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NEWS-PRESS EXCLUSIVE
Parklets in limbo
Dems move forward bill to chip away historic water rights By KENNETH SCHRUPP THE CENTER SQUARE CONTRIBUTOR
(The Center Square) — The California Assembly Committee on Water, Parks and Wildlife today passed a bill out of committee that would empower the State Water Board to chip away at historic water rights and significantly reduce rural water allocations. Under SB 389, sponsored by Ben Allen (D-Redondo Beach), the California State Water Resources Control Board and its five appointed members would be able to review historic riparian and appropriative water rights to determine whether or not they are appropriate. Already passed by the California Senate, the bill’s affirmative vote in committee is a strong sign the bill may become law. The main targets of the bill are holders of pre-1914 water rights who secured their water rights before a formal permitting and records process was adopted. By challenging water rights holders to provide exhaustive paper trails proving their rights’ legality and complete adherence to “beneficial use,” the State Water Board would effectively hold riparian and appropriative
Local investigator Craig Case arrested on embezzlement charges
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Parklets such as this one at Restaurant Roy at 7 W. Carrillo St. are in limbo. No one knows what will happen to it and 40 other parklets scattered in Santa Barbara and on Montecito’s Coast Village Road.
Fate uncertain for 41 dining areas not on State Street Editor’s note: This is a continuation of a News-Press series this summer on parklets and State Street. By NEIL HARTSTEIN The parklets on lower State Street will be around for at least another year, thanks to the Santa Barbara City Council. That’s because the council voted June 27 to continue the closure of the downtown promenade beyond Dec. 31 and at the same time allow the parklets to stay there as well as others nearby. The problem is they only account for half the parklets now operating in Santa Barbara. According to staff, there are 82 parklets up and running in the city. Thirty-eight of them are on the promenade (500-1200 blocks) and the 400 and 1300 blocks of State. Another three are on the zero block of West Victoria. The council agreed that they could remain until Dec. 31, 2026, or until the council adopts and enacts into law the new State Street Master Plan, whichever is earlier. But the other 41 are left in limbo, their owners unsure of their fate after the end of the year. Where are they? “They are scattered throughout
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columnist Robert Eringer reported that there were 26 court actions taken against Mr. Case, going back over 40 years since 1978, the first year he got his license as a private investigator. Those included the Santa Barbara Bank & Trust obtaining a default judgment against Mr. Case for $72,195; Everest National Insurance Company vs. Mr. Case, a default judgment of $54, 720.27; and Capitol One Bank U.SA. vs. Mr. Case, a default judgment of $8,435. 27. email: lhibbert@newspress.com
Dems shut down stronger sentencing for trafficking
The fate of parklets on some streets is uncertain, despite the fact that they are just a block from the protected parklets on State Street.
the city; many are in the general downtown area, but also on Milpas, San Andres, Coast Village Road, and the Mesa,” Meghan Salas, the city’s parking programs
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By LIAM HIBBERT NEWS-PRESS CORRESPONDENT
A Santa Barbara area private investigator has been arrested on embezzlement charges. Craig Case, a longtime local private investigator, is facing a number of other legal allegations. Mr. Case was served the arrest warrant Tuesday while at the Santa Barbara County Superior Court for unrelated charges. He is expected to return to court today in Santa Barbara and again on July 31. Last year News-Press
NEWS-PRESS COUNTY EDITOR
water rights holders guilty-untilproven-innocent, with their water, and their livelihoods, on the line at the board’s discretion. “It gives a clear mandate to the State Water Board to start reviewing and determining whether these riparian and appropriative rights are appropriate,” said Nick Dokoozlian, a California Assembly Republican Caucus consultant covering the bill. “Their end goal is to upend the California water rights system to benefit favored political groups through unelected bureaucrats.” Amid significant opposition from a broad coalition ranging from water districts that provide water to big cities, all the way to California farmers, bill author Sen. Ben Allen (D-Redondo Beach) painted the law in a different light, focusing on how this bill is designed to ensure the State Water Board has the data it needs to best manage future droughts. In his official statement on the bill, Sen. Allen said, “SB 389 provides information-gathering tools that allow the State Water Board to align a watershed’s reported demand with the diversions and use authorized under California law, thus more accurately determining water availability for all beneficial uses.”
supervisor, told the News-Press. Some, on side streets connecting State to Chapala, including West Carrillo and West Figueroa, are just a block or two from State but
nevertheless remain in jeopardy. What’s going to happen to these 41 parklets? Will they have to be Please see PARKLETS on A4
(The Center Square) — Despite passing unanimously with bipartisan support in the California Senate, a bill to bring California’s sentencing for trafficking minors in line with other states by making it a “serious felony” failed in the California Assembly Public Safety Committee due to unanimous Democratic abstention. SB 14 would have made trafficking of minors a serious felony that would qualify under California’s three strikes law, which keeps dangerous, serial
criminals off the streets, and make individuals convicted of the crime ineligible for early release. Bill author Sen. Shannon Grove, R-Bakersfield, said, “After passing the Senate with a unanimous, bipartisan vote, I had hoped Democrats on the Assembly Public Safety Committee, led by Assemblyman Reggie Jones-Sawyer, would agree to make sex trafficking of a minor a serious felony. I am profoundly disappointed that committee Democrats couldn’t bring themselves to support the bill ...”
INSIDE
L O T T E RY RESULTS
Classified................. B4 Life...................... B1-2 Obituaries............... A4
Wednesday’s SUPER LOTTO: 5-9-11-35-43 Meganumber: 12
Wednesday’s DAILY 4: 0-4-2-9
Tuesday’s MEGA MILLIONS: 10-17-33-51-64 Meganumber: 5
Wednesday’s FANTASY 5: 1-13-19-32-39
Wednesday’s DAILY DERBY: 03-09-12 Time: 1:048.99
Wednesday’s POWERBALL: 23-35-45-66-67 Meganumber: 20
Sudoku................... B3 Weather................. A4
Wednesday’s DAILY 3: 4-0-4 / Wednesday’s Midday 3-4-0