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calendar - The Coast News
PRSRT STD
U.S. POSTAGE PAID
ENCINITAS, CA 92025
PERMIT NO. 94
THE
COAST
NEWS
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MAKING WAVES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
VOL. 29, N0. 17
APRIL 24, 2015
SAN
MARCOS
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La Costa Estates resident Tracy Teregis spoke out against shortterm rentals in the residential areas of Carlsbad at a council meeting
Tuesday night. Photo by Ellen Wright
The Girling family, son Falcon, parents Frances and Luke, and daughter Josie, in their home organic garden. The soon to open Cyclops Farms
will be an agritourism enterprise. Photo by Promise Yee
Agritourism is taking root in Oceanside
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — City
and businesses efforts are
coming together to launch
agritourism
efforts
in
Oceanside that will provide
tactile farm experiences to
visitors and locals.
Tracey Bohlen, city economic development manager, described agritourism as
“something you can touch,
taste, experience and buy.”
Possibilities range from
taking a worm class to lean
how to make fertilizer, to
chefs pre-ordering vegetables from farmers to grow
for future menu items, and
farm-to-table dinners in
which food is harvested,
cooked and served on site.
Bohlen added the business
possibilities for farmers are
endless.
“The farm-to-table experience is a big movement
right now,” Bohlen said.
“It’s a new way of thinking
about tourism. I think it’s
really going to take off.”
The Economic Development Department is in the
process of drafting a RFP to
hire a consultant to develop
an agritourism strategic
marketing plan.
Once a plan is developed Visit Oceanside will
market agritourism in conjunction with other city promotional efforts.
Oceanside farmer Luke
Girling attended a recent
community meeting with
fellow farmers and city
TURN TO AGRITOURISM ON A15
Coastal Rail plan, fence proposal, panned by residents
By Aaron Burgin
E NC I N I TA S — W h at
started as a meeting to unveil the two alternatives for
a coastal rail trail between
Cardiff and Downtown Encinitas quickly spiraled
into a debate over fencing
that officials said is likely
inevitable along the North
County Transit District's
railroad right of way.
Sponsored by
SANDAG
officials
have settled in on two alternatives for the 1.5-mile
stretch, which would transform either Coast Highway
101 or San Elijo and Vulcan
avenues into pedestrian
and cyclist-friendly thoroughfares.
Officials hope to have
the project ready for federal and state environmental
review by mid-2016.
Skeptics of the plan
grew vocal when Encinitas
City Councilwoman Lisa
Shaffer, told the audience
that the transit district,
which owns the right of
way, plans on erecting a
fence along the stretch of
San Elijo Avenue with or
without the project, which
SANDAG project manager
Chris Carterette and transit district chief planning
officer Dahvia Lynch confirmed. Lynch said the plan for
a fence line independent
of the rail project is a longterm project the district is
exploring but is currently
unfunded and there are no
TURN TO RAIL ON A15
RANCHO
Short-term vacation
rentals
SFNEWS
banned in half of.Carlsbad
By Ellen Wright
CA R L SBA D — Cit y
Council members denied
short-term vacation rentals in more than half the
city Tuesday night, after
hearing robust public comments, largely in favor of
an outright ban.
Currently,
rentals
are not legal in the city
but more than 400 operate using travel sites like
VRBO and Airbnb and the
city collected more than
$330,000 in transient occupant tax on the rentals
last fiscal year.
Short-term vacation
rentals will be allowed in
the coastal zone, which
makes up 37 percent of
the city and extends east
from the coast to roughly
El Camino Real.
The California Coastal Commission has fought
other coastal cities in the
past that tried to ban vacation rentals, which is why
city staff recommended
com
the approval of the coastal
zone.
The commission is
in favor of the rentals because they increase coastal access for visitors and
tourists.
Councilmembers were
given four options, ranging from a citywide allowance of the rentals to permitting them solely in the
coastal zone.
Staff recommended a
citywide approval because
it would be easier to regulate and punish property
owners through permit revocation and daily fines.
“It certainly is a lot
harder to shut down an operator who’s not supposed
to be there. It’s a lot harder
to do that than to bring an
operator into the program
who’s allowed to be there,”
said Assistant City Manager Gary Barberio.
Mayor Pro Tem Keith
TURN TO RENTALS ON A20
A2
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APRIL 24, 2015 A3
T he C oast News Encinitas agricultural ordinance takes shape Leichtag farmer wins
major food writing award
By Aaron Burgin
ENCI N I TA S —A fter
months of debate and discussion, Encinitas unveiled
a draft of its agricultural
ordinance that officials said
they hope strikes a balance
between encouraging agricultural while protecting the
suburban value of neighbors. A city council subcommittee composed of Deputy
Mayor Catherine Blakespear
and Councilman Tony Kranz
discussed the draft rules at
a Tuesday morning meeting
and accepted feedback from
the 30 or so farming enthusiasts and agriculture experts
and officials from the county,
other cities and the Leichtag
Foundation on hand.
Currently, the city's
rules and codes are largely
silent on agriculture, which
has stymied at least one attempt to create the city's
first community garden and
caused a months-long controversy between a venerable
farming operation on Park
Lane and the surrounding
neighbors.
"This is why we are doing it, we get it," Blakespear
said. "It makes sense to do
this so we won't repeat these
problems."
At least one neighbor
involved with the Coral Tree
Farm controversy attended
Tuesday's meeting. He said
the proposed regulations
were an encouraging step toward striking that balance. "What was important to
us neighbors was having a
voice," said Richard Schoepel, who lives on Park Lane
adjacent to Coral Tree Farm.
"Our concern was that the
city was going to allow businesses to pop up in residential neighborhoods, and I
think these rules are a good
step toward not allowing that
to happen."
The ordinance spells
out a number of farming activities that property owners
would be able to do by right,
including:
• Have farms smaller
than an acre
By Aaron Burgin
Encinitas is in the middle of drafting agricultural ordinances. Among them, residents will be allowed to own
up to 25 chickens, as long as they’re 50 feet away from nearby homes. Photo by Ellen Wright
• Host farmers markets
with 15 or fewer vendors at
churches, schools and community centers, • Set up fruit stands of
120 square feet or smaller
and operate them 12 hours a
week
• Host up to six "agriconnection" events a year, including farm-to-table events,
farming tours and the like.
Events that are not directly
tied to agriculture, such as
yoga and art events, would
not be allowed by right. • Own 25 chickens as
long as the coop was 50 feet
away from nearby homes
• Own two goats • Own two beehives The ordinance would
also create a streamlined
permitting process for people who wanted to do more
and larger farming activities
than are guaranteed by right.
The draft calls for the socalled "agricultural permit"
to cost $800, though most in
the audience believed the
cost was too high.
For even larger farming
operations, property owners
would have to go through the
traditional minor-use permitting process, which costs
$1,600 to initiate and takes
anywhere from six months to
a year to complete. Aside from concerns
about the cost of the new
agricultural permit, the
biggest debate at Tuesday's
meeting was over the draft
ordinance's restrictions on
what type of "value-added"
products - such as honey and
jams - could be sold at large
fruit stands. The ordinance as written would restrict stand owners from selling off-site goods
at the stand, which city staff
said was to limit the impacts
of importing goods from surrounding communities, such
as increased vehicle traffic
and noise, on the neighbors.
"The risk is that they
(the fruit stands) could start
growing and could have more
of an impact on the community," Encinitas Planning
Director Jeff Murphy said.
"Trying to strike that balance is what we struggled
with."
Many of the people on
hand said the restriction
would make it financially unfeasible to operate a stand.
They suggested a compromise, such as limiting the
amount of off-site goods to a
certain percentage of what
was sold at the stand.
Other residents raised
questions about the city's
definition of farmer's mar-
kets and the percentage of
non-agricultural
products
sold at the events (some said
the city's 75-percent threshold of agricultural goods was
too high) and the ordinance's
prohibition on farming on
parks and open space (which
city staff said they would revisit to carve out exceptions). One man, however, also
raised questions about the
city's beehive regulations,
which would, for the first
time, recognize and permit
beekeeping in the community. Roger O'Neil, who lives
in Leucadia, said he is allergic to bees and has been
hospitalized due to allergic
reactions to bee stings. He
questioned the city's decision
to allow bee hives. "We're talking about my
public safety for god's sake,"
O'Neil said after the meeting. Kranz, who is a beekeeper, said the city was trying to
strike a balance between the
need to accommodate bees,
which play an integral role
in pollination, and residents’
safety.
Hives must be 15 feet
from homes and 20 feet from
right of way, and a third beehive would trigger even farther setbacks. Police HOT team efforts give city homeless a hand up
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE
—
Oceanside police have initiated a Homeless Outreach
Team (HOT) to connect individuals with resources to
help them get back on their
feet and end the cycle of
homelessness.
HOT team officers present assistance to individuals at transient camps and
respond to police officer referrals and calls from homeless individuals. From there
they work to connect those
who will take help with the
right assistance.
This means driving
them to the DMV to obtain
needed identification to register for services, and then
to a local charity that will
conduct a needs survey and
match them with the best
regional resources.
“They connect these
people with nonprofits and
places they can get some
help,” Councilman Jerry
Kern said. “Some (homeless
individuals) are so disconnected they don’t know what
services are available.”
Police Lt. Karen Laser,
manager of the HOT team,
said some individuals just
need referrals to services;
others need more assistance
due to mental challenges
they face, which may include lapses in taking needed medication.
In Oceanside the majority of homeless individuals
are men ages 18 to 35. Factors such as military service
and age determine qualifications for some assistance
programs.
The HOT team takes
the time to ensure each individual who accepts the
help receives the assistance
they need, even if follow up
takes weeks.
“It is not a enforcement-based team,” Laser
said. “Basically we’re offering assistance to homeless
who would not know the first
steps to get off the street.
For those who are willing to
make a change, that’s what
this team is there for.”
Police efforts respect
and accommodate those in
need. Laser said the department is in the process of acquiring a van to transport
individuals and their goods,
sometimes piled into a shopping cart, to services.
Homelessness is not just
an Oceanside problem. HOT
team efforts are part of the
extended 25 Cities Project.
The original project aims to
end veteran homelessness
in 25 U.S. cities by the end
of 2015, including San Diego.
Expanded efforts have
included North County cities and nonprofit groups in
a collaborative effort to end
veteran and chronic homelessness under the umbrella of Alliance for Regional
Solutions.
The Oceanside Police
Department is the only regional law enforcement
partner involved in the efforts, other than San Diego
Police.
Laser said it is important to understand the
difference between police
services to assist homeless
individuals, and police enforcement efforts to address
vagrants who cause disruptions. The two efforts are
very distinct.
Police have made efforts to educate downtown
merchants on accurate
terms to describe individuals when they call in, so the
correct help can be given.
Tracey Bohlen, city economic development manager, said there has been a
spike in vagrant panhandlers in the downtown area
in the past several months,
that some have mislabeled
as homeless. Bohlen said
merchants have complained
about aggressive individuals who loiter, refuse to
move on and are confrontational. Bohlen added police
have adopted a no-tolerance
policy and are ticketing violators.
Additionally
police
have reached out to charity groups to educate them
on regional efforts to help
homeless and enforcement
efforts to deal with vagrants. This ensures services help the homeless improve their lives and don’t
perpetuate vagrants gathering and causing residents
and tourists to feel uncomfortable.
The Leichtag Foundation’s “Farmer D” has won
a major food-writing award.
Daron Joffe, the foundation’s director of agricultural innovation and development, won an award from
the International Association of Culinary Professionals - one of world’s two major food-writing awards - for
his book “Citizen Farmers:
The Biodynamic Way to
Grow Healthy Food, Build
Thriving Communities,and
Give Back to the Earth.”
“I am honored and humbled by the IACP award,”
Joffe said in a news release.
“Everyone can be a farmer
and make a contribution to
a better and more sustainable world.
This book was written
to empower people to find
their soul in their food and
share it with their community.”
In the book, Joffe
writes that the “citizen
farmer” movement is about
“taking actions that foster
a healthier, more sustainable food system and passing these values to the next
generation.”
Joffe has helped to
spearhead Leichtag’s development of the former
Ecke Ranch property into
an educational community farm inspired by Jewish
agricultural traditions. One
of the farm’s goals is to improve the local food system,
according to a news release
from the Foundation.
He has also been actively involved in the discussions of the city’s urban
agriculture
ordinance,
which seeks to make the
regulatory climate in Encinitas more hospitable to
farming and agriculture.
Joffe will be speaking
and signing books on May
17 at Eco-Fest at 450 Quail
Gardens Dr.
Carlsbad crime down 17 percent
By Ellen Wright
CA R L SBA D —T he
Carlsbad FBI Index crime
rate dropped 17 percent
from 2013 to 2014, which is
a countywide trend according to a report released by
the San Diego Association
of Governments, or SANDAG.
SANDAG released the
results of a study looking at
the past 35 years of crime
and noted the crime rate
per capita is the lowest it’s
been since 1980.
“These regional statistics show San Diego County
has never been a safer place
to live than it is today,” said
Dr. Cynthia Burke, SANDAG Criminal Justice Research Director.
The overall crime rate
has dropped per capita 16
percent in the county from
2013 to 2014, from 25.82
crimes per 1,000 people
to 21.8 crimes per 1,000
people, with violent crime
down six percent.
Carlsbad’s crime rate is
lower than the county’s and
decreased 17 percent from
2013 from 21 crimes per
1,000 people to 17.5 crimes
per 1,000 people in 2014.
“The City of Carlsbad’s
crime rate generally runs
parallel to what is occurring countywide and even
nationally, just at a lower
level,” said Police Department Crime Analyst Cindy Anderson. “Our overall
crime rate decreased in
2014 including our violent
crime rate that has conTURN TO CRIME ON A15
A4
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
Opinion&Editorial
Views expressed in Opinion & Editorial do not
necessarily reflect the views of The Coast News
Community Commentary
It’s all about priorities
By Mark Muir
Court frustrating the voters’
will over ‘Jessica’s Law’
California Focus
By Thomas D. Elias
It was no surprise when
Proposition 83, the socalled Jessica’s Law, passed
in 2006 with better than a
2-1 majority. The issue, as
stated in the ballot summary, was where convicted sex
offenders should be allowed
to live, no matter how long
ago their offenses. The plain
wish of the vast majority of
voters is that these people
become pariahs for life, unable to live anywhere near
any potential victims.
Nobody likes sexual predators, especially
violent ones, nor should
they. But lawyers for some
of them argue that once
they’ve served their time
and once corrections authorities rule they’ve been
rehabilitated as well as
possible, they’ve got to live
somewhere. And the reality
is that Proposition 83 allows
them almost noplace to live
in any city or town.
That’s what voters
wanted, of course. No one
wants a predator living
nearby, and many parents
have felt more comfortable
since Proposition 83 passed.
As written, this law
prohibits all registered sex
offenders from residing
within 2,000 feet of any
school or park. The law also
mandates far longer prison
terms than before and allows the state Department
of Mental Health to keep
offenders in custody indefinitely after their prison
terms are up, if psychiatrists determine they’re
still dangerous.
After release, the measure puts tracking devices
on all of them for life.
No one is seriously
challenging many of these
provisions, which expand
on the severe restrictions
previously placed on violent
rapists and child molesters.
The challenges have come
to the residential limits.
On its surface, this
proposition was a no-brainer, a gut reaction against a
few crimes committed by
paroled offenders who were
not being thoroughly monitored.
Pre-existing rules even
contained a tougher residential restriction than the
initiative’s 2,000-foot limit
for some offenders, not allowing predators judged to
be high risks to live within 2,640 feet of parks and
schools.
But by voting as they
did, Californians said they
don’t fully trust the judgment of mental health professionals; they said no one
can ever be sure a onetime
offender might not again
act out an impulse.
Previous law took essentially the same point of
view, having long required
released sex offenders to
register with authorities
even decades after their
crimes.
The legal problem
comes in restricting where
long-ago offenders can live,
even after they are judged
no longer a serious risk to
anyone. This spring, the
state Supreme Court in a
ruling on a San Diego case,
written by conservative retired justice Marvin Baxter,
said the restrictions are too
tough.
Those rules raised the
rate of homelessness among
the state’s 8,000-plus registered sex offenders by a
factor of 24, also hindering
their access to medical care
and drug and alcohol dependency programs.
While the beatdown of
Proposition 83 residency
rules applied at first only
to San Diego County, it has
already been made general
by a state order lifting the
distance restriction on offenders whose crimes didn’t
involve children.
The state high court’s
decision was presaged
years earlier by a federal
judge in San Francisco, who
said the day after the initiative passed that there was
“a substantial likelihood”
the law is unconstitutional,
changing conditions of parole for persons convicted
and released long before it
passed.
That ruling came in a
case where a former offender, identified only as John
Doe, claimed Jessica’s Law
would force him to leave a
community where he lived
peacefully for more than 20
years.
That’s just what Republican legislator Susan Runner, from the high desert
region of Los Angeles County, wanted to do when she
sponsored Proposition 83
and it’s what voters wanted,
too.
They simply don’t trust
prior offenders to remain
impulse-resistant forever,
and so they want even longago sex offenders with solid
records since their release
far from any proximity to
children.
The last time voters
felt as strongly about an
initiative was in the mid1990s, when a huge majority passed Proposition
187 in an effort to cut off
health, education and all
other public services to illegal immigrants. A federal
judge struck down most of
that one quickly.
No one seriously expects the surveillance and
sentencing aspects of Proposition 83 to suffer a similar
fate.
But voters can be excused if they feel frustrated
by a court waiting almost
nine years to strike down a
much of a law they passed,
one that provided peace of
mind to many.
Email Thomas Elias at
[email protected]. For
more Elias columns, visit
californiafocus.net.
The Encinitas City
Council has begun one of
our most important annual
tasks, drafting the city’s
annual budget.
The mayor and I both
voted against increasing
taxes because we believe
that, as with your budget
at home, our city must live
within its means and exercise fiscal restraints. Just
like at home, there are always more wants than dollars available.
As a city, we want to
be sure to fund core services our citizen’s care
about, along with various
capital improvements and
special projects identified
in advance. The next step
in the planning process is
connecting the prioritized
spending plan to the annual budget.
Done correctly, the
budget will meet community expectations and
needs while creating longterm financial health for
the city. Ideally, the budget should reflect the city’s
priorities.
Ultimately,
municipal budgeting is a
big-picture task that ironically requires attention
to small details and also
must take into account the
short and long-term needs
of the city with a wide vision for anticipated issues
and projects.
Our city has benefited
from a historically thorough budgeting process,
which requires our staff to
focus and identify on the
needed resources to meet
our stated goals. Once
that process is complete,
each department has an
objective means to determine the importance of a
project and how it fits into
the overall mission.
The city has identified
394 million dollars in unfunded projects. Three of
which represents 322 million alone (drainage and
two railroad underground
projects). These big projects will only come to fruition with assistance from
Federal Grants.
The city has determined its financial capacity for Capital Improvement Projects (CIP) for
the next 6 years to be 41
million. Staff proposed
a CIP list that identified
high priority projects. If
the council agrees with
this list, that will leave an
unassigned fund balance
available for new capital
projects at $500,000 for
the next 6 years, which
many requests and recommendations for expenditures on programs or projects throughout the year.
Standing alone, many of
these projects could be described as “no brainers.”
Sure, we might be able to
afford one or many of them
— but we certainly can’t
afford all of them. That’s
why it’s so critical that
each project go though a
thoughtful budgetary review process.
Our city leaders, staff,
and community have invested a great deal of time
and energy into a strategic
planning process that identifies short and long-term
As a city, we want to be
sure to fund core services
our citizen’s care about
is not much, unless something is removed from the
CIP list and reallocated to
a new project.
The $19.6 million dollar debt for the recently
purchased Pacific property
View/Live Museum (property only) has challenged
the council in determining
or prioritizing the remaining project needs. Certainly, a museum can bring
plenty of positive benefits,
but we have to weigh it’s
additional cost against
other priority spending
needs for our city, such as
improved streets, city facilities, sand for beaches,
open space, trails, public
safety, wayside horns, stabilization of our beaches,
safe routes to schools, etc.
Our city receives
opportunities and challenges. We shouldn’t allow
that effort to go to waste
by failing to consider the
totality of the projects involved.
The best and more valued projects will surface to
the top.
These choices should
be based on a set of guiding criteria, such as: legal
mandate, risk mitigation,
effects on public health
and safety, improvements
to efficiency of core services, and most importantly — a broad public benefit.
Please participate by
letting the council know
what is important to YOU!
Mark Muir is an Encinitas
City Council member.
The Coast News
P.O. Box 232550, Encinitas, CA 92023-2550 • 760-436-9737
www.thecoastnews.com • Fax: 760-943-0850
MAKING WAVES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Jim Kydd
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APRIL 24, 2015 T he C oast News Oceanside Earth Festival drew a crowd of over 5,000 April 19. The festival included live music, eco-friendly
home and business tips, and vintage and repurposed retail. Photos by Promise Yee
Oceanside Earth Fest hailed
as biggest in North County
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — The
seventh annual Oceanside Earth Festival filled
four downtown blocks with
eco-friendly home and business tips, interactive kids
activities, environmental
nonprofits and vintage and
repurposed retail April 19.
The message shared
was reduce, reuse, recycle
and rethink.
“It’s a celebration of
our region’s efforts to promote sustainability and protect our waterways,” Colleen Foster, city solid waste
and recycling management
analyst, said. “We’re encouraging families, and
people in our community
and neighboring communities, to basically practice
the four Rs.”
In the kids eco-zone
Lincoln Middle School student Andres Garza shared
schoolwide efforts to put
waste in the right place,
determining
whether
it’s a general recyclable,
cash-earning CRV recyclable or trash.
Plans are to start a
school compost bin to further divert waste from going into landfills.
The Ecology Center
of San Juan Capistrano
and the Eco-Rooted organization also had hands-on
learning and creating centers for the 5,000-plus who
attended the festival.
Kids had an opportunity to decide how to divide
a bucket of water for daily
uses, and make bracelets
and crowns with repurposed materials.
For the second year the
vintage market area was
part of the Earth Festival.
Vendors offered a variety
of unique vintage and upcycled goods for sale.
“It’s bringing a new life
to something old,” Foster
said.
Reducing waste is everyone’s concern.
California cities are
mandated to reduce waste
that goes into landfills by
75 percent by 2020. Some
cities have set a further
3 Times More
Likely To Have A Stroke
Times More Likely
4To Have
A Heart Attack
6 Times More Likely
To Be In A Fatal Car Crash
Andres Garza, Lincoln Middle School student, explains efforts to reduce school trash that goes into the landfill. A trash count found the
school throws away 11,000 bags of trash in 180 days.
Liam Kennington, age 5 of
Oceanside, writes an Earth-friendly pledge. The kids eco-zone offered hands on learning activities.
goal to reduce waste by 90
percent by 2040.
Oceanside adopted a
Zero Waste Plan in 2012,
which has helped the city
move toward its reduction
goals.
“In 2008 to 2010, we
were generally around a
50 to 58 percent recycling
rate,” Foster said. “And
then once we passed the
Zero Waste Plan and our
community got engaged
through
Earth
month,
Green Oceanside and our
Road to Zero Waste program, we’ve taken our
recycling rate to over 70
percent, one of the highest
recycling rates in California.”
Foster said home and
business efforts add up and
make a difference.
Other California cities that divert 70 percent
or more of waste, and are
reaching for 90 percent diversion, are San Diego, San
Francisco and Los Angeles.
A5
A6
T he C oast News Sheriff doesn’t
support minidepartment
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR – Plans to
create a small police department that would augment current law enforcement services were shot
down by the Sheriff’s Department, Mayor Al Corti
reported at the April 20
meeting.
“The sheriff feels that
that’s not something that
they could work with and
pretty much shut the door
on that as a workable option,” he said.
About four years ago
a finance subcommittee
was formed to find ways
to reduce the cost of law
enforcement, which has
been provided by the San
Diego County Sheriff’s Department since Del Mar
became a city in 1959.
The current annual
contract costs approximately $1.8 million and is
expected to increase about
$100,000 each year, Jim
Benedict, a subcommittee
member, said.
As the panel worked to
cut law enforcement costs,
they discovered some dissatisfaction with existing
services and response
times for low priority calls.
One option the city
considered a few years ago
was creating its own police
department but the cost –
an additional $250,000 per
year plus $1 million for the
startup -- was prohibitive.
According
to
the
subcommittee, a small
department would cost
approximately
$575,000
annually,
plus
about
$100,000 in start-up costs,
and it could save the city
more than $300,000 a year.
Creating a minidepartment, which is required
to allow for enforcement,
could increase the visibility of officers and improve
response times.
It would include a required chief, one to two
certified peace officers
and one or two community
service officers.
Earlier this year council members agreed to pursue that idea, but only if
the Sheriff’s Department
was willing to work under
such an arrangement.
Corti and Councilman
Terry Sinnott recently met
with members of the Sheriff’s Department to discuss
the alternative.
“The option of the
minidepartment did not go
well with the Sheriff’s Department from their first
analysis,” Corti said.
Their decision was
based on operational and
safety concerns, he added.
“We asked them to put
those reasons in writing so
that we can actually digest
it,” Corti said.
“I think the key issue
is we were asking them to
dispatch our people and
that was something they
didn’t want to do,” Sinnott
said, adding that the sheriff “was very agreeable to
working on expanding”
the existing contract.
“They’re very open to
trying to work to improve
service,” he said. “The
question is what it’s going
TURN TO SHERIFF ON A15
APRIL 24, 2015
View obstruction an issue with proposed development
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — Discussion about the coastal
stringline setback, which
tells developers how far
they can build out homes
toward the ocean, caused
frustration for residents,
developers and planning
commissioners April 20.
KCS Properties LCC
proposed building two contemporary
single-family
homes on two side-by-side
beachfront lots, with the
contingency that balconies
extend 2 to 3 feet beyond
the city’s revised stringline. Chris Smither, member of KCS Properties LCC,
said the balconies would be
staggered and constructed
chiefly of glass.
Half a dozen neighbors
spoke against the project
on 1631 South Pacific Street
saying balconies would
block beloved views of the
pier and obstruct panoramic views of the coastline.
Many of the speakers
stated they have owned adjacent homes for 30 or more
The best part
of my house is
the beautiful
views of the
lights of the pier
at night and
the sunset.”
Steve Parker
Neighbor
years.
“The best part of my
house is the beautiful views
of the lights of the pier
at night and the sunset,”
neighbor Steve Parker said.
“The building would extend out past my deck 8 to10
feet. Even if I leaned over
my deck I still wouldn’t be
able to see the pier.”
City Principal Planner
Amy Fousekis confirmed
the project would impact
neighbors’ views.
“It will impact views
of older homes that have
not maximized stringline,”
Fousekis, said.
Initially there were
questions by commissioners on the validity of the
revised stringline that has
not yet been adopted by the
Coastal Commission.
Fousekis said the revised stringline was established after the previous
standard, which was determined by an aerial photograph of the coastline, was
repeatedly challenged. The
old stringline was much less
precise and contained varying widths of 3 to 4 feet on
where it was said to be located.
The revised stringline
is determined by a combination of a formal survey and
points of reference from
earlier approved projects.
mined 18 months ago. City
staff is in the process of
preparing the revision for
Coastal Commission approval by the end of summer.
KCS Properties began
the development process for
the project six months prior
to the revision, and adjusted the inhabitable building
space to the new stringline
that lopped three and a half
feet off the maximum build
out of the site.
“We’re not trying to
push anything past the limit,” Smither said.
Even with the revised
stringline accepted as the
standard, numerous complaints from neighbors, and
balconies that extend beyond the stringline caused
the commission not to approve the project.
Commissioner Dennis
Martinek proposed directing city staff to consider the
Fousekis added all project’s fit within the comrecent city projects have munity, in order to address
been judged by the revised
TURN TO OBSTRUCTION ON A15
stringline that was deter-
Nominate a ‘Youth of the Year’
ENCINITAS — The city
of Encinitas Youth Commission wants nominees for its
2015 “Youth of the Year
Award” from the public.
Anyone may nominate
an individual by completing a nomination form and
returning it to the City of
Encinitas, Parks and Recreation Department, 505
South Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024 between
April 1, 2015 and April
28, 2015, or e-mailing it
to [email protected].
Nomination forms, eligibility guidelines and additional
details may be found on the
Youth Commission page,
found under Public Meetings at EncinitasCA.gov.
Two youth will be awarded: one youth currently at the
middle school level (grades
seven and eight) and one
youth currently at the high
school level (grades nine to
12.) The city Encinitas
Youth Commission presents
a “Youth of the Year” award
to recognize those youth
who go above and beyond
in serving their community
either through their leadership abilities and/or their
commitment to community
service in Encinitas. Leadership can be de-
Parents discuss cyber-safety
DEL MAR — The Del
Mar Foundation invites the
community to a free evening
with a panel of experts to explore and discuss “Parenting
in a World of Technology.”
The panel discussion
will be from 6 to 7:30 p.m.
May 5 at the Del Mar Hills
Academy PAC, 14085 Mango Drive. There is no cost,
but registration is required
at delmarhillspta.org. Child
care will also be available.
Using a panel format,
the evening’s discussion
will cover the significance
of digital footprints. It will
also cover the subjects of
cyber security and safety,
social media and behaviors,
and support and resources in navigating children's
choices.
The mission of the Del
Mar Foundation is to promote civic pride and cohesiveness, acquire and preserve open space, improve
beaches and parklands,
raise and grant funds, and
sponsor diverse cultural
programs and community
events in Del Mar.
fined as those individuals
who consistently facilitate
a team vision and help
guide others towards success. Community service is
work that helps better the
community through the
value and impact of those
served. Final awards will
be based on dedication,
commitment beyond what
may be required by school,
and demonstrated impact of
those served.
Award recipients will
be honored at a city council
meeting and awarded a perpetual plaque that will be
displayed at the Encinitas
Civic Center. Recognized work by
youth is based on their personal merits and contributions and is not intended to
be limited to their school
involvement. All nominations are
reserved for youth who are
city of Encinitas residents.
Youth will be recognized
and awarded for service accomplished within the calendar year previous to the
nomination period. For more information,
contact Encinitas Recreation Supervisor Nick Buck,
at (760) 633-2760 or via
e-mail at [email protected].
New dog park sets
maintenance schedule
ENCINITAS — The city
of Encinitas made public its
maintenance schedule for
the Maggie Houlihan Memorial Dog Park, which is
part of the recently-opened
Encinitas Community Park
at 425 Santa Fe Drive.
The
maintenance
schedule was created to
ensure that the dog park
remains in good condition,
and it took effect March 12.
The dog park will be closed
every Thursday from 1 to 3
p.m. for cleaning, turf maintenance and odor control
treatments. The dog park
will also be closed April 27
through May 21 for turf renovations and grounds maintenance. If needed, the dog
park may be closed Sept. 8
through Sept. 20 for additional turf renovations and
grounds maintenance.
APRIL 24, 2015 A7
T he C oast News RSF Garden Club hosts morning soiree
By Christina Macone-Greene
RANCHO
SANTA
FE — The Rancho Santa
Fe Garden club is home to
those who appreciate horticulture, its beauty and
learning more about the
symbiotic relationship between plants and current
drought conditions.
On April 15, Coffee
in the Garden, a morning
event hosted by the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club,
invited members and prospective members to join
together in an informal way
to visit a member’s garden.
The Wasserman Family
opened the doors to their
Rancho Santa Fe residence
for a relaxing morning and
tour.
“In a humble way, we’re
proud of our garden,” said
Fred Wasserman, co-president of the RSF Garden
Club. “We’ve always been
interested
in
growing
things from oranges in the
San Joaquin Valley, and up
until a few years ago, we
grew grapes and had a winery up in Sonoma.”
When the guests arrived, they were directed
outside to a lovely backdrop
of drought-tolerant landscape and an attractive olive tree grove. Wasserman
championed the tour and
Co-President of the RSF Garden Club Fred Wasserman hosted the Coffee in the Garden alongside his wife.
Photo by Christina Macone-Greene
talked about their choices
in landscape and how to
nurture it.
“Gardening is an evolution,” he said, adding that
they would like to expand
his wife’s rose garden and
his vegetable garden in the
near future.
For Wasserman, planting is combined with pas-
sion. And when things
bloom, with it comes a sense
of pride.
While people enjoyed
the tour, Wasserman wanted to highlight the types of
plants and trees that were
drought-tolerant and disease resistant.
A handful of these included pomegranate trees,
Encinitas Street Fair this weekend
By Aaron Burgin
ENCINITAS—Once a
year for the past 32 years,
Coast Highway 101 gets
shut down in Downtown
Encinitas and the street becomes one big block party,
filled with fun for people of
all ages. This year, Encinitas
101 Main Street Association teams up with Tri-City
Medical Center to host the
32nd annual Street Fair,
which will again transform
downtown's main drag into
a showcase for more than
450 vendors, brewers and
other activities. Some of the new features of this year's street
450 vendors,
brewers and
other activities
fair include free bike test
rides, courtesy of Electra
Bike, and an expanded beer
garden on Saturday, open
two hours longer than the
usual 5 p.m. close. Cyclists will be able to
test out the company's latest bicycles from the company's J Street booth down
to Cardiff and back. In addition, the street
fair will include four stages with bands performing
live music, a Kids Zone at
H Street filled with interactive booths and activities
for kids, including a bounce
house and inflatable obstacle course; and a Dog
Zone for the canines on I
Street, which will include
pet-friendly exhibitors and
free activities. Encinitas Fire Department kicks off the event
with its annual Pancake
Breakfast from 7 a.m. to 11
a.m. in the 7-Eleven parking lot on the corner of
Highway 101 and D Street. For more information,
including the entertainment lineup, visit www.encinitas101.com
melaleuca, rosemary, bougainvillea and lantanas.
“Lantanas are easy to
grow, but a lot of landscapers don’t necessarily like
them, they’re an old-fashioned plant,” he said. “And
roses are very easy to grow
and they’re not heavy water users. You have to feed
them a fair amount, but
they grow roses in Phoenix,
Arizona — the hottest part
of the country.”
A drip system works
perfectly fine for roses,
Wasserman said. Today,
gardens in California need
to be efficient in terms of
watering.
While everyone enjoyed the one-hour tour,
Wasserman said he was
fond of sharing the information about their plants and
how he and his wife, Pam,
selected them.
They worked closely
with their landscaper.
“We picked every
plant that we put in and we
had all the descriptions of
them,” he said, adding that
it was fun for them to do.
For those who want to
redesign their landscaping,
Wasserman suggests researching drought-tolerant
plants that are easy to grow.
Also on this list are succulents.
Wasserman wants people to know that succulents
don’t need much water and
they can be very pretty. He
said he has seen some beautiful succulent gardens.
Wasserman admits having a vegetable garden is incredibly fun. And for families with younger children,
he said, planting a small
Pet of the Week
Sydney is the pet of
the week at your Rancho Coastal Humane Society. He’s a 6-year-old,
16-pound, Domestic Long
Haired cat.
Sydney’s
previous
owner had more animals
than he could care for, so
he surrendered Sydney to
Rancho Coastal Humane
Society. This is a cat that
doesn’t ask for much. Just
feed him and brush him
and let him sit on your lap,
purring. The $100 adoption fee includes medical
exam, up-to-date vaccinations, neuter, and microchip. To adopt or sponsor
a pet until its new family
takes it home, call (760)
753-6413, log on to SDpets.
org or visit Rancho Coastal
Humane Society at 389 Requeza St., Encinitas. Kennels and cattery are open
Wednesday through Monday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
City braces for 20 percent state mandated water cutbacks
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE – Oceanside
is making plans to cutback on
city water use by an expected 20
percent mandate. Ordered water cutbacks are scheduled to be
adopted by the State Water Resource Control Board in May in
response to California’s level II
drought.
Jason Dafforn, city interim
water utilities director, shared
increased measures the city will
take to reduce water use at the
City Council meeting April 22.
Added water conservation
measures include working with
top water users, policing home
and business irrigation runoff,
and keeping the Civic Center
fountain shut off.
Top water users the city will
help to use less water include
golf courses, homeowner associations, and school districts. Landscaping tips, turf removal, and
water conservation programs
and rebates will be shared with
high water users.
“We’ll help any way we can,”
Dafforn said.
The city will also evaluate
landscaping and watering at city
parks and find where reductions
can be made.
Another measure that will be
put in place is imposing fines for
excess irrigation runoff. Fines
will start at $100 for the second
warning and climb to $1,000 by
the fifth warning. Dafforn said
homeowners and businesses usually comply following the first
fine. Many make repairs, adjust
irrigation timing, and stop runoffs after the initial warning.
Additionally the Civic Center fountain, which just underwent repairs, will not be refilled until drought conditions
improve. Dafforn said keeping
the fountain off would serve as a
good example of water conservation.
“Once we’re out of the
drought we’ll put it back on
line,” Dafforn said.
The fountain has had a chain
link construction fence around
it during repairs that began in
December 2014. Once repairs
are completed a decorative fence
will be installed to protect the
fountain’s approximate $350,000
facelift, that includes new tiles,
electrical, and plaster work.
Further measures may include increasing water rates 20
to 30 percent. Dafforn said city
staff is waiting on the final word
from the State Water Resource
Control Board before going forward with rate increases.
The state water board is
scheduled to adopt mandates the
first week in May that will go
into effect in June.
Mandated city cutbacks will
be based on the city’s baseline
water use in 2013.
Oceanside and other cities
have asked the board to consider additional factors such as how
much precipitation the area re-
ceives, which effects irrigation,
and previous water conservation
measures.
Oceanside has already cut
back its water use by 27 percent
since enacting conservation efforts in 1990, and 17 percent in
the past seven years.
Dafforn said additional cutbacks will be challenging, but
the city will take measures to
reduce its water use during the
drought with or without a mandate.
garden can be wonderful.
Coffee in the Garden
is best described as both a
relaxing and fun event in
which up to 30 guests participate.
While everyone can
take in the surrounding
beauty, there is also an educational component to it.
To learn more about the
next Coffee in the Garden
event, email gardenclub.
[email protected] or call
(858) 756-1554. More information can also be found at
www.rsfgardenclub.org.
A8
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
Recognizing 4 of our
Top Producing Agents
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858-699-0939
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858.699.0939
[email protected]
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call/text at 760-402-4329.
www.realtysteele.com • 760.753.2222
APRIL 24, 2015 A9
T he C oast News Applicant field for
Encinitas City Manager
down to seven
By Aaron Burgin
A meet-and-greet barbecue that will allow residents to interact with the recently hired architectural team and provide input on designs for the
new City Hall will be held May 4 from 5 to 7 p.m. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
Council OKs new City Hall schedule
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR — With an
architectural firm and environmental consultants on
board, physical signs of a
project to replace City Hall
are visible on the site at
1050 Camino del Mar.
And at the April 20
meeting council members
approved a revised schedule that includes an opportunity for residents to share
with the design team their
ideas about what the new
facility should look like.
On April 6 council
members approved agreements with The Miller Hull
Partnership LLC and RECON.
Since then representatives from both firms and
the city have been working
to “mesh” schedules, Planning Director Kathy Garcia
said.
A meet-and-greet barbecue with the architects
will take place from 5 to 7
p.m. on May 4 in the City
Hall parking lot.
Garcia described the
event as a “festival of sorts”
with stations for community interaction where people
can view other Miller Hull
projects, get to know the
design team and provide
input.
The scheduled council
meeting will begin at 7:30
p.m., following the event
A June 1 open house
will be held to discuss ini-
tial design options for a
concept plan and elicit
feedback.
A preferred concept is
slated to be presented to
council for approval June
15.
The draft environmental impact report should be
available by Sept. 7.
“This is substantially
earlier than I had originally estimated before they
(the architects) were on
board, which is wonderful,”
Garcia said.
A
Design
Review
Board hearing is scheduled
for Nov. 18. City Council is
expected to hold an EIR
certification hearing Dec.
7.
“This allows us to
maintain a January demolition date,” Garcia said.
Meanwhile, the City
Hall property has been
surveyed and geotechnical
drilling is just getting underway.
A request for proposals
to find a temporary location
for staff and council chambers during construction
has been issued, about two
months ahead of schedule,
Garcia said.
Mayor Al Corti and
Councilman Terry Sinnott
reiterated the importance
of providing residents with
ample opportunities to
weigh in as the design process moves forward.
Councilman
Dwight
Worden agreed, even if it
affects the newly adopted
schedule.
“I like the schedule,”
Worden said. “It’s pretty
aggressive. If it needs to
slip to do it right that’s OK
with me. I’d rather do it
right than feel we have to
adhere to a schedule that
turns out to be too tight.”
Councilman Don Mosier said community input is
important but he would like
to stay on track as much as
possible.
“In my view we’ve
hired an exceptionally talented architectural design
team who pay a lot of attention to the community
in which they’re … designing,” he said. “I think it’s
useful to have some feedback from the community.
“On the other hand
these people have done
a wonderful job multiple
times designing buildings
that match the surrounding
community,” Mosier added. “One concern I have is
we don’t get a building designed by committee.
“We’ve hired a very
talented group of people,”
he said. “Let’s let them inspire us.”
Worden agreed, but
added, “This is a complicated, complex development
project and they often,
with the best of intentions,
don’t make their schedule
that they started out with.”
“I’m all for keeping
the demolition date firm,”
Mosier said.
Despite the new schedule, the ready-for-occupancy date of April 2017 remains the same.
E NC I N I TA S —T he
consultant hired by Encinitas to handle the recruitment for a permanent city
manager said he will recommend seven finalists to
the City Council at meeting on Monday.
William Avery, the
principal of the San Josebased Avery Associates
recruiting firm, said that
59 people applied for the
city manager position currently held by Larry Watt,
who replaced former city
manager Gus Vina on an
interim basis.
Vina resigned the
post in January to take
the same position in the
Northern California city
of Brentwood.
Avery said the 59 applicants were whittled
down through a series
of screenings, including
background checks, telephone interviews and
face-to-face
interviews
with him. Avery will present the finalists to the
council, at which time the
council could accept the
recommendation or modify it with other names
from the applicant pool.
Avery said the applicants came from across
the Western United States
and that the pool of finalists includes at least one
female candidate. All seven have municipal managerial experience.
“Fifty nine is a good
number (of applicants),”
Avery said. “And that is
because Encinitas is a
very desirable place for
people to be.”
The council hired
Avery in January to conduct the search, at which
time he told the council it
would take about threeand-a-half to four months
to recruit a new city manager.
In February, Avery
and the city hosted a community forum to solicit
suggestions from the community about what qualities mattered in the person who would be hired
to handle the city’s daily
operations.
Avery said he also received two dozen emails
from residents weighing
in on the search.
“I would say that they
wanted
transparency,
someone who understands
the community and the
unique nature of Encinitas,” Avery said.
Avery said if everything goes as planned, the
new city manager could
start work by June.
Monday’s meeting is
a closed session hearing
that starts at 10 a.m.
A10
T he C oast News Church will hold a document shredding and electronic recycling event from
9 a.m. to noon April 25 in
the lower parking lot at
6628 Santa Isabel, Carlsbad. All are welcome and
there is no limit. Call (760)
419-9243 if you have questions.
FASHION
HELPS
NEWBORNS Tri-City Hospital Foundation’s Fashion
That Heals, will be held
May 2. The champagne
luncheon and fashion show
will benefit local mothers
and babies benefitted by
Tri-City Medical Center’s
NICU. Tickets are $125 for
the trunk show, lunch, the
“Pick a Purse” opportunity
drawing and a runway show
starring Tri-City employees.
FRIENDS IN GARDEN
The next meeting of the
Friendship Gardeners of
Del Mar will be from 1 to
3 p.m. April 25. Founding
members Bonnie Bloeser,
will talk about the care of
Protea. For meeting location in Del Mar, call (858)
755-6570.
Publishers and Writers
of San Diego Will hold its
monthly meeting 10 am to
noon April 25, at the Encinitas Community Center,
1140 Oakcrest Park Drive,
Encinitas. The topic will
be “How to Get the Press
to Pay Attention to Your
Book‚” by USA Today best
selling author Jennifer Coburn. Members cost
$10, non-members $20. Visit PublishersWriters.org to
register.
LEGOLAND SALUTES
CARLSBAD Starting at 1
p.m. April 25, join the annual “Celebrate Carlsbad
Day” at Legoland California with $25 tickets that
include admission and park
hours extended to 8 p.m.
CALENDAR
Know something that’s going
on? Send it to calendar@
coastnewsgroup.com
APRIL 24
ASTRONOMY NIGHT
Agua Hedionda Lagoon
Foundation presents Astronomy Night at 6:30 p.m.
April 24 at the Discovery
Center, 1580 Cannon Road,
Carlsbad. Call (760) 8041969 for more information.
WINGS OF FREEDOM
The Wings of Freedom Tour
with the WWII Vintage
B-17 Flying Fortress, B-24
Liberator, B-25 Mitchell
and P-51 Mustang will be at
Western Flight at the McClellan-Palomar Airport,
2210 Palomar Airport Road
from April 24 to April 26. A
flight aboard any of these
aircraft runs from $400 to
$3,200. For reservations
and information, call (800)
568-8924.
ALL ABOUT LIFE A
lifelong learning group,
LIFE, presents lectures at
MiraCosta College meets at
1 p.m. April 24 at MiraCosta College/Oceanside Campus, 1 Barnard Dr., Admin.
Bldg. #1000. Park in lot 1A.
Check speaker schedule at
miracosta.edu/life, or call
(760) 757-2121, ext. 6972.
FRIENDS OF JUNG
The San Diego Friends of
Jung will meet at 7:30 p.m.
April 24 at the Winston
School, 215 9th St., Del Mar.
APRIL 25
SHRED-A-THON
St.
Elizabeth Seton Catholic
students to perform and
donor recognition to take
place on a special stage in
Miniland U.S.A. between
3 p.m. and 5 p.m. April 25.
Tickets can be bought online and e-mailed.
Visit CarlsbadEd.org
or call the Carlsbad Educational Foundation at (760)
929-1555.
BEGIN A BUSINESS
Helping Women Help Themselves in collaboration with
the San Diego County Libraries will be conducting
a two-hour Small Business
Seminar from 10 a.m. to
noon April 25, 540 Cornish
Drive, Encinitas. Learn
about creating and owning
a business.
Consultation and materials are also available in
Spanish. To register, go to
hwht.org/seminars.
WINE SHOW The San
Diego International Wine
Show returns to Del Mar
April 25 and 26 benefitting
the San Dieguito River Valley Conservancy. Tickets
are $55 pre-sale, $65 at the
door, and $80 for a 2-day
ticket.
Attendees must be 21
years and older. Visit SanDiegoI nter nat iona lWi ne Show.com for information
and tickets.
BE PREPARED Join
North County Food Bank,
Red Cross/Prepare San Diego, Encinitas CERT, Rancho Coastal Humane Society and other organizations,
for the Interfaith Community Emergency Preparedness
Fair, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. April
25, at the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints,
1444 Lake Drive, Encinitas.
Bring food donations for the
LDS-sponsored JustServe.
For more information, call
(760) 828-2403.
APRIL 26
MAKING
NEW
FRIENDS The Catholic
Widows and Widowers of
North County is a support
group for ladies and gentlemen who desire to foster
friendships through various
social activities.
The group will go to
Mass at St. Thomas More
Catholic Church and lunch
at Nucci’s Italian Cafe,
Carlsbad on April 26, meet
April 28 for Happy hour at
Fresco Trattoria, and gather
for a wine-tasting and lunch
at South Coast Winery, Temecula April 29. Reservations at (858) 674-4324.
APRIL 27
MARRY AT THE FAIR
Want to get married at
the “My Big Fair Wedding
Day?” The wedding will
be part of the Paul Ecke
Jr. Flower & Garden Show
Stage, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
June 28. You can exchange
vows at the fair, with all
expenses paid. Contact the
Flower and Garden Office
at [email protected]
or (858) 792-4273.
APRIL 28
ADOPTION SERVICES
Walden Family Services, a
non-profit foster care and
adoption agency based in
San Diego, invites all to
Spring Fête, at 6 p.m. April
28, at the Pamplemousse
Grille, 514 Via de la Valle,
Suite 100, Solana Beach
tickets are $300 at waldenfamily.org.
POLITICS AND COMEDY Carlsbad Republican
Women host comedian, Byron Walls, on crime awareness. At 11 a.m. April 28 at
the Green Dragon Tavern
and Museum, 6115 Paseo
del Norte, Carlsbad. Cost is
$35. RSVP to Niki at (760)
931-9420 or [email protected].
APRIL 24, 2015
APRIL 29
GEOLOGY WITH HISTORY Join Friends of the
San Dieguito Heritage Museum for coffee, dessert
and a lecture by geologist
Norrie Robbins on “When
did People arrive in North
America?” at 7 p.m. April
29 at the Encinitas Community Center, 1140 Oakcrest
Park Drive. Suggested donation is $5. For reservations, call (760) 632-9711.
APRIL 30
THERE WILL BE
SMOKE From 1 to 2:30 p.m.
April 30, an aerial firefighting exercise involving aviation and ground units from
Camp Pendleton, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, Navy
Region Southwest, Third
Fleet, CALFIRE and the
San Diego Sheriff’s Department will take place
on Camp Pendleton. Navy,
Marine Corps and civilian
helicopters will be supporting Camp Pendleton and
CALFIRE ground teams in
establishing a fire line and
conducting water bucket
operations.
FUN
FOR
TEENS
Swing by the Encinitas Library for a Teen DIY Project at 3:30 p.m. April 30,
540 Cornish Drive, Encinitas. Make Harry Potter,
Star Wars and Minecraft
key chains.
ROSE WEEKEND Del
Mar Library hosts Rose
Weekend from April 30
through May 1, 1309 Camino del Mar, Del Mar. Hundreds of cut roses, grown
by members of the Del Mar
Rose Society for the Society’s competitive rose show
will be on display. Cast a
vote to select the second annual People’s Choice Rose.
For more information, call
the library at (858) 755-
By Bianca Kaplanek
Your Rancho Santa Fe, Solana
Beach & Del Mar Territory Manager
Call Krista for all your
advertising needs.
760.436.9737
x101
[email protected]
DEL MAR — An exclusive exhibition of posters by
artist and writer David Lance
Goines will highlight a fundraiser for former Del Mar
Mayor Lee Haydu’s Woman
of the Year campaign for The
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.
The event will be held
from 5 to 7 p.m. on May 3
Paul, Lee, Michelle and Sarah Haydu pictured at a past event. Lee
at Powerhouse Community
Haydu is hosting an event May 3 to raise money for The Leukemia &
Lymphoma Society. Her husband passed away in February 2013 after Center and feature a onetime showing of 21 posters
being diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Courtesy photo
designed and printed by Goines, a graphic artist known
for his label for Ravenswood
Winery and work that helped
propel Alice Waters and her
Chez Panisse restaurant and
cookbooks.
The private collection
belongs to Robert McShane
and is on loan for the fundraiser.
Goines, a Northern California resident, is an advocate of the blood donor system and a 21-gallon donor.
He will be on hand to
tell stories, answer questions
and donate signed items for
an auction.
Haydu’s husband, Paul
Haydu, M.D., was diagnosed
with chronic lymphocytic
leukemia in 2003. He passed
away in February 2013.
“In Paul's honor, I want
to do my part to help oth-
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MAY 1
TRASH TO TREASURE Find surprises at
the Carlsbad Community
Church garage sale from
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. May 1 and
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. May 2
at 3175 Harding St., Carlsbad. Donation drop-offs
from 3 to 6 p.m. April 26
and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
April 27 through April 29.
Receipts available. Enter
through the church underground parking, 3175
Harding St., Carlsbad. All
proceeds will go to church
ministries.
CHURCH GALA St.
Thomas More Catholic
Church, 1450 South Melrose
Drive, Oceanside, is sponsoring its fourth annual
gala from 4:30 p.m. to 9:30
p.m. May 1, celebrating the
construction progress of the
Permanent Church.
For additional details
and registration, call Chris
Smith at (760) 758-4100,
ext. 120 or visit STMoside.
org.
MAY 2
DO THE DERBY Rotary Club of San Luis Rey
hosts a Kentucky Derby
Fundraiser from 1:30 to
4:30 p.m. May 2 at Rookies Sports Grill, 2216 S. El
Camino Real, Oceanside.
Come and help local charities, enjoy a Mint Julip
and cheer for your favorite
horse to win the Kentucky
Derby. Tickets are $33 (21
years and older). Contact
Mark Valle at valleafcon@
yahoo.com or SLRrotaryserviceaboveself@gmail.
com. The proceeds go to the
charities that the Rotary
Club of SLR supports.
Haydu fundraiser to aid
the Leukemia Society
Say you saw it in
The Coast News
KRISTA CONFER
1666.
For information
about San Diego County
Library and other events at
sdcl.org.
thecoastnews.com/subscribe
ers,” Lee Haydu wrote on her
fundraising page. “It is my
goal to make sure fewer go
through what Paul did and
save family members from
losing a loved one.
“Please join me in supporting The Leukemia &
Lymphoma Society by making a donation to my fundraising campaign for Man
or Woman of the Year,” she
added. “I am part of a team
working to raise as much as
possible in a 10-week period.
“Every dollar I raise
counts as one vote and the
candidate who gets the most
votes/raises the most money
is named the Man or Woman
of the Year,” Haydu wrote.
“Thanks to your support,
my efforts will help fund the
therapies and treatments
that save lives, not someday
but today.”
Haydu said her goal is to
raise $50,000 for a research
grant in her husband’s name
and direct where the research money goes.
Peter Sprague will perform during the event. The
cost is $40. RSVP to nancy@
delmarday.com by April 30.
Those unable to attend
who want to donate can do
so at http://www.mwoy.org/
pages/sd/sd15/lhaydu. Donations must be received by 5
p.m. on June 13.
APRIL 24, 2015 A11
T he C oast News ‘Ex Machina’ is a thrilling look
into artificial intelligence
By Nathalia Aryani
Ava, the AI in “Ex
Machina,” may be fictional, but the progress of artificial intelligence (“Her,”
“Transcendence”) in the
real world is accelerating
at a rapid pace. So much
so that Stephen Hawking
(“The Theory of Everything”), a world-renowned
astrophysicist, has recently warned that artificial
intelligence poses a threat
and could spell “the end of
the human race.” This sentiment is echoed by Elon
Musk, founder of SpaceX
and Tesla, as well Microsoft
founder, Bill Gates. Earlier
this year, AI experts signed
a letter issued by the Future of Life Institute, pledging that they would safely
and carefully monitor such
progress so that its growth
doesn’t go beyond our control.
In “Ex Machina,” a directorial debut by writer
Alex Garland, a young coder, Caleb (Domhnall Gleeson), wins an office prize for
a weeklong retreat with Nathan (Oscar Isaac), the company’s reclusive CEO and
inventor of the world’s most
popular search engine, Blue
Book. Reachable only by helicopter, the mountain cabin surrounded by pristine
nature of remote Alaska, is
actually a custom-built research facility. Nathan has
been working on a secret
project, artificial intelligence in the form of humanoid-robot named Ava (Alicia
Vikander).
Caleb learns that he’s
the human component in
the Turing Test (“Turing”
from Alan Turing, “The Imitation Game”), where he’s
tasked not only to evaluate
Ava’s advanced capabilities, but also human-like
consciousness. The method wall and their interactions
is simple. Caleb is to engage are monitored by Nathan.
Ava with get-to-know-you With every session, Caleb
conversations. They’re separated with a transparent
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T he C oast News A rts &Entertainment
APRIL 24, 2015
Send your arts & entertainment
news to [email protected]
Band’s break gives way to strongest efforts yet
By Alan Sculley
In 2011, the Decemberists hit a new pinnacle
when the group’s album,
“The King is Dead,”
debuted at number one on
“Billboard” magazine’s
album chart.
The band went on
tour as “The King is
Dead” racked up sales
and impressive reviews.
Then in 2012, the group
members did something
they hadn’t done in a career that stretched back a
dozen years — they went
on an extended break.
“It was definitely a
moment to get away from
things and just, yeah, it
just seemed like it was
time,” guitarist Chris
Funk said of the decision
to put the Decemberists
on pause. “It was time
to break off and do other
stuff, for sure.”
And other stuff the
five band members did.
Ironically,
Colin
Meloy, the Decemberists’
lead singer, songwriter
The Decemberists perform April 30 at the North Park Theatre in San Diego. Photo by Autumn DeWilde
and best known band
member, kept the lowest
profile — at least as far as
music was concerned.
During the break,
he focused on writing
the third installment
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in his series of “Wildwood Chronicles” fantasy adventure illustrated
novels, “Wildwood Imperium” (with his wife,
Carson Ellis, handling
the artwork).
Meloy also wrote
songs for what eventually
became the new Decemberists album, “What a
Terrible World, What a
Beautiful World,” during
the hiatus, but songwriting served as a breather
from work on the book,
rather than his primary
project.
Meanwhile, the other four members of the
Decemberists — Funk,
keyboa rd ist / accord ion
player Jenny Conlee,
bassist Nate Query and
drummer John Moen
— wasted little time returning to musical pursuits. Along with Annalisa Tornfelt (vocals/
violin) and Jon Neufeld
(guitar), they reactivated
their rootsy bluegrass-informed side band Black
Prairie and put the pedal
down on that project.
The group released
three albums — 2012’s
“A Tear in the Eye Is a
Wound in the Heart,”
2013’s “Wild Ones” and
2014’s “Fortune” — and
toured extensively, considerably raising the profile of the band in the process.
The roadwork also
helped the four members of the Decemberists
maintain their playing
chops for the time when
their main band reconvened.
“Four years is a long
break had we not played
music with each other,”
Funk said. “So I think it
benefited the band and
the recording process (for
“What a Terrible World,
What a Beautiful World”)
in the sense that we were
just already up (and running), the whole band,
working together.”
When it was time
for the Decemberists
to end their hiatus, the
group didn’t rush into the
“What A Terrible World,
What A Beautiful World”
project.
Instead, work on
the album stretched out
for a year and a half as
the band began recording and refining the 18
songs Meloy had amassed
during the hiatus and exploring other song ideas.
Funk said while the
band worked diligently —
some of the parts recorded on the first day in the
studio are on the finished
album — the extensive
schedule for studio work
was a nice change from
the shorter, more frenetic recording sessions that
had produced the other
Decemberists albums.
“I think it (the
18-month schedule) was
just a way to ease back
into it,” Funk said, “and
also not just going into
the studio and having this
full-on recording happening all of the time.”
The extensive work
that went into “What a
Terrible World, What a
Beautiful World” paid
off. It’s one of the strongest albums in a catalog
populated by six other acclaimed — and frequently ambitious — albums.
Where “The King
is Dead” was frequently stripped back and
leaned more toward folk,
the new album is being
called by some the Decemberists’ “big pop”
album. That description
fits certain songs, such
as “Philomena” (with its
Beach Boys-esque “oohwah” vocals, pretty string
lines and youthful lyrical
setting), “Make You Better” (a single that has
gone number one at triple A radio and features a
hooky classic pop melody)
and “Cavalry Captain”
(which is augmented by
buoyant horns).
But the band’s folk
roots are well represented, too, in tunes like
“12/17/12” (inspired by
the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting),
“Lake Song” and “Carolina Low.”
Funk said fans can
expect to hear songs from
across the Decemberists’
career during the band’s
concerts this spring.
“I think it’s a pretty
healthy retrospective on
everything mixed in with
the new material that
we’re excited to play,” he
said. “We are conscious
of the fact that we have
fans that have been with
us since day one, so we’re
trying to play music they
want to hear, but also be
conscious that likely we
have a lot of fans that
signed on at kind of ‘The
King Is Dead’ area for the
Decemberists.
“But yeah, we try
to make it fun for us,
too,” Funk said. “I think
whether or not people
have heard songs all the
time, we’re not a band
fully driven on hits, either. We have a catalog of
music and a fan base that
I think was kind of created out of touring a lot. So
we can kind of get away
with choosing a set list
that we think is exciting.”
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APRIL 24, 2015 A13
T he C oast News Council seeks to improve public outreach
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR – Council
members discussed three
proposals at the April 20
meeting to improve community engagement and better
inform the public and each
other, but opted to move
forward with only two of
the recommendations.
Dwight Worden and
Sherryl Parks make up a
council ad hoc committee
tasked with creating ways
to better address community outreach and engagement for committees,
advisory boards and City
Council.
“We picked out somewhat randomly two items …
to try this out and see how it
works,” Worden said.
Their colleagues support a suggestion to hold
periodic workshops in residents’ homes.
“Mainly we would listen to what people in that
area want to say,” Worden
said. “The idea would be
to really let the community
know we do want to hear
from them. We want to sit
around on their couches in
a more informal way dialoguing with them.”
The meeting topics
would focus on the concerns
of people in a specific area
of the city. The gatherings
would take place a few
times a year in a different
neighborhood each time.
Worden said home
meetings would eliminate
the “formality” of council
chambers.
“People don’t have to
be on TV,” he said. “They
can just talk to us.”
“I think going forward
with anything where you
go out in the community
and listen to people is very,
very positive,” Councilman
Terry Sinnott said. “And I
would encourage us to do
that.”
Worden and Parks will
also work to set up a mentoring program in which former council and committee
members share their volunteer experiences. The plan
includes producing short
video testimonials.
Worden said the program could increase public
participation by helping
people better understand
what City Council and advisory committee members
do.
He said residents often
“jump from the dry ground
into the deep end. There’s
no sort of transitional way
for you to find out what
you’re getting into.”
“It really would bode
well for recruiting more
people,” Parks said.
Sinnott said in addition to describing the role
of each group, the mentors
should list what they accomplish.
“People will sign up to
do volunteer work if they
know they’re getting something very valuable done,”
Sinnott said.
“I think the goals are
great and I encourage us
to figure out how to do it,”
Mayor Al Corti said.
Council members were
less enthusiastic about a
proposal to develop a webpage where they could post
items of interest between
public meetings.
In their report, Worden
and Parks noted the Brown
Act does not allow discussion of any topic of city
business, or collective decision-making, by a majority
or more of council members
outside of a publicly noticed
and open meeting.
Currently when they
want to share information
about what occurred during
a committee meeting, council members send the information to the city manager,
who ensures it is appropriate and then forwards it to
their colleagues.
The public doesn’t see
the information unless the
city manager posts it as part
of his weekly update.
Information must be
nonpolitical and factual
only, with no opinions added. As proposed the webpage would be read only.
Comments from council
members or the public
would be prohibited.
“I must say that I am
very firmly opposed to
this idea because I think it
opens us up to Brown Act violations,” Councilman Don
Mosier said. “In Del Mar
almost any statement you
make is political. I’m trying
to envision what you could
put on this page. If it’s public information it’s already
available.
“I think our job is to
tell people in a public forum when we’re meeting as
a council, not to put up little bits of information on a
website,” he added. “I don’t
think that’s our role as City
Council to be the communicators.
“I don’t want to be the
website guru of Del Mar
because almost anything I
want to say is going to have
a potential political implication,” Mosier said. “There’s
almost no opinion that I
want to put on this website
that doesn’t get me in trouble, and that’s the problem I
have with this idea.”
Corti said he has mixed
feelings about the proposal.
His concerns include the
amount of staff time that
would be required to monitor and manage the page.
“If people have misgivings about it we probably don’t want to do it,”
Worden said, adding that he
and Parks would “work on
it some more and see what
other options there are.”
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3/3/15 9:40 PM
A14
T he C oast News Sports
Fritz continues to climb the junior tennis ladder
sports
talk
jay paris
K
athy May Fritz,
like any mother, is pleased
her
teenage
son landed a summer job.
“I’m very proud of him,’’
she said.
Even if he doesn’t get
paid?
So it goes if you’re Taylor Fritz.
Fritz, among the world’s
top junior players, is joining
forces with the San Diego
Aviators of Mylan World
Team Tennis.
At least Taylor, 17, won’t
have a far commute with the
home matches at Carlsbad’s
Omni La Costa Resort &
Spa.
Taylor remains an amateur and he’ll be playing
as such across Europe and
at the French Open before
slapping on an Aviators jersey. Ranked fifth among junior players, Taylor is seen
as one of the young Americans seeking to make a mark
on the men’s side.
“I continue to work on
and off the court,’’ said Taylor, who won the CIF San Diego Section title as a Torrey
Pines High freshman and
now takes classes online.
“I’m trying to get stronger
so I can compete against the
top players.’’
The 6-foot-4, 180-pound
Taylor has the frame. With a booming forehand and massive serve,
Taylor has the game. With his mother, and father, Guy Fritz, a former
University of San Diego All
American, being former
pros, Taylor has the genes.
Guy Fritz is Taylor’s
coach, with his wife adding
her tennis knowledge, too.
But the will has to come
from Taylor, and he’s all in.
“I love the completion,’’
Taylor said. “I just love play-
ing someone one-on-one.’’
He was among four left
standing at last summer’s
Wimbledon junior event.
He also had a solid run
at this year’s Australian
Open, reaching the quarterfinals. In January, he advanced to the semifinals of
a Futures tournament in Los
Angeles.
It’s all part of the process of shooting up the junior ladder, while preparing
for the next step.
“I need to get faster and
move better,’’ said Taylor,
who won a qualifying match
as a wild card at the recent
BNP Paribas Open in Indian
Wells. “There is a big difference between the juniors
and the pros.’’
But Taylor, of Rancho
Santa Fe, no longer wonders
if he belongs. After his All
England Club showing, Taylor eased the doubt which
creeps into any player’s noggin’.
“That gave me a lot of
confidence that I could compete at this level,’’ he said.
With his parents’ line
of work, tennis was always
nearby. Taylor first swung a
racket as a tyke, but it wasn’t
until he was 14 that the tennis bug bit.
“He really only started
working hard three years
ago,’’ Kathy May Fritz said.
Which makes his climb
more impressive. “Things have happened
so quick,’’ he said. “I started
to do well and then I thought
I might be able to do something with this game.’’
He’s still a teenager, of
course, which means body
surfing near Del Mar’s 15th
Street and hanging with his
buddies. But Taylor’s tennis future is so bright he needs
shades when not at the beach.
“He loves to compete
and loves the challenge,’’
Taylor’s mother said. “He’s
very talented.’’
So much that a scholarship to USC awaits. But
Taylor could turn pro before
then or after dipping his toe
into the collegiate ranks.
Just what does Taylor’s
TURN TO JAY PARIS ON A15
APRIL 24, 2015
Contact us at [email protected]
with story ideas, photos or suggestions
Encinitas Little League will be allowed to stay at the YMCA fields for the foreseeable future according to an
April 17 announcement from YMCA officials. Photo by Ellen Wright
YMCA plans mean
Little League can stay
By Aaron Burgin
ENCINITAS —Encinitas Little League will be
able to call the Magdalena
Ecke YMCA fields home
for most of its operation
for the foreseeable future,
as the YMCA's recently announced expansion plans
will allow for the baseball
organization to stay.
The YMCA announced
April 17 that its board after several months of discussion had voted on its expansion plans, which will
eliminate one of the four
baseball fields to make way
for parking and indoor soccer fields, but preserve and
renovate the other fields. The plans mirror a proposal offered by the Little
League organization last
month, which offered to
relocate its baseball program for older members
in exchange for operations
to continue on the other
fields.
YMCA Executive Director Susan Hight, who
was out of town attending a
conference this week, said
she would respond to The
Coast News in an email.
The Coast News will update the story online when
Hight's responses are available. Current Little League
officials said they weren't
involved in negotiations
P H O T O G R A P H Y
Bill is a professional photographer who blends his
lifelong passion for sports with his skills in photography to capture memorable moments of all types
of action oriented events.Call Bill to learn more
about how his sports, portrait and commercial
photography services can meet your needs.
[email protected]
858.405.9986
over the expansion, but
were pleased with the outcome. "We are certainly happy with their plans," said
Robert Wade, the president of the Encinitas Little League, which has 542
players this season. "We
are confident that with the
proposed changes and with
some changes to how we
schedule games, we will be
able to keep the players in
the league playing together in the same location for
years to come, and that
is part of what makes our
league pretty special."
The future of the
YMCA fields had been at
the center of a controversy between the city, the
YMCA and the little league
as a result of a poison-pill
30-day termination clause
that was inserted into the
most recent iteration of the
field lease arrangement between the entities.
The clause worried Little League officials, who
feared the organization
could be displaced to usher in the YMCA expansion
plans with little time to relocate.
The YMCA then ensured the league that
play would go on through
2015, but uncertainty still
loomed beyond that point. Under the YMCA's
new expansion plans, field
No. 1, which is used by little league and the Encinitas Soccer League, among
other organzations, will
be converted into three
indoor soccer arenas and
a parking lot for 180 cars;
field No. 2 will remain unchanged; and fields 3 and
4 will be converted into
multi-sports fields that can
accommodate both soccer
and baseball games. Wade said little league
will likely relocate the junior division to the new Encinitas Community Park. One organization that
will be hurt by the move
is the Encinitas Soccer
League, which will see its
practice time on lighted
fields pared by nearly half.
Currently, the league can
accommodate two, 90-minute training sessions for 27
teams. With the elimination of field one, that number drops to 15 teams, with
six having their training
dropped to 75 minutes, said
Rick Lochner, the club's interim president.
With the renovation of
fields No. 3 and 4 occurring
during the second phase of
the expansion plans, Lochner said the impact will be
even greater early on.
"It definitely impacts
us," he said. "We are hoping that the city, since they
TURN TO LITTLE LEAGUE ON A15
APRIL 24, 2015 EX MACHINA
CONTINUED FROM A11
and Ava learn more about
each other and develop a relationship.
Alarmingly,
during
recurring power outages
where the monitors are out,
Ava reaches out to Caleb
and tells him that Nathan
cannot be trusted. She provides tidbits that seem to
support her pleas. It doesn’t
help that Nathan is arrogant, controlling, eccentric
and sardonic. Parts of his
interactions with Caleb are
unintentionally,
creepily
humorous. It becomes clear
why Caleb is chosen for the
experiment.
You’d feel things are
not what they seem and
something sinister is going
to surface, but you don’t
know what, when or how. It’s
AGRITOURISM
CONTINUED FROM A1
staff to discuss the idea. He
said the time is right for agritourism in Oceanside.
Girling just finished
raising more than $15,000
in Kickstarter funds to begin his own urban farm on
2.5 acres in the Fire Mountain community. He said he
has received a lot of support
from chefs and food purveyors on the soon-to-open Cyclops Farms.
RAIL
CONTINUED FROM A1
estimates as to when it
would occur. "We are really not there
yet," she said. "It is going to
be a long process."
Carterette said that
the rails plan was not tied
to plans to explore future
under- and over-crossings
along the rail corridor, so it
was not clear how long after
a fence were in place any
crossing relief would take
place. For most of the nearly
100 residents and stakeholders in attendance, a
fence line would effectively
separate Cardiff from the
coastline without any firm
plans for additional crossings, which they said was
unacceptable. "Most of us live here because we want access to the
beach," said Julie Thunder,
one of the more vocal critics
at the workshop. "If the city
is not willing to put crossings, then our beach access
is gone."
Deputy Mayor Catherine Blakespear, who was
also on hand for the workshop, said she believed the
solution would be building pedestrian crossings
at grade with the railroad,
which would be much cheaper than other types of crossings, and would provide the
beach access that the fence
line would eliminate.
Previous studies, however, ruled that these types
JAY PARIS
CONTINUED FROM A14
crystal ball show, 10 years
out?
“I would love to be in the
prime of my professional career,’’ he said.
“If I could make a
good living playing tennis,
that would be my dream.’’
A15
T he C oast News tantalizingly thrilling. The
removed and austere ambiance of the glass-and-stone,
sprawling facility adds to
the undercurrent tension.
The only other person there
is a housemaid (Sonoya
Mizuno) who doesn’t speak
English.
Vikander is a wonder,
walking a fine line between
human and machine. Her
Ava, partially translucent
with wires and circuits and
partially covered in human
skin, is both mechanically
perfect and surrealistically
human. Brilliantly and elegantly designed, she’s intellectually and emotionally
intelligent, independent, intuitive, beautiful and powerful. But there remains a
question whether her emotions are real or simulated.
The reveals come in
pieces and they boggle the
mind. Ethical quandaries
of identity, humanity, freedom, life and mortality. If
you could create a machine
with human consciousness,
would you ... just because
you could? What if artificial
intelligence goes beyond
artificial? Does it have the
right to exist? How would
it be integrated to society?
What are the implications?
What will become of mankind?
Strikingly compelling,
cerebrally cool and eerily
suspenseful, “Ex Machina”
delivers on the futuristic visual and philosophical level
and ceases with an ending
that lingers in your mind.
SHERIFF
Nathalia Aryani is a
film columnist and has a
movie blog, The MovieMaven:
sdmoviemaven.blogspot.com.
Twitter: #the_moviemaven.
DEVELOPMENT
“I have seen there is
a possibility and need for
coastal farming,” Girling
said.
Most Oceanside farms
are located in the inland
Morro Hills community.
Crops include avocados, citrus, tomatoes, grapes and
flowers.
Girling said he plans to
grow organic row crops for
restaurants, and add farm
tours, farm-to-table dinners
and student field trips to operations.
He said he wants to educate people about where
their food comes from, how
it’s grown, and show people
that they can grow food in
their own backyard on a
small scale.
Girling has started
crops in his home greenhouse to plant on the farm,
and is currently breaking
ground and preparing the
acreage in Fire Mountain
for farming. Cyclops Farms
is expected to be up and
running next month.
of crossing would be troublesome due to train speeds
in the area.
"It's clear that people
aren't hopping down the
bluffs to get to the beach,
there are clearly places
where people go to cross,"
Blakespear said. "We need
to investigate what it would
take to make these at-grade
crossings feasible."
Many residents also
expressed skepticism about
the San Elijo plan, which
they said would put cyclists
in close contact with neighbors leaving their homes
along the street.
Carterette said the
hope of the coastal trail
plan was to reduce dependency on vehicles, but most
neighbors said this was
more rhetoric than reality.
Not all of the residents
were opposed to the plan,
though. Michele Jacquin,
who said the current walk
along Coast Highway is
not conducive to the casual
walker, said she liked the
San Elijo Avenue concept.
"I would love to have a
promenade," Jacquin said
"If I want to walk to Seaside
Market, I have to dodge cars
going 65 miles per hour on
this material. There is no
place for me."
Thunder and several
residents suggested two alternative plans. The first
would create a simple walking path along San Elijo, and
the other bike and sharedused paths along Coast
Highway, where there is
more room to accommodate
them. The second would
be to start the continuous
paths along Vulcan, run
them through the recently
completed
undercrossing
at Swami's Beach, and then
continue them along Coast
Highway. The latter plan, neighbors said, would avoid the
two areas that even planning officials acknowledge
would be troublesome:
Coast Highway through
Downtown Encinitas, and
San Elijo Avenue through
Cardiff. Carterette said the
plan is to take all of the
feedback from this meeting
and determine which of the
alternatives would be the
preferred plan, though they
would also look into some of
the suggested alternatives
from residents. "The plan had recently
been focused on these alternatives, but we will be in
talks with the city and work
on how to proceed," Carterette said. Additionally, SANDAG
and the city must also find
a way to narrow the gap between the project's current
cost and the amount of money available to complete
it. SANDAG has budgeted
$5.1 million for the project, which will be paid for
through TransNet, the county half-cents sales tax. The
cheaper of the two alternatives - Coast Highway - costs
around $6 million, Carterette said. Every parents’ nightmare is a lazy teenager lounging on the couch all summer.
That won’t be the case
in the Fritz household, as
Taylor gallivants around the
world, chasing a fuzzy ball
and a goal, which couldn’t be
clearer.
“I get to see a lot of new
things and places that a lot
of people my age don’t get to
see,’’ Taylor said
His
worn
passport
proves it. Him wearing out
rivals confirms it.
Contact Jay Paris at
[email protected]. Follow him
on Twitter at jparis_sports and
at mighty109
CONTINUED FROM A6
with the city’s ranger program. “If they’re not armed
our own city employees are
an option.”
“So there is a potential
of changing that dispatching issue where we have
a very small department
that still responds to our
priority three and four
calls, maybe do some traffic enforcement, but we’ve
got to figure that out,” Sinnott said. “We’re regrouping.”
with property damage, an
escaped prisoner, arson
and child stealing. Prowlers, assault, indecent exposure, vandalism, trespassing and audible and silent
alarms constitute priority
four calls.
Corti said the subcommittee plans to discuss other options, including the
costs and benefits of forming a city police department with input from the
sheriffs, expanding the existing contract and hiring
a private security firm to
augment service, a system
currently used in Rancho
Santa Fe.
Fousekis
confirmed
the proposed five-bedroom dwellings fit in with
new development in the
high-density, residential,
tourist zoned neighborhood.
Commissioners were
in unanimous agreement
that they would not grant
a contingency to allow any
part of the structures to extend over the stringline.
Several commissioners voiced the necessity to
stick with established limits to give all beachfront
homeowners equal access
to a view.
The Planning Commission approved a continuance to June 8 to allow the
developer to make adjustments to the project that
has been two years in the
works.
from 300 cases in 2013 to
207 in 2014.
However, the auto
thefts in Carlsbad increased from 124 cases in
2013 to 128 cases in 2014.
“Many variables factor into why a crime rate
goes up and down,” said
Police Chief Gary Morrison.
“The hard working
men and women of the
Carlsbad Police Department actively look for the
latest methods to fight
crime and to keep the
crime rate down in an effort to maintain a high
quality of life for those who
live, work and recreate in
the City of Carlsbad.”
Lochner is referring
to the city’s capital improvement budget that the
city council recently voted
to include potential field
lights and artificial turf
at Leo Mullen, the soccer
club’s home field, in the
budget discussions. Wade said he under-
stands the position the
plans have put the soccer
organization in.
“I feel bad for them,
I don’t know what I could
have done or said to change
anything,” Wade said. “It
seemed like the YMCA was
dead set on expanding.”
to cost.”
“I think their analysis
of what they would do as
a service provider to meet
some of our needs is going
to be beneficial for us to
evaluate,” City Manager
Scott Huth said.
Although
sheriffs
didn’t support the notion of
a minidepartment, council
members haven’t completely given up on the idea.
Priority three calls
“We think it can be
done,” Corti said, noting include driving under the
that a similar system is influence, accidents with
used at universities and minor injuries, hit-and-run
CONTINUED FROM A6
neighbors’ concerns.
Commissioner Thomas
Morrissey said the project
already fits the neighborhood, and added the developer should not be limited in the design because
neighboring homeowners
have not yet built to the
stringline.
CRIME
CONTINUED FROM A3
tinued to decrease and remains in the bottom onethird of the county.”
Per 1,000 people, 1.85
committed a violent crime
in 2014.
Residential burglaries
are down almost a third,
LITTLE LEAGUE
CONTINUED FROM A14
boosted the priority of the
Leo Mullen Sports Park
project (lighting and turf),
will help us make up the
loss for that field. We will
know by May.”
FROM TREE TO ART
The city of Del Mar invites the community to celebrate the carving of a Torrey Pine tree into
public art at 10 a.m. April 28 at the Torrey Pines Reserve. Free parking will available along
Camino del Mar from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Courtesy photo
A16
LEGALS
T.S. No.: 2015-2648 Loan
No.: 136084177 NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT ATTACHED
注:本文件包含一个信息摘要
참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보
요약서가 있습니다
NOTA:
SE
ADJUNTA
UN
RESUMEN
DE
LA
INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE
DOCUMENTO
TALA: MAYROONG BUOD
NG
IMPORMASYON
SA
DOKUMENTONG
ITO
NA
NAKALAKIP
LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ
BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC
VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI
LIỆU NÀY
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 8/23/2005. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE.
IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
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: LORRAINE
A. GLENDON, A MARRIED
WOMAN AS HER SOLE AND
SEPARATE PROPERTY Duly
Appointed Trustee: American
Default
Management
Recorded
8/31/2005
as
Instrument No. 2005-0749975
in book //, page // Pursuant to
Loan Modification recorded
11/06/2008, as instrument
number
2008-0580384
of
Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, Described
as follows: As more fully
described in said Deed of
Trust Date of Sale: 5/19/2015
at 10:00 AM Place of Sale:
At the entrance to the east
county regional center by
statue, 250 E. Main Street,
El Cajon, CA Amount of
unpaid balance and other
charges: $457,536.49 Street
Address or other common
designation of real property:
2329 Seasons Rd. Oceanside,
CA 92056 A.P.N.: 162-481-0300 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
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
CITY OF ENCINITAS
PUBLIC NOTICE OF
ORDINANCE ADOPTION
ORDINANCE 2015-06
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City
Council of the City of Encinitas will consider adoption
of Ordinance 2015-06 entitled, “An Ordinance of the City
Council of the City of Encinitas, California, amending
Section 23.12.030 and 23.12.035 Related to Residential
Solar Energy and Electric Vehicle Ready Buildings.” With
the emergence of green building technology, consumers
are discovering a growing range of options to help reduce
energy consumption and costs. The City of Encinitas has
already undertaken efforts to support green building
development, such as permit fee waivers for residential
solar-photovoltaic (PV) and electric vehicle charging systems. The ordinance provides options to modify current
building codes to require increased energy efficiency in
new building construction in particular pre-wiring for solar energy and electric vehicle charging. This ordinance
was introduced on April 15, 2015 by the following vote:
AYES: Blakespear, Gaspar, Kranz, Muir, Shaffer; NAYS:
None; ABSTAIN: None; ABSENT: None. The City Council
will consider adoption of Ordinance 2015-06 at its regular meeting to be held on May 13, 2015 commencing at
6:00 P.M. in the City Council Chambers, 505 South Vulcan
Avenue. The ordinance is on file in the office of the City
Clerk, 505 South Vulcan Avenue and may be viewed between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. The City of
Encinitas is an equal opportunity public entity and does
not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age or disability in employment or the
provision of service. Please notify the City Clerk as soon
as possible before the meeting if disability accommodations are needed. /Kathy Hollywood, City Clerk.
04/24/15 CN 17213
CITY OF CARLSBAD
PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to you, because your interest
may be affected, that the Planning Commission of the City
of Carlsbad will hold a public hearing at the Council Chambers, 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad, California, at
6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, May 6, 2015, to consider the following:
1) ZCA 14-02/LCPA 14-04 – DENSITY BONUS AMENDMENT – A request for recommendation of approval of a
Zone Code Amendment and Local Coastal Program Amendment to make the city’s density bonus regulations consistent
with state law.
If you challenge these projects in court, you may be limited
to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at
the public hearing described in this notice or in written correspondence delivered to the City of Carlsbad at or prior to
the public hearing.
Copies of the environmental documents are available at the
Planning Division at 1635 Faraday Avenue during regular
business hours from 7:30 am to 5:30 pm Monday through
Thursday and 8:00 am to 5:00 pm Friday.
Those persons wishing to speak on these proposals are cordially invited to attend the public hearing. Copies of the
staff reports will be available online at http://carlsbad.
granicus.com/ViewPublisher.php?view_id=6 on or after the
Friday prior to the hearing date. If you have any questions,
please call the Planning Division at (760) 602-4600.
APRIL 24, 2015
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
City of Encinitas
Planning and Building Department
505 S. Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024
(760) 633-2710 or [email protected]
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING AND PENDING ACTION ON
ADMINISTRATIVE APPLICATIONS AND COASTAL DEVELOPMENT PERMITS
The Planning & Building Department of the City of Encinitas is currently reviewing the following Administrative Applications. Item 3 requires an administrative public hearing. The application submittals are available for review and
comment during regular business hours, 7:00 AM to 6:00 PM Monday through Friday. City Hall is closed alternate
Fridays (4/24, 5/8, etc.). A minimum 10-calendar-day review period has been established for the following applications:
1. CASE NUMBER: 15-044 ADR/CDP
FILING DATE: February 24, 2015
APPLICANT: Erica Christ
LOCATION: 152/154 Hillcrest Dr. (APN: 254-061-15)
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The applicant requests approval of an Administrative Design Review and Coastal Development Permit for an addition of 499 square feet (470 square feet to unit 1 and 29 square feet to unit 2) to an existing
duplex residence. The subject property is located in the Residential 8 (R-8) Zone and the Coastal Zone.
ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project has been determined to be exempt from environmental review pursuant to
the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).
CONTACT: Dan Halverson (760) 633-2711 or [email protected]
2. CASE NUMBER: 15-056 CDP
FILING DATE: March 9, 2015
APPLICANT: Patrice Mitchell
LOCATION: 320 La Mesa Avenue (APN 256-351-09)
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: A Coastal Development Permit for the construction of an addition to a single-family residence, and to utilize a temporary construction trailer during construction. The subject property is located in the Single=Family Residential 11 (RS-11) Zone and the Coastal Zone.
ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project has been determined to be exempt from environmental review pursuant to
the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).
CONTACT: Andrew Maynard (760) 633-2718 or [email protected]
PRIOR TO 6:00 P.M. ON MONDAY, MAY 4, 2015, ANY INTERESTED PERSON MAY REVIEW THE APPLICATION
FOR ITEMS 1 AND 2 AND PRESENT TESTIMONY, ORALLY OR IN WRITING, TO THE PLANNING AND BUILDING
DEPARTMENT. WRITTEN TESTIMONY IS PREFERRED IN ORDER TO HAVE A RECORD OF THE COMMENTS
RECEIVED.
PUBLIC HEARING FOR ITEM 3: Monday, May 4, 2015 at 5:00 p.m., to be held at the Planning and Building Department,
Lilac Room, 505 South Vulcan Ave, Encinitas.
THE CITY OF ENCINITAS IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY PUBLIC ENTITY AND DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE ON THE
BASIS OF RACE, COLOR, ETHNIC ORIGIN, NATIONAL ORIGIN, SEX, RELIGION, VETERANS STATUS OR PHYSICAL OR MENTAL DISABILITY IN EMPLOYMENT OR THE PROVISION OF SERVICE. IN COMPLIANCE WITH THE
AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT/SECTION 504 REHABILITATION ACT OF 1973, IF YOU NEED SPECIAL
ASSISTANCE TO PARTICIPATE IN THESE MEETINGS, PLEASE CONTACT THE PLANNING AND BUILDING DEPARTMENT AT (760) 633-2710.
3. CASE NUMBER: 14-290 TPM/CDP
FILING DATE: November 18, 2014
APPLICANT: Hygeia LLC
LOCATION: 544 Hygeia Avenue (APN 256-110-57)
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: A request for a Tentative Parcel Map and Coastal Development Permit to subdivide one (1)
legal parcel into three (3) residential lots. The project site is located in the Residential 8 (R-8) zone and within the
Coastal Zone.
ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project has been determined to be exempt from environmental review pursuant to
the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).
CONTACT: Anna Yentile (760) 633-2724 or [email protected]
PRIOR TO OR AT THE PUBLIC HEARING TO BE HELD AT 5:00 PM ON MONDAY, MAY 4, 2015, ANY INTERESTED
PERSON MAY REVIEW THE APPLICATION FOR ITEM 3 AND PRESENT TESTIMONY, ORALLY OR IN WRITING,
TO THE PLANNING & BUILDING DEPARTMENT. WRITTEN TESTIMONY IS PREFERRED IN ORDER TO HAVE A
RECORD OF THE COMMENTS RECEIVED.
After the close of the review periods or public hearings, as applicable, if additional information is not required, the
Planning and Building Department will render determinations on the applications, pursuant to Section 2.28.090 of the
City of Encinitas Municipal Code. Appeals of the Department’s determinations, accompanied by the appropriate filing
fee, may be filed within 15 calendar days from the date of determination for items 1 and 2 and within 10 calendar days
for Item 3. Appeals will be considered by the City Council pursuant to Chapter 1.12 of the Municipal Code. Any filing
of an appeal will suspend the appealed 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.
Items 1, 2, and 3 are located within the Coastal Zone and require issuance of regular Coastal Development Permits.
The action of the Planning and Building Department on Items 1, 2, and 3 may not be appealed to the California Coastal
Commission.
Under California Government Code Sec. 65009, if you challenge the nature of the proposed actions 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.
04/24/15 CN 17216
PUBLISH: April 24, 2015
CITY OF CARLSBAD
PLANNING DIVISION
04/24/15 CN 17231
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) 573-1965
or visit this Internet Web
site:
www.priorityposting.
com, using the file number
assigned to this case 20152648.
Information
about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information
or
on
the
Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend
the scheduled sale. Date:
4/21/2015 American Default
Management 433 N. Camden
Drive, 4th Floor Beverly Hills
CA 90210 Automated Sale
Information Line: (714) 5731965 Terrie Ceniceros, Trustee
Sale Officer P1140090 4/24,
5/1, 05/08/2015 CN 17215
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE T.S. No.: 14-0931 Loan
No.:
*******833
NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY
OF THE
INFORMATION
IN
THIS
DOCUMENT
ATTACHED
[PURSUANT
TO CIVIL CODE Section
2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
REFERRED TO ABOVE IS
NOT ATTACHED TO THE
RECORDED COPY OF THIS
DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO
THE COPIES PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR] YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
7/23/2007
AND
MORE
FULLY
DESCRIBED
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
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. A
public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check payable at
the time of sale in lawful
money of the United States
(payable to Attorney Lender
RANCHO SANTA FE SCHOOL DISTRICT
REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE RANCHO SANTA FE SCHOOL
DISTRICT of San Diego County, California, acting by and through its Governing Board,
is requesting qualifications submittal for
RFQ
DSA CERTIFIED PROJECT INSPECTOR AND
PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS COMPLIANCE INSPECTION SERVICES
The Request for Qualifications (RFQ) may be obtained from the Roya Saadat
Purchasing, Rancho Santa Fe School District, 5927 La Granada, Rancho Santa Fe, CA
92067. Questions regarding this RFQ shall be directed in writing to Roya Saadat via
email at ([email protected]) no later than noon on Friday, May 8, 2015. Responses to
questions or clarifications will be issued by Monday, May 11, 2015, by 2 p.m.
Sealed qualifications submittals must be received in the Main Office of the Rancho
Santa Fe School District, 5927 La Granada, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067, up to but no
later than 2 p.m. on Thursday, May 14, 2015.
The Rancho Santa Fe School District reserves the right to reject any or all
qualifications submittals, to accept or to reject any one or more items of a
qualifications submittal, or to waive any irregularities or informalities in the
qualifications submittals or in the bidding.
Dated this day of April 24, 2015
Publication Date: April 24, 2015
04/24/15 CN 17211
Services, Inc.) 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
Coast News legals
continued on
page A18
APRIL 24, 2015 T he C oast News Beautiful East County
hit the
road
e’louise ondash
I
t’s a beautiful April
day in East County.
My husband and
two grandsons have spent the
morning learning about and
interacting with the raptors
at Sky Falconry in Alpine. It’s
about noon and we’ are on the
way down Mount Viejas, so
there are still some hours left
to have lunch and take a hike.
We take advantage of being in East County and head
to Mission Trails Regional
Park, east of Interstate 15 and
south of Highway 52.
A beautiful 6,800 acres,
its 60 miles of trails wind
around rugged hills, open
fields and broad valleys, and
give visitors a glimpse of what
San Diego looked like before
Juan Cabrillo arrived in 1542.
Once home to Kumeyaay
Indians, it’s difficult to believe that this vast, preserved
space is only 8 miles east of
San Diego’s downtown.
We stop at the park’s
man-made
amphitheater
where the large, faux boulders call to kids who love to
climb. Also on the steps of the
amphitheater are sculptures
of animals that inhabit the
area, like the life-size mountain lion perched on a step.
The big cat is a kid-magnet;
one after another comes over
to examine it and are impressed when they learn that
there still are mountain lions
like this one in the area.
The boys have to be reminded to eat; they are having too much fun exploring
and climbing and trying to
avoid wet shoes while jumping over a manmade water
feature.
After lunch, we step into
the impressive visitor’s center, with its soaring ceiling,
massive picture windows and
a view of North and South
Fortuna mountains.
The
building rivals some of the
centers found in the national
parks.
Then we set out to hike
the 1.4-mile Visitors Center
Loop, sporadically lined with
wildflowers despite this season’s minimal rain. About a
third of the way, a huge, stately oak tree appears – another
kid-magnet.
The shade is welcomed
and the boys can’t get enough
of climbing and balancing on
the thick limbs.
It isn’t easy convincing
the boys that we have to keep
moving. The last third of the
trail presents an uphill grade,
part of which parallels civilization – Mission Gorge Road.
The presence of cars and
pavement and stores reminds
us why it’s so important to
preserve and maintain open
spaces like Mission Trails.
The park, founded in
1974, is one of the largest
urban parks in the country.
Some call it the Third Jewel
in the San Diego City Park
System, preceded by Balboa
Park and Mission Bay Park. It
has its unique history, charm
and topography, and there
are plenty of more ambitious
Despite the lack of rain this winter, there are patches of wildflowers at
the 6,800-acre Mission Trails Regional Park, just 8 miles east of San
Diego’s downtown. These were found on the 1.4-mile Visitor Center
Loop. Photos by E’Louise Ondash
trails for those who want a
E’Louise Ondash is a freegreater challenge and more lance writer living in North Counsolitude. Visit http://www.
ty. Tell her about your travels at
mtrp.org/.
[email protected]
A17
A18
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page A16
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: MEREDITH L.
PARK AND WOO J. PARK,
WIFE AND HUSBAND AS
JOINT TENANTS Trustee:
ATTORNEY
LENDER
SERVICES, INC. Recorded
8/1/2007 as Instrument No.
2007-0513391
of
Official
Records in the office of the
Recorder of San Diego County,
California, Date of Sale:
5/18/2015 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 Amount
of unpaid balance and other
charges:
$797,793.32 The
purported property address
is: 510 BEACH STREET
ENCINITAS, CA 92024 A.P.N.:
258-401-39-00 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 wherein the
real property is located and
more than three (3) months
have elapsed since such
recordation. The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability
for any incorrectness of the
property 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
Trustee’s Sale. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. 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
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
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If you
wish to learn whether your sale
date has been postponed, and,
if applicable, the rescheduled
time and date for the sale of
this property, you may call
714-730-2727 for information
regarding the trustee’s sale
or visit this Internet Web site
www.servicelinkasap.com for
information regarding the sale
of this property, using the file
number assigned to this case,
14-0931 Information about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information or on the Internet
Web site. The best way to verify
postponement information is
to attend the scheduled sale.
Date: 4/9/2015 ATTORNEY
LENDER SERVICES, INC.
Diane Weifenbach, Trustee
Sale Officer 5120 E. LaPalma
Avenue, #209 Anaheim ,CA
92807 Telephone: 714-6956637 Sales Line: 714-7302727 Sales Website: www.
servicelinkasap.com
This
office is attempting to collect
a debt and any information
obtained will be used for
that
purpose.
A-4521413
04/24/2015,
05/01/2015,
05/08/2015 CN 17214
of the obligations secured
by the property to be sold
and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of this Notice of
Trustee’s Sale is estimated to
be $532,062.55 (Estimated).
However,
prepayment
premiums, accrued interest
and advances will increase
this figure prior to sale.
Beneficiary’s bid at said sale
may include all or part of
said amount. In addition to
cash, the Trustee will accept
a cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association or savings bank
specified in Section 5102 of
the California Financial Code
and authorized to do business
in California, or other such
funds as may be acceptable
to the Trustee. In the event
tender other than cash is
accepted, the Trustee may
withhold the issuance of the
Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale
until funds become available
to the payee or endorsee as a
matter of right. The property
offered for sale excludes
all funds held on account
by the property receiver, if
applicable. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. 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 In Source Logic at
702-659-7766 for information
regarding the Trustee’s Sale
or visit the Internet Web
site address listed below for
information regarding the sale
of this property, using the file
number assigned to this case,
CA08000618-15-1. Information
about postponements that
are very short in duration or
that occur close in time to
the scheduled sale may not
immediately be reflected in
the telephone information
or on the Internet Web
site. The best way to verify
postponement information is
to attend the scheduled sale.
Date: April 14, 2015 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA0800061815-1 17100 Gillette Ave
Irvine, CA 92614 949-2528300 TDD: 866-660-4288 Amy
Lemus, Authorized Signatory
SALE INFORMATION CAN
BE OBTAINED ON LINE
AT
www.insourcelogic.com
FOR AUTOMATED SALES
INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL: In Source Logic AT
702-659-7766 MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps MAY
BE ACTING AS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
ORDER
NO.
CA15-000796-1, PUB DATES:
04/24/2015,
05/01/2015,
05/08/2015 CN 17212
sum due under said Notice of
Delinquent Assessment, with
interest thereon, as provided
in said notice, advances, if any,
estimated fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee, to-wit:
SHOWN ABOVE Estimated
amount with accrued interest
and
additional
advances,
if any, may increase this
figure prior to sale. The
claimant under said Notice
of Delinquent Assessment
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, in accordance
with the provision to the
Covenants, Conditions and
Restrictions. The undersigned
caused said Notice of Default
and Election to Sell which
recorded on SHOWN ABOVE
as Book SHOWN ABOVE
as Instrument No. SHOWN
ABOVE 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 1-800-540-1717,
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, express
or implied regarding title,
possession or encumbrances,
to satisfy the indebtedness
secured by said Notice,
advances thereunder, with
interest as provided therein,
and the unpaid assessments
secured by said Notice with
interest thereon as provided
in said Covenants, Conditions
and Restrictions, fees, charges
and expenses of the trustee
and the trusts created by said
Notice of Assessment and
Claim of Lien. Date: 4/14/2015
CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY,
As Trustee 316 W. MISSION
AVE STE. #121 ESCONDIDO,
CA, 92025 (800) 540-1717 EXT
3061 LORI R. FLEMINGS, as
Authorized Signor. 04/24/15,
05/01/15, 05/08/15 CN 17210
return of monies paid to the
Trustee, and the successful
bidder shall have no further
recourse. The beneficiary
of the Deed of Trust has
executed and delivered to the
undersigned a written request
to commence foreclosure,
and the undersigned caused
a Notice of Default and
Election to Sell to be recorded
in the county where the real
property is located. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing
the highest bid at a trustee
auction does not automatically
entitle you to free and clear
ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that the
lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible
for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned
off, before you can receive
clear title to the property. You
are encouraged to investigate
the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either
of which may charge you a
fee for this information. If
you consult either of these
resources, you should be aware
that the same lender may hold
more than one mortgage or
deed of trust on this property.
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 NOTICE TO PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown
on this notice of sale may be
postponed one or more times
by the mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to
Section 2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law requires
that information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (866)-960-8299
or visit this Internet Web
site
http://www.altisource.
com/MortgageServices/
DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices.aspx
using
the file number assigned
to this case 2014-03545CA.
Information
about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information
or
on
the
Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale Date: April
7, 2015 Western Progressive,
LLC , as Trustee
C/o 30 Corporate Park,
Suite 450 Irvine, CA 92606
Automated Sale Information
Line:
(866)
960-8299
h t t p : / / w w w. a l t i s o u r c e .
com/MortgageServices/
DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices.aspx
For
Non-Automated
Sale
Information,
call:
(866)
240-3530
THIS FIRM IS
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT
A
DEBT
AND
ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL
BE
USED
FOR
THAT PURPOSE 04/24/15,
05/01/15,
05/08/15 CN
17209
APN: 158-312-23-00 TS No:
CA08000618-15-1
TO
No:
120203655
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE
IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED
OF TRUST DATED August 22,
2005. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. On
May 19, 2015 at 10:30 AM,
at the entrance to the East
County Regional Center by
statue, 250 E. Main Street,
El Cajon, CA 92020, MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps, as the duly Appointed
Trustee, under and pursuant
to the power of sale contained
in that certain Deed of Trust
recorded on August 26, 2005,
as Instrument No. 20050739561, of official records in
the Office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
executed by MATTHEW D.
INGRAM AND WANDA FORD
INGRAM, HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
, as Trustor(s), in favor of
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK,
N.A. as Beneficiary, WILL
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION
TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER,
in lawful money of the United
States, all payable at the time
of sale, that certain property
situated in said County,
California describing the land
therein as: AS MORE FULLY
DESCRIBED IN 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: 791 VALLEY
CREST DR, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92054 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 without covenant or
warranty, express 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. The total
amount of the unpaid balance
AFC-974
TS#:
SHOWN
BELOW REF:
SHOWN
BELOW APN:
SHOWN
BELOW
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE
IN DEFAULT UNDER A
NOTICE OF DELINQUENT
ASSESSMENT
DATED
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.
NOTICE is hereby given
that
CHICAGO
TITLE
COMPANY, as the duly
appointed Trustee pursuant
to Notice of Delinquent
Assessment and Claim of Lien
executed by SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA BEACH CLUB
OWNERS
ASSOCIATION,
INC.,
A
CALIFORNIA
NONPROFIT
MUTUAL
BENEFIT
CORPORATION
as Book SHOWN BELOW
as Instrument No. SHOWN
BELOW of Official Records
in the Office of the Recorder
of SAN DIEGO County,
California, property owned by
SHOWN BELOW. WILL SELL
ON 5/20/2015 at 10:00 AM
LOCATION: AT THE FRONT
ENTRANCE TO CHICAGO
TITLE COMPANY 316 W.
MISSION AVENUE, SUITE
121, ESCONDIDO, CA 92025
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION
TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER
FOR CASH (payable at time
of sale in lawful money of
the United States, by cash,
a cashier’s check drawn by a
state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union, or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, business
in this state, all right, title
and interest under said Notice
of Delinquent Assessment
in the property situated in
said County, describing the
land on above referred Claim
of Lien. TS#, REF#, ICN,
U N I T / I N T E RVA L / W E E K ,
APN,
TRUSTORS,
COL
DATED, COL RECORDED,
COL BOOK, COL PAGE/
INSTRUMENT#,
NOD
RECORDED, NOD BOOK,
NOD PAGE/INSTRUMENT#,
ESTIMATED
SALES
AMOUNT
65261
20414A
4917 204 14 147-264-15-14
ROBERT DEAN CLAIBORNE
A MARRIED MAN AS HIS
SOLE
AND
SEPARATE
PROPERTY
11/21/2014
12/01/2014
2014
522137
01/06/2015 2015 3843 $5996.94
The street address and
other common designation,
if any, of the real property
described above is purported
to be: 121 SOUTH PACIFIC
, OCEANSIDE, CA, 92009
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
T.S.
No.:
2014-03545CA
Loan No.: 7131198827
A.P.N.:162-520-54-00 NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S
SALE
PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
REFERRED TO BELOW IS
NOT ATTACHED TO THE
RECORDED COPY OF THIS
DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO
THE COPIES PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR. NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT ATTACHED
注:本文件包含一个信息摘要
참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보
요약서가 있습니다
NOTA:
SE
ADJUNTA
UN
RESUMEN
DE
LA
INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE
DOCUMENTO
TALA: MAYROONG BUOD
NG
IMPORMASYON
SA
DOKUMENTONG
ITO
NA
NAKALAKIP
LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ
BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC
VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI
LIỆU NÀY
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
10/12/2004. UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC
SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT
A
LAWYER.
Trustor: SHERRY KAY ORR,
A SINGLE WOMAN Duly
Appointed Trustee: Western
Progressive, LLC Recorded
10/28/2004 as Instrument No.
2004-1022573 in book ---, page-- and of Official Records in
the office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
Date of Sale: 05/21/2015 at
10:30 AM Place of Sale:
AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER BY THE STATUE,
250 E. MAIN STREET, EL
CAJON,
CA
Estimated
amount of unpaid balance and
other charges: $314,618.56
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION
TO
HIGHEST
BIDDER
FOR
CASH,
CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN
ON A STATE OR NATIONAL
BANK, A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, OR A
CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE
OR
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, A
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR
SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED
IN SECTION 5102 OF THE
FINANCIAL
CODE AND
AUTHORIZED
TO
DO
BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
All right, title, and interest
conveyed to and now held by
the trustee in the hereinafter
described property under and
pursuant to a Deed of Trust
described as: Street Address
or other common designation
of
real
property:
4193
Diamond Circle, Oceanside,
CA 92056 A.P.N.: 162-520-5400 The undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the street
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
above. The sale will be
made, but without covenant
or warranty, expressed or
implied,
regarding
title,
possession, or encumbrances,
to pay the remaining principal
sum of the note(s) secured
by the Deed of Trust. The
total amount of the unpaid
balance of the obligation
secured by the property to be
sold and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of the Notice of
Sale is: $314,618.56. If the
Trustee is unable to convey
title for any reason, the
successful bidder’s sole and
exclusive remedy shall be the
T.S. No.: 2011-11566 L o a n
No.: 705657781
A . P. N. :
189-341-82-00
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S
SALE
PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
REFERRED TO BELOW IS
APRIL 24, 2015 A19
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
NOT ATTACHED TO THE
RECORDED COPY OF THIS
DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO
THE COPIES PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR. NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT ATTACHED
注:本文件包含一个信息摘要
참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보
요약서가 있습니다
NOTA:
SE
ADJUNTA
UN
RESUMEN
DE
LA
INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE
DOCUMENTO
TALA: MAYROONG BUOD
NG
IMPORMASYON
SA
DOKUMENTONG
ITO
NA
NAKALAKIP
LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ
BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC
VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI
LIỆU NÀY
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
2/2/2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT
A
LAWYER.
Trustor:
RICHARD
B.
GREENE, A SINGLE MAN
AND TRACEY M. SIMON, A
SINGLE WOMAN, AS JOINT
TENANTS. Duly Appointed
Trustee: Western Progressive,
LLC
Recorded 2/21/2006
as Instrument No. 20060121134 in book ---, page
--- and rerecorded on --- as
--- of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of San
Diego County, California,
Date of Sale: 5/20/2015 at
10:30 AM Place of Sale: AT
THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER BY THE STATUE,
250 E. MAIN STREET, EL
CAJON,
CA
Estimated
amount of unpaid balance and
other charges: $728,550.83
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST
BIDDER
FOR
CASH,
CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN
ON A STATE OR NATIONAL
BANK, A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, OR A
CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE
OR
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, A
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR
SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED
IN SECTION 5102 OF THE
FINANCIAL
CODE AND
AUTHORIZED
TO
DO
BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
All right, title and interest
conveyed to and now held by
the trustee in the hereinafter
described property under and
pursuant to a Deed of Trust
described as; Street Address or
other common designation of
real property: 14258 COEUR
D’ALENE
CT,
VALLEY
CENTER,
CALIFORNIA
92082 A.P.N.: 189-341-82-00
The
undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the street
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
above. The sale will be made,
but without covenant or
warrant, expressed or implied,
regarding title, possession,
or encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum of the
note(s) secured by the Deed
of Trust. The total amount of
the unpaid principal balance
of the obligation secured
by the property to be sold
and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of the Notice of
Sale is : $728,550.83 If the
Trustee is unable to convey
title for any reason, the
successful bidder’s sole and
exclusive remedy shall be the
return of monies paid to the
Trustee, and the successful
bidder shall have no further
recourse. The beneficiary
of the Deed of Trust has
executed and delivered to the
undersigned a written request
to commence foreclosure,
and the undersigned caused
a Notice of Default and
Election to Sell to be recorded
in the county where the real
property is located. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You
will be bidding on a lien,
not on the property itself.
Placing the highest bid at
a trustee auction does not
automatically entitle you to
free and clear ownership of
the property. You should also
be aware that the lien being
auctioned off may be a junior
lien. If you are the highest
bidder at the auction, you
are or may be responsible for
paying off all liens senior to
the lien being auctioned off,
before you can receive clear
title to the property. You are
encouraged to investigate
the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either
of which may charge you a
fee for this information. If
you consult either of these
resources, you should be aware
that the same lender may hold
more than one mortgage or
deed of trust on this property.
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. NOTICE TO PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown
on this notice of sale may be
postponed one or more times
by the mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to
Section 2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law requires
that information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (866)-960-8299
or visit this Internet Web
site
http://www.altisource.
com/MortgageServices/
DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices/Sales.aspx
using
the
file
number
assigned to this case 201111566.
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. The best way
to
verify
postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale Date: 4/7/2015
Western Progressive, LLC,
as Trustee c/o 30 Corporate
Park, Suite 450 Irvine, CA
92606
Automated
Sale
Information Line: (866) 9608299
http://www.altisource.
com/MortgageServices/
DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices/Sales.aspx
For
Non-Automated
Sale
Information,
call:
(866)
240-3530
Tamika
Smith,
Trustee Sale Assistant THIS
FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE 04/24/15, 05/01/15,
05/08/15 CN 17208
CONTACT A LAWYER On
5/14/2015 at 3:00 PM, CLEAR
RECON CORP., as duly
appointed
trustee
under
and pursuant to Deed of
Trust recorded 4/24/2006, as
Instrument No. 2006-0284037,
of Official Records in the
office of the County Recorder
of San Diego County, State of
CALIFORNIA executed by:
PATRICK J GALVIN, AND
HELEN M GALVIN, Husband
and Wife as joint tenants
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION
TO
HIGHEST
BIDDER
FOR
CASH,
CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN
ON A STATE OR NATIONAL
BANK, A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, OR A
CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE
OR
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, OR
SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED
IN SECTION 5102 OF THE
FINANCIAL
CODE AND
AUTHORIZED
TO
DO
BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER BY STATUE, 250 E.
MAIN STREET, EL CAJON,
CA 92020 all right, title and
interest conveyed to and
now held by it under said
Deed of Trust in the property
situated in said County
and State described as: AS
MORE FULLY DESCRIBED
IN SAID DEED OF TRUST.
The street address and other
common designation, if any,
of the real property described
above is purported to be:
6131 PASEO ARBOLADO
RANCHO SANTA FE, CA
92067-0000 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability
for any incorrectness of the
street address and other
common designation, if any,
shown herein. Said sale will be
held, but without covenant or
warranty, express or implied,
regarding title, possession,
condition, or encumbrances,
including fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee and
of the trusts created by said
Deed of Trust, to pay the
remaining principal sums
of the note(s) secured by
said Deed of Trust. The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligation secured by
the property to be sold and
reasonable estimated costs,
expenses and advances at the
time of the initial publication
of the Notice of Sale is:
$1,727,937.84 If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. The
beneficiary under said Deed of
Trust heretofore executed and
delivered to the undersigned
a written Declaration of
Default and Demand for
Sale, and a written Notice
of Default and Election to
Sell. The undersigned caused
said Notice of Default and
Election to Sell to be recorded
in the county where the real
property is located. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing
the highest bid at a trustee
auction does not automatically
entitle you to free and clear
ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that the
lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible
for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned
off, before you can receive
clear title to the property. You
are encouraged to investigate
the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee for
this information. If you consult
either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
lender may hold more than
one mortgage or deed of trust
on the property. NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this notice of
sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a
court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (844) 477-7869
or visit this Internet Web
site
WWW.STOXPOSTING.
COM, using the file number
assigned to this case 015080CA.
Information
about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information
or
on
the
Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale. FOR SALES
INFORMATION: (844) 4777869
CLEAR
RECON
CORP. CLEAR RECON CORP.
4375 Jutland Drive Suite
200 San Diego, California
92117
Legal
Description
THAT PORTION OF LOT 4,
IN BLOCK 30, OF RANCHO
SANTA FE, IN THE COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING
TO MAP THEREOF NO.
1742,
FILED IN THE
OFFICE OF THE COUNTY
RECORDER OF SAN DIEGO
COUNTY
DECEMBER
28, 1922, DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING
AT THE SOUTHEASTERLY
COMMON CORNER OF LOTS
2 AND 4 OF SAID BLOCK
30; THENCE ALONG THE
COMMON LINE BETWEEN
SAID LOTS 2 AND 4, NORTH
67° 39’ WEST 305.46 FEET
TO THE MOST NORTHERLY
CORNER OF THAT PARCEL
OF LAND DESCRIBED IN
DEED TO CONSTANCE C.
CLOTFELTER, A MARRIED
WOMAN, RECORDED APRIL
12, 1947, AS DOCUMENT NO.
38583 IN BOOK 2375, PAGE
436 OF OFFICIAL RECORDS;
SAID CLOTFELTER’S MOST
NORTHERLY
CORNER
BEING THE TRUE POINT
OF BEGINNING OF THE
PROPERTY
HEREIN
DESCRIBED;
THENCE
CONTINUING ALONG SAID
LOT-LINE NORTH 67° 39’
WEST 154.14 FEET TO THE
SOUTHEASTERLY
LINE
OF PUBLIC ROAD PASEO
ARBOLADO, 60 FEET IN
WIDTH AS CONVEYED TO
COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO,
BY DEED DATED AUGUST
7, 1940 AND RECORDED
IN BOOK 1103, PAGE 380
OF OFFICIAL RECORDS;
THENCE
ALONG
SAID
SOUTHEASTERLY
LINE
OF
ROAD
SOUTH
47°
05’ WEST
156.21 FEET;
THENCE
SOUTH
42°
55’ EAST 140 FEET TO
THE
SOUTHWESTERLY
PROLONGATION OF THE
NORTHWESTERLY
LINE
OF
SAID
CLOTFELTER
LAND ABOVE MENTIONED;
THENCE
ALONG
SAID
PROLONGATION AND LINE
OF SAID
CLOTFELTER
LAND NORTH 47° 05’ EAST
220.70 FEET TO THE TRUE
POINT OF
BEGINNING.
04/24/15, 05/01/15, 05/08/15
CN 17207
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST, DATED
4/25/2006.
UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC
SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER On
5/14/2015 at 3:00 PM, CLEAR
RECON CORP., as duly
appointed
trustee
under
and pursuant to Deed of
Trust recorded 5/2/2006, as
Instrument No. 2006-0306252,
of Official Records in the
office of the County Recorder
of San Diego County, State
of CALIFORNIA executed
by: ALVIN WASHINGTON, A
MARRIED MAN AS HIS SOLE
& SEPARATE PROPERTY
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION
TO
HIGHEST
BIDDER
FOR
CASH,
CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN
ON A STATE OR NATIONAL
BANK, A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, OR A
CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE
OR
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, OR
SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED
IN SECTION 5102 OF THE
FINANCIAL
CODE AND
AUTHORIZED
TO
DO
BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER BY STATUE, 250 E.
MAIN STREET, EL CAJON,
CA 92020 all right, title and
interest conveyed to and
now held by it under said
Deed of Trust in the property
situated in said County and
State described as: MORE
FULLY
DESCRIBED
ON
SAID DEED OF TRUST The
street address and other
common designation, if any,
of the real property described
above is purported to be:
4367 HIGHLAND DRIVE
CARLSBAD,
CALIFORNIA
92008-4226 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability
for any incorrectness of the
street address and other
common designation, if any,
shown herein. Said sale will be
held, but without covenant or
warranty, express or implied,
regarding title, possession,
condition, or encumbrances,
including fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee and
of the trusts created by said
Deed of Trust, to pay the
remaining principal sums
of the note(s) secured by
said Deed of Trust. The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligation secured by
the property to be sold and
reasonable estimated costs,
expenses and advances at the
time of the initial publication
of the Notice of Sale is:
$3,383,980.26 If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. The
beneficiary under said Deed of
Trust heretofore executed and
delivered to the undersigned
a written Declaration of
Default and Demand for
Sale, and a written Notice
of Default and Election to
Sell. The undersigned caused
said Notice of Default and
Election to Sell to be recorded
in the county where the real
property is located. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing
the highest bid at a trustee
auction does not automatically
entitle you to free and clear
ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that the
lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible
for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned
off, before you can receive
clear title to the property. You
are encouraged to investigate
the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee for
this information. If you consult
either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
lender may hold more than
one mortgage or deed of trust
on the property. NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this notice of
sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a
court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (844) 477-7869
or visit this Internet Web
site
WWW.STOXPOSTING.
COM, using the file number
assigned to this case 010440CA.
Information
about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information or on the Internet
Web site. The best way to verify
postponement information is
to attend the scheduled sale.
FOR SALES INFORMATION:
(844) 477-7869
CLEAR
RECON
CORP.
CLEAR
RECON CORP.4375 Jutland
Drive Suite 200 San Diego,
California 92117 EXHIBIT
A LEGAL DESCRIPTION
THE
LAND
REFERRED
TO HEREIN BELOW IS
SITUATED IN THE COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, STATE
OF CALIFORNIA, AND IS
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
PARCEL 1 OF PARCEL MAP
NO. 15756, IN THE CITY
OF CARLSBAD, COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING
TO MAP THEREOF FILED
IN THE OFFICE OF THE
COUNTY
RECORDER
OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY,
AUGUST 7, 1989. 04/24/15,
05/01/15, 05/08/15 CN 17206
THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT
A
LAWYER.
Trustor: William J. Hazelton,
A Widower Duly Appointed
Trustee: Western Progressive,
LLC Recorded 11/07/2003 as
Instrument No. 2003-1351975
in book ---, page--- and of
Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, Date of
Sale: 05/14/2015 at 10:30 AM
Place of Sale:
A
T
THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER BY THE STATUE,
250 E. MAIN STREET, EL
CAJON,
CA
Estimated
amount of unpaid balance and
other charges: $251,337.67
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION
TO
HIGHEST
BIDDER
FOR
CASH,
CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN
ON A STATE OR NATIONAL
BANK, A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, OR A
CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE
OR
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, A
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR
SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED
IN SECTION 5102 OF THE
FINANCIAL
CODE AND
AUTHORIZED
TO
DO
BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
All right, title, and interest
conveyed to and now held by
the trustee in the hereinafter
described property under and
pursuant to a Deed of Trust
described as: Street Address
or other common designation
of real property: 30629
Rolling Hills Drive, Valley
Center, CA 92082 A.P.N.: 129330-09-00 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability
for any incorrectness of
the street address or other
common designation, if any,
shown above. The sale will be
made, but without covenant
or warranty, expressed or
implied,
regarding
title,
possession, or encumbrances,
to pay the remaining principal
sum of the note(s) secured
by the Deed of Trust. The
total amount of the unpaid
balance of the obligation
secured by the property to be
sold and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of the Notice of
Sale is: $251,337.67. If the
Trustee is unable to convey
title for any reason, the
successful bidder’s sole and
exclusive remedy shall be the
return of monies paid to the
Trustee, and the successful
bidder shall have no further
recourse. The beneficiary
of the Deed of Trust has
executed and delivered to the
undersigned a written request
to commence foreclosure,
and the undersigned caused
a Notice of Default and
Election to Sell to be recorded
in the county where the real
property is located. NOTICE
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
APN: 26629301 T.S. No.
015080-CA
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant
to CA Civil Code 2923.3
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST, DATED
4/13/2006.
UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC
SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
APN: 206-180-46-00 T.S. No.
010440-CA
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant
to CA Civil Code 2923.3
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
T.S.
No.:
2014-03213CA
Loan No.: 7145721754
A.P.N.:129-330-09-00 NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S
SALE
PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
REFERRED TO BELOW IS
NOT ATTACHED TO THE
RECORDED COPY OF THIS
DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO
THE COPIES PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR. NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT ATTACHED
注:本文件包含一个信息摘要
참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보
요약서가 있습니다
NOTA:
SE
ADJUNTA
UN
RESUMEN
DE
LA
INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE
DOCUMENTO
TALA: MAYROONG BUOD
NG
IMPORMASYON
SA
DOKUMENTONG
ITO
NA
NAKALAKIP
LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ
BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC
VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI
LIỆU NÀY
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
10/30/2003. UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC
SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
Coast News legals
continued on
page A21
A20
T he C oast News RENTALS
CONTINUED FROM A1
Blackburn said he understood staff’s philosophy but
disagreed.
“In this particular case,
I’m kind of hearing ‘It’s illegal, people are doing it
anyway so let’s legalize it so
we can better manage it.’ I
kind of heard the same thing
about drugs, prostitution and
now I’m hearing about short
term rentals,” Blackburn
said to much applause from
the crowd.
He said there are
enough hotel and motel
rooms throughout the city to
accommodate visitors.
There are 4,060 hotel
rooms, with an additional
300 currently under construction. There are also
1,500 timeshare rooms.
Many of the speakers
APRIL 24, 2015
against vacation rentals
said they moved east of the
coastal zone for peace and
tranquility from traffic and
tourism.
“We deliberately selected to live in this residential
estate neighborhood outside
of the coastal community so
ROOF! ROOF!
we would not have to deal
with late nights, transients
coming and going, noise,
trash and the lack of security
in not knowing who is living
next door to you,” La Costa
Estates resident Tracy Teregis said.
She and her husband
Greg said their next-door
neighbor converted a home
into two vacation rentals,
which has caused them to consider selling their home.
“I would hope that the
city would stick up for homeowner rights versus businesses that want to run homes as
motels,” said Greg Teregis.
Former real estate agent
Joe Donnaghan spoke in favor of the rentals because he
believes the city is missing
out on a huge revenue source.
He has attended multiple
council meetings pleading for
the city to speed up the process of legalizing them.
“I hope the council will
expedite this, we’ve already
missed spring break and Easter and summer is going to
be upon us, let’s not drag our
feet,” Donegan told the council.
Councilmembers unanimously passed the ordinance,
which will go for a second
reading in two weeks and go
into effect 30 days after that,
in early June.
Short-term rental owners
in the coastal zone will need
to apply for a business license,
which is accompanied by a
yearlong permit.
They’ll have to post a
24-hour contact number to a
local property manager in a
window so surrounding neighbors can resolve conflicts.
The property manager
will need to respond within
45 minutes, although Councilmember Michael Schumacher said there’s no way the
city can regulate that.
Owners and each tenant
will need to sign a Good
Neighbor agreement, which
outlines noise and trash rules.
The maximum amount
of people allowed will be two
people per bedroom plus one
additional person per unit.
For example, a two-bedroom
rental would be allowed to accommodate five people.
Also, Homeowner Associations trump city and state
ordinances so if an HOA
doesn’t allow rentals, they are
not allowed in that residential
area.
City staff will come back
to council in a year to review
the ordinance and change it if
necessary.
Let our family help your family
find the perfect home.
Rick Anderson
Realtor #00885266
FALLBROOK
Reza Niroomand
Realtor #01020018
Randy Higgins
Realtor #00637031
$515,000 FALLBROOK
Call today to speak with one of our
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of these great properties!
$350,000 OCEANSIDE
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Realtor #01398182
Ken Chiles
Realtor #01402711
Irina Varshavsky
Realtor #01864491
$699,900-$739,900 OCEANSIDE
$555,000
$650,000-$675,000 CARLSBAD
$505,900
Gated community. 4BR/2.5BA with giant sunroom/game room. 3 Lake Rancho Viejo has walking trails, playground, Pool/Spa, Club- A rare jewel in a garden setting. Buena Vista Lagoon. Unheard Complex is across the street from the beach. Easy access to the
car garage with built-in workbench & cabinets. Low maintenance house, Tennis & Basketball included in HOA Fees. Home needs of privacy west of Coast Hwy. This unique home exudes charm. sand. Unit remodeled. Unit faces out on Tait. MLS # 140053653
Fossil stone fireplace. MLS # 150018749
grounds manicured by Association. MLS# 150011197
some TLC. Enclosed porch off the front bedroom.
MLS #150015948
OCEANSIDE
$360,000-$375,000 RAMONA
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trance. Tropical grounds with waterfalls & streams. Walk to the har- Fantastic opportunity for a huge 3 bedroom 2.5 bath unit in Country 4+ Acres,two contingent lots. Possible uses for Vineyard, grove, Come enjoy the good life on the lagoon. For your use enjoy boat
bor & restaurants. MLS # 150011613
Villas II. Private and Serene location with largest floorplan in the nursery, ranch, home site. DG Soil and higher elevation south facing docks, pool, spa, BBQs and patio with fire pit. Nice water views. Unit
complex. MLS # 150012395
slope could make property ideal for growing. Road refer to Parcel is 2/2 and 1268 sqft in Bristol Cove Complex. MLS # 150020000
Map. MLS # 150005135
Leading San Diego North County Real Estate Offices for home buyers, home sellers,
property management, and your source for short sale and foreclosure information.
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CARLSBAD
CARLSBAD
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2963Carlsbad
Carlsbad Blvd.
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OCEANSIDE
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316
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760.720.0600 760.722.4121
760.720.0600
760.722.4121
APRIL 24, 2015 LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page A19
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either
of which may charge you a
fee for this information. If
you consult either of these
resources, you should be aware
that the same lender may hold
more than one mortgage or
deed of trust on this property.
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 NOTICE TO PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown
on this notice of sale may be
postponed one or more times
by the mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to
Section 2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law requires
that information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (866)-960-8299
or visit this Internet Web
site
http://www.altisource.
com/MortgageServices/
DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices.aspx
using
the file number assigned
to this case 2014-03213CA.
Information
about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information
or
on
the
Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale Date: April
2, 2015 Western Progressive,
LLC , as Trustee
C/o 30 Corporate Park,
Suite 450 Irvine, CA 92606
Automated Sale Information
Line:
(866)
960-8299
h t t p : / / w w w. a l t i s o u r c e .
com/MortgageServices/
DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices.aspx For NonAutomated Sale Information,
call: (866) 240-3530
THIS
FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE 04/17/15, 04/24/15,
05/01/15 CN 17183
APN: 105-481-35-00 T.S. No.
016118-CA
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant
to CA Civil Code 2923.3
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
DEED OF TRUST, DATED
8/23/2006.
UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF THE
NATURE
OF
THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER On
5/7/2015 at 3:00 PM, CLEAR
RECON CORP., as duly
appointed trustee under and
pursuant to Deed of Trust
recorded
8/29/2006,
as
Instrument No. 2006-0615734,
of Official Records in the
office of the County Recorder
of San Diego County, State of
CALIFORNIA executed by:
MARTHA AVILA WILL SELL
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
HIGHEST
BIDDER
FOR
CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK
DRAWN ON A STATE OR
NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK
DRAWN BY A STATE OR
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION,
OR A CHECK DRAWN BY A
STATE
OR
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION,
SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION, OR SAVINGS
A21
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
BANK
SPECIFIED
IN
SECTION 5102 OF THE
FINANCIAL
CODE AND
AUTHORIZED
TO
DO
BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER BY STATUE, 250 E.
MAIN STREET, EL CAJON,
CA 92020 all right, title and
interest conveyed to and now
held by it under said Deed of
Trust in the property situated
in said County and State
described as: MORE FULLY
DESCRIBED ON SAID DEED
OF TRUST The street address
and
other
common
designation, if any, of the real
property described above is
purported to be: 711 STONE
POST
RD
FALLBROOK,
CALIFORNIA 92028-1649 The
undersigned Trustee disclaims
any
liability
for
any
incorrectness of the street
address and other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. Said sale will be held,
but without covenant or
warranty, express or implied,
regarding title, possession,
condition, or encumbrances,
including fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee and of
the trusts created by said
Deed of Trust, to pay the
remaining principal sums of
the note(s) secured by said
Deed of Trust.
The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligation secured by
the property to be sold and
reasonable estimated costs,
expenses and advances at the
time of the initial publication
of the Notice of Sale is:
$1,184,834.98 If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. The
beneficiary under said Deed
of Trust heretofore executed
and
delivered
to
the
undersigned
a
written
Declaration of Default and
Demand for Sale, and a
written Notice of Default and
Election
to
Sell.
The
undersigned
caused
said
Notice of Default and Election
to Sell to be recorded in the
county
where
the
real
property is located. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing the
highest bid at a trustee
auction does not automatically
entitle you to free and clear
ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that the
lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible
for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned off,
before you can receive clear
title to the property. You are
encouraged to investigate the
existence, priority, and size of
outstanding liens that may
exist on this property by
contacting
the
county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee
for this information. If you
consult either of these
resources, you should be
aware that the same lender
may hold more than one
mortgage or deed of trust on
the property. NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this notice of
sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a court,
pursuant to Section 2924g of
the California Civil Code. The
law requires that information
about
trustee
sale
postponements
be
made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If you
wish to learn whether your
sale date has been postponed,
and,
if
applicable,
the
rescheduled time and date for
the sale of this property, you
may call (844) 477-7869 or
visit this Internet Web site
WWW.STOXPOSTING.COM,
using the file number assigned
to this case 016118-CA.
Information
about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information or on the Internet
Web site. The best way to
verify
postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale. FOR SALES
INFORMATION: (844) 4777869 CLEAR RECON CORP.
CLEAR RECON CORP. 4375
Jutland Drive Suite 200 San
Diego,
California
92117
EXHIBIT A Real property in
the unincorporated area of the
County of San Diego State of
California,
described
as
follows: PARCEL 1: THAT
PORTION OF LOT 3 IN
SECTION 18, TOWNSHIP 9
SOUTH, RANGE 3 WEST,
SAN BERNARDINO BASE
AND MERIDIAN, IN THE
COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO,
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
ACCORDING
TO
THE
UNITED
STATE
GOVERNMENT
SURVEY,
APPROVED APRIL 21, 1890,
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
COMMENCING
AT
THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OF
SAID LOT 3; THENCE
ALONG THE EASTERLY
LINE OF SAID LOT 3, SOUTH
00º15’30” WEST 979.97 FEET
TO
THE
NORTHEAST
CORNER OF THAT CERTAIN
EASEMENT AS DESCRIBED
IN DEED TO RALPH K.
ENANDER,
ET
UX,
RECORDED APRIL 12, 1965
AS INSTRUMENT NO. 63917
OF OFFICIAL RECORDS,
BEING A POINT HEREIN
DESIGNATED AS POINT “C”;
THENCE
CONTINUING
ALONG SAID EASTERLY
LINE SOUTH 00º15’30” WEST
29.02 FEET TO THE MOST
SOUTHERLY, SOUTHEAST
CORNER
OF
LAND
DESCRIBED IN DEED TO
RALPH K. ENANDER, ET
UX, RECORDED APRIL 12,
1965 AS INSTRUMENT NO.
63916
OF
OFFICIAL
RECORDS; THENCE ALONG
THE BOUNDARY OF SAID
ENANDER’S LAND, LAST
ABOVE REFERRED TO AS
FOLLOWS: SOUTH 89º25’20”
WEST 450.83 FEET; NORTH
00º15’30” EAST 16.28 FEET;
AND SOUTH 89º25’20” WEST
39.21
FEET
TO
THE
SOUTHEASTERLY CORNER
OF LAND DESCRIBED IN
PARCEL 1 IN DEED TO
BYRON E. DENHOLM, ET
UX, RECORDED MAY 21,
1968 AS INSTRUMENT NO.
84419
OF
OFFICIAL
RECORDS, BEING A POINT
HEREIN DESIGNATED AS
POINT “A”; THENCE ALONG
THE BOUNDARY OF SAID
PARCEL 1 OF DENHOLM’S
LAND AS FOLLOWS: NORTH
00º15’30” EAST, 60.77 FEET;
NORTH
50º20’08” WEST
53.31
FEET
TO
THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
150.00
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE
CONCAVE
N O R T H E A S T E R LY;
NORTHWESTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 48º45’55” A
DISTANCE OF 127.67 FEET;
TANGENT TO SAID CURVE
NORTH
01º34’13” WEST
40.08
FEET
TO
THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
125.00
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE
CONCAVE
S O U T H W E S T E R LY;
NORTHWESTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 42º22’29”, A
DISTANCE OF 92.45 FEET
AND TANGENT TO SAID
CURVE NORTH 43º56’42”
WEST 31.55 FEET TO THE
MOST
NORTHERLY
CORNER OF SAID LAND;
THENCE
CONTINUING
NORTH 43º56’42” WEST,
77.17
FEET
TO
THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
250.00
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE
CONCAVE
SOUTHWESTERLY; THENCE
NORTHWESTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 27º49’50” A
DISTANCE OF 121.43 FEET;
THENCE TANGENT TO SAID
CURVE NORTH 71º46’32”
WEST 155.02 FEET TO THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
257.59
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE
CONCAVE
SOUTHERLY;
THENCE
WESTERLY ALONG THE
ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 22º25’58” A
DISTANCE OF 100.85 FEET
TO THE TRUE POINT OF
BEGINNING; THENCE NONTANGENT TO SAID CURVE
SOUTH 89º57’03” WEST,
80.00
FEET;
THENCE
NORTHWESTERLY IN A
STRAIGHT
LINE
A
DISTANCE OF 169.20 FEET
TO A POINT ON THE
WESTERLY LINE OF SAID
LOT 3 DISTANT THEREON
SOUTH 00º16’30” WEST 80.00
FEET
FROM
THE
SOUTHWEST CORNER OF
THE NORTHERLY 330.00
FEET OF SAID LOT 3;
THENCE
ALONG
SAID
WESTERLY LINE SOUTH
00º16’30” WEST 594.52 FEET
TO A LINE WHICH BEARS
SOUTH
89º25’20” WEST
FROM SAID POINT “A”;
THENCE NORTH 89º25’20”
EAST 386.51 FEET TO A
CORNER
IN
THE
BOUNDARY
OF
LAND
DESCRIBED IN PARCEL 1 IN
DEED
TO
ELMER
E.
KNOCHE,
ET
UX
RECORDED AUGUST 30,
1968 AS INSTRUMENT NO.
150246
OF
OFFICIAL
RECORDS; THENCE ALONG
THE BOUNDARY OF SAID
PARCEL 1 OF KNOCHE’S
LAND AS FOLLOWS: AT
RIGHT ANGLES NORTH
00º34’40” WEST 20.00 FEET;
AND AT RIGHT ANGLES
SOUTH
89º25’20” WEST
146.98 FEET TO A LINE
WHICH
BEARS
SOUTH
00º23’00” WEST FROM THE
TRUE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING;
THENCE
NORTH
00º23’00”
EAST
185.00 FEET TO A POINT
HEREIN DESIGNATED AS
POINT
“X”;
THENCE
CONTINUING
NORTH
00º23’00” EAST 333.14 FEET
TO THE TRUE POINT OF
BEGINNING.
EXCEPTING
THEREFROM
THAT
PORTION
LYING
SOUTHERLY
AND
WESTERLY OF A LINE
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT POINT “X”,
H E R E I N A B O V E
DESCRIBED;
THENCE
SOUTH
89º25’20” WEST
219.53
FEET
TO
THE
EASTERLY LINE OF THE
WESTERLY 20.00 FEET OF
SAID LOT 3; THENCE
ALONG SAID EASTERLY
LINE NORTH 00º16’30” EAST
380.00
FEET
TO
THE
INTERSECTION WITH THE
NORTHERLY LINE OF THE
1ST ABOVE DESCRIBED
LAND. PARCEL 2: AN
EASEMENT FOR INGRESS
AND EGRESS FOR ROAD
PURPOSES ONLY, OVER,
ALONG AND ACROSS THAT
PORTION OF LOT 3 IN
SECTION 18, TOWNSHIP 9
SOUTH, RANGE 3 WEST,
SAN BERNARDINO BASE
AND MERIDIAN, IN THE
COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO,
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
ACCORDING TO UNITED
STATES
GOVERNMENT
SURVEY APPROVED APRIL
21, 1890, DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT
SAID
POINT
“C”
H E R E I N A B O V E
DESIGNATED IN PARCEL 1,
BEING A POINT ON THE
EASTERLY LINE OF SAID
LOT 3; THENCE SOUTH
88º17’30” WEST 331.02 FEET
TO THE BEGINNING OF A
TANGENT
200.00
FOOT
RADIUS CURVE CONCAVE
NORTHEASTERLY; THENCE
NORTHWESTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
TO A LINE WHICH IS
PARALLEL WITH AND 20.00
FEET NORTHERLY OF AND
MEASURED
AT
RIGHT
ANGLES TO A LINE WHICH
BEARS SOUTH 88º17’30”
WEST FROM THE POINT
BEGINNING;
THENCE
ALONG SAID PARALLEL
LINE NORTH 88º17’30” EAST
TO THE EASTERLY LINE OF
SAID LOT 3; THENCE
ALONG SAID EASTERLY
LINE SOUTH 00º15’30” WEST
TO
THE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING. PARCEL 3: AN
EASEMENT AND RIGHT OF
WAY FOR ROAD, SEWER,
WATER, GAS, POWER AND
TELEPHONE LINES AND
APPURTENANCES
THERETO OVER, UNDER,
ALONG AND ACROSS A
STRIP OF LAND 52.00 FEET
IN WIDTH LYING WITHIN
LOT 3 IN SECTION 18,
TOWNSHIP
9
SOUTH,
RANGE
3 WEST, SAN
BERNARDINO BASE AND
MERIDIAN, IN THE COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING
TO
UNITED
STATES
GOVERNMENT
SURVEY
APPROVED APRIL 19, 1890,
THE CENTER LINE OF SAID
STRIP BEING DESCRIBED
AS
FOLLOWS:
COMMENCING AT POINT
“A”
HEREINABOVE
DESIGNATED IN PARCEL 1,
BEING
THE
SOUTHEASTERLY CORNER
OF LAND DESCRIBED IN
PARCEL 1 DEED TO BYRON
E. DENHOLM, ET LUX,
RECORDED MAY 21, 1968 AS
INSTRUMENT NO. 84419 OF
OFFICIAL
RECORDS;
THENCE
ALONG
THE
EASTERLY LINE OF SAID
PARCEL 1 OF DENHOLM’S
LAND NORTH 00º15’30”
EAST 60.77 FEET TO AN
ANGEL IN THE BOUNDARY
OF SAID LAND AND THE
TRUE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING;
THENCE
ALONG
THE
N O R T H E A S T E R LY
BOUNDARY
OF
SAID
PARCEL 1 OF DENHOLM’S
LAND AS FOLLOWS: NORTH
50º20’08” WEST, 53.31 FEET
TO THE BEGINNING OF A
TANGENT
150.00
FOOT
RADIUS CURVE CONCAVE
N O R T H E A S T E R LY,
NORTHWESTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
TROUGH
A
CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 48º45’55”, A
DISTANCE OF 127.67 FEET;
TANGENT TO SAID CURVE
NORTH
01º34’13” WEST
40.08
FEET
TO
THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
125.00
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE
CONCAVE
S O U T H W E S T E R LY;
NORTHWESTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 42º22’29”, A
DISTANCE OF 92.45 FEET
AND TANGENT TO SAID
CURVE NORTH 43º56’42”
WEST 31.55 FEET TO THE
MOST
NORTHERLY
CORNER OF SAID LAND;
THENCE
CONTINUING
NORTH 43º56’42” WEST,
77.17
FEET
TO
THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
250.00
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE
CONCAVE
SOUTHWESTERLY; THENCE
NORTHWESTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH
A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 27º49’50” A
DISTANCE OF 121.43 FEET;
THENCE TANGENT TO SAID
CURVE NORTH 71º46’32”
WEST 155.02 FEET TO THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
257.59
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE
CONCAVE
SOUTHERLY;
THENCE
WESTERLY ALONG THE
ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 22º25’58” A
DISTANCE OF 100.85 FEET;
THENCE NON-TANGENT TO
SAID
CURVE
SOUTH
89º57’03” WEST 80.00 FEET;
THENCE NORTHWESTERLY
IN A STRAIGHT LINE A
DISTANCE OF 169.20 FEET
TO A POINT ON THE
WESTERLY LINE OF SAID
LOT 3 DISTANT THEREON
SOUTH 00º16’30” WEST 80.00
FEET
FROM
THE
SOUTHWEST CORNER OF
THE NORTHERLY 330.00
FEET OF SAID LOT 3. SAID
EASEMENT TO TERMINATE
EASTERLY IN A LINE
WHICH
BEARS
NORTH
00º15’30” EAST FROM SAID
POINT
“A”
AND
TO
TERMINATE WESTERLY IN
THE WESTERLY LINE OF
SAID LOT 3. EXCEPTING
THEREFROM
THAT
PORTION LYING WITHIN
PARCEL 1 HEREINABOVE
DESCRIBED. PARCEL 4: AN
EASEMENT AND RIGHT OF
WAY FOR ROAD, SEWER,
WATER, GAS, POWER AND
TELEPHONE LINES AND
APPURTENANCES
THERETO OVER, UNDER,
ALONG AND ACROSS THAT
PORTION OF LOT 3 IN
SECTION 18, TOWNSHIP 9
SOUTH, RANGE 3 WEST,
SAN BERNARDINO BASE
AND MERIDIAN, IN THE
COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO,
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
ACCORDING TO UNITED
STATES
GOVERNMENT
SURVEY APPROVED APRIL
21, 1890, DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS: COMMENCING
AT
THE
SOUTHWEST
CORNER
OF
THE
NORTHERLY 674.00 FEET
OF THE EASTERLY 490.00
FEET OF SAID LOT 3, BEING
ALSO A POINT IN THE
BOUNDARY
OF
LAND
DESCRIBED IN DEED TO
RALPH K. ENANDER, ET
UX, RECORDED APRIL 12,
1965 AS INSTRUMENT NO.
63916
OF
OFFICIAL
RECORDS; THENCE ALONG
THE BOUNDARY OF SAID
ENANDER’S LAND SOUTH
00º15’30” WEST 249.61 FEET
TO AN ANGLE POINT
THEREIN AND THE TRUE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING;
THENCE
CONTINUING
ALONG THE BOUNDARY OF
SAID LAND SOUTH 51º43’00”
EAST 36.94 FEET TO THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
200.00
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE
CONCAVE
N O R T H E A S T E R LY;
SOUTHEASTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 39º59’30” A
DISTANCE OF 139.62 FEET
AND TANGENT TO SAID
CURVE NORTH 88º17’30”
EAST 331.02 FEET TO THE
EASTERLY LINE OF SAID
LOT 3; THENCE ALONG
SAID
EASTERLY
LINE
SOUTH 00º15’30” WEST,
29.02 FEET TO THE MOST
SOUTHERLY, SOUTHEAST
CORNER
OF
SAID
ENANDER’S LAND; THENCE
ALONG THE BOUNDARY OF
SAID ENANDER’S LAND AS
FOLLOWS: SOUTH 89º25’20”
WEST 450.83 FEET; NORTH
00º15’30” EAST, 16.28 FEET
AND SOUTH 89º25’20” WEST
39.21
FEET
TO
THE
SOUTHEASTERLY CORNER
OF LAND DESCRIBED IN
PARCEL 1 IN DEED TO
BYRON E. DENHOLM ET UX
RECORDED MAY 21, 1968 AS
INSTRUMENT NO. 84419 OF
OFFICIAL
RECORDS;
THENCE NORTH 00º15’30”
EAST 69.10 FEET TO THE
TRUE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING.
EXCEPTING
THEREFROM
THAT
PORTION, IF ANY, LYING
WITHIN THE SOUTHERLY
330.00
FEET
OF
THE
EASTERLY 674.00 FEET OF
SAID LOT 3. APN: 105-481-3500 04/17/15, 04/24/15, 05/01/15
CN 17182
DATED 09/07/2005. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER.A
public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, check
drawn by 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 §5102 to the
Financial code and authorized
to do business in this state,
will be held by duly appointed
trustee. The sale will be
made, but without covenant
or warranty, expressed or
implied,
regarding
title,
possession, or encumbrances,
to satisfy the obligation
secured by said Deed of Trust.
The
undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the property
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. Trustor(s): KENNETH
A. KOOYMAN AND SHARI
K. KOOYMAN, AS TRUSTEES
OF THE KOOYMAN FAMILY
TRUST INITIALLY CREATED
JANUARY 28, 1993 AND
KENNETH PAUL KOOYMAN
Recorded:
09/15/2005,
as
Instrument No. 2005-0796191,
of Official Records of San
Diego County, California.
Date of Sale: 05/07/2015 at
10:30 AM Place of Sale: At
the entrance to the East
County Regional Center by
the statue, 250 E. Main Street,
El Cajon, CA The purported
property address is: 507
BURMA RD, FALLBROOK,
CA 92028 Assessors Parcel
No. 121-061-04-00 The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligation secured
by the property to be sold
and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of the Notice of
Sale is $281,728.81. If the sale
is set aside for any reason, the
purchaser at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return of the
deposit paid, plus interest.
The purchaser shall have
no further recourse against
the beneficiary, the Trustor
or the trustee. 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
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE File No. 7233.22986
Title Order No. 6494059
MIN No. APN 121-061-0400 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST,
Coast News legals
continued on
page A22
A22
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page A21
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. The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligations secured
by the property to be sold
and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of this Notice of
Trustee’s Sale is estimated to
be $179,055.84 (Estimated).
However,
prepayment
premiums, accrued interest
and advances will increase
this figure prior to sale.
Beneficiary’s bid at said sale
may include all or part of
said amount. In addition to
cash, the Trustee will accept
a cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association or savings bank
specified in Section 5102 of
the California Financial Code
and authorized to do business
in California, or other such
funds as may be acceptable
to the Trustee. In the event
tender other than cash is
accepted, the Trustee may
withhold the issuance of the
Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale
until funds become available
to the payee or endorsee as a
matter of right. The property
offered for sale excludes
all funds held on account
by the property receiver, if
applicable. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. 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 In Source Logic at
702-659-7766 for information
regarding the Trustee’s Sale
or visit the Internet Web
site address listed below for
information regarding the sale
of this property, using the file
number assigned to this case,
CA05000598-14-1. Information
about postponements that
are very short in duration or
that occur close in time to
the scheduled sale may not
immediately be reflected in
the telephone information
or on the Internet Web
site. The best way to verify
postponement
information
is to attend the scheduled
sale. Date: April 8, 2015 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA0500059814-1 17100 Gillette Ave
Irvine, CA 92614 949-2528300 TDD: 866-660-4288 Amy
Lemus, Authorized Signatory
SALE INFORMATION CAN
BE OBTAINED ON LINE
AT
www.insourcelogic.com
FOR AUTOMATED SALES
INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL: In Source Logic AT
702-659-7766 MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps MAY
BE ACTING AS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
Order
No.
CA15-000752-1, Pub Dates
04/17/2015,
04/24/2015,
05/01/2015 CN 17180
Trustee’s Sale is estimated to
be $359,039.45 (Estimated).
However,
prepayment
premiums, accrued interest
and advances will increase
this figure prior to sale.
Beneficiary’s bid at said sale
may include all or part of
said amount. In addition to
cash, the Trustee will accept
a cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association or savings bank
specified in Section 5102 of
the California Financial Code
and authorized to do business
in California, or other such
funds as may be acceptable
to the Trustee. In the event
tender other than cash is
accepted, the Trustee may
withhold the issuance of the
Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale
until funds become available
to the payee or endorsee as a
matter of right. The property
offered for sale excludes
all funds held on account
by the property receiver, if
applicable. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. 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 In Source Logic at
702-659-7766 for information
regarding the Trustee’s Sale
or visit the Internet Web
site address listed below for
information regarding the sale
of this property, using the file
number assigned to this case,
CA08005923-14-1. Information
about postponements that
are very short in duration or
that occur close in time to
the scheduled sale may not
immediately be reflected in
the telephone information
or on the Internet Web
site. The best way to verify
postponement
information
is to attend the scheduled
sale. Date: April 7, 2015 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA0800592314-1 17100 Gillette Ave
Irvine, CA 92614 949-2528300 TDD: 866-660-4288 Amy
Lemus, Authorized Signatory
SALE INFORMATION CAN
BE OBTAINED ON LINE
AT
www.insourcelogic.com
FOR AUTOMATED SALES
INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL: In Source Logic AT
702-659-7766 MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps MAY
BE ACTING AS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE.
Order
No.
CA15-000733-1, Pub Dates
04/17/2015,
04/24/2015,
05/01/2015 CN 17179
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 714-573-1965
for information regarding
the trustee’s sale or visit this
Internet Web site http://www.
qualityloan.com , using the
file number assigned to this
foreclosure by the Trustee:
CA-14-655522-CL. 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. The undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the property
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. If no street address
or other common designation
is shown, directions to the
location of the property may be
obtained by sending a written
request to the beneficiary
within 10 days of the date of
first publication of this Notice
of Sale. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. If the sale
is set aside for any reason, the
Purchaser at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return of the
deposit paid. The Purchaser
shall have no further recourse
against the Mortgagor, the
Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee’s
Attorney.
If
you
have
previously been discharged
through
bankruptcy,
you
may have been released of
personal liability for this loan
in which case this letter is
intended to exercise the note
holders right’s against the real
property only. As required by
law, you are hereby notified
that a negative credit report
reflecting on your credit
record may be submitted to
a credit report agency if you
fail to fulfill the terms of your
credit obligations. QUALITY
MAY
BE
CONSIDERED
A
DEBT
COLLECTOR
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT
A
DEBT
AND
ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. Date: Quality
Loan Service Corporation
411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA
92101 619-645-7711 For NON
SALE information only Sale
Line: 714-573-1965 Or Login
to:
http://www.qualityloan.
com Reinstatement Line:
(866) 645-7711 Ext 5318
Quality Loan Service Corp. TS
No.: CA-14-655522-CL IDSPub
#0080984 4/17/2015 4/24/2015
5/1/2015 CN 17178
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 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 to the Financial Code
and authorized to do business
in this state, will be held
by duly appointed trustee.
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. BENEFICIARY
MAY ELECT TO BID LESS
THAN THE TOTAL AMOUNT
DUE. Trustor(s): GERALD L.
JOHNSON AND PATRICIA
JOHNSON, HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
Recorded:
9/29/2006
as
Instrument No. 2006-0694805
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of SAN
DIEGO County, California;
Date of Sale: 5/15/2015 at
9:00 AM Place of Sale: At
the Entrance of the East
County Regional Center, 250
E. Main Street, El Cajon,
CA 92020 Amount of unpaid
balance and other charges:
$917,890.79 The purported
property address is: 4750
MILANO WAY, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92057 Assessor’s Parcel
No.: 160-644-15-00 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
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If you
wish to learn whether your
sale date has been postponed,
and
if
applicable,
the
rescheduled time and date for
the sale of this property, you
may call 877-484-9942 or visit
this Internet Web site www.
USA-Foreclosure.com or www.
Auction.com using the file
number assigned to this case
7233.22986. Information about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information
or
on
the
Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend
the scheduled sale. Date:
April 8, 2015 NORTHWEST
TRUSTEE SERVICES, INC.,
as Trustee Victoria Gutierrez,
Authorized Signatory 1241 E.
Dyer Road, Suite 250, Santa
Ana, CA 92705 Reinstatement
and Pay-Off Requests: (866)
387-NWTS THIS OFFICE
IS
ATTEMPTING
TO
COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL
BE
USED
FOR
THAT PURPOSE ORDER
# 7233.22986: 04/17/2015,
04/24/2015, 05/01/2015
CN 17181
APN:
144-092-29-00
TS
No:
CA05000598-14-1
TO
No: 5918402 NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE
IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED
OF TRUST DATED January
20, 2003. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. On
May 12, 2015 at 10:30 AM,
at the entrance to the East
County Regional Center by
statue, 250 E. Main Street,
El Cajon, CA 92020, MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps, as the duly Appointed
Trustee, under and pursuant
to the power of sale contained
in that certain Deed of Trust
recorded on February 5,
2003, as Instrument No. 20030133645, of official records in
the Office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
executed by RANDY A
DICKSON, A SINGLE MAN,
as Trustor(s), in favor of
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYSTEMS,
INC. as nominee for HMS
CAPITAL
as
Beneficiary,
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST
BIDDER, in lawful money of
the United States, all payable
at the time of sale, that certain
property situated in said
County, California describing
the land therein as: AS
MORE FULLY DESCRIBED
IN 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: 1405 SAN SIMEON
STREET,
OCEANSIDE,
CA 92054 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 without covenant or
warranty, express or implied,
regarding title, possession,
or encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum of
the Note(s) secured by said
APN:
158-277-01-00
TS
No:
CA08005923-14-1
TO
No: 1141854 NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE
IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED
OF TRUST DATED March 5,
2007. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. On
May 12, 2015 at 10:30 AM,
at the entrance to the East
County Regional Center by
statue, 250 E. Main Street,
El Cajon, CA 92020, MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps, as the duly Appointed
Trustee, under and pursuant
to the power of sale contained
in that certain Deed of Trust
recorded on March 16, 2007, as
Instrument No. 2007-0179663,
of official records in the Office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, executed
by
RICHARD
EUGENE
SMITH AND ASTRID AVEDIS
SMITH, HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS,
as Trustor(s), in favor of
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYSTEMS,
INC. as nominee for HOME
CAPITAL FUNDING DBA
MORTGAGE ONE LENDING
as Beneficiary, WILL SELL
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
THE HIGHEST BIDDER, in
lawful money of the United
States, all payable at the time
of sale, that certain property
situated in said County,
California describing the land
therein as: AS MORE FULLY
DESCRIBED IN 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: 739 VALLEY
CREST DR, OCEANSIDE, CA
92058-0000 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 without covenant or
warranty, express 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. The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligations secured
by the property to be sold
and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of this Notice of
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE TS No. CA-14-655522CL Order No.: 110464177-CAMAI YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 7/10/2007. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. A
public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, check
drawn by 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 to the Financial Code
and authorized to do business
in this state, will be held
by duly appointed trustee.
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. BENEFICIARY
MAY ELECT TO BID LESS
THAN THE TOTAL AMOUNT
DUE. Trustor (s): ROBERT
R
HAIN
AND
ALICIA
HAIN,
HUSBAND
AND
WIFE
AS
COMMUNITY
PROPERTY WITH RIGHT OF
SURVIVORSHIP Recorded:
7/18/2007 as Instrument No.
2007-0479062
of
Official
Records in the office of the
Recorder of SAN DIEGO
County, California; Date of
Sale: 5/8/2015 at 10:00:00 AM
Place of Sale: At the entrance
to the east county regional
center by statue, 250 E. Main
Street, El Cajon, CA 92020
Amount of unpaid balance
and other charges: $427,332.94
The
purported
property
address is: 378 RIVER
RANCH WAY, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92057 Assessor’s Parcel
No.: 158-741-16-00 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
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE TS No. CA-14-651583CL Order No.: 602090252
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 9/18/2006. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
Coast News legals
continued on
page B6
APRIL 24, 2015 A23
T he C oast News EST. 1985
A24
T he C oast News Give Aways include:
$10,000 Mommy Makeover, Complementary
Cool Sculpting, Venus Freeze, with Therapy
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APRIL 24, 2015
B
APRIL 24, 2015
SECTION
When the word clean Roadwork on Jimmy Durante
becomes a dirty word nears completion next month
small
talk
jean gillette
As the years pass by
and I look back on the first
five years of my children’s
lives, I suppose my memories will soften, but if I
were asked right now to
sum up life with toddlers
in one word, that word
would be “sticky.”
This profound revelation came over me as I
cleaned up yesterday in
preparation for the arrival
of a longtime friend who
had not yet seen my home.
The term “clean” was once
a simple issue with me,
back when I had the time
and energy to be a clean
freak. I now have several
levels of “clean” for my
home, prompted by being
the wife of a messy-butlovable pack rat and the
mother of two pairs of every-sticky little hands.
There is now “everyday” clean (the only visitors also will have children), “downstairs only”
clean (for those who will
have no opportunity to explore the upstairs apocalypse), and the exhausting
“first-visit” clean. I barely survived the first six
months in this house when
everyone wanted a complete tour.
I now try to spend
most of my time with other moms who are oblivious
to the stickiness quotient.
In fact, in my circle a tooclean house is considered
rude and antisocial. You
will receive no visits, and
the playgroup all will have
colds when it’s your turn
to host. But as I cleaned
with extra scrutiny for the
arrival of my friend, I realized how easy it would be
to prepare a simple test to
determine just who is really emotionally prepared to
become a parent.
• Does it bother you
to have your sweater stick
to the arm of a chair when
you get up to leave?
• Does it bother you
when your shoes make the
“snack, snack” sound as
you walk across the kitchen floor?
• Do you classify bits
TURN TO SMALL TALK ON B12
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR — Driving
in and out of Del Mar along
Jimmy Durante Boulevard
will get a whole lot easier in
about a month.
“We are on schedule
for a May 24 substantial
completion,” Public Works
Director Eric Minicilli said
during a project update at
the April 20 City Council
meeting.
By then workers should
be off the roadway and completing “touchup work,”
Minicilli added.
Street, sidewalk and
drainage
improvements
along a southeast portion
of Jimmy Durante began in
mid-February.
Since then a stretch of
the roadway has been subject to closures and slowdowns to accommodate the
work, which includes construction of about 2,500
feet of new curbs and gutters, 16,000 square feet of
sidewalks, 2,200 square
feet of retaining walls, seven pedestrian ramps and
87,300 square feet of pavement rehabilitation.
Wastewater and water
main pipelines are also being replaced and new underground storm drain in-
The inconvenience of driving in and out of Del Mar along this stretch of Jimmy Durante Boulevard should
come to an end in about a month. Street, sidewalk and drainage improvements that started in February are
expected to wind down by May 24. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
frastructure added.
Before the beginning of
next month the water line
should be back in service
and connected to the rest of
the city, Minicilli said.
He said there are tentatively no plans to close
the northbound lane for the
next few weeks, but shut
downs will begin again in
the middle of May to complete the guardrail work
and a lot of the paving.
“That’ll involve major
closures to get the roadway repaved, restriped and
ready for summer season,”
he said.
Stone coverings are
currently being installed on
the retaining walls.
“Part of it is up,” Minicilli said. “I think it looks
great. Take a look as you
drive by.”
The improvements are
part of a more than $4 million citywide street, sidewalk and drainage project
that is being implemented
in phases. Most funding is
coming from a financing
plan offered by the San Diego Association of Governments.
The city is using the
money it receives annually
in TransNet funds — about
$200,000 — to pay the debt.
TransNet is a voter-apAffi
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TURN TO JIMMY DURANTE ON B12
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B2
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
Park fee study moves forward, Mentorship program aims
revenue increasing ideas nixed to excite girls about STEM
By Aaron Burgin
ENCINITAS—The City
Council unanimously authorized its parks and recreation department to move
forward with its ongoing
study of its fee schedule,
but not before it nixed a
controversial appendix that
included some revenue-generating ideas that sparked
a rebuke from several residents.
The Council received
the 140-page report from
the parks and recreation
staff done in collaboration
with Green Play LLC, a Colorado-based recreation consultant firm, which outlines
a new method that the city
will use to study and determine how park and recreation fees should be set.
Some proposed fee increases include potentially charging organizations
for use of the city’s fields,
which the city currently
does not do, and raising
fees for programs that have
more individual than communal benefits.
The study, billed as a
sustainability study, outlines that the city currently only recovers about 24
percent of the revenue it
spends providing parks and
recreation programs for
residents, and that without
further action that subsidy
could grow even more over
the next few years.
Staff said it would return with a list of recommended fees in the fall that
the council could then approve or reject.
Residents,
however,
were skeptical of the report
and an appendix that included a number of revenue
generating practices that
are used by other jurisdiction’s parks and recreation
departments. Additionally,
the wording of the staff report gave the appearance
that approval of Wednesday’s agenda item could
give staff authority to unilaterally raise fees.
Among the concepts
that residents spoke against
listed in the appendix included park naming rights
and selling of ad space at
parks, selling non-residents
a card that would allow
them to access city recreation programs at the same
rate paid by residents and
the use of parks as a location for cell towers.
“Since when has parks
and recreation been relegated to the status of cash
cow, for you to milk every
last dollar possible?” community stalwart Bob Bonde
said. “The people are already giving you over $100
million each year to provide
us with the services we want
and need to pay down the
SUE OTTO
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(millions) in debt that (the
city) has saddled us with.
You need to receive and file
this self-serving plan.”
Bonde went on to call
the study “unworkable”
and “heartless.”
Marie
Dardarian,
who frequently speaks at
council meetings, echoed
Bonde’s sentiments.
“This isn’t San Francisco, it is a little town of
60,000 people,” Dardarian
said. “We don’t need to be
commercialized.”
The council swiftly
voiced their opposition to
any fee increases and to the
controversial measures outlined in the appendix, and
ultimately voted to have the
appendix removed from the
report.
The council members
did, however, like some of
the ideas offered up by the
report, including cutting
programs that replicate
activities done by other organizations, both for- and
non-profit, rebranding the
city’s community and senior
center into something more
universal and charging
non-residents for field rentals for tournaments.
The unanimous vote
came after staff assured
the council that the council would retain authority
to raise fees, and that staff
would bring any recommendations back for their vote.
By Ellen Wright
ESCON DI DO —Del
Dios Academy of Arts and
Sciences 6th grader Jazmin
likes to bake and has even
considered pursuing it as a
career.
While she’s got plenty
of time to decide, she said
she’s now leaning more towards computer engineering.
“I was thinking of baking before computer engineering but I can do that
at home any time I want,”
Jazmin said.
She is part of a Sister-to-Sister
program
aimed at exposing under-privileged girls to science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM.
Big Brothers Big Sisters of San Diego County
partnered with health solutions company Millennium
Health to offer one on one
mentoring to girls at Del
Dios Academy in an effort
to expose them to STEM
concepts and provide mentorship to at-risk students.
“Many of our students
have been brought up with
the influence of gang life as
well as being the product of
low socio economic status,”
said Del Dios Social Worker
Kristen Clayton.
The goal of the program, called Beyond School
Walls STEM, is to lead students away from gang life
Tanya Moreno, Vice President of Genetics Research and Development
at Millennium Health, teaches Del Dios 6th Grader Jazmin about DNA.
They’ve met twice this year and Soria said she plans to continue in the
program. Courtesy photo
and influence them towards
high-paying STEM jobs.
“We’re in a hotbed of
biotech and (bio communications). Why not prepare
the children who live here
to also work here in the future? “ President and CEO
of Big Brothers Big Sisters
of San Diego Deborah Condon said.
While the program
aims to expose young teens
to STEM, it also serves to
reduce the likelihood of
gang involvement and drug
use.
According to a National Gang Intelligence Center report released in 2012,
juvenile prostitution is
the second most profitable
gang activity in San Diego,
behind drug dealing.
Condon stressed the
importance of one on one
mentoring in building girls’
self-esteem.
“The longer they’re
here, the stronger the outcome,” she said of the students in the Beyond School
Walls STEM program.
Twice a month, 15 girls
are bussed from Del Dios to
Millennium Health in Rancho Bernardo to meet with
their mentors and learn
more about different STEM
concepts.
Clayton said the students were hand chosen
TURN TO STEM ON B12
MiraCosta commemorates fall of Saigon with refugees
OCEANSIDE — This year
marks the 40th anniversary
of the Fall of Saigon, and to
commemorate this moment in
history, MiraCosta College is
hosting The Vietnam War Commemoration Project, featuring
a panel discussion and film presentation to be held at 5 p.m.
April 30 in Room 3601 at its
Oceanside Campus, 1 Barnard
Drive. The evening will include
a reception featuring Vietnam-
ese food and drink.
The event features a panel
of MiraCostans, Dr. Thao Ha,
sociology instructor; Thanh
Lai, fixed assets and administrative services specialist;
Jade Hidle, associate faculty,
English; and Nghia Nguyen, accountant, who were once Vietnamese refugees. The four will
speak about their own experiences: escape by boat, escape
by flight, refugee camp life,
Mira Costa Community College will look back on the fall of Saigon with,
from left, Dr, Thao Ha, sociology instructor; Thanh Lai, fixed assets and
administrative services specialist; Jade Hidle, associate faculty, English; and Nghia Nguyen, accountant.Courtesy photo
and resettlement in America.
The research of Ha is the inspiration for the new film, “Seadrift.” The trailer for this documentary will be screened at
the event. “Seadrift” tells the
tale of Vietnamese immigrant
fishery workers in Texas and is
an incredible story of survival,
perseverance and ultimate triumph over dire circumstances.
Ha and film director Tim Tsai
will participate in the panel
discussion.
The April 30 event will
also feature a screening of
the documentary, “A Village
Called Versailles,” a 2009 film
about environmental justice
and social activism by Vietnamese immigrants in the Versailles neighborhood of New
Orleans during the aftermath
of Hurricane Katrina.
The Fall of Saigon occurred on April 30, 1975 and
signaled the end of the Vietnam War. More than 100,000
Vietnamese refugees evacuated. For more information about
the event, contact Thao Ha at
[email protected].
JOIN THE ENCINITAS
SHERIFF’S SENIOR
VOLUNTEER PATROL
The Encinitas Sheriff’s Senior Volunteer Patrol performs home
vacation 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 & 4S Ranch
and the County unincorporated areas. Volunteers must be age 50 or
older, in good health, pass a background check, have auto insurance
and a valid California driver’s license. Training includes a two-week
academy plus training patrols. The minimum commitment is 24
hours per month and attendance at a monthly meeting. Interested
parties should call (760) 966-3579 to arrange an information
meeting.
APRIL 24, 2015 Who’s
NEWS?
Business news and special
achievements for North San
Diego County. Send information
via email to community@
coastnewsgroup.com.
JACQUES NAMED
PARTNER
Del Mar resident
Teresa Jacques has been
appointed to the post of
Partner, Technology for
DavenportMajor Executive
Search, a global retained
executive search firm focusing on the placement of
director, vice president and
C-level executives, as well
as the recruitment of board
directors.
Jacques will focus on
technology companies in
the software services, wireless, telecom, semiconduc-
tor and big data/analytics RUBY AWARD
North County Lifeline,
sectors.
in Vista, won the Ruby
Award for Outstanding DeSUPERINTENDANT
CHOSEN FOR
velopment Partner: “an enCONFERENCE
tity that provided unique or
Vista Unified School outstanding support on an
District
Superintendent affordable housing developDevin Vodicka has been ment project.”
tapped to join other eduIn
accepting
this
cation leaders later this award, North County Lifemonth in a national confer- line recognizes the true
ence in Vancouver, spon- heroes – youngsters who
sored by the Digital Prom- have aged out of the foster
ise League of Innovative care system and are tranSchools, aimed at increas- sitioning to become indeing the use of technology pendent adults. By assumin schools. Vista Unified ing 10 units of low-income
(vistausd.org) was accepted apartments currently under
into the League in Septem- construction in Vista, CHW
ber 2014 from a national and Lifeline expand the
pool of applicants based on transitional living program,
what League officials said LifeSpring, for former foswas the district’s leader- ter youth
ship, evidence of results, innovative vision for learning NEW BOOK FOR CARDIFF
and commitment to collabo- AUTHOR
ration.
“Legend,” a book by
Cardiff-by-the-Sea author
Eric Blehm, will hit stores
on April 28 from Crown, a
division of Random House.
Blehm's last book, “Fearless,” was a New York
Times bestseller. He graduated from San Diego State
University with a degree
in journalism, and was editor of TransWorld, a snowboarding magazine based in
San Diego.
REGION — Three
works of art created by students from Carmel Del Mar
Elementary School are featured in the San Diego Museum of Art’s “Young Art
2015: Visualizing Music” exhibition.
Paula Intravaia’s fourthgrade class collaborated to
make a multi-disciplinary,
stop-motion animation video
in December for the “Imagine” project for UNICEF’s
commemoration of the 25th
anniversary of the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the
Child.
Her 28 students studied
the lyrics of John Lennon’s
song “Imagine” and then
developed a story line titled
“Imaginanimation,” Intravaia said.
“When the theme for
‘Young Art’ came out we
went with that momentum
and submitted Scene 1 from
the video,” she said.
“An owl sees destruction on Earth caused by humans and dies flying over
a battle and makes people
realize what they had done
wrong,” Yulee Kang, one of
her students, wrote to describe her classmates’ piece.
“This connects to visualizing music because the song
‘Imagine’ by John Lennon is
about his dream for people
to have freedom and live in
peace.”
Also on display is “Circle” by Lukas Faranacci, a
fourth-grade student in David Skinner’s class.
“When I listen to rock
music, it makes my mind go
crazy,” he wrote to describe
his artwork.
Also featured is “Festival of Music of Balboa Park”
by second-grader Katherine
Lin, whose work was submitted by her Balboa Park art
teacher.
Coincidentally, Katherine was one of Intravaia’s students a few years ago when
she taught kindergarten.
The “Young Art” program, now in its 85th year, is
a biennial student art exhibition. This year’s theme was
inspired by “The Art of Music,” the last of the museu’'s
2015 exhibitions.
“Young Art 2015: Visualizing Music” features
artwork by San Diego County students in kindergarten
through 12th grade. The
pieces will be on display
through May 26.
Intravaia began submitting student artwork for the
exhibition when she started
at Carmel Del Mar as an art
teacher. This is the first time
Skinner entered work by his
students. Teachers can submit up to 10 pieces.
Intravaia
said
the
stop-motion animation video, which ends with the owl
transforming into a dove of
peace, includes some insightful symbolism.
“One of my students
said it connected well with
John Lennon because he was
peaceful but he died in a violent way, just like the owl,”
she said. “It helped me not
take for granted how meaningful and profound the students can be.”
Speaker Atkins pushes for fresh fish markets
REGION — California
Speaker Toni G. Atkins’ Pacific to Plate bill has moved
ahead. The bill, which
makes it easier for communities to have fishermen’s
markets similar to farmers’
markets, passed April 7 in
the Assembly Committee on
Health. Atkins’ district includes Solana Beach.
“Pacific to Plate will
help keep red tape from
tangling up this boon to San
Diego’s Blue Economy,” said
Speaker Atkins (D-San Diego). “By removing unnecessary barriers in state law,
this bill will help fishermen’s
markets thrive in coastal
communities
throughout
California.”
AB 226 allows fishermen’s markets to operate as
food facilities, fresh fish to
be cleaned for direct sale,
and streamlines the permitting process, so commercial
fishermen can organize under a single permit — just
like Certified Farmers’ Markets. The Pacific to Plate bill
also establishes guidelines,
including compliance with
the California Retail Food
Code and food safety requirements.
“We’re very pleased
that the legislature is coming together to facilitate the
process of fishermen selling
directly to the public,” said
Peter Halmay, a long-time
fisherman who helped organize and advocate for the San
Diego market that opened
last year. “It will be a great
boon to both the fishing industry and consumers.”
includes free diagnostic
mammograms, life-saving
screenings, surgeries, temporary financial aid for living expenses, meal deliveries, education, research and
more for qualified men and
women.
THEY LIKE TO MOVE IT,
MOVE IT
Mary Ellen Sheets,
founder of Two Men and a
Truck, along with the original two men, Brig Sorber
and Jon Sorber, celebrated
a grand opening of its expansion to 181 Pawnee St.,
San Marcos April 17.
For more information, (858) 877-2100 or visit
twomenandatrucksandiego.
com.
VISTA CLINIC GETS GIFT
Komen San Diego
is granting $1.1 million to
breast cancer research and
local breast health services
and that Vista Community
Clinic is receiving a grant
for the VCC Breast Health
Patient Navigation & Support Services program. The
Komen grants will provide NEW SALON SERVICES
ProfessioNail, at 689
the most comprehensive
breast health program in Lomas Santa Fe Drive, SoSan Diego County. This lana Beach, celebrated its
Young artists put visions to music Odd Files
By Bianca Kaplanek
B3
T he C oast News By Chuck Shepherd
Quintessential Australia
In
March,
the
Simoneau family in a town
near Australia’s Sunshine
Coast at first considered
the three-foot-long slitherer to be one of the country’s ubiquitous snakes,
but the home invader was
moving very slowly and,
it turned out, was merely
from one of those hair-raising Australian species —
gigantic earthworms. (2)
Dogs and cats, as well as
wild animals searching for
food, sometimes show up
with their heads caught in
fences, buckets or food containers (and, to avoid starvation, need to be freed by
helpful humans). In a suburb of Adelaide, in March,
a deadly Eastern brown
snake turned up needing
similar aid, but it being
Australia, its head was
stuck in a beer can.
Marketing Challenges
(1) Burger King Japan commenced an April
rollout — limited in duration and only in Japan —
of Burger King-branded
cologne (mimicking the
Whopper’s savory “flamegrilled scent”). Early reviews were favorable, even
though the launch date,
suspiciously, was April 1.
(2) A small Virginia de-
fense contractor won a
$7 million job recently to
help Pentagon analysts
sift through supercomputer research, and according
to the industry watchdog
Defense One, the firm has
decided to stick with its
long-ago- selected original
name. Even though events
have overtaken that name,
the company will still be
known as Isis Defense.
Least Competent Criminals
Didn’t Go As Planned:
(1) Surveillance cameras
revealed a man with a gun
inside the Circle K in Palm
Bay, Fla. on Jan. 31. Since
the clerk was in the back,
with the cash register
locked, the man decided to
wait for him — for 17 seconds, according to the video — but then, impatient,
fled empty-handed. (2)
According to a February
Ormond Beach, Florida,
police report, Matthew Semione, 26, handed a holdup
note (implying that he was
armed) to a Sun Trust bank
10-year anniversary April
18 with the Solana Beach
Chamber of Commerce
hosting a special ceremony.
KUDOS FOR AUTHOR
Author Steve
Pantazis, of
Ocea nside,
was honored
April 12, at
the 31st annual Writers
of the Future
awards in Los
Angeles. Pantazis was one
of only 12 winners from
more than 1,000 contest entries from 160 countries, for
his short story “Switch.” It
is now published in ”The
Writers of the Future” anthology.
He runs a small software
firm in San Diego. Video
of Pantazis’ acceptance
speech is at 1:45:00 at writersofthefuture.com
teller, who walked away to
get money. Semione grew
weary of waiting and left
empty-handed, but was arrested minutes later.
facebook.com/
coastnewsgroup
B4
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
A rts &Entertainment
Send your arts & entertainment
news to [email protected]
A Century of Art at the Oceanside Museum
T h e
year 2015
marks the
100th
anniversary
of
Balboa
Park,
as
kay colvin
well as the
twentieth
year of Oceanside Museum of Art (OMA)
as a prominent regional art museum.
Throughout this year OMA exhibitions
and events continue to focus on art created
and collected in San Diego and Southern
California.
OMA’s newly launched exhibition 100
Artists, 100 Years: The San Diego Museum
of Art Artists Guild, 1915-2015, in collaboration with The San Diego Museum of Art
Artists Guild, features works by one hundred distinguished Guild members who
have lived and worked in San Diego during
the last century. Established in 1915, the
Artists Guild was instrumental in the 1926
founding of The San Diego Museum of Art
and continues to enrich the culture of the
San Diego region.
OMA Executive Director Daniel Foster states, "This is easily the largest and
brush
with art
arts
CALENDAR
Know something that’s going
on? Send it to calendar@
coastnewsgroup.com
APRIL 24
THE WIZ Carlsbad
Community Theatre presents “Wizard of Oz,” young
performers edition, at the
Carlsbad Village Theatre
April 24 through April 26,
one of the most ambitious exhibitions in
our museum's history. It is particularly
important because our museum's programmatic priority is to cover the history of traditional and contemporary art of San Diego, and I believe that this exhibition does
that superbly, thanks to the Artists Guild
and the magnificent vision and effort of
Mark-Elliott Lugo."
100 Artists, 100 Years, which currently fills both of OMA’s first-floor galleries,
represents the region’s diverse art history
in painting, sculpture, drawing, printmaking, photography, ceramics, furniture making and architecture. Many of the works on
loan from local museums, institutions, galleries, private collections and artists have
never before been publicly exhibited.
Exhibition curator Mark-Elliott Lugo,
former curator of the San Diego Public Library system and art critic, states “This
exhibition will be a rare opportunity for
viewers to experience in one venue the
diverse range of art created in San Diego over the past century. I believe San
Diegans will be excited and proud to see
the exceptional skill and creativity of the
artists who have lived and worked in the
area.”
2822 State St., Carlsbad. Spring Art Department
Tickets $15 at carlsbadcom- open house and student
art exhibition from 5 to 8
muinitytheatre.com.
p.m. April 24 in the Art DeFOREIGN FILMS The partment Courtyard and
International Film Series C Building, 1140 W. Misat MiraCosta College pres- sion Road, San Marcos, for
ents the French film, “The demonstrations in glassClass” at 7 p.m. in the blowing, ceramics, painting
MiraCosta College Little and foundry metal pouring.
Theatre (Room 3601) at 1 The Student Art and Craft
Barnard Dr. in Oceanside. Sale ends April 25, from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m. next to the
Free.
ART IN ACTION Visit Boehm Gallery and the C
the Palomar College 2015 and D Buildings. For more
Look in today’s
Classified Section
for everything from
Autos to Real Estate
On display in the 100 Artists, 100 Years exhibition
at Oceanside Museum of Art through July 26, 2015:
Faiya Fredman, Yellow Tulip 2, 2007, Pigment print
on watercolor paper, 40 x 30 inches. Photo courtesy
of the artist.
The accomplished curator admits,
“This exhibition has been the challenge
information, visit palomar.
edu/art/.
ON
STAGE
The
MiraCosta College Theatre
Department presents “The
Normal Heart,” about the
AIDS epidemic in the early 1980s. The play runs at
7:30 p.m. April 24, April
25, April 30 and May 1
and May 2 and at 2 p.m.
April 25, April 26 and May
2 the MiraCosta College
Theatre, 1 Barnard Drive,
Oceanside. Tickets are
$15; students, $10 online
at miracosta.edu/buytix or
call (760) 795-6815.
of my life.” Lugo, who tends to curate exhibitions intuitively and whose personal
taste tends towards edgier, darker work,
has accomplished his intention to “knock
people’s socks off” with the quality and variety of work included in the 100 Artists,
100 Years exhibition.
Twenty objective criteria were used
in selecting artworks for the exhibition,
including the impact of the artist’s work
on the community, the professional and
public recognition the artist has achieved,
and the legacy the artist has passed on by
example and through teaching.
The task of researching and documenting hundreds of present and past Guild artists and thousands of their artworks was
performed for nearly five years by Jody
Abssy, Historian of the Artists Guild.
Angelika Villagrana, President of the
Artists Guild, tirelessly accompanied Lugo
for three months during the process of selecting and collecting the 100 artworks for
the exhibition.
The extensive collaborative efforts
have resulted in an exceptional exhibition
featuring the work of prominent artists
such as John Baldessari, Russell Baldwin,
ists, 100 Years: The San Diego Museum of Art Artists
Guild, 1915-2015” exhibition runs through July 26,
with an opening reception 6
to 8 p.m. April 25.
ALL ACOUSTIC The
Encinitas Library invites
the community to its fifth
anniversary celebration of
the San Diego County Library Acoustic Showcase
concert series at 1:30 p.m.
April 25 at 540 Cornish
Drive, Encinitas. Everyone
is invited to the free show
of great local music.
SATURDAY
NIGHT
POPS Join the Del Mar Village Association every Saturday evening in April and
May for Pop-Up Culture.
Hear the Jazz Pigs from 5 to
7 p.m. April 25 at L’Auberge
Amphitheater on the northwest corner of 15th Street
and Camino Del Mar.
TURN TO BRUSH WITH ART ON B12
lie Wilson, Clare Bowen &
Charles Esten, Calibre 50 &
Banda Carnaval, The Robert Cray Band, Kalin and
Myles and Three Dog Night.
Tickets for paid shows, dinner packages and reserved
seats available at the Del
Mar Fairgrounds Durante
Gate Box Office Tuesdays
through Saturdays, 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m., or through Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000.
APRIL 27
ECO-ART
Local
eco-artist and teacher Spramani Elaun will naturally guide youngsters ages
12 and under, through art
classes using different mediums (paints, clay, etc.)
from 3 to 4 p.m. Mondays on
the patio of the Encinitas
Library, 540 Cornish Drive,
Encinitas. Wear clothes
that can get a little messy.
Sign up at the Information
Desk.
APRIL 25
ART AND PUPS For
the love of art and dogs,
visit 454 Tattoo Art show
and San Diego Humane
Society adoption event 1
to 9 p.m. April 25 at 454 N.
Coast Highway 101, Encinitas. For more information,
APRIL 26
visit 454tattoo.com.
CONCERTS AT FAIR
100 AT OMA Oceanside
APRIL 28
Museum of Art’s “100 Art- Tickets for the 2015 San DiART IN NATURE
ego County Fair’s Summer
Concert Series are on sale Plein-Air Painters of Amerat the Del Mar Fairgrounds ica, and the San Dieguito
and through Ticketmaster. River Valley Conservancy
The line-up includes Char- host “Art in Nature: Legacy of the Land” a plein-air
exhibition through May 3
at the California Center for
the Arts, 340 N. Escondido
Blvd., Escondido. Admission is $8 Thursday through
Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. Tickets online at artcenter.org/museum/.
e
W
e
k
e
e
h
n
t
d
s
’
!
t
I
1x2
1x2 is newspaper talk for a one column
by 2” ad. Too small to be effective?
You’re reading this aren’t you?
Call 760-436-9737 for more info.
MAY 1
FRIDAY NIGHT LIVE
Every Friday night this
summer from 7 to 9 p.m. beTURN TO ARTS CALENDAR ON B12
CHRIS KYDD
Your Encinitas Territory Manager
Call Chris for all
your advertising needs.
Call 760.436.9737 x110
[email protected]
APRIL 24, 2015 B5
T he C oast News If I knew then what I know now, oh, the possibilities
baby
boomer
Joe Moris
Have you ever been
asked this question: If you
could live your life over
again would you do it?
I’ve been asked that
question several times and
my responses have always
been a resounding “no,” but
with a caveat that I would if
I had the knowledge I have
today. That, of course, would
be like cheating. You would
know how to invest, where
to get educated, what kind
of life path to take, etc. I
think of the movie series
“Back to the Future” to conjure up visions of what it
would be like to go back to
Southern California in the
‘50s with the knowledge of
California today and knowing what will transpire over
the next 50 to 60 years.
That is what it is like
every time I go to Mexico. I
feel like I’ve been dropped
into the early 20th century. I drive along some of the
most beautiful coastlines
imaginable that are dotted
with little ranchita towns
just nestled up against the
water. Many of the little towns
still have only dirt roads
but most have well-paved
rock or asphalt streets. Every town has a plaza, which
is usually situated in front
of a cathedral as Mexico is
still a very religious country with most residents
being Catholic. Each little
town tends to spread out
from the Plaza.
Each time I go into
Puerto Vallarta I see new
buildings under construction that are filled with
businesses almost immediately upon completion. But
for most of the other smaller towns and villages away
from the larger cities, nothing really changes.
My getaway house near
San Blas is situated in Mantanchen Bay. The setting
is very similar to Puerto
Vallarta in that the coastal
mountains hug the coastline as a backdrop to the
warm calm waters of the
bay.
The bay in Puerto Vallarta is called the Bay of
Banderas, but the settings
are almost identical to Mantanchen Bay except Puerto
Vallarta already has its resorts rimming the bay and
the downtown gets tonier
and tonier by the year with
new art galleries and specialty cuisine restaurants
being opened by foreigners
who have found their paradises. But, Mantanchen Bay
is just ripe for development
… the locals just don’t realize it. Surfers may know
ATTENTION READERS!
Say you saw it in
the Coast News!
MAKING WAVES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
When you shop or use the services that are
advertised in the Coast News, you are supporting the newspaper and our efforts to bring you
quality news. We are funded only by advertising
revenue, so please, when you use a product or
service that you saw in the paper, say you saw
it in the Coast News!"
Thank you for supporting our advertisers!
Sincerely, The Coast News Staff
though!
Near my house is the
small town of Aticama and
as you enter from the south
the first oceanfront buildings you come upon is an
elementary school. Every
time I pass that school I
project myself back to that
age and wonder what it
would have been like sitting at my desk while also
gazing out at the diamond
sparkling waves that roll
in on the small point that it
sits on. I don’t think I would
have been able to pay any
attention to my studies. As you drive a little farther north you come upon a
beautiful cove that is dotted with palapa-style structures (poles driven into
the sand and roofs made of
palm fronds).
The bay is well known
for its perfect waves, sandy
bottom and warm waters
(see attached picture of me
having the bay all to myself). On the weekends, families literally camp out in the
calmer water just standing
there drinking their cervezas and lemonades while
the children frolic nearby
in the soft fun waves.
If this bay were in
Southern California, there
In loving memory of
Life, whose love for San
Diego State was contagious. If you asked him to
name the starting lineup
for any Aztec basketball
team, no matter how many
years ago, he could. He always said statistics came
easily for him, “after all, I
spend my life in numbers!”
The irony of his death
on America’s tax day
seems hard to fathom.
True to his dedication to
his clients, he resisted his
wife Vicki’s
insistence
that he check himself
into a hospital prior to
his death. He was struggling with chest pains.
Unfortunately, he put
work before his health.
“Fred was the ultimate Aztec. He loved his
alma mater,” said Steve
Thomas, a Rancho Santa
Fe resident who shared
season tickets with him.
Mike Phillips, a Rancho Santa Fe resident and
longtime client of Fred’s,
said Fred was “a consummate professional, wonderful friend, and perennially frustrated Aztec,
Charger and Padre fan.”
He
took
great
pride in Vicki, his life
partner for 30 years.
When she returned
to school to earn her certificate in psychological
counseling he was so
proud of her. And when
he needed assistance
in the office, Vicki was
always there for
him.
In addition to Vicki,
he is survived by his sister, Jackie Dahlgren, and
her husband, William, of
Saline, Michigan; nephews Michael Dahlgren
and his daughter, Scarlet, of Saline, and Eric
Dahlgren, his wife, Erica,
and their son Jonathan
of Chicago; and cousins Rick, Tom, and Carol
Farrell from Montana.
He was preceded in
death by his parents, Herald and Mary Jane Steese.
A Celebration of
Life will be held at the
Village Church in Rancho Santa Fe on Saturday, April 25, at 4 p.m.
Frederick William
Steese
April 15, 2015
Frederick
William
Steese, a noted North
County CPA and a former president of the
Rancho Santa Fe Rotary Club, died April 15.
Cause
of
death
was an apparent heart
attack.
He was 63.
He was born in Burbank on October 17, 1951,
graduated from Granada Hills High School and
earned his undergraduate degree at San Diego
State University and was
a Certified Public Accountant in California.
He won numerous
awards in golf, wrestling
and baseball in high
school. A local newspaper
in the San Fernando Valley dubbed him “Slugger
Steese” for his wrestling
skills at Granada Hills.
Steese joined Leaf
and Cole, a public accounting firm in San Diego, shortly after graduating from SDSU. He later
joined with Dick Wehmeyer to form Wehmeyer & Steese, a public accounting
firm in Rancho Santa Fe.
Following Wehmeyer’s retirement, Steese
opened his own firm,
Frederick Wm. Steese,
in Encinitas in 2002.
“To know Fred was
to love him. He was fun,
engaged and a marvelous raconteur. He could
cite sports statistics and
dates faster than anyone
I’ve ever known, “ said
Bob Page, a former owner of the Rancho Santa
Fe Review, and a longtime personal friend.
He was an Aztec for
Submission Process
Please email obits @ coastnewsgroup.com or call (760)
436-9737 x100. All photo attachments should be sent in jpeg
format, no larger than 3MB. the photo will print 1.625” wide by
1.5” tall inh black and white.
Timeline
Obituaries should be received by Monday at 12 p.m. for publicatio in Friday’s newspaper. One proof will be e-mailed to the
customer for approval by Tuesday at 10 a.m.
Text” $15 per inch
Approx. 21 words per column inch
Photo: $25 Art: $15
(Dove, Heart, Flag, Rose)
would be huge resorts with ters and high-class restaumultiple golf courses rim- rants. But today, it is a dirt
ming the entire coastline
TURN TO BABY BOOMER ON B12
along with shopping cen-
Phyllis K. Benson, 82
Carlsbad
April 18, 2015
Kevin William O’Neill, 41
Carlsbad
April 12, 2015
Patricia Schmitt Martin, 88
Encinitas
April 16, 2015
Dorothy LaVerne Mellum, 93
Encinitas
April 13, 2015
John Umberto Curci, 90
Encinitas
April 11, 2015
Bogumila Jozefa Rachwal, 66
Oceanside
April 10, 2015
Gary Halverson, 65
Oceanside
April 13, 2015
Patti Giordano, 62
Oceanside
April 13, 2015
Help When You Need It…
And When You Don’t
When a loved one has died, the staff at Allen
Brothers are here to take your call 24 hours a
day, every day. You’ll never get an answering
service or a machine because we know you need
and want information and answers right away.
Our Allen Brothers family is here to provide you
with the professional guidance, understanding
and dignified care your family deserves in your
time of need.
Of course, many people prefer meeting prior to
need, when arrangements may be made at one’s
leisure, without urgency. We are happy to offer
- without any cost or obligation - complete
information on options for prearrangements.
Prearrangements are perhaps the greatest gift we
can give our families because it allows your
loved ones to focus on the memories of your life
rather than the details of your death.
Please feel welcome to contact us at either
chapel. We’re here to help...
when you need us and when you don’t.
ALLEN BROTHERS MORTUARY, INC.
FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1964
VISTA CHAPEL
FD-1120
1315 S. Santa Fe Ave
Vista, CA 92083
760-726-2555
SAN MARCOS CHAPEL
FD-1378
435 N. Twin Oaks Valley Rd
San Marcos, CA 92069
760-744-4522
www.allenbrothersmortuary.com
IN YOUR TIME
OF NEED...
whether it be for the loss of a loved
one or to support a friend, we want
you to feel that you are in good hands.
At our facility, we provide the attention
and support needed to make this life’s
transition as easy as possible.
340 Melrose
Ave., Encinitas
FD857
760-753-1143
C
.
.
4
4
B6
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page A22
by duly appointed trustee.
The sale will be made, but
without covenant or warranty,
expressed
or
implied,
regarding title, possession,
or encumbrances, to pay the
accrued 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. BENEFICIARY
MAY BID LESS THAN THE
TOTAL
AMOUNT
DUE.
Trustor(s):
Margarita
C
Saldana, Trustee of the Juan
G. and Margarita C Saldanan
Living Trust dated March 4,
2004 Recorded: 4/29/2008 as
Instrument No. 2008-0229290
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of SAN
DIEGO County, California;
Date of Sale: 5/18/2015 at
10:00 AM Place of Sale: At the
entrance to the East County
Regional Center by statue,
250 E. Main Street, El Cajon,
CA 92020 Amount of accrued
balance and other charges:
$253,604.88 The purported
property address is: 3600
FRENZEL CIR, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92056 Assessor’s Parcel
No. 165-402-45-00 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 714-573-1965
for information regarding
the trustee’s sale or visit this
Internet Web site http://www.
qualityloan.com , using the
file number assigned to this
foreclosure by the trustee: CA14-649160-HL.
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. The undersigned trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the property
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. If no street address
or other common designation
is shown, directions to the
location of the property may be
obtained by sending a written
request to the beneficiary
within 10 days of the date
of first publication of this
Notice of Sale. If the trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. If the sale
is set aside for any reason, the
Purchaser at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return of the
deposit paid. The Purchaser
shall have no further recourse
against the mortgagor, the
mortgagee, or the mortgagee’s
attorney.
If
you
have
previously been discharged
through
bankruptcy,
you
may have been released of
personal liability for this loan
in which case this letter is
intended to exercise the note
holders right’s against the real
property only. As required by
law, you are hereby notified
that a negative credit report
reflecting on your credit
record may be submitted
to a credit report agency if
you fail to fulfill the terms
of your credit obligations.
WE ARE ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT, AND ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. Date: Quality
Loan Service Corporation
411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA
92101 619-645-7711 For NON
SALE information only Sale
Line: 714-573-1965 Or Login
to:
http://www.qualityloan.
com Reinstatement Line:
(866) 645-7711 Ext 5318
Quality Loan Service Corp. TS
No.: CA-14-649160-HL IDSPub
#0080406 4/17/2015 4/24/2015
5/1/2015 CN 17176
3549 PASEO DE FRANCISCO
216 OCEANSIDE, CA 92056
The
undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the street
address and other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. Said sale will be
held, but without covenant or
warranty, express or implied,
regarding title, possession,
condition, or encumbrances,
including fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee and
of the trusts created by said
Deed of Trust, to pay the
remaining principal sums
of the note(s) secured by
said Deed of Trust. The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligation secured by
the property to be sold and
reasonable estimated costs,
expenses and advances at the
time of the initial publication
of the Notice of Sale is:
$285,340.65 If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. The
beneficiary under said Deed of
Trust heretofore executed and
delivered to the undersigned
a written Declaration of
Default and Demand for
Sale, and a written Notice
of Default and Election to
Sell. The undersigned caused
said Notice of Default and
Election to Sell to be recorded
in the county where the real
property is located. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing
the highest bid at a trustee
auction does not automatically
entitle you to free and clear
ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that the
lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible
for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned
off, before you can receive
clear title to the property. You
are encouraged to investigate
the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee for
this information. If you consult
either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
lender may hold more than
one mortgage or deed of trust
on the property. NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this notice of
sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a
court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (844) 477-7869
or visit this Internet Web
site
WWW.STOXPOSTING.
COM, using the file number
assigned to this case 021806CA.
Information
about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information
or
on
the
Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale. FOR SALES
INFORMATION: (844) 4777869 CLEAR RECON CORP.
CLEAR RECON CORP. 4375
Jutland Drive Suite 200
San Diego, California 92117
LEGAL
DESCRIPTION
The land referred to in this
Report is situated in the City
of Oceanside, County of San
Diego, State of California,
and is described as follows: A
condominium comprised of:
Parcel 1: An undivided 1/280th
interest in and to the common
area of lots 1 through 11,
inclusive, of Vista Way Village,
in the City of Oceanside,
County of San Diego, State of
California, according to map
thereof no. 11743, filed in the
office of the county recorder
of San Diego County, March
11, 1987. Except therefrom
units 1 through 280, and
the association property as
shown and defined upon the
condominium plan recorded
November
17,
2004
as
instrument no. 04-1086579,
official
records
of
said
county. Reserving therefrom
exclusive
use
association
property
easements
for
patios, balconies, utility areas,
parking areas and telephone
wiring designated as “P”, “B”,
“UA” and “PS”, in, over, across
and through those portions
of the association property
as shown in the above
referred to condominium
plan. Parcel 2: Unit 216_ as
shown and defined upon the
condominium plan referred
to in parcel 1 above. Parcel
3: Exclusive use association
property easements for all
uses and purposes of patio,
balcony, utility area, parking
spaces and telephone wiring,
to be appurtenant to parcels
1 and 2 above, in, over, across
and through those portions
of the association property
designated and delineated
as “P”, “B”, “UA”, and “PS”,
which bear the same number
as the unit referred to in
parcel 2 above, preceded by
the letters “P”, “B”, “UA”, and
“PS”, on the above referred to
condominium plan. 04/10/15,
04/17/15, 04/24/15 CN 17161
92028
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 without covenant or
warranty, express 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. The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligations secured
by the property to be sold
and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of this Notice of
Trustee’s Sale is estimated to
be $484,784.08 (Estimated).
However,
prepayment
premiums, accrued interest
and advances will increase
this figure prior to sale.
Beneficiary’s bid at said sale
may include all or part of
said amount. In addition to
cash, the Trustee will accept
a cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association or savings bank
specified in Section 5102 of
the California Financial Code
and authorized to do business
in California, or other such
funds as may be acceptable
to the Trustee. In the event
tender other than cash is
accepted, the Trustee may
withhold the issuance of the
Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale
until funds become available
to the payee or endorsee as a
matter of right. The property
offered for sale excludes
all funds held on account
by the property receiver, if
applicable. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. 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 Priority
Posting and Publishing at
714-573-1965 for information
regarding the Trustee’s Sale
or visit the Internet Web
site address listed below for
information regarding the sale
of this property, using the file
number assigned to this case,
CA08003298-14-1. Information
about postponements that
are very short in duration or
that occur close in time to
the scheduled sale may not
immediately be reflected in
the telephone information
or on the Internet Web
site. The best way to verify
postponement information is
to attend the scheduled sale.
Date: March 30, 2015 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA08003298-141 17100 Gillette Ave Irvine,
CA 92614 Phone: 949-2528300 TDD: 866-660-4288 Amy
Lemus, Authorized Signatory
SALE INFORMATION CAN
BE OBTAINED ON LINE
AT
www.priorityposting.
com
FOR
AUTOMATED
SALES
INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL:
Priority
Posting and Publishing AT
714-573-1965 MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps MAY
BE ACTING AS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. P1137570 4/10,
4/17, 04/24/2015 CN 17160
for the sale of this property,
you may call 800-280-2832
for information regarding
the trustee’s sale or visit this
Internet Web site http://www.
qualityloan.com , using the
file number assigned to this
foreclosure by the Trustee: CA14-651583-CL . 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. The undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the property
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. If no street address
or other common designation
is shown, directions to the
location of the property may be
obtained by sending a written
request to the beneficiary
within 10 days of the date of
first publication of this Notice
of Sale. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. If the sale
is set aside for any reason, the
Purchaser at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return of the
deposit paid. The Purchaser
shall have no further recourse
against the Mortgagor, the
Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee’s
Attorney.
If
you
have
previously been discharged
through
bankruptcy,
you
may have been released of
personal liability for this loan
in which case this letter is
intended to exercise the note
holders right’s against the real
property only. As required by
law, you are hereby notified
that a negative credit report
reflecting on your credit
record may be submitted to
a credit report agency if you
fail to fulfill the terms of your
credit obligations. QUALITY
MAY
BE
CONSIDERED
A
DEBT
COLLECTOR
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT
A
DEBT
AND
ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. Date: Quality
Loan Service Corporation
411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA
92101 619-645-7711 For NON
SALE information only Sale
Line: 800-280-2832 Or Login
to:
http://www.qualityloan.
com Reinstatement Line:
(866) 645-7711 Ext 5318
Quality Loan Service Corp. TS
No.: CA-14-651583-CL IDSPub
#0080944 4/17/2015 4/24/2015
5/1/2015 CN 17177
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE TS No. CA-14-649160HL Order No.: 730-140783970 (Pursuant to Cal. Civ.
Code 2923.3) YOU ARE IN
DEFAULT UNDER A DEED
OF TRUST DATED 4/24/2008.
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 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 to the Financial Code
and authorized to do business
in this state, will be held
APN: 165-362-27-02 T.S. No.
021806-CA
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant
to CA Civil Code 2923.3
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST, DATED
7/8/2005. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER On
4/30/2015 at 3:00 PM, CLEAR
RECON CORP., as duly
appointed
trustee
under
and pursuant to Deed of
Trust recorded 7/13/2005, as
Instrument No. 2005-0589233,
of Official Records in the
office of the County Recorder
of San Diego County, State of
CALIFORNIA executed by:
JASON REID JOPLING AND
HILLARY LAUREN JOPLING
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION
TO
HIGHEST
BIDDER
FOR
CASH,
CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN
ON A STATE OR NATIONAL
BANK, A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, OR A
CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE
OR
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, OR
SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED
IN SECTION 5102 OF THE
FINANCIAL
CODE AND
AUTHORIZED
TO
DO
BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER BY STATUE, 250 E.
MAIN STREET, EL CAJON,
CA 92020 all right, title and
interest conveyed to and
now held by it under said
Deed of Trust in the property
situated in said County
and State described as: AS
MORE FULLY DESCRIBED
IN SAID DEED OF TRUST
The street address and other
common designation, if any,
of the real property described
above is purported to be:
APN: 125-271-75-00 TS No:
CA08003298-14-1
TO
No:
140105850-CA-MAI NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
October 24, 2005. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE.
IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. On
May 5, 2015 at 10:00 AM,
at the entrance to the East
County Regional Center by
statue, 250 E. Main Street,
El Cajon, CA 92020, MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps, as the duly Appointed
Trustee, under and pursuant
to the power of sale contained
in that certain Deed of Trust
recorded on November 2,
2005, as Instrument No. 20050951617, of official records in
the Office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
executed by PHILLIP BECK
AND GEORGETTE BECK
HUSBAND AND WIFE ,
as Trustor(s), in favor of
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYSTEMS,
INC. as nominee for AMPRO
MORTGAGE, A DIVISION
OF UNITED FINANCIAL
MORTGAGE
CORP.
as
Beneficiary, WILL SELL AT
PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER, in lawful
money of the United States,
all payable at the time of
sale, that certain property
situated in said County,
California describing the
land therein as: AS MORE
FULLY
DESCRIBED
IN
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: 3568 LAKE CIRCLE
DRIVE, FALLBROOK, CA
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE TS No. CA-14-627625RY Order No.: 140130248-CAMAI NOTE: THERE IS
A SUMMARY OF THE
INFORMATION
IN THIS
DOCUMENT
ATTACHED
TO THE COPY PROVI DED
TO THE MORTGAGOR OR
TRUSTOR (Pursuant to Cal.
Civ. Code 2923.3) YOU ARE IN
DEFAULT UNDER A DEED
OF TRUST DATED 6/16/2005.
UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION
TO
PROTECT
YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. A
public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, check
drawn by 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 to the Financial C ode
and authorized to do business
in this state, will be held
by duly appointed trustee.
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. BENEFICIARY MAY
ELECT TO BID LESS THAN
THE TOTAL AMOUNT DUE.
Trustor(s): PETRA SALGADO,
A MARRIED WOMAN AS
HER SOLE AND SEPARATE
PROPERTY
Recorded:
6/24/2005 as Instrument No.
2005-0534760
of
Official
Records in the office of the
Recorder of SAN DIEGO
County, California; Date of
Sale: 5/1/2015 at 10:00:00
AM Place of Sale: At the
entrance to the east county
regional center by statue,
250 E. Main Street, El Cajon,
CA 92020 Amount of unpaid
APRIL 24, 2015 B7
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
balance and other charges:
$272,987.01 The purported
property address is: 5051
GOLD DRIVE, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92057 Assessor’s Parcel
No. 122-210-24-00 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 sa le date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call 714-573-1965
for information regarding
the trustee’s sale or visit this
Internet Web site http://www.
qualityloan.com , using the
file number assigned to this
foreclosure by the Trustee: CA14-627625-RY . 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. The undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the property
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. If no street address
or other common designation
is shown, directions to the
location of the property may be
obtained by sending a written
request to the beneficiary
within 10 days of the date of
first publication of this Notice
of Sale. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. If the sale
is set aside for any reason, the
Purchaser at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return of the
deposit paid. The Purchaser
shall have no further recourse
against the Mortgagor, the
Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee’s
Attorney.
If
you
have
previously been discharged
through
bankruptcy,
you
may have been released of
personal liability for this loan
in which case this letter is
intended to exercise the note
holders right’s against the real
property only. As required by
law, you are hereby notified
that a negative credit report
reflecting on your credit
record may be submitted to
a credit report agency if you
fail to fulfill the terms of your
credit obligations. QUALITY
MAY
BE
CONSIDERED
A
DEBT
COLLECTOR
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT
A
DEBT
AND
ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE . Date: Quality
Loan Service Corporation
411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA
92101 619-645-7711 For NON
SALE information only Sale
Line: 714-573-1965 O r Login
to:
http://www.qualityloan.
com Reinstatement Line:
(866) 645-7711 Ext 5318
Quality Loan Service Corp. TS
No.: CA-14-627625-RY IDSPub
#0080311 4/10/2015 4/17/2015
4/24/2015 CN 17159
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee for
this information. If you consult
either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
lender may hold more than
one mortgage or deed of trust
on the property. NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this notice of
sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a
court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call 800-280-2832
for information regarding
the trustee’s sale or visit this
Internet Web site http://www.
qualityloan.com , using the
file number assigned to this
foreclosure by the Trustee: CA14-629125-AB . 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. The undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the property
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. If no street address
or other common designation
is shown, directions to the
location of the property may be
obtained by sending a written
request to the beneficiary
within 10 days of the date of
first publication of this Notice
of Sale. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy
shall be the return of monies
paid to the Trustee, and the
successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. If the sale
is set aside for any reason, the
Purchaser at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return of the
deposit paid. The Purchaser
shall have no further recourse
against the Mortgagor, the
Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee’s
Attorney.
If
you
have
previously been discharged
through
bankruptcy,
you
may have been released of
personal liability for this loan
in which case this letter is
intended to exercise the note
holders right’s against the real
property only. As required by
law, you are hereby notified
that a negative credit report
reflecting on your credit
record may be submitted to
a credit report agency if you
fail to fulfill the terms of your
credit obligations. QUALITY
MAY
BE
CONSIDERED
A
DEBT
COLLECTOR
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT
A
DEBT
AND
ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. Date: Quality
Loan Service Corporation
411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA
92101 619-645-7711 For NON
SALE information only Sale
Line: 800-280-2832 Or Login
to:
http://www.qualityloan.
com Reinstatement Line:
(866) 645-7711 Ext 5318
Quality Loan Service Corp. TS
No.: CA-14-629125-AB IDSPub
#0080195 4/10/2015 4/17/2015
4/24/2015 CN 17158
may otherwise be interested
in the will or estate, or both,
of: RHONDA LEE TOWNE
AKA RHONDA LEE CHAPIN
A Petition for Probate has
been filed by ALICIA L.
FORSMAN in the Superior
Court of California, County of
SAN DIEGO.
The Petition for Probate
requests that ALICIA L.
FORSMAN be appointed as
personal representative to
administer the estate of the
decedent.
The
Petition
requests
authority to administer the
estate under the Independent
Administration of Estates Act.
(This authority will allow the
personal representative to
take many actions without
obtaining court approval.
Before taking certain very
important actions, however,
the personal representative
will be required to give notice
to interested persons unless
they have waived notice or
consented to the proposed
action.) The independent
administration
authority
will be granted unless an
interested person files an
objection to the petition and
shows good cause why the
court should not grant the
authority.
A hearing on the petition
will be held in this court on
May 12, 2015 at 11:00 AM in
Dept. PC-1 located at 1409 4th
Avenue, San Diego, CA 921013105 Central Division/Madge
Bradley Building.
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: Krista
D.S. Dupps, 2251 San Diego
Ave., Ste A-120, San Diego, CA
92101, Telephone: 619-6832545 4/17, 4/24, 5/1/15
CNS-2740716# CN 17185
at this court and have a copy
served on the plaintiff. A
letter or phone call will not
protect you.
Your written
response must be in proper
legal form if you want the
court to hear your case. There
may be a court form that you
can use for your response. You
can find these court forms
and more information at the
California Courts Online SelfHelp Center (www.courtinfo.
ca.gov/selfhelp), your county
law library, or the courthouse
nearest you. If you cannot pay
the filing fee, ask the court
clerk for a fee waiver form. If
you do not file your response
on time, you may lose the case
by default, and your wages,
money, and property may be
taken without further warning
from the court.
There
are
other
legal
requirements. You may want
to call an attorney right
away. If you do not know an
attorney, you may want to call
an attorney referral service. If
you cannot afford an attorney,
you may be eligible for free
legal services from a nonprofit
legal services program. You
can locate these nonprofit
groups at the California Legal
Services Web site (www.
lawhelpcalifornia.org),
the
California Courts Online SelfHelp Center (www.courtinfo.
ca.gov/selfhelp),
or
by
contacting your local court or
county bar association. NOTE:
The court has a statutory lien
for waived fees and costs on
any settlement or arbitration
award of $10,000 or more in
a civil. case. The court’s lien
must be paid before the court
will dismiss the case.
AVISO! Lo han demandado.
Si no responde dentro de 30
dias, la corte puede decidir
en su contra sin escuchar su
version. Lea la informacion a
continuacion.
Tiene
30
DIAS
DE
CALENDARIO
despues
de que le entreguen esta
citacion y papeles legales
para presentar una respuesta
por escrito en esta corte y
hacer que se entregue una
copia al demandante. Una
carta o una llamada telefonica
no lo protegen. Su respuesta
por escrito tiene que estar
en formato legal correcto
si desea que procesen su
caso en la corte. Es posible
que haya un formulario que
usted pueda usar para su
respuesta.Puede
encontrar
estos formularios de la corte y
mas informacion en el Centro
de Ayuda de las Cortes de
California
(www.sucorte.
ca.gov), en la biblioteca de
leyes de su condado o en
la corte que le quede mas
cerca. Si no puede pagar
la cuota de presentacion,
pida al secretario de la corte
que le de un formulario de
exencion de pago de cuotas.
Si no presenta su respuesta a
tiempo, puede perder el caso
por incumplimiento y la corte
le podra quitar su sueldo,
dinero y bienes sin mas
advertencia.
Hay otros requisitos legales.
Es recomendable que llame a
un abogado inmediatamente.
Si no conoce a un abogado,
puede llamar a un servicio
de remision a abogados. Si
no puede pagar a un abogado,
es posible que cumpla con
los requisitos para obtener
servicios legales gratuitos
de un programa de servicios
legales sin fines de lucro.
Puede encontrar estos grupos
sin fines de lucro en el sitio web
de California Legal Services,
(www.lawhelpcalifornia.org),
en el Centro de Ayuda de las
Cortes de California, (www.
sucorte.ca.gov) o poniendose
en contacto con la corte o el
colegio de abogados locales.
AVISO:
Por ley, la corte
tiene derecho a reclamar las
cuotas y los costos exentos
por imponer un gravamen
sobre cualquier recuperacion
de $10,000 o mas de valor
recibida mediante un acuerdo
o una concesion de arbitraje
en un caso de derecho civil.
Tiene que pagar el gravamen
de la corte antes de que la
corte pueda desechar el caso.
The name and address of
the court is: (El nombre y
direccion de la corte es):
Superior Court of California
County of San Diego
North County Regional Ctr.
325 S Melrose Dr
Vista CA 92081
The name, address, and
telephone
number
of
plaintiff’s
attorney,
or
plaintiff without an attorney,
is: (El nombre, la direccion
y el numero de telefono del
abogado del demandante, o
del demandante que no tiene
abogado, es):
C Bradley Hallen, Esq.# 47947
Law Offices of C Bradley
Hallen
2533 S Coast Hwy 101 #280
Cardiff, CA 92007
Electronically Filed Date:
(Fecha), 10/01/14
Clerk, by (Secretario)
E Fernandez, Deputy Adjunto)
NOTICE TO THE PERSON
SERVED: You are served as
an individual defendant.
04/17, 04/24, 05/01, 05/08/15
CN 17184
the petition is dismissed,
a judgement is entered, or
the court makes further
orders. They are enforceable
anywhere in California by any
law enforcement officer who
has received or seen a copy of
them.
AVISO: Las ordenes de
restriccion se encuentran en
la pagina 2: Las ordenes de
restriccion estan en vigencia
en cuanto a ambos conyuges
o miembros de la pareja de
hecho hasta que se despida
la peticion, se emita un fallo
o la corte de otras ordenes.
Cualquier agencia del orden
publico que haya recibido
o visto una copia de estas
ordenes
puede
hacerias
acatar en cualquier lugar de
California.
FEE WAIVER: If you cannot
pay the filing fee, ask the clerk
for a fee waiver form. The
court may order you to pay
back all or part of the fees and
costs that the court waived for
you or the other party.
EXENCION DE CUOTAS:
Si no puede pagar la cuota
de presentacion, pida al
secretario un formulario de
exencion de cuotas., La corte
puede ordenar que usted
pague, ya sea en parte o por
completo, las cuotas y costos
de la corte previamente
exentos a peticion de usted o
de la otra parte.
The name and address of
the court are (El nombre y
direccion de la corte son):
Superior Court of California
North County Division
325 S Melrose Dr
Vista CA 92081
The name, address, and
telephone
number
of
petitioner’s
attorney,
or
petitioner without an attorney,
are: (El nombre, direccion
y numero de telefono del
abogado del demandante, o
del demandante si no tiene
abogado, son):
Veronika
Andreevna
Andreeva
1010 Madison Ave
Escondido CA 92027
Telephone: 760.738.1013
Date (Fecha): 12/08/14
Clerk, by (Secretario, por),
S
Campbell,
Deputy
(Asistente)
04/10, 04/17, 04/24, 05/01/15
CN 17167
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE TS No. CA-14-629125AB Order No.: 8456416 YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
2/23/2007.
UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC
SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. A
public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, check
drawn by 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 to the Financial Code
and authorized to do business
in this state, will be held
by duly appointed trustee.
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. BENEFICIARY MAY
ELECT TO BID LESS THAN
THE TOTAL AMOUNT DUE.
Trustor(s): BRADLEY JAY
MANNING AND LESLIE
MICHELE
MANNING,
HUSBAND AND WIFE AS
COMMUNITY
PROPERTY.
Recorded:
3/2/2007
as
Instrument No. 2007-0143129
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of SAN
DIEGO County, California;
Date of Sale: 5/1/2015 at
9:00 AM Place of Sale: At
the Entrance of the East
County Regional Center, 250
E. Main Street, El Cajon,
CA 92020 Amount of unpaid
balance and other charges:
$553,291.48 The purported
property address is: 5021
CHALET DR, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92057 Assessor’s Parcel
No.: 158-503-51-00 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
NOTICE OF PETITION
TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF RHONDA
LEE TOWNE CASE NO.
37-2015-00011522-PR-LA-CTL
ROA #: 1 (IMAGED FILE)
To all heirs, beneficiaries,
creditors,
contingent
creditors, and persons who
SUMMONS (CITACION
JUDICIAL) CASE NUMBER:
37-2014-00033298CU-PA-NC
NOTICE TO DEFENDANT:
(AVISO AL DEMANDADO):
Rachelle Silberg and Does 1
to 10;
YOU ARE BEING SUED
BY
PLAINTIFF:
(LO
ESTA DEMANDANDO EL
DEMANDANTE):
David E Johnson;
NOTICE! You have been sued.
The court may decide against
you without your being heard
unless you respond within 30
days. Read the information
below.
You have 30 CALENDAR
DAYS after this summons and
legal papers are served on
you to file a written response
SUMMONS (Family Law)
ON FIRST AMENDED
PETITION CITACION
(Derecho familiar) CASE
# (NUMERO DE CASO)
DN179418
NOTICE TO RESPONDENT:
AVISO AL DEMANDADO:
Artemio Garfias Talavera.
You are being sued. Read
the
information
below
and on the next page. Lo
estan demandando. Lea la
informacion a continuacion y
en la pagina siguiente.
Petitioner’s Name is: Nombre
del demandante: Veronika
Andreevna Andreeva.
You have 30 calendar days
after this Summons and
Petition are served on you to
file a Response (form FL-120
or FL-123) at the court and
have a copy served on the
petitioner. A letter or phone
call will not protect you.
If you do not file your
Response on time, the court
may make orders affecting
your marriage or domestic
partnership, your property,
and custody of your children.
You may be ordered to pay
support and attorney fees and
costs.
For legal advice, contact a
lawyer immediately.
Get
help finding a lawyer at the
California Courts Online SelfHelp Center (www.courtinfo.
ca.gov/selfhelp),
at
the
California Legal Services Web
site
(www.lawhelpca.org),
or by contacting your local
county bar association.
Tiene 30 dias de calendario
despues de haber recibido la
entrega legal de esta Citacion
y Peticion para presentar una
Respuesta (fomulario FL120 o FL-123) ante la corte y
efectuar la entrega legal de
una copia al demandante.
Una carta o llamada telefonica
o una audiencia de la corte no
basta para protegerio.
Si no presenta su Respuesta
a tiempo, la corte puede
dar ordenes que afecten su
matrimonio o pareja de hecho,
sus bienes y la custodia de
sus hijos. La corte tambien
le puede ordenar que pague
manutencion, y honorarios y
costos legales.
Para asesoramiento legal,
pongase en contacto de
inmediato con un abogado.
Puede obtener informacion
para encontrar un abogado
en el Centro de Ayuda de las
Cortes de California (www.
sucorte.ca.gov), en el sitio web
de los Servicios Legales de
California
(www.lawhelpca.
org) o poniendose en contacto
con el colegio de abogados de
su condado.
NOTICE: The
restraining
orders are on page 2. These
restraining
orders
are
effective against both spouses
or domestic partners until
SUMMONS (Family Law)
CITACION (Derecho
familiar) CASE # (NUMERO
DE CASO) DN179418
NOTICE TO RESPONDENT:
AVISO AL DEMANDADO:
Artemio Garfias Talavera.
You are being sued. Read
the
information
below
and on the next page. Lo
estan demandando. Lea la
informacion a continuacion y
en la pagina siguiente.
Petitioner’s Name is: Nombre
del demandante: Veronika
Andreevna Andreeva.
You have 30 calendar days
after this Summons and
Petition are served on you to
file a Response (form FL-120
or FL-123) at the court and
have a copy served on the
petitioner. A letter or phone
call will not protect you.
If you do not file your
Response on time, the court
may make orders affecting
your marriage or domestic
partnership, your property,
and custody of your children.
You may be ordered to pay
support and attorney fees and
costs.
For legal advice, contact a
lawyer immediately.
Get
help finding a lawyer at the
California Courts Online SelfHelp Center (www.courtinfo.
ca.gov/selfhelp),
at
the
California Legal Services Web
site
(www.lawhelpca.org),
or by contacting your local
county bar association.
Coast News legals
continued on
page B10
B8
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
Food &Wine
The North Eats festival takes place Sunday, April 26th at the Carlsbad Hilton Oceanfront Resort and offers
food sampling and live events. Courtesy photo
the Plate’s Favorite
Culinary
Lick
Festival North Eats is back!
and the fact that he had already produced several of
his famous Poke Festivals.
Nino is the Event Creator
and Curator of this fabulous event and it’s being
held again this year at the
beautiful
Carlsbad Hilton
Oceanfront Resort on Sunday, April 26th and the
number of participating
restaurants is even more
impressive this year.
Baker and Olive is the
sponsor of the event and
owner Nol Calabreeze has
really stepped up their involvement in the festival.
Baker & Olive sells to the
public
and to restaurants,
many of who are utilizing
their olive oils and other
gourmet ingredients in
their offerings at North
Eats. If you have not been
I
recall getting an
email from Nino
"Neens" Camilo
about a year ago
pitching me on his upcoming North Eats festival
and I was amazed by the
number of top tier North
County restaurants he had
already
lined up for this
first time event. That in
itself was enough to sell
me on the idea of having
him as a guest on Lick the
Plate on KPRI. Well, that
to Baker & Olive lately I
would highly recommend
it. It’s one of those places that can really expand
your horizons as a home
cook. I will be following up
Nol in a future column, as
he is a very interesting guy
who has taken Baker & Olive to a whole new level.
With that, let me get
back to North Eats. I get to
a lot of these festivals and
can honestly say this one
stands head and shoulders
above most of them in San
Diego. That and the fact
that it is so conveniently located makes in a no-brainer for any food, music and
surf culture lover in North
County. But convenience
aside, the location is world
class, the participating
restaurants are amazing,
there is very little waiting
for food, very healthy sample portions, amazing beer
and wine options, killer en-
TURN TO LICK THE PLATE ON B12
restaurant
Pop Up Dinner Experience
Thornton winery’s 2015 Champagne Jazz season kicks off with saxman Brian Culbertson, Saturday May 2nd
at 7pm. Photo courtesy of Thornton Winery
Wine & Jazz Always Sweeter
at Thornton’s
Champagne Jazz Concerts
many of which have sold
out concerts for a number
of years past. In a statement
on their web site, John and
Sally Thornton, who have
guided the fortunes of the
winery and the concert sefrank mangio
ries had this to say about
the 2015 series. “Thornton
hose of us who winery continues to build
love jazz music on its national and criticalwith our wine, ly acclaimed reputation as
and there are one of the finest outdoor
many, are gladdened that venues. The intimate and
Spring has arrived. That’s acoustically superb Mediwhen new wine releases are terranean fountain terrace,
brought to market, and the overlooking the beautiful
new lineup of jazz concerts Temecula Wine Country,
are revealed at Thornton offers a memorable and
unique concert experiWinery in Temecula. When radio abandoned ence.”
The jazz experience Thornton Jazz Concert favorite
Jazz some years ago, fans
in Southern California begins Saturday May 2nd Richard Elliot leads Jazz Attack
starring Peter White and
turned to Thornton to keep at 7pm with Brian Culb- also
Euge Groove, with two concerts
the music coming with the ertson and Elan Trotman. on this year’s lineup. Photo by
star-quality that Thornton Lots of ticket options for Frank Mangio
has been famous for. I’m all concerts, from general
here to tell you that the admission to gourmet sup- on the menu is the Thornton
legend lives on this 2015 per packages prepared by Nebbiolo Italian red wine.
season with 22 concerts the award winning Café ($42.) The latest, a 2012
booked,
everyone of Coast
themAdChampagne.
osbMDAdTC'15Clr_OSB
4/16/15 10:29My
AM go-to
Page wine
2
featuring top Jazz artists, with just about any supper
TURN TO TASTE OF WINE ON B12
taste of
wine
T
Live Music with Diogo Andrade
Reservation (with ticket purchase only) recommended
Saturday, April 25th, 2015
at Beach Grass cafe
159 South Coast Highway 101, Solana Beach CA 92075
for more info:
619.847.0768
Sunday, May 10th
Mother’s Day on the Harbor!
Sunday Buffet Brunch from 10:00am~2:00pm
$34 for Adults / $14 Kids / $6 Bottle of Champagne
www.bossarestaurant.com
[email protected]
(760) 722-3474
Make Reservations Early!
1325 Harbor Drive North, Oceanside, CA 92054 • w w w . O c e a n s i d e - B r o i l e r. c o m
APRIL 24, 2015 B9
T he C oast News Camp P endleton News
With this ad, expires 5-15-15
The San Diego Nice Guys and Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton held a ribbon cutting ceremony to commemorate the opening of two beach cottages at San Onofre Beach, April 17. Photo by Cpl. Shaltiel Dominguez
“It begins with a conversation, and
ends when your dreams come true!”
Ribbon cutting ceremony for beach cottages
By Cpl. Shaltiel Dominguez
CAMP PENDLETON—
The San Diego Nice Guys
and Marine Corps Base
Camp Pendleton held a ribbon cutting ceremony to
commemorate the opening
of two beach cottages at
San Onofre Beach, April 17.
The cottages were dedicated in honor of Col. James
Williams, an accomplished
Marine pilot who served in
World War II, the Korean
War and the Vietnam War,
and Col. Jack Kelley who
had a highly decorated career as a Marine infantry
officer in Vietnam and was
the commanding officer of
3rd Battalion, 5th Marine
Regiment.
Both officers were
members of the San Diego Nice Guys, a volunteer
non-profit organization that
receives donations that provides aid to local individuals and families in need.
The Camp Pendleton
Cottage Renovation Project began in 2009 after
construction firm Hedges
Construction was contacted by a couple who wanted
to support Camp Pendleton
by replacing the deteriorating cottages at San Onofre
Beach.
The new cottages are
fully furnished, have a
kitchen, a living room, a
bedroom and a front porch
overlooking the beachfront.
“It’s all about the Marines,” said Brig. Gen. Edward D. Banta, Commanding General, Marine Corps
Base Camp Pendleton, Marine Corps Installations
– West. “We ask an awful
lot of them and providing
a world-class recreational opportunity like this is
just one of the ways we can
make sure they’re taken
care of.”
Hedges Construction
and the San Diego Nice
Guys are still continuing
their efforts to replacing
the remaining twenty-one
cottages at the beach.
The Camp Pendleton
Cottage Renovation Project
puts emphasis on providing accessibility and quality-of-life comforts to veterans with disabilities.
“It’s a place that allows
you to clear your head and
get away from the difficulties of life, some of which
might be related to military service,” said Bob Clelland, chairman of the Camp
Pendleton Cottage Renovation Project.
“We’ve provided for
those with physical disabilities handicap-friendly
kitchens, toilets and passages.”
“I think some of the
wounds that our servicemembers are coming back
with are those that you can’t
see,” added Clelland. “A
peaceful place like this can
help heal those wounds.”
NEW YEAR...YOUR NEW HOME!
Tropical, Spectacular Views
& Great Location on 4.55
Acres! Bring your horses!
Unique, gated, private & serene hilltop property
near I-15 with stunning views. Spacious main home
apprx 2760 sqft along with second structure/guest
home apprx 2300 sq ft that is waiting for your
imagination and finishing touches. Great for two
Families!!!
Cascading Waterfall, Resort style Pool &
Deck with large outdoor movie screen to enjoy
your favorite shows. Avocado & an assortment of
Fruit Trees as well as your own private Pond. Main
house with its fresh interior paint, a 4 bedroom / 3
bathroom with Living Rm, Family Rm, Dining Rm,
Kitchen, Laundry Rm. New Carpeting and Laminate
Flooring. Lower pond across the driveway.
Second structure is a single level with the
possibility of 2 Bedrooms / 2 Bathroom along with a
1 bedroom with loft area (could be a separate living
area or OFFICE) and a tremendous grate room.
There’s even a bonus of a basement!
Whether you are a gentlemen farmer or an
existing farmer with an extended family, this is the
place to be! These 4.55 acres could be a grower’s
delight with a wide range of options!
Nights can be most captivating as you gaze at
the stars, watch a movie on a theater like outdoor
screen, and hear the serenity of the waterfall.
Come and imagine your life here on Paradise hill!
$698,500. By Appointment Only. Call for Open
House Schedules!
Start the
conversation
today
and call Jim
& Joanie
Jim & Joanie Burton
Coastal Country Real Estate
[email protected]
www.coastalcountry.net
760-729-6400
BRE #’s 01950583 • 00624604
B10
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page B7
for a decree changing name
on behalf of minor child as
follows: a.
Present name
Scarlett Rose Lavelle Cox
changed to proposed name
Scarlett Rose Cox-Zanco.
THE COURT ORDERS that
all persons interested in
this matter appear before
this Court at the hearing
indicated below to show
cause, if any, why the petition
for a change of name should
not be granted. Any person
objecting to the name changes
described above must file
a written objection that
includes the reasons for the
objection at least two days
before the matter is scheduled
to be heard and must appear
at the hearing to show cause
why the petition should not
be granted. If no written
objection is timely filed, the
court may grant the petition
without a hearing.
NOTICE OF HEARING: On
June 02, 2015 at 8:30 a.m., in
Dept 26 of the Superior Court
of California, 325 S Melrose
Dr, Vista CA 92081, North
County Division.
Date: Mar 16, 2015
William S Dato
Judge of the Superior Court
04/10, 04/17, 04/24, 05/01/15
CN 17164
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Intelligent E-Commerce
Inc, 1470 Encinitas Blvd 136,
Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of
business was: 08/01/94 S/Noah
Wieder, 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,
05/15/15 CN 17227
by the following: 1. Hilary
Kirsten, 3221 San Tomas Dr,
Oceanside CA 92056 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Hilary Kirsten, 04/24, 05/01,
05/08, 05/15/15 CN 17222
Statement
#2015-009398
Filed: Apr 08, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Encinitas Karate Inc.
B.
Encinitas
Karate
C.
EncinitasKarate.com Located
at: 1516 Encinitas Blvd,
Encinitas CA San Diego 92024
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Encinitas
Karate Inc, 1516 Encinitas
Blvd, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted
by: A Corporation The first
day of business was: 07/01/99
S/Santhi Castle, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17204
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Mireille Boisse,
169 Phoebe St, Encinitas CA
92024 2. Gary Haver, 3264
Meadowlark Ln, Carlsbad
CA 92008 This business is
conducted by: A General
Partnership The first day
of business was: 09/19/05 S/
Mireille Boisse, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17198
Tiene 30 dias de calendario
despues de haber recibido la
entrega legal de esta Citacion
y Peticion para presentar una
Respuesta (fomulario FL120 o FL-123) ante la corte y
efectuar la entrega legal de
una copia al demandante.
Una carta o llamada telefonica
o una audiencia de la corte no
basta para protegerio.
Si no presenta su Respuesta
a tiempo, la corte puede
dar ordenes que afecten su
matrimonio o pareja de hecho,
sus bienes y la custodia de
sus hijos. La corte tambien
le puede ordenar que pague
manutencion, y honorarios y
costos legales.
Para asesoramiento legal,
pongase en contacto de
inmediato con un abogado.
Puede obtener informacion
para encontrar un abogado
en el Centro de Ayuda de las
Cortes de California (www.
sucorte.ca.gov), en el sitio web
de los Servicios Legales de
California
(www.lawhelpca.
org) o poniendose en contacto
con el colegio de abogados de
su condado.
NOTICE: The
restraining
orders are on page 2. These
restraining
orders
are
effective against both spouses
or domestic partners until
the petition is dismissed,
a judgement is entered, or
the court makes further
orders. They are enforceable
anywhere in California by any
law enforcement officer who
has received or seen a copy of
them.
AVISO: Las ordenes de
restriccion se encuentran en
la pagina 2: Las ordenes de
restriccion estan en vigencia
en cuanto a ambos conyuges
o miembros de la pareja de
hecho hasta que se despida
la peticion, se emita un fallo
o la corte de otras ordenes.
Cualquier agencia del orden
publico que haya recibido
o visto una copia de estas
ordenes
puede
hacerias
acatar en cualquier lugar de
California.
FEE WAIVER: If you cannot
pay the filing fee, ask the clerk
for a fee waiver form. The
court may order you to pay
back all or part of the fees and
costs that the court waived for
you or the other party.
EXENCION DE CUOTAS:
Si no puede pagar la cuota
de presentacion, pida al
secretario un formulario de
exencion de cuotas., La corte
puede ordenar que usted
pague, ya sea en parte o por
completo, las cuotas y costos
de la corte previamente
exentos a peticion de usted o
de la otra parte.
The name and address of
the court are (El nombre y
direccion de la corte son):
Superior Court of California
North County Division
325 S Melrose Dr
Vista CA 92081
The name, address, and
telephone
number
of
petitioner’s
attorney,
or
petitioner without an attorney,
are: (El nombre, direccion
y numero de telefono del
abogado del demandante, o
del demandante si no tiene
abogado, son):
Veronika
Andreevna
Andreeva
1010 Madison Ave
Escondido CA 92027
Date (Fecha): 06/30/14
Clerk, by (Secretario, por),
P Gomez, Deputy (Asistente)
04/10, 04/17, 04/24, 05/01/15
CN 17166
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE # 37-2015-00008675CU-PT-NC
TO
ALL
INTERESTED
PERSONS: Petitioner(s): In
Pro Per Shawn Marie Zanco
filed a petition with this court
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-008211
Filed: Mar 26, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Patrize Properties Located
at: 5920 Friars Rd #100, San
Diego CA San Diego 92108
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Michael
Anthony Brunnhoelzl, 5551
Meadows Del Mar, San Diego
CA 92130 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/26/15 S/ Michael Anthony
Brunnhoelzl, 04/24, 05/01,
05/08, 05/15/15 CN 17230
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009824
Filed: Apr 13, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. The Pursuit of Yoga, D.B.A.
B. Universal Sound and
Blissed Yoga, D.B.A. Located
at: 1345 Encinitas Blvd #316,
Encinitas CA San Diego 92024
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Yoga From
Love, LLC, 1345 Encinitas
Blvd #316, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted by:
A Limited Liability Company
The first day of business was:
03/20/15 S/Morissa Lazar,
04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/15
CN 17229
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009860
Filed: Apr 14, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. The Drowning Men USA
Located at: 330 Mainsail Rd,
Oceanside CA San Diego
92054
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Rory Dolan, 330 Mainsail
Rd, Oceanside CA 92054 2.
Todd Eisenkerch, 330 Mainsail
Rd, Oceanside CA 92054 This
business is conducted by: A
General Partnership The first
day of business was: 01/01/10
S/Todd Eisenkerch, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08, 05/15/15 CN
17228
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-010145
Filed: Apr 16, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Wieder Marketing B. ATM
Depot Located at: 364 2nd St
#4, Encinitas CA San Diego
92024
Mailing
Address:
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009935
Filed: Apr 14, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Stunning Photography B.
Stunning Photography and
Videography
Located
at:
3412 Lilac Summit, Encinitas
CA San Diego 92024 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Igor Lysenko,
3412 Lilac Summit, Encinitas
CA
92024
2.
Svitlana
Doubenko, 3412 Lilac Summit,
Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by: A
Married Couple The first day
of business was: 04/14/15 S/
Igor Lysenko, 04/24, 05/01,
05/08, 05/15/15 CN 17226
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-010365
Filed: Apr 20, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Simple
Solutions
B.
Simple Solutions Creating
an Organized Life Located
at: 1432 Highland Dr, Solana
Beach CA San Diego 92075
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Kathleen
D Kirkpatrick, 1432 Highland
Dr, Solana Beach CA 92075
This business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Kathleen D Kirkpatrick,
04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/15
CN 17225
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-010438
Filed: Apr 20, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. North Coast Optometry
Located at: 3915 Mission
Ave
#2,
Oceanside
CA
San Diego 92058 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by
the following: 1. Matthew
Gentile, 7638 Palmilla Dr,
San Diego CA 92122 2. Kurt
Lundquist, 45737 Cloudburst
Ln, Temecula CA 92592 This
business is conducted by: A
General Partnership The first
day of business was: 04/01/96
S/Matthew Gentile, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08, 05/15/15 CN
17224
Fictitious Business Name
Statement #2015-010397 Filed:
Apr 20, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. New
Solution for You Located at:
410 Glenmont Dr, Solana
Beach CA San Diego 92075
Mailing Address: 153 S Sierra
Ave #1361, Solana Beach CA
92075 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Stephan Weigandt, 410
Glenmont Dr, Solana Beach
CA 92075 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/01/08 S/Stephan Weigandt,
04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/15
CN 17223
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-010394
Filed: Apr 20, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Hope and Healing Located
at: 609 S Vulcan Ave #201,
Encinitas CA San Diego 92024
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009104
Filed: Apr 06, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Hempress Located at: 277
Quail Ln, Oceanside CA San
Diego 92057 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Lynette Susanne, 277 Quail
Ln, Oceanside CA 92057 This
business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 10/12/14 S/
Lynette Susanne, 04/24, 05/01,
05/08, 05/15/15 CN 17221
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009144
Filed: Apr 06, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Grannies Stash Located at:
4106 Peninsula Dr, Carlsbad
CA San Diego 92010 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by
the following: 1. Jennifer
Emerson, 4106 Peninsula
Dr, Carlsbad CA 92010 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Jennifer Emerson, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08, 05/15/15 CN
17220
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009934
Filed: Apr 14, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Enterprise
Innovation
Consulting Located at: 2630
Cazadero Dr, Carlsbad CA
San Diego 92009 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Patrick Goyarts,
2630 Cazadero Dr, Carlsbad
CA 92009 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
05/15/10 S/Patrick Goyarts,
04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/15
CN 17219
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-010150
Filed: Apr 16, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Clean My Car Located at:
1515 S Melrose Dr #67, Vista
CA San Diego 92081 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Sergio Ivan
Florez, 1515 S Melrose Dr
#67, Vista CA 92081 2. Karina
Lizett Sanchez, 1515 S Melrose
Dr #67, Vista CA 92081 This
business is conducted by:
Co-Partners The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Sergio Ivan Florez, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08, 05/15/15 CN
17218
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-006371
Filed: Mar 09, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Ambiance Located at: 6108
Citracado Circle, Carlsbad
CA San Diego 92009 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Walls Alive
Inc, 6108 Citracado Circle,
Carlsbad CA 92009 This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of
business was: 04/27/01 S/Hilda
Evereklian, 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,
05/15/15 CN 17217
Fictitious
Business
Name
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009459
Filed: Apr 08, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Lizzie
Barber Supply Located at:
514 N Coast Hwy, Oceanside
CA San Diego 92054 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Herbert Jeon
Jones Junior, 4501 Bale Ct,
Snellville GA 30039 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Herbert Jones, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17203
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009463
Filed: Apr 08, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. U.S. Construction Services
Located at: 10532 Caminito
Rimini, San Diego CA San
Diego 92129 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Peter John Lee Schneider,
10532 Caminito Rimini, San
Diego CA 92129 This business
is conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Peter John
Lee Schneider, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17201
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009493
Filed: Apr 09, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Stella
Mars
Surf
Association Located at: 710
Wood Dr, Encinitas CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. John Gregory Moline, 710
Wood Dr, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started S/John Greg Moline,
04/17, 04/24, 05/01, 05/08/15
CN 17200
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009754
Filed: Apr 13, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Signarama
Carlsbad
Located at: 3129 Tiger Run
Ct #114, Carlsbad CA San
Diego 92010 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Shackleton Designs LLC,
4429 Marlborough Ave #5, San
Diego CA 92116 This business
is conducted by: A Limited
Liability Company The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started S/Stephen Shackleton,
04/17, 04/24, 05/01, 05/08/15
CN 17199
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009170
Filed: Apr 07, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Peaceful Passing Located
at: 169 Phoebe St, Encinitas
CA San Diego 92024 Mailing
Address: Same This business
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-008118
Filed: Mar 25, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Patio Paradise Located
at: 940 Orpheus Av, Encinitas
CA San Diego 92040 Mailing
Address: 5333 Imperial Av,
San Diego CA 92114 This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Victor
Morales, 5333 Imperial Av, San
Diego CA 92114 This business
is conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/15/15 S/Victor Morales,
04/17, 04/24, 05/01, 05/08/15
CN 17197
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009651
Filed: Apr 10, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Old Rancho
Located
at: 2770 Sunny Creek Rd,
Carlsbad CA San Diego 92010
Mailing Address: PO Box
175, Carlsbad CA 92018 This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Karen
R Kelly, 2770 Sunny Creek
Rd, Carlsbad CA 92010 This
business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 03/03/06 S/
Karen R Kelly, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17196
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-006975
Filed: Mar 13, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Neuro Ex B. Neuroex
Located at: 3345 Terrace Ln,
Oceanside CA San Diego
92056
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Eric Harness, 3345 Terrace
Ln, Oceanside CA 92056 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Eric Harness, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17195
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009638
Filed: Apr 10, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Me for We Design Located
at: 737 Snapdragon St,
Encinitas CA San Diego 92024
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Michelle
Gutmann, 737 Snapdragon
St, Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 01/20/14 S/
Michelle Gutmann, 04/17,
04/24, 05/01, 05/08/15 CN
17194
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009644
Filed: Apr 10, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Matafied Hair Studio
Located at: 1840 S Coast
Hwy, Oceanside CA San
Diego 92054 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Michelle Marie Mata,
1142 S Ditmar St, Oceanside
CA 92054 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
04/10/15 S/Michelle Marie
Mata, 04/17, 04/24, 05/01,
05/08/15 CN 17193
LEGALS
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009418
Filed: Apr 08, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Love Your Mother Earth B.
Love Your Mother Organics
Located at: 740 Windy Way,
Encinitas
CA San Diego
92024 Mailing Address: PO
Box 231759, Encinitas CA
92023 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Life Safety Technologies
Inc, 740 Windy Way, Encinitas
CA 92024 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
04/08/15 S/Joanne Price, 04/17,
04/24, 05/01, 05/08/15 CN
17192
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-007604
Filed: Mar 19, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Franck Hair Salon Located
at: 2019 San Elijo Ave, Cardiff
CA San Diego 92007 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Franck H Inc, 552
Cerro St, Encinitas CA 92007
This business is conducted by:
A Corporation The first day
of business was: 04/18/07 S/
Maryline Houdin, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17191
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009423
Filed: Apr 08, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Finders Keepers Resale
Located at: 3500 Sports Arena
Blvd, San Diego CA San Diego
92110-4530 Mailing Address:
1531 Indian Summer Rd,
San Marcos CA 92069 This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Damon
Michael Joao, 1531 Indian
Summer Rd, San Marcos
CA 92069 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Damon
Michael Joao, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17190
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009602
Filed: Apr 10, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Clever Collective Located
at: 1812 Mackinnon Ave,
Cardiff CA San Diego 92007
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Jaclyn
Mayer,
1812
Mackinnon
Ave, Cardiff CA 92007 This
business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 04/06/15 S/
Jaclyn Mayer, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17189
Fictitious Business Name
Statement #2015-008486 Filed:
Mar 30, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Camhi
Enterprises Located at: 1901
Wandering Rd, Encinitas CA
San Diego 92024 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Jeremy Camhi,
1901 Wandering Rd, Encinitas
CA 92024 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/01/15 S/Jeremy Camhi,
04/17, 04/24, 05/01, 05/08/15
CN 17188
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-008305
Filed: Mar 26, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Betterwrx
Located at:
5973 Avenida Encinas #202,
APRIL 24, 2015 LEGALS
Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Nobelbiz
Ice Inc, 5973 Avenida Encinas
#202, Carlsbad CA 92008 This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of
business was: 11/04/14 S/G.L.
Scott Murray, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17187
Fictitious Business Name
Statement #2015-009700 Filed:
Apr 10, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Balloons
& More Located at: 3693 Via
Baldona, Oceanside CA San
Diego 92056 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Debbie Medrano, 3693 Vai
Baldona, Oceanside CA 92056
This business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 10/06/08 S/
Debbie Medrano, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01, 05/08/15 CN 17186
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009183
Filed: Apr 07, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Kotofacto Inc Located at:
3668 Azure Circle, Carlsbad
CA San Diego 92008 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Kotofacto Inc,
3668 Azure Circle, Carlsbad
CA 92008 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
04/01/15 S/Isamu Arie, 04/10,
04/17, 04/24, 05/01/15 CN
17175
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-007683
Filed: Mar 20, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. The UPS Store #0746
Located at: 315 S Coast Hwy
101 #U, Encinitas CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
5434 Cromer Pl, Woodland
Hills CA 91367 This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Razma Inc, 5434
Cromer Pl, Woodland Hills
CA 91367 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Farivar
Razmazma, 04/10, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01/15 CN 17174
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-006682
Filed: Mar 11, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Melrose Wellness Located
at: 1054 2nd St #B, Encinitas
CA San Diego 92024 Mailing
Address: 3313 Calle Cobre
#104, Carlsbad CA 92009
This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Melanie Sharp, 3313 Cobre
#104, Carlsbad CA 92009 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Melanie Sharp, 04/10, 04/17,
04/24, 05/01/15 CN 17173
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-009003
Filed: Apr 03, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Grandview
Mortgage
Company Located at: 3513
Corte Romero, Carlsbad CA
San Diego 92009 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Josh Jelsing,
3513 Corte Romero, Carlsbad
CA 92009 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Josh Jelsing,
04/10, 04/17, 04/24, 05/01/15
CN 17172
B11
T he C oast News LEGALS
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-008903
Filed: Apr 02, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. French Nails & Spa
Located at: 1501 San Elijo Rd
S #105, San Marcos CA San
Diego 92078 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following: 1.
Andy Trench Nails Inc, 2694
Peppertree Way, Carlsbad
CA 92009 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Andy Ho,
04/10, 04/17, 04/24, 05/01/15
CN 17171
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-007466
Filed: Mar 18, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Foreign Exchange Inc
Located at: 200 E Via Rancho
Pkwy #169, Escondido CA San
Diego 92025 Mailing Address:
12605 Cisneros Ln, Santa
Fe Springs CA 90670 This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Foreign
Exchange Inc, 12605 Cisneros
Ln, Santa Fe Springs CA 90670
This business is conducted by:
A Corporation The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Albert Han, 04/10, 04/17,
04/24, 05/01/15 CN 17170
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-007656
Filed: Mar 20, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Cooperative Strategies
Located at: 1535 Calle
Tulipanes, Encinitas CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. John H Parsons, 1535 Calle
Tulipanes, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day of
business was: 04/01/91 S/John
H Parsons, 04/10, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01/15 CN 17169
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-008844
Filed: Apr 02, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Circles Located at: 130
Third St, Encinitas CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Christopher James Law,
130 Third St, Encinitas CA
92024 2. Ashlee Shearer, 130
Third St, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted
by: A General Partnership
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Christopher
James Law, 04/10, 04/17, 04/24,
05/01/15 CN 17168
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-008143
Filed: Mar 25, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. MP Designs Located at:
400 N Myers St #48, Oceanside
CA San Diego 92054 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Marny K Pawzun,
400 N Myers St #48, Oceanside
CA 92054 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Marny K
Pawzun, 04/03, 04/10, 04/17,
04/24/15 CN 17153
Fictitious Business Name
Statement #2015-008498 Filed:
Mar 30, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Matafied
Hair Studio Located at: 1840
S Coast Hwy, Oceanside CA
San Diego 92054 Mailing
LEGALS
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Philip L Mata,
1142 S Ditmar St, Oceanside
CA 92054, 2. Michelle M
Mata, 1142 S Ditmar St,
Oceanside CA 92054 This
business is conducted by: A
Married Couple The first day
of business was: 03/25/15 S/
Philip L Mata, 04/03, 04/10,
04/17, 04/24/15 CN 17152
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-007972
Filed: Mar 24, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s): A.
Madys Attic Located at: 2736
Llama Ct, Carlsbad CA San
Diego 92009 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Madeline Condon, 2736
Llama Ct, Carlsbad CA 92009
2. James B Condon II, 2736
Llama Ct, Carlsbad CA 92009
This business is conducted by:
A Married Couple The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started S/Madeline Condon,
04/03, 04/10, 04/17, 04/24/15
CN 17151
Fictitious Business Name
Statement #2015-008025 Filed:
Mar 24, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. JMC
Consulting LLC Located at:
7927 Calle Madrid, Carlsbad
CA San Diego 92009 Mailing
Address: PO Box 230195,
Encinitas CA 92023-0195 This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. JMC
Consulting LLC, 7927 Calle
Madrid, Carlsbad CA 92009
This business is conducted by:
A Limited Liability Company
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Jeanne
M Ota, 04/03, 04/10, 04/17,
04/24/15 CN 17150
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-007678
Filed: Mar 20, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Diamond Aviation Located
at: 2100 Palomar Airport Rd
#B200, Carlsbad
CA San
Diego 92011 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following: 1.
David C Mercier, 565 Hygeia
Ave B, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day of
business was: 03/04/99 S/David
C Mercier, 04/03, 04/10, 04/17,
04/24/15 CN 17149
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OAST
NEWS
VOL. 28,
N0. 25
VISTA,
SAN
MARCOS,
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PERMITPOSTAGE
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JUNE 20,
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Sophia
planne Ceja, 3, of
d for April Ocean
19. See side, shows
the full
off
story on a handfu
page A9. l of eggs
she
Photo
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Counci
l closer
By Jared
Yee
to finaliz
ing Pac
Two commerc
be demolish ial structure
ed to
of retail
make s at Carlsbad
above, and apartmen way for
’s La Costa
retail. would include t buildingsa revamp that
Towne
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Center
.
48
renderings apartmen The larger includes the
will
new building, addition
ts, a courtyard
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egg hunts
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d
revampe retail center
d with apa to be
rtments
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Stine
Whitloc
are
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BAD —
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ITAS
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rcial structuy gained
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ty. That understanding
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council
million of the purcha
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Two Sectio
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48 pages
Center
of hou to be part
sing pro
ject
THE C
OAST
H
TO CENTER
VOL. 28,
NEWS
N0. 25
PRSRT
VISTA,
SAN
ON A17
U.S. POSTAGSTD
E PAID
ENCINIT PRSRT
AS, CA STD
U.S.
92025
PERMITPOSTAG
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NO. 94
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Fictitious Business Name
Statement #2015-007696 Filed:
Mar 20, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Daniela
Marshall Real Estate Service
Located at: 2776 Gateway
Rd, Carlsbad CA San Diego
92009 Mailing Address: PO
Box 2929, Oceanside CA
92049 This business is hereby
registered by the following: 1.
Mariarosa Daniela Marshall,
419 S Weitzel St, Oceanside
CA 92054 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
10/23/03 S/Mariarosa Daniela
Marshall, 04/03, 04/10, 04/17,
04/24/15 CN 17148
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-007811
Filed: Mar 23, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Bossa Restaurant Located
at: 123 Jupiter St #4, Encinitas
CA San Diego 92024 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. JAM Hospitality
LLC, 123 Jupiter #4, Encinitas
CA 92024 This business is
conducted by: A Limited
Liability Company The first
day of business was: 03/04/15
S/Marcos De Marco, 04/03,
04/10, 04/17, 04/24/15 CN
17146
ONDIDO
JUNE 20,
Sophia
planned Ceja, 3, of
for April Oceanside
19. See
, show
s off a
the full
hand
story
on page ful of eggs
A9.
she found
Council
. Four
city egg
closer
hunts
are
to finali
zing Pa
cific Vie
w deal
Photo
By Jared
THE C
OAST
VOL. 28,
VISTA
, SA
RCOS
Two Sect
ions
48 page
s
INLA
EDITI ND
ON
.com
, ESCO
NDIDO
JUNE 20,
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If you want us
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PRSRT
U.S. POSTA STD
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ing
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ncem
The final rema
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the
A&E.
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.........
y Resou Kay Parke meeti at the City
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436-9737
nity’s of the comm ns OUSD
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THE C
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NEWS
or email at: [email protected]
VOL. 28,
N0. 25
VISTA,
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NO. 94
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STEM
CONTINUED FROM B2
because of the potential
they show. They’re neither
the highest nor the lowest
performing students.
Girls are matched with
“Big Sisters,” working professionals in all fields at
Millennium Health, including science, communications and administration.
They meet for a 30-minute STEM activity and then
branch off with their individual mentor for an hour.
The program runs the
entire school year and students can return each year
until they finish the 8th
grade at Del Dios.
The program is part of
a national Big Brothers Big
Sisters campaign to pair
BABY BOOMER
CONTINUED FROM B5
road with bamboo and palm
fronds with some of the best
food imaginable for a small
price.
It still amazes me that
Mexicans pine for the United States. And yes, I just
drove the 1,400 miles back
to the United States last
week and once I crossed
the border in Nogales and
T he C oast News children with mentors.
According to a study
published by Public/Private
Ventures in 1996, students
with mentors were 46 percent less likely to begin using illegal drugs, nearly a
third less likely to use alcohol and 52 percent less likely to skip class, compared to
students not in the program.
On April 16, the students were having their
second meeting with their
“bigs,” or mentors.
Social Worker Clayton
said the girls are already
extremely excited about the
program.
“I cannot tell you how
excited they are. The day
after meeting their bigs,
they flooded into my office
to tell me all about it,” Clay-
ton said.
The mentors are just as
excited.
Tanya Moreno, Vice
President of Genetics Research and Development,
said she looks forward
to mentoring 6th grader
Jazmin.
“I love that she’s interested in science, and engineering and technology and
that she wants to talk about
these things,” Moreno said.
“It’s fun to get to share the
experience.”
After the interview,
Moreno was taking Jazmin
in to get a closer look at
DNA and go through some
DNA isolation experiments.
“I think I’m most interested in the DNA,” Jazmin
said.
drove into the huge and
beautiful city of Tucson,
the differences were just
so stark. The USA looks
like that shining light on
a hill with all its beautiful
communities and shopping
malls and skyscrapers. It
just amazes me though that
the same thing doesn’t take
place such a short distance
away.
If I still had that youthful entrepreneurial spirit,
coupled with my lifetime of
knowledge, I would relive
my life and be turning Mexico’s natural beauty into a
carbon copy of the United
States. Going to Mexico
feels like being transported
back in time. Oh, the possibilities!
TASTE OF WINE
Joe Moris may be
contacted at (760) 5006755 or by email at
[email protected]
LICK THE PLATE
CONTINUED FROM B8
tertainment, an eclectic
crowd, and of course the
Kook or Cook competition.
It’s a matchup between
pro-surfers paired with
professional chefs going
head-to-head all top chef
style. That combination
provided some great entertainment last year with
the pro surfers displaying
some surprising kitchen
skills under pressure. All my favorite restaurants from North County
participate in this and last
year there were a few newcomers and this gave me
the opportunity to do a little tasting in advance I’ve
been to these festivals before where the sample sizes
are so small and the lines
so long it was really not
worth the effort. Not the
case at North Eats. There is
food in abundance and never a long wait…and if so,
you will more than likely
SMALL TALK
CONTINUED FROM B1
of leftover paint and PlayDo as dirt or art?
• Do you think that
small toy parts add color
and charm to a room’s décor?
• Do you require that
your lawn be free of half-inflated pool toys in order to
look groomed?
• What bothers you
more – a stack of dirty
clothes that need washing
or a stack of clean clothes
that need folding?
• What bothers you
more – a stack of dirty dishes or regular dinner off of
fuel lights up the Thornton
season. Other big names inCONTINUED FROM B8
clude: Mindi Abair, Bobby
with rich berry flavor rem- Caldwell, Spyro Gyra, Dave
iniscent of Nebbiolo’s home Koz, Michael McDonald,
location in Piedmont, Italy. Chris Isaak, Kenny G, Chris
My excitement over Botti and George Benson.
this concert lineup really My best advice is to get your
revs up over the appear- tickets early. Order at 951ance of Jazz Attack, not 699-0099 or visit events@
once but twice: Saturday thorntonwine.com. ThornMay 30th at 7pm, then the ton also has Friday night
final concert Sunday Oc- live entertainment from 6
tober 18th, at 4pm. This to 9pm with a local lineup
rare collaboration brings of great live music. May 1st
Richard Elliot, the Scottish they have the Heart of Rock
born Sax player and former n Roll – a Huey Lewis Tribmember of the band Tower ute.
of Power during the ‘80’s. Wine Bytes
Peter White is the 2nd
• Napa’s premier Hall
member of this unique trio. and Walt Wines will be
Born in England, he gained poured at Il Fornaio in
fame with his stylish guitar Coronado at a wine dinner
playing in the 70’s with Al Fri. Apr. 24that 6pm. Cost
Stewart. is $55. per guest. The wines
Completing Jazz At- will be paired with Chef Lo
tack is Euge Groove, an Verde’s best recipes. Call
American born Sax per- 619-437-4911 for an RSVP.
former who replaced Elliot
• A buttery Chardonin Tower of Power in the nay tasting happens at La
late 80’s and had Sax solos Costa Wine Co. Fri. Apr. 24
with the girl group Expose’ from 6 to 10pm. 5 pours for
in the 90’s.
$15. Call 760-431-8455.
Lots of other rocket
• A Pour Toward a
Cure Benefit is at Morgan
Run Golf Club and Resort
in Rancho Santa Fe Sun.
Apr. 26 from 3 to 6pm. Cost
is $60. Details at 760-7053055.
• Vine Wine Shop and
Bistro in San Clemente is
planning a 5 course wine
and dine event Tues. Apr.
28th at 6:30pm, with Tantara Winery. Feature entrée is Braised Beef Cheek
Sugo, with a 2013 Pinot Noir
from Sta.Lucia Highlands. JIMMY DURANTE
RSVP at 949-361-2079.
CONTINUED FROM B1
• Holiday Wine Cellar in Escondido presents transportation projects.
The project initially
Rhone and Provence French
wines Thurs. Apr. 30 from included the addition of a
5:30 to 7:30pm. Learn what roundabout at the intermakes the Rhone Valley so
great. Cost is $5. Details at
BRUSH WITH ART
760-745-1200.
ARTS CALENDAR
Dieguito Academy Theater
students and alum perform
“Pain,” with a pre-show
reception at 6:30 p.m. and
curtain at 7:30 p.m. April
25 in the Clayton E. Liggett
Theater. General admission
is $35 at seatyourself.biz/
sandieguito. As a fundraiser for SDA drama department, the evening includes
an After-the-Performance
gathering at 3rd Corner
Wine and Bistro. Late night
menu and drink pricing will
begin at 10 p.m.
FRANKIE VALLI IN
TOWN Frankie Valli & The
Four Seasons, will hit the
new Starlight Theater stage
at 8 p.m. June 12, at Pala
Casino Spa & Resort.
Tickets for both shows,
$105, $95, $75, for Frankie
Valli & The Four Seasons
with no service charge,
at the Pala box office and
(877) 946-7252 or at startickets.com.
CONTINUED FROM B4
ginning May 1, through
July 31, the sidewalks of
Grand Avenue, State Street
and Roosevelt Street transform into an open-air concert stage. Enjoy free live
music from street performers. Musicians range from
indie rock to bluegrass and
many of Carlsbad Village’s
retailers will stay open late
to celebrate the series.
FOLK CONCERT Solana Beach singer/songwriter
Ross Moore will perform
at 11 a.m. May 1 at the Del
Mar Library, 1309 Camino Del Mar, presented by
The San Diego Bluegrass
Society, and Friends of the
Del Mar Library. For more
information, call (858) 7551666 or visit sdcl.org.
ART FLING Coastal
Artists presents “Spring
ArtFling” at the Carmel
Valley Library from May 1
through June 30. A patio reception to meet the artists
will be from noon to 2 p.m.
May 23, and offer a light
lunch buffet. Call (858) 5521668. For more information
visit coastal-artists.org.
MAY 2
CLASSIC
BALLET
The Encinitas Ballet presents a production of “Don
Quixote,” full of Spanish
flair, comedy and romance
with dancers and choreographers Sayat Asatryan
and Olga Tchekachova, and
guest principal dancers of
the Utah Regional Ballet,
Kaitlyn Potts and Tyler Burkett. The performance is
at 2 p.m. May 2 at the David H. Thompson PAC at La
Costa Canyon High School,
1 Maverick Way, Carlsbad.
For tickets, visit encinitasballet.com.
MARK THE CALENDAR
SDA ON STAGE San
Frank Mangio is a renowned wine connoisseur certified by Wine Spectator. He
is one of the leading wine commentators on the web. View
and link up with his columns
at tasteofwinetv.com. Reach
him at [email protected]
and follow him on Facebook.
CONTINUED FROM B4
Rex Brandt, Maurice Braun,
Manny Farber, Charles
Fries, James Hubbell, Alfred
Mitchell, Richard Allen Morris and Charles Reiffel, to
name but a few.
APRIL 24, 2015
meet someone cool in line.
Nino is an event manager extraordinaire and
he shows that off at North
Eats. The venue is perfect,
the layout flows between
indoors and outdoors and
the event unfolds as the
sun is setting over the Pacific. I really can’t think
of a better way to spend a
Sunday afternoon.
A sample of participating restaurants includes
Angels Salumi & Truffles,
Baker & Olive, Behind the
Scenes Catering, Beir Garden Encinitas, Bistro West,
Bloom Natural Health,
Blue Ribbon Artisan Pizzeria, Craftsman New
American Tavern, Cucina Enoteca, David Bacco
Chocolatier, Davanti Enoteca, El Callejon, Firefly
Grill & Wine Bar, Fish 101,
Guahan Grill, Hodads, Mia
Francesca, Old Mission San
Luis Rey, Panca Peruvian,
Petite Madeline Bakery,
Privateer Coal Fire Pizza,
Sadie Rose Bakery, Solar
Rain, Solterra Winery,
Trattoria I Trulli, Whole
Foods Del Mar, Wrench
& Rodent Seabasstropub,
Yummy Cupcakes, Chandlers and a whole lot more.
It’s like the all-star game of
North County restaurants,
all together in one place,
putting their best stuff out
there for all you foodies to
sample in one place. And
another bonus of the location is the ability to stroll
around the beautiful Carlsbad Hilton Oceanfront Resort.
Sample for a while
then walk it off then get
back to it. It’s the perfect
combination of the best in
North County cuisine, music, wine, beer and surf culture in the perfect setting.
Not much more you can ask
for from a culinary festival.
I would reserve tickets
early for this killer event.
It’s happening Sunday,
April 26th at the Carlsbad
Hilton Oceanfront Resort.
Go to www.onoyum.com
paper plates?
• Do you have a favorite color of Tupperware
cup, and do you know the
proper way to use a Sipper-Seal?
• When you see a glasstopped coffee table, do you
see:
• a handsome piece of
furniture?
• a certain trip to the
emergency room?
• the need for Windex
in industrial-sized drums
• Do you own or have
you ever lusted after white
carpeting?
• When you see a child
wrestle a 2-day-old Cheerio
away from the dog and eat
it, do you feel:
• nauseous?
• relief at one less
thing to vacuum up?
• delight that the child
is finally eating something?
If any doubt remains
after checking the answers,
you can ask just how much
they like sleeping in, or
sleeping, in general. That
one’s sure to break the tie.
Everything in life
should be this simple.
section of Jimmy Durante
and San Dieguito Drive. In
response to concerns raised
by several residents, the
traffic-calming device was
severed from the improvements.
An
informational
meeting regarding proposed changes to the intersection is scheduled from 6
to 7 p.m. on April 30 in the
City Hall Annex.
Not to be missed, the exhibition will be on display at
OMA through July 26, 2015,
with a panel discussion on
Wednesday, May 27.
The opening reception
for 100 Artists, 100 Years
will be held Saturday,
April 25, 2015, from 6:00-
8:00pm. The reception is
complimentary for OMA
members, $10 for nonmembers.
Oceanside Museum of
Art is located at 704 Pier
View Way, Oceanside.For
more information visit www.
oma-online.org.
At deadline, Jean Gillette
was off to her all-grown-up
son’s wedding. Here she shares
a fond look into parenthood
past. Contact her at jgillette@
coastnewsgroup.com.
ENCINITAS BALLET PERFORMS DON QUIXOTE
ENCINITAS—San Diego theatre-lovers are in for a royal treat with Encinitas Ballet’s enchanting production of Don Quixote full of Spanish flair, comedy and romance. Internationally renowned dancers and choreographers Sayat Asatryan, and Olga Tchekachova, have
created a lavish, full-length production, replete with a large cast, resplendent costuming
and gorgeous sets captivating spirit of 17 Century Spain here in Southern California. Don
Quixote ballet is based on excerpts from the classic Cervantes story, “ Don Quixote De La
Mancha”, originally choreographed by Marius Petipa to the music of Leon Minkus in 1869. Gracing the stage will be an impressive roster of guest artists including Kaitlyn Potts and
Tyler Burkett, Principal Dancers of Utah Regional Ballet. They will perform side by side with
local talent including students of Encinitas Ballet. Don’t miss Don Quixote this Saturday,
May 2nd at 2:00 PM. The performance will take place at the David H. Thompson Performing
Arts Center (PAC) at La Costa Canyon High School. For more information call (760) 6324947 and for tickets visit www.encinitasballet.com. Courtesy photo
APRIL 24, 2015 B13
T he C oast News part with your cash, find out how it will
be used. Check the credentials of those
involved and get agreements in writing.
SOUP TO NUTS by Rick Stromoski
By Eugenia Last
FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 2015
FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves
THE BORN LOSER by Art & Chip Sansom
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Be prepared
to take on whatever comes your way. Your
time and attention will be in demand. Participating in events will allow you to show
your strengths and gain popularity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Love is
in the air, and a romantic encounter will
have you thinking about your future. DisA personal dilemma should not be alcuss your intentions openly in order to
lowed to interrupt your career goals. Your
start the ball rolling.
insight will help you determine the best direction to pursue. A travel opportunity will SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Monlead to a favorable variety of professional ey matters will occupy your mind. Look
options. Uncertain or dissatisfying part- for an interesting financial breakthrough.
nerships should be reconsidered. Suc- Check over your financial agreements or
cess will require your undivided attention. contracts, and cut corners wherever possible. Save for something you really want.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- An unscheduled trip with friends or family will CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- You
clear your mind, giving you a better idea will feel uneasy or disturbed by a situation
of how to move forward without it costing that arises in your personal life. Don’t suffer in silence. If you discuss your feelings,
you too much financially or emotionally.
you will find a solution.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Professional changes are on the horizon. Don’t AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- You
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offer. Collaborating with someone or get- many new projects, your health will sufting involved in a joint venture will turn out fer. Do your best to set aside time for
yourself.
to be beneficial.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Explore
different cultures and traditions. Check
out travel opportunities that could be both
pleasurable and educational. Let your
imagination wander, but keep your decisions practical. Balance and compromise
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Stay in the will be necessary.
background. Conflicts are apparent and
ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- You will be
will result in a disruption of your plans. excessive or emotional when it comes
Play by the rules in order to avoid a major to financial matters. Review your investsetback.
ment strategy with your adviser before
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Overreacting will cause problems with the people
around you. Stick close to home, where
you can hide out, assess your options
and find a way to move forward.
BIG NATE by Lincoln Peirce
MONTY by Jim Meddick
ARLO & JANIS by Jimmy Johnson
THE GRIZZWELLS by Bill Schorr
ALLEY OOP byJack & Carole Bender
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Don’t fall making a decision. Someone from your
for a get-rich-quick scheme. Before you past is looking for you.
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VOL. 28,
ST NEW
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PRSRT STD
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ENCINITASPRSRTPAID
STD
, CA 92025
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NO. 94 PAID
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PERMIT NO. 92025
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N0. 25
VISTA, SAN
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A17
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Coast News, 22,000 RSF 10,000 INLAND 10,000
OPEN HOUSES
REAL ESTATE
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, APRIL
25TH FROM 1-4PM Ocean Hills
Country Club, model 2, approx.1980
sq ft. 5082 Milos Way Oceanside, Ca
92056
ESCONDIDO OPEN HOUSE - SUNDAY APRIL 26 1-4PM Beautifully
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1289 Ridgegrove Ln. Escondido,
CA 92029. Julio and Lindsay Lopez.
www.JulioLindsay.com. Pacific Sotheby’s International Realty
OPEN HOUSE - SAT 25TH &
SUN 26TH APRIL - 11AM-2PM 2
bedroom 2 bath. All appliances
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55+ community. 3615 Vista Bella
#23, Oceanside 92057. $205,000.
Coldwell Banker, Carlsbad - Grace
Stolzoff - (760)473-4704
SUNDAY APRIL 19TH 1-4PM 3 br
2.5 ba approx. 1725 sq ft in California Brisas 3369 Ricewood Dr.
Oceanside, CA 92058
SATURDAY APRIL 18TH FROM
1-4PM Custom Home, 4+ br, 4.5 ba,
approx. 4715 sq ft 7336 Cadencia St
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SUNDAY APRIL 19TH 1-4 Shadowridge, no Mello Roos or HOA, 4 br
2.5 ba approx.2605 sq ft. 1560 Pearl
Heights Vista, CA 92081
SATURDAY APRIL 18TH FROM
1-4PM 4+br, 3.5 ba approx. 3075
sq ft, energy saving features 1177
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SATURDAY APRIL 18TH 11-2PM
3 br, 2 ba parklike views, approx
1772 sq ft 1128 Vista Bonita Vista,
CA 92083
SATURDAY APRIL 18TH FROM
1-4PM Updated pool home, 5 br
3.5 ba approx. 3428 sq ft 13828 Tam
O’Shanter Poway, CA 92064
SATURDAY APRIL 18TH 11-2PM3
BR 3 BA APPROX. 1535 SQ FT 1650
HARBOR DR VISTA, CA 92081 3 br
3 ba approx. 1535 sq ft 1650 Harbor
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OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY APRIL
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1151 Vista Point Oceanside, CA
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OPEN HOUSE - SAT 25 & 26 APRIL
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- (760)902-3622.
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY APRIL
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in Oceanside 3406 Thunder Oceanside, CA 92056
HOUSE ON NATURE RESERVE
FOR SALE IN MISSION HILLS
A 1923 (renovated 1991) Mission
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could be the show-home of Mission Hills--Basics- 2,800sq feet on
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units. Four private decks. Hillside,
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putting green and a jungle-gym.
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A 10 min. walk away are Presidio
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a viewing.
FREE INVESTMENT WORKSHOP
FIRST AMERICAN TITLE Join us
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INVESTMENT PROPERTY WORKSHOP Join us April 30 at 10Am.
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Losses and Real Estate Investments. Keep your Equity, Avoid
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B15
T he C oast News CADNET CLASSIFIEDS
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B16
T he C oast News APRIL 24, 2015
OR
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For highly qualified customers who finance a 2015 Jetta or Passat through Volkswagen Credit. APR offers available on new, unused 2015 Jetta and Passat models. Examples: for TDI Clean Diesel models only 0% APR for 72 months, cost of financing
is $13.89 a month for every $1,000 financed; for Gasoline models only at 0% APR for 48 months, cost of financing is $20.83 a month for every $1,000 financed. APR offered to highly qualified customers on approved credit by Volkswagen Credit
through participating dealers. Down payment may be required. Not all customers wil qualify for advertised rate. APR offers end 4/30/2015. Volkswagen Credit wil give you a $1,000 Bonus when you purchase a new, unused 2015 Volkswagen Jetta or
Passat from a participating dealer and finance through Volkswagen Credit from April 1, 2015 to April 30, 2015. Subject to credit approval. Bonus paid toward MSRP and is not available for cash. See dealer for financing details
760-438-2200
VOLKSWAGEN
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 4-30-2015.
ar Country Drive
ar Country Drive
APR
ar Country Drive
Car Country Drive
0
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Financing Available for up to 72 months