Document 6588158

Transcription

Document 6588158
1 9 31
THE CAMBRIAN
5
-20 1
84
An edition of THE TRIBUNE
ElectionResults
Thursday, November 6, 2014
More, please: The season’s first rain
————————————
Del
Clegg
Lesli
Murdoch
Cambria CSD
Candidate
i-Jim Bahringer
i-M. Thompson
Jeff Hellman
Richard Hawley
Write-ins
Votes
1,280
1,270
890
861
54
A rainbow
makes an
appearance
Saturday
morning at
Leffingwell
Landing
against a
backdrop of
still-cloudy
skies after
the majority
of the rain
fell Friday
evening. A
faint second
rainbow can
be seen at
upper left.
%
29.39
29.16
20.44
19.77
1.24
Coast Unified School Board
Candidate
Votes
%
i-Del Clegg
2,060 44.53
Lesli Murdoch
1,286 27.80
Michael Foster
1,191
25.75
Write-ins
89
1.92
i — incumbent
Results with 100 percent of
precincts reporting.
Page 3: Second seat still up for
grabs in Coast Unified race.
INSIDE THIS WEEK
Agenda
Arts & Events
Classified ads
Crossword
Dates & Data
Letters
Obituaries
Sheriff’s Log
Weather
14
15
26-29
30
11, 13
8-10
5
6
13
PHOTO BY
JASON BUHL
AN APPETITE WHETTED
Storm drops more than an inch of rain on Halloween night
By Kathe Tanner
The Cambrian
And the rains came …
on Halloween night.
During the storm that
came ashore Oct. 31,
many North Coast locations received more than
an inch of mostly gentle
rainfall with breezes, but
not stiff winds.
According to various
officials: No flooding or
downed trees were re-
por ted to the Cambria
Fire Depar tment; no
damage was reported at
Hearst Castle or area
State Parks units; and the
rain didn’t disrupt
progress on the Cambria
Community Ser vices
District water-reclamation project under construction on San Simeon
Creek Road.
Late-goers to the farmers market got drenched.
Fewer trick-or-treaters
than usual knocked on
doors along the holidaydecorated Wood Drive
area. Some homeowners
estimated that they handed out sweets to about
350 hardy, soggy costumed youngsters (and a
few parents), or approximately half the usual
number.
See RAIN, Page 4
Vol. 84, No. 3
75¢
ELECTION2014
CCSD race goes
to incumbents
Jim Bahringer, Michael Thompson hold seats
By Kathe Tanner
The Cambrian
Cambria voters swept two
incumbents back into office
on the Cambria Community
Services District board.
As of 11:17 p.m. on Election Day, with 100 percent of
the ballots counted in the
race for two seats on the
Board of Directors, Board
President Jim Bahringer
and Director Michael
Thompson were leading,
each with more than 29 percent of the votes.
Challengers Jeff Hellman
and Richard Hawley trailed
with 20.44 and 19.77 per-
Jim
Bahringer
Michael
Thompson
cent, respectively. Write-in
candidates received 1.24
percent of the votes.
While the race had two
certified write-in candidates
— Stephen Kniffen and Jeff
Walters — those votes won’t
See CCSD, Page 4
County drought grant: Cambria
will share in $6.3 million total
By Kathe Tanner
The Cambrian
Five San Luis Obispo
County drought-related
projects — including Cambria’s $9 million emergency
water-reclamation project
and a $3.5 million “purple
pipe” distribution system
for recycled water in San
Simeon — will divvy up
about $6.3 million in state
drought grant money.
That’s nearly of half what
county officials sought from
the Proposition 84 funds, in
terms of the nearly $13 million estimated project cost
when the grant application
was submitted, according to
Dave Flynn, deputy director
of Public Works.
See GRANT, Page 31
2
November 6-12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
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November 6-12, 2014
COMMUNITY NEWS
Sea life: Rescuing injured marine mammals
THE CAMBRIAN
3
Coast Un i f i e d Sc hool Boar d
—————————
SEA LIONS SET FREE AT LEFFINGWELL Clegg re-elected; 2
Leanna Boyd
of San Luis
Obispo, right,
helps other
Marine
Mammal
Center
volunteers
with one of
two sea lions
released at
Leffingwell
Landing last
week. Both
animals were
rescued and
rehabilitated
before being
returned to
the sea.
One of the animals
was rescued after
becoming tangled in
fishing line near
Morro Rock
By Steve Provost
The Cambrian
Two sea lions returned to
the Pacific Ocean at Leffingwell Landing, with the
help of the Marine Mammal Center and about a
dozen volunteers.
The animals dubbed —
Socks and Bebbles — had
been rescued along the
Central Coast in mid-October and had spent the past
two weeks in rehabilitation
before they were ready to
venture back into the
waves.
“Down here, we don’t do
them very often, “ Aubrey
St. Marie said of the releases. “I think this is the second one this summer, but
before that, it’s been a couple of years since we had
one here.”
St. Marie, who has been
involved with the Marine
Mammal Center for 10
years, began serving as interim site manager during
the summer and took the
job permanently a week
ago. She oversaw the
Thursday’s releases.
The guests of honor, riding in large carriers, arrived at Moonstone Beach
via pickup about 1:30 p.m.
the day before Halloween,
then driven down the ramp
to the beach near the
bridge.
Volunteers
were
equipped with wooden
boards that looked a little
like boogie boards, then
stationed on either side of
the animal carriers before
the doors were opened.
Their task was to direct the
PHOTOS BY STEVE PROVOST
A volunteer watches as one of the sea lions takes its
final steps toward the Pacific Ocean.
animals gently toward the
sea.
Bebbles went first and
only stopped briefly in making a beeline toward the
small breaking waves. The
yearling female had been
found on a staircase at a
public beach in Monterey
County and was deemed
undernourished.
She
looked full of energy on
Thursday, though, dashing
out of the carrier as soon as
the gate was opened.
Socks was a little more
tentative. The subadult (2to 5-year-old) female had
been found Oct. 13 at Morro Rock, her mouth and
neck snared in fish netting.
St. Marie directed the
board-carrying volunteers
to take a couple of steps forward as a means of urging
Socks into the Pacific.
“It’s hard to tell what
they’re thinking,” St. Marie
said. “Sometimes they just
need a little encouragement
from us to get back out in
the water.”
A yearling male named
Orchard had also been
scheduled for release Oct.
30, but the Marine Mammal Center determined he
wasn’t yet feeling well
enough to return to the sea.
St. Marie said the mammal center can rescue animals for a variety of reasons, including bacterial infection, wounds, trauma
and maternal separation.
Sea lions are the most common patients; both Socks
and Bebbles were treated at
the center’s Sausalito hospital before being released.
It was a busy summer at
the rescue center, which
had tended to at least 84 sea
lions, 63 elephant seals and
five harbor seals by early
July.
But things have calmed
down quite a bit since then,
St. Marie said.
“Right now, it’s been a
quieter season,” she said.
“It’s definitely what we call
our slower season.”
vie for second seat
following week.
The two winners and the
other three trustees —
Cindy Fratto, Sue Nash and
Judith Hillen — will have a
By Kathe Tanner
lot on their plates.
The Cambrian
There’s plenty to accomVoters in the Coast Unified School District have plish as the district continover whelmingly returned ues clawing its way up out of
incumbent Del Clegg to the the fiscal red after the overBoard of Trustees, with whelming recession and
2,060 votes, or 44.53 percent cutbacks in state funding.
New district Superintendof ballots tallied by late Elecent
Vicki Schumacher (who
tion Night.
However, with 100 per- took over in July as the discent of votes counted, fewer trict’s third leader since
than 100 votes separate the 2013) says issues facing the
district include maintaining
results for two canfiscal health with an
didates seeking to
annual budget of
fill a seat to be vamore than $10 milcated in December
lion, focusing on proby retiring Trustee
fessional learning to
Dianne Brooke
support teachers in
Candidates Lesli
implementing
the
Murdoch of Camcomplex Common
bria and Michael
Core State Standards,
Foster of Cayucos Vicki
emphasizing
student
Schumacher
received 1,286 and
achievement, approv1,191 votes respecing a multiyear techtively (27.80 and 25.75 pernology plan and improving
cent of the votes).
While Murdoch has the district facilities, such as the
lead, the ultimate winner rutted, weed-choked middle
may not be decided until all school playfield.
According to Schumacher,
outstanding ballots are tallied in a laborious and time- the district serves slightly
consuming process done more than 700 students, with
mostly by hand, which in- an average class size of 15.
cludes the count of provisional and late-arriving
absentee ballots.
For the Record
As of early Wednesday,
—————————
Nov. 5, it wasn’t known how
The Cambrian is
many of those remained to
be counted in the CUSD committed to making its
race. Countywide, Clerk- news articles accurate and
Recorder Julie Rodewald fair. It is the paper’s policy
said, roughly 20,000 absen- to correct errors of fact and
tee and 2,600 provisional clarify misleading stateballots remained. She said ments. If you see an error,
she hopes the vast majority bring it to our attention
of the mail-ins will bee tal- by calling 927-8895 or
lied by Friday. Provisional emailing cambrian@the
ballots will be counted the tribunenews.com.
Fewer than 100 votes
separate Murdoch
and Foster.
4
THE CAMBRIAN
The Hometown Newspaper of the
scenic North Coast of San Luis Obispo
County at Cambria, CA. Published
weekly by The Tribune, 2442 Main St.,
Cambria, California 93428.
Subscription price: $39 per year in
SLO County, $52 per year elsewhere
in USA, in advance. Single copy price:
75¢. Advertising rates available upon
request. Entered as 2nd class mail
matter in Cambria, CA Post Office
under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
A legal publication adjudicated Sept.
26, 1932, San Luis Obispo Superior
Court File No. 10462. U.S. Postal
Service identification No. 086-420.
Copyright 2014, The Tribune. No part
of this publication may be
reproduced or reprinted without
permission of the publisher.
An award-winning
member of the
California Newspaper
Publishers
Association and The National
Newspaper Association
A McClatchy Newspaper
Publisher
Bruce Ray
781-7825, [email protected]
Circulation
Didn’t get your paper? Want to
subscribe? Call (800) 288-4128
Advertising
Advertising Office
Classified Advertising
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Fax
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Send advertising copy to:
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Ad deadlines*
Castles & Cottages: Space — Noon Thursday
Castles & Cottages: Copy — 10 a.m. Friday
Legal Notice: 10 a.m. Friday
Cambrian Display-Space: Noon Thursday
Cambrian Display-Copy: 10 a.m. Friday
Obituaries: Monday noon
Classified Liner Ads: Tuesday noon
News
Steve Provost, Managing Editor
927-8895, [email protected]
Kathe Tanner, Reporter
927-4140, [email protected]
News deadlines*
Letters to the editor: Friday, noon
Press releases/calendars: Thursday, noon
*HOLIDAY DEADLINES: Any time a holiday
occurs that necessitates closure of the
office, all deadlines are moved back one
working day.
FROM PAGE ONE
November 6-12, 2014
Rain
CCSD
Rocky Butte, northeast
of Cambria, received 1.54
inches of the wet stuff. The
butte, the highest point in
the area, is just beyond the
edge of the San Simeon
Creek watershed, according to area ranchers.
The Walter Ranch, about
1,100 feet above sea level
and about 9 miles east of
the Main Street/Santa
Rosa Creek Road intersection, received 2.04 inches
of rain during the storm.
Those figures are significant because the Cambria
Community Services District draws the town’s municipal water supply from
wells along the two creeks.
The precipitation, the
most significant in nearly
190 days, according to
PG&E meteorologist John
Lindsey, delighted gardeners, water purveyors and
drought-conscious conservers who’ve been anxiously watching their watermeter readings.
The early-season rainfall
didn’t, however, break the
drought — which Lindsey
said is “unprecedented”
since the beginning of the
last century.
Stringent Stage 3 wateruse restrictions remain in
force in Cambria and San
Simeon, as they are expected to be until the area
gets a substantial amount
of additional rainfall.
Cambria CSD officials
have said colloquially for
years that, in a normal
year, it takes 10 to 12 inches of rain in the area
around Rocky Butte to
recharge the San Simeon
Creek watershed, and a
similar amount at the headlands of Santa Rosa Creek
to fill up those wells.
Total recharge of the
wells is determined by
their levels: San Simeon
Creek wells are considered full at about 20 feet.
But there are other ways
be of ficially allocated to
them (or any other write-in
candidates) until later in the
ballot-counting process.
That laborious and timeconsuming process, done
mostly by hand, includes
the count of provisional and
late-arriving absentee ballots, which can change the
outcome of tight races.
The primary issue facing
the CSD winners will be the
complex process of getting
environmental and other
clearances to use the district’s new $9 million emergency water-supply project
on a permanent basis. The
project, designed to produce potable water from a
brackish blend, is being
built under an emergency
permit from the county.
A significant turning
point in that process is expected Friday, Nov. 14,
when a state water quality
agency board considers revising the services district’s
requirements for waste discharge and water recycling.
That’s the same day, construction of the new waterreclamation plant on San
Simeon Creek Road is to be
complete, according to
terms of the county’s
drought-triggered emergency permit.
Cambria Community
Services District and Central Coast Regional Water
Control Board staffers have
been negotiating several
sticking points in the district’s plan for handling the
waste brine, such as increased gopher control, the
need for a $17,600-a-year
surety bond and the safety
of a 6.2-million-gallon holding pond with a mechanical
spray-blower system to enhance evaporation.
Besides water, the CSD
provides sewage treatment,
in-town fire protection, trails
and parks such as Fiscalini
Ranch Preser ve, facilities
such as the Veterans Me-
From Page 1
From Page 1
PHOTO BY MICHELE SHERMAN
Taylor Hilden covers up the ‘Taproom Tammy’
scarecrow in front of the Cambria Historical Museum
on the afternoon of Oct. 30, a day before the storm
passed through.
to know whether an aquifer
is recharged, according to
area ranchers and scientists. Cambria resident Bill
Bianchi, a soil and groundwater physicist, says he
considers the watershed
completely saturated“when
you see water flowing out
of the squirrel holes in the
ground.”
Fire danger was momentarily lessened by the
Halloween-night storm,
but how long that will last
depends on how quickly
the next rain arrives, according to Fire Chief Mark
Miller and former fire chief
Bob Putney.
With so many stressed
and dying trees and so
many native and invasive
species literally drying on
the vine or the stem, “We’ll
need more than just a normal wet year to get back to
where our fuel moistures
are back in line,” Miller estimated. “We’ll need an extremely wet winter, followed by a wet or normal
one, to get us back in the
ballgame.”
“It was nice to get the
rain,” Putney said, “but I
don’t really think it changes
much for our future,” in
terms of community safety
and fire protection.
Lindsey said late October usually marks the beginning of the Central
Coast rains. “On average,
January and February are
the wettest months. They
both average over 5 inches
in Cambria,” he said.
“However, December
and March can also be extremely wet months. So
what will winter bring for
the drought-plagued Cambria? The Climate Prediction Center is now indicating that ‘El Niño is favored
to begin in the next one to
two months and (to) last into the Northern Hemisphere until spring 2015.’
They’ve also increased the
likelihood of normal or
above-rainfall for San Luis
Obispo County this winter.”
Lindsey said the Pacific
Decadal
Oscillation
(PDO), another large-scale
seawater temperature cycle that can af fect area
rainfall, “is still in a strong
positive or warm phase.
This condition is characterized by higher-thannormal sea-sur face temperatures in the north and
eastern Pacific and tends
to enhance El Niño conditions. Of course, these are
long-range forecasts and
there are no guarantees.
Only time will tell the
story. Nevertheless, I feel
more confident in a prediction of normal to abovenormal precipitation this
rain season.”
IF YOU GO
The Central Coast Regional
Water Quality Control Board’s
meeting Friday, Nov. 14, starts at
8:30 a.m. in the board offices,
895 Aerovista Place, Suite 101,
San Luis Obispo. The board is
scheduled to consider waste
discharge and water recycling
requirements for the Cambria
Community Services District’s
revised plan for permanent use
of its emergency water supply
project. The water board also is
to consider new waste discharge
requirements for the district’s
surface impoundment (waste
pond) for the project.
The Cambria Community
Services District Board of
Directors meeting will be
Thursday, Nov. 20, at 12:30 p.m. at
the Veterans Memorial Building.
morial Building, and the allvolunteer Parks, Recreation
and Open Space Commission and Nor th Coast
Ocean Rescue Team.
Other issues facing the
district board include:
• Asking customers to
approve another rate increase so the district has
funds to update or replace
aging infrastructure and
equipment and start building reserve funds.
• Determining how to
care for a rare, aging but
protected native stand of
Monterey pines.
• Having more than 660
properties on a wait list to
build.
• Maintaining a diverse
por tfolio of open space,
trails and parks and planning for a recreational park
on the preser ve’s East
Ranch area.
The district’s midyear operating budget for the 201415 fiscal year includes about
$8 million in income and
$9.2 in expenditures, but directors expect to consider a
budget update at their Nov.
20 meeting. General Manager Jerry Gruber estimated in September that the
district has the equivalent of
27 full-time employees.
November 6-12, 2014
COMMUNITY NEWS
BACK TO A FUTURISTIC HALLOWEEN PARADE
THE CAMBRIAN
5
Online survey assesses
impact of the drought
County wants to know how the crisis has affected
local wells and has set up a website to find out
By Kathe Tanner
The Cambrian
PHOTO BY MERLE BASSETT
R
ick Bruce, aka the Village Wizard, leads costumed youngsters down Main Street on
Friday, Oct. 31, during the annual Halloween parade. Bruce is dressed as Emmett
‘Doc’ Brown, the character played by actor Christopher Lloyd in the ‘Back to the Future’
movie trilogy. The parade Friday afternoon beat the rains by just a couple of hours.
Youngsters of all ages were invited to take part in the event, with plenty of parents tagging
along to keep them company. The kids didn’t forget the purpose of Halloween — that is to
say, collecting candy — and brought along pumpkin-shaped containers, bags and other
receptacles to collect goodies along the route.
HOW TO COMPLETE THE SURVEY
San Luis Obispo County officials To complete the survey online
have created an online sur vey to go to www.slocounty.ca.gov/admin/
assess the impacts of the drought Drought_Update or call 781-5011.
on local wells.
“We’re under federal, state and
Gibson said the drought’s effects
county drought declarations, and on the “municipal supply in Camknowing what damage is actually bria and San Simeon are well
happening is important to know,” known, but this sur vey request
Supervisor Bruce Gibson told The also would apply to people in rural
Cambrian on Nov. 3. “The very seri- areas,” such as ranchers, farmers
ous drought we’re in is causing and residents who get their water
threats and damage to people’s from individual wells on their own
water supplies. For the county to be land.
in the best position to seek outside
The county’s anonymous survey
aid in this situation, we need a clear can be filled out online or by telepicture. So we’re certainly interested phone. Data collected from the
to hear from anybody with a difficult sur vey will support the county’s
situation to report.”
request for federal disaster assisNorth Coast input could be crucial tance that could be available for infor the survey, because the area has dividuals affected by the drought.
been hit so hard by the lack of waThe county Administrative Office
ter. Stage 3 emergency water-use re- has set up a task force to coordistrictions — the most severe — are nate drought monitoring, impact
in force in Cambria and San Simeon. assessments and public informaStringent water-conservation prac- tion. The task force is composed
tices are the norm. People are taking of representatives from various
fewer showers and hauling around county departments.
buckets of shower and washing
water to flush toilets, wash cars and
Reporter David Sneed
help prized plantings survive.
contributed to this story.
Obituary
————————————
Paula Brown
Artist, designer, softspoken free spirit: Paula, our
mother, passed away peacefully in her sleep of natural
causes Oct. 21, 2014. She
was 78.
Mom was an artist in collage and watercolor. She
loved and was inspired by
the colors and landscapes of
Cambria. She participated in
the Cambria art walks and a
number of other art shows in
the area. For many years,
Mom was a clothing designer, designing Italian knitwear
for multiple companies,
which she started and owned
including Gino Paoli and
Jabberwocky. Mom was always reinventing herself —
clothing designer, social
worker, psychologist, journalist and artist. She lived in
New York City, Woodstock,
Rome, L.A. and Cambria. She
was an avid reader and belonged to many book clubs
over the years. In Cambria,
she also participated in many
local clubs and activities, including the Newcomers
Club, Mahjong, and Lunch
Bunch. Mom had a wonderful eye for design — her
homes were always welcoming, her clothes were always
impeccable, her jewelry was
fun and stylish; she wore
hats. We will miss our mom,
but we know she is at peace.
Paula leaves behind three
children: Tom, Leslie and
Josh; one grandchild, Sarah
June; and Mopsie, her dog.
She also leaves her sister,
Ronnie, who sat with her
through much of her illness,
and her brother George,
whom she talked with fre-
quently. Finally, Mom leaves
her friends. Thank you for being there with her, especially
Silvia, Lucia and Margaret.
The family would like to
thank the two caregivers,
Sandy and Cyndi — you guys
were great — and Carolyn,
who has adopted Mopsie.
A celebration of Paula’s
life will be held in Cambria
at a day and time to be announced.
6
THE CAMBRIAN
COMMUNITY COLUMNIST
Pet Topics
November 6-12, 2014
Homeless Animal Rescue Team
—————————
Holidays are the purrfect opportunity to adopt and donate
T
he kitties are all
cheering and
smiling at HART
with the many
plans that are
going on for their benefit.
Hopefully, you’ve made it
inside to see our new Cat
Lover’s Gift Shop, full of
merchandise including custom ID tags, an expanded
greeting card selection,
handcrafted items and all
the necessities for Puss
and Fido.
We’re just finishing up
our “doggie” clearance special and are going into November with two events.
The first is a “black cat special,” with all black cats and
kittens over 9 months available for a special adoption
MORE INFORMATION
expanding our adoptions
and
volunteer base. The
To learn more, call HART at
public is invited to enjoy
927-7377 or drop by 2638 Main St.
the official grand opening
Tuesday through Saturday from
with us Nov. 8.
noon to 5 p.m. Check out HART’s
Also in November, we are
newly designed and expanded
once again joining with
website at www.slohart.org.
Goodwill Industries to “Fill
the Truck” with usable
fee of just $5. Often overdonations. The Goodwill
looked but generally sweet truck will be at HART from
tempered, our black kitties 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 7-9.
are ready and waiting to
By the time this article apbecome your friend for life. pears, pre-pickup arrangeWe took our kitties and our ments will have ended, but,
special on the road Nov. 1
if you can get donations to
to the newly opened Lemos us (subject to the few
Pet Store in Morro Bay
things Goodwill doesn’t ac(new building at the same
cept), we can help declutter
location: 1320 Main St.).
your house for the holidays!
On the first Saturday of
Help us fill a truck to earn
every month, we will bring money for the shelter. Each
cats to Lemos in hopes of
truckload or partial truck-
PHOTO BY MARILYN ZAHM
Kittens are waiting to be adopted and steal your HART.
load results in a grant to
help with expenses. A donation receipt is available.
December brings the
Festival of Trees, holiday
merchandise in our Cat
Lover’s Gift Shop and the
Christmas Market, where
pictures with Santa (of you,
your kids, your pets or all
of the above) will be available from our volunteer
photographers for a small
donation. This would also
be a good time to give a
Guardian Angel Gift Certificate to friends and family.
Your gift will help with
medical care for special
needs cats. We are hopeful
that these events, along
with our year-end newsletter will stimulate donations
to help us keep going.
After the holidays, just a
reminder to you to save the
date for our Wines, Pines &
Felines event, scheduled for
Sunday, April 12, at Camp
Ocean Pines. If you haven’t
yet attended one of these, it
is becoming our signature
event, with fine wines, great
food, music and lots of fun.
Organizational meetings
have begun, and you are invited to participate.
This column, which
appears quarterly, was
written by board members
Susan Barghini, secretary/
treasurer; and Carol Jean
Attoe.
Sheriff’sLog
————————————
From Monday, Oct. 27, through
Sunday, Nov. 2, there were
36 entries in the Sheriff’s log for
the Cambria/San Simeon area.
Reports were written on nine,
including:
Monday, Oct. 27
Burton Drive at Highway 1,
3:18 a.m.: Cody Shea Flammer, 23,
was charged with felony posses-
sion of a controlled substance and
a misdemeanor for possession of
paraphernalia used for unlawfully
injecting or smoking a controlled
substance.
2100 block of Ogden Drive,
12:15 p.m.: Burglary.
1800 block of Windsor
Boulevard, 1:08 p.m.: Burglary.
Thursday, Oct. 30
400 block of Weymouth Street,
4:12 p.m.: Battery.
Friday, Oct. 31
2100 block of Orme Place,
12:43 a.m.: Kim Soo Min McMillan,
24, charged with felony possession of a controlled substance and
possessing a dirk or dagger, and
misdemeanor charges of giving
false identification and possession of a controlled substance.
Saturday, Nov. 1
9300 block of Castillo Drive,
San Simeon, 12:04 a.m.:
Suspicious circumstances.
2900 block of Burton Drive,
7:06 a.m.: Grand theft.
2100 block of Orme Place,
4:56 p.m.: Burglary.
(!+ )'# *$%$,'"&&
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Sunday, Nov. 2
500 block of Main St.,
11:13 a.m.: Petty theft.
Call today for home delivery.
1-800-288-4128.
November 6-12, 2014
COMMUNITY COLUMNIST
THE CAMBRIAN
7
Tale s f rom Town Con s u e lo Mac e do
—————————
Plans call for making Maggetti House office, research space
I
n 1994 the PROS
Commission created
the vision of a historical park along Center Street in the East
Village. The Cambria Historical Society took the
first step toward that
vision by restoring the
Bianchini House (as it was
known at the time), and
opened it as the Cambria
Historical Museum in December 2008. In 1978,
neighbors organized as
The Center Street Association arrested development of the property
by having it placed on
the National Register of
Historic Places as of
January 1980.
We are grateful to Marjorie Delyser, daughter of
Clyde Meacham, The Cambria Courier’s editor (19161918), for resisting efforts
to demolish the historic
Maggetti House by purchasing and renovating it in
1976.
We are also grateful to
her family for maintaining
the Maggetti House over
the years while it was used
by various businesses, and
making it available to the
Cambria Historical Society
as the second step toward
the Center Street Historical
Park vision.
The Historical Society
has purchased the structure and now seeks community support to make the
historic district the focus of
GOT NEWS?!
Contact
THE CAMBRIAN
newsroom!
927-8895
Fax: 927-4708
e-mail:
[email protected]
our quaint
village. Society President John
Ehlers reports that
Consuelo
“everyone
is
Macedo cooks,
delighted
writes and
that this
stargazes
house is reon Happy Hill.
maining in
the hands of
those who appreciate its
history. The current shop,
Hidden Gate Antiques, will
continue there in business
for the time being.
“Strategic plans in the
future for the Maggetti
House include making it
an office space and research facility for the public. The office in the current museum at Burton
Drive and Center Street
will be restored to the bedroom it once was. The purchase of the Maggetti
House was initially made
possible by an anonymous
donor who wishes the contribution to be a challenge
for other Cambrians to
contribute towards the
purchase and restoration
of the house.”
After its construction
ABOUT THE MUSEUM
The Historical Museum and
Book Shop is staffed by
volunteers from 1 to 4 p.m. Friday
through Monday and from 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Monday. The Heirloom
Gardens are open every day, and
nursery items propagated from
the property are on sale in the
backyard nursery.
For information, call 927-2891,
or go to www.cambriahistorical
society.com. On Facebook:
www.facebook.com/cambria
historicalsociety.
COURTESY PHOTO
Members of the board of directors of the Cambria
Historical Society met to view the historic ‘Little Blue
House.’ Left to right are Consuelo Macedo, Penny
Church, Marj Sewell, Debbie Johnson (standing at
rear), President John Ehlers, Bob Johnson and Kelly
Johnson. Dennis Rightmer, Brian Glusovich and
Richard Lee were not available for the picture.
about 1875, it was owned
and occupied by members
of the Maggetti family until
1975; the tiny second story,
accessed by a stairway
23 inches wide, was added
in 1900. For 40 years, it was
rented by Rocco and Elvira
Bianchini Rava, when it was
known as the Mushroom
House, for a business that
Rocco engaged in, gathering and drying mushrooms
on the fence.
The Cambria Historical
Society will begin a capital
campaign to retire the new
mortgage, having retired
the initial mortgage on the
Guthrie-Bianchini House
two years ago. The
501(c)(3) organization depends on fundraisers, contributions and grants to
support its operations and
mission, so all donations
are tax deductible.
The October Harvest
Festival weekend of events
has provided major funding in the past. This year
the Farm and Ranch Tour
featured the Derby Winery operation, the
Crowther Avocado Ranch
on the historic Van Gorden acreage, and the
Hearst Arabian Horse
Ranch on Pico Creek. The
last of these is on the original Stagecoach Road that
was replaced by old Highway 1, which used to meander along the coast as a
two-lane road with singlelane bridges. Sixty participants on the tour were
amazed by the lovely
Spanish-style “barn” designed by Julia Morgan for
William Randolph Hearst
and his prize steeds, as
well as the picturesque
original stage coach stop
building.
After watching the
horses run through their
paces, the group had lunch
at the new Hearst San
Simeon Warehouse, and
toured the original wharf
warehouses, which were at
one time filled with artifacts acquired by Hearst
for La Cuesta Encantada.
Consuelo Macedo’s column is special to The Cambrian and appears the first
Thursday of each month.
Macedo is community relations chairwoman for the
Cambria Historical Society
Board of Directors.
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THE CAMBRIAN
THE CAMBRIAN
Send letters by noon Friday or hand-deliver
by 5 p.m. Thursday to:
Email: [email protected]
2442 Main St., Cambria CA 93428
Fax: (805) 927-4708
Phone: (805) 927-8895
Letters to the editor may be edited.
Shorter letters on local topics appear sooner.
Editor’s Note s
—————————
Permit us to remodel
the English language
W
hen is a remodel not a remodel? That
question has been tugging at the corners of my mind (if a mind has corners) since I attended a North Coast
Advisory Council meeting a couple of
weeks ago. There, the council voted 9-0, with three abstentions, to recommend against a minor use permit involving the demolition of a 588-square-foot home on Andover Place and construction of a 3,335-square-foot residence a couple of miles away on Sherwood Drive.
The project, involving the transfer of a water meter
from the old site to Sherwood, was described as a “remodel,” a term that seemed to confuse several members
of the audience.
(For the record, Merriam Webster’s online dictionary doesn’t even recognize the
word as a noun. It’s a verb that means to
“alter the structure” of something; not to
tear one thing down and build something
Steve Provost
completely different.)
is managing
There are numerous terms that just
editor of
don’t fit what they purport to describe.
The Cambrian.
Musicians still release “albums,” even
though new music these days seldom
comes in cardboard sleeves with snazzy artwork and
printed lyrics. We still “dial” our friends’ numbers, even
though phones with circular dials are pure nostalgia. And
the football Giants and Jets don’t even play in the state of
New York, let alone the city.
Still, the labels persist.
The use of the word “remodel” in the case of the water
meter transfer is a little more complicated.
For one thing, two entities — San Luis Obispo County
and the Cambria Community Services District — must
approve the action, and the two don’t always use the
same language.
“I think what we’re seeing there is a confusion in
terminology between the two agencies,” county Supervisor
Bruce Gibson said.
The county, for its part, doesn’t describe the action as
Please see NOTES, Next Page
OPINION
‘A good newspaper is a community talking to itself.’
Let te r s to th e Editor
—————————
Thanks from Lions
he Lions Club of CamT
bria wishes to thank
the Cambria Drug and
Gift Pharmacy, Heritage
Oaks Bank, Rabobank,
Cookie Crock Market, the
U.S. Post Office and
Farmers Market for letting us set up for White
Cane Day on Oct. 10. We
also wish to thank all
45 people who worked on
behalf of the Lions; some
worked double shifts. A
heartfelt thanks to all the
Cambrians and visitors
who gave to help this worthy cause.
All money donated is
spent locally for eye care.
Vision screening is done
yearly at Cambria
schools. We also work
with other groups by collecting eyeglasses from
several optometrists
around the county. The
glasses are then packed
and shipped to other
countries to help their citizens.
Vision care is the priority of all Lions Clubs, and
Cambria does its part,
thanks to all of you. The
total collected this year
was $1,570.65.
Lanny Loveland
White Cane chairman
Response from CHC
Below is our response
to the opinion letter by
Anke van der Schaft, published in the Oct. 2 edition
of The Cambrian.
At Community Health
ICYMI: In case you missed it, find
archived Letters to the Editor
online at thecambrian.com.
Centers of the Central
Coast (CHC), we never
stop caring for our patients. We strive to improve the health and wellbeing of everyone who
comes to us for health
care. To maintain the
health and safety of our
patients and our staff,
both groups must operate
within the federal guidelines for patient rights and
responsibilities.
After every attempt has
been made to implement
a treatment plan, it’s possible that a patient may require a level of specialized
care that we simply aren’t
equipped to provide. In
these rare cases, federal
guidelines obligate us to
discontinue health services. Out of CHC’s 85,000
current patients, onetenth of one percent have
met the criteria that required being discharged
from care. This criteria includes; physical violence,
brandishing a weapon,
verbal or implied threats
(bomb threat, stalking,
lurking), destruction of
clinic property, stealing
prescription pads or forging/altering prescriptions.
Even following discharge, we endeavor to
maintain the patient’s continuity of care, and ensure
they don’t feel abandoned.
Patients also have the
right to appeal a decision,
and can request further
review by submitting a letter to our Quality Improvement Committee. In
every instance we exhaust
the means and tools at
our disposal to provide
the best health care possible for our patients.
Please contact our Patient
November 6-12, 2014
Vi ew From Th e Beac h
—————————
BY ART VAN RHYN
In which we follow directions precisely.
Advocate at 931-2668. We
welcome your feedback.
Steve Mahr
Communications,
Community Health
Centers of the Central
Coast, Inc. (CHC)
Growth rumors
There is a rumor going
around Cambria that the
Cambria Community
Services District board only wants the Emergency
Water Project and concurrent desal to enable it to
issue building permits and
turn Cambria into Orange
County. According to California Land Use Planning
Law, services districts are
prohibited from issuing
building permits, since
this is a land-use function,
and districts are prohibited from land-use functions. The district can issue intent to serve letters,
but this intent to serve can
become reality if, and only
if, the county issues a permit. The potential of the
county issuing building
permits in the midst of a
statewide drought, with
the worst drought areas
being the Central Coast
and Cambria as its bull’seye, are pretty low.
All sorts of alternatives
to this Emergency Water
See LETTERS, Next Page
Letters: Email letters to [email protected]
OPINION
November 6-12, 2014
Notes
From Previous Page
a remodel.
“We’re just looking at
land-use required to issue
a permit for demolition of
an old house and construction of a new house,” Gibson said. “As far as the
county is concerned, those
are two separate things.”
The county isn’t involved in approving the
transfer of the water meter,
just the construction, Gibson said; the transfer is under the CCSD’s purview.
And sure enough, it’s the
CCSD that uses the term
“remodel” to describe the
process. According to the
agenda from the North
Coast Advisory Council
meeting, “the new building
(on Sherwood Drive) is
classified by CCSD as a remodel/reconstruction, and
will be served by a transfer
of water meter from the
Andover parcel.”
There’s a reason for this,
CCSD public information
officer Tom Gray explained. When a house at
one site is demolished and
the water meter transferred to a new residence,
the homeowner must pay a
fee if the new building has
more water fixtures than
the old one. For instance,
if the original house had
five fixtures and the new
one will have 10, the
homeowner would get
credit for the original five
fixtures and pay a fee only
for the additional five.
You’d have to pay the
same fee if you were simply
adding five fixtures to an
existing home — in other
words, remodeling it.
Hence, the term “remodel.”
“The CCSD treats transfers and demolition/new
construction in the same
way it treats remodeling
projects on an existing residence,” Gray explained,
adding that he went
through the process himself when he demoed a
IF YOU GO
What: Cambria Planning
Department hearing
When: 9 a.m. Friday, Nov. 7
Where: Board of Supervisors
Chambers, County Government
Center, 1055 Monterey St., San
Luis Obispo.
Proposal: 2090 Sherwood Drive
project to construct a two-story,
2,799 square-foot home with
536-square foot attached garage.
The project, which would be set
back 3 feet from the side
property line and 5 feet from
Harvey Street, would disturb the
entire 5,073-square foot parcel,
using 435 transfer-ofdevelopment credits. The project’s
water service transferred after
demolishing a small home at 2194
Andover Place and retiring that
lot and another lot elsewhere.
home in 2010. “In all these
cases, it charges an ‘impact fee’ based on the net
new fixtures.”
The form used to apply
for a CCSD permit in such
cases isn’t called a “remodel” application, but has a
more precise title: Remodel/Addition/Reconstruction/Change of Use. It’s an
application for water and
sewer service, not for construction — which, as
mentioned earlier, is under
the county’s purview.
Clearly, the Andover-toSherwood transfer doesn’t
fit the definition of that
first word, “remodel.” But,
unfortunately, that’s the
shorthand officials have
generally used in discussing the project —
which has caused a good
deal of confusion. Wouldn’t
it have been less confusing
(and more accurate) to call
it a “reconstruction,” since
that’s in the title, too?
There’s almost always a
good alternative to speaking in ambiguous or confusing terms. Why not
speak simply and clearly?
It’s always better to be understood than to leave people scratching their heads.
Letters
From Previous Page
Project and desal have
been mentioned, with
reservoirs at the top of
the list. The only difficulty
with this, of course, is that
it must rain in order to
have enough water runoff
to fill the reservoir.
With climate change in
progress, we can’t rely on
past experience. We can
only use our current reality, be proactive and expect it not to change in
the foreseeable future,
and, if it doesn’t change,
the community will be
protected with these proj-
THE CAMBRIAN
ects. If it does change and
we have a series of wet
winters, Cambria can have
a giant block party and
dance in the rain!
Shirley Bianchi
Cambria
Watch for dogs
Cambria has many exceptional attractions, none
more so than the Fiscalini
Dog Ranch with its beautyand-the-beast adrenaline
rushes.
A walk through the
forested trail is often interrupted by a curt “on your
right,” followed by a leap
into the mostly poison oak
forest floor and a look up
to the whoosh and pumping legs of what must be
the finish of the “Tour de
Ranch.”
A cloud of dust, sunlit
from a low sun is beautiful
on the open dog trails until it reveals two to three
large dogs galloping
toward you. Stop in your
tracks, play dead, but
brace yourself. Anxious
screams of, “Come, Fido,
Fefe and Brutus,” are not
going to work. The dust
cloud passes, followed by
huffing owners: “They always come; they never
bite or jump; they love
people.”
The side trails with
their little gray or white
bags with tidy knots, positioned intermittently
along the way must be
waiting for garbage day,
once a week like the rest
of the neighborhood.
I think my next walk
will be with my GoPro, so
I can make a YouTube
video to show the full array of excitement an hour
on the Fiscalini Dog
Ranch can provide. The
Chamber of Commerce
could hire me to update
each month.
A walk in Lodge Hill
will reveal where all the
native animals of the
ranch have escaped to.
See LETTERS, Next Page
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10
OPINION
THE CAMBRIAN
Pac i ng th roug h th e Pi n e s
—————————
November 6-12, 2014
John FitzRandolph
Are boo-boos signs of the times, or just signs of the pines?
irst we get the drought,
F
followed by severe water shortages and unend-
ing hullabaloo over
prospective remedies. And
now — street sign discrepancies on Park Hill? Yikes!
Is it “Guilford Dr” or
“Guildford Dr”? Is it “Huntington Rd” or is it “Huntignton Rd”? Residents walking their dogs on the quiet,
pine-shrouded streets on
the east side of Park Hill
might think their eyesight
is playing tricks on them.
But this is not an eyesight issue: Someone
flubbed back when these
signs were made. I am assured by Google maps that
Huntington and Guilford
are the correct spellings.
And how much English
language savvy does it take
to produce signs that correctly spell the name of the
street on which the sign is
to be posted? We’ll postpone
that discussion, but the
question is worthy given
that there is another badly
maligned sign in our seaside settlement — a town
that is pronounced two different ways but is nearly always spelled “Cambria.”
The most blatant spelling
discrepancy in town is the
PHOTOS BY JOHN FITZRANDOLPH
Left to right: On the south side of this intersection, ’Huntington’ is spelled correctly, but on the north side, somebody goofed. Similarly,
‘Guilford’ is correct at one intersection, but where it meets Plymouth, a flub is evident. The original spelling (NitWit Ridge) is revised as ‘Nitt
Witt’ on the sign at the far right, which appears on Main Street.
Historical Landmark (No.
939) sign on Main Street
near the new library, renaming NitWit Ridge, “Nitt
Witt Ridge.” I suspect that
divergence from fact was
not a gaffe on the part of
the person who produced
the sign, but an apparent
decision by the landmark
applicant to modify history.
Why am I so certain
“NitWit” is accurate? Fortysix years ago, I was studying English and Journalism
at Cal Poly and a friend
suggested I contribute an
article to a new monthly
feature publication called
“Alternative.”
He further suggested
that I visit, interview and
write about a fascinating
yet controversial gent in
Cambria named Art Beal.
Indeed, I did interview
the bearded and riotously
opinionated Beal (also
known as “Dr. Tinkerpaw”
and “Captain NitWit”), and
published an article on him
in 1967. Subsequently, I
wrote several other pieces
on Captain NitWit — and
built a friendship with the
“turbulent terdhead,” as he
called himself — through
the years.
I also helped organize a
fundraising whale-watching
excursion out of Morro
Bay to help pay Beal’s back
taxes in the 1970s. The featured guest on that boat
was “Saturday Night Live”
luminary Don Novello (aka
Father Guido Sarducci),
who blessed a pod of California gray whales that appeared near the starboard
side of our boat, using pungent incense from his
swinging thurible that wafted eerily over them. The
sold-out event was promoted as “A Benefit for NitWit
Ridge.”
I spearheaded another
benefit to pay back taxes
for NitWit Ridge, a
fundraiser prominently featured in the April 24, 1975,
edition of The Cambrian.
“The infamous Dr. Tinkerpaw of NitWit Ridge was
benefitted Sunday afternoon…” the story began.
Note “NitWit Ridge,” not
“Nitt Witt.”
Meanwhile, back to the
imprecise street signs on
Park Hill; I spoke with
Michelle Matson in the
county’s Public Works department, and she pulled up
the Google image from the
corner of Guilford and Huntington, and could see that
the “g” and the “n” had been
reversed, causing Huntington to be misspelled.
“I can have that changed
for you,” she said. I pointed
out that I wasn’t requesting
a new sign; I just wondered
how long ago these signs
were put in place. She wasn’t
immediately able to locate
the history of those street
signs, but a resident walking
his dog nearby on Worcester Drive said he has lived
on Park Hill for 18 years and
the same signs have been
there all that time.
Another sign whose accuracy is open to discussion is
just north of Cambria, off of
San Simeon Creek Road, on
Van Gordon Creek Road.
Local historian and Cambrian columnist Consuelo
Macedo explains that the
correct spelling of the pio-
neer family that lived here
was Van Gorden.
Indeed, Ancestry.com
lists the passing of Ira Van
Gorden — “a member of
one of the pioneer families
of Cambria” — on March
9, 1929. On the other
hand, Macedo made clear,
if descendants of Mr. Van
Gorden prefer to change
the “e” to an “o,” that is
certainly their prerogative.
But as to “Huntignton”
and “Guildford,” are those
boo-boos simply signs of
the times, or just signs in
the pines?
Letters
Brooke, who described her
unpleasant ranch encounter with a biting dog. I
responded because I also
was attacked and bloodied.
I went to the hospital in
Templeton.
I changed bandages on
my hand for two weeks. I
had tetanus shots. I fretted
while the dog was impounded, awaiting news as
to whether or not I should
undergo the dreaded rabies treatment.
Now, let’s talk about
FIDO — or the “Friends of
Irresponsible Dog Owners.” This group is no
friend to the ranch’s native
animals, which are being
chased to extinction.
People from miles
around bring their dogs to
this huge boutique dog
park so their animals can
live free.
Many people fear the upper ranch. They walk on
the Harmony trail, where
dogs are not allowed, or
San Simeon, where dogs
must be leashed.
Litigation, the Lingua
Franca of today: I expect
FIDO may soon encounter
this beast.
FIDO is an appropriate
acronym for a group guilty
of irresponsible management. When a child is
mauled on the ranch,
FIDO will cease to exist.
Good luck, FIDO.
From Previous Page
Fenced yards, leashed
dogs and free food have
created a safari walk with
sightings of deer, wild
turkeys, fox, bobcats and
mountain lions.
Leslie Flood
Cambria
Your Journal of Local Record since1931.
Bitten on the ranch
I wrote some months
ago a response to Dianne
Freelance journalist
and Cambria resident
John FitzRandolph’s
monthly column is special to The Cambrian.
Email him at john
[email protected].
P.S.: According to San
Luis Obispo animal control,
voice command for dogs
exists only in a dream.
Geoffrey Palmer,
Cambria
November 6-12, 2014
DATES & DATA
THE CAMBRIAN
11
Cambria+Events
————————————
THISWEEK
THURSDAY
Adult wellness and prevention
screening. 9 a.m. to noon. Free
blood pressure, cholesterol, blood
sugar and anemia screenings and
nutritional/lifestyle counseling.
First-come, first-served. For lipid
panel ($20), call 544-2484, ext. 1,
for appointment. A Community
Action Partnership program at
South Bay Community Center,
2180 Palisades Ave., Los Osos.
Story time for preschoolers.
10:15 to 10:45 a.m. Thursdays.
Ages up to 6 welcome. Cambria
Library, 1043 Main St. 927-4336.
FRIDAY
Cambria Farmers Market. 2:30 to
5:30 p.m. Fridays. Sponsored by
Cambria Lions Club. Veterans
Memorial Building parking lot,
1000 Main St. Cambria. 924-1260.
Cuesta Vocal Jazz Festival
Evening Concert. 8 p.m.
Performance by True North.
Cultural and Performing Arts
Center, Cuesta College, Highway 1,
San Luis Obispo. $12 to $17.
546-3936.
SATURDAY
Sierra Club Ragged Point to
Mt. Mars Hike. 8:30 a.m. Twelvemile, very strenuous hike in
southern Big Sur for ridge and
ocean views. Meet at Washburn
Day Use parking area, off
Highway 1, two miles north of
Cambria. 546-0317.
Friends of the Fiscalini Ranch
Preserve Walk. 10 a.m. Al
Normandin leads a fall forest discovery walk. Cambria.
Reservations and locations, call
927-2202.
Forever Stoked Art Show. Noon
to 9 p.m. Group exhibit. Forever
Stoked, 1164 Quintana Road,
Morro Bay.
SUNDAY
Small Wilderness Area
Preservation (SWAP) Walk. 1:30
to 3 p.m. Vicky Johnsen shares
clues on how to identify birds in
the Elfin Forest. Meet at the north
end of 15th Street off of Santa
Ysabel Avenue, Los Osos.
528-0392.
6:30 to 9:30 p.m. 2164 Center St.,
Cambria. 927-8888.
Classical Guitar Concert. 2:30
p.m. Performance by Joseph
Seyedan. Benefit for G. Roger
Bailey Classical Guitar scholarship.
St. Benedict’s Church, 2220 Snowy
Egret Lane, Los Osos. $15. 771-8138.
The Cambria Walking Bunch.
9:30 a.m. Wednesdays. Meet at
Shamel Park, Cambria. darlenen
[email protected]. Walks for the
month ahead are:
• Nov. 12 — Walk the Elfin Forest
starting at 13th Street with lunch
in Los Osos
• Nov. 19 — Estero Bluffs. Park at
roadside lot between Abalone
Farm and large rock outcropping,
easy access to trail.
A Tapestry of Song Concert. 4
p.m. Performance by the Canzona
Women’s Ensemble. Cultural and
Performing Arts Center, Cuesta
College, Highway 1, San Luis
Obispo. $10 to $25.
WEDNESDAY
• Nov. 26 — Moonstone Beach
boardwalk.
• Dec. 3 — Harmony Headlands.
Cambria Couples Dance and
Social Club. 6 to 9 p.m. second
and fourth Wednesdays. Live
music and a potluck dinner.
Joslyn Recreation Center,
950 Main St., Cambria. 927-0527.
Poets and Storytellers. 7 p.m.
Readings by David Kann and Mary
Anne Anderson, followed by open
mike. Wise Owl Bookstore Cafe,
2164 Center St., Cambria.
927-8888.
ONGOING
Piedras Blancas Light Station
Tours. Sept. 1-June 14 tours are
Tuesdays, Thursdays, and
Saturdays; June 15-Aug. 31
tours are Mondays-Saturdays.
Meet at 9:45 a.m. at the former
Piedras Blancas Motel, 1.5 miles
north of the lighthouse. $10 for
adults, $5 for age 6-17, no fee
ages 5 and younger. Special
arrangements must be made for
groups of 10 or more. 927-7361.
Artist paint-out days. Second
WANT YOUR EVENT
LISTED HERE?
Email dated events to calendar
@thetribunenews.com (with a
copy to cambrian@thetribune
news.com) at least two weeks
before the event date.
Wednesdays. $10. To make
arrangements, call 927-8574.
See EVENTS, Page 17
MONDAY
Adult wellness and prevention
screening. 9:30 a.m. to noon. Free
blood pressure, cholesterol, blood
sugar and anemia screenings and
nutritional/lifestyle counseling.
First-come, first-served. For lipid
panel ($20), call 544-2484, ext. 1,
for appointment. A Community
Action Partnership program at
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church,
2700 Eton Road, Cambria.
Cambria’s Rough Writers. 1 to
4 p.m. Mondays. Creative writing
group meetings. Guests with a
serious interest in writing are welcome. Joslyn Recreation Center,
950 Main St., Cambria. Go to
www.RoughWriters.org, then email
[email protected] to
set a date.
Line Dancing. Mondays. Beginner
class at 5:30 p.m., no experience
or partner required. Latin, contemporary, country western.
Learn to dance and exercise at
the same time. $2. Ongoing class
at 6:15 p.m., $5, or take both classes for $5. Veterans Memorial
Building, 1000 Main St., Cambria.
903-3241.
TUESDAY
The Cambria Chorale meets for
rehearsals from 9 to 11:15 a.m.
Tuesdays and periodically from
1:30 to 3 p.m. Fridays. All singers
welcome. Joslyn Recreation
Center, 950 Main St., Cambria.
927-2989.
Wise Owl. Tuesday: Songwriters
at Play, featuring Ray Duncan,
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November 6-12, 2014
PLACES TO GO
Adult day care. Care and enrichment for clients and respite for
families and caregivers. 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays,
Cambria Adult Resources,
Education and Support (CARES),
at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church,
2700 Eton Road, Cambria.
927-4290.
Hearst Castle. Daytime tours,
daily, $25 adults, $12 children
(5-12 years old). Evening tours,
Fridays and Saturdays through
Dec. 30, $36 adults, $18 children.
800-444-4445, www.hearst
castle.com.
Free transportation around
Cambria for seniors and the disabled on the Cambria Community
Bus on weekdays. Weekly trips to
Morro Bay and San Luis Obispo;
monthly trips to Paso Robles,
Templeton and Atascadero. Call
927-4173 from 9 to 11 a.m. two
days before the day a ride is
needed.
Senior Nutrition Program lunch,
11:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday at St. Paul’s
Episcopal Church, 2700 Eton Road.
$2.75. 927-1268.
Free health screening is offered
monthly by the Community Action
Partnership to anyone 18 years
old and older, including monitoring blood pressure, pulse and
weight and a finger-prick blood
test for anemia, diabetes and high
cholesterol. No appointment
necessary for the screening.
9:30 a.m. to noon the second
Monday of each month at St.
Paul’s Episcopal Church, 2700 Eton
Road, Cambria.
————————————
RECREATION
AND EDUCATION
Belly dancing. A soft aerobics
workout for the abdomen and
spine. Classes are offered two
Fridays a month from 5 to
6:15 p.m. at the Joslyn Center,
950 Main St. Free to members.
785-0476.
Cambria Lawn Bowls Club meets
9 a.m. Mondays, Wednesdays,
Fridays and Saturdays. Free lessons are offered for all ages.
Joslyn Recreation Center,
950 Main St., Cambria. 924-1696,
559-281-6633, or email
[email protected].
Cambria Writers’ Workshop
meets from 9:30 a.m. to noon
Wednesdays at the Joslyn
Recreation Center, 950 Main St.
Anyone serious about writing and
publishing can come and bring
original unpublished works. No
charge. Guests are welcome. Call
Ivon at 927-8172 for details.
Drop-in Tennis. All skill and age
levels welcome. 9 to 11 a.m.
Saturdays and Sundays at Coast
Union High School, 2950 Santa
Rosa Creek Road. Sponsored by
the Cambria Tennis Club.
GymOne, 1266 Tamson Drive, Suite
1
Hi1
70
79
67
68
63
63
65
Lo1 Rain1
44 0.0
41 0.0
53 0.0
52 1.16
43 0.05
42 0.0
43 0.0
Hi2 Lo2 Rain2
74 47 0.0
86 57 0.0
73 52 0.0
67 53 1.14
63 50 0.13
62 44 0.0
67 49 0.0
—————————
Observations
Clear, bright, no fog, warm.
Sunny and hot, offshore breezes.
Cloudy. Mostly.
Cloudy Halloween, leading to (really?) rain by 4-5 p.m.!
Mostly clear after midnight with a few showers later.
Mostly clear, cool and bright with variable haze/light fog.
Sunny and chilly morning; warmer afternoon.
CCSD Water Quality Control Plant, 5500 Heath Lane, northeast side of Park Hill.
2
Whispering Pines, London Lane, east of Top of the World, Lodge Hill
November rainfall: 1.21”1, 1.27”2. 2013-14 rain season to date: 1.24”1 ,1.43”2
Weather Service forecast (as of Tuesday): Thursday: Sunny. Highs from mid- to upper 70s at beaches;
mid-80s to around 90 inland. Thursday night: Mostly clear. Lows in upper 40s to mid-50s. Friday through
Saturday night: Mostly clear. Highs from low to mid-70s at the beaches; 80s to around 90 inland. Lows in
mid-40s to mid-50s. Sunday: Mostly clear. Highs from low to mid-70s at beaches; low to mid-80s inland.
Lows in mid-40s to mid-50s. Monday: Sunny. Highs from mid-60s at beaches to mid-70s inland.
Updated forecast: www.thecambrian.com.
CCSD’s San Simeon Creek wells averaged 9.29’ on Oct. 14, down 0.88’ from 10.17’ on Oct. 6.
CCSD’s Santa Rosa Creek SR4 well measured 26.90’ on Oct. 14, up 1.32’ from 25.58’ on Oct. 6.
CCSD’s Santa Rosa Creek SR1 well measured 20.50’ on Oct. 14, down 0.19’ from 20.69’ on Oct. 6.
CCSD’s Santa Rosa Creek SR3 well measured 19.30’ on Oct. 14, down 4.85’ from 24.15’ on Oct. 6.
WBE Santa Rosa Creek monitoring well measured 4.09’ on Oct. 14.
101. 927-4961. www.gymone
cambria.com.
Activities include:
• Introduction to Spinning.
10:30 a.m. Tuesdays and
Thursdays. Gentle introduction to
indoor cycling. Participants can
build muscle and cardio
endurance.
• Yoga — All levels welcome.
Hatha, 9:30 a.m. Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays. Flow,
12:15 p.m. Wednesdays, 7:30 a.m.
Saturdays, 10 a.m. Sundays.
Gentle, noon Tuesdays and
Thursdays.
• Active Aging — variety of
older adult exercise: Senior
Sneakers, 11 a.m. Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays;
1:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays
and Saturdays.
Joslyn Recreation Center, home
to more than a dozen clubs. All
club members must be Joslyn
Recreation Center members
($35 annual membership fee).
927-3364, http://joslyn rec.org,
950 Main St.
Labyrinth and Meditation
Garden. Daylight hours daily.
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church; lower
level, 2700 Eton Road, Cambria.
Free. 927-3239, www.stpauls
cambria.org.
Watercolor “Yes You Can”
classes, 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays.
“Art Is Fun” classes, 2 to 5 p.m.
Thursdays, free shuttle to the Morro
Bay bus. Admission: $15 per session. Jacque Brackett, 927-5965.
Mind-body movement class
using elements of martial, dance
and healing arts. 5 to 6 p.m.
Fridays. All ages. Instructor:
Calico Hauser. $8. Joslyn
Recreation Center, 950 Main St.,
Cambria. 927-5405.
Yoga with Joanna: Call 927-YOGA
(9642) for schedule.
Pickleball. The club welcomes
drop-in play for all. 8 a.m. Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays on
the back two tennis courts at
Coast Union High School, 2950
Santa Rosa Creek Road. Combination of tennis, badminton and table
tennis. Enter through side gate by
baseball diamond, not through
front tennis courts. 909-9000.
Shorin-ryu karate. Children,
8 to 14 years old, 5:30 to
6:30 p.m.; adults, 7 to 8:30 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays. $25 a
month. 927-5856.
Stretch and tone: Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays at
9 a.m. and Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 8 a.m. at the
Veterans Memorial Building,
1000 Main St. No classes offered
on the fourth Thursday of each
month. Cost: $6 a class or $45
monthly. 927-4550.
—————————
Date
Nov. 6
Nov. 7
Nov. 8
Nov. 9
Nov. 10
Nov. 11
Nov. 12
Nov. 13
13
Mahjong. 1 to 4 p.m. Mondays at
the Joslyn Recreation Center,
950 Main St., Cambria. $1 donation
to the center and a $3 purse buyin. Visitors welcome. Sharon,
927-5155.
Tides
W e at h e r — W e l l s
Date
Oct. 28
Oct. 29
Oct. 30
Oct. 31
Nov. 1
Nov. 2
Nov. 3
THE CAMBRIAN
BulletinBoard
SENIORS
Cambria Historical Museum.
Local and regional history in the
former Guthrie-Bianchini House, a
home dated from 1870. Rotating
exhibits and displays. Bookstore
with gifts and mementos, nursery
with heirloom plants. Corner of
Burton Drive and Center Street.
1 to 4 p.m. Friday through
Sunday, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday.
Free admission, but donations
welcome. Museum and gardens
available for small parties, meetings and other events. 927-2891,
www.cambriahistoricalsociety.com.
Piedras Blancas Light Station
Tours. Sept. 1 to June 14:
Tuesdays, Thursdays and
Saturdays. June 15 to Aug. 31:
Mondays through Saturdays.
Meet at 9:45 a.m. at the former
Piedras Blancas Motel, 1.5 miles
north of the lighthouse. $10 for
adults, $5 for ages 6-17, no fee for
5 and younger. Call 927-7361 to
make arrangements for groups of
10 or more; no tours on federal
holidays. 927-7361. Artist paintout days. Second Wednesdays.
$10. To make arrangements, call
927-8574.
DATES & DATA
Low tide Height
High tide Height Moonrise/set
2:38 a.m. 1.4
8:52 a.m. 6.2
5:15 p.m.
3:47 p.m. -0.8
10:12 p.m. 4.4
6:10 a.m.
3:18 a.m. 1.8
9:29 a.m. 6.2
6:01 p.m.
4:32 p.m. -0.8
11:04 p.m. 4.3
7:13 a.m.
3:59 p.m. 2.1
10:06 a.m. 6.0
6:50 p.m.
5:17 p.m. -0.7
11:58 p.m. 4.1
8:14 a.m.
4:41 a.m. 2.1
10:45 a.m. 5.7
7:42 p.m.
6:03 p.m. -0.5
------------------9:10 a.m.
5:27 a.m. 2.7
12:55 a.m. 4.0
8:35 p.m.
6:52 p.m. -0.2
11:26 a.m. 5.3
10:01 a.m.
6:22 a.m. 2.9
1:57 a.m. 3.9
9:29 p.m.
7:43 p.m. 0.1
12:11 p.m. 4.9
10:47 a.m.
7:34 a.m. 3.1
3:03 a.m. 3.9
10:23 p.m.
8:38 p.m. 0.4
1:05 p.m. 4.5
11:27 a.m.
9:05 a.m. 3.0
9:05 a.m. 4.0
11:17 p.m.
9:34 p.m. 0.7
9:34 p.m. 4.1
12:05 p.m.
Sunrise: 6:32/6:39 a.m. Sunset: 5:05/4:59 p.m.
Full moon: 2:22 p.m. Nov. 6, 2014
Yoga with Patti. Yoga Flo at 4:30
p.m. Mondays, Joslyn Recreation
Center, 950 Main St. 927-1661.
Zumba. Latin-based music dance
for fitness. 4 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays,
5 to 6 p.m. Thursdays, 7:30 a.m.
Fridays. Admission: $3 for class
members, $5 for guests. Gym One,
1266 Tamson Drive, Suite 101.
927-4961, www.gymone
cambria.com.
Recreation and Education
listings appear the first Thursday
of each month; Help Is Available
listings on the second Thursday;
undated Club Meeting information on the third Thursday; and
Volunteers Needed listings on
the fourth Thursday.
Want your listing to appear
here? Items for Bulletin Board
should be submitted at least a
week before the requested publication date. Email items (fliers are
welcome) to cambrian@thetri
bunenews.com; drop by The
Cambrian at 2442 Main St.; mail to
PO Box 67, Cambria CA 93428; or
fax to 927-4708.
Haiku
—————————
At an estate sale
Were the couple’s belongings.
Sadly, their lives, too.
— Anne Bennett
Send haikus to
[email protected]
Gas Prices
—————————
Gallon of regular gas (Nov. 4):
Cambria Chevron
$3.99
Diesel $4.65
Cambria General Store $3.97
Cambria Shell
$3.99
Diesel $4.65
Paso Robles Spirit Gas $3.17
MORE LISTINGS AT WWW.SANLUIS
OBISPO.COM/GASPRICES
14
AGENDA
THE CAMBRIAN
Unless indicated, all meetings are
open to the public. Some are
available for later viewing on
Charter Cable channel 21. Check
www.slo-span.org
THURSDAY, NOV. 6
County Planning Commission.
9 a.m. Board of Supervisors
Chambers, County Government
Center, 1055 Monterey St., San
Luis Obispo. 781-5600. www.slo
county.ca.gov/planning.htm.
Agenda includes receiving and
filing items to: Rescind existing
land conservation contract and
enter into a new one after altering agricultural preserve boundaries from a lot-line adjustment
on 286 acres on Monte Cristo
Place adjacent to and southwest
of the junction of highways 1 and
46, about 1.4 miles south of
Cambria’s urban reserve line;
alter boundaries of ag preserve
340 acres at 295 Monte Cristo
Place, about 1,500 feet northwest of the junction of highways
1 and 46, about 1 mile south of
Cambria’s urban reserve line
then amend existing land conservation contract; alter bound-
November 6-12, 2014
PublicMeetings
————————————
aries of ag preserve by adding
1.7 acres through a lot-line
adjustment with a resulting
163-acre parcel between Van
Gordon Creek and the south fork
of Pico Creek about 1 mile northeast of the end of Van Gordon
Creek Road, about 4 miles north
of Cambria, then amend existing
land conservation contract. On
TV: Cablecast on Charter Cable
Channel 21, replayed at 6 p.m.
Thursday and Monday.
FRIDAY, NOV. 7
County Planning Department
hearing officer. 9 a.m. Board of
Supervisors Chambers, County
Government Center, 1055
Monterey St., San Luis Obispo.
781-5600. www.slocounty.ca.gov/
planning.htm. Agenda includes:
2090 Sherwood Drive, two-story,
2,799 square-foot home with
536-square-foot attached
garage. Project, which would be
set back 3 feet from the side
property line and 5 feet from
Harvey Street, would disturb the
entire 5,073-square foot parcel,
using 435 transfer-ofdevelopment credits. Project’s
water service transferred after
demolishing a small home at
2194 Andover Place and retiring
that lot and another lot elsewhere; 2150 Windsor Blvd., create 207-square-foot, secondstory deck, most of which would
be covered with a new gable
roof, in place of an existing
260-square foot covered deck.
Project also would add a
76-square-foot trellis. Deck and
trellis would be attached to the
front of the home, resulting in
disturbance of about 320 square
feet of a 3,500 square-foot
parcel.
TUESDAY, NOV. 11
County Supervisors won’t hold a
meeting today or on Nov. 18. The
next session will be 9 a.m.
Please see AGENDA, 17
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November 6-12, 2014
ARTS&EVENTS
THE CAMBRIAN
15
V e t e r a n s D ay 2 0 14
—————————
Those who served to be honored
By Hugh Scott
Special to The Cambrian
ambria’s traditional
C
Veterans Day celebration on Tuesday, Nov. 11,
PHOTO BY CONSUELO MACEDO
Chef Matt Beckett of Linn’s describes the magical
ingredients in both his award-winning soups, as Chef
Richard Lawson ladles out a sample.
Linn’s chef scores big at
Morro Bay Soupabration
Chef Matt Beckett of
Linn’s Restaurant in Cambria swept three of the five
awards for his entries in
the fourth annual
Soupabration event in Morro Bay over the weekend.
Beckett’s meatball soup
won Best of Show honors
based on blind testing by
celebrity judges. His turkey
quinoa meatball recipe
with kale and peppers —
the Best of Show winner —
also won in the Seasonal
category, and he took
top honors in the Vegan/
Vegetarian category with
his pumpkin/squash soup.
Sunset Grill in San Simeon won in the Best Chowder or Bisque category for
its New England Clam
Chowder, and the People’s
Choice Award, voted on by
more than 250 attendees,
went to Blue Sky Bistro of
Morro Bay for its lobster
bisque.
The judges sampled tast-
ings of each soup entered
by the 13 chefs and restaurants that competed in the
Nov. 1 event.
The panelists were Hal
Abrams, Morro Bay Community Radio founder;
Lynne Andujar, editor-inchief of 805 Living magazine; Neil Farrell, Bay
News editor; Chef Philipp
Riccomini, executive chef,
Paso Robles Culinary
Academy; and Chef
William Werner, James
Beard nominee and
chef/owner of Craftsman
and Wolves in San Francisco.
Participating chefs and
restaurants also represented Paso Robles, Templeton, Cayucos and San Luis
Obispo.
The Soupabration event,
which also featured wine
tasting, was a benefit for
Pacific Wildlife Care in
Morro Bay.
— Cambrian staff
takes on special meaning
this year because exactly
100 years earlier, a battle
was ending that dashed
hopes for a quick end to a
European conflict and
eventually drew America
into World War I.
Cambrians and visitors
are invited to join members of American Legion
Post No. 432 and community volunteers for an entertaining program of military pomp, patriotic music,
and a buffet lunch at the
Veterans Memorial Building, 1000 Main Street.
Activities will begin at
the customary 11 a.m., the
time at which an armistice
ended fighting on the
western front Nov. 11,
1918. Originally called
Armistice Day, the legal
holiday’s name was
changed to Veterans Day
in 1954.
Post 432 Commander
David Ehlers will officiate.
An honor guard led by
Dan Rivera will post the
national colors, followed
by military veterans including Lu Estrada, Dan
Cowels, Lou Fedor, Jerry
McKinnon, and Walter Stacy presenting the service
flags, escorted by mem-
COURTESY PHOTO
Cambrian Jay Burbank removes metal cutouts from the Cambria Veterans
Memorial Flag Stand on Main Street for cleaning and refinishing in preparation for
Veterans Day.
bers of Boy Scout Troop
217. Melanie Gruber will
sing “The Star-Spangled
Banner.” The Cambria
Men’s Chorus, led by
Randy Schwalbe, will sing
the military services’
songs, along with “America the Beautiful” and “God
Bless America.”
Bob Wilson, a retired
Army colonel, will be the
featured speaker. Local
Girl Scouts, Cub Scouts
and the Cambria 4H Club
will also participate.
Sons of the American
Legion and the American
Legion Auxiliary will serve
barbecued burgers following the formal program. A
$5 donation is requested.
For history buffs, the
First Battle of Ypres was
fought over a strategically
important town in Belgium
that blocked the German
army’s path to French
ports on the English Channel. Imperial Germany had
invaded neutral Belgium
on Aug. 4, 1914, and was
halted at the Marne River
outside Paris in September. The subsequent battle
at Ypres effectively ended
mobile warfare and set the
stage for static trench
fighting for the next three
years. The United States
entered the war in April
1917.
Cambria’s traditional Veterans Day celebration on Tuesday, Nov. 11, takes on special meaning this year
because exactly 100 years earlier, a battle was ending that dashed hopes for a quick end to a European
conflict and eventually drew America into World War I. ... The First Battle of Ypres effectively ended
mobile warfare and set for the stage for static trench fighting for the next three years.
16
SPORTS
THE CAMBRIAN
CUHS freshman earns all-county honors
Paul Butterfield
finishes among top 7
at county cross
country meet in SLO
By John FitzRandolph
Special to The Cambrian
The largest group of runners to compete for the
Coast Union cross country
team in more than 30 years
finished the 2014 season on
a positive note Thursday,
Oct. 30, at the San Luis
Obispo All-County High
School event.
It was an affirmative day
for freshman runner Paul
Butter field as he hustled
around the Laguna Lake
Park course fast enough —
finishing in 19 minutes flat
— to make the Freshman
All-County Team. “The top
seven runners in each grade
make all-county,” said
Coach Jim Hurley, who
pointed out that hundreds of
PHOTO BY JIM HURLEY
runners were on the course
Paul Butterfield (in Bronco red) made the Freshman All-County High
representing ever y high
See RUNNERS, Next Page
School cross country team Thursday Oct. 30 at Laguna Lake Park in San
Luis Obispo.
Hig h Sc hool Volleyball
—————————
Coast Union poised for playoffs as No. 2 seed
By John FitzRandolph
Special to The Cambrian
With a 10-1 Coast Valley
League (CVL) record coming into this week, the Coast
Union volleyball team is
heading to the CIF playoffs,
but Head Coach Pam Kenyon understands that her
team will be a No. 2 seed.
The Lady Broncos finished the season tied with
Nor th County Christian
atop the CVL standings, but
because the Crusaders beat
Coast Union in their second
head-to-head encounter,
they earned the league’s
No. 1 playof f seed via a
tiebreaker.
Kenyon said the loss to
North County Christian was
“a hard loss,” but that “from
a coaching perspective it
has rejuvenated their energy, our practices have been
really good, so I’m looking
forward to CIF” playoffs.
“Everybody on the team
is healthy,” she repor ted
Monday, Nov. 3. “They have
a new focus and they’re
ready to go.”
Kenyon, who has successfully battled colon cancer over the past year, continues to receive an infusion
of cancer-fighting drugs
once every two weeks. “It’s
a maintenance program that
I will be on for the foreseeable future,” she said.
The Lady Broncos won’t
know their opponents in the
first round of the CIF playof fs until Sunday, when
brackets are announced,
athletic director Bill Clough
said.
They will likely play their
first-round match Tuesday
or Wednesday.
November 6-12, 2014
Hig h Sc hool Football
—————————
Broncos fall
36-21 in finale
Cuyama Valley pulls away in second half to
claim Coast Valley League championship
By John FitzRandolph
2-6).
The Broncos had several
Prior to last Thursday chances in the fourth quarnight’s Coast Valley League ter but couldn’t match the
title game at New Cuyama, passing accuracy of the
a high school concession Bears, and Coast’s running
helper saturated a stack of game was stopped twice on
briquettes with lighter flu- fourth downs. Still, quarid, tossed a match to it, terback Alexis Mirales had
then ducked away as an excellent game, rushing
for 84 yards on nine
flames exploded
carries and comfrom the pit.
pleting 5 of 10 passThat ser ved to
es for 89 yards and
foreshadow the
a pair of touchfired-up spirit of the
downs.
Cuyama
Valley
Binh Trieu was
Bears as they
once again the
jogged onto the
workhorse
for
gridiron for warmCoast Union’s ofups before their Warren
fense, carrying the
game against visit- Smith
ball 26 times for
ing Coast Union.
And although Coast Union 133 yards and a touchtrailed the Bears by just two down. He returned two
points at halftime, 16-14, the kickoffs for 36 yards and
Cuyama Valley quarter- made two tackles, one a
back’s accurate passes to touchdown-saving tackle in
his tall, elusive receivers which his speed allowed
proved the difference in the him to catch up to the ball
second half. Cuyama Valley carrier from behind and
pulled away with 14 points bring him down.
Lane Sutherland was
in the third quarter and
eight more in the fourth en held to 20 yards on 10 carroute to a 36-21 victory, as ries, but he returned a
both teams concluded kickoff 23 yards and made
Coast Valley League play a big contribution on defense with five solo tackles
Thursday, Oct. 30.
Cuyama Valley finished and three assists. Tommy
the season atop the stand- Moreno caught a pair of
ings at 3-0 in league com- passes for 52 yards and a
petition and 8-1 overall, one touchdown and punted
game ahead of secondplace Coast Union (2-1, See FINALE, Next Page
Special to The Cambrian
DATES & DATA
November 6-12, 2014
Events
From Page 11
ART
ENDING
Día de los Muertos Altar
Exhibits. Through Nov. 6.
Cuesta College, Highway 1,
San Luis Obispo.546-3108.
“Pastel USA.” Pastel Society of
the West Coast International
Open Exhibition. Through Nov. 8.
Art Center Morro Bay, 835 Main
St. 772-2504.
ONGOING
Isha Elafi. “Nomadic Knotwork.”
Jewelry. Through Nov. 13. Seven
Sisters Gallery, 601 Embarcadero,
Morro Bay. 772-9955.
Flo Bartell. Abstracts in encaustic. Through Nov. 25. Top Dog
Coffee Bar, 857 Main St.,
Agenda
From Page 14
Tuesday, Nov. 25. www.slo
county.ca.gov/bos.
Cambria Tourism Board. 1 p.m.
Cambria Pines Lodge, 2905
Burton Drive. www.YourCBID.
com. 547-2243. Agenda
includes: Increasing the number of overnight stays by
tourists in Cambria.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12
San Simeon Community
Services District Board of
Directors. 6 p.m. Plaza del
Cavalier Banquet Room, 250 San
Simeon Avenue, San Simeon.
927-4778. www.sansimeoncsd
.com. Agenda includes: Update
on sharing of recycled water
Morro Bay. 772-9225.
955-2049.
“Craft Show 2014.” Reception:
5 to 8 p.m. Nov. 14. Group exhibit
by the Central Coast Crafters.
Through Nov. 29. Gallery at
Marina Square, 601 Embarcadero,
Suite 10, Morro Bay. 772-1068.
STAGE
Jarien de Ham. Reception:
5 to 8 p.m. Nov. 14. “Brush
Flying, Ink Dancing.” Chinese
brush painting. Through Nov. 29.
Gallery at Marina Square,
601 Embarcadero, Suite 10, Morro
Bay. 772-1068.
“Boeing Boeing.” Through
Nov. 9. 7:30 p.m. Fridays and
Saturdays; 3 p.m. Sundays.
Cambria Center for the Arts
Theatre, 1350 Main St. $15 to $20.
927-5951, cambriacenterfor
thearts.org.
PLANAHEAD
Liz Maruska. “Love Notes from
the Coast.” Landscapes. Through
Dec. 5. Edward Jones, 1236
Los Osos Valley Road, Suite J,
Los Osos. 543-1070.
Cambria Computer and
Technology Club. General meeting, Mac and PC. 2 p.m. Nov. 13.
Joslyn Center Conference Room.
Doors open at 1:30. “Jack is
Back.” Jack Hennessy will share
information on all things Mac.
Details: David Hills at oberonsd@
gmail.com.
“Silver Anniversary.” Silverthemed art in all media. Through
Dec. 10. Cayucos Art Gallery,
foot of the pier, Cayucos.
Adventures With Nature. Bad
weather cancels outdoor activities. 772-2694 or www.ccspa.info.
• Harmony Headlands and Its
with Cambrians, water to be
gotten, transported and delivered only by those trained in
how to use it.
831-427-4863. www.coastal.
ca.gov/. Thursday’s agenda
includes: Highway 1 in the Big
Creek area of Big Sur, Caltrans
application to build a 175-footlong viaduct with 12-foot-wide
lanes and 4-foot-wide shoulders
and related improvements,
including permanent rockfall
netting on inland side of road, to
stabilize eroding embankment.
Cambria Forest Committee.
6:30 p.m. Rabobank, 1070 Main
St. 927-6240. www.cambria
forestcommittee.org. Agenda
includes: Presentation by Vari
MacNeil, president of the
Beautify Cambria Association,
about ways to improve the
appearance of Cambria’s business district, including more
flowers, plants and trees; discussion about possible grants
for forest management.
WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY,
NOV. 12-14
State Coastal Commission.
9 a.m. Oceano Hotel & Spa, 280
Capistrano Road, Half Moon Bay.
THURSDAY, NOV. 13
County Planning Commission.
9 a.m. Board of Supervisors
Chambers, County Government
Center, 1055 Monterey St., San
Luis Obispo. 781-5600. www.slo
county.ca.gov/planning.htm. On
TV: Cablecast on Charter Cable
Channel 21, replayed at 6 p.m.
Thursday and Monday.
Coast Unified School District
Human History. 10 a.m. Nov. 13.
Discover the relationship that
humans have had with this land
for thousands of years. Learn
about geology, wildlife and plants.
Meet at Harmony Headlands parking lot, on the left side of
Highway 1 about 5.5 miles north
of Cayucos. 4 miles, 2-2.5 hours.
• Quarry Trail to Morro
Vistas. 9 a.m. Nov. 14. Hike to
the foot of Cerro Cabrillo to view
quarry site. Explore seasonal
wildflowers and enjoy vistas of
the Chorro Valley. View the web
of estuary waters on the return.
Meet at Quarry Trailhead off
South Bay Boulevard. 3 miles,
2.5 hours.
• Birding the Boardwalk.
10 a.m. Nov. 18. Identify birds
seen at the marina. Beginning
birders welcome. Park close to
the southeast end of the marina
parking lot by the Morro Bay
campground restrooms. 1 mile,
1.5 hours.
Board of Trustees. 7 p.m., Old
Grammar School, 1350 Main St.
927-3880. www.coastusd.org.
THURSDAY-FRIDAY,
NOV. 13-14
Regional Water Quality Control
Board. 8:30 a.m. Central Coast
Water Board offices, 895
Aerovista Place, Suite 101, San
Luis Obispo. 549-3147. www.water
boards.ca.gov/ centralcoast.
Friday’s agenda includes:
Approval of revised Cambria
Community Services District
waste discharge and water recycling requirements for the district’s plan for permanent use of
the water-reclamation project
(emergency water supply project). Also consider new wastedischarge requirements for the
district’s surface impoundment
(waste pond) for the project.
Cambria Reds drop close decision for first loss in Little League Fall Ball
By John FitzRandolph
Special to The Cambrian
The Cambria Reds intermediate Little League team
played their second Fall
Ball baseball game Sunday,
Nov. 2, against the Los Os-
os Fall Ball Team, and
came up just short in a 4-3
decision.
The game, played in Los
Osos, ended when a Reds
hitter grounded out, leaving the potential tying
runner stranded at third
base.
Coach Gary Stephenson
repor ted
that
Nate
Markham drove in two
runs, while Anhase Martin
made three “great catch-
es,” came in to pitch in relief and “stifled a rally.”
Alan Nunez pitched a
pair of scoreless innings
for the Reds, whose record
dropped to 1-1 in Fall Ball
play.
THE CAMBRIAN
Finale
From Previous Page
twice for 84 yards.
Head Coach Bill Clough
acknowledged that the loss
at Cuyama Valley was “bittersweet” and that his team
had several chances to
score but didn’t come up
with successful plays when
they were most needed.
Still, Clough zeroed in on
one particular referee’s call
that essentially put the
game out of reach for Coast
Union. “On that last drive,
we had third-and-one, and
picked up a first down on
the 10-yard line but the officials called a holding penalty. They hadn’t called a holding penalty the whole game,
but they call one when we
are driving for a touchdown
late in the game?” Clough
said. “That looked pretty
suspect to me.”
Following the penalty, the
Broncos did not make the
first down, and on the first
play after the Bears took
over, they went 65 yards for
a touchdown, putting the
game out of reach.
That issue aside, Clough
said, “We probably could
have put a better pass rush
Runners
From Previous Page
school in San Luis Obispo
County.
Sophomore Jez Lawson
missed making All-County
honors by one spot, Hurley
said.
Lawson was All-County
last year as a freshman, but
he finished eighth among all
SLO County sophomores in
this year’s competition.
Despite barely missing
out on All-County honors,
Lawson posted a personalbest time of 17 minutes,
50 seconds in the 5K.
“It wasn’t a question for
Jez of not running well; he
ran very well,” Hurley said.
17
on their quarterback, but
they had good, fast receivers
— and you can’t argue with
success. They won. But we
underachieved. We’re a
young football team.”
Reflecting on the season
and his players’ character,
Clough said, “I didn’t have
to motivate them. They really wanted to play football,
and we have a lot of players
returning, so we have set
the table for next year.”
On the plus side for the
Broncos from Thursday
night, Warren Smith caught
his first pass of the season
— a 6-yard touchdown —
and Juan Carlos Fernandez
kicked two extra points and
made two tackles. Jimmy
Welch was credited with
three solo tackles, Jake
McAvoy had five solo tackles, and Gehrig Kniffen had
four solo tackles and
grabbed two passes for
31 yards.
Danny Corona had an interception and a 44-yard return to go with two solo
tackles. Asher Armstrong
was credited with three solo
tackles, while Marcus Godfrey, Nahum Hernandez,
Octavio Villavazo and
Brayan Pena each had two
solo stops.
“He just ran up against
some tough competition.
Like any sport, you can do
really well and still get
beat.”
In addition to Lawson and
Butterfield, the rest of the
top seven Coast Union runners participating on the Laguna Lake Park course
were Oliver Fend, 49th
(20:03); Nick Roper, 58th
(21:39); Vincent Cueva, 61st
(22:57); Sage Deack, 63rd
(23:30); and Jack MacKinnon, 65th (23:44).
Other Coast Union competitors Oct. 30 were Will
Stephenson (23:52); Sam
MacKinnon (23:55); Alam
Romo (25:05); David Nolan
(27:33); and Nic Bar th
(27:45).
18
THE CAMBRIAN
COMMUNITY NEWS
A W o rt h w h i l e L i f e
—————————
November 6-12, 2014
L a dy T i e D i
Household cleansers can foul up indoor air quality
L
ove of My Life
and I remembered quickly on
our trip to the
East Coast last
month, how unused to
forced air heating we are.
As crisp, fall weather
rushed in, rumbling came
from the vents to make us
comfortable (which it did).
We slept with the windows
open that we might not dry
up like beef jerky.
It will greatly behoove us
to take a closer look at our
environment to maintain
our health and sanity, particularly at this time of the
year. Most of us are not living in prehistoric caves
anymore; rather, we have
created hermetically sealed
little boxes with their own
sets of dangers and issues.
The EPA ranks indoor
air pollution as one of the
top five threats to human
health. Headaches to cancer can be directly related
to cleaners and chemicals.
Considering how efficiently insulated our houses
have become, it stands to
reason that these products
have been more efficiently
trapped in with us as well,
breathed into our lungs or
absorbed through our skin.
Start by opening your
windows as often as possible. You most likely already have poison culprits
in your cupboards and cabinets — air them out. Better, throw it out.
Any product with “Danger” on the label is crimi-
Festival of Trees,
B&B tickets on sale
nounced at an evening reception from 5 to 7:30 p.m.
featuring a buffet, fine wine
and beer.
Tickets for the reception
are $25, and tickets for the
reception and tour together
are $45.
Details: Call the chamber
at 927-3624 or email info
@cambriachamber.org.
T
ickets for the annual
Festival of Trees and
Holiday B&B Tour went on
sale at the Cambria Chamber of Commerce on Saturday, Nov. 1.
Five bed and breakfast
inns will welcome visitors
from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday,
Dec. 6, opening their doors
to show off displays of holiday decorations. Each location will host a nonprofit
group selling tickets to a
drawing as a fundraiser.
Tickets for the tour itself
are $25.
From 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
that day, a variety of uniquely decorated trees will be
auctioned off at the Veterans Memorial Building. All
proceeds from the auction
will benefit local nonprofit
groups. Public viewing and
bidding will take place from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m., with the
winning bids to be an-
Coast Union grad
to speak on Ebola
Renee
Cooper, a
2005 Coast
Union High
School graduate, will return to Cambria on Sunday, Nov. 9,
Renee
to deliver a
presentation Cooper
on the Ebola epidemic during a 10
a.m. service at the Unitarian Universalist Community
of Cambria.
nal, but some labels are
more difficult to interpret.
“All Natural” means nothing on cleaners or food!
Anything with chemically
produced fragrances is difficult on the body.
New vinyl shower curtain? New rugs? New sofa?
Formaldehyde, toluene, xylene and the list goes on
from adhesives to additives
that are part of the package deal you just had delivered from the home goods
store.
Fine particulate matter
raised from using said
products and items is released and settles on other
surfaces. This is another
reason to remove “clutter”
from your home: that you
may have an easier time of
eliminating (wiping away)
potentially toxic dust.
So many people have
come to take cleaning
product commercials as
gospel.
“If it smells this way, you
know it’s clean!”
“It’s not clean if it’s not
optical white!”
“Oh, this surely makes it
easier!”
Horse puckey. Natural
cleaners, heck, soap and
water are as efficient if not
more so for killing germs
and leaving spotless counters.
The smell of vinegar will
not kill you. 409 may not
kill you, either, but such
cleansers may be behind
the sniffles or rashes you
may get when your body
InBrief
————————————
Cooper, representing
Partners in Health, will
present a brief history of
the epidemic and discuss
the steps being taken to
stop the disease from
spreading and prevent future epidemics.
Cooper received a bachelor’s degree in community
studies from UC Santa
Cruz and a master’s in public health from San Diego
State University. She has
worked as an EMT, owns
and operates a CPR training company, teaches
hands-on medical skills at
San Diego Community Colleges and has volunteered
on numerous medical aid
missions to South and Central America.
She works in a San
Diego hospital emergency
room and is the founder of
the Partners in Health En-
gage San Diego Community Chapter. The chapter’s
mission is to educate the
public on the Ebola epidemic and to raise support
for response efforts in
Liberia and Sierra Leone.
The Unitarian Universalist Community of Cambria
meets at 786 Arlington in
West Village.
Ray Duncan to play
at The Wise Owl
Songwriters at Play,
showcasing acoustic music
from Central Coast artists,
visits The Wise Owl from
6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday,
Nov. 11, featuring Cambria’s Ray Duncan.
Duncan has performed
with her father, Charles
Duncan, in the duo Ranchers for Peace; her mother,
Jude Johnstone, is a hit
overloads on these disruptive substances.
Get rid of these
cleansers responsibly.
Look to things you know
you could safely ingest —
lemons, vinegar, baking
soda, elbow grease, castile
soap. You can eat Dr. Bronner’s … just not too much,
or you’ll be blowing bubbles out your backside
(kidding, but wouldn’t that
be fun?).
Depend on Environmental Working Group (which
is not supported by chemical companies to do “research”) for updates and
info about everything from
cleaning products to dangers of flame retardant
jammies to sunscreens.
www.ewg.org/key-issues/
consumer-products. Read
everything, but specifically
look for “consumer
guides.”
Remember, the healthier
your body is, the more you
can expect of it whether
through the hustle and
bustle of the holidays or
anytime of year. It’s one of
the easiest and most
worthwhile things to do for
yourself.
P.S. I have found that the
most common reason for
any green product not
working properly is that we
simply ignore housework.
songwriter
whose compositions
have been
recorded by
Johnny
Cash, Bonnie Raitt and
Ray Duncan
others.
Special
guests Tuesday include
John Sandoval and Aaron
Porter.
Admission is free and
limited to those 21 and older. The Wise Owl is at
2164 Center St., behind
Robin’s Restaurant.
Details: 927-8888.
ture scientists from the
University of California
and speakers from the National Drought Mitigation
Center, National Oceanic
Atmospheric Administration and U.S. Department
of Agriculture.
Panelists will discuss topics including the significance of National Drought
Monitor to ranchers, ways
California’s ranchers are
coping with the drought,
new feeding strategies for
livestock and the weather
forecast for the upcoming
forage growing season.
The webcast is free; refreshments and lunch will
be provided. The Cooperative Extension Auditorium
is at 2156 Sierra Way.
Register for this webcast
at http://ucanr.edu/survey/
survey.cfm?surveynumber
=14004. Details: 781-5940.
— Cambrian staff
Drought webcast
for ranchers Friday
A webcast of a drought
and ranch workshop at
UC Davis will be available
for viewing at the San Luis
Obispo Cooperative Extension Auditorium on Friday,
Nov. 7.
The workshop will fea-
Dianne Brooke’s column
is special to The Cambrian.
Email her at ltd@ladytiedi
.com, or visit her website at
www.ladytiedi.com.
MORE NEWS
>> ON PAGE 24
November 6-12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
19
The Original CAMBRIAN PHONE BOOK LISTINGS at your fingertips.
ACCOUNTING
Hidden Gate Antiques
Brett White Gallery
Senior Living Consultants
AUTO REPAIR/SERVICES
Mozzi’s Saloon
Cherish Care
Debra Jones, CPA
2261 Center Street,
CMB 975-5140
Cell: 975-5140
4044 Burton Drive, Suite #2,
CMB 909-1420
BrettWhiteGallery.com
805 Aerovista Place #103,
SLO 545-5901
www.SeniorLivingConsultants.com
Gerber’s Auto Services
Bronze, Silver & Gold Gallery
Lic #0730143
CMB 927-1051
www.cherishcarecambria.com
ASTROLOGERS
2421-E Village Lane, CMB
927-8444
www.gerbersautoservices.com
2262 Main St, CMB
927-4767
www.mozzissaloon.com
Glen Potter
BEADS
CARPENTRY/FINISH WORK
Farmer, Harry
Cambria Beads
K. Smith Construction
CMB 927-1982
George G Ross
CPA PFS CFP
2350 Main Street,
772-2808
www.georgerosscpa.com
Singer, Lynne F. CPA
4070 Burton Dr, Suite 5,
CMB 927-2507
Kinsale Trading Company
842 Main St., CMB
927-5677
Rich Man Poor Man
Antiques Mall
4044 Burton Dr. #1,
CMB 927-5421
www.bsgcambria.com
Cambria Center for the Arts
ACUPUNCTURE
2110 Main St.,
CMB 203-5350
www.richmanpoormanantiques.com
CORE Care
APPAREL
Allied Arts Association
P.O. Box 184; 1350 Main St.,
CMB 927-8190
www.artistsofcambria.com
4070 West St., CMB
927-1055
Exotic Nature
Chambers Gallery
ADVERTISING
Cambria4insiders.com
805-776-3111
[email protected]
www.4insiders.biz
Dining Review
P.O. Box 1605,
CMB 927-1382
www.DiningReviewOnline.com
The Tribune
3825 S. Higuera St, SLO
781-7800
Toll-Free: Circulation
1-800-288-4128
www.sanluisobispo.com
Welcome Map
783 Main St.,
CMB 927-8423
www.exoticnature.com
Gallery of Wearable Art
at The Porte House
4015 West St., East Village,
CMB 927-1005
GOWACambria.com
GOWA Creative Arts
4015 West St., East Village,
CMB 927-1005
GOWACambria.com
The Place
2336A Main St., CMB
927-1195
www.theplacecambria.com
Wildwood
P.O. Box 1605, CMB
927-1382
www.WelcomeMap.biz
4210 Bridge St., CMB
924-0901
www.wildwoodcambria.com
ALARM SYSTEMS
APPLIANCES
San Luis Security Systems
Coastech
2415 #E Village Lane,
CMB 927-8688
772-7779
Cell: 801-8881
ALTERATIONS
Morro Bay Appliance
Original Stitching
By Mari Ella
1570 Berwick Dr., CMB
924-1498
ALZHEIMER’S CARE
Cambria’s Senior Solutions
2150 Main St., Suite 8, CMB
927-1051
www.cherishcarecambria.com
Cherish House Assisted
Living (Two Homes)
Lic #405801566,
Lic #405801741
1155 Warren Road & 1405
Berwick Drive,
927-1051
www.cambriaassistedliving.com
ANTIQUES
Antiques . . . a primitive
perspective
784 Main Street, CMB
203-5247
www.CambriaAntiques.com
Antiques on Arlington
Main St. & Arlington Unit C,
CMB 927-1121
Antiques on Main
2338 Main Street,
CMB 927-4292
935 Main St., MB
772-2755
Fax: 772-2756
755-B Main St.,
CMB 927-9445
www.chambersgallerycambria.com
Deer Run Art & Artifacts
2024 Main St.,
CMB 927-0427
www.deerruncambria.com
Gallerie Lulu
2450 Main Street, Suite B,
CMB 927-5800
www.gallerielulu.com
Melanee Sylvester Gallery
724 Main St, CMB
927-5450
www.MelaneeSylvester.com
Moonstones
American Craft Gallery
4070 Burton Dr, CMB
927-3447
www.moonstones.com
The Painted Lily
2026 Main St.,
CMB 927-5747
www.thepaintedlily.net
Visions of Nature Gallery
784-D Main St., CMB
927-0740
www.visionsofnaturegallery.com
ARCHITECTS
A.D.S Corporation Richard D. Low, Jr.
788 Arlington St., CMB
927-8138
Brent Berry-Architect
656 Weymouth St., CMB
927-4962
www.brentberryarchitect.com
David M. Brown Architect
P.O. Box 123,
CMB 927-3376
Jeffrey B. Lentz Architect
610 Warren Rd.,
CMB 927-4877
Marshall Lewis
Architecture
2281 Benson, CMB 927-0297
marshalllewisaia.com
ART GALLERIES
Amphora Gallery
4070 Burton Dr., Suite 1,
CMB 927-8273
[email protected]
www.amphoragallery.com
1-800-288-4128
P.O. Box 534,
CMB 927-2548
www.hfastrologer.com
ATTORNEYS
Basile Law Firm
1334 Chorro St,
SLO 781-8600
www.basilelaw.com
Broadhurst, Joan M.
816 Main St., Suite G,
CMB 927-1015
www.jmbattorney.com
Cooper-Gordon LLP
800-561-6322
www.cooper-gordon.com
Foerster, Charles E.
Frank E. Kocs
927-4649
Law Office of
Clay A. Schroeder
755 Santa Rosa Street,
Suite 310, SLO
805-395-0689
clayschroederlaw.com
Read, Russell
Attorney at Law CMB
927-2344
ASSISTED LIVING
AUTO BODY/PAINT &
REPAIR
Cambria’s Senior Solutions
2150 Main St., Suite 8,
CMB 927-1051
www.cherishcarecambria.com
Cherish House Assisted
Living (Two Homes)
Lic #405801566,
Lic #405801741
1155 Warren Road &
1405 Berwick Drive, CMB
927-1051
www.cambriaassistedliving.com
Cambria Auto Body
& Restoration
2485 Village Lane, CMB
927-1237
The Bodyman
2531 F Village Lane, CMB
927-5436
AUTO DETAILING
Castillo’s Detail Shop
2509 Building M Village Lane,
CMB 927-4884
A-1 Randy’s Carpet Cleaning
CMB 927-5097
Cell: 909-0579
CASH REGISTERS
Cherish Care Rent-A-Nanny
CMB 927-1051
BAIL BONDING
ABC Bonding
Allocco’s Food Products
Italian Bakery 1602 Main St.,
CMB 927-1501
alloccos.com
French Corner Bakery
2214 Main St, CMB
927-8227
Linn’s Restaurant
2277 Main St., CMB
927-0371
BALLOONS - HELIUM
Among Friends
2254 Main St., East Village,
CMB 927-7156
www.ShopAmongFriends.com
BANKS
1070 Main St.,
CMB 927-8633
2421-E Village Lane, CMB
927-8444
www.gerbersautoservices.com
Cambria Beer Company
The Communications Group
Bonded Electric Systems
Gerber’s Auto Services
CARPET CLEANING
BOARD & CARE
Rabobank
P.O. Box 682, CMB
927-1863
Cell: 909-1063
BEER TASTING
BABYSITTING
AUDIO/VIDEO
AUTO/SMOG
1639 Pineridge Dr., CMB
909-7508
[email protected]
821 Cornwall, CMB
203-5265
www.CambriaBeer.com
BAKERIES
1716 Cardiff Drive,
P.O. Box 1207, CMB
203-5222
Cell: 630-965-8858
www.bussonelaw.com
746 Main Street Suite B,
CMB 927-9907
www.cambriabeadstore.com
375 Quintana Rd., MB
772-6060 or 772-2055
www.morrobaytireandauto.com
Joseph D. Bussone,
Attorney at Law
ASPHALT SERVICES
Cambria Asphalt
Pete’s Morro Bay Tire & Auto
394 Plymouth, P.O. Box 1483,
CMB 927-2385
www.cfoerlaw.com
P.O. Box 900, CMB
927-5255
Art Workshops Of The Central Coast
Nelson’s Garage
50 S. Ocean Avenue, CAY
995-3658
948 Santa Rosa St., SLO
544-1000
www.bailbondsabc.com
MB
772-3302
Cell: 435-640-1895
www.bondedsystems.com
ART LESSONS
CMB 927-5296
Cell: 471-1043
BANQUET ROOMS
Cambria Pines Lodge
2905 Burton Dr.,
CMB 927-4200
Toll-Free: 800-966-6490
www.cambriapineslodge.com
Joslyn Adult
Recreation Center
950 Main St., CMB
927-3364
www.joslynrec.org
Cambria Pines Lodge
2905 Burton Dr., CMB
927-4200
Toll-Free: 800-966-6490
www.cambriapineslodge.com
Cambria’s Senior Solutions
2150 Main St., Suite 8, CMB
927-1051
www.cherishcarecambria.com
Cherish House Assisted
Living (Two Homes)
Lic #405801566,
Lic #405801741
1155 Warren Road &
1405 Berwick Drive, CMB
927-1051
www.cambriaassistedliving.com
Senior Living Consultants
805 Aerovista Place #103,
SLO 545-5901
www.SeniorLivingConsultants.com
George G Ross CPA PFS CFP
2350 Main Street, MB
772-2808
www.georgerosscpa.com
Singer, Lynne F. CPA
4070 Burton Dr, Suite 5,
CMB 927-2507
BOOKS
Padre Pio’s Book Shelf
2096 Main Street,
CMB 927-7209
CAB SERVICE
Cambria Cab
4363 Bridge St.,
CMB 927-HELP (4357)
CABLE TV
San Simeon
Community Cable
SS 927-5555
CANDY
Caren’s Corner
755 Main St., Unit A, CMB
927-1161
CAR WASH
Morro Bay Car Wash
Corner of Morro & Pacific,
MB 772-7775
CAREGIVING SERVICES
2150 Main Street, Suite 7,
CMB 927-9412
www.thecomgroup.com
CATERING
Linn’s Admin Office /
Catering / Cakes
2415 Village Ln, Suite A, CMB
927-1499
linnsfruitbin.com
CELL PHONES
Coast Electronics
510 Quintana Road, MB
772-1265
CEMETERIES
Cambria Cemetery
6005 Bridge St., CMB
927-5158
www.cambriacemetery.com
CHEESE SHOPS
Indigo Moon Cafe
1980 Main St., CMB
927-2911
CHIMNEY SWEEP
A. M. Williams Services
Licensed #725143,
CMB 423-6949
CHIROPRACTIC DOCTORS
Azevedo Chiropractic /
Core Care
Kirk Azevedo, D.C., QME
4070 West St., CMB
927-1055
Cambria Chiropractic
David P. Van Dyke, D.C.
1241 Knollwood Circle, Suite 201B,
CMB 927-8631
CHURCHES
Cambria Calvary Chapel
1067 Main St.,
CMB 927-9999
www.cambriacalvary.org
Community
Presbyterian Church
2250 Yorkshire Dr,
CMB 927-4356
Fax: 927-5502
First Baptist Church
2120 Green St, CMB.
927-4789
www.FbcCambria.org
Gold Coast
CMB 927-2607
www.ComeToYourCenter.org
Santa Rosa
Catholic Church
1174 Main St.,
CMB 927-4816
St. Paul’s
Episcopal Church
2700 Eton Road,
CMB 927-3239
www.stpaulscambria.org
Unitarian Universalist
Community of Cambria
786 Arlington Street,
CMB 395-4055
Unity Church of Cambria
950 Main P.O. Box 1565,
CMB 468-5645
www.unitycambria.com
CLEANERS
Mary & Jose Reveles
House Cleaning
Lic#0705566
P.O. Box 1665, CMB
927-5473
Cell: 909-7187
CLOCK REPAIR
California Clockworks
CMB 924-1364
Cell: 310-467-6678
Once Upon a Tyme
555 Main St., CMB
927-5554
COFFEE HOUSES
Cambria Coffee
Roasting Company
761 Main St., CMB
927-0670
www.cambriacoffee.com
Lily’s Coffee House
2028 Main St, CMB
927-7259
COMPUTER SERVICES & REPAIR
Greg’s Computer Services
Lic #0697748
CMB 927-2572
Cambria Vineyard Church
CONCRETE SUPPLIES & SERVICES
1617 Main Street, CMB
927-5550
www.cambriavineyard.org
2000 San Simeon Creek Rd,
CMB 927-1685
Cambria Rock
Cambria Pub &
Steakhouse
Cambria’s Senior Solutions
Christian Science Church
K. Smith Construction
4090 Burton Dr, CMB
927-0782
www.TheCambriaPub.com
2150 Main St., Suite 8, CMB
927-1051
www.cherishcarecambria.com
1475 Main St., CMB
927-3414
www.spirituality.com
1639 Pineridge Dr., CMB
909-7508
[email protected]
20
November 6-12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
The Original CAMBRIAN PHONE BOOK LISTINGS at your fingertips.
CONFERENCE FACILITIES
Jost Custom Builders
CPA
DESIGN - RESIDENTIAL
ELECTROLYSIS
FIREWOOD
GIFT BASKETS
Cambria Pines Lodge
661-871- 5538
Debra Jones, CPA
A.D.S Corporation Richard D. Low, Jr.
Electrolysis by Hetty
Clint Winsor & Hounds
CMB 927-7268
927-8138
ELECTRONICS
Cambria Community
Fitness Gym
2306 Main St., East Village,
CMB 927-7141
Toll-Free: 800-446-7505
www.fermentations.com
2425-A Village Lane,
788 Arlington St., CMB
CMB 927-6809
Cell: 540-1325
FERMENTATIONS
GIFTS & GIFT SHOPS
Art Ink Signs & Graphics
2905 Burton Dr., CMB
927-4200
Toll-Free: 800-966-6490
www.cambriapineslodge.com
San Simeon
Pines Seaside Resort
7200 Moonstone Beach Drive,
CMB 927-4648
Toll-Free: 866-927-4648
sspines.com
K. Smith Construction
CMB 927-1982
1639 Pineridge Dr., CMB
George G Ross
CPA PFS CFP
909-7508
[email protected]
Kelly Cannon Construction
CMB 927-0232
Kelly Design & Construction
CMB 927-5830
[email protected]
CONTRACTORS/GENERAL
Matt Humphrey Construction
BUILDING
Lic # 744896
A.D.S Corporation Richard D. Low, Jr.
www.matthumphreyconstruction.com
788 Arlington St., CMB
927-8138
Bickell Construction
Lic# 775097
CMB 805-801-3993
Built-Rite Construction &
Home Inspections
CMB 440-5970
CMB 909-0323
McKinney Construction, INC.
Lic #865783
P.O.Box 1266, CMB
927-3652
Cell: 235-0441
www.CambriaCustomBuilder.com
Moss Construction & Design
Burgener Design
Lic. #558870
CMB 927-5248
1196 Pineridge Dr., CMB
Carl Brandt & Co. Lic. #502804
CMB 927-8348
Cartwright Construction
2119 Wilton Drive,
CMB 927-8868
[email protected]
Colgan Construction
Cell: 235-1418
www.colganbuild.com
Corbet Construction Lic. # 674071
CMB 927-3818
corbetconstruction.com
David Morris Construction
Lic. 540233
CMB 927-8246
[email protected]
Della-Bitta Construction
Lic #468664
P.O. Box 1295, CMB
927-3819
Cell: 459-3491
www.dellabittaconstruction.com
Home Repair, Etc.
Alan Desmond Lic #814242
P.O. Box 409, CMB
924-1718
Cell: 610-4066
927-1178
Cell: 235-3284
O’Mannin’s Construction License# 562437
Blue Sky
Cremation Service
FD1966
ATAS 461-0835
www.blueskycremation.com
Blue Sky
Cremation Service
FD1768
PASO ROBLES 226-9478
blueskycremation.com
Reis Family Mortuary &
Crematory
544-7400
www.ReisFamilyMortuary.net
2471 Banbury Rd, CMB
927-4030
Wayne Gracey
Construction, INC
Lic. #384680
984 Manor Way,
CMB 927-8382
Wesley Torell
Construction, Inc.
2001 Chester Lane, CMB
927-8857
Wesner Construction,
Lic.#720283 - David Wesner
325 Conover Rd,
434-3124
Bob Wright
Construction CSL 334871
805-927-5249
Barbier-Clark,
Roz MA, MFT
800 Hillcrest Dr. #3,
CMB 927-3706
Bates, Diane G. M.F.T.
1106 Pinewood Dr.,
CMB 924-1066
788 Arlington St., CMB
927-8138
Burgener Design
CMB 927-5248
John Wordeman Design &
Construction
Pewter Plough Playhouse
Kelly Design &
Construction
824 Main St., CMB 927-3877
www.pewterploughplayhouse.org
CMB 927-5830
ESCROW/TITLE SERVICES
[email protected]
Fidelity National Title
DOG & CAT GROOMING
Animal Expressions
Pet Grooming
2509B Village Lane,
www.polyprowindow.com
FACIALS
CMB 927-POLY (7659)
DRAIN CLEANING
Phil’s Pro Plumb
CMB 927-3048
All American Dry Cleaning,
Alterations &
Laundry Service
1306 Tamson Dr.,
CMB 927-5162
aavideocambria.com
DUCT SEALING/CLEANING
Aeroseal California
2244 Main Street, CMB
927-3410
www.sotosmarketplace.com
www.aerosealcalifornia.com
DELIVERY SERVICES
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
1241 Knollwood Drive,
PMB #88,
CMB 927-5205
Cell: 805-550-8782
Dovesdelivery.com
DENTIST
Frank Fratto, DDS, Inc.
First American Title
Poly Pro Window & Door
816 Main St. Suite F, CMB
927-2956
www.therapybythesea.com
Dove’s Delivery
780 Monterey Avenue, Suite A,
MB 771-1920
Toll-Free: 800-266-1440
www.fidelityslo.com
601 Morro Bay Blvd, Suite A,
MB 772-2773
www.firstam.com/slo
DRY CLEANING
The New Soto’s
Marketplace
ENTERTAINMENT
Theatre at the Cambria
Center for the Arts
Cell: 235-7036
Therapy By The Sea
755 Main St., Unit A,
CMB 927-1161
1306 Tamson Dr.,
CMB 927-5162
aavideocambria.com
P.O. Box 1077, CMB 927-4126
Lic. # 467338
DOORS
Caren’s Corner
All American Video &
Electronics
Allied Arts Association
P.O. Box 184; 1350 Main St.,
CMB 927-8190
www.artistsofcambria.com
Diva Day Spa
9135 Hearst Drive, SS
927-7752
Cell: 909-7665
moonstonedayspa.com
Lic. #626793
A.D.S Corporation Richard D. Low, Jr.
CMB 927-0227
Cell: 909-1358
O’Sullivan Construction
DESIGN CONSTRUCTION
DAY SPAS
CMB 927-2977
Cell: 805-235-6230
Lic. # 658857
James H. Walker
CMB 927-3117
CREMATION SERVICES
Moonstone Day Spa
P.O. Box 1773,
CMB 927-8462
JHW Construction -
4070 Burton Dr, Suite 5,
CMB 927-2507
2500 Burton Drive,
P.O. Box 104, CMB
Lic. 932512
909-1013
[email protected]
Singer, Lynne F. CPA
250 San Simeon Ave.,
SS 927-4252
James D. Glitch
Construction, Inc.
Jeff Drew Construction
2350 Main Street, MB
772-2808
www.georgerosscpa.com
CMB 903-2266
Bonded Electric Systems
MB 772-3302
Cell: 435-640-1895
www.bondedsystems.com
Cambria Electric
2415 #E Village Lane,
CMB 927-8114
McCain Electric
Nolan Jangaard, DDS
2150 Main St., Suite 4,
CMB 927-4811
Residential & Commercial
Poulos, Jill E., DDS
Cell: 559-905-4860
4235 Bridge St.,
CMB 927-5797
www.jillpoulosdds.com
Karl Zumwalt Electric
Lic#349402
CMB 927-2939
CMB 927-8545
Cell: 235-2361
A Sojourn Healing Arts Center
CMB 927-8007
www.SojournSpa.com
Diva Day Spa
250 San Simeon Ave., SS
927-4252
www.divadayspaonline.com
True Skin
2150 Main Street, Suite C,
CMB 395-4474
trueskincambria.skincaretherapy.net
FENCING
Chris Anderson
Lic# 512473
CMB 805-203-5513
FINANCIAL PLANNING
George G Ross
CPA PFS CFP
2350 Main Street, MB
772-2808
www.georgerosscpa.com
Andrew Zinn - Mutual
Securities Inc.
Financial Advisor
1244 Pine Street, Suite 201,
PR 226-8033 or 927-0672
[email protected]
FITNESS
1235 Knollwood Dr., CMB
927-2767
Cell: 801-5272
Fitness for Life
Colleen Juarez CMB 909-0240
Gym One
1266 Tamson Drive,
Suite 101, CMB
927-4961
www.gymonecambria.com
FRAMING
Picture It Framed-Custom
Picture Framing
2435-H Village Lane,
CMB 927-4742
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Benedict-Rettey
Mortuary & Crematory
A Matter of Taste
4120 Burton Drive,
CMB 927-0286
www.amatteroftastecambria.com
Among Friends
2254 Main St., East Village,
CMB 927-7156
Toll-Free: 888-927-7156
www.ShopAmongFriends.com
Cambria Music
Box Shoppe
778-A Main St.,
CMB 927-3227
www.cambriamusicbox.com
Caren’s Corner
755 Main St., Unit A,
CMB 927-1161
Chances
San Simeon
Glass & Mirror
CMB 927-1588
Cell: 471-3486
GRAPHIC DESIGN
Jen Mathieson (Cannella)
CMB 927-5907
ArtWorksByTerio
CMB 924-1792
AzureFire Web &
Graphic Design
805 706 2812
www.azurefire.com
GROCERS
Cookie Crock Market
1240 Knollwood Dr.,
CMB 927-4490
The New Soto’s
Marketplace
2244 Main Street, CMB
927-3410
www.sotosmarketplace.com
733 Main St,
CMB 927-3542
Cambria Window Cleaning
Home Arts
CMB 805-927-8876
Cell: 805-927-0880
Reis Family Mortuary
& Crematory
727 Main St., CMB
927-ART1 (2781)
Linn’s Farmstore
544-7400
www.ReisFamilyMortuary.net
6275 Santa Rosa Creek Rd,,
CMB 927-8134
Cambria Community
Fitness Gym
FURNACES/HEATING
Linn’s Gourmet Goods
SALES & SERVICE
4241 Bridge St, CMB
924-1064
FD891
1401 Quintanta Rd.,
MB 772-7382
www.benedictrettey.com
Coastech
772-7779
Cell: 801-8881
D. Lafferty Heating
Linn’s HomeStyle
4249 Bridge St, CMB
927-5717
2515-H Village Lane, CMB
927-4487
Moonstones
American Craft Gallery
SLOCO Heating and
Cooling, Inc.
4070 Burton Dr,
CMB 927-3447
Toll-Free: 800-424-3827
www.moonstones.com
927-4226
Toll-Free: (888) SERV-SLO
www.slocoheatingandcooling.com
FURNITURE
Home Arts
727 Main St., CMB
927-ART1 (2781)
GARDENING MAINTENANCE & SERVICES
Chris Anderson
Lic# 512473
CMB 203-5513
Enriques
Gardening Service
FIREPLACES
P.O. Box 462,
CMB 927-1878
Forden’s Complete
Fireplace Shop
Jose Reveles
Repair & Service
857 Monterey St.,
SLO 543-1090
Toll-Free: 800-535-1090
www.fordens.com
Lic #0705566
P.O. Box 1665,
CMB 927-5473
Cell: 909-7187
Oliver’s Twist
1900 Saint James Road,
GYM
1235 Knollwood Dr.,
CMB 927-2767
Gym One
1266 Tamson Drive,
Suite 101, CMB
927-4961
www.gymonecambria.com
HAIR SALONS
Bridal Artistry
2150 Main Street, Suite A,
CMB 707-771-9238
Diane’s Hairport
2380 Main St.,
4039 Burton Dr.,
CMB 927-8196
CMB 927-8831
The Garden Shed
250 San Simeon Ave., SS
2024 Main St.,
CMB 927-7654
www.cambriagardenshed.com
www.divadayspaonline.com
Teresabelle Gallery
2380 - D Main St,
766 Main St., West Village,
CMB 927-4556
teresabellegallery.com
Fringe Hair Studio
Diva Day Spa
927-4252
Foxy Locks
CMB 927-8255
2150 Main Street, CMB
GLASS
927-2900
Estero Glass
New Beginnings
Hair Salon
1560 Main St., MB
772-2288
www.EsteroGlass.com
800 Hillcrest Dr., Ste 8,
CMB 927-5655
Poly Pro Window & Door
Pacific Hair
www.polyprowindow.com
CMB 927-POLY (7659)
780 Arlington, CMB 927-3301
pacifichaircambria.com
November 6-12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
The Original CAMBRIAN PHONE BOOK LISTINGS at your fingertips.
21
HANDYMAN
HEALTHCARE
HOTELS/MOTELS
HYPNOSIS
KENNELS
ECOTONES
Cholet, Suzanne
MORTGAGE
A. M. Williams Services
Community Health Centers
of the Central Coast, Inc.
9 Iron Inn
Dianne Brooke, CHT
& Ed Kraycik, CHT
Estrella Kennels
Landscape Design,
Installation & Maintenance
P.O. Box 1179, CMB 927-0374
www.ecotoneslandscapes.com
MS, MFT, CtHA
800 Hillcrest Drive, Suite #5,
CMB 927-3337
Central Coast Lending
601 Morro Bay Blvd., Suite #B,
Wellington, Barbara M.F.T.
www.CentralCoastLending.com
License #725143
CMB
Cell: 805-423-6949
B & B Handyman
CMB 975-3020 or 927-1735
Cell: 975-3020
Grandstaff Home Repair
and Service
P.O. Box 1232, CMB
Cell: 235-0737
Home Repair, Etc.
Alan Desmond Lic #814242
P.O. Box 409, CMB
924-1718
[email protected]
Jerry Milan Z
1241 Knollwood PMB 129,
CMB 927-4908
Jose Reveles
Repair & Service
Lic#0705566
P.O. Box 1665, CMB
927-5473.
K. Smith Construction
1639 Pineridge Dr., CMB
909-7508
Problem Solved
Renovations & repairs,
home and yard
927-4805
www.ladytiedi.com
HARDWARE
Cambria Hardware & Lumber
2345 Village Lane, East Village,
CMB 927-4650
HAULING
Big Tree
Buddy Campo,
License #967479
2075 Main Street, CMB
927-2277
Cell: 550-2525
Clint Winsor & Hounds
Construction —
Lic# 863869
CMB 927-7268
Tim Carr’s Handys
CMB 927-5111
Cell: 909-0440
Western Hauling
Calif. Contractors Lic. # 761591
CMB 927-0946
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Tahitian Noni Juice - Teri
O’Rourke
CMB 924-1792
www.tni.com/teri
HEALTH HEALTH FOOD
STORES/CAFES
2515 Main St., CMB
927-5292
communityhealthcenters.org
HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING
All Systems Heating & Air
Conditioning
ATAS 703-3464
Coastech Heating
Same Day Service
772-7779
Cell: 801-8881
D. Lafferty Heating
2515-H Village Lane,
CMB 927-4487
SLOCO Heating and
Cooling, Inc.
927-4226
Toll-Free: (888) SERV-SLO
www.slocoheatingandcooling.com
HOME AND GARDEN
St. Mary Mead
1940 Main St., CMB 927-1194
HOME HEALTH SERVICES
Cherish Care
Lic #0730143
CMB 927-1051
www.cherishcarecambria.com
Cherish Home Health
2150 Main St., Suite 8,
CMB 927-1212
HOME INSPECTIONS
Key Termite and Pest
Control
927-8611
www.keytermite.com
Pacific Coast Home
Inspections
Steve Spisak - Owner/Inspector
P.O. Box 1511, CMB
Cell: 909-7300
REPAIR/MAINTENANCE
K. Smith Construction
1639 Pineridge Dr., CMB
909-7508
Kelly Cannon Construction
CMB 927-0232
HOSPICE
Cherish House Assisted
Living (Two Homes)
Lic #405801566,
Lic #405801741
1155 Warren Road & 1405
Berwick Drive,
CMB 927-1051
www.cambriaassistedliving.com
HOT TUB/SPAS & RENTALS
Sunshine Health FoodsShine Cafe
Riptide Pool & Spa Enterprises
415 Morro Bay Blvd., MB
772-7873
CMB 927-3357
www.riptidealchemy.com
6736 Moonstone Beach Drive,
CMB 927-4647
www.9IronInn.com
Bluebird Inn
1880 Main St., CMB 927-4634
Toll-Free: 800-552-5434
www.bluebirdmotel.com
Cambria Pines Lodge
2905 Burton Dr., CMB 927-4200
Toll-Free: 800-966-6490
www.cambriapineslodge.com
Cambria Shores Inn
6276 Moonstone Beach Dr.,
CMB 927-8644
Toll-Free: 800-433-9179
www.cambriashores.com
Captain’s Cove Inn
6454 Moonstone Beach Dr.,
CMB 927-8581
Toll-Free: 800-781-2683
captainscoveinn.com
Creekside Inn
2618 Main St., CMB
927-4021
www.creeksidecambria.com
Her Castle Homestay Bed
& Breakfast Inn
CMB 805-924-1719
HerCastle.cc
Little Sur Inn
6190 Moonstone Beach
Drive, CMB 927-1329
www.littlesurinn.com
Moonstone Landing
6240 Moonstone Beach
Drive, CMB 927-0012
Toll-Free: 800-830-4540
www.moonstonelanding.com
San Simeon Pines Seaside
Resort
7200 Moonstone Beach Drive,
CMB 927-4648
sspines.com
The Pickford House
2555 MacLeod Way, CMB
1-877-300-4449
www.thepickfordhouse.com
Treebones Resort
71895 Highway 1, S. Big Sur
927-2390
Toll-Free: 877-424-4787
www.treebonesresort.com
White Water Inn
6790 Moonstone Beach Drive,
CMB 805-927-1066
Toll-Free: 800-995-1715
www.whitewaterinn.com
HOUSE CLEANING
K & K Cleaning
P.O. Box 22, CMB 927-8809
HOUSEWARES
A Matter of Taste
4120 Burton Drive,
CMB 927-0286
www.amatteroftastecambria.com
CMB 927-4805
www.ladytiedi.com
Cholet, Suzanne
MS, MFT, CtHA
800 Hillcrest Drive, Suite #5,
CMB 927-3337
Cell: 235-3352
ICE CREAM/YOGURT
Caren’s Corner
755 Main St., Unit A, CMB
927-1161
INTERNET/INTERNET CAFÉ
Cambria Coffee Roasting
Company
761 Main St., CMB
927-0670
www.cambriacoffee.com
INVESTMENTS
Edward Jones Investments
Shari Long Financial Advisor
1073 Main St, CMB
927-1343
www.edwardjones.com
George G Ross CPA PFS CFP
2350 Main Street,
MB 772-2808
www.georgerosscpa.com
Andrew Zinn - Mutual
Securities Inc.
1244 Pine Street, Suite 201,
PR 226-8033 or 927-0672
IRON WORK
Iron Willow
License # 395632
P.O.Box 673, CMB
805-395- 7015
ironwillow.com
JEWELRY/JEWELRY DESIGN & REPAIR
Alexander-Denny Jewelry
Studio
4090 Burton Drive, Suite 12,
CMB 927-0467
www.Alexander-Denny.com
Bronze, Silver & Gold
Gallery
4044 Burton Dr. #1, CMB
927-5421
www.bsgcambria.com
Casa De Oro Jewelry
Studio
4909 Burton Dr., Suite 5,
CMB 927-5444
Hauser Brothers Goldsmiths
2060 Main St., CMB
927-8315
www.hausergold.com
Moonstones American
Craft Gallery
4070 Burton Dr, CMB
927-3447
Toll-Free: 800-424-3827
www.moonstones.com
4250 Harmony Valley Rd,
HMY 927-7827
Vineyard Kennels
330 Ambush Trail, PR
805-238-1330
www.vineyardkennel.com
KITCHEN SHOPS
A Matter of Taste
Mike Rice- Since 1984
Lic#859364
P.O. Box 204, CMB
927-3310
LANDSCAPE SUPPLIES
Cambria Rock
4120 Burton Drive,
CMB 927-0286
www.amatteroftastecambria.com
2000 San Simeon Creek Rd,
CMB 927-1685
Forden’s Gifts for HOME
and KITCHEN
Wildwood
857 Monterey St., SLO
543-1090
Toll-Free: 800-535-1090
www.fordens.com
LANDSCAPE DESIGN
Clint Winsor & Hounds
Construction —
Lic.# 863869
CMB 927-7268
LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS
ECOTONES
Landscape Design,
Installation & Maintenance
P.O. Box 1179, CMB 927-0374
www.ecotoneslandscapes.com
Great Gardens
CMB See my ad on pg 49
927-1749
Landscape Concepts
Kent Cookingham Lic
#358822
CMB 927-9422
Cell: 909-0236
www.cambrialandscape.com
Mike Rice- Since 1984
Lic# 859364
P.O. Box 204, CMB
927-3310
Scenic Coast Landscape
& Maintenance,
LIC #854212
CMB 927-0908
Cell: 909-1360
ECOTONES
Landscape Design,
Installation & Maintenance
P.O. Box 1179, CMB 927-0374
www.ecotoneslandscapes.com
LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE
Chris Anderson
Lic# 512473
CMB 805-203-5513
Buddy Campo,
License #967479
2075 Main Street, CMB
927-2277
Cell: 550-2525
Cambria Irrigation Doctor
CMB 927-8047
LEATHER
4210 Bridge St., CMB
924-0901
www.wildwoodcambria.com
LEGAL SERVICES
HK FRAUD EXAMINER
794 Arlington, CMB
Cell: 748-7952
www.hkfraudexaminer.com
LIQUOR STORES
Bob & Jan’s Bottle Shop
2292 Main St., CMB
927-4909
LOCKSMITHS
Mel’s Lock & Key
CMB 927-4250
LUMBER
Cambria Hardware &
Lumber
2345 Village Lane, East Village,
CMB 927-4650
MARKETING
12 Toes Promotions
P.O. Box 952, CMB
559-683-1200
Cell: 559-760-1258
www.12toes.com
The Cambrian
2442 Main St, CMB 927-8652
Toll-Free: Classified
1-800-477-8799
Fax: 927-4708
[email protected]
www.thecambrian.com
The Tribune
3825 S. Higuera St, SLO
781-7800
Toll-Free: Circulation
1-800-288-4128
www.sanluisobispo.com
MARRIAGE, FAMILY & CHILD THERAPISTS
Barbier-Clark, Roz MA,
MFT
800 HillCrest Dr. #3, CMB
927-3706
Bates, Diane G. M.F.T.
1106 Pinewood Dr., CMB
924-1066
Brody, Cathy M.S.
800 Hillcrest, #7, CMB
927-5020
798 Arlington St, CMB 927-1887
MASONRY
MB 543-5626
Central Coast Mortgage
Consultants
Rocky Butte Masonry
2226 Burton Drive,
CMB 927-7729
www.rockybuttemasonry.com
755 Santa Rosa Street, Suite 310,
Gonzalez Multi-Masonry
1131 Monterey Street, SLO
Lic # 742151 CMB 924-1020
STONESMITH MASONRY
Leon D. Smith
2013 Hanging Tree Lane,
TMPLTN 237-2413
Cell: 235-6456
MASSAGE THERAPY
SLO See my ad on pg 54
783-4000
The Mortgage House
782-6999
Toll-Free: 800-644-4030
www.themortgagehouse.com
MUSIC BOXES
Cambria Music Box Shoppe
778-A Main St., CMB
927-3227
A Agidius (Ageless)
Healing Arts
www.cambriamusicbox.com
800 Hillcrest Dr. #2, CMB
927-0967
www.agidiushealingarts.com
Nails by Christine
2150 Main St., Unit A, CMB
A Sojourn Healing Arts Center
395-0979 or 927-2686
CMB 927-8007
www.SojournSpa.com
Amethyst Healing Center
704 Main St, CMB
927-1700
www.AmethystHealingCenter.com
NAIL CARE
NEEDLEWORK
Flying Fuzzies
719 Main St., CMB 927-2649
www.flyingfuzzies.com
NEWSPAPERS
Cambria Massage
The Cambrian
SS 927-5159
Cell: 909-7665
www.cambriamassage.com
2442 Main St, CMB 927-8652
Cambria Wellness
545 Croyden Ln, CMB
Cell: 927-0699
www.cambriawellness.com
Diva Day Spa
250 San Simeon Ave., SS
927-4252
www.divadayspaonline.com
Healing Hands of Happy Hill
Massage & Hypnotherapy
Toll-Free: Circulation
1-800-288-4128
Fax: 927-4708
www.thecambrian.com
The Tribune
3825 S. Higuera St, SLO
781-7800
Toll-Free: Circulation
1-800-288-4128
www.sanluisobispo.com
NOTARY PUBLIC
CMB 927-4805
www.ladytiedi.com
Davega’s Mobile Notary
Service
Massage by Rameeko
755 Ardath Drive, CMB
CMB 927-2607
www.rameeko.org
Moonstone Day Spa
927-1755
Judith A. Peterson Mobile Notary
9135 Hearst Drive,
SS 927-7752
moonstonedayspa.com
Singer, Lynne F. CPA
Moss, Nancy Therapeutic
Massage
CMB 927-2507
1196 Pineridge Dr., CMB
927-1178
Therapy By The Sea
Therapeutic Massage & Spa
Service
816 Main St. Suite F,
CMB 927-2956
www.therapybythesea.com
927-3488
4070 Burton Dr, Suite 5,
NURSERIES
GROW
2024 Main St., CMB 924-1340
www.grownursery.com
Scenic Coast Landscape
Nursery
2345 Village Lane
CMB 927-0908
22
November 6-12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
The Original CAMBRIAN PHONE BOOK LISTINGS at your fingertips.
OPTOMETRISTS
PERSONAL TRAINING
Cayucos Eyeworks
Optometry
Gym One
Glenn S. Parnes, O.D.
98 S. Ocean Ave., CAY
995-2777
www.cayucoseyeworks.com
Dr. Tiffamy Smart, O.D.
590 Harbor St, MB
772-1269
www.morrobayoptometry.com
OUTDOOR RETAILER
Cambria Outdoors
734 Main Street Ste A, CMB
805-927-5979
cambriaoutdoors.com
PAINT SUPPLIES
Cambria Hardware &
Lumber
2345 Village Lane, East Village,
CMB 927-4650
1266 Tamson Drive, Suite 101,
CMB 927-4961
www.gymonecambria.com
PEST CONTROL
Brezden Pest Control
3261 S. Higuera St., Suite 100,
SLO 927-5100
Toll-Free: 800-464-9446
www.BrezdenPest.com
Key Termite and Pest
Control
927-8611
Toll-Free: 800-548-5599
www.keytermite.com
Nordella’s Horticultural
Service
CMB 927-1607
PET CREMATORY
Black Mountain Pet Crematory
1401 Quintana Road, MB
772-0137
PAINTERS
PET SITTING
“Paul The Painter”
Chalifoux Painting
Aunties Paws N The Pines
CMB 927-2375
www.auntiespawsnthepines.com
CA Lic. #691754
1034 Hillcrest Drive, CMB
927-3107
Acosta’s Painting
Lic#946864
1241 Knollwood Dr. #89,
CMB 927-1402
www.CambriaPainting.com
Bayside Painting
Michael Goodwin
Lic#709877
1154 13th Street,
LOS OSOS 528-1572
Cell: 748-5585
www.baysidepainting.com
Brennan, Don
Painting Since 1980
P.O. Box 103, CMB
927-0213
www.DonBrennanPainting.com
Bruce Owens Painting
CMB 927-0153
Corby Lloyd Painting
License #716958
CMB 927-4333
Cell: 909-8243
Grandstaff Paint &
Pressure Wash
P.O. Box 1232,
Cell: 235-0737
Rogall Painting
CMB 927-2684
Taylor, Steve - Painting &
General Contracting
Lic #281886
CMB 927-0812
Whitfield, Gregg
CMB 927-1604
www.whitfieldpainting.com
Cherish Care
- Rent-a-Pet-Nanny
CMB 927-1051
Pet Nanny of Cambria
Community Health Centers
of the Central Coast, Inc.
2515 Main St., CMB
927-5292
Toll-Free: 866-614-4636
communityhealthcenters.org
PIANO TUNING
Tom Fritz Piano Tuning
& Repair
Cell: 559-246-6389
PICTURE FRAMING
Picture It Framed-Custom
Picture Framing
2435-H Village Lane,
CMB 927-4742
PIZZA
JJ’s Pizza
2380 Main St,
CMB 927-3084
PLUMBERS/PLUMBING
All Systems Heating & Air
Conditioning
ATAS 703-3464
Ben’s 24 Hr. Plumbing
Lic#549300
P.O. Box 569, CMB
927-1911
Cell: 909-0840
Jeff Smith Plumbing
P.O. Box 668, CMB
927-2646
CMB 927-7586
Cell: 909-1004
PET SUPPLIES
Phil’s Pro Plumbing
Maddie Mae’s Pet Pantry
Holistic Pet Nutrition
815 Main Street, CMB
924-1139
www.CambriaPet.com
CMB 927-3048
Potter Plumbing, Inc.
PHARMACY
2809 Burton Circle, CMB
927-4069
Cell: 909-0169
[email protected]
Cambria Drug & Gift
Toby’s Plumbing
Burton & Main, CMB
927-7283
PHOTOGRAPHY
Debbie Markham
Photography
CMB 235-7151
www.debbiemarkhamphotography.com
Ron Bianchetto Photography
CMB 927-0669 or 927-1020
Toll-Free: 800-922-9779
www.ronbianchetto.com
Greene’s Visions
4247 Wall Street, CMB
909-8451
PHYSICAL THERAPY
Cambria Physical Therapy
1266 Tamson Drive, Suite 101,
CMB 924-1605
www.cambriapt.com
Central Coast Physical
Therapy / CORE Care
4070 West St., CMB
927-1055
PHYSICIANS
Alan Brovar, M.D.
798 Arlington St, CMB
927-1887
P.O. Box 832, CMB
927-7555
Cell: 235-3396
PLUMBING & DRAIN CLEANING
Ben’s 24 Hr. Plumbing
Lic#549300
P.O. Box 569, CMB
927-1911
Cell: 909-0840
Cambria Rooter Service
Ben Heaston
CMB 927-1911
PRESSURE WASH
Grandstaff Paint &
Pressure Wash
P.O. Box 1232, CMB
Cell: 235-0737
Whitfield, Gregg
CMB 927-1604
Cell: 235-7412
www.whitfieldpainting.com
PRINTERS
P&D Printing
Double sided, full color flyers.
2442 Main St., CMB 927-8652
Fax: 927-4708
[email protected]
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Chalet Realty, James and Carol
Chalifoux, Broker-Realtor
728 Main St.,
CMB 927-3887
Cell: 441-2256
www.ChaletRealty.com
Gold Coast Realty
723 Main St, CMB
927-3883
Cell: 909-0120
goldcoastrealtyonline.com
O’Sullivan Property
Management
Broker DRE# 01916761
2471 Banbury Road, CMB
748-0308
osullivanpm.com
Quality Management
Services
816 Main St., Suite G-1, CMB
927-2953
Cell: 835-2570
Scenic Coast Property
Management
www.sceniccoastrentals.com
712 Main St,
CMB 927-6163
www.cambriacoastrentals.com
Sea & Pines Realty
LIC #01324340
1912 Pierce Ave,
CMB 927-0306
Toll-Free: 800-240-2277
www.seaandpinesrealty com
Brody, Steve Ph.D.
800 Hillcrest, #7, CMB
927-5020
REAL ESTATE
Jeff Smith Plumbing
Adams, Becky
CMB 927-7586
Cell: 909-1004
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main St, CMB
927-6144
Cell: 235-2258
www.BeckyAdams.com
O’Malley’s Plumbing
Lic. # 717290
CMB 927-2690
Phil’s Pro Plumbing
CMB 927-3048
POOL/SPA REPAIR
Riptide Pool & Spa
Enterprises
CMB 927-3357
www.riptidealchemy.com
Azevedo, Lynn
DRE#01888458
RE/MAX Pines By The Sea,
770 Main St., Suite A, CMB
927-2474
Cell: 703-3953
www.LynnAzevedo.com
Barnes & Associates
Sotheby’s International
Realty
Jeannette Johnson
743 Main St., CMB
927-1200
Cell: 441-7746
www.BASothebysRealty.com
Barnes & Associates
Sotheby’s International
Realty
743 Main St, CMB
927-1200
www.BASothebysRealty.com
Barnes, Michael
Barnes & Associates
Sotheby’s International Realty
743 Main St, CMB
927-1200
www.BASothebysRealty.com
Barry & Linda Humphrey,
Realtors
Century 21 Hometown Realty
2137 Pitt Place, CMB 203-5236
Cell: 234-4442
Beasley, Sunny
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main Street, CMB
927-3834 or 927-6146
Cell: . 909-2231
www.CambriaRealEstate.com
Berk, Deborah - Broker/
Owner
Sea & Pines Realty — LIC
#01324340
1912 Pierce Ave, CMB
927-0306
Toll-Free: 800-240-2277
www.seaandpinesrealty.com
Bob Kasper, Owner/Broker
The Real Estate Company of
Cambria
2080 Main St., CMB
927-3200
Toll-Free: 855-927-3200
Cell: 909-9707
www.TheRECC.com
Breen Realty
Richard & Kara Breen Owner/Broker
768 Main St, CMB
927-4966 or 927-4426
Toll-Free: 800-927-4967
Cell: 235-3684
www.BreenRealty.com
Brett, Jim
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main St, CMB .
927-6147
Cell: 235-3843
www.CambriaRealEstate.com
Brett, Manya
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates
702 Main St, CMB
927-5000
Cell: 235-2749
www.cambria-realestate.com
Cambria Pines Realty, Inc.
Gold Coast Realty
746-A Main St, CMB
927-8616
www.CambriaPinesRealty.com
723 Main St, CMB
927-3883
www.goldcoastrealtyonline.com
Robbin Hinson, Licensed Agent
746 -A Main Street,
CMB
Cell: 305-9778
www.robbinhinsonrealty.com
Coldwell Banker Kellie & Associates
702 Main St, CMB
927-6133
Cell: 909-0830
www.cambriarealestate.com
Cambria Pines Realty
Carnahan, Gerald
Sand Shell Realty, Realtor Associate
555 Main St, CMB
927-1511
Cell: 400-9839
www.sandshellrealty.com
Carson, Will
Gold Coast Realty - Broker/Owner
723 Main St, CMB
927-3883
www.goldcoastrealtyonline.com
Casey Hosman, Broker
Associate
The Real Estate Company of Cambria
2080 Main St., CMB
203-3131
www.CaseyHosman.com
CENTURY 21 Associates West
712 Main St, CMB.
927-6160
www.C21AssociatesWest.com
Chalet Realty, James and Carol
Chalifoux, Broker-Realtor
728 Main St., CMB
927-3887
Cell: 441-2256
www.ChaletRealty.com
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
“Where Home Begins”
702 Main Street, CMB
927-3834
www.CambriaRealEstate.com
Cookingham, Menta
Cambria Pines Realty
746-A Main St, CMB
927-8616
Cell: 909-0235 Fax: 926-3102
www.mentayourrealtor.com
Craig, David
Coldwell Banker Kellie & Associates
702 Main St, CMB
927-8368
www.DavidCraigRealtor.com
Doroski, Pat
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main Street, CMB
927-6134 or 927-3834
Cell: 235-6457
www.CambriaRealEstatecom
Doyle, Don
RE/MAX Pines By The Sea
770 Main Street, Ste A, CMB
Cell: 801-0810
www.dondoylecentralcoast.com
Edwards, Jana
RE/MAX Pines By The Sea
770 Main St., Suite A, CMB
927-2474
Cell: 909-9058
Gonyer, John
Howard, Bruce
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main St, CMB
927-3834
Cell: 909-0780
www.brucehowardrealtor.com
Jack Posemsky Real Estate
CMB 927-4777
www.jackposemsky.com
Jacobs, Jutta
Barnes & Associates
Sotheby’s International Realty
743 Main St, CMB
909-0520
Cell: 909-0520
www.juttajacobs.com
Karin Kraemer, CNE
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main St., CMB
Direct: 924-4006
www.cambriacoastrealestate.com
Koontz, Bruce
The Real Estate Company of
Cambria
2080 Main St., CMB
Home Office: 927-4957
Cell: 610-3371
www.brucekoontz.com
Lamb, Joyce
Sea & Pines Realty
1912 Pierce Ave., CMB.
909-7177
www.seaandpinesrealty.com
Lloyd, Jan, CRB, CRS, GRI,
SRES, e-PRO,
Broker Associate
Lic. # 01142335
Patterson Realty, MB
203-5136
Cell: 909-8263
www.CambriaCoastalProperties.com
Maston, Kimberly - Broker
Associate,
Lic. 01788920 CMB 909-8163
Cell: 909-8163
www.cambrialiving.com
Matthes, Bill - Realtor
Associate
Barnes & Associates
Sotheby’s International Realty
743 Main St, CMB
805-610-1564
McCall, Teri
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main Street, CMB.
909-1201
Cell: 909-1201
www.realestateincambria.com
McKinney, Laura
Barnes & Associates
Sotheby’s International Realty
743 Main St, CMB
927-1200
Cell: 235-0457
www.realestateslocounty.com
Mikesell, Priscilla
Sea & Pines Realty
1912 Pierce Ave, CMB
927-0306
Cell: 909-8206 Fax: 980-5506
www.seaandpinesrealty.com
Morales, Lance
Cambria Pines Realty, Inc.
746-A Main St, CMB
927-8616
Cell: 235-2794
www.CambriaPinesRealty.com
Morton, Janet
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main St, CMB
927-6129
Cell: 550-5444
www.JanetMortonRealtor.com
Mullins, Trudy
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main Street, CMB.
927-6128
RE/MAX Pines By The Sea
MacTavish, Lachlan Ian
770 Main Street, Ste A, CMB
927-2474
rmpinesbythesea.com
Malone, Betty
Monica King, Broker —- Real
Estate Coastal Connection
Cell: 550-0603
www.monicaking.com
Coldwell Banker Kellie & Associates
702 Main St, CMB
909-9745
www.cambrialostcoast.com
Barnes & Associates
Sotheby’s International Realty
743 Main St, CMB
927-1200
Cell: 909-0124
www.BASothebysRealty.com
Martin, Jeanne
Barnes & Associates
Sotheby’s International Realty
743 Main St, CMB.
927-1200
Cell: 235-3578
www.ronjeanne.com
San Luis Obispo Realty
Sand Shell Realty
555 Main St, CMB
927-1511
Toll-Free: 800-767-0095
www.sandshellrealty.com
Shalhoub, Ray, CDPE
The Real Estate Office
297 Santa Rosa Street, SLO
878-1924
Cell: 878-1924
www.rayshalhoub.com
November 6-12, 2014
Silvers, Jim
The Original CAMBRIAN PHONE BOOK LISTINGS at your fingertips.
RENTAL SERVICES
2415 Village Lane, Unit E,
CMB 927-5511
540 Atascadero Rd., MB
772-3335
604 Main St, CMB
927-3000
Oasis Equipment Rentals
CMB 927-0323
barbarasnydercambria.com
Aron Hill Vineyards
The Real Estate Company
of Cambria
2080 Main St., CMB
927-3200
www.TheRECC.com
Vandenheuvel, Kelly —
Broker Associate, GRI
Patterson Realty
471-1046
Cell: 471-1046
www.centralcoastsales.com
VanDuzer, Mac
Sand Shell Realty, Associate Broker
555 Main St, CMB.
927-1511
Cell: 909-7630
www.REcentralCoast.com
Warren, Rick
Cambria Pines Realty
746-A Main St., CMB
927-8616
Cell: 395-0668
Warren, Sue
Cambria Pines Realty
746-A Main St., CMB 927-5270
or 927-8616
Cell: 769-6339
Whitfield, Gregg
The Real Estate Office
555 Main St, CMB
Home Office: 927-1604
Cell: 235-7412
www.RealtorCentralCoast.com
Williams, Kellie - Owner/
Broker
Coldwell Banker Kellie &
Associates Real Estate
702 Main St., CMB
927-2269
www.CambriaRealEstate.com
Williams, Sheron
Gold Coast Realty
723 Main St., CMB
927-3883
Cell: 674-3160
www.goldcoastrealtyonline.com
Wilson & Co. Sotheby’s
International Realty
3590 Broad Street, Suite 130,
SLO 543-7727
WilsonandCoSIR.com
REMODELING
A.D.S Corporation Richard D. Low, Jr.
Architect/General Contractor
788 Arlington St., CMB
927-8138
Built-Rite Construction
CMB 440-5970
Kelly Cannon Construction
Serving Cambria Since 1985
CMB 927-0232
Robin’s Restaurant
4095 Burton Dr, CMB .
927-5007
www.robinsrestaurant.com
Sand Shell Realty
555 Main St, CMB
927-1511
Home Office: 927-1735
www.sandshellrealty.com
Snyder, Barbara, Real
Estate Broker
THE CAMBRIAN
Oasis Equipment Rentals
RESTAURANTS
3745 Highway 46 West,
TMPLTN
805-434-3066
Cell: 805-610-5751
www.aronhillvineyards.com
Black Cat Bistro
1602 Main St, CMB 927-1600
www.blackcatbistro.com
Black Hand Cellars
766 Main St., Suite B, CMB
Cell: 712-WINE
www.blackhandcellars.com
Cambria Beer Company
Micro-Brewery & Tap Room
821 Cornwall, CMB
203-5265
www.CambriaBeer.com
Cambria Cafe
2282 Main St., CMB
927-8519
Cambria Pines Lodge
2905 Burton Dr., CMB 927-4200
www.cambriapineslodge.com
Cambria Pub & Steakhouse
4090 Burton Dr., CMB.
927-0782
www.TheCambriaPub.com
Dragon Bistro
Chinese Restaurant
2150 Center St., CMB
927-1622
Indigo Moon Cafe
1980 Main St., CMB
927-2911
JBJ’S Roundup Pizza &
Grub
815 Main St, CMB
927-4115
JJ’s Pizza
2380 Main St, CMB.
927-3084
Las Cambritas
2336 Main Street, CMB
927-0175
Linn’s Easy as Pie Café
4251 Bridge St,, CMB .
924-3050
Linn’s Restaurant
2277 Main St,, CMB
927-0371
Lombardi’s Pasta & Pizza
4158 Bridge Street, CMB
927-0777
Madeline’s Restaurant
788 Main St., CMB
927-4175
www.madelinescambria.com
Manta Rey Restaurant
9240 Castillo Dr, SS 924-1032
www.mantareyrestaurant.com
Moonstone Beach Bar
& Grill
6550 Moonstone Beach Dr,
CMB 927-3859
www.moonstonebeach.com
Sandy’s Deli & Bakery
Tea Cozy
4286 Bridge Street, CMB
927-8765
Treebones Wild Coast
Restaurant and Sushi Bar
927-2390
www.treebonesresort.com
Wild Ginger
2380 Main St., CMB
927-1001
www.wildgingercambria.com
RETIREMENT LIVING
Cambria’s Senior Solutions
2150 Main St., Suite 8, CMB
927-1051
www.cherishcarecambria.com
Cherish House Assisted
Living (Two Homes)
Lic #405801566,
Lic #405801741
1155 Warren Road & 1405
Berwick Drive, CMB.
927-1051
www.cambriaassistedliving.com
ROOFING
CenCal Roofing
Lic# 369343
2030 Main St., MB .
772-6808
www.cencalinc.com
RUBBER STAMPS
Paws On Main
816 Main St., Suite C, CMB
927-PAWS (7297)SCHOOLS
Cambria Grammar School
3223 Main St, CMB 927-4400
www.coastusd.org/cusd/cusd_012.htm
Cambria Montessori
Learning Center
FPCS - A California Public
Charter School
CMB 927-2337
[email protected]
www.cambria-montessori.org
Coast Unified School
District Office
1350 Main St, CMB 927-3891
www.coastusd.org
Coast Union High School
2950 Santa Rosa Crk. Rd.,
CMB 927-3889
www.coastusd.org/cusd/cusd_010.htm
Leffingwell Continuation
School
2820 Santa Rosa Creek Rd.,
CMB 927-7148
www.coastusd.org/cusd/cusd_009.htm
Santa Lucia Middle
School
2850 Schoolhouse Lane,
CMB 927-3693
www.coastusd.org/cusd/cusd_011.htm
SCREENS
Poly Pro Window & Door
www.polyprowindow.com
CMB 927-POLY (7659)
SEAMSTRESS
TOWING
Bernadene Morgan
Cambria Towing
CMB 927-0237
SENIOR LIVING
Cambria’s Senior Solutions
4363 Bridge St.,
CMB 927-HELP (4357)
TRACTOR SERVICES
2150 Main St., Suite 8, CMB
927-1051
www.cherishcarecambria.com
Big Tree- Buddy Campo Big Tree Lic #967479
Lic #405801566,
Lic #40580741
1155 Warren Road & 1405
Berwick Drive, CMB
927-1051
www.cambriaassistedliving.com
Clint Winsor & Hounds
Construction —
Cherish House Assisted
Living (Two Homes)
Senior Living Consultants
805 Aerovista Place #103,
SLO 545-5901
www.SeniorLivingConsultants.com
SHARPENING
Spartan Precision John Poulos
CMB 927-5307
SHEET METAL
D. Lafferty Heating
2515-H Village Lane, CMB .
927-4487
SIGNS
Art Ink Signs & Graphics
Jen Mathieson (Cannella)
CMB 927-5907
SPAS/SWIMMING POOLS
Spa Guy
CMB 927-5611
[email protected]
STEREO
Coast Electronics
510 Quintana Road, MB
772-1265
STONE
Cambria Rock
2000 San Simeon Creek Rd,
CMB 927-1685
TAX PREPARATION/SERVICES
Debra Jones, CPA
CMB 927-1982
George G Ross CPA PFS CFP
2350 Main Street, MB
772-2808
www.georgerosscpa.com
Preferred Tax Service
792 Arlington, CMB.
Cell: 748-7952
Singer, Lynne F. CPA
4070 Burton Dr, Suite 5, CMB
927-2507
Tamara L. Corbet, EA
909-1210
TELEVISION - AUDIO/VIDEO
Coast Electronics
510 Quintana Road, MB .
772-1265
TILE CONTRACTORS
Cannon Custom Tile
Serving Cambria Since 1985
Lic. # 589903
CMB 927-0232
Marathon Tile
P.O. Box 668, CMB 927-4746
2075 Main Street, CMB
927-2277
Cell: 550-2525
License# 863869
CMB 927-7268
TRANSPORTATION/TAXI SERVICES
Cambria Community
Council Bus
P.O. Box 486, CMB .
927-4173
TRAVEL AGENCY
Gulliver’s Travel
81 Higuera St., Suite 150, SLO.
541-4141
www.slogull.com
San Simeon Travel
1253 Knollwood Cir, Suite 102,
CMB 927-4696
TREE SERVICES
Big Tree
Buddy Campo, License #967479
2075 Main Street, CMB
927-2277
Cell: 550-2525
Cambria Pines Tree Service
Dennis White
927-4414
Cell: 434-8287
McCormick’s Tree
CMB 927-1749
North Coast Tree Service
Lic #736407
Tim Radecki P.O. Box 2, CMB
927-8525
Cell: 235-1889
www.northcoasttree.com
Sigurdson’s
Tree & Landscape
Maisons de Cambria
Vacation Rentals Deborah Berk, Owner
1912 Pierce Ave, CMB
927-0306
www.maisonsdecambria.com
Scenic Coast Property
Management
www.sceniccoastrentals.com
712 Main St, CMB
927-6163
www.cambriacoastrentals.com
The Pickford House
2555 MacLeod Way, CMB
1-877-300-4449
www.thepickfordhouse.com
Cambria Animal Medical
Center
Ennis J. Ogorsolka, DVM
2501-A Village Lane, CMB
927-7000
www.CambriaAnimalMedicalCenter.com
Cambria Veterinary Clinic
1500 Main St., CMB 927-9700
www.cambriavet.com
VIDEO
All American Video &
Electronics
1306 Tamson Dr., CMB
927-5162
aavideocambria.com
WATCH REPAIRS
Once Upon a Tyme
Watches & Watch Repairs
555 Main St., CMB 927-5554
WATER
Culligan
355 Quintana Place, MB
927-8165
www.kitzmanwater.com
Riptide Alchemy
CMB 927-3357
www.riptidealchemy.com
WEBSITE DESIGN
AzureFire Web & Graphic
Design
CMB 223-5430
805 706 2812
www.azurefire.com
UPHOLSTERY
WEDDING SERVICES
Harry’s Fine Quality Upholstery
1312 Main St., MB 772-6156
Bridal Artistry
T-Line Upholstery
Shay Jacobsen
2150 Main Street, Suite A, CMB
707-771-9238
Auto and Furniture
CMB 909-8350
Cell: 909-8350
Center for Spiritual Living
2535-C Village Ln, CMB.
927-4065
Linn’s Admin Office /
Catering / Cakes
Village Upholstery
VACATION HOMES/RENTALS
Big Red House
370 Chelsea Lane, CMB
927-1390
www.thebigredhouse.com
Breen Vacation Station
768 Main St, CMB
927-1303
Toll-Free: 800-927-1303
www.BreenVacationStation.com
Cambria Vacation Rentals
784 Main St., Suite A,
CMB 927-8200
www.cambriavacationrentals.com
Debbie Markham
Photography
CMB 235-7151
www.debbiemarkhamphotography.com
Harmony Wedding Chapel
Town of Harmony
HMY 927-1028
www.HarmonyChapel.net
Old Santa Rosa Chapel
2353 Main St.; P.O. Box 316,
CMB 927-5212
www.santarosachapel.com
Robin’s Restaurant
4095 Burton Dr, CMB
927-5007
www.robinsrestaurant.com
WEED ABATEMENT
Buddy Campo,
License #967479
2075 Main Street, CMB
927-2277
Cell: 550-2525
Clint Winsor & Hounds
Construction —
Lic# 863869
CMB 95 927-7268
Mike Rice- Since 1984
Lic#859364
P.O. Box 204, CMB
927-3310
WELDING
The Bodyman
2531 F Village Lane, CMB
927-5436
WINDOW CLEANING
Cambria Window Cleaning
Andy Loveless
1900 Saint James Road, CMB
927-8876
Cell: 927-0880
Jose Reveles Repair &
Service
Lic#0705566
P.O. Box 1665, CMB
927-5473
Cell: 909-7187
Paradise Professional
Window Washers
Bob & Jonathan Herzog
CMB 927-5251
Cell: 748-5315
[email protected]
WINDOW COVERINGS
Bonded Electric Systems
CMB 927-2607
www.ComeToYourCenter.org
MB 772-3302
Cell: 435-640-1895
www.bondedsystems.com
2415 Village Lane, Suite A, CMB
927-1499
linnsfruitbin.com
2535-C Village Ln, CMB
927-4065
927-3488
P.O. Box 171, CMB 927-8040
WEDDINGS
WINDOWS
A Central Coast Wedding
Central Coast Glass
Reverend Judith Peterson
CMB 927-2222
ACentralCoastWedding.com
Cambria Bride & Finery
CMB 927-0237
Cambria Pines Lodge
2905 Burton Dr., CMB 927-4200
www.cambriapineslodge.com
Village Upholstery
WINDOW WASHING
Jon Boon-Jones
440 Quintana, MB
772-5080
Estero Glass
1560 Main St., MB
772-2288
www.EsteroGlass.com
Poly Pro Window & Door
23
www.polyprowindow.com
CMB 927-POLY (7659)
WINE SHOPS
Indigo Moon Cafe
1980 Main St., CMB .
927-2911
Fermentations
2306 Main St., East Village,
CMB 927-7141
www.fermentations.com
WINE TASTING
Aron Hill Vineyards
3745 Highway 46 West,
TMPLTN 434-3066
Cell: 805-610-5751
www.aronhillvineyards.com
Black Hand Cellars
766 Main St., Suite B, CMB
927-9463
Cell: 712-WINE
www.blackhandcellars.com
Fermentations
2306 Main St., East Village, CMB
927-7141
www.fermentations.com
Harmony Cellars
3255 Harmony Valley Rd., HMY .
927-1625
Fax: 927-0256
www.harmonycellars.com
Hearst Ranch Winery
A Legacy of Quality
442 SLO San Simeon Rd., SS
927-1400
www.HearstRanchWinery.com
Madeline’s Wine Shop
788 Main St., CMB
927-0990
www.centralcoastwineshop.com
Moonstone Cellars
801 Main St., CMB
927-9466
Stolo Family Vineyards
& Winery
3776 Santa Rosa Creek Rd.,
CMB 924-3131
www.stolofamilywinery.com
Twin Coyotes WineryCome howl with us!
2020 Main St., CMB
927-9800
www.twincoyotes.com
YARN
Ball & Skein & More
4210 Bridge Street, CMB
927-3280
www.cambriayarn.com
YOGA
Gym One
1266 Tamson Drive, Suite 101,
CMB 927-4961
www.gymonecambria.com
Raw Curry Yoga
Vivian Curry
4251 Bridge Street, CMB .
610-2548
24
THE CAMBRIAN
COMMUNITY NEWS
November 6-12, 2014
Harmony landowners win round in appellate court
Panel reverses an earlier ruling favoring
the Coastal Commission in a case involving
maintenance work and a public easement
By Steve Provost
The Cambrian
In a legal victory for three
Harmony property owners,
a California appellate court
has reversed itself on the
question of whether they
must provide a mile-long
public easement on a rocky
bluff overlooking the ocean.
The landowners had
sought a permit to rebuild a
farmhouse and barn on the
proper ty, but the Coastal
Commission had required
the easement as a condition
of the work.
The court initially sided
with the commission in
March, voting to require the
easement, but reversed that
ruling Oct. 23.
“The easement requirement amounted to an unconstitutional taking,” Judge
P.J. Gilber t wrote for the
three-judge panel. The proposed repairs, he wrote,
were exempt from the county’s coastal development permit (CDP) requirements because the code “does not require a CDP for repairs that
do not change the use or dimensions of the structure.”
The case dates back to
2002, when Walter Emmick
sought to make repairs on
the property, which he acquired in the 1990s. He did
some minor work on the
deck and roof, which didn’t
require county approval,
and applied for a permit to
do more extensive repairs
before he died the following
year, leaving ownership to a
family trust of three sisters:
Denise McLaughlin of
Tahoe Vista, Shar yn
Schrick of Sacramento and
Sandra Bowman of Burbank.
In 2004, the county approved a permit to allow
work on the farmhouse but
required that an easement
be established. The family
didn’t appeal that requirement but did no work and instead “walked away” from
the permit, according to
their attorney, Paul Beard of
the Pacific Legal Foundation.
Later, after the barn blew
down, the family applied for
a new permit, which the
county approved without
any easement requirement.
The Sierra Club, Surfrider Foundation and two
coastal commissioners,
however, objected and appealed to the Coastal Commission, which reinstated
the easement condition.
The family then filed suit
in 2010.
The state argued in court
that the easement require-
ment became permanent
when the family failed to appeal it. But the plaintiffs responded that the county’s
second permit superseded
the first one, which they
said had expired. They also
maintained the work constituted repairs to the property
rather than improvements,
which would have triggered
the easement requirement.
The court, in its decision,
agreed, stating that “the
work occurs within the existing ‘footprint’ of the property.”
The Pacific Legal Foundation, a Sacramento-based
public interest law firm that
advocates for private property rights, represented the
family at no charge.
Beard, the foundation’s
lead attorney in the case,
said Wednesday, Oct. 29,
that the ruling was noteworthy because the appellate court reversed its own
previous decision.
“Court of appeal cases are
rarely reheard, and to have
the appeals court reverse itself and then reverse the
judgment of the trial court is
unusual.”
He said the court agreed
to reconsider its initial decision because it “originally
applied the wrong standard
of review: The court initially
looked only to evidence and
arguments the Coastal Commission put forth and entirely ignored our evidence.
“The court stands for the
proposition, broadly speaking, that landowners can’t be
bound by old permits they
never acted under,” Beard
said. “You’ve got to be fair
with permit applicants and
not unfairly bind them to a
permit they never accepted.
Christopher Pederson,
deputy chief counsel for the
Coastal Commission, disagreed with the ruling.
“We think the court was
right the first time around
and did not need to reexplore the merits of its decision,” Pederson said
Wednesday.
He said the Coastal Commission was evaluating
whether to appeal the case
to the California Supreme
Court but had yet to make a
decision as of Wednesday,
Oct. 29. The commission
has 40 days from the date of
the ruling to file an appeal,
he said.
Meanwhile, Beard said
the sisters were “ecstatic”
over the decision.
“We hope that it’s the last
chapter in this four-year
legal battle. Even if it’s appealed, it’s unlikely that the
(state) Supreme Cour t
would consider it,” he said.
McLaughlin, one of the
three plaintiffs, said, “We always remained confident
that we would prevail, and
now we look forward to completing the long-delayed repairs to our family property.”
Community Emergency Response Team tests Cambria’s readiness
By Kathe Tanner
The Cambrian
Cambrians in their own
neighborhoods may have,
on Wednesday afternoon,
Oct. 22, seen someone getting out of a car and making
a call on something that
looked like a walkie-talkie.
Jerry Wood, assistant coordinator of Cambria’s Community Emergency Response Team (CERT), was
testing emergency communications with two local control centers, one at the Cambria Fire Department station on Burton Drive and another at Burton Drive and
Ellis Avenue.
It was part of a countywide test of emergency
communications involving
CERT teams in six communities and ham radio operators working out of the
county Emergency Operations Center (EOC) and other locations.
CERT members involved
were in Cambria, Atascadero, Paso Robles, Los
Osos, Morro Bay and Cayucos.
The hourlong test, requested and set up by Sherif f Ian Parkinson, began
about 2:30 p.m.
According to sherif f’s
spokesman Tony Cipolla,
“This system will be used
during disasters like an
earthquake or tsunami and
allow the dif ferent CER T
teams to be dispatched to
the area of greatest need for
their services (for instance
to coordinate volunteers
who want to help out after
the disaster).”
For instance, in Cambria,
communications were centered at the Cambria Fire
Department, where CERT
coordinator Craig Ufferheide was set up with members
Jim Cissna and Dave
Wierenga.
Cissna operated a ham
radio station, while Ufferheide and Wierenga communicated with one of the
portable radios provided by
the Sheriff’s Office.
Ufferheide said the radios
“operate on dedicated
CERT frequencies that do
not require a ham license
but have additional power
levels to reach throughout
the rolling hills of Cambria.”
During the test, Norm
and Shirley Smyth manned
a portable ham radio base
station at the Burton Drive
site. He said, “the portable
station can be used if the
equipment at the fire department fails, or for a localized incident to facilitate
CER T communications,”
such as when the teams are
searching for a missing
person.
“The portable station was
able to communicate directly with the county EOC and
all the CERT potential stag-
ing areas in Cambria,”
Smyth said.
However, as Shirley
Smyth noted with a smile,
“We’re doing this test on
such a beautiful day. We all
know communications may
be different” in a rainstorm,
especially when the wind is
howling.
CER T volunteers are
trained to form into effective
neighborhood teams to assist others in doing such
things as how and when to
turn off the utilities. CERT
teaches some firefighting
and medical skills, awareness of hazardous materials,
terrorism training, light
search and rescue techniques and profound self-
reliance.
CERT members also are
skilled at working side-byside with untrained volunteers, those who often turn
out following a disaster because they want so much to
help but don’t have the training to know where to go or
what to do when they get
there.
GOT NEWS?!
Contact
THE CAMBRIAN
newsroom!
927-8895
Fax: 927-4708
e-mail:
[email protected]
THE CAMBRIAN
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26
November 6 - 12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
Help
Wanted
Jobs
Help
Wanted
Call today for
home delivery
1-800-288-4128.
Help
Wanted
Help
Wanted
ROUTE DELIVERY
CAMBRIA AND
SAN SIMEON
INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS
WANTED: NEWSPAPER
DELIVERY
Route Delivery: CAMBRIA and
SAN SIMEON
3 ROUTES IN THE AREA:
HOUSECLEANER
Part-time help for light cleaning &
breakfast help.
Must speak English & live locally
Cambria B&B
927-3222
Miscellaneous
PAY ranges $275.00+ per week depending on route size, terrain, and number of
routes.
Typical time on route is approximately 2 to
3 hours per night. Some routes pay substantially more depending on size and
number of papers.
PLOTS: (2) in
Los Osos Valley
Memorial Park Sunrise Garden,
space #A & B lot
#221. Very desirable
area in the park.
$1995 for one or
$3600 for both.
(501) 655-1491
Need some extra income and live in San
Luis Obispo/Cayucos/Cambria/Morro Bay
area?
Please call us today!
ACCOUNTING
ASSISTANT
The Tribune has an opening for a
PART TIME Accounting Assistant (approx.
20 hours per week) to support the general
tasks of the accounting department. The
ideal candidate will be a team oriented,
self-starter with strong communication
skills and a proven track record in contributing new ideas. This individual will work
closely with other departments, providing
customer support and solutions. This position reports to the Finance Manager.
Responsibilities include:
- Assist with month-end close
- Process various transactions in the advertising system and Peoplesoft financials
- Support finance and sales teams with
process and inquiries
- Daily audit/measurement of applicable
publications
Requirements:
- Superior computer skills
- 1 to 2 years of finance/bookkeeping experience and demonstrated knowledge of
basic accounting principles
- AA degree preferred
The Tribune and SanLuisObispo.com are
San Luis Obispo’s leading information
sources. We’re at the forefront of what’s
happening in our County and our employees are educating, engaging and entertaining its residents each and every day. Our
team takes pride in strong local news, features and sports coverage and in the innovative marketing solutions and results we
provide to our advertisers.
We’re looking for talented people who
thrive in a fast paced, creative, deadline
driven environment and who are invested
in providing our community with quality
news, information and advertising.
Send resume, cover letter and salary
requirements to:
Human Resources, The Tribune
P.O. Box 112, San Luis Obispo, CA
93406. Or email materials to:
[email protected]
Call to schedule an appointment today .
Call Chris at 805-750-0487 or email at cni
[email protected] for more information.
More
Must bring vehicle registration valid driver’s license, social security card, and
proof of insurance.
Breaking
News
updates
ADVERTISING
ASSISTANT
Part Time - Temporary
any other
CAMBRIA OFFICE
The Cambrian has an immediate opening
for a part time Advertising Assistant to provide clerical and sales support in our
Cambria office. This position will provide
clerical and sales support covering for an
employee on a leave of absence. The position is for approximately 4-5 months, 30
hours per week. The successful applicant
will be responsible for a multitude of duties
in our busy office including data entry, customer service, ad tracking and reporting,
payment processing. This is a fast paced
position, requiring someone who is good
at multi-tasking, problem solving and
collaborating with others. Successful applicant will have at least two years experience working with the public, will be proficient in Microsoft Office applications, and
will have demonstrated success in a previous administrative role directly interacting
with customers.
local news
source.
Log on to
SanLuis
Obispo.com
To apply, send resume and cover letter to:
Human Resources
The Tribune
P.O. Box 112
San Luis Obispo, CA 93406
Or email materials to
[email protected]
EOE
EOE
Call today for home delivery. 1-800-288-4128.
than
Your Journal of Local Record since1931.
*"#2 " -/.2% 30)$( 3,/#2 10+2 !'&&23%
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November 6 - 12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
27
!$ "**'&- %+)+,(#* SENT US
"0 ,!'&0'& $!# &) *+2 #)%( '1)$'.
ANYTHING?
(."
"' +"- 3!*
!
)$.)!.* '*,"!&.)
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#(
THE CAMBRIAN
wants your
flyers, press
releases and
letters!
SEND TO:
927-8895
Fax: 927-4708
e-mail:
[email protected]
P.O. BOX 67
Cambria, CA 93428
Single Property Websites, open 24/7 (even when you’re not).
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Equal Housing Opportunity
28
November 6 - 12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
6
5
7
4
3 2
8
11
10
9
12
13
54 55
53
21
22
19
18
23
52
17 16
24
14
20
15
39
28
27
49
26
25
38
29
30
41
42
37
36
31
32
33
51
40
34
35
48
47
46
43
50
45
44
56 57
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61
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59
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November 6 - 12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
Take time to
be a dad today.
C a l l 8 7 7 - 4 D A D 4 11 o r v i s i t w w w . f a t h e r h o o d . g o v
29
30
November 6 - 12, 2014
THE CAMBRIAN
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10
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15
Chem. or biol.
18
Hue
19
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21
Pleasant smell
22
Burial place
24
Chimp’s cousin
25
Arthurian paradise
26
Boston player
27
Lake in Asia
28
Scottish cap
29
Superfluous
31
Earth pigment
33
Car repair place
35
Boutique
37
Burden
38
Burn
39
Tinkered
40
Organic compound
42
Bracelet location
43
Belief
44
Made pulpy
46
Ribbed fabric
47
Eyelash
48
Unruly crowds
52
Went separate ways
53
Jelly fruit
54
Woodland
56
Parrot of New Zealand
57
Pressed
58
Dread
59
Fathers
60
Seraglio
62
Place of debarkation
63
Hot coal
65
Samovar
66
Tell
67
Hotel
68
Commedia dell’—
69
Cup handles
71
Reaches across
73
Tardy
75
— canto
76
Group of musicians
77
Major airport
78
Smell
82
“— and Prejudice”
84
Electrical unit
85
Persian fairy
86
“...man — — mouse?”
87
Lower in rank
90
— polloi
91
Shouted
93
Get out!
94
Foreigner
95
Something unnecessary
97
Barry or Brubeck
98
Ill-will
99
Family member
100 City in Ohio
102 “The — Mutiny”
104 Flunked
105 Fastening device
107
108
109
110
112
113
114
117
118
119
123
124
125
127
128
129
131
133
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
Small rodent
Cake
Swelled outwards
Each
Midday meal
Great enjoyment
Portuguese wine
Bungle
Actress — Blanchett
Raps
Liked a lot
Variety show
Strike repeatedly
Upper limit
Labyrinth
Kind of orange
Cupid’s love
Where Greeks
assembled
Periods
Twangy
Animal restraint
Earn
Print measures
Hollow
— -do-well
Meaning
DOWN
1
Edinburgh natives
2
The Pentateuch
3
Texas mission
4
Weight unit
5
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6
Eat
7
Gather
8
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9
Quid — quo
10
Play at
11
Went wrong
12
— de force
13
French friend
14
City in Morocco
15
Fame
16
Pinkish shade
17
Picture
19
Drizzled
20
Work hard (with “down”)
23
Hemorrhaged
30
Hauled
32
Haven for shoppers
34
Do sums
36
Annoy
38
Cut
39
Side with a burger
41
Storage structure
42
Conscious
43
Concern
44
Dock for cabin cruisers
45
Silver, in heraldry
46
Commerce
47
Trumpet
49
Gumbo ingredient
50
Borscht ingredient
51
Identical
52
53
54
55
58
59
61
63
64
66
70
71
72
74
76
79
80
81
83
85
87
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Soft
Kind of aid
Therefore
Discharged
Guarantee against loss
Too
Simple dwelling
Wince
Fanatical
Hartsfield-Jackson code
Put aside
Thick soup
Sword
Convex molding
Easy to manage
Delivered a speech
Appraised
— and rave
Jet
Recipe amount
88
89
90
92
93
95
96
98
101
102
103
104
106
108
109
111
112
113
114
115
116
Essayist’s pen name
Girl
Conceal
Mrs. Archie Bunker
Tap
Plant life
Depend
A seasoning
Cooked too long
Idea
Foot part
Signal flare
Titled woman
Ballet skirt
Kind of knife
Contend
Beautiful
Collect
— Cass Elliot
Saying
Cheaper by the —
117
118
120
121
122
124
125
126
130
132
134
Fathered
Hidden supply
Oak-to-be
A European capital
Outpouring
Coarse file
Data unit
Butts
Everyone’s Uncle
Upperclassman (Abbr.)
— whiz!
PUZZLE
ANSWERS
PAGE 27
November 6-12, 2014
Grant
From Page 1
Some of those estimates
have changed since the applications were submitted,
including Cambria Community Services District’s
water-reclamation project,
which was then listed at
$5 million.
Flynn said the next step
is figuring out how much of
the $6.3 million each project should get, based on
“project readiness and viability”: whether a project
can meet the grant’s series
of deadlines and whether
the agency in charge can
provide the local funding
“match” of 25 percent of the
total project cost shown on
the applications.
The county now must determine the viability of each
project if each grant request
THE CAMBRIAN
is reduced proportionally,
Flynn said. That, too, will
factor into the final recommendations, which county
staff expects to take to county supervisors on Nov. 25.
County
Super visor
Bruce Gibson said another
factor in the decision will be
whether a project can get
funding elsewhere. The
county will “get a lump sum
for all five of the projects we
put forward,” he said. “We
think all of them are worth
pursuing.”
Under Flynn’s criteria,
the Cambria project appears to be ahead of the
game. The plant is under
construction and due to be
complete by mid-November, and the district has
contracted for and received
a loan of nearly $9 million
to pay for the project.
It has yet to be determined yet how or whether
the district’s loan will affect
the funding factor Gibson
mentioned.
Community Services District staff declined to comment on the $6.3 million
grant. Spokesman Tom
Gray said Tuesday night,
“We haven’t received any direct notification from Public
Works of the award or what
recommendations they may
have in mind for the allocation, so we’ll have to hold
off on comment at this time
until we see the details.”
However, CSD Director
Amanda
Rice
said,
“Frankly, it’s good news,
just not as good as we’d
wanted. I am really glad
that the county, as the applicant, was able to turn it
around and has at least gotten half of what they asked
for. Initially, the state had
made recommendations for
how much each applicant
was going to get, and we
got zilch. The county, the
consultants and district
staf f really worked their
tails off … to get something
instead of nothing.”
It’s been a complicated
process to get to this point,
with the county’s application initially classified by
the state in September as
being incomplete or “not
compliant.”
After more than a month
of receiving evidence that
the application was indeed
compliant, the state reversed its classification.
Then it had to determine
how much of the county’s
original request should be
granted.
But there was another
problem: The state already
had published a tentative
list of winning applicants,
minus San Luis Obispo
County.
The total Central Coast
area — including San Luis
Obispo and Santa Barbara
counties and the Pajaro River Watershed between
Monterey and Santa Cruz
— had been allocated
$19 million.
The revised total released Tuesday, which included San Luis Obispo
County, dropped the Central Coast total to $14.8 million.
In a touch of prescience,
Flynn had estimated in midOctober that the county
might get about a third of
that $19 million, or $6.3 million.
According to the Regional Water Management
Group’s final summary of
the approved suite of projects, included in the
$9.6 million in original grantfunding requests from the
county (for projects estimat-
31
ed then to cost more than
$12.9 million) were:
• $3.75 million toward
Cambria’s emergency water-reclamation project,
then estimated at $5 million
(costs have risen to nearly
$9 million).
• $1.3 million for a
$3.5 million “purple pipe” to
distribute recycled water in
San Simeon (estimated cost
in the application was more
than $1.7 million).
• $112,500 for a $150,000
Heritage Ranch project to
draw emergency water
from Nacimiento Lake’s
pipeline.
• $3 million for a $4 million intertie between Salinas and Nacimiento
pipelines.
• $1.5 million for a nearly $2 million intertie to provide emergency water from
Atascadero to Santa Margarita and Garden Farms.
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32
CAMBRIA PHOTO ALBUM
THE CAMBRIAN
November 6-12, 2014
Lessons: Apple of their iPad
Starry, starry night: Clear skies over Highway 46
PHOTO BY SUZANNE KENNEDY
PHOTO BY JERRY WOOD
Jerry Wood was up on Highway 46 on Oct. 26 to get a picture of the International Space Station
as it passed over the area when he snapped this shot. From left to right are the lights from San Luis
Obispo, Morro Bay/Los Osos and Cayucos under the stars. The picture was taken at 7:30 p.m.
Students at Santa Lucia Middle School were available
Oct. 17 to answer questions from parents about the
iPads they use at school and to help them learn how to
access grades and assignments. Here, Santa Lucia
eighth-grader Jullian Mercado answers questions about
the iPad from parent Carmen Garcia, left, and parent
Maria Arellano, right, as younger children look on.
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