The Coast News, July 5, 2019

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PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID ENCINITAS, CA 92024 PERMIT NO. 94

THE COAST NEWS

.com SERVING NORTH COUNTY SINCE 1987

VOL. 33, N0. 26

JULY 5, 2019

SAN MARCOS -NEWS

2-year-old’s E. coli death . to fair linked

com

3 other children fall THE ill after June visits

VISTA REGION NEWS — A 2-year-

.com

City News Service

architect and planning commissioner who lives on Mozart Avenue across the street from school, sent an email with pictures of his favorite tree being cut down. “My favorite tree which ‘blocked’ my ocean view was cut down,” Farrow wrote to a group of neighbors, including a prominent member of the group opposed to the project. “Beautiful wind sculpted tree. My kids liked climbing it. Huge loss. I urge others to document

old boy died and three other children were sickened but not hospitalized after contracting E. coli linked to the San Diego County Fair, health officials said. The children, whose ages range from 2 to 13, reportedly visited the petting zoo or touched animals RANCHO in other areas of the fair. According to the County SFNEWS of San Diego Health and Human Services Agency, a 13-year-old girl who visited the fair on June 8 became sick on June 10; an 11-yearold girl visited on June 8 and 12 and became sick on June 12; a 9-year-old boy visited on June 13 and was sickened on June 18, and a 2-year-old boy visited on June 15 and became sick on June 19. That last boy, identified as Jedidiah King Cabezuela, died on June 24. “Our sympathies go out to the family of the child that died from thisillness,” said Dr. Wilma J. Wooten, county public health officer. She said that while most people recover from the illness, between 5 to 10 percent ofpeople diagnosed with E. coli develop a life-threatening kidney infection. Health officials inspected food facilities the children visited and found no link to the cases. San Diego County Fair CEO Tim Fennell said he was heartbroken over the

TURN TO DEMOLITION ON A8

TURN TO E. COLI ON A6

.com

DEMOLITION of almost all of the Cardiff School buildings, which began Monday, is the first stage of a two-phase project. Controversially, the second phase involves relocating a school facility onto adjacent George Berkich Park. Photo by Aaron Burgin

Amid controversy, demolition of Cardiff School begins By Aaron Burgin

ENCINITAS — On a Monday morning, the campus of Cardiff Elementary School is noisier than it usually would be on a summer day. But the noise isn’t the cacophony of pupils at play, it’s the loud crunch of wood, fiberglass and other building materials being ripped from empty buildings. The metal jaws of two large demolition machines plunge into empty classroom buildings, bringing down six or seven decades

of history with each violent bite. Piece by piece, Cardiff Elementary is coming down. The demolition of almost all of the campus’ buildings is the first stage of a controversial, two-phase project to rebuild the school campus. The first phase, approved by the City Council in May, includes the grading and undergrounding of utilities and construction of new buildings. New construction will begin in Fall 2019 and is expected to be completed in

spring 2021. “It has been a long road to get here, but we’re finally ready to begin delivering on what we promised Cardiff voters when they passed Measure GG,” Cardiff School District Board President Siena Randall said. “By spring of 2021, Cardiff School students will have a fresh new campus built to the highest safety standards and designed to maximize their learning environment.” Beginning next fall, the second- and third-grade

students at the K-3 campus will attend school at the district’s upper school, Ada Harris, which currently serves grades four to six. Kindergarten and firstgrade classes will continue in portable classes on the campus while construction is underway. The construction has been met with some criticism, as neighbors have lamented the cutting down of mature trees that the district planned as part of the project. Brett Farrow, a local

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