uk - The Coast News

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uk - The Coast News
PRSRT STD
U.S. POSTAGE PAID
ENCINITAS, CA 92024
PERMIT NO. 94
THE
COAST
NEWS
.com
MAKING WAVES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
VOL. 28, NO. 1
JAN. 3, 2014
A bicyclist rides south on Coast Highway 101 in Encinitas. Cyclists,
law enforcement and city officials say an education campaign for
motorists on what sharrows mean and how bike riders can use them
is much needed. Photo by Tony Cagala
Graham Nancarrow, son of longtime San Diego television journalist Loren Nancarrow, prepares to paddle out to celebrate the life
of his father. Photo by Bill Reilly
Public celebrates Nancarrow’s life
By Jared Whitlock
ENCINITAS — Five-foot waves
rolled in, rays from the setting sun
streaked across the water and whales
even spouted off the coast.
It was a fitting scene to celebrate
the life of longtime local journalist
Loren Nancarrow, who loved all
things nature. On Monday afternoon,
hundreds gathered at Seaside Reef
for a paddle-out in his memory.
“I so appreciate you being here,”
wife Susie Nancarrow told those on
the beach before wading into the
water for the paddle-out. “This is
overwhelming — I’m almost speechless.”
Susie and others recalled that
Loren, who passed away the morning
of Dec. 28 at the age of 60, was a renaissance man with many passions.
Chief among them was organic gardening, a subject he co-authored multiple books about.
“He has given so much to our
community by educating and teaching about ecology and farming,” Susie
said while crying.
Daughter Hannah Nancarrow
wrote in a blog post shortly after his
passing: “My dad was a kayaker, an
organic gardening guru and a lover of
wonderment.”
The post went on to say: “He
enjoyed Bob Dylan, Jack Daniel’s and
hot sake and was an avid collector of
walking sticks, beach glass and beautiful German shepherds. My dad
knew everything there was to know
about citrus trees and roses and tomatoes, raising chickens and earthworms
and monarch butterflies. He was a
Two Sections,
44 pages
Counting homeless
The annual homeless count
later this month is one step
towards trying to solve
homelessness. B4
The best wines of 2013
Columnist Frank Mangio
selects the Top 10 wines of
2013. B11
human Pinterest board.”
Loren’s television career began
more than 30 years ago. He was a
weatherman, reporter and anchorman
with various local news outlets, with
his most recent position being at Fox
5 San Diego.
In February, Loren was diagnosed
with stage three terminal brain cancer, forcing him to later retire from
his anchor role at Fox 5. He chronicled the journey in his blog
www.thenancarrowproject.com.
“One of the lessons I’ve learned
in life is that happiness lies in discovering your passions and exploring
them fiercely,” Loren wrote in his
final blog post on Dec. 26. “And passions aren’t necessarily big, grand
notions. We can also find passion in a
Arts & Entertainment . A15
A former nun turned artist is
hoping that sales of her
works will raise enough
funds for her transplant to
beat leukemia. B1
Food & Wine . . . . . . . . B10
Legals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A19
Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A4
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A16
TURN TO NANCARROW ON A18
HOW TO
REACH US
(760) 436-9737
Calendar:
[email protected]
Community News:
[email protected]
Letters to the Editor:
[email protected]
Motorist education
over sharrows still
much needed
By Tony Cagala
ENCINITAS
—
“Bicycles are traffic –
we’re part of the traffic,”
said Brent Garrigus, an
avid cyclist and owner of
Ride Cyclery, a bike sales
and service shop that borders the South Coast
Highway 101 in Encinitas.
He rides his bike
along the highway on a
regular basis.
“It’s still very dangerous,” he said.
Garrigus said he gets
yelled at, even buzzed by
motorists while riding the
highway. Those have seemingly become commonplace experiences for
other cyclists, too.
The Coast Highway is
a bustling thoroughfare of
two narrow lanes each
heading north and south.
Vehicles are consistently
pulling in or out of parking
spots on the right sides of
the lanes making driving
conditions tight.
That tightness is felt
all the more with the addition of bicyclists to the
roadways — recreational
riders, tourists and those
that use bikes as their
main mode of transportation — and much of that is
causing a lot of “noise”
between cyclists and
motorists.
All, which is leading to
what cyclist groups, law
enforcement and city officials, say is a much needed
education campaign to
make sure motorists know
what the sharrows mean
and how bicyclists are able
to use them.
Sheriff’s Department
Capt. Robert Haley said
the sharrows (a symbol of
a bike underneath two
arrows painted onto roadways) were very forward
thinking on the city’s part.
“The lanes are too narrow
to have dedicated bike
lanes, so they created the
sharrow lanes and a lot of
drivers are very unfamiliar
with the whole sharrows
concept,” he said.
“The sharrows were
created to allow bicyclists
to avoid hazards on the
right side (of the lane),”
Haley said. “Sometimes
there could be trucks
parked over there, and if
they (bicyclists) need to
ride in the middle of the
lane, or even a little to the
left of the sharrow to avoid
TURN TO SHARROWS ON A18
A2
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
JANUARY 2014 EVENTS & CLASSES
All classes are held at Tri-City Medical Center - 4002 Vista Way, Oceanside or Tri-City Wellness Center - 6250 El Camino Real, Carlsbad,
unless otherwise indicated. Please note, classes are subject to change. Please call to confirm.
Wednesday, January 1
Diabetes Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, Tri-City
Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino Real,
Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to register/fee
involved
Breastfeeding Support, 9:15-11a.m., Call
760-940-7745
Bipolar/Anxiety/Depression Group, 2:30-4
p.m., 510 W. Vista Way, Vista, Call 760-4393500
Total Joint Knee Replacement, 12:30- 2
pm, registration required, Call 855-222-8262
Thursday, January 2
Aphasia Group, 11 a.m.-noon, Call 760-9407272
Stroke Exercise, 10-11 a.m., Call 760-9407272
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30 p.m. for
individuals undergoing treatment, Tri-City
Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino Real,
Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to register/fee
involved
Diabetes Support Group, 11-noon, Call
760-644-1201
Diabetes & Meal Planning, 2-3:30 p.m.,
registration required, Call 760-644-1201
Friday, January 3
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m., Call
866-331-1958
Parkinson’s Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, Call
760-940-7272
Diabetes Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, Tri-City
Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino Real,
Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to register/fee
involved
Saturday, January 4
AA Young People’s Group, 7:30-9 p.m.,
Call 760-758-2514
Sunday, January 5
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m., Call
866-331-1958
Monday, January 6
Basic Life Support (Renewal), 8-11a.m., fee
involved, registration required, Call 760-9403100
Maternity Tour, 2:30-4 p.m., Registration
Required, Call 760-940-5750
Tuesday, January 7
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for
individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30 p.m. for
individuals undergoing treatment, Tri-City
Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino Real,
Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to register/fee
involved
S.M.A.R.T. (Self Management & Recovery
Training, Non 12 step program), 6:30-8 p.m.,
Call 619-985-5483
Wednesday, January 8
Breastfeeding Support, 9:15-11a.m., Call
760-940-7745
Bipolar/Anxiety/Depression Group, 2:30-4
p.m., 510 W. Vista Way, Vista, Call 760-4393500
Diabetes Exercise Support Group Nutrition, 11 a.m.-noon, Tri-City Wellness Center,
6250 El Camino Real, Carlsbad, Call 760931-3171 to register/fee involved
Cancer Support Group, 10:30-11:30 a.m.,
Call 760-940-3632
Better Breathers, 1:30-3:30 p.m., Call 760940-3055
Thursday, January 9
Aphasia Group, 11 a.m.-noon, Call 760-9407272
Thursday, January 9
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for
individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30
p.m. for individuals undergoing treatment, Tri-City Wellness Center, 6250 El
Camino Real, Carlsbad, Call 760-9313171 to register/fee involved
Diabetes Support Group, 7-9 p.m,
Call 760-630-1964
Advanced Cardiac Life Support (Renewal), 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., registration
required, fee involved, Call 760-9403100
Doc Is In!
lecture
6 p.m., Dr, Yogesh Patel, “New Year
Resolutions You Should Consider for a
Pain Free 2014,” registration is encouraged, Tri-City Wellness Center, 6250 El
Camino Real, Carlsbad, Call 855-2228262
Friday, January 10
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m.,
Call 866-331-1958
Parkinson’s Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon,
Call 760-940-7272
Diabetes Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, TriCity Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to
register/fee involved
Saturday, January 11
AA Young People’s Group, 7:30-9
p.m., Call 760-758-2514
Sunday, January 12
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m.,
Call 866-331-1958
Monday, January 13
Diabetes Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, TriCity Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to
register/fee involved
Tuesday, January 14
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30 p.m.
for individuals undergoing treatment,
Tri-City Wellness Center, Carlsbad, Call
760-931-3171 to register/fee involved
Mended Hearts Support Group, 11
a.m., Tri-City Wellness Center, 6250 El
Camino Real, Carlsbad, Call 760-4762905
Wednesday, January 15
Breastfeeding Support, 9:15-11a.m.,
Call 760-940-7745
Diabetes Exercise Support Group
Nutrition, 11 a.m.-noon, Tri-City Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino Real,
Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to register/
fee involved
Maternity Tour, 6-7:30 p.m., Registration Required, Call 760-940-5750
Total Joint Knee Replacement, 12:302 pm, registration required, Call 855222-8262
Thursday, January 16
Aphasia Group, 11 a.m.-noon, Call
760-940-7272
Stroke Exercise, 10-11 a.m., Call 760940-7272
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30 p.m.
for individuals undergoing treatment,
Tri-City Wellness Center, Call 760-9313171 to register/fee involved
Friday, January 17
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m., Call
866-331-1958
Parkinson’s Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, Call
760-940-7272
Diabetes Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, Tri-City
Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino Real,
Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to register/fee
involved
Carlsbad Marathon, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m., Westfield Plaza Camino Real, 2525 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad, CA 92008
Saturday, January 18
Heartsaver First Aid CPR AED, 8 a.m.3:30 pm., Call 760-940-3100 to register/fee
involved
AA Young People’s Group, 7:30-9 p.m.,
Call 760-758-2514
Carlsbad Marathon, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Westfield Plaza Camino Real, 2525 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad, CA 92008
Sunday, January 19
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m., Call
866-331-1958
Carlsbad Marathon, 6 a.m.- 1 p.m., Westfield Plaza Camino Real, 2525 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad, CA 92008
Monday, January 20
Basic Life Support (Renewal), 8-11a.m., fee
involved, registration required, Call 760-9403100
Diabetes Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, Tri-City
Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino Real,
Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to register/fee
involved
Maternity Tour, 6-7:30 p.m., Registration
Required, Call 760-940-5750
Tuesday, January 21
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for
individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30 p.m. for
individuals undergoing treatment, Tri-City
Wellness Center, Call 760-931-3171 to register/fee involved
S.M.A.R.T. (Self Management & Recovery
Training, Non 12 step program), 6:30-8 p.m.,
Call 619-985-5483
Wednesday, January 22
Breastfeeding Support, 9:15-11a.m., Call
760-940-7745
Bipolar/Anxiety/Depression Group, 2:30-4
p.m., 510 W. Vista Way, Vista, Call 760-4393500
Thursday, January 23
Aphasia Group, 11 a.m.-noon, Call 760-9407272
Stroke Exercise, 10-11 a.m., Call 760-9407272
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for
individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30 p.m. for
individuals undergoing treatment, Tri-City
Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino Real,
Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to register/fee
involved
Friday, January 24
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m., Call
866-331-1958
Parkinson’s Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, Call
760-940-7272
Saturday, January 25
ENCINITAS WELLNESS WEEK,
SPONSORED BY TRI-CITY MEDICAL CENTER
11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Join us for exciting health & wellness
exhibits at the Encinitas Library
540 Cornish Drive, Encinitas, CA 92024
Sunday, January 26
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m., Call
866-331-1958
Monday, January 27
Diabetes Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, TriCity Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to
register/fee involved
Advanced Cardiac Life Support (Renewal), 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., registration
required, fee involved, Call 760-940-3100
Tuesday, January 28
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for
individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30 p.m.
for individuals undergoing treatment, TriCity Wellness Center, Call 760-931-3171
to register/fee involved
Wednesday, January 29
Breastfeeding Support, 9:15-11a.m.,
Call 760-940-7745
Bipolar/Anxiety/Depression Group,
2:30-4 p.m., 510 W. Vista Way, Vista, Call
760-439-3500
Thursday, January 30
Cancer Exercise, 12:30-1:30 p.m. for
individuals in remission & 1:30-2:30 p.m.
for individuals undergoing treatment,
Tri-City Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to
register/fee involved
Friday, January 31
Narcotics Anonymous, 7:30-9 p.m., Call
866-331-1958
Parkinson’s Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, Call
760-940-7272
Diabetes Exercise, 11 a.m.-noon, TriCity Wellness Center, 6250 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad, Call 760-931-3171 to
register/fee involved
ADVANCED HEALTH CARE
FOR
For more information please call (855) 222.8262 or visit www.tricitymed.org
DEC_ 2013 Events Ad - Copy.indd 1
12/20/2013 2:00:22 PM
A3
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
8 Encinitas stories to watch in 2014
From the Encinitas Community Park making its debut to
tougher rules for bars, here’s a rundown of eight stories that
will define Encinitas over the next year.
By Jared Whitlock
1. Mayoral election
No longer will a council majority choose the
mayor. Proposition K passed in 2012. So, for the
first time, Encinitas voters will directly elect a twoyear mayor in November.
Mayor Teresa Barth and Councilwoman Kristin
Gaspar are exploring entering the mayor’s race.
Both confirmed on Monday they haven’t made a
decision either way.
There’s also an open council seat up for grabs
in November. Barth stated she’s not interested in
the four-year council seat due to the length of the
term. Gaspar said that if she doesn’t run for mayor,
she’ll vie for the council member position.
“Although I am committed to running for
office in 2014, my final decision to run for mayor
will be based upon the feedback I receive from the
community,” Gaspar said in an email.
So far, 23-year-old Alex Fidel is the only person
to announce an intent to run. In an interview on
Tuesday, Fidel said he’s against local water fluoridation and what he sees as the federal government
interfering with Encinitas.
2. New agriculture taking root
A farming cluster is sprouting in Encinitas.
Namely, the Leichtag Foundation is transforming the 67-acre property formerly known as Ecke
Ranch into a hub for commercial and educational
agriculture.
Go Green Agriculture, an expanding company
that grows hydroponic lettuce, offered a glimpse
into the property’s future when it set up shop there
in the spring.
Jim Farley, CEO of the foundation, said
Leichtag is in talks with two other innovative agriculture companies and hopes to bring them on
board in 2014.
Plus, various nonprofits dedicated to issues
like food security are due to move onto the property. And Leichtag hopes to plant a “food forest” —
an ecosystem teeming with vegetables, fruits and
nuts — later in the year, according to Farley.
Across from the Leichtag land on Quail
Gardens Drive, a 10-acre plot will soon host a community farm and one-acre satellite campus for the
Encinitas Union School District. Work began on
the school portion this fall, and the community
part will be plowed for crops in the coming months,
said Scott Murray, the project organizer, last
month.
Also of note: the new one-acre Ocean Knoll
Elementary School Farm will sprout more produce
and offer expanded educational lessons for students in 2014.
469
*
MONTH + TAX
FOR 42 MONTHS
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4.
Plastic bag ban up for a vote
Encinitas could follow in Solana Beach’s
footsteps and eliminate plastic bags.
The City Council will vote on a ban, likely in
February or March, according to Richard Phillips,
Encinitas Environmental Commission coordinator.
California legislators are due to look at a
statewide ban, which would primarily apply to larger retailers. But Kranz said he’s inclined to support
a local ban that covers most stores to create a level
playing field.
“Plastics in the ocean are a significant problem,” Kranz said. “I’m hopeful Carlsbad, Oceanside
and other coastal cities give a ban consideration.”
5. Encinitas Community Park opening
A skatepark, dog park, playground and multiuse sports fields — those are some of the features
that will make up the 44-acre Encinitas
Community Park.
After more than a decade of debate and legal
setbacks, the long-planned park got City Council
approval during summer 2012.
This past November, city officials stated the
park, behind the Vons on Santa Fe Drive, will debut
in fall 2014.
The city will determine which athletic groups
and other organizations can use the fields. Also,
the City Council will consider naming the dog park
after the late Councilwoman Maggie Houlihan,
who advocated for dog-friendly areas.
The cost of park construction is estimated at
$19.3 million.
3. Pacific View negotiations
“Encinitas needs a community arts center.” It’s
a common refrain from residents and local businesses.
To fill the need, the City Council is considering
purchasing the Pacific View property from the
Encinitas Union School District.
6. New pension fund
Councilman Tony Kranz confirmed on Tuesday
About two months ago, Councilwoman Lisa
the city recently made an offer for Pacific View, but
Shaffer
proposed the city take a portion of surplus
couldn’t disclose further details since negotiations
are ongoing and in closed session.
TURN TO STORIES ON A18
This summer, the city received two varying
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in downtown. One came in at $3.29 million and the
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A4
O PINION &EDITORIAL
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Happy New Year!
As you may have heard, the County of
San Diego recently selected our company,
American Medical Response, to be the exclusive medical response provider for much of the
North County coastal region, including
Encinitas, Solana Beach, Del Mar, as well as
the community of Rancho Santa Fe.
As of Jan. 1, when you call 9-1-1 during a
medical emergency,AMR will respond to your
needs with our dedicated, highly trained medical personnel and the most state-of-the-art
life-saving technology.
While we are new to the coastal area,
we’ve been serving the San Diego region for
more than 65 years, providing the very best
patient-focused care on every call we respond
to, in every community we work in, on every
day of the year.
With AMR, you will benefit from the
resources and expertise of the nation’s leading
medical transportation company. AMR currently serves 40 states and employs more than
19,000 paramedics, EMT’s, RN’s, and other
professionals who care for and transport more
than 3 million patients a year.
We look forward to bringing you and your
neighbors the highest level of care in the
industry, including a brand new fleet of ambulances equipped with the most modern medical equipment.
In addition to transporting patients in
emergency and non-emergency situations,
we’ll be working with community and healthcare leaders on disaster planning, as well as
programs that will help improve the overall
health and wellbeing of the community.
Our roots in San Diego County run deep,
and our commitment to the communities we
serve is demonstrated by our hard-working
employees, many of whom are life-long county
residents and have been recognized as the best
in our industry.
If you ever have any questions or comments about our service, please don’t hesitate
to call me at (858) 492-8111 or email me at
[email protected].
Here’s to a safe, happy and healthy new
year!
Michael Murphy,
AMR General Manager
Connecting the dots
The paper’s Dec. 27 edition carried the
following two stories.
The front page described the lack of
water in our Lake Hodges reservoir and page
3 reported the Encinitas City Council’s 5-0 vote
to replace the missing electricity generation
from San Onofre by renewable and efficiency
means.
What the paper did not do is recognize
the vital connections between these two
events. Our water supply is threatened by lack
of seasonal rainfall as well as the thinner snow
pack in the sierras.The San Diego Foundation
has done an extensive study on local water
supply and the impacts of climate change.
They concluded (1):
·
San Diego County will require 37
percent more water than we currently use.
·
Our major sources of water — the
Colorado River and the rivers of Northern
California — could shrink by 20 percent or
more.
· Extended and more frequent droughts
will diminish local water supplies.
·
We could face an 18 percent water
shortage by 2050.
Which brings us to solutions, much needed and long overdue. The Encinitas City
Council wisely closed ranks around the only
viable course to follow: reduce our reliance on
fossil fuels and develop renewable sources of
energy coupled with more efficient energy
use. As one example, our homes, offices and
commercial buildings soak up about half of
the total energy generated in the U.S. As one
who makes buildings more energy efficient, I
can tell you that we have yet to scratch the surface on building energy efficiency. And when
we make buildings using less energy, it takes a
lot less solar energy to make up the remainder.
This is where the CPUC and SDG&E have it
wrong: building more fossil fuel plants will
only delay the urgent development of alternatives like photovoltaics, wind power and energy efficiency industries.
So thanks for publishing both stories.
Hope you consider connecting the dots going
forward.
Dadla Ponizil,
Encinitas
How to write us
Letters or commentaries intended for
Submissions must contain a phone
publishing should be emailed to number
(for confirmation [email protected] with “Letter” poses
only)
and
include
your
or “Commentary” in the subject line.
city of residence.
Views expressed in Opinion & Editorial do not
necessarily reflect the views of The Coast News
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
What to look for in 2014
INSIDE OCEANSIDE
got Mr. Wyland? May I remind you what
happened in Rocky’s 2012? Character
counts Mr. Wyland and so far all that
many of us know about is that you slur
your opponent’s family members.
BY KEN LEIGHTON
Instead of predictions, please let me
offer up some wishes for the new year.
A recent news report about the city
of Vista mayoral election noted that a
challenger, Councilman Cody Campbell,
is taking on incumbent mayor Judy
Ritter.
A third candidate who may also run
was quoted as saying that the contest had
become unusually personal and petty. “I
don’t want to see it go the way of
Oceanside here in Vista.”
Ouch. With the fact that Oceanside
behavior has become a regional thing-toavoid, let’s offer a wish list of things we
hope do and don’t happen in 2014.
Stop The Mud
The mudslinging that was referred to
in the introductory paragraph needs to
stop. When Steve Jepsen returned as our
city manager, Councilwoman Esther
Sanchez came up with this cringe-inducing statement: “I have no confidence in
Jepsen especially in light of causing the
biggest scandal the city has had in recent
history.” That acid-toss and Council member Jerry Kern’s occasional digs at civic
groups, which come to speak at council
meetings, need to end. I would humbly
submit that both council members can
win their cause without tossing toxic
grenades.
Stop The Mud — Part II
When former Councilman Rocky
Chavez ran for state assemblyman, he
first had to make it out of a three-candidate primary. One of those other two candidates took a cheap shot at the third,
saying the third had endured financial
problems with her business. What a petty
slime job! Rocky never got involved in
the smear. On that issue alone he
deserved to win...and he did.
Now comes word (from the L.A.
Times) that our state senator Mark
Wyland, who is termed out of office next
year and can not run for reelection, is
running for the state Board of
Equalization, a low-key but well-paid
elected position that is supposed to oversee state tax collection.
Mr. Wyland is running against another Republican, State Senator Diane
Harkey of Dana Point. Wyland has taken
the low road and is dragging Harkey’s
husband through the mud. Is that all you
Tri-City meltdown
The health care district which serves
Carlsbad, Oceanside and Vista, and
whose main job is to operate Tri-City
Hospital, has managed to shed itself of
embarrassing directors. Those elected
officials reportedly illegally leaked confidential hospital business information,
ran for office with a fake college diploma
and exhibited outrageous behavior in
board meetings. Those directors are no
longer on the board and the jokes have
subsided.
The district also fired its CEO Larry
Anderson, five months ago.
But alas, the dysfunction remains.
The hospital has lost public trust and its
finances are in ruins: it had to put most of
its $51 million of reserves down as collateral in order to get out from under an
interest-only loan. That money is still in
escrow. To the current seven Tri-City
directors: Do not wait for a new CEO.
Please move towards merging the
district with a larger health provider
right now. Tri-City Hospital District’s days
as a stand-alone entity are over. Its
patient count, earnings and net revenue
are in decline. It has lost public confidence. Let’s cut bait and let a more competent entity resuscitate our local hospital, which is in serious condition.
No more WalMarts
Although council members may not
know it, having Oceanside become the
most WalMarted city in California will
surely have negative repercussions on
this current council majority, which has
been calling the shots for three years.
Oceanside now has four WalMarts.
Please, let’s not pimp out our town for a
fifth WalMart, and please, let’s get someone in the saddle in City Hall who can
envision, and then realize, a bigger and
better economic picture for Oceanside
and commandeer some desirable new
business into town. It ain’t happening
now.
Let’s keep the ball rolling
The six years that Chief Frank
McCoy has run the Oceanside Police
Department is generally thought be constructive for our police force. The OPD
does not have the reputation it had in
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Arriving Daily
We’re taking care of life’s most important
gift with world-class compassionate care.
Nothing is more important than the healthy arrival of your baby.
That is why at Tri-City Medical Center we offer:
• On-site Board Certified Neonatologists available 24/7
• The only Level III Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) in North County
• The exclusive NICVIEW™ Parent/Baby Cam System, allowing mommy and baby
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Everything to ensure you and your growing family are taken care of close to home.
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A5
A6
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
The game changers:
A new frontier for
cataract surgery
By Jeffrey B. Morris, M.D., M.P.H
2014 marks the beginning
of a new exciting frontier for
laser cataract surgery!
Today I am proud to
announce that Morris Eye
Group is among the first practices in the country to offer the
Bausch & Lomb Victus®
Cataract Laser which is
housed in the San Diego Laser
Cataract Center.
The Victus® laser is now
the first step in preparing my
patients for cataract removal.
The laser automates the most
challenging parts of the
cataract procedure and eliminates the surgeon’s free-hand
incisions that were previously
done with blades and sharp
instruments.
The laser creates precise
incisions and a round opening
in the capsule of the lens.
Remarkably, all of this is done
without actually creating an
open wound in the eye.
In addition, the Victus®
Laser performs astigmatism
correction, allowing for better
vision with less dependence
on glasses. All of these steps
are performed quickly, painlessly, and with precision.
When I started operating
in 1983, many physicians,
including myself, were hesitant to operate on patients’
cataracts unless they were
very advanced. At that time
cataract surgery was a more
risky procedure than it is
today, especially compared
with the recent advancements
of cataract laser preparation
treatments.
Just like a camera has a
lens, so does the eye. A
cataract is a cloudy formation
on the natural lens within the
eye and the only way to
remove a cataract is with
cataract surgery.
Most of us can remember
our grandparents having to
stay in the hospital after
cataract surgery with sandbags on their shoulders to
keep their head stable while
they healed. They had to wear
thick glasses after surgery to
see well and often times, surgeons would only operate if
the patient's cataract was
"mature" or “ripe” and causing severe vision loss.
The good news is that
today’s cataract procedures
are nothing like those our
grandparents went through.
Much advancement in the
1980s and 1990s made the procedure much safer with smaller incisions and the invention
of soft, foldable intra-ocular
lens implants or IOLs.
Once the cataract was
removed, an IOL was implanted to replace the natural
cataract lens; this IOL allowed
patients to have renewed distance vision. With these types
of IOLs patients would still be
dependent on glasses for astigmatism and near vision correction.
Today many of my
patients elect “auto-focusing”
or “smart lens” implants along
with the Victus® Cataract
Laser. These are among several IOL options that help
patients be less dependent on
glasses after cataract surgery.
Once my patients have
undergone the quick Victus®
laser preparation, they are
taken to the operating room
for removal of the cataract and
implantation of the IOL.
In addition, the Center
for Surgery, where I operate
houses the ORA Verifeye®,
another piece of technology
that
has
revolutionized
cataract procedures.
Prior to cataract surgery,
specific measurements are
needed to help the surgeon
select the power of the IOL
needed for the patient.
However, these measurements
are taken while the patient
still has a cataract inside the
eye. Sometimes, due to the
cataract, the power of the
implant can be off. We now
have a way to confirm the
power of the IOL once placed
inside the eye.
After
the
surgeon
removes the cataract the ORA
Verifeye® will recalculate
measurements of the eye and
either validate the power of
the implant selected or recommend a different power.
If the ORA Verifeye®
There are very few
practices in the
country on the
cutting edge of this
new frontier in
cataract surgery
technology
comes back with a different
calculation the surgeon can
change the power of the
implant at the time of surgery
helping to decrease the risk of
needing to re-operate. This is
very important for the Babyboomer generation, many of
whom underwent LASIK making cataract surgery measurements less predictable unless
aided with the new ORA
Verifeye®
technology.
As I look back on my
career as an ophthalmologist, I
am proud that we have come
so far with treatment options
for patients.
The evolution of ophthalmology has brought about
priceless advancements that I
see directly when performing
modern cataract surgery
including: lowered risk, surgical astigmatism correction,
increased availability of IOL
options, greater visual outcomes, and faster, easier recovery time for patients.
There are very few practices in the country on the cutting edge of this new frontier
in cataract surgery technology
and Morris Eye Group is
among the first to offer laser
cataract preparation.
For those in need of
cataract treatment, there are
more exciting options available now than ever before!
For further questions or
to make an appointment,
please call (760) 631-3500 and
select option 2 when dialing.
Escondido
settles campaign
mailers lawsuit
By Rachel Stine
ESCONDIDO — Finding that city officials may
have violated state law, Escondido settled a lawsuit
over campaign mailers the city created and distributed
in Nov. 2012.
Former Escondido mayor Jerry Harmon filed a
lawsuit against the city in March, claiming that City
Council unlawfully used public funds for mailers that
supported two propositions presented to voters at the
Nov. 2012 municipal election.
In October 2012, City Council approved City
Manager Clay Phillips’s request for $20,000 for “educational and informational publications on upcoming
city ballot measures.”
The mailers consisted of information about Prop
N, a proposed general plan update that included
changes to some land use designations, and Prop P, a
measure that would change Escondido from a general
law city to a charter city.
The campaign flyer stated that Prop N would “preserve neighborhoods”, “attract higher paying” jobs,
and “protect the city’s character” while Prop P would
“transfer power from the state legislature in
Sacramento to the city of Escondido” and potentially
save up to $16 million to be used to increase police and
fire protection and fix streets.
The mailers were sent to Escondido residents in
their utility bills before the election.
Voters passed Prop N and rejected Prop P.
The lawsuit alleged that the mailers were biased
in favor of both measures and designed to influence
voters. The suit claimed that the city violated
California’s Constitution and Government Code by
paying for the campaign materials with city funds. “I
felt they had broken the law by spending taxpayer
money illegally,” said Harmon.
City Council agreed in closed session in November
to settle the lawsuit, according to deputy city attorney
Andrea Velasquez.
A city press release announcing the settlement on
Dec. 24 stated, “The City believes there is a possibility
that a court might agree that state law was violated in
connection with the preparation and distribution of
the mailer.”
The city agreed to pay Harmon’s attorney fees,
$36,500 total, and create rules and guidelines for
future mailers to ensure that the city abides by state
laws.
“I’m hoping that the publicity that it has generated will cause elected officials to think twice about how
they spend taxpayer money,” said Harmon.
Community invited to Alga
Norte park grand opening
CARLSBAD
—
Community members are
invited to celebrate the opening
of
Alga
Norte
Community Park, the City of
Carlsbad’s new 32-acre park
at the corner of Alicante
Road and Poinsettia Lane,
with a day full of free activities, demonstrations and
appearances by celebrity athletes.
The opening will take
place Jan. 11 from 10 a.m. to
2 p.m. at 6565 Alicante Road.
Following the ceremony,
which is open to the public,
free activities will take place
throughout the park
Carlsbad’s newest park
offers activities for all ages.
A7
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
V
i
s
i
t
carlsbadconnect.org to sign
up for group and individual
swimming lessons year
round, aquatic camps, deepwater boot camp, paddleboard pool yoga and diving
classes.
Dog owners can sign up
for dog training and agility
classes. The skate park will
feature camps and clinics for
beginner and experienced
skateboarders.
The city is also offering
for the first time NFL flag
football for boys and girls in
grades K-8.
For a full list of the day’s
activities,
visit
carlsbadca.gov.
MARC CUOMO
New Business Development, & Automotive
Call Marc for all your
advertising needs.
760.436.9737
x109
[email protected]
Festivals, schools awarded city grants
By Rachel Stine
CARLSBAD
—
Eighteen different nonprofits and schools were awarded a combined $25,000 for
classroom
instruments,
youth theater productions,
and art festivals from
Carlsbad’s
annual
Community Arts Grants.
“(Arts and culture) contribute to our quality of life
and community development, encourage life long
learning
and
creative
expression, and support
tourism and economic development as well,” said the
city’s Arts Manager Vincent
Kitch.
The city has set aside
finances in the General
Fund for the Community
Arts Grants since its inception in 1986 to support cultural and artistic opportunities for local residents.
New Village Arts for its theater productions and visual
arts education programs.
Funds were also granted to
the Carlsbad-Oceanside Art
(Arts and culture) contribute to
our quality of life and community
development... ”
Vincent Kitch
Arts Manager,Carlsbad
This year, Carlsbad gave
the largest amounts, several
thousand dollars, to the
Carlsbad Music Festival. A
grant was also awarded to
League, Mainly Mozart,
Patrons
of
the Arts
Fo u n d a t i o n / C a r l s b a d
Community Theatre, as well
as 13 Carlsbad schools.
The successful project
applications met criteria,
including project scale,
artistic merit, community
impact, as well as the organization’s ability to carry out
the proposed project and fiscal responsibility.
The Carlsbad Arts
Commission convened a
peer review panel of local
arts professionals and educators to evaluate this year’s
applications.
The Commission made
the final decision about
which proposals were selected and how much money was
given to each based on the
panel’s recommendations
and how well each application met the grant criteria.
Del Mar again comes to aid of small northern fair
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR — Christmas
came early once again for the
Modoc District Fair when the
22nd District Agricultural
Association board of directors
agreed at the Dec. 17 meeting
to give $25,000 to its significantly smaller counterpart in the
northeast corner of the state.
Almost exactly a year earlier, when the 34th District
Agricultural Association was in
danger of having to permanently shut down, it requested
and received $100,000 from
the 22nd DAA, which governs
the Del Mar Fairgrounds.
Since then the 34th DAA
tried to implement several new
revenue-generating opportunities, such as guided wagon
train and horseback tours, cattle drives, lodging stays and
money-making possibilities
from people attending Burning
Man, an annual art and selfexpression event that draws
tens of thousands of people to
the nearby Black Rock Desert
of Nevada.
Dannette DePaul, 34th
DAA chief executive officer,
said the organization could
potentially have earned about
$83,500 from the events, but
most were unsuccessful due to
“unexpected obstacles.”
She said she had difficulty
obtaining the required permits
for the tours and organizing
timelines with local ranchers
for the cattle drives.
She said most Burning
Man attendees had the necessary supplies going to the
event and needed minimal
items on the way back. DePaul
said she spent about $450 to
staff booths to sell food and
water that resulted in only
$245 in sales.
Modoc County has a population of about 9,700. Slightly
more than 500 people live in
Cedarville, which is home to
the fair, a four-day event that
has been ongoing since 1920.
During the offseason the
facilities are rented to nonprofit organizations, businesses
and locals for events such as
fundraisers, weddings, family
reunions, blood drives, school
activities and youth sports.
During disasters the site
serves as a crisis center for
humans and animals and is a
cooling center during extreme
heat conditions. The U.S.
Forest Service and Bureau of
Land Management use the
fairgrounds for training as well
as fire camp during the fire
season.
The fair began receiving
state money through horse racing revenues in 1935, but that
funding source was eliminated
by Sacramento last July. Its
current annual budget is about
$355,000.
DePaul said expenses will
be cut by about $100,000 in
2014 because she was “given
an ultimatum by the state” to
change district operations.
She said she was forced to
reduce her position from threequarters time to half time and
her maintenance budget had
to be cut by up to half.
“We do what we can to try
to make it survive,” DePaul
said. “Our fair will never be
self-sustainable”
given
Modoc’s population.
Board members urged her
not to be pessimistic.
“Don’t be short-sighted
and say you will never be selfsufficient,” 22nd DAA board
President Fred Schenk said.
“Take your energies and find
ways to achieve success. You
have the determination, and
you have the will.”
Schenk said DePaul
should continue to find ways to
attract business opportunities
from Burning Man, adding that
he hopes one day the 34th
DAA will be self-sufficient and
able to help other struggling
fairs.
“I’m thrilled,” DePaul
said after the vote to give
Modoc the $25,000.“They have
no idea how much this means
to our community.”
She said the district
expects to receive additional
funding from the state and private donations.
A8
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
Interfaith CEO retires, merge with CRC suspended
By Rachel Stine
REGION — Richard
Batt retired from his position as the CEO of
Interfaith
Community
Services less than two
weeks after the North
County nonprofit suspended its merger with the
Community
Resource
Center.
Announcing his decision on Dec. 23, Batt said
that he was leaving for personal reasons, including the
need to care for his elderly
father who has advanced
Parkinson’s disease.
“I came to Interfaith
with the goal of helping it
become one of the best
social service organizations
in the region. We advanced
toward that goal but there
is still more to do,” he stated in a letter to Interfaith
employees.
Based in Escondido,
Interfaith has provided
food, emergency shelter,
employment assistance and
other services throughout
North County for 31 years.
Associate
Director
Craig Jones was appointed
to serve as interim CEO. He
has worked for the organization for 16 years.
Interfaith’s board of
directors will determine a
process for filling the position permanently and a
replacement will likely be
selected within three to six
months, said the agency’s
Director of Community
Connections Jason Coker.
Interfaith commended
Batt in a press release for
his work leading the effort
to create a plan to solve
homelessness in North
County, launching the organization’s
employment
services department, and
the expansion of its temporary housing program.
Batt was hired as CEO
in September 2011, taking
over
from
Suzanne
Pohlman who led the organization for 30 years.
His retirement comes
on the heels of the deferral
of the merger between
Interfaith
and
the
Community
Resource
Center in Encinitas.
In mid-June, the two
social services organizations announced that they
planned to join together to
Richard Batt resigned as CEO of create one primary North
Interfaith after serving for two County agency to cut down
years. Photo courtesy of Interfaith on duplicate services and
reduce overhead costs.
Community Services
The new agency would
have combined Interfaith’s
$10.4 million operating
budget and specialties in
veterans’ assistance, addiction recovery programs, and
senior services with the
Community
Resource
Center’s $4.2 million annual budget and robust
domestic violence programs and employment
assistance.
Batt was poised to take
over as CEO of the joined
nonprofits once the merger
was complete. Laurin
Pause, the executive director of the Community
Resource Center, had
retired in July, but has
since returned to her position.
The
Community
Resource Center did not
respond to a request for
comment.
The merger was to be
finished by Dec. 31, but was
called off on Dec. 11. An
Interfaith press release
attributed the suspension
to the agencies’ inability to
resolve issues including
corporate
identity,
finances, unified governance, and the organizational culture.
But Coker noted that
the merge has not been
completely abandoned and
may be resumed sometime
in the future. “The merger
is not entirely off the
board,”
he said.
High tides
to hit
beaches
COAST CITIES — The
first week of January 2014,
some of the year’s highest
tides will hit California shorelines, providing a glimpse of
what the state can expect as
sea-level rises, according to
the California Coastal
Commission.
In North County, beaches most affected will include
Oceanside Beach, San Elijo
Lagoon, Del Mar Dog
Beach/San Dieguito Lagoon
Entrance, Torrey Pines
(where Penasquitos enters
the ocean) and La Jolla
Shores.
The ultra-high or “king
tides” occur primarily in the
morning Dec. 30 through Jan.
2 and again Jan. 29 through
Jan. 31. The California King
Tides Initiative, now in its
fourth season, encourages
the public to view and photograph ultra-high tides and
add to a growing collection at
flickr.com/groups/cakingtides.
Initiative organizers aim
to help the public envision
how California may be affected by sea-level rise.
“Many of our beaches,
trails, wetlands, roadways,
and critical infrastructure
become flooded during king
tides, illustrating the severity
and scope of potential sealevel rise impacts. Significant
economic impacts underscore the need to start planning for sea level rise in
California now,” said Susan
Hansch, Chief Deputy
Director at the California
Coastal Commission, an
Initiative organizer. The commission is inviting the public
to provide input on its recently released Draft Sea-Level
Rise Policy.
More information is
available at coastal.ca.gov/climate/SLRguidance.html.
A9
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
Why the Seaside Market is a wonderful
reason to call Cardiff-by-the-Sea home
IRENE
KRATZER
A Place To Call Home
The Center Chorale at the California Center for the Arts, Escondido,
is seeking new singers for the spring. Membership into North
County's premier vocal ensemble is by audition only. To schedule an
audition, call (760) 805-3945. Courtesy photo
Chorale listening
for new voices
ESCONDIDO — The
Center Chorale at the
California Center for the
Arts, Escondido (the Center)
is accepting new singers for
the spring Choral Arts season, with the first rehearsal
of the New Year set for Jan.
6.
The Choral Arts program, which is coordinated
through
the
Center’s
Education department, is an
exciting venture aimed at
furthering the art of singing
in the community and providing opportunities in
music for young people.
Introduced last season,
the 50-voice Center Chorale
is conducted by Dr. Joe
Stanford.
To learn more about the
Escondido Choral Arts program, including audition
and membership requirements and the Center
Chorale’s full rehearsal
schedule,
visit
escondidochoralarts.com.
The first rehearsal of
the spring season will be
held at 7 p.m. Jan. 6 in
Studio I at the Center, which
is located at 340 N.
Escondido Blvd.
The singers will immediately begin preparing for
their March concert, a performance of “Carmina
Burana,” one of the highlights of the Chorale’s 201314 season. Portions will be
danced by Faith JensenIsmay and her Mojalet
Dance Collective.
The flu is on the
rise in California
CDPH is
reminding people
to get a flu shot
SACRAMENTO
—
Following the normal seasonal pattern, influenza
activity is on the rise in
California and nationwide.
Many California counties,
and other states, are reporting patients who are critically ill with influenza, including healthy young adults.
The
H1N1
strain
appears to be the predominant strain circulating so far
in California and in the rest
of the United States this flu
season. The H1N1 virus,
which emerged during the
2009 pandemic, causes more
illness in children and young
adults, compared to older
adults. It causes severe illness in all age groups,
including those younger
than 65 years of age. This
year’s influenza vaccine protects against the strains circulating in the state, including H1N1.
?“It is not too late to get
the flu vaccine,” urged Dr.
Ron Chapman, director of
the California Department
of Public Health (CDPH)
and state health officer. “A
yearly flu vaccine is the most
important step in preventing
influenza. It’s important to
remember that unlike other
vaccine preventable diseases, it is necessary to get a
flu shot every year.”
The vaccine is available
now. Once vaccinated, it
takes approximately two
weeks before you are fully
protected against the flu. An
influenza vaccine is especially important for pregnant
women and other people at
higher risk for severe
influenza.
“It’s impossible to predict the severity of a flu season, but the best way to prevent spread of the flu is to
get vaccinated,” said Dr.
Chapman.
In addition to getting
vaccinated, it’s crucial to
practice good health habits.
If you become ill, you should
take actions to stop the
spread of germs, including:
·
Stay home when
you are sick
·
Cover your coughs
and sneezes
·
Wash your hands
with soap/water
·
Avoid touching
your eyes, nose and mouth
You can also protect
your health by eating a
nutritious diet and getting
enough sleep. If you think
you have influenza, contact
your physician. Visit a flu
vaccine location near you to
get immunized. Some local
health departments may
also offer free
or
low-cost immunizations.
Cardiff-by-the-Sea had
the good fortune to become
the home of Cardiff Seaside
Market in 1985 when John
and Pete Najjar opened their
12,500 square foot store in
the Cardiff Town Center.
After 29 years of making
shopping a wonderful experience, we look forward to the
upcoming expansion, which
will include a bakery department; wine and prepared
foods, as well as many other
departments will also be
enlarged.
Through the years
Cardiff shoppers have seen
changes.
As the market area
became a gathering place for
people to meet for something
delightful to eat from the deli
or just enjoy a cup of coffee.
A trip to the Seaside
Market is an adventure
because one can always find
exactly what one wants and
the pleasant service with a
smile makes it all delightful.
John and Pete are often
on the floor also to greet you
with a smile and a fitting
comment.
With the introduction of
the Rewards Card program,
one can look forward to
either a buy-one-get-one free
or a totally free item on a
weekly basis as well as
checks if you reach a certain
amount in purchases.
Gabe Aguirre, Cardiffby-the-Sea Library Librarian
II likes Seaside Market Deli
sandwiches, Chicken Tortilla
Soup and regional products
like unique chips plus prepared, boxed salads. Lori
Turley, Library Tech I, likes
Burgundy Tri-Tip, the fact
that veggies are bought from
local growers plus their fresh
fish and wonderful cuts of
meat. She is also a fan of the
Rewards Club Program.
Some of my favorites are
their great soups, boxed salads, fresh veggies, 10-ounce
cartons of milk (I call them
school milk) and the free
flowers.
Seaside is a wonderful
place for the person dining
alone. You can grab a fresh
salad or something from the
deli to pop in the microwave
— add fresh fruit and one has
a gourmet meal. Every week
the tent goes up for Taco
Tuesday and on weekends
you can enjoy a Tri-Tip
(called Cardiff Crack) sandwich, quite often accompanied with music, while dining
in the sunshine.
The Najjars were early
members of the Friends of
the
Cardiff-by-the-Sea
Library, and have contributed
to our building fund and
donate a fantastic fare for our
April volunteer breakfast
each year. They recently
received a proclamation from
the city of Encinitas for their
contributions to schools, local
organizations and causes.
John was quick to point
out that it is the local support
The Seaside Market in Cardiff has been in operation since 1985. It will soon undergo an expansion.
Courtesy photo
that has made the store popular, local shoppers, local vendor products.
At the Taste of Seaside
event, booths of local vendors
introduce the public to their
new creations, which customers will then be able to
find on the shelves when they
shop.
The entire Town Center,
sometimes referred to as the
uptown of Cardiff-by-the-Sea,
has taken on a new face down
through the years and is the
scene for local events, i.e.
banner auction and Kringle
Mingle.
Teresa Barth, who happens to be our present mayor,
provides
the
beautiful
Christmas tree yearly.
Cardiff Seaside Market
rates at the top of the list of
wonderful reasons that
Cardiff-by-the-Sea is such a
fantastic place to call home.
A founding and life member as well as
past president and current board
member of the of the Friends of the
Cardiff-by-the-Sea Library, Irene has
lived here since 1982.
North County
Homesellers
Your home may be worth
more than you think
Free Online Home Evaluation at:
www.NorthCountyOnlineHomeValues.com
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A10
THE COAST NEWS
y
h
lt
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e
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LOOKS GOOD ON YOU.
Join us for Wellness Week at Whole Foods Market® Encinitas
SATURDAY JAN 25th:
Wellness Week Festival
Location: Encinitas Library
540 Cornish Dr (between D St & E St)
Encinitas, CA 92024
Blender Bike Smoothie Demos
11 am–3 pm
SUNDAY JAN 26th:
Detox class: Love your Liver
with Serena Silberman, holistic
health practitioner
11:30 am
MONDAY JAN 27th:
$2 off All Juices
in the Coffee Juice Bar
excludes Coffee & Smoothies
TUESDAY JAN 28th:
$5 Health Starts Here™
Lunch Special in the Prepared Foods Department
WEDNESDAY JAN 29th:
$2 off per pound Salad Bar
THURSDAY JAN 30th:
$5 Health Starts Here™
Lunch Special in the Prepared Foods Department
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 1st:
Cooking with CSA class:
Healthy Habits; an inspirational
Cooking Class
10 am–11:30 am
www.CookingWithCSA.com
whole foods market® encinitas
687 south coast highway 101, encinitas, ca 92024 760.274.1580
store hours: 7am – 9pm daily
please visit wholefoodsmarket.com for other store locations
Connect with us!
JAN. 3, 2014
A11
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
Senior fitness offered in new year
CARLSBAD — The city
of Carlsbad Senior Center is
offering free Senior Center
classes in January. Meet the
instructors and try out the
class before the winter session begins. Only pay for the
class if you decide you want
to sign up for more.
Try a free Qigong class,
taught by Fay McGrew, from
10 to 11 a.m. Jan. 7. No preregistration is required.
A Jacki Sorensen’s
Aerobic Dancing — Lite,
will be taught by Margaret
Grundman, from 9 to 10 a.m.
Jan. 9.
No pre-registration is
required.
Zumba Gold, taught by
Donna Billmeyer, will begin
from 1 to 1:45 p.m. Jan. 15.
No
pre-registration
is
required,
For more information
on the city of Carlsbad
Senior Center seminars and
classes,
go
to
carlsbadca.gov/parksandrec
and click the “Adults 50+”
button
or
call
(760) 602-4650.
Panel looks at making the majors
CARMEL VALLEY —
The
TPHS
Baseball
Program invites athletes
and parents to a panel discussion with major league
players Mark Loretta, Chris
Young and Mark Kotsay, at
6 p.m. Jan. 14 at Torrey
Pines High School Lecture
Hall, 3710 Del Mar Heights
Road.
The event will include
a panel discussion until
7:15 p.m. followed by a pri-
vate reception from 7:15 to
8 p.m.
Tickets that include the
reception run from $100 to
$250 at brownpapertickets.com/event/470537.
On average, only 5.6
percent of high school baseball players will play at the
collegiate level and beyond.
Players will discuss the
challenges they faced as
they advanced through
their careers.
This interactive session, which benefits the
TPHS baseball program,
will help you get your questions answered and provide
tips on how you can beat
the odds.
Panelists will be available for autographs and
photographs during the
reception.
For more information,
contact
Jeb
Spencer
[email protected].
Breaking The Cycle
The most complete Marriage
Manual ever written
Brennan Cassidy displays USB charging and data cables made of natural cotton insulation available from
EcoKable, a Solana Beach company he co-founded with Kristian Rauhala. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
Remodeling project
leads to greener cables
By Bianca Kaplanek
SOLANA BEACH —
Back in the day, things were
made to last. Kristian
Rauhala found out just how
true that statement is when
remodeling his house.
It is also a discovery that
led him to create a technology company focused on
earth-friendly alternatives
for today’s consumer electronics products.
Rauhala and Brennan
Cassidy recently launched
EcoKable, a Solana Beach
company whose first products are USB charging and
data cables made of natural
cotton insulation rather than
polyvinyl chloride, better
known as PVC.
With a background in
electronics — he co-founded
companies that provide a
sports fitness application
and waterproof headphones
— Rauhala saw the amount
of electronic waste skyrocket
in recent years.
“What bothered him
was when new a product
comes out the cables are
worthless inventory,” Cassidy
said.
While remodeling his
house that was built in the
1950s, Rauhala discovered
all the wiring in his home
was insulated with paper
that had lasted more than
five decades.
“So he started tinkering
to make a more sustainable
product,” Cassidy said.
According to their
research,
somewhere
between 20 million and 50
million tons of electronic
products are discarded annu-
ally throughout the world,
with PVC being one of the
largest contributors.
E-waste that doesn’t end
up in a landfill for hundreds
of years is burned or exported, according to the
EcoKable website. Old electronic parts are often scavenged for valuable metals
such as copper wires by burning the PVC insulation and
releasing bad toxins into the
atmosphere.
The natural cotton insulation in EcoKable’s products
gives consumers a better
option to charge their cell
phones and transfer data,
Rauhala said.
Cassidy is a 27-year-old
Wisconsin native who landed
in California with a job working with the PGA Tour.
He switched gears and
moved to Solana Beach about
two-and-a-half years ago for a
position
with
Insulindependence
—
Cassidy is diabetic — a
Solana Beach-based company
with a mission to “unite,
expand and support the
active diabetes community.”
His wife was hired by
Rauhala at Pear Sports,
which produces a “mobile
training intelligence” system.
Cassidy said he was
intrigued when his wife
brought home one of the
cables.
“Living in Solana Beach
makes you more aware of the
need for sustainable products,” he said. So does being
someone like Cassidy who
enjoys outdoor sports such as
biking,
swimming
and triathlons.
“When you’re outside
you realize there are a lot of
things out there worth taking
care of,” he said. “The cables
are safer for the environment. Even if they end up in
a landfill, which I hope they
don’t, they will break down
much easier.
“People are trying to
make good choices,” he
added. “They won’t live in a
hut in the woods but they will
compost.
If consumers are given
two choices they will usually
choose the one that’s better
for the environment.”
EcoKable’s products cost
about the same as traditional
cables and are shipped in
environmentally
friendly
packaging.
Right now the company
offers mini-USB, micro-USB
and Apple 30-pin to USB
cables through its website
only. For an additional $2.50,
EcoKable will include a
return shipping label to recycle used PVC cables.
Next up are lightning
cables for Apple devices.
Cassidy said he hopes to
convince companies as well
as individuals to make the
switch.
“When you look in any
office there are endless
amounts of cables behind
computers,” he said.
As a resident in the San
Diego city that is generally on
the forefront of environmental sustainability, Cassidy
said he may even make a
pitch to Solana Beach City
Hall.
Visit ecokable.com for
more information.
facebook.com/
coastnewsgroup
Save or Improve
Your Marriage
call 760.972.6554 or visit
www.TheMarriageFoundation.org
(We refer couples to TMF certified therapists)
A12
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
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January 25, 2014 / 11am-3pm
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SUITE
101
Fishing questions
answered by Fish &
Game Department
REGION
—
The
California Fish & Game
Department answers questions online in a weekly column by Carrie Wilson is a
marine environmental scientist with the California
Department of Fish and
Wildlife. Contact her at
[email protected].
Is it legal to kee p legal-sized
fish caught in hoopnets?
Question: If I catch fish
in a hoop net while lobster
fishing, are they legal to
keep provided they meet any
size requirements? I have
been throwing them back
because I’m not sure it is
legal to catch them that way.
Someone told me they must
be caught on fishing line
only. What about sea snails
and octopus that are caught
in my hoops? Can other linecaught sportfish, such as
tuna, be used as bait in lobster hoops? (Steve G.)
Answer: You were correct to return fish caught in
your hoop nets because hoop
nets are not a legal method
of take. Finfish may only be
caught by hook-and-line
except in very specific circumstances listed under
“Finfish
–
Gear
Restrictions” in the Ocean
Sport Fishing Regulations
booklet (California Code of
Regulations Title 14, section
28.65).
Taking sea snails and
octopus caught incidentally
in your lobster hoop net is
not allowed (CCR Title 14,
section 29.10(a)). Any finfish
that is legal to take or possess in California may be
used as bait in your lobster
hoop net.
we will attempt to fish without the boat, and a few times
have forgotten to bring our
licenses. To prevent us from
mistakenly being without
our fishing licenses, can we
show a photo copy of our
licenses
or
can
the
California Department of
Fish and Wildlife (CDFW)
issue more than one copy to
a sport fisherman? (Murray
C.)
Answer: Good questions, but the answers to
both are no. You must have a
valid fishing license in your
possession when fishing or
attempting to take fish, and
you must present it to a
game warden upon request.
Additionally, only
one
license may be issued to a
person per year.
Is it legal to ca tch carp and
trout by hand?
Question: I recently
read a post from people saying they had caught carp by
hand in a lake. Is this legal in
California? I have caught
trout by hand in streams
when I was younger, but wasn’t sure if that was legal
either. Can you please clarify? (Nick)
Answer: There are no
freshwater finfish species
that can be legally taken by
hand from any California
lake waters within the state
(only exception: a few fish
species are allowed to be
caught by hand during specific times in a few non-lake
areas, as per CCR Title 14,
sections 1.76 and 2.30.)
Photographing hunting
Question: Is there any
If license is forgotten, will a law against mounting a camphoto copy of license do?
era to the scope of a rifle to
record my hunting experiQuestion: My son and I
ence? (Barry N.)
fish from our private boat
Answer: No, there is no
almost exclusively and keep
our sport fishing licenses law against this as long as
aboard so they are always there is no light emitted
present. On rare occasions from the camera.
A13
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
‘Gypsy Bride’ on exhibit
SOLANA BEACH — In
an age were ceremony is dictated by the undertones of
modern culture, the exhibition, “Gypsy Bride” by Raziah
Roushan asks the viewer to
reexamine the heart of matrimony.
In a series of oil paintings, presented as a cubist
exploration, Roushan juxtaposes iconographic symbols
to weave into each painting
the series’ hypothesis —
“What is the real cost of mar-
riage? Not the financial cost,
but the compromise given up
or gained by the commitment.
What is the life cost of being
in a committed relationship?”
“Gypsy Bride” is a
vibrant series, full of harmonious color and symbolism
that speak to viewers of all
ages and backgrounds.
The exhibition runs Jan.
6 through Feb. 15 at the
Solana Beach City Hall
Gallery.
Attendance is Free.
RESALE SHOP
Carlsbad Lightning’s Palau United Team. Photo courtesy of Carlsbad Lightning
Carlsbad soccer team shines in Palau
CARLSBAD — Lands
apart, divided by an ocean,
soccer translates between a
small group of islands in
the Western Pacific and
youngsters from Carlsbad
“When the 8- to 10year-old boys that signed up
to play recreational soccer
this season with Carlsbad
Lightning joined what
became the ‘Palau United’
Recreational Team, they
never expected that they
would appear on national
television and create a mini
media frenzy in a distant
country,” said Patrick
Trolan, media writer for the
Carlsbad Lighting Soccer
Club. “But that is exactly
what has happened.”
The Republic of Palau
is an island country in the
western Pacific Ocean —
part of Micronesia.
The country’s population of around 21,000 is
spread across 250 islands.
It all started with
Julian
Padilla,
the
Honorary Consul of Palau
in San Diego.
Padilla sponsored his
son Oliver’s recreational
team, inevitably leading to
the team being named
Palau United.
www.orphanedobjects.org
ended there,” Padilla said. national youth from oppo“But after the feature on site ends of the globe, even
Palau United aired, it was when there’s a language
viewed by Charles Reklai barrier, is easy when there’s
Mitchell, president of the a common denominator
Palau
Football that joins them in the form
of a black-and-white ball.”
Association.”
“No matter the age,
Instantly, Mitchell contacted Padilla with the skill level, nationality, race,
hope of using the story to or language, soccer is a fancreate exposure for youth tastic unifying sport,”
soccer in Palau and poten- Borlenghi said.
Palau United finished
tially creating some type of
link between the Palau off the recreational season
Football Association and winning all seven of their
games,
with
Bryce
Carlsbad Lightning.
Following
email Borlenghi, son of the head
exchanges, Padilla discov- coach, along with Oliver
ered that Mitchell actually Padilla, son of team sponsor
Assistant
Coach
grew up in San Diego and and
played for the La Jolla Padilla, ending up as top
Nomads prior to attending scorers for the team and
making
the
Edward Borlenghi college to play Division 1 at both
Recreational All Star Team.
Head Coach,Palau United Cal State Northridge.
To find out more about
Edward
Borlenghi,
Palau
Football
head coach of the victorious the
palauPalau United, summed it all Association, visit
focus on the young soccer up, saying, “Linking inter- football.sportingpulse.net.
stars.
Their winning streak
RATED ONE OF THE TOP 200 U.S. GOLF COURSES - GOLF DIGEST
ensured their story was
RATED ONE OF THE TOP 10 SAN DIEGO PUBLIC GOLF COURSES - ZAGAT
published in several newspapers in Palau, and it also
earned them a feature on
Celebrating our
Palau’s National television
50th
station, Oceania TV.
“You would be forgiven
Anniversary
for assuming the story
However, it wasn’t until
Palau United went their
first five games with successive victories that attention
back in Palau began to
No matter the
age, skill level,
nationality, race,
or language,
soccer is a
fantastic unifying
sport.”
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Please call us for all of your REAL ESTATE needs!!!
Geri Jones
Ginny Flannery Jones
760.533.9598
760.560.7039
DRE#01518593
6525 Helen Woodward Way, Suite B
5DQFKR6DQWD)H&$‡[
DRE#01930616
www. sdseacoast.com
A14
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
Creating a pollinator-friendly habitat
(BPT) —Pollinators such
as bees, butterflies, hummingbirds, bats and beetles play an
important role in producing
healthy plants and food for
people and wildlife.
Without pollinators feeding on nectar and moving
pollen from one flower to the
next, most plants would not
produce fruit or seeds.
You can attract pollinators to your lawn and garden
by following these steps to
create a pollinator-friendly
backyard habitat.
* Grow a diverse assortment of trees, shrubs and
flowers. Place water sources
throughout your lawn and
garden to draw a variety of
pollinators to your yard, while
providing them with food and
sheltered nesting areas.
* Add color to your backyard. Each pollinator is drawn
to specific plants based on its
size, shape, color and scent.
Bees are attracted to yellow
and blue flowers, as well as
fruit and nut trees with strong
fragrances.
Hummingbirds prefer
large red or orange tubular
flowers with no odor.
JOIN, CONNECT
& INSPIRE
son. Place plants in clumps to
supply large areas of color
and coverage that attracts
pollinators.
* Choose plants native to
your area to encourage
healthy pollination activity. In
the South, flowers from mint,
oregano, lavender and other
herbs attract bees, while pink
azaleas and coral honeysuckle vines entice hummingbirds
into your yard.
In the Northwest, birds
are drawn to flowering grape
holly shrub and blue
columbine flowers will draw
butterflies into your outdoor
space.
* Pay attention to how
* Select flowering plants
that bloom at different times you apply lawn and garden
to provide nectar sources products.
“When using insectithroughout the growing seacides, carefully read and follow label directions to protect
says Aaron
ARE ALL OF YOUR pollinators,”
Hobbs, president of RISE
RELATIONSHIPS
(Responsible Industry for a
Environment) — a
CLOSE, LOVING AND Sound
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Personal growth
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Ellie Favaloro
important food sources.
Support your backyard
760.415.3560
[email protected]
ecosystem while attracting
www.LifeEnhancementCoach.us
pollinator populations and
MA Spiritual Psychology
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surrounding your home with
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Join Today. First Month Free!
YMCA COMMUNITY OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 2014
9 AM-2 PM
MAGDALENA ECKE FAMILY YMCA
200 Saxony Road, Encinitas 92024
| ecke.ymca.org |
MOTTINO FAMILY YMCA
4701 Mesa Drive, Oceanside 92056
| mottino.ymca.org |
FREE SESSION!
Unable to join us on the 11th?
This special promotion will end January 31, 2014
*First Time Clients Only. Exp. 1/15/14
Let our family help your family
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OCEANSIDE
$480,000
Lovely two-story home is immaculate. One of a kind open
floor plan.Extensive updating has made this property a
turn-key family home.
MLS # 130060116
OCEANSIDE
$621,000
Spectacular mountain and golf course view home on 9th
hole of Arrowood Golf Course. Designer touches,
upgrades and amenities. 5BR/5.5BA. Comm. Ctr., clubhouse, olympic size pool/playground. MLS# 130062958
FALLBROOK
$465,000
Spectacular 6BR/BA home. Dramatic stairway, curves
and niches for architectural interest. Sunny Kitchen, stainless appliances and island bar. Dark wood floors, crisp
white accents, in a beautiful comm. MLS # 130025605
OCEANSIDE
$773,000-$799,000
Quiet cul-de-sac. 61 acre retreat. Henie Hills Community.
4br main residence with granny flat. The spacious Ranch
Style house is graced with beautiful grounds.
MLS# 130057057
ESCONDIDO
$369,000-$374,000
4BR/2BA home on Cul-de-sac. Meticulously maintained
with a fabulous backyard and covered patio. Kitchen has
island, lots of cabinets & upgraded counters and splash.
Custom wood flooring throughout. MLS # 130049042
VISTA
$535,000
Wonderful two story 4BR, 3BA home boasts many great
features. Open floor plan. Great backyard.
MLS# 130062478
CARLSBAD
$2,995,000
On Carlsbad`s most prestigious street, gorgeous custom
4500sf Estate boasts breathtaking panoramic ocean
views. 5+br, 5.5ba. Casita with Kitchen & Bath. Pool, Spa.
MLS # 130060276
VISTA
$56,900
Move-in ready 55+ living in desirable Green Valley Park.
2BR/2ba. Covered parking area for two cars and huge
shed/work shop! Close to Carlsbad, beach, shopping
and medical!
MLS# 130061732
CARLSBAD
$679,000
Situated in the Heart of Carlsbad Village. Walk to the
beach, shops, dining & Coaster. Master with balcony. Also
features a 2-car garage & relaxing patio to BBQ. Great
place to call Home.
MLS # 130063343
CARLSBAD
$460,000
Great single level 2/2 condo on Buena Vista Lagoon.
Gated community. Parking for 2 cars. Close to Carlsbad
Village, beaches, restaurants & shops.
MLS# 130036961
OCEANSIDE
$614,990
Spacious ocean view condo in gated complex, 2 bedroom 2 bath, recently remodeled with wood flooring in
bedrooms and travertine throughout.
MLS# 130019805
OCEANSIDE
$579,000
In gorgeous San Miguel, this spacious coastal Condo
has South Westerly views of Ocean & Pier. Centrally
located. Walk to beach, pier, shops.Community Pool.
MLS# 130062164
OCEANSIDE
$685,000
Beautiful unit with balcony above private Whitewater
Village beach. Direct access to public beach. Short distance to downtown Oceanside. Next to Buccaneer
Beach.
MLS# 130053336
OCEANSIDE
$795,000
Ocean view coastal Condo, 1519SF, 2br/2ba in San
Miguel. Relaxing ocean view patio. Just Steps from the
Surf and Sand. Short Stroll to the Pier, shops and dining.
MLS# 130044780
OCEANSIDE
$789,500
Beachfront corner 2/2 Condo. Panoramic ocean views
from most rooms. Beachfront balcony. 2-Car Parking.
Resort-Style Living.
MLS# 130065982
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OCEANSIDE
301 Mission Ave., Ste. 105
760.720.0600 760.722.4121
A15
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
A RTS &ENTERTAINMENT
Send your arts & entertainment
news to [email protected]
Singing and
ringing in the
New Year
ENCINITAS — “Dust off your guitars and come on out,”
said Janice Sharples. Instead of a guitar Sharples brought out
her autoharp on New Year’s Day to the Cardiff Kook statue for
the second annual Splash Jam event.
Most of the songs played during the unplugged jam session were improvised by the musicians, who were equipped
with harmonicas, violins, guitars, mandolins, banjos and plenty of other instruments.The event drew a crowd that was treated to some folk songs, bluegrass music, even a rendition of the
Rolling Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You Want.”
— Tony Cagala
“Scialla!” (“Easy!”) a comedy directed by Francesco Bruni will be shown in April during the San Diego Italian Film Festival, which will last from
January through July at the La Paloma Theatre in Encinitas. Courtesy photo
Italophiles have even more to cheer about
KAY
COLVIN
A Brush With Art
here are many
cultural events to
look forward to in
North County during the
upcoming year, but none
are more anticipated than
the slice of Italian culture
brought by the San Diego
Italian Film Festival to the
La Paloma Theatre in
Encinitas.
Now in its eighth year,
the SDIFF (San Diego
Italian Film Festival) is
expanding its programming
in North County.
Over the past two years
SDIFF has found a second
home at the historic La
Paloma, where audiences
have shown enthusiasm
and appreciation for the
current,
award-winning
Italian films that SDIFF
brings to San Diego.
The Film Festival will
show one Italian film at the
La Paloma each month
from January through July.
All of the movies, which are
in Italian with English subtitles, will begin at 7 p.m.
on Thursday evenings.
All of the movies presented by the SDIFF will
be introduced by one of the
group’s film experts, who
bring insight into the context, cinematography, politics, cast or simply aspects
of Italian culture. Most of
the featured films are not
available for viewing outside of Italy.
T
Jacques Cohen belts out a verse of “Midnight Special,” at the second
annual Splash Jam. Photos by Tony Cagala
Above: Willow Humphrey, 11, plays
violin during the second annual
Splash Jam event.
Left: Charli Crissy gives her selfmade washtub bass, or “gut bucket” a good plucking.
The nonprofit San
Diego Italian Film Festival
was founded in 2006 by a
group passionate about
Italian culture — especially
cinema — and dedicated to
bringing not only Italian
films, but also “an Italian
perspective” to San Diego.
Executive
Director
Victor Laruccia states,
“The San Diego Italian
Film Festival is about more
than just movies. It is
about identity, history and
a shared appreciation of
Italian culture and great
cinema. The San Diego
Italian Film Festival is a
place for a diverse audience of film lovers and
those who appreciate
Italian culture.”
For six years the viewings have been held at
Balboa Park’s Museum of
Photographic Arts.
However, in 2012
SDIFF board member
Anthea Beletsis suggested
that the festival bring
some of the films to North
County.
Cardiff
resident
Beletsis says of the decision to increase programming in Encinitas, “This is
music to my ears since I
love having our films in my
home town and in a ‘real’
theater. La Paloma is one
of the few big-screen, traditional movie houses that
remain in San Diego, complete with popcorn and
candy.” The theater is
located in downtown
Encinitas, close to restaurants and parking.
Beletsis continues, “As
with last year's miniseries,
we have chosen a variety of
films and genres to give
audiences a good taste of
what Italian cinema has to
offer.”
The selection of films
for 2014 will give audiences
variety, including drama,
romantic comedy and even
a nod to Shakespeare with
the screening of “Caesar
Must Die,” directed by the
famed Taviani brothers.
The series opens Jan.
23 with the comedy-drama
“Matter of the Heart” by
the celebrated Italian
director
Francesca
Archibugi. Most of the
screenings will be on the
second Thursday of each
month.
Tickets are $10 ($8 for
SDIFF Members, students,
and military with ID) and
can be purchased at the
theater’s box office (cash
only).
For more information,
including list of featured
films and complete screening
schedule,
visit
sandiegoitalianfilmfestival.com.
Kay Colvin is director of the L Street
Fine Art Gallery in San Diego’s
Gaslamp Quarter, serves as an arts
commissioner for the City of
Encinitas, and specializes in promoting emerging and mid-career artists.
Contact her at
[email protected].
A16
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
S PORTS
Contact us at [email protected]
with story ideas, photos or suggestions
Chargers reach
the playoffs in
miraculous fashion
By Tony Cagala
SAN DIEGO — They
needed nothing short of a
miracle. And the Chargers
got one and then some.
As the Chargers took
the field for warm ups on
Sunday, the scoreboard at
Qualcomm Stadium was
being updated with how the
New York Jets were doing
against
the
Miami
Dolphins, and what was
happening between the
Cincinnati Bengals and the
Baltimore Ravens.
For the Chargers to
make the playoffs this season, they’d need both the
Bengals and the Jets to win
their games.
Both did.
The Chargers, too,
would need a win against
the visiting Kansas City
Chiefs.
They did.
And then came the miracle.
With the game tied at
24 in the fourth quarter, the
Chiefs had control of the
ball and the clock. The
Chargers were out of timeouts and the Chiefs were
about the kick the game
winning field goal, ending
the Chargers season.
Each
second
that
ticked away must have felt
like the proverbial punch to
the gut for the Chargers,
knowing their season was
about to end.
Chiefs head coach
Andy Reid sent out his kicker Ryan Succop for the field
goal. Succop’s kick missed,
sending the game to overtime.
After receiving seemingly a second life, the
Chargers won the coin toss
and Nick Novak kicked a
field goal, which would be
enough to beat the Cheifs
27-24.
“Things happen for a
reason,” said head coach
Mike McCoy. “You don’t
always understand it…we
had some really hard losses
this year, I’ll say that, but
guys never skipped a beat.”
After a tumultuous
mid-season
when
the
Chargers were 5-7, they rallied, winning their next
four games in a row, all at
home.
Now, they’ll be heading
to the playoffs for the first
time in three years.
“There’s no words that
can describe just what we
had to deal with, overcoming adversity throughout
the season and sticking
together — is the main
ingredient in my mind —
that’s what got us to this
point,” said tight end
Antonio Gates.
Gates caught a 4-yard
pass from Philip Rivers to
score a touchdown in the
second quarter.
It was the 60th time the
two have connected for a
touchdown, the most in NFL
history
for
a
quarterback/tight end duo.
Rivers recalled the first
touchdown pass he completed to Gates like it was yesterday: “In Oakland, in
(2006). We threw the ball 11
times that game. And one of
those was a touchdown to
Gates. And to think there’s
been 59 more after that —
that’s a lot of touchdowns.
As a quarterback to have a
player like that to throw the
ball to, you’re very thankful, it’s very special. He’s a
special teammate and
friend.”
Playing in spurts,
Rivers said that even after
stringing four wins in a row
together, he thought the
team had shown all season
long that they can play well
enough to be in the playoffs. “I think we had shown
we could do it, we just
weren’t consistent enough.”
San Diego Chargers wide receiver Eddie Royal (11) attempts to catch a pass that is broken up by Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Ron Parker in
the second quarter. Photos by Bill Reilly
Rivers admitted they
didn’t play their best game
on Sunday, but teams that
are playoff teams find a way
to win when they don’t play
their best, he said.
Reaching the playoffs
was the first goal, McCoy
said. Their goal on Sunday
was to get to 9-7. They
couldn’t control what anybody else did, he added.
“And fortunate enough for
us, we went out for opening
kickoff; we knew what we
had out there for us.”
Rivers said he knows
they’ll have their hands full
when they face the Bengals
in the first round of playoffs
next weekend. “But we’ll be
there and we’ll give them
all we’ve got,” he said.
The Chargers will play
the Bengals at 10:05 a.m.
PST Jan. 5 on CBS.
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San Diego Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers looks up at the scoreboard during pre-game warm-ups. The Chargers needed help from the
New York Jets and Cincinnati Bengals to get into the playoffs. They went
on to beat the Kansas City Chiefs 27 - 24 in overtime.
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A17
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
S PORTS
Singing the Chargers’
praises while chowing
on some crow
JAY
PARIS
Down in the Deep South,
there’s a saying that goes like
this: it’s not the species, but
the recipe.
That’s a nice way of putting it — while an entree may
not be prime rib,if fixed right,
it tastes good.
So some are suggesting I
find a way to rustle up my
crow in such a manner.Throw
some spice in there; bathe
that bird in hot sauce. Find
some ketchup and empty the
bottle on those vittles.
This after being reminded by readers of my prediction that the Chargers’ season
would mimic holiday lights:
put away right after
Christmas.
But the Chargers are
sparkling and heading to
Cincinnati. The Queen City
awaits, and I’ll do the royal
thing and accept their appreciation.
A playoff share would be
swell, but I don’t expect too
much.The Spanos family likes
to spend money, but not waste
it.
Still, the thought here is,
guys like me poking the
Chargers in the ribs supplied
the motivation to shock the
world. Yep, they got plenty of
other help as the Dolphins
and Ravens went 0-4 over the
final two weekends while the
Chargers soared to 2-0.
They also got a boost
with Chiefs kicker Ryan
Succop going wide right and
the officials getting the play
wildly wrong. The Chargers
were lined-up illegally on
Succop’s epic miss to force
overtime, but the zebras
missed it as well.
So the Chargers survive
and yes, I’m available on the
motivational circuit for whatever ails your company.
Sports or otherwise.
A wise acre might predict the Chargers, the AFC’s
No. 6 seed, are in for a grand
fall on Sunday against the
AFC
North
champion
Bengals. That there’s a reason
why the locals are 40-to-1 in
some Las Vegas books to win
Super Bowl XLVIII.
And just maybe the
smart guys setting the odds
will get it right, but are they
the same ones giving the
Chargers a 1 percent chance
of making the playoffs with
two weeks remaining?
Nothing is surprising
anymore, or did you really
think the Chargers would win
four straight after a falling flat
against these same Bengals
on Dec. 1?
The Chargers were
mauled by the guys in stripes,
getting pushed around like a
shopping cart in a parking lot.
The Bengals rushed for 164
yards, the second-most the
Chargers allowed all season; I
can’t explain how the
Redskins rumbled for 209
either.
The Bengals pancaked
the Chargers before a flat
gathering that had to be
encouraged by manufactured
crowd noise being pumped
through
Qualcomm
Stadium’s speakers. The
biggest sound heard was the
Chargers falling from relevancy, a resounding thud with
them plopping two games
under .500 with a testy
December slate awaiting.
But
the
Chargers
rebounded, disposing of the
Giants, Broncos, Raiders and
Chiefs. That punched their
playoff ticket and has it really
been three years since we’ve
been on this route?
We’ll remind others that
we were coy and saw it coming all along, and if the
Chargers needed us doubting
their resolve to pull it off, so
be it.
The Chargers are alive
and the cheers are still ringing
in our ears from Succop going
all Pete Stoyanovich late
Sunday afternoon, and if you
don’t know the story, here
goes:
The Dolphins, in a 2004
AFC Divisional Game, were
poised to eliminate the
Chargers in the contest’s final
seconds.
The
steady
Stoyanovich was set to kick a
48-yard field goal for a 24-22
win. He lined it up, and just
like Succop, was wide right.
The Chargers removed
their blindfold and put away
their cigarette. It was off to
Pittsburgh for the AFC
Championship Game where
they were greeted by fullpage newspapers ads hawking Super Bowl XXIX trips to
Miami. The powerful Steelers
were double-digit favorites,
set to brush aside the
Chargers like dandruff on
shoulder pads.
But a funny thing happened on the Steelers’ way to
South Beach.
Stan Humphries found
Tony Martin, Dennis Gibson’s
arm found a last-gasp Neil
O’Donnell pass and the sight
of a beaming coach Bobby
Ross in the bedlam of that old
Three Rivers Stadium visitor’s
locker room is a lasting memory.
So bet against the
Chargers if you want with the
Bengals being undefeated at
home this season.
Bet against an uneven
Chargers team that was nearly beat by the Chiefs’ junior
varsity squad.
Bet, bet, bet, but just
remember, figuring out the
NFL is a wager no one should
embrace.
Me, I got a meal to eat.
I’m betting it’ll taste good
with ketchup.
Jay Paris can be heard talking
Chargers football on 1090 AM on
Monday and Friday mornings. He’s
also the Wednesday morning co-host
of “Hacksaw and Company.” He can
be reached at [email protected] and
followed on Twitter @jparis_sports.
Contact us at [email protected]
with story ideas, photos or suggestions
Soccer league expands coaching staff
By Bianca Kaplanek
REGION — The Del
Mar Carmel Valley Sharks
recently added five new
members to its coaching
and administrative staff.
Billy Garton was named
director of the boys competitive team and Warren
Barton is the new technical
director.
Ryan Penton, Steve
Gonzalez and Platini Soaf
have also joined the Sharks
coaching staff.
Garton had a 10-year
career with Manchester
United before an injury
forced him to retire in 1990.
He holds an honors
degree in education, specializing in physical education, and was a teacher for
five years after retiring
from professional soccer.
He coached professionally in the minor leagues in
England for several years
but also coached players as
young as preschool age.
He
is
currently
involved in a soccer management company that specializes in presenting elite
youth soccer players with
professional opportunities
in Europe and the United
States.
Barton, a
London
native, played soccer for 18
years in the English
Premier League, with 500
senior level appearances.
He was chairman of the
Professional Footballers
Association in the United
Kingdom for two years.
After his professional
soccer career Barton was an
analyst for SKY Sports
Television, covering major
soccer leagues and competitions.
He moved to the
United States six years ago
to become the head analyst
on Fox Soccer Channel,
which is now Fox Sports.
He was head coach of
the Under-18 Los Angeles
Galaxy team for two years
and then general manager
of the L.A. Blues. Four years
ago he became owner and
head coach of the San
Diego Flash.
Soaf will be working
with the competitive girls
teams. He has coached for
more than two decades at
all levels of women's soccer,
including extensive work
with
the
Olympic
Development Program.
He has international
experience in men's and Platini Soaf is part of the expanded coaching and administrative staff for
women's coaching, adminis- the Del Mar Carmel Valley Sharks. Courtesy photo
tration and training in
Mexico, Brazil, France,
Canada, England, Morocco,
Costa Rica, Portugal, Spain
and Germany.
Among the many playP H O T O G R A P H Y
ers Soaf has sent to college
or beyond is Rachel
Buehler,
a
two-time
Olympic gold medalist and
native of Del Mar.
Established in 1970,
the DMCV Sharks is a nonprofit, volunteer organization that offers recreational
and competitive soccer programs and camps for players of all abilities from ages
5 to 19.
Based in Carmel Valley,
the club emphasizes development of the individual
player over team success.
However, winning is a natural consequence of maxiBill is a professional photographer who blends his
lifelong passion for sports with his skills in photogmizing each individual playraphy to capture memorable moments of all types
er's potential.
of action oriented events.Call Bill to learn more
Players are given equal
about how his sports, portrait and commercial
playing time in league
photography services can meet your needs.
games.
Visit dmcvsharks.com
[email protected]
or call (858) 794-8404 for
more information.
858.405.9986
A18
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
SHARROWS
CONTINUED FROM A1
From left: Susie Nancarrow, Britta Nancarrow and Graham Nancarrow celebrate the life of their father and
longtime San Diego television journalist Loren Nancarrow at South Cardiff State Beach. Photo by Bill Reilly
NANCARROW
CONTINUED FROM A1
rose garden and the smell
of a puppy and the writing
of a first grader.”
The post goes on to
state: “And the most important lesson I’ve learned
throughout all of this, is
that it is far better to do
good for others, than to do
STORIES
CONTINUED FROM A3
revenue and dedicate it
toward a new pension contingency fund.
The idea is to contribute to the contingency
fund during good times,
Shaffer
explained
on
Monday.
That way, if there’s a
downturn in the economy
that drives up pension costs,
the city can draw upon the
reserve fund as a stabilization measure.
The City Council is
scheduled to consider the
contingency fund in late
spring.
Further, she said council members could potentially take a harder look at new
employee salaries, because
employee pay determines
pension payouts.
Last year, a city-ordered
analysis pegged Encinitas’
long-term unfunded pension
liability at $39 million.
State reform, which
went into effect for
Encinitas last year, cut
retirement benefits for new
employees. Other reform: in
the past, Encinitas paid half
of employees’ 9 percent contribution to the state’s pension system. In 2012,
Encinitas required that all
employees pick up their full
share.
However, the Encinitas
Taxpayers Association has
argued the city needs a
more aggressive plan to pay
down pension liability.
good for oneself.”
In addition to Hannah
and Susie, son Graham
Nancarrow and daughter
Britta Nancarrow survive
him.
To honor Loren, a healing garden is planned at
Scripps Radiation Therapy
Center in La Jolla.
For more information
and to donate, visit
7. Debate over density
bonus housing
First, it was the Desert
Rose
development
in
Olivenhain, and now there’s
controversy over a proposed
10-home project in Leucadia
on Fulvia Street.
At issue: California’s
density bonus law.
The law gives developers permission to build extra
housing on parcels if they
set aside one or more units
for low-income residents.
In the case of the Fulvia
Street project, the state law
grants five additional homes
on the property in exchange
for building one low-income
unit.
The project, which will
go in front of the Planning
Commission sometime in
the next few months, has
caused an uproar among
nearby residents, who argue
the additional homes would
result in flooding and hurt
the neighborhood’s character.
Councilman Mark Muir
recently asked for a report
on the city’s options for limiting density bonus projects.
Also, per the council’s
direction, the city’s lobbyist
will advocate at the state
level for more local control
over housing.
“We need to address the
issue head on and see what
we can do,” Muir said on
Monday.
scripps.org/loren.
As Loren’s friends and
family encircled him, friend
Ken Druck said the paddleout was a testament to the
number of people who
Loren influenced and
reached.
“What is the measure
of a life well lived?” Druck
asked. “We’re standing in
the moment of that.”
few months, the City
Council will give the thumbs
up or down to tougher standards that aim to curb noise
and trash outside of bars.
The stricter standards
are part of a proposed
deemed-approved
ordinance.
Alcohol-serving establishments that fail to comply
could be hit with fines or
eventually even the loss of
their license.
Some residents have
stated the ordinance is necessary to keep the downtown bar scene in check.
Another reason they’re
in favor: older bars face
fewer regulations and performance standards, and the
ordinance would create uniform rules.
But others believe the
ordinance is heavy-handed
and unnecessary.
Since the summer, when
the issue of downtown
drinking reached a fever
pitch, bar owners made a
concerted effort to address
alcohol-related problems,
they argue.
Other stories to watch
The Encinitas and
Solana Beach 50-year sand
replenishment project will
be seeking federal approval
and funding. Also, an e-cigarette ban in public places
will go before the City
Council. Plus, residents will
have the chance to weigh in
on the city’s housing ele8. Stricter rules for bars ment during workshops
Sometime in the next throughout Encinitas.
getting hit by a car pulling out, or somebody opening a door…then they can ride
over.”
Bicyclists are entitled to the entire
lane on a sharrow, Haley explained. “They
can ride in the middle or wherever they
feel it’s safe,” he said.
In late November, Garrigus met with
Encinitas City Manager Gus Vina and law
enforcement to talk about ways to help
educate riders, drivers and the public
about bike safety.
Vina became involved, he said,
because there was enough “noise” out
there in terms of bicycle safety involving
cars, bikes and buses that he began to
check in with cycling coalitions.
Vina said the bicycling community is
happy with the sharrows. But for more
education, he’s challenged bike groups to
come up with a campaign to devise on
their own what needs to be communicated.
Vina said increased enforcement hasn’t been discussed by the bike groups, but
that he’s aware of what he calls an “interpretation issue,” between law enforcement and bike groups. The issue revolves
around what’s actually allowed by law on
a sharrow, he explained.
“And that’s something that still
needs a little work and clarity,” Vina said.
Where there is disagreement
between law enforcement and cyclists is
the issue of riding side-by-side. Haley said
riding side-by-side in the sharrows is not
technically permitted.
If the cyclists want to ride side-byside, it would take amending the law. And
that’s what the sheriff’s department has
suggested to the bicycle coalitions, if they
wanted to make that happen.
Haley said that traffic-related issues
are the number one complaint he receives
— speeding, running stop signs — that’s
10-to-1 over any other complaints the
department receives.
“On occasion we get complaints from
bicyclists who are being hassled by
motorists that don’t understand the sharrows.”
Conversely, the department also
receives complaints from citizens regarding cyclists failing to stop at stop signs or
red lights.
From June through Nov. 30 of last
year a total of 15 bicycle citations were
given out. Out of those 15, 11 were issued
on Nov. 2, the day of the annual Bike the
Coast, Taste the Coast event.
“Whenever there’s an event, any type
of specialized event, whether it’s a running event or a triathlon or a specific
bicycling event, typically we provide
more people,” Haley said. “If they’re out
there, they’re going to be in the area
where these people may or may not be
violating the law. And if they violate the
law, then they’re going to get a citation.”
Haley said it was motorists that
receive “significantly more” traffic citations over bicyclists.
“We rarely cite bicyclists,” he said.
“We’re not specifically targeting them,
Cyclists have been buzzed by motorists, even yelled
at while riding along Coast Highway 101. Photo by
Tony Cagala
but if there’s a certain area where we
receive complaints, or if they’re (Sheriff’s
deputies) doing their routine patrol and a
bicyclist does something right in front of
them, then we have to act.”
Haley said the officers aren’t specifically instructed to enforce any infractions. “They’re traffic units, and that’s
their job. They’re very well-versed on traffic laws. It’s a specialized position; they
get picked for that job, just like a detective or anything else, and they’re expected to be proactive in what they’re doing.
“We don’t say, ‘pick on cyclists,’ we
just give them (traffic units) the information on complaints, we give them the
information on where there are collisions
occurring, and they’re expected to provide enforcement in those areas,” Haley
said.
The most commonly cited cyclist
infractions include riding outside the
bike lanes, hindering traffic, riding two to
three abreast, and running stop signs and
stop lights, Haley said.
In September, another roadway safety measure will go into effect. The Three
Feet for Safety Act will require that
motorists overtaking bicyclists or other
motorists must do so with a three-foot
buffer.
With the sharrows in place, Vina said
that it’s an approach that helps include
more modes of transportation. “And to
me, the key is to make sure that when we
do those things we are very thoughtful
about the public safety, whether you’re in
a car or on a bike or on the sidewalk.
Public safety has to be the
guiding
light here.”
JAN. 3, 2014
A19
THE COAST NEWS
Legals 800
Legals 800
Legals 800
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Legals 800
City of Encinitas
Planning and Building
Department
NOTICE INVITING APPLICATIONS
CITY OF CARLSBAD
LOCAL APPOINTMENTS LIST - 2014
In compliance with the requirements of the Maddy Act, Government Code 54972, the following list
is posted on an annual basis on or before December 31st.
NOTICE OF PENDING ACTION ON ADMINISTRATIVE
APPLICATIONS AND COASTAL DEVELOPMENT PERMITS
The City of Carlsbad is inviting applications from Carlsbad residents who are interested in serving
on one of the following Council-appointed Boards, Commissions and Committees. To receive an
application, contact the City Clerk’s Office at 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive, call (760) 434-2808, or
e-mail to: [email protected].
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
(1/3, 1/17 etc.) and will be closed Wednesday, January 1,
2014 in observance of New Year’s Day.
Minimum requirements to serve are applicants must be 18 years of age or older, a registered voter
and a resident of Carlsbad (CMC 2.08.090) except members of the Carlsbad Tourism Business
Improvement District Board. Some positions may have additional requirements, contact the City
Clerk’s Office for more information.
Arts Commission*: This is a seven-member board. Members must be residents of Carlsbad and
normally serve four-year terms.
Term
Appointed
Expiration
Aaron Alter
May, 2013
March, 2014
Joann Johnson
July, 2011
March, 2014
Beach Preservation Committee: This is a seven-member committee of Carlsbad residents and
normally serve four-year terms.
Term
Appointed
Expiration
Matt Rocco
April, 2011
June, 2014
Jayme Timberlake
April, 2011
June, 2014
Carlsbad Golf Lodging Business Improvement District Board*: This is a three member board.
Two members shall be appointed from the member hotels, one member shall be appointed from a
Carlsbad golf course establishment. Members serve terms as follows: one member shall serve an
initial term of two years, and two members shall serve an initial term of four years. Thereafter, the
City Council shall appoint all members for four year terms.
Term
Timothy Stripe
Appointed
November, 2012
Expiration
November, 2014
Historic Preservation Commission: This is a five member board appointed by the City Council
and one ex-officio representative of the Planning Commission. All regular members must have
knowledge of, and a demonstrated interest in, historic preservation and local history: three members, each of whom has a different recognized expertise or interest in architecture, archaeology,
history, biology, engineering or geology or related field; two members will have an interest in local
history, and one will serve at large from the community. Members serve four year terms.
Term
Appointed
Christopher Garcia
April, 2011
April, 2014
Murray Levy
April, 2011
April, 2014
Expiration
Housing Commission*: This is a five-member board. Two members must be tenants assisted by
the Carlsbad Housing Authority, one of which shall be at least 62 years of age; Three general
members with expertise in one or more of the following areas: development, construction, real
estate, social services, housing advocacy, planning, architecture or finance. To the extent possible, the members shall be representative of the four quadrants of the City. Members must be residents of Carlsbad and registered voters. Members serve four-year terms.
Term
Bobbie Smith**
Appointed
August 2007
Expiration
July, 2011
(**Senior tenant receiving assistance from the Carlsbad Housing Authority category)
Library Board of Trustees*: This is a five member board. Members must be residents of
Carlsbad and registered voters. Members serve four year terms. Trustees may serve no more than
two complete terms.
Term
Wendy Hinman
Appointed
Expiration
February, 2011
June, 2014
Planning Commission*: This is a seven member board appointed by the City Council. Four exofficio members shall be the Community and Economic Development Director, the City Engineer,
the City Attorney and the City Planner. Members must be residents of Carlsbad and serve four
year terms with the exception of ex-officio members whose term shall correspond to their respective official tenures.
Term
Victoria Scully
Kerry Siekmann
Appointed
Expiration
May, 2011
April, 2014
April, 2014
*Individuals appointed to these committees are subject to the F air Political Practices Commission
regulations and must file a Statement of Economic Interests .
01/03/14 CN 15743
T.S. No. 13-24900
A P N :
101-430-16-00
NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE'S SALE YOU ARE IN
DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF
TRUST DATED 11/23/2012.
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 a state or federal credit
union, or a check drawn by a
state or federal savings and loan
association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in
Section 5102 of the Financial
Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by
the duly appointed trustee as
shown below, of all right, title,
and interest conveyed to and
now held by the trustee in the
hereinafter described property
under and pursuant to a Deed of
Trust described below. The sale
will be made, but without
covenant or warranty, expressed
or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay
the remaining principal sum of
the note(s) secured by the Deed
of Trust, with interest and late
charges thereon, as provided in
the note(s), advances, under the
terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee for the
total amount (at the time of the
initial publication of the Notice
of Sale) reasonably estimated to
be set forth below. The amount
may be greater on the day of
sale.
Trustor:
BRANDON
CAREY AND LEANN CAREY,
HUSBAND AND WIFE AS
JOINT TENANTS
Duly
Appointed
Trustee:
LAW
OFFICES OF LES ZIEVE Deed
of Trust recorded 12/4/2012 as
Instrument No. 2012-0758277 in
book , page of Official Records
in the office of the Recorder of
January, 2011
San Diego County, California,
Date of Sale:1/24/2014 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:
$278,763.96 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: 39910 DAILY RD
FALLBROOK, California 92028
Described as follows: PARCEL
1: THAT PORTION OF THE
SOUTH ? OF THE SOUTHEAST
? OF THE NORTHEAST ? AND
THE NORTHEAST ? OF THE
SOUTHEAST ? OF SECTION 33,
TOWNSHIP 8 SOUTH, RANGE
4 WEST, SAN BERNARDINO
MERIDIAN, IN THE COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING TO
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT SURVEY, DESCRIBED
AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT
THE NORTHEAST CORNER
OF SAID ? OF THE SOUTHEAST ? OF THE NORTHEAST ?;
THENCE SOUTH 28 DEGREES
07 MINUTES 20 SECONDS
EAST 246.74 FEET; THENCE
SOUTH 58 DEGREES 40 MINUTES 15 SECONDS EAST, 30.0
FEET TO A POINT ON A 100.00
FOOT RADIUS CURVE
CONCAVE SOUTHEASTERLY,
THE RADIAL LINE THOUGH
WHICH BEARS NORTH 58
DEGREES 40 MINUTES 15
SECONDS WEST; THENCE
SOUTHWESTERLY
ALONG
SAID CURVE THROUGH A
ANGLE OF 29 DEGREES 23
MINUTES 35 SECONDS A DISTANCE OF 51.30 FEET;
THENCE TANGENT TO SAID
CURVE SOUTH 01 DEGREES
56 MINUTES 10 SECONDS
WEST 161.00 FEET TO THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
200.00 FOOT RADIUS CURVE
Legals 800
CONCAVE NORTHWESTERLY;
THENCE SOUTHWESTERLY
ALONG
SAID
CURVE
THROUGH AN ANGLE OF 53
DEGREES 11 MINUTES 10
SECONDS A DISTANCE OF
185.65 FEET; THENCE TANGENT TO SAID CURVE SOUTH
55 DEGREES 07 MINUTES 20
SECONDS WEST, 148.23 FEET
TO THE BEGINNING OF A TANGENT 300.00 FOOT RADIUS
CURVE CONCAVE NORTHWESTERLY; THENCE SOUTHWESTERLY ALONG SAID
CURVE THROUGH AN ANGLE
OF 33 DEGREES 17 MINUTES
50 SECONDS A DISTANCE OF
174.34 FEET; THENCE TANGENT TO SAID CURVE SOUTH
88 DEGREES 25 MINUTES 10
SECONDS WEST 270.36 FEET
TO THE BEGINNING OF A TANGENT 200.00 FOOT RADIUS
CURVE CONCAVE SOUTHERLY;
THENCE
WESTERLY
ALONG
SAID
CURVE
THROUGH ANGLE OF 09
DEGREES 10 MINUTES 00
SECONDS A DISTANCE OF
32.00 FEET; THENCE NORTH
14 DEGREES 22 MINUTES 10
SECONDS WEST, 242.73 FEET
TO THE TRUE POINT OF
BEGINNING; THENCE SOUTH
48 DEGREES 01 MINUTES 50
SECONDS WEST, 444.03 FEET
TO AN ANGLE IN THE EASTERLY BOUNDARY OF THAT
TRACT OF LAND DESCRIBED
IN DEED TO NED DAILY, ET
UX, RECORDED FEBRUARY 4,
1964 AS FILE/PAGE NO. 21637
OF OFFICIAL RECORDS;
THENCE ALONG THE BOUNDARY OF SAID LAND OF DAILY,
NORTH 03 DEGREES 45 MINUTES 40 SECONDS EAST,
175.23 FEET; AND NORTH 14
DEGREES 14 MINUTES 40
SECONDS WEST, 94.13 FEET
TO A POINT ''A'' OF THIS
DESCRIPTION;
THENCE
LEAVING SAID BOUNDARY
NORTH 40 DEGREES 04 MINUTES 10 SECONDS EAST
346.25 FEET TO A LINE WHICH
BEARS NORTH 27 DEGREES
02 MINUTES 20 SECONDS
A minimum 10-calendar-day review period has been established for the following applications:
1.CASE NUMBER: 13-247 CDP
FILING DATE:
November 26, 2013
APPLICANT:
St. Constantine Orthodox Church
LOCATION:
3505 Manchester Avenue
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The applicant requests approval of
a Coastal Development Permit for the demolition of an existing
single-family residence. The project site is located in the Rural
Residential 1 (RR-1) Zone, Scenic/Visual Corridor Overlay
Zone and Coastal Zone (APN: 261-150-61).
ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project is exempt from environmental review pursuant to California Environmental Quality
Act (CEQA) Guideline Section 15301(l)(1). Section 15301(l)(1)
exempts from environmental review the demolition of a singlefamily residence.
2.CASE NUMBER: 13-201 CDP
FILING DATE:
October 1, 2013
APPLICANT:
Patrick and Tina Keran
LOCATION:
1337 Sea Village Drive
PROJECT DESCRIPTION: The applicant requests approval of
a Coastal Development Permit for a remodel and the construction of an addition that will exceed 10% of the existing internal
floor area of the single-family residence. The project site is
located in the Residential 3 (R-3) Zone, Scenic/Visual Corridor
Overlay Zone and Coastal Zone (APN: 261-233-16).
ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project is exempt from environmental review pursuant to California Environmental Quality
Act (CEQA) Guideline Section 15301(e)(1).
Section
15301(e)(1) exempts from environmental review minor alterations of existing private structures and additions to existing
structures provided that the addition will not result in an
increase of more 50 percent of the floor area of the structure
before the addition, or 2,500 square feet, whichever is less.
PRIOR TO 6:00 P.M. ON MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 2013, ANY
INTERESTED PERSON MAY REVIEW THE APPLICATIONS
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 the
determinations. 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 actions of the Planning and Building Director on Items
1 and 2 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.
For further information on Item 1 and 2, contact Andrew
Maynard, Associate Planner, at (760) 633-2718 or [email protected]; or the Planning and Building
Department, 505 S. Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024 at
(760) 633-2710 or [email protected].
01/03/14 CN 15749
Legals 800
CITY OF CARLSBAD
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO INTERESTED PARTIES:
Please be advised that the City of Carlsbad is considering text
amendments to its Local Coastal Program (LCP) as summarized below. This amendment is being proposed by the City of
Carlsbad and is currently under review. This notice hereby
opens a six week review period after which the Planning
Commission and City Council will consider all comments and
act on the proposed amendment. The Planning Commission
hearing is expected to take place in February 2014, and will be
duly noticed. The City Council hearing is expected to take place
in March 2014, and will be duly noticed.
Copies of the LCP amendment are available for review at the following locations: (1) Carlsbad Planning Division, 1635 Faraday
Avenue; (2) City Clerk’s Office, 1200 Carlsbad Village Drive; (3)
Carlsbad Main Library, 1775 Dove Lane; (4) Georgina Cole
Library, 1250 Carlsbad Village Drive; and (5) the California
Coastal Commission, 7575 Metropolitan Drive, Suite 103, San
Diego, CA 92108-4402
PROPOSED LCP AMENDMENT SUMMARY
LCPA 11-08(A) – Transitional & Supportive Housing
The City’s Zoning Ordinance is the implementing ordinance for
the city’s Local Coastal Program. Accordingly, this Local
Coastal Program Amendment is necessary to ensure consistency between its proposed amended Zoning Ordinance and its
Local Coastal Program. This specific Zone Code Amendment is
as follows:
The LCP amendment is proposed to implement a program of
the city’s 2005-2010 Housing Element. As described below, this
program calls for the City of Carlsbad to amend its Zoning
Ordinance. The amendment does not affect the policies of the
various segments of the city’s LCP, only the text of the Zoning
Ordinance. Further, no development is proposed or would be
approved by the amendment.
• LCPA 11-08(A) – Amend the Zoning Ordinance to remove text
that specifies the number of persons allowed per unit as stated
in Zoning Ordinance CS-191, which will allow transitional and
supportive housing in all residential zones subject to only those
restrictions that apply to other residential uses of the same type
in the same zone.
If you have any questions, please call Pam Drew in the Planning
Division at (760) 602-4644. Written comments should be sent
to the Planning Division at 1635 Faraday Avenue, Carlsbad,
California 92008.
PUBLISH DATE:
January 3, 2014
PUBLISH DATE FOR NORTH COUNTY TIMES:
January 3, 2014
PUBLISH DATE FOR COAST NEWS:
January 3, 2014
01/03/14 CN 15750
SAN DIEGUITO WATER DISTRICT
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Directors of
the San Dieguito Water District will hold a public hearing
at 5:00 p.m. on January 15, 2014 at 505 South Vulcan
Avenue, Encinitas, California 92024 to present a
Miscellaneous Fee and Deposit Study prepared by Raftelis
Financial Consultants, Inc. and consider adoption of
Resolution No. 2014-01, implementing adjustments to the
District's miscellaneous fees and deposits.
The study includes an analysis of the cost of providing
services for certain miscellaneous tasks. These tasks are
typically customer-driven and include tasks such as, but
not limited to; plan checks, water meter installations and
posting notices. The study recommends adjustments to the
District’s fees in order to recover all expenses related to
providing the tasks.
For more information, please contact Jeff Umbrasas,
Administrative Services Manager for the San Dieguito
Water District, at 760-633-2651.
01/03/14, 01/10/14 CN 15744
SAN DIEGUITO WATER DISTRICT
RESOLUTION 2013-09
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
SAN DIEGUITO WATER DISTRICT AMENDING THE
DISTRICT’S ADMINISTRATIVE CODE REGARDING
THE TIME OF REGULAR BOARD MEETINGS
WHEREAS, Government Code Section 54954(a) requires
that legislative bodies set a time, date and location of regular meetings by ordinance, resolution or by-laws; and
WHEREAS, at the November 20, 2013 District Board
Meeting, the Board directed staff to change the meeting
time to 5:00 p.m.;
NOW, THERFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the Board of
Directors of San Dieguito Water District as follows:
1. That Section 2.4 of the San Dieguito Water District
Administrative Code be amended to read as follows:
WEST FROM THE TRUE POINT
OF BEGINNING; THENCE
SOUTH 27 DEGREES 02 MINUTES 20 SECONDS EAST,
262.69 FEET TO THE TRUE
POINT OF BEGINNING. PARCEL 2: AN EASEMENT AND
RIGHT OF WAY, TOGETHER
WITH RIGHT TO CONVEY
SAME TO OTHERS FOR ROAD,
SEWER, WATER, GAS, POWER
AND TELEPHONE LINES AND
APPURTENANCES THERETO
OVER, UNDER, ALONG AND
ACROSS A STRIP OF AND 40.00
FEET IN WIDTH, THE CENTER
LINE
OF
WHICH
IS
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT A POINT ''A''
HEREINABOVE DESIGNATED;
THENCE ALONG THE EASTERLY BOUNDARY OF SAID
LAND OF DAILY, SOUTH 14
DEGREES 34 MINUTES 40
SECONDS EAST 94.13 FEET;
SOUTH 03 DEGREES 45 MINUTES 40 SECONDS WEST
175.23 FEET; AND SOUTH 54
DEGREES 44 MINUTES 00
SECONDS EAST, 206.59 FEET
TO THE MOST EASTERLY
CORNER OF SAID LAND OF
DAILY. EXCEPTING THEREFROM
THAT
PORTION
INCLUDED IN PARCEL 1
ABOVE. PARCEL 3: AN EASE-
MENT FOR ROAD AND UTILITY PURPOSES OVER A STRIP
OF LAND 12 FEET WIDE OVER
THAT PORTION OF THE
SOUTH ? OF THE SOUTHEAST
? OF THE NORTHEAST ? AND
THE NORTHEAST ? OF THE
SOUTHEAST ? OF SECTION 33,
TOWNSHIP 8 SOUTH, RANGE
4 WEST, SAN BERNARDINO
MERIDIAN, IN THE COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING TO
THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT SURVEY, THE CENTER LINE OF WHICH IS
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT THE MOST
EASTERLY CORNER OF PARCEL 1 OF THAT LAND
DESCRIBED IN DEED TO VIRGIL I. VAUGHN IN FILE/PAGE
NO. 108882 OF OFFICIAL
RECORDS, RECORDED JULY
25, 1967, SAID POINT BEING A
POINT ON A 200 FOOT RADIUS
CURVE CONCAVE TO THE
SOUTHEASTERLY, A
RADIAL LINE THROUGH
WHICH BEARS NORTH 10
DEGREES 44 MINUTES 50
SECONDS WEST; THENCE
WESTERLY ALONG SAID
CURVE THROUGH AN ANGLE
OF 2 DEGREES 34 MINUTES 12
SECONDS A DISTANCE OF 8.97
Time, Date and Place of Regular Board Meetings.
Effective January 15, 2014, the Board shall hold regular
meetings on the third Wednesday of each month at 5:00
p.m. in the City of Encinitas Council Chambers, 505 South
Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, California.
2. In accordance with Section 21378 of the Water Code, the
District Clerk is authorized and directed to publish a copy
of this resolution once a week for two successive weeks in
a newspaper published in the County of San Diego, the
county in which the District is located.
PASSED AND ADOPTED this 18th day of December, 2013,
by the following vote, to wit: AYES:
Barth, Kranz,
Shaffer; NAYS: Gaspar (via teleconference), Muir;
ABSENT:
None;ABSTAIN:
None.
12/27/13, 01/03/14 CN 15728
FEET TO THE TRUE POINT OF
BEGINNING; THENCE NORTH
20 DEGREES 00 MINUTES 16
SECONDS WEST 127.63 FEET;
THENCE NORTH 23 DEGREES
11 MINUTES 08 SECONDS
WEST 15.28 FEET; THENCE
NORTH 31 DEGREES 51 MINUTES 01 SECONDS WEST 16.50
FEET; TO THE BEGINNING OF
A NON-TANGENT CURVE
CONCAVE TO THE SOUTHWEST HAVING A RADIUS OF
180.00 FEET; THENCE NORTHWESTERLY ALONG SAID
CURVE THROUGH AN ANGLE
OF 20 DEGREES 20 MINUTES
46 SECONDS A DISTANCE OF
63.92 FEET TO THE NORTHWESTERLY LIEN OF SAID
See more Coast
News Legals
Page A21
A20
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
DMV reminds motorists of new 2014 laws
PET WEEK
OF
THE
Tigger is a 3.5-yearold, 12-pound, neutered,
male Tabby with buff colored coat.
He’s a big guy, but
his soft and fluffy fur
makes Tig look bigger
than he really is. He is
handsome with bright,
golden eyes. He likes
other cats and is very
playful but polite. If he
Tigger wants attention
he gives a soft, “meow.”
His $100 adoption
fee includes medical
exam, up to date vaccinations,
neuter
and
microchip identification.
For more informa-
SACRAMENTO — With
2014 just around the corner,
the California Department
of Motor Vehicles (DMV) is
reminding motorists of
some of the new laws that
will become effective in the
new year. The following
laws go into effect on Jan. 1,
2014, unless otherwise
noted:
tion about other dogs,
cats, and rabbits that
need families call (760)
753-6413, log on to
sdpets.org, or visit
Rancho Coastal Humane
Society at 389 Requeza
Street in Encinitas.
— The Department of
Motor Vehicles will begin
the process of implementing AB 60 (Alejo) — the
new law requiring DMV to
issue a driver license to an
applicant who is unable to
submit satisfactory proof
that he/she is legally present in the Unites States —
by drafting new regulations
and preparing field offices
to process new applications.
The new law becomes operative by Jan. 1, 2015.
The applicant will be
required to meet all other
driver license qualifications.
—
DMV
Vehicle
Registration Pilot Program.
SB 806 (Hueso) authorizes
DMV to establish a pilot
program to evaluate the use
of alternatives to stickers,
tabs, license plates, and registration cards, subject to
certain requirements. It
will also enable the DMV to
experiment with electronic
license plates, as well as
facilitate DMV’s ability to
explore cost–effective alternatives to California’s tradi-
tional metal license plate,
plastic–coated registration
stickers, and paper registration cards.
and a driver operating a bus
weighing 26,000 pounds or
less to hold a commercial
Class C license.
— Bicycles: Passing
Distance.
AB
1371
(Bradford), known as the
Three Feet for Safety Act,
will require a motor vehicle
driver passing a bicycle
that is proceeding in the
same direction to pass with
no less than three feet
between any part of the
vehicle and any part of the
bicycle or driver.
When three feet is not
possible, the motor vehicle
must slow to a reasonable
and prudent speed and only
pass when no danger is
present to the bicyclist.
Failing to do so can incur a
fine, regardless of a collision or not.
This law will take
effect Sept. 16, 2014.
— Registration and
Vehicle Transfers Between
Family Members. AB 443
(Lowenthal) prohibits the
transfer of ownership of a
vehicle to a relative or a
revocable living trust until
all parking or toll-violation
fines and penalties reported to the DMV are paid by
the transferee.
— Clean Air Vehicle
Decals / HOV Stickers. AB
266 (Yee) and SB 286
(Blumefield),
together
extend sunset dates for low
emission, zero emission
vehicles to operate in high
occupancy vehicle lanes
(HOV) without meeting
occupancy requirements to
Jan. 1, 2019.
— Commercial Driver’s
License. AB 1047 (Linder)
will allow the DMV to conduct the commercial drive
test for the holder of an
out–of–state commercial
learner’s
permit.
The
department would electronically transfer the information to the motor vehicle
department in the applicant’s state of residence. AB
1047 also modifies the
license class definitions to
require a driver operating a
bus weighing more than
26,000 pounds to hold a
commercial Class B license
SCAN here to REGISTER or
visit www.cardiffkookrun.com and sign up
today! Save 10% with code CNG2014
— Teen Drivers. SB 194
(Galgiani) will prohibit a
person who is under 18
years of age from using an
electronic wireless communications device to write,
send, or read a text–based
communication while driving, even if it is equipped
with a hands–free device.
— Veterans License
Plates. AB 244 (Bonilla)
Requires the California
Department of Veterans
Affairs (CalVet) to sponsor
a veterans’ special interest
license plate and requires
the DMV to issue the veterans’ plate if CalVet meets
the
current
statutory
requirements. This law creates, in addition to the current Honoring Veterans
design of the Veteran’s
Organization Plate, a new
program to reissue the
Veteran design that was
issued prior to Jan. 1, 2010.
These plates are available
to all vehicle owners. The
Department of Veterans
Affairs must secure 7,500
pre–paid applications in
order for the department to
implement this plate program.
For complete information on chaptered bills
enacted in 2013, refer to the
Legislative Counsel website
at LegInfo.ca.gov.
JAN. 3, 2014
Legals 800
A21
THE COAST NEWS
Legals 800
Legals 800
Legals 800
Legals 800
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Legals 800
TITLE COMPANY, 316 W. MISSION AVENUE , SUITE 121,
ESCONDIDO,
CA,
92025
(Payable at time of sale in lawful
money of the United States, by
cash, a cashier's check drawn by
a state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a
state or federal savings and loan
association, savings association,
or savings bank), all right, title
and interest conveyed to and
now held by it under said Deed
of Trust in the property situated
in said County and State hereinafter described as more fully
described on said Deed of Trust.
The
property
heretofore
described is being sold "as is".
The street address and other
common designation, if any, of
the real property described
above is purported to be: 5805
ARMADA DRIVE, CARLSBAD,
CA, 92009 TS#, REF#, ICN#,
Unit/Interval/Week,
APN#,
Trustors, Current Beneficiary,
DOT Dated, DOT Recorded,
DOT
Book,
DOT
Page/Instrument#,
NOD
Recorded, NOD Book, NOD
Page/Instrument#, Estimated
Sales Amount
60214
Y2973469A GPP17849AE 178
EVEN 49 211-022-28 JOEL R.
VARTANIAN AND TINA M.
VARTANIAN HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
7/31/2005
9/9/2005 2005-0780377 09-032013 2013 0545286 $15996.43
60285 Y2370469A GPO25704AE
257 EVEN 04 211-022-28 ALVIN
R. EVANS AND TUNISIA E.
EVANS HUSBAND AND WIFE
AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A
CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A
GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
4/9/2005 5/27/2005 2005-0446318
09-20-2013
2013
577485
$13184.58 60286 Y1068469A
GPO37510AZ 375 ANNUAL 10
211-022-28 RICARDO JAQUEZ
AND JENNIFER C. JAQUEZ
HUSBAND AND WIFE AS
JOINT TENANTS GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A
CALIFORNIA LIMITED PART-
NERSHIP
(F/K/A
GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
7/25/2004
7/30/2004
20040716393 09-20-2013 2013 577486
$11216.75 60287 Y3333469A
GPO24822AE 248 EVEN 22 211022-28 VIRGINIA CARISA
HEARD AN UNMARRIED
WOMAN AS HER SOLE AND
SEPARATE
PROPERTY
GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP (F/K/A GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
11/11/2005 11/23/2005 20051014937 09-20-2013 2013 577487
$9223.01 60288 Y6147469A
GPO16908AO 169 ODD 08 211022-28 MARK R RIVERA AND
BEATRIZ CRUZ-RIVERA HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT
TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC
PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LLC)
6/30/2007
7/13/2007 2007-0469642 09-202013 2013 577488 $16517.85
60289 Y6786469A GPO25046AO
25 ODD 46 211-022-28 RICARDO
JAQUEZ AND JENNIFER C.
JAQUEZ HUSBAND AND WIFE
AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A
CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A
GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
8/2/2008 8/15/2008 2008-0436880
09-20-2013
2013
577489
$15734.64 60290 Y6491469A
GPO15514BZ 155 ANNUAL 14
211-022-28 TERRI J CHANDLER A(N) UNMARRIED AS
SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LLC)
9/17/2007
10/12/2007 2007-0657640 09-202013 2013 577490 $13240.69
60291 Y3743469A GPP39407BO
394 ODD 07 211-022-28 LESLIE
N. CALLUM A SINGLE WOMAN
AS SOLE AND SEPARATE
PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC
PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES LLC) 3/4/2006 3/17/2006
2006-0184480 09-20-2013 2013
577491
$9490.52
60293
Y5481469A GPO34706BZ 347
ANNUAL 06 211-022-28 JOHN F.
McCOY AND KIMBERLY J.
McCOY HUSBAND AND WIFE
AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A
CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A
GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
4/2/2006 4/14/2006 2006-0263122
09-20-2013
2013
577493
$20211.62 60294 Y6489469A
GPO15049AO 150 ODD 49 211022-28 ALVERTA RUSSELL
A(N) UNMARRIED WOMAN AS
SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LLC)
10/3/2007
10/12/2007 2007-0657637 09-202013 2013 577494 $17116.13
60295 Y6417469A GPO27233CZ
272 ANNUAL 33 211-022-28
PATRICK KIYOSHI GYOTOKU
AND ELEANOR EVANGELINA
GYOTOKU HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP (F/K/A GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
7/27/2007
9/14/2007
20070604943 09-20-2013 2013 577495
$21265.28 60296 Y6649469A
GPP29508BE 295 EVEN 08 211022-28 JEFF A. ROCHA AND
CORINA T. ROCHA HUSBAND
AND WIFE AS COMMUNITY
PROERTY WITH RIGHTS OF
SURVIVORSHIP
GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A
CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A
GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
1/12/2008
2/29/2008
20080105186 09-20-2013 2013 577496
$16491.96 60297 Y5851469A
GPP19504BE 195 EVEN 04 211022-28 DIANA L. BUSH AN
UNMARRIED WOMAN AND
KAREN L. BUSH A SINGLE
WOMAN AS JOINT TENANTS
GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP (F/K/A GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
8/27/2006 9/8/2006 2006-0639647
09-20-2013 2013 577497 $8880.44
60298 Y6339469A GPO25416CO
254 ODD 16 211-022-28 JEFFREY D. THOMPSON AND
MARIA O. GONZALEZ HUS-
BAND AND WIFE AS JOINT
TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC
PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LLC)
7/21/2007
8/24/2007 2007-0563257 09-202013 2013 577498 $12794.88
60300 Y6343469A GPO37242CZ
372 ANNUAL 42 211-022-28
STEPHEN N. SANCHEZ AND
RAQUEL L. SANCHEZ HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT
TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC
PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
7/14/2007
8/31/2007
20070578936 09-20-2013 2013 577500
$18606.94 60301 Y9628469N
GPP29440BE 294 EVEN 40 211022-28 EDWARD A. BATISTA
AND MARINA BATISTA HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT
TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC
PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES LLC) 5/8/2004 5/14/2004
2004-0439009 09-20-2013 2013
577501
$6572.75
60302
Y9942469A GPP39737AZ 397
ANNUAL 37 211-022-28 CARLOS S. RAMIREZ AND JENNIFER RAMIREZ HUSBAND
AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES
LP. A CALIFORNIA LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
6/19/2004
7/16/2004
20040663728 09-20-2013 2013 577502
$12117.72 60303 Y9902469A
GPP29821AZ 298 ANNUAL 21
211-022-28 FRANK JAMES
MEIER AND SHERRY D.
MEIER HUSBAND AND WIFE
AS JOINT TENANTS GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A
CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A
GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
5/1/2004 7/9/2004 2004-0638042
09-20-2013
2013
577503
$24527.76 60304 Y3496469A
GPO36735CZ 367 ANNUAL 35
211-022-28 ALVIN H. GOYA
AND DAROLYN GOYA HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT
TENANTS GRAND PACIFIC
PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A GRAND PACIFIC PAL-
ISADES
LLC)
12/13/2005
12/23/2005 2005-1099336 09-202013 2013 577504 $28759.12
60305 Y5381469L GPO26719CZ
267 ANNUAL 19 211-022-28
SAMANTHA E. MC TIGHE AN
UNMARRIED WOMAN AS
SOLE & SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES LLC) 5/11/2002 8/9/2002
2002-0672986 09-20-2013 2013
577505
$12442.34
60306
Y6720469L GPP29212AZ 292
ANNUAL
12
211-022-28
KATHARINE B TRENT AN
UNMARRIED WOMAN AS
SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY GRAND PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A CALIFORNIA
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
5/24/2003 6/6/2003 2003-0668530
09-20-2013
2013
577506
$25785.19 60307 Y6388469L
GPP19120AE 191 EVEN 20 211022-28 SCOTT M. WILLIAMS
AND MICHELLE E. WILLIAMS
HUSBAND AND WIFE AS
JOINT TENANTS GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LP. A
CALIFORNIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
(F/K/A
GRAND
PACIFIC PALISADES LLC)
3/23/2003 4/4/2003 2003-0377772
09-20-2013 2013 577507 $8277.67
The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address
and other common designation,
if any, shown herein. Said sale
will be made, but without
covenant or warranty, expressed
or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay
the remaining principal sum of
the note(s) secured by said Deed
of Trust, with interest thereon,
as provided in said note(s),
advances, if any, under the terms
of the Deed of Trust, estimated
fees, charges and expenses of
the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust, to-wit
is estimated at AS SHOWN
ABOVE Accrued interest and
additional advances, if any, may
increase this figure prior to sale.
The beneficiary under said Deed
of Trust heretofore executed and
delivered to the undersigned a
written Declaration of Default
and Demand for Sale, and a written Notice of Default and
Election to Sell. The undersigned caused said Notice of
Default and Election to Sell to
be recorded in the county where
the real property is located and
more than three months have
elapsed since such recordation.
NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering
bidding on this property lien,
you should understand that
there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You
will be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing the
highest bid at a trustee auction
does not automatically entitle
you to free and clear ownership
of the property. You should also
be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien.
If you are the highest bidder at
the auction, you are or may be
responsible for paying off all
liens senior to the lien being
auctioned off, before you can
receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property by
contacting the county recorder’s
office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge
you a fee for this information. If
you consult either of these
resources, you should be aware
that the same lender may hold
more than one mortgage or deed
of trust on the property.
NOTICE
TO
PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown on
this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the
mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee,
or a court, pursuant to Section
Coast News
Legals
From Page A19
VAUGHN`S LAND. THE SIDELINES OF SAID EASEMENT
SHALL BE EXTENDED OR
SHORTENED TO TERMINATE
ON THE NORTHWESTERLY
LINE OF SAID VAUGHN`S
LAND. A.P.N #.: 101-430-16-00
The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or
other common designation, if
any, shown above. If no street
address or other common designation is shown, directions to the
location of the property may be
obtained by sending a written
request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first
publication of this Notice of
Sale. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL
BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property
lien, you should understand that
there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You
will be bidding on a lien, not on
the property itself. Placing the
highest bid at a trustee auction
does not automatically entitle
you to free and clear ownership
of the property. You should also
be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien.
If you are the highest bidder at
the auction, you are or may be
responsible for paying off all
liens senior to the lien being
auctioned off, before you can
receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property by
contacting the county recorder's
office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge
you a fee for this information. If
you consult either of these
resources, you should be aware
that the same lender may hold
more than one mortgage or deed
of trust on the property. NOTICE
TO PROPERTY OWNER: The
sale date shown on this notice of
sale may be postponed one or
more times by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or a court,
pursuant to Section 2924g of the
California Civil Code. The law
requires that information about
trustee sale postponements be
made available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those not
present at the sale. If you wish
to learn whether your sale date
has been postponed, and, if
applicable, the rescheduled time
and date for the sale of this
property, you may call (714) 8489272 or visit this Internet Web
site www.elitepostandpub.com,
using the file number assigned
to
this
case
13-24900.
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:
12/30/2013 Law Offices of Les
Zieve, as Trustee 30 Corporate
Park, Suite 450 Irvine, CA 92606
For
Non-Automated
Sale
Information, call: (714) 848-7920
For Sale Information:
(714)
848-9272
www.elitepostandpub.com Christine O'Brien,
Trustee Sale Officer THIS FIRM
IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT
A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION WE OBTAINED WILL BE
USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.
EPP 9125 1/3, 1/10, 1/17/2014.
CN 15747
AFC-947,953
NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN
DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF
TRUST DATED AS SHOWN
BELOW. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION OF
THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDINGS AGAINST YOU,
YOU SHOULD CONTACT A
LAWYER. CHICAGO TITLE
COMPANY as the duly appointed Trustee under and pursuant
to Deed of Trust Executed by:
AS SHOWN BELOW, as Trustor,
AS
SHOWN
BELOW,
as
Beneficiary, recorded on AS
SHOWN BELOW as Instrument
No. AS SHOWN BELOW of
Official Records of the County
Recorder of SAN DIEGO
County, California, and pursuant
to the Notice of Default and
Election to Sell there under
recorded on AS SHOWN BELOW
as Instrument No. AS SHOWN
BELOW of said Official Records.
WILL SELL BY PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH On 1/24/2014
at 10:00 AM, AT THE FRONT
ENTRANCE TO CHICAGO
See more Coast
News Legals
Page B7
A22
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
Stretching your ski
vacation dollar
(BPT) — With the Olympics right around
the corner, skiing is on a lot of people’s minds.
While ski trips can get pricey quickly, there are
ways to give your budget a lift.
“It’s not unusual for ‘ski vacation’ to be synonymous with ‘expensive getaway,’“ says
Jeanenne Tornatore, senior editor for the travel
booking website Orbitz.com.“But it doesn’t have
to be that way.These seven simple tips and tricks
can stretch your dollar and get you slopeside for
a fraction of the price.”
* Borrow your ski equipment. One of the
big expenses of a ski vacation — especially for
new skiers — can be gearing up.Tap friends and
family to borrow ski gear for your trip — from
coats and ski pants to ski boots and snowboards.
* Travel’s new rule: Pack light. Most airlines
let you travel with a ski bag as one of your
checked bags. Just be conscious of the weight
allowance and take as much as you can in a carry
Following a few tips can help ease the cost of ski trips this winter season. Courtesy photo
- on bag to avoid extra fees.
not a hassle.
* Choose an easily reachable resort. Flying
into to smaller airports can mean heftier prices
and inconvenient connections. Look for ski
resorts that are within close proximity of major
airports where there is more airline competition.
Ski destinations like Keystone and
Breckenridge are both family-friendly and an
easy drive or shuttle ride from Denver
International Airport.
* Discount lift tickets. If you’re a student or
a senior, be sure to bring identification to take
advantage of any discounts available. And for
those who enjoy sleeping in, you can opt for
half—day or evening lift tickets that are discounted compared to full-day passes.
* Stay in a vacation rental. Large ski areas
have plenty of lodging options aside from hotels.
From condos, cabins and private homes, vacation rentals are a great alternative,especially for
large groups and families.Vacation rentals typically go for a flat daily or weekly fee,so the more
people you invite, the less it will cost per person.
* Location, location, location. While slopeside hotels let you walk out your door and hop
on the lift,opting for lodging a little farther from
the mountain can save you cash. And most ski
resorts offer free shuttle services with stops
throughout town, so getting to the
lifts is
* Timing is everything. Many travelers end
up paying too much for a ski vacation simply
because they choose to vacation when everyone
else does. In general, lift tickets and lodging will
be most expensive over Christmas and New
Year’s, MLK weekend, the President’s Day holiday and spring break during the month of
March. Prices are relatively low in the early season, which occurs November through midDecember.
They will often drop again in April, after
spring break. The month of January is perhaps
one of the best-kept secrets to skiing on a budget.
After the December holidays, you’ll find
plenty of snow without the crowds, typically
resulting in lower lodging rates.
In-Depth. Independent.
THE COAST NEWS thecoastnews.com
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
A23
CAPTURING THE SUNSET
La Costa resident and photographer Jim Grant captured a sunset over Swamis. All of San Diego County has been treated to colorfully vibrant sunsets for the past several weeks. Photo by
Jim Grant
OCEANSIDE
CONTINUED FROM A4
previous eras when a handful of renegade lawbreakers with badges got away
with everything but murder.
Let’s hope the next chief
selected by City Manager
Jepsen can maintain the
OPD’s professionalism and
efficiency in getting the
bad guys off the street.
Let’s also hope our
water department continues to make headway as it
increasingly produces its
own water from underground aquifers.
Let’s hope the El
Corazon soccer fields are
up and running as soon as
possible, and that the city
sticks with the spirit of El
Corazon as it was crafted
by years of public input
and design.
Let’s hope the public
has plenty of input on
what happens with “Lot
23,” the crucial block
north of the pier underpass and bounded by
Cleveland Street and the
railroad tracks.
It will have underground parking and multiple stories and will have a
huge impact on what
O’side library hosts
financial fitness course
OCEANSIDE
—
Start the New Year off
with a financial goal!
Join the Oceanside
Public Library for a
course designed to get
you closer to your financial goals and build
stronger money management skills.
Get
started Jan. 25, from 9
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in the
Oceanside
Public
Library
Community
Rooms located at 330 N.
Coast Highway.
Coffee, a light
snack and a boxed
lunch will be provided
to all registered participants.
Register by calling
(800) 884-4249 or by visiting chworks.org/classes-coaching.
C o m m u n i t y
Housing Works (CHW)
is a nonprofit that
works to help people
achieve
their
financial goals.
This class will help
you create actionable
financial goals, improve
your credit, boost your
savings and decrease
debt.
Graduates
will
leave the class with a
Goal
Action
Plan,
Savings and Spending
Plan, soft-pull credit
report with three FICO
scores, credit rebuilding
and budgeting tools.
The class is open to
all ages, with topics that
may be more appropriate for mature audiences.
This free program is
sponsored
by
the
Friends
of
the
Oceanside
Public
Library and is open to
the public.
For more information, please visit the
library’s website at
oceansidepubliclibrary.org
or
call
(760) 435-5600.
Oceanside will become.
How many stories? How
many condos?
Everyone I have spoken with has panned the
process of making Mission
and Seagaze Avenues oneway streets as a pointless
boondoggle and silly waste
of money.
I will wait until they
are finished to see what
the
finished
product
yields.
But there is no way
you can tell me that a separate plan to narrow Coast
Highway from four to three
or
two
lanes
will
be beneficial.
Streets first and foremost are there to accommodate traffic, not to make
us look quaint. Coast
Highway in fact, needs to
have more, not fewer
lanes. Improved landscaping is fine.
But reducing traffic
flow capability on this crucial thoroughfare just to
make us quaint is a failure.
Oceanside born and raised, Ken
Leighton is an Oceanside business
owner. He may be reached at
[email protected]
Looking For A Spiritual Home?
Not Finding What You Seek?
Come see why our congregation is growing!
A24
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
B
JAN. 3,
2014
SECTION
Artist, former nun seeks funds for life-saving transplant
JEAN
GILLETTE
Small Talk
Wild
kingdom
at her
fingertips
Jean is taking a short holiday br eak. Enjoy this one
from her archives
January. The mandatory time for reflection on
life and lessons learned.
As I ponder what
hard-won knowledge I
have gleaned in 1995, one
area stands head and
shoulders — make that
wing and paw — above
the rest. The aviary my
husband built.
The word aviary used
to mean a peaceful stroll
through a lush portion of
the San Diego Zoo. Now it
means an attractive but
demanding
6-by-6-foot
structure just outside my
back door, filled with
plants and creatures that
my husband insisted
would be nearly carefree.
They may, in fact, feel
carefree.
I certainly
don’t.
Right now it houses
two guinea pigs who can
evade capture with enormous skill, a cockatiel
that will consent to sit on
only one of four pairs of
shoulders in this family,
nine finches and a pond
that barely sustains six
goldfish. I think these
critters
are
happy
enough, but they are very
close to losing “pet” status and gaining “wild
kingdom” status.
It isn’t their fault.
They get visits from my
children only about once
a week. To avoid a trail of
seeds from the cabinet
across the living room and
out the door, I fill the
feeders
myself.
Consequently, I have
become the harbinger of
hatchings. The finches
are particularly happy
here, it appears, and have
produced five babies in
the dead of winter.
The water pump
required in the pond still
clogs up about once a
week. I don’t even bother
with rubber gloves anymore. I just reach right
into the slime and yank
that sucker up, disassemble, rinse, blow the muck
out of the air tube and
shove it all back under
the water hyacinths.
The startling part is
that I am finding this
crazy cage somehow therTURN TO SMALL TALK ON B14
By Rachel Stine
OCEANSIDE — At 19
years old, Heidi Hall was
certain that she knew what
the rest of her life would
look like.
She had come across
the autobiography of the
founder of the SelfRealization
Fellowship
(SRF),
Paramahansa
Yogananda, and after reading it, felt her entire life
shift.
“I was on fire,” Hall,
now in her early 60s,
recalled. “It was just this
deep conviction that that
was something I needed to
pursue.”
She left her studies at
Arizona State University,
and began training to
become a nun of the SRF
monastic order. She took
her vows two years later in
1972.
“I felt like I was going
to spend the rest of my life
there,” Hall said of entering
the SRF monastery in Los
Angeles.
She couldn’t envision
that she would ever leave
that life of regimented meditation and service, let
alone being an artist with a
long-term boyfriend and
facing her third year of
fighting leukemia.
Sitting on her deep
burgundy couch in her
small Oceanside home, a
smile crept over her face as
she looked back on her spiritual journey. Her small
TURN TO NUN ON B14
Heidi Hall displays her artwork in her home in Oceanside. Most of her paintings will be for sale during the benefit concert for her upcoming bone
marrow transplant Jan. 22. Photo by Rachel Stine
College board elects
president, vice president
By Promise Yee
A mock-up design shows what three new Grauer School classrooms will look like once complete. Grauer
School officials believe the classrooms are important to the educational institution’s long-term health. Image
courtesy of Bill Drysdale
School gets OK for campus rebuild
By Jared Whitlock
ENCINITAS — A recently approved rebuild plan will
ensure the future of The
Grauer School, representatives from the school believe.
The
Planning
Commission unanimously
voted in favor of the school’s
revamp proposal in midDecember.
Five modular buildings
make up a significant portion
of The Grauer School’s campus.As a result of the commis-
sion backing, three permanent, two-story classrooms
will soon replace those structures.
Before the vote, Stuart
Grauer, the school’s founder,
said the educational institution plays an important role
in North County. Permanent
classrooms would cement its
reputation, he said.
“Independent education
is very important to our communities,” Grauer said.
“We are engaged in acts
that improve our community
and world, and we want your
support,” Grauer later said.
Five other residents also
spoke in favor of the proposal.
One noted that the new classrooms would solidify the
school’s reputation among college recruiters who visit the
campus.
And 18 people registered
their approval for the project,
but didn’t speak.
Located on 4.6 acres
TURN TO GRAUER ON B14
OCEANSIDE
—
MiraCosta College’s board of
trustees recently elected
David Broad as board president and Jeanne Shannon as
board vice president.
Both have served as
board members for three
years and will serve one year
in elected positions.
Broad is a native of
England, an Oceanside resident and a board representative of Area 6.
He is a retired general
manager of Genentech,
which produces biological
drugs for the treatment of
cancers and immune disorders.
While
working
at
Genentech in 2001, Broad
reached out to MiraCosta
College and helped set up a
biotech-certificate program
to train workers for the
IDEC/Genentech facility.
After his retirement
from Genentech in 2008,
Broad became president of
the MiraCosta College
Foundation and has been
active in the foundation’s
fundraising efforts.
About 60 percent of
MiraCosta students work
while they attend college
and 36 percent of students
receive financial aid.
“I’m passionate about
the education community
TURN TO BOARD ON B14
MiraCosta College is working on improving its student success rate.
Students’ goals range from earning a certificate, to a degree, or transferring to a university. Photo by Promise Yee
B2
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
EXCLUSIVE PROPERTIES
Celebrating 28 Years
Del Mar
$2,950,000 3,095,000
Craftsman style home built in 2005 with
all the newest features. Master bedroom
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Tiffany inspired lighting and marble
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MLS# 130064012
Escondido $2,900,000
Vista $625,000 - 650,000
Hidden Meadows Ranch offers a unique opportunity to own a beautiful 40 acre
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MLS# 130065185
Gorgeous custom built single story home located in the Vista foothills. Situated
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A great buy! Stunning 1900+ sf penthouse condo w/sit-down water views. 2
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ENCINITAS/OLIVENHAIN
760.944.1112
SDSeaCoast.com
BEACH/CARDIFF
CARLSBAD/LA COSTA
760.753.8100
760.804.8021
ODD FILES
BY CHUCK SHEPHERD
Too Much Money
During the 2012 presidential campaign, Mitt
Romney caught criticism for
his proposed California
home with parking on an
upper floor, requiring a car
elevator. Much more elaborate elevator access will be
available in the new Porsche
Design Tower near Miami
(opening in 2016 and already
80 percent sold out, according to a December report by
Slate.com). The 132 oceanside units (in square footage
from 4,300 to 17,000 and in
price from $5.3 million to
$32.5 million) include glasswalled, elevator-accessed
spaces for two or four cars
(for people who would rather
admire their Bugattis and
Maseratis than the Atlantic
Ocean).
Can’t Possibly Be True
Tension over digital
security is such that an
alarming disclosure made in
2004 (and largely ignored)
can resurface on a website in
2013 and appear even more
astonishing. At the height of
the Cold War in the 1960s
(and largely because of
Pentagon-White House contentiousness), “safeguards”
were installed to prevent
rogue generals from launching nuclear war on their own.
What today would be a
“PIN” number was assigned
to each missile, but Strategic
Air Command generals
mocked the PINs by setting
each one to “00000000” — a
code that today would be
ridiculed
as
naive.
(Furthermore, “00000000”
was then written out on each
missile’s instructions, according to the former launch control officer who disclosed it in
2004.)
Inexplicable
David Friehling, who
was identified as Bernard
Madoff’s accountant soon
after Madoff’s 2008 confession to running his notorious
Ponzi scheme, provided evidence in November that a
certain Madoff associate
knew all along that Madoff
was running bogus numbers
on his books — testifying
that he dutifully certified all
such falsified documents
that the associate showed
him. Friehling, who pleaded
guilty in 2009 for his personal role in the scam, also
revealed that somehow he
had actually blown $4.3 million of his own money in the
swindle.
The Continuing Crisis
When a pickpocket
shared a taxi ride with him
recently in China’s Hunan
province and somehow managed to lift Zou Bin’s iPhone,
Zou was frightened that he
had lost all of his beverageindustry business contacts
and began text-messaging
desperate pleas to the thief.
Several days later, in the
postal mail, Zou received a
list of his contacts, apparently carefully copied from the
phone, totaling 11 handwritten pages of names and numbers. On Chinese social
media, the earnest thief was
referred to as “the conscience
of
the
(robbery) industry.”
B3
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
Fairgrounds to start work on parking studies
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR — Del Mar Fairgrounds officials
are eager to begin traffic studies that allow use
of a vacant lot east of the state-owned facility
even though they have a decade to complete
them.
“I see the 10 years as a reprieve, not final
approval,” Director David Watson said at the
Dec. 17 fair board meeting. “Because the
Coastal Commission told us to do it, we have to
do it, and I’d rather do it sooner rather than
later.”
One of two permits granted in November by
the California Coastal Commission allows the
22nd District Agricultural Association, which
oversees the fairgrounds, to continue yearround use of what is known as the east overflow
lot for parking and other events.
The commission was established in 1976 as
part of the Coastal Act.
Because the 22nd DAA used the south and
east lots for parking during the fair and horse
races before that time commissioners haven’t
challenged those uses during those events.
But additional uses during other times of
the year were considered violations.
About two years ago the two agencies
reached an agreement that requires the 22nd
DAA to completely restore the south lot to wetlands.
In exchange for the loss of 1,250 parking
spaces there, fairgrounds officials sought to
continue using the parcel east of Jimmy
Durante Boulevard for year-round parking and
temporary events such as the pumpkin patch
and Christmas tree sales.
County Supervisor Dave Roberts and representatives from environmental groups and the
San Dieguito River Park Joint Powers Authority
said the southern third of the east lot should
also be restored because a recent study indicates additional wetlands are there.
Commissioners voted 7-3 in November to
grant the fairgrounds a 10-year permit to use
the east lot year-round for parking and other
events with the condition that two traffic stud-
Fairgrounds officials will soon begin work on required parking studies even though they have 10 years to complete them.
The studies are part of a condition that allows year-round use of this vacant lot east of Jimmy Durante Boulevard for parking and temporary events such as pumpkin and Christmas tree sales. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
ies be done in that time.
“Ten years is really not that long,” Watson
said. The board plans to take action on the studies at the Jan. 14 meeting.
Watson said he would also like to begin
work to rename the 9.5-acre south lot once it is
restored.
With a recommendation from Jacqueline
Winterer, from Friends of the San Dieguito
River Valley, board members will look into
forming an advisory committee that includes
representatives from the JPA and the fairgrounds.
“I’d like to come up with a better name,”
Watson said. “I don’t want to go on calling it the
south overflow lot when it becomes a restored
wetlands.”
The board recently agreed to name a 100foot buffer on fairgrounds property after former state Sen. Christine Kehoe. That will not
change. Watson said the south lot does not necessarily have to be named after a person.
Swami’s, La Jolla offer underwater state parks
COAST CITIES — On
Dec. 19, California celebrated
the one-year anniversary of
the nation’s only statewide
network of marine protected
areas (MPAs).
These
“underwater
parks,” dotting the coast from
Oregon to Mexico, provide
safe havens for marine life to
rebound and opportunities
for people to get outside and
enjoy nature.
For a look at the outdoor
adventures to be had in
Southern California’s marine
protected areas, check out a
new 60-second video from
Ocean Conservancy, “How Do
You MPA?” at flickr.com/photos/californiampas/.
Many of California’s
marine protected areas are
located just offshore from
state and county parks, and
offer even winter activities.
Local sites include La Jolla
Cove with a sheltered kelp
forest teeming with leopard
sharks, garibaldi, lobsters,
octopus and more.
At Swami’s in Cardiff,
named
after
Swami
Paramahansa Yogananda,
whose
Self-Realization
ashram overlooks it, the kelp
forest offshore grooms the
waves while providing a
home to spiny lobster,
garibaldi and leopard sharks.
Spear-fishermen can fish
for yellowtail and white sea
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6/,5.4%%20!42/,
4HE%NCINITAS3HERIFFgS6OLUNTEER0ATROLPERFORMSHOME
VACATIONSECURITYCHECKSASSISTSWITHTRAFFICCONTROL
ENFORCESDISABLEDPARKINGREGULATIONSPATROLS
NEIGHBORHOODSSCHOOLSPARKSANDSHOPPINGCENTERSAND
VISITSHOMEBOUNDSENIORSWHOLIVEALONEFORTHECOMMUNITIESOF
%NCINITASAND3OLANA"EACH6OLUNTEERSMUSTBEOROLDERINGOOD
HEALTHPASSABACKGROUNDCHECKHAVEMEDICALANDAUTOINSURANCE
ANDAVALID#ALIFORNIADRIVERgSLICENSE4RAININGINCLUDESATWOWEEK
ACADEMYPLUSFIELDTRAININGPATROLS4HEMINIMUMCOMMITMENTIS
HOURSPERMONTHONPATROLORINTHEOFFICEANDATTENDANCEATAMONTHLY
MEETING &RQWDFW/DXUHQFH5HLVQHU$GPLQLVWUDWRU
In-Depth. Independent.
THE COAST NEWS
thecoastnews.com
bass.
California has 124
marine protected areas covering 848 square miles, or
about 16 percent of state
waters.
They allow recreational
uses such as swimming, surfing, kayaking and wildlife
viewing, but are protected
from some or all harvest of
marine life so that ocean
wildlife and habitat can
thrive.
The vast majority of
California’s coastal waters —
around 84 percent — remain
open to fishing. On the North
Coast, the state made history
by designating protections
that respect the right of
indigenous tribes to continue
to practice tribal ceremonies
and harvesting.
The protected areas
were created through the
landmark
Marine
Life
Protection Act (MLPA) of
1999. Conservationists and
groups including Ocean
Conservancy collaborated
with business owners, scientists, tribes, fishermen, recreational ocean users and government officials to design
the statewide network one
region at a time.
The MLPA planning
effort was one of the largest,
most participatory natural
resource management initiatives in the state’s history.
Free Consultation
A KIND, CARING
ATTORNEY
You can be assured we will
take your case seriously, return
your phone calls in a timely
manner and strive to provide
quality, honest and affordable
representation.
WILLS & TRUSTS
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V
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rana
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[email protected]
760.634.2403
B4
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
Annual count seeks to solve homelessness
By Promise Yee
SHINE A LIGHT
Betty Bulen, founder of The North County Elizabeth
Hospice, joins 500 people at the Elizabeth Hospice’s 31st
anniversary candle-lighting remembrance ceremonies on
Dec. 8. “Light Up a Life” is a ceremony held to remember
and honor those who have touched their lives. Donate
online at donate.elizabethhospice.org/form or mail a check
to The Elizabeth Hospice at 500 La Terraza Blvd., Suite
130, Escondido 92025. Courtesy photo
SUZANNE RYAN
Classified Sales
Call Suzanne for all your
classified advertising needs.
760.436.9737
x100
[email protected]
Sean Christian Randolph, 22
Oceanside
December 21, 2013
Betty Jean Boyd, 81
Oceanside
December 2013
Stephen Nazar, 65
Vista
December 18, 2013
Maria Lourdes Zamora, 52
Oceanside
December 16, 2013
IN YOUR TIME
OF NEED...
whether it be for the loss of a loved
one or to support a friend, we want
you to feel that you are in good hands.
At our facility, we provide the attention
and support needed to make this life’s
transition as easy as possible.
REGION — From Jan. 24
to Jan. 26 trained volunteers
will cover every square inch
of San Diego County’s 4,526
square miles to count and
interview homeless in order
to better understand and
solve the problem of homelessness
“We can’t fix what we
can’t measure,” Dolores Diaz,
executive director of San
Diego Regional Task Force on
the
Homeless,
said.
“Homelessness is really not
acceptable.”
“It’s a very complex
issue, but it is solvable.”
On Jan. 24, 800 volunteers, trained by the San
Diego Regional Task Force on
the Homeless data collection
center, will count homeless
individuals in winter shelters,
living on the street and in
cars.
Teams of volunteers will
set out in the early morning
hours with maps of areas
where10,000 homeless individuals bed down.
A point in time count of
makeshift shelters of cardboard boxes, garbage cans
and tarps are counted without
disturbing individuals inside
them, as well as a headcount
of unsheltered individuals.
“We count those outside,
in cars, in parks, places not fit
for human habitation,” Diaz
said.
Another 200 volunteers
continue to work through Jan.
26 interviewing homeless
individuals to help understand what brought about
their lack of housing.
Information on demographics, health and housing history is collected.
“The count itself is only a
number,” Jessica Osmun,
project coordinator of the San
Christine Enid Pilcher, 63
Encinitas
December 5, 2013
Sean Christian Randolph, 22
Oceanside
December 21, 2013
In Loving Memory
SANDRA MARGARET
MOTTAGHI
March 28, 1944 to
December 12, 2013
340 Melrose
Ave., Encinitas
FD857
760-753-1143
Submission Process
Please email [email protected] or call
(760) 436-9737 x100. All photo attachments should be sent
in jpeg format, no larger than 3MB. the photo will print
1.625” wide by 1.5” tall in black and white.
Timeline
Obituaries should be received by Monday at 12 p.m. for
publication in Friday’s newspaper. One proof will be emailed 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)
Mottaghi,
Sandra
Margaret of Oceanside, CA
passed away peacefully on
December 12, 2013. She was
born in Blackpool, England
on March 28, 1944. She was
surrounded by all of her lov-
The Bread of Life Rescue Mission in Oceanside provides winter shelter, meals and services. Services build
self-sufficiency in individuals that lead to securing employment and permanent housing. Photo by Promise Yee
Diego Regional Task Force on
the Homeless, said. “You
don’t know what that the population looks like or who the
homeless individuals are.”
Information gathered is
recorded by the task force
and reported to state and federal agencies that award
funds to groups working to
solve homelessness.
The data is also used by
Betty Jean Boyd, 81
Oceanside
December 2013
Sephen Nazar, 65
Vista
December 18, 2013
ing family and friends. She
is survived by her loving
husband, Reza, her daughters, Suzanne Michelle and
Rachel, her grandchildren,
Lindsay, Ryan, Abby and
Chloe, her sons-in-law,
Marty and Mark. She is also
survived by her sisters,
Janet, Shirley and Margaret
and her many nieces and
nephews, who live in
England.
She was preceded in
death by her mother,
Matilda and her brother
Peter. She loved the ocean,
tending to her garden, having a good cup of tea and
cooking for her family. Rest
in heaven mom, you will be
missed dearly by your loving
family and life long friends.
Services were held on
December 12, 2013, Eternal
Hills
Memorial
Park,
Oceanside, CA.
nonprofits groups to fine-tune
their programs based on
needs, and apply for government funds and private donations.
San Diego County collects data every year, but
some counties and cities only
collect data every other year.
To ensure data is collected this year the U.S.
Department of Veterans
Affairs 100 percent funded
the count in San Diego.
Last year 15 percent of
homeless individuals in San
Diego were military veterans.
The federal goal is to end
veteran homelessness by
2015.
Groups working to solve
homelessness
in
North
TURN TO HOMELESSNESS ON B14
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2 tbsp sugar
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Combine the dry ingredients, then add the
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foamy.
Let stand for a few minutes; bake on griddle.
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B5
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
Who’s
NEWS?
overseeing the day-to-day
activities of an agency with a
$1.15 billion budget and
about 330 employees.
Business news and special
achievements for
North San Diego County.
Send information via email to
community@
coastnewsgroup.com.
Top honors
Nadine
Scott,
of
Oceanside, was honored by
the California Association of
Resource
Conservation
Districts and received the
President’s Award for her
outstanding work within the
CARCD organization. Scott
has been on the board of
directors for the county
Resource
Conservation
District since 1996 and also
on the CARCD board since
1996 as Southern California
Baja Area Chair. Scott also
served as president of
CARCD, Legislative chairperson, and was honored by
the Natural Resources
Conservation Service in
2004 for her excellent partnership work.
Leader for county United
Way
United Way of San
Diego County’s board of
directors named Kevin
Crawford as the new president and CEO for the 93year-old nonprofit. Crawford
was fire chief in Carlsbad for
11 years, and is the interim
city manager for Carlsbad.
Crawford has served on
United Way’s board of directors for five years
Top athletes
The Army and Navy
Academy announced the
recipients of its fall 2013 athletic awards. Korey Warren
of Carlsbad won Varsity
Football Offensive Player of
the Year and Kava Aviu of
Oceanside was named
Varsity Football Special
Teams Player of the Year
Award. Aren Johnson of
Oceanside earned the
Warrior Pride Award for
Varsity Cross Country and
Christopher Medina of San
Marcos was named Most
Improved Varsity Cross
Country.
Lifting kids up
DPR
Construction’s
Foundation, a 501(c)3 charitable organization, awarded
a $50,000 grant in support of
the Boys & Girls Clubs of
San Dieguito and its La
Colonia Eden Gardens
Branch in Solana Beach. The
DPR Foundation exists to
help children who fall short
of their potential due to
socio-economic challenges.
Business support
The Carlsbad Chamber
of Commerce sustains a
Small Business Success
Center to counsel and guide
New SANDAG director
local businesses.If you are
Kim Kawada, with San interested, call (858) 453or
email
Diego
Association
of 9600
Governments (SANDAG) for [email protected].
19 years, has been promoted
to Chief Deputy Executive Strawberry queen
On March 1, the Vista
Director. She succeeds
Renée Wasmund who is Chamber of Commerce will
retiring. Kawada was most host its Strawberry Festival
recently
the
agency’s Pageant and crown a
TransNet and Legislative Strawberry Queen and
Affairs Program Director. As Princesses to reign over the
the Chief Deputy Executive 2014 Strawberry Festival
Director for SANDAG, which will be held May 25.
Kawada is responsible for The pageant is open to
young women aged 14 to 21
who live in San Diego
County. Interested contestants should email [email protected] or call
(760) 716-9477 for details.
Fair pass offered
The “Best Pass Ever” is
on sale now for the 2014 San
Diego County Fair. $24
guarantees you 24 days of
entrance to the fair. The
“Best Pass Ever” is available
at sdfair.com.
facebook.com/
coastnewsgroup
Patients have ‘skin in the game’
with the new health care reform
HEALTH WATCH
BY THE PHYSICIANS AND STAFF OF SCRIPPS HEALTH
By Chris Van Gorder, president and CEO, Scripps Health
Jan. 1 marks the beginning of a mandate under the
Affordable Care Act (ACA)
for most Americans to
obtain health insurance coverage or pay a penalty.
The new year also
means that no one can be
denied coverage because of
a pre-existing condition, and
more people will qualify for
Medi-Cal.
Despite implementation issues and other problems with the ACA, its goals
are laudable.
It is intended to ensure
health care coverage for the
48 million uninsured and to
rein in the nation’s skyrocketing health care costs,
which total more than $3
trillion a year.
Health care in this
country is already changing
and must keep evolving
because it’s broken.
While it is a crisis, it
also presents an opportunity for everyone involved,
including patients, to identify areas for improvement.
We have to break out of
the old paradigm of doctors
ordering tests and treatments for patients as an
answer to every real or perceived ill. Instead, patients
and doctors must partner
together to create individualized care plans that make
sense, avoid waste and produce the best outcomes.
The ACA places more
emphasis on wellness and
prevention of illness, with
hospitals being reserved for
the sickest of the sick.
Insurance plans now must
cover preventive services
such as mammograms and
annual physical examinations, but the real responsibility lies with the individual.
While preventive care
will be covered, for example, it will be up to the
patient to schedule and
complete screening exams
and wellness check-ups,
which can identify potentially serious illnesses such
as cancer in their earliest
and most treatable stages.
Also, individuals will be
encouraged to take inventory of unhealthy lifestyle
behaviors, such as a diet
high in sugar, fat or junk
food, or a lack of exercise.
Such behaviors have
been proven to contribute
to heart disease, diabetes
and other preventable illnesses.
At Scripps, we have had
programs in place since
2006 to encourage our
employees to adopt healthier lifestyles, including a
smarter diet, regular exercise and a healthy work-life
balance.
Besides being in step
with the spirit of health
care reform, it’s the right
thing to do for our employees.
And physicians can
“Health W atch”
is
brought to you b y the ph ysicians and staff of Scripps
Health. For more information
or for A ph ysician r eferral,
call 1-800-SCRIPPS or visit
scripps.org.
Nicholas Aldridge joins Bank of America team
REGION — Bank of
America Home Loans hires
experienced team from
Wells
Fargo
Private
Mortgage Banking to further build its San Diego
market presence.
The team brings with
them 89 years of combined
industry experience and a
proven track record in the
San Diego and surrounding
marketplace.
“Bringing on a team of
this caliber is an excellent
addition to the bank. We
continue to carefully grow
in the region and are
thrilled to add a team of
such seasoned professionals,” commented John
Bianchi, SVP Mortgage
Lending, Bank of America
Home Loans.
The team includes
Norma Nelson-Wiberg, Nick
Aldridge and Shawn Woolf.
Nicholas
Aldridge
gage industry, Mr. Aldridge
worked
in
corporate
finance as a CPA with Ernst
& Young, and former software CFO for a local San
Diego technology company.
His strong background
in finance provides him a
unique expertise when
working with borrowers
with even the most complex
income and asset profiles.
(NMLSR#:453515) entered
the mortgage industry in
2003 and has 22 years of
professional experience in
corporate and real estate
finance.
He has worked with a
multitude of self-employed
borrowers providing tailored mortgage solutions.
Prior to entering the mort-
DEANNA STRICKLAND
Your Encinitas Territory Manager
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advertising needs.
760.436.9737
x104
[email protected]
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Mr. Aldridge earned his
B.B.A., Accounting degree
from San Diego State
University.
For more information,
or to contact Mr. Aldridge,
please call (858) 847-6486,
email [email protected] or visit the
his
website
at
mortgage.bankofamerica.co
m/nickaldridge
NICHOLAS ALDRIDGE
Get your news
for
only
help their patients make
the same types of changes.
In the near future, innovations will make it easier
for patients to partner in
their care.
The
fast-emerging
world of digital medicine
will bring health care to
patients’ homes and even
their smartphones, helping
them better manage chronic
conditions and enhancing
their regular doctor visits.
While the ACA and its
initiatives may not be perfect, it is the law of the land
and a step toward addressing the nation’s health care
problems. The next steps —
and real change — will happen as health care providers
and patients work together
so the right care is delivered
at the right time, in the
right place.
Locally Owned/Operated Since 1983
B6
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
C AMP P ENDLETON N EWS
Falcons
play last
game of
season
By Cpl. Melissa Eschenbrenner
CAMP PENDLETON
— It was time. Pressure
was on for both Marine
Corps Air Station Miramar
Falcons and 1st Radio
Battalion FREQS football
teams. Both teams prepared and were ready for
the championship game, at
Paige Field House aboard
Marine Corps Base Camp
Pendleton on Nov. 19.
The game started off
tough for the Falcons, and
the FREQS managed to
Marines from 1st Marine Special Operations Brigade approach a CH-46 Sea Knight before conducting parachute operations aboard Camp Pendleton on Dec. 12, 2013. Marines with
1st Air Delivery Platoon, Landing Support Company, Combat Logistics Regiment 17, 1st Marine Logistics Group, conducted day and night jumps with 3rd Air Naval Gunfire Liaison
Company and 1st Marine Special Operations Brigade to maintain proficiency and transition to a new parachute system. Photo by Cpl. Timothy Childers
Air Delivery Platoon parachutes from CH-46s
By Cpl. Timothy Childers
CAMP PENDLETON —
“Thirty seconds!” yells the
jump master in the green
glow of the helicopter’s bay.
A line of Marines donning
parachutes repeat the call in
unison, muffled under the
screeching jet engines. The
jump master has ahold of the
Marine in front. The Marine
is nervous. His palms are
sweating, but his mind is
clear with the anticipation of
the jump master’s single
command. That word comes.
“Go!” exclaims the jump
master, and the Marine steps
into the dark void below.
Twelve Marines with 1st
Air
Delivery
Platoon,
Landing Support Company,
Combat Logistics Regiment
17, 1st Marine Logistics
Group, conducted static-line
parachute operations from
CH-46 Sea Knights aboard
Camp Pendleton on Dec. 12,
2013.
The day and night jumps
the Marines performed were
part of a joint training opera-
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tion with 3rd Air Naval
Gunfire Liaison Company
and 1st Marine Special
Operations Brigade to sustain their qualifications and
transition to a new parachute
system.
“The purpose of today’s
training is to maintain the
application of the new parachute system.The more experienced Marines completed
their jumps at night with
combat loads.
“Today will be my first
jump in the fleet and out of a
rotary aircraft,” said Lance
Cpl. Dustin Tyler, parachute
The purpose of today’s training
is to maintain the proficiency of
Marines who already transitioned
to the MC-7 parachute system.”
Sgt.Mark D.Ellis
Operations chief
proficiency of Marines who
already transitioned to the
MC-7 parachute system,”
said Sgt. Mark D. Ellis, operations chief, 1st Air Delivery
Platoon, LS Co., CLR-17, 1st
MLG. “However, we do have
some Marines who have not
transitioned, and that’s what
we will also be doing today.”
The
transitioning
Marines conducted day
jumps without a combat load
to gain confidence in the
rigger, 1st Air Delivery
Platoon, LS Co., CLR-17, 1st
MLG. “I’m used to C-130
door jumps, and today is
going to be my first ramp
jump from 2,000 feet. I’m
really excited about it,”
added the Fox Lake, Ill.,
native.
Although parachute riggers are responsible for the
maintenance of equipment
for airborne operations, they
also play an essential role in
delivering supplies and
equipment to forward-operating troops.
“1st
Air
Delivery
Platoon’s mission is essentially to provide logistical sup-
port to units on the ground
that need supplies,” said
Ellis, a native of Jacksonville,
Fla. “In a combat environment, air delivery is practical
and safer.”
Air-delivered supplies
can be sent virtually anywhere in a timely manner
and without the hazards or
logistical constraints of a
convoy.
Before the operation
began, the platoon went
through a series of pre-jump
routines. The Marines conducted thorough inspections
of their parachutes and gear
and, in a mock aircraft, practiced hand-and-arm signals
and landing drills.
The parachutes use a
static line that deploys the
system after they step off the
aircraft.
While in the air, the
Marines are able to steer and
control their descent to land
safely. Thus, confidence in
their individually packed
parachutes is put to the test.
As the stars began to
show, the last stick of
Marines jumped from the
aircraft. Only their glowsticks were visible over the
horizon. Light or dark, the
Marines refreshed their
skills, learned to use a new
parachute system and successfully
met
their qualifications.
RYAN SOLARSH
Your Oceanside/Carlsbad
Territory Manager
Call Ryan for all your
advertising needs.
760.436.9737
x102
[email protected]
It just
didn’t feel like
a real Falcons
game out
there...
Eric Cambell
Wide Receiver
lead the first half of the
game, 12-0.
That wasn’t going to
stop the Falcons though. In
the beginning of the third
quarter, Falcons made
their first touchdown,
caught by Eric Cambell, a
wide receiver for the team.
The FREQS won the
championship game in the
end, 19-7. Despite the loss,
the Falcons kept their
heads held high.
“It just didn’t feel like
a real Falcons game out
there
tonight,”
said
Cambell. “Don’t get me
wrong, it was a good game,
but I know we could have
done something else and
won.”
“It was a good game
from start to finish,” said
Col. John Farnam, the commanding officer of MCAS
Miramar. “The Marines
from both sides gave it their
all on the field.”
Players from both
teams received rewards
from Lt. Gen. John A.
Toolan, commanding general of the I Marine
Expeditionary Force. The
Falcons did not leave the
game empty handed.
“I’m looking forward to
next season,” said Carlice
Moffett, the head coach of
the Falcons. “We now have
unfinished business to handle.”
By the end of the night,
both teams came together,
not as opponents, but as
Marines smiling, shaking
hands, and congratulating
each other on a game well
played.
“When the game starts,
we’re warriors against each
other,” said Toolan. “When
the game’s over, we’re warriors that fight together.”
JAN. 3, 2014
Legals 800
Coast News
Legals
From Page A21
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about trustee sale
postponements be made available to you and to the public, as
a courtesy to those not present
at the sale. If you wish to learn
whether your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property, you
may call 1-800-540-1717, using
the TS number assigned to this
case on SHOWN ABOVE.
Information about postponements that are very short in
duration or that occur close in
time to the scheduled sale may
not immediately be reflected in
the telephone information or on
the Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale. Said sale will be
made, but without covenant or
warranty, expressed or implied,
regarding title, possession, or
encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum of the
note(s) secured by said Deed of
Trust, with interest thereon, as
provided in said note(s),
advances, if any, under the terms
of the Deed of Trust. The total
amount of the unpaid balance of
the obligation secured by the
property to be sold and resonable estimated fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee and of
the trusts created by said Deed
of Trust.
DATE: 12/31/2013
CHICAGO TITLE COMPANY, AS
TRUSTEE, 316 WEST MISSION
AVENUE, SUITE 121 ESCONDIDO,CA 92025 PHONE NO. (800)
540-1717 EXT 3061 LORI R.
FLEMINGS, as Authorized
Signor
01/03/14, 01/10/14,
01/17/14 CN 15745
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE
TS No. CA-13-548715-CL Order
No.: 130077235-CA-GTI YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
DEED OF TRUST DATED
5/16/2007. 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 C ode and authorized to do business in this state,
will be held by duly appointed
trustee. The sale will be made,
but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining
principal sum of the note(s)
secured by the Deed of Trust,
with interest and late charges
thereon, as provided in the
note(s), advances, under the
terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and
expenses of the Trustee for the
total amount (at the time of the
initial publication of the Notice
of Sale) reasonably estimated to
B7
THE COAST NEWS
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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): JAVIER FERNANDEZ, A MARRIED MAN
Recorded:
5/24/2007
as
Instrument No. 2007-0354247 of
Official Records in the office of
the Recorder of SAN DIEGO
County, California; Date of Sale:
1/17/2014 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:
$266,199.29 The purported property address is: 4238 TIBERON
DR, OCEANSIDE, CA 92056
Legal Description : Please be
advised that the legal description set forth on the Deed of
Trust is in error. The legal
description of the property
secured by the Deed of Trust is
more properly set forth and
made part of Exhibiti “A” as
attached hereto. Assessor’s
Parcel No.: 168-100-44-04 Parcel
1: An undivided 1/100ths interest
in and to lots 28-54 of braewood
oceanside unit No. 2, in the city
of oceanside, county of san
diego, state of california, according to map thereof No. 7501, filed
in the office of the county
recorder of san diego county,
december 13, 1972. Except therefrom all oil, gas, minerals, and
other hydrocarbon substances
lying below the surface of said
land, but with no right of surface
entry, as provided in deeds of
record. Also excepting therefrom
the following: A) all units as
shown upon the condominium
plan of sea breeze – oceanside,
phase No. 2, recorded on january
31, 1979 as file No. 79-049035 of
official records of san diego
county and declaration of annexation recorded on march 22, 1979
as file No. 79-118726 of official
records of san diego county. B) an
easement for ingress and egress
over and through the common
area of lots 28-54 of braewood –
oceanside unit No. 2, for the benefit and enjoyment of the unit
owners of lots 7, 8, 9, and 10 of
braewood – oceanside unit No. 1,
map No. 7175, and lots 55
through 71 of braewood – oceanside unit No. 2, map No. 7501.
Parcel 2: Unit 44 – D as shown
upon the condominium plan
above referred to. Parcel 3: An
easement for ingress and egress
over and across the common
areas of lots 7, 8, 9 and 10 of
braewood – oceanside unit No. 2,
map No. 7051, as defined on condominium plan of seabreeze –
oceanside phase No. 2. NOTICE
TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If
you are considering bidding on
this property lien, you should
understand that there are risks
involved in bidding at a trustee
auction. You will be bidding on a
lien, not on the property itself.
Placing the highest bid at a
trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and
clear ownership of the property.
You should also be aware that
the lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible for
paying off all liens senior to the
lien being auctioned off, before
you can receive clear title to the
property. You are encouraged to
investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens
that may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which
may charge you a fee for this
information. If you consult either
of these resources, you should be
aware that the same lender may
hold more than one mortgage or
deed of trust on the property.
NOTICE
TO
PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown on
this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the
mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee,
or a court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to
you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the
sale. If you wish to learn whether
your sa le date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the
rescheduled time and date for
the sale of this property, you may
call 714-573-1965 for information
regarding the trustee’s sale or
visit this Internet Web site
http://www.qualityloan.com
,
using the file number assigned to
this foreclosure by the Trustee:
CA-13-548715-CL . Information
about postponements that are
very short in duration or that
occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately
be reflected in the telephone
information or on the Internet
Web site. The best way to verify
postponement information is to
attend the scheduled sale. The
undersigned Trustee disclaims
any liability for any incorrectness of the property address or
other common designation, if
any, shown herein. If no street
address or other common designation is shown, directions to the
location of the property may be
obtained by sending a written
request to the beneficiary within
10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. If
the Trustee is unable to convey
title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive
remedy shall be the return of
monies paid to the Trustee, and
the successful bidder shall have
no further recourse. If the sale is
set aside for any reason, the
Purchaser at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return of the
deposit paid. The Purchaser shall
have no further recourse against
the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, or
the Mortgagee’s Attorney. If you
have previously been discharged
through bankruptcy, you may
have been released of personal
liability for this loan in which
case this letter is intended to
exercise the note holders right’s
against the real property only. As
required by law, you are hereby
notified that a negative credit
report reflecting on your credit
record may be submitted to a
credit report agency if you fail to
fulfill the terms of your credit
obligations. QUALITY MAY BE
CONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO
COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY
INFORMATION
OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE . Date: Quality Loan
Service Corporation 2141 5th
Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619645-7711 For NON SALE information only Sale Line: 714-5731965
O
r
Login
to:
h t t p : / / w w w. q u a l i t y l o a n . c o m
Reinstatement Line: (866) 6457711 Ext 5318 Quality Loan
Service Corp. TS No.: CA-13548715-CL IDSPub #0060223
12/27/2013 1/3/2014 1/10/2014 CN
15726
ter 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: 390 RIVER RANCH WAY
OCEANSIDE, CA. 92057-6527
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:
$617,343.58 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 (714) 573-1965 or visit
this
Internet
Web
site
WWW.PRIORITYPOSTING.CO
M, using the file number
assigned to this case 500084-CAORD. 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: (714) 573-1965
Date: 12/17/2013
O L D
REPUBLIC DEFAULT MANAGEMENT SERVICES, A DIVISION OF OLD REPUBLIC
NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY, P.O. BOX 250,
ORANGE, CA 92856-6250,
Authorized Signature OLD
REPUBLIC DEFAULT MANAGEMENT SERVICES, A DIVISION OF OLD REPUBLIC
NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY, P.O. BOX 250,
ORANGE, CA 92856-6250 P.O.
Box 250 Orange, CA 92856-6250
P1075431 12/27, 1/3, 01/10/2014
CN 15725
APN: 158-741-13-00 T.S. No.
500084-CA-ORD NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE IMPORTANT
NOTICE
TO
PROPERTY
OWNER:
YOU
ARE
IN
DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF
TRUST, DATED 11/7/2006.
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 1/17/2014 at 10:00
AM, OLD REPUBLIC DEFAULT
MANAGEMENT SERVICES, A
DIVISION OF OLD REPUBLIC
NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY, P.O. BOX 250,
ORANGE, CA 92856-6250, as
duly appointed trustee under
and pursuant to Deed of Trust
recorded
11/17/2006,
as
Instrument No. 2006-0819473, of
Official Records in the office of
the County Recorder of San
Diego County, State of CALIFORNIA executed by: IRENEO
A. REUS, JR. AND VICKY E.
REUS, HUSBAND AND WIFE
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: IN THE AREA IN
THE FRONT OF At the entrance
to the east county regional cen-
APN: 105-710-16-00 TS No:
CA08000622-11-1 TO No: 7742371049 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S
SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED July 25, 2005. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO PRO-
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TECT 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 January 15, 2014
at 10:00 AM, at the entrance to
the East County Regional Center
by statue, 250 E. Main Street, El
Cajon, CA 92020, MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps, as the
duly Appointed Trustee, under
and pursuant to the power of sale
contained in that certain Deed of
Trust Recorded on August 2,
2005 as Instrument No. 20050655334 of official records in the
Office of the Recorder of San
Diego County, California, executed by CLAY E FERGUSON AN
UNMARRIED
MAN,
as
Trustor(s), in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. as
nominee for SUNTRUST MORTGAGE, INC. as Beneficiary, WILL
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
THE HIGHEST BIDDER, in lawful money of the United States,
all payable at the time of sale,
that certain property situated in
said County, California describing the land therein as: SEE
EXHIBIT
“A”
ATTACHED
HERETO AND MADE A PART
HEREOF EXHIBIT “A” PARCEL
1:ALL THAT PORTION OF LOT
1 BEGIN THE SOUTHWEST
QUARTER OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION
18, TOWNSHIP 9 SOUTH,
RANGE
3
WEST,
SAN
BERNARDINO MERIDIAN, IN
THE COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO,
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA,
ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL
PLAT THEREOF DESCRIBED
AS FOLLOWS:BEGINNING AT
THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF
SECTION 18 AND PROCEEDING 25 FEET NORTH AT AN
ANGLE
OF
90;THENCE
DUE
EAST AT AN ANGEL OF
90 FOR A DISTANCE
OF 485.0 FEET TO THE TRUE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING.THENCE NORTH
AT AN ANGLE OF 90
FOR A DISTANCE OF 140.00
FEET; THENCE WEST AT AN
ANGLE OF 90 FOR A
DISTANCE OF 75.0 FEET;
THENCE SOUTH AT AN ANGLE
OF 90 FOR A DISTANCE
OF
140.0
FEET;
THENCE EAST FOR A DIS-
TANCE OF 75.0 FEET TO THE
TRUE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING.PARCEL
2:AN
EASEMENT OVER, ALONG
AND ACROSS ALL ROADS AND
MEANS OF INGRESS AND
EGRESS IN AND THROUGH
LOT 1 (SOUTHWEST QUARTER
OF SOUTHWEST QUARTER)
EXCEPTING THEREFROM THE
HIGHWAY IN SECTION 18,
TOWNSHIP 9 SOUTH, RANGE 3
WEST, SAN BERNARDINO
BASE AND MERIDIAN, IN THE
EAST HALF COUNTY OF SAN
DIEGO, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING TO UNITED
STATES GOVERNMENT SURVEY. 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: 702
VANITA STREET, 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 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 $245,207.06 (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
See more Coast
News Legals
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B8
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
Legals 800
Coast News
Legals
From Page B7
information about Trustee Sale
postponements be made available to you and to the public, as
a courtesy to those not present at
the sale. If you wish to learn
whether your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable, the
rescheduled time and date for
the sale of this property, you may
call Priority Posting and
Publishing at 714-573-1965 for
information
regarding
the
Trustee's Sale or visit the
Internet Web site address listed
below for information regarding
the sale of this property, using
the file number assigned to this
case,
CA08000622-11-1.
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: December 10, 2013
TRUSTEE CORPS TS No.
CA08000622-11-1 17100 Gillette
Ave Irvine, CA 92614 949-2528300
Lupe Tabita, Authorized
Signatory
SALE INFORMATION CAN BE OBTAINED ON
LINE
AT
www.priorityposting.com FOR
AUTOMATED SALES INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL:
Priority Posting and Publishing
at 714-573-1965
TRUSTEE
CORPS MAY BE ACTING AS A
DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION
OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. . P1074309 12/20, 12/27,
01/03/2014 CN 15707
APN: 223-010-41-68 TS No:
CA05002460-13-1 TO No: 1500997
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED July
7, 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 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST YOU, YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT
A
LAWYER. On January 15, 2014
at 10:00 AM, at the entrance to
the East County Regional Center
by statue, 250 E. Main Street, El
Cajon, CA 92020, MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps, as the
duly Appointed Trustee, under
and pursuant to the power of sale
contained in that certain Deed of
Trust Recorded on July 20, 2006
as Instrument No. 2006-0510733
of official records in the Office of
the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, executed by
BRENT POWERS, A SINGLE
MAN, as Trustor(s), in favor of
MORTGAGE
ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION
SYSTEMS,
INC. as nominee for CENTRAL
PACIFIC MORTGAGE COMPANY, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION. as Beneficiary, WILL
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
THE HIGHEST BIDDER, in lawful money of the United States,
all payable at the time of sale,
that certain property situated in
said County, California describing the land therein as: AS
MORE FULLY DESCRIBED IN
SAID DEED OF TRUST The
property heretofore described is
being sold “as is”. The street
address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported
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to be: 3110 SELLO LANE #68,
CARLSBAD, CA 92009The
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 $218,718.05 (Estimated).
However, prepayment premiums,
accrued interest and advances
will increase this figure prior to
sale. Beneficiary’s bid at said
sale may include all or part of
said amount. In addition to cash,
the Trustee will accept a
cashier’s check drawn on a state
or national bank, a check drawn
by a state or federal credit union
or a check drawn by a state or
federal savings and loan association, savings association or savings bank specified in Section
5102 of the California Financial
Code and authorized to do business in California, or other such
funds as may be acceptable to
the Trustee. In the event tender
other than cash is accepted, the
Trustee may withhold the
issuance of the Trustee’s Deed
Upon Sale until funds become
available to the payee or
endorsee as a matter of right.
The property offered for sale
excludes all funds held on
account by the property receiver,
if applicable. If the Trustee is
unable to convey title for any
reason, the successful bidder’s
sole and exclusive remedy shall
be the return of monies paid to
the Trustee and the successful
bidder shall have no further
recourse. Notice to Potential
Bidders If you are considering
bidding on this property lien, you
should understand that there are
risks involved in bidding at a
Trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid
at a Trustee auction does not
automatically entitle you to free
and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware
that the lien being auctioned off
may be a junior lien. If you are
the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior
to the lien being auctioned off,
before you can receive clear title
to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on
this property by contacting the
county recorder's office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee for
this information. If you consult
either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
Lender may hold more than one
mortgage or Deed of Trust on the
property. Notice to Property
Owner The sale date shown on
this Notice of Sale may be postponed one or more times by the
Mortgagee, Beneficiary, Trustee,
or a court, pursuant to Section
2924g of the California Civil
Code. The law requires that
information about Trustee Sale
postponements be made available to you and to the public, as
a courtesy to those not present at
the sale. If you wish to learn
whether your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable, the
rescheduled time and date for
the sale of this property, you may
call Priority Posting and
Publishing at 714-573-1965 for
information
regarding
the
Trustee's Sale or visit the
Internet Web site address listed
below for information regarding
the sale of this property, using
the file number assigned to this
case,
CA05002460-13-1.
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: December 10, 2013
TRUSTEE CORPS TS No.
CA05002460-13-1 17100 Gillette
Ave Irvine, CA 92614 949-2528300
Joseph Barragan,
Authorized Signatory
SALE
INFORMATION
CAN
BE
OBTAINED ON LINE AT
www.priorityposting.com FOR
AUTOMATED SALES INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL:
Priority Posting and Publishing
at 714-573-1965
TRUSTEE
CORPS MAY BE ACTING AS A
DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION
OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. P1074300 12/20, 12/27,
01/03/2014 CN 15706
AS SOLE AND SEPARATE
PROPERTY 07-31-2013 08-092013 2013 500662 09-10-2013
2013 558072 $4170.99 60078
522411B1O
GMO522411B1O
5224 B 11 211-130-0300 JACK W.
CROGHAN AND JAN A.
CROGHAN HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS 0731-2013 08-09-2013 2013 500662
09-10-2013 2013 558073 $4196.01
60079 542131DZ GMP542131DZ
5421 ANNUAL 31 211-130-0300
SAMUEL S. MARTINEZ AND
CONNIE I. JACOBS HUSBAND
AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
07-31-2013 08-09-2013 2013
500662 09-10-2013 2013 558074
$3478.44
60081
561406AZ
GMO561406AZ 5614 ANNUAL
06 211-130-0300 TIMOTHY
JACKSON A SINGLE MAN TENANT IN SEVERALTY 07-312013 08-09-2013 2013 500662 0910-2013 2013 558075 $5763.85
60082 561318AZ GMO561318AZ
5613 ANNUAL 18 211-130-0300
BRIAN W. MCAULEY AN
UNMARRIED
MAN
AND
MARYLOU
BRIESE
AN
UNMARRIED WOMAN AS
JOINT TENANTS 07-31-2013 0809-2013 2013 500662 09-10-2013
2013 558076 $5763.85 60083
541205EZ GMP541205EZ 5412
ANNUAL
05
211-130-0300
PHUONG-ANH NGUYEN A(N)
MARRIED WOMAN AS SOLE
AND SEPARATE PROPERTY
07-31-2013 08-09-2013 2013
500662 09-10-2013 2013 558077
$6825.14
60084
521132AZ
GMP521132AZ 5211 ANNUAL
32 211-130-0300 SOBRI TAJUDDIN A(N) MARRIED MAN
NATHRAH ZAKARIA A(N)
MARRIED
WOMAN
AND
KEISO KURANUSHI A(N) SINGLE MALE AS JOINT TENANTS 07-31-2013 08-09-2013
2013 500662 09-10-2013 2013
558078 $5840.29 The street
address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 5500 GRAND PACIFIC
DRIVE, 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, but without
covenant or warranty, expressed
or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay
the remaining principal sum due
under said Notice of Delinquent
Assessment, with interest thereon, as provided in said notice,
advances, if any, estimated fees,
charges and expenses of the
Trustee, to-wit: SHOWN ABOVE
Estimated amount with accrued
interest
and
additional
advances, if any, may increase
this figure prior to sale. The
claimant under said Notice of
Delinquent Assessment heretofore executed and delivered to
the undersigned a written
Declaration of Default and
Demand for Sale, and a written
Notice of Default and Election
to sell, in accordance with the
provision to the Covenants,
Conditions and Restrictions.
The undersigned caused said
Notice of Default and Election
to Sell which recorded on
SHOWN ABOVE as Book
SHOWN ABOVE as Instrument
No. SHOWN ABOVE in the county where the real property is
located and more than three
months have elapsed since such
recordation.
NOTICE TO
POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you
are considering bidding on this
property lien, you should understand that there are risks
involved in bidding at a trustee
auction. You will be bidding on a
lien, not on the property itself.
Placing the highest bid at a
trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and
clear ownership of the property.
You should also be aware that
the lien being auctioned off may
be a junior lien. If you are the
highest bidder at the auction,
you are or may be responsible
for paying off all liens senior to
the lien being auctioned off,
before you can receive clear title
to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on
this property by contacting the
county recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either of
which may charge you a fee for
this information. If you consult
either of these resources, you
should be aware that the same
lender may hold more than one
mortgage or deed of trust on the
property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date
shown on this notice of sale may
be postponed one or more times
by the mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to
Section 2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law requires that
information about trustee sale
postponements be made available to you and to the public, as
a courtesy to those not present
at the sale. If you wish to learn
whether your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property, you
may call 1-800-540-1717, using
the TS number assigned to this
case on SHOWN ABOVE.
Information about postponements that are very short in
duration or that occur close in
time to the scheduled sale may
not immediately be reflected in
the telephone information or on
the Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale. Said sale will be
made, but without covenant or
warranty, express or implied
regarding title, possession or
encumbrances, to satisfy the
indebtedness secured by said
Notice, advances thereunder,
with interest as provided therein, and the unpaid assessments
secured by said Notice with
interest thereon as provided in
said Covenants, Conditions and
Restrictions, fees, charges and
expenses of the trustee and the
trusts created by said Notice of
Assessment and Claim of Lien.
Date: 12/16/2013 CHICAGO
TITLE COMPANY, As Trustee,
316 W. MISSION AVE STE. #121,
ESCONDIDO, CA, 92025, (800)
540-1717 EXT 3061 LORI R.
FLEMINGS, as Authorized
Signor. 12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03/14
CN 15705
Timothy Michael Rosenwong
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: In Dept
26 of the Superior Court of
California, County of San Diego,
325 South Melrose, Vista CA 92081
on February 04, 2014 at 8:30 a.m.
Date: Dec. 23, 2013
K Michael Kirkman
Judge of the Superior Court
12/27/13, 01/03, 01/10, 01/17/14
CN 15738
DIEGO, 1409 Fourth Ave, 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.
Petitioner:
James L Bixby
4481 Dawngate Lane
Rolling Meadows, IL 60008
Telephone: 847.309.8384
12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03/14
CN 15709
AFC-944
NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE
IN DEFAULT UNDER A
NOTICE OF DELINQUENT
ASSESSMENT DATED SHOWN
BELOW UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION OF
THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDINGS AGAINST YOU,
YOU SHOULD CONTACT A
LAWYER. NOTICE is hereby
given that CHICAGO TITLE
COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee pursuant to Notice of
Delinquent Assessment and
Claim of Lien executed by
GRAND PACIFIC MARBRISA
OWNERS ASSOCIATION INC.,
A CALIFORNIA NONPROFIT
MUTUAL BENEFIT CORPORATION as Book SHOWN BELOW
as Instrument No. SHOWN
BELOW of Official Records in
the Office of the Recorder of
SAN DIEGO County, California,
property owned by SHOWN
BELOW.
WILL SELL ON
1/10/2014 at 10:00 AM LOCATION:
AT THE FRONT
ENTRANCE TO CHICAGO
TITLE COMPANY, 316 W. MISSION AVENUE, SUITE 121,
ESCONDIDO, CA 92025 SELL
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
(payable at time of sale in lawful
money of the United States, by
cash, a cashier’s check drawn by
a state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a
state or federal savings and loan
association, business in this
state, all right, title and interest
under said Notice of Delinquent
Assessment in the property situated in said County, describing
the land on above referred
Claim of Lien. TS#, REF#, ICN,
UNIT/INTERVAL/WEEK, APN,
TRUSTORS, COL DATED, COL
RECORDED, COL BOOK, COL
PAGE/INSTRUMENT#,
NOD
RECORDED, NOD BOOK, NOD
PAGE/INSTRUMENT#, ESTIMATED
SALES AMOUNT
60069 543232BZ GMP543232BZ
5432 ANNUAL 32 211-130-0300
MICHAEL D. HILDEN AND
LORENA U. HILDEN HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT
TENANTS 07-31-2013 08-09-2013
2013 500662 09-10-2013 2013
558066
$5727.34
60070
513210AO GMO513210AO 5132
ODD 10 211-130-0300 IOSEFO
VISESIO AND YOLANDA VISESIO HUSBAND AND WIFE AS
JOINT TENANTS 07-31-2013 0809-2013 2013 500662 09-10-2013
2013 558067 $5289.48 60071
562215AE GMO562215AE 5622
EVEN 15 211-130-0300 W.
LOUIS MCDONALD A SINGLE
MAN 07-31-2013 08-09-2013 2013
500662 09-10-2013 2013 558068
$5235.89
60072
541611DO
GMP541611DO 5416 ODD 11
211-130-0300 LINDA I. SYSSOLOFF
A(N)
WIDOWED
WOMAN AS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY 07-31-2013
08-09-2013 2013 500662 09-102013 2013 558069 $3076.44
60073 542108DO GMP542108DO
5421 ODD 08 211-130-0300
JUDY L. WOOD TRUSTEE OF
THE JUDY L. WOOD TRUST
DATED SEPTEMBER 2 2009 0731-2013 08-09-2013 2013 500662
09-10-2013 2013 558070 $3079.58
60075 543205BE GMP543205BE
5432 EVEN 05 211-130-0300
PETRUS VACATION RENTALS
LLC 07-31-2013 08-09-2013 2013
500662 09-10-2013 2013 558071
$4146.68
60077
502414BO
GMO502414BO 5024 ODD 14
211-130-0300 JOHN C. HUNTINGTON A(N) MARRIED MAN
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO
NORTH COUNTY DIVISION, 325
S. MELROSE DR., STE 130, VISTA,
CA 92081
IN THE MATTER OF MARIAH
LEE KELLEY (DOB 04/11/08) A
MINOR
CITATION FOR FREEDOM FROM
PARENTAL
CUSTODY AND
CONTROL CASE NUMBER AN
14808
To (name): HEATHER LEE KELLEY You are advised that you are
required to appear in the Superior
Court of the State of California,
County of San Diego, in
Department 25 at the court location indicated above on Friday,
March 7, 2014 at 8:30 am, to show
cause, if you have any, why (names)
Mariah Lee Kelley, minor(s),
should not be declared free from
parental custody and control (*for
the purpose of placement for adoption) as requested in the petition.
You are advised that if the
parent(s) are present at the time
and place above stated,the judge
will read the petition and, if
requested, may explain the effect
of the granting of the petition and,
if requested, the judge shall
explain any term or allegation contained therein and the nature of
the proceeding, its procedures and
possible consequences and may
continue the matter for not more
than 30 days for the appointment
of counsel or to give counsel time
to prepare.
The court may appoint counsel to
represent the minor whether or not
the minor is able to afford counsel.
If any parent appears and is unable
to afford counsel, the court shall
appoint counsel to represent each
parent who appears unless such
representationb is knowingly and
intelligently waived.
If you wish to seek the advice of an
attorney in this matter, you should
do so promptly so that your pleading, if any, may be filed on time.
Date: Dec. 19, 2013
Clerk of the Superior Court, by M
Zurcher, Deputy
ATTORNEY OR PARTY WITHOUT ATTORNEY (Name, state bar
number, and address):
Joshua Aaron Chiariello &
Shannon Angela Chiariello
Confidental Address
01/03, 01/10, 01/17, 01/24/14
CN 15751
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
TO SELL ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES
Date of Filing Application:
December 20, 2013
To Whom It May Concern:
The Name(s) of the Applicant(s)
is/are:
LOCAL TAP HOUSE LLC
The applicants listed above are
applying to the Department of
Alcoholic Beverage Control to
sell alcoholic beverages at:
308 S COAST HWY
OCEANSIDE CA 92054-3111
Type of license(s) applied for:
47 - On-Sale General Eating
Place
The Coast News
12/27/13, 01/03/14, 01/10/14
CN 15740
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER
37-2013-00080934-CU-PT-NC
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner(s): Anna Rosen Guercio
and Timothy Michael Wong filed a
petition with this court for a
decree changing names as follows:
a. Present name Anna Rosen
Guercio changed to proposed
name Anna Guercio Rosenwong, b.
Present name Timothy Michael
Wong changed to proposed name
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER
37-2013-00079127-CU-PT-NC
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner(s): Laura Jane Stevens
filed a petition with this court for a
decree changing names as follows:
a.
Present name Laura Jane
Stevens
changed to proposed
name Laura Jane Rilling.
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: In Dept
26 of the Superior Court of
California, County of San Diego,
325 South Melrose, Vista CA 92081
on January 28, 2014 at 8:30 a.m.
Date: Dec. 10, 2013
K Michael Kirkman
Judge of the Superior Court
12/27/13, 01/03, 01/10, 01/17/14
CN 15731
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
TO SELL ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES
Date of Filing Application:
December 10, 2013
To Whom It May Concern:
The Name(s) of the Applicant(s)
is/are:
SAN DIEGO BEERWORKS LLC
The applicants listed above are
applying to the Department of
Alcoholic Beverage Control to
sell alcoholic beverages at:
437 S HIGHWAY 101, STE 107
SOLANA BEACH, CA
92075-2219
Type of license(s) applied for:
42 - On-Sale Beer And Wine Public Premises
The Coast News
12/27/13, 01/03/14, 01/10/14
CN 15730
NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF:
JEANNE O. BIXBY
Case # 37-2013-00073062-PRPW-CTL
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and
persons who may otherwise be
interested in the will or estate,
or both, of: Jeanne O. Bixby.
A Petition for Probate has been
filed by James L Bixby in the
Superior Court of California,
County of San Diego.
The Petition for Probate
requests that James L Bixby 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 action without obtaining court approval.
Before taking certain very
important actions, however, the
personal representative will be
required to give notice to interested persons unless they have
waived notice or consented to
the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an
interested person files an objection to the petition and shows
good cause why the court should
not grant the authority.
A hearing on the petition will be
held in this court as follows:
Date: January 28, 2013 at 11:00
A.M. in Dept. PC-1, located at
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN
NOTICE OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE OF:
RICHARD H BROWN
Case # 37-2013-00079264-PRPW-CTL
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and
persons who may otherwise be
interested in the will or estate,
or both, of: Richard H Brown.
A Petition for Probate has been
filed by Jane S Brown in the
Superior Court of California,
County of San Diego.
The Petition for Probate
requests that Jane S Brown 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 action without obtaining court approval.
Before taking certain very
important actions, however, the
personal representative will be
required to give notice to interested persons unless they have
waived notice or consented to
the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an
interested person files an objection to the petition and shows
good cause why the court should
not grant the authority.
A hearing on the petition will be
held in this court as follows:
Date: January 14, 2013 at 11:00
A.M. in Dept. PC-1, located at
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN
DIEGO, 1409 Fourth Ave, 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
See more Coast
News Legals
Page B13
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
community
CALENDAR
Got an item for the calendar?
Send the details via e-mail to
[email protected].
Jan. 4
START YOUR GARDEN
The
MiraCosta
Horticulture Club will
meet at noon Jan. 4 at the
Aztlan Room in the
Student
Union
at
MiraCosta College, 1
Barnard Drive Oceanside.
Share favorite houseplants and Mary Matava on
“How to Improve Your
Soil.” For information call
(760) 721-3281 or go to
miracostahc.org.
TAKE A HIKE Join
the
San
Marcos
Community Heart of the
City Hike at 9 a.m. Jan. 4.
Sign up at 8:30 a.m. The
easy, 3-mile hike will be on
urban trails that follow the
rail trail east.
A more challenging, 6
to 7-mile hike will also be
offered. Hikers meet at the
outdoor hearth at the
Community Center, 3 Civic
Center Drive, San Marcos.
Visit san-marcos.net or call
(760)744-9000, ext. 3535.
Jan. 5
FUN
GATHERING
The Catholic Widows and
Widowers of North County
plan Jan. 5 dancing at the
Elk’s Club with Happy
Hour to follow at the
Brigantine
Restaurant,
Escondido.
The group will also
attend the Jan 5 Twelfth
Night Choral Festival at St.
Thomas More Catholic
Church,
Oceanside.
Contact (858) 674-4324.
Jan. 6
BE READY TO HELP
Want to be prepared to
help your neighbors?
Be ready to take control when disaster strikes
with
training
as
a
Community
Emergency
Response Team volunteer,
with 24 hours of training in
fire safety, light search and
rescue and more.
B9
Participants must be (858) 487-8041.
residents of Carlsbad and
18 years of age or older. Jan. 9
Participants will be chosen
at an orientation Jan. 6.
To learn more go to
carlsbadca.gov/CERT and
or call (760) 434-2906.
Jan. 7
THE
HEART
OF
THINGS San Diego North
Coastal
WomenHeart
Support Group welcomes
women with interests and
concerns about cardiac
health to share its monthly
meeting at 10:15 a.m. Jan.
7 at Tri-City Wellness
Center, 6250 El Camino
Road, Carlsbad.
For more information,
contact Marilyn Deak at
(760) 438-5890.
BE WATER WISE San
Dieguito Academy students Michael Loedel and
Joey Landers, will be making a presentation on residential rainwater harvesting from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Jan. 7 at the Encinitas
Community Center, 1140
Oak Crest Park Drive,
Encinitas.
As part of an ecology
project and will also
include information on
how this project can help
Boy Scouts earn the
Sustainability
Merit
badge.
WOMAN’S CLUB The
Woman’s Club of Vista
GFWC will meet 10:30 a.m.
Jan. 8 at the Shadowridge
Country
Club,
1980
Gateway Drive, Vista. Call
Nancy at (760) 822-6824 for
information.
Jan. 8
N E W C O M E R S
Carlsbad Newcomers meet
at 10 a.m. Jan. 8 at
Heritage Hall, Magee
Park, 2650 Garfield St.
Hear Justin Brooks on the
Innocence Project, San
Diego. For more information, call (760) 683-4460, or
v
i
s
i
t
carlsbadnewcomers.org.
BRANDEIS EVENT
Brandeis
National
Committee
presents
“University on Wheels”
and Dr. Melissa KosinskiCollins,
Associate
Professor of Biology, at
11:15 a.m. Jan. 8, Lomas
Santa Fe Country Club,
1505 Lomas Santa Fe
Drive, Solana Beach.
For more information
about the luncheon event,
contact
Dorothy
(760) 942-1941 or Linda
FIRST CAR FANS The
Palomar Model A Ford
Club will meet at 7 p.m.
Jan. 8 at the Palomar
Estates East Clubhouse,
650 S. Rancho Santa Fe
Road, San Marcos. All
Model A owners and enthusiasts are welcome. For
more information or directions, email Barbara at
[email protected] or call (619)
425-3241.
Jan. 10
FRIENDS OF JUNG
San Diego Friends of Jung
presents Dennis Patrick
Slattery
of
the
Mythological Studies program at Pacifica Graduate
Institute at 7:30 p.m. Jan.
10 at Winston School, 215
9th St., Del Mar, and a
workshop on “Riting Myth,
Mythic Writing: Plotting
your Personal Story” from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Jan. 11 at
MuellerCollege of Holistic
Studies,123 Camino de la
Reina, Bldg. D, San
Diego.For information, call
(858) 259-4447.
Jan. 11
BUTTERFLIES AND
BUGS Kids in the Garden
Class from 10 am to noon:
Jan. 11 at 1270 Vale
Terrace Drive, to discover
bugs and butterflies with
Farmer Jones and make a
butterfly craft to take
home.
The class fee is $5. Preregistration is required at
[email protected] or call (760) 8226824.
DAR
BREAKFAST
The
Santa
Margarita
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will
meet at 9:30 A.M. Jan. 11,
at the El Camino Country
Club, 3202 Vista Way,
Oceanside for breakfast
buffet and program presented
by
William
Whittenbury on the topic
“The Fleet
That
Never Sailed.”
GETTING INTO THE SPIRIT
The Cardiff Kook statue in Cardiff gets into the spirit of the holidays with a Nativity scene.
Courtesy photo
Senior fitness
offered in
new year
CARLSBAD — The city
of Carlsbad Senior Center
is offering free Senior
Center classes in January.
Meet the instructors
and try out the class before
the winter session begins.
Only pay for the class if you
decide you want to sign up
for more.
Try a free Qigong class,
taught by Fay McGrew, from
10 to 11 a.m. Jan. 7. No preregistration is required.
A Jacki Sorensen’s
Aerobic Dancing – Lite, will
be taught by Margaret
Grundman, from 9 to 10
a.m. Jan. 9. No pre-registration is required.
Zumba Gold, taught by
Donna Billmeyer, will begin
from 1 to 1:45 p.m. Jan. 15.
No
pre-registration
is
required,
For more information
on the city of Carlsbad
Senior Center seminars and
classes,
go
to
carlsbadca.gov/parksandrec
and click the “Adults 50+”
button
or
call
(760) 602-4650.
B10
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
F OOD &W INE
Restaurants offer
careers outside the norm
(BPT) — America’s restaurant and foodservice industry
provides jobs and careers for 13
million people — 10 percent of
our nation’s workforce.
While restaurants serve as
a stepping stone for many —
one in three Americans got
their first job experience in a
restaurant — it’s also an industry of tremendous opportunity,
where individuals of all backgrounds are given the opportunity to move up the ladder and
succeed.
In fact, 80 percent of
restaurant owners began their
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The restaurant industry can provide tremendous opportunities for
careers. Courtesy photo
careers as hourly workers in the
industry.
When people think of
careers in the restaurant and
foodservice industry, positions
such as servers, bartenders and
chefs most likely come to mind.
The industry’s careers are
wide-ranging, however, and
stretch beyond the four walls of
a traditional restaurant.
A catering manager, for
instance, plans every piece of a
catered event, from origination
to execution, including renting
tables and equipment, coordinating decorations and photographs, as well as booking
entertainment.
A person in this role needs
not only knowledge of food production and customer service,
but also the skills to generate
new business and ensure an
event runs smoothly and efficiently.
Similarly, a food and beverage director is in charge of
overseeing the management,
budget and operation of a foodservice outlet, catering services
and kitchen.
He or she must also communicate with the sales department to ensure maximum profitability.
Employment in the restaurant industry is expected to
grow to 14.4 million by 2023,
according to the National
Restaurant Association.
In order to hire and train
all those employees, the restaurant and foodservice industry
needs human resources managers, a role that requires
recruiting and hiring qualified
employees, creating in-house
job-training programs and
assisting employees with their
career needs.
These are not your typical
restaurant jobs but are equally
fulfilling careers, many of
which require specialized training to be successful. Many colleges and universities offer
degrees and diploma programs
in hospitality management.
Even high school students
can get a head start through
summer jobs or programs like
ProStart,
the
National
Restaurant
Association
Educational
Foundation’s
(NRAEF) two-year program
that trains students to go on to
pursue culinary and restaurant
management
careers.
Approximately 95,000 students
across more than 1,900 schools
nationwide participate in the
program.
Jessica Doerffel, food and
beverage director at Elways, a
restaurant at The Ritz-Carlton
in Denver,started busing tables
as a teenager and then enrolled
in her school’s ProStart program.
“The thought of taking a
curriculum based on hospitality was unheard of in high
school, so I jumped at the
chance,” Doerffel says, adding
that she completed several
internships at hotels, including
Marriott International, while in
college.
After college, Doerffel
rose through the ranks at
Marriott, eventually landing a
position as the food and beverage director at The RitzCarlton.
Others spend time learning the ins and outs of the food
and beverage business, so they
can teach.
Sissy Ivy worked more
than 15 years in the food industry to put herself through college, eventually becoming a
ProStart educator at the Sevier
County Career and Technical
Education
Center
in
Sevierville,Tenn.
She not only teaches students culinary and management skills, but also oversees
the students as they operate
their own cafe and catering
business, with all proceeds benefitting the program and local
charities.
Ivy’s hard work and commitment to the industry earned
her national recognition as one
of only three winners of the
2013 Faces of Diversity
American Dream Award, presented by the NRAEF and
PepsiCo Foodservice.
To learn more about the
award and to nominate inspirational employees and peers in
the
industry,
visit
NRAEF.org/Awards.
As teenagers and young
adults prepare to become their
own success stories within the
food and beverage industry,
many will begin to identify
opportunities outside of the
four walls of a restaurant.
Whether working in the
front of the house or in a traditional office, the industry offers
plenty of opportunities to pursue their passion.
B11
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
F OOD &W INE
The Top Ten
Tastes for 2013
FRANK
MANGIO
Taste of Wine
The bounty of fine wine
is never more evident than in
our Top Ten list for 2013.
Up and down the price
ladder, fine wine became
more affordable as the country returned to economic stability and confidence.
One proof of that report
is COSTCO the largest seller
of wine in the U.S. now offering “big bottle” formats, one
which sold for $7,800. per bottle,( a 27 liter Fontodi from
Tuscany.)
And 2013 was another
banner harvest for west coast
wines.
Both Temecula and San
Diego wine countries ramped
up the quality with their
reds.
Resorts, restaurants and
casinos spent millions on
high quality wine bars and
dining rooms.
Wine
Sommelier
became an increasingly
important position in the
restaurant experience.
This year, I had memorable experiences in Sonoma
and fell in love with the
Rhone Valley and the
Chateauneuf-du-Pape appellation in the south of France.
A trip is planned.
My 10 are all red wines,
with two from Napa Valley,
two from Sonoma, two from
Temecula, and one each from
Oregon, Italy, France and
Argentina.
The 10 are all of equal
value and listed in alphabetical order — no ranking
allowed. They entered based
on an excellence scale from
one to five, weighing flavor,
body, terroir and price to
value. All had a five. Enjoy!
Castello di Bossi Chianti
Classico, Tuscany, Italy. 2009;
$19. From vineyard to bottle,
the utmost care with quality
receives a “best Italian
Sangiovese” grape award. A
rich tradition is very much
respected with rich, ruby red
flavor. castellodibossi.it.
Cougar Winery Estate
Montepulciano, Temecula,
Calif. 2010; $41. Earthy mineral bouquet at the nose sets
up big Italian style flavors
and a lingering finish.
Captures the Tuscan style.
cougarvineyards.com.
Domaine
Serene
Reserve
Pinot
Noir,
Willamette Valley, Ore. 2010;
$65. Awarded the top Taste of
Wine for November by this
column, this wine went on to
be the No. 3 wine in the world
for 2013 by Wine Spectator.
Winemaker drew from seven
premium vineyards of Pinot.
Creek Valley vineyards. All
grapes are hand harvested,
low-yielding vines from
mountain heights. Serve with
roasted or braised meats,
lamb
or
duck.
Ferrari-carano.com.
domainserene.com.
E. Guigal Cotes du
Rhone, Rhone Valley, France.
2010; $15. The Guigal family
is the largest producer in the
south of France with 3.5 million cases.
This one is the biggest
bargain with 50 percent
Syrah and 50 percent
Grenache and a dash of
Mourvedre. Long aging is the
secret. 2010 was the best harvest in France in half a
decade. Guigal.com.
Ferrari-Carano Tresor
Bordeaux Blend, Sonoma
Calif. 2010; $41. Five classic
Bordeaux varietals grace this
premium blend, including
Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, The 2010 Ferrari-CaranoTresor, a
Merlot, Petit Verdot and Cab Bordeaux-style
blend
from
Franc, estate grown in the Sonoma.
Photo courtesy of
Alexander Valley and Dry Ferrari-Carano
Grgich Hills Estate
Merlot, Napa Valley, Calif.
2009; $42. This is a Cab
lover’s Merlot with bright
strawberry and cherry flavors, from grapes certified
Biodynamic with natural and
sustainable farming.
From the famed Mike
Grgich of the 1976 Paris
Tasting that changed the
world of wine and put Napa
Valley on the map. Visit
Grgich.com.
Mele’e
Old
Vine
Grenache, Napa Valley, Calif.
2010; $26. An iron-rich, classic Rhone Valley grape grown
in the shale and limestone
areas of Mendocino and Paso
Robles. Deep purple with a
striking garnet look and a
hint of tobacco.
Tuck Beckstoffer is the
winery owner and winemaker from a farming legacy in
Napa Valley, began by Andy
Beckstoffer
in
1975.
Tbwines.com.
Calif. 2009; $35. Named
after the original 65 families
that founded the winery, this
blend is really starting to
earn the medals around the
state, including Best of Class
at the San Francisco
International competition.
Includes four Bordeaux style
grapes plus a healthy dose of
Zinfandel. Montedeoro.com.
Norton Privada Private
Reserve
Mondoza,
Argentina. 2011; $18. A
Bordeaux blend with an
Argentina approach, this
time Cabernet, Merlot and
Malbec. Structured and
smoky, with plum and fig
notes. Long, lovely finish.
Drink now through 2018.
Small, carefully chosen
Tuck Beckstoffer produces Mele’e, 18,000 cases. Norton.com.ar.
from St. Helena in the Napa Valley.
It’s a classic Rhone Valley style
Grenache.
Photo courtesy of
Mele’e Wines
quantities. Graceful structure. Grapes come from
Merry Edwards Pinot small lots from six different
Noir, Russian River Sonoma, vineyards of converging influCalif. 2011; $45. Elegant ences. Merryedwards.com.
Pinot from a pioneer Pinot
since
1974.
producer
Monte De Oro Synergy
Handcrafted and in limited 65 Estate Blend, Temecula,
Wine Bytes, normally seen
in this column, will r eturn
next week.
Frank Mangio is a renowned San Diego
wine connoisseur certified by Wine
Spectator. He is one of the leading wine
commentators on the web. View and
link up with his columns at
.tasteofwinetv.com. Reach him at
[email protected].
B12
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
F OOD &W INE
Exploring the world of
wild fermentation at
Happy Pantry
LUNCH
Mon-Fri 11:30am-2:00pm
DINNER
Mon-Thurs: 5pm-9pm
Fri: 5pm-9pm / Sat: 4pm-9pm
Sun: 4pm-9pm
Eat for FREE on your Birthday
Excludes beverages and gratuities. Excludes alcohol. Not valid on holidays. Must be accompanied by a guest. MUST SHOW proof of birth date
(drivers license). Up to $18 value. Please consider the value of this coupon
when tipping your server. Offers cannot be combined with other promotions & discounts. One offer per table. Ask server for details. With this
coupon. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases.
Rebekah Stogsdill from Happy Pantry at the Leucadia Farmers Market Photo by David Boylan
211 S El Camino Real, Encinitas • 760-632-0888
(In the LA Fitness Shopping Center)
THE ORIG
INA
L
VOTED “BEST BREAKFAST”
Open Daily
6am-3pm
Breakfast
&
Lunch
“WE’VE GOT HUEVOS! ”
®
La Costa
7670 El Camino Real
760-943-8182
San Marcos
101 S. Las Posas Rd.
760-471-9655
Visit us online at: www.thebrokenyolkcafe.com
Visit us at our other locations:
Pacific Beach • Gaslamp • Eastlake
50% OFF
$2 OFF
Buy one entree & 2 beverages at
reg. price & get a 2nd entree of
equal or lesser value at 50% off.
With the purchase of one entree
and one beverage at regular price.
Any Entree
Any Entree
Limit 1 per coupon. 1 coupon per
table. No separate checks. Not
valid on weekends, holidays
or w/any other coupons.,
specials, offers or w/private
groups.
Limit 4 per coupon. 1 coupon per
table. No separate checks. Not
valid on weekends, holidays
or w/any other coupons.,
specials, offers or w/private
groups.
50% OFF
$2 OFF
Buy one entree & 2 beverages at
reg. price & get a 2nd entree of
equal or lesser value at 50% off.
With the purchase of one entree
and one beverage at regular price.
Any Entree
Limit 1 per coupon. 1 coupon per
table. No separate checks. Not
valid on weekends, holidays
or w/any other coupons.,
specials, offers or w/private
groups.
Any Entree
Limit 4 per coupon. 1 coupon per
table. No separate checks. Not
valid on weekends, holidays
or w/any other coupons.,
specials, offers or w/private
groups.
25% Off
Voted Best Asian 2013
 Rancho Magazine
Lunch
Max discount $25. Discount on food only.
Not valid with other offers, discounts,
holidays or special dates. One offer per
visit. Valid at Encinitas, Oceanside, Vista,
Rancho Bernardo & Miramar.
Exp. 1-31-14
25% Off
Dinner
Max discount $25. Discount on food only.
Not valid with other offers, discounts,
holidays or special dates. One offer per
visit. Valid at Encinitas, Oceanside, Vista,
Rancho Bernardo & Miramar.
Exp. 1-31-14
25% Off
Take-Out
Max discount $25. Discount on food only.
Not valid with other offers, discounts,
holidays or special dates. One offer per
visit. Valid at Encinitas, Oceanside, Vista,
Rancho Bernardo & Miramar.
Exp. 1-31-14
On
my
r e g u l a r
Sunday walk
through the
Leucadia
DAVID
BOYLAN F a r m e r ’ s
Market, there
Lick the Plate
are
certain
vendors where
there is always a line of enthusiastic customers patiently waiting their turn. Happy
Pantry is one of those, so I finally decided to
stop by to see what all the fuss was about.
Happy Pantry owners, and husband and
wife team Mark Stogsdill and Rebekah,
describes themselves as a “small familyowned company that explores the mysterious
and wonderful world of wild fermentation.We
often refer to our products as the forgotten
food group, and are dedicated to reviving this
ancient art form. While our focus is on the
many varieties of sauerkraut we produce, we
are always working on unique seasonal creations.” I love sauerkraut and pickles, so I
spoke with Mark Stogsdill to learn more.
makes us nothing more than glorified prep
cooks. We put together the elements of life
and wait. That is where the complexity comes
into play. The bacteria come to life seemingly
out of nowhere and transform what we started with into the final product that you see at
the farmers markets. In that regard I see us as
the creators of tiny universes, with each and
every batch being home to trillions of good
bacteria.
Describe the processes of making each and
the different varieties available
I always recommend the book “Wild
Fermentation” by Sandor Katz to people
interested in the process. The process has
been a part of humanity for thousands of
years. In fact, before refrigeration fermentation was a powerful partner when it came to
preserving food. It wasn’t until the food system became industrialized that we got away
from eating fermented veggies like sauerkraut. Talk to older generations — most of
them had a grandparent or parent that had a
ripe crock full of delicious sauerkraut/pickles
in their basement at all times. We got away
Do either you or Rebekah have a culinary or from that and our health as whole has suffarming background?
fered tremendously. It’s really exciting to see
Rebekah was in restaurant management the fermentation revival that is occurring
for ten years. I worked in restaurants for years now.
as well before moving into sales. Food was
always a passion and our hobby that we did What are some of your favorite ways to pair
together. We were/are huge “foodies,” and your products with different foods?
even before the creation of Happy Pantry we
Sandwiches, salads, wraps, and as a
spent quite a bit of our down time wandering stand-alone side.The ways to eat our products
through various farmers markets.
are only limited by the imagination of the person preparing the food. Sauerkraut is an
How did Happy Pantry happen?
amazing salad condiment. We throw it into
I was working in large format printer our salsas. Sort of like when you go to sushi
sales when the economy came crashing down and they put some pickled ginger on your
in 2008. I found myself unemployed fairly plate, serve a small side of fermented goods
quickly after that whole mess went down. To with every meal.Your body will thank you! We
be honest, I was a terrible salesperson that want our products to inspire people to reinprobably wouldn’t have lasted very much vent the way that they think of kraut.We want
longer had the economy been fine. I hated it. people to rediscover this incredible forgotten
I felt like it was sucking the life out of me. food group. It’s one of the most amazing super
Through a random series of events, Rebekah foods on the planet!
lost her job a few weeks later, so we decided
to use the down time like any responsible cou- You are primarily at farmers markets currentple would.We went traveling abroad. We were ly, what are your plans for expansion?
in Indonesia when I told Rebekah that I was
We will be moving into retail locations
going to start Happy Pantry. I knew that the starting this year. We finally opened our very
next chapter in my life was going to revolve own commercial kitchen for manufacturing.
around something that inspired me. When we For both production and storage, it’s a total
got home from that trip, the ball started game-changer that will enable us to expand
rolling and it never stopped.
our core products into regional treasures. I see
us available at select retailers throughout
How did you decide on your product mix of Southern California by the end of 2014. Our
sauerkraut, kombucha, kimchi and seasonal “Power Krautage” is a finalist for the Good
pickles?
Food Awards. Winners will be announced on
Our company is based on raw living January 16th in San Francisco. This is a really
deal.
Check
it
out
here:
foods. Simply put, we are bacteria farmers big
dealing in rotting vegetables. We create envi- goodfoodawards.org/winners/
Check out current Happy Pantry locaronments that encourage beneficial bacteria
to flourish, thus upping the digestibility and tions at happypantrysd.com
nutritional value of the raw veggies that we
started with. Fermentation is both so simple David Boylan is the founder of Artichoke Creative, an
and so complex at the same time. Simple in Encinitas based integrated marketing agency. He can be
that the process is incredibly easy- which reached at [email protected].
JAN. 3, 2014
Legals 800
Coast News
Legals
From Page B8
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:
Charles P Rettig - SBN 97848
Hochman, Salkin, Rettig,
Toscher & Perez, P.C.
9150 Wilshire Blvd, Ste 300
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
Telephone: 310.281.3200
12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03/14
CN 15708
SUMMONS
(CITACION JUDICIAL)
CASE NUMBER:
37-2013-00068663-CU-OR-NC
NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (AVISO
AL DEMANDADO):
RUSSEL S JONES; WILLIAM R
ANDERSON; CARDIFF CONDO’S,
LLC; All persons unknown, claiming any legal or equitable right,
title, estate, lien or interest in the
property described in the complaint adverse to Plaintiffs’ interest or any cloud on Plantiffs’ interest thereto [CCP § 762.060}]; and
DOES 1-50, inclusive,
YOU ARE BEING SUED BY
PLAINTIFF: (LO ESTA DEMANDANDO EL DEMANDANTE):
JEANNE I MACWHIRTER and
THEODORE S BETTWY.;
NOTICE! You have been sued. The
court may decide against you without your being heard unless you
respond within 30 days. Read the
information below.
You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS
after this summons and legal
papers are served on you to file a
written response at this court and
have a copy served on the plaintiff.
A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response
must be in proper legal form if you
want the court to hear your case.
There may be a court form that you
can use for your response. You can
find these court forms and more
information at the California
Courts Online Self-Help Center
(www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp) ,
your county law library, or the
courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the court
clerk for a fee waiver form. If you
do not file your response on time,
you may lose the case by default,
and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further
warning from the court.
There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an
attorney right away. If you do not
know an attorney, you may want to
call an attorney referral service. If
you cannot afford an attorney, you
may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services
program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California
Legal
Services
Web
site
(www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), the
California Courts online Self-Help
Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local
court or county bar association.
NOTE: The court has a statutory
lien for waived fees and costs on
any settlement or arbitration
award of $10,000 or more in a civil.
case. The court’s lien must be paid
before the court will dismiss the
case.
B13
THE COAST NEWS
Legals 800
Legals 800
Legals 800
Legals 800
Legals 800
Legals 800
AVISO! Lo han demandado. Si no
responde dentro de 30 dias, la corte
puede decidir en su contr
a sin
escuchar su version. Lea la informacion a continuacion.
Tiene 30 DIAS DE C ALENDARIO
despues de que le entreguen esta citacion y papeles legales par a presentar
una r espuesta por escrito en esta
corte y hacer que se entr egue una
copia al demandante. Una carta o
una llamada telefonica no lo protegen. Su r espuesta por escrito tiene
que estar en formato legal correcto si
desea que procesen su caso en la
corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar par a su
respuesta.Puede encontr ar estos formularios de la corte y mas informacion en el Centro de A yuda de las
Cortes de California
(www.sucorte.ca.gov), en la biblioteca de leyes de su condado o en la corte
que le quede mas cerca. Si no puede
pagar la cuota de pr esentacion, pida
al secretario de la corte que le de un
formulario de exencion de pago de
cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a
tiempo, puede perder el caso por
incumplimiento y la corte le podr a
quitar su sueldo, dinero y bienes sin
mas advertencia.
Hay otros r equisitos legales.
Es
recomendable que llame a un abogado inmedia tamente. Si no conoce a
un abogado, puede llamar a un servicio de r emision a abogados. Si no
puede pagar a un abogado, es posible
que cumpla con los r equisitos par a
obtener servicios legales gr atuitos de
un programa de servicios legales sin
fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos
grupos sin fines de lucro en el sitio
web de California Legal Services,
(www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), en el
Centro de A yuda de las Cortes de
California, (www.sucorte.ca.gov) o
poniendose en contacto con la corte o
el colegio de abogados locales.
AVISO: Por ley, la corte tiene derecho
a r eclamar las cuotas y los costos
exentos por imponer un gr avamen
sobre cualquier r ecuperacion de
$10,000 o mas de v alor r ecibida
mediante un acuerdo o una concesion de arbitr aje en un caso de der echo civil. Tiene que pagar el gr avamen de la corte antes de que la corte
pueda desechar el caso.
The name and address of the court
is: (El nombre y direccion de la corte
es):
San Diego County Superior Court
325 S Melrose Dr
Vista CA 92081
The name, address, and telephone
number of plaintiff’s attorney, or
plaintiff without an attorney, is:
(El nombre, la direccion y el numero
de telefono del abogado del demandante, o del demandante que no
tiene abogado, es):
D Wayne Brechtel, Esq. /
Yin T Ho, Esq
Worden Williams APC
462 Stevens Avenue
Solana Beach, CA 92075
Telephone: 858.755.6604
Date: (Fecha) September 25, 2013
Clerk, by (Secretario)
I Plasencia, Deputy (Adjunto)
CASE NO. 37-2013-00068663
NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF
ACTION
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that
this action was commenced in
the above-named court on
September 26, 2013 by Plaintiffs
Jeanne I. MacWhirter and
Theodore S. Bettwy against
Defendants Russell S. Jones,
William R. Anderson, Cardiff
Condos, LLC, all persons
unknown claiming any legal or
equitable right ,title, estate, lien
or interest in the property
described in the Complaint
adverse to Plaintiffs’ interest, or
any cloud on Plaintiffs’ interest
thereto (Cal. Code Civ. Proc. §
762.060), and DOES 1 through
50, inclusive.
The Complaint seeks to quiet
title to an appurtenant easement that burdens the real property located in San Diego
County, commonly known as
1809 and 1811 Montgomery
Avenue, Encinitas, California
92007, and more particularly
described in Exhibit “A,”
attached hereto and incorporated herein by this reference. The
property is designated as
Assessor Parcel Number 260275-26-00. DATED: November
15, 2013 WORDEN WILLIAMS,
APC YIN T. HO, Esq.
Attorneys for Plaintiffs Jeanne
I. MacWhirter and Theodore S.
Bettwy
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA
COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO On
November 15, 2013, before me,
Jason R. Schingler, a Notary
Public, personally appeared YIN
T. HO who proved to me on the
basis of satisfactory evidence to
be the person whose name is
subscribed to the within instrument and acknowledged to me
that he executed the same in his
authorized capacity, and that by
his signature on the instrument
the person, or the entity upon
behalf of which the person
acted, executed the instrument.
I certify under PENALTY OF
PERJURY under the laws of the
State of California that the foregoing paragraph is true and correct. WITNESS my hand and
official seal. Signature: Jason R
Schingler
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Real property In hte City of
Encinitas, County of San Diego,
State of California, described as
follows:
LOT A AND THAT PORTION OF
LOT B IN BLOCK 75 OF
CARDIFF VILLA TRACT, IN
THE CITY OF ENCINITAS,
COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO,
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA,
ACCORDING TO MAP THEREOF NO. 1469 FILED IN THE
OFFICE OF THE COUNTY
RECORDER OF SAN DIEGO
COUNTY, AUGUST 10, 1921,
LYING SOUTHEASTERLY OF A
LINE DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
COMMENCING AT THE MOST
EASTERLY CORNER OF SAID
LOT B; THENCE ALONG THE
NORTHEASTERLY LINE OF
SAID LOT B, NORTH 27º28’00”
WEST 3.40 FEET TO THE TRUE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING;
THENCE SOUTH 64º59’35”
WEST 114.35 FEET; THENCE
SOUTH 60º51’57”, 25.77 FEET
TO A POINT ON THE SOUTHWESTERLY LINE OF SAID OT
B DISTANT THEREON NORTH
27º28’00” WEST 7.50 FEET
FROM THE MOST SOUTHERLY CORNER OF SAID LOT B.
APN: 260-275-26-00
12/13, 12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03/14
CN15694
A. Brittannia Carpet, Upholstery &
Stone Cleaning Service Located
at: 3465 Camino Valencia, Carlsbad
CA San Diego 92009 Mailing
Address: Same. This business is
conducted by: An Individual The
first day of business was: Not Yet
Started This business is hereby registered by the following owner(s):
1. Malcolm Widdison, 3465 Camino
Valencia, Carlsbad CA 92009 This
statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 26, 2013. S/Malcolm
Widdison 01/03, 01/10, 01/17,
01/24/14 CN 15761
Encinitas CA 92024 This statement
was
filed
with
the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego
on
Dec
30,
2013.
S/Jacqueline Grad 01/03, 01/10,
01/17, 01/24/14 CN 15755
Cezanne, Code de Caca CA Orange
92679 Mailing Address: Same This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of business was: Not Yet Started This
business is hereby registered by
the following owner(s): 1. Brian
Ewing, 6869 Calle Portone, Rancho
Santa Fe, CA 92091 This statement
was
filed
with
the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 10, 2013. S/Brian
Ewing, 12/27/13, 01/03, 01/10,
01/17/14 CN 15735
The name(s) of the business:
A. Cee Cee and Bee Located at:
2160
Ranch View Terrace,
Encinitas CA San Diego 92024
Mailing Address: Same This business is conducted by: A General
Partnership The first day of business was: 11/09/13 This business is
hereby registered by the following
owner(s): 1. Charlene Corn, 2160
Ranch View Terrace, Encinitas CA
92024 2. Debbie Churchill, 247
Sychar Rd, San Diego CA 92114
This statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 06, 2013. S/Debbie
Churchill, 12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03,
01/10/14 CN 15717
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
CASE NUMBER
37-2013-00059238-CU-PT-NC
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS:
Petitioner(s): Kendahse Tafari
Kenyatta filed a petition with this
court for a decree changing names
as follows: a.
Present name
Kendahse Tafari Kenyatta changed
to proposed name Julilly Kendahse
Kohler.
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: In Dept
N-26 of the Superior Court of
California, County of San Diego,
325 South Melrose, Vista CA 92081
on February 04, 2014 at 8:30 a.m.
Date: July 25, 2013
K Michael Kirkman
Judge of the Superior Court
12/13, 12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03/14
CN 15692
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-034725
The name(s) of the business:
A. Bill Slattery & Assoc Inc. B.
Bslattery.net Located at: 2794
Gateway Rd Carlsbad CA San
Diego 92009 Mailing Address:
Same. This business is conducted
by: A Corporation The first day of
business was: 07/01/13 This business is hereby registered by the following owner(s): 1. Gold Standard
Tax & Accounting Inc, 2794
Gateway Rd Carlsbad CA 92009
This statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 16, 2013. S/Rachel
Rubin 01/03, 01/10, 01/17, 01/24/14
CN 15762
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035553
The name(s) of the business:
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035675
The name(s) of the business:
A. NRay4Plants Located at: 4513
Cove Drive #10, Carlsbad CA San
Diego 92008 Mailing Address:
Same. This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first day of
business was: 12/27/13This business is hereby registered by the following owner(s): 1. Nancy M Ray,
4513 Cove Drive #10, Carlsbad CA
92008 This statement was filed
with the Recorder/County Clerk of
San Diego on Dec 27, 2013.
S/Nancy M Ray 01/03, 01/10, 01/17,
01/24/14 CN 15760
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035782
The name(s) of the business:
A. The Fancy Penelope Located at:
2130 Sorrento Dr, Oceanside CA
San Diego 92056 Mailing Address:
Same. This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yert Started
This business is hereby registered
by the following owner(s): 1.
Magda Conant, 2130 Sorrento
Drive, Oceanside CA 92056 This
statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 04, 2013. S/Magda
Conant 01/03, 01/10, 01/17, 01/24/14
CN 15759
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035733
The name(s) of the business:
A. Rick’s San Diego Homes B.
Rick’s Coastal Properties C. Rick’s
Picks San Diego D. 1-derful Coastal
Porperties E. 1-derful Carlsbad
Homes F. 1-derful Encinitas Homes
G. 1-derful Rancho Santa Fe
Homes Located at: 2549 E Valley
Pkwy #68, Escondido CA San
Diego 92027 Mailing Address:
Same. This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first day of
business was: 08/01/13 This business is hereby registered by the following owner(s): 1. Rick Johnson,
2549 E Valley Pkwy #68, Escondido
CA 92027 This statement was filed
with the Recorder/County Clerk of
San Diego on Dec 27, 2013. S/Rick
Johnson 01/03, 01/10, 01/17,
01/24/14 CN 15758
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035752
The name(s) of the business:
A. Triton Health Innovations
Located at: 1155 Sportfisher Dr
Suite 280, Oceanside CA San
Diego 92054 Mailing Address:
Same. This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first day of
business was: 06/01/13 This business is hereby registered by the following owner(s): 1. Jason Randal
Hebert, 1155 Sportfisher Dr Ste
280, Oceanside CA 92054 This
statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 30, 2013. S/Jason
Randal Hebert 01/03, 01/10, 01/17,
01/24/14 CN 15756
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
FILE #2013-035751
The name(s) of the business: A.
Triton Health Innovations B. Triton
Healthcare Innovations Located
at: 1155 Sportfisher Dr Suite 280,
Oceanside CA San Diego 92054
Mailing Address: Same.
The
Ficititious Business Name referred
to above was filed in San Diego
County on: 04/09/13 and assigned
File No. 2013-010584 is abandoned
by the following registrant(s): 1.
Steve
Stenerodden,
1155
Sportifsher
Dr
Suite
280,
Oceanside CA 92054. This statement was filed with Ernest J.
Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/County
Clerk of San Diego County, on Dec
30, 2013 S/Steve Stenerodden
01/03, 01/10, 01/17, 01/24/14 CN
15756
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035845
The name(s) of the business:
A. Fully Loaded Micro Juicery B.
Fully Loaded Juice Located at: 466
N Coast Hwy 101, Encinitas CA
San Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same. This business is conducted
by: A Corporation The first day of
business was: 10/16/13 This business is hereby registered by the following owner(s): 1. FAM-WELL
Inc, 466 N Coast Hwy 101 Ste 5,
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035365
The name(s) of the business:
A. The Faucet Factory Located at:
523 Encinitas Blvd Suite 110,
Encinitas CA San Diego 92024
Mailing Address: 343 S Tustin
Street, Orange CA 92866. This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of business was: 12/17/13 This business is
hereby registered by the following
owner(s): 1. JRS Faucets Inc, 343 S
Tustin Street, Orange CA 92866
This statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 24, 2013. S/Scott
Haagsma 01/03, 01/10, 01/17,
01/24/14 CN 15754
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-034521
The name(s) of the business:
A. Bobby Riggs TC Located at: 875
Santa Fe Dr, Encinitas CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same This business is conducted
by: A Limited Liability Company
The first day of business was: Not
Yet Started This business is hereby
registered by the following
owner(s): 1. Shining Moon LLC,
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME 875 Santa Fe Dr, Encinitas CA
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035868 92024 This statement was filed
The name(s) of the business:
with the Recorder/County Clerk of
A. Elle Bernard and Company San Diego on Dec 12, 2013.
Located at: 534 Hermes Ave, S/James Steven Dawson, 12/27/13,
Encinitas CA San Diego 92024 01/03, 01/10, 01/17/14 CN 15734
Mailing Address: Same. This busiSTATEMENT OF ABANDONness is conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was: MENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
12/30/13 This business is hereby
registered by the following
FILE #2013-034668
owner(s): 1. Ellen Long, 534 The name(s) of the business: A.
Hermes Ave, Encinitas CA 92024 Classy K-9 Clips Located at: 3320
This statement was filed with the Mission Ave Ste G, Oceanside CA
Recorder/County Clerk of San San Diego 92058 Mailing Address:
Diego on Dec 30, 2013. S/Ellen 394 Mainsail Rd, Oceanside CA
Long 01/03, 01/10, 01/17, 01/24/14 92054. The Ficititious Business
Name referred to above was filed
CN 15753
in San Diego County on: 01/18/06
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME and assigned File No. 2006-002116
STATEMENT FILE #2013-033684 is abandoned by the following registrant(s): 1. Yvonne R Mittie, 394
The name(s) of the business:
A. Downward Dog Life B. The Mainsail Rd, Oceanside CA 92054.
Downward Dog Life C. DDL D. This statement was filed with
The DDL Located at: 1624 N Coast Ernest
J. Dronenburg, Jr.,
Hwy 101 Spc 57, Encinitas CA San Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address: Diego County, on Dec 16, 2013
Same. This business is conducted S/Yvonne R Mittie 12/27/13, 01/03,
by: An Individual The first day of 01/10, 01/17/14 CN 15733
business was: 11/18/13 This business is hereby registered by the fol- FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
lowing owner(s): 1. Javvad Syed, STATEMENT FILE #2013-033898
1624 N Coast Hwy 11 Spc 57,
The name(s) of the business:
Encinitas CA 92024 This statement A. Vrbane Located at: 2652
was
filed
with
the Jefferson St, Carlsbad CA San
Recorder/County Clerk of San Diego 92008 Mailing Address:
Diego on Dec 04, 2013. S/Javvad Same This business is conducted
Syed 01/03, 01/10, 01/17, 01/24/14 by: An Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started This
CN 15752
business is hereby registered by
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME the following owner(s): 1. Wesley
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035138 Marin, 2652 Jefferson St Apt E,
Carlsbad CA 92008 This statement
The name(s) of the business:
A. Local Tap House Located at: was
filed
with
the
308 S Coast Hwy, Oceanside CA Recorder/County Clerk of San
San Diego 92054 Mailing Address: Diego on Dec 05, 2013. S/Wesley
315 S Coast Hwy 101 U85, Marin, 12/27/13, 01/03, 01/10,
Encinitas CA 92024. This business 01/17/14 CN 15732
is conducted by: A Limited
Liability Company The first day of FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
business was: 11/01/13 This busi- STATEMENT FILE #2013-034566
ness is hereby registered by the folThe name(s) of the business:
lowing owner(s): 1. Local Tap A. Vista Medical Plaza Located at:
House LLC, 315 S Coast Hwy 101 140 Lomas Santa Fe Dr Ste 103,
U85, Encinitas CA 92024 This Solana Beach CA San Diego 92075
statement was filed with the Mailing Address: Same This busiRecorder/County Clerk of San ness is conducted by: A
Diego on Dec 19, 2013. S/Gabe Corporation The first day of busiHogan, 12/27/13, 01/03, 01/10, ness was: 01/19/12 This business is
hereby registered by the following
01/17/14 CN 15739
owner(s): 1. AmeriCare Health &
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME Retirment Inc, 140 Lomas Santa Fe
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035024 Dr Ste 103, Solana Beach CA 92075
The name(s) of the business:
This statement was filed with the
A. Prete’s Treats Vending B. Will- Recorder/County Clerk of San
O’-the-Wisp Located at: 245 4th Diego on Dec 13, 2013. S/Gilles
Street, Encinitas CA San Diego Giauffen, 12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03,
92024 Mailing Address: PO Box 01/10/14 CN 15722
231158, Encinitas CA 92023-1158
This business is conducted by: A FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
Married Couple The first day of STATEMENT FILE #2013-033906
business was: Not Yet Started This
The name(s) of the business:
business is hereby registered by A. Secos Media Located at: 805
the following owner(s): 1. Juana T Kalpati Circle Unit 232, Carlsbad
Prete, 245 4th Street, Encinitas CA CA San Diego 92008 Mailing
92024 2. Harold E Prete, 245 4th Address: Same This business is
Street, Encinitas CA 92024 This conducted by: An Individual The
statement was filed with the first day of business was: Not Yet
Recorder/County Clerk of San Started This business is hereby
Diego on Dec 18, 2013. S/Harold E registered by the following
Prete, 12/27/13, 01/03, 01/10, owner(s): 1. Peter McBride, 805
Kalpati Circle Unit 232, Carlsbad
01/17/14 CN 15737
CA 92008 This statement was filed
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME with the Recorder/County Clerk of
STATEMENT FILE #2013-035063 San Diego on Dec 05, 2013. S/Peter
McBride, 12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03,
The name(s) of the business:
A. Aachen Executive Bail Bonds 01/10/14 CN 15720
B. Aaronite Executive Bail Bonds
C. Aasvogel Executive Bail Bonds FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
Located at: 330 A St Suite 50, San STATEMENT FILE #2013-034298
The name(s) of the business:
Diego CA San Diego 92101 Mailing
Address: Same This business is A. Maui Melia Located at: 35
conducted by: An Individual The Walaka St #P307, Kihei HI, Maui
first day of business was: 07/01/13 96753 Mailing Address: 1022
This business is hereby registered Cottage Way, Encinitas Ca 92024
by the following owner(s): 1. This business is conducted by: An
Brendan Carberry, 2311 Oxford Individual The first day of busiAve, Cardiff by the Sea, CA 92007 ness was: 11/29/13 This business is
This statement was filed with the hereby registered by the following
Recorder/County Clerk of San owner(s): 1. Lynne Decosmo, 1002
Diego on Dec 19, 2013. S/Brendan Cottage Way, Encinitas CA 92024
Carberry, 12/27/13, 01/03, 01/10, This statement was filed with the
01/17/14 CN 15736
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 10, 2013. S/Lynne
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME Decosmo, 12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03,
STATEMENT FILE #2013-034242 01/10/14 CN 15718
The name(s) of the business:
A.
Wealth
Preservation FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
Consultants Located at: 7 Rue STATEMENT FILE #2013-034032
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-034696
The name(s) of the business:
A.
Insurance
$ettlement
Consultants Located at: 818
Summerhill Ct, Encinitas CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started This
business is hereby registered by
the following owner(s): 1. Joan
Higley, 818 Summerhill Ct,
Encinitas CA 92024 This statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 16, 2013. S/Joan
Higley, 12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03,
01/10/14 CN 15716
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-032379
The name(s) of the business:
A. Gray-Lift And Companion
Located at: 3985 Hortensia St #F6,
San Diego CA San Diego 92110
Mailing Address: Same This business is conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was: Not
Yet Started This business is hereby
registered by the following
owner(s): 1. Brunilda ‘Liz’ Luciano,
3985 Hortensia St #F6, San Diego
CA 92110 This statement was filed
with the Recorder/County Clerk of
San Diego on Nov 18, 2013.
S/Brunilda Liz Luciano 12/13,
12/20, 12/27/13, 01/03/14 CN 15704
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-034210
The name(s) of the business:
A. Water Wise Plumbing, Backflow
& Drains Located at: 123 Claudia
Way, Oceanside CA San Diego
92057 Mailing Address: Same This
business is conducted by: A
Married Couple The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started This
business is hereby registered by
the following owner(s): 1. Fred Lee
Quiroz Jr, 123 Claudia Way,
Oceanside CA 92057 2. Desiree D
Quiroz,
123
Claudia
Way,
Oceanside CA 92057 This statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 10, 2013. S/Fred Lee
Quiroz Jr 12/13, 12/20, 12/27/13,
01/03/14 CN 15703
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-033834
The name(s) of the business:
A. Metal Head Fabrication
Located at: 1869 York Dr, Vista CA
San Diego 92084 Mailing Address:
Same This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first day of
business was: 12/05/13 This business is hereby registered by the following owner(s): 1. Nick Schons,
1869 York Dr, Vista CA 92084 This
statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Dec 05, 2013. S/Nick
Schons 12/13, 12/20, 12/27/13,
01/03/14 CN 15702
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-033286
The name(s) of the business:
A. Sandpiper Point Apts Located
at: 2060 Manchester Ave, Cardiff
CA San Diego 92007 Mailing
Address: PO Box 157, Cardiff CA
92007 This business is conducted
by: A Corporation The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started This
business is hereby registered by
the following owner(s): 1. TMPIII
Properties Inc, 2060 Manchester
Ave, Cardiff CA 92007 This statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Nov 27, 2013. S/Tracy
Patrick 12/13, 12/20, 12/27/13,
01/03/14 CN 15701
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE #2013-032736
The name(s) of the business:
A. Share the View Located at: 3513
Cay Drive, Carlsbad CA San Diego
92010 Mailing Address: Same This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of business was: 12/10/08 This business is
hereby registered by the following
owner(s): 1. Peak-Boy Inc, 3513 Cay
Drive, Carlsbad CA 92010 This
statement was filed with the
Recorder/County Clerk of San
Diego on Nov 21, 2013. S/Joseph
Szalkiewicz 12/13, 12/20, 12/27/13,
01/03/14 CN 15700
B14
NUN
CONTINUED FROM B1
blue grey eyes widened as
she remembered how it all
began.
Hall said that she has
been a spiritual person for
as long as she can remember. When she discovered
SRF, the organization’s calling to develop a personal
relationship with God
through meditation felt like
the perfect match for her.
A vivid dream about
Yogananda only cemented
her commitment to becoming an SRF nun.
She spent her days in
the monastery in a set routine of meditating, reflecting, doing energy exercises
and working in the organization’s
correspondence
department. She took on the
name Savitri, which she said
means unconditional love.
Over the course of nearly 30 years, Hall became a
counselor, a teacher, a member of the board of directors,
and eventually the SRF
president’s confidential secretary.
With all of her roles and
responsibilities within the
monastery, she found herself working all day every
day.
“I threw myself into all
of those positions and eventually I didn’t realize that I
was burning myself out
physically and mentally,”
Hall said.
She also began to grow
apart from the organization’s administration, on top
of the exhaustion of her life
there.
So she left the
monastery in 2001. At 51,
she had an abundance of
HOMELESSNESS
CONTINUED FROM B4
County include the Bread of
Life
Rescue
Mission,
Interfaith
Community
Services, Salvation Army,
Community
Resource
Center, Operation Hope and
Catholic Charities.
Part of the effort to
solve the problem includes
six winter shelters that are
open
from
December
through March and provide
beds and services for 244
individuals.
Shelter is paired with
services that build self-sufficiency. Individuals who stay
at the shelters are required
to work with a case manager
and set goals to find a job
and secure permanent housing.
“It is not counseling,”
Esmeralda Ohlmaier, social
services manager of the
Community
Resource
Center, said. “It’s getting
them work ready to find a
job, secure housing, or find
better employment.”
Each shelter is unique
in its day-to-day operations
and the specific population
it serves.
The Bread of Life
Rescue Mission on Apple
Street in Oceanside shelters
18 women and 32 men in
separate bunk bed quarters.
Residents range in age
from 18 to 70 and are
helped on a first come, first
served basis.
“When one person is
squared away as far as housing we bring another one
in,” Pastor Steve Bassett, of
JAN. 3, 2014
THE COAST NEWS
spiritual gifts, no job, no
place to live, and just $700
in her pocket.
“I didn’t know what I
was going to do when I left.
All I knew is that I wanted
to find out who Heidi Hall
was underneath all of the
personas: the sister, the minister, the board of director,”
she said.
Starting from scratch,
she pieced her life together
with the help of friends of
friends she had met through
SRF.
For several years, Hall
worked a number of jobs,
including as a publicist and
organizer for a nonprofit,
and eventually settled in
Oceanside.
She held fast to her
spirituality, though she did
not practice any religion
with a particular organization or institution. When she
discovered painting, her
main subject focus became
sacred symbols from all religions.
But in late 2010, her life
shifted again. After a couple
of days of feeling exceptionally weak, Hall went to the
doctor. Her blood work
revealed an elevated white
blood cell count.
She was diagnosed with
acute
lymphoblastic
leukemia.
“(My oncologist) told
me, ‘Your life is never going
to be the same again.’”
Within a week and a
half, she was admitted to the
hospital for six months of
induction therapy.
“When I was first diagnosed, I didn’t really understand what I was up
against,” Hall said. “I went
into the hospital with a real
courageous spirit. Bring it
Bread of Life Rescue
Mission, said.
The routine at the shelter is fairly structured.
Residents eat dinner at 4:30
p.m., settle in for the night
by 7 p.m. and need to be out
and doing something productive by 7 a.m.
A light breakfast, sack
lunch and hot dinner is provided.
Bassett said one of the
most important things the
shelter provides residents is
a safe place to stay.
The Bread of Life
Rescue Mission shelter is
open from Dec. 1 through
March 31.
If residents have not
found permanent housing
by March 1, they create an
exit plan with their case
manager. Their next step
may be to relocate to another shelter, stay at a campground, or seek temporary
housing.
The
Community
Resource
Center
in
Encinitas houses 14 women
and children through the
North County Coastal
Interfaith Shelter Network.
It is a rotational shelter
in which residents stay two
weeks at a church, and then
relocate to another church.
Each host church provides three daily meals and
showers.
A set of inflatable mattresses and bedding moves
with the residents.
“It’s the very basics,”
Ohlmaier said. “Bedding
and some kind of privacy.
It’s a bridge to more permanent housing.”
on.”
But years of on-again, offagain remission and relapses
took a toll. Hall underwent
countless bouts of chemotherapy and later brain and spinal
column radiation.
Hall finds herself in need of
funds to make the transplant
possible.
While insurance is covering the procedure itself, Hall
needs help paying for her
care once she is home.
Yoga Munkey studio in
Vista is hosting a benefit concert and art show of Hall’s
works Jan. 4, to help Hall
cover the expenses of her procedure. The show will feature
Streetlight Cadence, an inter-
national music group from
Hawaii.
Hall hopes that with
donations and the sale of her
art — enough to raise the
$10,000 that she needs — will
transition her from cancer
free to cancer free and cured.
“The financial end of trying to support herself while
having leukemia has been
very tough,” explained her
brother, Greg Hall. “So this
charity event, if it could help
her pay for the basic costs of
the bone marrow transplant
then it would be one less
thing for her to worry about.”
“To say (a successful
fundraiser) would be huge is
an understatement,” he
added. “I would just love her
to beat this thing. Not just
because she’s my sister and I
love her, but because she’s a
bright spot. She loves life,
she’s helpful, she’s concerned,
(and) she’s a plus to the planet.”
The benefit event will
take place Jan. 4 at 7:30 p.m.
at Yoga Munkey at 410 S.
Santa Fe Ave., Suite 105 in
Vista.
For information about
donating to Hall, visit
https://m.helphopelive.org/
campaign/4342.
different
subjects
and
grades.
While the school will be
getting new classrooms, the
existing cap of enrolling no
more than 150 students will
remain.
And the school’s architectural footprint will stay
the same. The three permanent classrooms would measure 10,000 square feet and be
built on where the five modular buildings are currently
located. The classrooms will
include new spaces for the
English and Math departments, among other subjects.
Other proposed changes
include new parking spots,
landscaping and site grading
for improved stormwater
treatment.
The Grauer School plans
to break ground on the project in June.
The grand opening is
scheduled for sometime in
2015.
Fundraising for the project began this past spring
and has generated $1.5 million. To complete the rebuild,
the school’s goal is to raise an
additional $1.25 million.
The Grauer School was
approved by the city in 2001.
A board of trustees that’s a
part
of
the
Grauer
Foundation for Education, a
public nonprofit corporation,
governs the school.
by providing leadership on
issues like student success
and growth,” Shannon said.
Broad said this year
MiraCosta College would
focus on the student success
movement, which strives to
improve the success rate of
community college students.
The movement pushes
community colleges to finetune their efforts to help students achieve a certificate,
degree, or prepare to transfer
to a university.
A challenge is community college students come from
a wide range of backgrounds
and have distinctly different
education goals.
Broad said the Oceanside
campus focuses on training
students in certificate programs and the San Elijo campus in Carlsbad focuses on
educating students for university transfers.
“I believe that the student needs in Area 1 are different from the other areas,”
Shannon said. “In Area 1,
many of the graduates of
Torrey Pines High School and
Canyon Crest go onto four
year schools.”
“The students in the
Oceanside area are from
more disadvantaged families
and their needs are very different.”
Part of the student success movement requires every
student to declare a major of
study and set learning goals.
“Community colleges
have had open access for
everybody to get into any
class since1960,” Broad said.
“The majority of students
were not college ready in
English, math or both. That is
no longer acceptable.”
In addition to focusing on
improving its student success
rate, MiraCosta College is
also continuing to expand its
facilities to accommodate
growing academic demands.
“MCCC
(MiraCosta
Community College) is very
much concerned with student
success,” Shannon said.
“We would like them to
have the classes available to
them and to do so without any
wait lists.”
A new science building
with laboratory space was
recently built on the
Oceanside campus.
“The biggest issue had to
do with lab space,” Broad
said. “The lab was full day
and night.”
Another new science
building is under construction at the San Elijo campus.
It is expected to be open for
classes next fall.
“MiraCosta is in an
excellent place right now,”
Broad said. “We have a balanced budget, have invested
in new science buildings to
meet the burgeoning demand
for classes in the sciences, and
are intently focused on student success.”
“It’s an exciting time to
be here.”
Mom of the Year. My easygoing husband decided to
take the cockatiel outside
for a little change of
scenery. The bird behaved
well for an hour, then decided it was time for a road
trip and flew away. We
thought she would come
back at dusk, but no. My
daughter went immediately
into deep shrieking mourning and would not be consoled.
The next afternoon, for
reasons even I cannot
explain, I went into the
back yard and did my imita-
tion of a cockatiel whistle, a
questionable gift I possess.
Lo and behold, the bird
answered, from high atop
the neighbor’s tree. Off I
whistled into the neighbor’s
yard and up the tree on
wobbly limbs, high enough
to break my neck, my only
grip being branches alive
with ants.
I grimly continued to
whisper sweet birdie nothings, as the cockatiel sat
one branch higher than I
could climb. After the
longest three minutes of my
life, she admitted that one
night in a cold, foodless tree
was enough and hopped
down onto my hand. I
grabbed her around the
wings, which she hates and
swiftly popped her back
into the aviary.
I am still amazed that I
caught her, and that I got
down from the tree
unscathed. But it did earn
me some big-time points
with my children. I don’t
think the bird likes me any
better, though.
Fortunately, she doesn’t get to vote for
Mom of the Year.
ed directly into her brain.
“I thought I had all this
faith from all those years in
the
monastic
order…
(Cancer) shook my faith in
God somewhat.”
But she said that ulti-
transplant on Jan. 22, there is
hope that this will be her final
triumph over leukemia.
But after 30 years as a
nun, with no financial
resources and being unable to
work while battling cancer,
I’ve learned more from leukemia than anything
else in my life. It’s the most intense and incredible
spiritual practice you could ever have, in my opinion.”
Heidi Hall
Leukemia Patient
At one point, she was put
on hospice care when doctors
were certain she was not
going to live more then a few
weeks.
“The physical suffering
part of (cancer) is unbelievable. I’ve had more needles in
me than I can count,” Hall
said.
As she spoke, her fingers
traced the indentation on her
head, where a port was put in
for chemotherapy to be inject-
GRAUER
CONTINUED FROM B1
along El Camino Real, the
school emphasizes individual
attention for the middle and
high school students who
attend.
The proposal’s design
calls for clustering different
departments together in
each of the new buildings. By
doing so, the aim is to promote collaboration between
BOARD
CONTINUED FROM B1
college provides,” Broad said.
“In Britain you don’t have
anything similar.”
Broad describes community colleges as taking the top
100 percent of the class and
not leaving behind a student
who has the desire to learn.
“Many students come
from tough backgrounds and
are working so hard to
improve their lives,” Broad
said.
Shannon, the newly
elected vice president, is a
Carmel Valley resident, and
board representative of Area
1.
She manages her own
accounting and tax practice
and teaches accounting and
tax classes at the University
of San Diego and University
of Phoenix.
“As vice president I hope
to help assist the board and
continue to serve the college
SMALL TALK
CONTINUED FROM B1
apeutic. There is an unexpected satisfaction in
watching tiny eggs turn into
fat, little birds and in triumphing (however fleeting)
over the gathering of algae.
I have found, however,
that, like fear, animals can
sense complacency. When
the feeders are full and the
pond is clear, something
generally escapes. I have
lured back quail and finch,
but one Sunday I firmly
cinched my selection as
mately, leukemia has made
her faith stronger.
“I’ve learned more from
leukemia than anything else
in my life. It’s the most
intense and incredible spiritual practice you could ever
have in my opinion,” she said.
“My faith isn’t dependant
on… what condition my body
is in.”
Today, Hall finds herself
in remission once again. With
an upcoming bone marrow
JAN. 3, 2014
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THE COAST NEWS
SOUP TO NUTS by Rick Stromoski
By Bernice Bede Osol
FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2014
FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves
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pursuits, and plan carefully. Stay focused.
Your courage and integrity will be admired.
Do whatever is necessary.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today
will be busy and demanding. Stay focused
on what needs to be done. It’s best to try
to compromise in order to keep the peace.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Don’t be
deceived by rumors; someone may be trying to manipulate you. Use your own judgment and avoid risk-takers. Don’t make
any promises without getting all of the
facts first.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) — Take
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ARIES (March 21-April 19) — Keep pace
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make time for people with no direction. Do
what’s best for you and make friends with
those who inspire you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — It’s a good
day to find ways to pick up new skills and
knowledge. You’ll get ahead if you contin-
ue to solidify your assets. Seek out stimulation. Don’t settle for dull conversation.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Get a
checkup if you have been having health
concerns. This is not the day to let things
slide. Follow through with your goals to
give yourself a greater sense of purpose.
Make time to rejuvenate.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You may
want to check up on someone. Your intervention may not be welcome, but it will be
helpful. Deep conversations will lead to
new ideas that will be useful in the future.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Maintain a skeptical attitude. Insincerity from your
acquaintances is likely to lead you astray.
You’d do better to focus on your professional life instead of personal concerns if
you wish to make headway.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — It’s time to
take care of unfinished business. Let go of
projects that have no legs, and instead
focus on those with promise. Your decisions will give you momentum. Allow your
ambition to grow.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — To avoid conflict, you should maintain an impartial point
of view. If you are critical, you will meet
with resistance. Let others do as they may.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Close listening will be beneficial.Your observations
will provide insights that will change your
path. If you put yourself in someone else’s
shoes, you’ll feel fortunate.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — It’s
time to enjoy friends and thought-provoking entertainment. Consider a change of
residence. Keep your eyes and ears open
to new possibilities.
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B17
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THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014
FIVE GOOD YEARS
Contemporary Women of North County member Kathleen King, left, applauds fellow club
member Pam Irwin who was honored for her five years of active participation in club.
CWONC is a member of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs. Courtesy photo
Take care of your pets in 2014
OCEANSIDE — The
North County locations of the
San Diego Humane Society
and SPCA offer a full calendar
for 2014.
Make some new fuzzy
friends at Fur Fix Thursday
every Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m.
at 576 Airport Road.
You can touch, pet and
play with the animals or stop
by our enrichment table and
make toys for the animals.
At the downtown San
Diego location, the San Diego
Humane Society and SPCA, in
conjunction
with
the
American Red Cross, offers a
Pet First Aid certification class
at 10 a.m. Jan. 25 at 5500
Gaines St., San Diego.
This four-hour class
includes suggested treatments
for choking or breathing difficulties, possible broken bones,
shock, poisoning or snakebites,
carsickness or temperature illnesses, and more.
Cost is $60 per person and
includes either a Dog or Cat
Pet First Aid Handbook and
Pet First Aid certification.
Register on-line or call (619)
243-3490.
The topic will be “Using
Essential Oils” at the 6:30 p.m.
Jan. 16 Happy Hour at the
Gaines Street location.
Learn how to utilize the
benefits of therapeutic-grade
essential oils for your pet's
health of mind, body and spirit. Cost is $12 per person and
includes materials, light
snacks and non-alcoholic
refreshments. Pre-register by
calling (619) 243-3490 or RSVP
online.
Don’t forget the Doggie
Café at 6 p.m. Jan. 10 at 572
Airport Road, Oceanside.
Bring your friendly, onleash dog to have fun socializing with other dog lovers and
their dogs while you practice
teaching your dog how to be
calm around exciting distractions like people, other dogs
and food. Dogs should be
friendly and on-leash. One dog
per human handler, please.
Dogs should be at least 4
months old and up-to-date on
all vaccines, including rabies,
to attend. Complimentary
desserts and dog treats provided.
Behavior and Training
specialists “on-paw” to answer
training questions. There is a
$10 suggested cover charge.
RSVP on-line at sdhumane.org
or by calling (619) 299-7012
ext. 2230.
Visit sdhumane.org for
additional details, other event
locations and dates.
FREE
permanent hair color service
with men’s or women’s haircut.
*Some restrictions apply
HAIR & NAIL SALON
FOR MEN & WOMEN
828 N. Coast Hwy 101 • Leucadia
(N. Coast Hwy 101 at Leucadia Blvd.)
Call Terri for an appointment today!
760-942-1896
deluxehair.info
Open Mon-Sat Evening Appts. Available
B19
B20
THE COAST NEWS
JAN. 3, 2014