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Sigrid Toye Harbor Voice

Harbor VOICE

Superbowl Sunday: A Day at the Beach

By Sigrid Toye, Special to VOICE T HE AFTERNOON WAS SO BEAUTIFUL on Super Bowl Sunday, I decided to visit the Shoreline Cafe on Leadbetter Beach during a period of guaranteed absolute quiet throughout the city - football fans were MIA glued to their TV, munching on Hot Wings, and knocking back a Cold One... basically off the streets. With an unmistakeable and ideal location situated right on the sand, one of the Shoreline’s many benefits is a spectacular view, access to the parking lot, and a full bar! Now how welcoming is that?

The sun was beginning its decent as General Manager, Cameron Pyles, was kind enough to sit down with me to tell me a little about the restaurant.

“This is our 23rd year,” he stated proudly, “and our owner, Steve Marsh, offers a menu of California and Baja style cuisine with lots of choices for a variety of tastes.” All day beach favorites include calamari, ceviche, fish and chips, and a selection of juicy burgers (including a vegan burger for the faint of heart). The seafood choices are, with few exceptions, from local waters. Should the temperature

drop, a warm seafood soup or a clam chowder bread bowl are always ready for a quick warm up. For the early morning risers among us, breakfast is also available with everything from traditional favorites to Baja specials. To top it off, if I had wanted to grab take-out for the Super Bowl fans at my house, there’s a snack bar at the front of the restaurant. Now I’d say that’s full service!

The Shoreline Cafe opened its doors in 1997 under the ownership of a trio of well know Santa Barbara restauranteurs, including Randy Rowse, Kevin Boss, and Steve Marsh. Over the years, ownership eventually landed in the hands of Marsh who continues to expand and improve the menu and the facility. “Steve often took trips to Baja,” noted Pyles, “which definitely adds zest to our California style cuisine.” As he escorted me to the newest patio expansion and bar extending to the sand with a separate section devoted to beach chairs for relaxation and cocktails, he added with a chuckle, “Although we have a full bar, believe it or not, Corona is still our best seller.” The beach chairs and the ambiance of the late afternoon made me want to order one myself!

Although a native of Santa Barbara, Pyles found his way to Los Angeles where he was employed in the hospitality business developing restaurants.

“Steve is a family friend and although I wasn’t in any way dissatisfied in L.A., he convinced me to come back to Santa Barbara as a manager,” Pyles noted. He is hoping to continue at the Shoreline Cafe learning from Marsh and to become increasingly involved. He related that it is Santa Barbara residents who sustain the restaurant, some coming in three to four times a week, though during the summer months the eatery attracts out of town visitors and tourists. Its proximity to the harbor and the fact that it is one of the few dining spots directly on the sand, accessible to the beach, makes it a popular location. And as it states on the menu, “Life is better at the beach… right on Leadbetter Beach, Shoreline Cafe is the perfect place...” Photos by Sigrid Toye Cameron Pyles

Eagles Nest Ocean Views Santa Barbara’s Premiere Ocean View Apartments • Every apartment has outstanding ocean views with the very best island and sunset views in town. • 31 one bedroom apartments, each with granite counter tops and a magnificent view. • Recently updated on a dead end street with a reserved parking spot for each unit. • Only six blocks to the ocean and on a bluff top with mild ocean breezes year round. All the top floor units have high beamed ceilings and no steps, so easy access for all ages. • With 10 furnished apartments, there is short term as well as long term flexibility in rental agreements. • See the best of Santa Barbara from this park-like setting.

JOHN R. WHITEHURST Property Manager/Owner For more information or to schedule an appointment call John at 805-451-4551. 

805-451-4551 • www.SBOceanViewRentals.com Home Realty & Investment DRE#01050144

Wednesday, February 12, 2020 11:30am Registration • 12pm Program Begins La Pacifica Ballroom Terrace 1260 Channel Drive, Santa Barbara, CA 93108

RE-ELECT

Das Williams for County Supervisor

TRUSTED LEADERSHIP AND EXPERIENCE WORKING FOR US

THE ONLY CANDIDATE SUPPORTED BY OUR FIREFIGHTERS, DEPUTY SHERIFFS, THE SIERRA CLUB, AND THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY

„ Thomas Fire Response – Helped evacuate residents, aided community clean-up efforts, and continues to lead the County’s effort to increase flood control capacity in the event of another debris flow. „ Helping Families Rebuild – Eliminated red-tape and created a fast track approval process to help families rebuild their homes quickly. „ Stopping Gun Violence – In the wake of the Isla Vista mass shooting, co-authored groundbreaking ‘red-flag’ legislation – now a national model – that prevents the sale of guns or removes them from the possession of mentally unstable individuals. „ A Carbon-Free Santa Barbara – Championed a Strategic Energy Plan to expand solar power generation in Santa Barbara County, putting us on the path toward carbon-free energy. „ Fighting Climate Change – Co-Authored California’s landmark climate change law, putting California on the path to get 100% of its energy from renewables by 2045. „ Fiscal Responsibility – Facing a $6 million county budget deficit, fought for policies that resulted in a surplus, protecting funds for critical services like public safety, public health and libraries. „ Election Reform – Created the first ever County Independent Redistricting Commission, that takes the power to draw district lines away from politicians and puts it into the hands of citizens. A RECORD OF RESULTS

VOTE MARCH 3RD TO RE-ELECT DAS WILLIAMS FOR COUNTY SUPERVISOR For more information please visit www.daswilliams2020.com

By Mark M. Whitehurst, PhD / VOICE V OICE ACTIVATED VIRTUAL ASSISTANT SOFTWARE CALLED ALEXA, inspired by the conversational system on board the Starship Enterprise, is the task at hand for 75 new employees in downtown Santa Barbara, which was formally announced on Tuesday by Amazon. Amazon plans to add another 150 workers to the Alexa Hub, which is located at the corner of State and Carrillo and offers 48,000 sq.ft. of work space.

Preceding the official opening, Amazon began engaging the Santa Barbara community by becoming the 2020 presenting sponsor for Downtown’s popular 1st Thursday, an Art and Cultural Night organized by Downtown Santa Barbara. In addition Amazon jumped in and hosted an art exhibition for the February 1st Thursday event which included inviting the Piano Boys to perform. In addition to 1st Thursday, Amazon Senior Manager of Engineering Ivan Bercovich has joined the DSB board, which serves over 1250 members and is one of the largest business organizations in Santa Barbara County.

“DSB programming depends entirely on sponsorships as well as member participation and 1st Thursday has been, and continues to be, one of our most favorably received promotions. Amazon Alexa stepped up when we needed a sponsor to keep it going and we are appreciative. Bringing 200 plus new employees downtown is something we also want to champion,” commented DSB President Bob Stout.

Amazon employees also step up to participate in their communties. “Our employees in Santa Barbara have already dedicated hundreds of volunteer hours to support local charities, from local homeless shelter to food drives, such as Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation, Alpha Resource Center, Hillside House, Organic Soup Kitchen, Toys for Tots, Transition House, and Domestic Violence Solutions,” it was noted in an Amazon release. Corporate Communications Manager Federico Filippa was flown in from Milan, Italy to join Kevin Davis, Sr. Manager and Santa Barbara Site Lead to give the local press a tour of the new offices and provide official opening information.

“We have been able to hire great talent in Santa Barbara and look forward to doubling our workforce here,” said Davis. “Santa Barbara is an incredibly welcoming city with a high quality of life and innovative culture – and we’re excited to create more jobs, and continue to invest locally in the community.”

Davis and many of the workers at the newly opened Amazon office were employed by Graphix and have lived in the Santa Barbara area for a number of years.

On the press tour, Davis pointed out how dog friendly the office was and that a cafe would be added to the office entrance way sometime in the near future.

Since 2010, Amazon has created more than 45,000 full-time jobs and invested over $34.5 billion in California, from customer fulfillment, cloud infrastructure, to research facilities, and employee compensation. The company estimates that these direct investments in the state contributed an additional $25.8 billion to California’s economy.

For more information, visit www.amazon.com/about and follow @AmazonNews. Amazon has opened offices on the corner of State and Carillo in downtown Santa Barbara There is plenty of pleasant workspace for the dozens and soon to be hundreds of workers Courtesy Photos

Class Action Certified Against Plains All American Pipeline A CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT FILED AGAINST PLAINS ALL AMERICAN PIPELINE by Santa Barbara County property owners who have easement contracts with Plains and whose properties were impacted during the 2015 Refugio oil spill was certified by United States District Court Judge Philip Gutierrez, on Jan. 28th. The property owners are represented by Cappello & Noël LLP, Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein LLP and Keller Rohrback LLP, with Barry Cappello acting as lead trial counsel.

In 1991, Plains predecessor, Celeron Pipeline Company of California, built pipelines on 130 miles of private property to transport crude oil and other liquids from the California coast to inland refinery markets in California. At the time, property owners signed easement contracts allowing Lines 901 and 903 pipelines to be built on their property.

Notification of the class certification will be sent to all affected property owners. The law firms mentioned above are also representing two other certified subclasses against Plains involving the oil spill: fisheries and beachfront and beach easement property owners/renters. They also are seeking compensation for 500 oil workers who were terminated from their jobs on the oil platforms and onshore facilities when Plains shut down the pipeline. Cottage Health’s New VP for Info Tech and CIO S HERI K. RIBEIRO HAS JOINED THE STAFF AT COTTAGE HEALTH as the new vice president for information technology and chief information officer.

Ribeiro comes to Cottage after an extensive career in healthcare information technology, most recently as the vice president for enterprise applications at Allina Health in Minneapolis.

After earning a bachelor’s of science in computer information systems and business administration from CSU, Stanislaus, she achieved her MBA in healthcare management from the University of Phoenix. “Ribeiro brings a wealth of experience and knowledge, especially in operations management, IT governance best practices, strategic planning, and leadership development,” said Brett Tande, senior vice president of finance and chief financial officer for Cottage Health, in a news release. www.cottagehealth.org Sheri K. Ribeiro Girl’s Inc. of Carp’s New Development Director C ARLY BASS HAS BEEN APPOINTED AS THE DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT FOR GIRLS INC. OF CARPINTERIA. She will be responsible for developing and implementing a strategic plan to broaden the funding base for the organization, cultivating donors, directing special events, and increasing philanthropic support. She brings 15 years of experience in developing and executing fundraising initiatives for agencies

within the Santa Barbara community. Most recently, she served as a database consultant for the United Boys and Girls Clubs of Santa Barbara and the Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation, working to create and streamline fundraising systems, providing staff training, and assisting with special events.

A resident of Carpinteria, Bass currently serves as chair of the Book Fair at Canalino Elementary School and is co-creator of a local, grassroots program that fulfills needs for students, such as backpacks, food, and clothing. She previously coordinated and served on several service team visits to Mexico and Haiti.

Bass holds a master’s degree in organizational management from Antioch University and a bachelor’s degree in sociology from Westmont.

www.girlsinc-carp.org Carly Bass Cottage Hospital Raises $21,000 S ANTA YNEZ COTTAGE HOSPITAL RAISED OVER $21,000 IN SUPPORT OF THE ORGANIZATION at their annual Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital Holiday Gala held December 7th.

More than 250 guests attended the event held at the Santa Ynez Valley Marriott Hotel in Buellton. The gala was coordinated by the SYVCH Foundation’s Gala Committee led by Foundation administrator June Martin and Foundation Assistant Becky Christenson. Gala sponsors included: the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians, Community West Bank, Lana Clark and Associates, Montecito Bank and Trust, and Envision Physician Services. Wines served at the event were donated by Bradley Family Winery, Falcone Vineyards, El Rancho Market, Hitching Post, Lucas & Lewellen Vineyards, Sanger Family of Wines, and Westerly Wines.

“This year’s gala is supporting the Tele-Stroke Program. Using state-of-the-art telemedicine technology in the emergency department, stroke patients can now get faster and improved care. TeleStroke medicine immediately connects patients and emergency department physicians with boardcertified neurologists through two-way, audio-visual technology. This program is providing critical care sooner, thus saving lives and ensuring the best possible outcomes,” said Gerry Shepherd, former president of the SYVCH Foundation. The SYVCH Foundation is a non-profit organization, whose mission is to develop, manage, and channel the community’s financial support on behalf of the hospital. www.cottagehealth.org/syvch

1916 to 2020

AGLADIATOR ON THE SCREEN AND IN LIFE, Kirk Douglas, 103, died on Wednesday in Beverly Hills. Douglas and Anne, his wife of 65 years who survives him, were long time residents of Santa Barbara.

“To the world he was a legend, an actor from the golden age of movies who lived well into his golden years, a humanitarian whose commitment to justice and the causes he believed in set a standard for all of us to aspire to,” commented Michael Douglas on his instagram account on Wednesday. Douglas acted in more than 80 movies and is listed as number 17 on the American Film Institute’s list of greatest male screen legends of classic Hollywood cinema. An Award was named after him by the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. He received three Oscar Nominations and an Oscar for Lifetime Achievement. He was also a philanthropist, producer, and author of ten books.

Douglas’ birth name was Issur Danielovitch. He was born December 9th, 1916. Douglas served in the Navy and had four sons, Michael, Joel, Peter, and Eric. Photo by Rick Carter, 2007 Kirk Douglas at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s Kirk Douglas Award for Excellence in Film event in 2007

THE MUSIC ACADEMY OF THE WEST RECENTLY ANNOUNCED THE APPOINTMENT OF A NEW BOARD OF DIRECTORS CHAIR and several new board members.

Eileen Sheridan will be the academy’s new board chair. She is a partner at the local accounting firm Bartlett, Pringle & Wolf and has served on the board since 2011. She has previously been vice chair under former board chair Warren Staley. Sheridan has also previously served as chair of the Music Academy’s Planning, Giving, and Advancement committees. In 2020, she will chair the executive committee and serve on the finance and governance committees. She graduated cum laude from the University of Maryland with a bachelor’s degree in accounting before earning a master’s degree in taxation at Golden Gate University. Sheridan joined Bartlett, Pringle & Wolf in 1987 and became a partner nine years later. A specialist in estate, trust, and charitable planning, she is a founding member of the firm’s estate planning group. She is also a longstanding member and past president of the Channel Counties Chapter of the California Society of Certified Public Accountants, serves on the CaCPA Statewide Committee on Taxation, the current chair of the CaCPA Estate Planning Committee, a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and Santa Barbara Estate Planning Council.

Meg DiNapoli is a manager of family investment properties in Goleta and Santa Barbara and has been named Women’s Auxiliary chair, joining the academy’s board of directors. She will also serve on the academy’s Advancement Committee. DiNapoli previously served as auxiliary chair from 2009 to 2011 and was chair of the auxiliary’s May Madness fundraising event. A Santa Barbara resident for the past 58 years, DiNapoli has previously worked as information processing systems administrator at Raytheon from 1982 to 1996, and as general manager of Pacific Coachworks from 1978 to 1980. She has also served as chair of the Braille Auxiliary of Santa Barbara and chair of the Social Committee at La Cumbre Country Club. For over 35 years, she has volunteered as a “Fit for Life” instructor at the Santa Barbara YMCA. DiNapoli earned a bachelor’s degree in English literature at Stanford University and a master’s degree in comparative literature at UCSB. Her studies also took her to Germany and the Center for Culture at the University of Florence. Also an accomplished pianist, she has performed as a soloist and accompanist.

Ellen Barger has also joined the academy’s board of directors. Professionally, she provides service and leadership to the county’s 20 school districts as the assistant superintendent, curriculum and instruction, for the Santa Barbara County Education Office. Barger will also serve as chair of the academy’s outreach and innovation committee and participate in both the compeer and alumni and marketing committees. Her experience includes elementary, secondary, and postsecondary teaching and administration. She earned a Bachelor of Science, cum laude, from Ohio State University and a Master of Science in secondary education and mathematics education from CSU Fullerton, where she was named the Edwin Carr Fellow. Barger is currently on the executive council of the statewide CCSESA Curriculum and Instruction Steering Committee, is the chair of the mathematics subcommittee, and serves on multiple work groups for policy, instruction, and accountability. She also

serves on the board of Fairview Gardens Center for Urban Agriculture and is an active volunteer with Transition House and other Santa Barbara nonprofits. Margaret Cafarelli has returned to the academy board for a three-year term and will rejoin the finance and buildings & grounds committees. Cafarelli studied marketing and finance at Arizona State University before beginning a career in real estate development. In 1999, she founded Urban Developments, a San Francisco-based company that specializes in sustainable, urban mixed-use projects. She has served on the Sustainable Development Council of the Urban Land Institute, a public policy organization based in Washington, D.C., and completed the Executive Program in Business Strategies for Environmental Sustainability at Stanford University Graduate School of Business and the Woods Institute for the Environment in Palo Alto. Her most recent projects include the Santa Barbara Public Market and the broader Alma del Pueblo residential and commercial development, both on Victoria Street in Santa Barbara. Cafarelli became the academy’s first vice chair in 2013 and she has also chaired the Santa Barbara Golf Invitational, an annual Music Academy benefit, and has participated in the Compeer Program, which pairs academy fellows with academy donors and other Santa Barbara community members for informal socializing throughout the summer season. Maurice Singer will also be returning to the academy board for a three-year term. Previously, he served on the board from January 2010 to December 2018. He has also served as chair of the academy’s marketing committee and will participate this year in the audit, marketing, and investment committees. Singer studied English and economics at the University of Vermont and went on to hold a succession of senior management positions in the film and television industry, including president of HBO Films and senior vice president at Home Box Office, Columbia Pictures Corp., and Westinghouse Broadcasting Co. Not long after becoming a licensed financial advisor, he founded Los Angeles-based Riviera Capital Management in 1993, an independent firm specializing in wealth management, venture capital, and initial public offering consultation. Singer is currently a founding principal at The Evergreen Advantage, a private mortgage fund based in Santa Monica with offices in Montecito. In addition to being a member of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences and the National Association of Television Broadcasters, he has served as a board director for Tempra Technology and Qnext Corp. He is also a member of the board of directors of the Ojai Music Festival and The Industry, a Los Angeles-based opera company.

www. musicacademy.org Music Academy of the West Selects Board Members Eileen Sheridan Meg DiNapoli Ellen Barger Margaret Cafarelli Maurice Singer

By Beverley Jackson, Special to VOICE S INCE I’M BASICALLY KNOWN FOR WRITING ON CHINA, not my other writings, due to the five books I have written about it and my Chinese collections. And, since everything being written daily about China right now is very negative, I’ll write some vignettes about MY China which started in 1974.

A woman with whom I worked on Santa Barbara charity projects with Pearl Chase, Lily Wen, started it all. Lily saw me write shorthand notes at meetings, and although I was a student of Italian Renaissance painting, she remembered me saying I had great interest in China, just so that I could walk on the Great Wall. So one bright day, I got a phone call from the late actress, Jayne Meadows, saying that Lily had been to China to visit her mother (it was unheard of getting in and out of China back then as the Cultural Revolution was still raging) and she found out that they were holding the first annual Tientsin Carpet Fair and they wanted ten Americans. They only had countries like Romania, Bulgaria, Hungry etc. representing so far, so Lily and her friend Jayne, and Jayne’s husband, the ultra talented Steve Allen, quickly formed a carpet company, and Lily had Jayne call to see if I wanted to be one of the ten as secretary of their new company. I never said YES so fast in my life, not giving a thought to what the trip would involve. This was the proverbial invitation of a lifetime.

Next thing I knew, I was one of the ten and chugging into the New Territories from Hong Kong heading to the entry/customs into China on an old train with a steam engine in February 1975 with Jayne and Lily singing Hello Dolly in Mandarin. That’s where it all began, and many fascinating trips to China alone were to follow.

On one of the trips, I traveled with Tamara Kinsell. Tamara is a wonderful travel companion. I have refused many people who asked to go with me on one of my trips. Tamara agreed to go anywhere I dreamed up for us to visit. One place I dragged her to was the remote ancient city of Ping Yao, in central Shaanxi. What we went through to get there! But that’s a whole story in itself. Ping Yao is a UNESCO site, but doesn’t get the tourist mobs most of them do, although the general area became known world wide through the great film Raise the Red Lantern, which was filmed in the general area. Ping Yao is the only city in China that still retains its original walls totally surrounding the city. I had been fortunate enough to get to Peking that first trip while one section of their City Wall still stood, as did several of the towers of the wall. In fact, I had the thrill of seeing camel caravans from the north still plodding into Peking, now known as Beijing.

But back to Ping Yao. Almost nothing had been changed. The houses and shops were the same. However, a few of the mansion compounds were intact, but had been turned into very simple, barely modern bed and baths for rent. It was truly a step back in time, way back. Incidentally, Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, MA bought a great old compound a few years ago from that area and had it totally restored by workers they brought from China so it would be done authentically. No nails. Well worth visiting if you are in the Boston area.

Another great China memory was seeing the army of seven thousand 2,000 year old terra cotta soldiers in China’s Shaanxi province, found in 1974, almost the first time outsiders were allowed to see them. My reaction? I was so overwhelmed, I just stood there crying. The soldiers guarded the tomb of Emperor Qin Shi Huang 221 to 210 BCE, and interestingly, an additional two hundred soldiers, as well as a large number of weapons have just been uncovered as they continue excavating the massive tomb area. These soldiers are said to be sculpted in two positions, either clutching pole weapons with their right arms bent and fists partially clenched, or carrying bows. They were arranged in different positions in the pit according to their military tasks. And all of the 200 figures found so far are distinctly individual - their facial features, hair styles, and expressions on their faces. All because a Chinese farmer digging a well in 1974 struck something strange, fragments of a clay figure that looked like a soldier. I can’t wait to see/read what new treasures they find that were buried in the tomb.

I actually have Zhou Enlai, the first Premiere of the People’s Republic of China to thank for all of this. But that is a very special piece of information that you’ll have to wait to read in my next book. I didn’t find it out myself until 35 years after that first trip during the Cultural Revolution. MY China Photos courtesy of Beverley Jackson Jayne Meadows and Steve Allen at the carpet fair. He recorded everything during the trip for a book he wrote. Me with two children in Ping Yao. Border in 1975 between China and New territories Wall around Ping Yao

Scholarship Foundation of SB Selects CFO J AMES HUTCHINSON HAS BEEN APPOINTED CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER FOR THE SCHOLARSHIP FOUNDATION OF SANTA BARBARA. A skilled accounting professional whose lengthy career has encompassed a range of positions in the business and nonprofit sectors, his appointment became effective on February 3rd. Before earning an accounting certification through UC Santa Barbara’s Extension program, Hutchinson completed his undergraduate studies at Cal Poly. In his most recent role, he served as chief financial officer at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, where his responsibilities included analysis and reporting in addition to oversight of the organization’s finances and business office staff.

Hutchinson began his accounting career at Deloitte & Touche in San Jose and later joined the staff at MacFarlane, Faletti & Co. in Santa Barbara, where he performed and supervised audits, among other duties. He then went on to become a senior accountant at the SBMA before being named CFO in 2007. Hutchinson’s early professional experience included stints in software sales and as a loan officer and credit analyst. The SFSB is the nation’s largest community-based provider of college scholarships, having cumulatively awarded over $123 million to more than 50,000 county students since its founding in 1962. www.sbscholarship.org James Hutchinson

Santa Barbara Airport Stakeholder Meetings T HE SANTA BARBARA AIRPORT is offering a series of Stakeholder Meetings to all interested parties regarding proposed updates to Independent Commercial Activity rules at SBA.

The following Stakeholder Meetings are scheduled: February 12th, 2 – 4pm; February 18th, 10am – 12pm; and February 18th, 6 – 8pm.

All meetings will be held at the Airport Administration Conference Room at 601 Firestone Road.

The Stakeholder Meetings are being professionally facilitated to solicit input, suggestions, and alternatives on proposed updates to SBA Independent Commercial Activity rules.

Attendance is highly encouraged for interested stakeholders. The SBAPublicComment@ SantaBarbaraCA.gov email address remains available for parties wishing to provide additional written comment.

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