Exclusive Properties

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Exclusive Properties
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ENCINITAS, CA 92025
PERMIT NO. 94
THE
COAST
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MAKING WAVES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
VOL. 29, N0. 8
FEB. 20, 2015
SAN
MARCOS
-NEWS
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THE
VISTA
NEWS
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The city’s Traffic and Public Safety Commission is recommending
approval of a one-year test run of new traffic signal at the intersection
of D Street and Vulcan Avenue. Photo by Aaron Burgin
99 Banners on the 101
101 Artists’ Colony President Danny Salzhandler installs two art banners on a street lamppost along Coast Highway 101 in
Encinitas. The banners are part of the annual Arts Alive Banner project that stretches 6 miles of the city’s highway and this
year features 99 artworks. See full story on page A8. Photo by Chris Kydd
Oceanside city manager resigns
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — City Manager
Steve Jepsen resigned from his position during closed session on Wednesday. He was not present at the City
Council meeting following his resignation.
In a letter of public statement
Jepsen said a settlement agreement is
not his first choice. He thanked city
staff and residents.
“I remain hopeful that my departure will allow the council to focus on
(a) proactive agenda for services to
the residents of Oceanside,” Jepsen
said.
City Attorney John Mullen
opened the Feb. 18 meeting with a
report that the City Council accepted Deputy City Manager Michelle Skaggs Lawrence, center, takes the seat as interim city manager
TURN TO JEPSEN ON A16
following Steve Jepsen’s resignation during closed session on Wednesday night. Oceanside will
begin a nationwide search for a new hire. Photo by Promise Yee
New signal mayRANCHO
reduce
SFNEWS
confusion at intersection
City Council will
consider the new
signal at an
upcoming meeting
By Aaron Burgin
ENCINITAS — The
city of Encinitas is considering installing flashing yellow arrow signals
at a downtown intersection, which officials said
would reduce confusion
at the intersection, as
well as vehicle emissions
and fuel consumption.
The Traffic and Public Safety Commission recently recommended approval of a one-year test
run of the new type of intersection at D Street and
Vulcan Avenue, where
left turn movement is
currently controlled by
a permissive protective
traffic signal, one of two
such intersections in Encinitas. The other is on
the corner of Vulcan Av-
.com
enue and Leucadia Boulevard. The City Council
will consider adoption at
an upcoming meeting.
The installation of
the new signal will cost
$8,900.
In the case of the
flashing yellow arrow
signals, once the protected left turn signal cycle
ends, it is replaced by a
flashing yellow arrow,
which lets drivers know
they can make a left
turn, but must yield to
oncoming and pedestrian
traffic.
Flashing yellow arrow signals might be new
to Encinitas, but in places like El Cajon and Las
Vegas, they have quickly
replaced the permissive
protective variety, which
controls left turn movement with a green arrow
for a few seconds before
the arrow disappears and
drivers are left to make
left turns at their own
TURN TO INTERSECTION ON A16
A2
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
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FEB. 20, 2015 A3
T he C oast News Council responds to Del Mar satisfaction survey results
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR — Even though most of the
450 residents who responded to a questionnaire are at least somewhat satisfied, if not
more so, with the way the city is being run,
council members are not resting on their
laurels.
They plan to use input from the online
survey, conducted from Nov. 20 through
Jan. 12, to improve city services, especially in the three areas where respondents
registered the most complaints: roadway
maintenance, communication and the development and design review process.
There was little argument streets and
sidewalks citywide need work. The three
residents who addressed council during a
Feb. 3 priorities workshop support better
maintenance.
“There are a lot of roads here that are
failing,” Bill Michalsky said.
Councilman Dwight Worden said the
survey opened his eyes to the problem.
“Road and street maintenance is one
that popped right to the top of my personal pile that wasn’t there before,” he said.
“And because of the survey and the feedback, it is now, and I think we should put
more money on it.”
How much funding is needed to bring
the roadways up to an acceptable level Lack of roadway maintenance was one of the major complaints about city services in a recently conducted
satisfaction survey. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
seems to be the million dollar question.
City Manager Scott Huth said the city
hired a contractor to assess all the roads
about a year ago. A survey is currently
under way to evaluate the infrastructure
needs as well. It should be completed by
April.
Huth said the goal is to “overlay the
two and start the game plan.”
“We didn’t want to do road repairs and
then have to come back in a year and tear
it up for sewer repairs,” he said.
Adding to the problem is that when
people call to report problems such as potholes, the repairs are temporary.
“We are taking bags of cold mix asphalt and pouring them into the potholes,”
Public Works Director Eric Minicilli said.
“We know the temporary stuff will not
last. My crews do not have the abilities,
equipment, training to do hot-mix asphalt.
We need to get contractors out in the field
to do those types of repairs that are going
to last.”
Huth and Minicilli said they will work
on creating a project plan that includes
costs to make major improvements to roadways citywide.
On the positive side, Minicilli said,
“We know exactly which street everybody
wants us to start with — my street. We’ve
TURN TO SURVEY ON A16
Oceanside homicide thought to be a vicious attack
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — The
victim of a suspected vicious attack was found dead
at Buddy Todd Park on Monday morning.
The body of Mustafa
Gordon, 24, was spotted just
before 6 a.m. in the north
end of the park and police
responded to the scene.
The homicide is still
under investigation.
There were no gunshot
wounds to the body. Obvious blunt force trauma indicates Gordon was beaten to
death.
Gordon formerly served
in the Army.
He has had minor contacts with the law, but is
not known to be affiliated
with a gang, according to
Oceanside Police Department officials.
He lived in the back
gate neighborhood near
Camp Pendleton. It is not
known if he met someone at
the park or was taken there.
Family members last
Lisa Gunther, owner of Gunther Guns, asks the Planning Commission
to reconsider City Planner Don Neu’s decision to deny her a permit for
a shooting range. Photo by Ellen Wright
Denial of indoor shooting
range in Carlsbad upheld
By Ellen Wright
Oceanside Police are investigating the death of 24-year-old Mustafa Gordon. His body was found in the early
morning hours of Feb. 16. Photo by Tony Cagala
saw him at midnight the the incident, or who knows asked to call the Oceansnight of his murder. Anyone of a troubling relationship ide Police Department at
with more information on Gordon was having are (760) 435-4911.
Council OKs fencing of playground from dog park
By Aaron Burgin
ENCINITAS — Danielle Hurtado sat on a bench
in Orpheus Park, watching her 4-year-old son and
2-year-old daughter play
on the play structure. Behind them, a couple of dogs
streaked up and down the
hill in the park’s off-leash
dog area.
Hurtado said while she
likes that the dogs have a
place to play, a little separation from hers and other
children wouldn’t hurt.
“I think it is a really
good idea,” Hurtado said.
“Kids could get knocked
over, and sometimes the
dogs leave little gifts in the
sand. I am all about (putting
up a fence).”
Brenda Esparza, a Lake
Elsinore resident visiting
friends in Encinitas with
her dog “Malo,” said she felt
the fence would be good for
the kids.
“I don’t think it is so
much the dogs as much as it
is the kids; some kids don’t
know how to handle dogs,”
Esparza said.
The Encinitas Council
agreed, and on Wednesday
voted 3-2 to put up temporary fencing at Orpheus
Park as a part of a one-yeartrial to test the effectiveness of separating child and
beast.
The council’s split decision came after a staff report that detailed proposals
for fencing at the city’s three
parks that have off-leash
dog hours — Orpheus, Viewpoint Park and Sun Vista
Park. The city’s parks and
recreation staff estimated
the cost at about $57,000,
which included installing
a concrete ring around the
playground area at Viewpoint to accommodate bench
seating.
The
council
opted
against installing fences at
all three parks, rather focusing on Orpheus, which they
said would help them gather
information that could determine what the city’s next
steps should be.
Deputy Mayor Catherine Blakespear, who voted in
support of the immediate pilot program along with councilmembers Tony Kranz and
Lisa Shaffer, said that on
the campaign trail parents
expressed their desire to
see fencing around the playground areas where dogs are
allowed to roam off of their
leashes.
“They say, ‘I won’t go
to that park because of the
off-leash dog hours,’” Blakespear said. “To me (the question of whether the lack of
separation is an issue) is one
of those no brainers.”
Mayor Kristin Gaspar
and Councilman Mark Muir
voted against the proposal.
While they said they aren’t
opposed to the concept, they
said they wanted it to be
part of the upcoming parks
master plan discussion,
which the city has allocated
$100,000 to study a variety
of park issues facing the city.
“I just don’t think it follows the process of outreach,
study and then making a
more informed decision
moving forward,” Muir said.
Gaspar also expressed
concern that the city had
done no formal outreach on
the concept prior to Wednesday’s hearing. Parks and
Recreation Director Lisa
Rudloff said the city had received no formal complaints
about potential safety or dog
waste issues at the three
parks.
“I don’t want to discard
the concept,” Gaspar said.
“I just want to further explore it as part of the master
plan process.”
CARLSBAD — A sea
of people in support of
a recreational shooting
range packed city chambers Wednesday night to
express their support for a
gun range in Carlsbad.
Last December, Lisa
Gunther, owner of Gunther
Guns, was denied a minor
conditional use permit to
open a shooting range at
her store on Loker Avenue
West.
She appealed her decision to the Planning Commission.
On Wednesday, they
voted whether or not City
Planner Don Neu made an
error or abuse in discretion
on his decision to deny the
17-lane recreational shooting range.
The
commission’s
votes were tied, which by
default, upheld Neu’s decision.
The decision can now
be appealed to the City
Council, which Gunther
said, she plans on doing.
According to Assistant City Attorney Jane
Mobaldi, the City Council
designates Neu to make
decisions on zoning issues
because he is the most familiar with the intended
zones.
He denied the recre-
ational shooting range because if the use isn’t specified in the city code, it’s
generally not allowed.
“More than anything,
our code lists quite a number of uses so it’s pretty
rudimentary that if it’s not
in there, typically it’s not
permitted,” Neu said.
He said that he was
further convinced that the
unique nature of a recreational shooting range is
not allowed in the lightuse industrial zone where
Gunther Guns is located
because there are only six
ranges in the county.
Gunther appealed by
saying Neu’s decision was
not supported by facts and
said people use a shooting
range for the same reasons
they use a gym, indoor gocart track, ice skating rink
or swimming facility.
Neu denied the appeal because he determined that she didn’t show
enough proof.
He also determined
that a shooting range is not
similar to those facilities
because of safety concerns
including air quality, noise
and the use of lead, which
is a hazardous material.
Dozens of people spoke
in favor of the recreational
TURN TO RANGE ON A16
A4
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
Opinion&Editorial
Views expressed in Opinion & Editorial do not
necessarily reflect the views of The Coast News
Letters to the Editor
Nullifying
Carlsbad’s
‘Small town’ feel
The city of Carlsbad is
proposing an amendment
to allow two buildings
(hotels) to increase their
height by adding another
floor. To date, through the
city government ordinances, Carlsbad has been very
fortunate to have kept most
of the building structures
at three floors maximum to
comply with the Carlsbad
Local Coastal Program and
to support the Envision
Carlsbad’s mantra: “Small
Town Feel, Beach Community Character.”
Increasing the height
of the buildings in Carlsbad, beginning with two
hotels, means that Envision Carlsbad’s defining
A single vote really does count
California Focus
By Thomas D. Elias
Barely 21 percent of
eligible California voters
cast ballots in last fall’s
election, which means
about 80 percent of the
eligible populace should
have no complaints even if
they don’t like the performances of those who were
elected for the next two or
four years.
It’s easy to conclude
this was because of apathy and ignorance: after
all, polls showed about 40
percent of Californians
weren’t even aware Gov.
Jerry Brown was running
for reelection. Only 41 percent of those registered to
vote bothered to do anything.
One reason for the low
turnout is the old shibboleth that one vote doesn’t
count, or at least one vote
doesn’t count for much.
The truism is being
repeated again today, with
many cities heading into
elections in March. But
this truism just isn’t true,
no matter how many times
it’s repeated.
Take a look at Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti,
who travels his city and
the world in elegant, expensive suits with an air of
confidence that suggests
he has the support of a
massive majority of Angelenos.
He might. But no one
knows, because only about
13 percent of eligible voters cast ballots two years
ago, when he won with
about 54 percent of the
vote over former city Controller Wendy Greuel. This
means Garcetti was elected by just shy of 7 percent
of eligible voters, which in
turn means Greuel could
have won with only a few
more votes in each precinct.
Look also at California Attorney General Kamala Harris, the former
San Francisco district attorney who won reelection
by a wide margin last fall
and is now running for the
U.S. Senate.
Things weren’t so easy
four years earlier, when
she didn’t learn she’d won
until four weeks after
Election Day.
She beat Republican
Steve Cooley, then the Los
Angeles County District
Attorney in their battle of
DAs by about 40,000 votes,
or less than two votes per
precinct. Who says individual votes lack impact?
Just as dramatic, but
on a smaller scale, was
last fall’s 466-vote win by
Democratic
community
activist Patty Lopez in the
San Fernando Valley over
entrenched Assemblyman
Raul Bocanegra in an in-
So low
turnouts
magnify the
meaning of
each vote that
is actually cast.
tra-party battle.
Again, about two votes
per precinct proved decisive. Nearby, in an Assembly district in the South
Bay area of Los Angeles
County, Republican David
Hadley beat incumbent
Democrat Al Muratsuchi
by 706 votes, or an average
of slightly more than two
votes in each of the district’s 256 precincts.
But the tightest race
of the year, decided by
just two votes, came in the
Central California city of
Madera, where Brent Fernandes defeated incumbent school board member
Jose Rodriguez by two
votes. At times as the vote
count see-sawed for weeks
after the election, only
one vote separated the two
contenders.
The final outcome
means that if just three
more persons had voted
for Rodriguez, he’d have
won. And that if a single
vote had been reversed,
the race would have been
a tie, to be resolved by a
coin toss or some other
means.
Madera
apparently
liked close elections this
year, as another school
board seat was decided by
a margin of just 33 votes.
This is all firm proof
that anyone calling a single vote meaningless is
just blowing smoke. There
are always extremely close
races in California, but it’s
never possible to predict
where they will occur.
So low turnouts magnify the meaning of each
vote that actually is cast.
They also stand the entire concept of representative government on its
head. Lopez, the narrowly elected new assemblywoman, drew votes from
just 22,750 persons, or less
than five percent of the
people who live in her district. Mayor Garcetti had
the support of not many
more.
Can these kinds of
results make citizens feel
involved in civic affairs?
How can any individual
not feel important in the
Madera Unified School
District, where a vote or
two turned things around?
How healthy can California public life and public policy be when so few
care enough about it even
to cast a vote?
These are questions to
ponder as San Francisco,
Los Angeles and many other cities head toward their
spring elections, where
every eligible voter would
be wise to remember the
words of Thomas Jefferson: “In a democracy, the
people get precisely the
government they deserve.”
Email Thomas Elias at
[email protected]. His book,
“The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment
and the Government’s
Campaign to Squelch It,”
is now available in a soft
cover fourth edition. For
more Elias columns, go to
californiafocus.net
attributes of “small town
community feel” is nullified.
Carlsbad will lose its
uniqueness and be like
so many other California
coastal towns blighted with
tall buildings blocking the
landscape and vistas.
The Carlsbad residents then are less important than tourism and moneymaking entities.
The amendment to the
Carlsbad Local Coastal
Program radically changes
the “small town” character of Carlsbad and allows
taller buildings to impede
the beautiful vistas of the
beautiful coastal Carlsbad.
The precedence will be set.
The “runaway train”
toward unbridled develop-
ment then will become unstoppable. Pressures from
developers for variances,
modifications,
amendments will be uncontested.
If we don’t speak up,
before we know it, our residential community will
have become overcrowded
with unmanageable traffic and congestion.....and
blighted with taller and
taller buildings obstructing the bucolic landscape.
Write your objections
to the Carlsbad Council
Members and Planning
Commissioners at email
addresses: [email protected] and planning@
carlsbadca.gov.
Madeleine Szabo,
Carlsbad
Community Commentary
Time to bring graduate medical education into 21st century
By Dr. Barbara Ross-Lee
America is suffering from a shortage
of primary care physicians. And with the
national patient population expanding
and fewer doctors choosing to be generalists, the shortfall is only getting worse. By
2020, there will be a shortage of an estimated 45,000 primary care doctors.
Reforming graduate medical education — the system used to train new physicians — would help address this problem.
Established in 1965, the current system is
outdated and inefficient.
It doesn’t meet the healthcare needs
of our nation. Voters must urge Congress
to repurpose a small portion of current
funding toward new training models that
fix the shortfall and meet patients’ needs.
A July report from the Institute of
Medicine demonstrates that many graduate medical education programs fail to
provide enrollees with the knowledge
and skills needed to provide high quality
care outside of the hospital. Newly minted
doctors struggle with even “simple procedures” commonly required in office-based
settings.
The main cause of this problem is that
the bulk of the average doctor’s residency
training takes place in a large teaching
hospital.
That’s a unique environment with
many advantages for the small percent-
age of people who receive care there. But
it bears little resemblance to outpatient
clinical settings where most care is delivered, particularly in rural and low-income
areas. Patients in these regions often
struggle to find adequate services.
Fortunately, some medical organizations are taking innovative steps to address these flaws.
Consider the Wisconsin Collaborative for Rural Graduate Medical Education. This “regional cooperative” connects medical school residents to local
clinics. The initiative exposes residents to
the realities of medical care outside the
confines of a teaching hospital. Residents
enjoy a much higher level of personalized
patient interaction and gain a better understanding of how to provide quality,
culturally competent care.
Teaching Health Centers link primary care providers to clinics and health
centers in underserved communities.
Their graduates are almost three times
more likely to practice in underprivileged
areas.
Smartly, the Affordable Care Act includes funding for expanding Teaching
Health Centers throughout the country.
In 2014, the federal government allocated grants to 60 centers, enabling them to
TURN TO COMMENTARY ON A11
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
MANAGING EDITOR Tony Cagala
ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Chris Kydd
ACCOUNTING Becky Roland
COMMUNITY NEWS EDITOR Jean Gillette
STAFF REPORTER A aron Burgin
Ellen Wright
DIGITAL MEDIA MANAGER Savannah Lang
GRAPHIC ARTIST Phyllis Mitchell
ADVERTISING SALES K rista Confer
CIRCULATION MANAGER Bret Wise
The Coast News is a legally adjudicated newspaper published weekly on Fridays by The
Coast News Group. It is qualified
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law to be published in a newspaper of general circulation (Case
No. 677114).
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In addition to mail subscriptions, more than 30,000
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The classified advertising
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Contributing writers
Bianca K aplanek
[email protected]
Promise Yee
[email protected]
Christina M acone-Greene
David Boylan
E’Louise Ondash
F rank M angio
Jay Paris
Photographer
Bill R eilly
[email protected]
Contact the Editor
Tony Cagala
[email protected]
FEB. 20, 2015 A5
T he C oast News District will delay opening of its Double Peak campus
By Aaron Burgin
SAN MARCOS — The San
Marcos Unified School District
announced that it would delay
the opening of a highly anticipated and somewhat controversial
K-8 school at the top of San Elijo Hills, but one group in town
is hoping the school will not be
built at all.
Double Peak K-8, which is
currently under construction
at the intersection of San Elijo
Road and Ledge Street, was supposed to open at the start of the
2015-2016 school year in August
to alleviate overcrowding at San
Elijo’s other two schools, San Elijo Elementary and San Elijo Middle School.
Planning for the $75 million
project started four years ago,
and originally was scheduled to
be built closer to Cal State San
Marcos, but school officials were
forced to select the current site
after they discovered that the
former site contained high levels The San Marcos Unified School District says that it will delay the opening of the Kindergarten through 8th grade Double Peak School. Photo by Aaron Burgin
of arsenic.
To date, the district has
spent $21 million on site grading
and pre construction.
The district recently said
that it couldn’t maintain the original timeline due to prolonged
negotiations with nearby property owners as well as changes to
the plans mandated by the Division of the State Architect, that
must be submitted and approved
by the division before the school
district moves forward with the
project.
Rather than spending an additional $8 million to $10 million
in overtime to rush the opening,
school officials said delaying
would be the more prudent option.
“It was the decision of the
school district that the $8 (million) to $10 million could be best
used on other school projects,”
district spokeswoman Anna Lucia Roybal said.
Nearly 1,000 residents attended a school district informational meeting on Feb. 11 where
Encinitas to reward environmental achievements
By Aaron Burgin
ENCINITAS — Encinitas could become the first
city in San Diego County
to reward residents for
environmental stewardship efforts, as the city
Environmental Commission voted unanimously in
support of a proposed environmental awards.
The program, co-authored by commissioners
James Wang and Joy Lyndes, would highlight the
efforts by individuals,
nonprofits and businesses
citywide to preserve the
environment.
“The City of Encinitas
is blessed with an enviable
natural environment and
this is a prime stakeholder in preserving it and en-
hancing it,” the city staff
report stated. “The environment is important to
our business and our recreation, and so we should
make every effort towards
promoting its proper stewardship. Institution of a
City-sponsored EAP is a
step in that direction.”
Hosting an environmental award would have
the multi-pronged benefit
of increasing attention
to environmental causes citywide, which could
inspire others to follow
in the nominees and winner’s path, Wang and Lyndes wrote in the staff report.
“Finally, an EAP
shows that the City of Encinitas cares about the
environment,” the report
goes on to state.
The City Council will
consider the awards program at a future council
meeting.
The proposed awards
program would take six
months from nomination
to award ceremony.
Candidates would be
peer nominated and must
live or their businesses
based in Encinitas.
The awards could potentially be an environmentally themed artwork
and a small plaque.
According to the staff
report, the cost to administer the program, as well
as commission artists for
the award, would be about
$1,500, which both Wang
and Lyndes said the city
could recoup through corporate sponsorships.
Citing the city of Raleigh, N.C. as a primary
example of a city with an
awards program, the staff
report says that Raleigh’s
program is entirely supported by local business
donations, and that donor
businesses receive acclaim for supporting environmental causes.
Raleigh, according to
the report, gives out 12
awards annually; 11 in
specific categories and
one overall award. Encinitas’ proposed program
would only issue two
awards — one for businesses and nonprofits, and
the other for businesses.
School district will install filters on student iPads
By Aaron Burgin
ENCINITAS — The Encinitas Union School District is working on installing filters on student iPads
by next week that will restrict access to inappropriate sites when the students
take their devices home,
Superintendent Tim Baird
said this week.
Baird’s announcement
comes a week after several
parents criticized the district for failing to have filtering devices on the 5,400
iPads that would keep the
students from accessing
and downloading inappropriate content on the devices.
“We want to make sure
we provide a safe environment for students,” Baird
said. “We are listening to
our parents, we are taking
it seriously and are working
on a solution.”
When students have
the iPads at school, the district’s network has a strong
filtering system that prohibits students from visiting inappropriate sites.
The issue has been
when those devices are
taken home, where parents
said that without a filter,
students have been able to
visit pornographic sites or
other inappropriate sites
and download such content.
Five parents spoke at
last week’s special meeting, imploring the district
to take decisive action and
expand the school’s network to include off-site iPads.
This way, students accessing their computers at
home will have the same
safeguards as they do at
school.
Baird said that it wasn’t
unusual in not providing
filters at home sites for the
iPads, and that parents
were given instructions on
how to set up similar filters
on their home networks. He
acknowledged,
however,
that parents found that op-
tion unsatisfactory.
“We get it that it is
hard to set up those filters,”
he said.
The school district’s
one-to-one digital learning
program started in 2010
and was funded through
the $44 million voter-approved bond Proposition
P. In 2012, the district
launched a pilot program
for 3rd and 6th grade students, and has since expanded the program to all
students in the K-6 district,
at a cost of $2.7 million.
District officials have
lauded the program for
successfully increasing student engagement.
County felonies up, DUIs down, according to SANDAG report
REGION — During the
past five years, the adult
felony arrest rate in San Diego County increased by 8
percent while misdemeanor
DUI arrests declined by 31
percent, according to the
latest report compiled by
the San Diego Association
of Governments (SANDAG)
Criminal Justice Research
Division.
The report, titled Arrests 2013: Law Enforce-
ment Response to Crime
in the San Diego Region,
found that San Diego County had the state’s second
highest arrest rate for
adults and the state’s highest arrest rate for juveniles.
The report compares San
Diego County to four other
large counties throughout
California, as well as to the
state as a whole.
This report includes a
complete breakdown of ar-
rests by jurisdiction, as well
as by type.
The felony arrest trend
in San Diego County is one
of the most striking findings in the report, SANDAG
said.
In 2009, felonies represented 28 percent of all
adult arrests. Last year,
they represented 35 percent. Felony-level arrests
for dangerous drugs (which
include offenses related to
methamphetamine, depressants and hallucinogens) increased 54 percent between
2009 and 2013. In the same
period, other drug offenses
(which include prescription
drug abuse) increased 30
percent, and narcotics offenses (which include heroin) increased 20 percent.
Also on the rise were felony-level arrests of adults
for burglary and motor
vehicle theft.
the district outlined three options for opening the school:
1) Cluster students at their
home schools and transfer them
into the school in January 2016
at the start of the spring semester
2) Move students from various grade groups to three schoolsSan Elijo, Discovery and Twin
Oaks elementary schools.
3) Delay the opening until
August 2016
School officials said that the
majority of the people in attendance signaled support for delaying the opening by a year, though
it wasn’t entirely unanimous.
Melanie Flaim, who said she
attended the meeting, said she
preferred Option 1, opening the
school in January 2016.
While some expressed concerns about pulling students
from a school and transplanting
them into a new school mid year,
Flaim said it would be no different than if they did it at the start
TURN TO SCHOOL ON A10
‘Shoulder season’ and conferences
targeted as tourism opportunities
By Ellen Wright
CARLSBAD — Tourists flock to Carlsbad in the
summer producing an average hotel occupancy rate
of 80 percent from June to
August, according to the
Strategic Advisory Group,
a city-hired hospitality
consultant group.
Daniel Fenton and
Bethanie Parker from the
Strategic Advisory Group,
shared the results of their
nine month survey at a City
Council meeting Tuesday.
They
recommended
the city begin focusing on
the “shoulder season,” the
months between September and March to increase
tourism and revenue generated from the transient
occupancy tax.
“The research demonstrated that really where
we’re going to move the
needle when it comes to
incremental visitors and
where we’re going to make
an impact going forward is
on specifically marketing
to shoulder periods,” said
Fenton.
The consultants received input from 75 stakeholders, including people
from the city, the Carlsbad
Chamber of Commerce,
Legoland California and
hotels throughout the region.
Fenton said not many
short-term vacation rental owners took part in the
surveys even though he
reached out to some.
Short-term
vacation
rentals are allowed in residential zones as long as the
homeowner has the proper
permits.
One of the recommendations Fenton gave to
draw more visitors during
the shoulder season is by
using targeted marketing
techniques to increase
“group sales,” or large
groups of people that come
at once, such as conferences or sales retreats.
According to the report, Visit Carlsbad focuses 90 percent of the marketing resources towards
increasing awareness of
individual leisure travel
market.
Carlsbad has more
than 287,000 square feet
of meeting space and the
consultants met with different industry clusters in
the area to find out how to
enhance meeting space.
Fenton said that if
the targeted marketing
works well enough to attract more groups, the day
might come to discuss the
possibility of a convention
center.
“Could there be a
day where the group effort could be substantial enough that it would
warrant having our own
space?” asked Fenton.
He said efforts should
be targeted to businesses
throughout southern California.
Along with more targeted marketing, Fenton
also recommended creating a Carlsbad experience.
Tourists largely associate Carlsbad with Legoland California and the
beaches, which Fenton
said, needs to change.
“We proposed an approach to rethink some of
the experiences and the
way we market it,” Fenton
said.
He said the city needs
to increase awareness of
other resources, including
the lagoons, transportation, beach camping and
shopping to enhance visitors’ experiences.
“The key is how do
we put that all together in
kind of a singular experience for visitors,” Fenton
said.
Economic
Development Manager Christina
Vincent talked about the
possibility of shuttles in
Carlsbad Village to help
ease traffic and to create
a convenient way to get
around.
Another recommendation from Fenton was
to streamline the tourism
TURN TO TOURISM ON A16
A6
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
Solana Beach Marshalls shows
it’s got
‘sole’
Maribel Arroyo helps Osvaldo Arroyo try on a pair of Converse All-Stars, while Carlos Arroyo checks out his brother’s new Spider-Man sneakers. Photos by Bianca Kaplanek
By Bianca Kaplanek
Alexis Delgadillo opts for a pair of Spider-Man sneakers.
SOLANA BEACH -—
About 40 youngsters descended upon the Solana
Beach Marshalls on Feb. 12
for a shoe shopping extravaganza as part of the Assistance League of Rancho
San Dieguito’s Operation
School Bell Clothing Children.
The organization was
granted $3,000 from the
city’s annual Community
Grants Program with the
condition that the money be
spent in Solana Beach.
Board
members
reached out to Marshalls to
set up two shopping dates
— another one is planned
for Feb. 19 — for mostly
3- to 5-year-olds enrolled
in the St. Leo’s Head Start
program.
Each of the 80 youngsters can spend up to $30
to buy shoes. For some it is
their first new pair. Popular
choices were anything in
pink, those with sparkles
and ones that light up.
“This
company
is
all about neighborhood
choice,” store manager Carmen McDade said.
This company
is all about
neighborhood
choice.”
Carmen McDadeU
Store Manager
“When they brought up
that it was going to be about
kids it was terrific. We were
more than willing to participate.
“My personal motto is
to give back so I was glad
we could do this as a store
as well,” she added. “But
we were just the shell. The
Assistance League did all
the work.”
Four-year-old Lujane Decorse shows off her first pair of light-up shoes.
Kai Lyn Marchetti, 3, is excited
about a pair of silver ballet slippers.
DEXTER
Mayor Lesa Heebner, right, and Councilwoman Ginger Marshall display
a few of their favorites.
FEB. 20, 2015 City seeking input on next city manager hire
By Aaron Burgin
ENCINITAS — Encinitas wants to know what
its residents want from the
city’s next permanent city
manager.
To that end, the recruiting firm that is spearheading the search is hosting a community forum on
Feb. 24 to hear from residents as to what qualities
they would like to see in
the next city manager.
Encinitas is searching
for a permanent replacement for Gus Vina, who
left the city in January
to take a position with
the Northern California
city of Brentwood. The
City Council in January
hired longtime Encinitas
resident and former public works director Larry
Watt to serve as the interim city manager, and also
contracted with Avery and
Associates to handle the
permanent recruitment efforts.
Vina’s tenure began
with much promise, but
became rocky towards
the end, as several critics
of his performance called
on the council to fire him
and City Attorney Glenn
Sabine. Critics have been
vocal about an inherent distrust of the city’s
high-ranking staff among
residents.
The forum is scheduled from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Feb. 24 in the Poinsettia
room at City Hall, 505 S.
Vulcan Ave. Residents can
also email their thoughts
on the search — including potential candidates
— to Avery and Associates
at encinitascitymanager
@averyassoc.net
Learning Genie app connects preschool teachers with parents
By Ellen Wright
CARLSBAD — Carlsbad residents Gene Shi and
his wife Lala Zhang were
new parents with a natural
curiosity about what their
daughter, Audrey, was up
to at preschool.
Some of the parents
of children in Audrey’s
class asked their preschool
teacher to send photos
during the school day but
many preschools have restrictions about teacher’s
personal cell phone use.
Out of this need came
Learning Genie, a smartphone application that
connects preschool teachers with their students’
parents.
Shi said thousands of
parents, teachers and preschool owners have downloaded the app, which debuted in 2013.
The app allows teachers to upload links to content they’re using during
class time, like books and
songs.
Parents can then be
on the same page as the
teacher and continue the
lesson plans at home by
downloading the books
and songs used in class.
This helps children
with their comprehension
and understanding of the
books and songs during a
crucial phase of brain development.
The feature will be
available towards the end
of the month.
The app also lets
teachers send pictures
and write short updates on
each child
Shi said that while the
app was born out of a way
to include parents, it has
evolved into an organization tool for teachers.
He said the app helps
teachers cut the workload
and the amount of daily paperwork.
“If they need to write
a paper report, most of the
time they need to do that
for 12 or 24 kids every day,
and that’s a lot of work,”
said Shi.
With the Learning Genie, teachers are able to
take a photo and write a
short paragraph describing the child’s behavior,
activities and even types
of snacks. Since it’s all in
one place, the reports are
also easier to keep track
of, Shi said.
Most preschool centers use a dedicated tablet
or iPad for the application.
Shi said the application gives parents a tool to
interact with their child
A7
T he C oast News The Learning Genie app allows parents to check-in with their preschoolers in real time thanks to updates provided by their teachers.
Courtesy image
more, which in turn, helps
with the child’s development.
It also enhances the
relationship between the
parent and the teacher
because, Shi said, parents
thank the teacher more often for sending photos of
their child.
“Our end goal is that
it’s going to be a teacher’s
friend,” Shi said.
Teachers can also post
reminders on the app, instead of sending the child
home with a note.
Shi said that some preschool owners are hesitant
to adopt new technology
because they see it as an
added expense and hassle.
In order to ease the
transition of adopting the
app, Shi offers free training to preschool teachers
and said there are lots of
online resources and tutorials to help teachers adopt
the app.
The application is free
for preschools with less
than 15 children and ranges between about $10 a
month to $50 a month, depending on the preschool
size.
Some of the content
available for download,
In-Depth.
Independent.
THE
COAST NEWS
thecoastnews.com
like ebooks and YouTube
music videos, is free. Shi
said that most ebooks that
aren’t free cost about $2 or
$3.
Shi and his wife have
lived in Carlsbad since
2010 and are from China,
which is where the app’s
engineering team is.
More snake sightings doesn’t
necessarily mean more snakes
By Tony Cagala
REGION — On Sunday
Joanne Goss and her husband had gone for a hike
around the trails of San Elijo near the MiraCosta College campus.
They started their walk
around 10:30 a.m., but on
the way back to their car, a
little more than an hour later, Joanne was startled by
what she spotted — a large
rattlesnake on the trail.
For being early winter, yet, the sighting might
seem unexpected, though
perhaps not so unusual for
our area.
The snakes in our area
don’t even hibernate, explained Jeff Lemm, a herpetologist and senior research coordinator at the
San Diego Zoo Institute for
Conservation Research.
“On warm days they
will get up and move
around,” he said, adding
that during the wintertime
it’s one of the easiest times
to find them because they
tend to stick to the rock
piles.
Lemm has observed
snakes on the move in December and January even.
“It just doesn’t get cold
enough here that they go
into true hibernation,” he
said.
While the warmer winters don’t really have an impact on the snakes, Lemm
said that what was affecting
the snakes was the continu-
Joanne Goss and her husband encounter a large rattlesnake on the
trails of San Elijo near the campus of MiraCosta College. Photo courtesy
Joanne Goss
ing drought conditions.
“Their activity patterns are way below normal, numbers of snakes that
we’re seeing are way down,
about 50 percent of normal,
and the snakes that we are
finding look really rough,”
he said.
Those observations are
coming from the San Diego
Zoo Safari Park’s 900-acre
biodiversity preserve.
But to the questions
Lemm often gets asked:
Are there more snakes? Are
they breeding more? Are
they becoming more venomous?
The answers he gives:
“No. None of the above are
true. There’s actually fewer
snakes because of habitat
loss.”
The coastal sage scrub
in the county is one of the
most endangered habitats
in North America, if not the
TURN TO SNAKES ON A16
A8
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
A rts &Entertainment
Send your arts & entertainment
news to [email protected]
Banner art reflects life in the community
By Tony Cagala
ENCINITAS — The
more than 100 banner artworks that line the street
lampposts along Coast
Highway 101 right around
this time each year have
come to reflect what it’s like
to live here and quite possibly inspire those driving
past them. This year, the
Arts Alive banner project
has also come to inspire a
San Francisco neighborhood to begin its own version of hanging artwork.
As this year’s banners
were unveiled on Saturday,
Richard Kurylo, project
manager with San Fransisco’s office of economic and
workforce
development,
was on hand to learn all
about the project, from the
materials of the banners to
the paints used.
Kurylo, who previously
worked with the North Park
MainStreet in San Diego,
knew of the Encinitas art
project well. The banner
project, he said, was always
in the back of his mind as
something he wanted to do.
Undergoing
revitalization for the past several
years, Ingleside, a neighborhood about 7 miles from
downtown San Francisco,
will soon be bringing the
program to its own street
lampposts.
“I visualize this proj-
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ect emphasizing arts, culture and entertainment
that would form the backbone of the revitalization
for the eastside neighborhood,” Kurylo said.
Taking cues from Danny Salzhandler, president
of the 101 Artists’ Colony, which helps to host the
banner event, Kurylo said
they’re basically copying
the whole project — everything from the unveiling
event to the auction and
splitting the auction funds
with the artists.
This year marks the
event’s 16th year, which
Salzhandler describes as an
“art exhibit that goes (for)
about 6 miles.”
Every year, a mixed
bag of about 100 amateur
and professional artists create original works, he explained, which are then displayed after the unveiling
from La Costa Avenue down
to the Cardiff Town Center.
Though the event isn’t
sponsored by the city, Councilman Tony Kranz said the
event brings an enthusiasm
for the arts. “It’s just always
been exciting to see all the
energy around the beautiful paintings. It’s what I
love about Encinitas,” he
said.
“One of the things
about Encinitas is that
we’ve always had a rich
group of artists, and the 101
lends itself to this sort of
event,” Kranz said.
What Kranz said he’d
like to see happen with the
event in the future is to expand it to the El Camino
Real corridor and to have
more school kids get involved. “But we’re very fortunate, I think, to have the
work here hanging on the
light poles on the 101 corridor,” Kranz said.
Much of the art ap-
People wander through the former Cabo Grill restaurant in Cardiff on
Saturday to view the unveiled art banners that will be hung from the
street lampposts along Coast Highway 101. Photo by Tony Cagala
pearing on the banners has
come to reflect what it’s like
living in the coastal community.
Don Doerfler’s banner
“Endless Encinitas” shows
the silhouettes of three
surfers in front of palm
trees with the instantly
recognizable domes of the
Self Realization Fellowship
in the background.
“It’s basically Swami’s,
where you can meditate, do
yoga and ride world class
waves all from one parking
lot,” Doerfler said, when describing his banner.
Julie Ann Stricklin, a
commercial artist by trade,
said unveiling her banner
was fun, because it’s the
first time any of her friends
get to see it.
Her banner, which
she titled, “Nature’s Sermon Through Abandoned
Bones” depicts a scene of
nature seen through the
bones of an abandoned
building.
“I always think of na-
ture as like a church because all of our answers, in
my opinion, you can find in
nature, and that’s kind of
like a sermon,” she said.
Casey Gomez said of
his first banner, that it was
a good opportunity to do art
in the community and share
it with his neighborhood.
The banners show all
of the creative individuals
here, he added. “It shows
that art is something that
you can really do, it’s not
just a hobby. And I think it
beautifies the community.
It’s a great representation
of all of the people that
live here and how they feel
about things visually.”
All of the banners are
available for sale, with a
live auction scheduled for
June 7.
The banners will be
displayed from February
through May and bids may
be placed by calling Lecuadia 101 at (760) 436-2320.
Visit 101artistscolony.com
for more information.
Christopher Law reveals his “Angel of Hope” and the young girl who
inspired the painting at the Arts Alive unveiling. Photo by Greg Nico-
layeff Photography
Inspired to Inspire
brush
with art
kay colvin
W
hen
Christopher
Law
received
an
invitation to paint an Arts
Alive banner for the 2014
season, he had no idea
what he was getting into.
The daunting blank sheet
of vinyl measuring 7 feet
in height was the largest
artistic challenge he had
ever taken on.
As director of the nonprofit San Diego Beach
Volleyball Club, Law had
worked with youth to approach sports holistically
through nutrition, physical
training, yoga and meditation. Until relatively recently, however, painting
and drawing were things
he had done in his spare
time with the “other side
of his brain.”
The
challenge
of
painting an Arts Alive
banner inspired him. According to Law, his 2014
painting titled “Little An-
1x2
1x2 is newspaper talk for a one column
by 2” ad. Too small to be effective?
You’re reading this aren’t you?
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gel” represented the small
daughter of close friends
as “faith in the eyes of the
beholder”. The work of
this first-time banner artist was so enchanting that
it brought the highest bid
of the entire collection of
101 artworks in the auction
last June.
Law explains that his
new painting for the 2015
season titled “Angel of
Hope” depicts the same
small girl praying to her
“mother earth child”. It
will be displayed on the
light standard at the corner of Coast Highway
101 and K Street (in front
of the SRF bookstore)
through the end of May. It
will be one of 99 banners to
be auctioned June 7 in the
Cardiff Town Center courtyard.
Law will continue to
create a three-part series
titled “Faith, Hope, and
Love” featuring the same
small girl as the subject of
each painting.
Growing up in La
Jolla, Carmel Valley and
Solana Beach, Chris Law
has been in and around
the ocean since before he
could swim. He had a natural love for surfing and
beach volleyball, but also
showed an early talent in
art.
He says of moving to
Encinitas in early 2014,
“The vibrational frequency of this beautiful place
called me here. Encinitas
might be the reason my art
has begun to flourish.”
Having enjoyed drawing in charcoal for many
years, Law says, “The
evolvement of my art
TURN TO BRUSH WITH ART ON A16
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Your Rancho Santa Fe, Solana
Beach & Del Mar Territory Manager
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advertising needs.
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FEB. 20, 2015 T he C oast News A rts &Entertainment
Send your arts & entertainment
news to [email protected]
A9
Being miserable doesn’t always lead to great art
By Dave Gil de Rubio
The idea that suffering
makes for great art is one of
those time-honored rock ‘n’
roll tropes that even made
its way into the title of a
1982 Todd Rundgren album
(“The Ever Popular Tortured Artist Effect”). And
while Lucinda Williams has
had her share of personal
trauma that’s informed her
work over the past few decades, the happily married
musician isn’t buying it.
For her, happiness is
rather underrated when it
comes to the creative process, even if the name of her
fine new double-CD, “Down
Where the Spirit Meets the
Bone,” might suggest otherwise.
“(Being miserable in
order to create great art) is
a big myth,” she said with
laugh on the phone at her
L.A. home. “Not that suffering doesn’t help your writing, but I can’t write when
I’m in the middle of feeling
like crap. That’s the last
thing I want to do. Tom Petty said the exact same thing
in an interview. There’s
this whole myth that you’re
sitting on the side of your
bed drinking Jack Daniels
while your tears fall onto
your guitar and you’re writing away. That’s not how it
works (laughs).”
“Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone” marks
something of a new phase
for the respected 61-yearold singer-songwriter. She
left her former label, Lost
Highway, following the release of 2011’s “Blessed,”
and has signed with the artist-friendly Nashville-based
imprint Thirty Tigers,
which signed off on Williams’ request for her new
album to be a two-CD set.
“I wanted to do this
back when the “West” album came out (in 2007),”
she explained. “I actually
had enough songs for a double album then but [label
head] Luke [Lewis] didn’t
want to do it at the time for
business reasons. He was
concerned that they’d have
to charge more for it and
that the fans wouldn’t want
to pay that much. So a lot
of the songs that came out
on “Little Honey” (in 2008)
were supposed to come out
on “West.” That was frustrating for me because once
you have a batch of songs
that kind of all fit together,
you want to put them together.”
It would be easy to worry that “Where the Spirit
Meets the Bone” could go
down a slippery slope of
creative over-indulgence.
But Williams managed to
deftly sidestep that with a
collection of songs that are
all killer and no filler. The
opening cut, “Compassion,”
is a piece by her father
and renowned poet Miller Williams that the singer-songwriter put to music.
Stripped down to vocal and
acoustic guitar, it has the
arts
CALENDAR
“A Murmur in the Trees,” featuring the recent paintings of
artist Gail Roberts through
Feb. 26 in the college’s Kruglak Gallery in the OceansKnow something that’s going ide Campus Student Center,
Bldg. 3400, 1 Barnard Drive,
on? Send it to calendar@
Oceanside. Gallery hours are
coastnewsgroup.com
Mondays/Tuesdays, 2:30 to
FEB. 20
7:30 p.m.; and Wednesdays/
PIANO
CONCERTO Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Hear Music by the Sea with The gallery will be closed
pianist Hayk Arsenyan at Feb. 16.
7:30 p.m. Feb. 20 at the Encinitas Library, 540 Cornish FEB. 22
Drive. Tickets: $13
SALON DANCES From
2 to 3 p.m. Feb. 22, at the EnFEB. 21
cinitas Library, 540 Cornish
CABARET NIGHT San Drive, Encinitas, the PatriDieguito Academy’s music cia Rincon Dance Collective
and theater departments presents “Salon Dances” inpresent their eighth annual spired by Isadora Duncan’s
Cabaret Night fundraiser at salon dances of the 1900s,
6:30 p.m. Feb. 21 at San Die- with choreographer/dancer
guito Academy’s Clayton E. Erin Tracy and live piano by
Liggett Theater 800 Santa composer Ryan Welsh in colFe Drive, Encinitas, with en- laboration with playwright
tertainment by Theater and Kristin Idaszak. Afterward, a
Band classes, food by stu- talk-back session between audents in the Culinary Arts dience members and artists.
Program, a raffle and silent Cost is a suggested donation
auction. Tickets are $30 at of $10.
seatyourself.biz/sdamusic.
CONCERT BAND CoastART AT COLLEGE al Communities Concert Band
MiraCosta College presents presents “Coming Home” at 2
CHRIS KYDD
Your Encinitas Territory Manager
Call Chris for all
your advertising needs.
Call 760.436.9737 x110
[email protected]
Lucinda Williams performs at the North Park Theatre Feb. 21. Photo by Michael Wilson
cadence of a murder ballad
that has a world-weary aura
hanging over it and includes
the line Williams chose for
the album title. (Miller Williams passed away on New
Years Day at age 84.)
From there, the Louisiana native drawls her way
through swamp rock that
would do Tony Joe White
proud (the twang-soaked
“Protection”), endearingly pledging her love (the
“Harvest”-like “Stowaway
in Your Heart”) and even
gives a girlfriend an emotional hand up (the upbeat
“Walk On”). Elsewhere,
she goes from railing over
the trio of teens framed in
the 1993 murders of three
Arkansas boys (a laconic
“West Memphis”) to serving up classic tear-in-yourbeer sentiment (the honkytonk ballad “This Old
Heartache”). Best of all is
a near-10 minute reading of
the late J.J. Cale’s “Magnolia,” which has an ethereal
haze hanging over it thanks
to the elegant and minimalistic support of guitarists
Bill Frisell and Greg Leisz,
whose strumming wraps
their singer’s vocals in a
gauze of delicate riffs and
chords.
But for anyone who’s
even remotely followed Lucinda Williams long and
storied career, it should
come as no surprise that
she’d carry on this high level of creative brilliance as
she enters her sixth decade
of life.
p.m. Feb. 22, the great music
of this country, at Carlsbad
Community Church, 3175
Harding Street, Carlsbad.
Tickets: $15, $12. at cccband.
com/ or call (760) 436-6137.
FEB. 25
OPERA SOIREE The
Wednesdays@Noon concert
Feb. 25 will be a North County Opera Soiree with Caroline
Nelms, soprano; Ellen Rabiner, contralto; Lupe Rios, tenor; and Patrick Anderson,
bass-baritone; accompanied
by John Danke, piano, at Encinitas Library, 540 Cornish
Drive. For more information,
visit NorthCountySundaySoiree.com (Encinitas Arts Division) or call (760) 633-2746.
at 5:30 p.m. Feb. 27 in the
Little Theatre, Room 3601,
1 Barnard Drive, Oceanside.
The evening will also feature
the film’s executive producer/
director, Ernesto Quintero.
For more information, contact Lisa Montes at lmontes@
miracosta.edu or call (760)
757-2121, Ext. 6396.
FEB. 23
SING OUT As part of
the Museum of Making Music’s “Learn to …” workshop
series, the Music Men Chorus from the Palomar-Pacific
Chapter of the Barbershop
Harmony Society, is offering
a six-week vocal training clinic for men and women from
7 to 9 p.m. Mondays Feb. 23
through March 30 at 5790 Armada Drive, Carlsbad. Register on-line at museumofmakingmusic.org. Registration fee
of $15. For more information,
visit MusicMenChorus.org.
ALL ABOUT COLOR
Join an “All About Color‚ Any
Media” Osher lifelong learning class beginning Mondays
9 a.m. to noon Feb. 23 at the
Lake San Marcos Resort Pavilion. For non-artists and
artists alike. For information,
visit [email protected]. To
register, call (800) 500-9377
or visit csusm.edu/el.
DUKE
FEB. 28
SOUL FUSION MiraCosta College’s Umoja Community will hold its second annual
fundraiser, Soul Fusion, a concert combining jazz, gospel,
FEB. 27
LATINO
FILMS and R & B. Performers with
MiraCosta College’s Oceans- a silent auction at 4 p.m., and
ide Campus will host a free concert at 5 p.m. Feb. 28 in the
screening in the Latino Film
series of “A Sacred Journey”
TURN TO ARTS CALENDAR ON A16
Her catalog includes
several albums that were
nothing less than stellar,
including her 1988 self-titled release, 1992’s “Sweet
Old World” and 1998’s “Car
Wheels On a Gravel Road,”
the latter of which was a
commercial breakthrough
that landed her a Grammy.
Since 2007’s “West,”
Williams has released four
records. It was around this
time that she met, fell in
love with and eventually
married music executive
Tom Overby. It doesn’t seem
like much of a coincidence
that this newfound tranquility coincided with this
prolific (for Williams) run
of records.
“I’m not really sure
[where this creative burst]
has come from. It’s this period in my life and being
in this place where I feel
where I’m comfortable. It’s
given me more freedom being happily married and in
that kind of situation that’s
forcing me to push myself
to find other things to write
about besides unrequited
love,” she said. “I have to be
in a certain state of mind to
feel like writing. The other
side of it all is that you can
draw on those things that
created the pain. I just look
at it like an endless well
where I dip into it and pull
stuff out that goes all the
way back into my childhood
and not just my own life. It’s
really been liberating to be
in that place as a writer.”
A10
T he C oast News M arketplace News
FEB. 20, 2015
Items on this page are paid for by the provider of the article.
If you would like an article on this page, please call (760) 436-9737
Greenfield Compounding Pharmacy focuses first on patient needs
VISTA — These days
you can get your prescriptions filled just about anywhere.
There are pharmacies inside of most grocery
stores and large retailers,
as well as chain pharmacies on almost every corner.
Independent
pharmacies
are a bit fewer and farther
between, but Greenfield
Compounding
Pharmacy
has proved that there is still
a place — and a need — for
the individualized services
it offers.
Not only is Greenfield
Compounding
Pharmacy
independently owned, but it
offers valuable services that
are hard to find. “We are a
traditional pharmacy, with
an additional emphasis on
compounding, which is the
art and science of making
medications that are not
readily available in the marketplace,” owner Soheil Ahghari, Rph, said. “This way
we are able to cater to many
needs of the very young and
the elderly, as well as our
animal family members.”
Medication is traditionally manufactured on
a one-size-fits-all basis. As
a compounding pharmacy,
Greenfield is able to help
just about anyone needing a
specialized medication that
might not be manufactured
by a drug company.
Aside from the medication itself, there are other
ways that Greenfield Pharmacy stands out. “We don’t
have a drive thru and we
don’t sell garden hoses, so
we can usually take care of
your medication needs in a
very quick and convenient
manner,” Staff Pharmacist Gary Marton said. “We
also offer delivery services
and shipping of medicine to
those patients who request
it.”
Ahghari makes it a
point to refer to the people he serves as “patients”
rather than customers. “We
take care of our patients’
needs in an efficient and
professional manner and we
also will be happy to try to
bill any insurance for medication needs,” he said. “We
love to spoil our patients
with personalized service
above and beyond their expectation.”
Marton, who has decades of experience in a
variety of pharmacies,
echoes those sentiments.
He recognizes that when a
patient comes to Greenfield
Compounding Pharmacy,
they need to be given the
best care and service possible. “When someone needs
something at a pharmacy,
they are typically getting
medication to try to stay
healthy, get over an illness
or care for a loved one,” he
said. “So first, it is critical
to always get the right medication to help them get well
as soon as possible.” But
for the staff at Greenfield,
it’s about more than conve-
nience. “Beyond that there
is a human element that I
believe can be just as critical to the overall pharmacy
experience and healing,”
Marton said.
“This is where the huge
difference lies between a
chain pharmacy and our
independently owned pharmacy.”
Marton added that
the dedicated staff of professionals at Greenfield is
there to make sure they
take care of patients’ shortand long-term needs in an
Tennis Club introduces new membership category
By Christina Macone-Greene another one. So I mean we partner which has similar ing today will help us fill
RANCHO SANTA FE
— Before David Vandenberg, a Rancho Santa Fe
Tennis Club board member
discussed the possibility of
adding an additional membership category he shared
how the membership at the
Tennis Club was climbing
steadily.
According to his numbers, they have already
exceeded its annual quota in new memberships in
a half year. Vandenberg
commended the board for
allowing the Tennis Club
to expand its membership
categories.
“We are making money which is great,” he said.
Director Craig McAllister wanted to know what
the membership numbers
were a year ago in comparison to now.
Although he didn’t
have the numbers with
him, Vandenberg believed
last year the membership
was at around 189, and today, at about 230.
“That’s
amazing,”
McAllister said.
Vandenberg
added,
“And last night we added
have programs that are attracting people.”
He went on to say that
while their pre-reserve
numbers are climbing,
what he’s really excited
about is that everyone is
helping to make the Tennis Club a true asset to the
community, which will attract more people to it.
McAllister commended Vandenberg on a job
well done because more
than a decade ago, membership numbers were at
around 340 and has been
declining ever since.
Things have turned
around.
“It’s
phenomenal,
what you’ve done,” McAllister said.
And Vandenberg appreciated his enthusiasm.
“I’m here today to ask
for even more help and that
is for our Sponsor Membership,” he said, adding how
it would be a new category.
Vandenberg explained
that tennis is a different
sport than most others.
Unlike golf, one has to
have a partner. And a good
game also means having a
skill sets so a match can be
enjoyed, he said.
Vandenberg
sidestepped talking about how
this changes in the game of
golf using Jack Nicklaus as
an example.
“I can play in the same
foursome with him.
It
doesn’t make a difference.
I’m shooting 100, and he’s
shooting 70,” he said. “The
four of us can still go play
together and have a good
day. You can’t do that in
tennis. You got to have
people who have similar
capabilities.”
Vandenberg told the
board that the number one
reason that people join
tennis clubs and conversely, the number one reason
they quit is that they don’t
have somebody to play
with which have the same
skills.
Vandenberg said he
was on a mission not only
to increase just members
but certain kinds of members. They are trying to
get younger members between the ages of 20 to 45
which has remained a void.
“And what I’m propos-
that void. I have people
who have threatened to
quit our club, because they
have nobody to play with.
And I say, hang on, and let
me see what I can do,” Vandenberg said.
He continued, “I’ve
got to get those people.
We’ve had 20 people in
that age range quit the
club within the past year
because they have nobody
to play with.”
A Sponsorship Membership, he explained was
allowing a member of the
Tennis Club in good standing that could sponsor a
friend to join,” he said.
The rationale behind
this was keeping members
while attracting new players.
“I think I can get a lot
of the people who left to go
to other clubs back into the
Covenant,” he said.
Following a long discussion among the directors with Vandenberg
on hand to answer questions, the board unanimously
agreed
with
the
new
Sponsorship
Membership category.
Rancho Santa Fe Board of Directors appoints nominating committee
By Christina Macone-Greene
RANCHO SANTA FE
— At a previous board meeting, candidate names were
drawn to determine who
would be part of the 2015
Nominating
Committee.
Over the course of the following weeks, the committee
confirmed and formed.
President Ann Boon addressed her fellow directors
and members in the audience
at a recent board meeting.
“Amazingly enough it
is February, and that means
that the process has begun to
nominate candidates for the
board election this spring,”
she said.
Including Boon, other
members of the nominating committee are Director
Craig McAllister and former
Directors Ken Bien, Larry
Spitcaufsky and Bill Beckman. According to Boon, the
committee has already met
and several members have already submitted their names.
“The committee has
decided to have a more inclusive policy this year,”
she said. “We will not be
eliminating anyone who volunteers unless they clearly
cannot fulfill the time commitments or are technically
not qualified.”
The definition of technically qualified underscores
a member in good standing
and has lived in the Covenant
for three or more years.
“We will be interview-
ing the candidates as usual
to explain the campaign process and the job as serving
as a director. The nominating committee will be presenting a list of nominees to
the board by March the 16,”
Boon said.
For more information
on how to become a board
candidate for the 2015 Regular Annual Election, contact the RSF Association
at (858) 756-1174 or visit
rsfassociation.org.
efficient, accurate, professional and friendly manner.
“It
means
getting
more involved with patient
care by being in the circle
of communication which
involves the patient, the
prescriber and the pharmacist,” Marton said. “The
ultimate goal, which we all
want and deserve, is good
health.”
Greenfield Compounding Pharmacy has two pharmacists and two pharmacy technicians who work
full-time Monday through
SCHOOL
CONTINUED FROM A5
of the new school year.
“I think it’s fine, you’re
moving an entire class and
their teacher and just changing the building,” Flaim
said.
School officials anticipate that the school board
will decide on how to proceed with the delay at a future board meeting.
Meanwhile, a group
known as “Stop San Marcos
K-8” has expressed concerns
Nobody likes more
traffic, and yes, the speed
is a concern, but how can
anyone be opposed to a
beautiful new school?”
Nancy Lee
San Marcos Resident
about the location of the
project, which it says imperils the children who will attend.
Double Peak sits just
below the crest of San Elijo
Road, where the speed limit
is 50 miles per hour and the
street begins a steep 10 percent grade both eastbound
and westbound. Motorists
are often seen driving in
excess of the 50 mph speed
limit, some using the street
as a shortcut to Carlsbad and
Encinitas and others using
it to get to nearby Cal State
San Marcos.
The group, spearheaded
by local resident Andy Lee,
says that these conditions
will endanger the lives of
children who will have to
cross San Elijo Road in order
to make it to and from school.
Additionally,
Double
Peak is in an area where
wildfires have charred thou-
Friday. “Both technicians
are very people-oriented,
friendly and bilingual,” Ahghari said.
Ahghari enjoys working in Vista for its close
proximity to the beach and
his home.
“But most importantly, our facility is walking
distance from Tri-City Hospital and many great medical practices,” he said. “We
are conveniently located in
a very desirable medical
plaza with about a dozen
well-established, well-recognized physician groups.”
Greenfield Compounding Pharmacy is at 2067
W. Vista Way #195. It is
open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
For
more
information,
call (760) 842-1700 or visit
gfcpharmacy.com.
Greenfield Compounding Pharmacy is located at
Vista Medical Plaza — the
premier outpatient health
center in the Tri-City area.
If you’re a physician looking for medical office space,
Vista Medical Plaza offers
several unique advantages
to help grow your business.
To learn more, visit VistaMedicalPlaza.com/leasing.
sands of acres, both in 2007
and most recently in 2014
in the Cocos fire. The group
questions how safely would
the school be able to evacuate in the event of a wildfire.
“The new K-8 school site
is irresponsible, immoral,
and a public danger for San
Marcos students and residents in the area. This school
must be stopped,” Lee wrote
to The Coast News in September.
Roybal said that the
school is aware of the speed
and traffic issues along San
Elijo Road, and have built
in safety measures to the
project, which include a
quarter-mile drop off area
inside of the property and a
25 miles per hour speed limit
along the street in the immediate vicinity of the school.
The Coast News canvassed an area near the
school site asking parents
and residents about the
school and the safety concerns. While many acknowledged the traffic and vehicle
speed concerns of the group,
they said they didn’t think
this should stop the school
from being built.
“Nobody likes more
traffic, and yes, the speed is
a concern, but how can anyone be opposed to a beautiful new school?” said Nancy Lee, a local homeowner.
“One thing about this area
is that it is a great place to
raise children. Those children need a school.”
Lee’s neighbor Gloria
Loop said that she was very
concerned about the speeds,
but it is something that families deal with already.
“I think the school district can find ways to slow
down the speed, perhaps by
adding a couple of more stop
lights,” Loop said. “But I
don’t see this as a deal breaker. This community needs
the school.”
FEB. 20, 2015 A11
T he C oast News PETS LET LE BONTEMP ROULEZ
Hashbrown, a giant Flemish rabbit, joined the celebration at Helen Woodward Animal Center
Feb. 11 with some help from the students of La Jolla Country Day School’s Classroom Without
Walls program. The center was transformed into Mardi Gras and traditions were celebrated with a Doggie Gras parade on the Helen Woodward Animal Center grounds. Attendees
sipped on non-alcoholic Purr-icanes, snacked on BARK-King cake, took pictures against New
Orleans style-backgrounds and voted for their favorite float. Courtesy photo
of family medicine, general
internal medicine, and pediatrics. At more traditional
programs, just three in 10
physicians choose primary
care.
Right now, Medicare
allocates over $13 billion annually to finance graduate
medical education programs.
Distribution of those
funds is based on an outdated
formula that’s highly biased
toward traditional teaching
hospitals and neglectful of
innovative models like regional cooperatives, training
health centers, and OPTIs.
Sustained funding needs
to flow to these initiatives.
Modernizing the graduate
medical education system
will provide the flexibility
necessary to address workforce and patient needs in an
evolving healthcare system.
COMMENTARY
CONTINUED FROM A4
train 550 additional doctors.
Another successful model for improving the organization of medical education
is found in osteopathic postdoctoral training institutions.
These partnerships enable medical schools, hospitals, and community-based
health care facilities to pool
their academic and research
resources for graduate medical education.
At New York Institute
of Technology College of
Osteopathic Medicine, we
pioneered one of the first OPTIs in 1995. Since then, our
OPTI has worked with many
healthcare providers to increase the number of residents and provide a broader
educational experience in
community hospitals and
clinics.
Across the country, this
model is working. In fact, 40
percent of these osteopathic residents are choosing
the generalist disciplines
CUSTOM BUSINESS BANKING SERVICES | MOBILE BANKING | SBA PREFERRED LENDER
Dr. Barbara Ross-Lee is vice
president for Health Sciences
and Medical Affairs at New
York Institute of Technology
and a member of the Institute
of Medicine’s committee on
graduate medical education.
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A12
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
You’re Invited
G R A N D O P E N I N G C E L E B R AT I O N
P R E B Y S C A R D I O VA S C U L A R I N S T I T U T E
Join us for an inside look at Prebys Cardiovascular Institute,
our heart hospital of the future.
• Behind-the-scenes tours
• Interactive wellness activities
• Healthy cooking demonstrations and tastings
• Health screenings and exhibits, featuring:
- American Heart Association
- WomenHeart
-
EP Save-A-Life
-
-
A Lego station provided by LEGOLAND
Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center
La Jolla YMCA
Various local law enforcement and safety agencies
• Family-friendly events with a Kids’ Zone, sponsored by the Parent Connection,
featuring:
Interactive science demonstrations provided by Rueben H. Fleet Science Center
Musical performance by Hulabaloo
Kids’ fun and face painting
San Diego’s Best Heart Care Just Got Better.
Sunday, March 1, 2015
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Scripps Memorial
Hospital La Jolla
9888 Genesee Avenue
San Diego, CA 92037
To reserve your priority pass,
call 855-441-5018 or visit
scripps.org/scrippsheartcare.
FEB. 20, 2015 A13
T he C oast News Childhelp’s Southern California Auxiliary readies for fundraiser
By Christina Macone-Greene
RANCHO SANTA FE — When
it comes to making a difference in
the lives of children, Childhelp
has helped many in need. Over the
last 55 years, this organization has
assisted more than 4 million children.
It’s a staggering amount which
pulls on heartstrings.
Childhelp’s Southern California Auxiliary is preparing for its
April 18 annual gala, “Life is a Cabaret.” Guests will be sporting vintage Cabaret and will be whisked
away into nostalgic sophistication
at Hotel Del Coronado, while supporting an incredible cause.
“We fundraise to create a
brighter future for the abused
and neglected children throughout our community of San Diego
and Southern California as well as
across the country,” said Michelle
Teran, publicity board member for
Childhelp, Southern Auxiliary.
“Five children die a day from
child abuse in the United States.
We focus our efforts on advocacy,
prevention, treatment and commu-
nity outreach.”
Teran pointed out that from
every dollar donated to Childhelp,
90 cents goes directly to the children and its programs.
While Hotel Del will afford a
We fundraise to
create a brighter
future for the abused
and neglected
children throughout
our community...”
Michelle Teran, publicity board member
Michelle Terran for Childhelp, Southern Auxiliary, says
Board Member, Childhelp, their organization has received generous support from many local companies.
Souther Auxiliary Courtesy photo
memorable backdrop to the evening, Teran said it will be a special
gala for all who attend.
“The evening begins with a
VIP reception followed with dinner
and dancing to NRG, one of San Diego’s hottest bands. Our Masters of
Ceremonies are KUSI’s David Da-
vis and Staci Ortiz-Davis,” she said.
Celebrity guests will include Childhelp co-founders Sara
O’Meara and Yvonne Fedderson.
Teran shared that they have been
nominated a total of four times for
the Nobel Peace Prize.
And with a night of dancing,
special guests from “Dancing with
the Stars” will be on hand to both
impress and inspire the guests.
Also there will be actor, John
O’Hurley, who is well known for his
role as J. Peterman, from the memorable sitcom, “Seinfeld.” He will
be the recipient of the Childhelp
SCA Spirit of Compassion Award
Teran shared the evening will
be brimful of opportunity drawings, and live and silent auctions.
Tickets to see “Dancing with the
Stars” will be available as well as
an unforgettable trip to Prague
and much more.
While it takes effort and determination to host a gala of this
magnitude, community support is
welcomed.
“We always appreciate monetary donations and items to be in-
cluded in the silent, live or opportunity categories such as restaurants,
airlines, hotels, golfing and more,”
Teran said. “We have had support
from so many companies such as
Euphora, Lexus, Sea Coast Exclusive Properties, Headlines Salon,
La Costa Spa, Del Coronado and
so many other kind and generous
companies.”
And for any other companies
who want to take part in this special night and purpose are encouraged to do so.
Honorary chairs for the event
include Esther Nahama, Reinette
and Marvin Levine, John and
Tara Richards, and Mona & Jack
Ratelle. Its co-chairs consist of Arlene and Richard Esgate, Ron McMillan, and David Linde.
“I promise all who attend will
walk away having had the best
night ever,” she said.
For ticket information contact
Ron McMillan at (619) 957-1162.
For sponsorships or donations
please contact David Linde at (858)
945-5800 or Michelle Teran at
(858) 212-7021.
NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
The Encinitas 101 MainStreet Association selects Thora
Guthrie as its new executive director. Guthrie became the
CEO of the Escondido Downtown Business Association in
2009, where she also served as editor of the Escondido City
Magazine. Her immediate plans include seeking opportunities to develop long-term strategic partnerships to increase
the Association’s effectiveness in the community, while meeting the mission and goals of the Encinitas 101 MainStreet Association. Courtesy photo
Head Start grants given to North County
REGION — Easter
Seals Southern California
has been awarded a $2.1
million federal grant as part
of the federal Early Learning Initiative to operate
new Early Head Start Child
Care centers in partnership
with local child care centers
and family child providers
serving infants and toddlers
from low-income families.
The new Early Head
Start Child Care Partnership Grant will work to fill
a major community need in
the cities of Encinitas, Solana Beach, Escondido, Poway, Ramona and Borrego
Springs, with new services
for 168 infants and toddlers.
The grant works to increase
the supply of infant and
toddler care, improve family well-being and improve
child well-being and school
readiness.
Existing childcare providers interested in learning more about participation in the new Early Head
Start programs should contact the Easter Seals Child
Development Services administrative office at (760)
743-1185.
There is an extreme
shortage of agencies and
providers with expertise in
infant and toddler child development in the North San
Diego area.
deepfling - Coast Hwy 101 - the Lumberyard
937 s coast hwy 101, ste C100 encinitas, ca 92024
760.942.4254 - www.deepfling.com - m-f 10:30-5:30, sat 10-5, sun 11-5
SCOUT LEADERS HONORED
The San Diego-Imperial Boy Scout Council recently presented the 2015 Silver Beaver Award for Distinguished Service to
Youth to local residents, John Howells, left, and Jeff Boyer,
both from Santa Margarita District. The Silver Beaver Award
is the highest honor a Boy Scout Council can bestow upon a
volunteer. The award is given to only those persons who have
given continued, unselfish and effective service through programs of the Boy Scouts of America. Courtesy photo
A14
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
From soccer star to ESL Coach of the Year
By Cathy Hall
Special to The Coast News
ENCINITAS — Encinitas Express Soccer League
coach Brett Mills has spent
most of his life on the soccer
field. “I would attend every
one of my brother’s games
alongside of my mom. Then
when I was 4 years old I
joined Express’ rec program.”
Mills moved over to
ESL’s competitive program
at the age of 9 and continued to play well into high
school. He credits his coaches with building his confidence and instilling in him
a lifelong love for the game
of soccer. He also recalls
traveling with his team to
the San Diego Sports Arena to watch the San Diego
Sockers play.
“At that time, the Sockers were led by some of my
favorite players, like Julie
Veee, Ralph Wilhelm, Guy
Newman and Gary Collier,
all of whom would later
become very important
in my career.” Coincidentally, Mills now works for
Guy Newman, who is the
league’s Director of Coaching. “Brett has a real love
for the game,” said Newman, ”You can see it every
time he’s on the field.”
I just want
to make sure
everyone that
is interested in
playing soccer has
that chance.”
Brett Mills
Coach
After high school,
Mills played at Palomar Junior College for two years
and was named MVP in
2000. After a couple of years
away from playing soccer
he felt that he was missing
something in his life. It was
then that he reached out to
Julie Veee, who was the Director of Coaching at Encinitas Express at that time.
“He gave me the opportunity to coach with Express
and it rekindled the passion
for the game that I love.”
It was obviously a good fit
for both, Mills has been
with the league for the last
10 years and was recently
named ESL’s Coach of the
Year for 2014.
In his professional career, Mills now works for
Taylormade Golf. It was this
passion for both the game of
golf and soccer led him to
start the Encinitas Express
Annual Golf Tournament
three years ago. The tournament is held at Encini-
Encinitas Express Soccer League coach Brett Mills was named ESL’s
Coach of the Year for 2014. Courtesy photo
tas Ranch Golf Course and
benefits the league’s scholarship programs. “Growing
up, there were many years
that my family was in need
of financial assistance in order for me to play soccer. If
that assistance wasn't available, my path could have
been very different.”
Last
year
the
league gave scholarships
to 235 recreational players
and another 65 players in
its competitive program.
Mills wants to do his part to
make sure no child is ever
turned away because of finances. “The best part is
that now I get to give back
to the club that started it all
for me. I just want to make
sure everyone that is interested in playing soccer has
that chance.”
For more information about Encinitas Express
Soccer League, becoming a sponsor or attending
the golf tournament, visit
encinitas-soccer.org.
FEB. 20, 2015 Contact us at [email protected]
with story ideas, photos or suggestions
Padres pack
expectations
for spring trip
sports
talk
jay paris
A
A15
T he C oast News fter four years
of
heading
south, is it really due east to spring training?
The Padres arrive in
Arizona this week and four
words come to mind when
seeing them: Is that a mirage?
Dadgumit if the Padres don’t have proven major leaguers, depth in the
rotation and a belief outside of Peoria that something special is brewing.
Now all manager Bud
Black has to do is find some
rope and yell, “ready, set,
pull.’’
Getting those fresh
faces on board is among
Black’s biggest goals.
“You got to play together and you got to play
for each other,’’ Black said.
Black used that line
when talking recently to
the San Dieguito Academy
boys basketball team. But
really, he was giving it a
test drive for the Padres’
first team meeting.
It’s one thing to assemble talent. But getting
players to perform as one
isn’t as easy as getting sun
in the desert.
But we’ll let the Padres shine and how long
as it been since we wrote
that?
It’s been four straight
seasons of under .500 baseball and last summer was
the ultimate bummer as
the Padres couldn’t hit a
lick.
Not only were they
bad, they were boring and
just how did the Padres get
in such a pickle?
Easy — low payrolls,
shoddy drafts and a mi-
nor-league system that
spits out average instead of
spectacular.
That changed in December, and where will the
team put the A.J. Preller
statue?
OK, that’s a stretch,
but not if talking to patient
Padres fans. This dedicated bunch, which usually
rolls their eyes this time
of year, now bats them toward Preller.
And why not?
He’s resurrected a
franchise and he didn’t
even use jumper cables.
He revamped a shoddy outfield by bringing in
Matt Kemp, Justin Upton
and Wil Myers.
He kept pitcher James
Shields’ commute from
Rancho Santa Fe to within a half hour — well, the
I-5/I-805 merge willing.
In Preller we trust and
why wouldn’t you?
He just moved near
Encinitas’
Moonlight
Beach but it’s his shedding
of light on the Padres that
is keen.
But Black knows pennants aren’t won in the offseason. And if money were
the solution, the Yankees
would have many more
than 27 championships.
Just ask last year’s
Dodgers about buying
their way into the World
Series.
A roster is just that,
with various parts seeking
the right fit.
Mr. Black, have at it.
That Black enters his
ninth season without a
promise for a 10th is worth
mentioning.
But Black knows the
deal: win and get welTURN TO JAY PARIS ON A16
Sports
February marks five Opening Days for ball leagues
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — Feb.
14 through Feb. 28 marks
five Opening Days for
Oceanside ball leagues.
Oceanside Girls Softball kicked off the season
with Opening Day at Lake
Park Feb. 14.
Oceanside
National
Little League is next to
celebrate the start of the
season for its 300 players
with ceremonies at Martin
Luther King, Jr. Park Feb.
21.
“I can smell baseball
in the air,” league President Tina Uriarte said.
Opening Day ceremonies will introduce teams,
and celebrate last year’s
championship teams and
homerun players. League
board members and city
council
members
will
be introduced and share
words of encouragement
for players.
Two former players,
who now play high school
ball, will lead the traditional recitation of the Little League pledge.
“It has a hero aspect,”
Uriarte said. “It helps
players see themselves at
the next level.”
This year recognition
will be given to a league
empire, coach and parent
who passed away. A banner and dedication will celebrate their lives.
Following
opening
ceremonies
105-year-old
Oceanside resident Agnes
McKee will throw out the
first pitch. She also threw
a ceremonial pitch at a Padres game in July.
Uriarte said the upcoming Little League season has some significant
rule changes that allow
players more time to play.
She added as first year
president her goal is to expand parents’ involvement
and membership in the
league board.
“I look forward to getting to know parents, and
helping them understand
we’re here for them,” Uriarte said.
Vista American Lit-
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
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858.405.9986
A volunteer coach helps first time hitter strike the ball at previous year’s
Opening Day games. Opening Day celebrations for Oceanside leagues
will include introducing teams, fundraising booths, and first games.
Photo by Promise Yee
tle League, which serves
Oceanside and Vista youth,
will hold its Opening Day
at Ron Ortega Park Feb. 27
Both Oceanside American Little League and
Oceanside Valley Little
League will hold Opening
Day ceremonies on Feb.
28 at Ron Ortega Park and
Melba Bishop Park respectively.
The small and mighty
Oceanside American Little
League starts the season
with 210 players. League
president Cesar Diaz said
he has his sights set on getting to the Little League
World Series.
He said he is not sure
if it will be this season, or a
future one, but the league
will get there.
Opening Day ceremonies will introduce volunteer coaches, and last season’s winning teams.
“We’ve done fairly well
for such a small league,”
Diaz said. “We have a great
bunch of volunteers.”
Another Opening Day
highlight will be a motivational talk by a past league
coach about the importance of honesty and fair
play to win.
Diaz said this year a
record number of 20 scholarships were granted to
players who otherwise
could not afford to join the
league.
Financing
needed
gear, catcher equipment
and shade tents still remain a challenge. The
league is seeking additional sponsors to help with
costs.
A reduction in charges
for city field lights has
helped the league’s operating budget. The city
reduced the cost of field
lights from $26 an hour to
$20 an hour for all youth
sports leagues.
More good news is city
ball fields have been improved to ensure a better,
safer game for players.
“We have a good partnership with the city,” Diaz
said.
He added neighborhood police officers help
ensure city parks where
the league plays are drug
and alcohol free.
A16
INTERSECTION
CONTINUED FROM A1
risk. Traffic engineers
have expressed concern
about this type of permissive/protective intersections because drivers have
expressed confusion as to
whether the green light —
which directs thru traffic
— gives drivers making a
left turn the right of way.
In San Diego County, that confusion was
the primary culprit in a
fatal 1992 crash in San
JEPSEN
CONTINUED FROM A1
Jepsen’s resignation in
a 3-2 vote, with Councilmen Jack Feller and Jerry
Kern voting no.
A 3-2 vote also hired
Jepsen. Feller and Kern
voted in Jepsen in October 2013 along with former Councilman Gary
Felien. Mayor Jim Wood
and Councilwoman Esther
Sanchez voted against hiring Jepsen.
Following the city attorney’s report Feller said
he strongly opposed the
separation.
“He brought us a long
way,” Feller said. “I think
we owe him more than a
separation agreement.”
Wood said there were
philosophical differences,
JAY PARIS
CONTINUED FROM A15
welcomed back — fall flat
and don’t let the clubhouse
door hit your backside.
Baseball being baseball, there are no guarantees.
And there are enough
Padres red flags flapping
the Valley of the Sun breeze
to get noticed.
• Can Myers cover center field, in particular, and
overall, the outfield defense isn’t of the Gold Glove
ARTS CALENDAR
CONTINUED FROM A9
college’s Concert Hall,
Building 2400, 1 Barnard
Drive, Oceanside. Tickets
are $10 at miracosta.edu/
umojatix. For more information, call Kate Coleman
at (760) 795-6933.
PAINT
ENCINITAS
Paint Encinitas is raffling
off an original, 12-inch-by16-inch oil painting (Mixed
Swell, a $1,300 value) in its
fundraising efforts for the
new 40-foot mural by Micaiah Hardison at the 7/11
on D Street and Coast Highway 101. Email Jax Meyers
at
paintencinitas.org/author/jax-meyers to make a
BRUSH WITH ART
CONTINUED FROM A8
throughout the course of
the years has been more by
circumstance than my own
choosing.” He continues,
“My breakthrough in color
came after reading the Anastasia series.
The words literally inspired me to use the full
rainbow of colors.”
At age 31, Chris Law’s
professional background is
in Kinesiology with a science degree from Cal State
San Marcos.
His love of sports sci-
T he C oast News Marcos at Mission Road
and Mulberry Avenue between a school bus and a
recreational vehicle. As a
result, this type of intersection is already fairly
uncommon throughout the
county.
Traffic engineers have
tried to lessen that confusion by posting “left turn
yield on green ball” signs
at these intersections,
but federal and state traffic officials have over the
past few years concluded
that the flashing yellow
arrow intersections are
safer than the permissive
protective ones.
Because they are relatively new to San Diego
County, the Traffic and
Public Safety Commission
also recommended that
the city develop a public education program to
alert and educate motorists about the new signal.
If after the trial the
signal is deemed successful, Encinitas residents
could see more such intersections around the city.
and it was time to move
forward.
Since
Councilman
Chuck Lowery was voted
in, in November, the council majority shifted and
differences between the
majority and city manager
become apparent.
The City Council proposed actions to limit the
city manager’s powers.
Council voted to lower
the city manager’s discretionary purchasing from
$50,000 to $25,000.
Council also proposed
requiring council approval of all hires by the city
manager, but this item
was never heard.
Following the meeting
Wood said both of the limitations would likely be
scrapped when a new city
manager is hired.
Deputy City Manager Michelle Skaggs Lawrence will serve as interim city manager while
Oceanside launches a nationwide search for a new
hire.
Jepsen walks away
with 15 months salary,
earned leave and holiday
pay, and 15 months medical coverage. Salary, leave
and holiday pay add up to
$289,000. Since Jepsen
elected to resign immediately PERs costs of
$70,000 for a year’s leave
will be saved by the city.
The terms of the separation agreement were
written into Jepsen’s hiring contract.
Jepsen
previously worked as Oceanside
city manager from 2000
to 2006.
variety.
• Bating leadoff is...?
Dave Roberts is the best
option, but he’s the bench
coach.
• Finding someone to
get things going — Yangervis Solarte, maybe? — is on
Black’s to-do list.
• Shortstop? That question stands tall with the
smallest Padre, Alexi Amarista, asked to play big. Can
the Ninja Warrior last 162
games?
•There are more mysteries — what of Carlos
Quentin, Will Venable and
Cameron Maybin? — which
include determining the
No. 5 starter and filling
bullpen roles.
But that’s what spring
is for, and this one, brings a
welcoming sight for the Friar faithful.
After years of chasing
mirages, the Padres seem
real.
donation. A tax deductible
$50 donation gets you one
entry ticket.
DEGHER AND DAUGHTERS Leucadia 101 presents Darius Degher and
Daughters with Tim Flood
& Friends at 7 p.m. Feb. 28
at the Encinitas Library,
540 Cornish Drive, Encinitas.
Tickets $10 in advance,
$12 at the door. Encinitas’
own family of singer-songwriters, the Deghers, will
trade songs in an acoustic
showcase including Dad
Darius, daughter Cleopatra, just back from a tour
and 15 year-old Cordelia, a
freshman at San Dieguito
Academy.
MARK THE CALENDAR
VILLAGE CHURCH
THEATER The Village
Church Community Theater presents “The Curious Savage,” a comic tale,
which will challenge you to
discover again the values
of kindness and affection
lost in a world that seems
motivated at times by greed
and dishonesty. Tickets are
$18 for 7:30 p.m. March 20,
7:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. March
21 and 2 p.m. March 22 at
the Village Church Community Theater, 6225 Paseo
Delicias, Rancho Santa
Fe. Purchase tickets online at villagechurchcommunitytheater.org / 2014 2015-season.
ence and mechanics of the
body led him to work as a
personal trainer for five
years prior to becoming
a professional volleyball
coach.
Director of the San Diego Beach Volleyball Club,
Law says, “Through sports
we are able to teach aspects
of life often untouched by
traditional schooling systems. We started with about
24 kids and have grown to
over a hundred.”
In a recent interview
he described the club’s less
structured weekend activities, “Just today our girls
hiked Torrey Pines Preserve and then participated
in ‘Spreading Smiles,’ a day
of handing out flowers in
Encinitas. We also visited
SRF gardens and Yogananda’s house. Pretty amazing
day!”
Whether it’s through
physical training, spiritual
growth, or creating images that touch the hearts of
viewers, Chris Law gives
others hope for the future.
He says, “I’m inspired to
inspire.
When I am moved to allow art to flow through me,
I paint.”
Contact Jay Paris at
[email protected]. Follow him
on Twitter at jparis_sports
and at mighty1090.com
RANGE
CONTINUED FROM A3
shooting range.
Many said there are
not enough ranges in the
county and the closet one,
Iron Sights in Oceanside, is
always packed and has long
waits.
People also said that
it was denied because recreational shooting ranges
have a negative and unsafe
connotation.
Bill Ims of Carlsbad,
said Neu likely doesn’t
understand
recreational
shooting ranges.
“I do think a terrible
error was made by the staff
TOURISM
CONTINUED FROM A5
governing bodies.
Currently there is Visit
Carlsbad, which is made up
of leaders from hotels, Legoland California and Carlsbad Premium Outlets.
There is also the Carlsbad Tourism Business Improvement District Board,
which is made up of a cross
section of hotel officials
appointed by Mayor Matt
Hall.
Vincent said sometimes
different
representatives
represent the same entities on each board, which
isn’t efficient.
SURVEY
CONTINUED FROM A3
got to find that my street
and we’ll be good to go
from there.”
Although there was
near unanimous agreement on fixing roads, some
council members were a
bit more skeptical when
responding to other survey
results.
Worden said the demographic data from the poll
differed from 2010 census
data. For example, about
44 percent of the respondents were older than 65,
but only about 20 percent
of the population of Del
Mar fits that category.
Worden said residents
who are more active in city
matters could be predominantly represented in the
survey.
“I don’t know this but
I would be cautious,” he
said. “This tells me important information that’s
useful, but we’re in slippery terrain if we try to
extrapolate that it’s really
telling us what the whole
city would say about these
same topics.”
SNAKES
CONTINUED FROM A7
world, Lemm explained.
So far this year, the county’s Department of Animal
Services has received 30 calls
for rattlesnake removal (nine
calls came in January, and 21
calls this month), according to
Dan DeSousa, deputy director of the department.
“We see rattlesnakes
throughout the year in San
Diego County just because of
the warmer climate here, but
nowhere what we’ll see later
on in the year,” DeSousa said.
He noted last year that
the department received
their highest number of calls,
197, in May.
If you’re out for a walk,
FEB. 20, 2015
when they denied the request but I don’t think it
was for any reason other
than
misunderstanding.
Often times we fear most
what we don’t understand,”
said Ims.
Gunther said she was
surprised the range was
rejected because she met
with Neu and Associate
Planner Shannon Wernecke. She said there was
no debate when she spoke
with them about the project.
“You can imagine my
surprise when I received a
rejection letter on Christmas Eve 2014. I did not see
that one coming,” Gunther
said.
Commissioners
Hap
L’Heureux, Marty Montgomery and Neil Black voted against Neu’s decision
because they said they believed he made an error in
denying the range.
Chairperson Victoria
Scully and Commissioners Velyn Anderson and
Jeff Segall voted to uphold
Neu’s decision.
Commissioner Kerry
Siekmann excused herself
from the vote because she
did accounting for Gunther
Guns and said she couldn’t
provide an unbiased vote.
The appeal will now go
in front of the City Council.
“Let’s
streamline
that… so that so we’re not
duplicating efforts,” said
Vincent.
Finally, Fenton suggested changing the way tourism is measured. Instead of
tracking website traffic to
the Visit Carlsbad website,
he said it’s important to
measure marketing success
by focusing on the amount
of actual rooms being
booked and packages being
bought.
Councilmembers were
thankful for the report and
discussed their thoughts.
“Are we willing to feed
the goose that’s going to lay
the golden eggs for us?”
Councilman Mark Packard
asked.
He then said yes.
Hall said he doesn’t
support an increase in
transient occupancy tax in
the short term because he
wants room rates to remain
competitively priced.
He closed with saying
it’s time for the city to step
up more to help increase
tourism because the hotels
and attractions have done
their part.
“There should be some
partnership or some investment back from the city
into this because I think the
other side has really proven
themselves,” said Hall.
Councilman Don Mosier agreed, especially when
it comes to dissatisfaction
with the development and
design review process.
He said most of the
people who answered the
questions about that topic
have only lived in Del Mar
for about five years, which
means they likely went
through a remodel or rebuild.
“Historically the (Design Review Board) process
has worked very well for
Del Mar,” he said. “That’s
not to say we couldn’t adjust some of the (design review ordinances) to make
them easier to understand
and enforce.”
Mosier added that
when he was a DRB member many applicants didn’t
like the process but in the
end said it made their project better.
“So they were happy
with the outcome but unhappy with the process,” he
said. “I don’t think that’s
a priority that we need to
change very much.
“That’s not a process
that’s broken,” he added. “It’s a process that
works and the people who
go through it don’t like it
because they don’t get to
build the biggest mansion
they can possibly afford
in Del Mar and that’s what
the DRB is here for.”
Sherryl Parks said she
didn’t look at the survey
results in that much detail.
“I don’t overthink this
survey or look at the demographics or the numbers,”
she said. “I just would like
to fulfill the needs of what
people want. How hard is
that?”
Mayor Al Corti agreed.
“I see the survey as a very
valuable tool and it has
communicated something
to me,” he said, adding
that if the city doesn’t take
steps to address some of
the concerns raised, “then
I’m not too sure what we’re
really getting out of this
survey.”
Kristen Crane, assistant to the city manager, said staff is “still
digging into all of this”
information and will return periodically to council to present policies
and recommendations to
implement improvements.
DeSousa said, stay aware of
your surroundings. Keep your
dog on a leash. “If your dog’s
20 feet ahead of you without a
leash, you can’t control it from
interfering with a rattlesnake
and possibly getting bit.”
“People tend to freak out
about snakes for no real reason,” Lemm said.
“Snakes aren’t aggressive normally,” he added.
“When people think they’re
being aggressive, it’s because
they’re being defensive.
They’re scared for their life.”
For the snake that Joanne encountered, she said
her husband counted nine
segments on its rattle.
Lemm explained that every time a snake sheds, it gets
a new segment on its rattle.
An older snake is going to have a longer rattle,
but rattles tend to break off,
Lemm said, so you can’t age a
snake by the length of its rattle. “You just know the really
large snakes often have larger
rattles and more segments on
their rattle.”
Snakes do play an important role in the ecosystem,
especially in keeping rodent
populations at bay.
The more snakes you
kill, the more rodents you’re
going to have, and the more
hantaviruses you’re going to
have, Lemm added.
People are starting to
learn that snakes are good
for the environment, he said.
“Hopefully they keep learning that.”
FEB. 20, 2015 LEGALS
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE TS No. CA-14-640353JB Order No.: 8480784 YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
5/10/2005.
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 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): LEONARD
F. SCHUMAKER, A SINGLE
MAN Recorded: 5/24/2005 as
Instrument No. 2005-0434886
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of SAN
DIEGO County, California;
Date of Sale: 3/13/2015 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:
$327,084.77 The purported
property address is: 6381
RAINBOW HEIGHTS ROAD,
FALLBROOK,
CA
92028
Assessor’s Parcel No.: 109-25045-00 109-330-13-00 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
A17
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
City of Encinitas
Planning and Building Department
505 S. Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024
(760) 633-2710 or [email protected]
CITY OF ENCINITAS
REQUEST FOR LETTERS
OF INTEREST
To Purchase or Lease
1867 Mackinnon Avenue parcel (former fire station)
NOTICE OF PENDING ACTION ON ADMINISTRATIVE APPLICATIONS
AND COASTAL DEVELOPMENT PERMITS
In 2012 the City opened a new fire station on Birmingham
Drive and abandoned the former fire station at 1867 Mackinnon Avenue on the corner of Birmingham Drive. The
property is 0.15 acres, zoned Public/Semi-Public, and has
an abandoned fire station built in the 1970s. The City is
seeking letters of interest to either buy or lease.
Process: Letters of interest must be received by City Manager’s Office by Monday, March 2, 2015; Interested parties
will be invited to a pre-proposal meeting; Following the
meeting, there will be a walk-through of the property; At
the end of the walk-through, proposal packets will be distributed; Six weeks later, proposals are due to the City.
The letter of interest to include the following information:
Name of the firm or individual and contact address; Contact phone number and contact email address; Intended
use of the property.
Mail or email your letter of interest to:
City Manager’s Office
505 S. Vulcan Avenue
Encinitas, CA 92024
or [email protected]
Contact: Bob McSeveney, (760) 633-2613
The Planning & Building Department of the City of Encinitas is currently reviewing the following Administrative Applications. 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 (2/27, 3/13, etc.).
02/20/15 CN 17001
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:
CA-14-640353-JB . 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-14-640353-JB IDSPub
#0077820 2/20/2015 2/27/2015
3/6/2015 CN 16990
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE Trustee Sale No.
14CA00427-1
Order
No.
8444838 APN: 121-270-1000 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 04/16/2009. 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
03/12/2015 at 10:30 AM,
RSM&A Foreclosure Services,
LLC as the duly appointed
A minimum 10-calendar-day review period has been established for the following applications:
1. CASE NUMBER: 14-210 CDP
FILING DATE: August 19, 2014
APPLICANT: San Dieguito Union High School District
LOCATION: 675 Balour Dr. (APN: 259-181-01)
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: A Coastal Development Permit to authorize the Oak Crest Middle School Master Plan including the removal of existing portable classroom facilities and construction of new permanent classroom facilities
and associated site improvements. The subject property is located in the Public/Semi-Public (P/SP) 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: Roy Sapa’u (760) 633-2734 or [email protected]
2. CASE NUMBER: 14-262 CDP
FILING DATE: October 14, 2014
APPLICANT: FMRE, LLC.
LOCATION: 768 Devonshire Drive
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: A Coastal Development Permit for the demolition of an existing residence and the construction of single-family residence. The subject property is located in the Residential 5 (R-5) Zone, Scenic/Visual Corridor
Overlay Zone and the Coastal Zone. (APN: 258-234-32)
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, MARCH 2, 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.
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 1and 2. 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 and 2 are located within the Coastal Zone and require issuance of regular Coastal Development Permits. The
action of the Planning and Building Director on these items 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.
02/20/15 CN 17002
Trustee under and pursuant
to Deed of Trust Recorded
05/06/2009
as
Document
Number: 2009-0239179 of
official records in the Office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, executed
by: JUDITH L. MESSMANN,
TRUSTEE FOR THE TRUST
OF JUDITH L. MESSMANN,
TRUST DATED SEPTEMBER
21, 2004 as Trustor, Security
One Lending as Beneficiary,
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST
BIDDER FOR CASH (payable
at time of sale in lawful money
of the United States, by cash,
a cashier’s check drawn by a
state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union, or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association, or savings bank
specified in section 5102 of the
Financial Code and authorized
to do business in this state) at
the following location: At the
entrance to the East County
Regional Center by the 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, California
describing the land therein:
Legal description 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:
240 Spanish Spur, Fallbrook,
CA 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, but without covenant
or warranty, expressed or
implied,
regarding
title,
possession, or encumbrances,
to pay the remaining principal
sum of the note(s) secured
by said Deed of Trust, with
interest thereon, as provided
in said note(s), advances, if any,
under the terms of the Deed of
Trust, estimated fees, charges
and expenses of the Trustee
and of the trusts created by
said Deed of Trust, to-wit:
$431,950.39
(Estimated*)
*Accrued
interest
and
additional advances, if any,
will increase this figure
prior to sale. NOTICE TO
POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You
will be bidding on a lien, not
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) 277-4845
or visit this Internet Web
Site
www.usa-foreclosure.
com, using the file number,
14CA00427-1, assigned to
this case. Information about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not be immediately
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 beneficiary under
said Deed of Trust heretofore
executed and delivered to
the undersigned a written
Declaration of Default and
Demand for Sale, and a written
Notice of Default and Election
to Sell. The undersigned
caused said Notice of Default
and Election to Sell to be
recorded in the county where
the real property is located
and more than three months
have elapsed since such
recordation. DATE: 02/10/2015
RSM&A Foreclosure Services,
LLC 43252 Woodward Ave,
Suite 180 Bloomfield Hills,
CA 48302 (805) 804-5616 For
specific information on sales
including bid amounts call
(714) 277-4845.
Kimberly
Karas , Authorized Agent of
RSM&A Foreclosure Services,
LLC
FEI# 1045.245184
02/20/2015,
02/27/2015,
03/06/2015 CN 16989
T.S.
No.:
2013-05034CA
Loan No.: 7130792471
A.P.N.:300-460-79-00 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
03/28/2005. 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. Trustor: JACK
BUCCIARELLI, A MARRIED
MAN AS HIS SOLE &
SEPARATE PROPERTY Duly
Appointed Trustee: Western
Progressive, LLC Recorded
04/04/2005 as Instrument No.
2005-0268984 in book ---, page-- and of Official Records in
the office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
Date of Sale: 03/19/2015 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: $874,837.39
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
Coast News legals
continued on
page A18
A18
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page A17
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either
of which may charge you a
fee for this information. If
you consult either of these
resources, you should be aware
that the same lender may hold
more than one mortgage or
deed of trust on this property.
NOTICE TO
PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown
on this notice of sale may be
postponed one or more times
by the mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to
Section 2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law requires
that information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (866)-960-8299
or visit this Internet Web
site
http://www.altisource.
com/MortgageServices/
DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices.aspx
using
the file number assigned
to this case 2013-05034CA.
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: February 5, 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.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 02/20/15, 02/27/15,
03/06/15 CN 16988
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
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 6/9/2005. 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 3/12/2015 at 10:00 AM,
Old
Republic
Default
Management
Services,
a
Division of Old Republic
National
Title
Insurance
Company as duly appointed
Trustee pursuant to the Deed
of Trust, Recorded 6/17/2005
as Instrument No. 20050509385 in book --, page -- And
Modified by Loan Modification
Recorded on 04/07/2008 as
Instrument No. 2008-0180932
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of San
Diego County, California,
executed by: LEO NOVIELLO,
AN UNMARRIED MAN, as
Trustor, DOWNEY SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
F.A.,
A
FEDERALLY
CHARTERED
SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION as Beneficiary.
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST
BIDDER FOR CASH (payable
in full at time of sale by cash,
a cashier’s check drawn by a
state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union, or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association, or savings bank
specified in section 5102 of the
Financial Code and authorized
to do business in this state).
At the entrance to the east
county regional center by
statue, 250 E. Main Street, El
Cajon, CA 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, and
as more fully described in
the above referenced Deed of
Trust. The street address and
other common designation,
if any, of the real property
described above is purported
to be: 5448 WOLVERINE
TERR , CARLSBAD, CA 92008
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
in an “AS IS” condition, but
without covenant or warranty,
expressed
or
implied,
regarding title, possession,
or encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum of
the note(s) secured by said
Deed of Trust, with interest
thereon, as provided in said
note(s), advances, if any, under
the terms of the Deed of Trust,
estimated fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee and of
the trusts created by said Deed
of Trust, to-wit: $496,123.88
(Estimated). Accrued interest
and additional advances, if
any, will increase this figure
prior to sale. It is possible that
at the time of sale the opening
bid may be less than the total
indebtedness due. 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 or visit
this Internet Web site www.
priorityposting.com, using the
file number assigned to this
case 14-52723. 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 Declaration pursuant
to California Civil Code,
Section 2923.5(a) was fulfilled
when the Notice of Default
was recorded on 11/10/2014
Date: 2/12/2015 Old Republic
National
Title
Insurance
Company, as Trustee 500
City Parkway West, Suite
200, Orange, CA 92868-2913
(866) 263-5802 For Sale
Information Contact: Priority
Posting & Publishing (714)
573-1965 Dalaysia Ramirez,
Trustee Sale Officer “We
are attempting to collect a
debt, and any information we
obtain will be used for that
purpose.” P1131864 2/20, 2/27,
03/06/2015 CN 16987
Old
Republic
Default
Management
Services,
a
Division of Old Republic
National
Title
Insurance
Company as duly appointed
Trustee pursuant to the
Deed of Trust, Recorded
12/15/2004 as Instrument
No. 2004-1180498 in book --,
page -- of Official Records in
the office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
executed by: ROCKY K.
SPEARS AND
BRIDGET
M. MORAN, as Trustor,
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYSTEMS
INC AS NOMINEE FOR RBC
MORTGAGE COMPANY as
Beneficiary. WILL SELL AT
PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST
BIDDER
FOR
CASH (payable in full at time
of sale by cash, a cashier’s
check drawn by a state or
national bank, a check drawn
by a state or federal credit
union, or a check drawn by
a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association, or savings bank
specified in section 5102 of the
Financial Code and authorized
to do business in this state).
At the entrance to the east
county regional center by
statue, 250 E. Main Street, El
Cajon, CA 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, and
as more fully described in
the above referenced Deed of
Trust. The street address and
other common designation,
if any, of the real property
described above is purported
to be: 2443 CALLE SAN
CLEMANTE,
ENCINITAS,
CA 92024 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 in an “AS IS” condition,
but without covenant or
warranty,
expressed
or
implied,
regarding
title,
possession, or encumbrances,
to pay the remaining principal
sum of the note(s) secured
by said Deed of Trust, with
interest thereon, as provided
in said note(s), advances, if
any, under the terms of the
Deed of Trust, estimated
fees, charges and expenses
of the Trustee and of the
trusts created by said Deed
of Trust, to-wit: $878,996.56
(Estimated). Accrued interest
and additional advances, if
any, will increase this figure
prior to sale. It is possible that
at the time of sale the opening
bid may be less than the total
indebtedness due. 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 or visit
this Internet Web site www.
priorityposting.com, using the
file number assigned to this
case 14-53191. 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 Declaration pursuant
to California Civil Code,
Section 2923.5(a) was fulfilled
when the Notice of Default
was recorded on 10/31/2014
Date: 2/11/2015 Old Republic
National
Title
Insurance
Company, as Trustee 500
City Parkway West, Suite
200, Orange, CA 92868-2913
(866) 263-5802 For Sale
Information Contact: Priority
Posting & Publishing (714)
573-1965 Dalaysia Ramirez,
Trustee Sale Officer “We
are attempting to collect a
debt, and any information we
obtain will be used for that
purpose.” P1131695 2/20, 2/27,
03/06/2015 CN 16986
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
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 7023.110638. 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: February 11, 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
# 7023.110638: 02/20/2015,
02/27/2015, 03/06/2015
CN 16985
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
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 More fully described
in said Deed of Trust Street
Address or other common
designation of real property:
2572 Vantage Way, Del Mar,
CA 92014-2943 A.P.N.: 300460-79-00 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: $874,837.39. 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
T.S. No.: 14-52723 TSG Order
No.:
02-14024968
A.P.N.:
209-112-60-00
ATTENTION
RECORDER:
THE
FOLLOWING REFERENCE
TO
AN
ATTACHED
SUMMARY IS APPLICABLE
TO THE NOTICE PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR ONLY
PURSUANT TO CA CIVIL
CODE 2923.3 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
T.S. No.: 14-53191 TSG Order
No.:
02-14041856
A.P.N.:
264-153-35-00
ATTENTION
RECORDER:
THE
FOLLOWING REFERENCE
TO
AN
ATTACHED
SUMMARY IS APPLICABLE
TO THE NOTICE PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR ONLY
PURSUANT TO CA CIVIL
CODE 2923.3 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
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IMPORMASYON
SA
DOKUMENTONG
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NA
NAKALAKIP
LƯU Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ
BẢN TRÌNH BÀY TÓM LƯỢC
VỀ THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI
LIỆU NÀY
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 12/6/2004. 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.
On 3/12/2015 at 10:00 AM,
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE File No. 7023.110638
Title Order No. NXCA0147739 APN 157-402-22-00
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST,
DATED 02/29/2012. 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): Albert H.
Finan, III, A maried Man as His
Sole and Separate Property
Recorded:
03/06/2012,
as
Instrument No. 2012-0131039,
of Official Records of SAN
DIEGO County, California.
Date of Sale: 03/12/2015 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: 4592 VINYARD
STREET,
OCEANSIDE,
CA 92057 Assessors Parcel
No. 157-402-22-00 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 $280,915.17. 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
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE TS No. CA-14-619225HL Order No.: 140150314-CAVOI YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 1/26/2007. 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.
FEB. 20, 2015 A19
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
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): MARTHA AVILA,
A SINGLE WOMAN Recorded:
1/30/2007 as Instrument No.
2007-0066033
of
Official
Records in the office of the
Recorder of SAN DIEGO
County, California; Date of
Sale: 3/13/2015 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:
$1,619,237.24 The purported
property address is: 4912
CONEJO RD, FALLBROOK,
CA 92028 Assessor’s Parcel
No.: 121-121-06-00 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: CA14-619225-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. 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-14-619225-HL IDSPub
#0077656 2/20/2015 2/27/2015
3/6/2015 CN 16984
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: CA14-644345-BF . 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-14-644345-BF IDSPub
#0077072 2/20/2015 2/27/2015
3/6/2015 CN 16983
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: MATTHEW
C NARBER AND MARY K
MOLLOY, HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
Duly Appointed Trustee: LAW
OFFICES OF LES ZIEVE
Deed of Trust recorded
5/1/2006 as Instrument No.
2006-0304980 in book , page
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of San
Diego County, California,
Date of Sale:3/13/2015 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 Estimated amount
of unpaid balance and other
charges:
$678,436.28 Note:
Because
the
Beneficiary
reserves the right to bid less
than the total debt owed, it
is possible that at the time
of the sale the opening bid
may be less than the total
debt owed. Street Address or
other common designation of
real property:
7 0 0 8
VISTA OLAS CARLSBAD,
CALIFORNIA
92009
Described as follows: As more
fully described on said Deed
of Trust. A.P.N #.: 215-571-1300 The undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the street
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
above. If no street address
or other common designation
is shown, directions to the
location of the property
may be obtained by sending
a written request to the
beneficiary within 10 days of
the date of first publication of
this Notice of Sale. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS:
If you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing
the highest bid at a trustee
auction does not automatically
entitle you to free and clear
ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that the
lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible
for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned
off, before you can receive
clear title to the property. You
are encouraged to investigate
the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee for
this information. If you consult
either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
lender may hold more than
one mortgage or deed of trust
on the property. NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this notice of
sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a
court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (714) 848-9272
or visit this Internet Web
site
www.elitepostandpub.
com, using the file number
assigned to this case 1427513.
Information about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information
or
on
the
Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend
the scheduled sale. Dated:
2/12/2015 Law
Offices of
Les Zieve, as Trustee 30
Corporate Park, Suite 450
Irvine, CA 92606 For NonAutomated Sale Information,
call: (714) 848-7920 For Sale
Information: (714) 848-9272
www.elitepostandpub.com
Natalie Franklin, Trustee
Sale Officer THIS FIRM
IS
ATTEMPTING
TO
COLLECT A DEBT AND
ANY INFORMATION WE
OBTAINED WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE. EPP
11253 2/20, 2/27, 3/6/2015.
CN 16982
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:
$1,518,282.87 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) 477-7869
CLEAR
RECON
CORP.
CLEAR
RECON CORP. 4375 Jutland
Drive Suite 200San Diego,
California 92117 EXHIBIT
A REF. NO. 2011-101404
LEGAL
DESCRIPTION
THAT PORTION OF LOT 4,
IN BLOCK 30, OF RANCHO
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE TS No. CA-14-644345BF Order No.: 140380283-CAVOI YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 6/30/2008. 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
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): RANDY L.
ALBRIGHT AND BEVERLY I.
ALBRIGHT, HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
Recorded:
7/7/2008
as
Instrument No. 2008-0362328
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of SAN
DIEGO County, California;
Date of Sale: 3/13/2015 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:
$184,055.88 The purported
property address is: 3563
SURF PLACE, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92056 Assessor’s Parcel
No.: 168-120-40 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
T.S. No. 14-27513
A P N :
215-571-13-00 NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S
SALE
YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
4/14/2006.
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.
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
APN: 266-293-01-00 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
CONTACT A LAWYER On
3/5/2015 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,
Coast News legals
continued on
page A20
A20
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page A19
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’
WEST156.21
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. IN
THE ISSUANCE OF ANY
FURTHER
EVIDENCE
OF TITLE THE LEGAL
DESCRIPTION SHOWN IN
THIS GUARANTEE SHOULD
BE USED IN PLACE OF
THAT SHOWN ON THE
ABOVE MENTIONED DEED
OF TRUST AND NOTICE OF
DEFAULT. 02/13/15, 02/20/15,
02/27/15 CN 16969
T.S. No.: 14-0326 Loan No.:
*******741
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT ATTACHED
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
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
[PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 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
8/18/2005
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
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
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: HARRY
L. ELMORE, BARBARA M.
ELMORE AND DIANE R.
SMITH Trustee: ATTORNEY
LENDER SERVICES, INC
Recorded
8/26/2005
as
Instrument No. 2005-0739155
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of San
Diego County, California, Date
of Sale: 3/10/2015 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 unpaid balance and
other charges: $1,175,156.50
The
purported
property
address is: 22 Gateview Drive
Fallbrook, CA 92028 A.P.N.:
123-440-17-00 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
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
www.priorityposting.com for
information regarding the sale
of this property, using the file
number assigned to this case,
14-0326 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: 2/9/2015 ATTORNEY
LENDER SERVICES, INC
Diane Weifenbach, Trustee
Sale Officer 5120 E. LaPalma
Avenue, #209 Anaheim ,CA
92807 Telephone: 714-6956637 Sales Line: 714-5731965 Sales Website: www.
priorityposting.com
This
office is attempting to collect
a debt and any information
obtained will be used for that
purpose. P1131234 2/13, 2/20,
02/27/2015 CN 16967
the successful bidder shall
have no further recourse.
The undersigned mortgagee,
beneficiary or authorized
agent for the mortgagee
or beneficiary pursuant to
California Civil Code Section
2923.5(b) declares that the
mortgagee, beneficiary or the
mortgagee’s or beneficiary’s
authorized agent has either
contacted the borrower or
tried with due diligence
to contact the borrower as
required by California Civil
Code 2923.5. NOTICE TO
POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding
on this property lien, you
should understand that there
are risks involved in bidding
at a trustee auction. You will
be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing
the highest bid at a trustee
auction does not automatically
entitle you to free and clear
ownership of the property. You
should also be aware that the
lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible
for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned
off, before you can receive
clear title to the property. You
are encouraged to investigate
the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee for
this information. If you consult
either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
lender may hold more than
one mortgage or deed of trust
on the property. NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: The sale
date shown on this notice of
sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a
court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call 714-730-2727 or
visit this Internet Web site
www.ndscorp.com/sales, using
the file number assigned
to this case 14-20842-SPCA.
Information
about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information or on the Internet
Web site. The best way to verify
postponement
information
is to attend the scheduled
sale. Date: 02/09/2015 Tiffany
and Bosco, P.A. As agent for
National Default Servicing
Corporation 1230 Columbia
Street, Suite 680 San Diego,
CA 92101 Phone 888-264-4010
Sales Line 714-730-2727; Sales
Website:
www.ndscorp.com/
sales Lana Kacludis, Trustee
Sales Supervisor A-4509073
02/13/2015,
02/20/2015,
02/27/2015 CN 16966
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
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 12/31/2004. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT
A
LAWYER.
On 3/5/2015 at 10:00 AM,
Old
Republic
Default
Management
Services,
a
Division of Old Republic
National
Title
Insurance
Company as duly appointed
Trustee pursuant to the Deed
of Trust, Recorded 1/7/2005
as Instrument No. 20050018918 in book --, page -- of
Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, executed
by: JOSEPH F WINGATE,
A MARRIED MAN AS
HIS SOLE & SEPARATE
PROPERTY , as Trustor,
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYSTEMS,
INC., AS NOMINEE FOR
AMERICA’S
WHOLESALE
LENDER
as
Beneficiary.
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST
BIDDER FOR CASH (payable
in full at time of sale by cash,
a cashier’s check drawn by a
state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union, or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association, or savings bank
specified in section 5102
of the Financial Code and
authorized to do business in
this state). At the entrance
to the east county regional
center by statue, 250 E. Main
Street, El Cajon, CA 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, and as more
fully described in the above
referenced Deed of Trust.
The street address and other
common designation, if any,
of the real property described
above is purported to be:
1415 SAN ELIJO AVENUE,
ENCINITAS,
CA
92007
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
in an “AS IS” condition, but
without covenant or warranty,
expressed
or
implied,
regarding title, possession,
or encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum of
the note(s) secured by said
Deed of Trust, with interest
thereon, as provided in said
note(s), advances, if any, under
the terms of the Deed of Trust,
estimated fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee and of
the trusts created by said Deed
of Trust, to-wit: $1,784,414.03
(Estimated). Accrued interest
and additional advances, if
any, will increase this figure
prior to sale. It is possible that
at the time of sale the opening
bid may be less than the total
indebtedness due. 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 or visit
this Internet Web site www.
priorityposting.com, using the
file number assigned to this
case 14-53123. 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 Declaration pursuant
to California Civil Code,
Section 2923.5(a) was fulfilled
when the Notice of Default
was recorded on 10/23/2014
Date: 2/6/2015 Old Republic
National
Title
Insurance
Company, as Trustee 500
City Parkway West, Suite
200, Orange, CA 92868-2913
(866) 263-5802 For Sale
Information Contact: Priority
Posting & Publishing (714)
573-1965 Dalaysia Ramirez,
Trustee Sale Officer “We
are attempting to collect a
debt, and any information we
obtain will be used for that
purpose.” P1131031 2/13, 2/20,
02/27/2015 CN 16964
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE T.S. No. 14-20842-SP-CA
Title No. 140124508-CA-MAI
ATTENTION
RECORDER:
THE
FOLLOWING
REFERENCE
TO
AN
ATTACHED
SUMMARY
IS APPLICABLE TO THE
NOTICE PROVIDED TO THE
TRUSTOR ONLY PURSUANT
TO CIVIL CODE 2923.3 NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT
ATTACHED
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 02/09/2006. 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.
A public auction sale to
the
highest
bidder
for
cash,
(cashier’s
check(s)
must be made payable to
National Default Servicing
Corporation), drawn on a state
or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union, or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association, or savings bank
specified in Section 5102
of the Financial Code and
authorized to do business
in this state; will be held by
the duly appointed trustee
as shown below, of all right,
title, and interest conveyed to
and now held by the trustee
in the hereinafter described
property under and pursuant
to a Deed of Trust described
below. The sale will be made
in an “as is” condition, but
without covenant or warranty,
expressed
or
implied,
regarding title, possession,
or encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum of the
note(s) secured by the Deed of
Trust, with interest and late
charges thereon, as provided
in the note(s), advances,
under the terms of the Deed
of Trust, interest thereon, fees,
charges and expenses of the
Trustee for the total amount
(at the time of the initial
publication of the Notice of
Sale) reasonably estimated to
be set forth below. The amount
may be greater on the day of
sale. Trustor: Daryn Goodwin,
and Tanya Goodwin, husband
and wife as joint tenants
Duly
Appointed
Trustee:
NATIONAL
DEFAULT
SERVICING CORPORATION
Recorded
02/17/2006
as
Instrument No. 2006-0115176
(or Book, Page) of the Official
Records of SAN DIEGO
County, California. Date of
Sale: 03/05/2015 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
Estimated amount of unpaid
balance and other charges:
$1,330,279.97 Street Address
or other common designation
of real property: 521 HIDDEN
RIDGE COURT, ENCINITAS,
CA 92024-5838 A.P.N.: 257521-21-00 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability
for any incorrectness of
the street address or other
common designation, if any,
shown above. If no street
address or other common
designation
is
shown,
directions to the location of
the property may be obtained
by sending a written request
to the beneficiary within
10 days of the date of first
publication of this Notice of
Sale. 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
T.S. No.: 14-53123 TSG Order
No.:
02-14039719
A.P.N.:
260-620-81-00
ATTENTION
RECORDER:
THE
FOLLOWING REFERENCE
TO
AN
ATTACHED
SUMMARY IS APPLICABLE
TO THE NOTICE PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR ONLY
PURSUANT TO CA CIVIL
CODE 2923.3 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
T.S. No.: 14-53232 TSG Order
No.:
02-14042329
A.P.N.:
162-283-20-00
ATTENTION
RECORDER:
THE
FOLLOWING REFERENCE
TO
AN
ATTACHED
SUMMARY IS APPLICABLE
TO THE NOTICE PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR ONLY
PURSUANT TO CA CIVIL
CODE 2923.3 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
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 12/8/2004. 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.
On 3/6/2015 at 10:00 AM,
Old
Republic
Default
Management
Services,
a
Division of Old Republic
National
Title
Insurance
Company as duly appointed
Trustee pursuant to the Deed
FEB. 20, 2015 A21
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
of Trust, Recorded 12/10/2004
as Instrument No. 20041167619 in book --, page -- of
Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, executed
by: TOMASA MONTERO, A
SINGLE WOMAN, as Trustor,
MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYSTEMS,
INC.,
AS
NOMINEE
FOR
COUNTRYWIDE
HOME
LOANS,
INC.,
A
CORPORATION,
ITS
SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS
as Beneficiary. WILL SELL
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR
CASH (payable in full at time
of sale by cash, a cashier’s
check drawn by a state or
national bank, a check drawn
by a state or federal credit
union, or a check drawn by
a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings
association, or savings bank
specified in section 5102
of the Financial Code and
authorized to do business in
this state). At the entrance
to the east county regional
center by statue, 250 E. Main
Street, El Cajon, CA 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, and as more
fully described in the above
referenced Deed of Trust.
The street address and other
common designation, if any,
of the real property described
above is purported to be: 4146
GALBAR ST, 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
made in an “AS IS” condition,
but without covenant or
warranty,
expressed
or
implied,
regarding
title,
possession, or encumbrances,
to pay the remaining principal
sum of the note(s) secured
by said Deed of Trust, with
interest thereon, as provided
in said note(s), advances, if
any, under the terms of the
Deed of Trust, estimated
fees, charges and expenses
of the Trustee and of the
trusts created by said Deed
of Trust, to-wit: $468,483.49
(Estimated). Accrued interest
and additional advances, if
any, will increase this figure
prior to sale. It is possible that
at the time of sale the opening
bid may be less than the total
indebtedness due. 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 or visit
this Internet Web site www.
priorityposting.com, using the
file number assigned to this
case 14-53232. 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 Declaration pursuant
to California Civil Code,
Section 2923.5(a) was fulfilled
when the Notice of Default
was recorded on 10/22/2014
Date: 2/4/2015 Old Republic
National
Title
Insurance
Company, as Trustee 500
City Parkway West, Suite
200, Orange, CA 92868-2913
(866) 263-5802 For Sale
Information Contact: Priority
Posting & Publishing (714)
573-1965 Dalaysia Ramirez,
Trustee Sale Officer “We
are attempting to collect a
debt, and any information we
obtain will be used for that
purpose.” P1130696 2/13, 2/20,
02/27/2015 CN 16963
A DEED OF TRUST, DATED
8/18/2006.
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
3/5/2015 at 3:00 PM, CLEAR
RECON CORP., as duly
appointed
trustee
under
and pursuant to Deed of
Trust recorded 8/24/2006, as
Instrument No. 2006-0605142,
of Official Records in the
office of the County Recorder
of San Diego County, State of
CALIFORNIA executed by:
TAMARA
GERCHUFSKY,
A SINGLE WOMAN 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 ON SAID
DEED OF TRUST The street
address and other common
designation, if any, of the real
property described above is
purported to be: 338 PORTER
STREET FALLBROOK, CA
92028-0000 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:
$620,944.63If 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 014526CA.
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” THE LAND REFERRED
TO IN THIS GUARANTEE
IS
SITUATED
IN THE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
( U N I N C O R P O R AT E D
AREA), COUNTY OF SAN
DIEGO AND IS DESCRIBED
AS FOLLOWS: LOT 6 IN
BLOCK C OF VILLINGERS
SUBDIVISION OF BLOCK
66, OF WEST FALLBROOK,
IN
THE
COUNTY
OF
SAN DIEGO, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING
TO MAP THEREOF NO. 333,
FILED IN THE OFFICE OF
THE COUNTY RECORDER
OF SAN DIEGO COUNTY,
AUGUST 17, 1887 02/13/15,
02/20/15, 02/27/15 CN 16962
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: 5045 CASPIAN DRIVE,
OCEANSIDE,
CA
92057
The
undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability for any
incorrectness of the street
address and other common
designation, if any, shown
herein. Said sale will be
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 $55,622.22 (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,
CA08003962-14-1. 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: February 3, 2015 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA0800396214-1 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.
CA15-000220-1, PUB DATES:
02/13/2015,
02/20/2015,
02/27/2015 CN 16959
CENTER BY THE STATUE,
250 E. MAIN STREET, EL
CAJON,
CA
Estimated
amount of unpaid balance and
other charges: $499,736.38
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 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 More fully
described in said Deed of
Trust Street Address or other
common designation of real
property: 4542 Big Sur Street,
Oceanside, CA 92057
A.P.N.:
157-631-46-00
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:
$499,736.38. 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
APN: 103-055-10-00 T.S. No.
014526-CA NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE Pursuant
to CA Civil Code 2923.3
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
APN:
157-801-06-00
TS
No:
CA08003962-14-1
TO
No: 8460343 NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE
IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED
OF TRUST DATED February
6, 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
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. On
March 16, 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
25, 2008, as Instrument No.
2008-0095260,
of
official
records in the Office of
the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, executed
by MASOOD AHAD AND
SHAKILA AHAD, HUSBAND
AND WIFE, AS JOINT
TENANTS, as Trustor(s), in
favor of GUARANTY BANK
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
T.S.
No.:
2014-03537CA
Loan No.: 7192256746
A.P.N.:157-631-46-00 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
02/22/2006. 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:
JACOB
D
HARDWICK AND LAUREN
N HARDWICK, HUSBAND
AND WIFE AS COMMUNITY
PROPERTY Duly Appointed
Trustee: Western Progressive,
LLC Recorded 02/28/2006 as
Instrument No. 2006-0141138
in book ---, page--- and of
Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, Date of
Sale: 03/11/2015 at 10:30 AM
Place of Sale:
A
T
THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
Coast News legals
continued on
page A22
A22
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page A21
deed of trust on this property.
NOTICE TO
PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown
on this notice of sale may be
postponed one or more times
by the mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to
Section 2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law requires
that information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (866)-960-8299
or visit this Internet Web
site
http://www.altisource.
com/MortgageServices/
DefaultManagement/
TrusteeServices.aspx
using
the file number assigned
to this case 2014-03537CA.
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: January 23, 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.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 02/13/15, 02/20/15,
02/27/15 CN 16958
T.S.
No.:
2014-02176CA
Loan No.: 7130973428
A.P.N.:161-342-36-00 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
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
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
10/03/2006. 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: Grant L. Johnston
and Timothy Howard Duly
Appointed Trustee: Western
Progressive, LLC Recorded
10/10/2006 as Instrument No.
2006-0720958 in book ---, page-- and of Official Records in
the office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
Date of Sale: 03/12/2015 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: $277,288.97
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 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 More
fully described in said Deed
of Trust Street Address or
other common designation
of
real
property:
1467
Highridge Drive, Oceanside,
CA 92054 A.P.N.: 161-342-3600 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:
$277,288.97. 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.
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 2014-02176CA.
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: January 29, 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.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 02/13/15, 02/20/15,
LEGALS
02/27/15 CN 16957
T.S.
No.:
2014-00783CA
Loan No.: 7130882496
A.P.N.:158-550-62-00 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 02/15/2006. 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: Jacqueline Dunlop,
An Unmarried Woman Duly
Appointed Trustee: Western
Progressive, LLC Recorded
02/17/2006 as Instrument No.
2006-0117684 in book ---, page-- and of Official Records in
the office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
Date of Sale: 03/13/2015 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: $501,921.99
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 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 More
fully described in said Deed
of Trust Street Address or
other common designation
of
real
property:
5035
Cherrywood Drive, Oceanside,
CA 92056 A.P.N.: 158-550-6200 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
FEB. 20, 2015
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
of the Notice of Sale is:
$501,921.99. 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.
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 2014-00783CA.
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: January 29, 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.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 02/13/15, 02/20/15,
02/27/15 CN 16956
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
12/05/2006. 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: Sharlene R. Beltran
and Michael F. Beltran,
Wife and Husband, as Joint
Tenants
Duly
Appointed
Trustee: Western Progressive,
LLC Recorded 12/08/2006 as
Instrument No. 2006-0872311
in book ---, page--- and of
Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, Date of
Sale: 03/11/2015 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: $448,728.84
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
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 More fully described
in said Deed of Trust Street
Address or other common
designation of real property:
3623 Harwich Drive, Carlsbad,
CA 92010 A.P.N.: 167-553-0500 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: $448,728.84. 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
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.
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 2014-00408CA.
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: January 26, 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.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 02/13/15, 02/20/15,
02/27/15 CN 16955
T.S.
No.:
2014-00408CA
Loan No.: 706411253
A.P.N.:167-553-05-00 NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S
SALE
PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
T.S.
No.:
2014-04193CA
Loan No.: 713270133
A.P.N.:215-240-18-01 NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S
SALE
PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
REFERRED TO BELOW IS
NOT ATTACHED TO THE
Coast News legals
continued on
page B7
FEB. 20, 2015 A23
T he C oast News EST. 1985
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CYBERKNIFE OF SOUTHERN
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Tel: 760-734-3750 | TOLL-FREE 888-54-CYBER (29237)
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*NOTE: This information was presented
at The CyberKnife Society Scientific
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please contact Accuray directly as we do
not have access to the actual data.
Treatment Protocol is now
available for patients with
low risk (early stage)
prostate cancer.
Call today to see if you are
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TRUST YOUR
TREATMENT TO
THE AREA’S
TRUSTED
AUTHORITY
760-734-3750
At Oncology Therapies of Vista, Pacific
Radiation Oncology Medical Group and
CyberKnife of Southern California at Vista,
our mission is simple: to provide the most
informed, experienced and effective
radiation and radiosurgical care in San
Diego County and surrounding
communities. We know that, no matter how
sophisticated or complex, a tool is only as
good as the specialist wielding it. When it
comes to treating tumors, we believe you
should be able to trust not just the most
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advanced technologies but to the physicians
who know radiosurgery and radiation
therapy best.
We help to create a multifaceted
partnership between the patient, their
family members, and every Doctor involved
in their care. We do this - and maintain
open, honest, and frequent interaction because it is known to help lead to the best
outcomes. Our physicians helped introduce
the county to radiosurgery and have the
area’s largest volume of experience.
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and CyberKnife of
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(IGRT), Intensity Modulated
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well as CyberKnife
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B
FEB. 20, 2015
SECTION
Council
will discuss
possible
pay raise
small
talk
jean gillette
Tales of
war and
treasure
By Bianca Kaplanek
A
s Russia rattles its saber
in
Eastern
Europe, I was reminded of one of my favorite
stories that came from
where I least expected it.
It came from a neighborhood mom, a friend whose
kids went to my school.
One day in fall 2003, she
mentioned that she and
her family had gone to
Latvia that summer. Her
husband, she explained,
is half Latvian and his
mother – we’ll call her Sonia – was born there. That
alone is interesting, but
the tale has just begun.
Because Latvia was
part of the Soviet Union
until 1993, the trip that
summer was only the second time Sonia had been
back since her family escaped in 1944. For almost
50 years, Sonia kept her
papers and her memories
intact. When she finally
returned, she was able
to prove ownership of a
country house that had
been confiscated by the
Communists so many decades ago.
On this second trip
back, her sons came along.
While she was just a child
in 1944, Sonia clearly
remembered seeing her
father bury a box next to
the house just before the
family fled. She had no
idea what was in it.
“Sonia walked up to
the house, pointed and
said, ‘He buried it right
there,’” my friend explained.
To everyone’s amazement, a foot or two beneath the ground was
a box that had gone undiscovered by Germans,
Russians or renters for
60 years. And inside, like
the climax of a blockbuster Hollywood movie, was
treasure. Loose gemstones
— diamonds, rubies and
more — various pieces of
gold jewelry and even a
bar of bullion.
Now that’s a summer
vacation to remember.
The family returned the
next summer and excavated the basement. That
time they unearthed bottles of 1940 Martel brandy
and cases of champagne.
I was on the edge of
my seat asking her a dozen questions, all showing
my sad ignorance of Eastern Europe, World War
TURN TO SMALL TALK ON B14
Eames Shaw finds himself at a dead end in the maze wall. Many of the mirrored tiles were replaced after more than a decade of wear and tear
from weather and occasional vandals. Photo by Ellen Wright
After a year of maintenance,
Escondido’s sculpture garden re-opens
By Ellen Wright
ESCONDIDO — “Queen Califia’s
Magical Circle” sculpture garden in
Kit Carson Park re-opened to the public the second Saturday of each month
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. after undergoing maintenance.
The park is only open when volunteer docents are available to prevent vandalism and excessive wear
and tear on the mosaic tile sculptures.
On Feb. 14, visitors came to enjoy
the whimsical garden by artist Niki
de Saint Phalle.
The entrance begins with a black
and white tiled maze. Mirrors dot the
maze and caution tape is a reminder
Underneath “The Eagle” is a rich blue celestial mosaic. Visitors explored the under belly of “The
TURN TO SCULPTURE ON B14 Eagle” and were given a quick reprieve from the heat.
SOLANA
BEACH
— At the request of Mayor Lesa Heebner at the
Feb. 11 meeting, council
members will discuss the
possibility of approving a
raise for themselves at a
future meeting.
Each of the five members currently receives
a monthly stipend of
$712.58, an amount that
was last adjusted in 2008.
Prior to that they were
paid $593.82.
According to government code, council compensation can only be increased by an ordinance.
Since a city council is the
only body that can pass
an ordinance, it’s the only
one authorized to approve
a salary increase.
State laws also determine the maximum
amount of an increase
and when it can occur.
The initial amount council members can receive
is based on the city’s population. Each increase
can be no more than 5
percent for each calendar year since the last
increase.
Raises can only take
effect following an election when a new term of
office begins.
The codes also require council members to
take a salary, but in the
past many have donated the paycheck to local
charities.
In addition to bimonthly council meetTURN TO RAISE ON B14
New business presents a balancing act for San Marcos
By Aaron Burgin
SAN MARCOS — When
San Marcos’ “Furniture Row”
was borne in 1979 when Jerome’s opened on Los Vallecitos Boulevard, city and business officials saw it as a way
to keep new homeowners in
the rapidly growing community shopping locally to furnish
their new suburban homes.
Over the years, the
stretch of home furnishing
and similar retail stores along
the street that faces state
Route 78 has largely remained
dedicated to those types of
businesses.
But with the impending
opening of Sky Zone trampoline park in one of the strip’s
largest storefronts, the city is
presented with a precarious
balancing act of bringing in a
coveted attraction while not
opening up a Pandora’s Box
that could alter the face of a
commercial area that generates more than 10 percent of
Furniture Row in San Marcos is lined with mostly home furnishing and other similar types of businesses.
Later this year, a brand new type of business, Sky Zone, an indoor trampoline park, will have city officials
keeping an eye on its performance. Photo by Tony Cagala
the city’s sales tax revenue — ly,” City Manager Jack Griffin
said.
the lifeblood of city coffers.
“It’s a great business and
“It definitely is something that we will watch close- we are really excited about it,
but the other side of it is that
we lose that sales tax revenue
that a furniture store would
generate,” he added.
The city technically can’t
prohibit a business like Sky
Zone from occupying space on
furniture row if it meets the
city’s land-use and zoning requirements; it can only place
conditions on the business to
ensure its compatibility with
the neighboring businesses.
These conditions are outlined in what is called a conditional-use permit, which typically last five years, and then
the city can decide after that
period whether to extend the
permit or let it lapse.
These temporary permits
give both the city and property owner flexibility if another
business expresses interest in
the property that might be a
better fit, Griffin said.
While the city might be
temporarily losing the sales
tax revenue associated with
the furniture stores, the benefits of Sky Zone’s presence is
TURN TO FURNITURE ROW ON B14
B2
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
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©2015 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage office is owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker® and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered
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information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals. * Based on information total sales volume from California Real Estate Technology Services, Santa Barbara Association of REALTORS, SANDICOR, Inc. for the period 1/1/2013 through 12/31/2013 in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa
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FEB. 20, 2015 B3
T he C oast News Odd Files Remember Our Fallen memorial stops in Oceanside
By Chuck Shepherd
The Unhoneymoon
A Saratoga Springs,
New York, resort has begun accepting totally
defeated husbands and
wives for a relaxed weekend that includes divorce,
bringing to America a
concept already successful in six European cities.
The Gideon Putnam Resort & Spa charges $5,000
for a couple to check in
on a Friday, married, but
leave Sunday officially
single (complete with all
legal niceties and various
resort amenities, including, of course, separate
rooms). Even though the
couple must be fairly level-headed to accept this
approach, the facility
manager expressed concern that since the resort
also books weddings, the
“uncouplers” might inadvertently witness difficult
scenes. (Gideon Putnam
has hosted four divorces
so far, but, said the European founder of the package service, “hundreds”
of couples have used the
services in Europe.)
Weird Science
Because We Can: Scientists at the University
of California, Irvine (with
Australian partners) announced in January that
they had figured out how
to unboil a hen’s egg. (After boiling, the egg’s proteins become “tangled,”
but the scientists’ device
can untangle them, allowing the egg white to return to its previous state.)
Actually, the researchers’
paper promises dramatically reduced costs in
several applications, from
cancer treatments to food
production, where similar,
clean untanglings might
take “thousands” of times
longer.
Police Report
(1) The Knoxville
(Tennessee) Police Department reminded motorists (via its Facebook
page) that all vehicles
need working headlights
for night driving. Included was a recent department photo of the car of a
Sweetwater, Tenn., motorist who was ticketed twice
the same evening with no
headlights but only flashlights tied to his bumper
with bungee cords. (2)
A forlorn-appearing Anneliese Young, 82, was
arrested at a CVS pharmacy in Augusta, Ga., in
February after store security allegedly caught her
shoplifting a container of
“Sexiest Fantasies” body
spray that, according to
the packaging, “provides
a burst of sensuality ...
as addictive and seductive as the woman who
wears it,” “sure to drive
any man wild.”
facebook.com/
coastnewsgroup
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — Remember Our Fallen traveling memorial made a fiveday stop in Oceanside Feb.
9 to Feb. 14. What uniquely
stands out about the memorial are the personal photos
and stories of each California man and woman who
died in combat since 9-11.
Each soldier is pictured
in uniform, and in a second
photo holding his or her
child, or wearing his or her
high school sports uniform.
There are also mementos
and letters left by family
and friends that continue to
travel with the exhibit.
The California memorial has photos of over 700 soldiers. It filled the ballroom
of the Veterans Association
of North County (VANC)
in Oceanside. Sandra Silva
Fichter, VANC vice president, said some visitors
came back a second day to
take it all in.
To date Remember Our
Fallen memorials are completed for 15 states. Currently each memorial travels within its home state.
Future plans are for all 50
continental states memorials to travel together as one
exhibit.
The idea for the memorial exhibit started four
years ago when Bill and
Evonne Williams were
moved by a newspaper ar-
Tom and Carolyn Wachter, of Carlsbad, view Remember Our Fallen.
Carolyn Wachter said she read each soldiers name as her way to say
thank you. Photo by Promise Yee
ticle in which a Nebraskan
father of a fallen solider
said he was sad that people
would forget his son, and
the war was not even over.
This inspired the Williams, who have four sons in
the military two serving in
the Army and two serving in
the Marines, to create a memorial of Nebraska fallen
soldiers. They researched,
contacted each family for
photos, and opened the exhibit.
The impact of the memorial led them to begin researching other states.
Surf museum celebrates 29 years
OCEANSIDE — Tickets are on sale now for the
annual Members’ Party for
the California Surf Museum from noon to 4 p.m. Feb.
22 at the museum, 312 Pier
View Way.
As part of its 29th anniversary celebration, CSM
will be paying a special
tribute Chuck Allen, Byron Jessup, Lollie Taylor
and Ed Thomas, four elder
members who’ve played a
noteworthy role in helping
the museum compile its
outstanding collection of
artifacts, memorabilia and
stories.
Allen is an aviation pioneer and original member
of the Palos Verdes Surfing Club whose balsa/redwood PVSC board has been
an iconic fixture at CSM
for years.
Jessup was an early
Oceanside lifeguard and
mentor to Phil Edwards and
other notables, who recently donated his Hobie balsa
board to CSM’s showroom.
Taylor is an Oceanside
bodysurfer and mat-riding matriarch whose love
of catching waves extends
down through her family
for four generations. Thomas is an aerospace engineer
and early San Diego surfer
whose surfboard literally
“rescued” the museum in
the mid-1990s.
In addition to honoring
its special guests, festivities
will include a raffle for a
with proceeds going directly toward preservation supplies for the museum. Music and entertainment will
be provided by local singer-songwriter Dave Sheils.
Oceanside's Teri Cafe will
offer a Hawaiian-style plate
lunch for $11 and there will
be a no-host bar staffed by
volunteers from Oceanside
Glasstile.
Admission is free to all
members and general admission is $10 at the door.
CSM requests attendees RSVP for this event by
calling (760) 721-6876, ext.
0. Each RSVP will automatically receive two free
raffle tickets for our prize
drawings.
@CoastNewsGroup
To date California,
Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa,
Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas,
and Wisconsin memorials
are completed, and recent
fallen soldiers in those
states continue to be added.
Patriotic Productions
nonprofit was founded and
has grown to over a dozen
volunteers who transport
the exhibits and book host
sites.
Tom Williams, son of
Bill and Evonne and an
active duty Marine based
in Camp Pendleton, transports and sets up the California memorial.
“It all fits in the bed of
a semi truck flatbed,” Tom
Williams said. “That’s the
point to have it travel all
around, and accomplish the
mission of not forgetting.”
Tom said the 50 states
memorial is halfway completed with the states of
California, Texas and Florida, which have large military populations, done.
Research is underway
on the remaining states,
and is still personally conducted by Bill and Evonne
Williams.
“They contact families through letters, social
media, phone books,” Tom
Williams said. “There’s
no (state) order. It just de-
pends on how fast they get
it done.
“It’s their way of giving
back, and respecting our
fallen.”
Tom
shared
heart-warming stories of
personal connections his
parents have made with the
families they contacted.
One was a phone call his
mother made in which she
addressed the caller as Ashton’s mom. The women was
moved to tears and said she
hadn’t been called Ashton’s
mom in a long time.
“The worse thing is not
to say their names,” Tom
Williams said. “That’s the
idea, to acknowledge them
and say their names.”
The goal is to have all
50 memorials completed by
2016, and hold the first 50
states exhibit in Washington, D.C.
Funding for Remember
Our Fallen memorial comes
from sponsorships and donations. Organizations that
host the memorial make a
donation to help cover the
costs of transport and set
up. Additional contributions go towards research
and construction of future
memorials. Bellevue University displayed the first
memorial exhibit and is a
major sponsor. For more
information and state-bystate exhibit schedules go to
rememberingourfallen.org.
SAVANNAH LANG
Digital Media Manager
Call Savannah for all
your digital media needs.
Call 760.436.9737 x109
[email protected]
B4
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
Escondido Shines encourages volunteerism
By Ellen Wright
ESCONDIDO — In an
effort to increase community involvement, the five rotary clubs in Escondido are
banding together to promote
“Escondido Shines,” an initiative to encourage volunteerism throughout the city.
Chairman of Escondido
Shines Vaughn North said
normally 20 percent of the
people do 80 percent of the
work in the community and
he’d like to change that.
“What we’re trying to
do is recruit the 80 percent
by making it easy (to volunteer),” said North.
The San Diego County
Board of Supervisors approved $20,000 to go towards
the project at a meeting on
Feb. 3.
North said the funds
will go towards purchasing
20,000 plastic garbage bags
and yellow wristbands which
will be given out at all Escondido Union School District
schools.
The hope is that school
children will use the bags to
beautify Escondido, by weeding a neighbor’s lawn, donating clothes or picking up
It’s about a unification of the
community, some joint projects
to get out and get together and get
to know our fellow ‘Escondidoans.’”
Keith Richenbacher
Rotary Club of Escondido President
garbage at local parks, North
said.
“The thrust of the whole
thing is to make small decisions to be more involved,”
he said.
By encouraging kids,
Vaughn said it will be a grassroots effort and he hopes the
volunteerism attitude will
percolate upwards throughout the community.
Rotary Club of Escondido President Keith Richenbacher said the idea is also to
unify the community.
“It’s about a unification
of the community, some joint
projects to get out and get together and get to know our
fellow ‘Escondidoans,’” said
Richenbacher.
He hopes the initiative
will lead to a friendlier and
more unified community.
In another effort to get
kids involved, each school is
hosting a Student Community Spirit Week from Feb. 22
through Feb. 27.
Kids are encouraged
to write an essay, create a
poster, video or audio about
supporting community pride
and civic duty.
The winners in each category will receive $50.
The rotary club is partnering with faith organizations throughout Escondido
to find out where services
are needed and to get more
adults involved.
North hopes the children
will have a positive influence
on their parents to get out
and better the community.
He worked on a similar
campaign in Sandy, Utah,
called “Sandy Pride” which
he credits for turning the city
around into a place people
are proud of.
The first Sandy Pride
event was similar to Escondido Shines, said North. They
handed out 20,000 trash bags
to beautify the suburban city
in Salt Lake City, Utah.
After the first event,
the city won a beautification
award from the state because
of the community effort to
clean trash and graffiti.
It’s now in its 30th year.
Sandy’s success encouraged North to do the same
thing in Escondido.
“I don’t think I would
have taken this on if I hadn’t
seen a community do exactly
what we’re asking them to
do here and that is take the
initiative on their own part,”
North said.
Rotary
President
Richenbacher said they’re
trying to set up music in the
park on April 25 to further
community bonding.
More information will
be made available on the
website escondidoshines.org
which is set to launch soon.
Contest highlights water-wise landscapes
REGION — As county
residents continue to find
new ways to conserve water
during California’s unprecedented drought situation,
the time is ripe for residents
to showcase their water-wise
landscaping success stories
by entering the local water
agencies’ California-Friendly
Landscape Contest.
The contest encourages
Marie Mandroian, 92
Carlsbad
Feb. 10, 2015
Robert Rowland, 98
Carlsbad
Feb. 8, 2015
Charles E. Hummel, 55
Carlsbad
Feb. 8, 2015
Joan Gramly Warrick, 89
Carlsbad
Feb. 4, 2015
Leroy Edward Arnold, 81
Encinitas
Feb. 10, 2015
Dorothy Godfrey, 82
Encinitas
Feb. 2, 2015
Marcelo Sanita, 49
Encinitas
Feb. 2, 2015
Jesus Martinez, 86
Oceanside
Feb. 3, 2015
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
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Submission Process
Please email obits @ coastnewsgroup.com or call (760)
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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.
Rates:
Text” $15 per inch
Photo: $25 Art: $15
Approx. 21 words per column inch
(Dove, Heart, Flag, Rose)
homeowners who have already taken steps towards
conservation to show the
community what it, too, can
do. Options include moving
from traditional grass lawns
and/or landscaping to California Friendly plants that
require far less water. One
winner will be chosen from
each of the 12 agencies participating in the contest.
“Let me live in a house by the side of the
road and be a friend to man.”
These words by Sam Walter Foss bring to mind
our desire to be a friend to our neighbors in their
time of need.
We are very grateful to the many families who
have lived here for generations - folks who have
come to know and trust us to care for their loved
ones over the years.
In an era when most funeral homes have been
purchased by far-away corporations, we are
proud to be your local family owned & operated
mortuary. Our roots & hearts are here with you.
As we mark our 51st anniversary this month, we
thank you for the honor you have bestowed upon
us by choosing our family to serve yours!
THANK YOU!
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
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San Marcos, CA 92069
760-744-4522
www.allenbrothersmortuary.com
North Coast Repertory Theatre was granted $5,000 from the reserve
public art account for its Art with a Heart literacy outreach program.
The money will be used to underwrite the student production of “Aladdin Jr.” Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
Public Arts group comes to
the aid of North Coast Rep
By Bianca Kaplanek
SOLANA BEACH —
As they have done for the
past few years, council
members turned to a citizens group to fulfill a funding request from North
Coast Repertory Theatre,
bringing to 13 the number
of organizations to receive
money from this year’s
Community Grant Program.
One of 18 groups
seeking financial assistance during the application process late last year,
NCRT submitted a request
for $5,000 to underwrite
the student production of
“Aladdin Jr.” as part of its
Art with a Heart literacy
outreach program.
Because of limited
funding, not all organizations were allocated money when the grants were
awarded in December.
Council
members
asked staff to look into using the Public Arts Commission reserve public art
account to fulfill the NCRT
request, something that
has been done successfully
since 2012.
CROP
According to its appli.93 the theater school
cation,
.93
is planning
to collaborate
with
4.17local schools to include
4.28an educational component designed to help
meet visual and performing arts, common core and
STEAM, or science, technology, education, arts and
math, goals.
The aim of the project
is to build on two themes
in the show — Be Yourself
and Freedom is Everything.
Discussions
beyond
the production are designed to bring awareness to the plight of girls
around the world fighting
for an education.
At its Jan. 27 meeting
the Public Arts Commission, with Chairman Allen
Moffson recused because
of his involvement with
NCRT, approved the recommendation to allocate
$5,000 for the project.
City Manager David
Ott said there is approximately $100,000 available
in the reserve public art
account, which is primarily funded through the
transient occupancy tax
paid by hotel visitors.
According to the staff
report the money can “be
used to provide Solana
Beach a rich artistic environment.”
“We may just have to
be careful of establishing
this as a long-term pattern,” Councilman Dave
Zito said. “But I think right
now we have plenty of money, and it’s a good thing
and it’s a good use for the
funds.”
“It’s good that they’re
spending the money because that’s what it’s there
for,” Councilman Mike
Nichols added. “To keep
a fund balance around
($100,000) is pretty darn
good.”
The grant program
was established in 2004
with $5,000 each from
Coast Waste Management
and EDCO Waste and Recycling Services, the city’s
two waste haulers, and
$15,000 from the city.
The program provides
funding to nonprofit, nongovernmental groups and
civic or youth organizations serving Solana Beach
and its residents.
This year marked the
largest number of applications that have been submitted since 2009.
Look in today’s
Classified Section
for everything from
Autos to Real Estate
FEB. 20, 2015 B5
T he C oast News Educational Opportunities
Local charter school is currently
enrolling, now with two locations
SAN MARCOS — Taylion San Diego Academy
is now enrolling with two
locations to serve North
County. Taylion offers
programs in home school,
independent study and a
virtual program, and has
open enrollment throughout the year. With locations in San Marcos and
Vista, the charter school
has a program to meet the
needs of students in need
of a more personalized education.
The charter school
opened in 2013, and has
since grown to be a partner in the North County
community. During its
first year of existence, the
school was granted accreditation by the Western Association of Schools (WASC),
and has now expanded
into Vista. The school even
has an Associated Student
Body (A.S.B.), which plans
field trips and fundraisers
throughout the year.
Taylion’s programs is
an option for students K-12,
who find that a traditional
school setting just isn’t a fit
for them, academically or
otherwise (bullies, etc.). A
large number of their student population are high
school students. “Kids that
come to us, are for whatever reason, not thriving in
a traditional public school
setting,” said Taylion San
Diego Academy’s Director
I think, first
of all, parents
consider what
their kid’s
needs are.”
Shannon Smith
Director of Business
Development
of Business Development,
Shannon Smith. “It can be
for a variety of reasons:
academics, socially, and
they come to us where they
find a place where they can
academically and socially
thrive.”
Taylion offers three
separate learning environments for students: online education programs, a
home-school program, and
an independent study program. Programs are often
blended to meet the needs
of students. Some additional learning opportunities
include small group instruction and online learning programs.
School officials say
the program offers individualized learning, a safe
environment with less distraction, higher parent
involvement, credit recovery, credit acceleration,
greater access to new ed-
ucational resources, and
unparalleled flexibility in
utilizing various instructional delivery methods
based on the particular
student’s learning style.
When asked what parents should look for in a
choice for education, Smith
said, “I think, first of all,
parents consider what their
kid’s needs are. What is it
that they think can help
their kid to be successful,
and then go look at what
the options are, and that’s
what is wonderful about
charter schools. At Taylion
San Diego Academy, we
are able to customize their
learning program. We offer independent study, online classes, homeschooling and a blended model.
We are able to take each
student, assess where they
are at, determine what
would best help them and
design a program for them
individually.”
The San Marcos campus is located at 100 N.
Rancho Santa Fe Rd. #110,
San Marcos, CA 92069,
while the Vista site is located at 1661-B South
Melrose Drive, Vista, CA
92081.
For more information
regarding enrollment and
upcoming parent information sessions, call (855)
77-LEARN
or
(760) 295-5564, or visit
taylionsandiego.com.
Library receives major grant
The San Dieguito Surf Team, from left, Brennan Aubol, Will Doody, Niko Traubman, Patrick O’Mahony, Marco Martinez (coach), Ryden Way, take
a break from construction work at the Santa Teresa school in Nicaragua. Courtesy photo
Surf team backs Nicaraguan school
ENCINITAS — The San
Dieguito Academy High
School surf team members
have adopted the Santa Teresa School in Nicaragua.
To raise more funding
for its work there, the team
invites the community to a
Santa Teresa School Fundraiser Happy Hour at The
Belly Up, 143 S. Cedros
Ave, Solana Beach, with the
band Super Nacho, from 5 to
8 p.m. April 3. Cost is $7.
The surf team members, Brennan Aubol, Will
Doody, Niko Traubman,
Patrick O’Mahony, Marco
Martinez and Coach Ryden
Way, have been working to
help continue future school
expansion and supply the
Santa Teresa school with
school supplies.
Santa Teresa school
serves a small town in the
middle of a national reserve in central Nicaragua.
The SDA surf team has
built a relationship with
the school, bringing school
supplies and completing
projects such as pouring
a foundation for a school
room.
For more information, contact Marco Martinez at marco.martinez@
sduhsd.net or Jan Kaufman
[email protected].
CARLSBAD — The
city of Carlsbad Library &
Cultural Arts Department
is celebrating $66,000 in
donations. Arts patron Patricia M. White donated
$41,000 in support of the
city’s William D. Cannon
Art Gallery, and longtime
library patron and former
librarian Jill LeCroissette
donated $25,000, which
will support library renovations getting underway
later this year. Both donors
were Carlsbad residents
who died in 2014.
According to Library
& Cultural Arts Director
Heather Pizzuto, the funds
from the LeCroissette
Family Trust will have
long-lasting benefits by
supporting the modernization of the city’s Georgina
Cole Library and Carlsbad
City Library on Dove Lane.
“Ms.
LeCroissette’s
gift will help fulfill our
goal of ensuring our libraries stay current as centers
for information, technology and services,” said Pizzuto.
Work is scheduled to
begin on the Cole Library
in late summer 2015 and
be completed in about four
months.
Renovations on the
Carlsbad City Library on
Dove Lane will begin after
the Cole Library reopens.
Both facilities will get better gathering and meeting
spaces, improved wireless
access and new technology, and new flooring, paint
and furniture. The construction will be phased so
that only one library will
be closed at a time, to ensure community members
continue to have access to
library services at other locations.
The donation from the
Patricia M. White Trust
was designated to benefit
the city’s Cannon Art Gallery, in the Dove Library
complex. The gallery attracts more than 40,000
patrons annually with rotating exhibits featuring
nationally known artists.
LeCroissette enjoyed
a long career as an academic and special collection librarian and became
a full-time artist in 1982.
LeCroissette’s artwork and
her quilts have been displayed in the Carlsbad City
Library and the William D.
Cannon Art Gallery.
In 2014, the Carlsbad
City Library received a $2
million donation from the
Benson Family Trust in
support of Carlsbad City
Library Learning Center
programs and services, as
well as the library’s collection of books, e-books and
other materials.
B6
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
Rancho Santa Fe Library Guild hosts winter author talk
By Christina Macone-Greene
RANCHO SANTA FE — The
Rancho Santa Fe Library Guild
hosted an exclusive member
event featuring regarded author,
Kristin Hannah.
The afternoon affair began
with a light lunch followed by an
introduction of Hannah by Susan Appleby of the RSF Library
Guild.
Hannah was both charming and interesting during the
course of her talk while she
spoke of her newest published
work, “The Nightingale.”
Appleby promised Hannah
she wouldn’t give her a huge introduction but she did note that
Hannah was a prolific author
with more than 20 titles published to her name.
“The Nightingale takes
place in France during World
War II. I’ve read more than a
several books in the last year
within the same time period and
place,” Appleby said. She then
turned to Hannah and said, “I’m
not flattering you by saying this,
but yours was by far the best.”
Appleby also pointed out to
the Guild members that Hannah’s book was People Magazine’s book of the week.
Hannah thanked the crowd
for a warm welcome and then
started by explaining why she
wrote “The Nightingale,” while
shedding more light on the
Kristin Hannah, Winter Author Talk guest speaker at the RSF Library Guild event
signing her book, “The Nightingale,” for RSF resident and children’s author Adrienne
Falzon. Photo by Christina Macone-Greene
genres she has chosen over the
years.
“I’ve been really focusing
on books about women’s relationships,” Hannah said.
She described this topic on
the complexities of relationships
meets from 1 to 3:30 p.m.
Feb. 20 at the Oceanside
Campus, 1 Barnard Drive,
Know something that’s going
Administration
Bldg.
on? Send it to calendar@
#1000, Room 1068. Purcoastnewsgroup.com
chase a $1 parking permit
in parking lot 1A near the
FEB. 20
Campus Police Bldg. #1100.
FRIENDS OF JUNG The Check speaker schedule at
Del Mar Friends of Jung miracosta.edu/life.
host a lecture at 7:30 p.m.
Feb. 20 at Winston School, FEB. 21
215 9th St., Del Mar, with PREHISTORIC
PLANTS
Frank Dowling on “Alche- Palomar College Friends
my - The Coniunctio of Jung of the Arboretum present
and Shakespeare.”
“Ancient Plants – Plants
STILL
LEARNING that Lived with Dinosaurs”
MiraCosta College, the life- by botanist and biologist
long learning group, LIFE, Wayne Armstrong from
CALENDAR
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
between mothers, sisters, daughters and even friends. Hannah
said she really explores these issues a lot because she finds them
fascinating.
“A few years ago, I was writing a book called ‘Winter Gar-
10 a.m. to noon Feb. 21 in
Room NS-139, on campus,
1140 W. Mission Road, San
Marcos. R
SVP to Tony Rangel at
[email protected]
or
(760) 744-1150, ext. 2133.
Free parking for attendees
in Lot 5.
SPOT A WHALE Whale
watching from Helgren’s,
Oceanside Harbor is offered Feb. 21 through Pilgrim United Church of
Christ, 2020 Chestnut Ave.,
Carlsbad. This two-hour
trip is $22, $18 for children
and is wheelchair friendly.
Contact Cathy at (760) 2140569, or Diane at (760) 8031637 by text or phone.
GROOM THE LAGOON Batiquitos Lagoon trail maintenance and restoration is
held every first and third
Saturday from 9 a.m. to
noon at Batiquitos Lagoon
Nature Center, 7380 Gabbiano Lane, Carlsbad. No
pre-registration required.
Wear closed shoes, long
pants, hat, sun block and
sunglasses and bring water.
Help maintain trails, restore habitat, water plants,
clear debris and other
needed chores. For more information, visit batiquitosfoundation.org
den’ that was set in World War
II Russia about the siege of Leningrad. And in researching that
book I came across this memoir
written about a 19-year-old Belgian woman who created and ran
the escape route over the Pyrenees Mountains out of France
for downed airmen when France
was occupied during the war,”
she said.
Hannah shared with the
crowd how fascinated she was
that this woman had the fortitude and the strength to take on
this kind of risk and danger.
“I couldn’t use that story, of
course, in the book I was writing
because it was set in Russia, but
I filed that story away. And the
next thing I knew I was reading
more stories about the woman
of the French resistance,” she
said. Hannah continued, “And
it’s there, they were like action
heroes, you know, they were
couriers and spies and they put
themselves in incredibly dangerous situations to deliver messages and then to help the airmen
get out of France.”
The memoirs she found
touched her.
From there, Hannah started collecting these types of stories because she was amazed by
them and delved deeper into the
French resistance and wartime.
It also led her to the stories of
the women who hid Jewish chil-
FEB. 22
NEW FRIENDS The Catholic Widows and Widowers
of North County, a support
group for those who desire to foster friendships
through various social
activities, will gather for
Mass at St. James Catholic
Church and brunch at Sea
and Smoke, Del Mar on Feb.
22 and for Happy Hour at
Oceanside Broiler, Oceanside on Feb. 24.For reservations, call (858) 674-4324.
FEB. 23
TRAVEL WITH ROAD
SCHOLAR The Rancho
Santa Fe Library “Road
Scholar: Adventures in
Lifelong Learning” will celebrate 40 years of learning
and friendship with Ambassador, Jill Swaim at 10:30
a.m. Feb. 23 at the library,
17040 Avenida de Acacias,
Rancho Santa Fe.
FEB. 24
MUSIC AND MORE For
Black
History
Month,
MiraCosta College hosts
“Hip-Hop and the Academy,” at 1 p.m. Feb. 24 in the
Little Theater, Room 3601,
and “Soul Fusion” jazz
and gospel 4 to 7 p.m. Feb.
28 in Concert Hall, Bldg.
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.
dren and families in their homes.
“I’m a mother and drawn
to women’s issues,” she said.
Hannah continued, “To read
these stories by these women
who had done exactly that, who
had risked their lives, who had
risked their children’s lives who
had to a large extent paid an unimaginable price, a lot of them,
for doing this.”
Hannah wanted those in
attendance to know that in general women stories are not told
enough in history.
And they made many sacrifices, she said, putting themselves in dangerous situations.
And when wartime is over,
seemingly, no words are ever
spoken of these fearless women.
“One of themes of the book,
‘The Nightingale,’ you’ll see is to
ask your parents and your grandparents for these stories and to
pass them down because too often they are just forgotten,” she
said. “And so that is really the
‘The Nightingale’ in a nutshell.”
While Hannah is promoting
“The Nightingale,” she said she
is working on her next novel.
This special event was sponsored by Donald E. Johnson, III
of Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC.
To learn more about the
RSF Library Guild and its upcoming author talks please
call (858) 756-4780 or visit
RSFLibraryGuild.org
2400, with tickets for $10at
miracsota.edu/umojatix, on
campus at 1 Barnard Drive,
Oceanside. FEB. 25
TOASTMASTERS
North
Coast Toastmasters meets
Wednesdays, from 7:30 a.m.
to 9 a.m., at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, 334 14th St.
in Del Mar. Toastmasters
offers a “learn by doing”
approach to help people
develop public speaking
and leadership skills. Visit
hnorthcoast.toastmastersclubs.org/ to learn more.
YOUTH
PARTNERSHIP
The North County Youth
Partnership
Biannual
Training Symposium will
from 1 to 3 p.m. Feb. 25 at
the Women’s Center at Vista Community Clinic, 1000
Vale Terrace Drive, Vista.
The symposium will feature Andy Carey, Executive
Director of the U.S.-Mexico
Border Philanthropy Partnership, who will lead an interactive workshop on The
Power of Collaborations.
FEB. 27
ETIQUETTE IN BUSINESS
A Business of Etiquette
seminar will teach Business
Etiquette for Professionals
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Feb. 27
at Hera Hub Carlsbad, 5205
Avenida Encinas, Carlsbad. Cost is $100. To register, visit elaineswann.com/
business-etiquette-seminar-feb-2015.
GUMBY
MARK THE CALENDAR
GOLF FOR VOLLEYBALL
Be part of the golf tournament to raise funds for the
Coast Youth Foundation
that offers financial support
for underserved youth who
would like to play club volleyball. The event includes
a barbecue and talent show
(with coaches participating
in the show) beginning at
11 a.m. March 16 at Santaluz Golf Club, 8170 Caminito Santaluz East. Register
at CoastYouthFoundation.
org.
MICRO SOCCER Encinitas
Express Soccer League will
be holding walk-in Recreational Soccer registration
for its Micro (kindergarten and first grade) from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m. March 21 and
from 6 to 8:30 p.m. March
25 at the Encinitas Sports
Authority, 1050 N. El Camino Real, Encinitas. Cost is
$115. This program needs
volunteer coaches, given
receive training, all equipment and practices and
games planned around your
schedule. Financial aid is
available. For more information visit encinitas-soccer.org
CLUB REUNION Boys &
Girls Clubs of Oceanside
is inviting all alumni to
“Come Back to the Club!”
for an Alumni Picnic and
Basketball
Tournament
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. June
27 at 401 Country Club
Lane, Oceanside. To RSVP,
call (760) 433-8920, ext.
115, email [email protected],
HIGH TEA FOR CRC Tickets are available now for
the Community Resource
Center 20th annual Traditional English Tea at 1:30
p.m. April 11, including the
tea and an auction at the
Solana Beach Presbyterian
Church, 120 Stevens Ave.,
Solana Beach. Get a picture
with the queen. Tickets are
$75 at crcncc.org.
FEB. 20, 2015 B7
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page A22
total debt owed, it is possible
that at the time of the sale
the opening bid may be less
than the total debt More
fully described in said Deed
of Trust Street Address or
other common designation
of
real
property:
2388
Altisma Way #A, Carlsbad,
CA 92009 A.P.N.: 215-240-1801 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: $383,159.53. 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.
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 2014-04193CA.
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: January 20, 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.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 02/06/15, 02/13/15,
02/20/15 CN 16941
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:
Mark John M Ignacio, Esq.
7317 El Cajon Blvd #256
La Mesa, CA 91942
Telephone: 619.315.3287
02/20, 02/27, 03/06/15
CN 17004
decedent’s WILL and codicils,
if any, be admitted to probate.
The WILL and any codicils are
available for examination in
the file kept by the court.
THE PETITION requests
authority to administer the
estate under the Independent
Administration of Estates Act
. (This authority will allow
the personal representative
to take many actions without
obtaining court approval.
Before taking certain very
important actions, however,
the personal representative
will be required to give notice
to interested persons unless
they have waived notice or
consented to the proposed
action.) The independent
administration
authority
will be granted unless an
interested person files an
objection to the petition and
shows good cause why the
court should not grant the
authority.
A HEARING on the petition
will be held in this court as
follows: 03/19/15 at 1:30PM
in Dept. PC-2 located at 1409
4TH AVENUE, SAN DIEGO,
CA 92101
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
LAURA ZAMORA
LAW OFFICES OF DUANE P.
BOOTH
555 NORTH D ST #110
SAN BERNARDINO CA 92401
2/13, 2/20, 2/27/15 CNS2717067# CN 16968
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
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):
Iris LeSure
7892 Vista Higuera
Carlsbad CA 92009
Telephone: 760.805-2978
Date (Fecha): 01/28/14
Clerk, by (Secretario, por),
Toni
Ozenbaugh,
Deputy
(Asistente)
NOTICE
TO
PERSON
SERVED: You are served.
AVISO A LA PERSONA QUE
RECIBIO LA ENTREGA:
Esta entrega se realiza as
an individual (a usted como
individuo). 02/13, 02/20, 02/27,
03/06/15 CN 16965
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 03/15/2007. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT
A
LAWYER.
Trustor: JEANNETTE MARIE
MANNING, AN UNMARRIED
WOMAN Duly Appointed
Trustee: Western Progressive,
LLC Recorded 03/29/2007 as
Instrument No. 2007-0214542
in book ---, page--- and of
Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, Date of
Sale: 03/04/2015 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: $383,159.53
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 Note: Because
the Beneficiary reserves the
right to bid less than the
NOTICE OF PETITION
TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF
ASLAM ROMANI
CASE NO. 37-2015-00004836PR-LA-CTL (IMAGED FILE)
To all heirs, beneficiaries,
creditors,
contingent
creditors, and persons who
may otherwise be interested
in the will or estate, or both,
of: Aslam Romani.
A Petition for Probate has
been filed by Shahida Ali
in the Superior Court of
California, County of San
Diego.
The Petition for Probate
requests that Shahida Ali
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 March
17, 2015 at 11:00 AM in Dept.
PC-1 located at 1409 Fourth
Ave, San Diego, CA 92101
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
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE # 37-2015-00000413CU-PT-NC
TO
ALL
INTERESTED
PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Irma
Leticia Rubio filed a petition
with this court for a decree
changing names of self and
minor child as follows: a.
Present name Irma Leticia
Rubio changed to proposed
name Leticia Stephan, b.
Present name Ella Whitney
Rubio changed to proposed
name Ella Whitney Stephan.
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
March 24, 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: Jan 07, 2015
William S Dato
Judge of the Superior Court
02/20, 02/27, 03/06, 03/13/15
CN 16991
NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF:
(IMAGED FILE) EDWARD
JOSEPH CRESPIN AKA
EDWARD JOE CRESPIN,
EDWARD J. CRESPIN,
EDWARD CRESPIN
CASE NO. 37-2015-00003945PR-PL-CTL ROA#1
To all heirs, beneficiaries,
creditors,
contingent
creditors, and persons who
may otherwise be interested
in the WILL or estate, or
both of EDWARD JOSEPH
CRESPIN AKA EDWARD
JOE CRESPIN, EDWARD
J.
CRESPIN,
EDWARD
CRESPIN.
A PETITION FOR PROBATE
has been filed by RANDY
HART in the Superior Court
of California, County of SAN
DIEGO.
THE
PETITION
FOR
PROBATE
requests
that
RANDY HART be appointed
as personal representative to
administer the estate of the
decedent.
THE PETITION requests the
SUMMONS (Family Law)
CITACION (Derecho
familiar)
CASE NUMBER (NUMERO
DE CASO) DN177561
NOTICE TO RESPONDENT:
AVISO AL DEMANDADO:
Stephone LeSure
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: Iris LeSure
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
NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF
PATRICIA HELEN SELLERS
CASE NO. 37-2015-00003506PR-PL-CTL ROA#1
(IMAGED FILE)
To all heirs, beneficiaries,
creditors,
contingent
creditors, and persons who
may otherwise be interested
in the will or estate, or both,
of: Patricia Helen Sellers.
A Petition for Probate has
been filed by The First Church
of Christ, Scientist, in Boston,
Massachusetts in the Superior
Court of California, County of
San Diego.
The Petition for Probate
requests that Henry H Dearing
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 March
3, 2015 at 11:00 AM in Dept.
PC-1 located at 1409 Fourth
Ave, San Diego, CA 92101
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:
Anne Gifford Ewing
Gifford, Dearing & Abernathy,
LLP
515 S Figueroa St #2060
Los Angeles, CA 90071
Telephone: 213.626.4481
02/13, 02/20, 02/27/15
CN 16961
NOTICE OF PETITION
TO ADMINISTER ESTATE
Coast News legals
continued on
page B8
B8
T he C oast News LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
Coast News legals
continued from
page B7
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: William J.
Freed, Esq. 815 Civic Center
Drive, Oceanside, CA 92054,
Telephone: 760.722.4221 2/6,
2/13, 2/20/15 CNS-2713952#
CN 16942
A hearing on the petition will
be held in this court on Feb.
26, 2015 at 1:30 PM in Dept.
PC-2 located at 1409 Fourth
Ave, San Diego, CA 92101
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.
Filed: 01/26/15
Attorney for Petitioner:
Alex B Scheingross, Esq.
Law Office of Alex B
Scheingross
3772 Clairemont Dr
San Diego CA 92117
Telephone: 858.792.5988
02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15
CN 16940
follows: a. Present name Ian
Kai Crena Geckeler changed
to proposed name Ian Kai
Crena Geckeler.
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 on
Mar 06, 2015 at 8:30 a.m Dept
46 of the Superior Court of
California, 220 W Broadway,
San Diego CA 92101.
Date: Jan 15, 2015
David D Danielsen
Judge of the Superior Court
01/30, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15
CN 16921
OF CAROL ANN BADILLO
CASE NO. 37-2015-00003085PR-PW-CTL ROA #: 1
(IMAGED FILE)
To all heirs, beneficiaries,
creditors,
contingent
creditors, and persons who
may otherwise be interested
in the will or estate, or both,
of: Carol Ann Badillo
A Petition for Probate has
been filed by Victoria Heather
Fiore, aka Victoria Heather
Badillo in the Superior Court
of California, County of SAN
DIEGO.
The Petition for Probate
requests that Victoria Heather
Fiore, aka Victoria Heather
Badillo be appointed as
personal representative to
administer the estate of
the decedent. The Petition
requests
the
decedent’s
will and codicils, if any, be
admitted to probate. The
will and any codicils are
available for examination in
the file kept by the court. The
Petition requests authority
to administer the estate
under
the
Independent
Administration of Estates
Act. (This authority will allow
the personal representative
to take many actions without
obtaining court approval.
Before taking certain very
important actions, however,
the personal representative
will be required to give notice
to interested persons unless
they have waived notice or
consented to the proposed
action.) The independent
administration
authority
will be granted unless an
interested person files an
objection to the petition and
shows good cause why the
court should not grant the
authority. A hearing on the
petition will be held in this
court on March 3, 2015 at 11:00
AM in Dept. PC-1 located at
1409 4th Avenue, San Diego,
CA
92101-3105
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
AMENDED NOTICE OF
PETITION TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF BONNIE G.
BROWN aka BONNIE J.
BROWN
CASE #. 37-2014-00023759PR-PL-CTL ROA# 49
To all heirs, beneficiaries,
creditors,
contingent
creditors, and persons who
may otherwise be interested
in the will or estate, or both,
of: Bonnie Jean Brown, aka
Bonnie Jean Guthrie, aka
Bonnie Guthrie Brown, aka
Bonnie J. Brown, aka Bonnie
G. Brown, aka Bonnie Guthrie,
aka Bonnie Brown.
A Petition for Probate has
been filed by Ada Nelson.
in the Superior Court of
California, County of San
Diego.
The Petition for Probate
requests that Ada Nelson
be appointed as personal
representative to administer
the estate of the decedent.
The petition requests the
decedent’s will and codicils,
if any, be admitted to probate.
The will and any codicils are
available for examination in
the file kept by the court.
The
petition
requests
authority to administer the
estate under the Independent
Administration of Estates Act.
(This authority will allow the
personal representative to
take many actions without
obtaining court approval.
Before taking certain very
important actions, however,
the personal representative
will be required to give notice
to interested persons unless
they have waived notice or
consented to the proposed
action.) The independent
administration
authority
will be granted unless an
interested person files an
objection to the petition and
shows good cause why the
court should not grant the
authority.
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE # 37-2015-00002801CU-PT-NC
TO
ALL
INTERESTED
PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Juan
Luis Montanes Zepeda aka
Juan Luis Montanez filed a
petition with this court for
a decree changing names as
follows: a. Present name Juan
Luis Montanes Zepeda aka
Juan Luis Montanez changed
to proposed name John Louie
Montanez.
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
March 10, 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: Jan 27, 2015
William S Dato
Judge of the Superior Court
01/30, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15
CN 16937
AMENDED ORDER TO
SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME CASE #
37-2014-00040424-CU-PT-CTL
TO
ALL
INTERESTED
PERSONS: Petitioner(s): Ian
Kai Crena Geckeler filed a
petition with this court for
a decree changing names as
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002364
Filed: Jan 27, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Coastal
Breeze Pools Located at:
4867 Hillside Dr, Carlsbad
CA San Diego 92008 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Justin Marchand,
4867 Hillside Dr, Carlsbad
CA 92008 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business
was: Not Yet Started S/Justin
Marchand, 02/20, 02/27, 03/06,
03/13/15 CN 17005
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-003562
Filed: Feb 06, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Purple Squirrel Media
Located at: 7248 Mimosa Dr,
Carlsbad CA San Diego 92011
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1.
CH
Consulting Inc, 7248 Mimosa
Dr, Carlsbad CA 92011 This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/James Sudakow, 02/20, 02/27,
03/06, 03/13/15 CN 17003
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002800
Filed: Jan 29, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Wax ‘n’
Go Located at: 2810 Pio Pico
#B, Carlsbad CA San Diego
92008 Mailing Address: 4904
Luna Dr #A, Oceanside CA
92057 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Jessica Leah Goldstein,
4904 Luna Dr #A, Oceanside
CA 92057 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business
was: 04/01/03 S/Jessica Leah
Goldstein, 02/20, 02/27, 03/06,
03/13/15 CN 17000
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-004197
Filed: Feb 13, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Underwater Solutions B.
Dive Solutions Located at:
7731 High St, La Mesa CA San
Diego 91941 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Underwater Solutions –
Alejandro Silva, 7731 High
St, La Mesa CA 91941 This
business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 10/01/14 S/
Alejandro Silva, 02/20, 02/27,
FEB. 20, 2015
LEGALS
03/06, 03/13/15 CN 16999
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002553
Filed: Jan 28, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Tri
Canvas Located at: 5155 Via
Mindanao, Oceanside CA San
Diego 92057 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following: 1.
Pio Titie, 5155 Via Mindanao,
Oceanside CA 92057 This
business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 01/28/15 S/
Pio Titie, 02/20, 02/27, 03/06,
03/13/15 CN 16998
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-004068
Filed: Feb 12, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Soccer Ventures Located
at: 6582 Scaup St, Carlsbad
CA San Diego 92011 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Big Sky Sales
Inc, 6582 Scaup St, Carlsbad
CA 92011 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
01/01/15 S/Matthew T Gleason,
02/20, 02/27, 03/06, 03/13/15
CN 16997
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-003834
Filed: Feb 10, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Social Crossroads Located
at: 12813 Corbett Ct, San
Diego CA San Diego 92130
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Mana
Tulberg, 12813 Corbett Ct, San
Diego CA 92130 This business
is conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
01/01/13
S/Mana Tulberg,
02/20, 02/27, 03/06, 03/13/15
CN 16996
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-003881
Filed: Feb 10, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Passion for Pitching B.
Love Affair Apparel Located
at: 4640 Cass St #9661, San
Diego CA San Diego 92169
Mailing Address: PO Box 9661,
San Diego CA 92169 This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Douglas
Bryant White, 867 Seabright
Ln, Solana Beach CA 92075
This business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 08/01/06 S/
Douglas B White, 02/20, 02/27,
03/06, 03/13/15 CN 16995
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-004088
Filed: Feb 12, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Parkshell Development Inc
B. Parkshell Dev Inc Located
at: 3546 Yoyager Circle, San
Diego CA San Diego 92130
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Parkshell
Development
Inc,
3546
Voyager Circle, San Diego
CA 92130 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
05/17/05 S/Michael W Lupo,
02/20, 02/27, 03/06, 03/13/15
CN 16994
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-003219
Filed: Feb 03, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Bagatelle
Café/Bistro
B. B&V Group C. Vendome
Located at: 7094 Miramar
LEGALS
LEGALS
Rd #122, San Diego CA San
Diego 92121 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Corporate Account LLC,
7094 Miramar Rd #122, San
Diego CA 92121 This business
is conducted by: A Limited
Liability Company The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started S/Frederic Naeyaert,
02/20, 02/27, 03/06, 03/13/15
CN 16993
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Sharon
DeYoung 02/13, 02/20, 02/27,
03/06/15 CN 16978
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-003886
Filed: Feb 10, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Active Agent Advance
Located at: 500 La Terraza
Blvd #150, Escondido CA San
Diego 92025 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Active Agent Advance LLC,
500 La Terraza Blvd #150,
Escondido CA 92025 This
business is conducted by: A
Limited Liability Company
The first day of business was:
02/10/15 S/John Grubbs, 02/20,
02/27, 03/06, 03/13/15 CN
16992
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-003540
Filed: Feb 06, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Water-Tite Plumbing and
Drains Located at:
1558
Prima Vera, Oceanside CA San
Diego 92056 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Jesus Ramon Rivera Jr,
1558 Prima Vera, Oceanside
CA 92056 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business
was: Not Yet Started S/Jesus
Ramon Rivera Jr, 02/13, 02/20,
02/27, 03/06/15 CN 16981
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-003240
Filed: Feb 03, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. The Hop Concept, B. The
Hop Freshener Located at:
155 Mata Way #104, San
Marcos CA San Diego 92069
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1.
Port
Brewing LLC, 155 Mata Way
#104, San Marcos CA 92069
This business is conducted by:
A Limited Liability Company.
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Tomme
Arthur 02/13, 02/20, 02/27,
03/06/15 CN 16980
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002825
Filed: Jan 29, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. S.R. Skincare Located
at: 2745 Jefferson St #G,
Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Sharon
Kay Reabold, 5877 Wendi
Ct, Fallbrook CA 92028 This
business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day
of business was: 12/31/14 S/
Sharon Kay Reabold 02/13,
02/20, 02/27, 03/06/15 CN
16979
Fictitious Business Name
Statement #2015-003099 Filed:
Feb 02, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Mission
Truck Rentals Located at:
3320 Mission Ave, Oceanside
CA San Diego 92058 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Sharon DeYoung,
3642 Cheshire Ave, Carlsbad
CA 92010. This business is
conducted by: An Individual
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-003465
Filed: Feb 05, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Mikko Sushi Located at:
1025 Carlsbad Village Dr,
Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008
Mailing Address: 4338 Morgan
Creek Way, Oceanside CA
92057 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1.
Mikko Sushi Inc, 4338
Morgan Creek Way, Oceanside
CA 92057 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Kyong Davis
02/13, 02/20, 02/27, 03/06/15
CN 16977
Fictitious Business Name
Statement #2015-003588 Filed:
Feb 06, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Marrow
and Home 2. Marrow & Home
Located at: 3502 Pringle
St #304, San Diego CA San
Diego 92110 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Bryan Ortega, 3502 Pringle
St #304, San Diego CA 92110.
This business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Bryan Ortega 02/13, 02/20,
02/27, 03/06/15 CN 16976
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002628
Filed: Jan 28, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Graciela’s Taco Shop.
Located at: 5047-A Central
Ave, Bonita CA San Diego
91902
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Maria Graciela Ordaz, 5155
Cedarwood Rd #84, Bonita CA
91902 2. Crisologo Narciso
Nava, 5155 Cedarwood Rd
#84, Bonita CA 91902. This
business is conducted by:
A Married Couple The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started
S/Maria
Graciela
Ordaz, 02/13, 02/20, 02/27,
03/06/15 CN 16975
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002852
Filed: Jan 30, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Epic Real Estate B. Epic
Coaching. Located at: 676
Second St, Encinitas CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Simcoe Inc, 676 Second
St, Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/James Simcoe, 02/13, 02/20,
02/27, 03/06/15 CN 16974
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002732
Filed: Jan 29, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Zenith Publications &
Innovations. Located at: 900
E Karen #H-202, Las Vegas NV
Clark 92109 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1.
Jennifer Barger.
6806
Caminito Sueno, Carlsbad
CA 92009 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Jennifer
Barger, 02/13, 02/20, 02/27,
03/06/15 CN 16973
Fictitious
Statement
Business Name
#2015-001961
FEB. 20, 2015 B9
T he C oast News F
ood
&
W
ine
A conversation with Chef Rob Conaway
which is one of my favorite restaurants anywhere.
What was it like working
there under Bradley Ogden
and how do that experience
influence you?
Every job I accepted has a reason behind
it. When the opportunity
arose to get into the Lark
Creek Kitchen, it was a
no-brainer. Bradley instilled in all of his employees that by using the freshest ingredients possible,
your work as a cook is to
just bring out its existing
flavor. Bradley pushed consistency and flavors (tasting your food) and that is
what I took away from my
experience there.
Additionally, the accessibility to your own
garden for fresh herbs and
flowers was a tremendous
experience. Every job since
A
Red wine such as a port or claret is the desired wine to use in making
mulled wine, along with water, sugar and spices. Photo courtesy Bing.com
The wines of winter
taste of
wine
frank mangio
H
STUDIO PRODUCTION
Job #: PAL-000753_03
Live: visual
Trim: 5.075”w x 7.5”h
Bleed: N/W
Scale: 100%
Color: CMYK
Upload:
MECHANICAL
Title: 2/5-2/20 Win A Car/ Squealing for Cash
Element: Print_CoastNews
Date In: 01-16-15
ROUND: R1
TURN TO TASTE OF WINE ON B14
Your culinary resume is
quite impressive. You attended culinary school in
San Francisco and Thailand; tell me how your education in those diverse environments helped shaped
you.
Both locations really
opened my eyes and palate
to new and exciting aromas
and flavors. San Francisco
was my foundation; learning the base of French
cuisine and exploring all
of the restaurants in the
city and wine country was
like being a kid in a candy
store. I was wandering and
eating everywhere, trying
to fit as much in a humanly
possible while I was there.
Thailand, while quite a
bit shorter in time, gave me
time to explore the street
markets and ingredients
of South East Asia. Both
environments taught me
to look at ingredients and
think about how to pair
flavors differently and in
the moment. Additionally,
both locations taught me a
bit more about the historiDue Date: 01-29-15
Chef Rob Conaway from Inland Tavern in San Marcos. Photo courtesy
Feeney+Byrant
cal components to food - the
why, the how and the, “oh,
I get it now” feeling about
food.
TURN TO LICK THE PLATE ON B14
ROOF! ROOF!
Your road to Inland Tavern
is equally impressive, with
stops San Francisco, New
York, Dubai, and Vietnam.
Some high profile restaurants in all those markets
but the one that stood out
to me was Lark Creek Inn
in Larkspur, California,
PLUS 10 GUESTS
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$10,000
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Drawings begin at 6:00pm
Must be present to win
$101,000
GRAND PRIZE DRAWINGS
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
30 Winners Share $101,000
APPROVAL
CD: Gary Kelly
CD: Romeo Cervas
AD: Paul Masatani
PD: Maira Gutierrez
CW: Donovan Le
SM: Rosa Baer
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Must be present to win.
APPROVAL
AE: George Miranda
PM: Jen Collins
Notes:
OK
So Many Ways To Win
CHANGES
ere in the San
Diego area, not
much is said or
done about two
kinds of wine that are household words on the East Coast,
where it’s cold and sometimes snowy. Mulled wine and Ice
wine will always spice up
a gathering and warm up a
conversation. The two are
very different wine-based
beverages, so let’s take a look
at both and see if it fits into
your party plans.
Mulled wine is really the
perfect drink for a cold winter night. Wine was first recorded as spiced and heated
in Rome Italy during the 2nd
century. In their conquering of most of Europe, they
brought wine and viticulture
with them up the Rhine and
Danube rivers to the Scottish
border bringing their recipes
with them. It became popular in England and is to this
day, which would account for
the drink’s lively interest in
the Eastern states. It’s also big in Germany
and Austria, where it’s called
Gluhwein (glow-wine). I
liked this recipe so I’ll share
it with you in hopes you’ll get
that glow throughout in your
first taste. Heat up (don’t boil) a
bottle of red wine in a pot and
spice it with cinnamon sticks,
cloves, sliced orange, sugar to
taste and some vanilla pods.
Use cheesecloth or a filter to
catch seeds and twigs. It is at
times consumed with an added “Schuss,” a shot of rum or
something like it. Usually
about a cup of water is added
to the 750 milliliter of wine,
but that of course is also to
your taste preference. Serve
hot in mugs, with about 26
servings.
Mulled wine “leftovers”
can be saved in the refrigerator for re-use up to about a
week. Just re-heat it before
serving. The longer it stays
before serving, the more
concentrated flavor you will
get, similar to a good bottle
of wine.
Thanks to my friends
at the International Wine
& Spirits Guild, some facts
about Ice wine are available.
Ice wine is similar to other dessert wines, widely sold
in places that sell traditional wines. Its popularity appears limited to wine retailers in the East. The secret of
Ice wine lies in its time on the
vine in cold climates such as
Canada, New York, Germany and Austria. Canada is
the world’s largest producer
of Ice wine and it has strict
rules of production. Temperature at harvest
to make their wine must be
colder than minus eight degrees and the brix (measure
of sugar content) must be
over 35. The average grape
wine sugar measure is 23.
That combination guarantees a sweet, rich concentrated wine. There are many
producers who use artificial
means to achieve these features, but they cannot use
fter a fine meal
at Inland Tavern
recently, I had
a conversation with their
chef and discovered that
he had some serious experience. His talent was evident in the food we ate yet
his story is worth telling
and
his
food is definitely
worth checking out.
1-877-WIN-PALA (1-877-946-7252) PalaCasino.com
Located in Northern San Diego County
From San Diego & Riverside County: Take I-15 to HWY 76, go east 5 miles
From Orange County & Los Angeles County: Take I-5 South to HWY 76, go east 23 miles
TM
PAL_000753_03_2_5_2_20_WinACar_SquealingForCash_5.075x7.5_R1.indd 1
1/21/15 12:43 PM
B10
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
How well do you know your home state?
hit the
road
e’louise ondash
I
’ve traveled a lot of
California and feel
as though I know
a fair amount about the
state’s unique and diverse
history, peoples and natural wonders. But someone
recently handed me a copy
of “California Trivia,” compiled by Lucy Poshek &
Roger Naylor, and I discovered all kinds of facts that
are new to me.
The book is not new —
my copy was published in
1998 — but most of the facts
still hold. For instance:
Did you know that Walt
Disney founded the California Institute of the Arts in
Valencia?
Who remembers that
Florence Chadwick, the
first woman to swim the English Channel (both ways),
was a native San Diegan?
During the Civil War, Union Army soldiers were stationed on Catalina Island to prevent Southern sympathizers from establishing a base for pirate activities against the North. Photo
And did you know that by E’Louise Ondash
Father Junipero Serra remining to candy making
ferred to himself as the
during the Gold Rush?
Gray Ox? (The book didn’t
say why. I searched but
Who were California’s
came up empty-handed. Do
first winemakers?
you know the answer?)
Why were Union Army
troops stationed on CataliHere are a few more Calna Island during the Civil
ifornia-related trivia quesWar?
tions from the book. Try these
out on someone who thinks
ANSWERS:
he/she knows everything
about the Golden State, which
Old Town San Diego
by the way, made the official
State Historic Park.
State Nickname List in 1968.
Lake
Tahoe (shared
Answers at the bottom.
with Nevada) and Goose
In terms of attendance, The chapel on the grounds of Mission San Juan Capistrano is the oldLake (shared with Oregon).
what is the most popular est building in California still in use. Photo by Jerry Ondash
Pennsylvania
state park in California?
In what state is there a 14.495 feet) and lowest point
Less than 100 miles.
(Death Valley, 282 feet be- If attendance is the measure, San Diego’s Old Town State Historic Park
What two large Califor- town named California?
Four blocks.
low
sea level) are how far is the most popular state park. Photo by E’Louise Ondash
nia lakes extend into other
California’s
highest
apart?
The chapel at Mission
states?
point (Mount Whitney,
San Juan Capistrano.
By 1920, most Los An- fornia building still in use? and when?
John D. “Smokestack”
geles residents lived within
Who built his own railHow fast do migrating Spreckels built the San Diwhat distance of a trolley
road rather than pay the gray whales swim?
ego and Arizona Railroad
line?
rising rates of the Southern
Where
and
when
was
in 1919.
What is the oldest Cali- Pacific?
the Internet first conceived?
Tony Gwynn, in 1981.
What San Diego athlete
by the Padres baseball
Most states have one
was drafted by two teams in climatic zone. How many
team and the San Diego
the same city on the same does California have?
Clippers basketball team.
day?
Los Angeles Coliseum
How many lakes are
Where was the first Su- there in California?
in 1967. Green Bay Packers
per Bowl played?
beat Kansas City 35-10.
What town holds the
What desert ghost nation’s record for the lonCalico, north of Bartown, restored by Walter gest period without rain?
stow.
Knott, features 30 miles of
The
most
snow
in
a
sinHow many plants are
tunnels?
gle
storm
–
189
inches
–
fell
native to California?
The Mount Shasta Ski
Feb. 13-19, 1959.
Who changed from an
bowl was the site of what
About 27 miles per
U.S. meteorological record unsuccessful career of gold
hour.
At UCLA, about 1970.
Twenty-four.
About 8,000.
Bagdad, in the Mojave
Desert (767 days).
More than 5,000.
Domingo Ghirardelli.
The Spanish missionaries (padres).
To prevent Southern
sympathizers from using
the island as a base for
pirate activities against the
North.
E’Louise Ondash is a
freelance writer living in
North County. Tell her about
your travels at eondash@
Offer Expires 3-5-15
coastnewsgroup.com
FEB. 20, 2015 T he C oast News Oceanside native makes Navy his career
OCEANSIDE — A 2001
Vista High School graduate and Oceanside native
currently serves aboard
the U.S. Navy’s forward-deployed aircraft carrier USS
George Washington, stationed at a U.S. Navy base
located 35 miles south of
Tokyo.
Petty Officer 1st Class
Archibald Alamares is a
yeoman aboard the aircraft
carrier operating out of Yokosuka, Japan. While out
at sea, the ship visits numerous countries each year
such as the Philippines,
Hong Kong, Singapore and
Thailand.
As a sailor with numerous responsibilities, Alamares said he is proud to
serve his country aboard an
aircraft carrier in Japan.
“I like being aboard a
forward deployed ship that
goes on deployment every
year,” said Alamares.
Alamares also said he
is proud of the work he is
doing as part of the Washington’s
3,300-member
crew, living thousands of
miles from home, and protecting America on the
world’s oceans.
“I provide administrative and clerical services
for the ship,” Alamares explained.
Assigned to the Navy’s Seventh Fleet, George
native, Petty Officer 1st Class Archibald Alamares is a yeoWashington sailors are con- Oceanside
man aboard the aircraft carrier operating out of Yokosuka, Japan.
tinuously on watch through- Courtesy photo
out the Indo-Asia-Pacific
region, acting as one of
America’s first responders
in the Navy’s largest area of
responsibility.
Washington is one of
only 10 currently operational aircraft carriers in the
U.S. Navy.
It is the sixth Nimitz-class carrier and the
fourth Navy vessel named
after the first president of
the United States. Measuring nearly 1,100 feet from
bow to stern on the flight
deck, the ship is longer than
three football fields. It is
257 feet wide, 244 feet high
and weighs nearly 100,000
tons.
“I never cease to be impressed with the type and
quality of work that goes
on aboard the carrier each
day,” said Capt. Timothy
Kuehhas, the carrier’s commanding officer.
“Our team is filled
with highly qualified young
adults — in many cases,
19 and 20 years old — and
they’re out here launching
and recovering aircraft,
running a complex propulsion system safely, serving
as air traffic controllers, operating sophisticated electronics and keeping this
floating city alive and functioning. Collectively, they
are part of the greatest ship
in our Navy. They are proud
of their ship and proud of
what they do for the United
States Navy and their country. If you pick up a newspaper in any city and examine
what other 19- and 20-yearolds are doing, there is no
comparison to the level of
responsibility our Sailors
hold.”
“The Navy provides
great financial stability for
my family and gives me
the opportunity to travel,”
said Alamares.
B11
B12
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
Camp P endleton News
Evolution of shotguns in the Marine Corps
By Sgt. Christopher Duncan
CAMP PENDLETON,
— The Marine Corps has
employed and retired various shotgun weapons to
continually enhance its
war-fighting capabilities to
sustain the mantle of America’s premier expeditionary
force in readiness.
According to the National Museum of the Marine Corps, the shotgun has
been in use as early as WWI
for various purposes, like
breaching, riot control and
clearing trenches.
“In WWI Marines used
the Winchester Model 97 as
a trench gun and in WWII
Marines used Stevens Riot
Guns,” said Bruce Allen,
museum specialist with the
National Museum of the
Marine Corps.
In 1966 the Marine
Corps requested a modern
high firepower shotgun
and eventually adopted the
Remington 870.
“Vietnam also saw the
use of the Savage Model
177E,” said Allen.
As time passes, technological
advancements
are made and the Corps
strives to remain adaptive
by training Marines to employ the use of weapons like
the Benelli M4 Super 90,
which is a 12-gauge shotgun
also known as the M1014,
which has been a part of the
Corps’ arsenal since 1999.
“I think the M1014 is
the best shotgun the Marine Corps has right now,”
said Gunnery Sgt. Trocon
Bestman, an anti-terrorism force protection officer
here.
“We used others in
Iraq and the M1014 was the
most accurate I’ve used for
breaching in comparison to
those shotguns.”
One of the most significant changes from the
shotguns previously used
is a collapsible buttstock
which shortens the weapon
by eight inches, allowing
for more maneuverability
around tight corners and
over obstacles. “We used
it during my last deployment to Iraq, in 2007,” said
Bestman. “We used it for
breaching, mostly. Once
you get the hinges, it’s easier to separate the door Savage Model 177E.”
Breaching is a technique used to enter areas
that are restricted by obstacles, such as doors or walls.
“There are a few ways
to breach a door. You can
pry doors open with a crowbar or tool, pick the lock
As time passes, technological advancements are made and the Corps strives to remain adaptive by training
Marines to employ the use of weapons like the Benelli M4 Super 90, which is a 12-gauge shotgun also known
as the M1014, which has been a part of the Corps’ arsenal since 1999. Courtesy photo
or use explosives, but the with little mess.”
There have been many
Special Reaction Team, shotguns in use today; to inM1014 was a lot more effective in my opinion,” said Area Guard and military clude the Mossberg 500 and
Bestman, who is also the police units here train with the Remington 870, also
referred to as the M870,
which has been used by
the Marine Corps since the
1950’s.
Some of the shotguns
that have been used but are
no longer in service by the
Marine Corps are:
• Remington Model 11:
12-gauge, used from 1905 to
1950.
• Winchester Model
1897:
12-gauge, used from
Gunnery Sgt. Trocon Bestman
1910 to the 1960s.
Anti-Terrorism Force Protection Officer
• Remington Model 10:
12-gauge, used from 1910 to
area guard chief for the 11 shotgun weapon systems the 1930s.
to 18 and 27 Areas here. frequently to ensure they
• Winchester Model
“A shot to each hinge and are prepared to use these 1912: 12-gauge, used from
you’re in the door quick and weapons effectively.
the 1910s to the 1960s.
There are a few ways to breach
a door. You can pry doors open with
a crowbar or tool, pick the lock or
use explosives, but the M1014 was a
lot more effective in my opinion.”
• Ithaca 37: 12-gauge,
used from the 1940’s to the
1980’s.
Although investing in
the most up-to-date and
effective equipment is an
important aspect of warfighting, some feel that what
determines success is the
Marines using it.
“When it comes to any
weapon, the effectiveness of
that system depends on how
the operator uses it,” said
Chief Warrant Officer 3 Michael Ventrone, Director of
the Formal Marksmanship
Training Center here.
Many believe that
training is paramount to ensure tactical proficiency.
“There are many factors that come into play;
training with the weapon
enough to acquire muscle
memory, understanding the
different types of ammunition and the strengths and
limitations of the ammunition, and understanding the
minimum and maximum
distances for the weapon,”
said Ventrone.
Knowledge
of
the
weapon and its capabilities
can often only be learned
through repeatedly using them. According to
Ventrone, manuals aren’t
enough to ensure performance when it counts.
“It’s also important for
the shooter to understand
that the weapon systems
minimum and maximum
distances maybe be different than what the technical manual says,” said
Ventrone. “All of these factors come into play when
attempting to effectively put rounds on a target
and these pieces need to
come together in a fraction
of a second.”
Graduation held for energy pilot program
CAMP PENDLETON —
Twenty transitioning service
members graduated from
the U.S. Department of Energy SunShot Initiative Pilot
Solar Energy Tra
The ceremony was hosted by Brig. Gen. Edward D.
Banta, the Commanding
General of Marine Corps
Installations-West, Marine
Corps Base Camp Pendleton, and Minh Le, director
of the SunShot Initiative
within the Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable
Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy.
This pilot program is enabled by the Department of
Defense’s “Skillbridge” initiative, which allows exiting
military personnel to pursue
civilian job training, employment skills training, apprenticeships and internships up
to six months prior to their
End of Active Service date.
Service members who
graduate from this training
program will gain the skills
to size and install solar panels, safely connect electricity
to the grid, and interpret and
comply with local building
codes.
Five of the largest U.S.
solar companies by number
of employees — SolarCity,
Vivint Solar, Sunrun, SunEdison and SunPower — have
committed to interview all
graduating military trainees for employment, a step
that is intended to help place
qualified transitioning service members trainees in
well-paying jobs.
FEB. 20, 2015 LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
Filed: Jan 22, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. San Diego Super Saver.
Located at: 1120 Maryland
Dr, Vista CA San Diego 92083
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Sumner
Walz, 1120 Maryland Dr, Vista
CA 92083 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Sumner
Walz 02/06, 02/13, 02/20,
02/27/15 CN 16950
conducted by: A Limited
Liability Company The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started S/Jenna Medearis
02/06, 02/13, 02/20, 02/27/15
CN 16949
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002089
Filed: Jan 23, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. RMG Craft Located at:
15720 Kristen Glen, San Diego
CA San Diego 92127 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Robert McLeod
George Jr, 15720 Kristen
Glen, San Diego CA 92127
This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started S/Robert M George
Jr, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20, 02/27/15
CN 16947
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Denise W Levine, 2382
Carol View Dr F302, Cardiff
CA 92007 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
02/17/10 S/Denise W Levine,
02/06, 02/13, 02/20, 02/27/15
CN 16946
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002569
Filed: Jan 28, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Wolfpeach Salsa Co.
Located at: 3705 6th Ave, San
Diego CA San Diego 92103
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Wolfpeach
LLC, 3705 6th Ave, San Diego
CA 92103 This business is
B13
T he C oast News Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002477
Filed: Jan 27, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. When In Doubt Delivery
Located at: 650 S Rancho
Santa Fe Rd #240, San Marcos
CA San Diego 92078 Mailing
Address: 663 S Rancho Santa
Fe Rd #655, San Marcos CA
92078 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. When In Doubt Inc, 650 S
S Rancho Santa Fe Rd #240,
San Marcos CA 92078 This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/LaVonne A Haun 02/06,
02/13, 02/20, 02/27/15 CN
16948
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002568
Filed: Jan 28, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Outside In Organizer
B. Outside In Makeovers
Located at: 2033 San Elijo
Rd #634, Cardiff
CA San
Diego 92007 Mailing Address:
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002569
Filed: Jan 28, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Mysty
and Bella Designs Located
at: 2713 La Golondrina St,
Carlsbad
CA San Diego
92009 Mailing Address: PO
Box 131521, Carlsbad CA
92013 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Patricia Sweatte, 2713
La Golondrina St, Carlsbad
CA 92009 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Patricia
Sweatte, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20,
02/27/15 CN 16945
LEGALS
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001747
Filed: Jan 21, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Encinitas School of Music
Located at: 775 Orpheus Ave,
Encinitas CA San Diego 92024
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Encinitas
School of Music, 775 Orpheus
Ave, Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by:
A Corporation The first day
of business was: 10/01/01 S/
Stephen Rollins, 02/06, 02/13,
02/20, 02/27/15 CN 16944
Statement of Withdrawal
from Partnership Operating
Under Fictitious Business
Name #2015-002847 Filed: Jan
30, 2015 with County of the
San Diego Recorder/County
Clerk. Fictitious Business
Name(s): A. California Meter
Reading Service. The Original
Statement Of The Fictitious
Business Was Filed In San
Diego County On; 04/06/12, and
assigned File # 2012-009622.
Located at: 403 Requeza St
G-3, Encinitas CA San Diego
92024 Mailing Address: 403
Requeza St G-3, Encinitas CA
92024. The Following Partner
Has Withdrawn: Niles Kurt
Mikkelsen, 403 Requeza St
G-3, Encinitas CA San Diego
92024 S/Niles Kurt Mikkelsen
02/20, 02/13, 02/20, 02/27/15
CN 16943
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001884
Filed: Jan 22, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Coach Mira – Pathway to
College Located at: 828 Glen
Arbor Dr, Encinitas CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Mira L Simon, 828 Glen
Arbor Dr, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted by:
An Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Mira L Simon, 01/30, 02/06,
02/13, 02/20/15 CN 16939
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-002231
Filed: Jan 26, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Quality
Inn Encinitas
Located at:
607 Leucadia Blvd, Encinitas
CA San Diego 92024 Mailing
Address: PO Box 1145, Corona
CA 92878 This business is
hereby registered by the
following: 1. American Koyu
Hotels LLC, 3500 E Colorado
Blvd, Pasadena CA 91107 This
business is conducted by: A
Limited Liability Company
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Tokutaro
Umezawa, 01/30, 02/06, 02/13,
02/20/15 CN 16938
PRSRT STD
U.S. POSTAGE
PRSRTPAID
STD
ENCINITAS,
CA 92025
863267$*(3$,'
PERMIT
NO. 94
(1&,1,7$6&$
THE COASTT NEWS
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INLAND
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VOL. 28, N0. 25
.com
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JUNE 20, 2014
7ZRFRPPHUFLDOVWUXFWXUHVDW&DUOVEDG·V/D&RVWD7RZQH&HQWHUZLOO
be demolished to make way for a revamp that includes the addition
of retail and apartment buildings. The larger new building, shown
above, would include 48 apartments, a courtyard for residents, and
retail. Courtesy renderings
Carlsbad retail center to be
revamped with apartments
By Rachel Stine
Sophia Ceja, 3, of Oceanside, shows off a handful of eggs she found. Four city
c egg hunts are
planned for April 19. See the full story on page A9. Photo by Promise Yee
Council closer to finalizing Pacific VView deal
CARLSBAD — With it’s primary storefront empty
for five years, the 33-year-old La Costa Towne Center at
the corner of El Camino Real and La Costa Avenue is at
last getting a revamp.
The owner of the property gained approval to demolish two commercial structures in the shopping center and replace them with buildings that are half retail
and half apartments from Carlsbad’s Planning Commission on April 16.
Planning Commissioners praised the o ners for
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001646
Filed: Jan 20, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Utility Meter Reading
Solutions Located at: 403
Requeza St G-3, Encinitas
CA San Diego 92024 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Niles Kurt
Mikkelsen, 403 Requeza St
G-3, Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: 01/01/15 S/Niles
Kurt Mikkelsen, 01/30, 02/06,
02/13, 02/20/15 CN 16934
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-000318
Filed: Jan 06, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
LEGALS
LEGALS
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. The Five Elements B.
Beyond Tile Located at: 2706
Gateway Rd, Carlsbad CA San
Diego 92009 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. The Five Elements Inc,
2706 Gateway R, Carlsbad
CA 92009 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
10/03/03 S/Christa Keyser,
01/30, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15
CN 16933
registered by the following:
1. Clifford Bernard Jr, 729
Sea Cottage Way, Oceanside
CA 92054 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
01/08/15 S/Clifford Bernard Jr,
01/30, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15
CN 16927
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-000928
Filed: Jan 12, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Rosati’s of Encinitas
Located at: 377 N El Camino
Real, Encinitas CA San Diego
92024 Mailing Address: 43025
Calle Reva, Temecula CA
92592 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Partners In Dine Inc,
43025 Calle Reva, Temecula
CA 92592 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started S/Michael A
Gordon, 01/30, 02/06, 02/13,
02/20/15 CN 16932
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001330
Filed: Jan 15, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Mighdoll Property Care
Concierge Located at: 545
Amphitheatre Dr, Del Mar
CA San Diego 92014 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. David Mighdoll,
545 Amphitheatre Dr, Del Mar
CA 92014 2. Nils Christianson,
4086 Eagle St, San Diego
CA 92103 This business is
conducted by: A General
Partnership The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/David Mighdoll, 01/30, 02/06,
02/13, 02/20/15 CN 16930
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-000898
Filed: Jan 12, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Jeff Raymond Landscapes
Located at: 309 N Solana
Hills Dr #38, Solana Beach
CA San Diego 92075 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Jeff Raymond,
309 N Solana Hills Dr #38,
Solana Beach CA 92075 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Jeff Raymond, 01/30, 02/06,
02/13, 02/20/15 CN 16929
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001962
Filed: Jan 22, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Happy Place Foods Located
at: 931 Hermes Ave, Encinitas
CA San Diego 92024 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following:
1.
Annemarie
Mancini, 931 Hermes Ave,
Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
S/Annemarie Mancini, 01/30,
02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15 CN
16928
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001347
Filed: Jan 15, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Guiding
Light Investigations Located
at:
729 Sea Cottage Way,
Oceanside CA San Diego
92054
Mailing
Address:
PO Box 516, Oceanside CA
92049 This business is hereby
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001031
Filed: Jan 13, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Feel Located at: 524 S
Coast Hwy, Oceanside CA San
Diego 92054 Mailing Address:
1550 Basswood, Carlsbad CA
92008 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Donovan Stapleton, 1550
Basswood, Carlsbad CA 92008
This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started S/Donovan Stapleton,
01/30, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15
CN 16926
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-000267
Filed: Jan 06, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Dos Manos Studios Located
at:
2996 Greenwich St,
Carlsbad CA San Diego 92010
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Ida
LaChiusa, 2996 Greenwich
St, Carlsbad CA 92010 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: 01/02/15 S/Ida
LaChiusa, 01/30, 02/06, 02/13,
02/20/15 CN 16925
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-000993
Filed: Jan 13, 2015 with County
of the San Diego Recorder/
County
Clerk.
Fictitious
Business Name(s): A. Designs
By Bailie Located at: 3703
Pontiac Dr, Carlsbad CA San
Diego 92010 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Berner Enterprises Inc,
PO Box 3762, Vista CA 92058
This business is conducted
by: A Corporation The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started S/Bailie N Bickford,
01/30, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15
CN 16924
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001799
Filed: Jan 21, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Coveted Home Located
at: 715 Anchor Way, Carlsbad
CA San Diego 92008 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Sandra Stockman,
715 Anchor Way, Carlsbad
CA 92008 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
01/21/15 S/Sandra Stockman,
01/30, 02/06, 02/13, 02/20/15
CN 16923
Fictitious Business Name
Statement
#2015-001411
Filed: Jan 15, 2015 with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County
Clerk.
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Anti Uber World Wide
Located at: 2222 Green Hills
Way, Vista CA San Diego
92084
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Leon Sabbas, 2222 Green
Hills Way, Vista CA 92084
2. Scott Tufts, 7345 Melodia
Terrace, Carlsbad CA 92011
This business is conducted by:
Joint Venture The first day of
business was: 01/15/15 S/Leon
Sabbas, 01/30, 02/06, 02/13,
02/20/15 CN 16922
B14
T he C oast News SCULPTURE
FURNITURE ROW
of the broken mirrored
tiles that were just replaced.
In the center are large
totems with snakes, birds
and whimsical creatures
surrounding the major
work “The Eagle.”
The mythical Amazonian goddess Queen Califia
stands atop the eagle with
long tendril locks flowing
behind her.
Visitors can walk underneath “The Eagle” and
will find a ceiling of rich
blue celestial images.
De Saint Phalle was
influenced by the Native
American culture, which
is evident in the totems she
created, and the imagery
embedded in the tile walls.
California is named
after Queen Califia whose
origins begin in Spain.
Spanish writer Garci
Rodríguez de Montalvo introduced the Amazon goddess in the 1500s.
He wrote that Queen
Califia ruled over an island
of beautiful women.
When Spanish explorers saw Baja, they believed
it to be an island and
dubbed it California, after the island ruled by the
mythical goddess.
Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, the Spanish explorer
who first landed in San Diego, was documented using
the title “California.”
The garden has been
open since 2003 and has
been closed for the past
year because extensive
maintenance was needed
and broken tiles posed a
safety hazard.
Associate Planner for
the city, Kristina Owens,
said the park would be
that it fills a space that had
been vacant for more than
a year, officials from the
city and San Marcos Chamber of Commerce said.
The last business in
the location was Plummer’s, one of the larger retailers on Furniture Row,
which closed in 2013.
“Empty square footage doesn’t look good for
anyone,” said Hal Martin,
a former city councilman
who serves as the chamber’s development director. “It’s not a good look
for the other stores to have
a large anchor vacant for
a long time, it’s not a good
look for the city that needs
the revenue and it is a really bad look for the owner
of the property, who likely
missed that lease revenue
for more than a year and a
half.”
While the city might
CONTINUED FROM B1
LICK THE PLATE
CONTINUED FROM B9
CONTINUED FROM B1
RAISE
Above: The foot of one of the totem poles offers children the opportunity
to interact with the art. Below: The Native American influence is evident
in the totems throughout the garden. Photos by Ellen Wright
open more once there is a
larger pool of reliable volunteer docents.
She also said the gardens are still undergoing
maintenance, which is evident on some of the tile
walls which are missing
pieces.
There is also some visible water damage throughout the sculpture garden,
which is a result of some
of the materials not being
weather proof.
The garden will open
March 14, April 11 and May
9 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
sion being served at Inland
Tavern starts with the fish
we get from Tommy Gomes
at Catalina Offshore and
is ever so slightly cured or
cooked in fresh squeezed
limejuice from Specialty
Produce. It is tossed with local pomelos and some great
olive oil.
I have built some sort of
garden/herb box so we can
have access to the freshest
herbs possible. I am currently building garden boxes up in San Marcos so we
can grow products for the
restaurant, and I can pass
along a little bit of my expe- The house made rigatoni
rience at Lark Creek to my with short rib bolognaise,
basil, and parmesan bubcurrent staff.
bles was a standout as well.
How would you describe Tell me about the preparathe menu at Inland Tavern tion on that dish.
Well, this dish is someand what are some of your
what laborious. First there
favorites on it?
I get asked this ques- is the pasta. Fine Italian
tion a lot, and I like to tell semolina is mixed with
people that it is “Bar food, water and some salt and
extruded through our in
reimagined.
Favorites, wow that house pasta machine. While
is tough. The whole menu the pasta is drying we start
is what I like to cook and on the sauce. Blanching,
eat, but if you are making peeling and seeding the
me choose I would say the tomatoes, caramelizing the
Short Rib & Carnitas tacos, onions, sweating the garlic
the watercress and gigante along with a good dose of olbean salad, the potted ive oil and vegetable stock.
We then simmer this
s’more, and anything that
over a low flame for two
has pomelo in it.
hours to develop and conOne of my favorite dishes centrate the natural flavors.
was the Escabeche. Can you Throw in a bit of salt and we
educate me on this dish and are ready to add the short
rib meat, but first we have
the variations of it?
The dish is if Spanish to braise it. The short rib
origin, by way of Persia and meat is seared then braised
the Moors. The traditional for four-plus hours in our
dish is also a preservation oven along with mirepoix
method, whereas as meat is and aromatics. Once cooked
either poached or fried and and cooled, we handpick
then an acidic sauce with some of the meat and add
vegetables is added. The it into the sauce “a la minacid (vinegar) retards the ute.” Cook the pasta, add
spoilage. The current ver- the sauce and a nice chunk
CONTINUED FROM B1
ings, there are more than
20 regional, standing and
ad hoc committees that require representation. Most
council members are on at
least five.
Heebner noted Solana
Beach is a small city.
“What that means is
that we actually do a lot
more of our own work,” she
said. “We don’t have aides.
We don’t have assistants.
We drive our own cars.
“We read our own
SMALL TALK
CONTINUED FROM B1
of braised short rib, all
topped off with Thai basil
and some Parmesan bubbles (and a little bit of molecular gastronomy magic).
Whew.
You have a simple yet delicious dessert menu including those crazy good doughnuts. Tell me more about
the dessert options.
As I was developing the
dessert menu I was keen
on keeping things simple,
both from a production and
a guest perspective. The donuts (batter) is made daily
and is cooked to order. We
are currently incorporating
some wonderful Wisconsin cheddar into the batter
for an extra layer of flavor.
Then they are tossed with
cinnamon sugar and then
dusted with powdered sugar. We also have is the potted s’more. I remembered
eating s’mores on Mount
Palomar as a kid. Looking
to create an adult version I
settled on a chocolate pot
de crème base and toasted
house made marshmallow
cream on top. I think it does
the trick.
Lick the Plate can now
be heard on KPRi, 102.1 FM
Monday - Friday during at
4:10 and 7:10 p.m. David
Boylan is founder of Artichoke Creative and Artichoke
Apparel, an Encinitas based
marketing firm and clothing
line. Reach him at david@
artichoke-creative.com or
(858) 395-6905.
II and Latvia. For those of
you equally unaware, the
Red Army invaded Latvia
in 1939 and stripped citizens like Sonia’s family of
their wealth and property.
When the Germans arrived
in 1941, driving the Russians out, her family was
able to recover the country
home and restore her father’s business somewhat,
but when World War II ended, the Russians marched
back in. The family quickly
left for Germany, the safest place for them at that
time. Sonia’s father died
TASTE OF WINE
CONTINUED FROM B9
the term “Ice Wine.” Look
only for that term and no
other.
The Germans are famous for their Eiswein, discovered in the 19th century
when farmers left grapes
on the vines in the coldest
of winters to feed their livestock. Commercial production
began in the 1960s and the
government began rules
prohibiting use of any sort
of artificial freezing in production. So the ice wine lover needs to check to see if
there was no harvest during
a given year due to a warmer
than usual winter.
Remember, ice wine
is wine that is made from
grapes that have been allowed to freeze on the vine,
intensifying the flavor of
the wine due to the absence
of water when pressed
and fermented. FEB. 20, 2015
lose some sales tax revenue that a furniture store
generates, it attracts more
potential clients to the
street, and that is a good
thing, Martin said.
Martin said a similar phenomenon occurred
when Phil’s BBQ opened
in the Creekside Marketplace Shopping Center in
2011, despite reservations
from some of the other
restaurants that it would
siphon off business from
them.
“The overflow actually did all the restaurants
and businesses a big favor,” Martin said. “They
became a lot busier as a
result of Phil’s presence.”
Martin and Griffin
both said they don’t believe that Sky Zone’s presence signals the start of a
dramatic shift in the complexion of furniture row.
The city, they said, has
done a good job of putting
businesses in locations
where they can thrive.
“The only constant
is change, but I don’t see
it changing that rapidly,”
Martin said. “We still have
large anchor stores there
such as Mor, Jerome’s and
Ashley Furniture that
just moved over there,
and these are really large
anchors that will attract
some of the smaller businesses you see adjacent to
them.
“But I think what you
are seeing is that it really is hard to find another
major tenant; there just
aren’t many of those out
there and you run out of
candidates,” Martin said.
Griffin said the city
will be monitoring Sky
Zone’s performance, but
thinks it will be a positive
addition to the row.
“It’s a big draw, and
any time you can bring
more people to our commercial areas, there is a
lot of upside,” Griffin said.
agendas,” she added. “We
don’t have anybody reading them for us and providing us a little notebook
with great little crafted remarks.”
Council members also
are permitted to take a car
allowance, but none have
requested it in the past few
years. They opted to forgo
the perk when the economy
was weak and across-theboard budget cuts were being requested from every
department.
“So we’re in a new
day,” Heebner said.
Council
members
agreed both topics should
be added to a future agenda so they can at least have
a discussion about their options.
“I’d be interested in
hearing more,” Councilman Mike Nichols said.
“It’s a conversation that,
even if we vote no on it,
needs to happen because
it’s part of the process.”
Should a salary increase be approved, council members would be paid
$961.98 per month beginning in December 2016.
there. She and her mother eventually immigrated
to America, where half a
century passed before the
Berlin Wall fell and Soviet
Russia crumbled.
I was particularly
moved by an anecdote my
friend shared at the end
her amazing tale. In the
box of treasures was a
handful of gold wedding
bands. When Sonia saw
them, she was beside herself with distress, demanding they be thrown into the
nearest river.
They were, she said,
rings that her fellow townspeople had been forced to
sell to her father in des-
peration, when all else was
gone. Even after 60 years,
she wanted no part of those
rings or the pain they represented. The story ends
with one son planning to
renovate the home in Latvia.
With the rise of freedom across the world, three
generations were able to go
home, find their roots and
experience their rich heritage.
That, of course, is the
treasure beyond price. Jean Gillette is a freelance
writer. Contact her at
jgillette@coastnewsgroup.
com.
The best grapes used 232-4338.
for ice wines are: Riesling,
Solare Ristorante at
Gewurztraminer and Caber- Liberty Station in Point
net Franc with higher levels Loma has a Meyer Family
of acidity. Be prepared to Cellars dinner Feb. 25 from
pay $50 to $100 per 375 ml 6:30 to 9 p.m. Matt Meyer
bottle of authentic ice wine, the winemaker will walk
from such names as: Inni- you through the wines. skillin, Riverview Cellars
His family founded the
Estate and Chateau Ste. Mi- famous Silver Oak vineyard
chelle.
in Napa Valley. Meyer is
Wine Bytes
known for cabs, syrah and
WineSellar & Brasse- port. $85. RSVP at (619)
rie has a Sleight of Hand 270-9670.
Cellars winemaker dinner
Shorehouse Kitchen in
Feb. 21 from 6 to 9 p.m., in La Jolla has an all-Pinot Noir
the Sorrento Valley district dinner Feb. 26 from 6:30 to
of San Diego. Owners from 8:30 p.m. It’s a five-course
Washington State are Jerry pairing dinner for $59. Call
and Sandy Solomon. Enjoy a (858) 459-3300.
Rose, Chardonnay and three
blends. Cost is $80. Call
Frank Mangio is a
renowned wine connoisseur
(858) 450-9557.
Croce’s Park West is
certified by Wine Spectator. presenting a five-ourse dinHe is one of the leading wine
ner with Zaca Mesa wines
commentators on the web. from San Luis Obispo. Five
View and link up with his
tastings with winemaker
columns at TasteofWineTV.
Eric Mohseni is Feb. 24. com. Reach him at mangioCost is $80. RSVP and time [email protected] and follow him
on Facebook.
of the event by calling (619)
FEB. 20, 2015 B15
T he C oast News Put the power of
print to work for you!
for as little as
3
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Business or Personal
Your classified in print with over 120,000 readers and
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THE C
OAST
VOL. 28,
NEWS
N0. 25
VISTA,
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Two comm
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By Rach
*Place your own ad at: thecoastnews.com
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16.
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Carlsbad
s the propermillion of the purcTony Kran n said.
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cencoming ning Com
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’s Plan are half reta
the end majority
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k calle
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*25¢ per word line ads, 15 word minimum.
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CENTER
THE C
OAST
VOL. 28,
NEWS
N0. 25
VISTA,
ON A17
PRSR
U.S. POST T STD
AGE PAID
ENCINITA PRSR
T STD
U.S.S, CA 9202
PERMITPOST
AGE5PAID
ENCINITA
NO. 94
S,
PERMIT CA 92025
NO. 94
SAN M
ARCO
S,
INLA
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.com
ESCOND
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JUNE 20,
2014
Sophi
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If you want us to do the work,
Counci
l close
r to fin
alizing
Pacific
View
THE C
OAST
VOL. 28
hel Stin
deal
it’s $1 per word, 15 word minimum.
NEWS
, N0. 25
VISTA,
By Rac
e
CA
for five RLSBA D
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ON A17
760.436.9737
or email at:
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TER ON
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2015
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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Mixing financial and emotional issues can be costly. If your generosity is eating into your
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or hands-on help.
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Networking and promotion will bring you Schedule time to discuss your plans for
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Love will play a role in the success you at work. Prove how seriously you take
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able on the Internet. Don’t limit yourself to
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weather changes are unpleasant, but
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been exaggerating or spreading rumors, handled properly, you will end up with a
you will be accused of meddling. Keep lifelong friendship.
busy doing something that is beneficial to AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Finanyou and those around you.
cial gains lie ahead. An opportunity to
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Design & Remodel-Since 1973. Lic.#833211 www.konstruktdesignandremodel.com 858-453-6555
SENIOR COMPANION / CAREGIVER AVAILABLE to assist your loved
one. I am a retired engineer with 15
yrs experience. In home or assisted living visits and outings. Meal prep, light
housekeeping,,Dr. appts. errands, etc.
Excellent long term references. Available 2 days per week / 4 hr. minimum.
David 760.519.9616. No agency’s
MEMORIAL
PRESENTATION
SLIDESHOW WITH MUSIC I am a
multimedia producer. When my Mom
passed away, I scanned about 70 photos spanning her life. I can do the same
to project at your loved one’s service.
Keepsake forever. 760-436-8449
JESSE’S TREE SERVICE~WE DO IT
ALL! Lic.860309 Ins. Bonded 760-8459909
ENHANCE YOUR HOME OR OFFICE WITH BEAUTIFUL LIVING
ART ARRANGEMENTS FROM
GREENS & THINGS PLANTSCAPING Specializing in high-end, contemporary living art, our plantscape
designers use live plants, natural elements like stone and drift wood, and
other creative materials to create simplistic yet sophisticated living art to
suit your style and exceed your expectations. Ad some color and life to your
world and call (760) 942-1234 or email
[email protected]
FOR AFFORDABLE DOG WALKING
AND PET WASTE REMOVAL 35/mo/
dog. More info?? Please call Mark 818922-9074
BACK-HOE,
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Footings, Pool Removal, Leveling.
Owner/Operator. #503159 760-7814149
LAWYER MAKES HOUSE CALLS
Free consult. Bankruptcy, Modification, Short Sale. Elder Abuse. Other
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MATTRESS SET FOR SALE Queen
Mattress Set $150 New in Plastic
No Room. Call Today! 760-691-2337
PLANTPLAY GARDENS PlantPlay
Gardens Plants Pottery Gifts 4915A
ElCamino Real Carlsbad Open
7Days
9to5
Web
Facebook
DIRECTV IS CURRENTLY RECRUITING for the following position in San Diego: • Site Administrator • Warehouse
Assistant
If you are not able to access our
website, DIRECTV.com, mail your
resume and salary requirements to:
DIRECTV, Attn: Talent Acquisition,
161 Inverness Drive West, Englewood, CO 80112. To apply online,
visit:
www.directv.com/careers.
EOE.
HAIR SALON Hairstylist for Booth
Rental wanted for Full or part time.
Coastal Carlsbad salon with garden
setting. Call Lynde for details at
760-845-5540.
CAREGIVERS NEEDED NORTH
COUNTY Caregivers with one year
experience, reliable transportation,
a working cell phone and a clean
background are wanted for part
time or full time work in the North
County area. Please call (760) 7247273 to apply.
HAIRSTYLIST WANTED! Booth
Rental-Full or part time. Casual,
friendly, COASTAL ENCINITAS salon. Call Studio 839 for detail! (760)
436-9839
FOR RENT
ST NEW
S
PRSRT STD
U.S. POSTAGE
ENCINITASPRSRTPAID
STD
, CA 92025
U.S. POSTAGE
PERMIT
NO. 94 PAID
ENCINITAS
, CA
PERMIT NO. 92025
94
N0. 25
VISTA, SAN
INLAND
EDITIO
N
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LAKE HODGES AREA ESCONDIDO COTTAGE Small 2BR1BA
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CHARMING 1BR IN HISTORIC
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BEACH
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MISCELLANEOUS
COMMUNITY FLEA MARKET 9th
year Large north county Community
Flea looking for vendors! Sat. Market
March 28 Vista Elks lodge 1947 E. Vista Way, Vista 92084 Vendors pay $25
for a 20x15 Space (large enough for a
car and table. Must reserve space. first
come first served. space for 80 Vendors
check in at 6am ready to sell by 7:30.
Clean out your garage, advertize your
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resale consignment, anything legal.
call Myra for details 760-803-59074
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WANTED: VINTAGE EUROPEAN SPORTS CAR - PORSCHE,
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I prefer 1950’s through 1970’s models, but will consider ANY car - in
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Thank you! (619) 992-9488
ITEMS WANTED
ART WANTED ESTATES, COLLECTORS, BANKRUPTCIES Top
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FEB. 20, 2015 Who’s
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Business news and special
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KUDOS FOR TENNIS
CLUB
The Rancho Santa Fe
Tennis Club, 5829 Via de la
Cumbre, Rancho Santa Fe,
was recognized by the United States Professional Tennis Association (USPTA)
San Diego Division as the
2014 Outstanding Facility
of The Year. The club hosts
numerous USPTA tournaments and USTA league
play and donates courts for
the USPTA Professional
Singles Tournament. The
club also hosts the Rancho
Santa Fe Middle School
tennis team, the Eagles,
which is coached by four of
the club’s professionals four
days per week.
GOLD DESIGN AWARD
Del Mar-based Design Line Interiors has
been honored with a Gold
Award for excellence in
interior design at La Vita
at Orchard Hills, built by
Brookfield Residential in
Irvine. Design Line President Dawn Davidson accepted the award during
the International Builders’
Show in Las Vegas. Honored in the category of Best
Interior Merchandising of a
Model Home from 3,001 to
3,500 square feet, Design
Line was recognized for its
work on Residence Four,
a 3,942-square-foot home
with four bedrooms, fourand-a-half baths and an
oversized two-car garage.
NEW HOMEGOODS
HomeGoods
home
fashions will open a new
25,000-square-foot store in
Solana Beach from 8 a.m. to
8 p.m. Feb. 22 in the Lomas
Santa Fe Plaza at Interstate
5 and Lomas Santa Fe Drive.
The new Solana Beach location will be the fifth store
in the San Diego market.
HomeGoods expects to fill
approximately 60 full- and
part-time positions. Regular store hours will be Monday through Saturday 9:30
a.m. to 9:30 p.m.; Sunday 11
a.m. to 8 p.m.
DUISTER NAMED
PARTNER
The law offices of Rickard L. Borg, 800 Grand
Ave., #14, Carlsbad, has announced that associate attorney Vanessa C. Duisters
has been named a full partner at the firm. In recognition of the new partnership,
the firm also announces a
name change to The Law
Offices of Borg & Duisters
effective immediately. The
law office specializes in
business law, family law
and estate planning and is
currently celebrating 40
years of serving Carlsbad
and North San Diego County.
SPEAK CAT
San Diego Humane Society President and CEO,
Dr. Gary Weitzman, has released “How to Speak Cat:
A Guide to Decoding Cat
Language,” which educates
pet owners on how to decipher feline body language
and behavior. During February, everyone who adopts
a cat from San Diego Humane Society, will be entered to win a signed copy.
Branches are at 2905 San
Luis Rey Road, Oceanside
and 3450 E. Valley Parkway, Escondido.
tes at lmontes@miracosta.
edu or call (760) 757- 2121
ext. 6396. CONSTRUCTION NEWS
Dempsey
Construction is handling the renovation of Pacific Gateway
Towers, a two-building,
68,000-square-foot, multitenant medical office project at 3142 and 3156 Vista
Way, Oceanside. Project
Manager Paul Prellwitz
said the scope of the project
work includes a number of
substantial capital improvements, including upgrades
to both buildings‚ interior and exterior as well as
overall site improvements.
The interior renovation is
highlighted by upgrades to
common area lobbies, finishes, and hallway corridors
and restrooms, with ceiling
heights increased to open
up the floor plates
BOCCE TOURNAMENT IS ON
Bocce tournament supporter Dan Phelan, with his wife, Carolyn, will again take part in the
upcoming Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotary 19th annual Bocce Tournament fundraiser Oct. 4 on
the Del Mar Horsepark’s Grand Prix field. This year’s major beneficiaries will be Just in Time
for Foster Youth, Operation Game On and Reality Changers. Interested sponsors should
contact Tournament Chairwoman Vicky Mallett, via by emailing [email protected]. See
dmsbbocce.com for more information. For information about the Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotary Club, contact Paul Butler at (619) 559-3213 or [email protected]. Courtesy photo
“It begins with a conversation, and
ends when your dreams come true!”
PENDLETON RULES
Camp Pendleton Domino’s Pizza raised $7,526.11
for children at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital as
part of the Thanks and Giving campaign. The amount
raised was in the top 10
for all Domino’s stores. Nationwide, stores asked for a
dollar or more to be added
to customers’ orders for the
charity. ENCUENTROS HOSTED
MiraCosta College will
host Carlsbad area high
school Latino boys at the
Encuentros Education &
STEM Career Exploration
Conference Feb. 21 at the
college’s Oceanside Campus, 1 Barnard Drive. This
year’s breakout workshops
will focus on careers in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM), and
is aimed at increasing the
number of Latinos in higher
education. For more information, contact Lisa Mon-
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! By
Appointment Only. Call for Open House Schedules!
NEW TASTE SETTERS
L'Auberge Del Mar is
starting off 2015 in good
taste with new additions
to its food and beverage
team. The new team, Director of Restaurants Kurtis
Hurt, Restaurant Manager Greg Bringardner and
Food & Beverage Manager
Clyde Stewart, will debut
a new outlet in the spring,
craft beer dinners, music
programming showcasing
up-and-coming artists in
the Living Room Bar and
seasonal menu rotations at
KITCHEN 1540.
PET CLINIC OPENS
The Solana Beach
Chamber welcomes Banfield Pet Hospital to Solana
Beach with a ribbon-cutting ceremony from 9 to 11
a.m. Feb. 21 at 437 S. Coast
Highway 101, Suite 100,
Solana Beach. All pets are
welcome. A free consultation exam is offered.
B19
T he C oast News 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
B20
T he C oast News FEB. 20, 2015
$1,995 due at lease signing
36 month lease
15 at this payment (Standard 2.5i Automatic model, code FFB-02).
$1,995 due at lease signing. $0 security deposit. Tax, title and registration
fees extra. Other leases available on other models. Cannot be combined
with any other incentives. Special lease rates extended to well-qualified
buyers and are subject to credit approval, vehicle insurance approval and
vehicle availability. Lessee pays personal property and ad valorem taxes
(where applicable), insurance, maintenance repairs not covered by warranty,
excessive wear and tear and a mileage charge of 15 cents per mile for
mileage over 10,000 miles per year. Retailer participation may affect final
cost. Cannot be combined with any other incentives or offers. Must take
delivery from retailer stock by February 22, 2015.
Purchase or lease any new (previously untitled) Subaru and receive a complimentary factory
scheduled maintenance plan for 2 years or 24,000 miles (whichever comes first.) See Subaru
Added Security Maintenance Plan for intervals, coverages and limitations. Customer must take
delivery before 12-31-2015 and reside within the promotional area. At participating dealers only.
See dealer for program details and eligibility.
Cannot be combined with any other incentive. Financing for well-qualified applicants only. $20.83 thousand financed. Subject to credit approval, vehicle insurance approval and vehicle availability. No down payment required.
See participating dealers for details. Must take delivery from dealer stock by February 22, 2015.
Car Country Drive
5500 Paseo Del Norte Car Country Carlsbad
Car Country Drive
760-438-2200
www.bobbakersubaru.com
** EPA-estimated fuel economy. Actual mileage may vary. Subaru Tribeca, Forester, Impreza & Outback are registered trademarks. All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. Expires 2/22/2015.
22nd Annual Bob Baker
ar Country Drive
Car Country Drive
Vintage Volkswagen Spring Festival!
Mark your calendars! Sunday, Mar. 22, 2015 10am-2pm. Food Trucks, Live Music & Raffle!
Spectators are FREE! Car Show entrants only $10. Open to all Air-Cooled VWs!
Lease for
169
$
ar Country Drive
Automatic Transmission and More!
JEEP • CHRYSLER • MITSUBISHI
per month + tax
JEEPCHRYSLER MITS
for 36 months
6 at this payment. On approved above average credit. $1999 Due at Signing. $0 security deposit required. Payments plus tax & license, 36mo. closed end lease
with purchase option. Excess mileage fees of 20¢ per mile based on 10,000 miles per year. Offer Expires 2/22/15
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 2-22-2015.
ar Country Drive
2015 Volkswagen Jetta S 2.0L