Sanchez says she won’t speculate about who sent the emails, O’Harra believes Burlew sent them. “That’s not the way I run a campaign,” O’Harra said. Burlew said he hasn’t seen the emails. Another phony email
same time,” Robinson said. “While the inconvenience and fear factor for those on the road is understood, the truth was that once people removed themselves out of the South Morro Hills area they were no longer at risk.” Since 2017, the County, Sheriff’s Department and CALFIRE have developed a Wireless Emergency Alerting System (WEA) that delivers more precise evacuation notice. “It is my professional opinion that a well-designed, well-built community with residents who educate themselves about the risks of living in a wildland interface community should not be at any greater risk nor should such a development create a greater risk to the surrounding communities,” Robinson said. Voters will determine the fate of North River Farms on Nov. 3. A “yes” vote on Measure L is in favor of the project. North River Farms has gained the official support of the Oceanside Fire Association. According to “YES on L” spokesperson Tanya Castaneda, OFA authorized the campaign to display its logo as a supporter on the website. According to Integral Communities’ Form 461
filing with the city, which reports donations from major donors, the NRF owner donated $10,000 to the fire union on Oct. 24, 2019, and another $20,000 on Nov. 8, 2019. North River Farms agreed to donate one acre of land where Fire Station No. 9 will be built. The station will include a one-bay garage to accommodate a full-size fire truck, furniture, fixtures and equipment, a vehicle exhaust extrication system, station alerting features, storage space, three dormitories, toilet/shower facilities, office space and a restroom for public use. The fire engine will be a smaller but faster version of the larger fire trucks but will come with the same equipment and is capable of off-road travel. “First responders are able to arrive on-site to fire emergency calls while they’re still small and manageable,” Castenada said via email. The engine’s cost is an estimated $350,000. Additionally, North River Farms will fund a salary for medical and fire certified staff for a fully staffed fire station, which will accommodate two personnel per day and a total of six personnel assigned to the station.
sent in October claimed that O’Harra supported District 7 candidate Allen Manzano over his opponent, Dr. Nina Chaya, which O’Harra said is false. The mailing address included on this email matched Burlew’s business address. Additionally, several elements in the suspicious emails also match language found on Burlew’s campaign website, including the phrase, “This candidate is flawed for the following reasons.” O’Harra speculated that Burlew is sending fake emails to split the votes between targeted Democratic candidates, favoring both him for the District 1 seat and his ally, Deborah Vietor, for District 7. O’Harra has sent the fake emails to the Registrar and the Fair Political Practices Commission but has not yet received a response. “This is all just a
distraction from the important issues, the real issues, that are affecting Tri-City Healthcare in the district,” Chaya said at a Sept. 30 Chamber of Commerce forum. “ …It's really a shame when people try to rely on impugning others to win instead of their own qualifications.”
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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
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.
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OCT. 16, 2020
City launches effort to help local breweries By Tigist Layne
SAN MARCOS — The City of San Marcos recently launched a San Marcos promotional campaign with the help of local graphic designer Mike Nelson. The campaign, called Sunny San Marcos, is an effort to support local breweries and businesses during the COVID-19 crisis. Councilmember Randy Walton came up with the idea to create a logo and a slogan to promote San Marcos. To start, he has launched stickers that were designed by Nelson, founder and creative director of Type G, a brandSUNNY SAN MARCOS initiative is an effort to promote the city and ing and design company. encourage residents to support local businesses. Courtesy photo The design features
a bright San Marcos, rolling hills next to a body of water and the city’s iconic Double Peak Park. “I thought it would be cool if we had an image that evoked all the beautiful natural assets that we have in San Marcos like our hills, our trails, Double Peak Park, tons of sunshine, plus the ocean is not far away,” Walton said. The stickers have been made available for free at local breweries Dos Desperados, Lost Abbey (both San Marcos locations), My Yard Live, Rip Current, Urge Gastropub/Mason Ale Works and Wild Barrel, as well as Old Cal Coffee & Eat-
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Residents who want a sticker must visit one of these establishments and purchase food or a beverage. “I just hoped to use it to not only evoke pride in our city, but to use it to help our local businesses during such a difficult economic crisis,” Walton said. Walton added that he has been promoting the stickers through social media, and the feedback from the community has been very positive, so much so that he expects to order more stickers soon. Nelson, who used to live in San Marcos and now resides in Encinitas,
Oceanside places 2nd in US water challenge By City News Service
OCEANSIDE — Oceanside finished second in a national water conservation challenge among cities with populations between 100,000 and 299,999, behind only Lakeland, Florida, it was announced Oct. 14. During the month of August, Oceanside residents pledged to save water and protect the environment as part of the Wyland National Mayor's Challenge for Water Conservation. The challenge is intended to push cities across the nation to promote water supply reliability, watershed protection and overall environmental stewardship, and is a call to action for leaders to inspire their residents to use resources wisely. According to Oceanside officials, residents who participated in the challenge
By City News Service
REGION — The average price of a gallon of self-serve regular gasoline in San Diego County dropped Oct. 14 to its lowest amount since July 25, decreasing fourtenths of a cent to $3.179. The average price is eight-tenths of a cent less than one week ago, 4.1 cents lower than one month ago
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and 99 cents cheaper than one year ago, according to figures from the AAA and Oil Price Information Service. It has dropped 42.3 cents since the start of the year. The decrease of fourtenths of a cent ends a 13day streak of not changing by more than three-tenths of a cent.
Police seek help to ID bank robber
An Official Senior Dental Practice ENCINITAS
by pledging or completing environmental projects from home earned points for the city in the nationwide competition. Oceanside has improved its results each of the three years it has competed, in which it came in sixth, third and now second place. Thousands of cities and towns across the country compete in the challenge in one of six tiers, depending on population. “The Oceanside community has shown its commitment to sustainability and efficient use of natural resources,” said Cari Dale, the city’s water utilities director. Overall, challenge participants in 2020 pledged to save more than 1 billion gallons of water, 74 million kilowatt hours of electricity and 29 million fewer pounds of waste entering landfills.
County gas price lowest since July
By City News Service
199 N El Camino Real Suite E,
told The Coast News that this project meant a lot to him, and he had a lot of fun doing it. “My intention was to make it be simple, yet interesting and infuse all of the special features that San Marcos has to offer,” Nelson said. “The water, the sky and the way the landscape lights up around sunset time — I wanted it to be a little whimsical and have a happy, loose feeling.” Walton said he’s considering expanding the project to include other products besides just stickers. He’s also hoping to include more local businesses that may need support from the community.
CARLSBAD — Authorities are reaching out to the public for help in identifying a man suspected of robbing a Carlsbad bank ths month. The robbery happened Oct. 1 around 3:45 p.m. at a bank in the 6900 block of El Camino Real, Carlsbad police spokeswoman Jodee Reyes said. The suspect, believed to be in his mid-20s, entered the bank wearing a blue surgical mask and demanded cash from the clerk, Reyes said. The man referred to a gun during the robbery, but a firearm was not seen. After the clerk com-
plied, the man exited the branch with an undisclosed amount of cash and was last seen running northbound toward Dove Lane, she said. No injuries were reported. Police received several nank surveillance photos of the suspect, who was described as white, 5 feet, 10 inches tall and around 180 pounds, with a thin build. He was last seen wearing a black baseball cap, black long-sleeved shirt and blue jeans. Anyone with information about the identity of the suspect or his whereabouts was asked to call Carlsbad police at 760-9312110.
OCT. 16, 2020
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Election 2020
This is the second in a three-part election series. This week, The Coast News examines local races in North County. Photos by Caitlin Steinberg and Jordan P. Ingram
Carlsbad candidates tackle affordable housing, traffic By Steve Puterski
CARLSBAD — In less than three weeks, the city will add at least one new person to the City Council. In this election cycle, districts 2 and 4 are up as Keith Blackburn, a current councilman, takes on Lela Panagides in District 2, while Teresa Acosta and Phil Urbina battle in District 4. Each candidate spoke with the Coast News for its election coverage on district-specific issues such as the College Boulevard connection, traffic and Ponto
LELA PANAGIDES
KEITH BLACKBURN
PHIL URBINA
TERESA ACOSTA
Park. In District 2, Blackburn, who has been on the council since 2012, said the decision to connect El
Camino Real and College Boulevard came down to several factors. First, it was needed to alleviate traffic congestion; second, it was
necessary to allow development, which he said dovetails into more housing for the city, especially to meet its Regional Housing Needs
Assessment goals from the county. The city, Blackburn said, took the lead because there are at least a dozen
Where Carlsbad council candidates stand on controversial issues By Catherine Allen
CARLSBAD — Just a few weeks away from the Nov. 3 election, some local political candidates are reminding voters there’s more to the ballot than the presidential race. To get a taste of what the Carlsbad City Council candidates really support, The Coast News asked them where they stood on a few of the most popular local issues. Incumbent councilmember Keith Blackburn and small business owner Lela Panagides are vying for the District 2 seat. The District 4 position, which has been vacant for more than a year, will be
between candidates Tere- the police. sa Acosta and Phil Urbina, While all candidates who have experience as agree there’s always room small business owners. for improvement, Urbina said he’s against taking action for police reform Police Reform None of the candidates right now. As departments support defunding the po- across the nation begin to enact reforms, Urbilice. Blackburn, who served na said some of them will as a police officer for 29 have “catastrophic” conseyears 21 in Carlsbad, [who quences. Along with all the othserved as a police officer for 40 years, 33 in Carls- er candidates, Panagides bad,] said that the city’s applauded the “extraortypically healthy budget dinary leadership” of the enables the council to add Carlsbad Police Departresources to one area with- ment and its willingness to out having to take resourc- improve. A member of both the es away from another. This means that the International Association city can support other com- of Chiefs of Police and the munity services without NAACP, Panagides pointtaking support away from ed out that critics of law
enforcement can still be supporters of law enforcement. Two candidates voiced their opinion on Citizen Review Boards (CRB) specifically, which aims to increase community engagement and oversight in policing. Acosta said the city should further explore creating a CRB consisting of residents from each district. Urbina said a CRB adds “another layer of bureaucracy.”
Carlsbad, particularly when it comes to the Clean Energy Alliance. Panagides said not every city contract should have to work like this. Instead, she’d look at quality, price and dependability for projects. Though she supports working families, unions and benefits, “the PLA is not the only way to achieve that.” The rest of the candidates didn’t take the middle ground approach. Blackburn — who worked as a construction Project Labor Agreements union worker in his early 20s — and Urbina both say (PLAs) PLAs — contracts with they’re against PLAs, arlabor unions for public sec- guing they reduce competor projects — have been TURN TO ISSUES ON A16 contested in
landowners who couldn’t agree on how to split the cost of the new road. But by using specific city funding sources, Carlsbad can connect the road, which he said will help alleviate traffic on El Camino Real. “College is part of the General Plan circulation and is the final leg in that plan and it’s necessary,” he said. “Recently, the state of California said, ‘we don’t care what your General Plan says, you can’t stop development.’ The whole council has agreed it’s time for a new General Plan.” Panagides said College Boulevard was the “impetus” for why she decided to run. High speeds, children walking to school and were just some of her concerns, so she created a group to engage the city about those issues. And while the city will implement speed signs, Panagides said identifying the problem is where it starts. So, asking for dedicated turn lanes and lights near both the school campuses is priority. But with the pandemic, she said the city must be careful on how to spend on the future solutions for the issue in regard to a decrease in tax revenues. So, the thing for me about decision making is you have to live in the experience of the people you’re TURN TO CARLSBAD ON A16
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Rob Howard Oceanside (Mayor)
On highest relative priorities “My first duty and highest obligation is to Oceanside’s Public Safety. Illegal homeless encampments and crime/drug use is reaping havoc on thousands of Oceanside residents. I will bring relief through enforcing vagrancy laws, provide a shelter resource that offers vocational job training programs and access to Christopher Rodriguez treat mental illness/drug addiction.”
Oceanside (Mayor)
Oceanside (D3)
Fernando Garcia Oceanside (Mayor)
Rocky Chavez Oceanside (Mayor)
Alvin L. McGee Oceanside (Mayor)
David Zernik Oceanside (D3)
On highest relative priorities “We need to address the homeless crisis and the crime associated with it through a compassionate but tough approach that connects individuals with services while simultaneously enforcing our laws and upholding our quality of life.”
Peter Weiss Oceanside (D4)
Ryan Keim Oceanside (D3) On lowest relative priorities “Housing is important. However, the city does not have the adequate infrastructure to support more people. Until the city develops a better traffic plan (improvement of roads, installation of smart traffic lights, widening of the 76, North river road expansion and other major roadways), traffic congestion will increase.”
On disagreeing with past decisions “It’s too hard to start a business or get a building permit in this town. The city is hurting the economy. The city has created a housing shortage. My goal is that rent should be one week’s pay. Building department review times and permits should be reduced.”
On improving city finances “Fiscal Stability: following COVID, we need to focus on core services and manage our budget appropriately. Economic Recovery and Growth: streamline the approval and construction of various development projects and new businesses (Inn’s at Buena Creek, OceanKamp, El Corazon Sports Arena) to add construction and permanent jobs.”
Amanda Rigby Vista (D3)
On disagreeing with past decisions “The county grand jury strongly recommended to the City of Oceanside (and others) that a they form a Citizens Oversight Committee for Police Oversight when excessive force was in question. The City Council voted against the recommendation.”
Elizabeth Perez Vista (D2)
On highest relative priorities “I speak for my community and all those people who agree with me: our number one focus is to bring affordable housing and some kind of rent control to our city. Our elected officials do not care about us, all they want is your vote while the rent keeps going up, while workers’ wages don’t go up. We can’t let the real estate investor control our lives.”
Ruben Major Oceanside (Mayor)
On highest relative priorities “The homeless crisis is my top priority. We are not following the law of the land. We are citing and ticketing the homeless, which is a waste of money. If a person is homeless, they are permitted to live in public in front of storefronts and in the riverbed if there are not enough beds for them. I believe tiny houses can help address this issue.”
Teresa Acosta Carlsbad (D4)
On lowest relative priorities “There are no low priority issues.”
On disagreeing with past decisions “The City Council has approved projects that have ignored community objections about environmental impacts. In 2016, when the City Council unanimously approved the Caruso mall without an EIR, the citizens of Carlsbad voted to overturn the Council decision. As Councilmember, I will listen to the community’s concerns.”
On lowest relative priorities “In District 2 Carlsbad, historic preservation is not as relevant. The city is almost built out and we are feeling the impacts of reduced revenue due to the pandemic, so during this immediate crisis, we need to focus on higher priority issues and supporting quality Lela Panagides of life and public safety services for our Carlsbad (D2) residents now and into the future.”
David Joseph Turgeon Oceanside (Mayor)
On lowest relative priorities “We will always have a well maintained, secure, and easily accessible public transit system for all who want to use it and I remain committed to this. We must also recognize the needs of the approximately 97% of the population who use our freeways and roads, including those moving goods and services throughout our communities, balancing the two.”
On improving city finances “I plan to expand public private partnerships. This can be accomplished with clean energy solutions and this includes building innovative new local technologies. Long-term goals would include developing municipal broadband and Wi-Fi connectivity. Also, leverage and connect Vista’s agricultural assets with private industry and consumers.”
On improving city finances “Escondido will need to revisit a sales tax initiative. In the meantime, we should be looking at all areas of the budget where savings can be garnered (with budget committee), removing the ban on cannabis, grants, funding, and partnerships with other agencies, and any assets Vanessa Valenzuela to be leased or disposed of.”
On lowest relative priorities “North County is still not ready for public transit. During our current economic crisis, we certainly cannot afford to divert money which can be better utilized elsewhere.”
Escondido (D2)
Bill Batchelor Oceanside (D3) On highest relative priorities “The Mayor of Oceanside selects commissioners. I would ensure that each commission is balanced and not dominated by one special interest. Commissions allow healthy discussions on difficult issues and public input; this is beneficial as Oceanside address housing, energy, public safety and economics.”
Election 2020
On disagreeing with past decisions “A previous City Council decision I disagree with is regarding inclusionary housing requirements in the City of Vista. In 2015, Vista City Council, including the incumbent (my opponent) voted to remove inclusionary housing requirements for developers. The resulted Katie Melendez in our community missing out on hundreds of Vista potential affordable housing units.”
Oceanside (D4)
On disagreeing with past decisions “With the passage of Prop. 64 Oceanside had a golden opportunity to become a hub of the emerging cannabis industry. Despite overwhelming support for Prop 64, our council punted on the issue while smaller cities such as Vista cashed in. We need sensible cannabis regulations in Oceanside to protect businesses Amber Newman and consumers and safeguard our children.”
On lowest relative priorities “I have no lowest priority. ‘When everything is a priority’ then things get done.”
Fabio Marchi Oceanside (Mayor)
On disagreeing with past decisions “The response mounted by Oceanside’s City Council to stave off the worst economic effects of COVID-19 has been weak-willed at best. I’m a strong proponent of tapping emergency reserves to help struggling businesses and residents. This support through the worst of times will set us up for a more Michelle Gomez rapid recovery once the situation stabilizes.”
On highest relative priorities “Government transparency/accountability ranks high for me, as I am committed to building the much-needed trust back with our government. One of the ways to do that is through transparency, giving our community the ability to access and comment on important governmental Kellie Davis matters, like the selection of our new Oceanside (D3) Chief of Police.”
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Questionnaire Map_MUNI
Election 2020 On lowest relative priorities “We currently have open spaces. We need to ensure we keep them. So, while it is rated lower, it is not lower in importance. Public transit is rated lower because NCTD is the primary and we need to work with them to make transit usable for our workers and residents who need transit at different work/entertainment hours.”
OCT. 16, 2020
OCT. 16, 2020
On highest relative priorities “Declare a regional climate emergency. There is a climate emergency which demands a massive-scale mobilization to halt, reverse, and address its consequences and causes. This is an existential threat and San Marcos must do whatever it takes to confront it. Included Alan Geraci in this plan is an affordable housing and San Marcos (D3) 21st century transportation plan.”
Ed Musgrove San Marcos (D4)
On lowest relative priorities “Public transportation is needed, but we are not a community where we grew around this as a primary mode of transportation. It fits for some, but not the significant majority. We need to keep it up and running, but not at the expense of roadway safety, maintenance and efficiency.”
On lowest relative priorities “Not applicable. I think they are all important priorities.”
Susan Reveles Escondido (D3)
On disagreeing with past decisions “On July 15 the motion to add to the November 3rd ballot a measure to increase sales tax by 1% failed. Considering the growing budget gap, this revenue is vital to our city to avoid bankruptcy. A special election in 2021 to have the residents decide is what would be fair. An increase of sales tax is one strategy to solve our budget crisis.”
On improving city finances “The most pressing issue facing Escondido in the next few years is the structural budget deficit. I would propose a three-phase approach to addressing the issue. First, full audit of all departmental budgets and reallocation of funds. Second, selling off of superfluous real Donald Greene estate holdings. Third, establishing a Escondido (D3) Community Choice Energy program.”
Rick Paul Escondido (D2) On lowest relative priorities “Recreation/Open Space - it is already included in climate action plans so requires less intervention. We have 6,000 acres of open spaces and parks so that challenge is to maintain great resources, which is easier. The Daley Ranch is already a multiple species conservation zone, for example. So, Dara Czerwonka although important, it is not an immediate Escondido (D3) challenge.”
On lowest relative priorities “Every issue deserves the same attention and priority.”
April Austin Pugh Escondido (D4)
Sharon Jenkins San Marcos (D3) On improving city finances “I’m proud to continue the city’s commitment to fiscal prudence. The city could benefit from increased partnerships with our nonprofits, philanthropies, private foundations and the local public sector, as well as the state and federal government. There is existing wealth, expertise Catherine Blakespear and know-how that we could better leverEncinitas (Mayor) age to achieve common goals.”
Deputy Mayor Kellie Hinze Encinitas (D2)
Tracy Martinez Del Mar
Bob Gans Del Mar
On lowest relative priorities “All are important so this is difficult. I would say public transportation is the lowest although Del Mar has worked hard to build a more cycling and walkable town. We don’t have a train station. We do have a bus route which appears to be underused.”
On highest relative priorities “This question poses false choices. All priorities can be pursued in a transparent manner and with fiscal discipline, with the goal of preserving and improving our Community and preserving open space, as envisioned by our Community Plan. Providing for affordable housing is critical to complying with state law and maintaining local control.”
On lowest relative priorities “I ranked public transit and social services as high priorities but lesser than top tier due to the fact that these are regional priorities that, while worthy of focus on the city-level, ultimately are determined by agencies such as NCTD and the County Health and Human Services Agency.”
Glenn Warren Del Mar
Julie Thunder Encinitas (Mayor)
Susan Turney Encinitas (D2)
On highest relative priorities “State-mandated housing shouldn’t be concentrated in dense projects but woven into zones throughout, and we should demand developers set aside a higher percentage for low-income housing. I’m a staunch defender of our lagoons and ocean and will work for more sand replenishment on our bluff-lined beaches, protecting the impact zone on the bluffs.”
On highest relative priorities “There’s a better way to achieve mandated affordable units. I propose requiring up to 25% [inclusionary] housing, as other cities do. This way we also preserve neighborhoods and minimize impacts to traffic and on the infrastructure. At 25% rather than the council’s 15%, the need to rezone would drop from 5,587 to 3,352 units. That’s a 40% decrease.”
Tony Kranz Encinitas (D1)
On lowest relative priorities “Del Mar has a vibrant volunteer community that through organizations such as Community Connections provides assistance to those in need. Assistance is important, but since the private sector is providing, it, I don’t believe it is a priority for city government.”
On improving city finances “Del Mar needs to create a master plan to reduce its reliance on Fairgrounds Sales Tax revenue. We need figure out how to leverage technology rather than adding staff. We need to replenish our reserves and pay back Measure Q loan before adding staff.”
Dave Druker Del Mar
Neil Kramer San Marcos (D4)
On highest relative priorities “We can do better to address the housing needs of our community. I support: more affordable options for our citizens, smart growth, more density, and smaller units. We should be building more within the city, close to the freeway, along transit, and near shopping. I support New Urbanism that includes walkable neighborhoods.”
On disagreeing with past decisions “On Feb. 20, 2019, the city council voted 4-1 on program 3C of the Housing Element (Item 10A). My colleagues voted to ask a judge to rule Prop A couldn’t be used to preempt state law. I favored asking the voters to make a slight change to Prop A so that the city satisfied state regulators of housing law requirements.”
Alex Riley Encinitas (D1)
Phil Blair Del Mar
On disagreeing with past decisions “The vote on Sept 8th to not up-zone the north area of Del Mar to allow for state mandated housing was short term thinking and placed Del Mar in a very precarious position. And most importantly threatened our local control.”
On highest relative priorities “Infrastructure and public safety are the primary responsibilities of local government. Defending our neighborhoods from over-building and prioritizing these two fundamental duties will provide the solid foundation needed to allow us to maintain the high quality of life that we love about Encinitas.”
Supervisor Kristin Gaspar (D3)
County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer (D3)
On lowest relative priorities “I support a balanced transportation system that addresses investments in mass transit, while providing improvements to our regional roads. The North Coast Corridor in Solana Beach where I-5 expansion meets Coaster double-tracking and lagoon restoration is a perfect example of the balance we should be achieving.”
On lowest relative priorities “Fiscal management is vital; I rank it lowest because the County prioritized its finances over the actual work it needs to do for decades, and now has reserves far over recommended levels. I’d maintain safe reserves, but we can’t ignore the County’s responsibilities and underserve San Diego in the name of fiscal discipline when reserves are bloated.”
EDITOR’S NOTE: The Coast News asked candidates several questions in an electronic questionnaire. For this map, we selected what we thought was each candidate’s strongest short-answer response. To see all responses to all questions, visit our web site.
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OCT. 16, 2020
Election 2020
Encinitas candidates focus on housing, public safety By Caitlin Steinberg
ENCINITAS — The 2020 race for two seats on the Encinitas City Council is heating up, as the sitting Councilmembers Tony Kranz (District 1) and Deputy Mayor Kellie Hinze (District 2) face off with candidates Alex Riley (District 1) and Susan Turney (District 2). In previous weeks, all four candidates participated in the Coast News Clean Campaign Forum, signing the Clean Campaign Pledge, and answering a series of questions in regards to city spending, housing, their top priorities and why they want to represent residents. In the race for District 1, incumbent Councilman Tony Kranz has served on Encinitas City Council since 2012 and according to second-period financial statements, has raised $11,274 in campaign funds during 2020, while Alex Riley, a political newcomer, has raised $3,905. According to Kranz, Encinitas is one of the safest cities in the country with high property values. He looks to continue serving his district. “We are improving aging infrastructure, engaging our community and providing public art, recreation and helping to clean our
AFFORDABLE HOUSING remains one of the most contentious issues facing the City of Encinitas. Council challengers Susan Turney and Alex Riley are running on platforms focused on changing the city’s approach to housing development. Photo via Facebook
environment so that future generations can experience the joy of living along the edge of the ocean in a city we all love and cherish,” Kranz said. Kranz’s highest priority is public safety, pledging to consistently vote for the highest level of funding for the San Diego County Sheriff’s department and the Fire and Marine Safety division.
Riley, who served as a Lifeguard for the City of San Diego Fire/Rescue Department for 19 years, was motivated to run for the District 1 seat by looming housing developments in the Leucadia area. “My wife and I moved to Leucadia for a better quality of life we were lacking in North Park,” Riley said. “I’m running because I see the Council has largely ig-
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nored the long-standing issues in District 1 except to bury us in a disproportionate amount of dense up-zoning.” According to Riley, his top priority as councilmember would be infrastructure and public safety. “Defending our neighborhoods from over-building and prioritizing these two fundamental duties will provide the solid foundation
needed to allow us to maintain the high quality of life that we love about Encinitas.” The race for District 2 pit’s current Deputy Mayor Kellie Hinze and challenger Susan Turney. While Hinze has out-fundraised Turney, raising $41,177.60 in total since January 2020, according to second-period financial statements, Turney brought in more campaign donations between July 1 through September 16, raising $1,808.60 more than Hinze, for a total of $16,560. According to Hinze, she is running for election to “deliver progress to residents on vibrant public spaces, beaches, parks, and trails.” “My record reflects transparent decision-making and responsive leadership. The future of Encinitas depends on meaningful, positive collaboration and proactive planning to safeguard our environment, community and economy,” Hinze said. Hinze also believes public safety to be her top priority. “Public safety is the city’s core function,” Hinze said. “We have to do this exceptionally well to accomplish any other goals. As one of the safest cities in the
county, we are constantly working alongside marine safety, law enforcement and our fire department to uphold the highest level of safety possible with wildland-urban interfaces on all sides of our city.” Challenging Hinze for the seat, Turney said her priority as a council member would be to "put residents first" with respect to "housing, public safety, and government transparency," and to raise the number of mandated affordable housing units in Encinitas. “I propose requiring up to 25% affordable housing, as other cities do,” Turney said. “This way we also preserve neighborhoods and minimize impacts to traffic and on the infrastructure. At 25% rather than the council's 15%, the need to rezone would drop from 5,587 to 3,352 units. That’s a 40 % decrease.” Additional information on each candidate can be found on their webpages and social media, as linked in the article above. Any North County residents unaware of which district they live in may use the Coast News’ 2020 Interactive Voting Map by searching for their address and viewing all applicable candidates for legislative races on their ballot.
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OCT. 16, 2020
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T he C oast News
Election 2020
District 3 Supervisor race will determine board’s political majority By Tigist Layne
REGION — The November elections are just a few weeks away, and two candidates are vying for the District 3 seat in one of the region’s most anticipated races. For the first time in more than three decades, Democrats could flip the county Board of Supervisors’ long-held Republican majority. Districts 1, 2 and 3 are all up for election. District 1 has two Democratic candidates, and District 2 has two Republican candidates. Currently, District 4 is represented by a Democrat and District 5 is represented by a Republican. In District 3, Republican incumbent Kristin Gaspar is going head-to-head with Democrat Terra Lawson-Remer, and whoever comes out on top will deter-
mine the political leaning of the board. Although county supervisor is officially a nonpartisan position, the five-member board has been controlled by a Republican majority for more than 30 years and members’ political leanings and philosophies tend to play a part in the board’s policy directions. Gaspar, a small business owner who was elected to the board in 2016, has previously served four years on the Encinitas City Council and was the first elected mayor of Encinitas. She said that her top priority right now is economic recovery for the region. “We have to 250,000 San Diegans out of work … and 900,000 who are food insecure. It’s going to be
KRISTIN GASPAR
TERRA LAWSON-REMER
very important that you have a county supervisor to navigate us out of this economic crisis,” Gaspar said. “As a CFO of a business, someone that comes with three terms in local offices … I know that I’m prepared to do this job and walk
hand in hand with our families and businesses during what will be an incredibly challenging time.” Gaspar, who has been an advocate for a swifter reopening of businesses, criticized Gov. Gavin Newsom for not giving the county
more control of the reopening process. “It’s important that we follow our local data, and we should have the ability on the local level to make decisions that are in response to what we see in our science and our data,” Gaspar said. “One thing that frustrates me is a governor that’s trying to drive an entire state, and this is a big, diverse state, and not every county has been a leader like San Diego has.” Lawson-Remer, an economist and environmental attorney who worked in the Treasury Department during the Obama administration, said that the first step to COVID-19 recovery is increased testing and increased contact tracing. “If you look around the world, the economies that have been able to get re-
started again are the ones that focused on getting their case numbers down,” Lawson-Remer said. “Once they got their numbers down, they helped businesses invest in the equipment they needed to reopen safely, and they were able to reopen and stay open.” Lawson-Remer said that, besides COVID-19 recovery, her top priority is climate action. “I’m a passionate environmentalist and I’m really focused on taking action on climate change. That means protecting our beaches, coastlines and our open spaces, as well as investing in affordable housing, and reducing traffic and congestion because protecting our planet is the most important thing we can do,” Lawson-Remer said.
Solana Beach candidates talk housing By Dan Brendel
SOLANA BEACH — Solana Beach candidates for local office outlined the city’s obstacles to affordable housing, calling for the return of Redevelopment Agencies, a discontinued property tax mechanism, at a forum last month. Nicholas Garcia of the San Diego Organizing Project (SDOP), a group of religious congregations that hosted the Sept. 15 forum, told candidates his family had to move away, after living in Solana Beach for 30 years. Even before losing a restaurant job due to COVID closures, almost “all of my salary went to pay rent, bills, and food,” he said (translated from Spanish). “We hope that more low-income housing is built in Solana Beach so that we can return.” From 2013 to 2019, Solana Beach granted permits for 21% of the units allocated to it in the 2013-2021 Regional Housing Needs Assessment, a cyclical housing demand forecast. The city permitted only 4% of its target specifically in lower-income categories. Asked how they’d improve these stats, the candidates, all uncontested, said the city can only do so much without state help. “Especially in cities with high land value, … we can't get projects to pencil, even giving away [publicly-owned] land to developers,” said Mayor Jewel Edson, who’s running in Council District Three. She referred to The Pearl, a planned all-affordable apartment complex that would’ve gone on a city-owned parking lot, but which fizzled for lack of financing. (Though Ginger Hitzke, The Pearl’s developer, recalled in an April podcast the city being less than accommodating.) “Gov. Brown removed what's called the Redevel-
opment Agency, which was a source of funding that each city could realize to provide to affordable developers,” said Lesa Heeber, who’s running for mayor. “We continually push back on our state elected officials, … saying, please, please bring back redevelopment funds,” Edson said. “Without these funds, … we can't attract developers.” Councilman Dave Zito, who’s running in District One, echoed this sentiment. Redevelopment Agencies used “tax increment financing,” or TIF, to divert future growth in property tax revenue to finance urban renewal projects. Cities keep only some of their property tax revenues, the rest being redistributed to the county government, school districts and special districts, such as water and hospital districts. In San Diego County, 45% goes to schools, the largest share by far, and 13% to cities. Normally, everyone’s share would grow as the size of the whole countywide property value pie grew. But under Redevelopment, other recipients’ shares were frozen in time, with the incremental growth in value, including of new development, going to Redevelopment Agencies. The state, obligated to backfill, lost revenue growth for schools, eventually abandoned this system in 2011. State law still allows cities to utilize TIF by establishing Enhanced Infrastructure Financing Districts, or EIFDs. Like Redevelopment Agencies, EIFDs borrow against tax growth to fund projects. But an EIFD captures only the city’s portion of revenue growth, unless another recipient agency — namely, the county government — voluntarily cedes its portion to achieve some shared purpose, such as transit infrastructure together with affordable housing.
“In Redevelopment, we were like the kid that came to the sandbox with our toys, and then we took everyone else’s,” Larry Kosmont, a consultant, told The Coast News. “In EIFDs … we come to that same sandbox … hoping that people will throw their toys in and participate with us.” A few municipalities have struck deals with L.A. and Orange Counties. But even if Solana Beach negotiated such a deal, “it is unlikely to derive much revenue for [Solana Beach] given … many of the infrastructure improvements that would cause a further increase in property values have already been done,” Heebner said.
760-753-7002 • 760-815-0307 www.LeadingNoteStudios.com
Working with EVERYONE to Get RESULTS • Helped develop County protocols to keep San Diegans safe from COVID-19 • Launched a Housing Trust Fund to help first-time buyers • Negotiated a new psychiatric ward at TriCity to address the mental health crisis • Led the County’s opposition to Trump Administration off-shore drilling
Kristin is the only candidate who opposes Prop. 15 Prop. 15 eliminates many Prop. 13 property tax protections Paid for by Gaspar for Supervisor 2020
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T he C oast News
OCT. 16, 2020
Election 2020
Del Mar candidates on development, local control By Dan Brendel
DEL MAR — Del Mar candidates for local office, at a forum last month, differed primarily on tradeoffs between development and risks posed to local land use authority. Councilman Dave Druker and Tracy Martinez, running as a slate, characterized the election as a choice between them and an opposing camp, including Bob Gans, Phil Blair and Glenn Warren. Druker said he and Martinez “represent the large majority of you in town that are skeptical
about government and do not want massive change to our small town.” He told the Coast News he believes Gans and Blair in particular “have a propensity to allow overdevelopment.” He cited their support for the proposed bluff-top Marisol resort development (Measure G), which voters defeated in March. Dan Quirk, a sixth candidate, unclaimed by either side, also opposed Measure G, he told the Del Mar Times. Gans and Blair separately told The Coast News
SAN MARCOS • ESCONDIDO
Four candidates vie for two seats in San Marcos By Tigist Layne
SAN MARCOS — Two San Marcos districts will vote for the first time ever for their own City Council representatives this November, the first election since the city began transitioning to a district voting system in 2018. Districts 3 and 4 are up for election on Nov. 3, with two candidates running for each district seat. Current Councilmember at-large Sharon Jenkins is running for the District 3 seat against Democrat Alan Geraci. Jenkins, a Republican, was elected to City Coun-
CARLSBAD
CONTINUED FROM A11
trying to make decisions for,” she said. “And that often doesn’t happen, which means you have to be accessible to people.” District 4 — Ponto Park
Both Acosta and Urbina are in favor of the coastal park in District 4 proposed by the group, People for Ponto. However, they slightly differ on how to get there. The space being proposed along Ponto Road off Avienda Encinas. Acosta said she is in full support and said there have been errors admitted by city staff. She added the city must review and clarify what the zoning is, who has paid into the park and whether the park deficit is satisfied, which she believes it is not. There is also an area that has been debated about whether the residents of San Pacifico in this planning area F had paid a fee for a park,” she said. “And this fee had been collected by the city, but the park was never built.” Due to the complexities, Urbina said he is in favor of an “exhaustive” feasibility study, review the issues raised by the group,
cil at large in 2012 and re-elected at large in 2016. “My focus is doing what’s best for San Marcos. I think the best way to represent our residents is to look at what’s best for everybody and not just a particular district,” Jenkins said. “I think it’s best to stay nonpartisan and focus on our residents.” Geraci, a climate action enthusiast, told The Coast News that, though COVID-19 recovery comes first and foremost, climate action is his top priority. “I want to work on our climate. There are things we can do locally, regionally, at the state level and nationally,” Geraci said. “I want to do what I can locally to protect our climate and take the action that’s needed when it comes to the city’s Climate Action collect facts and then make a final decision. He added taking up a firm stance, either way, before the study is conducted would be irresponsible. “People for Ponto have brought up numerous issues and I think as a councilmember my job is to look at things from a 30,000-foot level, to be able to see what those issues are, to get the facts and then to be able to make a decision,” he added. Housing
Affordable housing has long been an issue throughout the state. All the candidates said analyzing other properties not zoned for residential should be considered, such as industrial zones, along with infill and refill. One hurdle, though, are penalties from state combined with a lack of incentives for developers to meet the Regional Housing Needs Assessment set by the county at 3,873 units for Carlsbad. Of those, more than 2,000 must meet very low to low-income residences. Additionally, all spoke about converting the west side parking lot at The Shoppes at Carlsbad mall into a residential area.
the main issue isn’t development per se, but the risk of losing local land use authority for failing to comply with state affordable housing law. In recent weeks, novotes from Druker and Councilwoman Terry Gaasterland twice blocked city council from adding an allowable residential use to the city’s North Commercial zone, as the city’s state-certified Housing Element requires. The state government has cautioned the city against noncompliance. Potential consequenc-
es include the state overriding the city’s discretionary review processes — meaning development proposals would require ministerial approval only, but not political scrutiny — and up-zoning the very bluffs voters denied Marisol. Warren called Druker and Gaasterland’s action “completely irresponsible” and Gans called it “reckless.” “We do not want to lose our local control to the state, and then [the state would] come in and tell us exactly how many
[affordable housing] units and where they're going to be. Because they might just select the bluffs as the easiest option,” Blair said. “State mandated high density housing requirements could destroy our neighborhoods,” Martinez said. She pointed to alternatives outlined in a June report she coauthored with other members of the city’s Housing Element Ad-Hoc Citizens’ Task Force. The report prioritized repurposing various city-owned properties and the Del Mar Fairgrounds for affordable housing, as well as encour-
aging homeowners to build accessory dwelling units (“granny flats”). Quirk spoke in favor of those three avenues, as well. Gans told The Coast News he supported the Marisol project because it would’ve generated $8 million in annual tax revenue, 22 units of affordable housing and funds for beach sand replenishment. Blair said it was better than the alternative, which could include a gated community of multi-million homes, inaccessible to the public.
candidates are running for three seats on the Escondido City Council, meaning Districts 2, 3 and 4 could soon have new representatives who could cause a shift in the council’s political tone for at least the next two years. Despite the council officially being a nonpartisan office, members’ political leanings and philosophies tend to play a part in the council’s agendas and voting patterns. For eight years, the council had a conservative majority until two Democrats, Mayor Paul McNamara and Councilmember Consuelo Martinez, were elected in 2018, joining Democrat Olga Diaz. The election could flip the council once again, or maintain a liberal majority. One way or the other, Escondido City Council the new council will also direction on the line as be responsible for hiring voters fill 3 district seats a new city manager after ESCONDIDO — Nine City Manager Jeffrey Epp
officially retired in July. In District 2, three candidates are hoping to finish out the remaining two years of the term after Republican Councilmember John Masson died in March. Democrat Vanessa Valenzuela, Republican Tina Inscoe and self-described nonpartisan Rick Paul are vying for Masson’s seat. Valenzuela told The Coast News that her top priorities if elected are COVID-19 recovery for small businesses and finding solutions for the city’s impending roughly $200 million budget deficit. “I’m invested in the community’s success,” Valenzuela said. “I want to leave an Escondido that my kids can thrive in, and I believe that I have the energy, the fresh ideas and fresh perspective that will be imperative to Escondi-
do successfully moving forward.” Republican Joe Garcia, Democrats Don Greene and Susan Reveles, and Dara Czerwonka are running for the council’s District 3 seat to replace Diaz, who opted to not to run again. Greene, who is endorsed by Diaz, said he wants to bring financial stability to the city by fixing the budgeting process. “We need to build more housing and stabilize our property tax stream,” Greene said. “We also need to attract new businesses to the city. One of the businesses that I’m very strongly in support of is the cannabis industry. … Opening up the cannabis industry would bring safe, reliable access to cannabis to a number of consumers in the area and bring in a large portion of sales tax generated into the city.”
Blackburn said the city has been in discussions with the property owner for several years to find the best project, along with clearing regulatory and legal hurdles. Panagides said a more blended mix of housing is needed, such as mixed-use developments, along with bringing down costs for developers so they can build, and the city meets its goals. In District 4, Urbina said there is little land left to build and the decisions on where to put housing, whether in the city or District 4, will be complex and require the mix to meet the RHNA goals. Also, he said the cap on the city’s population has been removed by the state, so the Growth Management Plan must be revisited. Acosta the city can upzone in some areas, add triplexes and fourplexes in line with the character of the area, increase density and reduce delays for builders and city fees. Also, she said streamlining the process to provide permitting and expertise to developers to make the city a friendly entity to do business with.
crease in homelessness due to the pandemic, he said the best way to reduce the risk of evictions is to “keep everybody working” and “make sure we support our businesses.” Still, Blackburn and Urbina said there are some unintended consequences and ramifications of rental deferments and other reliefs. “…For every rental unit, there is an owner of that unit who is not getting the revenue that they expected, and these people aren’t all giant corporations,” Urbina said.
would begin to take effect for some businesses starting Fiscal Year 2022. “I would oppose this anytime, but particularly in this COVID world,” Urbina said. Blackburn, who’s skeptical of the proposition, said “the timing is horrible.” He’s concerned that funds may be redirected to other areas, and the increased tax will ultimately be passed on to the consumer. As co-chair of the Carlsbad Chamber of Commerce’s Government Affairs Committee, Acosta was able to hear from speakers on both sides of the debate and ultimately chose to support the proposition. She said that “only very large corporations” will have to switch to paying market value, which would be fair considering “big businesses have been escaping through a property tax loophole.” Since councilmembers don’t have direct authority over propositions, Panagides declined to take a public stance, saying “the voters of California will decide.”
Plan.” In District 4, Democrat Neil Kramer and Republican Ed Musgrove are going head-to-head to replace Councilmember at-large Jay Petrek, who was appointed at large in 2019 by the council to fill a vacant seat. Petrek is not running for re-election. Kramer said his priorities for the city involve limiting big developments. “People are frustrated with the big development projects that have taken place over the last 10 to 15 years,” Kramer said. “They are infringing on our open spaces, they’re not affordable to the people that are working in the community, they are overcrowding our schools and they’re congesting our roadways.”
The Coast News intern Catherine Allen contributed to this story.
ISSUES
CONTINUED FROM A11
tition and drive up project costs. Acosta supports PLAs for its worker protection of fair pay, benefits and bargaining rights. “If we don’t protect them, they will not be able to afford to live in communities like this,” Acosta said. “Our workforce is already struggling living here.” COVID-19 Rent Deferments
Carlsbad’s growing list of COVID-19 economic recovery initiatives includes small business loans and commercial rent deferments, but Acosta said that farther down the line, the council will need to mitigate the effects of the resulting balloon payments. Acknowledging Carlsbad’s loss in revenue and limited control over businesses closing and homes being lost, both Panagides and Acosta said that they’d advocate at the state and federal levels for more local resources, such as grants and CARES Act funding. Though Urbina said he hasn’t seen any in-
Proposition 15
Proposition 15 would use a split roll to tax commercial and industrial property based on their market value, while still taxing residential property at its purchase price. The new tax on market value would only apply to businesses with more than $3 million in holdings. The revenue would be distributed at the state, county and local levels, while also funding public schools and community colleges. The proposition
OCT. 16, 2020
A17
T he C oast News
Election 2020
County Board
District 3
Name
Carlsbad Del Mar
4
At Large
Encinitas
2 Mayor
Escondido
3
4
Oceanside San Marcos Vista Solana Beach
3 Mayor
Social Service / Helps
Environment / Natural Resource Mgmt
Public Transit
Public Safety
Recreation / Open Space
1
3
2
2
Strongly Disagree
Somewhat Disagree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
2
3
3
1
2
Somewhat Agree
Somewhat Disagree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Higgins, Brian
No Response / Declined Dropped Out
Panagides, Lela
2
4
1
3
3
1
1
3
1
2
Somewhat Disagree
Somewhat Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Acosta, Teresa
2
3
1
2
2
1
1
3
1
2
Somewhat Disagree
Somewhat Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Urbina, Phil
No Response / Declined
Blair, Phil
2
2
2
1
1
2
1
3
2
2
Strongly Disagree
Somewhat Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Druker, Dave
2
2
2
1
1
2
1
3
1
3
Somewhat Agree
Somewhat Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Gans, Bob
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
Somewhat Disagree
Somewhat Disagree
A - mostly a political matter for community
2
1
1
1
1
1
2
3
2
2
Somewhat Disagree
Strongly Disagree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Martinez, Tracy
No Response / Declined
Warren, Glenn
2
2
2
2
1
2
2
3
2
4
Strongly Disagree
Somewhat Disagree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Kranz, Tony
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
Somewhat Agree
Strongly Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Riley, Alex
2
1
2
1
2
2
1
2
2
2
Strongly Disagree
Strongly Agree
Hinze, Kellie
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
Strongly Disagree
Somewhat Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Turney, Susan
1
2
2
1
2
2
1
3
2
2
Somewhat Disagree
Strongly Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Blakespear, Catherine
2
1
1
2
1
2
1
3
1
2
Somewhat Agree
Somewhat Agree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
1
1
Strongly Disagree
Strongly Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Thunder, Julie
No Response / Declined
Paul, Rick
3
2
1
4
1
2
1
4
3
2
Somewhat Disagree
Somewhat Agree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
Valenzuela, Vanessa
2
4
2
1
1
3
2
3
2
2
Strongly Agree
Strongly Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
1
3
1
2
2
4
1
3
1
2
Somewhat Disagree
Somewhat Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Garcia, Joe
No Response / Declined
Greene, Don
1
3
2
2
2
3
2
4
1
1
Strongly Agree
Strongly Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Reveles, Susan
3
3
2
1
1
3
1
4
2
2
Somewhat Agree
Somewhat Agree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Somewhat Agree
Strongly Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Somewhat Agree
Strongly Disagree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
Morasco, Mike
No Response / Declined
Yanes, Andres
Dropped Out
Batchelor, Bill
1
3
1
3
1
2
1
2
3
2
Davis, Kellie
1
3
1
1
3
3
1
4
1
1
Strongly Agree
Strongly Disagree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Keim, Ryan
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
3
1
2
Somewhat Disagree
Somewhat Agree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit A - mostly a political matter for community
Mackin, Shari
No Response / Declined
Newman, Amber
1
2
1
1
1
2
1
3
2
1
Strongly Agree
Somewhat Agree
Zernik, David
1
3
1
3
2
1
1
3
2
2
Strongly Agree
Somewhat Agree
D - mostly a private matter for owners
Gomez, Michelle
2
4
2
2
2
3
1
4
3
1
Strongly Agree
Somewhat Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
4
1
3
1
4
3
2
Strongly Disagree
Somewhat Disagree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
1
2
2
2
3
2
2
Strongly Disagree
Somewhat Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Marshall, Jane Mccray, Morgan
No Response / Declined
2
4
1
No Response / Declined
2
2
2
No Response / Declined
Garcia, Fernando
3
2
2
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
Strongly Disagree
Strongly Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Howard, Rob
2
2
1
1
2
3
2
3
2
2
Somewhat Agree
Somewhat Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Turgeon, David
1
2
1
1
2
1
2
2
2
1
Strongly Agree
Strongly Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Major, Ruben
2
2
2
1
2
2
1
3
2
1
Strongly Agree
Strongly Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Marchi, Fabio
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Strongly Agree
Strongly Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Mcgee, Alvin
1
2
1
1
2
2
1
2
2
2
Somewhat Agree
Somewhat Agree
D - mostly a private matter for owners
Rodriguez, Christopher
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
3
2
2
Somewhat Agree
Somewhat Agree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
A - mostly a political matter for community
Uridel, Louis
1
Fiscal Mgmt / Discipline
2
4
Sanchez, Esther
3
Gov't Transparency / Accountability
1
2
Feller, Jack
2
Small Businesses
2
1
Chavez, Rocky
4
D = Land use is mostly a private matter. Beyond minimal constraints for public safety, owners should be able to use their private property how they see fit.
1
Weiss, Peter
3
C = There should be a balance. But currently community influence is too favored. I’d like to loosen local government’s control a little bit.
4
Alvarez, Perry
Mayor
4 = Lowest Relative Priority
B = There should be a balance. But currently private economic decisions are too favored. I’d like to tighten local government’s control a little bit.
2
Austin Pugh, April 4
3 = Below Average
A = Land use is mostly a community-wide matter. Every parcel affects others. Decisions about what to allow/incentivize belong to voters or their reps.
2
Czerwonka, Dara 3
2 = Above Average
Which of these statements about local land use constraints on redevelopment or new development (zoning, discretionary review, fee structures) do you most agree with?
1
Inscoe, Tina 2
1 = Highest Relative Priority
How strongly do you agree: "I favor diverting at least some of the public resources currently budgeted for law enforcement to other social / community services or back to taxpayers."
How strongly do you agree: "Elected officials should strive to discern and follow the popular will, even if they and the technical / professional experts on staff don't personally agree with popular sentiment."
Gaspar, Kristin
Quirk, Daniel
1
Multiple Choice
Lawson-Remer, Terra Blackburn, Keith
2
Neighborhood / Historic Preservation
Housing Affordability
Relative Priorities
No Response / Declined
Geraci, Alan
1
3
1
2
3
2
1
1
2
2
Strongly Agree
Strongly Disagree
Jenkins, Sharon
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Strongly Disagree
Somewhat Agree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
Kramer, Neil
1
2
1
2
1
1
2
1
1
1
Somewhat Disagree
Somewhat Disagree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Musgrove, Ed
1
2
2
1
1
2
1
3
2
2
Strongly Disagree
Strongly Disagree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
Green, Joe
No Response / Declined
Perez, Elizabeth
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Somewhat Agree
Strongly Agree
A - mostly a political matter for community
Melendez, Katie
1
4
2
1
2
4
1
3
3
2
Somewhat Agree
Somewhat Agree
B - balance, but tighten gov't control a bit
Rigby, Amanda
2
2
1
1
1
2
1
3
2
1
Strongly Disagree
Somewhat Disagree
C - balance, but loosen gov't control a bit
Zito, David Edson, Jewel
No Response / Declined
Heebner, Lesa
OUR MAIN PURPOSES here are (1) to help readers differentiate candidates (2) within the context of the whole region-wide field. While these issues are nuanced, we tried to compel candidates to take a meaningful “sixty-thousand-foot” position. For relative priorities: “When everything is a priority, nothing is a priority.” We grant these issues all have merit and aren’t always mutually exclusive. But in a world of constraints (money, time, political capital), every issue can’t have high priority relative to the rest. Graphic by Dan Brendel
A18
T he C oast News
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
OCT. 16, 2020
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
CITY OF ENCINITAS PUBLIC NOTICE OF REQUEST FOR BIDS
CITY OF ENCINITAS DEVELOPMENT SERVICES DEPARTMENT 505 S. Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024 Phone: (760) 633-2710 | Email: planning@encinitasca.gov | Web: www.encinitasca.gov
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City of Encinitas Public Works Department (City) invites Request for Bids (RFB) for:
City Hall Hours: Monday through Thursday 7:30 AM to 5:30 PM and Friday 7:30 AM TO 4:30 PM
Maintenance of Mechanical Systems at City Facilities And Replacement of HVAC Equipment
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING AND PENDING ACTION ON ADMINISTRATIVE APPLICATIONS AND COASTAL DEVELOPMENT PERMITS
The website for this RFP, related documents and correspondence is PlanetBids (www. encinitasca.gov/bids). All project correspondence will be posted on the PlanetBids website. It is the responsibility of Bidder to check the website regularly for information updates, clarifications, as well as any addenda. Bidders must be registered with the City of Encinitas as a vendor on PlanetBids. To register as a vendor, go to the following link (www.encinitasca.gov/bids) and then proceed to the “New Vendor Registration” link. All addenda will be available on the PlanetBids website.
PUBLIC HEARING: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2020 AT 5:00 PM, TO BE HELD AT THE CITY OF ENCINITAS, 505 SOUTH VULCAN AVENUE, ENCINITAS
To be considered for selection, a Bid must be received no later than 2:00 p.m. (Pacific Time) on Thursday, November 5, 2020 to: PlanetBids. Each prospective bidder is responsible for fully acquainting himself with the conditions of the work site as well as those conditions relating to the work in order to fully understand the facilities. All prospective bidders shall attend a pre-bid meeting scheduled for 9:00 a.m., Friday, October 23, 2020 at Encinitas City Hall, 505 S. Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024. Information on this meeting is available via PlanetBids. Failure to attend the pre-bid meeting shall result in disqualification. The City hereby notifies all potential Bidders that it will ensure that in any Contract issued pursuant to the advertisement, minority business enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to submit a response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color or national origin in consideration for an award. The City reserves the right to reject any or all Proposals or waive any irregularities or technical deficiencies in any Proposal. The City does not discriminate based on handicapped status in the admission or access to, or treatment, or employment in its programs or activities. Please contact www.encinitasca.gov/bids for additional information. 10/16/2020, 10/23/2020 CN 24879
IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT/SECTION 504 REHABILITATION ACT OF 1973 AND TITLE VI, THIS AGENCY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY PUBLIC ENTITY AND DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE ON THE BASIS OF RACE, COLOR, ETHNIC ORIGIN, NATIONAL ORIGIN, SEX, RELIGION, VETERANS STATUS OR PHYSICAL OR MENTAL DISABILITY IN EMPLOYMENT OR THE PROVISION OF SERVICE. IF YOU REQUIRE SPECIAL ASSISTANCE TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS MEETING, PLEASE CONTACT THE DEVELOPMENT SERVICES DEPARTMENT AT (760) 633-2710 AT LEAST 72 HOURS PRIOR TO THE MEETING. PURSUANT TO THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA EXECUTIVE ORDERS AND AMENDED COUNTY HEALTH ORDERS, MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC WILL ONLY BE ALLOWED TO PARTICIPATE IN MEETINGS ELECTRONICALLY. PUBLIC COMMENT PRIOR TO THE MEETING: to submit a comment in writing, email planning@encinitasca.gov and include the agenda item number and/or title of the item in the subject line. If the comment is not related to an agenda item, indicate oral communication in the subject line. All e-mail comments received by 3:00 p.m. on the day of the meeting will be emailed to the zoning administrator and made a part of the official record. Please note, e-mail comments received prior to the meeting will no longer be read at the meeting. PUBLIC COMMENT DURING THE MEETING (INCLUDING ORAL COMMUNICATIONS, AND COMMENTS RELATED TO CONSENT CALENDAR ITEMS AND ACTION ITEMS): to provide public comment during the meeting, you must register by 2:00 p.m. on the day of the meeting to join the administrative hearing meeting webinar. You do not need to register to watch but must register if you wish to speak. Members of the public will not be shown on video; they will be able to watch and listen, and to speak when called upon. Each speaker is allowed three (3) minutes to address the zoning administrator. Please be aware that the zoning administrator has the authority to reduce equally each speaker’s time to accommodate a larger number of speakers. All comments are subject to the same rules as would otherwise govern speaker comments at the meeting. Speakers are asked to be respectful and courteous. Please address your comments to the zoning administrator and avoid personal attacks against members of the public, zoning administrator, and city staff. To register to speak at this meeting, go to the Agenda for this meeting found on the City’s website at: https://encinitasca.gov/Government/Agendas-Webcasts. A link will be provided at the time of agenda posting for registering to speak. 1.
PROJECT NAME: Barzal Tentative Parcel Map and Residence (Parcel 1); CASE NUMBER: MULTI-003363-2019; CDP-003364-2019; and SUB-003365-2019; FILING DATE: September 19, 2019; APPLICANT: Tim Barzal; LOCATION: 806 Hygeia Avenue (APN: 256-040-76); PROJECT DESCRIPTION: A public hearing to consider a subdivision of one existing legal lot into two new legal lots; construct a new single-family dwelling; and authorization for the placement of a temporary construction trailer on Lot 2 of the subdivision; ZONING/ OVERLAY: Residential 8 (R 8) and Coastal Overlay Zone; ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: A Draft Mitigated Negative Declaration was prepared, circulated, and a notice was made of its availability for public review and comment during the period from May 8, 2020 through May 28, 2020. STAFF CONTACT: Laurie Winter, Associate Planner: (760) 633-2717 or lwinter@encinitasca.gov.
2.
PROJECT NAME: Emminger Addition; CASE NUMBER: MULTI-0003943-2020; CDP-003942-2020; SUBC003344-2019; FILING DATE: September 10, 2019; APPLICANT: Ken and Teresa Emminger; LOCATION: 1752 Kennington Road (254-460-11-00); PROJECT DESCRIPTION: A public hearing to consider a Coastal Development Permit and Substantial Conformance Permit for a minor addition on the first and second floor and expanded deck of an existing condominium unit in the SeaBluffe Condominium Community; ZONING/ OVERLAY: The subject property is located in the Residential 11 (R-11) and the Coastal Appeal Overlay Zone; ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project has been determined to be exempt from environmental review pursuant to Section 15301(e)(1) of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) Guidelines. Section 15301(e)(1) exempts minor additions to existing structures less than 2,500 square feet in area. STAFF CONTACT: Andrew Maynard, Associate Planner: (760) 633-2718 or amaynard@encinitasca.gov.
CITY OF ENCINITAS DEVELOPMENT SERVICES DEPARTMENT 505 S. Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024 Phone: (760) 633-2710 | Email: planning@encinitasca.gov | Web: www.encinitasca.gov City Hall Hours: Monday through Thursday 7:30 AM to 5:30 PM and Friday 7:30 AM TO 4:30 PM NOTICE OF PENDING ACTION ON ADMINISTRATIVE APPLICATION AND COASTAL DEVELOPMENT PERMIT PROJECT NAME: Hygeia Residence (Parcel 2); CASE NUMBER: CDP-003366-2019; FILING DATE: September 19, 2019; APPLICANT: Tim Barzal; LOCATION: Hygeia Avenue (APN: 256-040-76); PROJECT DESCRIPTION: To allow the construction of a new two-story single-family dwelling with an attached garage on a vacant lot created from (MULTI-003363-2019, CDP-003364-2019, and SUB-003365-2019) to be heard t the October 27, 2020 Administrative Hearing; ZONING/OVERLAY: Residential 8 (R8) and Coastal Overlay Zone; ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: A Draft Mitigated Negative Declaration was prepared, circulated, and a notice was made of its availability for public review and comment during the period from May 8, 2020 through May 28, 2020. STAFF CONTACT: Laurie Winter, Associate Planner: (760) 633-2717 or lwinter@encinitasca.gov PRIOR TO 5:30 PM ON MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 2020, ANY INTERESTED PERSON MAY REVIEW THE APPLICATION AND PRESENT TESTIMONY, ORALLY OR IN WRITING, TO THE DEVELOPMENT SERVICES DEPARTMENT. WRITTEN TESTIMONY IS PREFERRED IN ORDER TO HAVE A RECORD OF THE COMMENTS RECEIVED. If additional information is not required, the Development Services Department will render a determination on the application, pursuant to Section 2.28.090 of the City of Encinitas Municipal Code, after the close of the review period. An Appeal of the Department’s determination accompanied by the appropriate filing fee may be filed within 15-calendar days from the date of the determination. Appeals will be considered by the City Council pursuant to Chapter 1.12 of the Municipal Code. Any filing of an appeal will suspend this action as well as any processing of permits in reliance thereon in accordance with Encinitas Municipal Code Section 1.12.020(D)(1) until such time as an action is taken on the appeal. The above item is located within the Coastal Zone and requires the issuance of a regular Coastal Development Permit. The action of the Development Services Director may not be appealed to the California Coastal Commission. Under California Government Code Sec. 65009, if you challenge the nature of the proposed action in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised regarding the matter described in this notice or written correspondence delivered to the City at or prior to the date and time of the determination. 10/16/2020 CN 24884
T.S. No.: 093635-CA APN: 147-271-15-16 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 2/25/2008. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank
specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Trustor: OTHQ, LLC, AN ALASKA LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY Duly Appointed Trustee: CLEAR RECON CORP Recorded 2/29/2008, as Instrument No. 2008-0107113, of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 11/9/2020 at 1:00 PM Place of Sale: OUTSIDE THE MAIN ENTRANCE AT THE SUPERIOR COURT NORTH COUNTY DIVISION, 325 S MELROSE DR., VISTA, CA 92081 Amount of unpaid balance and other charges:
PRIOR TO OR AT THE PUBLIC HEARING TO BE HELD AT 5:00 PM ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2020, ANY INTERESTED PERSON MAY REVIEW THE ABOVE APPLICATIONS AND PRESENT TESTIMONY, ORALLY OR IN WRITING, TO THE DEVELOPMENT SERVICES DEPARTMENT. WRITTEN TESTIMONY IS PREFERRED IN ORDER TO HAVE A RECORD OF THE COMMENTS RECEIVED. If additional information is not required, the Development Services Department will render a determination on the applications, pursuant to Section 2.28.090 of the City of Encinitas Municipal Code, after the close of the review period. An Appeal of the Department’s determination accompanied by the appropriate filing fee may be filed within 10-calendar days for Item 1 and within 15-calendar days for Item 2 from the date of the determination. Appeals will be considered by the City Council pursuant to Chapter 1.12 of the Municipal Code. Any filing of an appeal will suspend this action as well as any processing of permits in reliance thereon in accordance with Encinitas Municipal Code Section 1.12.020(D)(1) until such time as an action is taken on the appeal. The above items are located within the Coastal Zone and require the issuance of a regular Coastal Development Permit. The action of the Development Services Director on Item 1 may not be appealed to the California Coastal Commission. The action of the Development Services Director on Item 2 may be appealed to the California Coastal Commission. Under California Government Code Sec. 65009, if you challenge the nature of the proposed action in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised regarding the matter described in this notice or written correspondence delivered to the City at or prior to the date and time of the determination. 10/16/2020 CN 24885 $743,147.19 Property being sold “as is – Where is” Street Address or other common designation of real property: 301 MISSION AVE SUITE 209 OCEANSIDE, CA 92054 MORE ACCURATELY DESCRIBED IN SAID DEED OF TRUST. A.P.N.: 147-271-15-16 THE BENEFICIARY MAY ELECT, IN ITS DISCRETION, TO EXERCISE ITS RIGHTS AND REMEDIESIN ANY MANNER PERMITTED UNDER SECTION 9604 OF THE CALIFORNIA COMMERCIAL CODE, OR ANY OTHER APPLICABLE SECTION, AS TO ALL OR SOME OF THE PERSONAL PROPERTY, FIXTURES AND OTHER GENERAL TANGIBLES AND INTANGIBLES MORE PARTICULARY DESCRIVED IN THE DEED OF TRUST, GUARANTEES, UCC’S, SECURITY AGREEMENTS. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common
designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the
existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (844) 4777869 or visit this Internet Web
site WWW.STOXPOSTING. COM, using the file number assigned to this case 093635CA. 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. CLEAR RECON CORP 4375 Jutland Drive San Diego, California 92117 STOX 926666 10/16/2020, 10/23/2020, 10/30/2020 CN 24878 T.S. No. 20-61301 APN: 157-743-26-00 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 2/6/2006. 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
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PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Trustor: GEORGE PSILOPOULOS AND DIANA K. PSILOPOULOS, HUSBAND AND WIFE AS COMMUNITY PROPERTY Duly Appointed Trustee: ZBS Law, LLP Deed of Trust recorded 2/10/2006, as Instrument No. 2006-0101333, of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 11/2/2020 at 10:30 AM Place of Sale: AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE EAST COUNTY REGIONAL CENTER BY STATUE, 250 E. MAIN STREET, EL CAJON, CA 92020 Estimated amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $368,036.66 Note: Because the Beneficiary reserves the right to bid less than the total debt owed, it is possible that at the time of the sale the opening bid may be less than the total debt owed. Street Address or other common designation of real property: 507 SPRINGFIELD AVENUE OCEANSIDE, California 92057 Described as follows: As more fully described on said Deed of Trust A.P.N #.: 157-743-26-00 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (714) 848-9272 or visit this Internet Web site www.elitepostandpub. com, using the file number assigned to this case 2061301. 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. Dated: 9/28/2020 ZBS Law, LLP , as Trustee 30 Corporate Park, Suite 450 Irvine, CA 92606 For Non-Automated Sale Information, call: (714) 848-7920 For Sale Information: (714) 8489272 www.elitepostandpub. com Michael Busby, Trustee Sale Officer This office is enforcing a security interest of your creditor. To the extent that your obligation has been discharged by a bankruptcy court or is subject to an automatic stay of bankruptcy, this notice is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a demand for payment or any attempt to collect such obligation. EPP 31964 Pub Dates 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24856
more fully described on said Deed of Trust. 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: 6400 SURFSIDE LANE, CARLSBAD, CA, 92009 TS#, CUSTOMER REF#, ICN#, Unit/Interval/Week, APN#, Trustors, Beneficiary, DOT Dated, DOT Recorded, DOT Book, DOT Page/Instrument#, NOD Recorded, NOD Book, NOD Page/Instrument#, Estimated Sales Amount 99877 B0522445H MCS20540BO 205 BIENNIAL ODD 40 214-010-9400 RAMONA BURGESS A(N) SINGLE WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 01/10/2019 07/03/2019 2019-0263695 1/2/2020 2020-0000735 $27972.97 99939 B0436045C MCS11946AE 119 BIENNIAL EVEN 46 214-010-94-00 KOBIE O. MAHIRI AND ANA M. MAHIRI HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 09/29/2014 10/16/2014 2014-0448840 1/16/2020 2020-0024488 $24342.01 100227 B0463775C MCS30313CZ 303 ANNUAL 13 214-010-94-00 ROBERT W. HARLESS AND REBECCA L. HARLESS TRUSTEES OF THE HARLESS FAMILY TRUST DATED MAY 25 1995 GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 03/22/2016 04/14/2016 2016-0171884 3/17/2020 2020-0139237 $31252.69 100228 B0517025C MCS30614AZ 306 ANNUAL 14 214-010-94-00 McANTHONY M. AWAYAN AND ELIZABETH M. AWAYAN HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 01/12/2019 02/21/2019 2019-0061446 3/17/2020 2020-0139237 $41114.92 100242 B0516985C MCS10209BZ 102 ANNUAL 09 214-010-94-00 YVONNE MARIE CAVENEY A(N) UNMARRIED WOMAN AND MARY E. SHUTE A(N) SINGLE WOMAN EACH AS TO AN UNDIVIDED ONE-HALF (1/2) INTEREST AS TENANTS IN COMMON GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 02/07/2019 02/21/2019 2019-0061581 3/17/2020 2020-0139237 $30327.83 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 is estimated at AS SHOWN ABOVE Accrued interest and additional advances, if any, may 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 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 1-800540-1717, using the TS number assigned to this case on SHOWN ABOVE. 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. 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. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. DATE:9/30/2020 CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE 10805 RANCHO BERNARDO RD, #150 SAN DIEGO, CA 92127 PHONE NO. (858) 207-0646 BY LORI R. FLEMINGS, as Authorized Signor IN ORDER TO BRING YOUR ACCOUNT CURRENT, PLEASE CONTACT ADVANCED FINANCIAL COMPANY AT PHONE NO. 800234-6222 EXT 189 10/09/2020, 10/16/2020, 10/23/2020 CN 24855
SHOWN BELOW as Instrument No. AS SHOWN BELOW of said Official Records. WILL SELL BY PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH On 10/30/2020 at 10:00 AM, AT THE FRONT ENTRANCE TO CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY 2121 PALOMAR AIRPORT ROAD., CARLSBAD, CA 92011, CARLSBAD, CA, 92011 IMPORTANT NOTE: TO ADHERE TO THE COVID-19 PROTOCOLS, THE TRUSTEES SALE WILL OCCUR OUTSIDE AND WILL REQUIRE THAT EVERYONE PRESENT MUST HAVE FACE COVERINGS AND ADHEAR TO SOCIAL DISTANCING BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER THE SALE TAKES PLACE. (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), 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 hereinafter described as more fully described on said Deed of Trust. 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: 5805 ARMADA DRIVE, CARLSBAD, CA, 92009 TS#, CUSTOMER REF#, ICN#, Unit/ Interval/Week, APN#, Trustors, Beneficiary, DOT Dated, DOT Recorded, DOT Book, DOT Page/Instrument#, NOD Recorded, NOD Book, NOD Page/Instrument#, Estimated Sales Amount 99878 B0445075C MGP39439BE 394 BIENNIAL EVEN 39 211-022-28-00 KEN G. FRASER AND ANNA B. FRASER HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 04/26/2015 05/14/2015 2015-0245091 1/2/2020 2020-0000738 $23688.97 99879 B0456335C MGP19437BE 194 BIENNIAL EVEN 37 211-022-28-00 JOSE ALBERTO SAINZ AND BRITTANY LYNN DISANO HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 05/03/2015 11/25/2015 2015-0609313 1/2/2020 2020-0000738 $23173.44 99880 B0484215H MGP17801AE 178 BIENNIAL EVEN 01 211-022-28-00 PETER S. PARRENAS AND MEREDITH B. PARRENAS HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 04/14/2017 04/27/2017 2017-0188349 1/2/2020 2020-0000738 $29047.01 99935 B0412055C MGP19716AO 197 BIENNIAL ODD 16 211-022-28-00 WILLIAM LAWRENCE NICHOLS AND LAURA KLINGENSMITH HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 07/29/2013 08/08/2013 2013-0498245 1/16/2020 2020-0024473 $21529.04 99936 B0413235C MGP28507AO 285 BIENNIAL ODD 07 211-022-28-00 RICHARD J. SOMMERS AND MARILYN TRACY SOMMERS HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/19/2013 08/29/2013 2013-0539512 1/16/2020 2020-0024473 $19673.60 99937 B0419615H MGP28007AE 280 BIENNIAL EVEN 07 211-022-28-00 DAVID S. IM AND ANNA IM HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A
CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/24/2013 12/19/2013 2013-0728098 1/16/2020 2020-0024473 $20702.69 99938 B0436155C MGP27019EZ 270 EACH 19 211-022-28-00 TERRANCE L. WILSON AND ERIN T. WILSON HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 09/29/2014 10/16/2014 2014-0448985 1/16/2020 2020-0024473 $38531.15 100224 B0424445H MGP39731AZ 397 ANNUAL 31 211-022-28-00 MARIO J. INGRASCI AND CAROLYN L. INGRASCI HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 02/25/2014 03/13/2014 2014-0099185 3/17/2020 2020-0139231 $29709.67 100225 B0515685H MGP27418AO 274 BIENNIAL ODD 18 211-022-28-00 TROY D. METHENY AND CHARLA R. METHENY HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/22/2018 01/17/2019 2019-0018630 3/17/2020 2020-0139231 $30053.94 100226 B0477405H MGP38449CO 384 BIENNIAL ODD 49 211-022-28-00 JOHN C. SWART AND VINIE P. SWART HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 11/18/2016 12/01/2016 2016-0658110 3/17/2020 2020-0139231 $25714.26 100240 B0458725C MGP18529AO 185 ODD 29 211022-28-00 CHRISTOPHER M. HONNOLD AND JEANNETTE M. HONNOLD HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/19/2015 01/07/2016 2016-0006509 3/17/2020 2020-0139231 $32366.57 100241 B0515915C MGP25312AE 253 EVEN 12 211-022-28-00 JAMES M. JENNINGS A(N) MARRIED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/26/2018 01/24/2019 2019-0025608 3/17/2020 2020-0139231 $29837.25 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 is estimated at AS SHOWN ABOVE Accrued interest and additional advances, if any, may 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 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 1-800540-1717, using the TS number assigned to this case on SHOWN ABOVE. 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. 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. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. DATE:9/30/2020 CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE 10805 RANCHO BERNARDO RD, #150 SAN DIEGO, CA 92127 PHONE NO. (858) 207-0646 BY LORI R. FLEMINGS, as Authorized Signor IN ORDER TO BRING YOUR ACCOUNT CURRENT, PLEASE CONTACT ADVANCED FINANCIAL COMPANY AT PHONE NO. 800-234-6222 EXT 189 10/09/2020, 10/16/2020, 10/23/2020 CN 24854
BATCH: AFC-2078 (2083,2087,2090) NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED AS SHOWN BELOW. 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. CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY as the duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust Executed by: AS SHOWN BELOW, as Trustor, AS SHOWN BELOW, as Beneficiary, recorded on AS SHOWN BELOW as Instrument No. AS SHOWN BELOW of Official Records of the County Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, California, and pursuant to the Notice of Default and Election to Sell there under recorded on AS SHOWN BELOW as Instrument No. AS SHOWN BELOW of said Official Records. WILL SELL BY PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH On 10/30/2020 at 10:00 AM, AT THE FRONT ENTRANCE TO CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY 2121 PALOMAR AIRPORT ROAD., CARLSBAD, CA 92011, CARLSBAD, CA, 92011 IMPORTANT NOTE: TO ADHERE TO THE COVID-19 PROTOCOLS, THE TRUSTEES SALE WILL OCCUR OUTSIDE AND WILL REQUIRE THAT EVERYONE PRESENT MUST HAVE FACE COVERINGS AND ADHEAR TO SOCIAL DISTANCING BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER THE SALE TAKES PLACE. (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), 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 hereinafter described as
BATCH: AFC-2077 (2082 2086 2089) NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED AS SHOWN BELOW. 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. CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY as the duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust Executed by: AS SHOWN BELOW, as Trustor, AS SHOWN BELOW, as Beneficiary, recorded on AS SHOWN BELOW as Instrument No. AS SHOWN BELOW of Official Records of the County Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, California, and pursuant to the Notice of Default and Election to Sell there under recorded on AS
BATCH: AFC-2076 (2081 2085 2088) NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED AS SHOWN BELOW. 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. CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY as the duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust Executed by: AS SHOWN BELOW, as Trustor, AS SHOWN BELOW, as Beneficiary, recorded on AS SHOWN BELOW as Instrument No. AS SHOWN BELOW of Official Records of the County Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, California, and pursuant to the Notice of
Coast News legals continued on page B4
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OCT. 16, 2020
Sports
Carlsbad’s Millard staying grounded but hopes to fly high sports talk jay paris
A
mint chocolate chip milkshake is Riley Millard’s reward. Here’s to the Carlsbad High standout having one, and every other North County prep athlete, too. Millard, who’s among RILEY MILLARD of Carlsbad High is one of the top long jump the area’s top long jumpers, ers in the county. Courtesy photo sits and waits for the when-
and-if her senior year will include her soaring above the ground. The pandemic that has halted high school sports is starting to set its sights on Millard having her wings clipped for the second straight year. Millard, 17, can curse her fate, but only when including hundreds of other competitors who are also having to cool their jets. “It didn’t just happen to me, it has happened to every athlete,” Millard said. “You have to consider how they are feeling, as well, which is sad and kind of de-
side Residents An Open Letter to Ocean ill only get worse w de si an ce O in s ld fie The lack of sports
s!
rt o p S y la P S ID K r u O t e L
unity Members Dear Oceanside Comm al sports and the , 2020, to discuss loc ary bru Fe y in ld he ng youth. We want the cit There was a meeti ailable for Oceanside av nt, y ntl me rre ree cu ag y lds err fie g db razon Su lack of playin in relation to the El Co and hts ies rig ilit ir fac the s ise ort sp erc ex ild council to Sudberry to bu of page 3) and buyout ed: dated 1/3/13 (bottom at the meeting includ ted en re. Those repres ctu tru ras inf ted cia so as ) • Rugby (Josh Williams rman) me Zim k m Quamme) an (Ki (Fr all er cc ftb • So • Fast-pitch So o) ag Me maire)* • Football (Jason • VolleyBall (Susan Le e)* gn pa am Ch e nn za the • LaCross (Su 00 children and, with ns represent over 4,0 tio iza up to an 0% org 10 s – ort 50 sp y increase by These youth of players can rapidl uncil er Co y mb Cit nu the the t , ies tha ilit nd proper fac ng was to dema eti me the of nt me me lop tco ou razon deve 8,000 children. The Sudberry in the El Co th wi nt e me Th ree ed ag titl t ac en corporation exercise their contr ll organize a 501-C (3) wi : up es gro lud the inc ion cil dit un complex. In ad uest to the city co s Federation. Their req Oceanside Field Sport 0 parking spaces 20 Soccer Fields/2,00 the d uil ort the urgent reb d an n 1. Redesig s Fields (2 - 4) to supp as Gr 6) (4lds Fie d (4) Lighte all • Lit Softball Fields 2. Multiple Purpose crosse • Soccer • Footb needs for • Rugby • La rk (4 – 6 ) acres 3. Small Children’s Pa fields 4. Parking close to the potties) ooms (no more porta thr Ba n’s me Wo 5. Men & d investment SE listed banking an NY a th wi ed ss cu was dis ilities, making The project viability and infrastructure fac s ort sp the all for ble cost to the City of firm and deemed via d and managed at no de fun y tel to va pri ely ke them take action the project complet representative and ma al loc ur yo ll ca e as Oceanside. Ple uth leagues now. ity and local public yo support our commun at: Call City Hall today r C. Sanchez Peter Weiss Mayor (760) 435-3066 org pweiss@oceansideca. ez Christopher Rodrigu trict 2 Councilmember • Dis (760) 435-3046 ca.org crodriguez@oceanside
ouncement.
A Public Service Ann
Esthe trict 1 Councilmember · Dis (760) 435-3057 ca.org esanchez@oceanside
Jack Feller ge Deputy Mayor - At Lar 6 05 5-3 (760) 43 org jfeller@oceansideca.
Ryan Keim Large Councilmember - At 8 04 5-3 43 0) (76 org rkeim@oceansideca. *not present at meeting
ion
but fully supports miss
pressing. “Sports just got taken away from us and it was gone. We missed going out there and competing and just experiencing the excitement of it.” Teenagers are asked to navigate much and COVID-19 just added to what’s on their plates. That’s especially true for students trying to transfer their athletic skills into college scholarships. It’s hard to impress coaches minus competitive settings. It’s hard for those coaches to decipher which athlete to choose from minus those competitive settings. Again, Millard’s story isn’t unique. It serves as an all-encompassing reminder of the upheaval in prep athletics. “Sometimes you wonder if you’re training for nothing because a season can be taken away again,” said Millard, a two-time All-Avocado League selection. “Just like there was no football games or homecoming in my senior year.” But when Millard dreams, she can envision herself jumping for a college. She’s hop-scotched the nation to visit the University of Colorado, Long Beach State, Northern Arizona University, Wichita State and the University of Kansas, to name a few. “I could take virtual tours, but I like to see them in person,” she said. Millard never saw herself being trained by Al Joyner, who now lives in San Marcos. The Olympic gold medalist in the triple jump at the 1984 Games is among those training Millard, as she joins workouts with his children. Joyner spotted Mil-
lard’s hops at a championship meet and decided they had to meet. The pair got together and soon Joyner was delivering wisdom and advice on getting the maximum of her in-flight entertainment. “You should be doing this with your eyes closed,” Joyner told Millard. Joyner was referring to Millard being so confident in sprinting to the white line to leap that she can reach her peak without taking a peek. “We focus on everything that leads to the takeoff,” said Millard, a twotime CIF San Diego Section finalist who’s twice been selected as Carlsbad’s MVP. “That’s crazy that a gold medalist is training us. But he is so patent with his drills and is a great coach to learn from.” Millard also works with Carlsbad athletic director Sam Eshelman and Kelly Large, a former standout at UC Santa Barbara. But Millard, like most prep athletes, does more than sweat for her own good. Millard is part of the National Charity League and has helped build houses in Tijuana through her church. If everyone can say a little prayer that COVID-19 is soon tamed, what’s the harm? “In my head I’m preparing like they will say ‘yes’ there is a season,” Millard said. “I’m trying to stay positive but it’s still up the air.” That’s a place where the high-flying Millard is content, especially if the post-flight landing includes a shake of distinction. Contact Jay Paris at jparis8@aol.com. Follow him @jparis_sports
Hall of Fame trainer Jones, 76, dies By City News Service
DEL MAR — Hall of Fame thoroughbred horse trainer Gary Jones died at his Del Mar home at the age of 76, it was announced Oct. 12. Jones, whose career accomplishments included earning more than $52 million in purses and 1,465 race victories, died Sunday following a lengthy illness.
His son Marty, also a trainer, told the Thoroughbred Daily News that his father had been in hospice care and died of natural causes The son of legendary trainer Farrell “Wild Horse” Jones took over his father’s stable in 1974 and trained 104 stakes winners over the next 22 years. He was elected to the US Racing Hall of Fame in 2014.
DIZZY
in the morning? We make house calls! Call Today! 760-652-9993
Dr. Kim Bell , DPT BetterBalanceInLife.com
OCT. 16, 2020
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T he C oast News
M arketplace News Top 5 reasons to migrate your business to the cloud Marketplace News is paid advertorial content. If you would like to buy space on this page, please contact the Coast News Group.
ATMOSPHERIC RIVER STORMS produce 40%-60% of the West Coast’s annual precipitation and are responsible for the majority of flood damage in the region. Courtesy photo
Scripps collaboration to optimize water management & supply The San Diego County Water Authority (SDCWA) is partnering with the renowned Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego to better predict atmospheric rivers and optimize water management before, during and after California’s ever-changing seasonal storms. Atmospheric river storms produce 40 to 60 percent of the West Coast’s annual precipitation and are responsible for the majority of flood damage in the region. Predicting and managing this is challenging due to unpredictable and changing snowmelt and rainfall. To study this, Scripps’ Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes (CW3E) introduced the Water Affiliates Group, which brings together relevant science and water industry expertise to enhance reservoir operations along with California’s changing climate. “This partnership with Scripps Institution of Oceanography underscores our commitment to strategic, science-based decision-making and long-term planning,” said SDCWA Board of Directors Chairperson Jim Madaffer. “By supporting advances in forecasting, we can more efficiently and effectively manage water resources both local and statewide. This ultimately will benefit everyone in California by helping sustain our economy and quality of life.” The Water Authority is working with CW3E to assess how better near-term and long-term precipitation forecasts can improve reservoir planning and operational management in the San Diego region by maxi-
mizing local water supplies and the reliability of water resources through a mix of planning processes and real-time decisions. Other SoCal water authorities joining as founding partners are Orange County Water District and Irvine Ranch Water District. Once finalized, CW3E and its partners will share their findings of best practices in forecast-informed reservoir operations and management of atmospheric rivers and droughts and develop strat-
[W]e will enhance our planning capacity and be ready to adapt to whatever the future brings.” Sandra L Keri General manager
egies for reducing flood risk and increasing consistent water supply. San Diego County Water Authority General Manager Sandra L Keri stated that this collaboration is a “great example of how water agencies are stronger together by addressing major climate challenges that affect everyone across the arid west. By combining forces with some of the leading scientists in the world, we will enhance our planning capacity and be ready to adapt to whatever the future brings.” She also stated that this partnership speaks to Gov. Newsom’s Water Resilience Portfolio, which encourages voluntary agreements, smart water storage strategies and coordination of data collection.
During these changing times, businesses of all sizes are thinking and operating differently. From physical workstations and remote office locations to new IT infrastructure investments and network maintenance – it’s all being reevaluated in this new virtual world. Traditional office settings have rapidly migrated to virtual environments. Employees are moving into work-from-home stations. Most business meetings and presentations are now online. With more virtual activity comes the need for a fast and secure cloud-based solution that ensures businesses run more efficiently than ever before. Moving to a cloud-based solution can feel daunting but partnering with a cloud services provider like Cox Business Cloud Solutions takes away the guesswork and heavy lifting. HERE ARE THE TOP 5 THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN LOOKING AT CLOUD MIGRATION. Enabling Your Mobile Workforce With more employees working remotely than ever before, many companies have struggled to equip themselves properly. Workflows are different. Secure access to company data from various locations presents challenges. The sudden shift to remote work has changed how businesses operate and left them looking to new solutions for how to best move forward without hurting productivity. Cloud services help companies of all sizes find accessible, affordable ways to conduct business remotely. Instead of piecing together a convoluted process based on outdated, insecure
on-premises hardware, the cloud enables teams to connect securely via a virtual desktop environment and continue their typical work process. The cloud helps your business function as efficiently as it would in a traditional working environment from one or more office locations. This is critical not only during a pandemic when things are unexpectedly shut down, but also during any kind of business interruption - natural disasters, storms, even cyber attacks. Quickly Scaling Your Network Every business is different and moving data to the cloud isn’t one-sizefits-all. Cox Business Cloud Solutions provides customized services to best fit the scale and needs of each individual business. A cloud migration plan considers critical workloads, data and applications, potential obstacles and a desired timeline for implementing tailored solutions. And it’s scalable. Cox Business Cloud Solutions provides enterprise-level services including Managed Cloud Security, Disaster Recovery, Data Backup, Virtual Desktop Environments, Software Defined Wide Area Network (SDWAN), and Enterprise Grade Infrastructure, and works with customers to ensure a safe transition of data. Securing Critical Data One thing that businesses worry about most is security for sensitive data. Most companies don’t want to allocate IT funds elsewhere when they’re focusing resources on continually updating, patching, assessing office systems, and protecting against outdated cyber security mea-
sures that could threaten the business. Cloud solutions are inherently more secure than on-premises solutions, and cloud providers manage security issues in the background more efficiently with little to no adverse effect to workloads. By utilizing the cloud, software is more easily kept up to date, backups can be made and recovered more quickly, and documents and access controls are easier to manage. According to a RapidScale study, 94% of businesses say they saw an improvement after implementing cloud security solutions. Cloud solutions can improve the level of your security with Tier 3 data centers that have biometric scanning, security guards, and around-theclock monitoring along with fast threat detection response using a Unified Security Management platform. And all documents are safe and accessible with full redundancy and fully managed firewalls and encryption protection, providing you peace of mind that your business is always protected. Realizing Cost Savings and Maximizing Profitability Building and maintaining IT infrastructure is costly, as is the real estate and insurance that infrastructure requires. Expensive hardware, software, and licensing for all devices are just the beginning. Allocating resources to IT for setup, maintenance, security and management tools all add up. Cox Business Cloud Solutions can help reduce costs across the board. The
cloud allows lower capital spending on facilities and onsite servers while reducing the overall IT budget. Many companies that move to the cloud downsize their data centers or eliminate them entirely. It supports more regular technology upgrades, reduces ongoing maintenance and staff time, and shifts the burden for time-consuming tasks, like patches, upgrades and infrastructure expenditures to cloud service providers. The Cox Business Cloud Solutions team supports your IT team, as well as your end-users – from device troubleshooting and application integrations to building out new data center requirements. Not only can you reduce IT expenses by reducing physical PC costs, you can also layer in our Cloud Desktop as a Service (DaaS), which is a pay-as-you-go subscription – meaning one monthly charge, which makes budgeting simple. Saving Time and Valuable IT Resources by Choosing the Right Partner Cloud migration requires finding a cloud services partner that listens to your needs and translates that into a strategic migration plan for your unique business needs. The Cox Business Cloud Solutions team is among the best in the industry with solutions to grow your business and ensure you have 24/7 support from certified professionals for your IT staff and end users. Visit www.coxbusiness.com/cloud to learn more about migrating your business to the cloud.
Rhoades students soar in STEM event By Staff
ENCINITAS — Three students from The Rhoades School — including current eighth-grader Tejas Ravi and recent graduates Arjun Chatha and Bhadra Rupesh — were recently named Top 300 competitors in the 2020 Broadcom MASTERS, the nation’s premier STEM competition for middle school students. This honor places The Rhoades School students among a select group of 300 middle school science and engineering projects in the U.S. from 3,476 entrants. The Rhoades School students’ projects included: “The Effects of Various Wavelengths on Rod Activity,” was Ravi’s project which focused on rod bleaching many people experience when driving at night. Ravi measured the effects of exposure to various visible light wavelengths on the preservation of rod cell function. In his exper-
BHADRA RUPESH
TEJAS RAVI
iments, Ravi applied a summation formula to calculate and compare rod sensitivities. According to his results, utilizing light of only blue-green wavelengths at night for road signage and vehicle lights would better preserve rod activity in our eyes than allowing exposure to the full spectrum (white light). “Fall Detection: Using Artificial Intelligence to Help the Elderly,” by Arjun
Chatha explored a project that could help elderly individuals at risk of falling by employing artificial intelligence through the use of a camera coupled to a computer. After carrying out many trials, Chatha developed a human pose detection CNN (convolution neural network) that recognized and quantified key changes in body position as a novel means of fall detection for the elderly.
“Evaluating Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in the Correlation of Phenotypes to Type 2 Diabetes,” by Bhadra Rupesh, evaluated 15 single nucleotide polymorphisms in an attempt to assess possible correlations to phenotypes associated with Type 2 diabetes. To perform her analysis, Rupesh wrote a software program in Python and surveyed tremendous volumes of data sets she accessed through the online Type 2 diabetes Knowledge Portal. Rupesh discovered that several polymorphisms she examined had strong correlations to phenotype indicators of Type 2 diabetes. The Broadcom MASTERS seeks to inspire young scientists, engineers and innovators to solve the grand challenges of the 21st Century. For more information about Broadcom MASTERS, visit societyforscience.org.
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OCT. 16, 2020 PRAYERS FOR JUSTICE
CALENDAR
A gathering of “Prayer & Witnessing for Peace & Justice” is being held at noon every Tuesday through Jan. 19 at the Dove Library, 1775 Dove Lane, Carlsbad. Unite with others in a witness of prayer for justice, peace and nonviolence in our nation at this time.
Know something that’s going on? Send it to calendar@ coastnewsgroup.com
OCT. 16
KNOW YOUR BALLOT
Learn about state propositions and local ballot measures. The League of Women Voters North County San Diego is currently providing a nonpartisan summary of each state and local ballot initiative, the financial impact of the proposition, supporters and opposition, and financial contributions made to date. A pre-recorded version of the presentation is available at http://bit. ly / LW V NC SD_YouTube. Community members can submit questions about any of the ballot issues and receive a personalized answer at the League website at: https://bit.ly/LVNCSD_ BallotQuestions. FREE FLU SHOTS AVAILABLE
Champions for Health (CFH) is providing free flu shot clinics in partnership with the County of San Diego Health & Human Services Epidemiology and Immunization Services program and United Healthcare. Sites include, from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 16, Wakeland Housing, 201 Country Club Lane, Oceanside. From 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oct. 31 at James and St. Leo’s, 936 Genevieve St., Solana Beach. Additional dates and locations can be found at https://
OCT. 18
COSTUME CONTEST
HALLOWEEN IN MINILAND: Every Friday, Saturday and Sunday during October, Legoland’s Miniland U.S.A. becomes a not-so-spooky Halloween destination. File photo
championsforhealth.org / Oct. 22. Tickets are $15 yond the Obvious.” Fee is events/free-flu-immuniza- at https://bit.ly/3nBChpI. $15. For questions e-mail tions/. Once you activate your seminars@nsdcgs.org. For ticket, you have 48 hours registrations, e-mail reserto watch the documentary vations@nsdcgs.org. CPR TRAINING The American Heart and recorded panel discusAssociation and Mission sion as many times as you HWAC TROPICAL GALA Federal Credit Union will would like. A live panel Helen Woodward Anibe offering a free Digital discussion, with CSM Pres- mal Center’s largest fundHands-Only CPR Train- ident Jim Kempton as mod- raising event offers an ing session from 11 to erator, director Inna Blokh- exotic journey from the 11:30 a.m. Oct. 16 as part ina, big wave surfer Keala comfort of your own homes. of World Restart a Heart Kennelly and 1982 Wom- Join the center at 7 p.m. Day. The training will be en's World Surfing Cham- Oct. 17 for the “Jewels of conducted via Facebook pion Debbie Beacham, fol- the Earth Gala – A Tropical Live and will be conducted lows the film screening. Escape at Home.” Tune into in both English and Spanthe event for free (registraish. For more information tion required) or purchase and to attend the train- OCT. 17 tickets, which will include ing, visit facebook.com/ GENEALOGY WEBINAR a home delivery of select events/654758245465542/. The Fall Seminar pre- wine, entrées and desserts sented by North San Diego from some of the best local WATER WOMAN’S DOC County Genealogical So- restaurants in San Diego. The California Surf ciety will be held via live Register at https://animalMuseum presents Inna Webinar from 9:30 a.m. to center.org/spring-fling-gaBlokhina’s documentary 3:30 p.m. Oct. 17 in four la. Animal-lovers can also “She Is The Ocean.” You separate sessions. Fritz tune in on Helen Woodward can purchase your ticket Juengling will present, Animal Center’s Facebook any day at 6 p.m. through “Names, Places, Dates: Be- page.
A One Paseo virtual Costume Contest will run through Oct. 31 via the One Paseo Instagram, @ onepaseo. To participate, guests simply need to head to One Paseo and snap a picture in their favorite Halloween costume at the center. Then, to enter, participants simply need to post their picture on Instagram from now until Oct. 31, tag @onepaseo, and use the hashtag #OPCostumeContest. The winner will be announced via One Paseo’s instagram stories on Nov. 2, to win a One Paseo goodie bag filled with treats from the One Paseo retailers.
ter the Dia de los Muertos Decorating Contest, partnered with the Friends of Oceanside Dia de los Muertos. There is no fee to enter and the registration and judging deadlines are the same for both contests. VIRTUAL TWEEN-SCENE STEM
Each Monday in October from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. the Carlsbad City Library offers Virtual Tween Scene, a weekly program of rotating topics such as STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math), games and a hands-on activity for tweens in grades four to six. Presented on Zoom. Register at carlsbadca.gov/ services/depts/library/.
OCT. 20
HALLOWEEN AT SEA WORLD
Get your kids’ costumes ready, because SeaWorld has spooky surprises and fall fun in store at Spooktacular! Advanced reservations are required at https://seaworld.com/ san-diego /events /halloween-spooktacular/tickets/. New and enhanced safety procedures all throughout OCT. 19 the seasonally-decorated SCARECROW CONTEST park and for a limited time, MainStreet Oceans- kids get free admission with ide and the Oceanside each full-paid adult. Coastal Neighborhood Association (OCNA) host the 50+ TECH FAIR second annual Scarecrow “Get Connected: TechContest with free regis- nology Fair for Adults 50+” tration through Oct. 19 at will be hosted by San Diego OCNA101@gmail.com. Oct Oasis, sponsored by county 20 to Oct. 27 display scare- of San Diego Aging and Incrows, Oct. 28 judging by dependence Services, daily MainStreet with awards on from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Oct. 20 Oct 29. Businesses and resiTURN TO CALENDAR ON A23 dents are also invited to en-
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OCT. 16, 2020
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the campaign trail, many expressing surprise at the toxicity of Encinitas’ local the current city council’s elections and all agreeing, voting record. local politics can get dirty. Participants detailed A political newcomer, their own experiences on Thunder was surprised by CONTINUED FROM A1
the vicious nature of the 2020 election season. “I was warned by a lot of people that there would be a lot of mudslinging… but I was not prepared for what came,” Thunder said.
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“I realized why good people don’t run for office because it destroys a little part of you… but as I said, I’m here for the long haul so I’m sticking it out.” Blakespear acknowledged she has dealt with a high level of toxicity and hate speech since taking office four years ago. “You reevaluate whether there is credible fear of violence against you or your family and then you proceed with what you have to support you,” Blakespear said. “I feel grateful that I have a very supportive family and a lot of community and council members who support me [professionally] and personally and you try to move on from there.” In several tense moments, Blakespear and Thunder sparred over the responsibility of candidates to denounce the harassing actions of supporters. Blakespear apologized for the behavior of an individual who harassed Thunder in a now widely circulated email.
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or many women battling cancer, they are doing exactly that – battling. It’s constant exhaustion from managing life while fighting the disease, all the while feeling a range of emotions while facing uncertainty. Through the Wigs for Hope program, Tri-City Medical Center has been providing free custom wigs to women undergoing chemotherapy. This valuable program enables them to feel more comfortable, confident and courageous. Unfortunately, as many resources have been impacted, our Wigs for Hope program has suffered a loss of funding. We need your support and contributions to continue providing this service to our community. The Wigs for Hope program changes lives for women like Maria Ochoa, who credits the program for helping restore her confidence and support her stepping back into who she knew herself to be before treatment. “I didn’t want to hear it will grow back. My hair was a part of my identity and the idea of losing ALL of it was incomparable,” said Maria Ochoa. “My nurse and the Cancer Care Navigator who
I didn’t want to hear it will grow back. My hair was a part of my identity and the idea of losing all of it was incomparable. runs the wig program at TriCity Women’s Center, Renee Ebejer, understood what I needed as a person, not just a patient. Renee gave a voice to my loss. She genuinely felt my pain and then found the treatment to alleviate that pain, which was as simple as providing a wig.” With your help, we can continue this program and help more people like Maria.
HELPING IS SIMPLE… here are 3 ways to show support: Visit the Tri-City Hospital Foundation Wigs For Hope Facebook Fundraiser Email Deborah at datrusty@tcmc.org Visit the DONATE NOW page on TriCityHospitalFoundation.org
“I’m sorry that Julie did receive that email and I’m sorry that he wrote it,” Blakespear said. While the candidates agreed that violent and inappropriate supporters should be disavowed, an issue covered in depth in a podcast episode of North County Beat, the two disagreed on whether either had done enough to publicly condemn the behavior, Blakespear further requesting Thunder disavow the actions of a specific supporter of her own. The candidates also discussed how to govern through disagreements, pledging to listen to voters as well as remain transparent in their decision-making process. Hinze expressed her intent to meet each person as an individual in an effort to understand their perspective, sharing her interactions with residents prior to the controversial JFC Overnight Parking Lot approval. “You had such high emotions on both sides of this issue. On the same day I had somebody crying… about the fear that we would be welcoming homeless into this city,” Hinze said. “And then an hour later, somebody whose brother had perished by having experienced homelessness for too long and not been given the resources… to get back on their feet.” Turney championed transparency as the basis for successful hard conversations. “I think you have to show your work, you have to show that you actually understand… and show the source documentation for your reasoning,” Turney said. “You have to be straight with people. You have to show them that you understand why you made a decision, [but] never walk away from them in anger, [and] never shut down a meeting abruptly.” In discussing the topic of the negative impacts of conspiracy theories and misinformation, Riley suggested “conspiracy theories grow in a vacuum when there is not enough information and people are left to fill in the blanks themselves." “Some conspiracy theories we may see around this town are probably created by a lack of transparency happening in City Council, to be honest with you,” Riley said. In one of several moments of tense rebuttal during the forum, debate shifted to PAC contributions and endorsements, when Blakespear falsely stated the following: “I think there are a lot of people who have changed their party. They've
become independent voters because they were disillusioned… especially [with] the Republican Party. “So, it can seem like opportunism when my opponent changes her party the month before she runs or just the flat reality that the PAC that is supporting the three opponents is funded by Republicans, gun owners and the BIA.” However, in regards to the political affiliations of Thunder, Turney and Riley, all three individuals declared themselves to be Independents, disavowing direct support from the BIA. Additionally, San Diego County Gun Owners PAC has not officially endorsed Thunder, Riley or Turney. Thunder said the PAC's founder and executive director has pledged his personal support for her in a Facebook post. Ethics & Transparency in Government PAC referenced by Blakespear has not endorsed nor directly donated to Thunder, Riley or Turney. However, as noted by financial statements submitted to the city, the group has spent thousands of dollars in online and print advertisements against their opponents. Beyond the fierce debate and tense moments, the candidates were able to reconcile issues perpetuated on the campaign trail. During the forum, Riley asked Kranz to reverse his statement claiming Riley had only attended one city council meeting to which Kranz apologized and acknowledged that he did not notice Riley’s attendance at additional meetings. Hinze and Turney committed to stopping the spread of misinformation about each other’s campaigns, Hinze thanking Turney for keeping their debate largely issue orientated. In addition, Blakespear thanked Thunder for reaching out to her in a text message in support of her family’s safety after 100 residents marched on Blakespear’s home during a protest earlier this spring. As the forum wrapped, Kranz’s closing remarks gave kudos to all candidates involved in signing the Clean Campaign Pledge and the night’s discussion. “My admiration for Susan, Julie and Alex is tremendous, as well as Katherine and Kelly, because you put your hat in the ring, you're in the arena, and you're working to make our community what you think is better. So, I appreciate that and I look forward to November 4, when we can start healing the community and move forward,” Kranz said.
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through Oct. 23. The event OCT. 22 is free, but registration is re- MAD HATTER TEA PARTY quired at SanDiegoOasis.org Thursdays through Sunto register for Class #75. days through Oct. 31, join Bliss Tea and Treats for a OCT. 21 Mad Hatter Tea Party at 301 FAMILY STORY TIME Mission Ave., Oceanside, reThe Carlsbad City Li- placing formality with doses brary offers a free virtual of whimsy. Book reservations Family Storytimes from 10 at https://blissteatreats.com/. to 10:30 a.m. each Wednes- Seating times are 11:30 a.m., day in October, presented on 2:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m.
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Award Winning Healthcare in our Community Tri-City’s mission is to advance the health and wellness of the community we serve. For nearly 60 years we’ve shown our commitment to fulfill that mission. The caring hands and skilled care of our dedicated nurses, doctors and clinicians have been recognized at the highest levels. We’re proud to have earned these recent honors: Heart & Stroke Care Leader in North County Tri-City is home to one of the top Heart and Stroke treatment programs anywhere. The American Heart Association recently awarded FIVE Gold Awards for our heart and stroke programs—making us the Gold Standard in the care of some of our community’s most critically ill patients.
CBAD Award - Community Impact We are extremely proud to receive the Community Impact – Large Company CBAD Award recognizing Tri-City Medical Center’s community outreach efforts and in-kind support for community organizations to “move the needle” on community health issues and address social determinants of health.
Best Maternity Care Tri-City was recognized by Newsweek and Leapfrog as one of the “Best Maternity Hospitals 2020”. This award is granted to hospitals that meet Leapfrog’s rigorous standards for excellence in maternity care – including low rates of C-section, episiotomy, early elective delivery and following important protocols to protect moms and babies, among other measures. Tri-City has also gone more than TEN YEARS without a PICC line infection in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), a major milestone.
4002 Vista Way, Oceanside, CA 92009 | 855.222.TCMC (8262) | tricitymed.com
OCT. 16, 2020
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nary disease and sleep-related disorders. It will provide both inpatient and outpatient care, including prevention, diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation and research. “An investment of this magnitude will allow us to take a significant step forward for our patients, their families and the entire caregiving team, making Scripps Encinitas a top destination for health care,” said Scott Eisman, M.D., physician chief operating executive at Scripps Encinitas. “We’ve seen demand for health care services increase steadily over the past decade at Scripps Encinitas, and with continuing population growth expected, it’s critical that we take steps now to prepare
y son used to come to me for help with his Spanish homework. He knew full well that he could get no math assistance, but yo hablo Español. Sort of. Never mind that I chatted through three years in high school and several semesters in college. Somehow, I never got out of the present tense — and my vocabulary needs work. If anyone asks me to translate something, I am sharply reminded of my muchas shortcomings. I love to speak it, but my mastery of Español is such a spotty thing. I once had a professor tell me I spoke like a native when I read out loud in class. It seems I am a silver-tongued devil who can never quite remember whether pato means a duck or my hair, or whether I had just told someone they were cute or a fool. I managed to learn several bits of slang that really made me sound like I had the language down, but it’s all flash and no substance. I have sworn several times over the years I would immerse myself in the language and really master it, but no one has offered me a six-month stay in Puerto Vallarta. There have been plenty of times when I was very
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LUSARDI TOWER, named after local philanthropists Debbie and Warner Lusardi, of Rancho Santa Fe, will provide a range of patient services and will be home to the new Lusardi Pulmonary Institute. Courtesy rendering
Lusardi family donates $25M to Scripps Encinitas By Staff
RANCHO SANTA FE — Local philanthropists Warner and Debbie Lusardi, of Rancho Santa Fe, have given Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas the largest donation in its history — a $25 million investment to help fund a new acute care hospital tower and pulmonary institute. “We are immensely grateful to Warner and Debbie Lusardi, whose historic gift will have a truly transformative impact on the region’s health care for generations to come,” said Chris Van Gorder, president and chief executive officer of Scripps Health. “This investment will provide North County residents with expanded access to the high-quality, compassionate health care they have come to expect from
RANCHO SANTA FE philanthropists Debbie and Warner Lusardi made the largest donation in the history of Scripps Encintias. Courtesy photo
Scripps Encinitas.” The new hospital building, to be called Lusardi Tower, will be a three-story, 224,000-square-foot facility that will offer a broad range
Preserve Encinitas’ Quality of Life Before it’s Too Late
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of patient care services. The building will include 64 inpatient beds that will be used for a variety of clinical needs, including medical-surgical care, in-
tensive care and progressive (or intermediate) care, as well as additional operating suites. Scripps expects site work to begin at the hospital in early 2022, with the first phase of Lusardi Tower expected to be open for patient care in 2025. The tower will be situated between the existing main hospital building and the Leichtag Foundation Critical Care Pavilion. Lusardi Tower also will be home to the new Lusardi Pulmonary Institute, which will provide a wide spectrum of patient care for respiratory conditions. The institute will include early detection of lung cancer, minimally invasive diagnostic lung biopsy, thoracic surgery and treatment of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmo-
Julie Thunder for Mayor
Alex riley for City Council, District 1
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SuSAn Turney for City Council, District 2
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OCT. 16, 2020
Surfrider opens Carlsbad water quality monitoring lab By City News Service
CARLSBAD — The San Diego County chapter of the Surfrider Foundation announced a new water quality monitoring lab in Carlsbad Oct. 13, as well as three new water quality testing sites along beaches in North County. Since 2017, Surfrider volunteers have monitored and tracked water quality on a weekly basis at 10 different beaches in San Diego. According to the ocean-focused environmental nonprofit, the tracking is intended to educate the community about water quality issues and protect the health of the community. The new community lab is based out of footwear and lifestyle brand REEF's Carlsbad headquarters. It is the fourth lab opened in San Diego as part of the foundation's national Blue Water Task Force program, which provides water quality information for beaches in the South Bay, Central San Diego and now
THE CARLSBAD SITE is the fourth lab opened in San Diego as part of the foundation’s national Blue Water Task Force program. Courtesy photo
North County. The Carlsbad community lab is scheduled to begin operations later in October. Volunteers measure levels of Enterococcus, a fecal indicator bacteria, in recreational waters and compare them to water quality standards set to protect public health. Data is then shared with the public and county officials. “Much of what we do as individuals impacts our community and planet, and that extends to the health of our beaches,” said Jess DellaRossa, program co-lead for the local Blue Water Task
NEWS?
Business news and special achievements for North San Diego County. Send information via email to community@ coastnewsgroup.com. WORK AT CASA DE AMPARO
Casa de Amparo is hiring. If you or someone you know is interested in working for Casa de Amparo, see available positions at casadeamparo.org/about-us/ careers/. Alila Marea Beach Resort Encinitas, at 2100 N. Coast Highway 101, has named Benjamin Thiele as general manager of the luxury beachfront resort. Thiele joins the Hyatt family following a decade with Kimpton Hotels — most recently Kimpton Canary Hotel in Santa Barbara and Seattle’s Palladian Hotel.
CSUSM FACULTY GET GRANTS
Two Cal State San Marcos faculty members in the School of Nursing have received a grant of $1.33 million to help further build the pipeline of psychiatric mental health nurse practitioners in California. CSUSM’s School of Nursing assistant professor Catherine Baker and professor emerita Nancy Romig received the five-year grant from the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. Both are co-coordinators of the Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) program. The grant will provide full scholarships for 20 new PMHNP students and fund the costs associated with admitting additional students and securing field placements.
TRI-CITY STROKE CARE TOPS
Force. “Pollutants, as simple as gardening fertilizer, dog waste and small pieces of litter go straight to our oceans via storm drains. This negatively impacts the water quality of San Diego’s beautiful beaches every day.” The new lab in Carlsbad will expand the task force’s reach by collecting and monitoring samples from three sites north of State Route 56: the San Luis Rey River outlet in Oceanside, the San Elijo Lagoon outlet in Cardiff and the San Dieguito River outlet in Del Mar. In 2019, Surfrider San Diego earmarked grant University included Amita Denham of Oceanside, with a bachelor of science in nursing; Krissy Gonzales of Carmel Valley, with a bachelor of science in nursing; Kristin Sevilla of San Marcos, with a master of science degree and Randi Swilley of Oceanside, with a bachelor of science in nursing.
Who’s
RESORT NAMES MANAGER
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BENJAMIN THIELE
ciation, including three Gold Plus Performance Achievement Awards for stroke care, heart care, and resuscitation quality, as well as two Gold Level awards for its care of patients with STEMI, or ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction, heart attacks. Tri-City Medical Center is the only medical center in San Diego County to receive Gold Plus in both heart failure and stroke care and to earn more honors than any other hospital in the region. For more information, visit tricitymed.org/about-us/accreditation-awards. COAST GUARD SCHOLARS
Coast Guard Foundation Scholarships were awarded to Ryane Quintanar, child of USCG Petty Officer Zachary Quintanar, from San Marcos, and Dorian Ashmore, child of USCG Chief Petty Officer Charles Ashmore, from Vista. The recipients are attending Loyola University Chicago and University of Hawaii at Manoa, respectively. The Coast Guard Foundation Scholarships benefit the children of enlisted men and women who are serving or have served in the U.S. Coast Guard, whether active duty, reserve, retired or deceased.
Tri-City Medical Center earned eight certifications SUMMER GRADS Summer semester and awards from the American Heart and Stroke Asso- 2020 graduates from Ohio
The California Office of Traffic Safety announced it has awarded the city of Carlsbad Police Department a $108,000 grant. The grant will fund a variety of traffic safety programs. The focus of the grant is roadway safety and it will assist the police department in its efforts to reduce deaths and injuries on the Carlsbad roadways.
funds to purchase lab equipment and testing supplies to be used for water quality monitoring in North County, and REEF Lifestyle assisted by donating office space to be used as a lab. REEF and Surfrider Foundation have already joined forces to create the Better Beach Alliance, dedicated to plastic pollution initiatives through beach cleanups and environmental legislation. “Surfrider Foundation and REEF came together in 2018 to establish the Better Beach Alliance so we could help amplify the impact of Surfrider’s national Beach Cleanup program, and I'm proud to further our partnership with Surfrider by supporting the development of this new Blue Water Task Force lab,” said Mike Jensen, president of REEF. “The Blue Water Task Force volunteers work tirelessly to address a variety of water quality challenges. It’s an honor to provide them with a space to continue their work in northern San Diego.” SAFARI PARK LAUDED
The San Diego Zoo Safari Park has been recognized by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums with top honors in AZA’s Exhibit Award for 2020, for the Walkabout Australia experience. The award was announced Sept. 16 at the 2020 Virtual AZA Annual Conference, recognizing the achievements in conservation, education, research, habitat design, marketing, diversity, research and volunteer engagement.
NEW DEAN
Leslie Salas Named Dean of Counseling at Palomar Community College. Salas comes to North County with 23 years of experience in the California Community College system.
Pet of the Week Ms. Cake is a beautifully adorned little lady who is cause for celebration! At 15 months old, Ms. Cake is rich with love and is the ultimate comfort kitty. She’s quirky and fun with her black and white patches. Ms. Cake weighs 8 pounds. Ms. Cake is waiting to meet you at Helen Woodward Animal Center. Her adoption fee is $139. All pets adopted from Helen Woodward Animal Center are neutered, vaccinated and micro-chipped for
identification. For more information call (858) 756-4117, option #1 or visit animalcenter. org.
KOCT.ORG - The Voice of North County is a non - profit, live stream PEG outlet funded by the City of Oceanside and powered by Cox Cable. Since 1984, KOCT.ORG has produced and programmed the issues that directly affect our daily life, keeping us locals well informed & engaged as a continual voice for the North County community. By becoming a Friend of KOCT, you help insure the future of quality KOCT productions, an access to The KOCT Community Calendar, a dedicated airtime for submitted programming, discounts on KOCT production services and many other great benefits. Show your support and become a Friend of KOCT! Tune into to watch KOCT, The Voice of North County on Community Channel 18 and Government Channel 19 on Cox Cable in Oceanside or AT&T Channel 99 Countywide. Visit KOCT.ORG! Like us on Facebook @KOCTTV Follow us on Instagram @KOCTTELEVISION Find us on Twitter @KOCTTV And call us at 760.722.4433 with comments or questions. We thank you for your support.
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PARTNERSHIP 11/26/2018 12/02/2018 2018-0510823 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $25030.02 99866 B0512615H GMP8010506BE 1050 BIENNIAL EVEN 80 211-13002-00 JEFFREY DESHAWN RICHARDSON A(N) MARRIED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 10/16/2018 11/01/2018 2018-0457906 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $25337.55 99867 B0420655S GMP691410A1Z 1410 EACH 69 211-131-13-00 RAMON M. AVELAR JR. AND MARIA DEL PILAR AVELAR HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/24/2013 01/09/2014 2014-0010597 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $29127.87 99869 B0452615C GMO501132DE 1132 BIENNIAL EVEN 50 211-13002-00 SKYLAR L. CLARK A(N) SINGLE MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/14/2015 09/17/2015 2015-0491083 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $22286.57 99871 B0409295L GMP691308A1Z 1308 EACH 69 211-131-11-00 FRANK A. TORRES AND REBECCA L. TORRES HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 06/10/2013 06/20/2013 2013-0388026 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $22788.40 99873 B0451635H GMP651312D1E 1312 BIENNIAL EVEN 65 211-13113-00 CAROL R. SCHEIBE A(N) SINGLE WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 06/28/2015 09/10/2015 2015-0477663 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $21848.55 99914 B3996205C GMP543318BZ 3318 ANNUAL 54 211-130-03-00 JAMES PATRICK MOYA AND ELIZABETH WILLIAMS MOYA HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 01/05/2012 01/26/2012 2012-0045169 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $19360.82 99916 B0425085S GMP701303A1Z 1303 ANNUAL 70 211-131-13-00 ALAN W. SIMON AND NICHE P. SIMON HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 03/10/2014 03/27/2014 2014-0119988 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $28187.11 99917 B0461735H GMO522415D1E 2415 BIENNIAL EVEN 52 211-13002-00 LORI LIZABETH LATZ A(N) UNMARRIED WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 02/06/2016 03/10/2016 2016-0105434 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $20282.82 99918 B0464165S GMP583410BZ 3410 ANNUAL 58 211-131-05-00 TEDDY M. HODGES AND AMY D. HODGES HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 03/18/2016 04/28/2016 2016-0198580 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $27488.66 99919 B0472545H GMP592311AZ 2311 ANNUAL 59 211-131-11-00 DANA C. ANDERSON AND CYNTHIA D. ANDERSON HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/21/2016 09/08/2016 2016-0469937 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $31773.73 99920 B0475325C
GMP652312D1O 2312 BIENNIAL ODD 65 211-131-1300 ELLEN J. THOMPSON A(N) UNMARRIED WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/23/2016 10/27/2016 2016-0581324 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $23107.23 99921 B0482205C GMP583426BZ 3426 ANNUAL 58 211-131-11-00 DENNIS L. BURROWS A(N) UNMARRIED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 02/20/2017 03/30/2017 2017-0142683 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $35567.37 99922 B0481965H GMP692407D1Z 2407 ANNUAL 69 211-131-13-00 PHILLIP W. CAREY AND NAOMI J. CAREY HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 03/09/2017 03/23/2017 2017-0131964 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $31987.06 99923 B0488725H GMP592437E2Z 2437 ANNUAL 59 211-131-11-00 ROBERT W. DEASON A(N) MARRIED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 06/30/2017 07/13/2017 2017-0315500 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $60919.85 99924 B0492365C GMP652419D1E 2419 BIENNIAL EVEN 65 211-13113-00 KERRY A. MOORE AND JANETHIA S. MOORE HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 09/06/2017 09/21/2017 2017-0432259 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $21314.60 99925 B0496685H GMP701410D1E 1410 BIENNIAL EVEN 70 211-13113-00 JESSICA LYNN WILLIAMS AND ZACHARY THOMAS WILLIAMS WIFE AND HUSBAND AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/08/2017 12/21/2017 2017-0599978 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $23307.94 99926 B0497535H GMP683304D1E 3304 BIENNIAL EVEN 68 211-13113-00 ANGELA HARRELL A(N) SINGLE WOMAN AND KATHLEEN MCGRAW A(N) SINGLE WOMAN AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/29/2017 01/11/2018 2018-0011757 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $22736.91 99927 B0498975H GMP521412D1E 1412 BIENNIAL EVEN 52 211-13002-00 ROSEMARY ANN BARTLE A(N) SINGLE WOMAN AND TARA KIM FAIRBANKS A(N) SINGLE WOMAN AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 01/29/2018 02/15/2018 2018-0060242 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $22376.03 99928 B0505065S GMS8020546DO 2054 BIENNIAL ODD 80 212-271-0400 IRA GENE WORRELL AND MARTHA A. WORRELL HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 06/06/2018 06/21/2018 2018-0252099 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $20117.07 99931 B0518095C GMP602135A1Z 2135 ANNUAL 60 211-131-11-00 GREGORY H. STANFORD AND REYNA A. STANFORD HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 01/06/2019 03/21/2019 2019-0101370 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $55042.31 99932 B0516445H GMP602236D1Z 2236 ANNUAL
60 211-131-11-00 SERETHA M. SHERROD A(N) SINGLE WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 01/10/2019 01/31/2019 2019-0035387 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $35110.53 99933 B1572475C GMO561306AZ 1306 ANNUAL 56 211-130-03-00 JOHN C. TABOR SR. AND IRENE A. TABOR HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 04/23/2007 05/04/2007 2007-0305401 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $23447.33 99934 B0450795S GMP652110A1O 2110 BIENNIAL ODD 65 211-131-1300 MATTHEW LEE SNYDER AND ANDREA ROSE SNYDER HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/03/2015 08/20/2015 2015-0440899 1/16/2020 2020-0024429 $31078.47 100209 B3504475C GMP541506EE 5415 EVEN 6 211-130-03-00 ANTHONY J. BALSAM AND MARIETTA M. BALSAM HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 06/07/2009 06/19/2009 2009-0334300 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $25390.31 100211 B0424805L GMP702134A1Z 7021 ANNUAL 34 211-131-10-00 PAUL T. BRENNER AND VERONICA BRENNER HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 02/27/2014 03/20/2014 2014-0109487 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $38746.00 100213 B0431915L GMP542620DO 5426 ODD 20 211-130-03-00 JUAN C ACEVES AND VERONICA ACEVES HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 07/19/2014 07/31/2014 2014-0325479 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $19594.55 100214 B0461945C GMP583207A1Z 5832 ANNUAL 7 211-131-05-00 TERRANCE L. GRAY A(N) MARRIED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 02/22/2016 03/17/2016 2016-0117712 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $58208.58 100215 B0466585H GMP691244D1O 6912 ODD 44 211-131-07-00 RONALDO R. CARAIG AND LOUELLA S. CARAIG HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 05/16/2016 06/02/2016 2016-0269647 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $24235.81 100216 B0472555H GMP591243AZ 5912 ANNUAL 43 211-131-11-00 DANA C. ANDERSON AND CYNTHIA D. ANDERSON HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/21/2016 09/08/2016 2016-0469950 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $34865.01 100217 B0496515H GMO614152BO 6141 ODD 52 211-131-11-00 PATRICIA I. ARIAS A(N) UNMARRIED WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 11/26/2017 12/21/2017 2017-0599923 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $32404.18 100218 B0497685S GMP531403AO 5314 ODD 3 211-130-03-00 KAREN R. COOPER A(N) SINGLE WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/30/2017 01/18/2018 2018-0019221
3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $28548.69 100219 B0509055C GMP611433A1Z 6114 ANNUAL 33 211-131-11-00 DON CHRISTOPHER IOANE AND TERRI FAATU IOANE HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 07/30/2018 08/30/2018 2018-0358740 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $59299.10 100220 B0518775S GMP663417BZ 6634 ANNUAL 17 211-131-13-00 EVAN D. THOMAS AND NINA I. THOMAS HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/07/2018 04/04/2019 2019-0119802 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $34425.83 100221 B0519455C GMP8010545BE 80105 EVEN 45 212-271-04-00 JESSE WILLIAMS A(N) UNMARRIED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/09/2018 04/18/2019 2019-0140265 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $28857.80 100222 B0520145S GMP601346B1Z 6013 ANNUAL 46 211-131-11-00 MICHAEL C. MCCOY AND LASHANDRIA R. LEFFALL HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 04/15/2019 05/02/2019 2019-0162921 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $38133.15 100223 B0524485S GMO522313D1E 5223 EVEN 13 211-130-02-00 LONZIA C. THOMAS A(N) WIDOWED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 08/04/2019 08/22/2019 2019-0356733 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $24827.60 100229 B0443705L GMO703110BZ 7031 ANNUAL 10 211-131-10-00 JAMES J. DUFFY A(N) UNMARRIED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 03/31/2015 04/16/2015 2015-0182415 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $29163.50 100230 B0443715L GMP591213AZ 5912 ANNUAL 13 211-131-11-00 JAMES J. DUFFY A(N) UNMARRIED MAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 03/31/2015 04/16/2015 2015-0182417 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $32361.84 100232 B0500535H GMP662407D1O 6624 ODD 7 211-131-13-00 RON C. NIX SR. AND MARY A. NIX HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 03/13/2018 03/29/2018 2018-0124665 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $22790.46 100233 B4042935H GMP682136A1O 6821 ODD 36 211-131-07-00 MARJORIE HICKINBOTHAM AN UNMARRIED WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 09/18/2012 09/27/2012 2012-0587591 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $22407.50 100234 B0498605H GMP612426D1Z 6124 ANNUAL 26 211-131-11-00 OFELIA ROBLES AN UNMARRIED WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/31/2017 02/08/2018 2018-0051153 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $32730.37 100235 B3992565C GMO513205AO 5132 ODD 5 211-130-02-00 JACK M. PORTER AND JENNIE PORTER HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD
LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 09/03/2011 09/15/2011 2011-0478383 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $17759.43 100236 B0497385H GMO604248L2Z 6042 ANNUAL 48 211-131-11-00 CHRISTINA MCMAHON A(N) MARRIED WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 12/23/2017 01/11/2018 2018-0011799 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $51076.61 100237 B0477055H GMO503432EO 5034 ODD 32 211-130-02-00 RHODA C. HARPER A(N) UNMARRIED WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 09/13/2016 12/01/2016 2016-0657755 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $45192.33 100238 B0520465H GMS8020240D1O 80202 ODD 40 212-271-04-00 JAMES M. FLETCHER AND SHANNON FLETCHER HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 04/02/2019 05/09/2019 2019-0173633 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $27634.99 100239 B0412685H GMP542348BE 5423 EVEN 48 211-130-03-00 JONATHAN D. JONES AND TAMARA J. JONES HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 04/11/2013 08/22/2013 2013-0525784 3/17/2020 2020-0139238 $19719.31 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 is estimated at AS SHOWN ABOVE Accrued interest and additional advances, if any, may 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 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 1-800540-1717, using the TS number assigned to this case on SHOWN ABOVE. 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. 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. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust. DATE: 9/30/2020 CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE 10805 RANCHO BERNARDO RD, #150 SAN DIEGO, CA 92127 PHONE NO. (858) 207-0646 BY LORI R. FLEMINGS, as Authorized Signor IN ORDER TO BRING YOUR ACCOUNT CURRENT, PLEASE CONTACT ADVANCED FINANCIAL COMPANY AT PHONE NO. 800-234-6222 EXT 189 10/09/2020, 10/16/2020, 10/23/2020 CN 24853
Default and Election to Sell there under recorded on AS SHOWN BELOW as Instrument No. AS SHOWN BELOW of said Official Records. WILL SELL BY PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH On 10/30/2020 at 10:00 AM, AT THE FRONT ENTRANCE TO CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY 2121 PALOMAR AIRPORT ROAD., CARLSBAD, CA 92011, CARLSBAD, CA, 92011 IMPORTANT NOTE: TO ADHERE TO THE COVID-19 PROTOCOLS, THE TRUSTEES SALE WILL OCCUR OUTSIDE AND WILL REQUIRE THAT EVERYONE PRESENT MUST HAVE FACE COVERINGS AND ADHEAR TO SOCIAL DISTANCING BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER THE SALE TAKES PLACE. (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), 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 hereinafter described as more fully described on said Deed of Trust. 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: 1594 MARBRISA CIRCLE, CARLSBAD, CA, 92008 TS#, CUSTOMER REF#, ICN#, Unit/ Interval/Week, APN#, Trustors, Beneficiary, DOT Dated, DOT Recorded, DOT Book, DOT Page/Instrument#, NOD Recorded, NOD Book, NOD Page/Instrument#, Estimated Sales Amount 99861 B0413095S GMP681206B1E 1206 BIENNIAL EVEN 68 211-13113-00 GUY R. BISSONNETTE AND AMBER M. BISSONNETTE HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 04/24/2013 08/29/2013 2013-0539633 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $19781.91 99862 B0432835S GMP691116B1O 1116 BIENNIAL ODD 69 211-131-1300 JEREMY A. MCDAVID AND DANYIELLE D. MCDAVID HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 07/18/2014 08/14/2014 2014-0349128 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $21685.34 99863 B0475215C GMO603101A1O 3101 BIENNIAL ODD 60 211-131-1100 JOAN P. GROLL A(N) WIDOWED WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 10/10/2016 10/27/2016 2016-0581213 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $28684.52 99864 B0507205C GMP601145D1E 1145 BIENNIAL EVEN 60 211-13111-00 OSCAR N. LOPEZ AND MARIA C. TORRES LOPEZ HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP 07/13/2018 07/26/2018 2018-0304547 1/2/2020 2020-0000801 $23583.57 99865 B0514555S GMP8010316B1O 1031 BIENNIAL ODD 80 211-130-0200 CURTIS EUGENE HUMPHREY AND DONNA JEAN HUMPHREY HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC CARLSBAD LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE# 37-2020-00034883-CUPT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Stephen Craig Scheer and Jennifer Anne Scheer filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: a. Present name: Kennedy Brooke Scheer change to proposed name: Kennedy Jeanette Scheer. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this Court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for a change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: On Nov 17, 2020 at 8:30 a.m., in Dept. 23 of the Superior Court of California, 325 S Melrose Dr., Vista CA 92081, North County Regional Division. NO HEARING WILL OCCUR ON THE ABOVE DATE; ATTACHMENT TO ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME (JC FORM #NC-120) Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which poses a substantial risk to the health and welfare of court personnel and the public, rendering presence in, or access to, the court’s facilities unsafe, and pursuant to the emergency orders of the Chief Justice of the State of California and General Orders of the Presiding Department of the San Diego Superior Court, the following Order is made: NO HEARING
OCT. 16, 2020
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WILL OCCUR ON THE DATE SPECIFIED IN THE ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE. The court will review the documents filed as of the date specified on the Order to Show Cause for Change of Name (JC Form #NC-120). If all requirements for a name change have been met as of the date specified, and no timely written objection has been received (required at least two court days before the date specified), the Petition for Change of Name (JC Form #NC100) will be granted without a hearing. One certified copy of the Order Granting the Petition will be mailed to the petitioner. If all the requirements have not been met as of the date specified, the court will mail the petitioner a written order with further directions. If a timely objection is filed, the court will set a remote hearing date and contact the parties by mail with further directions. A RESPONDENT OBJECTING TO THE NAME CHANGE MUST FILE A WRITTEN OBJECTION AT LEAST TWO COURT DAYS (excluding weekends and holidays) BEFORE THE DATE SPECIFIED. Do not come to court on the specified date. The court will notify the parties by mail of a future remote hearing date. Any Petition for the name change of a minor that is signed by only one parent must have this. Attachment served along with the Petition and Order to Show Cause, on the other nonsigning parent, and proof of service must be filed with the court. IT IS SO ORDERED. Date: Oct 2, 2020 Sim Von Kalinowski Judge of the Superior Court. 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/06/2020 CN 24875
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, October 23, 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.
(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: Caroline L. Morrison 514 Via De La Valle, Ste 207 Solana Beach, CA 92075 Telephone: 858.771.0776 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24846
Superior Court. 10/02, 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24841
petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: a. Present name: Sharon Lynn Hecht change to proposed name: Sha Sha Lynn Hecht. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this Court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for a change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: On Nov 03, 2020 at 8:30 a.m., in Dept. 23 of the Superior Court of California, 325 S Melrose Dr., Vista CA 92081, North County Regional Division. NO HEARING WILL OCCUR ON THE ABOVE DATE; ATTACHMENT TO ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME (JC FORM #NC-120) Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which poses a substantial risk to the health and welfare of court personnel and the public, rendering presence in, or access to, the court’s facilities unsafe, and pursuant to the emergency orders of the Chief Justice of the State of California and General Orders of the Presiding Department of the San Diego Superior Court, the following Order is made: NO HEARING WILL OCCUR ON THE DATE SPECIFIED IN THE ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE. The court will review the documents filed as of the date specified on the Order to Show Cause for Change of Name (JC Form #NC-120). If all requirements for a name change have been met as of the date specified, and no timely written objection has been received (required at least two court days before the date specified), the Petition for Change of Name (JC Form #NC100) will be granted without a hearing. One certified copy of the Order Granting the Petition will be mailed to the petitioner. If all the requirements have not been met as of the date specified, the court will mail the petitioner a written order with further directions. If a timely objection is filed, the court will set a remote hearing date and contact the parties by mail with further directions. A RESPONDENT OBJECTING TO THE NAME CHANGE MUST FILE A WRITTEN OBJECTION AT LEAST TWO COURT DAYS (excluding weekends and holidays) BEFORE THE DATE SPECIFIED. Do not come to court on the specified date. The court will notify the parties by mail of a future remote hearing date. Any Petition for the name change of a minor that is signed by only one parent must have this. Attachment served along with the Petition and Order to Show Cause, on the other nonsigning parent, and proof of service must be filed with the court. IT IS SO ORDERED. Date: Sep 16, 2020 Sim von Kalinowski Judge of the Superior Court. 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24819
NOTICE OF LIEN SALE PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE §798.56a AND COMMERCIAL CODE §§ 7209 AND 7210 To: The Estate of David L. Price 3030 Oceanside Blvd. Space 51 Oceanside, California 92054 YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that Terrace Gardens MHP claims a lien against the mobilehome described below in the sum of $5,105.64. This sum represents the storage value of the site where the mobilehome has been stored from February 1, 2020 through September 29, 2020, plus costs incurred in removing or storing the mobilehome, and other amounts recoverable under California Civil Code § 798.56a. The rental rate for storage is $12.84 per day, and additional amounts may accrue for utilities, storage, attorney’s fees, publication fees and other expenses before the date of sale. Manufacturer: FLAMINGO Tradename: FLAMINGO Model: FLAMINGO Year of Manufacture: 1960 Decal or License No.: AAN3553 Serial No(s).: S9685 Insignia: 88544 Location: Terrace Gardens MHP, 3030 Oceanside Blvd., Space 51, Oceanside, California 92054, County of San Diego. YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that the mobilehome will be sold at 10:00 A.M. on November 2, 2020 at the park office, 3030 Oceanside Blvd., Oceanside, California 92054. The warehouseman’s lien sale is for the mobilehome only; it does not include the right to keep the mobilehome on-site. The warehouseman’s lien cannot be used to transfer nor does it transfer the leasehold interest in the land. The property owner reserves the right to require removal of mobilehome from the park upon conclusion of the lien sale. To inquire about the sale, call the Chana Law Firm at (714) 680-4080. 10/16/2020, 10/23/2020 CN 24874 NOTICE OF PUBLIC LIEN SALE
Edward Betts Jr. F-228 10/09/2020, 10/16/2020 CN 24857
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF DAROLYNE L. BOSCH Case# 37-2020-00033274-PR-LACTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Darolyne L. Bosch. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Darin Bosch & Devin Bosch, as CoAdministrators, in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego. The Petition for Probate requests that Darin Bosch & Devin Bosch, as CoAdministrators, 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 as follows: Date: Dec. 17, 2020; Time: 1:30 PM; in Dept.: 503; Room: 503 Court address: 1100 Union St., San Diego CA 92101, Central Courthouse, Probate. Effective November 2, 2020: Probate hearings will be heard via Microsoft Teams, appearances must be made by video conferencing, using the free Microsoft Teams application (“MS Teams”) or by calling the department’s teleconference phone number. Visit sdcourt.ca.gov/Probate for more information. No personal appearances are allowed until further notice. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE# 37-2020-00033544-CUPT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Lena Jo Rumps filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: a. Present name: Lena Jo Rumps change to proposed name: Lena Rumps Littman. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this Court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for a change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: On Nov 10, 2020 at 8:30 a.m., in Dept. 23 of the Superior Court of California, 325 S Melrose Dr., Vista CA 92081, North County Regional Division. NO HEARING WILL OCCUR ON THE ABOVE DATE; ATTACHMENT TO ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME (JC FORM #NC-120) Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which poses a substantial risk to the health and welfare of court personnel and the public, rendering presence in, or access to, the court’s facilities unsafe, and pursuant to the emergency orders of the Chief Justice of the State of California and General Orders of the Presiding Department of the San Diego Superior Court, the following Order is made: NO HEARING WILL OCCUR ON THE DATE SPECIFIED IN THE ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE. The court will review the documents filed as of the date specified on the Order to Show Cause for Change of Name (JC Form #NC-120). If all requirements for a name change have been met as of the date specified, and no timely written objection has been received (required at least two court days before the date specified), the Petition for Change of Name (JC Form #NC100) will be granted without a hearing. One certified copy of the Order Granting the Petition will be mailed to the petitioner. If all the requirements have not been met as of the date specified, the court will mail the petitioner a written order with further directions. If a timely objection is filed, the court will set a remote hearing date and contact the parties by mail with further directions. A RESPONDENT OBJECTING TO THE NAME CHANGE MUST FILE A WRITTEN OBJECTION AT LEAST TWO COURT DAYS (excluding weekends and holidays) BEFORE THE DATE SPECIFIED. Do not come to court on the specified date. The court will notify the parties by mail of a future remote hearing date. Any Petition for the name change of a minor that is signed by only one parent must have this. Attachment served along with the Petition and Order to Show Cause, on the other nonsigning parent, and proof of service must be filed with the court. IT IS SO ORDERED. Date: Sep 24, 2020 Sim Von Kalinowski Judge of the
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF WILLIAM G. EDWARDS aka WILLIAM GEORGE EDWARDS Case# 37-2020-00032650-PR-LA-CTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of William G. Edwards aka William George Edwards. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Karyn J. Tiller, in the Superior Court of California, County of San Diego. The Petition for Probate requests that Karyn J. Tiller, 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 as follows: Date: Dec. 09, 2020; Time: 1:30 PM; in Dept.: 502; Court address: 1100 Union St., San Diego CA 92101, Central Courthouse, Probate. Effective November 2, 2020: Probate hearings will be heard via Microsoft Teams, appearances must be made by video conferencing, using the free Microsoft Teams application (“MS Teams”) or by calling the department’s teleconference phone number. Visit sdcourt.ca.gov/Probate for more information. No personal appearances are allowed until further notice. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Debra Leffler Streeter, Esq. 217 Civic Center Dr. Ste 10 Vista CA 92084 Telephone: 760.945.9353 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24834 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE# 37-2020-00032427-CUPT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Sharon Lynn Hecht filed a
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016082 Filed: Sep 26, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Skip Strategies. Located at: 13325 Via Tresca #1, San Diego CA San Diego 92129. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Dana Helene Levin, 13325 Via Tresca #1, San Diego CA 92129. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 09/13/2020 S/Dana Helene
LEGALS Levin 10/16, 10/23, 11/06/2020 CN 24883
LEGALS 10/30,
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016425 Filed: Oct 01, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. JUNE6 Agency; B. Fewture Supply USA. Located at: 111 C St., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. WannAccess Corp., 111 C St., 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/Cecile Courty 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/06/2020 CN 24882 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016342 Filed: Sep 28, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Goldibox. Located at: 3624 Via Bernardo, Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. SAE Kitchen Inc., 3624 Via Bernardo, Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/08/2020 S/ Nina Smoley 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/06/2020 CN 24881 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016582 Filed: Oct 06, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Elam’s Hallmark. Located at: 6303 Caminito Tenedor, San Diego CA San Diego 92120. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Elam’s Jewelry Inc., 6303 Caminito Tenedor, San Diego CA 92120. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/01/1979 S/Guy Elam 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/06/2020 CN 24880 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016392 Filed: Sep 30, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. West Dermatology. Located at: 6010 Hidden Valley Rd. #120, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92011. Mailing Address: 2285 Corporate Cir. #200, Henderson NV 89074. Registrant Information: 1. J Robert West MD, Inc., 2285 Corporate Cir. #200, Henderson NV 89074. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Lucius Blanchard 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/06/2020 CN 24877 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015444 Filed: Sep 16, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Ranch Hands. Located at: 1601 Longhorn Dr., Vista CA San Diego 92081. Mailing Address: PO Box 1453, Vista CA 92085. Registrant Information: 1. Rancho Buena Vista Band and Pageantry Boosters Inc., 1604 Longhorn Dr., Vista CA 92081. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/01/1989 S/ Rebecca Jaime 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 11/06/2020 CN 24876 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016335 Filed: Sep 28, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Passion 4 Life. Located at: 1755 Bella Laguna Ct., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing
Address: 1345 Encinitas Blvd. #736, Encinitas CA 92024. Registrant Information: 1. Health 4 Life LLC, 1755 Bella Laguna Ct., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 08/19/2020 S/Karel Van Kessler 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24873 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016032 Filed: Sep 26, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Newcorp Contracting; B. Luxury Bath San Diego. Located at: 3001 Carlsbad Blvd. #8, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Joseph Mario Anguiano, 3740 Hibiscus Cir., 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/Joseph Mario Anguiano 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24872 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016465 Filed: Oct 01, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Elite Bodyworks and Massage. Located at: 1872 Saint Thomas Rd., Vista CA San Diego 92081. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Danielle Renee Perez, 1872 Saint Thomas Rd., Vista CA 92081. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Danielle Renee Perez 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24871 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015661 Filed: Sep 19, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Crown Locksmith Services. Located at: 6819 Embarcadero Ln. #112, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92011. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Jacob Ryan De Anda, 6819 Embarcadero Ln. #112, Carlsbad CA 92011; 2. Chasen Michael De Anda, 6819 Embarcadero Ln. #112, Carlsbad CA 92011. This business is conducted by: General Partnership. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Jacob Ryan De Anda & Chasen Michael De Anda 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24870 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016018 Filed: Sep 25, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. All Coast Mortgage. Located at: 3203 La Costa Ave., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: 1106 2nd St. #609, Encinitas CA 92024. Registrant Information: 1. Ian Allan McGibben, 3203 La Costa Ave., 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/Ian Allan McGibben 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24869 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015361 Filed: Sep 14, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk.
Coast News legals continued on page B14
B6
T he C oast News
OCT. 16, 2020
Farewell to Surfer
T In loving memory of
Mary Bernadette “Pat” Holzinger December 5, 1933 October 6, 2020
Pat Holzinger passed away at her home in Arcata on October 6, 2020. She was born in San Diego to her parents Mary and James Crock and was the eldest of six children. She attended Cathedral Girl’s High School and later graduated from San Diego State University where she was a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. During college she met Carl Henry Holzinger and they were wed in 1954. They then moved to Vista, California where they raised their three children, Chris, Claudia and Curt. Both were educators in the local school district
and they remained in Vista until Carl’s death in 1982. Pat subsequently moved to Encinitas, California where she lived for 30 years before moving to Arcata in 2013. As a teacher, Pat was empathetic, but also ‘no nonsense’. She often worked as a substitute teacher, and sometimes taught special needs children at their homes. She loved cooking, baking, dancing, skiing, going to performances, travelling, and playing both bridge and scrabble. In some circles she became known as “Scrabble Pat” for her love of that game. During her life Pat traveled widely, first with Carl and the kids making frequent local trips to Mexico, Anza Borrego Desert and San Elijo State beach. For years, a summer ritual involved several families camping together for a week at the beach. The 5 o’clock parent happy hour sometimes attracted the attention of the park rangers! Before the kids went out on their own, the family travelled all over North America and Europe. Later she and Carl travelled to Mexico, Spain, Morocco, Italy, and the Caribbean.
Linda Lee Christensen, 76 Oceanside September 29, 2020
Claire Patricia Rogus, 77 Escondido September 27, 2020
Louise Bester, 74 Escondido September 24, 2020
Betty Lea Snavely, 97 San Marcos September 18, 2020
After moving to Encinitas, Pat continued to travel with the local Ski Club making trips to Tahoe, Mammoth, and beyond; as well as a yearly boat house party on Lake Powell. She also traveled with close friends to places as diverse as China, Japan, Peru, and Argentina. Pat loved the beach in Encinitas and generously shared her home there, hosting multiple parties, as well as just spending days together on the beach. She found great joy in her friends and large extended family, children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren. Pat was a strong independent woman, who was also incredibly supportive and ready with advice and help. Moving to Arcata allowed Pat to spend more time with family in the area, and to be closer as her great grandchildren grew up. She also supported and immersed herself in the performing arts, taking dance classes and attending any and every cultural event she could. She was fond of her close neighborhood, and happy while tending her sunny gar-
den. Pat made several new friends in town and enjoyed hiking and exploring the North Coast with them. Pat shared in the lives of many people and will be deeply missed by family and friends. Her strong spirit and presence will live on. She is survived by her daughter and sons, Claudia Holzinger (Von Tunstall), Chris Holzinger and Curt Holzinger; her grandchildren Melonie (Troy) Parrish, Carl Coates and Mateaus Tunstall; her great grandchildren Hunter, Mallory and Ashton Parrish; her sister Margaret (Duane) Adams; sister Michele Reed; and a wide circle of cousins, nieces and nephews. Family and friends are encouraged to view photos and to post memories and photos on her tribute wall at: www.Paulschapel. com. The family is planning to have a celebration of her life in Spring 2021. Recognizing Pat’s generous spirit, the family suggests that any donations be made to Redwood Raks World Dance Studio in Arcata, where she attended classes and performances: www.redwoodraks.com.
“Every man’s life ends the same way. It is only the details of how he lived and how he died that distinguish one man from another.”
4.28
SMALL TALK CONTINUED FROM B1
— Ernest Hemingway
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(Dove, Heart, Flag, Rose)
he world stopped in 1961 as I laid down my 75 cents in exchange for my first copy of Surfer Magazine. I read it as I walked home with romantic visions in my head fueled by images of Pipeline, Rincon and Malibu. We lived inland and our main lifeline appeared every other month. I took the mag to school, placed it between the pages of my geography book and studied every photo, and every word until I knew more about the world of surf than I ever would the paper realities of schoolbooks. Like every 13-year-old gremmie I longed to hang out with the featured surfers, including Lance, Phil, and Butch. To do so, I would have become a great surfer or purchased a 35-millimeter camera. When it became apparent that neither my athletic ability nor my paper route money would allow me access to my heroes, I decided to become a writer. The only thing in the way of my brilliant literary career was the F’s I regularly received in all things English related. Still, I read and reread Surfer, and within a decade I had submitted a story and achieved my first byline. By then I had quit pulling full-page images and center spreads from their staples and fastening them to my bedroom walls. I was a real surfer, living on my own in Hawaii before moving to Encinitas in 1970. Because of the guidance provided by Surfer Magazine, I correctly identified the guy ripping Swami’s as U.S. surfing champion Rusty Miller, the cute blond ripper as Linda Benson and the tall kid as Cheer Critchlow. Through the ’70s, I hand-wrote CROP surf stories and popped in to see if editor Steve.93 Pezman was interested .93 any of them. At in printing first they 4.17 were rejected, but
A T F Our professional Firefighters ~ dedicated and courageous men and women ~ stand ready at a moment’s notice to save lives and protect our homes and businesses. But, in reality, our Firefighters save more than just buildings. They save hearts, memories, and dreams! Firefighters are people who face extraordinary circumstances and act with courage, honor, and self-sacrifice! The staff at Allen Brothers Mortuary San Marcos and Vista Chapels are proud to salute our firefighters.
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1315 S. Santa Fe Ave Vista, CA 92083
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glad that I knew as much Spanish as I do.I can stumble along in what linguists scathingly call “Spanglish,” and have done so many times with patient, helpful Spanish speakers. I have managed to help tourists fill out customs cards, gotten students to bring back library books and told secrets to my husband in front of my children. But more often I am desperately frustrated when I can craft a third of what I want to say and then come up empty on the crucial phrase or tense needed. There was, for instance, the time I flew down to Cabo San Lucas on a whim to meet my husband for the weekend. My words of wisdom here are, talk to your travel agent first. An unplanned jaunt to the tip of Baja left me there without the proper paperwork to get home. I stood in the middle of the Cabo airport, six months pregnant and terrified. I had no idea how long
waterspot
chris ahrens
in time I found success and saw my name in print for the first time. Once Pezman started his own publication, Surfer’s Journal, he was followed by editors Jim Kempton, Paul Holmes and Matt Warshaw. And I followed them, placing my now typed stories smeared with whiteout into their salty hands. Once a year, I attended the Surfer Magazine poll where I ate and drank freely with the best surfers in the world. I was shocked to discover some of them even knew my name. I never knew if I had outgrown Surfer, or if it outgrew me, but by the late ’80s I rarely glanced at the magazine. Surfer and I had not been intimate for decades when I got the news last week that the magazine had folded. I guess that was inevitable since international surf content is currently available free, on tap 24/7. I was sad, but not deeply sad. What made me far sadder was the passing of South African surfer Michael Tomson. I met Tomson in 1977 when I did a profile on him for Surfer Magazine. He was articulate beyond most other saltwater creatures, and he proved himself among the top surfers in the world by tearing into 6- to 8-foot Steamer Lane. Later that year, Tomson moved into a house on Oahu’s North Shore with my brother, David. Soon afterward came the company he founded, Gotcha, and crazy rumors and ads featuring hard-core riders like Martin Potter. Aloha Michael. Aloha Surfer. You have made a lasting impact on us all. I might be stuck there, but I began thinking up Spanish names for my unborn child. Not only did I not know enough Spanish to explain my problem convincingly, I remember even less when I am in panic mode. (That sort of explains most of my test grades, too.) What phrases do I have down cold? Well, there is “¿Como se dice en Espanol…?” which is probably my favorite. If I can’t remember how to say something, there’s a good chance the person I’m talking to can enlighten me. My other standby is “Habla mas despacio, por favor.” If I am to simultaneously translate, or even belatedly translate, it requires them to speak at the pace of a robot low on batteries. I’ll keep at it, though, in my slow and occasional fashion. But the minute someone offers a “Learn Spanish the Luxurious Way” cruise to Madrid, I’m first in line. Jean Gillette is a freelance writer struggling with future tenses. Contact her at jean@coastnewsgroup.com.
OCT. 16, 2020
B7
T he C oast News
‘So close to everything and so far from everything’ hit the road e’louise ondash
T
hirteen years ago, Andrew Quintana and wife Caitlin decided to make Catalina Island their home. They boarded the Catalina Express, the ferry that connects the island with the mainland, and as the boat approached Avalon Harbor, Quintana looked up and saw a robust fire crackling in the hills north and west above the town of 4,000. “We are on the Express with all our suitcases,” Quintana recalls. “The boat slowed and someone said, ‘Look at the ridgetop!’ We saw a wall of flame above the town, which has lots of old wooden buildings. The fire had been coming towards the city slowly for about half a day.” Just when it looked as though Avalon was about to be consumed by fire, “the wind shifted and pushed the fire back up the hill.” Even though it changed direction, the fire continued to burn for 5½ days. It didn’t, however, change the resolve of the Quintanas to stay on the island. “I just fell in love with Catalina,” says Andrew, a 32-year-old native Southern Californian and our guide on the Rumble and Trek tour (https://www.visitcatalina.com /things-todo/eco-tours). The 2½-hour adventure takes visitors up to the second highest spot on the island via a Hummer pow-
LUSARDI
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for the future.” Lusardi Tower and Lusardi Pulmonary Institute are key components of the second and final phase of a master plan that is well underway at Scripps Encinitas. Another phase-two project, a three-story, 68,000-square-foot medical office pavilion located on the northernmost portion of the hospital campus, is currently under construction, with completion expected next year. Phase one of the hospital’s master plan was completed in 2016. It includes the Leichtag Foundation Critical Care Pavilion, which offers an emergency department and a medical-surgical unit. The Lusardi's have a long history of supporting Scripps Encinitas and the entire Scripps Health system. They helped launch Scripps Encinitas’ current fundraising campaign with a $1.1 million gift. Additional donations by the Lusardis helped efforts to upgrade the hospital's operating rooms and acquire two separate pieces of diagnostic technology to detect respi-
RUMBLE AND TREK tour guide Andrew Quintana and the vegetable oil-powered Hummer take visitors on Catalina Island up into the mountains above Avalon. Quintana narrates the historic, geologic and ecologic story of the island, then leads a 2.2-mile hike on the Airport Loop Trail. Photo by Jerry Ondash
VISITORS TO CATALINA Island may run into one of the 100 bison that live in the mountains above Avalon if they take the Rumble and Trek tour. Photo by Jerry Ondash
ered by recycled vegetable oil from local restaurants. The ride is followed by a 2.2-mile hike on the Airport Loop Trail, which yields panoramic views of Avalon, its homes creeping up the steep hillside, and the picture-postcard har-
bor.
ratory issues and bladder cancer. “The Lusardi family has deep roots in San Diego County, and this generous gift is a testament to their legacy of leadership and altruism, which will continue to have a significant impact on our community for generations to come,” said John Engle, corporate senior vice president and chief development officer with Scripps Health. “We couldn’t be more proud for this vital addition to Scripps Encinitas to bear the Lusardi name.” Beyond Scripps Enci-
nitas, Warner and Debbie Lusardi donated to support the Prebys Cardiovascular Institute and the Scripps Whittier Diabetes Institute. Warner Lusardi co-founded Lusardi Construction Co. with his father, Peter, in 1958. Warner and Debbie Lusardi’s volunteer efforts have been recognized with the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Patrons’ Breath of Life Award, and the Distinguished Achievement Award from Circle of Life 100, a group that supports Scripps Encinitas.
The hike also visits the old Soapstone Quarry, and if you’re lucky, you’ll encounter one or more of the 100 bison that inhabit the hills. We also get gentle thrills standing just below
the end of the runway of the Airport in the Sky and watching the planes land a few feet above our heads. “When you are here, it’s hard to believe that that there are 25 million people just 30 miles away,” Quintana says as we stand taking in the Pacific from 1,600 feet. “We are so close to everything and so far from everything.” Catalina Island was on “total lockdown” for about 10 weeks early in the pandemic — no one could come in or out except for emergencies — and this resulted in a 90% unemployment rate. Now that the island has reopened, it’s an attractive destination for Southern Californians now because it’s nearby but feels far away, offers many outdoor
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attractions, maintains a strict mask policy, and focuses on outdoor dining. “Now people are looking for things to do,” Quintana says. “It’s October but it feels like July here. The cruise ships are not coming this year, so we’re really grateful to the people who come to visit.” The Rumble and Trek tour was created in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and began operating mid-September. The open-air Hummer is designed to carry 13 passengers, but this tour takes no more than eight (12 if related or traveling together). All passengers and guides must wear masks, hand sanitizer hangs on the Hummer, and participants hike at least 6 feet apart. Quintana has worked at many jobs since arriving in Avalon, but he’s found his niche with the Catalina Island Company, which owns many of the businesses and attractions. He began working for the company about three years ago and currently
leads the Hummer/hike tours. He narrates throughout the twisty-turny drive from Avalon to the airport and continues during the hike. He tells stories about the weather, topography, geology, environment, the 60 plant, animal and insect species found nowhere else, and what it’s like to live in a town with an area of less than 3 square miles (The entire island is 76 square miles; 88% belongs to the nonprofit Catalina Island Conservancy, which works to preserve the island and its natural resources). “As I was being trained for the tour and the more I went out into the hills, the more I fell in love with the island,” Quintana tells us. “I love sharing the island with other people. (Catalina is a place) where you can get out and step away from the craziness during this pandemic.” Visit www.visitcatalina.com. For more photos and commentary, visit www.facebook.com/ elouise.ondash.
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OCT. 16, 2020
Food &Wine
‘Merlot Month’ honors popular grape taste of wine frank mangio
F
ifteen years ago, an intoxicating wine movie comedy with little fanfare except word of mouth caught fire. It was “Sideways,” about two frustrated sidekicks on a bachelor’s last days spent guzzling wine along the Central Coast of California. For some unknown reason, the movie savaged Merlot in both words and deeds, resulting in a stunning 25% drop in sales that year. In the movie, Miles, the character who hated Merlot, secretly owned a never-opened world-class Merlot bottle, a very expensive Right Bank Bordeaux French legend named Petrus. In a fit of anger and frustration over a lost book publishing deal and a lost love, he gulps down the Petrus with a burger at a McDonalds. At its best, Merlot is a beautiful round and supple grape. It is sometimes characterized as the flesh on Cabernet Sauvignon’s bones. Proof of this might be the fact that most red blends start out with Cab but make sure that the next choice in the blend is Merlot. Some serious top-notch producers make intensely flavored, big, complex Merlots. We will review some
THORN BREWING’S Relay IPA is one of the San Diego brewery’s most popualr core beers. Photo by Ryan Woldt
Core beers are the foundation of a brewery
A THE MERLOT GRAPE is grown on more than 720,000 acres worldwide. It is reported to be the second-leading red varietal after Cabernet Sauvignon. Courtesy photo
below. Merlot’s golden years were the pervasive ’90s. You didn’t buy a bottle of wine for a fine dinner; you bought a Merlot. That “bubble” of production led to copycat bottles by two-bit growers peddling cheap, soft tasting bland Merlots. So “Sideways” was simply the punch-out in a wine balloon that had to burst to be eventually better. And better it got … so much so
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that in 2017, a Duckhorn with Merlot grapes from their Three Palms Vineyard in Napa Valley, was awarded the No. 1 wine in the world by the most respected wine publication in the world, Wine Spectator. Spectator praised the wine as “an easy-going red of generous fruit and texture. Its subtle tannins make it perfect for early drinking that allows it to pair with a wide range of foods.” The Renaissance of Merlot is being celebrated in October in a monthlong recognition of its achievements in the wine world. The rallying cry is #MER-
LOTME, a global movement reaching millions of wine lovers. First, get your hands on some fantastic tasting Merlot. I have a few suggestions. Inspired after a visit to Bordeaux, Dan Duckhorn produced the first vintage of Duckhorn Vineyards Napa Valley Merlot in 1978. A splash of Cabernet Sauvignon in the current 2017 vintage adds notable depth and structure, as well as creative flavors of black cherry, plum and spice. ($56) St. Supery is a Rutherford Merlot in Napa Valley and sports a rich black plum and chocolate tasting sensation for its 2016 vintage. ($50) This was a near perfect growing season as this column has frequently enthused about. St. Supery ages its Merlot for 19 months for added layers of complexity. The wine is sustainably farmed and given optimal hang time. Sorting by cluster, then by berry, TURN TO TASTE OF WINE ON B10
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ll breweries have a core beer, or series of core beers. They’re the yearround offerings, often the beers they spent brew session after session perfecting until they got it just right every single time at the beginning of their brewing journey. They’re the beers that become synonymous with a brand. Think Sierra Nevada Pale Ale or Firestone-Walker 805 or Stone IPA or Modern Times Blazing World. For many craft beer drinkers, a core beer is where we got our start. Unlike seasonal or the continually evolving one-off double hazy IPA, the core beer is always available, always the same, and if a brewery begins distributing to retail, it will be the beer that you’ll find on the shelves of your local grocery, Costco or corner store. In the past, distributing to retail seemed more like a choice about how the brewery wanted to grow, or not grow. Many breweries choose to sell direct to consumer to cut out the middle man or just because being a neighborhood brewery was their focus, but in a year in which the pandemic forced many of us to spend months at home, inspiring us to start ordering groceries instead of buying them, the core beers have been going through a renaissance of appreciation. For the next few weeks I’m going to be adding a sixpack to my grocery order
Cheers! North County
Ryan Woldt and reporting back to you. A conversation with Thorn Brewing’s Taylor Allen inspired me to look to the south, and so this week I snagged some Thorn Relay IPA to drink on the patio. I let the sun warm my outsides while the beer did its job cooling off my insides. How beautiful has the weather been lately? Everything crazy thing in the world seems better with a beer and some sunshine. Relay is a 7.2% ABV, West Coast (American) style IPA. You can check out the Brewers Association definition for the technical description, or just read the following description of this beer! It pours a translucent goldenrod color. The head is thick and lustrous. This can is packed full of a murderer’s row of hops. Citra, Centennial, Simcoe, Amarillo. There are more hops here than you’d find at a bunny rabbit convention. It is the Amarillo that hits my nose first. The pine breaking free from the citrus and grapefruit notes underneath to punch me square in the nostrils. The first drink is just as punchy, workmanlike as it hits the mouth and moves on down the throat without pretense. Even the head disappears quickly, almost courteously, as if to acknowledge its own appearance is an unnecessary frill, but it still wanted to say hello, just briefly, to respect tradition. This beer inspires me to gaze off into the future. To let my brain wander to some of the outdoor spaces I love, or have yet to explore, but can’t get to without a little effort. Joining me in my daydream is a two-dimensional raccoon riding a 19th century bicycle on the front of the can. We’re looking toward those adventures together. Once upon a time, TURN TO CHEERS! ON B10
OCT. 16, 2020
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Food &Wine
The perfect slice of New York-style pizza at Mr. Moto Pizza lick the plate david boylan
I
have to be honest and convey that when I heard there was another pizza joint opening in Encinitas, I questioned the sanity of the proprietors. My initial thoughts were along the lines of, “OK, don’t be so judgmental … dig a little and see what their angle is and maybe, just maybe, there is something different about this one.” Well, I did and there is — Mr. Moto Pizza has one of the best New York City-style slices outside of NYC, and certainly in this area. I can’t claim to be an expert on NYC but am familiar with the general characteristics of a large hand-tossed thin crust, sold in wide slices to go. The crust is usually thick and crisp only along its edge, yet soft, thin, and pliable enough beneath its toppings to be folded in half to eat, which is one of the great pleasures of the NYC-style slice. It evolved in the United States in the early 1900s and is derived from the Neapoli-
BRAND MANAGER Jorge Moreno, left, and Mr. Moto Pizza owner Gibran Fernandez at their new store in Encinitas, one of eight locations around San Diego. Photo by David Boylan
tan-style pizza made in Italy. And for me, there needs to be a certain element of grease involved … enough so that unless caution is taken, you will drip some on your shirt or lap. I’m not eating a slice in any clothing where that would matter. Either plain cheese or pepperoni are the only slice
choices for toppings in my opinion, though don’t hold me to that. My first bite into a Mr. Moto pepperoni slice came just before I started my 101.5 KGB interview with owner Gibran Fernandez (or Mr. Moto, as he is known) and his brand manager, Jorge Moreno.
The slice pictured above was sitting on my gig case and I could not wait and it just looked so beautiful. I gave it a little fold and bit into this slice of NYC pizza perfection. I needed a moment to gather my thoughts, and Gibran and Jorge completely understood.
I’m certain they have seen the same reaction hundreds of times at their eight locations around San Diego. I then lavished praise on their accomplishment throughout the interview that is airing this week. The interview was a blast with Mr. Moto, and while we were talking, I kept glancing up at the menu board and its intriguing items, like the Meatball Hero, Stromboli, Calzone, Wings, Garlic Knots and Stuffed Knots. And that was only one of the boards. The other included Spaghetti and Meatballs, Vodka Sauce Penne, Chicken Pesto Penne and a House and Caesar Salads. Being the meatball freak I am, I had to get the Meatball Hero to go and had every intention on saving it for dinner. Good intentions tend to fly out the window when meatballs and bread are sitting next to me driving home. The Hero was half-devoured by the time I pulled in the driveway and, well, I finished it off a short time later. Yeah, it’s pretty darn good. But this is a pizza joint at its core, offering 10 varieties of large specialty white pies with homemade garlic paste and five more large specialty red pies with
homemade marinara sauce. You can also build your own pie in three sizes and there are several by-the-slice options, including a “slice pie” that lets you combine any eight slices. Oh, I like that option. They keep dessert options simple at Mr. Moto with NY Cheesecake, Tiramisu, Chocolate Cake and Cannoli. There is a quirky vibe at Mr. Moto that adds some fun to the really solid menu offerings. Check out the website for a look at some of their signature videos. Mr. Moto himself stars in a lot of them and he is quite the character. But besides that, he has brought another pizza place to Encinitas, confident enough in what he is doing to generate a buzz and make it work. My hunch after my initial skepticism is that he is well on his way to doing that as it’s become my go-to slice joint and I will be eating my way through their menu soon. Mr. Moto Pizza opened its Encinitas location on Oct. 6 and, besides carryout and delivery options, it has seating on the sidewalk on Coast Highway. The restaurant is located at 615 S Coast Hwy 101 and online at www.mrmotopizza.com.
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ensures a well-balanced Merlot. Up Washington way, a stop at LeEcole No. 41 in Walla Walla is all you need to confirm the quality of Merlot in this district. We tested the 2017 Estate grown Merlot. The winery was a school at one time, and proudly proclaims their Merlot as certified sustainable and salmon safe. The wine delivers structure, color and with awarD great balanced acidity. A beautiwinning ful Indian summer brought RENEE ARY joined Duckhorn in 2003 and, after a decade of attorneys in plenty of sunshine for the learning its style, was named the fourth winemaker in the certiFieD October harvest. ($37) history of the vineyard. Courtesy photo FaMiLy Law Visit MerlotMe.com for sPeciaLists more information. and Winery in Temecula is trees. Go to lorimarwinery. making a bid to become the com for details or call 951caLL 760-480-8400 Wine Bytes entertainment capital of 694-6699. www.Yelman.com • Lorimar Vineyards that wine country with an • October is National array of dates monthly. The live pop music group Those Seafood Month at Chart Guys play Friday, Oct. 23, House along the Cardiff from 6 to 9 p.m. Free admis- coast. Monday through sion, with food and wine for Thursday, celebrate with a three-course sea-to-table purchase. Also, a fun Murder Mys- Prix Fixe menu for $39 each. tery Dinner is on for Thurs- RSVP at 760-436-4044. day, Oct. 29, with showtime Frank Mangio is a at 7 p.m. It’s an experience renowned wine connoisseur that will leave everyone 50% SOLD OUT certified by Wine Spectator. laughing. $50 per person includes admission and din- Reach him at frank@tasteofwineandfood.com. ner with three choices of en-
CHEERS!
CONTINUED FROM B8
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Thorn Brewing was merely a workmanlike brewery in the North Park San Diego neighborhood, but when they looked to the future they saw a gleaming 30 barrel brewhouse that manifested itself in Barrio Logan, beyond that a third tasting room in Mission Hills, beyond that, well … who knows? It depends where all this the hard work takes them. The Relay IPA is crisp, brisk and will be a classic on a long enough timeline. It will feel equally at home post-hike, during a working lunch, or near any sort of lake, stream or river. It has enough oomph to appreciate, but not so much it will blow out your taste buds. It is the epitome of a core beer — drinkable, consistent and appealing in a wide variety of scenarios. As I sit here paddling an imaginary kayak around the Agua Hedionda Lagoon in my mind, I am struck that often when I find a new brewery I get beer FOMO, and start my sampling with the wilder beers, the one-offs, the
fancy stuff I find instead of going for the core products they’ve worked hard to perfect. I’m still doing beer pickups around town so those only-every-so-often brews might make their way into the fridge. But I’m also committing to reacquainting myself with the local cores like the Burgeon Brewing Treevana IPA or Booze Brothers Penny Blonde. They are the foundation everything else coming out of the brewhouse is built on, and I’m looking forward to exploring them. Cheers! Be sure to check out the most recent episode of the Cheers! North County podcast featuring my conversation with Priya Bhat-Patel, Carlsbad Councilwoman and candidate for California State Senate in 2022. Check out the shows homepage to listen or find links to all of your favorite podcast platforms. Don’t forget to follow Cheers! North County on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Got an interesting story about your drinking adventures? Reach out! I want to hear it.
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1. GEOGRAPHY: Which city is known as “The Eternal City”? 2. FOOD & DRINK: What is the name of the bee used in advertisements for Honey Nut Cheerios? 3. LANGUAGE: What does the Latin phrase “ad meliora” mean? 4. MEASUREMENTS: How many inches are in a hand? 5. U.S. STATES: A resident of which state might be called a Buckeye? 6. MOVIES: Who were the three stars of the film “Three Amigos” 7. GAMES: Which “ailment” was added to the Operation board game in 2004? 8. ASTRONOMY: Which two planets in our solar system lack natural moons? 9. MYTHOLOGY: What is a Valkyrie in Norse mythology? 10. TELEVISION: What was the name of the android on “Star Trek: The Next Generation”?
ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Some flashes of Aries ire might erupt as you confront an unusually bewildering situation. But you should be able to keep your temper under control as you work through it. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) That marriage ‘twixt the arts and practicality that Taureans excel at once again highlights your enjoyment of much of the week. However, you need to watch any sudden urge to splurge. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Even with all the plusses apparently outweighing the minuses, you still might want to defer an important decision to make sure you have all the facts you need. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) One or two problems might threaten to derail otherwise smoothly running situations at work or at home. But a few well-placed words should help get things back on track quickly. LEO (July 23 to August 22) This could be a good time for all you Leos and Leonas in the spotlight to open your generous Lion’s hearts and share the glory with those who helped you accomplish so much along the way. VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) You might want to get advice from someone who’s been there and knows these situations better than you do, before investing time or money (or both) in a questionable matter.
TRIVIA TEST ANSWERS
LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) Be careful how you handle a workplace matter that seems out of place in the schedule you’ve prepared. Before you act, one way or another, find out who set it up and why. SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) Your entertainment aspect is strong this week. Besides providing a wonderful break from everyday obligations, sharing fun times brings you closer to those you care for. SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) Having a weekend fun fest? Your friend or relative who’s down in the emotional dumps could perk up if you find a way to include him or her in your plans. CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) If you’re in one of those “the Goat knows best” periods, you might want to ease up and try listening to what others have to say. You could learn something. AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) That new challenge is getting closer, and you should be out there now showing facts and figures to potential allies to help persuade them to rally to your support. Good luck. PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Getting a head start on holiday plans could help free up some time later to spend on other projects. Meanwhile, a colleague has some ideas that you might find worth discussing. BORN THIS WEEK: You are always there for others, and sometimes you need to be reminded that you need to be there for yourself as well. © 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.
1. Rome 2. Buzz 3. Toward better things 4. Four 5. Ohio 6. Steve Martin, Martin Short and Chevy Chase 7. Brain Freeze 8. Mercury and Venus 9. A maiden who chooses who may die in battle, and which of the slain are worthy of a place in Valhalla 10. Data
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2016
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 al-
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 ok, him port of who said on graduated 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. tures is than 1,900 signa-n that it endorse ucation fear that our “I Gaspar’s istration asking the admin A social Abed overvoted to reache edcampaign Republican apart. I system is falling d this fellow back to to bring Romer - placed on studies teacher week and Encini pressed disapp the classro at Rancho adminis tas Mayor not goingworry my kids o dents Buena are om. On and parentstrative leave in ointment exwho is also Kristin Gaspar - not receivi education to get a valuab early March. Vista High School to launch ro told his last day, Rome- Romero. Photo in ng the le , nomina at public The an online was anymo supervisor running for by Hoa Quach party’s schools leaving students he re.” petition move prompted seat currenthe several tion, but touted in support stuwas sorry held by David Whidd key endors nization because “the orgaof Vincent tly she I can’t be is seekinDave Roberts, who Marcos ements has receive with the rest change.” decided to make g re-elec called on of San out the campa d throug of the year. you for do “shameful.” a my choice tion. the move Abed, h— we’re It’s not “(They a polariz who has been “While ign. “This confidence ) no longer have it goes.” , but it’s the way until there’s going to fight I’m disaphis two ing figure during pointed not genuinely is a teacher fight with. nothing left know what in me that that terms In the to cares,” get ty endors to wrote. as mayor I plan to Escondido, I ute speech roughly I’m doing,” Whidd for your Romero, ement, the par“Both be back in proud senior year.” secured said I’m very coveted Mr. Romer of my sons on whose to studen4-minto have were record the of Romer remark emotional ts, an the suppor ment by party endors joyed his o and greatly had Mayor students o also urged on Facebo ed and posteds to fight the Romero vowed t 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 effecto on Petitio “He truly she was “Endo r. lican mayor cares for wrote. a Democ nSite.com, created publican rsing one what he ratic in Re- ing urging quires a over another on balanccity by focusTURN TO ed budget TEACHER — and 2/3 vote thresh re- economic ON A15 s, 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 LEGALS Coast News legals continued from page B5 Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Ex Vivo Automation. Located at: 12545 Swan Canyon Ct., San Diego CA San Diego 92131. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. John Anton Selberg, 12545 Swan Canyon Ct., San Diego CA 92131. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 08/31/2020 S/John Anton Selberg 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24863 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016002 Filed: Sep 25, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. San Diego Web Marketing. Located at: 15190 Segovia Ct., San Diego CA San Diego 92129. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Deborah Mest, 15190 Segovia Ct., San Diego CA 92129. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Deborah Mest 10/09, 10/16,
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
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10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24862
10/30/2020 CN 24860
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Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015580 Filed: Sep 19, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Leslie Legal Group. Located at: 1808 Aston Ave., #235, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Sean F Leslie, 2055 Alta Vista Dr., Vista CA 92084. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 10/08/2010 S/Sean F Leslie 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24861
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016101 Filed: Sep 26, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Big Sis. Located at: 909 San Juan Pl., Oceanside CA San Diego 92058. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Alanna Autumn Martinez, 909 San Juan Pl., Oceanside CA 92058. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 08/17/2020 S/Alanna Autumn Martinez 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN 24859
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015615 Filed: Sep 19, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. SCCRC. Located at: 9680 Flair Dr., El Monte CA Los Angeles 91731. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Southern California Commercial Regional Center LLC, 9680 Flair Dr., El Monte CA 91731. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/04/2010 S/ Justin Huang 10/02, 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24851
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015836 Filed: Sep 22, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Blackwood Electric. Located at: 707 Sherwood Dr., Oceanside CA San Diego 92058. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Travis Christopher Tompkins, 707 Sherwood Dr., Oceanside CA 92058. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Travis Christopher Tompkins 10/09, 10/16, 10/23,
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9016019 Filed: Sep 25, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Azul Stoneworks. Located at: 3698 Via Bernardo, Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Walter JosĂŠ Pereyra, 3698 Via Bernardo, Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 03/11/2015 S/ Walter JosĂŠ Pereyra 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30/2020 CN
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9014739 Filed: Sep 03, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Stageforce. Located at: 1619 S Rancho Santa Fe Rd. #D, San Marcos CA San Diego 92078. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. The Stagency Inc., 1619 S Rancho Santa Fe Rd. #D, 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/Tori Prince 10/02,
OCT. 16, 2020
LEGALS
LEGALS
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10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24845
Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Hoehn Buick GMC Cadillac. Located at: 5550 Paseo del Norte, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: PO Box 789, Carlsbad CA 92018. Registrant Information: 1. Hoehn Buick GMC Cadillac Inc., 5550 Paseo del Norte, Carlsbad CA 92008. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 09/01/2020 S/Susanah Peterson 10/02, 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24835
Information: 1. Edward S Bedrick, 1610 Waterlily Way, San Marcos CA 92078. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Edward S Bedrick 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24823
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015898 Filed: Sep 23, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. San Diego Custom Cleaning; B. SD Custom Cleaning. Located at: 697 Ocean View Ave., Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Courtney Christiana Reeves, 697 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: Not Yet Started S/Courtney Christiana Reeves 10/02, 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24844 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015813 Filed: Sep 22, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Leash and Harness Coffee Company. Located at: 1716 Avenida Segovia, Oceanside CA San Diego 92056. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. John Kevin Wilson, 1716 Avenida Segovia, Oceanside CA 92056; 2. Amanda Breanne Wilson, 1716 Avenida Segovia, Oceanside CA 92056. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 09/01/2020 S/ John Kevin Wilson 10/02, 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24843 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015770 Filed: Sep 19, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Joie Brand Design. Located at: 3857 Pell Pl. #317, San Diego CA San Diego 92130. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Pamela Joy Brown, 3857 Pell Pl. #317, San Diego CA 92130. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Pamela Joy Brown 10/02, 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24842 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9014476 Filed: Aug 29, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Flip Side Salon. Located at: 594 S Coast Hwy, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: 356 Apollo Dr., Vista CA 92084. Registrant Information: 1. Matthew Middleton, 356 Apollo Dr., Vista CA 92084. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Matthew Middleton 10/02, 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24841 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015163 Filed: Sep 12, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Wayne Brown Group. Located at: 2720 Jefferson St., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Jonathan W Bandemer, 2720 Jefferson St., Carlsbad CA 92008. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Jonathan W Bandemer 10/02, 10/09, 10/16, 10/23/2020 CN 24836 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015578 Filed: Sep 19, 2020 with County of San
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015239 Filed: Sep 12, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Faster Drivers Delivery Service; B. Faster Drivers Delivery Service. Located at: 1376 Bonair Rd. #8, Vista CA San Diego 92084. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Mauro Netzahuatl Jimenez, 1376 Bonair Rd. #8, Vista CA 92084; 2. Lisa Marie Gonzalez, 1376 Bonair Rd. #8, Vista CA 92084. This business is conducted by: Married Couple. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 03/01/2020 S/Mauro Netzahuatl Jimenez 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24830 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015446 Filed: Sep 16, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Jaguar Land Rover Carlsbad. Located at: 5334 Paseo del Norte, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: PO Box 789, Carlsbad CA 92018. Registrant Information: 1. Hoehn JLR Inc., 5334 Paseo del Norte, Carlsbad CA 92008. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 01/01/2010 S/ Susanah Peterson 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24829 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015452 Filed: Sep 16, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Cali-Scape Landscape Development. Located at: 1253 Felicita Ln., Escondido CA San Diego 92029. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Gabriel Said Honarvar, 1253 Felicita Ln., Escondido CA 92029. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 07/28/2020 S/Gabriel Said Honarvar 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24828 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015465 Filed: Sep 16, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. That Pickle Place. Located at: 1610 Waterlily Way, San Marcos CA San Diego 92078. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Edward S Bedrick, 1610 Waterlily Way, San Marcos CA 92078. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Edward S Bedrick 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24824 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015464 Filed: Sep 16, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. That Soup Place. Located at: 1610 Waterlily Way, San Marcos CA San Diego 92078. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant
Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015407 Filed: Sep 15, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. NoTimeCards; B. NoTimeCards. com. Located at: 5125 Whitman Way #308, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Elizabeth Neville Coyne, 5125 Whitman Way #308, 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/Elizabeth Neville Coyne 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24822 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015254 Filed: Sep 12, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Paramount Advantage Insurance Solutions. Located at: 2701 Loker Ave. W #290, Carlsbad CA San Diego 92010. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Paramount Insurance Group Inc., 701 Loker Ave. W #290, Carlsbad CA 9210. This business is conducted by: Corporation. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: Not Yet Started S/Mario Caballero 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24821 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015166 Filed: Sep 12, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Animal Scoops. Located at: 246 Countryhaven, Encinitas CA San Diego 92024. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Danny Slama, 246 Countryhaven Rd., Encinitas CA 92024. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 09/01/2012 S/ Danny Slama 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24816 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015310 Filed: Sep 12, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. The Legend Publiser. Located at: 3139 Del Rey Ave., Carlsbad CA San Diego 92009. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. William Branson Bishop, 3139 Del Rey Ave., Carlsbad CA 92009. This business is conducted by: Individual. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 06/01/2020 S/ William Branson Bishop 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24815 Fictitious Business Name Statement #2020-9015124 Filed: Sep 10, 2020 with County of San Diego Recorder/County Clerk. Fictitious Business Name(s): A. Eden Tropics; B. Deep Sound Meditation. Located at: 821 N Emerald Dr., Vista CA San Diego 92083. Mailing Address: Same. Registrant Information: 1. Deoja Creations LLC, 821 N Emerald Dr., Vista CA 92083. This business is conducted by: Limited Liability Company. Registrant First Commenced to Transact Business Under the Above Names(s) as of: 08/17/2020 S/Deep Deoja 09/25, 10/02, 10/09, 10/16/2020 CN 24814
OCT. 16, 2020
B15
T he C oast News
arts CALENDAR
able until Art in the Village 2021 next summer. ART IN ESCONDIDO
In October, the Escondido Arts Partnership, 262 East Grand Ave., Escondido offers a PhotoArts Group's exhibition of photography as seen through the View Finder in the Innerspace Gallery. A group show in Gallery Too with Virginia Cole, Linda Doll and Carol Mansfield. In the artist studios and hall walls are Renee Richetts, Bob Barry, Patrick Brown, Scott Gengelbach, Virginia Cole, Martita Foss, Daniel Hernandez, Bettina Heinz, Robert Rose, and Woody Woodaman. "The Society for Orphaned and Wayward Art" is having a sale of donated artworks in the Expressions Gallery benefiting EAP's art programs.
Know something that’s going on? Send it to calendar@ coastnewsgroup.com
OCT. 16
SAVE OUR STAGES
Belly Up Tavern and the National Independent Venue Association host Save Our Stages Festival, #SOSFEST, a three-day virtual music festival Oct.16 through Oct. 18, with Jason Mraz, hosted By Reggie Watts with Foo Fighters, Brittany Howard, Dave Matthews, Dillon Francis, The Roots, Marshmello, Demi Lovato, Kelsea Ballerini, Miley Cyrus, Monica, Reba McEntire, Sebastián Yatra, Yg and more. #SOSFEST will stream live on NIVA’S OCEANSIDE MUSEUM OF ART presents “Night of the Living Art: An Art After Dark Fashion Extravaganza,” a live stream 6-9 official youtube channel at p.m. Oct. 31. Art After Dark has been reimagined this year as a virtual experience. Courtesy photo VETS’ ART SPOTLIGHTED https://bit.ly/34DYCKR. Through Oct. 26, the Here you will find artwork Off Track Gallery, 937 S. online at 7 p.m. Oct. 28 hostSUBMIT YOUR ART by category (painting, sculp- Coast Highway 101, Suite ed by Poway OnStage. Your Escondido Municipal VIRTUAL COLLAGE CLASS ture, photography, mixed C-103, Encinitas, will presticket gives you access to ART STILL IN VILLAGE Fall Session Youth & the concert for two weeks at You can see the wide media, etc.) and by artist’s ent a very special annual Gallery/ Escondido Arts Partnership is seeking Adult Classes virtually smorgborg.com/e021791d- variety of artwork provided name as well. Artists add show featuring the artwork art for “The Big Little Art through Zoom presented in- ce08-4200-bd67-9a7c448f- by the Art in the Village art- new images to keep their of U.S. military veterans. ists at carlsbad-village.com/ virtual art show fresh. The The gallery is open daily Show,” planned for Nov. clude Intermediate Exper- ca97. events /art-in-the-village. gallery will remain avail- from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 13 to Dec. 4. Art will be imental Collage Mondays received from 11 a.m. to 2 at 6 p.m.; Introduction to CHAMBER MUSIC p.m. Oct. 16 and Oct. 17. For Acrylic Painting, Tuesdays Chamber Music Society more information, visit es- at 10 a.m.; Beginning Wa- of Lincoln Center presents tercolor Wednesdays at 6 condidoarts.org. CMS Front Row courtesy p.m. and “What the Heck is of the city of Carlsbad CulContemporary Art?” ThursART OF WOMEN tural Arts Office from 8 days at 6 p.m. Register at “Four Visions: A Cela.m. Oct. 28 through Nov. 1. ebration of the Year of the https://classes.luxartinsti- For more information, visit tute.org/. Woman” will be on dis| sully4realestate.com https://bit.ly/34AL0Qu. play at the Carlsbad City Library’s William D. Cannon Art Gallery through Dec. 30 at 1775 Dove Lane, MURAL ARTIST ART AFTER DARK Encinitas 101 MainCarlsbad. The Oceanside MuseStreet Art Gallery preswith a Kindred Spirit um of Art presents “Night ents artist Celeste Byers Of The Living Art: An Art through Nov. 30 at 818 S. After Dark Fashion ExtravYOUR Spiritual Realtor... for Life! Coast Highway 101 in EnMAKE SOME TINY ART aganza,” 6 to 9 p.m. Oct. 31. Artists and art enthusi- cinitas. Celeste Byers is a Live Stream, $25. Art After asts of all ages are invited California-based artist spe- Dark has been reimagined to submit artwork in almost cializing in large-scale mu- this year as a virtual expe“Soul on Fire” Columnist any media for inclusion rals. See her work at http:// rience that is equal parts celestebyers.com/. Call me TODAY to arrange a in OMA’s Teeny Tiny Art art, fashion, and fun. For personalized consultation. Mart. Artwork by novices, sponsorship and watch parprofessionals, civic leaders, ty opportunities, contact Local-Experienced-Intuitive Carlsbad Village and local celebrities will Erika D. Williams, (760) DRE Lic. #01434989 Selling North County Since 1976 ‘SAME TIME, NEXT YEAR’ be available for purchase 435-3726. C A L I F O R N I A N AT I V E & 4 T H G E N E R AT I O N R E A L E S TAT E P R O F E S S I O N A L North Coast Repertoat prices accessible for anyone, with a twist—buyers ry Theatre presents its latwill not know the identity est online production, the Local Encinitas Hay House Author and Radio Host of the artist until they pur- romantic comedy, “Same Time, Next Year,” directed chase the artwork. All artwork must measure exactly by David Ellenstein. The 5-inches-by-5-inches wide play will begin streaming (no smaller and no larger), online Oct. 21 through Nov. and no more than 1.5 inches 15. Tickets $34 at northdeep. All submissions must coastrep.org or call (858) be delivered no later than 481-1055. 5 p.m. Nov. 9 to Oceanside Museum Of Art, 704 Pier View Way, Oceanside. All donated artwork will be PHANTASMIC POE FEST put up for sale at the Teeny Just in time for HalTiny Art Mart with 100% loween, Write Out Loud of the proceeds helping to will host its annual, support OMA’s ongoing ed- this-year-virtual, PoeFest ucation initiatives. with filmed performances of works by Edgar Allan Marisa is a renowned spiritual intuitive, channel and Poe and other authors of master reiki instructor with 15 books and counting the Phantasmic, streaming from Oct. 23 to Nov. 1 in JAZZ EVENSONG Through her books, classes, and one-on-one classes, St. Michael’s by-the- partnership with Save Our Marisa will teach and heal your mind body and soul by Sea Episcopal Church, 2775 Heritage Organisation. InWEEKEND TEACHING CLASSES AND SEMINARS introducing you to your higher self / soul / angelic team Carlsbad Blvd., Carlsbad dividual programs are $13 WEDNESDAY NIGHT WORLD-WIDE ONLINE CLASSES each, or all six with a VIP is hosting a “Jazz EvenJoe Moris, Marisa’s dad, is a Christian. ONE-ON-ONE SESSIONS song” program every Sun- Festival Pass for $50 plus Together through Joe’s questions and comments and an exclusive live-streamed day from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Marisa’s channelled responses, have penned the ALL BOOKS AVAILABLE ON KINDLE AND AUDIOBOOK outside on the parish lawn, Opening Night event. Tick“Bible Speaks” series based upon interviews with AND AVAILABLE THROUGH: ets may be purchased at with masks, social distancChrist and the New Testament Authors. Quotes, DiscoverIntuition.com, Amazon.com ing, sign-in required, free https://writeoutloud.ticklessons, and new parables can be found in “Ask Jesus” to the public. On drums is etspice.com/poefest or by Barnes & Noble & Soulscape Encinitas Tom Morey, inventor of the calling (619) 297-8953 Marisa, together with renowned author and publisher, Listen to Marisa at 1:00 PM, Tuesdays on Hay House Radio (through App) boogie board. Keith BishWilliam Gladstone, have penned non-biblical but op on saxophone (played Archived shows available on thoroughly spiritual books called the “Skeptics” series. with the Buddy Rich Band), patreon.com/discoveringintuition and intuitionmedia.vhx.tv These books on numerous subjects will blow your mind. Leonard Thompson on pia- HAVE A LAUGH Comedian Steve Poltz no, and Dene Davidson on Must reads! www.DiscoverIntuition.com presents Quarantine Blues bass.
OCT. 19
ONGOING
LOOKING TO BUY, SELL OR INVEST
IN REAL ESTATE?
OCT. 20
Let's talk about it! 760-208-3382
OCT. 31
List or Buy
OCT. 17
Susan “Sully” Sullivan
OCT. 21
Marisa Moris
DISCOVER INTUITION
OCT. 23
OCT. 18
OCT. 28
B16
T he C oast News
OCT. 16, 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 Oct 31, 2020.
Car Country Drive
Car Country Carlsbad
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.
Car Country Drive
760-438-2200 5500 Paseo Del Norte
** EPA-estimated fuel economy. Actual mileage may vary. Subaru Tribeca, Forester, Impreza & Outback are registered trademarks. All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. Expires 10/31 /2020.
6 Years/72,000 Miles Transferable Bumper-to-Bumper Limited Warranty
251
ar Country Drive
Car Country Drive
2020 Volkswagen Tiguan S FWD Automatic Transmission with Driver’s Assist
ar Country Drive
ar Country Drive
$
per month+tax 39 Month Lease $0 Down Payment
JEEP • CHRYSLER • MITSUBISHI
JEEPCHRYSLER MITS
2020 Volkswagen Jetta S
208
Automatic Transmission
$
per month+tax 39 Month Lease $0 Down Payment
1 at this payment Example: VIN: 3VV1B7AX6LM145274Stock: VL1190, *Closed end lease Lease offer through VW Credit.available through Oct 31 2020 for a new, unused 2020 Tiguan S on approved credit to highly qualified customers by Volkswagen Credit. Monthly lease payment based on MSRP of $26,285 and destination charges less a suggested dealer contribution resulting in a capitalized cost of $22,227 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 $9789. 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. Jetta S: 1 at this payment : VIN: 3VWC57BU4LM078268 Stock: VL1269, *Closed end lease Lease offer through VW Credit.available through Oct 31 2020 for a new, unused 2020 Jetta S on approved credit to highly qualified customers by Volkswagen Credit. Monthly lease payment based on MSRP of $20,885 and destination charges less a suggested dealer contribution resulting in a capitalized cost of $18,037 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 $8112. 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.
VOLKSWAGEN
760-438-2200 5500 Paseo Del Norte Car Country Carlsbad
BobBakerVW.com
All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. Expires 10-18-2020. CoastNews_10_16_20.indd 1
10/12/20 2:04 PM