POWAY WWW.POMERADONEWS.COM
BY EMILY SORENSEN
A2
• PUSD board balks at using CAB-linked firms. A4
EVENTS
• Surprise ending, great cast make PowPAC drama stand out. B8 • Tickets on sale for tribute to Hank Williams. B10
ALSO • Business B7 • Community Calendar A6 • Crime A12 • Entertainment B8 • Homes B19 • Marketplace B14 • Opinion A14 • Reader Poll A2 • Sports B1 • Vacation photos B11
Poway News Chieftain An Edition of
14023 Midland Road Poway, CA 92064 (858) 218-7200 pomeradonews.com
The installation of a 20-foot high chain link fence has slowed, but hasn’t stopped, the torrent of balls coming into a Poway resident’s yard from Midland Elementary School. Robert Rings, a Poway resident whose backyard shares a border with the ball courts at Midland, said he has been living “a nightmare” for the past nine years. He estimates that 1,700 balls have been bounced, tossed or deliberately thrown over his fence, breaking windows, destroying his backyard and even contributing to the death of his dog. Rings has lived in his home since 1978. “Since the district rebuilt the school in 2006, I’ve been getting balls in my yard,” said Rings. “The school opened on a Wednesday. By Friday, more than 60 balls had come over my fence.” There is a chain link fence and Rings’ own six-foot wooden fence between the school playground and Rings’s backyard, and the chain link fence is less than eight feet from his kitchen. In June, the district installed a 20-foot chain link fence on Midland’s property border, running the length of Rings’ backyard. While his neighbors have several balls a year thrown into their yards, Rings said none of them have experienced the sheer number he has. Rings’ yard borders the basketball court closest to the school. Rings said that since Midland Elementary reopened in August, he has only had one ball, a softball, come over the SEE BALLS, Page A10
BY MICHAEL BOWER The wait for the Poway Rodeo is over, as some 12,000 people are expected to attend this weekend’s festivities at the Poway Valley Riders Association grounds. The 43rd annual Poway Rodeo opens with a single show Friday at 7:30 p.m. and then will conclude with two shows Saturday (1 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.). Immediately following the rodeo on both nights is the Rodeo Dance. It’s free and open to everyone 21 and over. Ticket prices, which can be found at Powayrodeo.com or in the Poway Rodeo program inside this paper, include a concert prior to the Friday and Saturday night rodeos by country music recording artist Mark Connors. Some of the best people in the rodeo business will be back in Poway to ensure an entertaining show. “It’s amazing,” Poway Rodeo committee member Nancy Kirchhofer said of all the returning talent. “Wayne Brooks has been announcer of the year several times so he is the best you can get. Our rodeo stock company takes stock to the National Finals Rodeo every year so they are among the best you can get. And they are all wonderful people.” Brooks, a four-time Announcer of the Year, is back for the 12th straight year
POWAY RODEO 43rd Annual 2015 OFFICIAL PROGR AM
FRIDAY, SEPT. 25 SATURDAY, SEPT. 26
The official Poway Rodeo program is inside this paper. and Salt River Rodeo Company, which has been in the business for over 20 years, is providing the livestock for the sixth consecutive year. J.J. Harrison makes his return to Poway as the rodeo clown. The 40-year-old, who is known for his fat-guyclown suits and off-the-cuff comedy, last performed at the Poway Rodeo in 2012. The Poway Rodeo was just shy of drawing 12,000 people over the three shows last year. The hope is to hit the 12,000 mark this year.
It certainly will not hurt having food trucks available and a new bar area called “Hitching Post.” The area will have one or two TVs showing all the rodeo action, catering to the people who do not like to sit in the bleachers. “Tickets will be a little less and it is for the people that would like to sit in a bartype area and watch the rodeo on TV,” Kirchhofer said. “It will be a nice little feature.” The Hole In the Wall Gang is back. The group from Lakeside will bring back the Old West through re-enactments and comedy during the intermission. The kids’ rodeo events will include Mutton Busting – children under 50 pounds and at least 3 years of age try to ride a sheep for eight seconds — and Junior Barrel Racing. There is also a special VIP designated area for kids, which features face painting and a balloon artist. Lunch in the area is provided by Chick-fil-A. Those who are coming to watch the professional rodeo riders should have plenty to cheer for, as the PRCA-sanctioned event is the final chance for the cowboys to earn money to qualify for the National Rodeo Finals in December. The rodeo is composed of seven competitions: bull riding, saddle bronc riding, bareback riding, steer wrestling, tie-down roping, team roping and barrel racing.
Detours part of new system to relieve I-15 traffic BY ELIZABETH MARIE HIMCHAK Drivers should soon be able to get around severe traffic delays through a pilot project coming to the inland corridor section of Interstate 15. By mid-October the I-15 Integrated Corridor Management Project will be fully operational between the Miramar/ Pomerado roads exit and State Route 78. Through that stretch, alternate routes in Rancho Bernardo, Poway, Carmel Mountain Ranch, Sabre Springs, Rancho Penasquitos, Mira Mesa and Escondido have been developed to move vehicles onto surface streets when freeway lanes are closed due to traffic accidents and other incidents. San Diego and Dallas are the only two of eight applicants for federal grant money to be approved for the pilot program, said Alex Estrella a senior transportation planner with SANDAG when speaking to the Rancho Bernardo Planning Board on Sept. 17. “This is very innovative and changes the way we do things in the region,” Estrella said. The new “umbrella system” is due to cooperation between SEE DETOURS, Page A11
Readers’ Choice
“Best of”
One of the I-15 Integrated Corridor Management detour signs recently installed in Poway on Pomerado Road north of Poway Road. Photo by Steve Dreyer
CRAIG BROWN
THE RE AD ER S
2015
HO BERNAR NC DO RA \4
Lending solutions that serve you better.
BY ED OT V
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More than a loan...
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•Turn in unused pills Saturday in Poway, Carmel Mtn. Ranch.
Poway Rodeo is Friday, Saturday
H NEWS JOUR NA NC RA L
High fence helps ease deluge of school balls
INSIDE
50 cents (includes tax) | Vol. 62, ISSUE 18
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A2 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
Neighborhood Real Estate Specialist YourYour Neighborhood Real Estate Specialist
BRIDLEWOOD COUNTRY ESTATES
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Bring expired medications to Take Back event on Saturday BY ELIZABETH MARIE HIMCHAK
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Locals can dispose of their expired or unneeded medications properly on Saturday during the 10th national Prescription Drug Take Back Day. Two local drop-off points are among the 42 countywide accepting medications from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 26. They are the Poway Sheriff’s Station at 13100 Bowron Road and the Scripps Rancho Bernardo Clinic, 15004 Innovation Drive in Carmel Mountain Ranch. For other locations, go to www.DEA.gov. No sharps or needles will be accepted. Those unable to make it during the collection time are also welcome to leave medications in the designated bins during weekday office hours at any sheriff’s station or substation during normal business hours. The take back service is free and anonymous since officials said unwanted or expired prescription drugs can be dangerous to the community if they fall into the wrong
hands. Drug Enforcement Agency officials said rates of prescription drug abuse in the U.S. are alarmingly high, as are the number of accidental poisonings and overdoses due to these drugs. Studies show that many abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, including from the home medicine cabinet. They said flushing medications down the toilet or tossing in the trash are not options because those methods pose safety and environmental hazards. “Our goal is to reduce the risk of addiction and the 46,000 overdose deaths a year that come with prescription drug abuse,” said DEA Acting Administrator Chuck Rosenberg. “Take Back Day is a great opportunity for folks to help reduce the threat. Please clean out your medicine cabinet and make your home safe from drug theft and abuse.” The DEA’s previous nine nationwide TakeBack events collected 4,823,251 pounds — more than 2,411 tons — of drugs.
SEPT. 24, 25 AND 26
Big crafts boutique opens at RB church BY ELIZABETH MARIE HIMCHAK
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Starting today (Thursday), you can get a jump on your holiday decoration and gift shopping while simultaneously supporting local children. Hope United Methodist Church’s 15th annual Hearts to You crafts boutique will be open for the next three days. Its hours are 6:30 to 9 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 24; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, Sept. 25 and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 26. The boutique will be held at the church, 16550 Bernardo Heights Parkway in Rancho Bernardo. Admission and parking are free, and cash, checks, Visa, American Express and MasterCard will be accepted. The crafts boutique will feature a wide assortment of items, including fall, Halloween and Christmas decorations; handcrafted items for the home; ceramics; baked goods; jewelry;
gift items for all ages and more. Suzi Maley, who once again is coordinating the event, said there are a few new crafters that she is excited about. One is a woman who makes fancy aprons, another is someone who makes homemade chocolates and other candies — “that will be tough to go by,” Maley said — and there will also be a cake maker who creates decorative cakes and cupcakes. Maley said since the church sent out 1,500 invitations to previous attendees, she is hoping for at least 500 shoppers over the three days. Everyone is welcome. She said the crafts boutique’s proceeds continue to go toward a playground the church wants to build for its preschool and children’s ministry. Each year the crafts boutique has raised at least a few thousand dollars for the endeavor. She said Hope United has about 40 percent of the estimated $75,000 needed to build the playground.
POLL OF THE WEEK
Call Suzanne
858 - 618-5691 skropf@bhhscal.com
Last week’s question and poll results: Do you believe reports that
we are in for a wet winter??
• Yes 77%
• No 22%
This week’s question: Should more tax dollars be spent on helping the
homeless? www.PowayHomes.com
www.4RBHomes.com
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Answer on the homepage at pomeradonews.com
LOCAL NEWS
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE A3
Del Norte holding a ‘Star Wars’ homecoming Poway chamber hosting first business roundtable
BY ELIZABETH MARIE HIMCHAK Del Norte High’s students will continue traveling to “a galaxy far, far away” to conclude their homecoming celebration this week. Inspired by the “Star Wars” franchise, the Nighthawks have been embracing the outer space theme. Their creativity in that regard will be on full display during their annual parade, set to begin at 11:50 a.m. this Friday on streets surrounding the campus at 16601 Nighthawk Lane in 4S Ranch. The public is welcome to Del Norte High’s 2015 Homecoming Court. Front row are the king and queen candidates, seniors watch the parade that includes Tyler McDonald, Sabha Mobini, Michael Bulkin, Mattie Smith, Grant Hylton and Alana Webb. Back class floats, the marching band row are freshmen Alex Howell and Georgia Bond, sophomores Mark McClure and Lexi Fernandez and other entries by lining up Photo by Elizabeth Marie Himchak along the parade route that in- and juniors Jack Dwyer and Jules Hayashi. cludes Deer Ridge Road, Camino San Bernardo, Nighthawk stadium. Tickets are $7 for adults and $5 for students and senior citizens. Students with an ASB sticker are admitted Lane, Del Sur Ridge Road and Lone Quail Road. The parade participants will include the homecoming for free. Throughout the week students have dressed in attire repcourt. It consists of freshmen Georgia Bond and Alex Howell, sophomores Lexi Fernandez and Mark McClure, juniors resenting the “Star Wars” theme. They wore their pajamas Jules Hayashi and Jack Dwyer plus the senior queen and on Monday so they could “rest up for battle.” Tuesday was king candidates. Those nominated for homecoming queen Clone Day, so they dressed like a friend. On Wednesday, it are Sabha Mobini, Mattie Smith and Alana Webb. The home- was Jedi versus Sith Day, so the freshmen and seniors wore coming king candidates are Michael Bulkin, Grant Hylton blue, while the sophomores and juniors wore red. For Interand Tyler McDonald. The king and queen will be crowned galactic Day today (Thursday) they wore crazy and wacky clothes. On Friday they plan to show their Nighthawk spirit during the varsity football game’s halftime. The homecoming football game will be Friday night, when by wearing their school colors of blue and green. The festivities will conclude on Saturday evening when the Del Norte Nighthawks take on the Escondido Charter High School White Tigers. The junior varsity game will be- students attend their “A Galaxy Far, Far Away” homecoming gin at 4:30 p.m. and the varsity game at 7 p.m. in Del Norte’s dance in the Del Norte High gym.
BY EMILY SORENSEN The Poway Chamber of Commerce is holding its first business roundtable of 2015 from 7:30 to 9:15 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 30 and wants you to be a part of it. Reservations to attend must be made by Friday at 858748-0016 or chamber@poway.com. Attendance is free with registration. The program will begin with a free continental breakfast and networking at 7:30 a.m., with the program itself starting at 8 a.m. The purpose of the meeting is to learn what issues and challenges are impacting local businesses. “Running a business is not easy, but working together, we can improve the local economic climate. Helping you succeed is our business,” said Dolores Canizales, president and CEO of the Poway Chamber, in a press release. Representatives of elected officials will be on hand to hear business concerns. At the end of the meeting, participants will produce a set of priorities and identify common goals. Chamber leadership will then develop a program of work and report back to its members on their accomplishments at the State of the Community early next year.
NEWS BRIEF Maienschein at COGG Assemblyman Brian Maienschein will give an update on what is happening in Sacramento at the 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13 Conservative Order for Good Government luncheon. It will be at Bernardo Heights Country Club, 16066 Bernardo Heights Parkway in Rancho Bernardo. Cost: $25 for non-COGG members. RSVP by Friday, Oct. 9 with Rose Marie Dishman at 858-486-0119 or RoseMarie@coggrb.com.
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A4 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
PUSD board balks at using CAB-linked firms BY EMILY SORENSEN Poway Unified School District board members were divided at the monthly board meeting on Sept. 16 over several issues concerning financial advisors, consultants and underwriters. The shadow of the Capital Appreciation Bonds (CABs) came back to haunt the district as board members expressed an unwillingness to work with companies associated with the maligned bonds again. An agenda item asking the board to approve of the appointment of several financial consultants for the sale of Community Facilities District (CFD) No. 15 (Del Sur East) Improvement Area ‘C’ special tax bonds failed after much discussion due to the inclusion of the Dolinka Group, a firm that was involved in the sale of the CABs in 2011. While the item asked the board to approve seven different positions, it was two of the proposed companies that caused controversy, Dolinka Group and Stifel, Nicolaus and Company, Inc. Dolinka Group’s Benjamin Dolinka was the district’s financial advisor during the 2011 CABs, which will cost taxpayers nearly $1 billion over the next 40 years. Stifel, Nicolaus and Company were not directly involved with the CABs. A company they have since acquired, Stone and Youngberg, LLC, however, was involved in the sale of the CABs in 2011. Dolinka Group’s position in the CFD No. 15 (Del Sur East) Improvement Area
‘C’ special tax bonds would be as a special tax consultant and would have nothing to do with financial advising. Stifel, Nicolaus and Company were one of two options to be the district’s underwriter in the transaction (Piper Jaffray was the second option for underwriter). The district has a five-year, $600,000-plus contract with the Dolinka Group for Benjamin Dolinka to act as the district’s special tax consultant. It was unknown as of the meeting the terms of the contract and if the district was required to use Dolinka. Several board members expressed reluctance to work with anybody involved in the sale of the 2011 CABs, no matter how tenuous (in the case of Stifel, Nicolaus and Company). “To whom does the board owe fiduciary responsibility when issuing bonds?” asked Kimberley Beatty, board president. Board member Michelle O’Connor-Ratcliff said that even though Stifel, Nicolaus and Company weren’t directly involved with the CABs, the risk that Stone and Youngberg employees might end up on the underwriter team was still there. “The level of culpability is not the issue here,” said O’Connor-Ratcliff. “We have a duty to the public, and the public has spoken. They want anyone involved with the CABs out. We owe it to the public to be sensitive to that. I want to do this right.” Sandi Burgoyne, district planning director, said going with Piper Jaffray over Stifel, Nicolaus and Company would delay any bond sales for about six months, as
she would need to take the time to get the new underwriting team up to speed on the district’s many CFS special tax bonds. Beatty replied that going with Piper Jaffray and delaying special tax bond sales was “painful, but had to be done” because of Stifel, Nicolaus and Company’s acquisition of Stone and Youngberg. Board member T.J. Zane said he would like to see an ‘or’ option for the special tax consultant role, which would allow them to choose whether or not to use Dolinka for bond sales, similar to how the underwriter position has two options. An amended motion to pass the agenda item with Piper Jaffray as the underwriter failed after not receiving enough yes votes (only Beatty and fellow board member Charles Sellers voted yes). An attempt by board member Andy Patapow to pass the original agenda item failed after it did not receive a second. Board members argued about who they considered acceptable for district staff to bring back for consideration in the future. O’Connor-Ratcliff reiterated the importance of listening to the public. “I’m trying to be congnizant to my duty to the public to follow what I believe is public mandate, that they don’t like the CABs or anyone involved in it,” said O’Connor-Ratcliff. The next step will be district staff bringing a new list of financial consultants for approval to the board in the future. The next board meeting will be at 6 p.m. Monday, Oct. 16 at the district office in Carmel Mountain Ranch.
NEW OFFICERS — The Green Valle Garden Club recently announced its 2015-2016 board members. They are, from left, Lynda Trunzo (program VP), Karen Lawhon (program VP), Cinda Raupe-Hultner (president), Sharon Hinkle (Program VP), and K Sorenson (first VP). Not pictured are Solveig Bassham (treasurer) and Tish Civitate (secretary).
HELLO, BOSTON — Poway resident Barry Cunningham and Tony Rubino, his longtime coach on the Poway Padres Special Olympics softball team, recently enjoyed a weekend in Boston, including a Boston Red Sox game in historic Fenway Park, courtesy of the LAZ Parking Co. Cunningham, who has Williams Syndrome and is a “global messenger” for Special Olympics, impressed company officials with a presentation at a golf tournament fundraiser at the Maderas Golf Club.
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A6 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
ERIC MATZ REAL ESTATE TEAM
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BUSINESS MIXER — The Poway Chamber of Commerce will hold its monthly networking social from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 24 at Replica Printing Services and KIC Restoration, 12170 Tech Center Drive in Poway. The mixer will have a rodeo theme, so attendees are encouraged to wear rodeo attire. Cost: $25 for non-members. Admission is free to members who pre-register by 3 p.m. Sept. 24 at poway. com or call 858-748-0016. CRAFT FAIR — The Hearts to You crafts boutique will be 6:30 to 9 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 24 at Hope United Methodist Church, 16550 Bernardo Heights Parkway in Rancho Bernardo. Admission is free. It will feature fall, Halloween and Christmas decorations; plus hand-crafted items for the home, ceramics, baked goods, jewelry and gift items.
FRIDAYSEPT. 25 CRAFT FAIR — The Hearts to You crafts boutique will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, Sept. 25 at Hope United Methodist Church, 16550 Bernardo Heights Parkway in Rancho Bernardo. Admission is free. It will feature fall, Halloween and Christmas decorations; plus hand-crafted items for the home, ceramics, baked goods, jewelry and gift items. POWAY RODEO — The Poway Rodeo returns at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 25 at the PVRA, 14336 Tierra Bonita Road. Enjoy barrel riding, mutton busting, bull riding and much more. Tickets range from $14 to $55. For tickets and information visit powayrodeo.com. RODEO DANCE — After the rodeo, attendees ages 21 and up with a valid ID can enjoy a free rodeo dance featuring music by Southbound Johnny. No cover charge. For information, visit powayrodeo.com/poway-rodeo-dance/.
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MEDICARE QUESTIONS? — Medicare/ insurance consultant Jill Lackey will present a Medicare seminar to answer questions about open enrollment from 10 to 11:30 am. Thursday, Sept. 24. The free seminar will be at Rancho Bernardo Senior Services, 16769 Bernardo Center Drive, Suite K-14 in The Plaza. Register at 858-487-2640.
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ICE CREAM SOCIAL — Rancho Bernardo Honorary Mayor candidate Kevin Martin is holding a Community Ice Cream Social from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 25 at Café Merlot in Bernardo Winery, 13330 Paseo del Verano Norte, Rancho Bernardo. Cost: $25, with senior tickets for $15 and kids (under 12) for $10. There will be ice cream, sliders and other refreshments. Purchase tickets at gearupsd.com.
SATURDAYSEPT. 26 SUPPOR T RB HIGH — The 25th annual Rancho Bernardo High School pancake breakfast to support several campus clubs and teams will be 8 a.m. to noon Saturday, Sept. 26 in the RB High lunch area, 13010 Paseo Lucido. Tickets are $5, which includes a coupon to Which Wich Superior Sandwiches valued at $6.25
fair and entertainment. For questions, call Teri Wyness at 858-335-8279. SAFETY FAIR — The second annual Rancho Bernardo Safety Fair for all ages will be 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 26 in Rancho Bernardo Community Park in the parking lot between the recreation center and tennis courts, 18448 W. Bernardo Drive. It will have 25 safety-oriented booths such as water, computer, fire, school and home safety; senior issues and how to prepare for various emergencies. There will be free admission, goodies and refreshments. POWAY RODEO — The Poway Rodeo returns at 1 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 26 at the PVRA, 14336 Tierra Bonita Road. Enjoy barrel riding, mutton busting, bull riding and much more. For tickets and information visit powayrodeo.com. RODEO DANCE — After the 7:30 p.m. rodeo, attendees ages 21 and up with a valid ID can enjoy a free rodeo dance featuring music by Southbound Johnny. No cover charge. For information, visit powayrodeo.com/poway-rodeodance/. CRAFT FAIR — The Hearts to You crafts boutique will be 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 26 at Hope United Methodist Church, 16550 Bernardo Heights Parkway in Rancho Bernardo. Admission is free. It will feature fall, Halloween and Christmas decorations; plus hand-crafted items for the home, ceramics, baked goods, jewelry and gift items. WATER-WISE GARDENING — Learn how to be a water-wise gardener with a free class cohosted by the City of Poway and the San Diego County Library from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 26 at the Poway Library, 13137 Poway Road. Topics will include building a living soil sponge, using rainwater as a resource and managing irrigation, among others. For information, call 858-513-2900 or contact powaylibbranch@gmail.com. TOSS OLD MEDS — National Prescription Drug Take Back Day is 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 26 throughout the county. Bring any of your unwanted or expired prescription drugs for free, proper disposal. Drop off locations include 15004 Innovation Drive in Carmel Mountain Ranch and the Sheriff’s Station at 13100 Bowron Road in Poway. This service is free and anonymous. No sharps or needles will be accepted. PI BETA PI — The North San Diego County Pi Beta Pi Alumnae Club will hold its first luncheon meeting of the club year at 11 a.m. Saturday Sept. 26. All alumnae are invited. For details and location, call 858-755-7564 or 858-613-3926.
MONDAYSEPT. 28 FUN IN THE PARK — The City of Poway continues its In The Park series with two hours of free family fun from 10 a.m. to noon Monday, Sept. 28 in Poway Community Park,
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POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP 13094 Civic Center Drive. Enjoy ring toss, knocking down milk bottles and more. For information, call 858-668-4671. LAWN ALTERNATIVES — Diane Kennedy from Finch Frolic Nursery in Fallbrook will give some alternatives to gravel and artificial turf for lawn replacement during drought at the 2 p.m. Monday, Sept. 28 Lake Hodges Native Plant Club meeting. It will be in the Rancho Bernardo Library, 17110 Bernardo Center Drive. All are welcome. For details, call 858-4876661 or go to lhnpc.org.
TUESDAYSEPT. 29 SAVE WEBB LAKE — A meeting for anyone who wants to volunteer with the Save Webb Lake effort will be held at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 29 at the Courtyard by Marriott, 11611 Bernardo Plaza Court in Rancho Bernardo. For details, contact Scott Lawn at 858-486-8277 or greenway1@sbcglobal.net.
WEDNESDAYSEPT. 30 BUSINESS ROUNDTABLE — Poway Chamber of Commerce and the City of Poway will hold a Business Roundtable for chamber members and non-members from 7:30 to 9:15 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 30 in Poway City Hall’s City Council Chambers, 13325 Civic Center Drive. It will give local business representatives a chance to discuss challenges in today’s economic environment. RSVP by Sept. 25 at 858-748-0016 or chamber@poway.com. A continental breakfast will be served. AMAZING WOMEN — “50 Women You Would Like to Meet” will be hosted by the Po-
way Soroptimists from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 30 at Café Merlot in Bernardo Winery, 13330 Paseo del Verano Norte. Meet some amazing women and hear what they are accomplishing in the area. Refreshments will be provided. Event is free, but RSVPs requested. Call Jeanne at 858-248-3672 or Mary at 619-991-6328.
THURSDAYOCT. 1 SENIOR LUNCHEON — Rancho Bernardo Community Presbyterian Church will hold its Prime Time luncheon for seniors at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 1 in the church’s Fellowship Hall, 17010 Pomerado Road. The Rhapsody Singers will provide entertainment. Cost: $8. RSVP by Sept. 29 with Lynn Cramer at 858674-0759. RB WOMAN’S CLUB — Storyteller Marilyn McPhie will entertain attendees of the 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 1 Rancho Bernardo Woman’s Club luncheon. It will be at the Rancho Bernardo Inn, 17550 Bernardo Oaks Drive. Cost: $26. RSVP by Sept. 28 with Fern at 760741-6620. For details on becoming a member, contact Stella Logan at 760-212-9177 or stellalogan@gmail.com. FOR THOSE 50-PLUS — The Church at Rancho Bernardo is offering a free “Thriving in the Third Act” seminar for anyone age 50-plus. The first of the four-part event will be 6:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 1 in room 21 at the church, 11740 Bernardo Plaza Court. Other sessions will be on Oct. 8, 15 and 22. Topics will include spiritual growth/career shifts, money/security, health/well-being and caregiving. Pre-registration is required at tinyurl.com/CRB3rdAct. For details, contact Bob Meissner at 858-592-2434
ext. 311 or bob@thechurchrb.org.
FRIDAYOCT. 2 BOOK SALE — The Seven Oaks Community Library is holding its annual book sale from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, Oct. 2 at the center, 16789 Bernardo Oaks Drive in Rancho Bernardo. There will be books of all kinds plus movies, audio books and puzzles. Most items are $1 or less. Everyone over 18 is welcome.
SATURDAYOCT. 3 BOOK SALE — The Seven Oaks Community Library is holding its annual book sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 at the center, 16789 Bernardo Oaks Drive in Rancho Bernardo. There will be books of all kinds plus movies, audio books and puzzles. Most items are $1 or less. Everyone over 18 is welcome. FALL FESTIVAL — The Seven Oaks neighborhood will hold its annual Fall Festival from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 in its community center, 16789 Bernardo Oaks Drive in Rancho Bernardo. There will be craft items for sale. Food trucks will be there from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Only those 18 and older may attend. BLESS YOUR PETS — St. Michael’s Catholic Church will provide the annual Blessing of the Animals in celebration of St. Francis of Assisi. All pets, of all shapes and sizes, are welcome to come receive a special blessing at 10 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 on St. Michael’s School’s south campus field, 15546 Pomerado Road in Poway. The event is free and complimentary coffee and donuts will be served.
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE A7 FIRE DEPAR TMENT OPEN HOUSE — The City of Poway’s fire department will be holding an open house from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 at the Fire Department Training Tower, 12335 Crosthwaite Circle. RENDEZVOUS IN POWAY — Take a trip back in time with this free, family-friendly oldfashioned event from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 in Old Poway Park, 14134 Midland Road. Interact with period correct historical camps, experience mock train robberies, meet pioneers and much more. Free and open to the public. For details, call 858-668-4576. HANK WILLIAMS TRIBUTE — The Poway Center for the Performing Arts presents “Hank and My Honky Tonk Heroes,” celebrating the life and music of country music legend Hank Williams, at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 at the PCPA, 15498 Espola Road. Tickets range from $39 to $54, with dinner on the patio an additional $28. For tickets and information, call 858-748-0505 or visit www.powaycenter.com.
SUNDAYOCT. 4 RENDEZVOUS IN POWAY — Take a trip back in time with this free, family-friendly oldfashioned event from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 4 in Old Poway Park, 14134 Midland Road. Interact with period correct historical camps, experience mock train robberies, meet pioneers and much more. Free and open to the public. For details, call 858-668-4576. SEE CALENDAR, Page A8
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A8 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
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CALENDAR CONTINUED FROM PAGE A7
THURSDAYOCT. 8 CHAT WITH COUNTY REP — San Diego County Supervisor Dave Roberts provides a monthly opportunity for his Third District constituents to meet with him in the Rancho Bernardo Library, 17110 Bernardo Center Drive. He is available on the second Thursday of each month between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. The next opportunity is Thursday, Oct. 8. No appointment is needed, but if you’d like one, call 619531-5533. The Third District includes Rancho Bernardo, 4S Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, Sabre Springs and Rancho Penasquitos. FOR THOSE 50-PLUS — The Church at Rancho Bernardo is offering a free “Thriving in the Third Act” seminar for anyone age 50-plus. The second of the four-part event will be 6:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 8 in room 21 at the church, 11740 Bernardo Plaza Court. Other sessions will be on Oct. 15 and 22. Topics will include spiritual growth/career shifts, money/ security, health/well-being and caregiving. Preregistration is required at tinyurl.com/CRB3rdAct. For details, contact Bob Meissner at 858592-2434 ext. 311 or bob@thechurchrb.org.
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BEER FESTIVAL — The fourth annual Rancho BEERnardo Festival and Tasting that features India Pale Ales will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 10 at the Sikes Adobe Historic Farmstead, 12655 Sunset Drive in Escondido. The event that will also have food, music and more is organized by the Rancho Bernardo Sunrise Rotary Club. Tickets are $40 per person for 15 tastings or $70 for two attendees. The notasting designated driver admission is $10. To purchase, go to ranchobeernardofestival.com.
MONDAYOCT. 12 BREATHE BETTER — Valerie Haegele from Tri-City Hospital will speak at the Poway-Rancho Bernardo Better Breathers meeting at 1:15 p.m. Monday, Oct. 12 in the Ed Brown Center for Active Adults, 18402 W. Bernardo Drive in Rancho Bernardo Community Park. All with
breathing issues or their caretakers are welcome. For details, call Mary Gardner at 858-4878307 or Nancy Koehler at 858-748-4307.
TUESDAYOCT. 13 MAIENSCHEIN AT COGG — Assemblyman Brian Maienschein will give an update on what is happening in Sacramento at the 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13 Conservative Order for Good Government luncheon. It will be at Bernardo Heights Country Club, 16066 Bernardo Heights Parkway in Rancho Bernardo. Cost: $25 for non-COGG members. RSVP by Friday, Oct. 9 with Rose Marie Dishman at 858-4860119 or RoseMarie@coggrb.com. RESCUE RECOUNTED — Retired Navy Capt. Mark Cedrun will share his first-hand account of the 2009 rescue of Capt. Richard Phillips from Somali pirates at the 1 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13 Brandeis National Committee Rancho Bernardo Chapter meeting. It will include a dessert bar and be held in the Remington Club II, 16916 Hierba Drive in Rancho Bernardo. Cost: $16. RSVP with Linda at 858-487-8041.
WEDNESDAYOCT. 14 BUSINESS MIXER — North San Diego Business Chamber will hold its 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 14 Regional Connect mixer at the new Petco Corporation headquarters, 10850 Via Frontera in Rancho Bernardo. Cost: $35 for non-members, members can send up to five employees for free if they register by 3 p.m. on Oct. 13 or pay $10 at the door. Register at sdbusinesschamber.com or call 858-487-1767.
THURSDAYOCT. 15 BUSINESS BRANDING — Ric Militi will present “Mirror, Mirror: How personal brand reflects company brand” for the 7:30 to 9 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 15 North San Diego Business Chamber Professional Development Forum. It will be in the chamber office, 10875 Rancho Bernardo Road, Suite 104 in Rancho Bernardo. Cost: $29 for members, $49 for non-members. Registration required at sdbusinesschamber. com or call 858-487-1767.
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RB Sunrise Rotary Club Meets at 7:15 a.m. each Tuesday at the Country Club of Rancho Bernardo, 12280 Greens East Road. Breakfast is $18. For details, call Mary Stanton at 858-521-0566 or go to www. rbsunrise.org. Upcoming programs: Sept. 29 — Former San Diego City Councilman Carl DeMaio, now a host of the DeMaio/ Sullivan Report on KOGO AM600, will give a political update.
Rotary Club of Rancho Bernardo HIDDEN MEADOWS - ESCONDIDO $1,795,000 4BR plus a guest room, 5BA, 4925 sq. ft. including guest quarters. 360˚ views to ocean. 3+ acres, private gate. Room for RV’s and all the toys. www.10282HighMountain.com
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Meets at noon for lunch each Thursday except the second Thursday of each month when it meets for dinner at 5:30 p.m. All gatherings are at Bernardo Heights Country Club. Cost: $17. For details, contact Don Glover at 619994-7703 or dglov@san.rr.com or go to www. rbrotary.org.
Rotary Club of Poway-Scripps Meets from noon to 1:30 p.m. Wednesdays at the Mainstream Bar & Grill, 13385 Poway
Road. Lunch is $20. For details, call Bill at 858231-3619.
Rancho Bernardo Lions Club Meets for lunch at 11:30 a.m. on the second and fourth Tuesday in Bernardo Heights Country Club, 16006 Bernardo Heights Parkway in Rancho Bernardo. Lunch is $20. During the summer, the fourth Tuesday meeting will switch to a dinner gathering at 6:30 p.m. at Olive Garde in Carmel Mountain Ranch.or details, call Betty Dye at 858-487-8175.
Rancho Bernardo Kiwanis Club Meets at 7 a.m. every Wednesday at Cafe Merlot in the Bernardo Winer y. A speaker gives a presentation each week. The buffet breakfast is $15. For details, go to www.ranchobernardokiwanis.org.
Poway Lions Club Meets for dinner on the on the second and fourth Wednesday at Kaminsky’s BBQ and Sports Bar, 12735 Poway Road, Poway.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE A9
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
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RANCHO BERNARDO | 18022 Avenida Alozdra Elizabeth Bachmann $460,000 858.618.5678 In Oaks North Villas, 55+, the popular 3BR/2BA home with 2 car garage is highly upgraded, light and bright.
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RANCHO BERNARDO | 17765 Corte Erizo Elizabeth Bachmann $659,000 858.618.5678 Tastefully remodeled 3BR/2BA home with open floor plan in Oaks North Estates, 55+. Upgraded plus expanded master bedroom.
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RANCHO BERNARDO | 12550 Oaks North Drive Elizabeth Bachmann $544,900-$554,900 858.618.5678 Magnificent views of the Oaks North Golf Course from this rare 2BR/2BA home with a den.
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POWAY | 14243 Silver Ridge Road Dawn Colonna $725,000 858.663.1273 Beautiful one story 4BR/2BA home, panoramic mountain views, vaulted ceilings, open floor plan, 3 car garage and low maintenance yard.
RANCHO BERNARDO | 17832 Avenida Cordillera Elizabeth Bachmann $395,000 858.618.5678 One level, 3BR/2BA in park-like setting. Oaks North Villas 55+. End unit, backs to large open greenbelt. Large back patio, view.
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RANCHO BERNARDO | 12662 Gaillon Court W Theresa Gonzaga $1,250,000 - $1,350,000 619.972.9396 Shows like a model home! Stunning, single story 4BR in The Palisades on premium lot with expansive back yard.
POWAY | 13516 Orchard Gate Road Jessica & Joshua Foote $1,150,000 858.461.9612 4BR/3BA gorgeous home in Green Valley Highlands on spacious lot with fruit trees, outdoor living space & fireplace. 3 car garage.
CARMELVALLEY | 11217-1 Carmel Creek Road Bernadette Skaljac $685,000-$715,876 858.472.1409 Picture your family in this exquisitely upgraded 3BR/2.5BA home in coveted Trilogy neighborhood. Call Bernadette for gate code.
4S RANCH | 10577 Richard Road Katie Holmes $888,000-$918,000 858.335.5417 Spacious 5BR home in Pienza. 1BR/BA downstairs with optional office or 6th BR. Gorgeous kitchen and beautiful views.
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VISTA | 430 Caminito Azul Alicia Simmons $315,000 760.521.0065 Close to Sprinter, shopping, schools and more. Spacious 1,282 sq.ft. 3BR/2.5BA townhome with attached 2 car garage.
Featured Listings from the
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A10 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
BALLS CONTINUED FROM PAGE A1
fence into his yard, a vast decline but it’s not enough. “Even one ball a year is too many,� said Rings. “This has been mental anguish for the past nine years. It’s traumatic. It’s like Chinese water torture with how many balls there has been. I don’t know how this can happen in this community.� Rings said he used to get as many as 300 balls a year over his fence in the beginning, a number that dropped to 200, then about 100 a year when he stopped returning the balls in 2008. With the balls stopped, Rings said what he wants now is an apology from the district. He has appeared before the Poway Unified School District several times on the matter and last month explained his situation to the Poway City Council. Rings said he first complained to the district about the balls damaging his home in 2006. He said the district agreed to fix the problem, promising to add a three or four-foot addition to the top of the chain link fence sharing a property line with Rings. Rings said the district then put off installing the addition for several years, claiming to be over budget or not have any available
Robert Rings, with some of the balls in his backyard. He said many more are stored in his garage or have been given away to friends. The 20-foot fence is in the background. Photo by Emily Sorensen of installing a fence until Rings spoke at the April school board meeting and drew the attention of Board President Kimberley Beatty. Beatty, along with Mike Tarantino, PUSD’s director of maintenance and facilities, came to Rings’ home to assess
work crews to do the work. In 2009, after admittedly “cussing out� Supt. John Collins, Rings said he was told the fence would never be installed and the problem would never be fixed. There were no further talks
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the situation. Rings said Tarantino wanted to install a net that would be opened during the day and closed at night, but Rings and Beatty didn’t like that solution. Beatty brought in a contractor friend, said Rings, who suggested that a taller fence would be the best solution. Rings said he told the district at this point to “do whatever, just don’t devalue my property.� However, Rings said he is unhappy with the fence solution because it devalues his property and makes him feel like he is living in a prison. Originally, Rings said he returned the balls over the fence, but stopped after a basketball nearly hit his four-pound miniature pinscher. The dog went into shock because of the incident and had to be put down after it never recovered. He has been too afraid to let his other dogs outside since the incident. Rings said the balls have caused significant damage to his property, including destroying his air conditioner, his roof, breaking windows, knocking his sliding doors off their tracks, breaking patio furniture and cracking his stucco. He said he has also lost income from roommates, who move out because of the constant risk from balls, or decline to rent a room after they find out about the school.
Tarantino said in an email that when the solution of raising the fence to keep balls out of Rings’ yard was presented, Rings didn’t want the fence raised and, following that conversation, Tarantino was no longer involved in the issue. “When the situation reappeared, Mrs. Beatty asked if I would go with her to Mr. Rings’s property to discuss solutions, which I did. During a conversation with Mrs. Beatty, I discussed that I would want Mr. Rings to be part if not all of what the solution would be. We looked at several ideas that were presented to Mr. Rings. Mr. Rings selected raising the fence height and the placement of a cantilevered piece of fencing (similar to a baseball back stop) that would help deter the balls from entering his property. Once we had direction from Mr. Rings, the District proceeded with the work,� Tarantino wrote in an email. Tarantino also said that removing the ball court that shared a border with Rings was brought up, but Rings declined this solution. “My memory was that Mr. Rings did not want the district to incur that expense, noting that kids will be kids and some balls will find their way into his property, hopefully not as many as he has experienced.�
NEWS BRIEFS Chamber mixer The Poway Chamber of Commerce will hold its monthly networking social from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 24 at Replica Printing Services and KIC Restoration, 12170 Tech Center Drive in Poway. The mixer will have a rodeo theme, so attendees are encouraged to wear rodeo attire. Cost: $25 for non-members. Admission is free to members who pre-register by 3 p.m. Sept. 24 at poway.com or call 858-748-0016.
Water-wise gardening Learn how to be a waterwise gardener with a free class co-hosted by the City of Poway and the San Diego County Library from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 26 at the Poway Library, 13137 Poway Road. Topics will include building a living soil sponge, using rainwater as a resource and managing irrigation, among others. For information, call 858513-2900 or contact powaylibbranch@gmail.com. Send news items to editor@pomeradonews.oom.
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PARK ADDITION — There is a new community announcement kiosk at Old Poway Park thanks to the combined efforts of Boy Scout Troop 682 Eagle Scout candidate Jens Hartvig and the Poway Kiwanis Club. Hartvig planned and supervised the construction of the kiosk while the club provided financial support. A plaque on the structure commemorates the 100th anniversary of Kiwanis International. Attending Sunday’s dedication were, from left, Hartvig, Kiwanis Club President Joyce Handa, Kiwanis Division 37 Lt. Gov. Carl Ames, Ames’s wife, Carol Brady, and club members Thelma Fisher, Jim Crute, Gina Sheehan, and Neil Tarzy. Photo by Criselda Yee
DETOURS CONTINUED FROM PAGE A1
the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG); Caltrans; the cities of San Diego, Poway and Escondido; North County Transit District and San Diego Metropolitan Transit System. Through integrated corridor management, these partners are able to address congestion in real-time under normal and incident conditions. When such conditions are present, the system will devise the best alternate surface street routes to detour traffic. Signs have started going up in Poway and will soon appear in the other communities directing drivers to the alternative routes. When activated, freeway signs will tell drivers which alternate route to take and street signals will be adjusted to keep the increased traffic flowing on the surface streets. When the system is not activated the traffic signals on the surface streets will operate on their normal timing schedule. The system will also take into account the time of day, so for example, freeway drivers will not be detoured onto Pomerado Road in the early morning and mid-afternoon of weekdays in order to not create more traffic on that street during school arrival and dismissal
times since there are several schools along Pomerado, Estrella said. The integrated system will have “200 intersections talking to each other,” he said, noting San Diego County was chosen in part because of the recent transit improvements it has made along Interstate 15, including Bus Rapid Transit, Direct Access Ramps, transit stations, Express Lanes and an improved arterial network. In all, there will be 23 alternative route signs posted within the City of San Diego, nine in Poway and 10 in Escondido, he said. The surface streets selected for the program include Scripps-Poway Parkway, Poway Road, Pomerado Road, Ted Williams Parkway, Camino del Norte, Rancho Bernardo Road, Sabre Springs Parkway, Rancho Carmel Drive, Carroll Canyon Road, Black Mountain Road, State Route 56, Mira Mesa Boulevard, Centre City Parkway, Auto Park Way and State Route 78. In addition to the freeway signs alerting drivers to take the alternate routes, Estrella said there is a 511 San Diego mobile app they can install on their smartphones, available for free through the Apple App Store and Google Play. For details, go to sandag.org/ICM.
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE A12 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
Body of missing man found in Poway A body found inside a vehicle parked near a Walmart store in Poway late last week was that of a 71-year-old San Diego man who had been missing nine days, the county Medical Examiner’s Office reported today. Luong Chieu Le was reported missing after driving away from home on Sept. 9 in his black 2003 Honda Odyssey minivan, according to San Diego police and the medical examiner’s office. Police said Le required medication for an undisclosed issue but failed to take it with him when he left home. It was unclear whether that played a role in his death. Le’s body was found inside his van in a parking lot along Community Road near Hilleary Place shortly after 6:30 p.m. Friday, authorities said. The medical examiner’s office has yet to determine how he died.
CRIME LOG Crimes reported in Poway
Sept. 20 • Misdemeanor battery on person - 14300 block Erin Lane, 2:13 p.m. • Felony burglary (shoplifting) - 13400 block Community Road, 6:30 a.m. Sept. 19 • Felony vandalism ($400 or more) - 14400 block Ortez Place, 9:45 p.m. Sept. 17 • Commercial burglary 14700 block Pomerado Road, 8 p.m. • Felony obstruct/resist executive officer with minor injury - Country Day Road/ Espola Road, 10:30 a.m. Sept. 16 • Vehicle break-in/theft - 17100 block Cloudcroft Drive, 9 p.m. Sept. 15 • Residential burglar y - 12700 block Avenida De Espuela, 8 a.m.
• Commercial burglar y - 12700 block Poway Road, 3:21 a.m. Crimes reported in Rancho Bernardo, 4S Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, Sabre Springs and Black Mountain Ranch
Sept. 21 • Vandalism ($400 or more) - 13000 block Rancho Penasquitos Blvd., 6 a.m. Sept. 20 • Vandalism ($400 or more) - 10700 block Via Las Posadas, 6:30 p.m. • Possession syringe 11800 block Rancho Bernardo Road, 7:10 a.m. • Fraud - 8200 block Stage Coach Place, 7 a.m. Sept. 19 • Felony battery with serious bodily injury - 8800 block Sparren Way, 9:20 p.m. • Vehicle break-in/theft 11800 block Avenue of Industry, 8 p.m.
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
Poway veterans help repair flooded home BY KAREN BRAINARD The flood-damaged home of 97-yearold World War II veteran Pat Belden of Ramona is gradually coming together through donations of time, labor and money by many individuals, organizations and businesses, including some from Poway. Last week Kitchen Barn of Ramona installed new kitchen cabinets for the U.S. Women’s Army Air Corps veteran, whose house in the 1100 block of Sixth Street was a victim of the July 18 and 19 rainstorms. “Every room in the house flooded,” said Belden’s live-in caregiver, Debbie Labbe. While Kitchen Barn is donating the labor for the cabinet installation, Ramona Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 3783 and its Men’s and Ladies auxiliaries contributed $1,750 toward the cabinets. Mark Gottas, a design consultant with Kitchen Barn, is a member of the Men’s Auxiliary. He is one of many connecting to others to make the restoration possible. Kitchen Barn’s co-owner, Tracy Taft, became aware of Belden’s situation because her sister, Karen Vaughan, handles Belden’s financial affairs and has long ties to the veteran and her late husband, Michael. The Beldens owned Business Management Ser vices and hired Vaughan when she was 16 years old. Vaughan eventually purchased the business from them. Also contributing to the kitchen restoration is Poway VFW Post 7907, which is donating appliances. Both the Ramona and Poway VFWs also arranged for new drywall, related supplies and labor, said Labbe.
Through the Poway Veterans Organization, Dave Mullet with San Diego Granite Inc. in Poway learned of Belden’s situation. He received approval from San Diego Granite owners Bill Mullet (Dave Mullet’s brother) and Doug Main to provide granite countertops for Belden’s kitchen and bathrooms. In addition, Ramona Food & Clothes Closet gave a donation. “I think it’s fantastic,” a grateful and soft-spoken Belden said of all the help. While she is bedridden and has been staying in a back bedroom throughout the ordeal, she is aware of the work underway. “She’s a wonderful person,” Vaughan said. “She’s been a part of the community a long time.” Originally from New York, Belden said she moved to Ramona in 1976. During WWII, she was stationed in England where she handled a motor pool and saw most of the country, and then went to France and Germany where she worked with intelligence because she spoke German. “She’s an amazing person,” Labbe said, while Belden referred to her caregiver as “the best.” Labbe was at the house on the day of the July downpour and was videotaping water running off the roof when she turned around and slipped on wet flooring. “I came out into the kitchen and water was pouring in the (screen) door,” she said. “I couldn’t stop water from coming in.” The backyard is adjacent to properties that have small embankments. Labbe said she heard a rumble when rainwater came barreling down from those embankments into Belden’s backyard.
The short ramp outside the sliding glass doors of Belden’s bedroom helped to prevent some of the water from flowing in, Labbe said. The caregiver said she was able to push out and sop up water so Belden could stay in her room that night. Friends came with wet and dry buckets and Labbe said she kicked holes in the walls to prevent mold. Outside, the rainwater seeped through the foundation slab and into the house overnight, she added “I said if you could get through WWII, we can get through this,” Labbe remembered saying to Belden. Vaughan said he is worried the yard could flood again as it sits about six inches elow the street and there is no drainage. “It’s a concern, especially if we have an El Niño,” she said. Labbe credited the many who came to their aid, including resident Lisa Patterson, who brought them meals every day, and Team Rubicon, a volunteer organization of military veterans and first responders that assist with disasters around the globe. Calling Team Rubicon “my heroes,” Labbe said the group came the weekend after the flooding, performed demolition work and looked out for them. She also noted that resident Michelle Carr provided food for Team Rubicon while at Belden’s house. The team set up camp at Olive Peirce Middle School and called it Forward Operating Base Belden. “I never met so many gracious, unselfish people in my life,” said Labbe. Soon, she told Belden, the house will get back to normal. With a sweet smile, Belden replied, “I’d like to get back to normal.”
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE A13
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
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PAGE A14 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
LOCAL NEWS
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The News Journal and the News Chieftain (USPS 440760) are published each Thursday by U-T Community Press. Adjudicated as newspapers of general circulation by Superior Court No. 226549, February 23, 1962. Subscriptions are available at $27 per year by carrier within the 92127, 92128 and 92064 ZIP areas and $125 per year by mail. Call above number for rates outside area. Send address changes to above address. Copyright © 2015 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.
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GUEST COLUMN
We are all on this planet together By Amy Roost
M
y grandpa Sam and great uncle Bolek were luckier than their nine bothers and sisters. They made it out of Poland alive. Uncle Bolek owned a small art gallery in the Nazi ghetto in occupied Poland and had the good sense to roll up three of his most valuable oil canvases in the event he needed to barter on the road to Sweden. Today, two of those oils hang in my house, a reminder of my family’s narrow escape from Hitler’s reach. My husband Ain’s parents were also refugees. They escaped from Estonia on a fishing boat crossing the Baltic Sea to Sweden in the cover of darkness, just ahead of Stalin’s henchmen. His uncle traveled the same route by rowboat carrying his only currency: 13 bottles of homemade moonshine. My would-be in-laws went on to work in labor camps, set up by Sweden to help refugees transition. Meanwhile, two of my husband’s uncles were sent to Siberia, never to be heard from again. Ain was also a refugee. By 1951, with Finlandization in full swing and Stalin about to come knocking at Sweden’s door, Ain’s parents decided to put more distance between their new family and the ruthless Soviet dictator. They sailed across another sea, this time the Atlantic, and put down roots in Canada. My husband was teased when they arrived because, although he could speak Estonian and Swedish at the age of five, he could not yet speak English. He was called a “DP” (displaced person) by neighborhood bullies, a term he couldn’t understand at the time but knew, because it was said with such derogatory vehemence, that it was the worst of ethnic slurs. I met Ain’s Olympic track coach George for the first time last summer in Canada. George is also a refugee. He wrote a book about his experience titled I Was a Horse in Bryansk. George was one of approximately 100,000 Hungarian refugees Canada took in during the 1956 revolution. The U.S. took in 35,000. My yoga buddy Hu is a refugee. When he was three years old, his family of nine escaped on a small wooden boat with 73 others from a war-torn Vietnam. A Japanese boat saved his family from drowning in their sinking boat. The U.N.’s Humanitarian Organization sponsored his family to an immigrant community in San Diego. The refugees I have known didn’t feel entitled to anything. They hated living off of food stamps, welfare, housing assistance, government cheese, and in an internment-like and/ or poverty stricken communities. But they appreciated the assistance, made the best of opportunities that came their way, and they all worked hard to become fully independent contributing members of their new communities as quickly as they could. They also didn’t enjoy being discriminated against or having to fear for their livelihood because of their eyes, skin color, name, language, and social class. They just hoped that it would all get better. And for each of them, it did. They worked hard to make lives for themselves whether it meant dumpster diving, picking cans, logging, selling newspapers on street corners, delivering pizzas, landscaping people’s homes, or whatever it took to provide shelter and put food on the family table. All of us human beings, we are all proud. We all want an opportunity to live freely without fear, without repression. When there is hope, we can endure just about anything, even the traumas of war and the struggles of systematic persecution, SEE REFUGEES Page A15
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Don’t blame Beatty In your Sept. 3 editorial, you criticize Poway Unified school board President Kimberley Beatty for her handling of a volatile situation at the August school board meeting. Yet, in her article about that very meeting, your own Emily Sorensen wrote that “Wilson was asked twice by Board President Kimberley Beatty to sit down or he would be removed. A district security officer asked Wilson to leave after he failed to sit down. Wilson left without further incident.” What part of that demonstrates an inability to run an orderly public meeting? Criticize the combatants all you want, but don’t blame Ms. Beatty for their behavior. Her handling of the incident was both measured and appropriate, unlike the Superintendent and his critics.
CHARLES SELLERS Rancho Penasquitos PUSD board member
Warning for pet owners I’m writing to get word out to others who may have small animals in our area. On Sept. 17 at 2:30 p.m. a coyote leaped our five-foot wall and killed our eleven pound maltese. We saw the coyote escape as we were looking for our dog from her less than 10 minute trip to do her business. There is a coyote pack that lives in a wooded area between the 13000 block of Willow Run Road and Jack Rabbit Road. They are seen routinely walking the streets day and night. A neighbor saw two mature coyotes on our street about 30 minutes prior to this event.
TOM LEONARD Poway
Do as city says, not does? I take shorter showers and purchased an electric shaver to save water. Anything living in my yard (except my dog) is by definition drought resistant, as I don’t water anything. As I’m driving by the city park in the Westwood neighborhood, I see the sprinklers water-
ing the lawn at 12:30 p.m. on Friday. As I don’t water anything, I haven’t kept up with the water saving rules. It seems that I remember that Friday was not a day that we could water and we couldn’t water in midday. Is the city exempt from the rules that they put on us? There is an old rule that states “People do those things that the boss checks.” I would suggest that any time a citizen reports that the city is not in compliance with the rules regarding water restrictions, the mayor and City Council members be required to go 24 hours without personal hygiene water usage.
NORMAN C. SWANSON Rancho Bernardo
Parade suggestions As a longtime Poway resident, I have attended most of the parades for Poway Days. I was concerned to note the lower participant and spectator turnout this past Sept. 12. Was it the heat? You may recall that the heat has been almost unbearable the past few years at parade time. And, while our 6-year-old Brownies and Cub Scouts bravely trekked the distance, I noted that none of our elected officials or other politicians were riding in the parade this year in their convertibles. Too hot for them? Or is it just not an election year? I highly recommend that the parade committee consider the following changes: either change the date to later in the year, or shorten the route the participants must march, or change the time to the evening hours when it should be cooler. Because of climate change, we can no longer expect the weather during the day in early September to be pleasant enough for young and old to march the length of Poway Road, or for the spectators to fill the parade route.
ANDREA WHITEHILL Poway Letters to the editor should be limited to 250 words. They may be emailed to editor@ pomeradonews.com or composed online at www.pomeradonews.com.
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
OPINION
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE A15
‘Anti-vaxxers’ threaten freedoms of others I
magine a California where polio becomes a threat to children’s health as it was before the 1950s, when first the Salk vaccine and later the even more effective Sabin formula threw this dreaded and crippling disease and all its iron lungs into dormancy. Or a California where dozens of kids die every year from pertussis, better known as whooping cough for the gasping whoop children often make after their deep coughing. And more, like measles, mumps and rubella, to name a few. This was the threat that faced California after Gov. Jerry Brown in 2012 attached a one-sentence signing message to a law that aimed to make it tougher for parents to evade getting their kids vaccinated. Now a proposed referendum being circulated by anti-vaccination activists threatens to thrust the state back into those Dark Ages-style dangers. Brown’s short message in 2012 called on state health officials to provide a religious exemption on a form allowing parents to opt out of vaccinations and still register them for public or private schools. Checking the religious belief box allowed parents to claim their deep theological beliefs precluded vaccinations. Many with little religious belief lied when they took the checkoff. They either believed the widespread shibboleth that vaccinations are harmful or they were just plain lazy. Within less than three years, there followed outbreaks of both measles and pertussis. There is no proven link between these bursts of previously inactive diseases to Brown’s personal belief box, found a Johns Hopkins University study of a 2010 pertussis epidemic in California. But the report showed a link between the location of cases and the areas where parents most actively sought previous, harder-to-get, religious exemptions. Of course, no organized religion then or now, aside from the Black Muslim Nation of Islam, has opposed vaccination. The great preponderance of vaccination exemptions have come in wealthy coastal counties with virtually no Nation of Islam presence. So parents claiming a religious belief exemption must
Thomas Elias SOCAL FOCUS either have lied or possess a private religion. All this caused Brown to reverse himself this year and okay a law allowing vaccination exemptions only for medical reasons. This law, effective with the start of the next school year, still doesn’t demand all children be vaccinated before kindergarten and seventh grade; parents can home school their kids if they don’t want them vaccinated. The current referendum effort aims to put a measure on the November 2016 ballot and reverse the new law. Only two modern-era referenda have succeeded: one in 1982 cancelling government approval of a “peripheral canal” project to bring Northern California river water to the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California, and one last year reversing state approval of an off-reservation Indian casino. It’s telling that religion has barely been mentioned in public meetings around the state pushing the anti-vaxxers’ referendum. Most speakers describe the vaccination mandate as a “fundamental human rights issue.” As an example, they argued in one San Diego County meeting this summer that “the state wants to get between a parent and a child.” The anti-vaxxers want to be free to leave their kids unprotected from potentially deadly diseases whose viral or bacterial causes are still present in the environment. They claim, for instance, that the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine is linked to increased autism rates. This myth, originally published in a medical journal, was debunked long ago and later denounced by the authors of the flawed British study, who admit their research was faulty. But it persists, even getting a full airing on the syndicated talk show of former CBS News anchorwoman
Katie Couric, who later apologized for that. Essentially, parents who want to be free to keep their children unvaccinated and at risk for dangerous diseases would deny the freedom of other children with medical reasons that preclude vaccination to attend schools or enjoy theme parks and other public areas for fear of picking up disease from unvaccinated peers. It’s clear the belief of some parents in a discredited theory should not take precedence over the freedoms of other kids to live without fear of preventable diseases. But this conflict will never be voiced by anti-vaxxers who formerly could take the religious exemption even when they had no religion. Which makes it clear responsible Californians should refuse to sign the current referendum petitions when accosted outside supermarkets and big box stores by carriers being paid up to $9 for each signature they gather. Elias is a syndicated columnist. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
REFUGEES CONTINUED FROM PAGE A14
discrimination, and humiliation. For refugees this hope involves risking life and limb to try to reach a country where they can be free to live their lives and create futures for themselves and their families through the sweat of their brows. In similar circumstances most of us, if we had the courage, would do the same. In fact this country was founded on just that – people fleeing persecution and seeking liberty. My hope is that our society realizes that we are all on this planet together and can, if we choose, continue to lend a helping hand to those in need. Refugees I have known have appreciated such assistance and have repaid the debt by enriching and giving back to their adopted countries and communities. Roost is a former Poway resident who now lives in Encinitas. Until recently, she was a regular contributing columnist.
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OPINION
PAGE A16 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
The pope and capitalism
R
obert Rector, who has spent an academic lifetime tracking information from the U.S. Census Bureau, reports that the U.S. has the richest poor in the world. Someone needs to tell Pope Francis, who has an apparent enmity for capitalism. Now I have seen real “unfettered” capitalism, as practiced in the British-controlled Hong Kong of the 1960s, and it worked, but it worked differently than the mixed economy that we have in the U.S. today. It is apparently “unfettered” capitalism that the pope abhors, although I doubt he ever saw it. Until this week the pope had also never seen the United States, so one assumes his economic knowledge is academic. The Hong Kong of yesteryear, with “unfettered” capitalism, was a marvel that drove the Chinese to decide to keep it under the slogan, “one country, two systems” but they continue to change it anyway, meanwhile stealing some of its most productive mannerisms to drive the Chinese economy. Unfettered capitalism in the British Hong Kong had no safety net – it was, in the words of my ancient Southern youth, “Root hog, or die.” Now no one died in Hong Kong because everyone worked. The shoes custom fit for my wife were glued together by some poor 7-year-old child, and her dresses custom-fit at Harilela’s, which under the British was “By Appointment To Her Majesty The Queen,” were sewn by women in their 80s – or so I was told by Harilela’s. Hunger is a great motivator. It is not a system that would be tolerated in the U.S. – but then neither is polygamy, or child brides, or eating dog meat, or eating balutes (you don’t want to know), or letting cows roam the streets unmolested. All of these are acceptable in other successful cultures. Child labor and sweat shops are no longer in our culture,
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LOCAL LEADERS
Allen Polk Hemphill TAKING THE POINT POSITION although both were. We had real capitalism, unfettered, in the colonies at the inception of this nation – everyone worked because everyone had to contribute. Today’s mixed economy may indeed be “nicer” and softer, and certainly we have created enormous wealth...and yes, we can afford to provide a safety net for the weak, the disabled and the lazy. So could have pre-Chinese Hong Kong, but that was not their culture. It can be debated whether our version of capitalism has evolved or devolved, but it is certainly true that the U.S. has the richest poor in the world. The U.S. Census Bureau tracks it, and Robert Rector of Heritage Foundation looks at the data and publishes his findings – and yes, Heritage is conservative, but, as an article in the Atlantic debating Richter’s findings states, yes, Richter’s data shows our average American poor have great material things like an automobile, air conditioning, several TV sets, a computer, and live in housing the average middle-class European would welcome, but the average American poor still have little access to higher education. The Atlantic article might also note that a Bentley is beyond the reach of the poor. Perhaps the pope will address that. Reach Hemphill, an occasional columnist, at ahemphill@ cox.net.
Poway City Council: Steve Vaus, mayor, Jim Cunningham, John Mullin, Dave Grosch and Barry Leonard, members. Meets the first and third Tuesdays of each month in the City Council chambers, 13325 Civic Center Drive. Dan Singer, city manager. City Hall: 858-668-4400. San Diego Mayor: Kevin Faulconer, 202 C Street, 11th floor, San Diego, CA 92101. Phone: 619-236-6330. Email: kevinfaulconer@sandiego.gov. San Diego City Councilman: Mark Kersey, District 5. City Administration Building, 202 C Street, MS No. 10A, San Diego, CA 92101. San Diego phone: 619-236-6655. North County phone: 858-673-5304. Fax: 619-238-0915. Email: markkersey@sandiego. gov. Poway Unified School District: John Collins, superintendent. Andy Patapow, Kimberley Beatty, Michelle O’ConnorRatcliff, Charles Sellers and T.J. Zane. Mailing address: 15250 Avenue of Science, San Diego, CA 92128-3406. Phone: 858-521-2800. Rancho Bernardo Community Council: Robin Kaufman, president. Meets at 6:30 p.m. the fourth Thursday of each month from January to October and first Thursday in December in Rancho Bernardo Library’s second floor community room, 17110 Bernardo Center Drive. Mailing address: 12463 Rancho Bernardo Road, #523, San Diego, CA 92198. Phone: 858-487-6227. Rancho Bernardo Community Planning Board: Mike Lutz, chairman. Meets at 7 p.m. the third Thursday of each month in the Club 21 room at RB Swim & Tennis Club, 16955 Bernardo Oaks Drive. Mailing address: P.O. Box 270831, San Diego, CA 92198. Phone: 858-673-8763. County Super visor (Poway): Dianne Jacob, District 2. County Administration Building, 1600 Pacific Highway, San Diego, CA 92101. Phone: 619-531-5522. Fax: 619-696-7253. Email: dianne.jacob@sdcounty.ca.gov. County Supervisor (Rancho Bernardo, 4S Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, Sabre Springs, Rancho Penasquitos): Dave Roberts, District 3. 1600 Pacific Highway, Room 335, San Diego, CA 92101. North County office: 720 North Broadway, Escondido. Phone 760-705-8024. Email: dave.roberts@sdcounty. ca.gov.
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE A17
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
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POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
PAGE A18 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
John Robert Ellis
Paul N. Fenner, DVM
November 20, 1933 - September 12, 2015
May 29, 1954 - September 5, 2015 RANCHO BERNARDO — Paul N. Fenner, DVM, died on September 5, 2015, after a courageous fight with melanoma. Dr. Fenner was a loving husband and father, and a beloved son, brother, uncle, and a highly regarded veterinarian. He will be sorely missed by his family, friends, and the veterinary community. Paul was born in Seattle and had a passion for the outdoors in the Pacific Northwest, hiking, hunting, fishing, canoeing, and camping in many locations. He earned his DVM from Washington State University in 1979 and began a long career caring for small animals. Paul married Chris Moore in 1982, and their son, Conor, came into the family in 2000. Paul and Chris founded Bernardo Heights Veterinary Hospital in Rancho Bernardo in 1987 and grew it into a successful veterinary practice. Outside of his professional life, Paul loved to travel and explore, visiting several countries in Europe with Chris and Conor. He was an avid and voracious reader and researcher who loved to learn as much as possible about any topic that would come to his attention. Paul faced his cancer head-on and with grace. His family’s support and his dry wit carried him through many rough times
during the course of his illness. He is predeceased by his mother, Carolyn, and father-in-law, Lawrence Boyd Moore. Paul is survived by wife, Chris; son, Conor; father, Jim; sisters, Ruth Van (Don) Wechel and Susan Fenner (Carl Uhlman); brother, Bill (Anne Healey); motherin-law, Juanita Moore; brother-in-law, John Moore; as well as seven nieces and nephews. There will be a memorial mass held at St. Gabriel’s Catholic Church, 13714 Twin Peaks Road, Poway, California, on Friday, October 9, 2015, at 10am with a casual reception to follow at the Church. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the animal rescue, or animal therapy charity of your choice or melanoma research. Please sign the guest book online at legacy.com/ obituaries/pomeradonews.
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RANCHO BERNARDO — John Robert Ellis passed away peacefully at the age of 81 on September 12, 2015, due to complications of Parkinson’s disease. A lifelong resident of California, John was born November 20, 1933, in Santa Monica, CA, played trumpet and French horn in the Santa Cruz High School Marching Band and Orchestra, and graduated from Santa Cruz High School in 1951. John belonged to the “Cam Snappers” Hot Rod Club in Santa Cruz, and his passion for hot rods, power and speed continued to grow throughout the years. After high school graduation, John was in the Navy Reserve and worked as an apprentice machinist at Moore Dry Dock in Oakland, CA. He was drafted into the Navy and served two years as a submariner aboard the USS Tunny during the Korean Conflict. After leaving the Navy, he worked as a machinist while he earned a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from San Jose State University in 1963. John began his 30 year career with Hewlett-Packard (HP) at the Stanford Park Manufacturing Division in Palo Alto, CA, and later transferred to the Santa Clara Division. In 1981 John found his engineering “home” at the San Diego Division as a Senior Manufacturing Engineer where he was responsible for coordinating tooling design with foreign and domestic vendors of fabricated and injection molded parts used in the new product development for production of HP Plotters and Printers. He
retired from HP in San Diego in 2003. John enjoyed water and snow skiing, building hotrods and working on his 1972 classic “project” cars, a Porsche 911 Targa and a Chevy Pickup, watching Indy car racing, and travelling throughout 21 countries in his lifetime. He was an elder, usher, choir member and thrift shop volunteer at Rancho Bernardo Community Presbyterian Church (RBCPC). John’s pride and joy were his family: his wife of 61 years, Bonni; son, Robert Ellis of Truckee, CA; daughter, Sandra Peterson, and granddaughters, Kirsten and Erika Peterson of Ramona, CA; and brother, Tom Ellis of Livermore, CA. A Celebration of Life service will be held at RBCPC on Saturday, October 10, 2015, at 11:00AM, with a reception immediately following. In lieu of flowers, the family is asking that donations be made in memory of John at http://www. parkinsonsassociation.org/ san-diego-office/. Please sign the guest book online at legacy.com/ obituaries/pomeradonews.
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Russell W. Savatt Jr.
June 5, 1927 - September 7, 2015
POWAY — Russell W. Savatt Jr., MGySgt. USMC Ret., died peacefully on September 7, 2015, at his home in Poway, California. He was 87 years old. Russell was raised in Kings Park, NY, and is preceded in death by his parents, Russell W. and Helen Savatt, and his sister, Sally (Joe) LaValle. He is survived by his wife, Josephine; four children, Laura (Jim) Reynolds, Russell W. (Chris) Savatt III, Mark Savatt and Claudine (Robert) Hagerstrom; and their beloved grandchildren. Russ enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in 1947, graduated in 1949 from the New York Institute of Photography, and upon graduating came on active duty as a United States Marine. Russ served an honorable and distinguished 32 year career in the Marines. He is a decorated veteran of the Korean War, served two tours in Vietnam and was the recipient of the Bronze Star, Air Medal, Combat Action Ribbon, Presidential Unit Citation, Navy Unit Commendation, Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Korean Service Medal, Vietnam Service Medal, United Nations Service Medal, Republic of Vietnam Meritorious Unit Citation, Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal, and Combat Aircrew Insignia. After the Vietnam War Russ continued his 32 year Marine Corps career. He was a photographer for the Leatherneck Magazine
which took him to many exciting places. He was also selected to photograph the 1972 Munich Olympics for the Marine Corps. The final years of Russ’ Marine Corps career brought the Savatt’s to San Diego where Russ finished his career, running the photo lab for the Marine Corps Recruit Depot (MCRD) San Diego and retiring from Camp Pendleton. Russ and Jo were active members of the San Diego Chapter of the United States Marine Corps Combat Correspondents Association. After retirement from the Marine Corps he joined the Oceanside Police Department (OPD) in 1980 as their Police Photographer. At OPD Russ was responsible for operating the crime lab, training officers and photographing crime scenes. He retired from OPD after 13 years of service. Russ and Jo, married for over 63 years, had many wonderful adventures both overseas and here at home with their four children. The Savatt’s have been fixtures in Poway since 1975. Russ will always be remembered for his sense of honor, love for his family and his bountiful sense of humor. Services will be held Wednesday, September 30, 2015, at 11:00 am at Miramar National Cemetery. Please sign the guest book online at legacy.com/ obituaries/pomeradonews.
To place a Life Tribute call Cathy Kay at 858-218-7237 or email InMemory@MyClassifiedMarketplace.com
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE A19
PAGE A20 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
SECTION B
ALSO IN THIS SECTION POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2015
Marketplace & Real Estate
PREP GIRLS GOLF
POWER SHIFT? Janina Jusay plays center field for the RBHS softball team. File photo
PREP SOFTBALL
Jusay verbals to SDSU Maranatha Christian running back and linebacker Trevor Sheng. Courtesy photo
Rancho Bernardo High junior softball player Janina Jusay verbally committed to San Diego State University in early September. The speedy center fielder with an amazing glove announced the commitment on her Twitter account. “I am so happy and blessed to say that I have verbally committed to play softball at SDSU. Go Aztecs!” she wrote. Jusay was an All-Palomar League honorable mention selection as a sophomore last year.
PREP FOOTBALL
EAGLES SET FOR HUGE D-V BATTLE BY MICHAEL BOWER Only two games left blemishes on the regular-season record of the Maranatha Christian High football team last season: a 52-0 loss to Capistrano Valley Christian and a 40-12 loss to Vincent Memorial. The latter was disappointing for the Eagles, because they felt they could play with the Scots. But turnovers turned a 14-6 deficit at halftime into a 28-point loss. “Last year, we both entered that game undefeated and we felt that was a test to see where we are,” Eagles coach Mike Cole said. “This year is the same thing. We are both undefeated and we want to see where we are.” Maranatha will find out Friday night, when they travel to Vincent Memorial for a 7 p.m. showdown between two of the top teams in Division V. The Scots enter with a 4-0 record, while the Eagles are 3-0 and coming off a bye week. “We want to win this game,” SEE EAGLES, Page B4
Calista Reyes, left, Cece DeMatteo, middle, and Samantha Yi helped the Broncos beat perennial state power Torrey Pines twice last week. File photos
Broncos look to usher in new era BY MICHAEL BOWER This could be the beginning of a new era in the San Diego Section. At least that’s what the Rancho Bernardo High girls golf team is making it look like through its first 10 matches of the year. The Broncos, who have finished runner-up to perennial state power Torrey Pines at the section championships for the last five consecutive years, beat the Falcons twice last week and are on pace to capture their first outright Palomar League championship in school history. “It has been a long time coming,” said 13th-year Broncos’ coach Tim Steigerwald, who collected his 200th career win when Rancho Bernardo beat San Pasqual on Aug. 31. “I think the tide has finally turned.” The power shift from the Falcons to the Broncos is far from official. But Rancho Bernardo’s sweep of Torrey Pines — who has won six straight section championships (12 of the last
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marigarcia@allstate.com CA Lic: 0E02729
15) and four of the last five state titles — for the first time in school history is a sign that it is a possibility. The Broncos edged the Falcons 189-192 at Bernardo Heights Country Club on Sept. 15 and then followed that with a 185-191 win the very next
“I think the tide has finally turned.” - Broncos’ girls golf coach Tim Steigerwald day at Lomas Santa Fe Golf Course. Sophomore Calista Reyes and freshman Stephanie Heimler both fired 1-under-par 35s on both days to lead the Broncos (10-0). Rancho Bernardo and Torrey Pines played each other back-to-back days because of a schedule conflict. “It was a lot different for us because we usually don’t play two days
in a row or any team two days in a row,” said Rancho Bernardo junior Cece DeMatteo said. “But after we beat them the first time it gave us more confidence for the second day.” It was like one big match.” DeMatteo, Reyes and Heimler are part of a young and deep Broncos’ squad. Junior Claire Hogle, sophomore Samantha Yi and freshman Bailey Gansert are the other usual scorers. The 10 girls on the team know they have a chance to do something special. “This is the best team we have had,” Steiger wald said. “Last year was our best year, but we are as good and deeper. It’s just a stronger team depth wise.” And that team last year took third in the state and ended the Falcons’ consecutive match-winning streak at 117. While the Broncos are hoping to dethrone Torrey Pines for their first San Diego Section championship in school history, they have their eye on SEE GOLF, Page B4
Lauren Leland leads the Titans with eight goals. File photo
PREP FIELD HOCKEY
Fast start for Titans The Poway High field hockey team entered this week with a 7-3-1 record and have won three of its last four matches. It’s a big difference from where the Titans were a season ago when they won just five games all year. Sophomore Lauren Leland leads the team with eight goals, while sophomore Emily Plummer leads Poway in assists with five. Senior defender Taylor Jervis has helped the Titans register seven shutouts. Poway will play at Escondido Friday at 6 p.m.
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SPORTS
PAGE B2 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Sedej excelling in leading role for Titans’ water polo BY MICHAEL BOWER Owen Sedej dabbled in many sports as a youngster. There was golf, but it did not fulfill his craving for intensity and action. There was soccer, lacrosse and flag football, all intense and full of action — but something was still missing. Then Sedej’s seventh-grade year rolled around and he found water polo. “Water was the key,” said Sedej, now a senior at Poway High. “I found myself in the water and I loved swimming. And water polo has all the aspects of the other sports, but it’s in the water. I really liked it.” And now the Titans’ boys water polo team is reaping the benefits. Sedej, who made the varsity team as a freshman, has 22 goals and 14 assists in Poway’s first seven matches. The Titans (6-1) are playing some of their best water polo in years with Sedej in the leading role. The 5-foot-11, 170-pound utility player says it’s only because of his surrounding cast that Poway is off to such a fast start. “It’s so nice to have all the support around me,” said Sedej, who owns the school record for sprints/draws won with 94 his junior year. “If I was shooting at the goal all the time, we couldn’t put up as many points as we do on the scoreboard. We have freshmen and bench players stepping up. We have multiple people that can score. One of us can have an off day and somebody else will pick us up.” That’s exactly what Poway coach John Giulianotti was hoping would happen this year. The Titans leaned heavily on senior Riley Fantasia for scoring last season and when opponents took him away Poway would struggle. “I knew this year we were not going to have a Riley or
Poway High senior Owen Sedej has scored 22 goals and piled up 14 assists for the boys water polo team. Photo by Sherri Dunlap one person score 110 goals,” Giulianotti said. “I knew it would be an effort by committee this year. It is still early and Owen might end up being the guy who scores a lot of the goals, but right now we are working as a team.” And the Titans often work best with Sedej, who primarily plays driver but can play anywhere in the pool, running the point. His ability to find the open man on the counter attack or the best matchup in an offensive set is uncanny. “I think he is most effective off the counter attack and being our point man running the offense,” Giulianotti
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said. “He is a strong ball handler and is great at feeding the ball to his teammates. He is kind of like a point guard in basketball.” Sedej is a great perimeter defender, too. He puts constant pressure on the ball, forcing opponents to make bad decisions. But sometimes he can take his aggressiveness a little too far. “He plays with a lot of passion, sometimes too much,” Giulianotti said. “Sometimes he needs to tone it back a bit, but he has great legs and just really quick reaction times. He can anticipate things really well and steal balls in the air and from guys he is defending one-on-one.” Sedej, who plays with the Del Mar Water Polo Club when he isn’t playing with Poway High, prefers defense to offense. “I think I like the feeling of taking the ball,” he said, “and a great shot block is pretty cool, too.” Sedej would like to play water polo in college, but said his academics will take priority. He plans to study biomedical engineering. “I would choose academics over water polo,” he said. “I can always play club water polo somewhere to satisfy my competitive spirit.” And his need to be in the water.
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Leilani Lynn Ramsay and Ryan Timothy Sigel married on August 28, 2015, at the San Diego County Administration Center after 16 years together and a six-year engagement. Dressed in a modern white satin gown with moderate train, the bride wore an orchid adorned French braid and carried an orchid bouquet. Attending the double ring ceremony were the bride’s father, Leigh Ramsay, mother, Angelina Ramsay, brother, Morgan Ramsay, the groom’s mother, Patricia Tuttle, and his brother, Jason Sigel. “It was the best day of our lives! After our ceremony we danced on the Star of India!” said the Bride. The reception was at Roy’s Waterfront Restaurant overlooking the marina. All wore leis befitting the Hawaiian Fusion motif. Said Leilani, “It was a wonderful dinner with great food shared with family.” The Bride and Groom fed each other strawberry cream cheese wedding cake! Leilani and Ryan will honeymoon next year in Hawaii. They live in La Mesa, CA.
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SPORTS
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE B3
PREP FOOTBALL
Local teams are looking to bounce back in Week 5 BY MICHAEL BOWER The Poway High, Rancho Ber nardo and Del Nor te football teams will all tr y to bounce back after losses this week. The Titans will travel to Torrey Pines for a 7 p.m. showdown against the former Palomar League foe. The Broncos will travel to Carlsbad, hoping to avenge a 28-7 loss to the Lancers last season. Meanwhile, Del Nor te has a strong chance to get its first win of the season on its homecoming night against Escondido Charter. Here is a closer look at Friday night’s games: Nonleague Poway (2-2) at Tor rey Pines (1-3), Friday 7 p.m. Last week: Poway lost to Mission Hills 27-7; Torrey Pines lost to Westview 10-7. Notes: There are deceiving statistics all over the place with these two squads.
Poway High’s Zane Abbot runs with the ball in a game against Mt. Miguel earlier this year. Photo by Sherri Dunlap The final score of the Titans’ loss last week to top-ranked Mission Hills is one of them. Poway led at halftime and was within striking distance midway through the fourth quarter. On the other side, Torrey Pines’ 1-3 record is deceiving. The three teams that have beaten the Falcons (Mission Hills, Cathedral Catholic and Westview)
have a combined record of 9-3. The Dons have all three of those losses, but have played some of the top teams in the state ... The Titans had a chance to stun the No. 1 Grizzlies, but turnovers late killed that dream. It was the second straight loss for the T itans, who have proven they can play with anyone if they don’t
turn the ball over. Conor Boyle accounted for the lone TD last week, returning an interception 61 yards for a TD to give Poway a 7-0 lead at halftime. The offense did not get on the board, rushing for just 52 yards on 30 carries ... The Falcons have had their own offensive struggles, scoring just 28 points combined in their first four games. They have only scored over 10 once. Torrey Pines presents a r un-heavy of fense, but certainly has the ability to throw the ball with QB Caden Kelley and WR Lucas Braun ... Expect both teams to pound the run and for the squad that defends it best to win. Prediction: Poway 13, Torrey Pines 10. **** Rancho Bernardo (1-3) at Carlsbad, Friday 7 p.m. Last week: Rancho Bernardo lost to La Costa CanSEE FOOTBALL, Page B5
Jeff Molino hauls in a pass for the Broncos furing last week’s loss to La Costa Canyon at RBHS. Photo by Tim Garcia
OGDEN’S CLEANERS
Hearts To You
Ogden Family owned and operated in Rancho Bernardo since 1983
a crafts boutique benefitting our Preschool & Children’s Ministry
2015 Premier Opening Night for early buying Thursday, Sept. 24 6:30pm to 9pm Saturday, Sept. 26 9am to 2pm
Hope United Methodist Church 16550 Bernardo Heights Pkwy., San Diego, 92128
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SPORTS
PAGE B4 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
EAGLES CONTINUED FROM PAGE B1
Cole said. “We think we are a good team so we are going to do whatever it takes to win the game. It would be a huge win for us and with one more week before league play starts we want to keep things rolling.” This one will certainly have playoff-seeding implications. With defending champion La Jolla Country Day (3-1) still looking like the team to beat in Division V, the team that wins this one could end up in the driver’s seat for the No. 2 seed. “Who knows how high we can go if we win this and then keep winning,” Cole said. “I think everybody is trying to get a higher seed so they don’t have to play Countr y Day (early in the section playoffs).” The Eagles and Scots feature two of the best defenses in Division V. Maranatha has posted one shutout and has allowed just 20 points in its three games. The Scots have posted two shutouts and have allowed just 10 points in four games. “Their defense is No. 1 and ours is No. 2 in Division V right now,” Cole said. “All the pressure is going to be on me to try to score.” Cole, who calls the offensive plays, has plenty of weapons to attack the Scots. The Eagles have showed they can throw the ball and run it with success. Quarterback Christian Cortes has thrown for 480 yards and six touchdowns to just one interception. Wide receiver Matt DeWildt has 10 catches for 128 yards and a touchdown, while Isaac Schwan has hauled in eight balls for
110 yards and three touchdowns. Running back Trevor Sheng is averaging just under six yards per carry, while Jake Bronson is averaging nearly seven per carry. “I want to say we always have the ability to score a lot of points,” Cole said. “I feel like nobody can really matchup with our wideouts. A lot of teams bracket and do things to take them away, so basically we have to find out what they are going to take away and attack them somewhere else.” Vincent Memorial put up just eight points in its season opener, but since then has scored at least 22 points in every game. The senior-heavy Scots love to run it behind their strong offensive line, which features 6-foot-9, 400-pound tackle Frank Martinez. “Running teams can get downhill and give us problems,” Cole said. “We are built to stop the pass. Vincent Memorial does like to throw the ball, too, but our game plan is to force people to throw.” Cole hopes his team is ready but not overly hyped for the showdown. “Sometimes these type of games you can get too hyped up and make mistakes,” he said. “We are going to practice like it is a big game, but treat it like it is just another road game when we get there.” Maranatha Christian (3-0) at Vincent Memorial (4-0), Friday 7 p.m. Last week: Maranatha had a bye; Vincent Memorial beat Palo Verde Valley 8-0. Prediction: Maranatha 21, Vincent Memorial 14.
NEED FOR SPEED — The Kiesel family, which lives in Poway, recently took the Sports Car Club of America races in Nebraska by storm. Jeff Kiesel, second from left, was the R1 pro solo champion and the EM solo champion. His wife, Shawn Kiesel, right, was the EM ladies solo champion. Their son, Zak Kiesel, left, was the JA pro solo champion and the JA solo champion. Kaila Kiesel, Jeff and Shawn’s daughter, third from left, finished in fifth in the JA class race.
GOLF CONTINUED FROM PAGE B1
a much bigger prize. “It definitely means a lot to us to beat Torrey Pines,” DeMatteo said. “We get excited about it. But we have our eyes on the bigger picture. We know we have a chance to win a state title.” And they are not scared to talk about it. “We talk about it every time someone sends a group text message or every time we are in the van,” DeMatteo said. “It is a daily conversation.” Said Steigerwald: “I don’t mind them talking about it. We know when it is (section tournament) time we will focus on taking it one day
at a time. But we are practicing and preparing to win it all.” The Broncos have the lowest differential in the section at 8.99. Torrey Pines is second at 11.83 and La Jolla is third at 14.79. Those are the three teams that will likely battle it out at the section tournament in early November for the two qualifying spots to the SoCal Regional. With only 36 holes deciding the winner, Steigerwald knows anything can happen. “It’s golf and you never know,” he said. “I feel confident, though. We are in an excellent position this year.”
“To educate, inspire and encourage participation in the political process.”
Join Freedom Frontline “National Security and the World Today” Special Guest:
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Richard Grenell
15575 Jimmy Durante Blvd. Del Mar, CA 92014
Richard Grenell is a frequent Fox News contributor and the longest serving US spokesperson at the UN.
October 6th, 6:00 - 8:30 pm Cost: $45 | Students: $20 (Includes dinner and parking)
Emcee:
Mark Larson Mark Larson is one of San Diego’s most popular media personalities. He is the talk radio host on AM 1170 ‘The Answer’ weekdays 6 - 9 AM.
Please register online at www.freedomfrontline.com or mail your check (made to: Freedom Frontline) to PO Box 8674, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067
www.freedomfrontline.com PO Box 8674 Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067 | Phone: (760) 807-5827 | Email: webmail@freedomfrontline.com
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SPORTS
FOOTBALL
SPORTS SCOOPS
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE B5
CONTINUED FROM PAGE B3
yon 27-13; Carlsbad beat Vista 33-0. Notes: The Lancers have won two straight and the Broncos are coming off their first loss of the season ... Rancho Bernardo uncharacteristically fumbled four times — losing one — and threw two interceptions in last week’s loss to the Mavericks. The Broncos’ secondar y was picked apart and the run defense proved to be vulnerable to the sweep. The offense actually moved the ball well, but a couple of bad snaps killed drives. QB Mark Salazar was 16 of 25 for 240 yards and a TD. WR Leo Wagner caught 9 passes for 118 yards and a TD. Devaughn Vele hauled in five balls for 95 yards and running back Milan Grice rushed for 102 yards on 15 carries ... The Broncos fell 28-7 to the Lancers last season. Expect this one to be a lot closer and for Rancho Bernardo to pull it out with a touchdown late. Prediction: Rancho Bernardo 24, Carlsbad 21. Escondido Char ter (1-3) at Del Norte (0-4), Friday 7 p.m.
Last week: Escondido Charter lost to St. Francis-Calgary, Alberta 35-0; Del Norte lost to Mt. Carmel 42-17. Notes: This one features two struggling teams. Escondido Charter enters on a three-game losing streak and the Nighthawks have yet to get a win ... It will be homecoming night for Del Norte, whose closest game was a 21-3 loss to Westview in Week 3. But the Nighthawks should be able to have more success against the White Tigers on Friday. Escondido Charter has been outscored 124-13 in its four games. The Nighthawks have playmakers in Marco Young and QB Jake Moore. The two connected for a TD in the loss last week ... The White Tigers were blanked in both of their last two games. They feature a run-heavy offense and will cer tainly tr y to pound the ball against the Nighthawks ... Expect Del Norte to put up some points in this one and get first-year coach Patrick Coleman his first win. Prediction: Del Norte 28, Escondido Charter 14.
Triple Threat SD welcomes all club, high school, recreational and aspiring basketball players to come train and improve their game at their new training facility in 4S Ranch, 10720 Thornmint Road. This is strictly a basketball training facility where boys and girls work on their fundamentals — shooting, ball handling and strength conditioning. Triple Threat SD is the home of Triple Threat Elite, formerly known as the Titans Girls Club. For more information about Triple Threat SD training, contact Rick Castro at 858-451-3200 or via email at rick@triplethreatsd.com. Tryout information for future Titans competitive boys basketball for fourth through eighth graders can be found at futuretitans.info. Youth basketball summer league at the Carmel Mountain/Sabre Springs Recreation Center has started online registration. It is for grades 1 - 12. Visit www.nextlevelsportssd.com for more
San Diego County Parks and Recreation has teamed up with the United States Tennis Association to offer adult tennis instruction at 4S Ranch Sports Park. Free tennis lessons from a certified instructor is available on Wednesdays from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. For more information, call 858-673-3900. Adult roller hockey clinics will be held at 4S Ranch Sports Park on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Cost is $700 per team. Age is 18 and up. Monday hockey is designed for less advanced players; Tues-
Adult men’s basketball league will be on Mondays and Tuesdays in 4S Ranch. The 10-week season plus playoffs will cost $350 per team. Games will be played between 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. The league allows a 12-man roster. For more information, visit 4sranchbasketball.com or contact the 4S Ranch Recreation Office. Poway Valley Water Polo is in need of youth water polo coaches. No experience is necessary, but is helpful. Poway Valley Water Polo club consists of kids ages 8-18 at all different levels of experience. If interested, please contact Chris Hart at 858-776-8944. For more information, visit powayvalleywaterpolo.. com
Join Peter Funt and the team from Candid Camera when their fun stage show, “8 Decades of Smiles,” comes to the Poway Center. Good tickets available, plus get $10 off with promo code: UT SMILE Call: 858-748-0505.
Move up Buyer, Senior Buyer or Seller? Investor? Need to know WHERE to begin?
I CAN HELP YOU!
POWAY CENTER / Tickets: www.CandidCamera.com
Toni Church 858 354-5820 CA DRE #01119025
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Youth roller hockey clinics will be held at 4S Ranch Sports Park on Saturdays between 8 a.m. and 12 p.m. for ages 5-18. The clinics are for beginners and experienced players. Registration is ongoing. Visit 4sranchrollerhockey.com or contact the 4S Ranch Recreation Office for more information.
day for slightly higher-skilled players and Wednesdays for medium-skilled to highskilled players. For more information, visit 4sranchrollerhockey.com or contact the 4S Ranch Recreation Office.
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Call for information 760.788.7160 • www.salernowinery.com
LOCAL NEWS
PAGE B6 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
Faces of the Future Outstanding Poway, Rancho Bernardo and Del Norte high school seniors are being honored with membership in the Fraternity of Academic and Civic Excellence (FACE), sponsored by the Poway News Chieftain, Rancho Bernardo News Journal and Visual Photography. These students are selected by their schools for outstanding academic and community service.
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Enjoy the tastes of Italy at the Cafasso Meatball Company in Carmel Mountain Ranch. Featuring a Cafasso family favorite and ultimate comfort food, CMC offers a full Italian experience. Choose from a variety of pasta dishes, subs, Italian salads, pizza, family style meals, homemade desserts and more. Meatball sliders are also very popular. Enjoy a favorite glass of wine (several to choose from) or a beer (d0mestic or imported) along with your meal. Try any or all of Cafasso’s meatballs: classic beef, beef and bacon, beef and pork sausage and vegetarian. You can even buy them by the dozen! Family meals for two or more people are a great way to try many menu items. Don’t leave without trying the incredible homemade cannoli. Cafasso offers catering services, a great meal opportunity for your next gathering. They will design the menu according to your desires. Join them for lunch or dinner, or have them cater your next gathering. Find Cafasso Meatball Company at 12075 Carmel Mountain Road, Suite 205, in the Home Depot center. Call them at 858-451-2255.
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BUSINESS
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE B7
And the winning contractor is ... The fun started when my bride discovered the kitchen flood last month. True, we hated the floor, the room desperately needed painting, and the dishwasher was shot. We knew both the cabinetry and counter tops would benefit from a facelift. But with a daughter in college, we weren’t prepared to spend the money just yet. The pipes behind the wall had other ideas. We found ourselves suddenly dealing with insurance adjusters and contractors. My head swam with the paperwork, estimates, significant research, and multiple decisions all needing instant, simultaneous attention. We debated color palettes, replacement costs, and choosing a contractor. Our adjuster recommended three and we bounced between them. We overthought things, paralyzed with fear and doubt, trying not to make a major mistake. “Guy 1 has 80 great YELP reviews” went the conversation. “Guy 2 had no business card. Guy 3 removed his shoes when he entered the house.” Round and round we went as our insurance agent pressed us to make a decision and move forward. Three weeks after the incident we remained undecided and finally chose Mr. Great YELP Reviews…just so we could get going. Then came the phone call from Contractor 2. He’d struck us both as flexible, personable, and someone we could work with. True, he had no business card and his
Rob Weinberg ASK MR. MARKETING website was terrible. He wasn’t as buttoned up as the others. But he reached out to us and made us feel comfortable about him. He joked with me and made me reconsider my decision. And he got the business. All because he made one extra phone call. Studies have shown most sales are closed by making just one additional phone call. That eighth touch might have closed the deal, but you’ll probably have stopped after three calls. And while you do need to take a hint at some point and just stop calling if the prospect is obviously not buying your pitch, finding that balance can make all the difference in whether or not your bottom line grows. So plan to call that prospect again before you give up on him. It could be enough to push the guy over the edge and get him to sign a contract with you. It certainly worked for Contractor 2! With that said, I wish you a week of profitable marketing. Coax more business from your customer base at www.askmrmarketing.com.
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Sabre Springs 858.486.5020 Cardiff by the Sea 760.436.8900 belmontvillage.com RCFE License 374603231, 374603279 © 2015 Belmont Village, L.P.
FRED ASTAIRE DANCE STUDIO OF RANCHO BERNARDO 16769 Bernardo Center Dr. Ste. 26 San Diego, CA 92128 Specializing in social and competitive ballroom dancing. We offer private and group instruction for all levels. Beginner classes are fun, easy and available five days a week.
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
PAGE B8 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
Entertainment Surprise ending caps well-acted PowPAC drama BY ELIZABETH MARIE HIMCHAK A well-acted, dramatic mystery thriller with many twists and turns, murders and a surprise ending can be seen through Oct. 18 in Poway. PowPAC’s performance of “A Night of Dark Intent” will keep audience members riveted as one surprise after another unfolds in this intriguing play written by L. Don Swartz and directed by Jay Mower. Set in an abandoned house in upstate New York, the play takes place over a weekend in late October 1978. The former Stark family home is in a remote location at least 10 miles from the nearest town. Adding to the spookiness of the setting, there is a bad storm that over the course of events eventually cuts off the possibility of additional outside help arriving due to severe flooding. Holly (Erika Toraya) is working on her graduate school project that involves writing and directing a play. Her inspiration is a memory from her youth, a book with photos of a grisly double murder committed in 1965. It was an account of how Pastor Stark was allegedly beheaded and dismembered by his ax-wielding teenage daughter, Lenora, who authorities said then used scissors to stab her mother multiple times. Lenora (April McBride) claimed innocence, blaming the murders on her 12-year-old half-sister Abigail, whom Lenora says no one in town knew about because she lived in the family’s barn. It coincidentally burned down the night of the murders. Lenora’s claims that her upstanding citizen parents were secretly raising her father’s love child seemed so far fetched to locals that they did not believe her. It did not help that Lenora
REVIEW
Escapee Lenora (April McBride) and Deputy Terry (Brandon Kaye Thomas) confront each other in PowPAC’s “A Night of Dark Intent” playing through Oct. 18. Photo by Tony Eisenhower was found ringing the town’s church bell — supposedly to summon help — while covered in blood and her father’s head laying at her feet. She was found guilty and sent to an asylum for the criminally insane. Thirteen years later — and six months after Lenora’s former boyfriend committed suicide in the Stark’s attic — Holly, her two friends Wilma and Ingrid (Carolyn Wheat and Shelby Blackwood) and a psychic named Miranda (Susan Bray) decide to stay in the house the weekend before it is to be torn down.
HANK AND MY HONKY TONK HEROES Saturday, Oct. 3 at 8:00pm A celebration of Hank Williams and the singers who influenced – and were influenced by – the “King of Country Music.” Featuring the songs of Williams, George Jones, Alan Jackson, Elvis and more.
Tickets available now! View full season and purchase tickets at Formerly
www.PowayOnStage.org
858.748.0505 | 15498 Espola Road | Poway, CA 92064 | Convenient, free parking
Presented at the Poway Center for the Performing Arts
They hope to discover the truth about the murders. Also with them are Mrs. Thurmin (Katharine Rex), the church secretary who reluctantly has to accompany them for insurance liability reasons, and Gretchen (Rachel Landis), a hitchhiker they came upon near the house. Later joining the group is Deputy Terry (Brandon Kaye Thomas), who is sent to protect the women when it is learned that Lenora and another inmate killed a guard while escaping from the asylum. The entire cast does a good job in portraying their roles, whether that includes skepticism, fear or, in the case of Bray, otherworldly incantations. They are believable in their reactions throughout, especially when a couple of them get killed in the same manner as Pastor and Mrs. Stark. Special kudos to Thomas, whose performance in the end is especially dramatic and believable. Once again, the all-volunteer PowPAC team has excelled on stage and off. Whether it is the acting, stage design (in this case creating multiple rooms on one small stage) or special effects, those at PowPAC shine in creating a realistic performance that rivals any professional production in terms of detail. For this play nothing was overlooked, from the rainstorm heard “outside” to the cobwebs hanging throughout the set. It must be noted that due to the subject matter of some plot twists, the play is best for mature teens and adults. “A Night of Dark Intent” can be seen at 8 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, plus 2 p.m. Sundays through Oct. 18 at PowPAC, Poway’s Community Theatre, located at 13250 Poway Road in the Lively Center. Tickets are $22 for general admission and $20 for students, seniors and active duty military. Purchase at www.powpac.org.
ENTERTAINMENT
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE B9
ENTERTAINMENT CALENDAR THEATER Moonlight Stage Productions continues its summer season with “Big Fish,” running through Saturday, Sept. 26 at the Moonlight Amphitheatre in Vista. Tickets range from $24 to $52 and are available by calling 760-724-2110 or online at www.moonlightstage.com.
DANCE Registration for San Diego Civic Dance Arts’ fall semester is open. For online registration students need to establish a SDRecConnect account prior to registering. Online registration requires a credit card or Visa/Mastercard debit card. In person registration (cash, check or credit card) can be done at any city recreation center. Classes are taught at recreation centers throughout the city of San Diego, including Rancho Bernardo, Carmel Mountain Ranch/Sabre Springs, plus Hilltop and Canyonside in Rancho Penasquitos. A semester of weekly classes (Sept. 28 to Dec. 13) for children, teens and adults is $41 plus a $2 transaction fee and 3 percent online processing fee. For a schedule and online registration instructions, go to civicdancearts.org or call 619-235-5255. Free Thriller classes in Poway! All ages, no dance skill required. Classes are held from 6 to 7 p.m. Thursdays, in Poway Community Park near swim center through Oct. 22. Classes will also be held from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Sundays in Old Poway Park through Oct. 18. No commitment, come when you can. There will be an optional performance on Sunday, Oct. 25 at Once Upon a Hallowe’en in Old Poway Park. Questions - contact Carol Legg at 619-871-3205 or cslegg@cox.net. The San Diego Ballet presents “Romeo et Juliet,” at 8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 16 and Saturday, Oct. 17 and 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 18 at the Lyceum Theatre, 79 Horton Plaza. Tickets range from $30 to $50 and are available by calling 619-544-1000 or visiting www.sandiegoballet.org.
Parva Tara Shayassi and Spirit Synergy Studio teaches traditional Persian dance and “sacred birthing” belly dance Sundays in Poway (call for address). Beginner/intermediate lessons are 9 to 10 a.m., intermediate/advanced lessons are 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. and prenatal lessons are from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Lessons are $12 each. For information, call 951805-0932 or contact Spirit_Synergy_Studio@yahoo.com. Maria Ghaibi teaches Zumba classes at the RB Swim & Tennis Club, 16955 Bernardo Oaks Drive, Rancho Bernardo. Classes are 6 to 7 p.m. every Thursday. For fees and details, contact Maria Ghaibi at 858-385-0621 or mg_ghaibi@yahoo.com.
ART New abstract paintings by Temáre are currently on exhibit at Capri Blu Italian Wine Bistro in 4S Ranch at The Commons. Temáre abstracts are a collaboration between two San Diego award-winning artists, Terry Anderson and Marlene Levitt. All of the artwork is for sale. The exhibit is on-going and showcases the latest works by the artists. The North County Society of Fine Arts is a local nonprofit group devoted to bringing the visual arts to public attention and fostering art education. For further information, visit www.ncsfa.org for news about meetings, display opportunities, exhibits at the Poway Center for Performing Arts, paint-outs and trips..
MUSIC The Poway Library’s Acoustic Showcase concert series presents Prairie Sky in concert at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 10 at the library, 13137 Poway Road. Concert is free and open to the public. For information call 858-513-2900. SEE EVENTS, Page B10
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PAGE B10 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
EVENTS
OCTOBER 3 IN POWAY
Tickets on sale for tribute to Hank Williams BY EMILY SORENSEN Take a trip down memory lane into country music history with “Hank and My Honky Tonk Heroes,� performing at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 at the Poway Center for the Performing Arts, 15498 Espola Road. This tribute to countr y music legend Hank Williams features his music, as well as music from singers who influenced and who were influenced by Hank Williams, including Jimmie Rodgers, Roy Acuff, Ernest Tubbs, The Carter Family, George Jones, Alan Jackson and more. Tickets range from $39 to $54 and are available by calling the box office at 858-748-0505 or online at www.powaycenter. com. For an additional $28, you can enjoy dinner on the plaza prior to the show. Catered by Cafe Merlot, the menu for “Hank and My Honky Tonk Heroes� includes corn and bacon chowder shooters; seafood and sausage jambalaya ser ved over dirty rice; country-fried steak with hush puppies and gravy; bayou
salad; corn bread; and Bourbon Street pecan slices with cinnamon whipped cream for dessert. Dinner on the plaza tickets include one complimentary beverage (wine, beer or non-alcoholic). The show stars Obie awardwinning per former Jason Petty, who has been playing Hank Williams in shows since 1996, when he performed in “Lost Highway� at the Grand Ole Opry. Petty said he was inspired to create “Hank and My Honky Tonk Heroes� after spending years playing Williams and listening to stories about him at the Grand Ole Opry. “I’d been doing this role for eight years, and I’d become friends with (the Grand Ole Opr y) stars and musicians who had been friends with Hank,� said Petty. “I wrote down the stories they told me about him to remember them.� Friends suggested he should write a book about Williams, but Petty said he decided to write a show instead. “It’s about how Hank changed country music. He sort of fil-
CONTINUED FROM PAGE B9
The Rancho Bernardo Library will kick off the third series of its jazz concerts with a performance by Pete Deluke and the Mellotones, 6:15 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 14 in the second floor Community Room of the library, 17110 Bernardo Center Drive. Concerts are free and open to the public. Children 7 and up are permitted to attend with a parent. Free-will donations are appreciated. Nicholas Reveles and Opera Exposed! perform at 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25 at Hope United Methodist Church, 16550 Bernardo Heights Pkwy, Rancho Bernardo. Concert is free, donations appreciated. For information call 858-485-5840.
MUSEUMS Jason Petty stars as Hank Williams in “Hank and My Honky Tonk Heroes� at the Poway Center for the Performing Arts. tered it down to what is now known as modern country. He died when he was 29, but he left an amazing influence on Elvis Presley, Ray Charles and tons of other people.� Petty said that in between performing songs, he talks about Williams’s life. “I talk about how the songs were written. I pay homage to the
OPEN HOUSE - SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10
people he influenced. A lot of the stories are fun. His life was filled with a lot of joy and humor.� “Hank and My Honky Tonk Heroes� is the first of five shows Petty has written, which also includes a show on singing cowboys, a Christmas show and a Hank Williams and Patsy Cline show. His most re-
cent show is “Classic Nashville Roadshow,� which performs top-25 country music songs. Between October and December, Petty will be touring all five shows. “It’s fun. I feel really blessed to do what I want to do, raise my family in Tennessee in my hometown, tour and get paid for it,� said Petty.
The Poway Historical and Memorial Society operates the free Poway Heritage Museum and the Nelson House in Old Poway Park, 14114 Midland Road in Poway. Hours are 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sundays. The Nelson House is open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays; 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sundays and is closed the second Sunday of each month. Call 858-679-8587 or visit www.powayhistoricalsociety.org. Want to submit an event for the calendar? Send it to entertainment@pomeradonews.com.
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LOCAL NEWS
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE B11
NEWS BRIEFS Learn to dance Registration for San Diego Civic Dance Arts’ fall semester is open. For online registration students need to establish a SDRecConnect account prior to registering. Online registration requires a credit card or Visa/Mastercard debit card. In person registration (cash, check or credit card) can be done at any city recreation center. Classes are taught at recreation centers throughout the city of San Diego, including Rancho Bernardo, Carmel Mountain Ranch/ Sabre Springs, plus Hilltop and Canyonside in Rancho Penasquitos. A semester of weekly classes (Sept. 28 to Dec. 13) for children, teens and adults is $41 plus a $2 transaction fee and 3 percent online processing fee. For a schedule and online regis-
tration instructions, go to civicdancearts.org or call 619-235-5255.
For those 50-plus The Church at Rancho Bernardo is offering a free “Thriving in the Third Act” seminar for anyone age 50-plus. The four-part event will be 6:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 1, 8, 15 and 22 in room 21 at the church, 11740 Bernardo Plaza Court. Topics will include spiritual growth/career shifts, money/security, health/well-being and caregiving. Pre-registration is required at tinyurl.com/ CRB3rdAct. For details, contact Bob Meissner at 858-592-2434 ext. 311 or bob@thechurchrb. org. Send news items to editor@pomeradonews. com.
VACATION PHOTOS Above, Debra Gutzmer of Poway with her mom, Kay Lee of San Marcos, (formerly from Poway), with former San Diego Charger Kellen Winslow at the Football Hall of Fame Class of 2015 Induction Ceremony in Canton, Ohio.
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Left, Alex, Abbey, and Annabelle Skale at the tomb of Abraham Lincoln in Springfield, Ill.
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Going on vacation? Have your photo taken while holding a copy of the Poway News Chieftain or Rancho Bernardo News Journal. Mail to Vacation Photos, 14023 Midland Road, Poway, CA 92064 or send an email, with the high-resolution digital photo attached, to editor@pomeradonews.com. Photos and caption information will appear in our newspapers and on our website.
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PAGE B12 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
LOCAL NEWS
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
Mad Hatters Tea Party serves up fun at Brown center The Mad Hatters Tea Party in Rancho Bernardo on Sunday had plenty of entertainment and attendees wearing “Alice in Wonderland” costumes or decorated hats. It was a fundraiser benefitting the Ed Brown Center for Active Adults. See more photos in the photo gallery at PomeradoNews.com. Photos by Criselda Yee
Karen and Jerry Georgens.
Classical Academy teacher Spencer Farmer and Ed Brown Center President Lynn Wolsey were among those in costume.
Joanne Campbell and Rosalie Merrick.
At left, students from the Classical Academy volunteered to be servers at the tea party. They included senior Noah Farmer, kneeling in front; juniors Ciara Atenciao and Kate McLeod, drama teacher Spencer Farmer and junior Danielle Weston.
Veronica Murphy, Eric Minella and Walter Ritter, all members of the Write Out Loud group that was among the tea party’s performers.
Below, left are Trish Lutes, Vivienne Kantor, Sonny Googins, Hermia Webber, Ann Wakefield and Ling Arper. Below, right are Janice Campagnolo, Naomi Munoz, Sally Fallon and Linda Moses.
Members of the Greater San Diego Music Coterie entertaining tea party guests.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE B13
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
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PAGE B14 Thursday, September 24, 2015
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023069 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. TJMax Express Located at: 7920 Airway Road, Suite A5, San Diego, CA 92154, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 7920 Airway Road, Suite A5, San Diego, CA 92154. Registered Owners Name(s): a. MDD Logistics, Inc., 7920 Airway Road, Suite A5, San Diego, CA 92154, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 08/14/2012. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/02/2015. Jin Kim (aka Jason Kim), CFO.RB1323. Sept. 10, 17, 24, Oct. 1, 2015
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022408 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Maestro Construction b. Maestro Landscaping Located at: 16863 Abundante St., San Diego, CA 92127, San Diego County County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Moghbelli Enterprises Inc., 16863 Abundante St., San Diego, CA 92127, 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 08/26/2015. Alireza Moghbelli, CEO. RB1315. 9/3/15, 9/10/15, 9/17/15. 9/24/15 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-021176 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Sanchez Residential Care #3 Located at: 285 Green Ave., Escondido, CA 92025, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 9880 Dauntless St., San Diego, CA 92126. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Blue Sky Care Services Inc., 9880 Dauntless St., San Diego, CA 92126., California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 10/29/2009. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/13/2015. Isabel Sanchez, President. RB1318. Sept. 3, 10, 17, 24, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022913 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. The Spirits Connect Located at: 14860 Sunrise Drive, Poway, CA 92064, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Lynn Kay-Stachnik, 14860 Sunrise Drive, Poway, CA 92064. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 09/30/2013. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/01/2015. Lynn Kay-Stachnik. P4607. Sept. 10, 17, 24, Oct. 1, 2015.
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Insured/Licensed CA Lic#1000174 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022730 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. The Man Cave Barber Shop Located at: 15731 Bernardo Heights Pkwy., Suite 104 A & B, San Diego, CA 92129, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 14320 La Harina Ct., San Diego, CA 92129. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Deanna Hood, 14320 La Harina Ct., San Diego, CA 92129. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 08/31/15. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/31/2015. Deanna Hood. RB1320. Sept. 10, 17, 24, Oct. 1, 2015.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022121 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Bar Wesley Croft Located at: 31029 Oak Glen Lane, Valley Center, CA 92082, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Mark E. Wesley, 31029 Oak Glen Lane, Valley Center, CA 92082. b. Vincentia A. Wesley, 31029 Oak Glen Lane, Valley Center, CA 92082. This business is conducted by: a Married Couple. The first day of business was 08/21/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/24/2015. Mark E. Wesley. RB1322. Sept. 10, 17, 24, Oct. 1, 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023457 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Noblivious Located at: 2130 Foothill Dr. , Vista, CA 92084, San Diego County. Mailing Address: Same as above. Registered Owners Name(s): a. David Tharp, 2130 Foothill Dr., Vista, CA 92084. b.Thomas Zakrajsek, 14613 Silverset St., Poway, CA 92064. 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 09/08/2015. David Tharp. P4622. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023171 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Broadwater Realty b. Broadwater Real Estate c. San Diego Market Realty Located at: 10922 Ivy Hill Drive, #1, San Diego, CA 92131, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Richard Patterson Winkler, 10922 Ivy Hill Drive, #1, San Diego, CA 92131. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 08/15/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/03/2015. Richard Patterson Winkler. P4613. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022717 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Go Dog Go! Mobile Pet Grooming b. Sharp Eye Sharpening Located at: 17052 Capilla Ct., San Diego, CA, 92127, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Dog Eye Inc., 17052 Capilla Ct., San Diego, CA 92127, CA. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 05/06/2006. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/31/2015. Terrence Dooley, Vice President. RB1319. Sept. 3, 10, 17, 24, 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023356 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Americas Finest Kids Located at: 4412 Maryland Street, San Diego, CA 92116, San Diego County. Mailing Address: P.O.Box 610, Poway, CA 92074. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Americas Finest Kids, LLC., 4412 Maryland Street, San Diego, CA 92116, California. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 06/01/2004. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/08/2015. Terry Smith, President. P4623. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022540 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Give Activewear Located at: 11365 Affinity Ct., #197, San Diego, CA 92131, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Kelly Olson, 11365 Affinity Ct., #197, San Diego, CA 92131. b. Ryne Olson, 11365 Affinity Ct., #197, San Diego, CA 92131. This business is conducted by: a Married Couple. 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 08/27/2015. Ryne Olson. RB1321. Sept. 10, 17, 24, Oct. 1, 2015. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023873 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Dan’s Car Service Located at: 4615 Almayo Ave., San Diego, CA 92117, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Daniel E. Pohl, 4615 Almayo Ave., San Diego, CA 92117. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 09/07/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/14/2015. Daniel E. Pohl. RB1329. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015.
Local News
PAGE B16 Thursday, September 24, 2015
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023620 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Scene Sea Located at: 12316 Fernando Dr., San Diego, CA 92128, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Scene Sea LLC, 12316 Fernando Dr., San Diego, CA 92128, 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 09/10/2015. Brian M. Belfield, Member. RB1325. Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023725 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Venus Fine Cars, Inc. Located at: 10960 La Alberca Ave, San Diego, CA 92127, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 10960 La Alberca Ave., San Diego, CA 92127 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Venus Fine Cars, Inc., 10960 La Alberca Ave., San Diego, CA 92127, 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 09/11/2015. Sheila Madgedi, CEO. RB1327. Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-024387 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. A.H. TaekwonDo Located at: 12265 Scripps Poway Pkwy #106, Poway, CA 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: Same as above. Registered Owners Name(s): a. AAA Martial Arts Inc., 12265 Scripps Poway Pkwy, #106, Poway, CA 92064, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. 06/01/2009. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/18/2015. Hannah Hong, Secretary. P4621. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-021987 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Kellington and Son Custom Woodworking Located at: 13858 Midgrove Court, Poway, CA 92064, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Michael R. Kellington, 13858 Midgrove Court, Poway, CA 92064. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 08/17/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/21/2015. Michael R. Kellington, Owner. P4599. Sept. 3, 10, 17, 24, 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023762 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Sofellis Located at: 12160 Sage View Road, Poway, CA 92064, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 12160 Sage View Road, Poway, CA 92064. Registered Owners Name(s): a. TCX Inc., 12160 Sage View Road, Poway, CA 92064, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 07/01/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/11/2015. Rakesh Kumar, President. P4611. Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023844 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Clean & Green Cleaning Services Located at: 1810 Hillsdale Rd. #17, El Cajon, CA 92019, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 1810 Hillsdale Rd., #17, El Cajon, CA 92019 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Angelica Arreola, 1810 Hillsdale Rd., #17, El Cajon, CA 92019. 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 09/14/2015. Angelica Arreola. RB1328. Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-024228 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Tong Xing Textile (USA) Located at: 13549 Scarsdale Way, San Diego, CA 92128, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 13549 Scarsdale Way, San Diego, CA 92128. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Yijie Fu, 13549 Scarsdale Way, San Diego, CA 92128. 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 09/17/2015. Yijie Fu. RB1331. Sept. 24 Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023822 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Rub It In Located at: 4611 Coronado Ave, San Diego, CA 92107, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 4611 Coronado Ave, San Diego, CA 92107. Registered Owners Name(s): a. John Oliver, 4611 Coronado Ave, San Diego, CA 92107. 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 09/11/2015. John Oliver. RB1326. Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 2015 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-023982 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. ROAR Located at: 10587 Caminito Memosac, San Diego, CA 92131, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Eugene Mingo Jr., 10587 Caminito Memosac, San Diego, CA 92131. 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 09/15/2015. Eugene Mingo Jr.. RB1330. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-024384 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. The Aloe Skincare Company Located at: 495 Camino Bailen, Escondido, CA 92029, San Diego County. Mailing Address: Same as above. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Jennifer R. Baker, 495 Camino Bailen, Escondido, CA 92029. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 12/12/2010. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/18/2015. Jennifer R Baker. RB1334. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-024309 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Sesko Land Company, Inc. Located at: 14369 Hwy 67, Lakeside, CA 92040, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Sesko Land Company, Inc., 14369 Hwy 67, Lakeside, CA 92040, California. This business is conducted by: a Corporation. The first day of business was 06/01/2004. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/17/2015. Brian S. Sesko, President. P4618. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022826 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Tavo’s Motorcycles, LLC Located at: 1316 N. Melrose Drive, Suite C, Vista, CA 92083, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Tavo’s Motorcycles, LLC, 1316 N. Melrose Drive, Suite C, Vista, CA 92083, California. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 07/30/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/01/2015. Gustavo Pena, CEO. P4612. Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 2015.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022864 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Marco’s Pizza Located at: 11631 Duenda Rd., San Diego, CA 92127, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 17058 Silver Crest Dr., San Diego, CA 92127. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Alimi LLC, 17058 Silver Crest Dr., San Diego, CA 92127, CA. This business is conducted by: a Limited Liability Company. The first day of business was 02/03/2014. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/01/2015. Edward Alimi, Member. RB1324. Sept. 10, 17, 24, Oct. 1, 2015.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022086 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Abe Flooring Located at: 12345 Lakeshore Dr., Apt. 27, Lakeside, CA 92040, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Abdullah Serdah, 12345 Lakeshore Dr., Apt. 27, Lakeside, CA 92040. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 08/14/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/24/2015. Abdullah Serdah. P4606. Sept. 10, 17, 24, Oct. 1, 2015
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-024367 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. My Smart House Located at: 308 S. Linclon Ave, El Cajon, CA 92020, San Diego County. Mailing Address: 308 S. Linclon Ave., El Cajon, CA 92020 Registered Owners Name(s): a. Joel Mejia, 308 S. Linclon Ave., El Cajon, CA 92020. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 09/17/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 09/18/2015. Joel Mejia. RB1332. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No.: 2015-022413 Fictitious Business Name(s): a. Activate Chiropractic b. Activate Chiropractic a Family Wellness Center Located at: 12235 Poway Rd., Poway, CA 92064, San Diego County. Registered Owners Name(s): a. Derek Libby, 9750 Oviedo St., San Diego, CA 92129. This business is conducted by: an Individual. The first day of business was 08/20/2015. This statement was filed with Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr., Recorder / County Clerk of San Diego County on 08/26/2015. Derek Libby. P4620. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015.
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CITY OF POWAY NOTICE OF CITY COUNCIL PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Poway will hold a Public Hearing to consider the following item: Amendment to the Master Fee Schedule to add Annual Right-ofWay Permit and Associated Fee. This project is exempt from the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), pursuant to Section 15273(a)(1) of the CEQA guidelines in that it involves the adoption of a fee to pay for the processing of a new permit type. DATE OF MEETING: October 6, 2015 TIME OF MEETING: 7:00 p.m. LOCATION OF MEETING: City Council Chambers 13325 Civic Center Drive Poway, CA 92064 PROJECT NAME: Amendment to the Master Fee Schedule to add Annual Right-of-Way Permit and Associated Fee STAFF: Robert Manis, Director of Development Services EMAIL: bmanis@poway.org PHONE NUMBER: (858) 668-4601 ANY INTERESTED PERSON may review the staff report and the plans for this project and obtain additional information at the City of Poway, Development Services Department, City Hall, 13325 Civic Center Drive, Poway, CA, or by visiting the City’s website at www.poway.org. If you wish to express concerns in favor or against the above, you may appear in person at the above described meeting or submit your concerns in writing to the City Clerk, City of Poway. If you challenge the matter in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the City Council at, or prior to, the public hearing. If you have special needs requiring assistance at the meeting, please call the City Clerk’s Office at (858) 668-4530 at least 24 hours prior to the meeting so that accommodations can be arranged. Published in the Poway News Chieftain on Thursday, September 24, 2015, and Thursday, October 1, 2015. Order No. 15-077. P4617.
NOTICE OF CITY COUNCIL PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Poway will hold a Public Hearing to consider the following item: The Adoption of Ordinance No. 779 an Ordinance to Extend Interim Urgency Ordinance No. 776 of the City of Poway, California, Adopted Pursuant to Government Code Section 65858, Establishing a Moratorium on Launching, Landing, and Operating Unmanned Aircraft Systems in the Open Space – Recreation (OS-R), Open Space – Resource Management (OSRM), Planned Community (PC), and Rural Residential (RR-A through RR-C) Zones in the City of Poway. DATE OF MEETING: October 6, 2015 – Regular Meeting TIME OF MEETING: 7:00 p.m. LOCATION OF MEETING: City Council Chambers 13325 Civic Center Drive Poway, CA 92064 PROJECT NAME: Ordinance No. 779 Relating to Launching, Landing, and Operating Unmanned Aircraft Systems STAFF: Morgan L. Foley, City Attorney PHONE NUMBER: 858- 668-4500 ANY INTERESTED PERSON may review the staff report and obtain additional information at the City of Poway, City Hall, 13325 Civic Center Drive, Poway, CA. If you wish to express concerns in favor or against the above, you may appear in person at the above described meeting or submit your concerns in writing to the City Clerk, City of Poway. If you challenge the matter in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the City Council at, or prior to, the public hearing. If you have special needs requiring assistance at the meeting, please call the City Clerk’s Office at (858) 668-4530 at least 24 hours prior to the meeting so that accommodations can be arranged. Published in the Poway News Chieftain on Thursday, September 24, 2015. Order No. 15-076. P4616.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Regarding the Administration of the Estate of ROSE GREENBERG The personal representative of the estate of ROSE GREENBERG has begun administration of the decedent’s estate. This is a non-probate matter, however, you must file your claim within (60) days of this notice by mailing a claim to: Lynn Greenberg-Barker, 7105 Fairways Dr., Longmont, CO 80503. P4609. Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 2015.
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POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP T.S. No.: 2014-06069-CA A.P.N.: 277-220-13-00 Property Address: 18675 Old Coach Road, Poway, CA 92064 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO CIVIL CODE § 2923.3(a), THE SUMMARY OF INFORMATION REFERRED TO BELOW IS NOT ATTACHED TO THE RECORDED COPY OF THIS DOCUMENT BUT ONLY TO THE COPIES PROVIDED TO THE TRUSTOR. NOTE: THERE IS A SUMMARY OF THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT ATTACHED IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 05/10/2004. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. Trustor: Kevin A Tucker, A Married Man, As His Sole And Separate Property Duly Appointed Trustee: Western Progressive, LLC Recorded 05/13/2004 as Instrument No. 2004-0436481 in book ---, page--- and of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Diego County, California, Date of Sale: 10/19/2015 at 10:30 AM. Place of Sale: AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE EAST COUNTY REGIONAL CENTER BY THE STATUE, 250 E. MAIN STREET, EL CAJON, CA. Estimated amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $3,669,593.35. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN ON A STATE OR NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, OR A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OR SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF THE FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE: All right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described as: More fully described in said Deed
ant to a Deed of Trust described as: More fully described in said Deed of Trust. Street Address or other common designation of real property: 18675 Old Coach Road, Poway, CA 92064 A.P.N.: 277-220-13-00 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. 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. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is: $3,669,593.35. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. The beneficiary of the Deed of Trust has executed and delivered to the undersigned a written request to commence foreclosure, and the undersigned caused a Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible 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
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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 this property. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Because the Beneficiary reserves the right to bid less than the total debt owed, it is possible that at the time of the sale the opening bid may be less than the total debt NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (866)-960-8299 or visit this Internet Web site http:// www.altisource.com/MortgageServices/DefaultManagement/ TrusteeServices.aspx using the file number assigned to this case 2014-06069-CA. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Date: August 29, 2015. Western Progressive, LLC, as Trustee for beneficiary, c/o 30 Corporate Park, Suite 450, Irvine, CA 92606. Automated Sale Information Line: (866) 9608299 http://www.altisource.com/ MortgageServices/DefaultManagement/TrusteeServices.aspx For Non-Automated Sale Information, call: (866) 240-3530. WESTERN PROGRESSIVE, LLC MAY BE ACTING AS A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. APP1508-CA-2726326. 9/17, 9/24, 10/1/2015. P4602. SELL YOUR ITEMS FOR $25.00 Private parties only, items up to $500. Call 800-914-6434
CITY OF POWAY NOTICE AND SUMMARY OF ORDINANCE NO. 778 which was introduced at the regular City Council meeting of September 15, 2015. This Ordinance is scheduled for adoption at the Regular City Council Meeting of October 6, 2015. Full text is available in the City Clerk’s Office at 13325 Civic Center Drive, Poway, CA or online at www.poway.org. ORDINANCE NO. 778 entitled, “AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF POWAY, CALIFORNIA, ESTABLISHING CONSERVATION ENFORCEMENT MEASURES FOR WATER CUSTOMERS; ESTABLISHING WATER ALLOCATION AND BASE USAGE CRITERIA; AND PROVIDING FOR FINES AND PENALTIES FOR WATER CUSTOMERS EXCEEDING WATER ALLOCATIONS OR BASE LEVEL USAGE.” This proposed Ordinance would establish a framework to allow the City to impose administrative fines and penalties for customers whose water consumption exceeds the allocation established by Council. This approach gives the City Council maximum flexibility. If the Ordinance were adopted an implementation resolution would be required in order to establish specific allocation parameters. Without a resolution to initiate allocation, the Ordinance would have no effect, but would at least be “on the books” if future allocations were deemed necessary. This Ordinance shall take effect and be in force thirty (30) days after its adoption. Published in the Poway News Chieftain on Thursday, September 24, 2015. Order No. 15-075. P4615. CITY OF POWAY NOTICE AND SUMMARY OF ADOPTED ORDINANCE NO. 777 which was introduced at the City Council meeting of September 1, 2015, and adopted at the Regular City Council Meeting of September 15, 2015, by a roll call vote. Full text is available in the City Clerk’s Office at 13325 Civic Center Drive, Poway, CA or at www. poway.org. ORDINANCE NO. 777 entitled, “AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF POWAY, CALIFORNIA ADDING CHAPTER 15.26 TO THE POWAY MUNICIPAL CODE RELATING TO EXPEDITED PERMITTING PROCEDURES FOR SMALL RESIDENTIAL ROOFTOP SOLAR PHOTOVOLTAIC SYSTEMS” This proposed Ordinance will provide an expedited and streamline permitting process for the installation of small residential rooftop solar photovoltaic systems and solar water heating systems. Councilmembers voting aye: LEONARD, CUNNINGHAM, MULLIN, GROSCH, VAUS Councilmembers voting noe: NONE Councilmembers absent: NONE Councilmembers disqualified: NONE /s/:Sheila R. Cobian, CMC, City Clerk Published in the Poway News Chieftain, Thursday, September 24, 2015. Order No. 15-074. P4614. Pass the Middleman… Get the Best Price for Your Car! Auto Classified Ads
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Thursday, September 24, 2015 PAGE B17
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITIONER(S): NORMA LETICIA RAMOS on behalf of a minor ELINA ASHLY PEREZ for a change of name ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2015-00031456-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS PETITION OF: NORMA LETICIA RAMOS filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : ELINA ASHLY PEREZ to Proposed Name: ELINA ASHLY RAMOS. 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 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: Nov. 06, 2015 Time: 8:30 am 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: Poway News Chieftain Date: SEP 18, 2015 David J. Danielsen Judge of the Superior Court P4619. Sept. 24, Oct. 1, 8, 15, 2015 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 W. Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: ALMA GEORGINA LYON for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2015-00028947-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): ALMA GEORGINA LYON filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : ALMA GEORGINA LYON to Proposed Name: GEORGINA ALMA LYON 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 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: Oct. 09, 2015 Time: 8:30 am 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: Rancho Bernardo News Journal Date: AUG 26, 2015 David J. Danielsen Judge of the Superior Court RB1316. 9/3, 9/10, 9/17, 9/24/2015
LIST YOUR PET EVENT OR OFFER SERVICES Call Call 800-914-6434 RENT YOUR SPACE IN THE MARKETPLACE CALL TODAY! 800-914-6434 or 858.218.7200
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO 330 West Broadway San Diego, CA 92101 PETITION OF: Angela Layne Walthall for change of name. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR A CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 37-2015-00029729-CU-PT-CTL TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS Petitioner(S): Angela Layne Walthall filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a. Present Name : Dylan Cameron Thomason to Proposed Name: Dylan Cameron Walthall 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 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: 10/16/2015 Time: 8:30am 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: Poway News Chieftain Date: Sept. 2, 2015 David J. Danielsen Judge of the Superior Court P4610. Sept. 17, 24, Oct. 1, 8, 2015
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LOCAL NEWS
PAGE B18 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
NORTH N ORTH IINLAND NLAND H HOMES OMES
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
REAL R EAL E ESTATE STATE
HOMES SOLD: September 5 - September 11 92064 ADDRESS
BED
BATH
14231 Tobiasson Road 13909 Powers Road 14423 Springvale Street 13126 Tawny Way 12920 Sunderland Street 17531 Boca Raton Lane 14790 Deerwood Street 12722 Cobblestone Creek Rd 12935 Avenida La Valencia
3 3 3 4 5 4 4 4 4
1.5 1.5 1 2 2 2.5 2 3 3
PRICE
$400,000 $470,000 $540,000 $550,000 $560,000 $787,500 $792,000 $811,000 $1,045,000
92127 ADDRESS
BED
BATH
17195 W Bernardo Drive #208 17569 Matinal Road #19 15273 Maturin Drive #27 17161 Alva Road #2811 10611 Matinal Circle 16988 Robins Nest Way #3 11427 Box Elder Place 17892 Creciente Way 16388 Calloway Drive 15558 Corte Raposo 17161 Russet Street 16119 Cayenne Creek Place 14617 Via Bettona 17099 San Antonio Rose Ct
2 2 2 3 2 3 3 3 4 4 5 5 3 4
2 1.5 2.5 2 2 2.5 2 2 3 3 4 2.5 3.5 4.5
PRICE
$287,000 $330,000 $347,000 $370,000 $425,000 $495,000 $615,000 $635,000 $709,000 $730,000 $835,000 $855,000 $1,099,000 $1,450,000
92128 ADDRESS
BED
BATH
12174 Rancho Bernardo Rd #A 10870 Sabre Hill Drive #280 15016 Avenida Venusto #161 12349 Santiago Road E 17463 Plaza Abierto #28 17985 Caminito Pinero #190 16657 Bernardo Oaks Drive 17427 Ashburton Road 13022 Paseo Del Verano 17458 Fairlie Road 16416 Avenida Venusto #A 16846 Acebo Drive 16175 Selva Drive 16657 San Salvador Court 16055 Avenida Aveiro 17035 Bernardo Oaks Drive 11979 Avenida Consentido 12480 Pomerado Place 12075 Mil Pitrero Road 11832 Aspen View Drive
2 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 2 2 2 2 3 4 3 5 5
2 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2.5 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 3 3
PRICE
$154,000 $216,000 $232,000 $255,000 $255,000 $310,000 $340,000 $345,500 $357,000 $390,000 $400,000 $449,000 $495,000 $531,500 $592,000 $650,000 $750,000 $756,500 $800,000 $840,000
92129 ADDRESS
BED
BATH
14137 Caminito Quevedo 9939 Azuaga Street #H206 9864 Caminito Cuadro 9352 Twin Trails Drive #203 9316 Twin Trails Drive #102 13461 Appalachian Way 7440 Healis Place 12302 Salvia Way 8384 Alpine Ridge Road
2 2 2 3 3 3 3 4 6
1.5 2 1.5 2 2 2 2.5 2.5 3
SOURCE: CoreLogic
PRICE
$263,000 $270,000 $338,000 $350,000 $370,000 $604,000 $622,000 $720,000 $995,000
TEACHER RECOGNIZED — Gayle Case, president of the Delta Kappa Gamma Society International’s local Eta Chi Chapter, recently presented a $300 check to Allison Basehore, a third grade teacher at Rolling Hills Elementary School in the Poway Unified School District. The Eta Chi Chapter members are pleased to support Allison’s “The Understanding Others Book Club” which focuses on books with characters facing different disabilities, such as physical or mental challenges. Rolling Hills Principal Libby Keller is on the left.
Starting healthy choices early makes a lifetime of difference
K
ids aren’t getting enough servings of fruits and vegetables and childhood obesity is on the rise. Both topics are at the heart of separate national awareness campaigns in September: “Fruits and Veggies – More Matters Month” and “National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month.” Setting healthy routines early is key to making a difference on both of these fronts, shares pediatrician Natalie Digate Muth of the Children’s Primary Care Medical Group. “Healthy food and activity habits develop in the first few years of life and tend to stick with us for the long haul,” said Muth. “The smallest choices we make when kids are young add up in a big way as they get older. In fact, a mom can begin to shape MUTH a child’s food preferences starting at nine months of age.” The doctor is a dual board-certified pediatrician and obesity medicine physician, registered dietitian and board-certified specialist in sports dietetics. She’s not only a doctor, but a mother of a once-picky eater and someone who struggled with weight in her own childhood. She serves as co-chair of the San Diego Childhood Obesity Initiative and is the author of “Eat Your Vegetables!” and Other Mistakes Parents Make: Redefining How to Raise Healthy Eaters. Obstacles abound when it comes to raising healthy children, but Dr. Muth emphasizes starting early and staying the course: • Start your healthy patterns even before your baby is born. Keep moving during pregnancy and eat a balanced and highly varied, nutritious diet because flavors do transmit through the amniotic fluid. • Build up their taste buds early. Moms who are breastfeeding should likewise eat a wide variety of flavors of food, especially bitter vegetables. As you introduce solids,
take advantage of immature taste buds with babies with frequent exposure to bitter vegetables and other foods most toddlers tend to reject. • Take stress off the menu. During the toddler years, keep mealtimes relaxing and enjoyable. Use strategies like food bridges, including at least one food child will like, and repeated exposures to make this easier. • Model healthy habits. Eat your fruits and vegetables, increase your child’s accessibility and exposure to them, engage children in food preparation and decrease access and exposure to unhealthy options. • Help your child be active at every age. For a baby, provide a play mat and a safe environment to explore; help a toddler walk, run, and throw; teach your preschooler to ride a tricycle or bike and go on family bike rides and walks; join a neighborhood “walking school bus” to get your older kids to school; model physical activity in your own life. It’s never too late to start. The small steps and little changes in nutrition and physical activity all add up. “Few children are born with childhood obesity, yet kids who start school with it are very likely to become adults with obesity,” Dr. Muth cautioned. “Given food preferences are established very early in life, it’s imperative that we help our children acquire a taste for healthy foods like vegetables and fruits, enjoy regular physical activity, and enter school at a healthy weight.” Children’s Primary Care Medical Group is celebrating 20 years of helping children grow, develop and thrive in every way. CPCMG has more than 90 board-certified doctors working in 20 offices throughout San Diego and south Riverside counties. Local offices are at 15725 Pomerado Road Suite 203, Poway and 16918 Dove Canyon Road Suite 200, 4S Ranch. For more information, visit www.cpcmg.net or call the Welcome Center at (858) 5021177.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015 PAGE B19
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
Homes Pending SoCal home sales dip
Backyard upgrades for a year-round oasis
(CNS) — Pending home sales declined in Southern California in August, but were still well ahead of the same month a year ago, the Los Angeles-based California Association of Realtors announced Tuesday. The story was largely the same across the state, with August pending home sales down but still strong, marking 10 straight months of year-over-year gains, according to CAR. In Southern California, pending home sales dropped 13.7 percent from July, but were up 14.7 percent from a year ago. At the regional level, pending sales were higher on a year-over-year basis in the San Francisco Bay Area, Southern California, and Central Valley, but were lower on a monthly basis, CAR said. San Francisco Bay Area pending sales fell 14.1 percent from July, but were up 1.1 percent from August 2014. Central Valley pending sales were lower in August, decreasing 5.7 percent from July, but were up 15.9 percent from August 2014. CAR also reported that the share of equity sales -- or non-distressed property sales -- edged up from August to post its highest level since the fall of 2007. Equity sales made up 93.8 percent of all home sales in August, up from 93.3 percent in July and 91.6 percent in August 2014. The Pending Home Sales Index statewide rose 12.8 percent on an annual basis to 112.8 in August, based on signed contracts. The August 2015 index was up from the 100 index recorded a year ago and marked the 10th straight month of year-over-year gains, according to CAR.
(Family Features) If you’re finding it difficult to say farewell to all the fun you enjoyed in your backyard this summer, now is the perfect time to make upgrades that let you enjoy your outdoor living space all year long. When making changes to a comfortable and familiar setting such as your own backyard, it’s important to keep both aesthetics and function in mind. The following ideas let you achieve a stylish look while introducing new touches that make it possible to enjoy your backyard to the fullest, any time of year. Extend your growing season – and lend a burst of color to the landscape – with a greenhouse that lets you continue to cultivate fresh veggies and flowers in a temperature-controlled environment. Work the house seamlessly into your backyard design by choosing from compact models that have about the same footprint as a sandbox (or even smaller) up to larger walk-in units the size of a detached shed. Make your backyard oasis a true wellness retreat with a spa that offers therapeutic relaxation under the stars.
Options such as the new Highlife Collection NXT line by Hot Spring Spas lend a striking addition to your space with meticulously crafted models that feature architecturally molded corners, elegant exterior lighting, and cabinetry with a rich wood- grain look. Created by Designworks, a BMW Group Company, the elevated design of Highlife NXT spas – which appears to float above the ground – delivers form and function with cutting-edge features, technology and options. Nothing warms up a cool night like a toasty fire, and flames dancing in an open pit set a special ambiance for evening gatherings out back. Options
are limited only by your imagination: integrate a freestanding version into your existing patio layout, create a stone walkway across the yard to a seating area surrounding a fire pit ringed in stone, or introduce a whole new hardscape to your patio with a small built-in fireplace and chimney. Full or partial patio enclosures offer a natural extension of your indoor space, affording the views and ambiance of the outdoor environment with protection from elements such as wind and rain. A wide range of options let you choose how close to nature you will be, from open-air pergolas that deflect precipitation to retractable screens and windows that keep brisk air at bay. A lush landscape lends more than an appealing appearance to a yard. Strategically planted vegetation can serve functional benefits such as deflecting wind or providing a protective canopy overhead. Adding foliage that blooms late in the season or maintains its color year- round lends a fresh aesthetic, and you can draw birds and other wildlife all year long with plantings that offer both food and shelter.
HOME OF THE WEEK
11751 Treadwell Drive, Poway 92064 Bask in your own tropical oasis featuring solar heated pool with rockslide, waterfall, spa, pavilion, gas fire pit and outdoor BBQ! An entertainer’s delight, this turnkey home offers numerous indoor and outdoor living spaces. With 4647 esf this home boasts an open floor plan with gourmet kitchen/great room with new appliances, slab granite, built in work station and media center, dining area and spacious family room with fireplace. 5BR, 5.5BA includes bonus room/guest quarters with mini kitchen, full bath and separate entrance. A bedroom with ensuite bath is on the entrance level. Luxurious master suite with retreat is on upper level with views to the gorgeous backyard from an adjoining sitting/fitness room. Three more bedrooms are upstairs, including one with ensuite bath. Other features include interior/exterior surround sound, soaring ceilings, plantation shutters, ceiling fans, 2 tankless water heaters, gorgeous synthetic front lawn and 4 car garage. Close to all, this Rolling Hills Estates home offers executive style living at its finest! NO MELLO ROOS, HOA FEES! MLS# 150043695 www.11751Treadwelldrive.com
Offered at: $1,389,000-$1,449,000
Elizabeth Diehl San Diego Castles Realty 619-840-8285 BRE# 01098533
Open Sunday 9/27 1-4 pm
OPEN HOUSES Open house listings at pomeradonews.com/open-houses-list/
...IF IT'S BLUE, IT'S NEW! $949,000-$1,049,000 4BR/3BA
11176 Gatemoore Way, San Diego 92131 Sun 1-4 pm Sue Johnson, Windermere Homes & Estates 760-801-0414
$1,449,000 4BR/3.5BA
15470 White Vale Lane, Poway Julio and Lindsay, Pacific Sotheby’s
Sun 1-4 pm 858-405-4057
$1,790,000-$1,890,000 5BR/5.5BA
14331 Twisted Branch Road, Poway Suzanne Kropf, Berkshire Hathaway
Sun 2-4 pm 858-618-5691
$2,239,000 4BR/5BA
7783 Northern Lights, San Diego 92127 Sean Zangeneh, Windermere Homes & Estates
Sun 1-4 pm 858-229-6063
$725,000 4BR/2BA
14243 Silver Ridge Road, Poway Dawn Colonna, Berkshire Hathaway
Sat 12-3 pm 858-663-1273
POMERADO NEWSPAPER GROUP
PAGE B20 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2015
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RANCHO BERNARDO
4S RANCH
$799,000-$849,000
$339,000-$359,000
Highly upgraded 5br 3ba Westwood Valley home with views of San Pasqual Valley and occasional snow-covered Palomar Mountains. Situated on quiet cul-de-sac with large back yard. Remodeled/reconfigured open kitchen to family room cozy fireplace.
Downsizing? Investing? Views! Location! Golf course setting. 2br plus den, 2ba, 1455 approx sq ft. No popcorn, vaulted ceilings, wood flooring, updated kitchen/baths. Move-in condition. Near historic Rancho Bernardo Winery, restaurants, shops.
Karin Gentry
16789 Bernardo Center Drive, Suite B |
(858) 676-5221
San Diego, CA 92128
Brian Finneran
(858) 776-7999
POWAY $1,095,000-$1,144,000
RANCHO BERNARDO
ESCONDIDO
RANCHO BERNARDO $1,495,000
$749,000-$789,000
REDUCED! A Jewel in Green Valley. Single level ranch-style home on a large corner lot with drought resistant landscaping. Large updated kitchen, 4br 3.5ba approx 3,585 sq ft. Real “Pride of Ownership” shows in this home. No Mello Roos or HOA.
Craftsman upgraded, beautifully decorated 4 bedrooms, 3 bathroom home that is truly move-in ready. Resort style backyard with amazing panoramic views, including pool, spa, waterfall and outdoor kitchen. Furnishings are negotiable.
Beautiful, upgraded single story Mediterranean-style home located on a private cul-de-sac. 4 bedrooms 4.5 baths, approx. 3,276 sq ft on a two-acre lot with southwesterly views. Granite counters in kitchen with center island cooktop.
Wonderful home in Bel Etage that offers 5br, an office and Media room with br and full ba on first floor. Gourmet kitchen, two center islands. Breakfast area, fireplace in family room, 4-car garage. Pool, spa, fireplace, BBQ in tropical back yard.
Stately brick and stucco two-story immaculate home with 3-car garage. Professionally landscaped with sparkling pool/spa, plantation shutters and wood blinds. 3 fireplaces, upgraded neutral carpet. Kitchen custom tile and island. Master retreat.
Debby Palmer
George Cooke
Diana Webber
Danielle Malham
Andrew Thorne
$1,098,000
(619) 559-6161
$874,900
(858) 674-1222
(858) 676-6124
RANCHO BERNARDO
(858) 735-9914
(858) 775-3697
RANCHO BERNARDO
RANCHO BERNARDO
RANCHO BERNARDO
POWAY
$1,125,000-$1,195,000
$262,000
Gatewood Hills home with 3-car garage, dramatic curved staircase, fresh paint, 2006 kitchen remodel with engineered stone countertops, newer windows, upgraded electrical outlets, energy efficient furnace. Interior laundry. Backyard with open view.
Gorgeous quiet location at end of cul-de-sac in Westwood Valley. Cathedral ceilings, recently installed carpet and pad, recently painted interior. Low maintenance and attractive landscaping. Open and bright. Close to schools parks and Lake Hodges.
Top floor unit with views off the balcony. 3br, 2ba, 1290 approx. sq ft in Mira La Paz. Open floor plan with vaulted ceilings, newer carpet in bedrooms and hardwood floors in living room. Two-car garage.
Remodeled Custom 4500 approx sq ft ranch style. Master and other primary living space on entry level. 5+br, 3.5ba. Views of golf course/mountains. 3-car finished garage. Pond/waterfall/creek/gorgeous backyard, courtyard, large deck, putting green.
Beautiful upper one bedroom-quiet-with view and upgrades. Brand new carpet and paint. Custom 2-inch blinds and verticals. Custom fireplace and entry tile. Great newer refrigerator, dishwasher and AC unit. Stackable washer/dryer in closet.
Dee Dee Hill
Angela Dunsford
Todd Fortney
Sallie Hite (858) 212-7212
Marilyn Hanes
$649,000-$699,000
$589,000-$629,000
(858) 676-5222
$349,000-$369,000
(858) 442-8001
(858) 676-5229
RANCHO BERNARDO
(619) 540-6750
Bret Geernaert
Claudia Adams
Mike Amarillas
Sam Blank
Sherrie Brewer
Edith Broyles
Mary Ann Buckley
Toni Church
George Cooke
Maribel Dewey
Midori Doxey
Angela Dunsford
Anwar El-Mofty
Amy Farber
Terri Fehlberg
Brian Finneran
Todd Fortney
Karin Gentry
Cathe Gigstad
Marilyn Hanes
Dee Dee Hill
Sallie Hite
Jeff Jenkel
Patti Keller
Sandy Lu
Danielle Malham
Barbara McAree
Suan Miller Property Mgmt
Carla Molino
Shirley Napierala
Ward Nelson
Debby Palmer
Maria Parsa
Kip Peppin
Michelle Peters
Carol Prendergast
Nancie Raddatz
Jessica Rarity
Laura Reindel
Vivi-Anne Riordan
Paul Rode
Jolyn Stoffel
Rich Teeter
Gwen Thompson
Andrew Thorne
Ken Towers
Catherine Valentine
Amanda Van Vranken
Diana Webber
Linda Harbert
Stephanie Kosmo
RANCHO BERNARDO (858) 487-3333 16789 Bernardo Center Dr., Suite B San Diego, CA 92128
COLDWELL BANKER® SELLS MORE HOMES THROUGHOUT SAN DIEGO COUNTY THAN ANY OTHER REAL ESTATE BRAND
©2015 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Each Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage office is owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker® and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Broker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by 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.