760.436.9737 - The Coast News

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760.436.9737 - The Coast News
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ENCINITAS, CA 92025
PERMIT NO. 94
THE
COAST
NEWS
.com
MAKING WAVES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
VOL. 28, N0. 16
April 18, 2014
SAN
MARCOS
-NEWS
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THE
VISTA
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Two commercial structures at Carlsbad’s La Costa Towne Center will
be demolished to make way for a revamp that includes the addition
of retail and apartment buildings. The larger new building, shown
above, would include 48 apartments, a courtyard for residents, and
retail. Courtesy renderings
Carlsbad retail center
to be
RANCHO
SFNEWS
revamped with apartments
FINDERS KEEPERS
By Rachel Stine
Sophia Ceja, 3, of Oceanside, shows off a handful of eggs she found. Four city egg hunts are planned for April 19. See the full
story on page A9. Photo by Promise Yee
Council closer to finalizing Pacific View deal
By Jared Whitlock
ENCINITAS — The council took
another step toward acquiring the Pacific View site on Wednesday night.
Council members voted 3-2 in
favor of a $50,000 deposit and other
conditions spelled out in a memorandum of understanding for the property. That document paves the way for a
final purchase agreement, which the
council majority hopes to approve by
the end of May.
But the agenda item sparked a
long debate over whether the council
should have even agreed to pay $10
million to acquire the site from the
Encinitas Union School District.
Resident Jeff Eddington said he’s
excited at the prospect of the city
owning the site, but worried the council is getting “bamboozled.”
“The city offered $4.3 million for
the property in the not-too-distant
past, and is now offering more than
2.3 times that price.” Eddington said.
Councilman Tony Kranz, an advocate of the purchase, said the $4.3
million figure was based on the property’s current public zoning. And it
was only intended as a first offer.
Additionally, Kranz said he voted in favor of upping the price knowing that EUSD had a strong rezoning
case, which would have made the land
much more valuable.
The city could have tried to fight
the district’s rezone request, but that
would likely have resulted in an expensive court battle, Kranz added.
Last month, EUSD was due to
auction Pacific View with a minimum
bid set at $9.5 million. With the clock
ticking, the city submitted an offer
Pacific View Elementary, which closed a de- just before the deadline. EUSD has
cade ago. The council approved a memoran- delayed the auction by two months as
dum of understanding at Wednesday night’s a safeguard, in case the deal with the
meeting, bringing the city closer to acquiring
the site. Photo by Jared Whitlock
Mosaic, part 2
Two Sections
48 pages
Artist Mark Patterson
has plans for a follow
up to his Surfing Madonna mosaic. A5
Message remains
The final installment
on Eden Gardens
tells of the community’s
commitment
to youth. A6
OUSD takes the pledge
to reduce waste and
form “green teams”
aimed at recycling. B1
A&E..................... A10
Classifieds.......... B21
Food & Wine....... B12
Legals.................. A18
Opinion................A4
Sports.................. A20
TURN TO DEAL ON A15
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CARLSBAD — With it’s primary storefront empty
for five years, the 33-year-old La Costa Towne Center at
the corner of El Camino Real and La Costa Avenue is at
last getting a revamp.
The owner of the property gained approval to demolish two commercial structures in the shopping center and replace them with buildings that are half retail
and half apartments from Carlsbad’s Planning Commission on April 16.
Planning Commissioners praised the owners for
coming forward with plans to redevelop the dated shopping center that they said currently lacks signage, design, and a main tenant.
“(La Costa Towne Center is) just this big long white
wall. You have no idea what’s inside, it’s not inviting,”
said Planning Commissioner Hap L’Heureux. “This center has been long overdue.”
Commissioner Aurthur Neil Black called the little
mall an eyesore.
TURN TO TOWNE CENTER ON A15
Center to be part
of housing project
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — The
announcement that an UrbanLIFT grant will fund
building the Kay Parker
Family Resource Center at
the planned Mission Cove
affordable housing project
bought applause for two
reasons.
Community members
were glad to have a family
resource center as part of
the city’s low-income housing project, and equally
pleased the name of the
center will honor the late
Kay Parker, a beloved, fair
housing advocate.
Kay’s husband Dick
Parker helped accept the
grant at the City Council
meeting April 16. He said
the honor of naming the resource center after his late
wife was well deserved.
The Mission Cove
affordable housing and
mixed-use project on Mission Avenue is being developed through a partnership
between the city and National Community Renaissance nonprofit developer.
The project will break
ground this summer. GradTURN TO CENTER ON A17
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A2
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Exclusiv e Properties
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Amazing opportunity to own a really charming single level ranch style home on a huge
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April 18, 2014 Cell service antennas
planned for neighborhood
By Rachel Stine
CARLSBAD — Sprint
will be adding nine cell
service antennas in a La
Costa residential neighborhood, having obtained
Commission
Planning
approval on Wednesday
night.
Though city council
policy dictates that cell
phone service towers and
antennas should not be
placed in residential neighborhoods, Sprint’s application established that there
were not any non-residential sites for their antennas
that would cover the cell
service gap in La Costa.
“Basically the area
we’re trying to cover is
all residential,” explained
Sprint representative Tim
Henion.
Instead of constructing a new tower, Sprint
will be attaching its antennas to an existing SDG&E
transmission tower at the
site, which is located between Altisma Way and
Via Villegas.
Residents who spoke
at the meeting expressed
mixed views. Some supported the relatively unobtrusive project, while others voiced concerns about
the potential health impacts of having cell phone
service antennas in their
backyards.
“No one can say that
it’s safe. Obviously there’s
not scientific proof that
says it’s not safe, but
there’s no scientific proof
that it is. It’s an experiment, and I don’t think our
families should be guinea
pigs,” said Karen Latiano,
who lives near the planned
site.
Sprint will be adding nine cell
phone service antennas to an
existing SDG&E tower off of Altisma Way in La Costa. Photo by
Rachel Stine
Assistant City Attorney Jane Mobaldi reminded planning commissioners, according to Federal
Communications Commission regulations, they are
unable to reject the application based on health
concerns if the cell service
antennas meet federal regulations, which the Sprint
antennas did.
“I’m not a fan of putting cell sites into neighborhoods, but we can’t rule
on health reasons,” said
Commissioner Jeff Segall.
“I think the neighbors
would agree, having a utility tower in the neighborhood is an unsightly thing,
but they’re already there. I
think adding the antennas
for Sprint is probably a minor thing,” said Commissioner Velyn Anderson.
Planning commissioners unanimously approved
allowing Sprint’s antennas
to operate in the La Costa
neighborhood for the next
10 years.
Suspect arrested for
Carlsbad homicide
By Rachel Stine
CARLSBAD — A woman was found murdered in
a business parking lot on
Saturday night, and police
have arrested a suspect in
relation to the case.
Just before 8 p.m. on
April 12, a concerned relative called 9-1-1 to request
that police check up on the
woman, according to Carlsbad Police.
Police found the deceased woman in a parking
lot in the 5700 block of Van
Allen Way outside of the
business where she worked.
Officers determined that
the woman had been the
victim of a homicide.
The woman’s identity
has not yet been released by
the county Medical Examiner’s office.
Based on leads from
their investigation, Carlsbad Police arrested 49-yearold Pedro Rosalino Zurita
the next morning.
Zurita was booked in
Vista jail without bail.
Man, 25, shot and killed
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — A
shooting that took place
on the 1400 block of Olive
Street on April 8 left one
man dead.
Police responded to a
9-1-1 call from neighbors
who reported hearing gunshots fired at 8 p.m. Upon
arrival police found the
25-year-old Hispanic shooting victim.
firefightOceanside
ers/paramedics responded
and performed lifesaving
measures at the scene. The
victim was transported to a
A3
T he C oast News hospital, and died due to his
injuries.
As of April 11, Police Lt.
Leonard Cosby said the incident is under investigation
and no more information
can be presently shared.
It has not been determined if the shooting is
gang related.
Information on the victim’s name, and number of
people involved in the incident has not been released.
Police ask anyone
with information to call
Detective
LaVake
at
(760) 435-4872.
Elephant owner thanks fair board
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR — Although
she and her husband had
already sent the governing
board of the Del Mar Fairgrounds a letter stating
Have Trunk Will Travel
will not bring elephants to
this year’s San Diego County Fair, company co-owner
Kari Johnson attended the
April 8 meeting to personally thank the directors,
staff and fairgoers for their
support during the past 29
years.
In the letter, read by
President Fred Schenk,
Gary and Kari Johnson
state the “difficult decision” was made for “business and personal reasons
and to further our longterm goals as elephant
caretakers and conservationists.”
Elephants are only able
to become pregnant about
three times a year, and
once they give birth, only
about every four to five
years.
One of their five female
Asian pachyderms, which
are endangered, is cycling
during this year’s fair,
which is the main reason
the Johnsons announced
March 27 they will not be
part of the 2014 event.
In the letter the Johnsons thanked fairgoers and
staff for raising money for
the International Elephant
Foundation to fund a deadly virus that affects young
elephants.
“We will miss everyone
this year but look forward
to partnering in the future,” the letter also states.
“We love you,” Kari
Johnson said.
Director Lisa Barkett
said “it has been a true
pleasure” having the animals at the fair, adding
that they have brought “a
lot of joy to children and
parents.”
“I’m personally sad-
Kari Johnson addresses the fair board. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
dened you will not be here,”
Barkett said. “Know that
you have a lot of friends
here.”
Animal rights activists
have been urging the fair
board since 2011 to stop
the rides during the annual fair. They accused Have
Trunk Will Travel trainers
of abusing the animals and
claim the rides are unsafe.
Since the March announcement, Kari Johnson
said she has only received
comments from people saying they will miss the elephants at the fair.
A4
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Opinion&Editorial
A true tale of two cities
Community Commentary
Why I’m running for Encinitas City Council
By Catherine S. Blakespear, Esq.
I’m running for Encinitas City Council
to preserve and enhance the essence of Encinitas.
We need the right leaders to create
transparent, efficient and effective government, and we need council members
who can work together to build consensus
to solve the city’s thorniest problems. As
a fourth-generation Encinitas resident, I
believe I’m uniquely capable of doing just
that.
I’m a mom and an attorney who
co-founded my own firm, so I’ll offer the
perspective of a small business owner who
makes the books balance. I’ll also bring a
lawyer’s background and understanding
when threats of litigation face the city, as
well as during the interpretation of legally
dense documents involving density bonus
laws, contract negotiations, pensions and
other city business.
I’ve been a reporter with the Los Angeles Times and the Associated Press, and am
the past president of a large business-networking group.
My current membership on the city’s
Traffic & Public Safety Commission shows
me that managing the effects of growth is
one of our greatest challenges. Developments that create a steady stream of new
residents and more visitors mean opportunities for vibrancy and bustling commerce,
but also increasing traffic and congestion.
There is no easy answer to figuring out
the right balance. We need to be in front of
this wave and not allow piecemeal or crisis
decision-making. We need to protect private property rights while standing up for
the public interest to ensure that development enhances our communities.
I am thankful for the purchase of the
Pacific View property, but did it have to
happen at the eleventh hour, in a panicked
rush? Pacific View had been for sale for
years. Could other leaders have reached a
compromise earlier in the process and under better terms?
Bottom line, I believe the city has the
potential to live within its means, foster
vibrant commerce and acquire historically
important pieces of property.
I’d like to create ways for all sides to
be proactively involved in solving the city’s
most serious issues. City guidelines that interpret the state requirement allowing for
density bonus upgrades need to be over-
hauled immediately to prevent the abuses
that we’ve seen—pitfalls that other cities
manage to avoid.
As a member of GPAC (General Plan
Advisory Committee), I’m particularly concerned about the housing element in the
General Plan update. We need meaningful
ways to create affordable housing, such as
counting accessory dwelling units, while
also complying with state mandates. We
have smart, engaged people in this city and
I want to create an environment where they
can help us solve these issues.
To avoid future mistakes, the city
needs to examine recent projects that
have created congestion problems, such as
the traffic back-up near the recently built
drive-through Starbucks on Leucadia Boulevard. There has been no actual analysis
of what created this headache, and what we
can do to avoid that happening again. This
lack of perspective is a citywide issue.
Let me tell you a little about my family
background. I grew up in a multi-generational Encinitas household with a grandma
who spent her youth growing flowers here.
My grandma and I helped establish the garden program at the elementary school that
my two children now attend, the school my
grandpa’s construction company built in
the 1950s.
It’s the same school my mother and her
three siblings attended. Today, I’m proud to
be the chair of the nonprofit that helps run
the successful garden and fruit tree program where all 400 students enjoy growing
their own food.
Our family lives, works and plays here.
My husband works in the Emergency Department at Scripps Hospital in Encinitas.
We delight in Encinitas’ amazing recreational opportunities—we run the trails
and along the beach, bike, swim and surf in
the ocean and play field sports.
We live here for the same reason you
live here, because we love Encinitas. I believe that I am an energized, professional
leader who can help unite people in a common vision.
My job will be to leave a legacy of prudent financial decision-making that continues to provide residents with the very best
quality of life. Protecting the essence of Encinitas is why I’m running for City Council.
Catherine S. Blakespear, Esq. is an
Encinitas resident.
Letters To the Editor
Funds should be spent elsewhere
I, too, am sentimental
about Pacific View School.
My son spent several great
years there and my family
has lived in that neighborhood.
But as a current resident of Leucadia, I cannot
support the city purchasing
that property for $10 million.
Every day I see roads
that need to be resurfaced (I
was told by a staff member
there was not enough money
in the budget to purchase
paint to write the speed
limit on the street), cracks
on the sidewalks (like the
one I recently fell over) and
a park in our neighborhood
that the developer gave the
city money to improve, but
that funding has apparently
disappeared and it is now a
vacant, locked lot.
There are beaches in
need of repair and a lifeguard tower at Moonlight
Beach that will not be built
if the Pacific View sale goes
through. In terms of need-
ing a “gathering place” for
the community, we have a
beautiful library that cost
$14 million and a largely
empty building for the sanitation district that we paid
$9 million for.
I hope that the City
Council has the wisdom
to say “no” to yet another
multi-million dollar expenditure when there are
so many existing projects
needing funding.
Linda Kaiser,
Leucadia
RE: Pacific View Property
purchase
I was pleased to read
The Coast News article
about the property purchase vote. I could not
believe the asking price for
the property in light of the
appraisal of record.
Now the City has until
May to find a way to pay for
the purchase. We asked the
traffic department to paint
speed limit signs on Urania
Ave. and their response was
“we don’t have a budget
for the paint.” I see many
Views expressed in Opinion & Editorial do not
necessarily reflect the views of The Coast News
roads in town that can use
re-surfacing, a beach access
at Beacons that needs
upgrading, a promised Park
at Piraeus & Olympic (eight
years ago) that could benefit all residents.
I remember when the
Council approved the Mossy
Chevrolet property for $9
million and they said that
building would also serve as
a Art Center, after another
$500,000 to renovate the
property, no Art Center,
just a sewer and water yard.
Is Pacific View really worth
$10 million?
The Library cost was
$14 million; again we over
paid or over designed,
either way a very expensive
property.
I see this Pacific View
property sucking funds
away from property and
promises we already have.
Borrow money to meet the
promises already made and
improve our infrastructure
and keep our beaches clean.
Ron Susi,
Encinitas
By Bill Arballo
In 1956, the highly active San Dieguito Junior Chamber of Commerce (Jaycees)
faced a major challenge.
A committee headed by Don Royer of
Solana Beach and John Topp of Leucadia
was introducing Little League competition to the area but lacked land for playing
fields.
Then-President Bill Arballo leaned
on Don Lapham and Don Armstrong, both
of Solana Beach, to come up with ideas to
solve the roadblock.
They approached the Santa Fe Irrigation District that had land it had acquired
through tax foreclosures. The ball park
idea was appealing because a site between
Rancho Santa Fe and Solana Beach was
preferred by the Irrigation District over
the possibility of a developer acquiring it
to build a bunch of houses. The road from
Solana Beach was considered one of Rancho’s scenic gateways.
District directors challenged the Jaycees to involve the county as the landowner. Fifth District Supervisor Dean Howell
was all for it, however, the four other county lawmakers were flatly opposed. They
argued there was no money in the budget
for a park that was weed-covered and “out
in the sticks.”
Armstrong and Lapham, with unwavering support from the president, were not
to be denied A couple of steak dinners with
generous quantities of libations helped the
againers to see the light, and finally three
of them voted for the project.
County Parks Director Gerald Cullison, who lived in Cardiff, used low risk
prisoners for the first time to clear the
land of brush, snakes and rabbits.
The Jaycees paid a token fee to the
Irrigation District to transfer the 100acre parcel to the county. A minor glitch
occurred when the check was short of collateral and was returned marked “insufficient funds.” An emergency sale of road
flares (a national Jaycee project) solved
the problem.
Hundreds of visitors enjoy San Dieguito Park for all sorts of reasons.
A bronze plaque near the main entrance credits the Junior Chamber as the
original sponsor.
It is considered to be the crown jewel
of the park system thanks to the Jaycees
vision. Efforts of a builder coveting the
park for homes would be impossible because of a clause in the park document
that provides that it remains a park otherwise the site will revert back to the Irrigation District.
Encinitas now faces a similar crossroad. Council members Tony Kranz and
Lisa Shaffer with strong support from Mayor Teresa Barth have acquired the Pacific
View school site in the center of the city.
Many uses have been put forward, but
the major issue is how to pay for the purchase.
In spite of opposition from some sources, it will work out and decades from now
hundreds of users will enjoy its facilities
for a variety of reasons; thanks to the
three decision makers who had the leadership and vision to make it a reality.
Bill Arballo is an Encinitas resident.
Ground water becoming another fight
Sacramento and San Joaquin river systems.
For it’s all but certain
that regulations of some
kind will come soon to this
only source of California
fresh water that currently
has virtually none.
“In the coming months,
I will be working…on
strategies for more effective groundwater management,” wrote Democratic
state Sen. Fran Pavley of
Calabasas in her latest constituent newsletter.
When Pavley broaches
a subject like this, no one
involved can afford to ignore her.
Only last year, she
authored the state’s first
regulations on hydraulic
fracturing (fracking) for oil
CALIFORNIA FOCUS
By Thomas Elias
he next front in California’s long-runT
ning water wars has already
opened, and the reasons for
it will sometimes be hard to
see — but not always.
That next fight is over
ground water, source of
about 35 percent of the
state’s fresh water in normal years and a much higher percentage in dry ones
like 2014.
This battle has the potential to become far more
bitter than even the quarrels over how to distribute
water from the Delta of the
and natural gas, and back
in 2006, she was the force
behind the AB32 restrictions on greenhouse gases,
progenitor of the state’s
ever-controversial cap-andtrade program.
For sure, the long-running drought here is producing conditions that alTURN TO ELIAS ON A15
Letters to the Editor
and reader feedback are
welcomed. Please submit
letters or commentaries,
including your city of residence and contact information (for confirmation
purposes only) to letters@
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The CoasT News
P.O. Box 232550, Encinitas, CA 92023-2550 • 760-436-9737
www.thecoastnews.com • Fax: 760-943-0850
MAKING WAVES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
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Contributing writers
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[email protected]
Promise yee
[email protected]
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david Boylan
e’louise ondash
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Photographer
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Contact the Editor
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April 18, 2014 A5
T he C oast News City considers multi-million library upgrades
By Rachel Stine
Surfing Madonna artist Mark Patterson, left, and Bob Nichols, operations director of the nonprofit Surfing Madonna Oceans Project, pose in
front of a sequel to the Surfing Madonna. The tarp will be taken off this
fall, revealing the new mosaic. Photo by Jared Whitlock
Artist working on follow
up to ‘Madonna’ mosaic
By Jared Whitlock
ENCINITAS — Soon, a spot in North County will
be graced with a Surfing Madonna companion piece.
Exactly where is anyone’s guess.
Mark Patterson, the artist behind the renowned
mosaic, has been working on a follow-up for the past
three months in a Leucadia garage. While a sequel of
sorts, religious figures won’t be in the piece — or at
least that’s the plan since it’s a work-in-progress.
Patterson hasn’t revealed the artwork yet.
Even the title is under wraps.
But what’s certain is that his latest mosaic depicts
an underwater scene, which aims to advance a message, inscribed on the Surfing Madonna: “Save the
Ocean.”
“The perspective is that you’re in the water looking at ocean life,” Patterson said. “And the idea being
that you’re part of the ocean and everything that’s in
it.
TURN TO MOSAIC ON A16
CARLSBAD — The city is considering expanding the scope of
proposed upgrades to the Cole and
Dove Libraries, which could more
than double the project’s original
estimated costs.
Major repairs and upgrades to
the libraries were initially prepared
as part of the 2013-14 Capital Improvement Plan budget, which was
finalized and approved last summer.
But city staff has since identified
higher costs for those projects as
well as more facility improvements
that were not considered last year.
By enhancing both libraries,
the city aims to prepare both facilities to meet the changing demands
of the community for years to come.
“What the community needs
in five years (from a library) is no
longer something we can anticipate
exactly. Part of that is the speed
of how technology changes,” explained Library and Cultural Arts
Director Heather Pizzuto.
She said that even two years
ago, city staff could not have anticipated that the library would have
tablets available for public use.
“(The library is) not just about
books anymore,” said Councilmember Lorraine Wood during a presentation on the proposed projects at
the April 15 council meeting.
To prepare for “libraries for the
future,” the city is striving to create
library spaces and utilities that will
be able to provide any range of resources and services.
The goal is to create “libraries
that are flexible and able to change
with the continuingly evolving
needs and interests of the communities,” Pizzuto said.
City staff incorporated feedback from hundreds of citizens
about the libraries from the most
recent city survey into their propos-
Patrons use the Cole Library not only for books, but also as a community center to do work
on personal laptops and to listen to music and audiobooks. On average, 2,500 people visit
Carlsbad’s libraries every day, accoridng to Pizzuto Photo by Rachel Stine
als.
Projects that were originally
brought forth and approved last
year include upgraded Wi-Fi, updated public technology, more electrical outlets, and new staff work areas for both libraries.
Though many proposed projects
simply reflect needed infrastructure repairs for the aging buildings.
Located on Carlsbad Village
Drive adjacent to City Hall, the Cole
Library was first built in 1967 and
most recently renovated in 2000.
Dove Library, the city’s main
library off of Dove Lane, was built
in 1999.
The recommended projects at
both locations included replacing
15-year-old carpets and flooring,
reconfiguring book stacks, installing meeting rooms with removable
walls, painting, and more.
For the Cole Library, replacing the original 1967 elevator, constructing a new roof, and removing
the city’s only history room away
from the HVAC and boiler were also
approved.
City staff originally estimated that the cost for these projects
would total just over $5 million.
But now less than a year later,
staff says that the actual costs of
these projects will total more than
$7.5 million.
The changes to the approved
projects budget are the result of the
city needing to adhere to new prevailing wage requirements, state-required energy efficiency standards,
project contingencies, temporary
relocation costs, escalation, and soft
costs, according to city staff.
Mayor Pro Tem Mark Packard said at Tuesday’s meeting, “I
was distressed to see how much we
missed the mark on our improvement estimates.”
He emphasized that as these
projects move forward, he wants to
see more detailed cost estimates.
In addition to presenting the
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TURN TO LIBRARIES ON A15
A6
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Neighborhood group’s message continues to thrive
A safe environment, opportunities for
youth resound in the community
This is the third and final story in a series
about Eden Gardens.
By Bianca Kaplanek
SOLANA BEACH — When drug and
gang activity threatened the security of
Solana Beach’s oldest community more
than two decades ago, a group of citizens
worked together with city leaders, law enforcement and other organizations to “get
rid of the undesirables,” longtime resident
Alice Granados said.
Although Eden Gardens Against
Drugs has long since disbanded, its efforts
are still visible throughout La Colonia de
Eden Gardens, the formal name of the area
that about 1,100 people now call home.
More importantly, the group’s mission
to provide a safe environment and opportunities for youth continues to thrive.
In the heart of the community is La
Colonia Park and Community Center,
which was dedicated in May 1991.
“Our dream, my dream years ago was
for kids to play soccer or baseball there,”
Granados said. Although administrative
issues delayed that dream at the time, the
facility now offers activities, programs and
classes for residents of all ages.
The field is used for a variety of organized sports and pick-up games as well
as city events such as egg hunts, a family
campout and Paws in the Park.
In the building’s front courtyard a ceremony honoring servicemen and women
is held every Memorial and Veterans Day.
There are plans to upgrade the entire facility once funding is identified, however,
and teenagers by providing “a safe and supervised haven after school and during the
summer months,” according to the website.
Mentoring and academic support and
fitness and recreational activities are just
some of the available programs.
The club recently partnered with
nearby Crush Italian Restaurant to create
a mentoring program that teaches industry skills. Five teens from the La Colonia
branch are currently participating in the
10-week program by shadowing every position to gain real world experience.
For nearly a decade Kids Korps USA
has hosted a weeklong summer camp at La
Colonia Park for youngsters from diverse,
low-income families, teaching them how
they can help others and build a more sustainable future.
In past years participants have visited
senior citizens and picked vegetables for
local Head Start preschools and low-income families.
Perhaps the greatest effort to celebrate the unique character of Eden Gardens and help provide opportunities for
today’s youth is La Colonia de Eden Gardens Foundation, which seemingly picked
Edgar Vergara, left, and Anotonio Cruz are members of La Colonia Changers, a group of teens trying to up where EGAD left off.
make positive changes in Eden Gardens by giving back to the community. Other members are Leslye and
Brenda Mejia, Johanna Rosas, Celene Olivares, Alexis Sotelo, Tania Bartolo and Jorge Linares. Photo by
Bianca Kaplanek
a project to recognize Solana Beach veterans is moving forward.
To further enhance Eden Gardens in
1991, Dr. Dick Wheelock opened a clinic
to serve the uninsured working poor in
the community. Two years later dental services were added.
The St. James and St. Leo Medical and
Dental Program continues offering health
care to area residents every Saturday
morning and Wednesday night.
In November 1996, a community storefront office for the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department opened at La Colonia
Community Center and 10 years later the
Boys & Girls Clubs of San Dieguito expanded and an Eden Gardens branch was added
there.
That organization currently serves
more than 100 elementary school students
Through the tireless efforts of current
chairman Manny Aguilar, the organization
is continually seeking ways to improve the
community.
Aguilar said the foundation sprang
from grassroots efforts more than 30 years
ago “to address the challenges of the community.”
He said the major challenges stem
from “institutional barriers such as intolTURN TO MESSAGE ON A16
Current and former City Council and staff members, contractors and representatives from the California Department of Transportation and Federal Highway Administration take part in the ribbon cutting. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
81-year-old bridge gets new lease on life
By Bianca Kaplanek
seismic activity are issues of
DEL MAR — Road the past for the North Torrey
closures, corrosion and the Pines Bridge.
inability to survive major
A ribbon-cutting cere-
mony was held April 15 to bilitate the 81-year-old struccelebrate the completion of ture.
a $21 million construction
Funding came primarily
project to retrofit and reha- from the California Department of Transportation and
Federal Highway Administration.
Mayor Lee Haydu said
the 550-foot bridge is not
only functional, but a work
of art as well.
“Great care and attention to detail went into the
planning and design to preserve the history and beauty
of this structure,” she said.
Three of the four corner
balusters are the originals
and are marked by the year
1933, when construction of
the bridge was completed.
Haydu noted it was the
same year legendary racing
horse Seabiscuit was born,
the Hoover Dam was completed, construction began
on the Golden Gate Bridge
and Balboa Park was designated.
In the 1980s, the bridge
TURN TO BRIDGE ON A16
April 18, 2014 A7
T he C oast News Parents concerned over kindergarten enrollment
By Jared Whitlock
SeaWeeders members Kristine Schindler, Sandy Mills and Susan Larson greet post office visitors April 15 to introduce the recently completed beautification project. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
Group delivers on landscaping
By Bianca Kaplanek
SOLANA BEACH —
Walking from the parking
lot to the entrance of the
Solana Beach Post Office
is easier and more scenic
thanks to the efforts of the
SeaWeeders Garden Club,
an offshoot of the Civic and
Historical Society focused
on beautifying landscaping
throughout the city.
The group decided to
unveil this year’s beautification project on April 15
because they figured a lot
of people would visit the
post office because it was
the deadline for mailing in
tax returns.
“Everyone has been
thanking us for the path
from the parking lot to the
front door,” SeaWeeders
member Susan Larson said.
The previous walkway,
or lack thereof, was a trail
people had made by walking through the old landscaping.
Funds for the approximately $10,000 project
came from a variety of
sources, including a county
grant, sales of poinsettias
at Christmas and donations
from the Del Mar Rotary
Club, private individuals
and the city’s Public Arts
Advisory Commission.
Volunteers from Solana
Beach Presbyterian Church
TURN TO SEAWEEDERS ON A15
Solana Beach opposes
boardwalk removal
By Bianca Kaplanek
SOLANA BEACH —
Joining their neighbors to
the south, Solana Beach
council members voted 4-0,
with Peter Zahn absent at
the April 9 meeting, to send
a letter of opposition to the
California Coastal Commission in response to that agency’s staff recommendation to
remove the boardwalk trail
on the south side of the Del
Mar Fairgrounds south overflow parking lot.
When the Coastal Commission approved a twophase restoration project in
February to convert the lot
back to wetlands, the boardwalk was included in the
plans.
Phase one is under way.
Coastal Commission staff
directed that the boardwalk
be removed as part of phase
two, for which plans are currently being developed.
According to Del Mar
and Solana Beach staff reports, the recommended
change was made without
any public input.
In its letter, Solana
Beach notes the boardwalk
trail, built in 2006 with
public funds, is a “vital public resource … maintained
through private donations
and volunteer efforts.”
“It is a cherished public
asset that provides educational and recreational access to the coastal wetlands
to all of the County residents
and visitors,” the letter
states.
In the letter city officials say they believe the
objectives of the restoration
project can be met with the
inclusion of the boardwalk.
A statement from the
San Dieguito River Valley
Joint Powers Authority notes
that the boardwalk was de-
signed to minimize habitat
impact.
The JPA and Del Mar
sent similar letters of opposition to the Coastal Commission in March.
The Del Mar Fairgrounds board of directors
agreed at the April 8 meeting to also send a letter of
opposition.
“No one wants this
change,” Director David
Watson said.
ENCINITAS — David
Owens’ daughter will turn 6
years old at the end of July.
Owens kept her home
from kindergarten this
school year to give her extra
time to prepare for school.
But Owens and other Encinitas Union School District
parents worry their children
will be denied kindergarten enrollment when school
starts this August.
Mirroring state education code, EUSD has said
that students turning six prior to Sept. 1 are age appropriate for first grade. Owens
and roughly 60 other families in a similar situation are
appealing the district to let
their children enter kindergarten.
“We didn’t know kindergarten enrollment could
be an issue,” Owens said.
“We were totally kept in the
dark.”
Leighangela
Brady,
EUSD assistant superintendent of educational services,
said the district follows the
state education code. However, in the past, it has admitted 6-year-old students
into kindergarten on a caseby-case basis at individual
schools.
Because of the high
number of families delaying kindergarten this year,
EUSD set up a new district-wide assessment process for students who fall
outside of the kindergarten
age range.
That process recently
involved district teachers
observing affected students
completing typical kindergarten and first grade activities to evaluate which grade
they should be placed in.
Brady said she anticipates most of the families’
appeals will be granted.
With the assessment, the
district was only looking for
the outliers who are clearly
ready for the first grade.
Placing students who
belong in first grade with
kindergarten students could
have a negative impact on
classroom learning, she said.
“There’s a lot of potential impacts,” Brady said.
“We want to make sure we
do our due diligence and
they’re appropriate for first
grade.”
EUSD plans to send out
placement letters within the
next week.
But Owens takes issue
with the district’s assessment.
“There’s never been a
policy to evaluate kids behind closed doors,” Owens
said. “The process has always been to register your
kids when they’re ready.
Some need extra time to develop socially and emotionally
“Most of these kids are
mere weeks and in some
cases just a month or two
outside the window,” Owens
added.
Further, he said EUSD
should have done a better
job communicating potential enrollment problems.
To voice frustrations,
EUSD parents started a
Facebook page called “Encinitas Children Denied Kindergarten.”
Brady said the confusion could partly be chalked
up to changing rules.
In 2010, former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed
the Kindergarten Readiness
Act. The act stated that all
children entering kindergarten during the 2014-15 school
year must turn 5 years old by
Sept. 1, instead of the previous Dec. 2 cutoff date.
The rule has been
phased in during the past
two years. For the 2013-14
school year, the deadline
was Oct. 1.
About 20 of the roughly
60 families have September
birthdays, so they would
have been automatically
admitted last year, Brady
noted.
Also, due to the popularity of dual-language
kindergarten at EUSD, the
district has to deny some applications. EUSD has found
some families whose children aren’t accepted delay
kindergarten for a year to
gain a second chance at entering the program.
Brady said the district
wasn’t aware that so many
would be delaying kinder-
garten because most parents
didn’t start registering their
children until two months
ago.
“If you don’t bring
your child to us beforehand,
they’re not in our system,”
Brady said.
To get the word out
about kindergarten and the
state education code, the
district has sent letters to 50
preschools, she noted. Additionally, the district updated
its website to better explain
kindergarten enrollment,
she said.
Brady said there isn’t a
fiscal impact associated with
accepting students outside
the kindergarten age range.
However, EUSD will
likely have to shift first
grade teachers to kindergarten to accommodate the influx of kindergarteners, she
noted.
A8
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
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4/15/14 11:25 AM
April 18, 2014 A9
T he C oast News Marines dedicate 4 more ocean-view cottages
By Bianca Kaplanek
John Paul, 21 months, of Oceanside, scoops up eggs hidden in library
shelves. Infants through preschool age tots took part in the egg hunt.
Photo by Promise Yee
Egg hunts abound
in Oceanside
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — There
is lot of egg hunting going on
this spring with library egg
hunts on April 11 and April
15, and four city egg hunts to
follow.
The first egg hunt was
held at the Mission Branch
Library.
Toddlers
and
preschool-age tots listened to
stories read by the Easter
Bunny, and made a woven
paper basket before they
searched for eggs hidden in
the bookshelves.
“For the littlest ones
its colorful and exciting,”
librarian Liz Aaron said.
“They know its some sort
of party. The older ones anticipate it and know they’re
looking for eggs.”
The egg hunt took place
in the children’s area of the
library, which has recently
undergone renovation. Lower kid-friendly bookshelves
have been installed, and an
area is set up with play stations designed to stimulate
the imagination and practice
in eye-hand coordination.
“They’re
wonderful
toys for pre-literacy skills,”
Aaron said.
Another egg hunt was
held at the Civic Center Library on April 15, for kids
age 7 and younger.
Both egg hunts compliment the weekly story time
programs that are held for
infants, toddlers and preschoolers.
Additional city egg
hunts are planned for April
19.
Neighborhood
egg
hunts will be held at Joe
Balderrama Park at 9:30
a.m., and Fireside Park and
Libby Lake Park at 10:30
a.m. These egg hunts draw
kids from the immediate
neighborhood.
The Joe Balderrama
Park egg hunt will feature
gold prize eggs, and a spring
carnival after the hunt.
The Fireside Park and
Libby Lake Park egg hunts
will hold raffle drawings for
prize baskets following the
hunt.
The largest egg hunt is
planned at Buddy Todd Park
at 10 a.m. It is geared for kids
ages 1- to 12-years-old.
Age group egg hunt areas will be marked off in
quadrants of the park lawn.
A blast of the fire engine horn will signal start of
the hunt.
Hidden in each egg
hunt area are gold eggs that
can be redeemed for prizes.
The annual fun is expected to be fast paced.
“It’s all over in 10 minutes,” Eileen Turk, parks
and recreation division manager, said. “They run and
scoop eggs.”
The Easter Bunny will
be at Buddy Todd Park to
greet kids, and after the
hunt there will be a magic
show.
It is highly recommended to arrive early to the egg
hunts.
CAMP PENDLETON —
With four new cottages dedicated on April 15, a project
to provide low-cost vacation
rentals to active duty and
retired military personnel is
one-third complete.
The Pendleton Cottages Project is seeking to replace 30-year-old Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency trailers that are corroded beyond repair with
manufactured one- and
two-bedroom homes built
with a focus on the special
needs of wounded warriors.
Each cottage costs approximately $90,000, including furnishings. They
are built to last, using metal
roofs, composite siding and
railings and stainless steel
appliances.
The San Diego Nice
Guys Victory Fund acts
as the not-for-profit fiscal
agent for the project, with
Hedges Construction as the
sponsor, said Dino Richardson, general sales manager
for Pendleton Marketing.
“We’ve been floored by
the generosity,” Richardson
said, noting that no donations are solicited.
Without the individual
donors and the collective
efforts of everyone working
together we could not have
moved this forward, said
Brig. Gen. John Bullard,
commanding general of
Marine Corps Installations
West, Marine Corps Base
Camp Pendleton.
The units, which are
constructed offsite, are set
on ground-level foundations so entry ramps are not
needed. They are decorated
to be “timeless and beachy”
and feature flat-screen TVs,
h a nd ic ap p e d - e qu ip p e d
bathrooms and kitchens
and ocean-view patios.
At the southern end of
the cottage area is a sitting
Bob Clelland, chairman of the Pendleton Cottages Project, left, donors and their families and Brig. Gen.
John Bullard, commanding general of Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, take part in the ribbon-cutting
ceremony. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
area with a fire pit.
Each unit can be dedicated with a plaque honoring the donor or the donor’s
designee, such as an organization, company or family
member who served in the
military.
The four new cottages
were dedicated to Navy Capt.
Robert M. Hanson, Robert
F. Sumoski, U.S. Air Force,
veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan and all medical personnel who serve in the U.S.
military.
The cottages are located at San Onofre Beach on
Camp Pendleton and are
available to all who serve,
not just Marines. The first
five were dedicated in June
2013.
“They have been very
popular,” Bob Clelland,
chairman of the Pendleton
Cottages Project, said.
“They booked up im-
mediately after we opened
last year and have been
reserved ever since,” John
Preston, San Onofre Beach
TURN TO COTTAGES ON A16
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A10
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
A rts &Entertainment
Jazz-pop fusion band Mango Melody keeps it light
Send your arts & entertainment
news to [email protected]
By Jared Whitlock
ENCINITAS — Mango Melody is the brainchild of
brother and sister duo Mike and Tracey Stockalper.
For years, the Encinitas residents pursued their own
musical inclinations, but they started playing together
two years ago.
What emerged: music they describe as a cross between jazz and pop — that’s playful, dynamic and, as
their name indicates, melody driven. They’ll play tracks
from their debut album “Fruit of Happiness” at the Encinitas Street Fair from noon to 1 p.m. April 26 and April 27.
In this Q&A, they talk about not taking things too
seriously, their tastes melding and Captain Planet.
Q: What led you to collaborate?
Sculptor Jeans Wells and OMA Executive Director Daniel Foster
squeeze into Well’s interactive mosaic sculpture “Maximum Capacity 7
Passengers.” Humor is a key element in her work. Photo by Promise Yee
Exhibits highlight
what sculpture is
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — The
Oceanside Museum of Art
mega reception on April 12
included five concurrent
exhibits, and featured the
works of local sculptors
Jeans Wells and Kenneth
Capps.
Wells is known for her
vivid pop art glass mosaic
sculptures, and Capps for
his purposeful use of lines.
Museum Executive Director Daniel Foster said
the intention of the mega
reception is to bring different art audiences together
to experience art they love,
and introduce them to other
artwork.
The pairing of the
Wells and Capps exhibits fit
the aspiration.
“It really discusses the
breadth and width of what
sculpture is. They’re very,
very polar opposites,” Tara
Smith, OMA deputy director and chief curator, said.
“Dichotomy: Kenneth
Capps” pays homage to the
body of Capps work from
the 1970s to today. The exhibit is not arranged as a
time line, but as a visual
arts
CALENDAR
Know something that’s going
on? Send it to calendar@
coastnewsgroup.com
relationship of Capps work
over time.
Smith met with Capps
for several months to discuss his work, and look
through drawings Capps
himself had not looked at
for decades.
The result is a cohesive
picture of the whole of his
work, and the language he
developed with lines.
“On display is a cross
section of many different
bodies of his work over 40
years,” Smith said.
During the reception
Capps pointed out how a
1970s ink drawing he made
of the side of a sculpture he
created, led to a later idea
for a recent sculpture on
display.
Capps said the relationship between his works was
not planned, but developed
spontaneously.
Even without knowing
the history of each work,
the exhibit that shows ink
on paper, steel cutout drawings, and steel and bronze
sculptures side by side is
precise, balanced and harTURN TO SCULPTORS ON A14
Artist Mona Mills’ “New
Symbolism” paintings and
poetry are on display at
the Solana Beach library
during the month of April,
with a reception at 2 p.m.
April 19 at 157 Stevens
Ave. For more information, call (858) 755-1404.
MORE JAZZ The Museum of Making Music celebrates Jazz Appreciation
Month with “New York
Conversations,” vocalist
Kendra Shank and jazz
guitarist John Stowell at 7
p.m. April 19.
Tickets are $20 at [email protected].
BOOK-SIGNING San
Marcos author Steven Eck
will host a book-signing
event for his latest book
“Golf’s All-Time Greatest,” from 1 to 3 p.m. April
19 at the Old California
Coffee House and Eatery,
1080 W. San Marcos Blvd.,
San Marcos.
APRIL 18
NEW
CD
FOR
SPRAGUE Peter Sprague
will introduce his new CD,
“Ocean In Your Eyes” with
a concert at 7 p.m. April
18, at the Museum of Making Music, 5790 Armada
Drive, Carlsbad. Tickets
are $20
ART AND GARDENS
Tickets are on sale now
for the San Dieguito Art
Guild’s
Mother’s
Day
Weekend Art, Garden &
Studio Tour, May 10 and
May 11, either online at
offtrackgallery.com/index.
php or in person at the Off
Track Gallery, 937 S. Coast
Highway 101, Suite C103,
APRIL 22
Encinitas.
MUSICIANS WANTED The Carlsbad Music
APRIL 19
ART AND POETRY Festival is seeking ad-
Mike: I was kind of a music snob after music school
at UCSD. (laughs). I played and listened to a lot of jazz
and thought I was pretty hot stuff. Tracey was singing a
lot of Fiona Apple and different pop artists, and maybe I
thought I was too cool for that.
I went to Chicago for three years for graduate school.
When I came home, my music tastes came back down to
earth. I could sing and she could play, so it was like, why
don’t we just play? We’re related (laughs).
Q:
It sounds like you have different musical backgrounds — how do you feed off of each other?
Mike: There’s a lot of stuff we both like, and she has
Mike and Tracey Stockalper, brother and sister, make up Mango Meloa really jazz-friendly voice — really smooth.
Tracey: People say I sound like Norah Jones. I listen
to a little more pop and he listens to a little more jazz, so
we meet halfway.
dy. They’ll perform at the Encinitas Street Fair from noon to 1 p.m. April
26 and April 27. Courtesy photo
Q:
You’re both yoga teachers on top of being musicians.
Ever play your own recordings while teaching?
Mike: Being brother and sister, when we write togethTracey: He doesn’t. He’s more of the perfectionist,
er we get pretty goofy. When she’s on her own or I’m on
my own, we tend to be more serious about our music. It’s and self-conscious. Whereas I’m about just getting our
music out there. I want to play it and see the response
a nice change of pace.
I get. Sometimes students will come up after and enthuHow is being in a band with a sibling different than siastically say, “what was that song?” Well, that was my
brother and me, I say. That’s a great way to subtly proplaying with others?
mote our music. And it’s a nice way to get feedback from
Mike: I don’t think it’s that different…Did you ever people.
watch Captain Planet as a kid (laughs)? I think it’s like
What are some surprising facts people might not
that being in a band and playing music with other people. You’re these separate entities on your own, but when know about Mango Melody?
you merge together, you become this new entity. Your
Mike: We grew up in Switzerland. Our dad was a prothoughts have to gel with their thoughts. Otherwise,
fessional basketball player over there. So we spent quite
you’re not going to come up with something.
a few years there.
Your bio states your music is best enjoyed in a live
Any kind of European influence on your music?
setting — why is that?
Q:
Q:
Q:
Q:
Tracey: It brings out the perfectionist in you, when
you’re recording. When you’re playing live, you don’t
have room to be a perfectionist, and that’s what makes it
fun. If you mess up, you just have to play it off. And sometimes that’s when you come up with something cool, and
you think, wow — what did I just play right now? Then
maybe you can even get a song out of that moment.
venturous musicians for
its Village Music Walk on
June 21, 2014.
The Walk is a semi-annual event that draws
crowds for 40 performances throughout the Village
of Carlsbad. Musicians of
all styles and genres are
invited to apply by filling
out the form at the link below.
APRIL 23
ART ALL EVENING
Come to “Cruizin’ the
Scene” from 5:30 to 8:30
p.m. April 24 in Carlsbad
Village and visit all of
Carlsbad’s art venues with
live music, artist demos,
Open Life drawing, refreshments and lots of art.
Call (760) 434-8497 or visit coalartgallery.com for
map.
PAINT AND PLAY
The city of Encinitas and
Abrakadoodle Art offer a
“My First Art Class” for 2to 5-year-old children and
their parents, held in fourweek sessions on Wednesdays and Thursdays from
10 to 10:45 a.m. at the Encinitas Community Center, 1140 Oakcrest Park
Drive, Encinitas.
Register at EncinitasParksandRec.com.
KRISTA CONFER
Your Rancho Santa Fe, Solana
Beach & Del Mar Territory Manager
Call Krista for all your
advertising needs.
760.436.9737
x101
[email protected]
Mike: I think so, because when I was a kid a lot of people listened to house and techno music over there. That
was huge. I find myself gravitating toward that kind of
music, and I’m ashamed of it (laughs). I can’t help it; it
was a part of my childhood.
No, our take on rock is softer — and in Europe the
aesthetic seems to be a little softer.
APRIL 24
NEW TUNES Sarah
Jarosz highlights her new
album, “Build Me Up From
Bones” at 8 p.m. April 24
at the Belly Up Tavern,
143 S. Cedros Ave., Solana Beach. Tickets are $20.
For more information, call
(858) 481-8140.
APRIL 26
ARTWALK
Carlsbad artists Darlene Katz,
Gregg Visintainer, and
Justin Coopersmith will
be displaying at this year’s
downtown ArtWalk from
11 a.m. until 6 p.m. April
26 and April 27. During
those times the artists will
be set up in tents over 17
blocks in Little Italy.
LOCAL MUSICIANS
The Encinitas School of
Music will be sponsoring
a stage at the 31st annual Encinitas Street Fair
in Downtown Encinitas
featuring students, staff
and alumni. The fair runs
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. April
26 and April 27 on Coast
Highway 101 from D St. to
J St. Some highlights include the Rock Show from
2 to 4 p.m. April 26 and
Flutelicious on at 1:30 p.m.
April 27, followed by the
Encinitas School Big Band.
April 18, 2014 T he C oast News A rts &Entertainment
Send your arts & entertainment
news to [email protected]
A11
The man
in the
machine
The filmmaking team behind “Oculus,” Producer Jason Blum, left,
and Director Mike Flanagan. The horror film opened last week and
has earned more than $14 million at the box office. Photos by Alex J.
Berliner/ABImages
Filmmakers shine
light on horror flick
By Noah S. Lee
“Oculus” opened in
theaters last week and
anybody who loves a
scary time will get what
they ask for. As someone
who isn’t a big fan of horror films, I can assure
you this one has what it
takes to succeed as disturbingly well-made entertainment.
While I’m still shaking off the shock from
seeing the film not too
long ago, Producer Jason
Blum and Director Mike
Flanagan shed some light
on their journey creating
this harrowing film.
ration did you turn to in
order to create this truly
scary film?
Flanagan: Well, I’m
a big fan of Stephen King
and H.P. Lovecraft. And
I’ve always been that
kid who was also scared
of mirrors. So, for me,
it was like kind of that,
in addition to the Jewish tradition of covering mirrors at funerals
to prevent the spirits of
the departed from coming back into the world.
I thought that was so terrifying…that the mirror
could be a gateway to
another world. So yeah,
Jason, you’ve experi- those things all came toenced incredible success gether and the idea just
producing horror films wouldn’t leave me alone.
such as “Paranormal Activity,” “Insidious,” “SinTURN TO FILMMAKERS ON A13
ister,” and “The Purge.”
What was it about “Oculus” that convinced you
to grant Mike’s wish to
turn his short film of the
same name into a fulllength feature?
Blum: I liked it (“Oculus”) because it shares a
lot in common with those
movies. I feel like all
those movies are low-budget and very original.
They’re original stories,
it’s original storytelling,
and I feel like that’s what
“Oculus” has, too.
A digital Depp is
interesting to watch but
some connection is lost
in ‘Transcendence’
By Noah S. Lee
“Transcendence” looks
and feels cool — not surprising, given its trippy
concept — but somehow its
intellectual side forgets to
make use of most of the actors’ potential.
Technology has, whether we like it or not, defined
humanity; nowhere is this
more apparent than in our
current computerized era.
And one thing’s for certain: our constant desire to
evolve corresponds to the
progressive nature of technology.
So then what implications could await us as the
boundary between creators
and the created blurs?
That is the question
to which Dr. Will Caster
(Johnny Depp) seeks an answer in his goal to create a
sentient/collectively intelligent machine.
All seems lost when anti-technology extremists attack him, but their actions
result in him participating
Will Caster (Johnny Depp) is a researcher of Artificial Intelligence, who becomes a part of his own experiment in the film, “Transcendence.” Photo by Peter Mountain
in his own experiment.
Such a big step would produce endless possibilities,
but even if it could be done,
should it?
Will’s wife Evelyn (Rebecca Hall) and his best
friend Max Waters (Paul
Bettany) are at odds with
whether or not downloading
Will’s mind into a computer to save his life was a
good idea.
That is a question of
which they aren’t sure what
answer to expect since Will
seeks to acquire not only
knowledge, but also power.
And he won’t let anything
(or anybody) stop him.
When it comes to pacing, I have to give first-time
director Wally Pfister credit…he has confidence in
knowing when to speed up
and slow down.
His taut focus on the
plot drives the film forward
as the audience continually
wonders what Will intends
to achieve in his digital
form, as well as witnessing
Evelyn experience changes
in her relationship with her
husband.
Not for a single moment does the anticipation
waver, and by the time
the action-packed climax
emerges, the adrenaline
continues to throb as the
unthinkable
possibilities
behind mankind’s history
with technology unravel
and flood our minds.
“Tra nscendence”
TURN TO TRANSCENDENCE ON A13
Spring Fling
Dance/Mixer
Mike, it’s been only a few
weeks since I last saw
“Oculus” and even now it
still gives me the creeps.
What sources of inspi-
Happiness is finding a pencil, sharing a secret...or reliving
the wonders of our childhood with Charlie Brown, Snoopy
and the Peanuts gang. Based on the beloved comic
strip by Charles Schultz, this award‑winning musical
revival version of You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown
is sure to engage the entire family!
Professional adult actors perform for families
April 19, 20, 26, 27
MAy 3 & 4
All performances at 11am
TickeTs: (858) 481‑1055
or northcoastrep.org
$20 Adults/$16 Children
A12
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
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7.25 in.
April 18, 2014 TRANSCENDENCE
CONTINUED FROM A11
matches its bold premise
with slick visuals that serve
to enhance, not overwhelm,
the film.
Watching a digital Depp
demonstrate his capabilities
and the inclusion of silvery
nanotechnology later on is
quite a sight to behold, and
given Pfister’s experience as
a cinematographer, seeing
these effects captured in numerous cool camera shots is
a no-brainer.
OK, so “Transcendence”
has it all in terms of premise, plot, and effects. I can’t
say the same about the cast,
however. A stellar choice of
actors, yes, but only a few
managed to reach the full
potential of their characters
here.
Johnny Depp does a
good job portraying Will’s
driven personality when he
is a living, breathing human.
Once he makes the transition from man to machine,
a substantial chunk of him
gets lost. Perhaps this was
intentional on Pfister’s part
when casting Depp; yet because he shows little change
in expression, it’s hard to
connect to or understand
him at times.
Paul Bettany has a contemplative logic about him
in his role of Max, and succeeds in engaging the audience with his levelheaded
demeanor. Kate Mara, who
plays a prominent anti-tech
extremist, attempts to imbue
her role with a sympathetic
edge, but her reasons seem
to lack a major “big reason”
required to lend credibility
to her actions.
I appreciate seeing Morgan Freeman in any film he
is a part of, but the fact that
his character Joseph Tagger
(another academic) doesn’t
really express his own perspective on technological advancement is kind of underwhelming. Cillian Murphy
is your cookie-cutter federal
agent; he lacks any attitude
towards technology and exists simply to move things
along.
If anything, Rebecca
Hall is responsible for singlehandedly rescuing “Transcendence” from its own
flaws. She brings a real emotional gravitas to Evelyn,
whose love for her husband
clashes with the astonishing direction in which their
years of research are taking
them. As for her chemistry
with Depp, where he occasionally stumbles, she manages to get it back on track.
For all its shortcomings
and missed opportunities,
“Transcendence” is not half
bad as a directorial debut
for Wally Pfister. It’s only a
start, but I have a good feeling that should he decide to
continue making films, his
next one will be a better, refined follow-up.
MPAA rating: PG-13
for sci-fi action and
violence, some bloody
images, brief strong language and sensuality.
Run time: 1 hour and 59
minutes
10.25 in.
Playing: In general
release
FILMMAKERS
CONTINUED FROM A11
If I had to name the film’s
strongest asset, it would
be the sibling relationship, both in the past and
the present. What was
it like getting to create
that family bond with
Karen Gillan and Brenton
Thwaites, as well as Annalise Basso and Garrett
Ryan?
Flanagan: It was really fun. Siblings have
this shorthand with each
other that you don’t find
in other relationships.
Those actors would interact with each other immediately when they showed
up on set.
Karen and Brenton
were relatively inseparable, and spent most of
their time together trying to develop that shorthand. Annalise and Garrett did the same; they
would work together as
well, so that Karen could
look at what Annalise was
doing and use that as a
foundation for her performance, and Brenton did
the same with Garrett.
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people can make them by
their own rules.
The challenges now
are always trying to find
new things — maybe doing slightly different
genres — to keep trying
to change and evolve, and
that’s what we always try
to do.
Mike, I can only imagine the anticipation you
must’ve felt prior to seeing “Oculus” in its finished form. What was
your reaction to screening it for the first time?
Flanagan: The first
time I really got to see it
with an audience — which
is, you know, kind of the
only time I can really
gauge how it has all come
out — was (in) Toronto.
And that was incredible,
because you lose objectivity so completely in
post-production;
that’s
the litmus test for all the
work and all the decisions
and all the different people who have come into
the project and added
their own piece of art to
it. That’s a really validating experience, but you
only know that at the very
Jason, in your early years, end, and going into it is
what obstacles challenged utterly terrifying.
your micro- to low-budget
production model, and Jason, since you’re one of
which ones do you face the executive producers,
what do you look for when
now?
Blum: I was frustrat- it comes to determining
ed at working on more the size of a film’s budtraditional studio movies, get? In the case of “Ocuand I didn’t agree with lus,” what did you have
a lot of what they had to to keep in mind before,
say about storytelling. during and after producSo the way I figured out tion?
Blum: Never more
around those rules was to
make movies low budget; than five million dollars;
THIS WAY
TO HEALTHIER
CARE.
•
•
•
•
A13
T he C oast News in the case of “Oculus,”
these guys made the movie, and then we didn’t
get involved until it was
finished, which is what
we did on “Paranormal
Activity.” So they got
to make decisions about
budget before I saw it. But
I recognized the low-budget spirit in the movie.
What about you, Mike?
Are you going to continue to do horror, or have
you any interest in other
genres as well?
Flanagan: I’m interested in any genre that’s
got great characters and a
story that grabs me. But I
have a deep love for horror, so I can’t imagine I’m
ever going to be out of it
for very long.
This interview has
been edited for length.
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A14
T he C oast News SCULPTORS
CONTINUED FROM A10
monious.
“His whole career really dealt with sculpture in all
different materials,” Smith
said. “He discovered form
and really is discussing it.
Form is the content of the
show.”
Wells’ bright, playful
sculptures in “Jean Wells:
Icons of Desire” set a different mood. The exhibit is energizing and engaging.
Familiar
American
images are given a playful
twist, and humor is a key element in each piece.
“It’s a very accessible
show to the public,” Danielle
Susalla Deery, OMA director
of marketing and exhibit cu-
rator, said. “I love the pop art
aspect of it.”
A 10-foot shimmering
Frosty Cone, upon closer
inspection, has a black and
white cow head topping the
swirling ice cream treat.
A line of 4-foot crayons is
mislabeled with color names
that do not match the hues.
Wells said adults do not
always notice the discrepan-
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cy, but children are quick to
point it out.
“While most of my work
is easy on the eye, and what
we might call happy or fun,
underneath the surface I
plant the seeds for further
thought and investigation,”
Wells said.
“My intention is to provide hope, challenges and
meaning.”
Another reaction to her
work that Wells shared is
people want to interact and
get inside the art.
Wells makes this possible with two of her pieces
on display, “The Kiss” and
“Maximum Capacity 7 Passengers.”
“The Kiss” is a 17-foot
April 18, 2014
tall replica of a Hershey’s
kiss constructed from aluminum foil layered over a
form. Inside is an altar where
several couples were legally
married in celebration of the
exhibit in February.
“Maximum Capacity 7
Passengers” is a bright yellow Mini Cooper, which seats
two, decked out in punchy
black and white checkered
mosaic tile to resemble a
taxi. The joke is in the title
that suggests seven could fit
inside.
Observers can open the
taxi door, put on a fun taxi
driver hat and sit behind the
wheel.
Taking the taxi joke a
step further, the museum is
challenging teams to come to
the museum and videotape
themselves fitting as many
people into the taxi as possible.
A $1,000 prize is being
offered for the most people
squeezed in and the best
theme.
“Jean Wells: Icons of
Desire” is on exhibit through
June 15.
“Dichotomy: Kenneth
Capps” runs through July 6.
An all-day Sculpture
Park Foundation tour of
Capps
work
displayed
throughout a 40-acre site in
Warner Springs is scheduled
for May 31.
OMA is located at 704
Pier View Way in Oceanside.
Engel & Völkers expands Peanuts
REGION — Engel &
Völkers, the leading international luxury real estate
brand, announced that Evergreen Realty in Solana
Beach, is the newest addition to its North American
network and will provide
its global standard of highend real estate service
in the market as Engel &
Völkers San Diego RanchCoast.
Michael Hannon and
Quentin Smith are the
owners of Engel & Völkers
San Diego Ranch-Coast.
The new shop serves
home sellers and buyers
throughout North County
San Diego, including the
towns of Del Mar, Solana
Beach, Rancho Santa Fe,
Encinitas and Carlsbad.
“With Engel & Völkers
San Diego Ranch-Coast,
we are well positioned to
serve clients in the area as
well as the growing number of second home owners
coming from throughout
the U.S., Canada and Mexico,” said Anthony Hitt,
chief executive officer of
Engel & Völkers North
America.
Executive Vice President of Engel & Völkers
North America, Tom Kunz,
adds, “Michael and Quentin and their team represent well over 100 years of
real estate industry experience.
Their professionalism
and high standards of service quality make them
the ideal representatives
of our brand in this market.”
Engel & Völkers San
Diego Ranch-Coast will
operate from its Solana
Beach office location with
plans to open future Engel
& Völkers shops in Encinitas, Carlsbad and Rancho
Santa Fe. Solana Beach
and its neighboring communities in particular are
enjoying a real estate renaissance due to the wide
selection of beachfront,
golf course and hillside
homes and condominiums.
With desirable neighborhoods, schools, easy
access to downtown San
Diego and Orange County and some of the most
sought after beaches and
weather in the world, they
are ideally located for local, national and international buyers.
“We are extremely
proud to be part of the
Engel & Völkers brand
because of their commitment to quality and their
international
prestige,”
said Smith. “The marketing tools and technology
platform, as well as the
distinctive culture and luxury lifestyle that they offer
is unlike anything we have
seen in this market.”
This
announcement
from Engel & Völkers
comes one month following the opening of its Engel & Völkers Las Vegas
brokerage as the brand
continues its expansion efforts throughout the U.S.
and Canada.
gang
onstage
SOLANA BEACH —
Happiness is finding a
pencil, sharing a secret,
or reliving the wonders
of our childhood with
Charlie Brown, Snoopy
and the Peanuts gang.
Professional Theatre for
Families (PTF), an arm
of North Coast Repertory Theatre, is presenting
“You’re a Good Man,
Charlie Brown,” the 1999
award-winning
musical revival based on the
beloved comic strip by
Charles Schultz.
An all-adult professional cast will bring the
trials and tribulations of
the hapless boy, his pals
and his quirky, colorful
dog to the theatre’s mainstage Saturdays and Sundays at 11 a.m. from April
19 through May 4. Tickets
are $20 for adults, $16 for
children 17 and under.
“In this electronic
world, where most kids
rely on TV and movies
for their storytelling experiences, live theatre
stirs the imagination and
creates unmatched excitement,” said Siobhan
Sullivan Crews, director
of Theatre School and
Educational Outreach.
Desha Crownover directs a cast that includes
Beverly Baker as Lucy;
Sean Boyd as Linus; Benjamin Cole as Charlie
Brown; Leif Corbeil as
Schroeder; Tatiana Mac
as Sally, and E.Y. Washington as Snoopy.
For tickets, call (858)
481-1055, or visit northcoa st rep.org / T he at re
School.
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April 18, 2014 SEAWEEDERS
TOWNE CENTER
helped clear away the old
landscaping.
SeaWeeders members then
spent about a week installing the new plants, sidewalk, decorative stones and
mulch.
“It was a real community effort,” Sandy Mills said.
“I was sore for two days afterward.”
“It was everybody
working together to make
this project happen,” Sandy
Parish said.
Mills, Susan Larson
and Kristine Schindler
were handing out free cookies and lemonade the morning of April 15 to highlight
the project and raise funds
to complete it.
The group needs about
$1,800 to install a bike rack
and paint the flag pole.
“We’ve had some generous donations, but I don’t
think we’ll raise $1,000 today,” Larson said.
The SeaWeeders meet
the first Wednesday of the
month at 6:30 p.m. at the
Boys & Girls Clubs, 533 Lomas Santa Fe Drive.
Upcoming educational
speakers will address water-saving suggestions for
home irrigation May 7 and
organic pest control June
4. There are no meetings in
July or August.
Call Sandy Parish at
(858) 481-0453 for more information or to contribute
to the post office project.
La Costa Towne Center was
originally approved by the
city in 1979. Vons anchored
the 15-acre shopping center until the grocery store
closed in 2008 and was never replaced.
Representatives for the
owner, Excel GIV, were not
shy about the condition of
the shopping center.
Excel’s William Stone
said, “This proposed project
that is before the planning
commission is the redevelopment of a 33-year-old
shopping center that is obsolete.”
Referring to the Vons
building he said, “That
building is so bad, if any of
the termites quit holding
hands it would probably
come down.”
While the current tenants, including a Jazzercise and massage parlors,
are surviving, they are not
thriving, he explained.
Stone said that the
new development will be a
smart-growth project where
people can live, work, and
play in the same location.
The new retail spaces
have been designed with
specialty grocery stores and
coffee shops in mind.
Excel’s staff explained
that the center will be more
aesthetically pleasing and
inviting to shoppers by
knocking down one commercial building along El
Camino Real and locating
CONTINUED FROM A7
ELIAS
CONTINUED FROM A4
most demand regulation.
As things get drier,
especially for San Joaquin
Valley farms now drawing just a small fraction of
their normal water entitlements from both the state
Water Project and the federal Central Valley Project,
many of those farmers are
pumping ground water furiously to keep their crops
and businesses alive.
The longstanding presumption here has been
that if there’s water under
your land and you have a
well, you can take as much
as you want.
That has sometimes ignored effects on other nearby property owners and the
public.
One of those effects
can be land subsidence,
which in some Central
Valley locales has topped
20 feet and can be spotted
by passing motorists who
see instruments and wellheads that once were on the
surface perched on pipes
reaching high above the
current ground level.
Subsidence, in turn,
can lead to problems moving surface water in canals,
something water agen-
A15
T he C oast News CONTINUED FROM A1
cies cannot long tolerate.
Over-pumping ground water can also spur intrusions
of brackish salt water into
fresh water aquifers.
The reality is that some
of California’s most significant environmental laws
have been the direct results of crises.
The Field Act, passed
just after the 1933 Long
Beach earthquake, changed
the way schools all over the
state are built.
Building standards for
other structures changed
immensely after the 1971
San Fernando earthquake
severely damaged the Olive
View Medical Center.
The drought of 1975-77
produced major water conservation changes, among
them wide government
distribution of low-flow toilets and shower heads, now
standard in new homes and
one reason today’s drought
has not yet proved as disastrous as previous ones.
So far, drought has not
produced great enthusiasm
for Gov. Jerry Brown’s proposed twin tunnels water
project to bring Sacramento River water under the
Delta to the state’s aqueduct.
That’s partly because
in return for more than $20
its replacement along the
east side of the shopping
center.
Residents from adjacent neighborhoods spoke
at the meeting to express
concerns about potential
noise and traffic increases
from the new residences
and businesses.
“I’m dying for a little
grocery store and coffee
shop,” said one resident,
Julie Marshall. But she explained that there is already
a lot of noise generated
from the current shopping
center from landscapers,
street cleaners, and delivery trucks at all hours of the
day and night.
Planning commissioners urged the property
owners and developers to
consider having a live-in
manager for the apartment
buildings who can handle
noise complaints promptly
and work more with the existing businesses to prevent
late night deliveries.
Commissioners
also
brought the project to the
attention of the city’s traffic
engineer for consideration
of traffic mitigation efforts,
including restriping El
Camino Real.
But otherwise, all parties expressed their excitement about the shopping
center to come.
“I love the open areas
that they are creating and
the little community areas
that they are creating,”
said Commissioner Victoria
Scully.
billion, the state would get
no more water, even if the
tunnels might assure more
level supplies from year to
year.
So far, the main backers are water districts on
the west side of the San
Joaquin Valley, whose
member farmers are prone
to major water allocation
swings from year to year.
So that project won’t
go anywhere for a while.
Which could mean that legislators who want at least
to purvey the image of doing something about the
drought will become more
likely to adopt ground water regulations.
If they try this, expect
another loud and large
fight to break out, as farmers and water districts with
wells of their own can be
expected to fight anyone
trying to tell them what to
do with water they’ve long
viewed as their own property.
Email Thomas Elias at
[email protected].
LIBRARIES
CONTINUED FROM A5
new costs to city council, staff also brought
forward more library improvement projects for
consideration.
For the Dove Library,
the new proposals included removing one of the
main staircases in the
lobby to allow for more
open space, replacing the
roof, replacing the exterior stucco, and creating a
patio in back.
Several
improvements for the Schulman
auditorium at the Dove
Library were also suggested. Because of the
way the stage and seating were originally built,
some audience members
sitting in certain seats
cannot see people on
stage. The auditorium
DEAL
CONTINUED FROM A1
city falls through.
Kranz said the city
could have waited to see
if anyone participated in
the auction, as a public
speaker suggested. But he
equated that with “rolling
the dice.” The risky strategy could have meant losing
the historic property.
Councilwoman Kristin
Gaspar, who voted against
the Pacific View offer last
month, said EUSD has
tried to rezone the property in the past.
She said the district
didn’t have a compelling
case for rezoning the property then, and not much
has changed since.
She added the city
offered too much for the
2.8-acre site. Gaspar voted
against the memorandum
of understanding, which a
council subcommittee and
EUSD subcommittee drafted. She stated the document puts unnecessary restrictions on the city.
It specifies that if the
city wants to sell the land
in the next decade, it must
first offer it to EUSD for
$10 million, plus the cost of
any improvements.
But after 10 years passes, the city is free to sell to
any buyer.
Given how much the
city agreed to pay for the
property, there shouldn’t
be any conditions, Gaspar
said.
also lacks a green room
for performers to change
into costumes.
Replacing the fire
suppression system at the
Cole Library was suggested as well.
Staff
emphasized
that they are only looking to complete essential
upgrades to the Cole Library, which they hope to
have replaced in about 10
years.
The costs of these
suggested new projects
add up to another $5 million.
Because staff presented a number of new
multi-million infrastructure improvement projects for the first time
on Tuesday, city council
provided feedback rather
than making a final decision on the projects.
Staff will come be-
fore council at a yet-tobe-determined meeting
with a narrower scope of
new projects and supporting information about
how the city could pay for
them.
Mayor Matt Hall requested that the staff
research what kind of
community services and
potential revenue the
city would receive in return for its investment in
the proposed library projects.
“If we are going to
spend $7 million, $10
million, whatever that
number is, are we looking
at the right type of technology, the right type of
business?” he asked.
“If we are going to invest, we want to invest in
the future. What does the
library 10 years from now
look like?”
Mayor Teresa Barth
said that language was added to appease EUSD.
The district expressed
worry over the city buying
the site, rezoning it and
putting it on the market to
turn a quick profit.
Barth added it’s unlikely the city will sell the
property. But its “hands aren’t tied” if it wants to do
so in the distant future.
The council has floated the idea of putting a
community venue there.
Currently, the property is
home to the dilapidated
Pacific View Elementary,
which closed 10 years ago.
Another
stipulation
notes EUSD is responsible
for mitigation if toxic soil is
found on the site.
The memorandum also
states the city must place
a $50,000 deposit down on
the property. However, it’s
refundable if the city and
EUSD can’t agree on a financing plan.
On that note, Council-
man Mark Muir, who also
voted against the memorandum, raised questions
over which type of bond
will support the purchase.
The council will consider financing methods
next month.
Muir brought up a
handful of other concerns
related to the purchase.
Eventually, the council majority voted to cut off discussion and put the memorandum to a vote, drawing
objections from Muir and
Gaspar.
LISA SANDSTROM
Your Oceanside/Carlsbad
Territory Manager
Call Lisa for all
your advertising needs.
Call 760.436.9737 x102
[email protected]
A16
T he C oast News MOSAIC
CONTINUED FROM A5
COTTAGES
CONTINUED FROM A9
general manager, said.
“The longest length of stay
we allow is seven days, but
on average our patrons stay
one to three days.
“Our patrons come
from all over the world,” he
added. “Often the guests
are wounded warriors.”
Costs vary based on
the size of the unit and the
rank of the servicemen and
women, with discounted
prices for handicapped service members.
The range is between
$85 and $140 per night
during the summer.
“These cottages will
help the men and women
MESSAGE
CONTINUED FROM A6
erance, prejudice, bigotry,
ignorance and bias that
led our youth to seek other
places to find friends and
acceptance.”
“Unfortunately, this
led our youth to police brutality, violence, drug usage
and high school dropout
rates,” Aguilar said.
The foundation seeks
to address these issues
“through prevention and
early intervention and prevention programs through
community dialogue, to
seek positive solutions via
close collaboration with
community partners, parents and our youth.”
To achieve those goals,
forums are held to garner
input from residents. The
foundation recently partnered with the National
Latino Research Center at
California State University San Marcos to conduct
community-based research
to find solutions to issues
and provide real-world applications in areas such as
education, public health
and civic engagement.
That study is ongoing,
with results expected to be
presented this summer.
In the summer of 2013
the foundation began a
camp for teenagers, who
spent a week at Whispering Winds in the Cuyamaca Mountains developing
leadership skills to help the
community, learn about career opportunities and enjoy hikes and swimming.
Pastel-colored units are built at ground level so entry ramps are not
needed. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
who come back from war
understand that we support them,” Clelland said.
Cottages are replaced
as funds become available.
For more information or to
donate, visit pendletoncottages.org.
That first camp — another is planned for this
summer — resulted in the
formation of La Colonia
Changers, a group of teenagers motivated to make a
difference and give back to
the community.
Edgar Vergara and
Anotonio Cruz, both 15,
and several other teens
are currently working on a
project called Photo Voice,
which they plan to present
to city council in May.
The youth are taking
pictures of positive and
negative things they see
around the community
and documenting their
thoughts about the images
and how they impact the
neighborhood.
The photos include pictures of dark areas or people drinking or smoking at
the park, activities prohibited by city laws.
Group members play
for and coach three youth
soccer teams created under the foundation. They
are also holding a free forum April 30 focused on
understanding underage
drinking, why it happens
and how it impacts the
community.
Volunteers helped out
at a local church. “It was
refreshing to see young
people go in and do hard
work and not complain,”
Maggy Hillenbrand, from
Mission Circle at St. James
Parish, said. “They seemed
to enjoy it. … They could
have left but they stayed
and worked all day. They
have more than paid back
to the community.”
Edgar and Antonio
said they were most inspired by a guest speaker
at the summer camp who
started dealing drugs at
12 years old, but ended up
getting a law degree from
the University of California Berkeley and running
an after-school program in
Oceanside.
“He talked about
how you have support and
should reach for the stars,”
Edgar said. “It got me to
think I want to go out there
and have a good career and
came back and give back to
help other people.”
“Since I started coming to the group I’ve seen
changes in the community,” Antonio said. “I don’t
see teenagers hanging
around the park when
we’re practicing.”
“I love the park,” Edgar added. “I want to make
it feel safe and just have
fun. I love our community.
That’s why we want to improve it.”
“Everybody in every
family wants the same
things,” Aguilar said. “We
want to feel safe. We want
a good education for our
kids. We want a good living
and to enjoy the community.”
Contact Aguilar for
more information on the
foundation at [email protected]. Call (619) 7776365 for information on the
April 30 forum, which will
be held from 6 to 8 p.m. at
North Coast Fellowship on
Genevieve Street.
“After a while, people forget,” Patterson said of the
Surfing Madonna. “It’s
like the wallet in your hip
pocket you don’t realize is
there. And I want to keep
the momentum going.”
On Tuesday morning, Patterson lifted up a
small section of blue tarp
enveloping the 10 foot-by10-foot work, revealing a
patch of kelp in one corner of the piece.
That cover will fall
to the ground when the
mosaic makes its debut at
the next Surfing Madonna
5-10K, tentatively slated
for Oct. 25.
Not long after, the
piece will be installed
somewhere along Coast
Highway 101.
Four locations are being considered, two in Encinitas and two elsewhere
in North County. Beyond
those details, Patterson
remained
tight-lipped
about the location, only
saying eyeballs are a priority.
“It should be as visible as possible, so that
people who are driving or
walking by can be reminded the oceans are in trouble,” Patterson said.
It’s unlikely the piece
will land Patterson in hot
water like the Surfing Madonna did.
This time, Patterson
noted the new piece would
get the OK from the property owner beforehand,
and two cities have even
courted the mosaic.
Shortly after the Surfing Madonna was installed
under a rail overpass on
Coast Highway 101 in Encinitas several years ago,
city officials said Patterson didn’t go through the
proper channels. They labeled it graffiti, ordering
its removal.
That sparked a backand-forth debate over
where the piece should
hang.
Ultimately, on the
suggestion of the owner
of Leucadia Pizzeria, Patterson and friends affixed
it to the restaurant’s wall
last year, across the street
from its original home.
Patterson said the
BRIDGE
CONTINUED FROM A6
was deemed one of the worst
in the state as far as its ability to withstand an earthquake.
It connects Camino del
Mar with North Torrey Pines
Road and borders the city of
San Diego, which sold the
structure to Del Mar for $1
in 2000 when the two cities
couldn’t agree on whether to
demolish and replace it or restore it.
The retrofit strengthened the existing structure,
enhancing its ability to survive major seismic activity, and extended its life by
about 50 years.
Construction
began
shortly after a November
2011 groundbreaking ceremony, however, plans were
in the works long before that.
The project was not
without its challenges.
“It’s an environmentally
sensitive area,” said Zylkia
April 18, 2014
image of the underwater
scene has been burned in
his brain for a while. It’s
not the first time that’s
happened.
The Surfing Madonna
first popped up in his doodling notebook in 2005,
and then again in 2008
and 2009.
In early 2010, a friend
recommended he enroll in
a beginner mosaics class
while on vacation in Italy. That summer, he found
himself putting together
mosaics of flowers with
others.
the only place with “Save
the Ocean” artwork; the
goal is to spread the message up north in the nottoo-distant future.
Across
the
state,
coastal artists will interpret the Surfing Madonna
as they see fit with mosaics or paintings to draw
attention to problems like
ocean acidification and
trash in the sea.
Funding for “thoughtful pieces” will come from
the nonprofit Surfing Madonna Oceans Project.
Patterson and friends
We’re a long way from finishing
this story. Until the oceans are
healthy, there is no end to this.”
Mark Patterson
Mosaic Artist
Yet Patterson yearned
to create the reoccurring
image stuck in his head,
and so he let the teacher
know of the aspiration.
“She
probably
thought, ‘Oh these tourists — what are they thinking?’” Patterson said with
a laugh. “‘You’ve never
done mosaics before, and
you want to make the face
of the Madonna.’”
Once he returned
home, he quit his job at
Microsoft and dedicated
the next nine months to
constructing the mosaic.
With experience under his belt, he noted the
new mosaic seems to be
coming along easier. Still,
his hands are often bloody
after hours of meticulously cutting glass.
Inspiration, he said,
comes in fits and starts —
and sometimes it hits him
at 4 a.m.
“You have to work
when you’re inspired,”
Patterson said. “Every
time I’ve forced something, I’ve had to tear it
out.
“If you feel that inspiration, then it flows,
everything stops and you
don’t pay attention to
time,” he added.
North County won’t be
started the nonprofit after
they realized the potential for giving back.
Last year, the nonprofit’s inaugural 5-10K,
along with other projects,
raised $50,000, most of
which went to scholarships for children and local environmental causes.
“We want a strong
foothold in North County,” said Bob Nichols, the
operations director of the
nonprofit. “This is our
home; we want two here.
And then, we’d like pieces to go in Santa Barbara,
Santa Cruz or maybe in
Monterrey.”
This year, the Surfing
Madonna Oceans Project
hopes to raise $100,000
for the community with
an expanded 5-10K. The
nonprofit is also selling
personalized bricks that
will be placed under the
Surfing Madonna at surfingmadonna.org.
Patterson said the
“Save the Ocean” campaign would continue full
steam until the ocean is
no longer treated as a garbage dump.
“We’re a long way
from finishing this story,”
Patterson said. “Until the
oceans are healthy, there
is no end to this.”
Martin-Yambo from the Federal Highway Administration.
In fact, before construction began, trapping bats
had to be moved to an alternative habitat.
Martin-Yambo said it
also required coordination
with utility companies. “And
there’s a train that goes under it,” she added. “On top of
that, it’s historic so it (needed) to look the same, even
the color of the concrete. …
Today I’m happy to say that
it’s done.”
Gary Vettese, from Caltrans, recalled the passion
and emotional attachment
of David Scherer, the city’s
Public Works director when
the project started.
He said when the contractors were planning a
field study, Scherer would
say they were “going to
church” because of all the
gothic peers and columns.
Vettese said the bridge
is a perfect example that
“things that are hard are really worth doing.”
Del Mar was presented
with certificates of recognition from the offices of U.S.
Rep. Darrell Issa and state
Sen. Marty Block.
Also on hand were several vintage cars from the
1920s and ’30s. Following the
ceremony they drove across
the bridge to show what it
might have looked like the
year the structure was built.
Crystal Crawford, who
was serving on the Del Mar
City Council when the project got under way, noted that
when it was built more than
eight decades ago the engineers used pencils, paper
and slide rulers.
“That was quite an accomplishment,”
Crawford
said. “I love what it represents about the engineers
and our ancestors who did
this. … And now I don’t have
to worry about anything falling on my head when I walk
under it.”
April 18, 2014 T he C oast News CENTER
CONTINUED FROM A1
ing and infrastructure are
set to begin in July.
The next step in construction is to build the
family resource center, 90
affordable housing units for
families, veterans, seniors
and transitional youth, and
rentable business space.
Then 130 senior housing
units will be added.
As the final step 60 more
affordable housing units, and
additional business space
will be built.
The 14.5-acre mixed-use
project will also include a
garden area, walking paths,
tot lots, and open space.
The Kay Parker Family
Resource Center will serve
as the hub of the housing
project. Plans are to provide
day care, and family services
at the center.
A $294,000 Wells Fargo UrbanLIFT grant was
awarded to National Community Renaissance for the
housing project and family
resource center.
The grant is awarded to
help strengthen neighborhoods impacted by foreclosures.
“We’re extremely grateful for Wells Fargo’s commitment to this important
project,” John Seymour,
National Community Renaissance vice president of
acquisitions, said.
The vision for the family
resource center is a reflection of what Parker advocated for the community.
Parker worked as a
housing commissioner for
20 years, speaking from her
heart to promote clean, quality housing for low-income
working families and others
in need.
“There is no greater
reward than to have a positive impact on the life of a
child,” Parker said, at the
grand opening of the 80-unit
La Mision Village affordable
housing project on Mission
Dick Parker, center, helps the city and builder accept the grant that will
fund the Kay Parker Family Resource Center. The late Kay Parker was
an advocate for fair housing. Photo by Promise Yee
Avenue in 2008.
be another acknowledgeParker was a proponent ment to her work and legacy.
of quality affordable housing, and city legislation that
supported affordable housing.
She led the charge for
numerous housing causes
including the 22-unit Marisol Apartments on Tremont
Street that provide affordable housing for individuals
with HIV and AIDS.
Parker and other advocates worked to overcome
community concerns about
the project built in 1997,
when little was known about
HIV and AIDS and negative stigmas were falsely attached with the diseases.
Parker was honored for
her work by the North San
Diego County Branch of the
NAACP, and received the
2011 Martin Luther King Jr.
Civic Award, which acknowledges outstanding community civic leaders.
One of the last projects
Parker helped to advocate,
before she passed away in
November 2012, was the Mission Cove mixed-use housing
project.
The family resource center will bear her name, and
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A17
A18
LEGALS 800
T he C oast News LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
CITY OF CARLSBAD
ORDINANCE NO. CS-248
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF CARLSBAD, CALIFORNIA, APPROVING AN AMENDMENT TO THE CAR COUNTRY SPECIFIC PLAN, SP
19(J) TO 1) UPDATE THE CAR COUNTRY COMPREHENSIVE SIGN PROGRAM BY
MODIFYING THE EXISTING SIGN STANDARDS AND 2) TO STREAMLINE THE PERMIT AND REVIEW PROCESS FOR MINOR IMPROVEMENTS.
CASE NAME: CAR COUNTRY INITIATIVES 2 & 4
CASE NO.: SP 19(J)
The City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California, does ordain as follows:
WHEREAS, the City Council approved the Car Country Specific Plan SP 19 on January
18, 1972 by adopting Ordinance No. 9288; and
WHEREAS, the City Council approved an amendment to the Car Country Specific Plan
SP 19(A) on June 19, 1984 by adopting Ordinance No. 9720; and
WHEREAS, the City Council approved an amendment to the Car Country Specific Plan
SP 19(B) on January 22, 1985 by adopting Ordinance No. 9734; and
WHEREAS, the City Council approved an expansion to the Car Country Specific Plan
SP 19(C) on December 22, 1987 by adopting Ordinance No. 9842; and
WHEREAS, the City Council approved an amendment to the Car Country Specific Plan
SP 19(D) on October 6, 1992 by adopting Ordinance No. NS-214; and
WHEREAS, the City Council approved an amendment to the Car Country Specific Plan
SP 19(E) on August 20, 1991 by adopting Ordinance No. NS-116; and
WHEREAS, an application for an amendment to the Car Country Specific Plan SP 19(F)
was applied for and withdrawn; and
WHEREAS, the City Council approved an amendment to the Car Country Specific Plan
SP 19(G) on June 27, 1995 and July 18, 1995 by adopting Ordinance No. NS-315 and NS317, respectively; and
WHEREAS, the City Council denied an amendment to the Car Country Specific Plan SP
19(H) on April 23, 1996 by adopting City Council Resolution 96-141; and
WHEREAS, the City Council approved an amendment to the Car Country Specific Plan
SP 19(I) on April 18, 2006 by adopting Ordinance No. NS-799; and
WHEREAS, after procedures in accordance with the requirements of law, the City Council has determined that the public interest indicates that said Specific Plan Amendment
SP 19(J) be approved; and
WHEREAS, the City Council did on the 25th day of March 2014 hold a duly noticed
public hearing as prescribed by law to consider said request; and
WHEREAS, said application constitutes a request for a Specific Plan Amendment as
shown on Exhibit “SP 19(J)” dated January 15, 2014 incorporated by reference.
NOW, THEREFORE, the City Council of the City of Carlsbad ordains as follows that:
1. The above recitations are true and correct.
2. That Specific Plan Amendment SP 19(J) dated January 15, 2014 attached hereto,
and incorporated herein by reference, is approved. The Specific Plan shall constitute
the development plan for the property and all development within the plan area shall
conform to the plan.
3. That the findings and conditions of the Planning Commission in Planning Commission Resolution No. 7031 shall also constitute the findings and conditions of the City
Council.
EFFECTIVE DATE: This ordinance shall be effective no sooner than thirty days after
its adoption but not until approved by the California Coastal Commission, and the City
Clerk shall certify to the adoption of this ordinance and cause it to be published at least
once in a publication of general circulation in the City of Carlsbad within fifteen days
after its adoption.
INTRODUCED AND FIRST READ at a regular meeting of the Carlsbad City Council on
the 25th day of March 2014, and thereafter.
PASSED AND ADOPTED at a regular meeting of the City Council of the City of Carlsbad on the 8th day of April, 2014, by the following vote, to wit:
AYES:
Council Members Hall, Packard, Wood, Schumacher and Blackburn.
NOES:
None.
ABSENT: None.
APPROVED AS TO FORM AND LEGALITY:
CELIA A. BREWER, City Attorney
MATT HALL, Mayor
ATTEST:
BARBARA ENGLESON, City Clerk
04/18/14 CN 16083
T.S. No.: 13-0131 Loan No.:
*******088
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT
ATTACHED
注:本文件包含一个信息摘要
참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보
요약서가 있습니다
NOTA:
SE
ADJUNTA
UN
RESUMEN
DE
LA
INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE
DOCUMENTO
TALA: MAYROONG BUOD
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IMPORMASYON
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L�U Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY
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[PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
REFERRED TO ABOVE IS
NOT ATTACHED TO THE
RECORDED COPY OF THIS
DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO
THE COPIES PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR] YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
10/6/2005
AND
MORE
FULLY
DESCRIBED
BELOW. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. A
public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check payable at
the time of sale in lawful
money of the United States
(payable to Attorney Lender
Services, Inc.) will be held by
the duly appointed Trustee
as shown below, of all right,
title, and interest conveyed to
and now held by the trustee
in the hereinafter described
property under and pursuant
to a Deed of Trust described
below. The sale will be
made, but without covenant
or warranty, expressed or
implied,
regarding
title,
possession, or encumbrances,
to pay the remaining principal
sum of the note(s) secured
by the Deed of Trust, with
interest and late charges
thereon, as provided in the
note(s), advances, under the
terms of the Deed of Trust,
interest thereon, fees, charges
and expenses of the Trustee
for the total amount (at the
time of the initial publication
of the Notice of Sale)
reasonably estimated to be set
forth below. The amount may
be greater on the day of sale.
Trustor: MINDEY KAREN
MORRISON,
A
SINGLE
WOMAN Trustee: ATTORNEY
LENDER SERVICES, INC.
Recorded
10/14/2005
as
Instrument No. 2005-0891342
of Official Records in the
office of the Recorder of San
Diego County, California,
Date of Sale: 5/9/2014 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:
$1,601,333.39 The purported
property address is: 309 South
Nardo Avenue, Solana Beach,
CA 92075 A.P.N.: 298-08230-00 The beneficiary under
said Deed of Trust heretofore
executed and delivered to
the undersigned a written
Declaration of Default and
Demand for Sale and a written
Notice of Default and Election
to Sell. The undersigned
caused said Notice of Default
and Election to Sell to be
recorded in the county
wherein the real property is
located and more than three
(3) months have elapsed
since
such
recordation.
The
undersigned Trustee
disclaims any liability tor any
incorrectness of the property
address or other common
designation, if any, shown
above. If no street address or
other common designation
is shown, directions to the
location of the property
may be obtained by sending
a written request to the
beneficiary within 10 days of
the date of first publication
of this Notice of Trustee’s
SaIe. 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
LEGALS 800
April 18, 2014
LEGALS 800
CITY OF ENCINITAS
PLANNING AND BUILDING
DEPARTMENT
LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Planning Commission
PLACE OF MEETING: Council Chambers, Civic Center
505 South Vulcan Avenue
Encinitas, CA 92024
THE ABOVE MENTIONED AGENCY IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY PUBLIC ENTITY AND DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE ON THE BASIS OF RACE, COLOR, ETHNIC ORIGIN, NATIONAL ORIGIN, SEX, RELIGION, VETERANS
STATUS OR PHYSICAL OR MENTAL DISABILITY IN
EMPLOYMENT OR THE PROVISION OF SERVICE. IN
COMPLIANCE WITH THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT/SECTION 504 REHABILITATION ACT OF 1973,
IF YOU NEED SPECIAL ASSISTANCE TO PARTICIPATE IN
THESE MEETINGS, PLEASE CONTACT THE PLANNING
& BUILDING DEPARTMENT AT (760) 633-2710.
It is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held on Thursday,
May 1, 2014 at 6:00 p.m., or as soon as possible thereafter, by the
Encinitas Planning Commission to discuss the following hearing
items of the City of Encinitas:
An appeal of a Planning Commission determination, accompanied
by the appropriate filing fee, may be filed by 6:00 p.m. on the 15th
calendar day (10th calendar day for subdivisions) following the
date of the Commission’s determination. Appeals will be considered by the City Council pursuant to Chapter 1.12 of the Municipal
Code. Any filing of an appeal will suspend 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.
Under California Government Code Sect. 65009, if you challenge
the nature of the proposed action in court, you may be limited to
raising only the issues you or someone else raised regarding the matter described in this notice or written correspondence delivered to
the City at or before the time and date of the determination.
1. CASE NUMBER:
FILING DATE:
APPLICANT:
LOCATION:
14-018 CDP
January 21, 2014
Eric Price
1405 Rainbow Ridge Lane
(APN: 254-181-23).
DESCRIPTION: The applicant requests a Coastal Development
Permit for the construction of a new single-family residence on a
vacant property.
ZONING: The subject property is located in the Rural Residential
2 (RR-2) zone in the Community of Leucadia and within the Hillside/Inland Bluff Overlay (H/IBO) zone and the Coastal Zone of the
City of Encinitas.
ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The project is exempt from environmental review.
2. CASE NUMBER:
FILING DATE:
APPLICANT:
LOCATION:
13-178 PCIN
September 3, 2013
Madelyn J. Chaber
1386 Tennis Club Drive
(APN: 262-080-17)
DESCRIPTION: Public Hearing for a Planning Commission Interpretation of what constitutes natural grade for purposes of development.
ZONING/OVERLAYS: The subject property is located in the Residential 3 (R-3) zone, Hillside/Inland Bluff Overlay Zone and the
Coastal Zone.
ENVIRONMENTAL STATUS: The interpretation of provisions
of the Municipal Code by the Planning Commission is not subject to
environmental review as per Section 15060(c) of the CEQA Guidelines because the activity in question is not a project as per Section
15378(b)(2) of the CEQA Guidelines.
Item 1 is located in the City’s Coastal Zone and requires issuance
of a Coastal Development Permit. The action of the Planning Commission and/or City Council relative to Item 1 is not appealable to
the California Coastal Commission.
For further information, or to review the above applications prior to
the hearing, contact Associate Planner Todd Mierau at (760) 6332693 or by email at [email protected] for Item 1, Senior
Planner Roy Sapa’u at (760) 633-2734 or by email at [email protected] for Item 2; or the Planning and Building Department at
(760) 633-2710 or by email at [email protected], 505 South
Vulcan Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024-3633.
04/18/14 CN 16092
there are risks involved in
bidding at a trustee auction.
You will be bidding on a
lien, not the property itself.
Placing the highest bid at
a trustee auction does not
automatically entitle you to
free and clear ownership of
the property. You should also
be aware that the lien being
auctioned off may be a junior
lien. If you are the highest
bidder at the auction, you
are or may be responsible for
paying off all liens senior to
the lien being auctioned off,
before you can receive clear
title to the property. You are
encouraged to investigate
the existence, priority, and
size of outstanding liens that
may exist on this property
by contacting the county
recorder’s office or a title
insurance company, either
of which may charge you a
fee for this information. If
you consult either of these
resources, you should be aware
that the same lender may hold
more than one mortgage or
deed of trust on the property.
NOTICE TO
PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown
on this notice of sale may be
postponed one or more times
by the mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to
Section 2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law requires
that information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If you
wish to learn whether your sale
date has been postponed, and,
if applicable, the rescheduled
time and date for the sale of
this property, you may call
714-573-1965 for information
regarding the trustee’s sale
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
CITY OF CARLSBAD
ORDINANCE NO. CS-247
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE
CITY OF CARLSBAD, CALIFORNIA, AMENDING TITLE 10, CHAPTER 10.44 OF THE CARLSBAD MUNICIPAL CODE BY REVISION OF SECTION 10.44.210(c)
TO REDUCE THE 40 MILE PER HOUR SPEED LIMIT
UPON ALICANTE ROAD FROM POINSETTIA LANE TO
GATEWAY ROAD TO 30 MILES PER HOUR.
The City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California,
hereby ordains as follows:
That Title 10, Chapter 10.44 of the Carlsbad Municipal
Code is amended by the revision of Section 10.44.210(c)
to read as follows:
“10.44.210 – Alicante Road.
c. Upon Alicante Road from Poinsettia Lane to its intersection with Gateway Road, the prima facie speed limit
shall be thirty miles per hour.
EFFECTIVE DATE: This ordinance shall be effective
thirty (30) days after its adoption; and the city clerk
shall certify the adoption of this ordinance and cause the
full text of the ordinance or a summary of the ordinance
prepared by the city attorney to be published at least
once in a newspaper of general circulation in the City
of Carlsbad within fifteen (15) days after its adoption.
INTRODUCED AND FIRST READ at a Regular Meeting of the Carlsbad City Council on the 25th day of
March, 2014, and thereafter
PASSED AND ADOPTED at a Regular Meeting of the
City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California, on the
8th day of April, 2014, by the following vote, to wit:
AYES:
Council Members Hall, Packard, Wood,
Schumacher and Blackburn.
NOES:
None.
ABSENT: None.
APPROVED AS TO FORM AND LEGALITY:
CELIA BREWER, City Attorney
MATT HALL, Mayor
ATTEST:
BARBARA ENGLESON, City Clerk
(SEAL)
04/18/14 CN 16082
City of Carlsbad
Summary of Ordinance No.
CS-249 per Government Code
§36933(c)
An Ordinance of the City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California Approving Amendments to the Carlsbad
Zoning Code (Title 21 of the Carlsbad Municipal Code)
Regarding Transitional Housing and Supportive Housing
(ZCA 11-07(A) “Transitional & Supportive Housing”)
The proposed ordinance would approve amendments to
the Carlsbad Zoning Code (Title 21 of the Carlsbad Municipal Code) amending Ordinance No. CS-191, to remove
text that states the specific number of persons allowed
per transitional and supportive housing unit and revise
the definitions to state that transitional and supportive
housing are residential uses subject to only those restrictions that apply to other residential uses of the same type
in the same zone.
A certified copy of the full text of the proposed ordinance
is posted in the Office of the City Clerk, 1200 Carlsbad
Village Drive, Carlsbad, CA 92008.
PASSED AND ADOPTED at a Regular Meeting of the
City Council of the City of Carlsbad, California, on the
8th day of April, 2012, by the following vote, to wit:
AYES:
Council Members Hall, Packard, Wood,
Schumacher and Blackburn.
NOES:
None.
ABSENT: None.
04/18/14 CN 16081
or visit this Internet Web site
www.priorityposting.com for
information regarding the
sale of this property, using
the file number assigned to
this case, 13-0131 Information
about postponements that
are very short in duration or
that occur close in time to
the scheduled sale may not
immediately be reflected in
the telephone information
or on the Internet Web
site. The best way to verify
postponement information is
to attend the scheduled sale.
Date: 4/14/2014 ATTORNEY
LENDER SERVICES, INC.
Diane Weifenbach, Trustee
Sale Officer 5120 E. LaPalma
Avenue, #209 Anaheim ,CA
92807 Telephone: 714-6956637 Sales Line: 714-5731965 Sales Website: www.
priorityposting.com
This
office is attempting to collect
a debt and any information
obtained will be used for that
purpose. P1090826 4/18, 4/25,
05/02/2014 CN 16093
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE Trustee Sale No.
250974CA
Loan
No.
XXXXXX0315Title Order No.
849614
ATTENTION
RECORDER:
THE
FOLLOWING REFERENCE
TO
AN
ATTACHED
SUMMARY IS APPLICABLE
TO THE NOTICE PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR ONLY.
PURSUANT TO CALIFORNIA
CIVIL CODE 2923.3 NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT
ATTACHED
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 09-29-2005. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
April 18, 2014 A19
T he C oast News LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
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 0509-2014 at 9:00 AM, ALAW as
the duly appointed Trustee
under and pursuant to Deed of
Trust Recorded 10-06-2005,
Book
N/A,
Page
N/A,
Instrument 2005-0866791, of
official records in the Office of
the Recorder of SAN DIEGO
County, California, executed
by:
DENNIS
FRANKLIN
JONES
AND
KAREN
MICHELLE
JONES
HUSBAND AND WIFE AS
COMMUNITY
PROPERTY
WITH
RIGHT
OF
SURVIVORSHIP, as Trustor,
COMMERCIAL
CAPITAL
BANK, FSB, A FEDERALLY
CHARTERED
SAVINGS
BANK, as Beneficiary, will sell
at public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check drawn by a
state or national bank, a
cashier’s check drawn by a
state or federal credit union,
or a cashier’s 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. Sale 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 the Deed of Trust. 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, interest
thereon,
estimated
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. Place of Sale: Sheraton
San Diego Hotel and Marina,
1380 Harbor Island Drive, San
Diego, CA 92101 Legal
Description: .PARCEL A:
PARCEL 3 OF PARCEL MAP
NO. 3278, IN THE CTTY OF
ECINITAS, COUNTY OF SAN
DIEGO,
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA, FILED IN THE
OFFICE OF THE COUNTY
RECORDER OF SAN DIEGO
COUNTY, DECEMBER 5,
1974.
PARCEL
B:
AN
EASEMENT FOR ROAD AND
UTILITY PURPOSES AND
APPURTENANCES
THERETO, TO BE USED IN
COMMON WITH OTHERS,
OVER, UNDER, ALONG AND
ACROSS THE NORTHERLY
30.00 FEET OF PARCEL 2
AND THE NORTHERLY 30.00
FEET AND THE WESTERLY
30.00 FEET OF PARCEL 1
AND THE WESTERLY 30.00
FEET AND THE SOUTHERLY
30.00 FEET OF PARCEL 4
ALL BEING IN THE COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, AS SHOWN AT
PAGE 3278, OF PARCEL
MAPS, FILED IN THE
OFFICE OF THE COUNTY
RECORDER OF SAN DIEGO
COUNTY. PARCEL C: AN
EASEMENT FOR ROAD AND
UTILITY PURPOSES AND
APPURTENANCES
THERETO, TO BE USED IN
COMMON WITH OTHERS,
OVER, UNDER, ALONG AND
ACROSS THE EASTERLY
30.00
FEET
OF
THE
SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF
THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER
OF
THE
SOUTHEAST
QUARTER OF SECTION 5,
TOWNSHIP
13
SOUTH,
RANGE
3 WEST, SAN
BERNARDINO MERIDIAN,
IN THE COUNTY OF SAN
DIEGO,
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING
TO
UNITED
STATES
GOVERNMENT
SURVEY.
PARCEL D: AN EASEMENT
FOR ROAD AND UTILITY
PURPOSES
AND
APPURTENANCES
THERETO, TO BE USED IN
COMMON WITH OTHERS,
OVER, UNDER, ALONG AND
ACROSS THE SOUTHERLY
30.00 FEET OF THE NORTH
HALF OF THE SOUTHWEST
QUARTER
OF
THE
SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF
SECTION 4, TOWNSHIP 13
SOUTH, RANGE 3 WEST,
SAN
BERNARDINO
MERIDIAN, IN THE COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, STATE OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING
TO
UNITED
STATES
GOVERNMENT
SURVEY.
PARCEL E: AN EASEMENT
FOR ROAD AND UTILITY
PURPOSES
AND
APPURTENANCES
THERETO, TO BE USED IN
COMMON WITH OTHERS
OVER, UNDER, ALONG AND
ACROSS A STRIP OF LAND
60.00 FEET IN WIDTH,
LYING WITHIN SECTION 4,
TOWNSHIP
13
SOUTH,
RANGE
3 WEST, SAN
BERNARDINO MERIDIAN,
IN THE COUNTY OF SAN
DIEGO,
STATE
OF
CALIFORNIA, ACCORDING
TO
UNITED
STATES
GOVERNMENT
SURVEY,
THE CENTER LINE OF SAID
STRIP BEING DESCRIBED
AS
FOLLOWS:
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
City of Encinitas
Engineering Services Department
PUBLIC NOTICE INVITING BIDS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the
City of Encinitas (City) invites sealed
bids for:
Santa Fe Drive North Sidewalk
Improvements, an HSIP Project,
Project Number CS07B
Drawing
0098 -SI
RECEIPT AND OPENING OF PROPOSALS: Sealed bids will be received
at the office of the City Clerk of the
City of Encinitas at the address given
below. Bids will be received until May
14, 2014 at 2:00 P.M., at which time the
bid packages will be publicly opened
and read.
Bids shall be submitted in a sealed envelope addressed to:
Kathy Hollywood, City Clerk
City of Encinitas
505 S. Vulcan Avenue
Encinitas, CA 92024
On the outside of the envelope shall
be stated: “Santa Fe Drive North Sidewalk Improvements, An HSIP Project
Sealed Bid: DO NOT OPEN UNTIL
May 14, 2014 at 2:00 P.M.”
WORK TO BE DONE: The Work will
consist of the Items generally listed
below and other related appurtenant
work required in accordance with the
Contract Documents:
Work includes: Demolition of existing
improvements and construction of
curb, gutter, sidewalk, concrete driveways, pedestrian ramps, storm drain,
and installation of traffic signals and
streetlights, pavement overlay, and
street striping.
The Work shall be completed within 45
Working Days.
Because this is a Federal project, at
least 30% of the contract work is to
be performed by the prime contractor.
However, the more stringent Greenbook provision of 50% of the contract
work to be performed with Contractor’s own organization, shall apply.
ENGINEER’S COST ESTIMATE: The
Engineer’s Estimate is: $550,339.00
The contract for this project will be
awarded upon the lowest responsive
and responsible bidder.
OBTAINING BID PACKAGE: Bid Packages may be obtained after April 11,
2014, at the Engineering Department
front service counter at 505 South
Vulcan Ave., Encinitas, CA 92024, at a
non refundable cost of $50.00 per set.
Prospective Bidders may call (760) 6332839 with any questions about obtaining a bid package. The City is closed
alternate Fridays. Bid packages can
be mailed at an additional cost. Please
contact the City at 760-633-2770 to request a mailed bid package. In compliance with California Contract Code,
Section 20103.7, electronic copies will
be made available to contractor plan
room service upon request. The City
makes no representation regarding the
accuracy of Contract Documents received from third party plan rooms and
recommends that any contractor interested in bidding the project obtain a
bid package from the City.
OBTAINING BID PACKAGE: This Bid
Package Must Be Purchased Together
with the Bid Package for the Santa Fe
Drive Undergrounding Project.
Contractors wishing to bid must bid
for both this project and the Santa Fe
Drive Undergrounding Project. The
lowest responsible and responsive bidder for the sum of the bids for the two
projects will be awarded both.
Bidders wishing to bid this project
must put together one complete bid
package for it and a second complete
bid package for the Santa Fe Drive
Undergrounding. The required forms
must be filled out for each project and
each project must be separately (ie,
separate bid bonds, separate forms)
provided in its entirety in its own envelope to the City on the date and time
stated above.
Questions about the project should
COMMENCING
AT
THE
NORTHWEST CORNER OF
THE SOUTH HALF OF THE
SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF
THE
SOUTHWEST
QUARTER
OF
SAID
SECTION 4; THENCE ALONG
THE NORTHERLY LINE OF
SAID SOUTH HALF OF THE
SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF
THE
SOUTHWEST
QUARTER, NORTH 88º 09’’
47’’ EAST, APPROXIMATELY
125.00
FEET
TO
THE
CENTER LINE OF THAT
CERTAIN
20.00
FOOT
EASEMENT DESCRIBED IN
PARCEL 1 IN DEED TO
OLIVENHAIN MUNICIPAL
WATER
DISTRICT,
be emailed to the project manager at
[email protected] . Questions
pertaining to obtaining a bid package
should be directed to the phone number given above.
LICENSE: In order to bid this project,
the Contractor must have at the time
of contract award through project acceptance a valid State of California
Class A license in good standing. The
Contractor is responsible to ensure
that all proper licenses are maintained.
No bid will be awarded to a contractor
who is not licensed in accordance with
these requirements or the provisions of
Chapter 9, Division 3 of the Business
and Professions Code.
City shall have the right to request,
and Bidder shall provide within 5 calendar days, evidence satisfactory to
City of all valid license(s) currently
held by that Bidder and Bidder’s Subcontractors required by these Contract
Documents.
BOND AND BID SECURITY: Bid Security shall accompany the bid in the
form of a certified or cashier’s check, or
a Bid Bond for ten percent (10%) of the
total bid amount. Additional information on bid security requirements can
be found in the project Specifications
included with the Bid Package. All
bonds shall be issued by an admitted
carrier qualified to do business in California.
WAGE RATES: This is a prevailing
wage project and prevailing wage rates
for this locality and project as determined by the Director of the California
Department of Industrial Relations
apply, pursuant to labor code section
1770, et. Seq. A schedule of prevailing
wage rates may be found on the internet at http://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/dlsepublicworks.html .
Wage rates shall conform to the Davis-Bacon Act. Contractors shall pay
the higher of either the minimum
federal wage rates or State prevailing
wage rates. Federal minimum wage
rates applicable to this project have
been determined by the Secretary of
Labor and are set forth in the Reference Documents as a General Wage
Decision. In accordance with the provisions of the Davis-Bacon Act (40 U.S.C.
276 to a-7) as amended (29 CFR, Part
5), the Contractor shall be required to
pay wages to laborers and mechanics at
a rate not less than the wage rate determinations of the Secretary of Labor.
The Contractor is referred to the website http://www.wdol.gov/dba.aspx for
Federal wage rates. Revisions to the
applicable Federal wage rates, up to 10
days before bid opening, will be identified by the issuance of an addendum
with the corresponding internet address where the updates can be found.
The final contract documents signed
by the local agency and the contractor will physically include the Federal
wage rates that apply.
A copy of the prevailing wage rates
shall be posted on the job site by the
Contractor. A schedule of prevailing
wage rates is available for review at the
City’s offices. Questions pertaining to
State predetermined wage rates should
be directed to the State department of
Industrial Relations website at www.
dir.gov . The successful bidder shall be
required to pay at least the wage rates
set forth in that schedule. The prime
contractor shall be responsible for ensuring compliance with all applicable
provisions of the Labor Code including,
but not limited to, Section 1777.5.
FEDERAL PROJECT (DBE REQUIREMENTS): This project is financed
with Federal funds. Contractor’s ability and/or good faith effort to meet the
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
Goal for this project will be considered
in determining the responsiveness of
the bidders. The DBE goal for this project is 5.67%.
RIGHT TO REJECT ALL BIDS: The
City requires responsible and responsive bidders. All Bids shall remain valid for a period of 90 calendar days from
the date of bid opening. The City reserves the right to reject all bids at its
sole discretion and to waive any immaterial irregularities or informalities in
the bids received. Withdrawal of bids
shall not be permitted for a period of
90 calendar days after the bid opening.
RECORDED JANUARY 31,
1962 AS INSTRUMENT NO.
18555
OF
OFFICIAL
RECORDS. PARCEL F: AN
EASEMENT FOR ROAD AND
UTILITY PURPOSES AND
APPURTENANCES
THERETO TO BE USED IN
COMMON WITH OTHERS,
OVER, UNDER, ALONG AND
ACROSS A STRIP OF LAND
60.00 FEET IN WIDTH LYING
WITHIN
SECTION
5,
TOWNSHIP
13
SOUTH,
RANGE
3 WEST, SAN
BERNARDINO MERIDIAN,
AND WITHIN LOT 16 OF THE
SUBDIVISION OF RANCHO
LAS
ENCINITAS,
ACCORDINGTO
MAP
See INFORMATION AND INSTRUCTIONS FOR BIDDERS in the Specifications for additional bid information
and requirements.
City of Encinitas
BY: Glenn Pruim, P.E.
Director of Engineering/Public Works
DATE: April 11, 2014
END OF NOTICE INVITING BIDS
FOR THE SANTA FE DRIVE NORTH
SIDEWALK IMPROVEMENTS
SEE BELOW FOR NOTICE INVITING
BIDS FOR THE COMPANION PROJECT, THE SANTA FE DRIVE UNDERGROUNDING.
PUBLIC NOTICE INVITING BIDS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the
City of Encinitas (City) invites sealed
bids for:
Santa Fe Drive Undergrounding,
District 17, Project Number CS07B
SDGE Project 156725-10
RECEIPT AND OPENING OF PROPOSALS: Sealed bids will be received
at the office of the City Clerk of the
City of Encinitas at the address given
below. Bids will be received until May
14, 2014 at 2:00 P.M., at which time the
bid packages will be publicly opened
and read.
Bids shall be submitted in a sealed envelope addressed to:
Kathy Hollywood, City Clerk
City of Encinitas
505 S. Vulcan Avenue
Encinitas, CA 92024
On the outside of the envelope shall be
stated: “Santa Fe Drive Undergrounding, District 17 Sealed Bid: DO NOT
OPEN UNTIL May 14, 2014 at 2:00
P.M.”
WORK TO BE DONE: The Work will
consist of the Items generally listed
below and other related appurtenant
work required in accordance with the
Contract Documents:
Work includes: The work includes furnishing all labor, materials, equipment,
and services for the construction of
the Santa Fe Drive Undergrounding
Project, District 17. The work includes
but is not limited to traffic control, excavation, installation of conduit with
pull rope, installation of concrete pads,
trench backfill, landscape and hardscape replacement, and trench resurfacing.
The Work shall be completed within 45
Working Days.
At least 50% of the contract work is to
be performed by the prime contractor.
ENGINEER’S COST ESTIMATE: The
Engineer’s Estimate is: $1,000,000.00
The contract for this project will be
awarded upon the lowest responsive
and responsible bidder.
OBTAINING BID PACKAGE: This bid
package may be obtained after April
11, 2014, at the Engineering Department front service counter at 505 South
Vulcan Ave., Encinitas, CA 92024, at a
non-refundable cost of $55.00 per set.
Prospective Bidders may call (760) 6332839 with any questions about obtaining a bid package. The City is closed
alternate Fridays. Bid packages can
be mailed at an additional cost. Please
contact the City at 760-633-2770 to request a mailed bid package. In compliance with California Contract Code,
Section 20103.7, electronic copies will
be made available to a contractor plan
room service upon request. The City
makes no representation regarding the
accuracy of Contract Documents received from third party plan rooms and
recommends that any contractor interested in bidding the project obtain a
bid package from the City.
OBTAINING BID PACKAGE: This Bid
Package Must Be Purchased Together
with the Bid Package for the Santa Fe
Drive North Sidewalk Project.
THEREOF NO. 848, FILED IN
THE OFFICE OF THE
COUNTY RECORDER OF
SAN DIEGO COUNTY, JUNE
27, 1898, ALL BEING IN THE
COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO,
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
AND THE CENTER LINE OF
SAID
STRIP
BEING
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
COMMENCING
AT
THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OF
SAID LOT 16 AS SHOWN ON
RECORD OF SURVEY MAP
NO. 6085, FILED IN THE
OFFICE OF THE COUNTY
RECORDER OF SAN DIEGO
COUNTY, AUGUST 14, 1962,
BEING ALSO A POINT ON
THE WESTERLY LINE OF
Contractors wishing to bid must bid
for both this project and the Santa Fe
Drive North Sidewalk project. The lowest responsible and responsive bidder
for the sum of the bids for the two projects will be awarded both.
Bidders wishing to bid this project
must put together one complete bid
package for it and a second complete
bid package for the Santa Fe Drive
North Sidewalk project. The required
forms must be filled out for each project and each project must be separately (ie, separate bid bonds, separate
forms) provided in its entirety in its
own envelope to the City on the date
and time stated above.
Questions about the project should
be emailed to the project manager at
[email protected] . Questions
pertaining to obtaining a bid package
should be directed to the phone number given above.
LICENSE: In order to bid this project,
the Contractor must have at the time
of contract award through project acceptance a valid State of California
Class A license in good standing. The
Contractor is responsible to ensure
that all proper licenses are maintained.
No bid will be awarded to a contractor
who is not licensed in accordance with
these requirements or the provisions of
Chapter 9, Division 3 of the Business
and Professions Code.
City shall have the right to request,
and Bidder shall provide within 5 calendar days, evidence satisfactory to
City of all valid license(s) currently
held by that Bidder and Bidder’s Subcontractors required by these Contract
Documents.
BOND AND BID SECURITY: Bid Security shall accompany the bid in the
form of a certified or cashier’s check, or
a Bid Bond for ten percent (10%) of the
total bid amount. Additional information on bid security requirements can
be found in the project Specifications
included with the Bid Package. All
bonds shall be issued by an admitted
carrier qualified to do business in California.
WAGE RATES: This is a prevailing
wage project and prevailing wage rates
for this locality and project as determined by the Director of the California
Department of Industrial Relations
apply, pursuant to labor code section
1770, et. Seq. A schedule of prevailing
wage rates may be found on the internet at http://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/dlsepublicworks.html.
A copy of the prevailing wage rates
shall be posted on the job site by the
Contractor. A schedule of prevailing
wage rates is available for review at the
City’s offices. Questions pertaining to
State predetermined wage rates should
be directed to the State department of
Industrial Relations website at www.
dir.gov . The successful bidder shall be
required to pay at least the wage rates
set forth in that schedule. The prime
contractor shall be responsible for ensuring compliance with all applicable
provisions of the Labor Code including,
but not limited to, Section 1777.5.
RIGHT TO REJECT ALL BIDS: The
City requires responsible and responsive bidders. All Bids shall remain valid for a period of 90 calendar days from
the date of bid opening. The City reserves the right to reject all bids at its
sole discretion and to waive any immaterial irregularities or informalities in
the bids received. Withdrawal of bids
shall not be permitted for a period of
90 calendar days after the bid opening.
See INFORMATION AND INSTRUCTIONS FOR BIDDERS in the Specifications for additional bid information
and requirements.
City of Encinitas
BY: Glenn Pruim, P.E.
Director of Engineering/Public Works
DATE: April 11, 2014
END OF NOTICE INVITING BIDS
04/11/14, 04/18/14, 04/25/14, 05/02/14,
05/09/14 CN 16058
SAID SECTION 5; THENCE
ALONG SAID WESTERLY
LINE SOUTH 03º 57’ 39’’
EAST, 1029.04 FEET TO A
POINT
HEREIN
DESIGNATED AS POINT ‘’A’’;
THENCE SOUTH 86º 00’ 00’’
WEST, 149.53D FEET TO THE
CENTER LINE OF COUNTY
ROAD SURVEY NO. 554 AS
SHOWN ON SAID RECORD
OF SURVEY MAP NO. 6085
AND BEING THE TRUE
POINT
OF
BEGINNING;
THENCE
RETRACING
NORTH 86º 00’ 00’’ EAST,
149.53 FEET TO SAID POINT
‘’A’’ ON THE WESTERLY
LINE OF SAID SECTION 5;
THENCE NORTH 86º 00’ 00’’
EAST, 130.41 FEET TO THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
200.00
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE,
CONCAVE
N O R T H W E S T E R LY;
THENCE NORTHEASTERLY
ALONG THE ARC OF SAID
CURVE
THROUGH
A
CENTRAL ANGLE OF 38º 17’
20’’ A DISTANCE OF 132.70
FEET; THENCE TANGENT
TO SAID CURVE NORTH 47º
42’ 40’’ EAST, 408.43 FEET TO
Coast News legals
continued on
page A22
A20
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Sports
Contact us at [email protected]
with story ideas, photos or suggestions
Personal trainer has a personal connection to Washington tragedy
al.
sports
talk
jay paris
The heartbreak raced down
the coast and landed, in all places,
at the La Costa Resort and Spa.
The impact of last month’s
deadly landslide in Oso, Wash.,
was felt by all that saw its wreckage. The graphic pictures of that
modest, blue-collar town being
decimated in an instant were
stunning.
But to Emily Hilgemann, they
were more than shocking visuals.
“I was born there,’’ Hilgemann said. “My mom was a teacher and principal in the district.
My dad was the high-school soccer coach.’’
So for Hilgemann, a personal
trainer at La Costa, it was person-
Sign up for
volleyball
tourney
DEL MAR — The
“Spread the Love … of
Sport” beach volleyball
tournament will hit the
sand beginning at 8 a.m.
April 26 at Dog Beach,
3006 Sandy Lane off Coast
Highway 101, sponsored by
Whole Sports.
Tournament check-in
begins at 8 a.m. and the proceeds benefit Special Olympics and the WholeSports.
org Scholarship/Building
Fund.
The cost for the Doubles Youth volleyball tournament Girls Divisions 14 to
18 is $75 per team.
The Adult Coed 4s volleyball tournament accepts
any skill level and any combination of family, friends,
or children, with no more
than two adult men per
team.
For more information
and to register for the event,
visit WholeSports.org.
“All my friends are still
there,’’ Hilgemann said.
Some of those friends have
relatives that didn’t survive. Others were first-responders, sifting
through the 300 acres of muck
and mud to save community members.
“They compared it to being
enough dirt to fill up three baseball stadiums,’’ Hilgemann said.
“It was like all the concrete of
Hoover Dam falling on them at 60
miles per hour. That’s crazy.’’
So Hilgemann, a Carlsbad
resident who’s worked for 10 years
at La Costa, got busy. She organized Healing Oso, a fund-raising
dinner April 27.
Hilgemann’s clients — from
the well-known to the anonymous
— are helping her after years of
her helping them. Not only does
she expect nearly 200 people to
attend the event at La Costa, but
her acquaintances are donating
items to auction.
Dan Fouts sent a signed football.
Fred Lynn put his John Hancock on a jersey.
Rod Laver is contributing autographed books.
The Chargers have a goody
bag at the ready; the same goes
for the Padres.
There are golf packages to
the area’s finest courses. Wine.
Trips to Arizona and beyond.
“Everyone has been so nice,’’
Hilgemann said. “I almost feel
bad for doing this. Someone wanted to give me $1,500 paintings.’’
But then Hilgemann reflects
on those she grew up with and
their plight. So she plows ahead,
working her way through a to-do
list that protrudes from both sides
of her crammed Manila folder.
“I’ve never done anything
like this before,’’ said Hilgemann,
but that hasn’t stopped her from
seeking a basketball signed by
Kansas’ team.
Those knowing Hilgemann
aren’t surprised she attacked this
endeavor with passion.
“I admire her a lot for what
she is trying to do,’’ said Carlsbad’s Ann Bennett, who has
trained with Hilgemann since
2009. “It’s her hometown and she
was down here, felt hopeless and
thought, ‘What can I do to help?’
She’s doing all this while working
and being a full-time mother and
wife.’’
Also with an ailing leg that
has her on crutches. But a hip
injury from running can’t slow
Hilgemann.
“I knew people around here
would love for me to do something and everyone has been so
supportive,’’ she said. “They are
having like bake sales up there
and I knew down here we could do
something bigger. There are charity events here for things that already have money so I knew with
this being a real cause, where
people have died, that everyone
would come through.’’
That’s been proven as Hilgemann has yet to hear that one
word when making requests.
“No one has said, ‘no,’’’ she
said.
Want to assist Hilgemann?
Tickets at $75 for the April 27 dinner are available at the door. Auction items are being accepted by
Hilgemann at emilyhilgemann@
gmail.com. Donations can be
made at youcaring.com/ososlide.
“And every single penny is
going to all the victims,’’ Hilgemann stressed, and I believe her.
“I was sad I wasn’t there to
help when it happened,’’ she said.
“It’s just a small town where everyone knows everyone.’’
Now we know how to help.
Torrey Pines dancers win big at nationals
CARMEL VALLEY —
Torrey Pines High School
dancers won trophies in
every category they entered at the end of March
at the United Spirit Association 2014 Nationals &
Championships in Anaheim.
Varsity dancers competed in the championship
division, where they captured a third-place trophy
for their large hip-hop routine.
In other finishes, medium hip-hop took a second-place; medium lyrical
won a third-place trophy,
X small dance finished
third and small dance finished fifth.
“I am so proud of
our dancers,” said Sarah
Kaye, Torrey Pines dance
director. “Some of our
dancers had very little
experience before joining
our program. Now they are
competing at a very high
level. That really says a lot
about their talent, dedication and hard work.”
Varsity dancers com-
P H O T O G R A P H Y
Bill is a professional photographer who blends his
lifelong passion for sports with his skills in photography to capture memorable moments of all types
of action oriented events.Call Bill to learn more
about how his sports, portrait and commercial
photography services can meet your needs.
[email protected]
858.405.9986
Torrey Pines High School Varsity dancers placed third and the team brought home five trophies from a
recent championship competition in Anaheim. Courtesy photo
peting last week included:
Jackie Antoun, Delaney
Baril, Meaghan Baril,
Heejun Chough, Emma
Conger, Megan Corgan,
Delaney Douglas, Austin
Edwards, Edward Fang,
Maura Friedlander, Audrey Gompf, Brianna
Haire, Megan Hermer,
Andreana Izotov, Margaret Izotov, Lauren Kent,
Josh Kim, Nurie Kim,
Jenny Kwak, Ben Larchet,
Julia London, Sarah Ludington, Kelsey McMullen,
Brenda Mejia, Jaqueline
Park, Serina Patel, Katie
Qian, Ashley Ramirez,
Erin Ross, Alex Shearer,
Declan Sullivan, Madison
Tencer and Narumi Watanabe.
The junior varsity
team was represented by:
Madison Clagg, Samantha Griffith, Christine
Li, Madeline Lim, Claire
Norma, Elana Roberts and
Kaitlin Tiernan.
During awards ceremonies on Friday at the
Anaheim Convention Center, an earthquake caused
the bleachers to tremble
and overhead lights to
swing shortly after the
announcer identified the
Torrey Pines team.
“You
could
say
our performance was
earth-shaking,” Kaye said.
The dance program at
Torrey Pines High School
serves nearly 260 students
at all levels.
Kaye runs the program with the assistance
of Coach Anthony Rodriguez.
The year-end performance, Expression Session 2014, is set for June 7
at the Torrey Pines High
School gym.
To learn more, visit
tpdanceonline.com.
Contact Jay Paris at jparis8@
aol.com. Follow him on Twitter at
jparis_sports.
Equestrians
gather for
national
show
DEL MAR — The Del
Mar National Horse Show
opens April 17 and continues through May 4 at the Del
Mar Fairgrounds Arena.
The highlight of Western
Week is Night of the Horse at
7 p.m. April 19, presented by
Mary’s Tack & Feed. Night
of the Horse presents “Hoofbeats Through History.”
Anthony DeLongis, a
mounted shooter, actor and
director, writer, voiceover
artist, Black Belt and USA
Martial Arts and International Knife Throwers Halls
of Fame inductee, will perform.
Peter Sherayko, King of
the Western Movies, a historian, author, actor and coordinator, will enact how the cowboy tamed the west, opened
territory, ranched, mined,
traveled, and brawled.
Clay Maier will showcase driving dressage and
jumping during his “Friesian
Spectacular,” demonstrating
maneuvers used by the cavalry.
Among other entertainers will be present-day
knights in shining armor.
WorldJoust
Tournaments
will demonstrate authentic
jousting techniques.
Local horse whisperer
Nancy Nunke is featured
with the only trained Przewalski’s horse in the world.
These prehistoric horses
were the subject of cave
drawings in France 10,000
years ago and are exceedingly rare.
Admission is free on
weekdays from 8 a.m. to 4
p.m.
Reserved Grandstand
seats for evening performances are $19 for each Saturday
evening highlight event, at
ticketmaster.com, or the Del
Mar Fairgrounds Box Office
by phone at (858) 792-4252 or
at the Fairgrounds, Tuesday
through Saturday, 10 a.m. to
6 p.m.
April 18, 2014 MiraCosta
focuses
on career
guidance
OCEANSIDE — Career choices of accounting
and biotechnology get the
focus at MiraCosta Community College this spring.
The college will host
an Accounting Information evening, 4:30 to 6 p.m.,
April 22, in the Aztlan A&B
conference rooms (Bldg.
3400), at the MiraCosta
College Oceanside Campus, 1 Barnard Drive.
This free event will
give attendees the opportunity to get an overview
of what is needed to succeed in the accounting and
finance industries from
local business owners and
leading industry professionals including, Shondra
Larsen, audit manager
for KPMG; Gil Lackritz,
owner of TCP; and former
MiraCosta College student
Lyudia Hillman, senior accounting manager for Ambrx. A question and answer
session will follow the panel presentation.
For more information,
contact Julie Essman (760)
757-2121, ext. 6493 or go to
miracosta.edu/careers.
The
Biotechnology
Program will be hosting
the next event in its yearlong speaker series at noon
April 25, in Room 3601
at MiraCosta College, 1
Barnard Drive. This year
marks the fifth anniversary of this speaking event.
Marjan Haghnia, staff
scientist at GenMark Diagnostics, Inc. of Carlsbad,
will present “A Day in the
Life of a Molecular Diagnostic Scientist.” Dr. Haghnia will cover molecular
diagnostics as a branch
of biotechnology and the
specific technologies that
DenMark uses to diagnose
illnesses such as cystic fibrosis, respiratory viral infections and thrombophilia. She also will talk about
how ideas are translated
into a commercial product,
and the role of a research
ans development scientist
within that process.
For more information,
visit
miracosta.edu/biotech.
MiraCosta College’s
Biotechnology
Program
has been designed by
working scientists and
biotechnology companies
to give students the theoretical background and
practical experience necessary to gain employment
in the biotechnology field.
The program is designed
for students who want to
obtain biotechnology certificates, earn an associate
in arts degree, and/or prepare to transfer to a fouryear institution. Courses
are also of interest to current workers in the field of
biotechnology who wish to
upgrade or expand their
skills.
For additional information about MiraCosta
College’s
Biotechnology
Program or the Biotechnology Speaker Series,
contact Fino at (760) 7572121 ext. 6499 or mfino@
miracosta.edu.
A21
T he C oast News Marketplace News
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Graybill’s growth has no effect on its neighborhood doctor feel
Quality medical care for
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With several offices
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Graybill Medical Group has
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“We strive to cater to the
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said Dr. Linden Burzell, lead
physician of Graybill’s North
Coastal Region with offices
in Carlsbad, Oceanside, Vista and the Tri-City area.
With a talented and
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nurses and support staff,
Graybill Medical Group is
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Perhaps the most telling testimonial is the fact
that there are many patients
who make Graybill Medical
a family affair. “We provide care to a lot of younger
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good population of geriatric patients who have been
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said. “In many cases we also
take care of their children,
grandchildren and extended
families.”
With an emphasis on
Dr. Linden Burzell is the lead physician of Graybill’s North Coastal
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“We’re very accessible,”
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“If one of our patients
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can refer them to any number of nearby specialists,”
Dr. Burzell said. “We also do
an array of minor procedures
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The family-friendly atmosphere at Graybill Medical Group shouldn’t belie
its ability to keep up to date
with the latest advances in
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The Oceanside office is
about to become the third
Graybill location to install
digital radiology (the others are Escondido and Fallbrook). “The benefits of going digital are enormous,”
Dr. Burzell said. “Our physicians will be able to see
an image on their desktop
computer within minutes.
Not only does digital radiology gives us better images
for evaluating health issues,
it is also more convenient for
our patients in terms of their
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In addition to the Urgent
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pediatrics provided by its
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areas of internal medicine,
OB/GYN, sports medicine,
radiology, physical therapy,
ear nose and throat, general
surgery, optometry and ophthalmology, and even medical aesthetics.
Those who enrolled in
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for the recent deadline will
be pleased to hear that Graybill Medical Group accepts
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Dr. Burzell advises patients with a Covered California plan to verify their
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Additionally Graybill
accepts most major health
plans plus Medicare, Medicare Advantage PPO and
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Graybill strives to stand
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“We started out 80 years ago
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Dr. Burzell describes the
atmosphere at Graybill Medical Group as “a good mix of
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He cited as an example
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A22
LEGALS 800
Coast News legals
continued from
page A19
THE BEGINNING OF A
TANGENT
200.00
FOOT
RADIUS CURVE, CONCAVE
SOUTHEASTERLY; THENCE
NORTHEASTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGLE OF 39º 51’ 20’’, A
DISTANCE OF 139.12 FEET;
THENCE TANGENT TO SAID
CURVE NORTH 87º 34’ 00’’
EAST, 254.13 FEET TO THE
BEGINNING OF A TANGENT
500.00
FOOT
RADIUS
CURVE,
CONCAVE
N O R T H W E S T E R LY;
THENCE NORTHEASTERLY
ALONG THE ARC OF SAID
CURVE
THROUGH
A
CENTRAL ANGLE OF 24º 06’
20’’’ A DISTANCE OF 210.36
FEET; THENCE TANGENT
TO SAID CURVE NORTH 63º
27’ 40’’ EAST, 292.32 FEET TO
THE BEGINNING OF A
TANGENT
200.00
FOOT
RADIUS CURVE, CONCAVE
SOUTHEASTERLY; THENCE
NORTHEASTERLY ALONG
THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
THROUGH A CENTRAL
ANGEL OF 24º 12’ 03’’ A
DISTANCE OF 84.48 FEET TO
THE POINT OF TANGENCY
IN THE NORTHERLY LINE
OF THE SOUTH HALF OF
THE
SOUTHWEST
QUARTER
OF
THE
SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF
SAID SECTION 5; THENCE
ALONG SAID NORTHERLY
LINE TANGENT TO SAID
CURVE NORTH 87º 39’ 43’’
EAST, 640.00 FEET, MORE
OR
LESS,
TO
THE
NORTHWEST CORNER OF
THE SOUTH HALF OF THE
SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF
THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER
OF
SAID
SECTION
5;
THENCE
ALONG
THE
NORTHERLY LINE OF SAID
SOUTH HALF OF THE
SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF
THE
SOUTHEAST
QUARTER, NORTH 87º 15’
43’’ EAST, 1321.28 FEET TO
THE EASTERLY LINE OF
SAID SECTION 5. SAID
EASEMENT TO TERMINATE
WESTERLY IN THE CENTER
LINE OF SAID COUNTY
ROAD SURVEY NO. 554 AND
TO TERMINATE EASTERLY
IN THE EASTERLY LINE OF
SAID SECTION 5. . Amount of
unpaid balance and other
charges:
$1,884,782.65
(estimated) Street address
and other common designation
of the real property: 3520
FORTUNA RANCH ROAD
ENCINITAS, CA 92024 APN
Number: 264-451-03-00 The
T he C oast News LEGALS 800
undersigned Trustee disclaims
any
liability
for
any
incorrectness of the street
address and other common
designation, if any, shown
herein.
The
property
heretofore described is being
sold “as is”. In compliance
with California Civil Code
2923.5(c)
the
mortgagee,
trustee,
beneficiary,
or
authorized agent declares:
that it has contacted the
borrower(s) to assess their
financial situation and to
explore options to avoid
foreclosure; or that it has
made efforts to contact the
borrower(s) to assess their
financial situation and to
explore options to avoid
foreclosure by one of the
following
methods:
by
telephone; by United States
mail; either 1st class or
certified;
by
overnight
delivery; by personal delivery;
by e-mail; by face to face
meeting. DATE: 04-10-2014
ALAW, as Trustee MARIA
MAYORGA,
ASSISTANT
SECRETARY ALAW 9200
OAKDALE AVE. - 3RD
FLOOR CHATSWORTH, CA
91311 (818)435-3661 For Sales
Information:
www.lpsasap.
com or 1-714-730-2727 www.
priorityposting.com or 1-714573-1965 www.auction.com or
1-800-280-2832 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,
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
April 18, 2014
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
City of Encinitas Engineering Services Department
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
FIBER OPTIC INTERCONNECT PROJECTS
(A HIGHWAY SAFETY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM PROJECT)
INTRODUCTION
The City of Encinitas is soliciting proposals for plans, specifications, estimates, and
construction engineering for two Highway Safety Improvement Program (HSIP) projects. One consultant will be chosen to implement both projects. Deadline to submit
a proposal will be 5:00 PM on Wednesday, April 30, 2014. Three (3) copies of the
proposal shall be submitted to the Engineering Services Department, Attention: Rob
Blough.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
The Fiber Optic Interconnect Projects is funded through the federal Highway Safety Improvement Program (HSIP) Cycle 5 and consists of two HSIP projects. The
combined projects will install approximately 7.3 miles of fiber optic communication
cable, CCTV cameras, traffic signal controller upgrades and associated improvements along several corridors in Encinitas. A total of thirty-five (35) traffic signals are
located along the project corridors. A majority of the project corridors are running
on the 170 controller platform.
The goal of the project is to improve traffic signal timing/coordination, safety, and
monitoring through the use of a fiber optic traffic signal interconnect system. This
project will install the necessary components of a fiber optic traffic signal interconnect system to achieve the goal including: conduit, cable, communication equipment, monitoring devices, control software, and uninterruptible power systems.
This proposal contains two projects. Each projects tasks, billing, and invoicing will
be tracked as two separate contracts. The projects are defined below:
• Fiber Optic Interconnect Project 1
The proposed work will install a fiber optic traffic signal interconnect system along
the following corridors in the City of Encinitas:
• El Camino Real from Santa Fe Drive to Leucadia Boulevard
• Encinitas Blvd from El Camino Real to Manchester Ave
• Fiber Optic Interconnect Project 2
The proposed work will install a fiber optic traffic signal interconnect system along
the following corridors in the City of Encinitas:
• Leucadia Boulevard from Clark Avenue to El Camino Real
• Encinitas Blvd from Coast Highway 101 to Driveway Entry (Denny’s)
• Coast Highway 101 from Encinitas Boulevard to F Street
• Via Cantebria from Encinitas Boulevard to Garden View Road to El Camino Real
• Vulcan Avenue from Encinitas Boulevard to D Street
PROJECT SCHEDULE
The Fiber Optic Interconnect Projects are planned to be constructed by August 2015.
The project construction bid documents shall be completed within (4) months of
Notice To Proceed.
DBE INFORMATION
The term Disadvantaged Business Enterprise” or “DBE” means a for-profit small
business concern that is at least 51 percent owned by one or more individuals who
are both socially and economically disadvantaged as defined in Title 49, Part 26.5 of
the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
This is a Federal (or State) grant funded project. The City has established a Disadvantage Business Enterprise (DBE) goal of 3% for this project.
The proposers are required to complete Caltrans Exhibits 10-01 and 10-O2 as part
of the submittal to identify DBE commitments to the project. If DBE firms will not be
participating in the project, the forms must still be submitted.
PROPOSAL REQUIREMENTS
Notice is hereby given that the City of Encinitas, hereinafter referred to as City, invites Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) Consulting Firms (Consultant) to submit
a fee proposal for consulting services for the above stated Projects.
Consultant shall submit a bound proposal, limited to 20 pages (not including covers,
tabs, forms, and appendices) consisting of the following:
• Cover Letter.
• Project approach and methodology.
• Description of three (3) similar projects completed in the last five (5) years. Include
client name, address, and contact information.
• A list of all subconsultants and contact information. Indicate which tasks each
subconsultant will be assigned to.
• An organization chart indicating the individuals who will conduct the work. Include
the resumes for key personnel that will be involved on the project. Identify the
Project Manager.
• References (max 5).
• Insurance Certificates for Consultant and all Sub consultants. Insurance must
meet requirements outlined in the Agreement for Consultants Services.
• List of exceptions and/or clarifications to the Scope of Work outlined in the attachment.
• Detailed Fee and Hourly labor Rate Schedule by RFP task in spreadsheet format
showing: task number, description, labor and hourly rate, Consultant staff members,
Sub-consultant fees, and incidental costs. The Fee and Hourly Labor Rate Schedule
will be incorporated into the final consultant agreement with the City as Exhibit B.
The Hourly Labor Rate Schedule for Consultant and all Sub-consultants shall be
submitted in a sealed envelope. The Hourly Labor Rate Schedule for the Consultant
and all Sub-consultants will be used for monthly billing and for determining the fees
for any out-of-scope services the City may request. This should be completed for
each of the HSIP projects.
• Appropriate forms, documentation and paperwork associated with the RFP.
Please submit three (3) copies of your proposal in a sealed envelope plainly marked
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, this
information can be obtained
from one of the following
three companies: LPS Agency
Sales and Posting at (714) 7302727, or visit the Internet Web
site
www.lpsasap.com
(Registration required to
search for sale information) or
Priority
Posting
and
Publishing at (714) 573-1965
or visit the Internet Web site
w w w. p r i o r i t y p o s t i n g . c o m
(Click on the link for
“Advanced Search” to search
for sale information), or
auction.com at 1-800-280-2832
or visit the Internet Web site
www.auction.com, using the
Trustee Sale No. 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
on the outside with “PROPOSAL FOR FIBER OPTIC INTERCONNECT PROJECTS” TO:
Rob Blough, City Traffic Engineer
Engineering Services Department
505 S. Vulcan Avenue
Encinitas, CA 92024-3633
SELECTION CRITERIA
Selection criteria will be based on the following weighted factors:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Consultant understanding of the work to be done
Consultant experience with similar kinds of projects
Quality of Consultant staff for work to be done
Experience with Federal Procedures and Regulations
Total
35%
30%
25%
10%
100%
INTERPRETATION OF RFP AND CONTRACT DOCUMENTS
If the Consultant is in doubt as to the meaning or finds discrepancies and/or omissions from any part of the RFP and Contract Documents, the Consultant shall submit
a written request for clarification via e-mail to Rob Blough, Rblough@encinitasca.
gov. All requested clarifications regarding this RFP shall be sent via email only. All
emails should be marked clearly in the subject area as Fiber Optic Interconnect
Projects. If necessary, addendums to modify and or clarify the scope will be issued if
needed and will be emailed to the consultants. All addenda so issued shall become
part of the RFP and Contract Documents. Failure to cover in its proposal any such
addenda issued may render the bid informal and result in its rejection.
CONSULTANT SELECTION
Evaluation of the proposals will commence based upon the ranking of the most
qualified consultant as determined by the City. The City will then review the cost
proposal of the most qualified consultant and enter into negotiations. The goal of
the negotiation is to agree on a final contract that delivers the services or products
required at a fair and reasonable cost. If agreement on a fair and reasonable price
cannot be reached, negotiations will be formally terminated. Negotiations will then
proceed to the next most qualified consultant. Each consultant’s cost proposal will
remain sealed until negotiations commence with that particular consultant.
Consultant shall begin work immediately after a final Agreement is signed and shall
maintain the level of effort required to complete the work in accordance with the
approved design schedule. Consultant shall also make every reasonable effort to
maintain its proposed project team throughout the course of the work. Changes to
project team staff shall require approval by the City.
The Consultant to whom the Contract is awarded, and any subcontractor under such
Consultant, shall hereby ensure that minority and women business enterprises will
be afforded full opportunity to submit bids for subcontracts. Further, there shall be
no discrimination in employment practices on the basis of race, religious creed,
color, national origin ancestry, physical handicap, medical condition, marital status,
age, or sex.
The City is not responsible for costs associated with the preparation of the proposals. The City reserves the right to accept or reject any and all proposals.
All data, documents and other products used or developed during this RFP process
and project development remain the property of the City.
AWARD OF CONTRACTS
The City reserves the right to award a contract to any consultant proposing on the
project or to reject all proposals. By this request for proposal, the City in no way
obligates itself to award a contract for this project. All proposals shall be valid for
a minimum of 90 days.
The award of the contract, if it be awarded, will be to the Consultant whose proposal
complies with all the requirements prescribed.
The contract shall be executed by the successful proposer and shall be returned, together with the proper insurance documentation to the City within 10 business days
after the proposer has received the contract for execution. Failure to do so shall be
just cause for forfeiture of the proposal guaranty. The executed contract documents
shall be delivered to the following address:
City of Encinitas
Engineering Services Department
Attn: Rob Blough
505 S. Vulcan Ave
Encinitas, CA 92024
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND REQUIRED FORMS
The following appendices and required forms are available on the City’s website
at http://www.cityofencinitas.org/ and also may be picked up at the Engineering
Services Department counter at 505 S. Vulcan Ave, Encinitas, CA 92024.
Appendix A: Scope of Work
Appendix B: Interconnect Maps
Appendix C: Required Forms
Appendix D: Compliance with Laws and Contract Information
Appendix E: Protest Procedures
Proposals not presented with forms so furnished, or submitted without all required
supplements, or not completed with all required information may be rejected by the
City as non-responsive.
03/28, 04/04, 04/11, 04/18/14 CN 16036
verify
postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale. A-4451352
04/18/2014,
04/25/2014,
05/02/2014 CN 16084
NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S
SALE
(NOTICE
OF
LIEN
SALE
OF
REAL
PROPERTY UPON LIEN
FOR
HOMEOWNER’S
ASSOCIATION
DUES)
(CALIFORNIA CIVIL CODE
§§ 5700 and 5710) Loan
No: ROSEDALE T.S. No:
1329238-20 APN: 165-710-5200 TRA: 07076 UNINS Ref:
VALERIA ROBLEDO YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A
DECLARATION
OF
COVENANTS, CONDITIONS
AND
RESTRICTIONS
AFFECTING
YOUR
PROPERTY. UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT APUBLIC
SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
THE NATURE OF THE
P RO C E E D I N G AG A I N S T
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. THIS
PROPERTY IS BEING SOLD
SUBJECT TO THE RIGHT
OF REDEMPTION CREATED
IN
CALIFORNIA
CIVIL
CODE SECTION 5715(b).
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
THAT ON May 08, 2014, at
10:00am,
CAL-WESTERN
RECONVEYANCE LLC, a
California corporation as
Designated Trustee, WILL
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION
TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER
FOR
CASH,
CASHIER’S
CHECK DRAWN ON A
STATE
OR
NATIONAL
BANK, A CHECK DRAWN
BY A STATE OR FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, OR A
CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE
Coast News legals
continued on
page B10
April 18, 2014 T he C oast News North
County
Earth Day
healing
fest
Gong Players for Peace performed a gong sound healing ceremony
during the Earth Day celebration. The gong players who performed are
also healers.
Isabella Castillo, 11, of San Marcos, enjoys the view from a garden tree. The gardens boast 80 types of fruit trees and vegetables.
Photos by Promise Yee
By Promise Yee
VISTA — Organic gardens, music, art, plant sales
and healing arts were celebrated for Earth Day at Alta
Vista Gardens on April 12.
The organic gardens
served as the perfect venue
for the Earth Day festival.
The gardens feature sculptures, permanent outdoor
instruments, an interactive sundial and panoramic
views to the ocean.
“The gardens are a natural habitat with no chemicals, and no fertilizers,”
Bryan Morse, Alta Vista Botanical Gardens president
and CEO, said. “There are
80 types of fruit trees and
vegetables. We add a few
varieties per month.”
For the Earth Day festival, three stages of music
filled the air with folk tunes
and Rastafarian beats.
Dance groups and musicians performed throughout the afternoon.
Avid gardeners could
select from a variety of
plants to purchase, which
ranged from flower sixpacks to 10-gallon shrubs.
There were also eco-friendly vendors.
“I came last year and
learned new things,” Claudia Martinez of Vista said.
“This year they have even
more.”
Artists set up easels
throughout the gardens to
participate in the Star Foundation plein air painting
contest. The winner took
home a $100 cash prize.
There were also art stations for kids.
Unique to the festival
was a healing arts area that
featured yoga instruction,
reiki healing dance and
palm reading.
Lia Strell organized
the healing arts area, and
worked with Morse to create the festival theme of
healing the Earth, healing
ourselves.
Strell is also a professional sculptor. Two of her
pieces are permanent installations in the gardens.
She described healing
artists as creative healers
who share a nature centric
connection. The practice involves ancient wisdom and
modern vision.
A focus of the practice
is taking responsibility to
clean the Earth of manmade toxins and create positive energy.
“It’s community peace
making, and giving back to
the soil,” Strell said.
“It’s an understanding of our responsibility to
ourselves and the planet,”
she added. We realize this
by slowing down and experiencing quiet. We have to
have this for our next generation. There will be careers
in cleaning up the planet.”
The theme of healing
fit the Earth Day fest.
“Earth Day is about
promoting the health of the
planet,” Morse said. “We
wanted to incorporate creative healing, and open the
A23
door to people who have alternative approaches.”
The fourth festival
stage area, with vista views,
showcased healing arts
performers. A drum circle
was held, and for the finale
Gong Players for Peace performed a gong sound healing ceremony.
The drum circle led
by Native Americans gave
a healing blessing to the
earth.
Morse described the
nature of the drum ceremony.
“They’re dealing with
issues related to nature
and earth following Native
American tradition.”
The finale performance
consisted of four gong players and a spoken word artist, who led the audience
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through visualizations.
During the ceremony
two musicians carried their
gongs among the audience
and played.
The gongs filled the air
with clean, calming, empowering vibrations that
adults soaked in and children responded to gleefully.
“It’s incredibly powerful,” Morse said. “The gong
is 3 foot in diameter. You
feel quite connected to it.
“You can unwind and
relax at the end of day, with
ocean views.”
A24
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
B
April18,2014
SECTION
small
talk
jean gillette
Spring
has
sprung
I
didn’t really need
to mark March 20
as the beginning of
spring. I work at a school.
All I had to do was
walk by a bunch of
sixth-graders. There is no
more accurate bellwether
of the rising sap.
This time of year, you
will find squirrely behavior at every grade level, but
among the 11 and 12-yearolds, all kinds of heck is
breaking loose. I am actually a little sorry for them;
because it’s really not
something they have a lot
of say about. Puberty has
handed out a smack down
like a tsunami and they are
just learning to dog paddle. I expect, however, the
surge of springtime hormones is as much a part of
preparing for junior high
as mastering multi-digit
decimal multiplication.
The boys can be suddenly dumbfounded by the
sight of the girl in the desk
next to them. Poor guys. It’s
a wonder they get anything
accomplished from April
through June. Oh wait.
They don’t. But they get
really funny and goofy. It’s
the ultimate test of their
sense of humor.
Sixth-grade teachers
clearly have developed, or
were born with, many special skills.
Foremost would be
selective hearing because
I believe the ever-moreshrill giggling of the girls
actually cracked the lens
in my reading glasses. I
don’t think the teachers
have resorted to tranquilizer darts yet, but they must
have some secret method of
getting both sexes to settle
down and focus, for short
bursts of time.
Teachers are certainly
able to find a way to speak
louder than 30 revved up
kids, which must require
TURN TO SMALL TALK ON B23
Sponsored by
RSF Garden Club brings smiles to Camp Pendleton
By Christina Macone-Greene
RANCHO SANTA FE — In
the spring of 2008, “Petals for Patriots” was created by David Root,
a San Diegan floral designer who
decided to brighten up the spirits
of the wounded warriors at the Balboa Naval Hospital. It didn’t take
long for garden clubs to take part
in the project, including the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club.
There was just one twist.
The garden clubs located in
North County would bring “Petals
for Patriots” to the Wounded Warrior Battalion to Camp Pendleton
in Oceanside.
Recently, the Rancho Santa Fe
Garden Club made their “Petals
for Patriots” delivery on April 8.
LaVerne Schlosser, philanthropy chairman of the Rancho
Santa Fe Garden Club, said their
group officially started a few years
ago. Various garden clubs in the
North County rotate turns to bring
monthly bouquets to Camp Pendleton.
Over the years, however, certain groups have dropped out,
people have moved on and circumstances have changed.
But the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club is still hard at work, dedicating two months out of the year
to bring smiles to wounded warriors.
“’Petals for Patriots’ was a
perfect project for us to get into,”
said Schlosser, adding that their
club is a nonprofit. “And Dos Gringos, a flower raising company in
Carlsbad who is very active in the
community, has been very generous to us by donating the beautiful
sunflowers they raise that we use
PETALS FOR PATRIOTS From left, Sandy Southworth, Patricia Queen, Lorri Kehoe, LaVerne Schlosser, Shirley Corless, Linda Neehan
and Mary Jam are volunteers at the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club who prepared the floral bouquets and fruit baskets to bring to the
Wounded Warrior Battalion in Camp Pendleton. Courtesy photo
for our bouquets.”
In addition to a seven floral
arrangement mix of sunflowers,
irises, and alstroemerias, the club
also gifted four large baskets of
fresh fruit.
“We delivered it right to the
Wounded
Warrior
Battalion’s
two-story barracks,” Schlosser
said. Bouquets and fruit baskets
were peppered throughout the dining room, treatment rooms, meet-
OUSD officially joins
city in zero waste goal
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — Oceanside Unified School District is
not simply signing a pledge
to reduce waste, but is officially committed to reduce
the waste the district produces by 75 percent.
The school district made
a commitment to join the
city in its focused zero waste
efforts on April 11.
The district’s commitment to the Zero Waste
Schools Program began with
a semester long pilot program launched at a handful
of school sites, and the district office.
District staff took the
city mini bin challenge that
encourages office workers to
think and sort before they
put waste in the trashcan.
The challenge equips
each worker with a desktop
mini trashcan and larger
recycling container. After a
week workers are thinking
about how much trash they
generate, where they dispose of it, and beginning to
reduce office waste.
Pilot school sites had
a school-wide trash assessment, to see where waste
could be cut, and classroom
lessons in waste reduction,
recycling and composting.
The city environmental
specialist spent four weeks
prior to school site implementation with site stakeholders
to develop a school-specific
environmental
education
and waste reduction plan,
and two weeks on campus
delivering instruction.
As part of the program
each school forms a student
TURN TO ZERO WASTE ON B23
Encinitas
STREET FAIR
ing rooms, leisure rooms and more.
Established in 1926, the Rancho Santa Fe Garden Club is the
oldest organization located in the
Ranch. While it has been involved
in a flurry of activities and causes,
it has had close ties to the military.
“During World War II, our old club
house was used to wrap packages,
and for years, we made Christmas
wreaths for Camp Pendleton,” she
said.
Another reason why this particular project is special to Schlosser is because her husband was in
the air force for 35 years. “’Petals
for Patriots’ is a favorite thing that
we do,” she said.
For anyone interested in learning more about “Petals for Patriots” and how they can help in the
future or learn about the RSF Garden Club, visit RSFGardenClub.
org or call (858) 756-1554.
Letter sent over proposed train platform
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR — Having
not received a response to
a letter sent in December,
council members voted 3-11 at the April 7 meeting to
send a follow-up letter to
the San Diego Association
of Governments that outlines concerns with a proposed project that will add
a seasonal train platform at
the Del Mar Fairgrounds,
double track a 1.1-mile
stretch of the railway and
replace the San Dieguito
Railway River Bridge.
Councilman Don Mosier, who cast the dissenting
vote, said he supports many
of the mitigation requests
to reduce noise, lighting
and vibration impacts to
the nearby residential community.
But he couldn’t support
sending the letter unless a
request to shorten the seasonal platform by 250 feet
was removed.
Councilman Don Mosier said a city request to shorten the length of a
proposed seasonal platform at the Del Mar Fairgrounds is asking two
local agencies to ignore federal and state laws, a move that could hurt
Del Mar’s credibility. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek
“Since this issue first
came up I’ve been investigating the shortening of
the platform,” said Mosier,
the city’s representative to
North County Transit District and a member of the
SANDAG planning commission.
He said he spoke with
officials at both agencies.
“In order to fund this project (SANDAG and NCTD)
have to comply with the
rules of the Federal Railway Administration … and
the Public Utilities Commission, which governs
TURN TO LETTER ON B17
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April 18, 2014
Rosalinda Hernandez, left, nears the finish line. Hernandez walked with 100 coworkers from Tri-City Medical
Center. Photo by Promise Yee
1,000 walk, run, stroll in
the March of Dimes 5K
By Promise Yee
OCEANSIDE — More than 1,000 walkers and runners took part in the March of
Dimes 5K on April 12.
Many participants have a very personal connection to the fundraiser walk/run.
About 10 percent of the 48,000 babies born annually in San Diego County
are born preterm and face greater health
risks. More than 1,400 babies are born
with a birth defect, and more than 200 die
within their first year.
The mission of March of Dimes is to
improve the health of babies by preventing
birth defects, premature births and infant
mortality.
The annual 5K walk/run is the non-
profit’s premiere fundraising event to support its efforts.
Shawna Emery walked with family and friends to celebrate her grandson
Gabriel, who was born prematurely at
23 weeks — 16 weeks short of a full-term
pregnancy.
He will be 2 years old next month.
“He’s amazing,” Emery said. “They
said he wouldn’t be able to do anything.
He’s able to do everything.”
Emery showed off a tattoo of his infant
footprints that is a reminder he is a miracle.
Heidi Palomera walked with Team
TURN TO MARCH OF DIMES ON B14
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Pre
p
p
i
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Keb'’ Mo'’
Three-time, Grammy Awardwinning Blues-Americana Artist
Special Guest: Nancarrow
One of San Diego’s Favorite Bands
May 19, 2014
7 p.m.
Humphreys by the Bay
2241 Shelter Island Dr.
San Diego, CA 92106
a celebration of cancer survivorship
For more information and to buy tickets,
visit Scripps.org/ConcertForCancer.
Join the Conversation: #ScrippsCFC
April 18, 2014 Odd Files
By Chuck Shepherd
Down on the Deer Farm
The
billion-dollar
deer-farming industry in
America produces generations of bucks growing progressively larger
racks of antlers mainly
for eventual bragging
rights by the so-called
“hunters” who will pay
large fees to kill them in
fenced-in fields just so
they can hang the grotesque antlers in their
dens. Even before the
farm-raised deer are
stalked (reported The Indianapolis Star in March
in its multipart investigation), bucks’ necks habitually slump from the
weight of the freakish
antlers. Most states allow
such “hunting,” and in
some, the activity is lightly regulated, lacking the
safety rules and more-humane conditions required
by open-forest hunting
laws and agriculture protocols. The Indianapolis
Star also highlighted several captive-deer diseases that doctors still worry
might jump species to humans (as “mad cow” disease did).
Recurring Themes
Stories That Never
Get Old: Dayton, Ohio,
bus driver Rickey Wagoner, 49, survived a
three-bullet shooting in
February that, police
said, was probably a gang
initiation that randomly
targeted him as he worked
on his bus’s engine. A
police sergeant told the
Dayton Daily News that
Wagoner “should probably not be here” and survived the attack only because two of the bullets
were blocked by a copy
of “The Message” (a contemporary version of the
Bible) in Wagoner’s shirt
pocket.
The most recent
“monument” offered by
People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals
would be its proposed 10foot tombstone along U.S.
129 in Gainesville, Ga.,
to honor the “several”
chickens that were killed
when a truck overturned
in January. No humans
were hurt in the collision,
and had the chickens survived, they would have
shortly been slaughtered.
(The Georgia Department of Transportation
rejected the proposal.)
Allowing dogs as
“witnesses” in court cases in France has become
“something of a recent
trend,” reported the Paris edition of the European
news site
The Local in April.
A 9-year-old Labrador
retriever (Tango) took
the witness stand in the
city of Tours so the judge
could observe how he reacted to the defendant, on
trial for killing the dog’s
owner. (For due process
of law, a second dog, Norman, took the stand later,
as a “control group.”) Ultimately, the judge said
he learned nothing from
the dogs and
dismissed them.
B3
T he C oast News Democratic Club welcomes Lt. Governor
By Christina Macone-Greene
RANCHO SANTA FE
— A sold out crowd packed
the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club on April 3 for a
special evening hosted by
the Rancho Santa Fe Democratic Club.
More than 100 attendees took part in the event
to meet California Lt. Governor, Gavin Newsom.
“Part of the mission of
our club is to educate voters in the county area, and
pursuant to that, we invite
a lot of public officials as
well as candidates,” said
Michael Gelfand, president
of the Rancho Santa Fe
Democratic Club.
“The Lt. Governor has
been a very outspoken advocate for liberal and progressive democratic issue
throughout his career and
we thought it would be
particularly interesting to
have him speak.”
When Newsom took
center stage, he spoke of
the major issues affecting
California.
Following this, there
was time for one follow-up
question, which Gelfand
asked. The subject pertained to Newsom’s position
on high speed rail and the
water supply in California.
Gelfand pointed out
that initially Newsom was
Back row standing, from left: Mike Nichols, Solana Beach City Council member, Dave Peiser, candidate for
Congress, Susan Guinn, candidate for County Assessor, Lt. Governor Gavin Newsome, County Supervisor
Dave Roberts. Seated from left: Michael Gelfand, President Rancho Santa Fe Democratic Club, Olga Diaz,
Escondido deputy mayor and candidate for mayor. Courtesy photo
a proponent for high speed
rail but has changed his position.
“The Lt. Governor
talked about the obvious
and significant drought
facing California, and in
particular, the aging infrastructure for water in California,” Gelfand said.
With the limited financial resources California
has, Gelfand said, the Lt.
Governor feels we would be
better off dealing with the
water issues than with expensive high speed rail.
“Lt. Governor Gavin
Newsom has a lot of conviction and is not afraid to
speak his mind on controversial issues; and, he has a
very bright political future
ahead of him,” Gelfand
said.
Also taking part in the
evening event was Supervisor Dave Roberts. Before
Newsom attended the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club
Council delays survey, opts not to change rules
By Bianca Kaplanek
DEL MAR — A survey
to gauge residents’ satisfaction with city services was
put on hold at the April 7
meeting after council members deemed it a waste of
money that would garner
relatively useless information.
Council was slated to
award a $15,000 contract
to Probolsky Research as
part of the consent calendar, which is a list of items
approved with a single vote
and no discussion.
But Councilman Al
Corti asked that the item be
pulled because he received
requests from residents to
expand the scope of the
questionnaire.
Corti said he thought
it was the proper consultant and didn’t necessarily
think the scope should be
expanded but he wanted input from his colleagues.
With plans to conduct
125 telephone interviews
and a margin of error of
plus-or-minus 9 percent,
Councilman Don Mosier said the city would be
spending “a modest sum to
get a very imprecise survey.”
“If the rest of the council wants to do that, that’s
fine,” he said. “I would say
this is a waste of money.
“I have trouble spending this little money for this
little information,” Mosier
added. “You either do it
right or you don’t do it, and
I vote for not doing it.”
Councilwoman
Sherryl Parks said she opposed
the idea from the beginning when it was presented
during a goal-setting meeting.
“The information that
we’ll glean won’t be worthwhile or trustworthy,” she
said.
Mayor Lee Haydu said
she had trouble supporting
it because the city just conducted a survey for the City
Hall replacement project.
Councilman Terry Sinnott, the lone supporter,
agreed it should not be done
if it would not result in statistically valid data. But, he
said, “any service organization — which I think this
is a service organization —
needs to periodically check
in with the customers” to
ask how it’s doing.
Sinnott said a survey
focused on city services has
not been conducted during
his four years on the council.
“We owe it to the community,” he said. A similar
survey was last conducted
in 2006.
Mosier said he was
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open to other options but
saw “serious problems”
with this particular survey.
Staff will present alternatives at a future meeting, including less reliance
on telephone interviews,
which most council members did not support.
In other news, council unanimously agreed
to change the name of the
Shores Park Master Plan
Committee and voted 4-1
not to alter the description
of its members.
The advisory committee was established in February to ensure the master
planning process for the
Shores property is open and
inclusive.
Members would primarily identify and prioritize issues, provide input
and recommendations for
improvements and monitor
the planning process for
the 5.3-acre site bordered
by Camino del Mar, Ninth
Street and Stratford Court
that the city bought from
the Del Mar Union School
District in 2008.
City Attorney Leslie
Devaney said the language
TURN TO DELAYS ON B14
gathering, he stopped by
Roberts’ private home for
gathering.
Roberts said they discussed the future of California, conferring about
county and state initiatives
such as domestic violence
and human trafficking.
As far as the Rancho
Santa Fe Democratic Club
event, Roberts said it was
the largest turnout he had
ever seen at the club meeting.
“It’s not often that we
get an opportunity to see
and talk with our elected
officials and having our Lt.
Governor, who is a heartbeat away from being our
Governor, be in our area
and interact with us was
great,” Roberts said.
While Roberts noted
that Newsom is a dynamic
speaker, the Rancho Santa
Fe Democratic Club meeting was more than just
about political parties.
“It’s about people that
are compassionate about
making our world better,”
Roberts said. “And that’s
one of the great things
about Gavin – he has the
ability to work across party
lines.”
To learn more about
the Rancho Santa Fe
Democratic
Club
visit
RSFDEM.org
1x2
1x2 is newspaper talk for a one column
by 2” ad. Too small to be effective?
You’re reading this aren’t you?
Call 760-436-9737 for more info.
B4
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Camp P endleton News
Pendleton holds annual volunteer recognition ceremony
By Sgt. Valerie C. Eppler
CAMP PENDLETON
— Military and civilian
volunteers were awarded
for their acts of service at
the 2014 Volunteer Recognition Ceremony held
at the Pacific Views Event
Center on April 10.
All the nominees and
their command staff were
invited to attend because
the winners were not notified until their names were
announced during the ceremony.
Volunteers
were
awarded in the following
categories: Volunteer of
the Year, Large and Small
Volunteer Units of the
Year, Small Team of the
Year (3+ volunteers).
The winners for 2013 were:
Civilian Volunteer of the
Year - Ashley Hendrickson
Military Volunteer of the
Year - Petty Officer 1st
Class Eric Foster
Team Volunteer of the Year
- Words of Comfort Hope &
Promise
Youth Volunteer of the
Year - Cara Martin
Small Volunteer Unit of
the Year - Combat Logistics
Battalion 11, 1st Marine
Logistics Group
Large Volunteer Unit of
the Year - Naval Hospital,
Camp Pendleton
The volunteer nominees were nominated by
their peers, volunteer coordinators, or commands.
All of the nominations
were evaluated and scored
by a six-person Volunteer
Selection
Committee,
which included one field
grade officer, one senior
staff
noncommissioned
officer, one NCO, one military spouse, one volunteer, and one Marine Corps
Community Service employee.
Candi Heinberger, the
volunteer and skills development program coordinator here, said in 2013 the
number of registered volunteers on Camp Pendleton was greater than 6,000,
and the total hours of volunteer service recorded
was 110,461 hours.
In 2013, the national
average for volunteer service was valued at $24.75
per hour.
Camp
Pendleton saved more than
an estimated $2.7 million in
Representatives from Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton, the unit awarded with the Large Unit Volunteer of the Year award, pose with Brig. Gen.
John W. Bullard, commanding general of Marine Corps Installations-West, during the 2014 Volunteer Recognition Ceremony at the Pacific Views
Event Center on April 10. More than 6,000 military and civilian volunteers from several units on Camp Pendleton accumulated a total of 110,461
hours of volunteer service in 2013. Photo by Cpl. Sarah Wolff-Diaz
Service Award, according award that gives presiden- tions who have demonstratlabor costs.
All nominees receive to Heinberger.
tial recognition to people ed a sustained commitment
This is a prestigious of all ages and organiza- to volunteer service.
the President’s Volunteer
Under Secretary of Defense visits Camp Pendleton
By Cpl. Orrin G. Farmer
CAMP PENDLETON —
Jessica L. (Garfola) Wright,
Under Secretary of Defense
for Personnel and Readiness, visited voting assistance staff members from
the Camp Pendleton voting
office today during her tour
of the installation.
“She wanted to familiarize herself with the
Marine Corps and Camp
Pendleton,” said Jimmie
Hoskins, the Marine Corps
Installations-West installation voting assistant officer.
“She wanted to see a working Marine Corps installation voting office.”
Secretary Wright is the
senior policy advisor to the
Secretary of Defense on recruitment, career development, pay and benefits for
1.4 million active duty military personnel, 1.3 million
Guard and Reserve personnel, 680,000 Department
of Defense civilians, and is
responsible for overseeing
the overall state of military
readiness.
Wright spoke with
Cpl. Krishaun Lavalais, installation voter assistance
officer staff member, who
explained services the voting office has to offer to Marines and sailors aboard the
base.
“I think the voting program is really important,
and though sometimes we
are quiet about it, there are
periods of time where voting takes center stage and
we need someone to make
sure that we are allowing
service members an opportunity,” said Wright.
The
Voting
Office
aboard Camp Pendleton
helps service members and
Jessica L. (Garfola) Wright, the under secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, visits with voting assistance staff members from the
Camp Pendleton voting office during her tour of the installation. Photo by
Cpl. Sarah Wolff-Diaz
their dependents register assistance with the registraand vote. They can provide tion process on fvap.gov or
attaining a hard copy. The
voting office also facilitates
free postage to those casting ballots or registering.
Wright also met with
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headquarters to discuss
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[email protected]
For more information
about voting please contact:
MCI-West IVAO at
Reach over
(760) 725-5312
JERRY HUDSON
Call 760.436.9737
108,000
readers!
Call your Coast News rep today to reserve your space
760.436.9737
[email protected]
facebook.com/
coastnewsgroup
April 18, 2014 B5
T he C oast News Phoenix’s Desert Botanical Garden is in full floral splendor
hit the
road
e’louise ondash
T
his year’s desert
bloom in Anza Borrego fell victim to
the drought, but there’s one
place where cactus flowers
are not casualties of The Big
Dry.
Phoenix’s Desert Botanical Garden is in full floral
splendor now. The prickly
pear, the chollas, the stately
saguaros, the saffron palo
verde trees and all kinds of
exotic succulents are strutting their best stuff this
spring.
That’s because these
plants and trees — both rare
and common — are irrigated, explains John Sallot, director of marketing.
“We are a display garden and we want the desert
plants looking the best they
can be.”
And in a nod to the wise
use of resources, “the plants
are irrigated with canal water from the Salt River,” he
adds. “The canal runs right
behind the garden and we
don’t use any water intended
for human consumption.”
You’ll also get a lot for
the price of admission because “the (more than 2,600)
plants are much closer together than in nature.”
Fooling Mother Nature
a bit in this case is just fine
A lush, blooming ocotillo stands guard for what could be described as a
tangle of snakes in graduated blue tones. It required six semi-trucks to
transport the Chihuly sculptures and dozens of workers to install them
in the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix. Photos by Jerry Ondash
Desert blue bells get cozy with cholla blooms at the Desert Botanical
Garden in Phoenix. Because the garden’s cactus, succulents and wildflowers are irrigated, visitors are assured of a grand show of desert
flowers in the spring months.
with me. I’m sure she is smiling down upon the garden
— just like the visitors who
“oooo” and “aaaah” when
they come upon the colorful,
waxy flowers encircling the
barrel cactus, the brilliant
blossoms of beaver tail, and
the red flames shooting from
the ocotillos.
There’s another reason
for the amazed smiles.
The garden is the temporary residence of 20-some
jaw-dropping works of glass
by renowned artist Dale Chihuly.
You don’t have to possess an art degree to understand that the artist means
to please, amaze and create
infectious joy. Some of the
glass shapes, arrangements
and hues seem to be at one
with the desert landscape,
while other pieces appear
other-worldly and playfully
outrageous. You can’t help
but revel in the shades of
Popsicle red, yellow, orange,
blue and violet.
The size of the works
alone begs so many questions
— like how the pieces were
transported and installed.
“It took six semi-trucks
to transport the glass and armature (the metal skeletons
into which the glass pieces
are placed),” Sallot says.
“Everyone worked from sunup to sun-down. It took about
two weeks total.”
Workers included Chihuly and his staff, the garden
employees and plenty of volunteers.
The garden never closed
during installation.
Chihuly and his team
“We blocked the area
where we were working and scouted the area, with input
funneled the visitors into from the staff, who advised
on things like accessibility
other areas,” Sallot says.
Choosing the pieces to
exhibit was a joint endeavor.
TURN TO HIT THE ROAD ON B14
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B6
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Educational Opportunities
Register now for...
Attack Recreational Summer Soccer Camps
Who’s Ready for Summer Soccer Camp?!
Join us this summer as soccer players of all ages come out and have FUN
while working on their technical ability and improving their game under the
supervision of our professional coaches.
The emphasis over the week-long soccer camp will be on: Individual Skills,
Speed and Agility, Finishing, Goalie Training, Shooting Skills, & Having Fun!
It’s Easy to Register Online! Simply Visit: www.rsfsoccer.com
June 16‐20, 9:30am-12pm
Rancho Santa Fe Sports Field
16826 Rambla De Las Flores / RSF
$160 for 5 days (or $40 per day)
August 11‐15, 9:30am-12pm
Solana Vista Elementary
780 Santa Victoria / SB
$160 for 5 days (or $40 per day)
August 4‐8, 9:30am-12pm
Rancho Santa Fe Sports Field
16826 Rambla De Las Flores / RSF
$160 for 5 days (or $40 per day)
August 18‐22, 9:30am-12pm
Solana Santa Fe Elementary School
6570 El Apajo / RSF
$160 for 5 days (or $40 per day)
WHAT’S INCLUDED: Each camper will receive a customized Soccer Ball & T‐shirt!
NOTE: All attendees must wear soccer cleats and shin guards.
Please bring plenty of water and a snack. Scholarships available.
Online registration is
now open for Rancho Santa
Fe Attack’s Summer Recreational Soccer Camps
and our Fall Recreational
program. More information
on these programs can be
found on the League website at www.rsfsoccer.com.
This summer the camps
will be held in Rancho Santa Fe and Solana Beach.
These camps are designed
for all players who want to
have FUN while working
on their technical ability
and improving their skills.
The camp is open to all
ages and will be conducted by Attack Director of
Coaching Malcolm Tovey
and his professional staff.
Every player will receive a
customized ball and t-shirt
for attending. Walk-ins are
accepted at all camps.
Our first two camps
will run the week of June
16-20 and August 4-8 and
will be held at the Rancho
Santa Fe Sports Field. After that we will move to
Solana Beach and will hold
our third camp the week of
August 11-15 at Solana Vista Elementary School.
Our fourth camp will
be back in Rancho Santa Fe
at Solana Santa Fe Elementary School the week of August 18-. The camps start
at 9:30 a.m. and run until
noon. All of our camps are
available for online regis-
Calling; all palyers! Attack Fall 2014 Rcreational soccer season in now
open. Courtesy photo
tration at www.rsfsoccer.
com.
For those that are interested in signing up your
child for our Fall Recreational Program, registration is OPEN and can be
completed online or the
forms can be downloaded
at this time. Walk-In Registration will be held on Saturday, May 3rd at Rancho
Santa Fe School from 9:00
a.m. to noon. All forms
must be completed and new
players must include a copy
of their birth certificate or
passport. Coach and Team
requests will only be accepted through the 3rd.
You may bring your signed
forms to the Walk-In Registration or mail them to the
Attack office.
Attack also has a nationally recognized competitive program that is always
looking for players from
7-18 years old. Our teams
compete in the top leagues
and play in some of the top
tournaments around the
country, as well as internationally. Contact our Director of Coaching Malcolm
Tovey if you are interested
in learning more about this
program.
Sign up now to ensure
that your child has a spot in
our camps and this fall in
our Rec program.
Questions about these
or any of our other programs can be directed
to the League office at
760.479.1500 or by emailing
[email protected].
Exciting new charter school
enrolling now in North County
SAN MARCOS —Taylion San Diego Academy
announces the opening of
its newest location in San
Marcos, offering a variety of unique and customized classes for students
in grades K-12. The school
presents a program that’s
online, at-home, or a blended program of both, for gifted and talented students
who are looking for a more
academically, physically,
and mentally,” said Taylion’s Academic Director
Vicki McFarland.
“Taylion’s philosophy
is that all students can succeed if they truly learn to
believe in themselves.
Our philosophy is to inspire confidence in a child
through our belief that
we can make a significant
impact with each child by
Taylion San Diego Academy provides
students a unique, holistic learning
environment that prepares them for the
21st century academically, physically, and
mentally.”
Vicki McFarland
Academic Director, Taylion San Diego Academy
challenging curriculum different from a tradi-tional
class setting.
The Taylion program is
an option for students K-12,
who find that a traditional
school setting just isn’t a
good fit for them, academically or otherwise (bullies,
etc.).
A large number of their
student population is high
school students.
“Taylion San Diego
Academy provides students
a unique holistic learning
environment that prepares
them for the 21st century
empowering all students
to better understand themselves as individuals.”
Taylion offers three
sep-arate learning environments for students:
an online component, a
home-school program, and
a blended program that includes independent study
and classroom options along
with online components.
School officials say
the program offers individualized learning, a safe
environment with less distraction, higher parent involvement, credit recovery,
credit acceleration, greater
access to new educational
resources, and unparalleled flexibility in utilizing
various instructional delivery methods based on the
particular student’s learning style.
“We are thrilled to be
opening a school here in
San Diego, offering a blended learning solution which
is state of the art, but we are
also very proud of our independent study and home
schooling options as well,”
said Timothy A. Smith,
president of the school’s
parent company, Learning
Matters Educational Group.
“We feel that we are
going to be able to serve our
students in the San Diego
area very well with highly
qualified teachers —dynamic teachers that are going to be able to personalize
instruction for each child.”
Taylion belongs to a
group of charter schools
that began in Arizona in
1996.
The San Marcos campus is located at 100 N. Rancho Santa Fe Rd. #119, San
Marcos, CA 92069.
For more information
regarding enrollment and
upcoming parent information sessions, call (855)
77-LEARN or (760) 2955564, or visit taylionsandiego.com.
April 18, 2014 B7
T he C oast News Educational Opportunities
Find yourself at Saint Katherine College
College is an exciting
time for academic challenges and opportunities. An
integrated core course of
study at Saint Katherine
College will give you the
tools to think critically,
express your thoughts in a
precise way, examine your
beliefs, and debate the issues of our time.
Our core integrated
curriculum, which includes
theology, science, mathematics, and a foreign language, is unique to Saint
Katherine College.
The
Core also includes a semester on the methods of interdisciplinary studies, with
integrated courses covering
economics, history, philoso-
Who’s
NEWS?
Business news and special
achievements for North San
Diego County. Send information
via email to community@
coastnewsgroup.com.
Easter dining
On April 20, Mille
Fleurs will serve Easter
brunch between 10:30
a.m. and 1:45 p.m. for
$54 per adult. Easter
dinner service will also
be offered between 5:30
and 8:30 p.m. Reservations can be made online
at millefleurs.com or by
calling the restaurant at
(858) 756-3085.
Our core integrated
curriculum, which
includes theology,
science, mathematics,
and a foreign language,
is unique to Saint
Katherine College.
phy, and a Senior Thesis, all
under the supervision of an
academic advisor. Each of
our 10 degree programs is
enriched by student internships and field experiences.
We believe that athletics, music, and other
extra-curricular group activities are all part of an
to Vigilucci’s Trattoria
Italiana, who served savory Cappellacci di Zucca at this year’s Taste of
MainStreet event. The
Trattoria Italiana is also
celebrating its 20th anniversary.
Porter joins Dempsey
David C. Porter has
joined
Carlsbad-based
Dempsey Construction as
Superintendent, according to John Dempsey,
president of Dempsey
Construction. He will be
responsible for project
scheduling and coordination of all subcontractors
both on and off the job
site. Porter has nearly
30 years of experience
in the construction industry. Prior to joining
Dempsey Construction,
Porter worked as a superintendent for Lusardi Construction, Hearne
Builders & Viking Construction.’
Egg hunt with brunch
From 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. April 20, The Grand
Del Mar annual Easter
egg hunt, which starts at
12:30 p.m. at 5300 Grand
Del Mar Court, San Diego, complimentary to
all Easter brunch diners Reduce, reuse, recandle
and resort guests. reserWax & Whimsy, 107
vations, call (858) 314- S. Cedros Ave., Solana
1996.
Beach announced their
candle recycling service
Board nominations open known as “Recandle,”
The Carlsbad Village just in time for Earth
Association is expand- Day. “Recandling” aling its board of directors lows you to drop off your
from five to seven mem- empty candle vessels
bers. If you are a Village of any size for refilling.
merchant interested in Hours are Monday to Satbecoming more involved urday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
in downtown manage- and Sun. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
ment, marketing and
events, review the board Top at SMU
nomination packet at
Southern Methodist
carlsbad-village.com. Ap- University awarded its
plications are due April Multicultural Academic
25, and terms begin in Achievement Award to
June.
Rancho Santa Fe residents currently studying
Top taste
there, including LawA few hundred Leu- rence Jiang, Fantine
cadia tasters voted to Giap, Maximillian Grust
award the 2014 Taste and Mark Villalba.
of Leucadia Platinum
Platinum Plate Award Award for Chavez
Assembly member
Rocky Chávez (R-Oceanside) was presented with
the “2014 Legislator of
the Year” award by Donate Life California. Donate life works to find
organ donors.
Chávez spoke in support of Assembly Concurrent Resolution 125 dedicating April 7 as DMV/
facebook.com/
Donate Life California
Day and April as Donate
coastnewsgroup
Life Month
enriched and well-rounded
education. Join in wherever your interests lie, or give
something new a try!
Saint Katherine College will offer you the
resources,
knowledge,
and experiences to hone
your passion, natural abilities, and hard work into a
productive vocation that
honors you, your family
and, above all, God. We
welcome students from all
faith traditions to attend.
Our vision as a College is
to provide a balanced education founded and rooted
in the life of the Orthodox
Christian Church with its
theology dating back to Jesus Christ and His Apostles.
Parks & Rec society salutes long-time supporter
CARLSBAD — The California Parks & Recreation
Society has honored Carlsbad resident Joan Kindle
for her volunteer service
to the city’s Leo Carrillo
Ranch Historic Park, which
she helped restore and has
served as a volunteer curator
for nearly 30 years.
Originally called “Los
Quiotes,” the rancho was
established in 1937 by Leo
Carrillo, a longtime character actor best known for his
role as Pancho in the 1950s
television series, “The Cisco
Kid.” Carrillo’s family roots
trace to the state’s earliest
Spanish settlers, and he
worked tirelessly as a preservationist, helping the state
acquire Hearst Castle near
San Simeon.
Kindle and her late husband, Alan Kindle, discovered the ranch when they
moved to Carlsbad in 1985.
Carrillo had died in 1961 at
the age of 80, and the core
remnant of the ranch was
owned by the city, which intended to restore the ranch’s
many old structures. Joan
and Alan took interest in
learning about the former
Hollywood actor and his
ranch’s place in Carlsbad
history. Then-Mayor Bud
Lewis asked Joan to become
the park’s volunteer curator,
which she agreed to do.
“I said to myself, ‘Don’t
tell the mayor you don’t even
know what a curator is.’ I
didn’t want to disappoint
him so I thought if I could
From left, Carlsbad Parks & Recreation Director Chris Hazeltine congratulates Joan Kindle for her exceptional volunteer service to the city’s
Leo Carrillo Ranch Historic Park, joined by Carlsbad Parks & Recreation Special Projects Manager Mick Calarco. Courtesy photo
figure out a way to do it, I’ll
do it,” Kindle said.
Kindle learned on the
job and became a tireless
advocate for the park and its
restoration. She was offered
artifacts reflecting Carrillo’s
life and times, and she and
her husband helped establish the Carrillo Ranch Trust
Fund to receive donations of
memorabilia and monetary
gifts that are on display at
the Ranch. Carrillo’s visitors
included such Hollywood luminaries from Hollywood’s
“Golden Age” as Clark Gable, who are shown in photos
throughout the ranch detailing the history of the property and its owner.
Kindle teamed with
Carlsbad city staff to research, prepare and submit
an application to list Leo
Carrillo Ranch on the National Register of Historic
Places, which they achieved
in 1992. The preservation
effort peaked in 2003, when
Leo Carrillo Ranch Historic
Park opened to the public.
Today the Leo Carrillo Ranch Historic Park is a
landscaped 27-acre canyon
in southeast Carlsbad featuring restored adobe buildings, antique windmills, a
reflecting pool and beautiful
structures and artifacts that
visitors can explore while
strolling alongside dozens
of peacocks, descendants
of birds Carrillo originally
brought to his working rancho.
“I’ve spent 29 years as a
citizen of Carlsbad and just
feel privileged to be able to
walk beside city staff and
city leaders as they encourage their citizens to help
them with projects like
this,” Kindle said. “You feel
an enormous sense of accomplishment when they invite
you in the door and you do
something like this. Carlsbad is a wonderful city and
Leo Carrillo Ranch is a wonderful park and it continues
to be more and more popular
as people discover it.”
The California Parks &
Recreation Society District
12, which encompasses San
Diego and Imperial counties,
recognized Kindle on March
26 for her 30-year contribution to preserve Leo Carrillo
Ranch Historic Park as an
example of a unique chapter
in California and Carlsbad
history.
Leo Carrillo Ranch
Historic Park, 6200 Flying
Leo Carrillo Lane, is open
Tuesday through Saturday 9
a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sundays
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission
is free. The public is invited
to join 90-minute, docent-led
tours Saturdays at 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m., and Sundays at
noon and 2 p.m. In addition
to the docent-led weekend
tours, self-guided walking
tours of the building exteriors and park grounds are
available during normal
park hours.
North County Health Services receives grant
SAN MARCOS — North
County Health Services announced it has received an
“Innovations in Community Health” grant from the
CVS Caremark Charitable
Trust, a private foundation
created by CVS Caremark
Corporation in partnership
with the National Association of Community Health
Centers.
The $38,676.00 grant
has been awarded as part
of the CVS Caremark Charitable Trust’s commitment
to help support community
health and expand access to
quality health care.
The “Innovations in
Community Health” grant
will help NCHS support
the automated phone call
and text services that reach
out to patients with uncontrolled diabetes, high cholesterol, asthma and other
chronic diseases.
This will allow NCHS
to better track the health of
patients and increase quality of care.
During the past two
years, the “Innovations in
Community Health” grants,
which total more than $2
million, have been awarded
to community health cen-
ters nationwide to support
the development of innovative, community-based
programs and initiatives
that focus on the treatment
and management of chronic
illnesses, specifically heart
disease, diabetes, hypertension and asthma.
“Chronic diseases are
the leading cause of death
and disability in the United
States, and we are honored
to receive an ‘Innovations in
Community Health’ grant
from the CVS Caremark
Charitable Trust to help
us produce better health
outcome for our patients,”
Director of Operations Support Joseph Crain said.
“This support helps
us continue our mission to
build a healthier community in North County,” he
added.
The “Innovations in
Community Health” grants
are part of the CVS Caremark Charitable Trust’s
$5 million commitment to
expanding access to quality health care nationwide
through partnerships with
NACHC, the National Association of Free & Charitable Clinics and the SchoolBased Health Alliance.
B8
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
FILL YOUR EASTER BASKET
AT NORTH COUNTY’S LAST GREAT
BUTCHER SHOP
Meats
ip TToopp Meats
TTip
4467tthh
AAnnnnivivceee1rr9ss6aa7)r)ryy
(s(sinince 1967
John says, “Let
us make your Easter Dinner Egg-stra Special!”
Pork Crown Roast
Pork Loin Roast
Fruit Stuffed Pork Roast
USDA Prime Rib &
Spencer Roasts
USDA Choice Leg of
Lamb
Many other cuts of lamb
available. All of our roasts can be
cut to order.
HAM for the Traditional
EASTER DINNER
We smoke our own
whole-muscle ham in a
variety of sizes. There
is no better tasting
ham anywhere!
Diestel Turkeys
Straight from the farm to Tip Top. A difference you can taste Tender & Juicy with an old fashioned flavor. A range grown
Diestel Turkey is consistently better.
MORE TURKEY! Turkey Breast
• Turkey Sausage * Fresh-cut Turkey
Parts • Turkey for stock! Turducken - our
own Cajun-style! A boneless turkey,
stuffed with a duck, stuffed with a
chicken and several special stuffings.
Everything for Easter
Breakfast • Brunch • Dinner
Our Own German Strudel!!
Baked Fresh in our Ovens
PEACH • APPLE
BLUEBERRY
CHERRY
Three eggs any style, homefried potatoes &
toast. ALL YOU CAN EAT smokehouse bacon,
pork link sausage, bratwurst or ham.
W E S P E C I A L I Z E I N P R O C E S S I N G FA R M A N D G A M E M E AT S & C U S TO M C U T T I N G !
www.tiptopmeats.com
April 18, 2014 community
CALENDAR
APRIL 18
CONSIDER THIS LIFE
at MiraCosta College, the lifelong learning group, will hear
“Duck-Duck-Goose: Finding
Shakespeare” and “How Tarot Cards Came To Be” from
1 to 3:30 p.m. April 18 at the
Oceanside Campus, 1 Barnard
Drive, Administration Bldg.
1000, Room 1068.
APRIL 19
TREASURE HUNT The
Flower Hill Promenade hosts
its annual Easter Egg Treasure Hunt from noon to 2 p.m.
April 19, 2720 Via de la Valle,
Del Mar.
BUNNY TIME Rancho
Santa Fe Golf Club will celebrate the season with an Easter egg hunt beginning at noon
April 19 at the clubhouse, 5827
Via de la Cumbre. Youngsters
under 5 will hunt at noon
with children 5 and older beginning at 12:15 p.m. Easter
bunny, children’s activities,
games, face painting and a
petting zoo. For more information, call (858) 756-1182.
SPRING FEST The city
of Solana Beach will host a
Children’s Spring Festival and
Egg Hunt from 10 a.m. to noon
April 19 at La Colonia Community Park, 715 Valley Ave.
Free games and refreshments
will be provided and the egg
hunt is for children thirdgrade or younger. Bring your
own basket or bag to collect
the goodies. Fun jumps, crafts,
pictures with the Spring Bunny and piñatas. For more event
information, contact Kirk
Wenger at ( 858) 720- 2453.
FUN IN THE PARK
Oceanside Neighborhood Services hosts an Easter Egg Hunt
at 10 a.m. April 19 in Buddy
Todd Park, 3000 Mesa Drive,
Oceanside. For more information, call (760) 435-5041.
EGGS AND MORE Join
an EGGstravaganza Spring
Festival from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
April 19,at Poinsettia Community Park, 6600 Hidden Valley
Road, Carlsbad.
For more information, visit carlsbadca.gov/parksandrec
or call (760) 434-2843
HOLIDAY
HAPPENINGS The Lighthouse Christian Church, 4700 Mesa Drive,
Oceanside, invites all children
ages 2 to 11 to bring a basket
and join the free annual Com-
B9
T he C oast News munity Easter Egg Hunt 10
a.m. to noon April 19. Enjoy
egg hunt, crafts, jumpers and
food. For more information,
visit lightcc.org or call (760)
726-0590.
BIG BUNNY San Diego
Botanic Garden, 230 Quail
Gardens Drive. Encinitas will
host a Spring Party with Bunny
April 19.
The early party is 10 to
11:30 a.m. and the late party is
from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. The
cost is $15 per child for members, $18 for non-members.
EASTER SERVICES Holy
Cross Episcopal Church, 2510,
Gateway Road, Carlsbad, offers a Good Friday April 18
service at 10 a.m. at La Costa
Glen, 1940 Levante St., and
at noon at the church. A 9:30
a.m. prayer service will be
held Holy Saturday April 19,
and Easter Worship with an
egg hunt at 9 a.m. April 20.
BRITISH DAUGHTERS
Daughters of the British Empire will meet at noon April
19 at the Palomar East Club
House, 650 S. Rancho Santa Fe Road, San Marcos. For
more information, call (760)
731-7379 or email [email protected].
APRIL 20
EASTER WEEK Carlsbad Community Church Holy
Week and Easter services at
7 p.m. Good Friday, April 18
and 10:15 a.m. Easter Sunday,
April 20 at 3175 Harding St.,
Carlsbad. For more information, visit 3c.org.
SPRING SERVICES The
Seaside Center for Spiritual
Living has Spring Easter services April 20 at 6 a.m. 9 a.m.
and 11 a.m. The Easter Egg
hunt begins at noon. For more
information, call (760) 7535786 or go to seasidecenter.
org/easter.
APRIL 21
CRITTER CAMP Spend
spring break with the animals
of Helen Woodward Animal
Center at Spring Critter Camp
April 21 through April 25.
Children learn through handson animal interactions and
animal-themed crafts, games,
and activities. Sign up for a
day, or the whole week. Get
more information and register
at animalcenter.org.
HATS AND MORE “Mad
Hatters” is the theme of the
San Marcos - Vista Christian
Women’s Club luncheon at
11:30 a.m. April 21 at the St.
Mark Golf Club, 1750 San
Pablo Drive, San Marcos. Cost
is $18.00 inclusive. For reservations, call Donna at (760)
432-0772 or Martha at (760)
471-7059.
APRIL 22
GENEALOGY
North
San Diego County Genealogical Society meets 10 to 11:30
a.m. April 22, in the Carlsbad
City Council Chambers, 1200
Carlsbad Village Drive, Carlsbad. For information, contact
[email protected] or
(760) 632-0416.
APRIL 23
RSF THEATER CAMP
Parents can register youngster
now to be part of The Village
Church Community Theater
Camp that runs from July 21
through July 25, at 6225 Paseo
Delicias. The cost of the camp
is $105 per student and some
partial scholarships may be
available. For more information, visit villagechurch.org/.
APRIL 24
YES Youth Enrichment
Services (YES) will meet from
8:30 to 9:30 a.m. April 24 with
presenter Carlsbad Unified
School District Superintendent Suzette Lovely, at the
Carlsbad Unified School District Offices, 6225 El Camino
Real, Carlsbad.
APRIL 25
CLEAN THE LAGOON
Join the Agua Hedionda Lagoon Clean-Up from 11 a.m.
to 4 p.m. April 25 starting at
California Water Sports, 4215
Harrison St., Carlsbad. A
dumpster, trash bags, kayaks
and food will be provided for
volunteers.
PLANES OF WW II Aviation enthusiasts and war history buffs will enjoy an exciting
display at McClellan-Palomar
Airport in Carlsbad, as World
War II aircraft, including the
B-17 Flying Fortress, B-24
Liberator and P-51 Mustang
will be on display April 25 to
27. For flight reservations and
exhibit times, call (800) 568-
Bonnie Kemmerer, 88
Encinitas
April 13, 2014
Marie Darr, 86
Oceanside
April 12, 2014
George Schrum, 94
Oceanside
April 12, 2014
Mary Rita Baldwin, 96
Oceanside
April 4, 2014
Richard E. Scheinost, 77
Oceanside
April 4, 2014
Lorenzo Guzman Ventura, 82
Oceanside
April 2014
Daniel Villalta, 55
Oceanside
April 4, 2014
Juan Chapa, 71
Vista
April 7, 2014
IN YOUR TIME
OF NEED...
whether it be for the loss of a loved
SUZANNE RYAN
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.
Classified Sales
Call Suzanne for all your
classified advertising needs.
760.436.9737
8924 or visit cfdn.org.
APRIL 26
TRAVEL
EVERYWHERE Sharon Lee will discuss her cultural travel TV
series premiere of “Culture
Club” at 1p.m. April 26 at La
Paloma Theatre, created to
change the misconceptions of
international travel, and show
the positive side of some amazing destinations. For more information visit, cultureclubshow.com.
STANDING UP The SUP
Chicks of North County are
hosting a fundraiser for Standup for the Cure from 6:30 to 10
p.m. April 26 at the California
Surf Museum, 312 Pier View
Way, Oceanside. Donations
begin at $5. PayPal link is [email protected].
TO THE GARDEN Encinitas Garden Festival and
Tour offers a self-guided walking tour of private gardens
from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. April
26. Tickets and information at
encinitasgardenfestival.org.
NORSE TALES The Sons
of Norway Norge Lodge of Vista presents Norwegian actress,
screenwriter and playwright
Jeanne Bøe for a one show
event, at 2 p.m. April 26, performing her Peer Gynt Monologue, at the King of Kings
Lutheran Church, 2993 McDonald St. Oceanside. For reservations, send $10 to Katrin
Christianson, 906 Tempera
Court, Oceanside.
TAILGATE SWAP The
St. John’s Altar Society is hosting its multi-vendor Tailgate
Swap Meet from 7 a.m. to 2
p.m. April 26 in the St. John
the Evangelist School parking
lot, 1001 Encinitas Blvd., Encinitas.
Items for sale include
clothing, furniture, jewelry
and plants. Call (760) 6130999 for more information.
340 Melrose
Ave., Encinitas
x100
[email protected]
JOIN THE ENCINITAS SHERIFF’S
VOLUNTEER PATROL
The Encinitas Sheriff's Volunteer Patrol performs home
vacation security checks, assists with traffic control,
enforces disabled parking regulations, patrols
neighborhoods, schools, parks and shopping centers and
and
visits homebound seniors who live alone for the communities of
Encinitas and Solana Beach.Volunteers must be 50 or older, in good
health, pass a background check, have medical and auto insurance
and a valid California driver's license.Training includes a two week
academy plus 4 field training patrols.The minimum commitment is 24
hours per month on patrol or in the office, and attendance at a monthly
meeting. Contact Laurence Reisner,Administrator 760-966-3579.
FD857
760-753-1143
Submission Process
Please email obits @ coastnewsgroup.com or call (760)
436-9737 x100. All photo attachments should be sent in jpeg
format, no larger than 3MB. the photo will print 1.625” wide by
1.5” tall inh black and white.
Timeline
Obituaries should be received by Monday at 12 p.m. for publicatio in Friday’s newspaper. One proof will be e-mailed to the
customer for approval by Tuesday at 10 a.m.
Rates:
Text” $15 per inch
Photo: $25 Art: $15
Approx. 21 words per column inch
(Dove, Heart, Flag, Rose)
Author explores sea levels
LA JOLLA — John Englander, author of “High
Tide on Main Street: Rising
Sea Level and the Coming
Coastal Crisis,” will discuss rising sea levels and
the impact on coastal communities during a special
presentation at 7 p.m. May
7 at Birch Aquarium, 2300
Expedition Way, at Scripps
Institution of Oceanography/UC San Diego
The lecture cost is $5.
RSVP to (858) 534-5771 or
online at aquarium.ucsd.
edu.
Rising sea level may
be one of the most profound
long-term impacts of climate change, yet many are
unaware of the magnitude
of this impending problem.
“High Tide on Main Street”
explains the science behind
sea level rise, its connection
to climate change and the
effects it could have on our
coastal communities.
Joseph Romm, Senior
Fellow at the Center for
American Progress, said
of the book, “If you own
coastal property or know
someone who does, you better read this now. The time
coastal property values
start collapsing is nigh.”
Englander argues that
while we can’t stop sea level rise, we can intelligently
adapt our coastal communities in preparation.
Englander will sign
books following the presentation. Guests who purchase
the book in advance from
the Aquarium Gift Shop
receive priority seating at
the event. To receive priority seating, the book must
be purchased on site or by
phone at (858) 534-8753.
Englander is an oceanographer and geologist
specializing in sea level
rise. He is a global ocean
explorer with expeditions
to Antarctica, Greenland
and the High Arctic, and
has made deep dives in research submarines. In addition to writing, Englander
formerly served as CEO for
such organizations as The
Cousteau Society and The
International SeaKeepers
Society.
He is a Fellow of The
Explorers Club, and the Institute for Marine Engineering, Science & Technology.
Earth Day Opportunities
Every year on April 22, over a
billion people in 192 countries
take action for Earth Day.
Earth Day aims to inspire an
awareness of and an appreciation for earth’s
environment and is usually celebrated with
individual or group acts of service.
How can we each make a difference locally?
 Consider using recyclable containers for
snacks and lunches whenever possible.
 Plant a tree in your yard or in a local park
(check with your city for details.)
 Pick up trash in your neighborhood; work
in teams to make it fun.
 Organize with your neighbors to collect
and shred paper.
 Recycle items collecting in your house/
garage by donating to local non-profits.
 Volunteer at a local community event that
teaches children about recycling.
We can each make a difference in today’s
world and for our future generations!
ALLEN BROTHERS MORTUARY, INC.
FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1964
VISTA CHAPEL
FD-1120
1315 S. Santa Fe Ave
Vista, CA 92083
760-726-2555
SAN MARCOS CHAPEL
FD-1378
435 N. Twin Oaks Valley Rd
San Marcos, CA 92069
760-744-4522
www.allenbrothersmortuary.com
CR
.93
.93
4.1
4.2
B10
LEGALS 800
Coast News legals
continued from
page A22
OR
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION,
OR
SAVINGS
BANK
SPECIFIED IN SECTION
5102 OF THE FINANCIAL
CODE AND AUTHORIZED
TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS
STATE WILL BE HELD AT
THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER BY STATUE, 250 E.
MAIN STREET EL CAJON,
CALIFORNIA in the County
of SAN DIEGO, State of
California, and described
as follows: COMPLETELY
DESCRIBED IN SAID LIEN.
The street address and
other common designation,
if any, of the real property
described above is purported
to be: 338 DIAMANTE WAY
OCEANSIDE CA 92056 The
undersigned
designated
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,
condition, or encumbrances
to satisfy the obligations
secured by and pursuant to
the Power of Sale conferred in
the Declaration of Covenants,
Conditions, and Restrictions,
which recorded on July 28,
1999 as Instrument No. 99521500 in book XX, at page
XX. Under said Declaration
the
property
described
above became subject to
liens for unpaid dues to
ROSEDALE HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION with interest
thereon,
and
for
fees,
charges and expenses of the
Homeowner’s
Association.
The record owner(s) of said
property is (are) purported
to be VALERIA E. ROBLEDO
The Association, under said
Declaration of Covenants,
Conditions, and Restrictions
by reason of the breach thereof
and default in the payments
of dues thereunder, heretofore
have caused to record a Notice
of Delinquent Assessment and
Lien in the Official Records
of SAN DIEGO County, on
July 30, 2009, as Instrument
No. 2009-0426273, in Book
XX, Page XX and a Notice of
Default and Election to Sell as
Instrument No. 2013-0612409,
Page XX, in Book XX, and
recorded on October 10, 2013.
THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF
THE UNPAID BALANCE
OF
THE
OBLIGATION
SECURED
BY
THE
PROPERTY TO BE SOLD,
INCLUDING
ESTIMATED
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
COSTS, EXPENSES AND
ADVANCES IS $11,205.52
Dated: April 09, 2014 For sales
information:(619)590-1221.
Cal-Western
Reconveyance
LLC, 525 East Main Street,
P.O. Box 22004, El Cajon, CA
92022-9004.
(DLPP-437519
04/18/14, 04/25/14, 05/02/14)
CN 16080
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 $249,729.18 (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,
CA08001873-13-1. 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: April 8, 2014 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA0800187313-1 17100 Gillette Ave
Irvine, CA 92614 949-2528300
Joseph Barragan,
Authorized Signatory SALE
INFORMATION CAN BE
OBTAINED ON LINE AT
w w w. p r i o r i t y p o s t i n g . c o m
FOR AUTOMATED SALES
INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL:
Priority
Posting
and Publishing at 714-5731965
MTC Financial Inc.
dba Trustee Corps MAY
BE ACTING AS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. P1089930 4/18,
4/25, 05/02/2014 CN 16079
by the Deed of Trust, interest
thereon,
estimated
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. Place of Sale:
AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE
EAST COUNTY REGIONAL
CENTER
BY
STATUE,
250 E. MAIN STREET, EL
CAJON, CA Amount of unpaid
balance and other charges:
$353,424.68 (estimated) Street
address and other common
designation of the real
property purported as: 233
LEVANT WAY , OCEANSIDE,
CA 92057 APN Number: 158422-25-00 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability
for any incorrectness of the
street address and other
common designation, if any,
shown herein. The property
heretofore described is being
sold “as is”. The following
statements;
NOTICE
TO
POTENTIAL BIDDERS and
NOTICE TO
PROPERTY
OWNER are statutory notices
for all one to four single
family residences and a
courtesy notice for all other
types of properties. 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 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
& Publishing at (714) 5731965 or visit this Internet
Web site www.priorityposting.
com using the file number
assigned to this case 812W065752. 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: 0407-2014 FOR TRUSTEE’S
SALES
INFORMATION,
PLEASE CALL (714) 5731965, OR VISIT WEBSITE:
w w w. p r i o r i t y p o s t i n g . c o m
PLM LOAN MANAGEMENT
SERVICES, INC, AS TRUSTEE
(408)-370-4030 ELIZABETH
GODBEY, VICE PRESIDENT
PLM LOAN MANAGEMENT
SERVICES, INC IS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. P1089818 4/18,
4/25, 05/02/2014 CN 16078
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,
CA08001907-13-1. 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: March 31, 2014 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA08001907-131 17100 Gillette Ave Irvine,
CA 92614 949-252-8300 Amy
Lemus, Authorized Signatory
SALE INFORMATION CAN
BE OBTAINED ON LINE
AT
www.priorityposting.
com
FOR
AUTOMATED
SALES
INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL:
Priority
Posting and Publishing at
714-573-1965 MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps MAY
BE ACTING AS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. P1088957 4/11,
4/18, 04/25/2014 CN 16056
APN:
165-493-03-00
TS
No:
CA08001873-13-1
TO
No: 1553646 NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE
YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
December 17, 2004. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE.
IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. On
May 13, 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 December 21,
2004 as Instrument No. 20041198477 of official records in
the Office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
executed
by
YOLANDA
B. GARMONG, A WIDOW
AND RODNEY M. DAVIS,
A WIDOWER AS JOINT
TENANTS,
as
Trustor(s),
in favor of HOUSEHOLD
FINANCE
CORPORATION
OF
CALIFORNIA
as
Beneficiary, WILL SELL AT
PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER, in lawful
money of the United States,
all payable at the time of
sale, that certain property
situated in said County,
California describing the
land therein as: AS MORE
FULLY
DESCRIBED
IN
SAID DEED OF TRUST The
property heretofore described
is being sold “as is”. The
street address and other
common designation, if any,
of the real property described
above is purported to be: 3737
GAIL DRIVE, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92056 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability
for any incorrectness of the
street address and other
common designation, if any,
shown herein. Said sale will
be made 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
Trustee Sale No. 812W-065752
Loan No. 9041453440 Title
Order No. 8390802 NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S
NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT
ATTACHED
注:本文件包含一个信息摘要
참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보
요약서가 있습니다
NOTA:
SE
ADJUNTA
UN
RESUMEN
DE
LA
INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE
DOCUMENTO
TALA: MAYROONG BUOD
NG
IMPORMASYON
SA
DOKUMENTONG
ITO
NA
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L�U Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ
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V� THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI
LI�U NÀY
[PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
REFERRED TO ABOVE IS
NOT ATTACHED TO THE
RECORDED OR PUBLISHED
COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT
BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES
PROVIDED
TO
THE
TRUSTOR.] YOU ARE IN
DEFAULT UNDER A DEED
OF TRUST DATED 03-112005. 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
05-09-2014 at 10:00 AM,
PLM LOAN MANAGEMENT
SERVICES, INC as the duly
appointed Trustee
under
and pursuant to Deed of
Trust Recorded 03-25-2005,
Instrument 2005-0245631 of
official records in the Office of
the Recorder of SAN DIEGO
County, California, executed
by: TIMOTHY M. CASTILLO,
AN UNMARRIED MAN, as
Trustor, DOWNEY SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
F.A., as Beneficiary, will
sell at public auction the
trustor’s interest in the
property described below, to
the highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check drawn by
a state or national bank, a
cashier’s check drawn by a
state or federal credit union,
or a cashier’s 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. The sale 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 the Deed
of Trust.
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
APN: 161-591-34-00 TS No:
CA08001907-13-1
TO
No:
130244474-CA-MAI NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
DEED OF TRUST DATED May
21, 2008. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. On
May 6, 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 16,
2008 as Instrument No. 20080382376 of official records in
the Office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
executed by CRAIG J WADDY
AND VERNEE J WADDY,
HUSBAND AND WIFE, as
Trustor(s), in favor of NAVY
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
as Beneficiary, WILL SELL
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
THE HIGHEST BIDDER, in
lawful money of the United
States, all payable at the time
of sale, that certain property
situated in said County,
California describing the
land therein as: AS MORE
FULLY
DESCRIBED
IN
SAID DEED OF TRUST The
property heretofore described
is being sold “as is”. The
street address and other
common designation, if any,
of the real property described
above is purported to be:
1635 AVENIDA ANDANTE,
OCEANSIDE, CA 92056-6907
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 $29,512.60 (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
APN:
123-210-22-00
TS
No:
CA08002495-11-1
TO
No: 1012378 NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE
YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
November 17, 2006. UNLESS
Coast News legals
continued on
page B15
April 18, 2014 T he C oast News STATE OF THE CITY
From left, Encinitas Chamber President Bob Gattinella, Councilmember Lisa Shaffer, Mayor
Kristin Gaspar, County Supervisor Dave Roberts, Mayor Teresa Barth and Councilmember
Tony Kranz were on hand as the combined Encinitas Chamber of Commerce and the three
101 Mainstreet Associations hosted the 2014 State of the City address April 4, splitting the
address between the two councilmembers sharing the mayor’s seat. Courtesy photo
Have fun at country
fair in San Elijo Hills
REGION — The seventh
annual San Elijo Hills Country Fair will offer sights,
tastes, sounds and experiences for the whole family.
The fair runs from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. April 26 at San
Elijo Elementary School,
1615 Schoolhouse Way.
“The Country Fair raises money for educational
programs,” said Michelle
Philbrick, one of many event
organizers.
All proceeds
benefit San Elijo Elementary School (SEES). Admission to the fair is free
and tickets for rides, games
and food will be available for
sale at the event.
New this year are the
Giant Zorb balls (human-size
hamster balls) for both kids
and adults. Returning is the
Trampoline Bungee Jump
and a 25-foot Gondola Ferris
Wheel.
The festival will include
live performances of international music and dance by
local artists throughout the
day and a Hoe Down Throw
Down with performances by
SEES teachers on the hour
throughout the day.
“The Hoe Down Throw
Down will feature our very
own SEES teachers as they
serenade us with Karaoke
tunes selected by the audience,” said Philbrick. “For
even more fun, you can join
in with them and sing to your
heart’s content.”
There also will be arts
and crafts, a silent auction
with items for the whole
family, a petting zoo, a train
that travels through fabled
“Route 66,” and inflatable
jumpies and slides. Additional highlights include a Prize
Walk offering oversized Sock
Monkeys and more than 20
professional midway games.
For
more
information on San Elijo Hills,
visit SanElijoHills.com or
sanelijoelementary.org
or
call (888) 726-3545.
Fun, fun, fun!
Play mini golf
• Fun for all ages • Birthday Parties
• Group Golf Classes • Date night
• Company Team Building
2 OFF
$
with this coupon • regular priced
round. Offer valid for up to 4 players
15555 Jimmy Durante Blvd.
Del Mar • 858.481.0363
www.pellysminigolf.com
.
st Hwy
N. Coa
101
X
La Costa Ave
B11
B12
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Food &Wine
Discovering latest wine tours of the ‘boot’
taste of
wine
frank mangio
T
he results are in
on the 2013 Italian harvest and
for those that
enjoy a good Barolo, Chianti
Classico, Primativo or Nero
D’ Avola and hundreds of other Italian varietals, the news
is good.
You will of course have
to wait until bottles of these
favorites are ready to be
shipped to the U.S. and other
countries that enjoy a lovely
Italian red.
Balanced ripeness is
what I read for 2013.
All well and good, but
our sights are set on vintages that are ready to drink
now, such as 2010, 2011 and
to some extent 2012. So let’s
launch our latest wine tour of
the “boot” with new releases
from an old friend, Castello
Banfi in Tuscany.
It was a time of celebration for Banfi and the popular
Solare
Italian Restaurant in
San Diego. Recently a full
house of diners was treated
to the latest 2010 reds, affectionately called “Super Tuscans.”
The 2010’s may be the
finest vintage since 2001’s
great year. The intensity is
there, as well as rich, berry
fruit in the Sangiovese base
grape.
For noble reds, the Summus Toscana with Cabernet,
Merlot, Sangiovese and Syrah
are as tasty as they come.
Banfi is founded and
owned by the Mariani Family,
whose achievements in wine
are recognized worldwide. Go
to
castel-
GOOD THRU 4/30/2014
The Banfi team at Solare included from left: Regional Diane Naris, The San Diego International Wine Show takes place at the Del Mar
Ambassador Luciano Castiello and Restaurants Rita DiLello. Photo by Fairgrounds April 26 and April 27. Photo courtesy of San Diego International
Frank Mangio
lobanfi.com.
From icons to discoveries, two names to know in
Italy are: Stemmari from
Sicily and Centanni from Le
Marche. Stemmari is the new
label of Feudo Arancio, a major Sicilian wine enterprise
owned by northern Italy’s
Mezzacorona, well known in
the U.S. which buys half of its
million plus cases per year,
according to Wine Spectator.
Stemmari has focused in on
its Nero D’Avola, Sicily’s go-to
wine.
Its calling card is “Celebrate the Art of Living.”
($9.99) Other varietals in
the Stemmari selections include: an elegant Pinot Noir,
a Pinot Grigio, a Moscato and
two blends, Dalila and Cantodoro. All are $9.99 with the
Wine Show
blends at $13.99. Go to stemmari.it.
Jonathan Zeiger is a
young, fresh face distributing a growing list of new
Italian names for us to know
in SoCal. His ZGR Imports
specializes in wines from the
Le Marche district of Italy, including Centanni.
As I write this he is working hard setting up buyers at
the largest wine event in the
country, Vin Italy.
The first thing noticed
about Centanni bottles is
that they use the fascinating
VinoLok glass tops.
These “eliminate the
risk of cork taint, allow for
easy opening and resealing,
minimize additional oxidation on an open bottle and are
aesthetically pleasing.”
The wines that I favored
include: Pecorino 2012 with
100 percent Pecorino grapes
($28.99) and Monte Floris
2011 Marche Rosso with
100 percent Montepulciano
grapes ($28.99).
Go to zgrimports.com.
The San Diego
International Wine Show
nternational
wines
from all around the
I
world will be tasted at the 3rd
annual San Diego International Wine Show at the Del
Mar Fairgrounds April 26
and April 27 from 1 to 5 p.m.
in the Paddock area.
Hundreds of local and
world-renowned wines will
be brought in by experts in
wine making, with music
and seminars all for a single
event price of $55 advance,
$65 at the door.
Proceeds to benefit the
Country Friends nonprofit
projects.
This show is a must for
wine connoisseurs and those
simply interested in trying
new worldwide wines.
Sample cooking under
a big tent is an extra special
attraction with creative cooking demos from well-known
chefs. Look for olive oil,
cheeses and chocolates. The
fairgrounds’ 17 Hands restaurant will be open for menu
items.
Buy tickets at sandiegointernationalwineshow.com.
More information at (619)
8WINESD.
Wine Bytes
The Grand Del Mar will
host a Peay Vineyards Sonoma Wine Tasting April 22
from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Delectable hors d’oeuvres, cheese,
cold cuts and six wine selections; $55. RSVP at (858)
314-1996.
The Orange County
California Wine Festival is
April 25 and April 26 at Laguna Cliffs Marriott Hotel
and Lantern Bay Park, Dana
Point. This two-day show features Rare & Reserve Tasting
Friday from 6 to 9 p.m. and
Saturday 1 to 4 p.m. Get all
details and ticket info at californiawinefestival.com.
San Diego Magazine
presents the Best of North
County April 25 from 6:30 to
9:30 p.m. at Park Hyatt Aviara in Carlsbad. It features
the best restaurants, breweries, wineries and live entertainment; $75. Visit sandiegomagazine.com/noco2014.
The DePortola Trail Wineries in Temecula is having
their RedFest from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. April 27. Ten wineries
will serve samples of three
wines each and a serving of
food. Early Tickets are $49,
and are available at deportolawinetrail.com.
Frank Mangio is a renowned wine connoisseur certified by Wine Spectator. His
columns can be viewed at tasteofwinetv.com. He is one of
the top wine commentators on
the web. Reach him at [email protected].
April 18, 2014 Food &Wine
So
you
T he C oast News want to
open
a restaurant…really?
W
e all have that
one signature
dish we make
that wows our friends and
family and provides, for a
moment at least, a culinary
bravado that gets us thinking we could make a restaurant work.
If you are more than a
one-trick
pony and can actually cook up good meals
on a regular basis, the accolades and restaurant
suggestions will come from
others, pumping up your
culinary ego even more and
stoking that restaurant fantasy.
I fancy myself a decent
cook, and have a decent
track record of planning
and cooking for groups
ranging from small dinner parties to large scale
events, and count chefs
and restaurateurs as good
friends, and I’m still hesitant to think I would want
the stress of a day-to-day
restaurant operation.
That said, give me my
culinary dream team in the
kitchen, a great location,
and investors who have
money to back the venture,
and I’d give it some serious
thought.
Until then, my taste of
running a restaurant happens once a month at the
GRUEL dinner and concert I host at the Encinitas
American Legion. I’ll touch
more on that later though.
I’ve written about and
interviewed over 300 chefs
and restaurant owners over
the past few years, some
of whom are thriving and
plenty who are not around
anymore. I’ve developed a sense
for what’s going to work,
what is doomed, and those
that are what I call “hobby
restaurants” that don’t really need to make money. Not
so fond of those. One of my best friends
took the plunge and opened
his own place 12 years ago
after many
years managing
restaurants. If anyone was
prepared, it was him. Since
then, it’s been a roller coaster ride but he has managed
to make it work. I asked him recently
to share some advice and
detail what some of his biggest headaches have been
in opening and running a
restaurant.
His first cautionary
words were to be prepared
to work as hard as you have
in your life.
There are a ton of
moving parts that go into
opening a restaurant and
it is definitely not a 9 to 5
job. Concept, equipment,
design, menu development,
staffing, securing vendor
relationships, negotiating
a favorable lease, building
a buzz around the joint…
those are just a few of the
initial steps. A solid concept is key
and if you plan on jumping on a trend, that trend
is probably already on a
downward trajectory and
there is a good chance you
will be screwed from the
start. Case in point, the
burger joint fallout that has
already begun to happen in
San Diego. If you do manage to get
the restaurant open, one
of the biggest headaches
I’ve heard from just about
every owner is hiring and
maintaining quality, trustworthy staff. While there
are certain high-end estab-
TURN TO LICK THE PLATE ON B14
B13
B14
T he C oast News MARCH OF DIMES
CONTINUED FROM B2
Carlos to celebrate Carlos Palomera,
9, who was born with cerebral palsy.
Carlos has faced and overcome
numerous challenges, including
learning to walk at age 4.
Team Carlos members dressed
as super heroes. Carlos wore a T-shirt
with a big letter “C” and blue cape.
Sheri Lunn, March of Dimes director of communications, said those
who do not have a personal connection find one during the walk when
they hear families’ stories, and meet
children who have overcome huge
health challenges and discouraging
medical odds.
“It’s incredibly inspiring,” Lunn
said.
Rosalinda Hernandez walked
with 100 coworkers from Tri-City
Medical Center.
March of Dimes sponsors the
Tri-City NICU family support program. The two organizations have a
strong partnership.
Channel 10 News/Azteca San Diego is another longtime supporter of
the walk.
The television station participates annually as part of its com-
DELAYS
CONTINUED FROM B3
of the mission and work
program, which states
members must be “objective and unbiased,” may
present conflicts of interest for committee members
who live or own property
near the site.
Under state law, public
officials cannot use an official position to influence a
governmental decision in
which they may have a financial interest.
Devaney said the “objective and unbiased”
description might make
people who have financial
interests in or near the
park unable to serve.
Because the intent of
the group is to receive input from all stakeholders,
including those who may
live or own property near
the park, there was a recommendation to delete the
word “unbiased” and add a
sentence stating the committee is advisory with no
decision-making authority.
Devaney said the 500foot rule would not apply if
it is clear the committee is
advisory.
The proposed new language would clarify that
the role of the committee
was only advisory and if
somebody did have a special interest they would be
A March of Dimes 5k will be held in Balboa
Park April 26. Over 1,000 turned out for the
March for Babies run/walk in Oceanside. Photo
by Promise Yee
mitment to the countywide Live
Well initiative that calls on families
to improve their health, safety and
wellbeing.
able to serve, Planning Director Kathy Garcia said.
Corti had concerns
with both issues.
He said deleting the
word “unbiased” sends a
message the city is looking
for biased people.
“That is not what I
want,” he said. On the other hand, he said the committee should include those
who live or own property
within 500 feet.
“To exclude those who
live close is not fair,” he
said.
Councilman Don Mosier opposed any changes,
especially because it could
mean the city would have
to readvertise the request
for members.
He said the creation
of the work plan “was very
carefully thought out to
clearly get unbiased views
from all of the residents.”
The proposed revisions
would “do away with that
objective,” he said.
He also noted most city
committees are advisory
so adding that language
would be “restating the obvious.”
“What we do with that
park is something that
could change property values and so … I would like
to stay with the way that we
have it that they should not
live within 500 feet,” Mayor Lee Haydu said. “We
“I’ve seen some of these babies
grow up,” Paola Hernandez, television host of Azetca 15, said.
There are also families who participate in the walk to support medical advancements.
“It’s heartbreaking, some are
walking to memorialize a baby they
lost,” Lunn said.
Funds raised support research;
advocacy for legislation to improve
the health of infants, children and
women; education efforts that reach
out to hospitals, parents and expectant moms; and family support.
On average, each walker raises
$100.
“We want to see a day every
baby is born healthy,” Lunn said.
Current research efforts are
looking at cell function in heart
development and how it relates to
heart defects; the role of immune
system cells in triggering preterm
labor; and how problems with brain
cell development contribute to neurological conditions.
A March of Dimes 5K will be
also held at Balboa Park on April 26.
More than 7,000 are expected to participate in the walk/run.
The combined fundraising goal
for the two events is $1 million.
said that we did not want
anyone to apply for this
committee that had any
special interest. Well, having a home within 500 feet
or 300 feet I think is special
interest.”
“They’re only advising us as to whether we’re
doing a good job in getting
the community’s input and
coming up with solutions
regarding that input,” said
Sinnott, who supported
the changes. “And when I
heard that … we were starting to exclude people because of where they lived, I
had a disconnect.
“You do not want to
start excluding a lot of
people for all kinds of reasons,” Sinnott added. “I
want to think of ways that
we can include as many
people and their ideas as
possible so we can come up
with the best solution.”
Council is slated to appoint seven people to the
committee under the original language at the April
21 meeting.
Going forward, the
group will be called the
Shores Advisory Committee rather than the Shores
Park Master Plan Committee because it is “short and
sweet,” Parks said, making
it easier to say and simplifying the job of the person
taking minutes for meetings.
April 18, 2014
HIT THE ROAD
CONTINUED FROM B5
and light. But in the end,
“it’s Chihuly who decides
which pieces go where,” Sallot says. “He’s said that our
plants are unique in shape
and texture and color, and
that the light is different, so
his artwork takes on a different look in the desert.”
This is the second Chihuly exhibit at the garden;
the first was in 2008.
The Chihuly pieces are
scattered throughout the
garden’s five trails, which
wind throughout its 392
acres. Each trail highlights
certain plants and animals,
including the Cactus and
Succulent Galleries situated under a shade structure.
This is where I learned that
cacti are a variety of succulent, which is defined as any
plant that retains water.
Don’t miss the Desert
Wildflower Loop Trail that
offers lupine, brittle bush,
blue bells and more.
The Chihuly exhibit
Phoenix-area birds know where to
go for the good life. This one has
created a home by burrowing out
a space in a large saguaro cactus
in the Desert Botanical Garden.
Photo by Jerry Ondash
continues through May 18.
Visit dbg.org or call (480)
941-1225, and don’t forget
the hats and sunscreen.
E’Louise Ondash is a
freelance writer living in
North County. Tell her about
your travels at eondash@
coastnewsgroup.com
LICK THE PLATE
CONTINUED FROM B13
lishments where decent careers are had as a server,
those are the exception to
the rule. Many of us have
picked up a restaurant job
at some point in our lives
and it’s usually to help supplement education or make
extra money during a transition period. It’s hardly a
situation that builds employee loyalty. Several owner
friends have had scenarios of
employee’s skimming money
and theft. And if you ever
plan to take a day off, a competent, trustworthy manager
is essential. Assuming the
rest of your restaurant ship
is sailing smoothly, having
someone in place to run the
show to enable you to take a
day off or a vacation is a key
part of the restaurant ownership equation.
I could really write an
entire book with chapters
devoted to each of the above
mentioned topics but I think
you get my point. And don’t
get me wrong, I would love
to team up with one of the
many talented chefs I know
and bring culinary pleasure
to folks on a nightly basis
and that may even happen
someday. Until then, I’ve
figured out a way to play
restaurant owner and chef
for a night then return to my
reality of writing about and
interviewing chefs and owners. My dabble in the restaurant world is called GRUEL
and it’s a dinner and concert
I host on occasion at the
American Legion in Encinitas. They have a sweet commercial range and a nice size
kitchen that is perfect for me
to whip up one of my specialties, book a fun band, and entertain 60-80 people on a Friday night. I love the thrill of
planning the menu, booking
the band, prepping the meal,
then feeding and entertaining a nice size crowd. Then I
go back to my day job. I have
one coming up Friday, May 9
and have booked local favorite The Blue Moonies as the
musical guests. If you are interested in attending, RSVP
at lick-the-plate.com/gruel .
Lick the Plate can now
be heard on KPRi, 102.1 FM
Monday - Friday during the
7pm hour. David Boylan is
founder of Artichoke Creative
and Artichoke Apparel, an Encinitas based marketing firm
and clothing line. Reach him at
[email protected]
April 18, 2014 LEGALS 800
Coast News legals
continued from
page B10
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
April 30, 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
November
22, 2006 as Instrument No.
2006-0835428
of
official
records in the Office of
the Recorder of San Diego
County, California, executed
by JERRY D. GUSTAFSON,
AND, CARLA S GUSTAFSON,
HUSBAND
AND
WIFE
AS JOINT TENANTS, 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: AS MORE FULLY
DESCRIBED IN SAID DEED
OF TRUST
The property
heretofore
described
is
being sold “as is”. The street
address and other common
designation, if any, of the real
property described above is
purported to be: 3272 ALTA
VISTA DRIVE, SAN DIEGO,
CA 92028 AKA 3272 ALTA
VISTA, 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
B15
T he C oast News LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
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 $631,390.90 (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,
CA08002495-11-1. 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: March 28, 2014 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA08002495-111 17100 Gillette Ave Irvine,
CA 92614 949-252-8300 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 MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps MAY
BE ACTING AS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. P1088979 4/4, 4/11,
04/18/2014 CN 16046
California;
Date of Sale:
4/25/2014 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:
$307,751.32 The
purported property address
is: 4490 Brisbane Way #4,
Oceanside, CA 92054 Legal
Description: As more fully
described in said Deed of
Trust Assessors Parcel No. 158030-35-03 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. 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
the telephone number listed
below as “Sale Line” or visit
the Internet Web site listed
below, using the Trustee Sale
number (TS #) assigned to
this case. Information about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not 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: 3/25/2014 UTLS
Default
Services,
LLC
Dana Rosas, Assistant Vice
President
Post Office Box
5899 Irvine, CA 92616 (949)
885-1050 Sale Line: (714) 5731965
www.priorityposting.
com Reinstatement Line:
(949) 885-1050
To request
reinstatement/and or payoff
FAX request to: (949) 8854496
THIS OFFICE IS
ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT
A
DEBT
AND
ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. P1088798 4/4, 4/11,
04/18/2014 CN 16045
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,
CA05003971-13-1. 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: March 28, 2014 MTC
Financial Inc. dba Trustee
Corps TS No. CA05003971-131 17100 Gillette Ave Irvine,
CA 92614 949-252-8300 Amy
Lemus, Authorized Signatory
SALE INFORMATION CAN
BE OBTAINED ON LINE
AT
www.priorityposting.
com
FOR
AUTOMATED
SALES
INFORMATION
PLEASE
CALL:
Priority
Posting and Publishing at
714-573-1965 MTC Financial
Inc. dba Trustee Corps MAY
BE ACTING AS A DEBT
COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
MAY BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. P1088725 4/4, 4/11,
04/18/2014 CN 16044
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER On
5/9/2014, at 9:00 AM, CLEAR
RECON CORP., as duly
appointed
trustee
under
and pursuant to Deed of
Trust recorded 4/24/2003, as
Instrument No. 2003-0473629,
of Official Records in the
office of the County Recorder
of San Diego County, State
of CALIFORNIA executed
by: ROBERT STEFANOVICH
AND ELENI THEOCHARI,
HUSBAND AND WIFE AS
JOINT
TENANTS
WILL
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION
TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR
CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK
DRAWN ON A STATE OR
NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK
DRAWN BY A STATE OR
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION,
OR A CHECK DRAWN BY
A STATE OR FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION,
SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION, OR SAVINGS
BANK
SPECIFIED
IN
SECTION 5102 OF THE
FINANCIAL
CODE AND
AUTHORIZED
TO
DO
BUSINESS IN THIS STATE:
AUCTION.COM
ROOM,
SHERATON SAN DIEGO
HOTEL & MARINA, 1380
HARBOR ISLAND DRIVE,
SAN DIEGO, CA 92101
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:
3235
MONROE
STREET
CARLSBAD, California 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
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:
$271,475.50. 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
TS# 028-013576 Order #
8378765 Loan # NOTICE
OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST DATED
12/10/2004. UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC
SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. 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.
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(s): KRISTIN N.
TATE, A SINGLE WOMAN
Recorded:
12/20/2004
as
Instrument No. 2004-1195830
in book , page of Official
Records in the office of the
Recorder of San Diego County,
APN:
157-363-23-00
TS
No:
CA05003971-13-1
TO
No: 00206737 NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE
IN DEFAULT UNDER A
DEED OF TRUST DATED July
13, 2007. UNLESS YOU TAKE
ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD
AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDINGS
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. On
May 5, 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 18,
2007 as Instrument No. 20070480859 of official records in
the Office of the Recorder of
San Diego County, California,
executed
by
EUSEBIO
MARQUETA AND AMPARO
MARQUETA,
HUSBAND
AND WIFE, AS JOINT
TENANTS,
as
Trustor(s),
in favor of FINANCIAL
FREEDOM
SENIOR
FUNDING CORPORATION, A
SUBSIDIARY OF INDYMAC
BANK, F.S.B. as Beneficiary,
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST
BIDDER, in lawful money of
the United States, all payable
at the time of sale, that certain
property situated in said
County, California describing
the land therein as: AS MORE
FULLY
DESCRIBED
IN
SAID DEED OF TRUST The
property heretofore described
is being sold “as is”. The
street address and other
common designation, if any,
of the real property described
above is purported to be: 203
HOLIDAY WAY, OCEANSIDE,
CA 92057 The undersigned
Trustee disclaims any liability
for any incorrectness of the
street address and other
common designation, if any,
shown herein. Said sale will
be made without covenant or
warranty, express or implied,
regarding title, possession,
or encumbrances, to pay the
remaining principal sum of
the Note(s) secured by said
Deed of Trust, with interest
thereon, as provided in said
Note(s), advances if any, under
the terms of the Deed of
Trust, estimated fees, charges
and expenses of the Trustee
and of the trusts created by
said Deed of Trust. The total
amount of the unpaid balance
of the obligations secured
by the property to be sold
and reasonable estimated
costs, expenses and advances
at the time of the initial
publication of this Notice of
Trustee’s Sale is estimated to
be $295,453.49 (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
APN:
167-130-12-00
T.S.
No.
008347-CA
NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S
SALE
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PROPERTY OWNER: YOU
ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER
A DEED OF TRUST, DATED
4/11/2003.
UNLESS YOU
TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY
BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC
SALE.
IF
YOU
NEED
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
THE NATURE OF THE
Coast News legals
continued on
page B16
B16
LEGALS 800
Coast News legals
continued from
page B15
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 (800) 280-2832 or visit
the Internet Web site WWW.
AUCTION.COM, using the file
number assigned to this case
008347-CA. Information about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information
or
on
the
Internet Web site. The best
way to verify postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale. FOR SALES
INFORMATION:
(800)
280-2832 Dated: 3/26/2014
CLEAR RECON CORP. ,
Authorized Signature CLEAR
RECON CORP. 4375 Jutland
Drive Suite 200 San Diego,
California 92117 P1088488
4/4, 4/11, 04/18/2014 CN 16043
T.S. No.: 2012-21486
Loan
No.: 7100741151 NOTICE
OF
TRUSTEE’S
SALE
PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE
§ 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY
OF
INFORMATION
REFERRED TO BELOW IS
NOT ATTACHED TO THE
RECORDED COPY OF THIS
DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO
THE COPIES PROVIDED
TO THE TRUSTOR. NOTE:
THERE IS A SUMMARY OF
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
THE INFORMATION IN THIS
DOCUMENT ATTACHED
注:本文件包含一个信息摘要
참고사항: 본 첨부 문서에 정보
요약서가 있습니다
NOTA:
SE
ADJUNTA
UN
RESUMEN
DE
LA
INFORMACIÓN DE ESTE
DOCUMENTO
TALA: MAYROONG BUOD
NG
IMPORMASYON
SA
DOKUMENTONG
ITO
NA
NAKALAKIP
L�U Ý: KÈM THEO ĐÂY LÀ
B�N TRÌNH BÀY TÓM L��C
V� THÔNG TIN TRONG TÀI
LI�U NÀY
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST
DATED 12/20/2006. UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY,
IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
PUBLIC SALE.
IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING
AGAINST
YOU,
YOU
SHOULD
CONTACT A LAWYER. A
public auction sale to the
highest bidder for cash,
cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, check
drawn by a state or federal
credit union, or a check drawn
by a state or federal savings
and loan association, or
savings association, or savings
bank specified in Section
5102 of the Financial Code
and authorized to do business
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: DANIEL
AFASENE AND SUZANNE M.
AFASENE, HUSBAND AND
WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS
Duly
Appointed
Trustee:
Western Progressive, LLC
Recorded
12/28/2006
as
Instrument No. 2006-0923650
in book ---, page --- and
rerecorded on --- as --- of
Official Records in the office
of the Recorder of San Diego
County, California,
Date of Sale: 4/28/2014 at
10:30 AM
Place of Sale:
At the
main entrance to the East
County Regional Center by
statue, 250 Main street, El
Cajon, CA
Estimated amount of unpaid
balance and other charges:
$367,524.71 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. Street Address or other
common designation of real
property: 4844 TACAYME DR,,
OCEANSIDE, CALIFORNIA
92057 A.P.N.: 157-183-15-00
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 my hold
more than one mortgage or
deed of trust on this property.
NOTICE TO
PROPERTY
OWNER: The sale date shown
on this notice of sale may be
postponed one or more times
by the mortgagee, beneficiary,
trustee, or a court, pursuant to
Section 2924g of the California
Civil Code. The law requires
that information about trustee
sale postponements be made
available to you and to the
public, as a courtesy to those
not present at the sale. If
you wish to learn whether
your sale date has been
postponed, and, if applicable,
the rescheduled time and date
for the sale of this property,
you may call (866)-960-8299
or visit this Internet Web site
http://altisource.com/resware/
Tr u s t e e S e r v i c e s S e a r c h .
aspx using the file number
assigned to this case 201221486.
Information about
postponements that are very
short in duration or that occur
close in time to the scheduled
sale may not immediately be
reflected in the telephone
information. The best way
to
verify
postponement
information is to attend the
scheduled sale Date: 3/15/2014
Western Progressive, LLC, as
Trustee
c/o
30
Corporate
Park,
Suite 450 Irvine, CA 92606
Automated Sale Information
Line: (866) 960-8299
http://altisource.com/resware/
TrusteeServicesSearch.aspx
For
Non-Automated
Sale
Information, call: (866) 240THIS FIRM IS ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT
AND ANY INFORMATION
OBTAINED WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE
04/04/14, 04/11/14, 04/18/14 CN
16041
they have waived notice or
consented to the proposed
action.) The independent
administration
authority
will be granted unless an
interested person files an
objection to the petition and
shows good cause why the
court should not grant the
authority. A hearing on the
petition will be held in this
court on 6/03/2014 at 11:00 AM
in Dept. PC-1 located at 1409
4th Avenue, San Diego, CA
92101-3105 Probate Division/
Madge Bradley Building. If
you object to the granting
of the petition, you should
appear at the hearing and
state your objections or file
written objections with the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be in
person or by your attorney.
If you are a creditor or a
contingent creditor of the
decedent, you must file your
claim with the court and
mail a copy to the personal
representative appointed by
the court within the later of
either (1) four months from
the date of first issuance of
letters to a general personal
representative, as defined in
section 58(b) of the California
Probate Code, or (2) 60 days
from the date of mailing or
personal delivery to you of a
notice under section 9052 of
the California Probate Code.
Other California statutes and
legal authority may affect
your rights as a creditor. You
may want to consult with
an attorney knowledgeable
in California law. You may
examine the file kept by the
court. If you are a person
interested in the estate, you
may file with the court a
Request for Special Notice
(form DE-154) of the filing of
an inventory and appraisal of
estate assets or of any petition
or account as provided in
Probate Code section 1250.
A Request for Special Notice
form is available from the
court clerk. Attorney for
Petitioner: William J. Freed,
Esq. SB#144829. Walwick
& Freed 815 Civic Center
Drive, Oceanside, CA 92054 ,
Telephone: 760.722.4221
4/18,
4/25,
5/2/14
CNS2610852# CN 16077
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
representation is knowingly
and intelligently waived.
If you wish to seek the advise
of an attorney in this matter,
you should do so promptly so
that your pleading, if any, may
be filed in time.
Date: 03/26/2014
Clerk of the Superior Court
By: M Zurcher, Deputy
Attorney of Party without
Attorney:
Holly Lynn McQuigg
855 Harbor Cliff Way, #312
Oceanside, CA 92054
Telephone: 760.967.8357
04/11, 04/18, 04/25, 05/02/14
CN 16063
Susan L Turner 04/18, 04/25,
05/02, 05/09/14 CN 16095
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice is herby given that
pursuant to Sections 2170121715of the Business and
Professional Code and Section
2328 of the Commercial Code
of California, that Affordable
Stor Mor, 470 N. Midway Dr.,
Escondido, CA 92027 will
sell property listed below by
competitive bidding on or
after Tuesday, May 20, 2014
held at the above address.
Property to be sold as
follows: Any and all personal,
business, leisure, sporting,
winnings, inherited, gifted,
loaned, automobiles or misc
items contained within in the
possession of the following:
Margaret Anne Marrone # 87
Auction to be conducted by:
West Coast Auctions
Bond # 0434194
04/18/14, 04/25/14 CN 16097
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE # 37-2014-00010768-CUPT-CTL
TO
ALL
INTERESTED
PERSONS:
Petitioner(s):
Dhurgham
Riyadh
Mohammed filed a petition
with this court for a decree
changing names as follows:
a. Present name Dhurgham
Riyadh Mohammed changed
to proposed name Gordon
James Knightman.
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 46 of the Superior Court
of California, County of San
Diego, 250 East Main Street,
El Cajon CA 92020 on May 23,
2014 at 9:30 a.m.
Date: Apr 10, 2014
David J Danielsen
Judge of the Superior Court
04/18, 04/25, 05/02, 05/09/14
CN 16085
NOTICE OF PETITION
TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF
YOGESH MISRA CASE NO.
37-2014-00010528-PR-PL-CTL
ROA #: 1 (IMAGED FILE)
To all heirs, beneficiaries,
creditors,
contingent
creditors, and persons who
may otherwise be interested
in the will or estate, or both,
of: Yogesh Misra. A Petition
for Probate has been filed by
Jyotika Misra in the Superior
Court of California, County of
SAN DIEGO. The Petition for
Probate requests that Jyotika
Misra be appointed as personal
representative to administer
the estate of the decedent.
The Petition requests the
decedent’s will and codicils,
if any, be admitted to probate.
The will and any codicils are
available for examination in
the file kept by the court. The
Petition requests authority
to administer the estate
under
the
Independent
Administration of Estates
Act. (This authority will allow
the personal representative
to take many actions without
obtaining court approval.
Before taking certain very
important actions, however,
the personal representative
will be required to give notice
to interested persons unless
CITATION FOR FREEDOM
FROM PARENTAL
CUSTODY AND CONTROL
CASE AN14893
IN THE
MATTER
OF:
SEBASTIAN
WILLIAM
MCQUIGG DATE OF BIRTH:
10/15/2003 A MINOR
SUPERIOR
COURT
OF
CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY
OF SAN DIEGO, NORTH
COUNTY DIVISION, 325 S
MELROSE DR, SUITE 130,
VISTA, CA 92081
To
(name);
SHANNON
ROCHELLE FURLONG aka
RUBENSTEIN
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 June 06, 2014, at
8:30 AM. to show cause, if you
have any, why SEBASTIAN
WILLIAM
MCQUIGG
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
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CASE # 37-2014-00009405CU-PT-NC
TO
ALL
INTERESTED
PERSONS:
Petitioner(s):
Justin Cole Chapa filed a
petition with this court for
a decree changing names
as follows: a. Present name
Justin Cole Chapa changed
to proposed name Justin Cole
Sylvester.
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 S Melrose Dr, Vista
CA 92081 on May 27, 2014 at
8:30 a.m.
Date: Apr 02, 2014
K Michael Kirkman
Judge of the Superior Court
04/11, 04/18, 04/25, 05/02
CN 16062
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-010533
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Harcourts Ranch and Coast
Located at: 6024-G Paseo
Delicias, Rancho Santa Fe,
CA San Diego 92067 Mailing
Address: PO Box 5000-PMB
403, Rancho Santa Fe, CA
92067 This business is hereby
registered by the following: 1.
Monarch Pacific Investments
Inc, 17036 Blue Shadows
Lane, San Diego CA 92127
This business is conducted
by: A Corporation The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Apr 14, 2014. S/Talechia
Plumlee 04/18, 04/25, 05/02,
05/09/14 CN 16096
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-010478
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Glamorousbeads4u
Located at: 752 Banyonwood
Dr, Oceanside, CA San Diego
92057
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Susan Lynn Turner, 752
Banyonwood Dr, Oceanside
CA 92057 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started This statement
was filed with County of the
San Diego Recorder/County
Clerk on Apr 14, 2014. S/
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-010347
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Infinity Pie
Located at:
4647 Utah St, San Diego, CA
San Diego 92116 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Derek DiNublia,
4647 Utah St, San Diego
CA 92116 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
01/01/13 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Apr 11, 2014. S/Derek
DiNublia 04/18, 04/25, 05/02,
05/09/14 CN 16094
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009028
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. The Burnett Center for
Psychotherapy and Wellness
Inc B. The Burnett Center
Located at: 355 Santa Fe Drive
Suite 200, Encinitas, CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
PO Box 895, Cardiff by the
Sea, CA 92007 This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. The Burnett
Center for Psychotherapy
and Wellness Inc, 355 Santa
Fe Drive Suite 200, Encinitas
CA 92024 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
01/01/14 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 28, 2014. S/Debra
Burnett, Psy.D. 04/18, 04/25,
05/02, 05/09/14 CN 16091
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009193
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Sometimes Julie B. WalkerSorensongs Located at: 155
Mozart Ave, Cardiff, CA San
Diego 92007 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Richard William Walker,
155 Mozart Ave, Cardiff CA
92007 2. Monica Lynn Riggins
Sorenson, 11725 Aldercrest
Pt, San Diego CA 92131 This
business is conducted by: A
General Partnership The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Apr 01, 2014. S/Richard
W Walker 04/18, 04/25,
05/02, 05/09/14 CN 16090
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009610
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Cristine Clark & Jamie
Gilman Team
Located at:
217 Civic Center Drive #3,
Vista, CA San Diego 92084
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. CCJ Inc,
217 Civic Center Dr #3, Vista
CA 92084 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business
was: 10/01/13 This statement
was filed with County of the
San Diego Recorder/County
Clerk on Apr 04, 2014. S/
Steven Jackson 04/18, 04/25,
05/02, 05/09/14 CN 16089
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009965
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Carlsbad Famous Water B.
Carlsbad Historic Water C.
Carlsbad Water D. Carlsbad
Drinking Water E. Carlsbad
Vending Water F. Carlsbad
Water Vending G. Alkaline
Coast News legals
continued on
page B18
April 18, 2014 LETTER
CONTINUED FROM B1
public transport,” he said.
Mosier said a federal
policy adopted in 2005 requires all new commuter
and inner-city rail platform stations to have a
platform running the full
length of the passenger
boarding area of the station.
Projects that don’t
comply with the rule “will
not qualify for grant funding,” Mosier said.
“So for … Del Mar to
insist that this platform
be shorter as their primary opening concern is
nonproductive,” he added. “It’s saying, ‘Del Mar
says SANDAG and NCTD
should ignore federal law,
ignore state law and adhere to Del Mar’s wishes.’
“I think that’s why
you didn’t get a response
from the first letter,” Mosier added. “You’re asking
SANDAG and NCTD to
do something they can’t
possibly do. I don’t know
where anybody got the
impression that they have
flexibility to shorten the
platform because they
don’t by federal law and
state law.
“Del Mar has a credibility issue at SANDAG
because of past issues like
this and we’re sustaining that,” he said. “We’re
trying to gain credibility
in a regional setting and
yet Del Mar insists everything has to be done our
way. That’s not the way to
gain credibility. That’s the
way to lose credibility.”
Resident Bill Michalsky, co-chairman of the
city’s ad hoc San Dieguito Double Track Project
Committee, said residents
don’t oppose the platform.
“We’re happy to have
the platform,” he said.
“We’re happy to get cars
off the road. But this is a
big price and there should
be more pushback from
our community to NCTD,
to Amtrak and especially
to SANDAG to get them to
realize that it’s not about
not having it in our backyard. It’s just about how
far into our backyard.
“And this is considerable,” Michalsky said.
“Don’t role over to SANDAG’s desire. I think this
is just too much of an impact.”
Councilman Al Corti,
who recused himself from
the council discussion because he owns property
within 500 feet of the project, spoke as a resident.
He said he didn’t support the letter because
“we’re sending a strong
message that conceptually
we’re in favor of the double track and platform”
but with modifications.
Corti said he opposes double tracking all together, especially because
there are no set plans on
double tracking the rest of
railway in Del Mar.
To spend $125 million
of taxpayer money to add
a mile of double tracking
@CoastNewsGroup
T he C oast News in the north side of town
when they haven’t responded to how they are
going to double track the
rest, I think that’s problematic, he said.
“I don’t see the benefit to Del Mar,” Corti added. “As a matter of fact I
see more problems coming
as a result of it.
“I think that double
tracking through Del Mar
is the wrong thing to do,
and I think this is sending
the message that it’s acceptable.”
Councilwoman Sherryl Parks said she supported sending the letter
because in her opinion,
residents weren’t given
“the straight scoop” about
the project in the beginning.
“It would have been
helpful (knowing) what
are the rules,” she said.
“I don’t think that’s what
was first done. … People
do better if they know
what the facts are right
up front and then deal
with the solutions. I’m sad
about it.”
“I share some of your
frustration,” Mosier said.
“There has been some
disconnect. … That’s not
unique to this project. …
And yes I get frustrated
with federal rules all the
time but that doesn’t allow
you to get around them.”
Mayor Lee Haydu and
Councilman Terry Sinnott
also supported sending
the letter and then following up with SANDAG
and NCTD officials to
identify which mitigation
measures can be included
before the project’s environmental impact report
is released this summer
for public comment.
B17
B18
LEGALS 800
Coast News legals
continued from
page B16
Water Carlsbad Located at:
2802 Carlsbad Blvd, Carlsbad,
CA San Diego 92008 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Ludvik Grigoras,
6836 Forest Gate St, N Las
Vegas NV 89204 2. Veronica
Grigoras, 6836 Forest Gate
St, N Las Vegas NV 89204
This business is conducted
by: A Married Couple The
first day of business was:
06/01/96 This statement was
filed with County of the
San Diego Recorder/County
Clerk on Apr 08, 2014. S/
Ludvik Grigoras 04/18, 04/25,
05/02, 05/09/14 CN 16088
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-010298
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Japanese Knives Select B.
The Bridge Communications
Located at: 106 Countrywood
Ln, Encinitas, CA San Diego
92024
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Krista Lee Yamada, 106
Countrywood Ln, Encinitas
CA
92024
2.
Ichinari
Yamada, 106 Countrywood
Ln, Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by:
A Married Couple The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Apr 10, 2014. S/Krista
Lee Yamada 04/18, 04/25,
05/02, 05/09/14 CN 16087
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-010285
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. U.S. Pacific Auto Located
at: 701 Palomar Airport Rd
#300, Carlsbad, CA San Diego
92011 Mailing Address: 4635
Rim Circle #102, Carlsbad CA
92010 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Shawn Ghaffari, 4635
Rim Circle #102, Carlsbad
CA 92010 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business
was: 04/10/14 This statement
was filed with County of the
San Diego Recorder/County
Clerk on Apr 10, 2014. S/
Shawn Ghaffari 04/18, 04/25,
05/02, 05/09/14 CN 16086
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007398
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Glucolift
Located at:
1376 Summitt Ave, Cardiff by
the Sea, CA San Diego 92075
Mailing Address: 249 S Hwy
101 #531, Solana Beach CA
92075 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Jungell Inc, 249 S Hwy 101
#531, Solana Beach CA 92075
This business is conducted
by: A Corporation The first
day of business was: 08/01/09
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 15, 2014. S/Christopher
Angell 04/11, 04/18, 04/25,
05/02/14 CN 16076
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009670
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Ecojack Located at: 345
Liverpool Drive, Cardiff CA
San Diego 92007 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by
the following: 1. Ecojack
Environmental
Consulting
LLC, 345 Liverpool Drive,
Cardiff CA 92007 This business
is conducted by: A Limited
Liability Company The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started This statement was
filed with County of the San
T he C oast News LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Apr 04, 2014. S/Timothy
William Jackson 04/11, 04/18,
04/25, 05/02/14 CN 16075
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Apr 01, 2014. S/Lu Q Yu
04/11, 04/18, 04/25, 05/02/14
CN 16070
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007513
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Family Pool & Land
B.
Family Pool & Landscape
Located at: 1884 Palisades Dr,
Carlsbad CA San Diego 92008
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Aaron
James Bryan, 1884 Palisades
Dr, Carlsbad CA 92008 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 17, 2014. S/Aaron Bryan
04/11, 04/18, 04/25, 05/02/14
CN 16074
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009148
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. NotaryLoanSigningClass.
com Located at: 636 Summer
View Circle, Encinitas, CA San
Diego 92024 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Paul Curtis Rosenbaum,
636 Summer View Circle,
Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Apr 01, 2014. S/Paul Curtis
Rosenbaum
04/11,
04/18,
04/25, 05/02/14 CN 16069
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-008547
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Amanda’s Beauty Bar
Located at: 2055 Montiel Rd
Ste 109, San Marcos CA San
Diego 92069 Mailing Address:
610 Landmark Pl, San Marcos
CA 92069 This business is
hereby registered by the
following: 1. Amanda Duong,
610 Landmark Pl, San Marcos
CA 92069 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/14/14 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 25, 2014. S/Amanda
Duong 04/11, 04/18, 04/25,
05/02/14 CN 16073
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009387
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Commodore Pool Service
Located at: 7792 Falda Pl,
Carlsbad, CA San Diego 92009
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. William
Neal Moquin, 7792 Falda
Pl, Carlsbad CA 92009 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Apr 02, 2014. S/William Neal
Moquin 04/11, 04/18, 04/25,
05/02/14 CN 16068
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009540
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. So Cal Limo Service
Located at: 1564 Caudor
St, Encinitas CA San Diego
92024
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Melvin Edward Servi Jr,
1564 Caudor St, Encinitas
CA 92024 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
04/03/14 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Apr 03, 2014. S/Melvin
Edward Servi Jr 04/11, 04/18,
04/25, 05/02/14 CN 16072
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009141
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Oriental Natural Treatment
Located at: 750 Sycamore
Ave #110, Vista CA San Diego
92083 Mailing Address: 9100
Garvey Ave #411, Rosemead
CA 91770 This business is
hereby registered by the
following: 1. Pacific Oriental
Natural Inc, 9100 Garvey Ave
#411, Rosemead CA 91770
This business is conducted
by: A Corporation The first
day of business was: 02/04/14
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Apr 01, 2014. S/Lu Q Yu 04/11,
04/18, 04/25, 05/02/14 CN
16071
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009140
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Pure Massage Located at:
2530 Vista Way #R, Oceanside,
CA San Diego 92054 Mailing
Address: 9100 Garvey Ave
#411, Rosemead CA 91770 This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Pacific
Oriental Natural Inc, 9100
Garvey Ave #411, Rosemead
CA 91770 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
02/04/14 This statement was
filed with County of the San
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009162
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. LaCosta Piano and Voice
Located at: 3323 Cabo Way,
Carlsbad, CA San Diego 92009
Mailing Address: Same This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Susan B
York, 3323 Cabo Way, Carlsbad
CA 92009 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
01/01/07 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Apr 01, 2014. S/Susan
B York 04/11, 04/18, 04/25,
05/02/14 CN 16067
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007973
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Garnish & Relish B. 5
Color Meals C. Deleecious
D. Dining Dash Located at:
2467 Newcastle Ave, Cardiff,
CA San Diego 92007 Mailing
Address: Same This business
is hereby registered by the
following: 1. Amy Claire
DeLee, 2467 Newcastle Ave,
Cardiff CA 92007 This business
is conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/20/14 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 20, 2014. S/Amy Claire
DeLee 04/11, 04/18, 04/25,
05/02/14 CN 16066
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009070
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Concierge Fitness Located
at: 2101 Manchester Ave, Apt
H, Cardiff, CA San Diego
92007
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Ingrid Johnson, 2101
Manchester Ave Apt H, Cardiff
CA 92007 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/28/14 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 28, 2014. S/Ingrid
Johnson 04/11, 04/18, 04/25,
05/02/14 CN 16065
April 18, 2014
LEGALS 800
LEGALS 800
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-009629
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Clear Meds Rewards
Located at: 770 Sunningdale
Dr, Oceanside, CA San Diego
92057
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Gary W Ripsco, 770
Sunningdale Dr, Oceanside
CA 92057 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
Not Yet Started This statement
was filed with County of the
San Diego Recorder/County
Clerk on Apr 04, 2014. S/Gary
W Ripsco 04/11, 04/18, 04/25,
05/02/14 CN 16064
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-008887
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Wrap it up with Kim B. Wild
Thing Hobbys C. Vacations
by Kim
Located at: 1565
Green Oak Rd, Vista, CA San
Diego 92081 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Valassist Inc, 1565 Green
Oak Rd, Vista CA 92081 This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of
business was: 04/15/13 This
statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 27, 2014.
S/Kimberly
Pineau 04/04, 04/11, 04/18,
04/25/14 CN 16050
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-008992
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Flowers Annette Gomez
Located at: 5431 Avenida
Encinas Suite K, Carlsbad,
CA San Diego 92008 Mailing
Address: PO Box 742, Cardiff
CA 92007 This business is
hereby registered by the
following: 1. Flowers by
Annette Inc, 5431 Avenida
Encinas Suite K, Carlsbad
CA 92008 This business is
conducted by: A Corporation
The first day of business was:
07/01/01 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 28, 2014. S/Pablo
Gomez 04/04, 04/11, 04/18,
04/25/14 CN 16054
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-008947
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. The
Quinton
Group
Located at: 299 Blue Springs
Lane, Oceanside, CA San
Diego 92054 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following: 1.
Yvonne Quinton-Barnett, 299
Blue Springs Lane, Oceanside
CA 92054 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/15/14 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 28, 2014. S/Yvonne
Quinton-Barnett 04/04, 04/11,
04/18, 04/25/14 CN 16053
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-008896
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Antioch Ministries Located
at: 5945 Pacific Center Blvd
#510, San Diego, CA San
Diego 92121 Mailing Address:
PO Box 3335, Oceanside CA
92051 This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Antioch Ministries, 5945
Pacific Center Blvd #510,
San Diego CA 92121 This
business is conducted by: A
Corporation The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 27, 2014.
S/Clarence
Hunter 04/04, 04/11, 04/18,
04/25/14 CN 16052
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007534
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Star and Stone Feng Shui
Located at: 3914 Adams
Avenue, San Diego, CA San
Diego 92116 Mailing Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Kathleen Keelan Rushall,
3914 Adams Avenue, San
Diego CA 92116 This business
is conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
03/17/14 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 17, 2014. S/Kathleen
Keelan Rushall 04/04, 04/11,
04/18, 04/25/14 CN 16051
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-008463
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Living Spices
Located
at: 2301 Paseo de Laura #47,
Oceanside, CA, San Diego,
92056.
Mailing
Address:
2301 Paseo de Laura #47,
Oceanside, CA 92056. This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Elie
Gendloff, 2301 Paseo de Laura
#47, Oceanside, CA 92056.
This business is conducted
by an Individual. The first
day of business was 3/25/14.
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 25, 2014. S/Elie Gendloff
03/28, 04/04, 04/11, 04/18/14
CN 16040
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-008433
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. The Next You Located
at: 2033 San Elijo Ave. Suite
422, Cardiff, CA San Diego
92007.
Mailing
Address:
2033 San Elijo Ave. Suite
422, Cardiff, CA 92007. This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Andrew
Papageorge 2342 Newport
Ave. Cardiff CA 92007. 2. Craig
Marshall 11959 Dorothy Street
#7, Los Angeles CA 90049,
This business is conducted by
A General Partnership. The
first day of business was: Not
Applicable. This statement
was filed with County of the
San Diego Recorder/County
Clerk on Mar 25, 2014. S/
Andrew Papageorge 03/28,
04/04, 04/11, 04/18/14 CN
16039
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-006273
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.Tin KB Coffee Co. Pictures
Located at: 1451 MacKinnon
Ave, Cardiff by the Sea, CA
92007.
Mailing
Address:
____San Diego co., This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Tim KB
Coffee Co Pictures LLC, 1451
Mackinnon Ave, Cardiff by
the Sea CA 92007, California.
This business is conducted by
a Limited Liability Company.
The first day of business
was: January 1, 2013. This
statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 05, 2014. S/Laura McGillArdolino 03/28, 04/04, 04/11,
04/18/14 CN 16037
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-008236
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Santanaways. B. Los 3
Sapos C. Benito Meschoulam
Located at: 1170 Arcadia
Rd, Encinitas, CA San Diego
92024.
Mailing
Address:
Same as Above, This business
is hereby registered by
the following: 1. Benito S
Meschoulam, 1170 Arcadia
Rd, Encinitas CA 92024. This
business is conducted by an
LEGALS 800
Individual. The first day of
business was: 01/01/2014.
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 24, 2014.
S/Benito S
Meschoulam
03/28, 04/04,
04/11, 04/18/14 CN 16034
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007758
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Creative
Engineering
Solutions DBA Smart Door
Located at: 3265 Production
Ave, Oceanside, CA San Diego,
92058. Mailing Address: 3265
Production Ave, Oceanside CA
92058, This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1.
Creative
Engineering
Solutions, 3265 Production
Avenue, Oceanside, CA 92058.
California.
This
business
is
conducted
by:
F.A.
Corporation. The first day
of business was: 03/09/2010.
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 19, 2014. S/June Jones
03/28, 04/04, 04/11, 04/18/14
CN 16033
FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007409
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. New Balance Cardiff by
the Sea
Located at: 2009
Newcastle Ave, Cardiff, CA
San Diego 92007. Mailing
Address: 13434 Clayton Rd.
St. Louis, MO 63131, This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. NBO Shoes,
LLC 13434 Clayton Rd., St.
Louis, Mo. 63131 Oklahoma.
This business is conducted by:
A Limited Liability Company.
The first day of business was:
2/15/2009. This statement
was filed with County of the
San Diego Recorder/County
Clerk on Mar 15, 2014. S/Kipp
Keller
03/28, 04/04, 04/11,
04/18/14 CN 16032
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-004735
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Venetian Mask Society B.
venetianmasksociety.com C.
VMS D. Masquerade Mask
Society E.
Ferrari Masks
F. Maximizer Marketing G.
Radio Station Gear H. Pro
Music Libraries I. Soiar J.
Soiar.com K. cloak shop
L. Ferrari Glass M. Pascal
Ferrari N. Venetian Mask
Shop O. venetianmaskshop.
com P. venetian mask photos
Q.
venetianmaskphotos.
com Located at: 1437 Tennis
Match Way Encinitas Ca San
Diego 92024. Mailing Address:
(same as above) This business
is hereby registered by the
following: F & Co., Inc 1437
Tennis Match Way Encinitas
CA 92024 California. This
business is conducted by: F.A.
Corporation. The first day
of business was: 05/30/2008.
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Feb 19, 2014. S/Pascal Ferrari
03/28, 04/04, 04/11, 04/18/14
CN 16031
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007684
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Illuminating Ink Located
at: 297 Star Jasmine Ln,
Encinitas, CA San Diego
92024
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Alexis Marie Ravey, 3558
Seafarer
Dr,
Oceanside
CA 92054 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
06/18/03 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 18, 2014. S/Alexis
Marie Ravey 03/28, 04/04,
04/11, 04/18/14 CN 16030
LEGALS 800
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007009
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Encinitas Express Cab
Located at: 858 Del-Rio Ave,
Encinitas, CA San Diego
92024
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Haim Hanover, 858 DelRio Ave, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted
by: An Individual The first
day of business was: Not Yet
Started This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 12, 2014.
S/Haim
Hanover 03/28, 04/04, 04/11,
04/18/14 CN 16029
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007542
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
DelTiempo
Home
Improvements
Located
at: 3385 Tonopah Street,
Oceanside, CA San Diego
92054
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following:
1. Kaime B DelTiempo, 3385
Tonopah Street, Oceanside
CA 92054 This business is
conducted by: An Individual
The first day of business was:
10/03/13 This statement was
filed with County of the San
Diego Recorder/County Clerk
on Mar 17, 2014. S/Jaime B
DelTiempo 03/28, 04/04, 04/11,
04/18/14 CN 16026
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007851
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A. Root Woodwork Located
at: 675 Ocean View Ave,
Encinitas, CA San Diego
92024
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following: 1.
Justin Root, 675 Ocean View
Ave, Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 19, 2014. S/Justin Root
03/28, 04/04, 04/11, 04/18/14
CN 16025
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007912
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Sleep
Organic.net
Located at: 4213 Via Tercero,
Oceanside, CA San Diego
92056
Mailing
Address:
Same This business is hereby
registered by the following: 1.
Mark Neel, 4213 Via Tercero,
Oceanside CA 92056 This
business is conducted by: An
Individual The first day of
business was: 03/19/14 This
statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 20, 2014. S/Mark Neel
03/28, 04/04, 04/11, 04/18/14
CN 16024
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT FILE
#2014-007701
Fictitious Business Name(s):
A.
Seaside
Residential
Brokerage Located at: 2093
San Elijo Avenue, Cardiff by
the Sea, CA San Diego 92007
Mailing Address: 1378 ½ Crest
Drive, Encinitas CA 92024 This
business is hereby registered
by the following: 1. Stellar
Bancorp Inc, 1378 ½ Crest
Drive, Encinitas CA 92024
This business is conducted by:
A Corporation The first day of
business was: Not Yet Started
This statement was filed with
County of the San Diego
Recorder/County Clerk on
Mar 18, 2014. S/Seth Chalnick
03/28, 04/04, 04/11, 04/18/14
CN 16023
April 18, 2014 JAN. 31, 2014
B19
B1
T he C oast News T he C oasT News
SOUP TO NUTS by rick Stromoski
games or sports to help boost your stamina.
Show the people you love that they are a top
priority in your life.
By Bernice Bede Osol
FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2014
FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Don’t allow
anyone to take advantage of you. Speak up
and set your own rules. If you are assertive
and you stand your ground, you will get the
desired results. Do your own thing.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Make an effort
to cooperate with family members. Older
Compare your current situation with your relatives may be able to offer insight into
projected goals. Stop contemplating and your problems. Discuss family history with
start moving. Take command of your cir- an elder to discover valuable information.
cumstances and do your best to make the SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Be strict
changes necessary for success. Smaller about the family budget. Frivolous expenses
tasks should be delegated to others so you will deplete your savings if you don’t keep
can concentrate on the big picture.
track of them. Accurate financial records
ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Interesting
new connections will contribute to your
personal prospects. Meeting someone in
a learning environment or at a community
event will turn out to be beneficial.
are essential.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Focus on your
goals, but be careful not to spread yourself
too thin. Timing and a steady pace will make
a difference. Trying to take on too many responsibilities will be your undoing.
misinterpreted.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- You will
be able to continue engaging in pleasant activities once you have resolved a minor family problem. Keep your emotions in check,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Health prob- or you may end up making matters worse.
lems will prevail if you aren’t getting enough CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Don’t
rest. Financial concerns or demanding fam- divulge secrets. Make sure your work relaily members will add to your frustration. tionships stay free of emotional turmoil. Be
Keep your temper under control.
truthful and clear. A casual remark could be
THE BORN LOSER by Art & Chip Sansom
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- It’s great to
get out and mingle, but before forming new
friendships, make sure there isn’t a conflict
of interest. A hastily made promise could
CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Stay out of result in an embarrassing situation.
office debates and keep your opinions to PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Strong alyourself. You will get a lot more done if you liances with your co-workers will enable
are able to ignore all the disgruntled and bit- you to make great strides. Pool your ideas
ter people around you.
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BIG NATE by lincoln peirce
MONTY by Jim Meddick
ARLO & JANIS by Jimmy Johnson
THE GRIZZWELLS by Bill Schorr
ALLEY OOP byJack & Carole Bender
B20
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Safe and sunny — life in Puerta Vallarta
baby
boomer
Joe Moris
It’s hard to believe
that it’s Easter again and
with it will soon come
the May gray and the
June gloom.
Easter comes on the
first full moon Sunday
following the Spring
Equinox. We therefore
have Easters anywhere
from March 22 through
April 20.
Leading up to Easter the weather can be
absolutely perfect yet it
never ceases to amaze
me that you can bet your
bottom dollar that it will
be foggy and cold during
Easter morning sunrise
service, where parishioners sit freezing under
blankets.
It was Easter of 2011
— while lying across the
warm rocks of a short jetty in Punta Mita, at the
northern tip of the Bay of
Banderas in Puerto Vallarta, watching perfect
3-to-4-foot Malibu rights
in 82-degree turquoise
waters — that I pulled
the trigger and bought
a condo on the water in
Puerto Vallarta.
And, with May and
June coming I would
just as soon spend those
months where they have
never experienced fog.
It is an endless summer
there.
It is where I would
rather be than under a
blanket of gray in Encinitas.
In 2011 Mexico was
getting hammered unjustly by our press.
The mainstream —
and even not so mainstream — media were
just aghast at the violence in Mexico.
Also in 2011 Conde
Naste, the traveler publication, listed Puerto Vallarta the seventh safest
tourist destination in the
world.
That
didn’t
matter to friends and loved
ones. They thought for
sure that I would be kidnapped or lose my head.
I have entertained
many visitors and have
had many use my condo
when I’m not there.
They all say the
same things as everyone else who has bought
down there: The place
is beautiful, the people
are friendly, there is old
world charm and 21st
century
conveniences
like Walmart, Costco and
Home Depot.
Since my last column
just two weeks ago, two
of my readers began taking positive steps toward
furthering their change
of life, too.
One is a client who
spent two weeks at my
place in late March and
early April.
He has already called
and said it’s time to sell
his home here.
He already has a
180-degree view and
ocean-close condo picked
out in Punta Mita where
he can play his music
in La Cruz at Philo’s at
night and spend some
quality time in the warm
water during the day
catching “old man” sets.
Fish markets abound
and the cost is little for
a meal.
Soon to be free of
debt, a little social security income and he’s
now taking the steps to
moving down to his new
heaven — a two-and-ahalf hour flight away but
a world apart.
The other is a father
of two and husband who
has become so ill from
the stresses of life that
he has decided that if he
doesn’t change his life
and rid himself of all his
burdens then he’s sure
he will be taken “home”
soon.
My next column will
likely be written from
Puerto Vallarta while
soaking up the spring
warmth of a white sand
beach or enjoying a ballgame at Steve’s Sports
Bar on a lazy Sunday.
There is a caveat:
I’ll stay as long as I can
before work forces me
home. I’m semi-retired
now but I don’t turn
down clients who reappear either.
Any money made just
goes into the nest egg
jar for the unexpected
that pops up from time to
time.
I can still live comfortably on my social security as long as I don’t
buy “things” that I don’t
need. My life has been
quite the roller coaster yet I learned how to
downsize and retire.
It can be done by
anyone and everyone;
you just have to want to.
I’m testimony to that
and now friends and
readers are striking out
so that when we’re done
blinking and its Easter
time again in 2015, they
will be well settled into
their new lifestyles.
See the light and
find your peace.
Happy Easter!
Joe Moris may be
contacted at (760) 5006755 or by email at
[email protected]
Del Mar
Library coming
up roses
DEL MAR — The Del
Mar Branch Library will be
celebrating Rose Weekend
on April 25.
Hundreds of cut roses,
grown by members of the
Del Mar Rose Society for
the Society’s competitive
rose show, will be on display
throughout the library at
1309 Camino del Mar. Local
musicians, KM2, will perform at 11 a.m. Library books
and DVDs on roses and gardening will be featured and
customers will be able to cast
a vote between 9:30 a.m. and
3 p.m. to select the first Del
Mar Library People’s Choice
Rose. The winning rose will
be revealed the morning of
April 26.
“It’s such a treat for everyone in the library to be
surrounded by roses,” said
Polly Cipparrone, library
branch manager.
For more information,
call the library at (858)
755-1666. For information
about San Diego County
Library and other events,
visit sdcl.org.
April 18, 2014 B21
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B22
T he C oast News ITEMS FOR SALE
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Reader Advisory: The National Trade
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avoid misunderstandings, some advertisers do not offer employment but rather
supply the readers with manuals, directories and other materials designed to
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Under NO circumstance should you send
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April 18, 2014 ZERO WASTE
CONTINUED FROM B1
“green team” that keeps recycling, composting, and gardening projects active.
Teachers said the benefits
are reduced waste, and learning opportunities.
OUSD is a STEM-E district, which focuses on science,
technology, engineering, mathematics, and environmental
stewardship.
“The Oceanside Zero
Waste Schools Program fosters
environmental stewardship,
provides hands-on learning
opportunities and serves as
a platform for Common Core
curriculum and STEM-E projects,” Jenna Roripaugh, city
environmental specialist, said.
Some school sites already
have established gardens.
Palmquist Elementary,
which participated in the zero
waste pilot program, boasts a
quarter-acre irrigated organic
garden, composting bins, and
solar powered aquaponics
to clean water. Third grade
teacher Mark Wagner leads
gardening efforts that include
all students.
Vegetables grown in the
thriving school garden are sold
at the local farmer’s market
and used in school site lunches.
“They’re high quality
B23
T he C oast News vegetable that are sold as produce at the Sunset Market, and
used in the nutritional services
program on site,” Roripaugh
said. “The kids take care of
this garden.”
Through participating in
the zero waste program Palmquist Elementary increased
its recycling efforts from 24
percent to 85 percent, saving
the school $600 a month on its
trash bill.
Some eco-smart lessons
were learned, such as purchasing and disposing of recycled
materials is more cost effective
than purchasing and disposing
of environmentally unfriendly
Styrofoam.
The zero waste program
will continue to be implemented at three to five school
sites each semester, with the
end goal of reducing waste
by 75 percent in all 23 district
schools by 2020.
The
expected
districtwide savings on the trash
bill, after full implementation,
is $100,000 annually.
There is also a ripple
effect from families being involved in school site zero waste
projects and implementing the
ideas at home.
“We’re creating a cultural change for our community
and environment,” Roripaugh
said.
SMALL TALK
CONTINUED FROM B1
the breathing discipline of
an opera tenor.
And I believe they have
mastered a look that has the
same affect as a bucket of
cold water. The best of them
find ways to channel the upwelling of giddiness into creative learning. Those are the
true masters.
Other sure signs are
harder to spot in California,
as girls here wear teeny, tiny
shorts all year long.
They may have a parka
on top, but their legs seem
weatherproof. I imagine in
Minnesota, the sixth-grade
boys must get whiplash the
first week of warm weather,
when the girls lose the heavy
coats and break out the minimal wardrobe.
To add insult to injury,
this is the year of “health
class.” It’s time to learn
about all those body parts
that have suddenly leapt into
action.
Most kids would rather
stab themselves in the eye
with a pencil. Upon returning the final test, the teacher
intones, “Please take these
home and share them with
your parents.”
Card
If you listen very closely, you can almost hear the
unanimous student response
— “Yeah. About the same
time I give up my phone, eat
a scorpion and then take a
dip in the nearest volcano.”
Jean Gillette is a freelance
writer who is always happy she
is not headed for junior high.
Contact her at [email protected].
B24
T he C oast News April 18, 2014
Purchase or lease any new (previously untitled) Subaru and receive a complimentary factory
scheduled maintenance plan for 2 years or 24,000 miles (whichever comes first.) See Subaru
Added Security Maintenance Plan for intervals, coverages and limitations. Customer must take
delivery before 12-31-2014 and reside within the promotional area. At participating dealers only.
See dealer for program details and eligibility.
Model EDD. Payments + tax & License, 36 mo. closed end
lease with purchase option. $1999 Due at Signing. $0 security
deposit required, On approved credit. Excess mileage fees of
15¢ per mile. Based on 10,000 miles per year. MSRP $28510
#E3215893 All advertised prices exclude government fees and
taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document processing
charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing
charge. Expires 4-20-2014.
Car Country Drive
5500 Paseo Del Norte Car Country Carlsbad
Car Country Drive
760-438-2200
www.bobbakersubaru.com
** EPA-estimated fuel economy. Actual mileage may vary. Subaru Tribeca, Forester, Impreza & Outback are registered trademarks. All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. Expires 4-20-2014.
ar Country Drive
Car Country Drive
JEEPCHRYSLER MITS
0.9
%
APR
Financing Available up to 60 months
on all new Clean Diesel 2014 Volkswagen TDI models!*
*APR offer good on new 2014 Volkswagen TDI models. Example: For 0.9% APR, monthly payment for every $1,000 you
finance for 60 months is $17.05. No down payment required with approved credit through Volkswagen Credit. Not all
customers will qualify for lowest rate. See dealer for details. Offer Expires 4/30/14
PLUS! $1000 Fuel Card or $1000 Manufacturer Bonus
Customers purchasing or leasing a new VW TDI model will have the opportunity to choose between a $1000 Fuel Card
or $1000 Manufacturer’s Bonus. Please see dealer for details.
760-438-2200
VOLKSWAGEN
5500 Paseo Del Norte
Car Country Carlsbad
BobBakerVW.com
All advertised prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, $80 dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. Expires 4-30-2014.
ar Country Drive
ar Country Drive
JEEP • CHRYSLER • MITSUBISHI