Carmel valley news 5 28 15

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CARMEL VALLEY NEWS www.delmartimes.net

Volume 30 Number 35

Community

■ CCA speech and debate team raises volume on competition. Page 9

May 28, 2015

City Council rescinds One Paseo approval; project being redesigned after compromise BY KAREN BILLING It took six years and three extra days, but Kilroy Realty has finally been able to reach a compromise that appeased the community on its One Paseo development. The announcement that a scaled-down “new” One Paseo is in the works and news that lawsuits from neighboring Del Mar Highlands Town Center and community groups had been called off, came at the San Diego City Council’s referendum-forced hearing on May 21. After hearing that a deal had been struck that all parties were happy about, the council voted unanimously to rescind approval of the previous

1.45-million-square-foot project and send it back to the community for revisions. “I’m hopeful about this agreement and I think it’s a great thing and I think it will move this community forward,” said long-time project opponent Ken Farinsky. “This is an opportunity to get the mixed-use project that we want with the community input that we need.” Jamas Gwilliam, vice president of Kilroy, said they have agreed to settle two separate lawsuits with Donahue Schriber, the owner of Del Mar Highlands, and a trio of community groups: the Alliance for Responsible Development, the East Bluff Community Association and Mitigate One

Paseo. Gwilliam said they would settle only if the project was rescinded and a new One Paseo project was considered that would dramatically reduce traffic and other impacts. “It’s been a long, hard road … Reasonable people came to the right conclusion,” said Pat Donahue, chairman and chief executive officer of Donahue Schriber. “Kilroy has listened to the people of Carmel Valley.” On May 18, when the council voted to delay the originally scheduled referendum-forced hearing to give more time for a compromise, President Sherri Lightner voted against the motion beSee ONE PASEO, page 22

Memorial Day Ceremony held in Solana Beach

■ “A Fair to Remember” opens June 5. Page B1

Lifestyle

■ For photos of the TPHS and CCA scholarship award events, see pages B10-B11, B12-B13.

CARMEL VALLEY NEWS An Edition of 3702 Via de la Valle Suite 202W Del Mar, CA 92014 858-756-1403 www.delmartimes.net

The city of Solana Beach and Solana Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5431 co-hosted a Memorial Day Ceremony May 25 at La Colonia Community Center. (Left) Event attendees salute those who have served. (Center) Color Guard from the Camp Pendleton Young Marines; (Right) The Santa Fe Christian school band under the direction of David Hall. See page B18 for more photos. Photos by Jon Clark. See photos online at www.delmartimes.net.

Terry Decker named new Solana Beach School District superintendent BY KRISTINA HOUCK The Solana Beach School Board has selected Terry Decker as the Solana Beach School District’s new superintendent. Decker is the district’s assistant superintendent of instructional services. “I am truly honored to be selected as superintendent for our district,” Decker said. “Solana Beach is just truly a special and remarkable school district.” Decker will step in for Superintendent Nancy Lynch, who announced April 21 she is returning to Northern California to become superintendent of a Bay Area school district. Born in San Diego and raised on the

Terry Decker

East Coast, he has worked in education for more than 30 years, including two years at the San Diego County Office of Education. Decker holds a bachelor’s degree in elementary education from West Chester University of Pennsylvania and a master’s degree in educational administration from San Diego State University. He began his career as a teacher. He joined the Solana Beach School Board as director of instruction in 2012 and was promoted to assistant superintendent the following year. “I’ve been the assistant superinten-

dent for the last two years and I was a director prior to that here in the district, so I know the culture of our school district, our schools and the programs we have in place,” said Decker, a Carlsbad resident. “I know where we’ve been and where we’re going. I’ve been a big piece of that progress in the last few years, so I think we can take everything that we’ve done, continue the progress and move forward.” The school board’s decision was unanimous. The board is exSee SUPERINTENDENT, page 15

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PAGE A2 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

Supervisor Roberts denies New rules impose fines, penalties allegations amid new claim for water-use violations BY JOSHUA STEWART, SPECIAL TO THE CV NEWS/ DM TIMES/SB SUN A spokesman for County Supervisor Dave Roberts on May 21 sought to refute claims by a former staffer that Roberts had an unprofessional relationship with his driver, that he misused county resources, and that he was an abrasive boss. But as Roberts’ aide addressed allegations by former scheduler Diane Porter, another ex-staff member filed a complaint against the county over his actions. Glynnis Vaughan, who had been Roberts’ chief of staff, filed a claim seeking $475,000 or more from the county, making accusations similar to Porter’s. Such a claim is a necessary precursor to a lawsuit. Porter had filed her own claim earlier. At a May 21 news conference, Roberts’ newly hired crisis management consultant, Gary Gartner, spoke about some of Porter’s allegations. “They are false, defama-

Gary Gartner, a spokesperson for County Supervisor Dave Roberts, holds a message sent to Roberts from former staffer Diane Porter to show the two had a friendly relationship despite her claims that he treated staff poorly and misused government resources. — David Brooks tory, and will be refuted,” and the first-term supervisor has consistently acted with the “highest ethical standards,” Gartner said. Gartner later said they had only received Vaughan’s claim May 21 and hadn’t had time to review it. (An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated what day Vaughan’s claim was filed and when Gartner received it.) The media event, which the supervisor didn’t attend, was the first time Roberts’ camp directly addressed accusations Porter made in her May 13 claim against the county. It was a sweeping 46-minute event where Gartner spoke about Roberts’ hotel sleeping arrangements on work-related

BY JOE TASH Customers of the Santa Fe Irrigation District must cut their outdoor water use by 45 percent or face penalties and fines under a sweeping series of new regulations enacted by the district’s board of directors at its May 21 meeting. The district provides water to about 19,400 residents in Solana Beach, Rancho Santa Fe and Fairbanks Ranch. On May 21, in response to a state mandate to cut its total water use by 36 percent by February 2016, the district established water “allocations” for the first time since it was founded in 1923. That means residents will be given a base allowance of water, and subjected to an escalating series of penalties if they use more than their allotment. In addition, residents will face fines for violating water-use restrictions, which include outdoor watering only two days per week, and curtailing such activities as washing cars in their driveways. “There’s a target on our back,” said board President Michael Hogan, regarding the state-mandated cuts. State regulators this month adopted a tiered system of mandated cutbacks for local water suppliers, ranging from 4 to 36 percent. Santa Fe Irrigation District is in the highest tier because of its high per capita water use. “There’s no soft landing in this process. There’s only a hard landing,” Hogan said.

The required cuts flow from a directive issued by Gov. Jerry Brown, calling for an overall 25 percent reduction in water use by California residents in order to cope with a statewide drought now in its fourth year. Some residents asked for more time to learn about the new requirements before the fines and penalties take effect, but the board moved forward, citing a state penalty of up to $10,000 per day for water agencies that fail to meet their targeted reductions. “We have a very short period of time in which to react, unfortunately,” said Paula de Sousa, the district’s general counsel. Along with the allocations, which were approved 4-1 by the board, with director Greg Gruzdowich voting no, the board also voted to move to a Level 3 drought response, which entails tighter water-use restrictions. That decision came on a 5-0 vote, as did the adoption of a series of rule changes, including doubling fines for water-use violations. The maximum fine for a fourth violation in a one-year period went to $1,000 from $500. Gruzdowich said he had two objections to the allocation plan: that it was a “onesize-fits-all” approach that failed to take into account those who have already cut their water use; and that people are being penalized before they’ve had a chance to fully understand the new rules. He compared the change to a cellular See WATER, page 22

See ROBERTS, page 18

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PAGE A4 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

SDUHSD high school enrollment San Dieguito district prepares plan to spend state funds for 2015-18 input continues this summer BY KAREN BILLING At the May 21 board meeting, San Dieguito Union High School District Superintendent Rick Schmitt said he would like to have some direction from the board on how the district enrolls high school students by the end of this summer. If any substantial change is made to the enrollment process, Schmitt said that the district needs to begin work by December 2015 to be ready by the 2016-17 school year. A survey will be sent out in the first week of June to district parents and elementary school feeder district parents. Over the summer, Associate Superintendent of Educational Services Mike Grove will compile all of the information received in the survey, as well as from public workshops held earlier this year. Another public workshop will be held in August, and at that point, Schmitt would like to hear a discussion and recommendation from the school board. With the district’s current enrollment practice, San Dieguito High School Academy and Canyon Crest Academy are open boundary schools. If a situation occurs

where more students select a school than there are available seats, the district decides who gets in through a random lottery. No preference is given to proximity. All ninth- through 12th-grade students were accepted into their first-choice schools of Canyon Crest and San Dieguito this year, primarily because site administrators worked to expand capacity by using every space possible on campuses and by reviewing master schedules. The options for the district are: boundaries for all schools; eliminating all boundaries; a mix of boundary and non-boundary schools (the current situation); small boundaries around each academy and small boundaries around each school; and no boundaries for the rest of the district. Grove said the challenge with the survey is getting informed feedback. “There is a general recognition that each option is going to leave some people unhappy,� Grove said. “It’s about making a decision about what’s best for the greatest number of students that we can.�

BY KAREN BILLING The San Dieguito Union High School District is in the process of finalizing its Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP), the plan for how it will spend allocated funding from the state for the next three years. The LCAP is a requirement of all school districts as a result of the state’s Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF) that first went into effect last year. With the formula, revenue limits and most state categorical funding are eliminated and the funding formula is based on the number, grade level and demographics of the students the district serves. The LCFF funding comes in base and supplemental formats. The base grant is the per pupil amount; supplemental grant is additional funding based on English learners, low income and foster youth. San Dieguito’s 2014-15 target for supplemental expenditures was about $950,000 and in the 201516 school year, the amount has grown to $1.6 million. Supplemental funding will be used to provide increased support for English learners, intervention courses for those performing below grade level, college readiness courses, professional development for teachers on strategies to support English learners and increasing course access for all students. The public hearing for the LCAP will be June 4, with final approval on June 16, along with the 2015-16 budget. The LCAP must include an update about progress made toward the previous year’s goals and any adjustments that need to be made. According to Jason Viloria, executive director of educational services, the district is performing strongly compared with other

Earl Warren student advances in National Spelling Bee BY CITY NEWS SERVICE An eighth-grader from Earl Warren Middle School in Solana Beach correctly spelled geoponics in the second round of the 88th Scripps National Spelling Bee on May 27 in Maryland. Geoponics is a noun meaning an art or science of cultivating the earth. The correct spelling advances Oona Mary Nikko Flood to the third round, which will be held later on May 27 (after press time for this newspaper) at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center. Spellers who spell their third-round word correctly can be among the maximum of 50 spellers advancing to the semifinals on May 28 if their score on the multiple-choice spelling and vocabulary test taken May 26 is high enough. A misspelling in either the second or third round means the contestant is eliminated. The semifinalists will be announced after the conclusion of the third round.

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districts. In 2013-14, the percentage of English learners making annual progress was 73 percent, compared with Carlsbad Unified at 68 percent and 58 percent in San Diego Unified. The district also has high AP exam pass rates and graduation rates — 23 percent of SDUHSD have a GPA of 4.0 or higher. Of those students above 4.0 GPA, 1.6 percent are English learners and 2.7 percent are socio-economically disadvantaged. Viloria said the district had a 2013-14 AP exam pass rate of 85 percent, which is impressive, as SDUHSD is an “open access� district. The district saw a record number of students take AP tests this year compared with last year — the biggest jump at La Costa Canyon. Part of the LCAP is “stakeholder engagement,� making sure parents, staff and students are involved in the planning process. Viloria said that the district is lucky that Superintendent Rick Schmitt doesn’t like to sit still and does a lot of engagement activities. For the LCAP, the district used feedback from more than 30 stakeholder meetings and more than 1,000 responses from a parent LCAP survey. The San Dieguito District English Learner Advisory Committee also gave input about having more options for English learners and working harder toward reaching proficiency. Viloria said 4.2 percent of the district’s population is classified as English learners, and while the district has seen a drop in those numbers, the population has much greater needs. “We do a great job in this district, and this is a great portrait of the work, but we always look to do better,� Viloria said.

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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE A5

It’s full STEAM ahead on rebranding educational enrichment curriculum BY KAREN BILLING In the Del Mar Union School District, STEAM + is replacing ESC. Awareness and education about the re-branding of the Extended Studies Curriculum over to Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Music Plus will be taking place over the next school year, with full implementation by 2017. Superintendent Holly McClurg and Assistant Superintendent of Instructional Services Shelley Petersen officially rolled out STEAM + to the Del Mar Schools Education Foundation at its May 13 meeting. Instead of thinking about the district’s specialized education program as an individual science teacher or a music teacher, with STEAM +, the specialized subjects are integrated into all of disciplines. “The STEAM + culture will be in every classroom and innovation center at every school,” Petersen said, noting they are moving away from the concept of set-aside “ESC time.” “We’re working toward programs that do not live in isolation; they are actively engaged in all disciplines.” McClurg said the district will rely on the foundation as their partner in spreading the message about STEAM + and raising the funds to make it happen. “We are so enthusiastic about what’s to come,” McClurg said. “Our district would not be what it is without the work the foundation does … you work so hard to do great things for our children.” The school board was scheduled to hear about the new STEAM + at its meeting Wednesday, May 27 (after press time for this newspaper), as well as hear a discussion about what the program means for facilities needs. The transition to STEAM + has been in development with district staff for the past

two years. McClurg had found in meeting with parents about ESC and the role of the foundation, the notion of marketing ESC was “problematic.” She said people didn’t understand whether ESC was extra enrichment or remedial education or what it really was. McClurg said people didn’t even seem to like the ESC acronym. “Since we have changed to STEAM +, nobody has said ‘I really liked that name ESC,’” McClurg said. Petersen said when they talk about STEAM +, they talk about the “wow” factor, of walking into a classroom and seeing what it looks like with students being prolific writers, “attacking math fearlessly” and applying their knowledge in engineering projects. Board member Scott Wooden said in his visits to schools he is always impressed with how the subjects integrate with whatever’s going on in the grade level, such as art and science applied to lessons in social studies. Petersen said that people would be hard-pressed to find better examples of what they do in Del Mar with interdisciplinary units of studies. Their program is already “wonderful” but they can do more, such as bring engineering specialists into the classroom. “We’re very excited about the potential to look beyond the way we currently do things,” McClurg said. With STEAM +, Petersen said they aim to teach children to be good thinkers, ready to apply their skills and be prepared for middle school, high school and their careers. “The plus represents whatever the school community feels is near and dear to their heart and educational program,” Petersen said, noting that some campuses val-

Maria Grantham, DMSEF vice president of marketing, Superintendent Holly McClurg, DMSEF President Ty Humes and Shelley Petersen, assistant superintendent of instructional services. Photo by Karen Billing ue subjects like foreign language and drama, which they will still be able to have. Foundation representative Brenda Bilstad expressed her concerns that the foundation will face challenges in explaining STEAM +. As the program is integrated more, there isn’t the distinction of “ESC time.” Public school education is supposed to be free, and they will have to explain to parents why they need to donate funds for their children’s education. Petersen said she understands that educating the school community will be a challenge, and that the foundation and the district will need to be consistent in the way they communicate about STEAM +. She said the foundation will still be funding people, such as science specialists and technology specialists who bring their expertise, and all the other ways to enrich the educational experience. McClurg said the brutal fact is that public education does not include specialized programs like those Del Mar has, and it exists only because of the community’s support. “We would not have what we have in this school district without the foundation,” she said. “We’re really proud of our foundation … The model in place here is very successful, especially because it’s all volunteers.” “We have a private school setting in a public school system because of the work the foundation does to support our incredible program,” Petersen said.


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PAGE A6 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

Santa Fe Montessori School closing after more than 40 years in SB • Irvine-based LePort Schools will open new facility BY KRISTINA HOUCK After more than four decades of service, Santa Fe Montessori School is closing its doors in Solana Beach. Santa Fe Montessori School will close on June 5. L e P o r t Schools, which purchased the Nancy Sager p r o p e r t y, will open on June 8. “This school is one that runs like a well-oiled machine after all these years,” said Head of School Teresita Leimer. “Nancy Sager, the founder and the owner of the land, along with her husband, Paul, have really created something that’s lasted a long time and been known for its high quality.” With a dream to open her own Montessori school, Nancy Sager founded Santa Fe Montessori School in 1971. Sager had studied the Montessori method in New York and further researched

the method after she relocated to San Diego. The Montessori learning method establishes a collaborative environment without grades or tests and with multi-age classrooms, as well as self-directed learning and discovery for long blocks of time. Santa Fe Montessori School opened in September 1971 with two classrooms for toddlers to 6-year-olds. Forty-eight children enrolled the first year. The elementary program opened two years later, and additional classrooms were built in the years that followed. Growing demand led to the construction of the elementary school, which opened in 1992. Finally, the toddler program opened in 2000. Today, three buildings sit on the two-acre property. The school has 140 students, ages 18 months to 12 years, in programs for toddlers through sixth grade. There are 28 staff members, including eight lead teachers.

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In October, LePort Schools approached the Sagers, who own the building and land, with an offer to purchase the property. The couple accepted, families were notified in February and the sale was final in March, Leimer said. Students, parents, alumni and staff gathered May 16 to celebrate the school’s 44 years in Solana Beach. “What I’d like to say today is that this school is like a bird,” said Sager in her farewell speech. “And the birds come in many, many different colors, different wings, different songs. And that is the way our children are, with different colors and different songs. “This school will continue, but there comes a time in life when things change, and therefore, there is a change. Thank you for being a part of this today. And may these beautiful birds — who are really children, right? — go out and fly.” Based in Irvine, LePort Schools offers Montessori and private schools in Orange, Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco coun-

Santa Fe Montessori School students at the school’s book fair. ties, and has recently expanded to New York. LePort Schools will offer programs for infants through sixth grade at the Solana Beach site. Leimer estimates that as many as 50 percent of Santa Fe Montessori School’s students will transition to the new school. Several staff members are also staying. Leimer, who sat on the school’s board of directors for seven years, has served as the head of school for four years. She plans to help open a school in Cancun, Mexico. “Santa Fe Montessori School is an institution nearly half a century old and is now closing its doors, but those 44 years of making a difference in children’s lives not only leaves an imprint on the past, it also leaves an enduring legacy for the future,” Leimer said in her farewell speech. “Every one of those hundreds of children spread unknowingly the legacy of SFMS by living a passion for learning, by embodying compassionate connections, and by enjoying life to the fullest every day here in San Diego, across the United States, and around the world.” For more about Santa Fe Montessori School, visit www.santafemontessori.org. For more about LePort Schools, visit leportschools.com.

Solana Beach School District selects new principals for Solana Vista and Carmel Creek schools The Solana Beach School District recently announced that Joel Tapia is the finalist for the principal position at Solana Vista School. Tapia comes to Solana Beach from Chula Vista Elementary School District where he has been an elementary school principal since 2011. With more than 12 years of education experience, he has served as an associate principal, a projects coordinator, and teacher. Tapia said, “I’m absolutely honored and blessed to be joining such an elite school district like Solana Beach. I can’t wait to meet the wonderful students, families, staff, and community members of Solana Vista School. I am confident we will continue the great

traditions as well as discover new innovations for excellence.” Lisa Platt, the current Solana Vista School principal, will retire at the end of the 2014-15 school year after 10 years with the Solana Beach School District. The Solana Beach School District also recently announced that Lisa Ryder is the finalist for the principal position at Carmel Creek School. With more than 20 years’ experience in education, Ryder has worked in the Solana Beach School District for nine years as principal, enrichment principal, special education teacher, inclusion specialist, and speech language pathologist. Ryder has a passion for early childhood education and was principal of

the district’s Child Development Center for the 2014-15 school year. “I am truly honored to serve as principal at Carmel Creek School, and highly respect the innovative teaching and learning community in the Solana Beach School District,” she stated. “This is an exciting time in education, and I am privileged to be part of the Carmel Creek team.” Carmel Creek School Principal Terri Davis will retire at the end of the 2014-15 school year after 28 years with the Solana Beach School District. Approval of these appointments is slated for the regularly scheduled June 4 meeting of the Board of Education. Tapia and Ryder will assume their assignments in August 2015.

District proposes new position of associate superintendent of administrative services BY KAREN BILLING San Dieguito Union High School District Superintendent Rick Schmitt introduced a proposal at the May 21 board meeting for a new position: associate superintendent of administrative services. The position change is part of the re-organization of the educational services department, which has become necessary because Schmitt said the district’s work has quadrupled due to the “unprecedented scope and scale” of new education standards. The position change is cost-neutral.

Schmitt said the new position would give Associate Superintendent Mike Grove the time to focus on curriculum and instruction and assessment needs. The new associate superintendent would provide leadership in areas such as construction, enrollment, program shifts, bell schedules, athletics, technology and summer programs. If approved on June 4, Schmitt said he would appoint Jason Viloria as the executive director of educational services effective July 1. Viloria’s former position, executive director of instructional services, would be eliminated.


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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE A7

Solana Beach entrepreneur’s book details business of Bubba Gump restaurants BY ROB LEDONNE The Bubba Gump Shrimp Company chain of restaurants can be found all over the world — from Hong Kong to New York’s Times Square. To lift the chain into its current worldwide ubiquity took years of planning and strategy, and its story is being told for the first time in “Gumption: Taking Bubba Gump from Movie to Restaurant,” a book chronicling the restaurants’ success, written by former CEO Scott Barnett, a resident of Solana Beach. “People have been telling me for years I should write a book about this,” said Barnett. “When I started writing, it was originally going to be a case study for the Eller College of Management at the University of Arizona. When I showed it to the dean, he said it should be a book, and that sealed the deal.” Barnett — a longtime North County resident who has moved around Solana Beach, Encinitas and Del Mar since 1985 — was originally the brains behind a chain of a successful restaurants called the Rusty Pelican. Barnett’s life soon changed, though, when his Rusty Pelican partner, Del Mar resident Gordon Miles, received a call out of the blue from the powers that be at Paramount Pictures. “They asked if we were interested in doing a restaurant based around the movie ‘Forrest Gump.’” Bubba-Gump Shrimp Company is the fictional company founded by the character Forrest Gump in the 1994 hit movie.

“We decided to go for it,” said Barnett, who agreed to a licensing agreement with Paramount. The first restaurant later opened in Monterey and it became a runaway success, paving the way for the restaurant’s global future. When it came to putting together the book, Barnett tried to remember the stories and anecdotes he collected along the way, to the method behind the brand’s immense success. “The book is for entrepreneurs or people in business,” said Barnett of “Gumption,” which follows the brand from its infancy. “I was writing 1,500 words a day for about 10 weeks. I had written things all my life and writing had always come easy to me, but writing the book is a totally different thing.” Throughout the rise of Bubba Gump restaurants, Barnett had to sometimes navigate tricky waters — which included opening its first international location in Osaka, Japan, and supervising the 2004 launch of the Bubba Gump location in Times Square. “Clearly, that was a massive thing for us,” he said of that restaurant, which has since become a landmark and nets a whopping $25 million a year. “People refer to Time Square as the crossroads of the world, so that was our first big milestone.” Barnett left Bubba Gump in 2010 and as of March is the interim CEO of Ruby’s Diners, a chain of 1940s-themed eateries. But with the Bubba-Gump Shrimp Company ingrained in American culture and the

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PAGE A8 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

Board of San Dieguito River Park Joint Powers Authority announces new executive director

Kid-friendly car show Touch A Truck is May 31 at CCA; event raises funds to fight children’s cancer

The board of directors of the San Dieguito River Park Joint Powers Authority announced the selection of Kevin McKernan as its new executive director. McKernan has more than six years of experience as executive officer of two state conservancies, and as a program director with the Conservation Lands Foundation. He has also served as an environmental director and planner for two Native American tribes. McKernan’s most recent position is as the executive officer of the San Diego River Conservancy. Among his new responsibilities with San Dieguito River Park will be directing the JPA’s operations, which include managing 11 employees involved in planning, constructing, and maintaining the park’s trails, habitat and improvements. McKernan will start his new position on June 29. “The San Dieguito River Park is pleased to select Kevin McKernan for this leadership role,” said Board Chairman Don Mosier. “We believe Kevin will continue the great progress being made by the park. He brings a strong background in conservation management and outdoor recreation, and a real passion for and commitment to his profession.” McKernan assumes a position held for 16 years by Richard Bobertz, who recently retired. The San Dieguito River Park Joint Powers Authority manages more than 55 miles of habitat and trails for hikers, bicyclists, and equestrians that stretch from Volcan Mountain in northeast San Diego County to its ocean outlet at the beach in Del Mar. More than 70 miles of trails exist within the park, of which the primary feature is the Coast to Crest Trail. The San Dieguito River Park is a joint powers agency among the cities of Del Mar, Escondido, Poway, San Diego, and Solana Beach, and the County of San Diego. The long-term mission of the JPA is to finish the planning and construction of the Coast to Crest Trail from Del Mar to Julian, of which two-thirds is already complete and available for public use.

Kids can get the chance to climb inside some of their favorite vehicles as Touch A Truck returns to Carmel Valley’s Canyon Crest Academy. The event, which raises money to help fight children’s cancer, will take place from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. May 31. Touch A Truck San Diego started seven years ago with a vision to give kids the opportunity to sit in the driver’s seats of vehicles big and small. This year’s event features nearly 100 race cars, hot rods, motorcycles, military, construction, off-road and emergency response vehicles. All the money raised helps support the Neuroblastoma and Medulloblastoma Translational Research Consortium. Buy tickets at www.TouchATruckSD.com or call 858-621-FIRE. Fundraising for free admission and cool prizes is also available.

TPHS Scholarship Fund selling grad signs Celebrate your Torrey Pines High School Graduate with a sign for your front yard! The 18-inch-by-24-inch yard sign reading “Congratulations TPHS GRAD” can be ordered at www.tphssf.org or at the School Store. Two options for your order: • $50 for a yard sign, stand and balloons delivered to your front yard during graduation week with a personalized wish. • $25 for a yard sign and stand with personalized wish to be picked up June 9 from TPHS in the school’s front parking lot.

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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE A9

CCA speech and debate team raises volume on competition BY KRISTINA HOUCK As the school year comes to a close, Canyon Crest Academy’s speech and debate team is wrapping up its most competitive season ever. After a series of successes, the season is ending with sophomore Catherine Cang headed to the National Championship Tournament in June, following her District Championship win at the National Qualifier. “These kids are so dedicated and such a wonderful group to be around, it is a pleasure to come to class every week and help channel their enthusiasm and watch their development,” said the team’s head coach, Michael Orfield, a retired Superior Court judge. “We are a young team with a lot of potential.” The season kicked off with the team scoring third place overall in the Sweepstakes Competition at the League 3 Tournament. From there, Canyon Crest took home its first varsity sweepstakes trophy in the League 5 Tournament, where sophomore Michaela Allen placed first in original prose and poetry, and sophomore Kaleolani Laymon placed second in duo interpretation. The team then sent three qualifiers to California High School Speech Association’s State Championships for the first time. It was also the first time students competed in both speech and debate competitions. Kaleolani placed second in dramatic interpretation, earning an automatic berth in the State Championship Tournament. Michaela placed sixth in original prose and poetry, and Kevin Li placed sixth in Lincoln Douglas Debate. Both also went on to the Championships in Murrieta, where Kaleolani ranked in the top third of dramatic interpretation competitors. “I’m enjoying this immensely,” said Orfield, a Carmel Valley resident. “I’m a retired Superior Court judge, so I’ve had a lot of opportunities to see people talk and debate. I’ve seen the good, the bad and the ugly of what speech and debate can be on a professional level.” A San Diego native, Orfield was a member of Grossmont High School’s speech and debate team when he was in high school. Orfield stepped in as head coach of the Canyon Crest team in 2012, after the former coach retired. At that time, the group existed as the speech and debate club, which Orfield expanded into a club and a team. The club, which is led by student officers, supports the roughly 30-member team through fundraising. “Together, these two entities now function to allow the team to move forward,” Orfield explained. In his first year with the speech and debate team, the team qualified its first student to California High School Speech Association’s State Championships, with two students qualifying for the tournament the following year and three students this year. “We’ve not only qualified more people each year to state championships, but this last year, we qualified people to both the speech side and the debate side,” Orfield said. Breaking new school records, Catherine placed first in the District Championship in Lincoln Douglas Debate at the National Qualifier. She and Orfield are headed to the National Championship Tournament June 14-19 in Dallas. “It makes me proud to see both the speech side and the debate side come into their

The Canyon Crest Academy speech and debate team is ending its most competitive season ever, with one member heading to the National Championship Tournament in June. Courtesy photo own,” Orfield said. Although school may soon be out for the summer, the team is already looking forward to next year. Next year, the team aims to be even more competitive, entering nine league tournaments instead of six. The team belongs to the San Diego Imperial Valley Speech League, the regional league of the California High School Speech Association. “The doors are open for them, given their ability to think on their feet, present well and have self-confidence,” Orfield said. “We have a young team,” he added. “We’re mostly composed of freshmen and sophomores, so we have a chance to take the current crop of people and really work another two or three years with them. We’re also looking forward to a brand new group of freshmen coming in. We’re looking to get bigger and better.”

We’re proud to be your neighbors! The entire team at the Del Mar Highlands Town Center extends their sincerest thanks to the many community members who have worked tirelessly over the last six years to achieve an appropriately-sized One Paseo project. :H ZHUH KRQRUHG WR VWDQG ZLWK \RX LQ WKLV H΍RUW DQG VXSSRUW \RXU ZRUN WR HQKDQFH RXU community’s quality of life.

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PAGE A10 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

San Dieguito Union HS District Student Standouts Del Mar Union School District Student Standouts Forty-nine area students were honored at the Greater San Dieguito Association of California School Administrators Student Standout Ceremony held May 14 at Solana Ranch Elementary School. Students were selected from each school and to be honored in one of six categories. The students received award certificates, congratulatory letters and gift bags from U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, State Sen. Joel Anderson, San Diego County Supervisor Dave Roberts, the Greater San Dieguito ACSA and from Mission Federal Credit Union. Congratulations to these Del Mar Union School District students who were honored (principal’s name in parentheses): Ashley Falls: Geneva Easton, arts (Chris Delehanty) Carmel Del Mar: Matthew Bowen, fellowship (Jessica Morales) Del Mar Heights: Catherine Smith, fellowship (Wendy Wardlow) Del Mar Hills Academy: Riley Aiken, arts (Julie Lerner) Ocean Air: Zoe Ludena, arts (Ryan Stanley) Sage Canyon: Charlotte Zhang, arts (Vivian Firestone) Sycamore Ridge: Manuel Ortiz, fellowship (Peg LaRose) Torrey Hills: David Medina-Gonzalez, courage (Monica Sorenson)

Forty-nine area students were honored at the Greater San Dieguito Association of California School Administrators Student Standout Ceremony held May 14 at Solana Ranch Elementary School. Students were selected from each school and to be honored in one of six categories. The students received award certificates, congratulatory letters and gift bags from U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, State Sen. Joel Anderson, San Diego County Supervisor Dave Roberts, the Greater San Dieguito ACSA and from Mission Federal Credit Union. Congratulations to these San Dieguito Union High School School District students who were honored (principal’s name in parentheses): Canyon Crest High School: Noah Levinson, community service (Karl Mueller) Carmel Valley Middle School: Melody Li, fellowship (Cara Dolnik) Diegueño Middle School: Corinne Andrus, community service (Bjorn Page) Earl Warren Middle School: Soyon Kim, courage (Adam Camacho) La Costa Canyon High School: Cole Marting, fellowship (Bryan Marcus) Oak Crest Middle School: Gage Tanzman, courage (Ryan Yee) Pacific Trails Middle School: No student this year San Dieguito Academy: Gabrielle Posard, community service (Timothy Hornig) Sunset High School: Devyn French, arts (Rick Ayala) Torrey Pines High School: Brandon Hong, fellowship (David Jaffe)

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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE A11

Earl Warren seventh-graders raise CIF Scholar-Athlete honor money, participate in beach cleanup for county goes to CV student As part of a class assignment, Earl Warren social science teacher Connor Nesseler asked his seventh-grade humanities students to raise money and donate to a good cause. Luka Waage, Colton Valentine and Lukas Loy chose to focus their efforts on the environment, specifically keeping their ocean and beaches clean. Each boy loves his local hometown beaches and spends much time in the water surfing, bodyboarding and swimming. The boys together organized a campaign titled “Happy oceans, happy life!” and identified the Surfrider Left: Luka Waage, Colton Valentine at beach cleanup; Foundation as an organiza- Right: Luka Waage, Lukas Loy. tion that spends much time and effort in keeping beaches and oceans clean and healthy. The boys wanted to raise money for the Foundation and assist them with their efforts. They used online crowdfunding to reach out to friends and family for donations. The campaign has to date raised $855 and is still in full swing. The boys will donate all money raised directly to the Surfrider Foundation. Luka, Colton and Lukas decided that they also wanted to get involved in the effort of keeping their beaches and ocean clean beyond fundraising. They participated in several beach cleanups and put together an education campaign for the community. The boys created a flier describing the sources of stormwater pollution and what everyone can do to prevent or diminish it. They distributed these fliers at the Del Mar Farmers Market and to friends and family, and posted the fliers at local Starbucks stores. Their hope is to educate all on what steps each of us can take personally to keep our oceans and beaches clean. The boys have enjoyed this project and through the process have learned how each person can make a significant impact.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR

Carmel Valley resident Alex Barone has been selected as the male CIF scholar athlete for San Diego County. The scholarship award identifies student-athletes who excel in the classroom, athletics, and are strong contributors to their schools and communities. Twenty CIF Section winners were recognized by the Federation from throughout California — one male and one female from each of the 10 sections. Alex, a senior tennis player at Cathedral Catholic High School, is the first male athlete from Cathedral Catholic to earn this recognition, which was presented to him May 20 at the second Cathedral Athletic Awards. “The students of California and our CIF scholar-athletes continue to confirm for all of us involved in education based Dave Smola, vice principal, Athletics at athletics that the future is bright,” CIF Cathedral, presents senior Alex Barone with Executive Director Roger L. Blake said. “There were an exceptional group of the CIF Scholar Athlete Award for San Diego nominees this year and I want to con- County. Courtesy photo gratulate all of them and thank them for their contributions to their local school community.” Recipients were selected from a pool of 432 candidates representing 1,554 CIF member schools statewide. Besides serving as a captain of the varsity tennis team, Alex is also the vice president of the National Honors Society and a lifetime member of California Scholastic Federation. He is a multiyear member of the Campus Ministry Team and has contributed more than 400 volunteer hours during his high school career, earning recognition from his school and the White House. Alex earned the Male Academic Athlete of the Year Award from Cathedral, which was also presented to him at the awards ceremony. Throughout high school, Alex has participated in WIT, A college-level course for high school students offered through UCSD where they learn entrepreneurial and leadership skills while designing, launching and growing social impact projects. Alex worked with his team to create and lead CHOOSE YOU, a teen-designed mentoring and education program for low-income elementary students to help them develop the knowledge and self-confidence to make healthy choices concerning diet, exercise and overall well-being. The program has been implemented at Carson Elementary School and Bayside Community Center in Linda Vista. Alex will attend the University of Notre Dame in the fall.

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With the San Diego City Council’s rescission of One Paseo last week, Kilroy is preparing plans for a refined project that will deliver amenities to the community while reducing traffic and visual impacts.


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PAGE A12 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

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PAGE A14 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

DM BodySurfing Club welcoming first exchange student from Down Under BY KRISTINA HOUCK Thanks to the Del Mar BodySurfing Club, bodysurfers from around the world will have an opportunity to visit Del Mar. The club recently launched its International Student Exchange Program and will welcome its first student in June. “I think this program is tremendously important because it promotes cultural exchange and social interaction with people around the world,� said Del Mar resident Vince Askey, chairman of the club. “I think it’s also very important for the promotion of the sport, which is a growing sport.� Australian bodysurfer Tom Marr, 18, is the program’s first exchange student. A freshman at the University of Queensland, he is majoring in marine biology and zoology and swimming on the school’s swim team. Club members met Marr during their March tour of Australia, where some of the 14 members on the trip competed in the BodyWomp Comp in Noosa Heads, Queensland, at the Noosa Festival of Surfing. Marr, who is fairly new to competitive bodysurfing, won the bodysurfing contest in his first-ever attempt at competing in the sport. “We’re sponsoring his entire stay,� Askey said. Marr will arrive July 29 in Del Mar and will stay will a few host families from the club, including Del Mar couple Lindsey Buechler and Eric Phleger and their four children. Their family is also very involved in sports. Buechler and Phleger are members of the Del Mar BodySurfing Club. Buechler’s mother, Del Mar resident Christy Hahn, and her aunt, Del Mar resident Merrily McLellan, are also club members and went on the trip to Australia. Her older daughter, Reily Buechler, graduated from Torrey Pines High School in June 2014 and just finished her freshman year at UCLA, where she plays on the women’s volleyball team. Buechler’s mother met Marr and said he was “a fantastic kid and a great athlete.� “We just thought that our family would be a great fit for him,� she said. “He’s a swimmer and we’re also a big water family.� Marr’s trip will also include visits to other coastal cities throughout Southern California, including Huntington Beach and Manhattan Beach, as he will compete in three bodysurfing contests before he returns home on Aug. 24. “He’s staying several different places, so he’ll get the opportunity to experience a num-

Tom Marr bodysurfing in Queensland, Australia. Courtesy photo ber of different people and a number of different beaches,� Askey said. Founded in October 2012, the Del Mar BodySurfing Club promotes bodysurfing through local get-togethers and international trips. The club has 50 competitive and recreational members and is looking to establish as a nonprofit to further expand its programs. The exchange program was inspired by the club’s recent trip to Australia. Members of the Del Mar BodySurfing Club meet every weekend to surf Del Mar waves. The club plans to return to Australia in March 2016. Until then, members will compete Aug. 22-23 in the World Bodysurfing Championships, along with Marr, in Oceanside. For more about the Del Mar BodySurfing Club, visit www.dmbodysurfing.club.

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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE A15

SUPERINTENDENT

Notre Dame students are finalists in STEM contest

continued from page 1

pected to officially approve Decker’s contract at the June 4 meeting. “Mr. Decker possesses the values, skills and experience to lead Solana Beach School District and ensure our continued success,� said board president Vicki King in a letter to parents on May 21. “He has a genuine appreciation for the work of our teachers, administrative team and support staff. He values the culture of collaboration, collegiality and community engagement that makes Solana Beach School District such a remarkable place. Above all, he holds an unwavering belief that all students can learn and succeed.� Lynch joined the district in April 2012. Under Lynch’s leadership, the Solana Beach School District has transitioned to Common Core State Standards and championed STREAM (Science, Technology, Research, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics) through STREAM-centered Discovery Labs. In the fall, the district opened its seventh school, Solana Ranch Elementary School in Pacific Highlands Ranch. Because Decker has played an integral part in the district’s recent successes, he said the change in leadership would be a “seamless transition.� “One of the most important pieces is for us to continue the very positive trajectory we’re on,� Decker said. “I look forward to everything we’re going to be able to accomplish together with our staff and our families in the years to come.� Lynch’s last day with the Solana Beach district will be June 30. On July 1, she is expected to start as superintendent of Reed Union School District. Decker’s first day as superintendent will be July 1. “Dr. Lynch has done such a wonderful job in these last three years,� Decker said. “To have the opportunity to step into that role and continue the great work that’s been done over the last few years is just an honor. I’m thrilled to have the opportunity.�

Two of the eight finalists who competed recently in the KFMB-TV Station’s Innovate 8: STEM Innovators Contest are from Notre Dame Academy. Kevin Lopatka, grade 7, and Robin Tête, grade 8, designed and directed one-minute videos showcasing how they use STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering or Math) to make San Diego a better place. Both of their creative and insightful videos were chosen from a pool of other high school and middle school student entries from across the county. Although both videos highlighted how the concepts the boys learned in their NDA STEM class are everywhere, the examples they used to illustrate them were unique.

Robin’s video showed hot air balloons, roller coasters and skate-park design software, while some of Kevin’s examples were a basketball arching in to the basket, all the buildings around us and the game of baseball. From eight finalists, a winner was decided through public online voting. The winner was Adam Douillet of San Pasqual Union School. See entries at http://kfmb.upickem.net/engine/Welcome.aspx?contestid=169530. Notre Dame Academy added STEM classes to its middle school curriculum this year and will hold its first STEM Expo in June. Notre Dame Academy is a private Catholic school for preschool through grade 8. Visit www.ndasd.org.

CCA Eco Club hosts ‘free market’ May 28 The Canyon Crest Academy Eco Club is hosting a “really really free market� from 3-6 p.m. May 28 at the Carmel Valley Farmers Market. Donate and drop off anything you want (anything, even broken stuff) — take anything you want. You don’t have to bring something to take something. Everyone is welcome! The market is in the Canyon Crest Academy Front Parking Lot, 5951 E. Village Center Loop Road, San Diego (next to the new mall with the Trader Joe’s), Carmel Valley Road Exit off the 56. Look for the signs at the intersection of Del Mar Heights and Carmel Valley Road. Visit www.cca-ecoclub.webs.com.

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Š2014 BHH AfďŹ liates, LLC. An independently operated subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc., a Berkshire Hathaway afďŹ liate, and a franchisee of BHH AfďŹ liates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of HomeServices of America, Inc.ÂŽ Equal Housing Opportunity. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals. If your home is currently listed, this is not a solicitation for your listing. CalBRE# 01317331


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Le Dimora Presents Our th

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May 31 CCA Cancer Awareness Run supports Cancer Angels of San Diego BY KAREN BILLING Canyon Crest Academy’s Cancer Awareness Club is hosting a Cancer Awareness Run from 8 a.m. to noon Sunday, May 31, on the CCA track. The free event supports Cancer Angels of San Diego, an organization that helps stage IV cancer patients in need of financial assistance. Participants can opt to run or walk as much as they can, and the top donator and runner will receive a free T-shirt. The event will also include a speaker from Cancer Angels of San Diego, a raffle, live DJ and face painting with boba tea stand and other concessions for The CCA Cancer Awareness Club, which is hosting a May purchase. This is the club’s first year 31 walk at CCA, participated in the Light the Night Walk on campus, founded by fresh- in San Diego last year. Courtesy photo man Sarah Teruya, who lost a close friend to cancer two years ago. The club’s goal is to provide a greater understanding of cancer and it hosts weekly informational lunchtime meetings. They hold fundraising bake sales and support off-campus cancer organizations such as the American Cancer Foundation, Relay for Life and Susan G. Komen San Diego. In November, the club participated in San Diego’s Light the Night Walk. The experience prompted members to host their own community event. “So many people are affected by cancer in the world, and this walk allowed us to connect to each other and realize that we aren’t alone in this journey. This walk made us realize that life is fragile and we cannot take it for granted,” wrote club member Rachel Fu on the club website. “The survivors inspired us to stay positive and thankful for what we have and to take care of ourselves. This humbling experience made us warriors to help and support cancer patients and their families.” Pre-registration is encouraged at ccacancerawareness.weebly.com.

Torrey Pines hosts Freddie Awards May 28 Torrey Pines High School will be hosting its first Freddie Awards show on Thursday, May 28, at the Torrey Pines Gym to celebrate another great year of athletic achievement. The Falcons have already won 10 League and seven CIF Championships this year, with more opportunities to come over the next few weeks. Another remarkable accomplishment is that 48 scholar-athletes from the Class of 2015 are being recruited to play at 36 colleges nationwide. This inaugural awards event promises to be a fun evening honoring the best athletes, teams, coaches and performances at Torrey Pines’ version of the Academy Awards, with a celebrity MC and semiformal attire by the nominees. The awards are named after Torrey Pines mascot Freddie Falcon. The public, students, family and friends are invited to the reception at 5 p.m. with appetizers being served, followed by the awards ceremony at 6 p.m. General admission is $5 with proceeds benefiting Torrey Pines Athletics. Freddie nominees, coaches and staff are guests. Tickets are available at the TPHS foundation office in the Administration building at 3710 Del Mar Heights Road and at the door on the night of the event.

Two council candidates to appear at June 11 event WE’RE MAKING ROOM FOR OUR NEW FALL COLLECTIONS. HUGE REDUCTIONS ON THE FINEST LUXURY FURNITURE BRANDS INCLUDING

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The Rancho Santa Fe Democratic Club will welcome two candidates for San Diego City Council at 6:30 p.m. June 11. In the First District, which includes La Jolla, Carmel Valley, and Del Mar Hills, Heights, and Terrace, Sherri Lightner is termed out. Barbara Bry is an entrepreneur, a columnist in the San Diego Union-Tribune, and a founder of Run Women Run, a nonpartisan organization that encourages San DiBarbara Bry Joe LaCava ego pro-choice women to run for public office. Joe LaCava is a land use and public policy consultant and past president of the La Jolla Community Planning Association. In addition to the two candidates, attorney Dwight Worden, who serves on the Del Mar City Council, will discuss the history, the future, and the politics of One Paseo and Carmel Valley. The Rancho Santa Fe Democratic Club meets every second Thursday (except for July and August); question and answer sessions follow. The Club meets at the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club, 1505 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Solana Beach. Cost is $15 for members and $25 for guests. RSVP at www.rsfdem.org or 858-759-2620.


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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE A17

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Del Mar Times Solana Beach Sun Carmel Valley News 3702 Via de la Valle Suite 202W Del Mar, CA 92014 858-756-1403

www.delmartimes.net The Del Mar Times (USPS 1980) is published every Friday by U-T Community Press. Adjudicated as a newspaper of general circulation by Superior Court No.GIC 748533,December 21,2000.Copyright © 2013 U-T Community Press. All rights reserved. No part of the contents of this publication may be reproduced in any medium,including print and electronic media,without the express written consent of U-T Community Press.

PHYLLIS PFEIFFER

President

DON PARKS

Chief Revenue Officer LORINE WRIGHT

Executive Editor editor@rsfreview.com KAREN BILLING

Senior News Writer KRISTINA HOUCK

Reporter MARSHA SUTTON

Senior Education Reporter JON CLARK, MCKENZIE IMAGES

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Advertising Sales Manager GABBY CORDOBA, EVELYNE OLLMAN, MICHAEL RATIGAN, ASHLEY O’DONNELL

Advertising DARA ELSTEIN

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Graphic Designer ASHLEY FREDERICK

Graphic Designer LAURA GROCH, AMY STIRNKORB

Production/Editorial Assistant Joe Tash, Suzanne Evans, Diane Welch, Kathy Day, Rob LeDonne and Kelley Carlson, Gideon Rubin,

Contributors OBITUARIES: 858.218.7237 or cathy@myclassifiedmarketplace.com

LETTERS POLICY Topical letters to the editor are encouraged and we make an effort to print them all. Letters are limited to 200 words or less and submissions are limited to one every two weeks per author. Submission must include a full name, address, e-mail address (if available) and atelephone number for verification purposes. We do not publish anonymous letters. Contact the editor for more information about submitting a guest editorial piece,called Community View, at 400 words maximum. We reserve the right to edit for taste, clarity, length and to avoid libel. E-mailed submissions are preferred to editor@delmartimes.net. Lettersmay also be mailed or delivered to 565 Pearl St., Ste. 300, La Jolla, or faxed to (858) 459-5250. LETTERSPOLICY

Letters to the editor/Opinion Drought confusion? Confused, lost by drought policies as we are fined for nine-minute showers, told to replace our lawns with polyester and drink toilet water? Obama just declared CO2 as the biggest threat to national security. Wholesale taking out lawns which breathe in CO2, increases this national threat. Keep the lawns, water less. The local cities/towns with bans on plastic bags (poly) are encouraging paper bags and thus felled trees, which also absorb CO2, also causing increased water usage as more trees to be forested. So why don’t the cities/towns suspend their plastic bag bans, cooperate with the big effort and help with the drought and national security — a two-for-one that proves real motives, “the collective good.” Then I’ll believe the altruism. Noel Spaid, Del Mar

Big win for Carmel Valley and drivers on I-5 BY GORDON CLANTON On May 21, the San Diego City Council voted unanimously to rescind its earlier 7-2 approval of the zonebusting One Paseo Grande proposal for a shopping center with residential towers along Del Mar Heights Road in Carmel Valley. A successful citizens petition required that the council either rescind its earlier approval or put the matter to a public vote. A U-T editorial urged the council to go to the ballot. Pro-business Republicans on the council seemed to be leaning the same way: “If the council is restrained by the petition from giving the developers what they want, let’s go to a public vote to give the developers what they want.” Last-minute negotiations between the developer, Kilroy Corp., and project opponents resulted in a compromise that calls for a dramatically scaled-back proposal with half the traffic. Details are yet to be revealed. And the devil, as always, lurks in the details, but ... In the end, even the project’s supporters favored recission, the cancellation of the previous approval. Amazing, really. The developer will need to redesign and resubmit plans for the site. The developer has agreed to involve community planning groups in the re-design. The council hearing provided some high drama. Scores of One Paseo opponents in red T-shirts once again took to the floor. Speakers opposing the One Paseo Grande plan included Supervisor Dave Roberts, former supervisor Pam SlaterPrice, Dwight Worden from the Del Mar City Council, and two candidates for SDCC District 1, Barbara Bry and Joe LaCava. Longtime opponents of One Paseo who added their testimony included Ken Farinsky, Diana Scheffler, and Bob Fuchs. Perhaps even more encouraging was the testimony of San Diegans from every part of the city in support of zoning regulations that benefit our regional quality of life. The message of these otherwise disparate voices is this: The council must listen to community planning groups. Four such groups, plus the cities of Del Mar and Solana Beach, had opposed the One Paseo proposal — to no avail, until last week. Residents of Carmel Valley and adjacent communities owe an enormous debt to that small band of activists who fought the One Paseo Goliath for six years. Todd Gloria and David Alvarez, both of whom previously supported the proposal, praised the persistence of community activists in educating council members and turning the situation around. Democracy in action. Good guys win a round. Stay tuned. Gordon Clanton teaches sociology at San Diego State University. He welcomes comments at gclanton@mail.sdsu.edu. LETTERS POLICY: Topical letters to the editor are encouraged. Submissions should include a full name, address, e-mail address (if available) and a telephone number for verification purposes. We do not publish anonymous letters and there are length limits (about 400 words maximum). Emailed submissions are preferred to editor@delmartimes.net. Letters may be edited. The letters/columns published are the author’s opinion only and do not reflect the opinion of this newspaper.

ROBERTS

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travel and released copies of text messages and invoices to counter some of Porter’s claims. He also released a statement from the driver, a current staff member, who swore under oath that “I am a heterosexual male.” If documents are the currency that buys understanding into what happened in Roberts’ office, Porter had some of her own. As Gartner provided reporters with papers he said showed that Roberts did nothing wrong, Porter’s lawyer, Chris Morris, gave out copies of text messages that he believes support his client’s accusations. Among Gartner’s key points: • Roberts, a married gay man, did not have an inappropriate relationship with his driver, staff member Harold Meza. “There was absolutely no inappropriate conduct, sexual or otherwise,” Gartner said. The two traveled together, and shared a hotel room, but they slept in separate beds and there was no sexual contact, Gartner said. “All that happened was that I went to sleep in my own bed. There was no sexual activity of any kind,” Meza said in the sworn statement. “Let me be perfectly clear about this, I am a heterosexual male,” he said. In text messages attorney Morris provided, Roberts talks about sharing a bed with Harold, and during a trip to Washington, D.C., Roberts wrote that “Harold will keep me warm!” and included an emoji icon of a face winking while sticking out his tongue. In another instance, Roberts sent a text that said he wanted to share a bed with Meza on a trip to Hawaii. (Meza ultimately didn’t attend.) It was all just a joke, Gartner said. He said Roberts is a happily married man who has a good sense of humor. “That was basically a funny statement,” he said. • Roberts’ office spent $999.37 on 10,000 baseball cards with the supervisor’s face on the front. In her claim, Porter said that after staffers questioned whether this expense was a misuse of public money, Roberts asked her “to ‘make the cards disappear.’” Porter still has the cards. A similar community outreach project by former Gov. Pete Wilson inspired the cards, and Roberts got appropriate clearance from the county’s lawyers before they were printed, Gartner said. “There was no inappropriate use of money for those baseball cards,” he said. But later, one of Roberts’ friends saw the cards and suggested that he should doublecheck and make sure that they were appropriate. He then told Porter to keep the cards in a drawer as he tried to verify that he could pass them out. Gartner said he wasn’t sure whether Roberts found out if the cards were acceptable, and ultimately, the cards were never distributed. • Roberts and Porter had a great relationship, and everyone is baffled about why Porter would suddenly file a claim and make such serious allegations, Gartner said. Nineteen pages of text messages show jovial banter between the two. One includes a cartoon titled “12 outstanding personality traits of a great boss” and another included an image of a child with outstretched hands that was captioned “Multiple exclamation

points are the written equivalent of jazz hands!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” “What I’m trying to show here is that for somebody who says it was a hostile work environment, and doesn’t get along with their boss, the text messages don’t show that,” Gartner said. Eventually, in a three-week span, Porter, Vaughan, deputy Chief of Staff Lindsey Masukawa and Brittany Shaw, an administrative assistant, all resigned. Vaughan, Porter and Shaw have all raised similar allegations about Roberts’ behavior and use of county resources. Gartner would not speak to the other women’s concerns, and took aim exclusively at Porter while avoiding questions about other staffers. Gartner said he doesn’t know why Porter, a 20-year Navy veteran, would create a “false report.” “You know, it’s really hard to know,” he said. Morris said Gartner’s claims didn’t add up. “Everything he said was refutable by the texts and emails,” he said. Vaughan’s new claim, which was filed late May 21, echoes many of the issues Porter raised, including the improper relationship with his driver. But Vaughan also says that Roberts had an unauthorized agreement with an Arizona-based consultant, was unfair to women, and that the county failed to protect her as a whistle-blower. Roberts’ office was in poor shape when Vaughan arrived in December 2014, the complaint said. Staffers were inexperienced, hadn’t had adequate ethics training and didn’t know the rules that govern public officials. They also didn’t distinguish between political, personal and government work while on the county clock. “In short, it appeared to Ms. Vaughan the staff seemed to do whatever it was Supervisor Dave Roberts wanted them to do, whether or not the Supervisor’s request were a proper use of County resources, in an effort to stay in the Supervisor’s good graces,” according to the claim, written by Vaughan’s attorney, Lynne Lasry. In a separate statement, Lasry said it had been Vaughan’s “intention and desire to resolve this matter quietly with the County and move on with her career.” But she added the county, “through the Board of Supervisors, wouldn’t have it that way.” The board rejected a $75,000 severance package for Vaughan. On several occasions, Vaughan brought up her concerns with the county, including Chief Administrative Officer Helen RobbinsMeyer, human resources officials and county lawyers. But ultimately her warnings weren’t addressed, and the county failed to protect her from Roberts, the claim states. At one meeting, a county lawyer told Vaughan that “based on what had been learned, if Supervisor Dave Roberts had been a County Director and not an elected official, he would have been terminated immediately as a County employee.” So far Roberts hasn’t personally addressed the allegations against him but Gartner said that will change. “Very soon he will be speaking to the media, because he would like to,” Gartner said.

Poll of the Week at www.delmartimes.net Last week’s poll: Do you think Solana Beach needs tougher restrictions on RV parking on public streets? Yes 53 percent; No 46 percent Do you plan to attend the San Diego County Fair this year? Yes or No


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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE A19

Cathedral Catholic golf star advances in U.S. Open BY ROB LEDONNE It’s been a busy few weeks for Cathedral Catholic senior Ryan Bisharat, as his golf career is reaching new heights — all built on a bedrock of past successes in the sport. Along with wrapping up his time playing for Cathedral and continuing to advance with his high school time (with an as-yet-undetermined outcome), Bisharat was one of just five qualifiers to move on to the next round of the U.S. Open in a qualifying round held earlier in May. “I originally wasn’t even going to play in the qualifier,” said Bisharat, citing scheduling conflicts with his Cathedral Catholic matches. However, because of a series of events that ended up with his opponent becoming ineligible, Bisharat was freed up to trek to Lakeside’s Barona Creek Golf Course to face off against 88 other hopefuls all vying to advance. “I had never played a tournament like that before, so I had no expectation I was going to make it,” Bisharat said of the experience. “There was really no pressure on my end.” As a result, after bogeying his second hole, Bisharat managed to breeze through the course. “Once I hit the back nine, it started to hit me,” he noted. “I was adding up the scores in my head and knew I was going to be on the bubble. Thankfully, I was on the right side of that bubble.”

(Another North County player — Torrey Pines High School senior Jamie Cheatham — also advanced.) Bisharat’s success at Barona Creek was the cherry on top of years of accomplishments throughout his life in golf, including winning the City Conference Match Play Tournament this year — his second such win at the tournament. (Bisharat also came in first in 2013.) “I started playing tournaments when I was 8 years old,” he said of his beginnings in the sport, which was spurred by father Rod’s interest in golf. “After a while, I realized there was something there for me — that if I worked hard and stayed focused, I could make something out of this.” For the next few weeks, Bisharat has a lot to look forward to. After graduating from Cathedral Catholic this coming Saturday, his next focus is the next round of the U.S. Open in Newport Beach on June 8. “From what I understand, that tournament will be 36 holes in one day,” he said. “I’m not sure how many people advance from there.” As for the stress of competing in such high-stakes matches, Bisharat said he tries to take everything in stride and focus on the game. “I sometimes get nervous, but it depends on the magnitude of the tournament you’re playing. I usually play best when I just go out there trying to get a good num-

Ryan Bisharat was one of just five qualifiers to move onto the next round of the U.S. Open in a qualifying round held earlier in May. ber and not think about anything else.” Bisharat still isn’t sure what college he’ll be attending come fall — he’s leaning towards Cal State San Marcos — but what he is sure of is that golf will continue to play a large role in his life after he graduates from Cathedral Catholic. Said Bisharat, “I want to see where my golf takes me.”

DM Powerhouse 10U Champs in Triple Crown

DM Powerhouse 12U finalists in state championships

The Del Mar Powerhouse 10U boys traveled to Temecula to compete in the Triple Crown Memorial Day Classic against a stacked field of 23 teams from throughout Southern California. The boys battled through the weekend to bring home the Championship in the Silver division. Front row: Danny Eisendrath, Zach Isaacman, Chopper Correia. Middle: Jake Altman, Clark Caspersen, Nathan Lesher, Eric Van Valkenburg, Brandon Choy, Kian Sanchez, Nathan Samudio. Back: Coach James Meador, Coach Rodger Meador. Tryouts for the 2015-16 season will be held June 14 at Del Mar Heights Elementary. Visit www.delmarpowerhouse.com for information.

The Del Mar Powerhouse 12U team went undefeated in pool play to earn the No. 2 seed in a 14-team pool in the Memorial Day tournament in San Diego. The Powerhouse bats were hot as they put up 55 runs on their way to the D1 Championship game. Top row, L-R: Alex Roberts,Luke Stevenson, Coach Matt Chess, Cam Klein, Teagan Pope, Corrado Martini, Cade Ramsayer, Coach Vic Sanchez. Bottom row: Jake Maier, Jason Behrend, Aiden Springer, Theo Von Posern, Eric Lu. Tryouts for the 2015-16 season will be held June 14 at Del Mar Heights Elementary. Visit www.delmarpowerhouse.com for information.

Del Mar Powerhouse to hold tryouts June 14 at Del Mar Heights School Del Mar Powerhouse, elite competitive youth travel baseball, is holding annual tryouts on June 14 at Del Mar Heights Elementary School, 13555 Boquita Drive, Del Mar. In its 14th season, attracting top athletes from throughout San Diego, Del Mar Powerhouse is home to 7 competitive travel teams this 2014/2015 season. Teams from ages 8U to

High School compete throughout Southern California and National tournaments. Tryout times at the East Field start at 9 a.m. for Team 8U, 10:45 a.m. for 9U, and 12:30 p.m. for 10U. Tryout times at the West Field are 9 a.m. for 11U, 10:45 a.m. for 12U, 12:30 p.m. for 13U and 2:15 p.m. for 14U.

Callback schedule to be announced at the tryouts. Registration will be on site 20 minutes before start time. Baseball ages are determined based on player’s age as of April 30, 2016. If planning to attend, please send player’s name and age to powerhousebb@gmail.com. Visit www.delmarpowerhouse.


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CVMS Boys: Bottom row, L-R: Erik Gunnarson, Daniel Lee, Wyatt Eastlack, Cody Black, Ali Demiralp, Daniel Blacher, Rafa Shifren, Rish Jain, Liam Koeneke, Cade Eastlack. Top row: Brandon Teren, Justin Zhang, Ryan Cai, Brandon Kaleta, Mikey Marsal, Maxim Kraynov, Cameron Black, Hanson James, Wei Wei Ren, Brad Keel, Ben Burgener, Ishmael Uno, Coach Brandon Busch

SB Cats 6th grade Red All Stars undefeated The Solana Beach Cats 6th Grade Red All Star Team was undefeated at the Fastbreak Invitational Tournament in Seal Beach and won first place in the U12 Division. Pictured, standing, L-R: Coach Troy, Coach Nate, Matthew Lim, Ethan Golden, Matthew Schwartz, Cameron Klein, Max McCall, Coach Jeff. Sitting: Matthew Naimark, Trevin Martin, Chris Narwocki, Cooper Glenn.

CVMS soccer teams are Big 8 champs The Carmel Valley Middle School boys and girls soccer teams (above and below) finished their seasons with major championship wins. The boys soccer team defeated Earl Warren Middle School to win the Big 8 Middle School league soccer championship. Goal keeper Liam Koeneke was the game MVP, stopping three penalty kicks after the game was tied 2-2 in regulation. The CMVS girls team capped an undefeated league season with a 2-0 win in the championship game over Diegueno Middle School. This is the seventh league championship in a row for the CVMS girls team. The CVMS girls are coached by Jackie Busch and the boys are coached by Brandon Busch. Teams in the Big Eight Middle School Sports Conference compete with local middle schools in and outside the district. About 1,200 student-athletes are being served from Earl Warren in Solana Beach, Diegueno and Oak Crest in Encinitas, Calavera Hills in Carlsbad, Martin Luther King, Jr. in Oceanside, and Carmel Valley (as charter members of the Big Eight). Congratulations, CVMS!

Cathedral volleyball team wins CIF Open Division After capturing the Western League Championship, coaches Paul Araiza and Austin Rester led Cathedral Catholic High School boys volleyball team (20-10) to win CIF San Diego Section Open Division title Saturday night against Mt. Carmel High School (23-4). Jarrod Jordan was awarded the CIF Sportsmanship Award. Top row, L-R: Coach Paul Araiza, Dominic Madden, Matthew Elliot, Matthew Faraimo, Riley Ford, Patrick Kearney, Jarrod Jordan, Collin Jordan, Christian Seiber, Mike Marshall, Ian Clark, Coach Austin Rester. Bottom row: Shawn Sporl, Zach Holingsworth, Cole Schmitz, Andrew Clexton, James Cimino.

CCA Events of Care Club to host two soccer camps in July; Proceeds to help American Childhood Cancer Organization Events of Care, a club at Canyon Crest Academy dedicated to helping others, is holding two summer soccer camps at the school’s Turf Field. The camps are for ages 7-12 and will run from 8:30 a.m.-noon July 11 and July 25. A $15 donation is recommended, but any amount you can afford will be gratefully accepted. Only cash can be accepted, no checks. Money raised will be donated to the American Childhood Cancer Organization. EOC jerseys can be purchased for $15. Please bring soccer cleats and shin guards. The field is at 5951 E. Village Center Loop Road, San Diego. Donations can be given at: booster.com/eocsummercamp For signups and questions, contact eventsofcare@gmail.com or call 858-999-5649.

CVMS Girls: Bottom row, L-R: Talia Nakata, Jillian Kaplan, Isabella Jou, Acacia Benton Vanlandingham, Jordan Rowell, Brynn Davidoff, Sydney Sanchez, Coach Jackie Busch. Top row: Chloe Stevenson, Paige Linden, Emily Greeser, Morgan Bertrand, Sophia Perri, Malia Douglas, Kristin Bitter, Alice Lee, Angelina Ludena. Not pictured: Emma Reeves

CCA offers girls basketball camp Aug. 3-7 Canyon Crest Academy is offering a girls basketball skills development camp from 1-4 p.m. Aug. 3-7. This is an opportunity for athletes interested in improving their skills as basketball players. CCA girls Head Basketball Coach Scott Tucker, coaching staff and players will conduct the camp. The objectives are to improve the athlete’s skills and confidence with all aspects of basketball. Participation includes a camp T-shirt for each player. The camp will be held at the Canyon Crest Academy Gym, 5951 Village Center Loop Road, San Diego. Cost is $175. Call 858-350-0253. Questions: Contact Coach Tucker at ccabballcoach@gmail.com or 858-945-5236.


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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE A21

TPHS varsity baseball team recognizes players’ achievements The Torrey Pines Varsity Baseball team, winners of the Palomar Conference title with a 12-3 record, have had multiple players recognized for their achievements during the 2015 season. Leading the way is pitcher/catcher/outfielder CJ Stubbs, who was given the prestigious Pitcher of the Year award. With a conference record of 5-0 with five complete games and four shutouts, CJ allowed only 1 run for a 0.20 ERA. His overall record, including nonconference games, was 6-2 with a 0.56 ERA. CJ was also chosen 1st Team All Conference as a Pitcher/catcher/outfielder CJ Stubbs won the prestigious catcher/outfielder as well. Pitcher of the Year award. Courtesy photo Besides his phenomenal pitching credentials, he led the Falcons offensively hitting .362 with 5 doubles, a homer and 8 RBI. Joining CJ as a 1st Team selection is left-handed pitcher Chase Cameron. Chase also threw five complete games in conference play, finishing with a 4-1 record and a minuscule 2.00 ERA. A crafty, intelligent pitcher, Chase walked only four batters in 35 innings. Senior second baseman Logan Tomlinson was named 2nd Team All Conference, compiling a .393 average and .541 on base percentage while stealing four bases and 6 RBI. Honorable Mention went to junior right-hander Josh Sidney and senior third baseman Jake Singer. The Falcons finished with an overall record of 21-8-1, qualifying them for the Open Division playoffs, which began May 27.

DMCV Sharks Girls U10 team wins championship Congratulations to the DMCV Sharks Girls U10 Ellingson soccer team, who were champions at the 2015 Nott’s Forest Memorial Cup held the weekend of May 23-24. They were undefeated at the tournament, winning four straight games! Awesome job, Sharks Girls U10 Ellingson! Pictured, bottom row, L-R: Laurel G, Skye D, Ava E, Melia G, Amanda W. Top row: Josh Ellingson, Gabriela M, Ines D, Ella E, Julia R, Morea J.

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cause she said she did not believe a suitable compromise would be possible. She said she was glad she was wrong. The agreement “represents a significant collaboration between the community and the developer and brings about the results everyone desires,” Lightner said. Gwilliam said they are in the very early stages of the design of the new One Paseo project, but they have agreed to several parameters to follow as the plan moves through the public-input process. Kilroy has agreed to reduce the project’s estimated 28,000 average daily trips by nearly half, create 30-foot setbacks from the road, eliminate one planned traffic signal on Del Mar Heights Road, cap office building heights at seven stories, and significantly reduce the bulk and scale of the project. “We can deliver the community many of the amenities they desire while addressing traffic and visual concerns,” said Gwilliam. “We believe this is a fair compromise that allows us to give the Carmel Valley community what they want and avoid a protracted legal battle.” The originally approved size of One Paseo included 198,500 square feet of retail, 484,000 square feet of commercial office, and 608 multi-family residential units. In September 2014, the Carmel Valley Community Planning Board rejected the original proposal and said it would support a reduced alternative of 140,000 to 198,500 square feet of retail, 267,800 square feet of office and 304 residential units. As Farinsky noted, there is no negotiated project size at this time, but Kilroy will work with the community along the agreed-upon framework with the hope to cut down the need for additional turn lanes

WATER

into residential neighborhoods, reduce the required street widening that would have necessitated the removal of mature trees, and keep emergency response times at a safe level. Bob Fuchs, co-founder of the What Price Main Street community coalition, said they believe the project will be more in line with the intent of the community plan. “I believe that the coalition members, though not a party to the negotiations, will find the settlement conditions consistent with what has been advocated for many years, and will be happy to leave the controversy behind and look forward to reviewing a project the community can be proud of,” Fuchs said. After the new version of One Paseo undergoes additional review by the Carmel Valley Planning Board, it will also need approval by the San Diego Planning Commission and San Diego City Council. The mood was celebratory in the council chambers after the announcement of the agreement. Audience members clapped when the unanimous vote to rescind came down. “I’ve always been supportive of One Paseo and I’m excited about getting it going as soon as possible,” said Carmel Valley resident Bobbi Walden. Resident Alyssa Sepinwall was more cautiously optimistic — she said she hoped that public input will truly be valued moving forward. “For years we wanted a compromise, but it took them until this week to get it done,” Sepinwall said, urging Kilroy to continue to listen to the community. “I hope we will be satisfied with the new plan.”

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telephone contract: “You’re in a new plan, but you don’t know what it is. I think that’s fundamentally unfair,” he said. Director Alan Smerican agreed the state-mandated cutbacks are unfair, but said the district is bound by them. After the responsibility of delivering clean drinking water to its customers, he said, the district’s highest priority is to avoid potential fines of $10,000 per day. The district adopted mandatory water-use restrictions under a Level 2 drought response in September, which included a three-day per week watering schedule. Residents did comply with directives to cut water use in previous droughts, reducing consumption by 20 percent between 2007 and 2013. However, this time around, district officials said use has actually increased in six of the eight months since the latest mandatory restrictions were put in place. “We’re not seeing the reduction in demand that we anticipated,” district General Manager Michael Bardin said May 21. “Currently, we’re going in the wrong direction.” Therefore, staff recommended the tighter restrictions of the Level 3 response, as well as the allocation plan and higher fines for violators. The new restrictions take effect June 1, while the allocations begin July 1. The first bill on which customers could see a penalty for exceeding their allocations will be in September. Under an example prepared for the board, a household’s bimonthly water bill would increase to $660 from $541 for using 25 units of water (each unit contains 748 gallons) over its allocation. “That’s a very strong message to send to the community, and it changes the playing field for us,” Bardin said. Smerican, though, wondered whether the district should impose even tighter restrictions. “Everything we’ve done to date has failed, regarding conservation,” he said. “Is this enough?” On the other hand, district customers asked the district to take a less aggressive approach, at least until people get up to speed on the new rules. “This should be more about education and less about punishment,” said Rancho Santa Fe resident Nick Dieterich, who urged the board not to implement the fines and penalties until after a concerted outreach effort. “We have to be cognizant that there are other needs than just inside the house. I can’t cut off my outdoor use entirely,” he said. Next steps could include a moratorium on adding new water meters, and a freeze on annexations. Neither step would be justified, said Bardin, unless the district declared a “water shortage emergency,” under which water would be available only for health and safety and firefighting purposes. “We aren’t there yet,” Bardin said. That said, the district still faces a challenge in meeting the state-mandated reductions. A series of town hall meetings to educate the public about the new rules is being planned. “It’s a drought. We’re being asked to cut a lot of water (use), and everyone is going to have to sacrifice for that,” said district spokeswoman Jessica Parks.


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Sage Canyon Elementary Drama Club holds showcase. See page B7.

LIFESTYLES

Earl Warren Middle School presents Spring Arts Festival. See page B3.

Section B | May 28, 2015

‘Fair to Remember’ opens June 5 with deep-fried delights, rides, concerts and more • Theme gives a shout-out to fairs gone by and the inventions they introduced to society BY KRISTINA HOUCK With food, fun and all things “fair,” this year’s San Diego County Fair will surely be “A Fair to Remember.” In commemoration of the centennial anniversary of the 1915 Panama-California Exposition held in San Diego’s Balboa Park, the fair’s theme is “A Fair to Remember, A Celebration of World’s Fairs and Balboa Park.” “I think it’s a real fitting tribute for the county fair to acknowledge this very historic moment with this year’s theme,” said San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer during a press conference and fair preview on May 20. “It helps to celebrate Balboa Park’s history, it elevates the centennial to a truly regional event and it promotes San Diego’s crown jewel on a whole new level.” Set to open June 5, the month-long fair will feature “It All Started at a Fair,” an exhibit that celebrates World’s Fairs and their contributions to global culture over the past 165 years. The exhibit will emphasize the Panama-California Exposition, which celebrated the opening of the Panama Canal, as well as highlighting inventions that were first introduced at fairs, such as the bicycle, telephone, ice cream cone and Ferris wheel. The fair will also demonstrate how agriculture was, and still is, at the core of fairs and expositions. The 22nd District Agricultural Association, a state agency that operates the fairgrounds, sponsors the fair. “The San Diego County Fair is proud to honor the mission of the 22nd District Agricultural Association by bringing together our agricultural heritage with family-friendly attractions and exhibits,” said Tim Fennell, CEO and general manager. “The San Diego County Fair is a premium value, providing entertainment and fun that gives families a reason to visit the fair year after year, numerous times during the 25-day run.” As the largest annual event in the county and one of the top 10 fairs in the United States and Canada, the San Diego County Fair attracts more than 1.4 million fairgoers each year. With nine stages of entertainment, Fennell predicted this year’s fair would break attendance records. “Due to this year’s theme and this oncein-a-lifetime opportunity to partner with our friends from Balboa Park and the city of San Diego, I predict, in 2015, we will make history and we will break all records,” he said. The nightly Summer Concert Series opens June 5 with KC and the Sunshine Band. Other artists include Gary Allan on June 6, Peter Frampton and Cheap Trick on June 10, Colbie Caillat on June 13, Christina Perri on June 17, Switchfoot on July 19 and

Little Big Town on June 24. Comedian Dana Carvey will perform on the Fourth of July. In addition to animal exhibits, car shows and rides, the fair will also include the San Diego International Beer Festival, the Toast of the Coast Wine Festival and the new Distilled Spirit and Cocktail Festival. Of course, salty, sweet and unusual foods will also be available. Fair favorite Chicken Charlie’s food stand is back, and this year he’s frying something for everyone — even the “health-conscious.” Among Chicken Charlie’s new creations is a deep-fried Slimfast bar. “I’m a big fan of the bars — I truly am,” said Charlie Boghosian, admitting he struggles with his weight. “Every once in a while I’ll deep-fry one to treat myself,” he said. “One of my favorite things is deep-fried Oreos and this tastes just as good.” Boghosian has served fried food at the fair for 32 years, 20 years as the owner of the famous Chicken Charlie’s. This is the first time he’s back since he opened FryBQ in Clairemont last fall. Although fans can get their hands on some of their fried favorites at the restaurant, its focus is on barbecue food, including ribs and chicken and waffles. Last year, Boghosian’s top seller at the fair was a triple cheeseburger on Krispy Kreme doughnuts instead of buns. He said he sold about 24,000 triple-decker burgers, which are back on Chicken Charlie’s menu this year. Another new concoction for the fair is the deep-fried peanut butter pickle — a hollowed pickle filled with peanut butter and then deep-fried in pancake batter and topped with chocolate syrup, powdered sugar and sprinkles. “I enjoy the people, the smell, the sounds — and the food,” Boghosian said. “There’s nothing better. Where else can you go to se this kind of variety? From the baked to the fried, all the different varieties are unbelievable.” From spicy to sweet, selections from other vendors include wasabi bacon bombs — spicy pork with wasabi wrapped in dough and bacon and fried — and deep-fried Starbucks — coffee beans and chocolate chips wrapped in cinnamon roll dough, deepfried, rolled in sugar and served with whipped cream. The 25-day fair opens June 5 and runs through July 5. It will be closed on Mondays and the first two Tuesdays. Admission is $15 for adults, $8 for ages 6 to 12 and $8 for adults 62 and older. Entry is free for children 5 and younger. For more information on the fair and performances/events, visit www.sdfair.com.

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Chicken Charlie with his deep-fried Slimfast bar. He’ll also be offering a deep-fried peanut-butter-filled pickle. Photos by Kristina Houck.

Above: Samples of the Chili Cheese Frito Crunch sandwiches. Right: Mayor Kevin Faulconer welcomes the fair.

Coolrays performed at the May 20 fair preview event and will perform at the fair.

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Earl Warren Middle School Spring Arts Festival Earl Warren Middle School held its Spring Arts Festival May 20 at Skyline Elementary School in Solana Beach. Organized by Earl Warren’s Visual and Performing Arts Department, the event opened with a viewing of student artwork outside the school’s Activity Center. Guitar and band students also performed. Drama students closed the show with scenes from William Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” Photos by Kristina Houck

Guitar performance by the students.

Earl Warren eighth-grader Julian Hernandez

Some of the students’ artwork.

Student art

La Jolla Cultural Partners

Guests enjoy seeing the different art pieces created by students.

Earl Warren seventh-grader Max Von Thaden

Earl Warren seventh-grader Jade Thompson

June 22 - August 21, 2015

Accredited by the American Camp Association From the classroom to the seashore, our accredited Summer Learning Adventure Camps merge scientific exploration with hands-on fun and learning. Campers ages 4-15 investigate marine habitats, create ocean art projects, learn about careers in oceanography, and combine the science and sports of surfing and snorkeling, all while making new friends and memories.

Register: online at aquarium.ucsd.edu, or call 858-534-7336

CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING New Musical Based On A True Story

Come From Away Book, Music and Lyrics by Irene Sankoff and David Hein Directed by Christopher Ashley Single Tickets On Sale Now! LaJollaPlayhouse.org

La Jolla Music Society SummerFest 2015 August 5-28

FARRELL FAMILY JAZZ AT THE ATHENAEUM

Mark your calendars for SummerFest Under the Stars!

Benny Green Trio Thursday, June 4, at 7:30 PM . Marianne Trudel Trifloia Trio California debut Friday, June 12, at 7:30 PM

Led by Music Director Cho-Liang Lin, the FREE outdoor concert returns to the La Jolla Cove on Wednesday, August 5 at 7:00 pm.

(858) 459-3728 www.LJMS.org

This summer season features an international piano series by four acclaimed jazz acts from the United States, Canada, Germany, and Cuba.

Julia Hülsmann Trio California debut Sunday, June 28, at 7:30 PM Spiros Exaras and Elio Villafranca. Thursday, July 9, at 7:30 PM Series of 4 concerts: $76 members, $96 nonmembers Tickets: $21 members, $26 nonmembers ljathenaeum.org/jazz (858) 454-5872

Dear Nemesis, Nicole Eisenman 1993-2013 Now through September 6, 2015 MCASD La Jolla The largest definitive mid-career survey of the work of celebrated American artist Nicole Eisenman to date, Dear Nemesis, Nicole Eisenman 1993-2013 includes more than 120 works, charting the development of Eisenman’s practice across painting, printmaking, and drawing from the 1990s to the present. www.mcasd.org MCASD La Jolla 858 454 3541 700 Prospect Street


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PAGE B4 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

The Spice Way aims to make cooking easy, fun and even more healthful BY DIANE Y. WELCH If you’re tired of preparing routine meals for your family and feel that your culinary fare is past its sell-by date, The Spice Way can help. Located in the Vons Shopping Center, on El Camino Real in Encinitas, the newly opened store is brimming from wall-to-wall with aromatic spices, healthy herbs, flavorful fruit blends, olive oil, honey, balsamic vinegar and more, along with kitchenware and creative recipes to make cooking easy and fun. The store is celebrating its grand opening from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 7. During the family-friendly opening, there will be a live cooking demonstration, giveaway products, free recipes, tasty samplings, opportunity drawings for kitchenware, teaware and spice racks with spices, coupons, introductory pricing and special activities for kids. Owner Debbie Kornberg will also demonstrate how fresh tahini is made from sesame seeds, using a mechanized grinder. Various flavors of halva — the dessert version of tahini — will be available for tasting. Integrating hundreds of years of knowledge with modern-day know-how, the concept behind the store’s unique product lines is based on a simple premise: that using spices and herbs enhances health and well-being. “Everything we have here has some health benefit to it,” Kornberg explained. “Whether it’s spices and herbs that we combine in blends to add to meat, poultry or seafood, or gourmet blends for potatoes, pasta, rice, salads and dips, everything is all-natural and nonGMO.” The store carries a variety of ethnic blends using Mediterranean, Italian and Asian spices. “We also carry the spices individually, whole or ground, like cinnamon, turmeric, ginger, garlic and more,” said Kornberg. Tea comes in loose green and black tea-leaf blends, long known for their anti-oxidant benefits, and colorful fruit infusion blends. “These are really unique,” said Kornberg. These dried fruit blends include wild fruit, rosehips, citrus, melon, pomegranate and tropical fruits. The Spice Way is the first store to open in the United States of what will soon be a national franchise. Kornberg, a longtime Carmel Valley resident, was introduced to the business idea by a colleague while she worked at the Jewish Federation of San Diego County. Kornberg’s husband is senior rabbi at Carmel Valley’s Congregation Beth Am, and they are both active in the Jewish community. Like many working moms, Kornberg still prepares the family meals for her husband and two teenagers, and was looking for healthy creative options in the kitchen. The Spice Way solved her problem. “Their products really lend themselves to getting a healthy meal on the table, using spices and herbs to get you there,” Kornberg said. You don’t have to be a gourmet chef to have fun in the kitchen and that daily question,

CV Middle School to hold spring concerts June 2-3 On June 2 and 3, the award-winning Carmel Valley Middle School Music Program is showcasing its work for the year at its annual Spring Concert series. Led by Music Director Scott Drechsel, the June 2 concert will feature the Bobcat Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra, Directors Award finalists and the awards. The June 3 concert will feature the Jazz Band, Bobcat Band, Symphonic Band, Wind Ensemble, and Directors Award finalists and awards. Both performances will be at 6 p.m. at the Carmel Valley Middle School Performing Arts Center, 3800 Mykonos Lane, San Diego. A $10 per family donation at the door is suggested to support to the Carmel Valley Middle School Music Boosters, Inc., a not-for-profit organization that provides vital financial support to the Carmel Valley Middle School Music Program. Students have free admission. Find information about the Carmel Valley Middle School Music Boosters at www. cvmsmb.com.

North County Easter Seals Head Start programs enrolling for fall Easter Seals Southern California Head Start Child Development Centers and HomeBased Head Start Programs in Solana Beach, Encinitas and Leucadia are now enrolling for fall 2015. These Head Start programs are free for children from 3 to 5 years old from incomeeligible families. Easter Seals’ Child Development Centers and Home-Based Programs provide hands-on learning that promote children’s natural development, preparing them for success in kindergarten and beyond. Featuring state-of-the-art tools and programs, nutritional services, individualized learning plans and highly qualified teachers, these programs are for children with or without disabilities. Enrollment for fall 2015 is now open and slots are available until filled. To learn more about the Head Start programs in northern San Diego County, visit http://www.easterseals.com/southerncal/our-programs/childrens-services/ or call the Easter Seals Child Development Services administrative office at (760) 743-1185.

Wine & Roses charity tasting is June 7 The 32nd annual Wine & Roses Charity Wine Tasting will return to The Grand Del Mar Hotel from 3-6 p.m. June 7, put on by the Social Service Auxiliary of San Diego and the San Diego International Wine Competition. All proceeds benefit the youth summer camp, Camp Oliver, in Descanso. Prices begin at $100 for general admission, $150 and $275 for VIP admission, and $2,200 for a VIP Table. Visit www.wineandroses.net.

Debbie Kornberg will be demonstrating how to make tahini at the grand opening June 7 of The Spice Way in Encinitas. Photos courtesy Del Rio Studios “What am I going to do for dinner tonight?” is easily solved, she added. Getting dinner on the table quickly spoke to Kornberg, as her son is vegetarian and she makes dinner twice. “Now I can use the same blends on the chicken or meat dish and also on a tofu-based dish for my son.” The Spice Way grows, dries, and blends its own herbs and spices. A huge variety of high-quality products is attractively displayed in the store, with informational signs explaining how to use them. The Spice Way staff shares its extensive knowledge with visitors, offering helpful suggestions on how to use the herbs. For more about The Spice Way, visit www.thespiceway.com or like its Facebook page, facebook/The Spice Way-San Diego. Call 760-634-9709 for hours. The store is at 260-B N. El Camino Real, Encinitas.

Del Mar Foundation announces June calendar The Del Mar Foundation announces its June Calendar of Events. Registration for most events is required. Registration information is sent by email approximately 4-5 weeks before the date of each event. If you are not receiving emails, visit www.delmarfoundation.org and click on “join our email list.” • 7 p.m. June 4, First Thursdays: Eve Selis, Slip-Sliding Into Summer Del Mar Powerhouse Community Center, Coast Boulevard Doors open at 6:30 p.m. for wine and cheese Open to subscription holders only. • 6 p.m. June 8, DMF Talks: “The Role of Chromosome Ends in Aging and Disease” by Dr. Jan Karlseder of the Salk Institute Powerhouse Community Center Registration is required. • 2 p.m. June 13, Cultural Arts presents: Blue Highway in a special “Bluegrass & Be-

yond” performance Powerhouse Community Center Doors open at 1:30 PM. This is a ticketed event! Tickets and information are available at http://delmarfoundation.org/bluegrass.html. • 7:30 p.m. June 13, Cultural Arts presents: Blue Highway in a special “Bluegrass & Beyond” performance Powerhouse Community Center Sold out • 6 p.m. June 16, Summer Twilight Concerts: Mark Wood and the Parrot Head Band Powerhouse Park, Del Mar The Zel’s Opening Act, Charlie Imes and Rob Mehl, starts at 6 p.m. Mark Wood and the Parrot Head Band come on at 7 p.m. • 8 a.m. Thursday, June 18: Del Mar Foundation Board Meeting 225 9th St., Del Mar

DM Rose Society hosts speaker May 28 The Del Mar Rose Society meets on Thursday, May 28, to hear guest speaker Suzanne Horn discuss “David Austin and the Romance of English Roses.” Horn is an enthusiastic rosarian and exhibitor from California with a background in entertainment. She grows almost 500 exhibition roses all in containers, and about 55 are classified as English roses. They were introduced to American gardens by famed British hybridizer David Austin. Horn has fallen in love with these old-style roses and prepared a presentation punctuated with beautiful photographs. Her program will cover the history of David Austin Roses, their family lines, and their forms and growth habits, shade tolerance, fragrance, etc. Social hour and refreshments at 6:30 p.m., with program at 7 p.m., at the Del Mar Powerhouse, Coast Boulevard. For information, call 858-349-4799.


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DM resident to hold leukemia fundraiser featuring family-fun events May 31 Del Mar resident Shannon Foster is running for Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) Woman of the Year, on behalf of her 4-year-old daughter, Ava. Ava recently battled leukemia for the second time around. She received a transplant and is doing great. (Visit https://www. facebook.com/prayersforavamariefoster?fref=ts) The Woman of the Year campaign lasts 10 weeks. Foster’s team is aiming to raise $50,000, which will give her access to all the latest research in LLS. As part of the fundraising, her team is throwing “Avapalooza,” a family event, on May 31 from 1- 5 p.m. at Torrey Hills Park in Carmel Valley (4260 Calle Mejillones, San Diego, CA, 92130). The family-friendly event will offer entertainment, bounce houses, bunny pens, face painters, food, games and prizes. Tickets are $12 per person or $40 for a family 4-pack. For info and to purchase tickets, visit www.avapalooza.com.

‘Friday Night Funnies’ returns to county fair

Del Mar Heights Dolphin Leadership team partners with Nick’s Picks for service learning project The Del Mar Heights Dolphin Leadership team at Del Mar Heights Elementary School “is excited to partner with Nick’s Picks for a school-wide service learning project.“ Nick’s Picks is a charity founded by liver transplant recipient and Del Mar resident Nick Wallace. Nick’s Picks provides fun-filled backpacks to hospitalized youths facing a long-term illness.

Wine and food festival to be held June 6 at Botanic Garden The Encinitas Rotary Club will hold its 12th annual Wine and Food Festival on the evening of June 6 at the San Diego Botanic Garden. Featuring food and desserts from more than 24 local restaurants and beverages from 16 wineries and five breweries, the wildly popular event also features entertainment by top local musicians in the relaxed setting of the Botanic Gardens. Visit www.encinitaswinefestival.com.

The

Spice

Way

Starting June 12, the San Diego County Fair is bringing back the “Friday Night Funnies.” The lineup is packed with comics whose credits include “The Tonight Show,” “The Late Show With David Letterman,” Comedy Central, “America’s Got Talent” and more. Every Friday night, at 9 p.m., starting June 12, the Turf Club transforms into the Fair’s own “comedy central” with an all-star show for laughaholics, and a full bar for guests aged 21 and older. Jason Love returns as host. The Friday Night Funnies Lineup: June 12 — Frances Dilorinzo (“NickMom Night Out,” Nickelodeon, “Last Comic Standing,” “Comics Unleashed,” “Secret Life of a Soccer Mom” on TLC, and “Real Housewives of Orange County”); Andrew Norelli (“Seriously Unusual Television,” “The Late Show With David Letterman,” “The Tonight Show,” and Comedy Central’s “Live at Gotham”). June 19 — Frank Lucero (“Crown Royal Latin Kings of Comedy” Tour, “Combat Comedy Tour”); James P. Connelly (Comedy Central, HBO, VH1’s “Movie Obsessions,” SiriusXM’s Live From Here,” “The Bob & Tom Show”). June 26 — Eric Schwartz (“The Tonight Show,” Showtime, “Comics Unleashed”); Vargus Mason (Top 10 Comics of MySpace, semifinalist in the Boston International Comedy Festival, HBO’s “Young Comedian Spotlight,” “Last Comic Standing”). July 3 — Dwayne Perkins (Comedy Central, “Conan,” “The Jay Leno Show”); Karen Ronkowski (“The Late Show with David Letterman,” SiriusXM, “Comics Unleashed,” Comedy Central, “The Bob & Tom Show”). Visit http://www.sdfair.com/comedy.

‘Secrets of the Pacific Trail’ May 30 at SB Library Local hiking enthusiast Dana Law will share his adventures and advice for hiking the legendary Pacific Crest Trail in “Secrets of the Pacific Trail” at 2 p.m. May 30 at the Solana Beach Library. The library is at 157 Stevens Ave., Solana Beach.

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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE B7

Writer David Brin to speak June 11 at SB Library Explore the future with award-winning scientist and science fiction writer David Brin, who will be speaking at 6:30 p.m. June 11 at the Solana Beach Library. Brin will explore the nature of the near future, both light and dark. Compelling questions will be confronted such as can the planet be saved, and is privacy dead? David Brin has received the Hugo, Locus, Campbell, and Nebula awards. His book, “The Postman,” won the Campbell award and was adapted into a feature film in 1997. His nonfiction book, “The Transparent Society,” won the Freedom of Speech Award of the American Library Association and the McGannon Communication Award. More information on his David Brin books can be found at www.davidbrin.com. A selection of Brin’s books will be available for purchase and signing. This free Friends Night Out program is sponsored by the Friends of the Solana Beach Library. The library is at 157 Stevens Ave., Solana Beach. Call 858-755-1404.

Fiesta del Sol to be held May 30-31 in SB Don’t miss the 36th annual Celebration of Fiesta del Sol — Solana Beach’s official kickoff to summer! The Solana Beach Chamber of Commerce hosts this free two-day music and crafts event May 30 and 31. Once again, the Belly Up Tavern has lined up a great list of musicians to perform over the two-day festival, which also includes local community talent. An expansive, fun and exciting Children’s Area is set up for families to enjoy rides, games, a climbing wall and much more. The beautiful Cedros Design District will be celebrating on Cedros Avenue with live bands and shopping specials throughout the weekend. Parking options have been expanded, making it easier to park and catch a shuttle or simply walk from one of the city’s convenient parking areas. All parking is free. Fiesta del Sol has something for everyone. Food trucks, along with other specialty food vendors, will be back, as well as the Arts & Crafts area, Sponsor area, Solana Beach Fireman’s Pancake Breakfast on Sunday, and much more! There will also be a special place exclusively for local artists. The beer and wine gardens will be in full swing with the local Del Sur Lions Club returning to serve, while raising funds to support local causes. Visit http://solanabeachchamber.com/FiestaDelSol/home.aspx.

Robin Henkel performs at Zel’s Del Mar Award-winning guitarist and singer Robin Henkel performs blues and jazz at Zel’s Del Mar from 8-10 p.m. June 6, 11 and 25. Zel’s is at 1247 Camino Del Mar, Del Mar. Call 858755-0076.

Left: The Elements were the first middleschool-age rock band to perform at the festival since its inception in 2012.

Sage Canyon Elementary Drama Club holds showcase The Sage Canyon Elementary School Creative Coyotes Drama Club held its first Spring Showcase on the evening of May 18. More than 50 students performed in an opening dance routine and also acted out monologues, skits, and musical theater songs. Led by parents Karen Coleman, Julia Hughes, Nikki Katz and Stephanie Van Winkle, the students rehearsed once a week during their lunch breaks and put on an amazing show to a packed house.

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1st middle-school-age band opens arts festival’s Battle of the Bands The Elements, a middle- school-age rock band, opened the Encinitas Arts Festival Battle of the Bands on March 29 at San Dieguito Academy. The Elements wowed the audience by playing cover songs of today’s popular radio hits from bands like The Fray, Cage The Elephant, and Bastille. The Elements were the first middle-school-age rock band to perform at the festival since its inception in 2012. In previous years, bands were high school and college students. Put on by the city of Encinitas Arts Division and San Dieguito Academy Foundation, the Encinitas Arts Festival celebrates the critical role the arts play in schools and community. All of The Elements band members are students in the San Dieguito Union High School District. Three members — lead singer Julian Boyer; guitar player Ryan Beck; and bass player Granger Pasko — attend Earl Warren Middle School in Solana Beach. Drummer Logan McCarty and keyboard player Dylan Herrera attend Oak Crest Middle School in Encinitas. McCarty, Boyer and Herrera will be attending San Dieguito Academy as freshmen in the fall. “We were so happy that we all got into SDA and thought it was so cool to perform at the school we would be going to next year,” said Herrera. The Elements band was formed through The Rockademy, a music school in Solana Beach. The Rockademy puts kid rock bands together and provides many opportunities for them to perform at venues in San Diego including House of Blues, San Diego Fair, Fiesta Del Sol, Petco Park and D Street Bar and Grill in Encinitas. The Elements have been playing together as a band for one year. Contact The Elements at lmntsfive@gmail.com.

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PAGE B8 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

‘It’s how we do it in Brazil,’ says owner of Natura Waxing Lounge’s specialty BY KRISTINA HOUCK Born in Brazil, Rafaela Chagas has become a local expert on Brazilian waxing. With three shops, including a new Solana Beach site, “Brazilians� are Natura Waxing Lounge & Spa’s specialty. “The real Brazilian technique, the real Brazilian recipe, the real Brazilian way of doing Brazilians — it’s how we do it in Brazil and it’s what we offer here in Solana Beach,� said Chagas, owner of Natura Waxing Lounge & Spa. Located in the Boardwalk shopping center, Natura Waxing Lounge & Spa opened in Solana Beach mid-April. The roughly 1,200-square-foot store offers a variety of health and beauty services, including airbrush tanning, facials, massage and full face and body waxing for men and women. But the Brazilian wax is the shop’s claim to fame. Chagas learned the technique in her native country and has been working in waxing ever since she came to San Diego 12 years ago. “I have passion for waxing and skin care,� Chagas said. “I like making my clients happy. They leave feeling beautiful.� In 2010, Chagas founded Natura Waxing Lounge & Spa in Pacific Beach, opening a second location two years later in La Mesa, where she lives with her family. Chagas recently brought the chain to Solana Beach for her North County clients. “We wanted to expand up north because we have clients from Carlsbad, Encinitas, Solana Beach, Del Mar and Carmel Valley who used to drive all the way to PB,� said Chagas, adding that she and her family frequents the area for dining, shopping and visiting the beach. “It’s a beautiful area,� she said. “I’ve always had a crush on this area. I’m glad we’re finally here.� With her own clients at all three locations, Chagas frequents every store throughout the week. She also personally trains her aestheticians so they know the “real Brazilian technique.� The real technique, she said, is to use three types of wax: hard, soft and natural wax. She and her husband make the natural sugar wax at home. The hard and soft waxes are also natu-

Carmel Creek reunion to be held June 10 for Class of 2015 High school seniors who once attended Carmel Creek Elementary are invited to a casual reunion at the school from 3-4 p.m. June 10. The highlight of this event will be when students and teachers get in a big circle. The students will share a favorite memory and what their future plans are, and the teachers, along with Principal Terri Davis, will share stories and words of encouragement to the students as they begin this next stage in life. It will be a very special goodbye with so many beloved teachers retiring this year, including Principal Terri Davis. The school is at 4210 Carmel Center Road, San Diego.

The new Natura Waxing Lounge & Spa in Solana Beach. Photos by Kristina Houck.

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ral. “That’s why the Brazilian wax is our specialty,� Chagas said. “By mixing all the different types of wax, we can provide you with the best results.� The Solana Beach store is at 437 South Highway 101, Suite 104. It is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and closed Sundays. Call 858-436-7143 or visit naturawaxspa.com.

Friends of SB Library holding silent auction June 1-6 The Friends of The Solana Beach Library will hold a silent auction from June 1-June 6. People may bid on collector books and unique items donated to The Friends. Proceeds benefit Solana Beach Library programs and services. Winners will be notified within a week of closing. The silent auction will be open for bids during regular library hours (not the limited 10 a.m.-4 p.m. hours). The library is at 157 Stevens Ave., Solana Beach. Call 858-755-1404.

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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE B9

Program aims to put youngsters on track to successful animal training BY DIANE Y. WELCH For local young animal lovers, a unique summer program is being offered — “Junior Animal Trainer.” Encinitas-based animal expert Britta Wilson is heading the program. This is its pilot year, but Wilson said she hopes to offer the workshops year-round in the future. Children will learn to train animals using positive reinforcement and clicker training techniques proven to be effective for training dogs and other pets. Workshops, held in a private Leucadia residence, are designed for students 11 through 14 years, and 14 through 18 years, who may want to work in the animal field someday as caregivers or trainers. Classes for the younger group will be held from 9-10 a.m. Tuesdays on June 30, July 7, 14, 21, 28 and Aug. 4. Classes for the older group will be held from 9-10 a.m. Thursdays on July 1, 9, 16, 23, 30 and Aug. 6. There will be home assignments to practice new skills, and the last class will be an opportunity for students to showcase their techniques and the new behaviors their dogs have learned. All students will receive a Junior Animal Trainer Certificate, and the dogs will receive a graduation present. “I’m expecting children to bring their family dog to class, so the dogs must already be friendly and social,” said Wilson. “I’ll send out a questionnaire to students ahead of time and have them fill it out to make sure that their pet will be able to attend the class, too.” The clicker training she offers may be generalized to any animal. “So you can learn

with your pet dog, but you can train any animal that can perceive a cue, even your pet turtle, guinea pig or cat,” Wilson explained. The method uses a clicking sound that lets animals know that a treat will follow when they are compliant with the handler’s request. “Eventually, that sound becomes more reinforcing than the treat itself and it’s something the animals really enjoy. It’s a fun way of training and is mentally stimulating for the animal,” Wilson explained. Unlike some training methods, clicker training doesn’t involve any kind of corrections, dominance or punishment for the animals. It’s all voluntary, said Wilson. “You are working with their minds. I see animals blossom with this type of training.” The workshops offer a rare opportunity for young animal lovers to have hands-on learning with Wilson, whose background includes a lifelong love of animals and certified credentials through the Karen Pryor Academy for Animal Training and Behavior. It is the same type of training that Wilson used when she worked as a zoo keeper, an endeavor that she undertook starting in 1993 when she was an intern at the Santa Ana Zoo at Prentice Park in Santa Ana. She graduated from Long Beach State University that same year with a bachelor of arts in psychology, a minor in biology and an emphasis in animal behavior, and was offered a full-time position at the Santa Ana Zoo. From there, she held various positions at San Diego’s Wild Animal Park and the San Diego Zoo. In 2003, she transferred to the San Diego Zoo’s Shows Division, training, handling and caring for exotic animals, which included cheetahs, an arctic wolf,

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Britta Wilson with Finnegan. Courtesy photo red-tailed hawks, binturongs, a red river hog, clouded leopards and more. An eighth-generation San Diegan, Wilson is a descendant of the Osuna family, one of the original local Spanish land grant owners. She grew up in the North County coastal area loving the outdoors and always felt that she was born to be an animal protector and advocate, she said. “My mother taught me to love animals and treat them with kindness, and that has helped shape me.” Wilson left the world of zoos in 2012 to launch her animal training, dog walking and animal care business, offering her expertise in the animal field to pet “parents” in San Di-

TPHS cheer squad to hold June 3 workshop TPHS Varsity Cheer squad and coaches will present a cheer fundamentals workshop from 3:30-6:30 p.m. June 3 at the Torrey Pines High School gymnasium. The workshop is especially for children ages 5-14. To register and for questions, contact Wendy at cawendy4@gmail.com.

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ego County area. She is eager to share her love and knowledge of animals with youth who will represent future advocates for animals. Visit www.junioranimaltrainer.com for class sign-up and location, or call Wilson at 760-351-6967. Class sizes are limited to four students for one-onone attention. An adult must also attend with students under 18. Visit http:// www.brittasanimaltrainingandpetservices.com/ to learn about Britta Wilson’s other pet services.

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PAGE B10 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

A Magical Evening: TPHS Scholarship Fund Awards Night Torrey Pines High School Scholarship Fund celebrated its 28th Annual Awards Night on May 20. Over $40,000 scholarships were awarded to 64 Torrey Pines High School seniors, making a total of $1 million in scholarships awarded since the fund’s inception. The May 20 event was magical as students were honored in the presence of their families, school officials, board members, donors and friends. Congratulations to all! Torrey Pines High School Scholarship Fund would like to thank the community for its continued support. For more information, visit tphssf. org. Photos by Jon Clark. For photos online, visit www.delmartimes.net.

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Hope Chen, Joy Li, Adriana Babakanian, Cindy Yang, Rebecca Chen, Natalie Kadonaga

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PAGE B12 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

CCA Dollars for Scholars awards scholarships to a record number of CCA seniors

Haleh, Roman and Tara Murphy

Alex and David Ahmadian

Laurie, Garrett, Austin and Mark Schmid

Aria Wiedmann, Lori Ballance, David George

Canyon Crest Academy Dollars For Scholars (CCA DFS) presented its scholarship awards May 20 on the CCA campus. “This year, CCA DFS awarded a record 60 scholarships to outstanding CCA seniors who plan to attend a two- or fouryear university or college, vocational, or technical school,” said Stacy Modugno, CCA Dollars for Scholars co-president. “A new high of $36,150 in scholarship funds were raised through sales of CCA student directories and graduation leis and the CCA DFS/CCA Foundation Driver’s Ed Program, and through the generous donations of CCA families, alumni, and friends, and community businesses and organizations.” Among the colleges scholarship winners will be attending are: Amherst College, Boston College, Brown University, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, Carnegie Mellon, Claremont McKenna College, Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Harvard University, Hofstra University, Johns Hopkins University, Lewis and Clark University, Pepperdine University, Pomona College, San Diego State University, Stanford University, Syracuse University, Tufts University, UC Berkeley, UC Irvine, UCLA, UC San Diego, UC Santa Barbara, and USC. Continued on page B13.

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Charles Foster representing the Del Mar-Solana Beach Rotarians, CCA DFS board member Amanda Chin, board Co-President Stacey Modugno, Jim Parrotte representing the Del Mar-Solana Beach Optimist Club

JJ, Pauline and Soo Rim Choi


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NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE B13

CCA Dollars for Scholars Awards cont. CCA DFS graciously acknowledges the following individuals, groups, and organizations who donated so generously to the scholarship funds: CCA Foundation, CCA Improv Club, CCA Science Olympiad, Del Mar/Solana Beach Rotary, Dollars for Scholars Alumni, Dollars for Scholars Board of Directors, DUCERUS, the Ernst family, Hansen’s Surf, High Bluff Academy, ITW Foundation, Mission Federal Credit Union, Overland Storage current and former employees, Optimist Club of Del Mar-Solana Beach, Pardee Homes, Rancho Santa Fe Rotary Foundation, Town & Country Men’s Wear, and the Wirt-Foltyn family. Thanks also to Mission Federal Credit Union, who generously sponsored the Awards Ceremony, and Trader Joe’s and Village Mill Bread Company, who provided refreshments. CCA Dollars for Scholars, a program of Scholarship America, is a parent volunteer, community-based scholarship organization whose mission is to recognize seniors at Canyon Crest Academy for their involvement in a broad range of activities and interests during their high school career, and support their pursuit of continuing education, from four-year degrees to technical training programs. They welcome donations for 2016 scholarships of any amount, including, contributions from CCA parents, local businesses, organizations, civic groups, CCA alumni and their families, and individual donors. Visit www.canyoncrest.dollarsforscholars.org for more information. Most photos by McKenzie Images. For photos online, visit www.delmartimes.net.

CCA Dollars For Scholars Board of Directors

Left: Ye Jin Choi, David Choi, Eun hee Ru

Katrina and Carolina Schaber

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PAGE B14 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

Solana Highlands PTA Dads’ Club Pancake Breakfast Families enjoyed delicious food at the May 22 Solana Highlands PTA Dads’ Club Pancake Breakfast. This was the second of two such breakfast events put on by the Dads’ Club. Photos by Jon Clark. For photos online, visit www.delmartimes.net.

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100 - LEGAL NOTICES SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 325 S. Melrose Dr. Vista, CA 92081 North County Division PETITION OF: HEATHER SIEVERS for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2015-00017145-CU-PT-NC TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner HEATHER SIEVERS and MATHEW HURTADO filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name: JAX EULALIO SIEVERS to Proposed Name: JAX MATHEW HURTADO/B> THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the

objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Notice of Hearing Date: JUL 14, 2015 Time: 8:30 AM Dept.: 26. The address of the court is: same as noted above. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Del Mar Times. Date: MAY 22, 2015 William S. Dato Judge of the Superior Court DM1385. May 28, June 4, 11, 18, 2015 City of Del Mar Planning Commission Agenda Del Mar Communications Center 240 Tenth Street, Del Mar, California Tuesday, June 9, 2014 at 6:00 p.m. ROLL CALL APPROVAL OF MINUTES UPDATE PLANNING COMMISSION/STAFF DISCUSSION (Non-Application Items) HEARING FROM THE AUDIENCE ON ITEMS NOT LISTED ON THE AGENDA (Oral Communications) DISCUSSION AND BRIEFING (Application Items) CONSENT CALENDAR CONTINUED APPLICATION(S): ITEM 1 CUP15-004 APN: 299-100-29 Location: 2132 Jimmy Durante Blvd. Owner/ Applicant: Pamela Stonebreaker Owner Agent: Steven Mira and Layne Fournier, Animal & Bird

Hospital of Del Mar Zone: North Commercial (NC) Environmental Status: Exempt Contact Person: Joseph Smith, AICP, Senior Planner Description: A request to modify an existing Conditional Use Permit (CUP-86-4) to allow kennel use and day, overnight, and extended boarding of dogs and cats associated with an existing veterinarian clinic (Animal & Bird Hospital of Del Mar). The request would result in both a new CUP and a Modification to the previously-issued CUP. NEW APPLICATION(S): ITEM 2 V14-008 APN: 299-13403 Location: 2007 Santa Fe Ave. Owner/Applicant: Jeff Kelley Owner Agent: Bob Scott, RJS Planning Zone: RM-West Overlay Zone: Floodplain Overlay Zone Environmental Status: Exempt Contact Person: Matt Bator, AICP, Senior Planner Description: A request for a Variance from Del Mar Municipal Code (DMMC) Section 30.86.090 to allow a previously constructed concrete retaining wall within a required easement and Section 30.86.200 to allow previously constructed permanent landscape features in the required front and street side yard setbacks and roof overhang projections into the required front, street and side yard setbacks. ITEM 3 CUP15-001 V15-001 CDP15-001 APN: 299-100-16 Location: 2194 San Dieguito Dr. Owner/Applicant: Jason and Megan Tackitt Owner Agent: Greg Jordan, Designatarium Zone: R1-40 Overlay Zone: Bluff, Slope and Canyon Overlay Zone, Lagoon Overlay Zone Environmental Status: Exempt Contact Person: Katie Benson, Assistant Planner Description: A request for a

Conditional Use Permit for the encroachment into steep slope setbacks of three detached accessory structures; a Variance from Del Mar Municipal Code (DMMC) Section 30.86.070.C1c to allow the previously constructed single-family residence within the required side yard setback; and a Coastal Development Permit to allow three (3) existing accessory structures, one to be reconstructed, on a developed site in the R1-40 Zone and Bluff, Slope and Canyon and Lagoon Overlay Zones. *Note: This project is located in the Coastal Commission’s appeals area. ADJOURNMENT pc2015_6.9. DM1383. 5/28/15. CITY OF DEL MAR NOTICE OF ORDINANCE INTRODUCTION AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF DEL MAR, CALIFORNIA, AMENDING CHAPTER 30.84 OF THE DEL MAR MUNICIPAL CODE (SIGNAGE) REGARDING THE CALCULATION OF SIGN SIZE FOR PERMITTED SIGN AREA TOTAL FOR COMMERCIAL ZONES; THE ALLOWANCE OF BLADE SIGNS AND THE ALLOWANCE OF CHALKBOARD SIGNS The above referenced ordinance was introduced by action of the City Council on May 18, 2015. Adoption of the above listed ordinance will be considered on June 1, 2015. Date: May 19, 2015 Andrew Potter, City Clerk OrdNtro212. DM1382. 5/28/15. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-013241


May 28, 2015

Fictitious Business Name(s): EMS Sourcing Located at: 930 Via Mil Cumbres, #45, Solana Beach, CA, 92075, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 930 Via Mil Cumbres, #45, Solana Beach, CA 92075. This business is registered by the following: Natascha Wollank, 930 Via Mil Cumbres, #45, Solana Beach, CA 92075. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/18/2015. Natascha Wollank. DM1381. May 28, June 4, 11, 18, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-012954 Fictitious Business Name(s): Pristine Green Located at: 4157 1/2 Adams Ave., San Diego, CA, 92116, San Diego County. This business is registered by the following: Pristine Green, 4157 1/2 Adams Ave., San Diego, CA 92116, California. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg,

Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/14/2015. Ray T. Teare II, Manager. CV738. May 28, June 4, 11, 18, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-012320 Fictitious Business Name(s): LIMAN Located at: 11269 Carmel Creek Road, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: PO Box 7011, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067. This business is registered by the following: 1. Karilyn M. Perry, 6263 Via Naranjal, Box 7011, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067 2. Svetlana Maric, 11269 Carmel Creek Road, San Diego, CA 92130 This business is conducted by: A General Partnership. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/07/2015. Karilyn M. Perry. CV736. May 21, 28, June 4, 11, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-013114 Fictitious Business Name(s):

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NORTH COAST The Business Doctors Located at: 4225 Executive Square, Ste. 600, La Jolla, CA, 92037, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 4225 Executive Square, Ste. 600, La Jolla, CA 92037. This business is registered by the following: Doucette Law Group, Inc., 4225 Executive Square, Ste. 600, La Jolla, CA 92037, California. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 4/1/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/15/2015. Jodi L. Doucette, President. CV737. May 21, 28, June 4, 11, 2015. SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 1409 Fourth Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 Madge Bradley Building Estate of: PATRICIA ANN BECKER, Decedent NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: PATRICIA ANN BECKER CASE NUMBER: 37-2015-00016441-PR-PW-CTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of PATRICIA ANN BECKER. A Petition for Probate has been filed by CATHERINE BECKER in the Superior Court of California, County of SAN DIEGO. The petition for Probate requests that CATHERINE BECKER be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: June 23, 2015 Time: 11:00 A.M. Dept.: PC-1. Room Address of court: same as noted above. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code.

ANSWERS 5/21/15

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Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: SUSAN A. MERCURE 401 West A Street, Suite 2600 San Diego, California 92101 (619) 236-1551 DM1380. May 21, 28, June 4, 2015 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-013177 Fictitious Business Name(s): MonaKat Located at: 3332 Cowley Way, #3, San Diego, CA, 92117, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3332 Cowley Way, #3, San Diego, CA 92117. This business is registered by the following: World’s Trade LLC, 3332 Cowley Way, #3, San Diego, CA 92117, California. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/18/2015. Silva Tetroashvili. CV735. May 21, 28, June 4, 11, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-013064 Fictitious Business Name(s): Hold the Line Financial Services Located at: 147 West Glaucus, #B, Encinitas, CA, 92024, San Diego County. This business is registered by the following: Michael Perrotti, 147 West Glaucus, #B, Encinitas, CA 92024. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/15/2015. Michael Perrotti. CV734. May 21, 28, June 4, 11, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-010974 Fictitious Business Name(s): Carlsbad Beach Volleyball Club Located at: 6890 Mimosa Dr., Carlsbad, CA, 92011, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 6890 Mimosa Dr., Carlsbad, CA 92011. This business is registered by the following: Washnet Development Corporation, 6890 Mimosa Dr., Carlsbad, CA 92011, California. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 04/24/2015. Bob Sommers, President. DM1376. May 21, 28, June 4, 11, 2015. SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 Central Division PETITION OF: RAYMOND C. CHAN and JEAN L. CHAN, on behalf of a minor, for change of name ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER 37-2015-00015301-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner: RAYMOND C. CHAN and JEAN L. CHAN, on behalf of a minor, filed a petition with the court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name: MICHAEL ZIXIONG CHAN to Proposed Name: MICHAEL ALEXANDER ZIXIONG CHAN.

THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Notice of Hearing Date: JUNE 19, 2015, Time: 9:30 a.m., Dept: 46. The address of the court is 220 West Broadway, San Diego, CA 92101. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Carmel Valley News. Date: MAY 07, 2015 David J. Danielsen Judge of the Superior Court CV733. May 14, 21, 28, June 4, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-012237 Fictitious Business Name(s): GH By Teresa Located at: 2624 Rawhide Ln., San Marcos, CA, 92078, San Diego County. This business is registered by the following: 1. Maria Teresa Guthrie, 2624 Rawhide Ln., San Marcos, CA 92078 2. Billy J. Guthrie, 2624 Rawhide Ln., San Marcos, CA 92078 This business is conducted by: A Married Couple. The first day of business was 5/6/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/06/2015. Maria Teresa Guthrie, Owner. DM1374. May 14, 21, 28, June 4, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-011863 Fictitious Business Name(s): Elope To The Beach Located at: 955 Sealane Dr., Encinitas, CA, 92024, San Diego County. This business is registered by the following: Herman W. Mitschke, 955 Sealane Dr., Encinitas, CA 92024. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 05/01/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/01/2015. HW Mitschke, Owner. CV732. May 14, 21, 28, June 4, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-012084 Fictitious Business Name(s): Light News Located at: 3421 Curtis St., San Diego, CA, 92106, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3421 Curtis St., San Diego, CA 92106. This business is registered by the following: Richard Anthony Jelusich, 3421 Curtis St., San Diego, CA 92106. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/05/2015. Richard Anthony Jelusich, Owner. CV731. May 14, 21, 28, June 4, 2015. SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 1409 Fourth Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 Madge Bradley Building Estate of: JOHN MICHAEL TAYLOR, Decedent AMENDED NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: JOHN MICHAEL TAYLOR

CASE NUMBER: 37-2014-00022433-PR-PW-CTL To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of JOHN MICHAEL TAYLOR, JOHN TAYLOR. A Petition for Probate has been filed by KIMBERLY TAYLOR KING in the Superior Court of California, County of SAN DIEGO. The petition for Probate requests that KIMBERLY TAYLOR KING be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: June 4, 2015 Time: 1:30 P.M. Dept.: PC-2. Room Address of court: same as noted above. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: DANIEL W. ABBOTT, ESQ. 401 B Street, Suite 2220 San Diego, California 92101 (619) 407-0505 DM1372. May 14, 21, 28, 2015 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-010293 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Fully Fabricated b. Full Fabrications Located at: 12495 San Bruno Cove, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 3830 Valley Centre, #705, PMB503, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is registered by the following: Michael Callamaras, 12495 San Bruno Cove, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was April 15, 2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County


www.delmartimes.net on 04/17/2015. Michael Callamaras. CV730. May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-011936 Fictitious Business Name(s): Uncommon Marketing Located at: 13510 Mango Drive, Del Mar, CA, 92014, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 13510 Mango Drive, Del Mar, CA 92014. This business is registered by the following: Julie Reynolds, 13510 Mango Drive, Del Mar, CA 92014. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 04/15/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/04/2015. Julie Reynolds, Owner. DM1371. May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-010664 Fictitious Business Name(s): College Found Consulting Located at: 4278 Corte de Sausalito, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 4653 Carmel Mtn. Rd., #308-403, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is registered by the following: Molly Wright, 4278 Corte de Sausalito, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 09/01/2008. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 04/22/2015. Molly Wright, Owner. DM1370. May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-011851 Fictitious Business Name(s): BnD Tech Located at: 13053 Signature Pt., #229, San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 13053 Signature Pt., #229, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is registered by the following: Migyoung Kweon, 13053 Signature Pt., #229, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/01/2015. Migyoung Kweon, Owner. CV729. May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-011316 Fictitious Business Name(s): Tasting Room Del Mar Located at: 1435 Camino Del Mar, Suite D, Del Mar, CA, 92014, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 14374 Caminito Lazanja, San Diego, CA 92127. This business is registered by the following: Taylor5, LLC, 14374 Caminito Lazanja, San Diego, CA 92127, CA. This business is conducted by: A Limited Liability Company. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 04/27/2015. David Taylor, Managing Member. DM1369. May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-010131 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Korea House b. Damso c. Kang Hodong Baekjeong d. Baekjeong e. Kanghodong Baekjeong Located at: 4620 Convoy St., Ste. A-C, San Diego, CA, 92111, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 12750 Carmel Country Road, #107, San Diego, CA 92130. This business is registered by the following: S & K San Diego, Inc., 3791 Ruette San Raphael, San Diego, CA 92130, CA. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business has not yet started. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg,

NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE B17 Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 04/16/2015. Sun M. Choi, President. DM1367. May 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE TS No. CA-14-641466-RY Order No.: 140215128-CA-MAI YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 12/8/2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 to the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, will be held by duly appointed trustee. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. BENEFICIARY MAY ELECT TO BID LESS THAN THE TOTAL AMOUNT DUE. Trustor(s): GREGORY MANNHALTER, AN UNMARRIED MAN Recorded: 1/4/2007 as Instrument No. 20070005576 of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of SAN DIEGO County, California; Date of Sale: 6/4/2015 at 10:00:00 AM Place of Sale: At the entrance to the east county regional center by statue, 250 E. Main Street, El Cajon, CA 92020 Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $282,579.34 The purported property address is: 2582 DEL MAR HEIGHTS ROAD #15, DEL MAR, CA 92014 Assessor’s Parcel No.: 300-364-34-15 NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 714-573-1965 for information regarding the trustee’s

sale or visit this Internet Web site http://www.qualityloan.com , using the file number assigned to this foreclosure by the Trustee: CA-14-641466-RY . Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the property address or other common designation, if any, shown herein. If no street address or other common designation is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee’s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right’s against the real property only. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. QUALITY MAY BE CONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Date: Quality Loan Service Corporation 411 Ivy Street San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 For NON SALE information only Sale Line: 714-573-1965 Or Login to: http://www.qualityloan. com Reinstatement Line: (866) 645-7711 Ext 5318 Quality Loan Service Corp. TS No.: CA-14641466-RY IDSPub #0081919 5/14/2015 5/21/2015 5/28/2015. DM1362. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-013606 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Remlow Networks Inc. b. Alan Wolmer Consulting Located at: 13242 Larkfield Ct., San Diego, CA, 92130, San Diego County. Registrant Information: Remlow Networks Inc., 13242 Larkfield Ct., San Diego, CA 92130, California. This business is conducted by: A Corporation. The first day of business was 05/21/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/21/2015. Alan Wolmer, CEO. CV739. May 28, June 4, 11, 18, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-013500 Fictitious Business Name(s): Lima Dive Service Located at: 4127 Lamont St., San Diego, CA, 92109, San Diego County. Registrant Information: Clisley Lima, 4127 Lamont St., San Diego, CA 92109. This business is conducted by: An Individual. The first day of business was 5/20/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder/ County Clerk of San Diego County on 05/20/2015. Clisley Lima. DM1384. May 28, June 4, 11, 18, 2015. PLACE A GARAGE SALE AD TODAY! CALL 800-914-6434

Food-linked books inspire creative cooks The Kitchen Shrink

KITCHEN SHRINK CATHARINE KAUFMAN On May 13, Green Acre Campus Pointe opened its doors to a group of gourmets with sophisticated taste buds, inspired chefs and devoted bibliophiles to celebrate the San Diego Council on Literacy’s sixth annual blockbuster event — EAT.DRINK.READ. This culinary and literary extravaganza was focused on ramping up awareness on the shocking illiteracy figures in both this community and around the country. According to Jose L. Cruz, chief executive officer of the council, 20 percent of the adult population in the nation — that’s 444,000 in San Diego County alone — are functionally illiterate, reading prose below fourthgrade level. In fact, 70 percent of these people are English-speaking. Cruz explains that the Internet, social media and texting encourage the lazy use of acronyms and code words that jettison grammar, spelling, vocabulary and syntax rules. “EAT. DRINK. READ. is the foodie community saying that reading is important to us, and we can play a vital role to increase literacy rates,” said Cruz. Thanks to last year’s fundraising event, 171,000 adults and children in San Diego received tutoring and books to hone their literary skills that their employability, livelihoods, academic careers, family dynamics and quality of life depend on. The rock stars of the evening included sponsors such as The Dr. Seuss Foundation, Sycuan Casino & Resort, Ashford University, and the San Diego Chargers; media and marketing partners KPBS, U-T San Diego, and the San Diego Public Library, to mention a few, as well as live auction and raffle donors. The local culinary circle came out in force, represented by cele-

brated chefs, bakers, chocolatiers, vendors, vintners and brewmasters, as they plotted a gustatory adventure using a food-related book as their inspiration. Each developed an original theme paired with delectable offerings featured in their chosen literary work. Here are some of them: • Executive Chef Brian Malarkey of Green Acre Campus Pointe and culinary host of the event concocted an herbivorous delight of sautéed snap peas with yogurt, Meyer lemon, dill and Vadouvan (French interpretation of Indian masala), accompanied by a carrot puree and crispy kale leaves to complement “The Tale of Peter Rabbit” by Beatrix Potter. • Chef Donald Lockhart from Cusp Dining & Drinks created a whimsical Mad Hatter tea party with a menu in rhyming verse: “a curry sauce drizzled on toasted quail with yellow tale.” A perfect treat for the Cheshire Cat using Lewis Carroll’s “Alice in Wonderland” as his muse. • Croce’s Park West Executive Chef Russell Rummer served a sweet and savory crostini topped with duck rillettes, red wine onion marmalade, and micro-arugula, paying homage to John Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath. “ • Chef Matt Gordon of Solace Restaurants served a smoky exotic Asian rice porridge or congee with Jidori chicken and charred scallions to conjure images of preWorld War I Chinese peasant farmers in Pearl Buck’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, “The Good Earth.” • Casa Guadalajara’s Chef Jose Duran whipped up a rich, hearty turkey mole over spicy rice using Laura Esquivel’s “Like Water for Chocolate” for his culinary spark. • The Patio Restaurant Group’s executive chef John Medall took a page from “Salem’s Lot,” Stephen King’s horror fiction novel filled with vampire slayings. Guests devoured oyster shooters and dug their fangs into blood sausage antipasto. • Finally, for those “just desserts,” cookie creator Adam Koven from The Cravory appropriately chose “Blueberries for Sal” (Robert McCloskey) as his literary partner, pleasing palates with blueberry muffin cookies, along with scrumptious signature flavors such as Ultimate Chocolate Chip, Birthday Cake, Strawberry Lemonade and Almond Joyous. • Eclipse Chocolate’s exotic truffle tasting played on Roald Dahl’s “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” with such bonbon delights as “Snozzberry,” infused with blackberry, hibiscus and Meyer lemon, and coconut caramel ginger sea salt. • My mouth-watering contribution to literacy is a south Indian celebratory sweet called laddu with gram (chickpea) flour and ghee butter to pay tribute to my favorite novel, Yann Martel’s “Life of Pi.” So luscious laddu is like a poem melting in your mouth.

INDIAN LADDU 1 cup gram (chickpea) flour 1/3 cup powdered (confectioner’s) sugar 5 to 6 tablespoons ghee butter (melted) 1/3 cup roasted cashews or pistachios (crushed) 1/4 teaspoon ginger powder or cinnamon In a large pan, dry-roast flour over low heat, stirring constantly for about 10 minutes, until it is golden and exudes a nutty fragrance. Add ghee butter and continue stirring for about 3 minutes until well-blended. Remove from heat; let cool. Blend in sugar, spices and nuts of choice. Roll into walnut-size balls, coat with shredded coconut, chopped nuts or cinnamon. Store in airtight containers. If interested in becoming a volunteer tutor for San Diego Council on Literacy, call 888-850-7323. Indian laddu.


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B18 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

Solana Beach Memorial Day Ceremony The city of Solana Beach and Solana Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5431 co-hosted a Memorial Day Ceremony May 25 at La Colonia Community Center. Camp Pendleton Young Marines served as the honor guard. Master Sgt. Julian Gonzales was the guest speaker, as well as Solana Beach Mayor Lesa Heebner and Randy Treadway, post commander for VFW Post 5431. The Santa Fe Christian School Band performed patriotic songs. A special “Doves From Heaven� release was provided by Joe and Leslie Irwin. The Veterans Memorial wall, which honors the service of all Solana Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars, was available for viewing. Donation information, and design renderings of the new Veterans Honor Courtyard at La Colonia Park, was also available for viewing. Docents from the Civic and Historical Society were available to conduct tours of the Historical Museum. Photos by Jon Clark. For photos online, visit www.delmartimes.net.

Jeannie, Trevor, Olivia, and Carmen

The Bronstein Family VFW Post 5431 Chaplain Ron Rodrigues leads the invocation

SB Mayor Lesa Heebner and VFW Post Commander Randy Treadway present a plaque to retiring Camp Pendleton Young Marines Unit Commander Trish Jones.

Veterans Steven Ellwood, Clarence Bytoff, and John Leipper

VFW Post 5431 Commander Randy A Santa Fe Christian school band Treadway welcomes guests to the member plays Taps. Memorial Day event.

Tensia Trejo, Donna and Byron Culver Color Guard from the Camp Pendleton Young Marines Camp Pendleton Young Marines

Veteran Clarence Bytoff Guest speaker Master Sgt. Julian participates with a poetic response. Gonzales, USMC Retired

Wally Oliver, Susie Bruun

Veteran Carl Turnbull, guest speaker Master Sgt. Julian Gonzales, VFW Post Commander Randy Treadway


www.delmartimes.net

NORTH COAST - MAY 28, 2015 - PAGE B19

Julie Split-Keyes of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties earns Chairman’s Circle Gold Award

New phase releases now selling at Pardee Homes’ Canterra and Casabella Pacific Highlands Ranch

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties is proud to honor Julie Split-Keyes with the Chairman’s Circle Gold Award, in recognition of her sales performance in 2014. The award honors residential sales professionals who surpassed extraordinary sales measures in terms of the number of transactions or sales production in a given year. Split-Keyes was recognized during a special award ceremony at the brokerage’s national sales convention, which was attended by top real estate professionals from the United States, Mexico, and Canada. This year’s convention took place March 22-24 at the Mirage Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. As a Chairman’s Circle Gold Award winner, Split-Keyes ranked in the top 2 percent for her sales performance in 2014, out of the brokerage’s vast national network of residential sales professionals. “Julie is a dedicated agent who is known for her ability to deliver favorable results for her clients. We consistently receive positive feedback about the level of service that Julie provides for her buyers and sellers. She has set a benchmark of professionalism and integrity in our industry,” said David M. Cabot, president and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties. Split-Keyes has also earned Number One Individual in Transactions and Number Two Individual in Production in the Del Mar and Carmel Valley office. Julie Split-Keyes can be contacted through Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties at 858-735-6754 mobile or Julie@RanchToCoast.com. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties

Pardee Homes recently released a new phase of 10 homes at Canterra and a phase of nine homes at Casabella, offering luxury, energy-efficient living, in master-planned Pacific Highlands Ranch, just east of Carmel Valley. Both neighborhoods offer exciting features such as guest suites and the LivingSmart® package of standard and optional eco-friendly features. These two stand-out communities are coastal-close, with pricing that starts in the high $800,000s at Canterra. “Buyer response has been encouraging, with home shoppers especially excited about the fresh designs, spacious great rooms, outdoor rooms and unique optional prep and chef’s kitchens available at Casabella,” said Liz Ramirez, regional director of marketing for Pardee Homes. “Both Canterra and Casabella feature versatile guest suites and standard and optional ecofriendly features that increase energy-efficiency and save water as well as incorporating materials that come from recycled and sustainable resources.” Canterra offers timeless, two-story living in three open plan designs. Each home embraces the indoor-outdoor way of life and includes spacious great rooms, generous dining rooms, space-enhancing lofts and well-defined first-floor bedrooms. Homes have four bedrooms, three to four baths and approximately 2,077 to 2,593 square feet. Stylish Casabella, priced from the low $900,000s, offers three to four bedrooms with three bathrooms, two- and three-bay garages and approximately 2,134 to 2,682 square feet. Four upscale, two-story plans include great room living, lofts, outdoor rooms with covered patios, optional prep or chef’s kitchens and optional spa showers. For more information call (858) 342-8797 or go to www.pardeehomes.com. To visit Casabella and Canterra from SR 56 exit at Carmel Valley Road heading north to Solterra Vista Parkway; turn right and follow the signs to the New Home Gallery and models.

Julie Split-Keyes is a wholly owned subsidiary of HomeServices of America, Inc. and a member of HSF Affiliates, LLC. For more information, visit www.bhhscalifornia. com. To learn about career opportunities, call 858523-4940.

TPHS senior’s original play to run June 1-5 The Torrey Pines High School Black Box Theater presents “The Mountain,” an original play written by TPHS senior Mackenzie Bath. Mackenzie will star in the production with students Blake Regottaz, Amy Ni, and Jensen Cameron. Joining them in the cast is Marinee Payne, the theater teacher at TPHS. The play will be showing at 7:30 p.m. June 1-5. Tickets are $7 and are available at www. tpplayers.com.

Blue Highway to perform matinee June 13 in ‘Bluegrass and Beyond’ The acclaimed bluegrass band Blue Highway will perform at the Del Mar Powerhouse on June 13 as part of the Del Mar Foundation’s “Bluegrass and Beyond” series. With the evening show having sold out in just a few days, a matinee at 2 p.m. has been added so that more people can enjoy this San Diego appearance by a virtuosic ensemble considered to be in the forefront of contemporary bluegrass music. Notably, Blue Highway recently celebrated its 20th anniversary with the same five musicians that founded the group in 1994. Blue Highway has garnered two Grammy nominations, a Dove Award, topped the Bluegrass Unlimited radio charts, and won numerous International Bluegrass Music Association awards. Indeed, Blue Highway’s Rob Ickes is the most awarded instrumentalist in the history of the IBMA awards, a 15-time winner of the Dobro Player of the Year trophy. Critics have praised the band for its “cutting edge of tradition” sound, with rich vocal harmonies and smoking instrumental skills. For information and tickets ($25 general admission, $40 patron/reserved), visit www. delmarfoundation.org/bluegrass.html.

Pinter’s ‘Betrayal’ starts run June 3 at North Coast Repertory Theatre Master playwright Harold Pinter explores the shifting balance of power within a love triangle in “Betrayal,” presented starting June 3 at North Coast Repertory Theatre. Filled with taut drama and deception, the story unfolds in reverse chronology as the audience takes this treacherous journey with characters who are compelling and brimming with human frailty. Passionate, explosive and surprisingly funny, “Betrayal” is considered one of Pinter’s most innovative and influential works, one that is certain to provoke lively discussion long after the curtain falls. Frank Corrado directs a stellar cast: Richard Baird, Jeffrey Fracé, Carla Harting and Benjamin Cole. “Betrayal” previews begin June 3. Opening night at 8 p.m. June 6 includes a post-show reception. There will be a special talkback on June 12, with the cast and artistic director. Performances are 7 p.m. Wednesdays, 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays, 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, and 7 p.m. Sundays, through June 28. North Coast Repertory Theatre is at 987 Lomas Santa Fe Drive, Suite D, Solana Beach. Tickets: Previews, $37; weeknights, $44; Saturday evening and Sunday matinee, $48; Saturday matinee and Sunday evening, $41. Seniors, students, military get $3 off admission. Call 858-481-1055 or visit www.northcoastrep.org.

OPEN HOUSES Carmel Valley

CARMEL VALLEY

$975,000 4 BR/2.5 BA

5594 Willowmere Lane Jennifer Drennan/Sampson California Realty

$1,359,000 5 BR/3 BA

12680 Lone Cypress Place Charles & Farryl Moore/Coldwell Banker

Sat 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-395-7525

$1,849,000 4 BR/3.5 BA

5177 Seagrove Cove Charles & Farryl Moore/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-395-7525

$2,499,000 6 BR/4.5 BA

13151 Caminito Mendiola Charles & Farryl Moore/Coldwell Banker

Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-395-7525

Del Mar $899,000 Lot/Land RANCHO SANTA FE $1,329,995 3 BR/3.5 BA

Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-205-3077

DEL MAR Carmel Valley Rd between Via Grimaldi & Portofino Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Chris Lin/Berkshire Hathaway 858-605-8355

RANCHO SANTA FE 16932 Simple Melody Lon Noel/Willis Allen

Sat & Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-58-.6398

$1,350,000 - $1,450,876 17160 Blue Skies Ridge 4 BR/5.5 BA John Lefferdink/Berkshire Hathaway $1,350,000 - $1,450,876 17160 Blue Skies Ridge 4 BR/5.5 BA John Lefferdink/host: D. Haddad $1,599,000 5 BR/4.5 BA

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 619-813-8222 Sat 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 619-813-8222/310-740-5153

16108 Via Madera Circa West Susan Kazmarek/Willis Allen Real Estate

Sat & Sun 12 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-775-3251

$1,649,000 - $1,699,000 8475 Run of the Knolls 3 BR/2.5 BA Gloria Shepard & Kathy Lysaught/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 619-417-5564

$1,700,000 - $1,900,876 16850 Going My Way 5 BR/5.5 BA John Lefferdink/host: E. Himfir/Berkshire Hathaway

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 619-813-8222

$1,700,000 - $1,900,876 16413 Irish Eyes Lane Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. John Lefferdink/host: J. Biggerstaff/Berkshire Hathaway 619-813-8222 /619-540-4649 5 BR/5.5 BA $2,095,000 3 BR/3 BA

6727 Las Colinas Janet Lawless Christ/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-335-7700

$2,150,000 4 BR/3.5 BA

5881 San Elijo Janet Lawless Christ/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-335-7700

$2,549,000 - $2,699,000 4 BR/4.5 BA

7811 Sendero Angelica Gloria Shepard & Kathy Lysaught/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 619-417-5564

$2,950,000 6 BR/6.5 BA

7021 Rancho La Cima Dr Sara Alavi/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-405-9941

$3,288,000 6 BR/5.5 BA

5050 El Secreto Mary Heon/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 619-888-7653

$3,495,000 7 BR/7.5 BA

5283 Avenida Maravillas Janet Lawless Christ/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-335-7700

$4,995,000 4 BR/4.5 BA

6550 Paseo Delicias Janet Lawless Christ/Coldwell Banker

Sun 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 858-335-7700

For the most up-to-date list of open houses, mapped locations, and premium listings with photos, visit delmartimes.net/open-houses-list/ Contact Colleen Gray | colleeng@rsfreview.com | 858.756.1403 x112


www.delmartimes.net

PAGE B20 - MAY 28, 2015 - NORTH COAST

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