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CITY TO HEAR FROM EIGHT CANNABIS APPLICANTS ON MONDAY
November 9, 2023
Healdsburg, California Healdsburg, California
Date, Date, 20202020
ANONYMOUS POSTCARD CLOUDS THE AIR OF PUBLIC INPUT By Christian Kallen
Scorecards
Assistant City Manager Andrew Sturmfels, who is guiding the city’s process, posted background documentation for every applicant on the city’s website late last week, including graded results from their application forms and interview scores. The application forms show that three primary categories were scored ➝ Cannabis Applicants, 6
Photo by Christian Kallen
The eight applicants in pursuit of two business licenses to operate a dispensary in Healdsburg will each state their case before the City Council, and the public, on Monday, Nov. 13. The meeting starts at 5pm in their chambers at 410 Grove St. The meeting will begin with a brief presentation by city staff. That will be followed by eight minutes for each of the eight applicants to make their verbal presentation to the council, plus additional time to respond to questions from the council members. Public comment will be held at the conclusion of all applicant presentations and council questions. Applicants and owners will not be allowed to speak during public comment. The public review should be the final step in the two-year process to provide for legal sale and distribution of cannabis in the city of Healdsburg. Although the council is expected to choose the two successful applicants, it is not obligated to do so—and a continuance to a later date for further consideration is always a possibility.
END OF THE RAINBOW The Clover Theater in Cloverdale, which closed on Oct. 17, still displays the unseen final bill on its marquee.
Dream Is Over for The Clover CLOVERDALE’S INDEPENDENT THEATER GOES LIGHTS-OUT By Christian Kallen
The only movie theater between Santa Rosa and Ukiah, located in a classic cinema dating from 1950, has gone dark. The Clover Theater, located on East First Street in downtown Cloverdale, ceased showing films in mid-October, as owner Ryan Hecht announced in an email to the theater’s owners and fans. He said that poor attendance “put the nail in the coffin” of the theater’s operating capital. In a follow-up email to the Tribune, Hecht wrote, “The Clover Theater was
Filmgoing Trends
operated for 10 years with the utmost love and care, personal pride, and integrity. I ran the theater to the best of my ability given the resources available to me in Cloverdale, a global pandemic that shuttered the business for more than 18 months, and a shifting film industry.” The theater, which was split into three screening rooms after Hecht purchased and remodeled it, features an old-fashioned move marquee above First Street, offering Cloverdale a sense of small-town America. Cloverdale is the northernmost city in Sonoma County, but its population of around 10,000 was evidently not enough to support the traditional experience of going to the movies.
Since the introduction of cable TV and streaming channels, the habits of film-lovers have shifted to the at-home experience, with visits to neighborhood cinemas sharply reduced. The trend was exacerbated with the COVID pandemic, which temporarily closed almost every theater in the county. The Clover closed during the pandemic in March, 2020, but reopened 18 months later, in October 2021. Healdsburg’s Raven Film Center also closed during the pandemic, but never reopened, announcing the Santa Rosa Entertainment Group’s departure from Healdsburg in September 2020. The multi-screen Reading Cinema, in Rohnert
SILKROAD ENSEMBLE PULLS INTO GREEN HALL COLLECTIVE’S ‘AMERICAN RAILROAD’ SHOW NOW LED BY RENAISSANCE ARTIST By Dave Gil de Rubio
Photo by Ebru Yildiz
VIRTUOSO Banjo player, vocalist and leader of Silkroad
Ensemble, Rhiannon Giddons comes to SSU in November to lead the group formed by Yo-Yo Ma in 2000.
The adjective “Renaissance” is often overused when describing someone proficient in a wide range of fields. In the case of Rhiannon Giddens, the term is drastically insufficient to describe the ride she’s been on since releasing her 2015 solo debut, Tomorrow
Park, also closed for good just over a week ago, on Nov. 1. The 16-screen complex also closed for a year during the pandemic, but reopened in March 2021 with social distancing protocols. “The closures of The Clover Theater and Rohnert Park Cinemas are a heartbreaking reality check for all who love movies,” said Kathryn Hecht in an email. “Both locations represent a former generation of cinema. These theaters were built decades ago to accommodate patrons of that time. Today, they are too big for contemporary audiences, too single-minded in their purpose, and their amenities are outdated. We mourn for them out of nostalgia, but the past does not serve
Is My Turn, following her successful run with oldtime string band the Carolina Chocolate Drops. She appears locally on Saturday, Nov. 18, as artistic director of Silkroad Ensemble, a position previously held by the collective’s founder, Yo-Yo Ma. They will perform at the Green Music Center on the Sonoma State University campus to end a nine-city tour. Giddens has accomplished a great deal during the last five years. She released two albums with creative/romantic partner Francesco Turrisi, 2019’s There Is No Other and 2021’s Grammy Award-winning They’re Calling Me Home; wrapped up the second of two seasons playing a gospel-singing social worker on the television drama Nashville; wrote a pair of children’s books, Build a House and We Could Fly;
us except as a reminder of what’s essential for the future.”
Origin Story
Ryan and Kathryn Hecht have been credited as the co-founders of the current iteration of the theater, which they began working on after they left New York and moved to California. According to a contemporary article in the Healdsburg Tribune, the idea to resurrect the theater was born when Ryan Hect was “Googling movie theaters for sale,” saw the theater and was attracted by its mid-century marquee. “The duo had to pony up nearly $240,000 to upgrade the theater’s projectors, a project that culminated with a Kickstarter ➝ Clover Theater, 4
scored music for the Nashville Ballet (Lucy Negro, Redux); and was commissioned to write music for an opera for which she won a Pulitzer Prize for Music, 2020’s Omar. And that doesn’t include stints hosting a podcast, Aria Code with Rhiannon Giddens, and being named the artistic director of the cross-cultural music organization Silkroad Ensemble, overseeing a 12-part video series called The Banjo: Music, History and Heritage or being named the musical director of the 2023 Ojai Music Festival. And let’s not forget she just released the Jack Splashproduced You’re the One, her first solo album since 2017’s Freedom Highway. “I tend to work better when I’m also doing eight other things,” she said during a call from her home in Ireland. “I think I’m destined to go through life ➝ ‘American Railroad’, 4
2 HEALDSBURGTRIBUNE.COM
THE HEALDSBURG TRIBUNE
NOVEMBER 9, 2023
THE CITY COUNCIL OWES ITS JEWISH COMMUNITY SYMPATHY AND EMPATHY NOT NEUTRALITY Recently, some of Healdsburg’s Jews asked our City Council to light the Healdsburg Avenue Bridge in blue and white in sympathy with the men, women, children and babies who were kidnapped, tortured, raped, murdered and mutilated in Israel, by Hamas, for the crime of being Jewish. Hamas, which recently called for the murder of Jews globally, killed over 1400 innocent civilians, executed young children, raped young women next to the corpses of their friends, massacred over 40 babies and desecrated their bodies. We have been shocked, frightened and devastated by the greatest act of antisemitic genocide since the Holocaust. Our neighbors have shown us an outpouring of compassion and empathy. Most of Israel’s critics have distinguished these acts from past acts of terror and recognized them as inexcusable genocide. All sane humans sympathize with and advocate for the innocents on both sides yet understand this massacre as an act apart. Unfortunately, the Council is in the small minority who lack the moral courage to offer their Jewish community comfort and support and to recognize October 7 as a day of historic brutality, injustice and inhumanity against the Jewish people. Instead of lighting the bridge in the blue and white of the Jewish people, as is done every Hanukkah, they chose to show their indifference by lighting the bridge in white, ostensibly to symbolize peace. On 9/11, did we Americans rush to call for peace? Did Israel and the rest of the world light their monuments in red, white and blue or in white? When ISIS spread its vicious depravity across the globe, was anyone foolish enough to talk of peace? Did the US offer peace to the Nazi regime? Hamas has just perpetrated a 9/11-style attack, while committing ISIS-like atrocities and espousing a Nazi-like, exterminationist policy toward Jews. Why is our Council equivocating? If any Israelis committed a fraction of these atrocities, they would not be greeted, as they were in Gaza, as heroes. Israel would not allow naked women and corpses to be paraded in the streets nor have their children beat captured toddlers and place the videos on the internet. Instead, the perpetrators would be widely and loudly condemned and jailed for life, as Israel has no death penalty. We in Healdsburg would not tolerate such acts. Yet, we did not even ask the City Council to be brave enough to condemn these acts, only to let us know that they feel our pain. And let those who would justify these acts know that, in Healdsburg, we do not accept them as justifiable and that these deliberate brutalities elicit in us the deepest feelings of sympathy toward and horror on behalf of our Jewish community. One cannot overstate how important this is right now. Gazan and Israeli babies all deserve to grow up in a healthy and safe environment and we sincerely hope that both sides can do what is necessary to make this a reality. But our request was not to solve or weigh in on the conflict, it was to comfort and console a community targeted by the worst acts humans can inflict upon their fellows and acknowledge that, whatever one feels more generally, there is no moral equivalence to these acts. Already, we have seen these atrocities embolden terrorists and anti-Semites to attack Jews in Israel and around the world. Crowds of Palestinian activists filled the streets of Sydney, Australia to chant “Gas the Jews.” Israeli tourists were murdered in cold blood in Egypt. A synagogue was bombed in Berlin. Hezbollah is launching daily attacks against Israel and Iran has threatened Israel with destruction and proudly proclaimed its support for terrorism against Israel. In the days after the massacre, here in the United States, white supremacist leaders called for replicating these attacks against Jews here at home. Students for Justice in Palestine has applauded the attacks as “a historic win” and called for “not just slogans and rallies, but armed confrontation.” On the day of the massacres, Within Our Lifetime – United for Palestine made clear that they aim to achieve their goals “By any means necessary. With no exceptions and no fine print.” Police departments across the country are reporting massive spikes in antisemitic incidents. At a time when Jews across the country are being faced with extremist groups that make clear that they support an end to conflict through the extermination of Jews, we thought the City Council might take a simple step to show us that, here in Healdsburg, Jews can expect our community’s institutions to stand by us and acknowledge that, whatever the contours of the current conflict, the tears we shed for our babies and children will not go unacknowledged nor relegated to the back-of-mind bin of ‘all the bad things happening in the world.’ What would it mean to have “peace” now? What is the City Council’s message? Hamas has an idea. From their founding charter: “Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it… The Day of Judgment will not come about until Muslims fight Jews and kill them. Then, the Jews will hide behind rocks and trees, and the rocks and trees will cry out: ‘O Moslem, there is a Jew hiding behind me, come and kill him.” The only peace on offer now is the peace of Auschwitz, the peace of the Khmelnitsky pogroms, the peace of the Inquistion, the peace of October 7th; it is the peace of dead Jews and dancing genocidaires. Healdsburg City Council, we don’t need your white light of “peace.” What we needed was a recognition that Jews and their allies were massacred and brutalised en masse by a genocidal, antisemitic organization and that you feel our pain and don’t think such things should happen. Your refusal to do this – a vote ironically taken during a meeting on promoting diversity in Healdsburg – leaves you as a moral outlier in the civilized world.
WE WILL BE HOSTING A NON-POLITICAL SOLIDARITY GATHERING FOR JEWS AND ALLIES TO HONOR OUR DEAD AND SHARE OUR THOUGHTS WITH ONE ANOTHER ON NOVEMBER 11TH AT 6P ON THE PLAZA. PLEASE BRING A CANDLE.
Paid advertisement by concerned citizens of the Healdsburg Jewish community
NOVEMBER 9, 2023
HEALDSBURGTRIBUNE.COM 3
THE HEALDSBURG TRIBUNE
HEALDSBURG HAPPENINGS GOINGS ON AROUND THE TOWN THIS WEEK & NEXT La Dame Blanche
Yaite Ramos Rodriguez, a.k.a. La Dame Blanche, summons the spirits with powerful and compelling sounds of hip-hop, dancehall, voice and flute. Starting at 7pm on Thursday, Nov. 9, at Second Story, upstairs at Little Saint, 25 North St.
City Offices Closed
Raven Players
Betty and Edith and Sue are lifelong friends who share the same godmother. On stage at the Raven Performing Arts Center, 115 North St. Performances Nov. 10-19, various times. See raventheater.org/ event/betty-and-edithand-sue-november-10-19.
Dali Quartet
Friday, Nov. 10, finds the classical Dali Quartet in performance on The 222 stage. With its classical roots and “Latin Soul” programming, the group has toured the Americas since its founding in 2018. Their diversified performance
KC’s Birthday
Music entrepreneur KC Mosso throws himself a birthday party on Friday, Nov. 10. DJ Kevin West provides free entertainment. Elephant in the Room, 8pm to midnight, 177 Healdsburg Ave.
Farmers’ Market
The regular Saturday Healdsburg Farmers’ Market is Saturday, Nov. 11, from 8:30am to noon at the West Plaza parking lot. The market celebrates local agricultural heritage and is one of the original Certified Farmers Markets in the area.
Photo by Christian Kallen
The Community Development Center and City offices will be closed on Nov. 10. This eliminates a travel day for employees, and reduces utility and facility use costs by closing some facilities. Public Works and Building inspections will be available.
will begin at 7:30pm, 222 Healdsburg Ave. Tickets $35-$75 at the222.org.
Hotel Jazz
Regular Saturday-evening jazz in the Spirit Bar at Hotel Healdsburg. This Saturday, Nov. 11, hear standards and originals from the Robb Fisher Trio, with Ben Stolorow on piano and Brandon Etzler on drums. From 6-9pm, 25 Matheson St., no cover.
CLOSING SOON The Healdsburg Museum’s exhibit on ‘African American Histories’ will close on Nov. 19. The museum, a former Carnegie Library, is located at 221 Matheson St.
Cannabis Review
Open meeting of the City Council to review the eight applicants for two cannabis business licenses in town, to be held Monday, Nov. 13, starting at 5pm. City Council Chambers, 401 Grove St.
Gypsy Jazz
Return to 1930s Europe with Ian Scherer, Emily Froberg and Trevor Kinsell and their Django Reinhardt-style music on Saturday, Nov. 11. The Gypsy Trio, winners in the 2013 North Bay Bohemian’s North Bay Music Awards (Norbays) voting, play from 5-8pm at Furthermore Wines, 328-A Healdsburg Ave.
Film Fundraiser
Hollywood Glam is the preferred dress for AVFilm’s gala on Monday, Nov. 13. Follow the red carpet to the “Hollywood of Tomorrow” program, which celebrates student filmmaking and community programs, with a tribute to Star Wars-editor
Marcia Lucas. Starts at 6pm at Little Saint, 25 North St; details and tickets at avfilmpresents.org/ hollywood-of-tomorrow.
Design Dialog
“Scale: Adding Housing Diversity” is the theme of the fall’s third Design Dialog, with local architects and CraftWork founder Jim Heid, on Tuesday, Nov. 14. At CraftWork, 5:30pm. Information and tickets at craftworkhbg.com/ design-dialogues.
Planning Commission
Latest deliberations from the city’s Planning Commission are Tuesday night,
Nov. 14, starting at 6pm. Held at Council Chambers, 401 Grove St.
St., Saturday, Nov. 18, 10am to 2pm.
Craft Fair
Final two weeks for the “African American Experience in Healdsburg” exhibit, at the Healdsburg Museum, 221 Matheson St. Open Wednesday to Sunday, 11am to 4pm, until Nov. 19. Free admission, donation appreciated.
Annual Senior Center Craft Fair is on Saturday, Nov. 18, from 10am to 2pm at the Senior Center, 113 Matheson St.
Holiday Boutique
Stock up on holiday gifts and handcrafted jams, chutneys and marmalades from Healdsburg-area home chefs. Also Thanksgiving and Christmas decorations, artwork and loads of jewelry and other gifts. At St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 209 Matheson
Black History
Post events on the Tribune’s online calendar at healdsburgtribune. com/calendar, and send special announcements to editor@ healdsburgtribune.com.
SNAPSHOT
The Shape of Water THERE’S MORE TO A RAINDROP THAN MEETS THE EYE
anxieties. Maybe the rain is ending this year’s fire season and beginning winter’s filling of reservoirs and the Sierra’s snowpack. Last winter, Northern California received epic rain and snow. Let’s see what this winter brings. Fun facts: Water droplets are perfectly round— sometimes. Principles of cohesion act to form water droplets’ roundness. A droplet falling through the air takes on a spherical shape trying to minimize surface area to volume for aerodynamic efficiency— round shapes being best at subsonic speed and pointy shapes best at supersonic
By Pierre Ratte
This weekend’s rain released earthy fragrances, falling gently over two days and lessening fire-season
speed. If air resistance is too great, which happens when water droplets become too large, the droplet flattens like a hamburger bun. Water is the stickiest non-metallic liquid. It likes itself. It’s predisposed to liking itself because of its atomic properties. Two positively charged hydrogen atoms nestle on one side, and a lone negatively charged oxygen atom is on the opposite side. With positive and negative sides, water is self-attracted like two magnets with opposite polarity. Stickiness, known as cohesion or adhesion in physics, is “like sticking
DOLORES ROSE NABER November 7, 1928 – October 17, 2023
Photo by Pierre Ratte
CLOSEUP Water droplets, captured on a grassy field, look
like crystal globes.
CHERYL MILEY TARTER June 21, 1947 - July 6, 2023
W
e are deeply sad to announce the passing of Cheryl Miley Tarter. She died at the age of 76 on July 6, 2023 in Chico, CA. Cheryl cherished the time spent living in Healdsburg and her work at the Healdsburg Senior Center. If you would like more information on Cheryl or the Celebration of Life please visit the Brusie Funeral Home’s website or email: celebrationrsvp2000@gmail.com
H
er heart took her to many places around the world and finally gave out. She was aware and surely felt the love and caring of all her friends and relatives. Dolores’ hands were always working; crocheting, rock collecting, and making jewelry in Arizona, tending to her garden and bonsai plants in Cloverdale, CA. She was in the orchid and bocce club at Del Webb and made pottery there too. Believing strongly in wasting as little as possible, she could fix anything with enough glue, tape, and Saran Wrap! She read the newspaper, every page, ‘til the very end. Being an avid Gonzaga basketball fan, she kept all their scores in her scrapbook. Dolores was famous for her lemon meringue pies and homemade raviolis after all food is love! Dolores will be met by those who left her before –husband, John Naber Jr, daughter, Kara Naber, mother, Julia Sbragia, father, Pio Pippi, and stepfather Gino Sbragia, brother, Albert Pippi. She is survived by her daughter, Mary Naber, son, Johnny Alan Naber, her brother, Ed Sbragia, granddaughter, Jessica Coppola, great granddaughter, Summer Coppola and numerous loving nieces and nephews. Donations: suggested at the charity of your choice. Services may be announced later.
to like” vs. “like sticking to other.” The cartoon version of water dropping as a “teardrop” is not accurate, but suggestive. When rain forms, the small droplets are round. They attract other droplets until they become heavy enough to fall out of the cloud. When the falling droplets get larger, approximately 3 millimeters, they flatten
until they break and form little round spheres again, which then attract other water droplets to grow larger, and so it goes. One might call it the rain cycle of a single droplet of water. Modern weather radar, with two polarized signals, picks out round shapes and flattened shapes of rain falling, thereby better estimating the rate of rainfall.
NELLA COLUMBA BARAJAS December 31, 1931 – November 2, 2023
O
ur dear mother, Nella Columba Barajas passed away peacefully in her own home November 2, 2023 at the age of 91. A mother of 5 boys, she was preceded in death by her eldest son Henry Guy Diaz and brothers Alejo Del Angel, Chel Del Angel, Filimon Del Angel, and Gorgonio Del Angel. She is survived by her sons Andy Diaz, Fred Diaz, Joe Barajas, Rudy Barajas, daughter in laws Rosie Diaz, Eileen Diaz, Lisa Barajas, and numerous grandchildren, nieces, and nephews. She is also survived by her brother Norberto Del Angel who paid regular visits in her final years, as well as siblings Nalo Del Angel, Kiyi Del Angel, and Rosa Del Angel. Nella immigrated to the US as a teenager, first living in Brownsville, Texas then settling in Healdsburg, California in the early 1950s. In her early years Nella worked as a live-in nanny for the Daniels family, of which she had many fond memories. She later worked as a waitress, teacher’s aid, and production bottling for a winery. Nella was very active in the migrant community and participated in Cesar Chavez’s historic march to the state capitol. Over the years Nella helped many migrants secure housing, food, and employment. Many whom Nella had helped came back in later years to express their gratitude for her help in getting a foothold in this country. Mom had a passion for gardening and flowers. The front yard of her home was always lined with flowers of many different varieties that she was quite proud of. She was also proud of her family and lined the walls with numerous photos, especially the children. Her sparkling smile will be dearly missed by all of us, and she will be in our hearts forever. A viewing will take place 3-7pm at the Windsor Healdsburg Mortuary and Crematory, 9660 Old Redwood Hwy. Windsor, CA on Thursday November 9, 2023.
4 HEALDSBURGTRIBUNE.COM
THE HEALDSBURG TRIBUNE
NOVEMBER 9, 2023
Clover Theater
‘American Railroad’
➝1
➝1
immediate use of young people throughout the county to gather, study and practice their skills in telling their own personal stories,” said Kathryn Hecht.
Reactions
The filmgoing public expressed disappointment at the announcement of the theater closure, and not only at the loss of a place to go see a movie. Some people on social media voiced their dissatisfaction with the sudden shuttering of a theater that was assisted in its remodel by a public fundraising effort. However, Laura Paine Carr, a board member of the Cloverdale Arts Alliance, said, “I’ve heard only heartbreak and disappointment. Much respect for the owners and all the events and creativity they brought to the community.” “While I’m sad it’s over, I’m very proud of what we were able to accomplish over the last 10 years,” Ryan Hecht said in a recent statement. “We showed a lot of movies, popped a lot of popcorn and hopefully gave people some really fun times.”
constantly stressed, but it is what it is. I’ve had a lot of amazing opportunities that I’m grateful for.” While You’re The One was released in midAugust, she’s currently focused on her work as artistic director of Silkroad Ensemble. “We have a big initiative called the American Railroad, which is looking at the building of the transcontinental railroad from the viewpoint of the people who built it and the people that were most disrupted by it, rather than the people who benefited most from it,” she said. Giddens is in the midst of a fall tour that promotes the American Railroad project. She’ll perform new compositions and interpretations of other material alongside Silkroad Ensemble. The music will complement the mission of the American Railroad project to spotlight the often-overlooked contributions of America’s diverse communities to America’s railroad history. The American Railroad project fits well with much of Giddens’ other recorded
work, which has dealt with weighty subjects ranging from the 1963 Ku Klux Klan bombing of a Baptist church in Alabama that killed four little girls, to the evils of slavery. And then there’s that certain accomplishment of landing a Pulitzer Prize for Music for composing an opera based on the Arabic language autobiography of Omar Ibn Said, a highly literate Muslim cleric who
was enslaved and brought over to the United States in the early 1800s, during which time he died in bondage, but not before penning his memoirs. “The Spoleto Festival USA approached me about it and asked if I’d ever heard of Omar Ibn Said, and I said, ‘No,’” Giddens said. “They told me a story about him being brought to South Carolina as a slave, and they
asked if I’d be interested in writing an opera about it and I agreed. And then I thought, ‘Oh my God, what have I done?’” She continued, “But yeah, it was an amazing experience. I’m not sure it’s one I want to repeat, but it got delayed a few years by the pandemic, which only made it better to give us a little extra breathing room to finish the things we needed to.”
Photo by Adam Gurczak
crowdfunding campaign that raised more than $60,000 in five days,” according to the article. But Kathryn Hecht, the director of AVFilm, which had its origins in Cloverdale, emphasized that she is not an owner of the theater. “The Clover Theater was his business. I have never had any ownership of The Clover Theater,” she said recently. AVFilm, meanwhile, is currently fundraising for its own multi-screen theater in Healdsburg, to be called the Plaza Film Center. It is nearing its goal of $2 million to construct three small screening rooms at 375 Healdsburg Ave. Formerly known as the Alexander Valley Film Festival, the organization held several special events at The Clover, including Oscar Night screenings and film festival programming. But its focus is now on fundraising for the small cinema complex and its nonprofit “school” located upstairs at the same address. “The suite above the theater will be developed as educational studios for the
IN PERFORMANCE Silkroad Ensemble, founded by Yo-Yo Ma in 2000, is touring their latest
project, “American Railroad,” featuring current director Rhiannon Giddens (banjo).
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Date, 2020
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SPORTS
Another Season Without a Win for Greyhounds
Photos by Joe Rowland
ROLLING RIGHT Senior Tyler Swanson (9) led Healdsburg rushing in the Piner-Healdsburg game, seen here running behind a block by James Parmeter (68) in the third quarter.
STRUGGLES CONTINUE BUT HOPES HIGHER FOR NEXT YEAR By Caleb Knudsen
The Greyhounds ended their 2023 season last Friday, Nov. 3, with a loss to Piner High in Santa Rosa. The 28-14 final score gave Piner (5-5, 1-3 in the league) fourth place in the five-team NCS Redwood League, ahead of Healdsburg (0-9-1, 0-4). At the Santa Rosa field, both Nova Perrill II and Alexander Harms scored first-half TDs, and kicker Mario Castro delivered his reliable conversion points. The Hounds took a 14-7 lead into halftime, but the Prospectors adjusted and their quarterback Soso Prak sliced open the Hounds’ pass defense to score three touchdowns in the second half for the win. “It has been a tough year with moments to cheer about, but too many teams
have players who clearly have much more experience than our players,” said Richard Bugarske, the game announcer at Rec Park for the Healdsburg Hounds. Bugarske, a former teacher and administrator at both Windsor High and Healdsburg High, is currently president of the Healdsburg High Athletic Booster Club and the Membership chair. “Having a JV team with freshmen and sophomores will help,” he said. “The hope is that the players don’t give up, because losing is no fun.” But losing has become the unfortunate norm for recent Healdsburg Hounds. The last year the team made the NCS playoffs was in 2016, when their record was 5 wins, 6 losses, under coach Todd Beth. The following year they switched coaches to Dave Stine and went 3-6, but in 2018 the team got off to such a rocky start, losing
their first two games 41-0 and 61-0, the players voted to suspend the season. With Shaun Montecito coaching, they went without a win in the next two seasons, 2019 and 2020, and only in 2021 did they again show some success in coach Robert Gray’s first year, with a 3-6 record. That season included wins over Fort Bragg, Willits and Kennedy. The Sept. 24, 2021 13-6 win over Kennedy in Richmond was the last time the Hounds scored more points than their opponent. The following year, Gray’s second as head coach, they went 0-10, and Randy Parmeter was hired for the 2023 season. The Greyhounds soldiered through both 2022 and 2023 without a win, though on Sept. 29 of this year a 42-42 lock against Berean Christian provided a flicker of optimism. With Randy Parmeter now serving as coach, the Greyhounds hope they can convert some of those Ls to
Ws, and look forward to a more equitable schedule for 2024. The lopsided record of several teams in the North Coast Section (NCS) has led to a revised league structure next year, an attempt at more equity among the teams’ schedules. Most of their opponents this season were in higher divisions, based on school enrollment, which usually means a better selection of players and more success on the field. Next year the schedule will be more suitable for a Division 7 team (550 students and below) like the Greyhounds. It will be called the Mountain League, and its members will include Archie Williams (San Anselmo), Novato, Piner, San Rafael, Sonoma Valley and Terra Linda, as well as Healdsburg. “With the attempt at more equity, the teams next year should give the Hounds a chance to have more success,” said Bugarske.
MVP Junior Nova Perrill II, Healdsburg’s leading rusher and passer for the 2023 season.
Healdsburg Runners 3rd in NBL Redwood Championships STRONG FINISH AT SPRING LAKE REGIONALS BY ANDERSON SIBLINGS By Caleb Knudsen
Photo by Michael Lucid
CLOSE SECOND Healdsburg's Kayden Anderson kept the lead through most of the Nov. 2 NBL Redwood finals at Spring Lake, but came in second.
The North Coast’s top crosscountry runners gathered at Spring Lake on Thursday, Nov. 2, and small-butmighty Healdsburg High went toe-to-toe with the county’s best and grabbed the bronze in the boys competition. Kaeden Anderson, the top Greyhound runner for the past three years, again showed why he bears
watching as he came in second in the hard-fought boys race, losing to Analy’s Cormac Gaylord by a few seconds. Gaylord had to sprint for the win, passing Anderson only as the 2.97-mile race neared the finish line. Anderson also came in behind Gaylord in the Analy-Healdsburg dual meet of Oc. 25, on the 4,250-meter track. Gaylord’s winning time was 14.03, Anderson on his heels at 14.16. Both boys are juniors, and their competition will likely continue next year. Anderson’s time of 16.06 at Spring Lake was a personal best at the distance,
though his second-place finish was a disappointment after last year’s first in the NBL Redwood finals. Anderson did not compete in the Oct. 21 Yoshanny Invitational in Ukiah. Two other Greyhounds finished in the top 10, giving the boys an overall third place in the meet with 59 points, behind Analy’s 37 and Ukiah’s 55. Jake McWilliams finished in sixth place (17.18), and Jack Wilmore came in ninth (18.10). Lucas York (19.43), Ross Fitzpatrick (20.25), Brandon Hausman (21.16) and Dash Willmore (21.33) rounded out the Healdsburg boys team.
Sierra Anderson just missed finishing in the top 10 in the girls race, finishing 11th with a time of 23.03 (The winner was sophomore Stella Finely of Analy, with a time of 19.03). For Healdsburg, Joie Kozubal (24.13), Fia Huebel (27.10) and Brenna Scott (34.26) rounded out the galloping Greyhound girls. At Analy on Oct. 25, Sierra Anderson was the top girls finisher for Healdsburg, fifth place at 20.06. The top four runners were all from the strong Sebastopol squad, led by Rosemary Harris (16.37).
6 HEALDSBURGTRIBUNE.COM
THE HEALDSBURG TRIBUNE
NOVEMBER 9, 2023
Cannabis Applicants ➝1
decision. “The scores are separate and will not be combined,” said Sturmfels. “Since all eight applicants are moving forward to the council for consideration, it is ultimately the council’s determination on who to select.” As to whether the council will make a final decision at the Nov. 13 meeting, Sturmfels said, “Council always has the option to hold an item to a later date.”
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opposed to, or in favor of, the location, though some messages only included the subject line recommended by the postcard. “On the whole, locals had some really thoughtful things to say about this location,” said Kelley. “Many folks did not like how visible it is as you enter a main artery into town. Others said while they enjoy cannabis and are happy they will be able to purchase it locally in the coming year, they think this location is not very discrete and would prefer to purchase somewhere more ‘off the beaten path’ where they won’t run into
clients or people who may judge them for buying it.” Councilmember Evelyn Mitchell said she received about 50 email messages, most of them opposed to the dispensary at that location. But she pointed out that location was just one of the criteria that had already been established months ago in the review process, and 20 Dry Creek Rd. met the criteria, “along with capitalization of the business and security that matter as much or more than the location.” She thought the response indicated that the mailer may have reached people who hadn’t been paying
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attention to the process, though, like the other council members, she did not receive the postcard itself. Councilmember Ron Edwards said he received close to 40 postcards, though he also said it was “the most emails I’ve gotten about any subject.” He made efforts to find out who sent the card, but wasn’t able to do so easily and, given his expected impartiality in the council’s decisions, he decided not to dig any deeper. Councilmember Chris Herrod, the other firsttermer on the council, said he also received about 40
emails, with most in agreement with the postcard’s position, though about 20% opposed it. Mayor Kelley, however, made it a point to say the postcard responses weren’t the best way to engage in public conversation on the topic, saying that “people can and should email us their feedback in advance of Monday’s public meeting. We welcome their thoughts and emails are a great way to reach us.” The Cannabis Review meeting will be held Monday, Nov. 13, starting at 5pm, in City Council Chambers, 401 Grove St.
POSTCARD Many Healdsburg residents received this unsigned postcard in late October, objecting to the location of one of the eight applicants for cannabis licenses in town.
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Perhaps to sway the council, if not public opinion, a number of Healdsburg households received an oversize postcard mailer the week of Oct. 30, outlining reasons for opposing one site in particular—that offered by Mercy Wellness. The location is at the former Di Vine Pizza restaurant at 20 Dry Creek Rd., near the intersection with Healdsburg Avenue. During the runup to the city’s initial selection period, Mercy Wellness parked a black van stenciled with their name, address and other information soliciting support for the location, the most visible overture for public support in Healdsburg. The mailer was signed “Healdsburg Community Residents,” though there was no direct contact information for the mysterious group aside from a P.O. Box that did not appear to be accurate. The reasons for opposing the dispensary largely concerned its location as closest of the proposed dispensaries to the public schools. It was also described as being “the gateway to the Healdsburg Wine Country” and “a landmark for all Dry Creek and Alexander Valley tourists, as well as visitors to the Montage Hotel.” Recipients of the postcards—which were addressed to property landlords—were encouraged to contact city council members, and all five of their email addresses were printed on the card. Curiously, none of the council members reported receiving the postcard, though all received at least 30 messages about it, with Mayor Ariel Kelley seeing the greatest response of “about a hundred emails, possibly more, from folks both for and against having Mercy operate at 20 Dry Creek Road.” All of the council members contacted reported a 4-1 split of messages
Photos courtesy of Shutterstock
separately—Security Plan, Labor and Employment Plan, and Business Plan. Each category was worth 400 points, for a total of 1,200 available points. The completed and tabulated applications showed that most applicants scored 1,200 out of 1,200 points, while two others fell short in one subcategory or another. In both cases it was the failure to fully supply all the documentation requested, at least according to the scoring committee. The information on the city’s website at healdsburg.gov/1094/RetailApplication-Review-Process also included scores not only from the initial application process (Phase II), but the city’s interviews with the applicant (Phase III), most of which were conducted on Oct. 18. Of interest is that while six of the applicants scored 100% (1,200 points out of 1,200) on the initial application, the two that did not were the top two total score earners in Phase III of the process, the in-person interviews. Mercy Wellness (with its proposed dispensary at 20 Dry Creek Rd.) scored 1,145 points (95.42%) on the Phase II application, but the high score of 97.6% in Phase III, the interview. 465 Retail (dba Solful, at 465 Healdsburg Ave.) scored 1,185 points (98.75%) on the application, but the second-highest rating of 94.94% in the interview. All other applicants scored 100% in Phase II, but their interview scores fell short of the top two. These applicants include JF Healdsburg (dba Jane, at 44D Mill St.), which narrowly earned the thirdhighest Phase III score of 90.94%, ahead of OTC Healdsburg (dba Off the Charts, at 129-133 Healdsburg Ave.) at 90.75%. Finishing below 90% in Phase III were Garden PARC (dba Sparc, at 1241 Grove St.) with 88.31%; and Sonoma CHO (dba Flora Terra, at 498 Moore Lane), with 87.88%. Two other applicants scored less than 70% in the interviews. They were Kure Healdsburg (dba Kure Wellness, 434 Hudson St.) at 69.06%; and Chroma (dba Thi Wellness, 51 Front St.) with just 60%. However, the council is not required to follow the scores in their final
NOVEMBER 9, 2023
THE HEALDSBURG TRIBUNE
HEALDSBURGTRIBUNE.COM 7
CLASSIFIED ADS/LEGAL NOTICES Legal Notices TRUSTEE SALE NO. 131286-1 LOAN NO. BELL ROAD TITLE ORDER NO. 95312945 APN 164-020-005-000;164-020-006000;164-020-008-000;164-020041-000;164-010-020-000;066170-033-000;066-170-013-000 TRA No. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 09/26/2014. 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 PROCEEDINGS AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. MORTGAGE LENDER SERVICES, INC. as the duly appointed Trustee WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (payable at time of sale in lawful money of the United States, by cash, a cashier’s check drawn by 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, 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 it under said Deed of Trust described as follows: Trustor(s): WINDSOR MILL COMMUNITY, LLC Deed of Trust: recorded on 09/26/2014 as Document No. 2014068035; modified by document recorded on 11/23/2015 as Document No. 2015100473; modified by document recorded on 04/24/2017 as Document No. 2017031245; modified by document recorded on 03/29/2018 as Document No. 2018021533; modified by document recorded on 04/02/2019 as Document No. 2019021566 of official records in the Office of the Recorder of Sonoma County, California, Date of Trustee’s Sale: 11/22/2023 at 10:00 AM Trustee’s Sale Location: In the Plaza at Fremont Park located at 860 Fifth Street, Santa Rosa, CA 95404 The property situated in said County, California describing the land therein: SEE EXHBIT “A” ATTACHED HERETO AND MADE A PART HEREOF Exhibit “A” Legal Description Tract One: All That Portion Of The Northwest 1/4 Of Section 13, Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.B. & M., More Particularly Described As Follows: Commencing At The Section Corner Common To Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14, Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.B. & M.; Thence North 88° 16’ East, Along The Center Line Of A County Road (River Road), A Distance Of 866.83 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Iron Pipe; Thence South 1° 44’ East, A Distance Of 910.55 Feet; Thence North 88° 29’ 30” East, A Distance Of 135.27 Feet; Thence South 34° 22’ East, A Distance Of 808.02 Feet To A Point; Thence On A Curve To The Left, With A Radius Of 200 Feet, Through A Central Angle Of 20° 35’, A Distance Of 71.85 Feet To A Point On A Tangent Bearing North 54° 57’ West; Thence North 35° 03’ East, A Distance Of 25.00 Feet To A Point “X”; Thence From A Tangent Which Bears North 54° 57’ West, Along A Curve To The Right, With A Radius Of 175 Feet, Through A Central Angle Of 20° 35’, A Distance Of 62.87 Feet; Thence North 34° 22’ West, A Distance Of 431.16 Feet To The True Point Of Beginning Of This Description; Thence Continue North 34° 22’ West, A Distance Of 279.09 Feet, To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin; Thence Along A Curve To The Right, With A Radius Of 25.00 Feet, Through A Central Angle Of 122° 51’ 30”, A Distance Of 53.61 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin; Thence North 88° 29’ 30” East, A Distance Of 229.09 Feet; Thence South 1° 31’ 30” East, A Distance Of 200.00 Feet; Thence South 38° 02’ 03” West, A Distance Of 23.95 Feet; Thence South 55° 38’ West, A Distance Of 100.00 Feet To The Point Of Beginning. Tract Two: Parcel One: Commencing At The Common Corner Of Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14, In Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.M., Said Point Being In The Center Of The County Road Leading From Windsor To East Windsor; Thence Along The Center Of Said County Road And The Northerly Line Of Said Section 13, A Distance Of 836.58 Feet, More Or Less, To The Westerly Line Of Bell Street, Extended Northerly; Thence Southerly And Along The Westerly Line Of Bell Street, Extended, A Distance Of 290 Feet To The Southerly Line Of Johnson Street, Said Point Being The Southeasterly Corner Of The Parcel Of Land Conveyed To Noah Bell, A Single Man, By Deed Recorded September 21, 1950, In Book 993 Of Official Records, Page(S) 93, Recorder’s Serial No. D-23071, Sonoma County Records; Thence Continuing Southerly Along The Westerly Line Of Bell Street, A Distance Of 885 Feet, More Or Less, To The Northeasterly Line Of The Right Of Way Of The Northwestern Pacific Railroad Company, The True Point Of Beginning Of The Parcel Of Land To Be Herein Described; Thence From Said Point Of Beginning North 55° 38’ East, 300 Feet To A Point; Thence North 34° 22’ West, 154.3 Feet To The Point Of Beginning Of A Curve; Thence Along A Curve To The Left, With A Radius Of 50 Feet, For A Distance Of 49.87 Feet To A Point; Thence South 88° 29’ 30” West, 125.53 Feet To The West Line Of Bell Street; Thence South 1° 43’ 30” East, 300 Feet, More Or Less, To The Point Of Beginning. Excepting The Following: Commencing At The Common Corner Of Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14, In Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.B. & M., Said Point Being In The Center Of Windsor River Road At The Windsor Road; Thence North 88° 29’ 30” East, Along Windsor River Road And The Northerly Line Of Section 13, 836.83 Feet, More Or Less, To The Westerly Side Of Bell Street, Projected Northerly; Thence Southerly Along The Westerly Side Of Bell Street, 910.48 Feet To The Northwestern Corner Of A Portion Of The Lands Of Power Construction Company, James V. Power, Described By Deed In Book 2050 Of Official Records, Page(S) 690, Sonoma County Records, Said Corner Being The True Point Of Beginning; Thence North 88° 29’ 30” East, 20.00 Feet; Thence South 1° 43’ 30” East, 185.27 Feet; Thence North 88° 29’ 30” East, 45.00 Feet; Thence South 34° 22’ East, 74.0 Feet, More Or Less, To The Southeasterly Boundary Line Of Said Lands Of Power; Thence South 55° 38’ West, 125.0 Feet, More Or Less, Along Said Boundary Line To The Northeasterly Right Of Way Line Of The Northwestern Pacific Railroad; Thence North 1° 43’ 30” West, 315.27 Feet To The Point Of Beginning. Parcel Two: Right Of Way For Road And Utility Purposes To Be Used In Common With Others Over And Across A Strip Of Land 50 Feet In Width, Lying 25 Feet On Each Side Of A Centerline Described As Follows: Commencing At The Section Corner Common To Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14, Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.B.& M.; Thence North 88° 16’ East, Along The Center Line Of A County Road (River Road), A
Distance Of 866.83 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Iron Pipe; And The True Point Of The Center Line To Be Described Hereby; Thence South 1° 44’ East, A Distance Of 910.55 Feet; Thence North 88° 29’ 30” East, A Distance Of 135.27 Feet; Thence South 34° 22’ East, A Distance Of 808.02 Feet To A Point; Thence On A Curve To The Left, With A Radius Of 200 Feet, Through A Central Angle Of 57° 08’ 30”, A Distance Of 199.46 Feet To A Point; Thence North 88° 29’ 30” East, A Distance Of 737.47 Feet To The East End Of Said Right Of Way. Excepting Therefrom Any Portion Lying Within Tract Two, Parcel One Hereinabove Described. Tract Three: Parcel One: Being A Parcel Of Land Situate, Lying And Being In The Northwest 1/4 Of Section 13, Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.B. & M., Being Also A Portion Of The Lester L. Sauers Property Described By Deed Recorded November 30, 1955, In Book 1397 Of Official Records, Page(S) 235, Sonoma County Records, And Being More Particularly Described As Follows: Commencing At A 3/4 Inch Diameter Iron Pipe On The Southerly Boundary Of The Windsor Elementary School District Property Described In The Final Order Of Condemnation Recorded May 18, 1950 In Book 961 Of Official Records, Page 272, Sonoma County Records, And From Which Pipe A 2 Inch Diameter Steel Fence Post At The Southeast Corner Of Said School Property Bears North 88° 29’ 30” East, 689.06 Feet Distant; Thence From Said Point Of Commencement South 1° 30’ 30” East, 225.00 Feet To A Point; Thence South 88° 29’ 30” West, 48.41 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin, Thence Along A Curve To The Right, With A Radius Of 225.00 Feet, For A Distance Of 224.39 Feet, Through A Central Angle Of 57° 08’ 30” To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin; Thence North 34° 22’ West, 306.93 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin, Said Pin Being Also The Point Of Beginning Of The Herein Described Parcel; Thence Continuing North 34° 22’ West, 300.00 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin; Thence South 55° 38’ West, 300.00 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin On The Northeasterly Line Of The Northwestern Pacific Railroad Right Of Way; Thence Along Said Northeasterly Line South 34° 22’ East, 300.00 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin; Thence North 55° 38’ East, 300.00 Feet To The Point Of Beginning. Parcel Two: Commencing At The Common Corner Of Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14, In Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.M., Said Point Being In The Center Of The County Road Leading From Windsor To East Windsor; Thence Along The Center Of Said County Road And The Northerly Line Of Section 13, A Distance Of 836.58 Feet, More Or Less, To The Westerly Line Of Bell Street, Extended Northerly; Thence Southerly And Along The Westerly Line Of Bell Street, Extended, A Distance Of 290 Feet To The Southerly Line Of Johnson Street, Said Point Being The Southeasterly Corner Of The Parcel Of Land Conveyed To Noah Bell, A Single Man, By Deed Recorded September 21, 1950, In Book 993 Of Official Records, Page(S) 93, Recorder’s Serial No. D-23071, Sonoma County Records; Thence Continuing Southerly Along The Westerly Line Of Bell Street, A Distance Of 885 Feet, More Or Less, To The Northeasterly Line Of The Right Of Way Of The Northwestern Pacific Railroad Company; Thence From Said Point South 34° 30’ East, Along The Northerly Line Of Said Railroad Right Of Way, 300 Feet To The True Point Of Beginning Of The Parcel To Be Described; Thence At Right Angles North 55° 30’ East, 300 Feet; Thence South 34° 30’ East, 290 Feet; Thence South 55° 30’ West, 300 Feet To A Point; Thence North 34° 30’ West, 290 Feet To The Point Of Beginning. Tract Four: Being A Portion Of Parcel Two Of The Lands Of F-Bow Properties, A General Partnership, As Recorded In Book 2171 Or Official Records, Page(S) 535, Sonoma County Records, And Being More Particularly Described As Follows: Parcel One: Beginning At The Southwest Corner Of The Windsor School District Property Described In Final Order Recorded Under Recorder’s Serial No. D-13671, Sonoma County Records. Thence From Said Point Of Beginning, Following The Centerline Of Small Creek And The West Line Of Said Windsor School District Property The Following Courses And Distances: North 10° 05’40” East, 68.53 Feet; North 55° 45’ East, 181.92 Feet; North 11° 54’ 10” West, 109.43 Feet; North 32° 32’ 10” East, 122.17 Feet; North 18° 55’ 10” West, 173.54 Feet To An Angle Point In Said School Land; Thence South 88° 29’ 30” West, Along A Southerly Line Of Land Conveyed To School By Said Final Order Recorded Under Recorder’s Serial No. D-13671, Sonoma County Records, 320 Feet, More Or Less, To The Northeast Corner Of That Portion Of Land Conveyed To Reggie F. Vincent And Wife, By Deed Dated August 7, 1961 And Recorded December 13, 1961, In Book 1861 Of Official Records, Page(S) 778, Sonoma County Records; Thence Along The Boundary Of Said Portion Of Land The Following Courses: South 01° 31’ 30” East, 200.00 Feet; South 38° 02’ 03” West, 23.95 Feet, South 55° 38’ West, 100.00 Feet; North 34° 22’ West, 279.09 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin, Along A Tangent Curve To The Right, With A Radius Of 25.00 Feet, Through A Central Angle Of 122° 51’ 30”, A Distance Of 53.61 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pin; Thence Leaving The Boundary Of Said Portion Of Land, Tangent To The Last Mentioned Curve, South 88° 29’ 30” West, 132.66 Feet, More Or Less, To A Point On The Boundary Of The First Mentioned Exception To The Aforementioned Parcel Two As Recorded In Book 2171 Of Official Records, Page(S) 537 And 538, Sonoma County Records, Which Said Point Bears North 88° 29’ 30” East, 127.53 Feet Along The Southerly Line Of The Parcel Conveyed To The Windsor School District By Final Order Recorded Under Recorder’s Serial No. D13671, Sonoma County Records From The Intersection Of The West Line Of Bell Street With Said Southerly Line; Thence Along The Boundary Of Said First Mentioned Exception The Following Courses: Along A Curve Concave Southwesterly, Tangent To The Last Described Course, With A Radius Of 50 Feet, Through A Central Angle Of 57° 08’ 30”, A Distance Of 49.87 Feet; South 34° 22’ East, 744.30 Feet; South 55° 38’ West, 300 Feet To The Northeasterly Line Of The Northwestern Pacific Railroad; Thence Leaving The Boundary Of Said First Mentioned Exception And Along Said Northeasterly Line South 34° 22’ East, 516.5 Feet, More Or Less, To The Center Of Windsor Creek, Previously Called Small Creek; Thence Leaving Said Northeasterly Line And Along The Center Of Said Windsor Creek, As Approximately Defined By The Following Courses: North 13° 22’ East, 161.5 Feet; North 45° 23’ East, 112.5 Feet; North 13° 15’ West, 233.5 Feet; Thence North 06° 23’ West, 103.0 Feet; Thence North
10° 32’ 40” West, 142.34 Feet To The Point Of Beginning, Pursuant To A Lot Line Adjustment #6568 On File In The Office Of The Sonoma County Planning Department And Recorded On October 24, 1978, In Book 3472 Of Official Records, Page(S) 488, Under Recorder’s Serial No. T- 44290, Sonoma County Records. Parcel Two: A Non-Exclusive Right Of Way For Road And Utility Purposes Over A Strip Of Land 50 Feet Wide, Lying 25 Feet On Each Side Of A Centerline Described As Follows: Commencing At A 1/2 Inch Iron Pin Marking The Northeast Corner Of That Parcel Of Land Conveyed To A.J. Pinckney And Wife, By Deed Dated December 9, 1959 And Recorded December 22, 1959, In Book 1722 Of Official Records, Page(S) 154, Sonoma County Records; Thence South 1° 30’ 30” East, 150 Feet To The Point Of Beginning Of The Center Line To Be Described Herein; Thence From Said Point Of Beginning South 88° 29’ 30” West, 737.47 Feet; Thence Along A Curve To The Right With A Radius Of 200 Feet, For A Distance Of 199.46 Feet, Through A Central Angle Of 57° 08’ 30”; Thence North 34° 22’ West, 808.02 Feet; Thence South 88° 29’ 30” West, 135.27 Feet; Thence North 1° 44’ West, 910.55 Feet To A 1/2 Inch Diameter Iron Pipe In The Centerline Of The County Road Known As River Road And From Which Pipe The Section Corner Common To Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14, Township 8 North, Range 9 West, Mount Diablo Base And Meridian Bears South 88° 16’west, 866.83 Feet Distant. Excepting From Parcel Two Herein, Any Portion Lying Within Parcel One Described Above. Parcel Three: All That Real Property Situated In The Town Of Windsor, Lying Within The County Of Sonoma, State Of California And Being A Portion Of The Lands Of Windsor Union School District, As Described In That Final Order Of Condemnation Filed In Book 961 Of Official Records At Page 272, Sonoma County Records And Being More Particularly Described As Follows: Beginning At The Northeasterly Corner Of The Lands Of Cal-Waii Molding Co., As Described In That Grant Deed Filed In Book 3472 Of Official Records At Page 488, Sonoma County Records And Shown On That Record Of Survey Of The Lands Of Cal-Waii Molding Co., Et Al, And Filed In Book 663 Of Maps At Pages 45 And 46, Sonoma County Records, Said Point Being On The Boundary Line Common To Said Lands Of Windsor Union School District And Said Lands Of Cal-Waii Molding Co.; Thence From Said Point Of Beginning, North 18° 29’ 20” West 62.87 Feet To The Northerly Boundary Of Said Lands Of The Windsor Union School District; Thence Along Said Northerly Line, South 88° 53’ 55” West 790.57 Feet To The Northwest Corner Of Said Lands Of Windsor Union School District; Thence Along The Westerly Boundary Of Said Lands, South 01° 16’ 53” East 60.00 Feet; Thence, Along The Boundary Of Said Lands Of Windsor Union School District, North 88° 53’ 55” East 809.17 Feet To The Point Of Beginning Of The Hereinabove Described Parcel Of Land. Basis Of Bearings: Record Of Survey Of The Lands Of Cal-Waii Molding, Et Al, Filed In Book 663 Of Maps At Pages 45-46, Sonoma County Records. Tract Five: Lying In West Windsor And Being A Portion Of The Northwest 1/4 Of Section 13, Township 8 North, Range 9 West; M.D.M. And Described As: Commencing At A Stake In The North Boundary Of Said Section 13, Which Bears Easterly, A Distance Of 347 Feet From The Common Corner Of Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14; Thence Southerly And Along The East Line Of An Alley Leading To The Hotchkiss Winery, 290 Feet, More Or Less, To A Stake Set At The Northwest Corner Of The Parcel Of Land Conveyed To Lenora T. Griffith, By Deed Recorded November 13, 1945, In Book 664 Of Official Records, Page 276, Sonoma County Records, Said Point Being The Point Of Beginning Of The Parcel Of Land To Be Herein Described; Thence From Said Point Of Beginning, South 1° 30’ East And Along The East Line Of Said Alley, 100 Feet; Thence North 88° 08’ East And Along The North Line Of A Right Of Way, 100.45 Feet To An Iron Pipe Monument, And North 87° 02’ East, 23.05 Feet To An Iron Pipe Monument Set At The Northwest Corner Of The Parcel Of Land Conveyed To W.V. Howard And Wife, By Deed Recorded December 28, 1949, In Book 927 Of Official Records, Page 408, Sonoma County Records; Thence South 25° East And Along The Westerly Line Of Said Parcel Conveyed To Howard, 138.75 Feet To An Iron Pipe Monument Set At The Southwesterly Corner Thereof; Thence South 89° 48’ East And Along The South Line Of Said Parcel Of Land, 178.70 Feet To An Iron Pipe Monument Set At The Southeasterly Corner Thereof; Thence Southerly And Along The Division Line Between The 4.68 Acre Parcel Of Land Conveyed To Felice Carlo Guerinoni And Wife, By Deed Recorded February 24, 1947, In Book 713 Of Official Records, Page 394, Sonoma County Records, And The Lands Conveyed To Gene Packwood, By Decree Of Distribution Dated March 3, 1944, And Recorded In Book 600 Of Official Records, Page 434, Sonoma County Records, A Distance Of 175.10 Feet, More Or Less, To An Angle In Said Division Line; Thence Continuing Along Said Division Line Westerly, A Distance Of 50 Feet, More Or Less, To An Angle In Said Line; Thence Southerly And Continuing Along Said Division Line, 233 Feet, More Or Less, To An Angle In Said Line; Thence Westerly Along Said Division Line, 27 Feet, More Or Less, To The Northeasterly Right Of Way Line Of The Northwestern Pacific Railway; Thence Northwesterly And Along The Northeasterly Line Of Said Railroad Right Of Way, 760 Feet, More Or Less, To The South Line Of A 60 Foot Street Sometimes Known As Johnson Street; Thence Easterly And Along The Southerly Line Of Said Street, 120 Feet, More Or Less, To The Point Of Beginning. Tract Six Commencing At A Stake In The Northeasterly Boundary Line Of The Right Of Way Of The Northwestern Pacific Railroad Company, Which Is South 37° 43’ East, 480 Feet From The Northwest Corner Of Section 13, In Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.M.; Thence North 88° 08’ East, 150.25 Feet To A Stake; Thence North 87° 02’ East, 23.05 Feet To An Iron Pin Driven In The Ground, The Point Of Beginning Of The Lands Herein Described; Thence North 87° 02’ East, 238.43 Feet To An Iron Pin Driven In The Ground; Thence South 2° 33’ East, 134.9 Feet To An Iron Pin Driven In The Ground; Thence North 89° 48’ West, 178.70 Feet To An Iron Pin Driven In The Ground; Thence North 25° West, 138.75 Feet To The Point Of Beginning, As Established Aforesaid. Tract Seven: Commencing At The Common Corner Of Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14, Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.B. & M., Said Point Being In The Center Of The County Road Leading From Windsor To East Windsor; Thence Along The Center Of Said County Road And The Northerly Line Of Said Section 13, A Distance Of 830.58 Feet, More Or Less, To The Westerly Line Of Bell
Street Extended Northerly; Thence Southerly And Along The Westerly Line Of Bell Street Extended, A Distance Of 290 Feet To The Southerly Line Of Johnson Street, Said Point Being The Southeasterly Corner Of The Parcel Of Land Conveyed To Noah Bell, A Single Man, By Deed Recorded September 21, 1950, In Book 993 Of Official Records, Page 93, Under Recorder’s Serial No. D-23071, Sonoma County Records, And The Point Of Beginning Of The Parcel Of Land To Be Herein Described; Thence From Said Point Of Beginning And Continuing Southerly Along The Westerly Line Of Bell Street, A Distance Of 885 Feet, More Or Less, To The Northeasterly Line Of The Right Of Way Of The Northwestern Pacific Railroad Company; Thence North 34° 30’ West And Along The Northeasterly Line Of The Railroad Right Of Way, 312 Feet, More Or Less, To The Southerly Line Of The Lands Described In Parcel One In The Decree Of Distribution In The Matter Of The Estate Of Bernice Packwood Pool, Deceased, Dated March 3, 1944 And Recorded In Book 600 Of Official Records, Page 434, Sonoma County Records; Thence East Along The Southerly Line Of Said Parcel Of Land, A Distance Of 27 Feet, More Or Less, To The Southeasterly Corner Thereof; Thence North 1° East And Along The Easterly Line Of Said Lands, 233 Feet, More Or Less, To An Angle In Said Line; Thence East Along Said Line, 50 Feet, More Or Less, To An Angle In Said Line; Thence North 1° East And Along The Easterly Line Of Said Lands, 410 Feet, More Or Less, To The Southerly Line Of A 60 Foot Street Commonly Known As Johnson Street; Thence Easterly Along The Southerly Line Of Johnson Street To The Point Of Beginning. Excepting Therefrom, All That Portion Conveyed To Gerald E. Stevens By Deed Recorded September 10, 1963, Under Recorder’s Serial No. H-54378, Sonoma County Records, Said More Particularly Described As Follows: Commencing At The Common Corner Of Sections 11, 12, 13 And 14, Township 8 North, Range 9 West, M.D.B.& M., Said Point Being In The Center Of The County Road Leading From Windsor To East Windsor; Thence Along The Center Of Said County Road And The Northerly Line Of Said Section 13, A Distance Of 836.58 Feet, More Or Less, To The Westerly Line Of Bell Street Extended Northerly; Thence Southerly And Along The Westerly Line Of Bell Street Extended, A Distance Of 290 Feet To The Southerly Line Of Johnson Street, Said Point Being The Southeasterly Corner Of The Parcel Of Land Conveyed To Noah Bell, A Single Man, By Deed Recorded September 21, 1950, In Book 993 Of Official Records, Page 93, Under Recorder’s Serial No. D-23071, Sonoma County Records, And The Point Of Beginning Of The Parcel Of Land To Be Herein Described; Thence From Said Point Of Beginning And Continuing Southerly Along The Westerly Line Of Bell Street, A Distance Of 284.0 Feet; Thence Westerly And Parallel With The Southerly Line Of Johnson Street To A Point On The Easterly Line Of That Certain Parcel Of Land Described In Parcel One In The Decree Of Distribution In The Matter Of The Estate Of Bernice Packwood Pool, Deceased, Dated March 3, 1944 And Recorded In Book 600 Of Official Records, Page 434, Sonoma County Records; Thence North 1° East And Along The Easterly Line Of Said Lands, 284.00 Feet To A Point On The Southerly Line Of Johnson Street; Thence Easterly And Along The Southerly Line Of Johnson Street To The Point Of Beginning. The property heretofore described is being sold “as is”. The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 8703, 8711, 8716 and 8777 BELL ROAD, AND 8820 LARSEN WAY AKA 8820 LARSON WAY, WINDSOR, CA 95492. BENEFICIARY HEREBY ELECTS TO CONDUCT A UNIFIED FORECLOSURE SALE PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF CALIFORNIA COMMERCIAL CODE SECTION 9604(a)(1)(B) AND TO INCLUDE IN THE NON-JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE OF THE ESTATE DESCRIBED IN THIS NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE ALL OF THE PERSONAL PROPERTY AND FIXTURES, TOGETHER WITH REPLACEMENTS AND PROCEEDS, IF APPLICABLE, DESCRIBED IN THE SECURITY AGREEMENT DATED 09/26/2014 AND IN A UCC-1 FINANCING STATEMENT FILED WITH THE SECRETARY OF STATE, STATE OF CALIFORNIA ON 08/26/2020 AS DOCUMENT NO. U200014749125 , AND BETWEEN THE ORIGINAL TRUSTOR AND THE ORIGINAL BENEFICIARY, AS IT MAY HAVE BEEN AMENDED FROM TIME TO TIME, AND PURSUANT TO ANY OTHER INSTRUMENTS BETWEEN THE TRUSTOR AND BENEFICIARY REFERENCING A SECURITY INTEREST IN PERSONAL PROPERTY. BENEFICIARY RESERVES ITS RIGHT TO REVOKE ITS ELECTION AS TO SOME OR ALL OF SAID PERSONAL PROPERTY AND/OR FIXTURES, OR TO ADD ADDITIONAL PERSONAL PROPERTY AND/OR FIXTURES TO THE ELECTION HEREIN EXPRESSED, AT BENEFICIARY’S SOLE ELECTION, FROM TIME TO TIME AND AT ANY TIME UNTIL THE CONSUMATION OF THE TRUSTEE’S SALE TO BE CONDUCTED PURSUANT TO THE DEED OF TRUST AND THIS NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE. A DESCRIPTION OF THE PERSONAL PROPERTY, WHICH WAS GIVEN AS SECURITY FOR TRUSTOR’S OBLIGATION IS: SEE EXHIBIT “B” ATTACHED HERETO. EXHIBIT “B” UCC-1 Financing Statement Name of Debtor: Windsor Mill Community, LLC Name of Secured Party: Windsor Mill Homes, LLC Item No. 4 All assets of Debtor, including without limitation the collateral described in this Schedule 1: All of Debtor’s right, title and interest in and to all personal property of every kind and description, whether now existing or later acquired, which now is, or which at any later time may be, attached to, erected upon, situated in or upon, forming a part of, appurtenant to, used or useful in the construction or operation of or in connection with, or arising from the use or enjoyment of all or any part oC or from any lease or agreement pertaining to, the real property or interests in it located in the County of Sonoma, State of California, as more particularly described in Exhibit A attached to and made a part of this financing statement (the “Land”), including, without limitation: (a) All buildings, structures and improvements now located or later to be constructed on the Land (the “Improvements”); together with (b) AII existing and future appurtenances, privileges, easements, franchises and tenements of the Land, including as-extracted collateral which may be in, under or produced from any part of the Land, including minerals, oil, gas, other hydrocarbons and associated sub-stances. sulphur, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, helium and other commercially valuable substances and all products
processed or obtained therefrom and the proceeds thereof, all development rights and credits, air rights, water, water rights (whether riparian, appropriative or otherv,1ise, and whether or not appurtenant) and water stock, and any land lying in the streets, roads or avenues, open or proposed, in front of or adjoining the Land and Improvements; together with (c) All existing and future leases, subleases, subtenancies, licenses, occupancy agreements and concessions (“leases’’) relating to the use and enjoyment of all or any part of the Land and Improvements, and any and all guaranties, letter-of-credit rights (whether or not the let-ter of credit is evidenced by a ·writing) and other agreements relating to or made in connection with any of such leases; together with (d) All real property and improvements on it, and all appurtenances and other property and interests of any kind or character, whether described in Exhibit A or not, which may be reasonably necessary or desirable to promote the present and any reasonable future beneficial use and enjoyment of the Land and Improvements; together with (e) All goods, materials, supplies, chattels, furniture, fixtures, equipment and machinery now or later to be attached to, placed in or on, or used in connection with the use, enjoyment, occupancy or operation of all or any part of the Land and Improvements, whether stored on the Land or elsewhere, including all pumping plant-,, engines, pipes, ditches and flumes, and also all gas, electric, cooking, heating, cooling, air conditioning, lighting, refrigeration and plumbing fixtures and equipment, including any and all software embedded - I - therein, a11 of which shall be considered to the fullest extent of the law to be real property for purposes of this Deed of Trust; together with (1) All building materials, equipment, work in process or other personal property of any kind, including any and all software embedded therein, whether stored on the Land or elsewhere, which have been or later will be acquired for the purpose of being delivered to, incorporated into or installed in or about the Land or Improvements; together with (g) All of Debtor’s interest in and to any and all deposit accounts into which Loan funds may be deposited, the Loan funds, whether disbursed or not; together with (h) All general intangibles, payment intangibles, rights to the payment of money, accounts, deposit accounts, accounts receivable, reserves, deferred payments, refunds, cost savings, payments and deposits, whether now or later to be received from third parties (including all earnest money sales deposits) or deposited by Debtor with third parties (including all utility deposits), all existing and future construction contracts, architect contracts, engineering contracts and related agreements (“construction documents”), development and use rights, governmental permits, approvals and licenses, ap-plications, architectural and engineering plans, specifications and drawings, as-built drawings, which arise from or relate to the construction of the real property secured by the subject Deed of Trust, chattel paper (whether tangible or electronic), instruments, documents, promissory notes, draft<; and letter-of-credit rights (whether or not the letter of credit is evidenced by a writing), which arise from or relate to construction on the Land or to any business now or later to be conducted on it, or to the Land and Improvements generally; together with (i) All general intangibles, accounts, deposit accounts and pro-ceeds, including all claims thereto and demands therefor (whether cash or non-cash and including payment intangibles), of or arising from the voluntary or involuntary con-version of any of the Land, Improvements or the other property described above into cash or liquidated claims, including all proceeds of any insurance policies, present and future, payable because of loss sustained to all or pan of the Land, the Improvements, or any other property identified herein, whether or not such insurance policies are re-quired by Secured Party, and all condemnation awards or payments now or later to be made by any public body or decree by any court of competent jurisdiction for any tak-ing or in connection with any condemnation or eminent domain proceeding, :md all causes of action and their proceeds for any damage or injury to the Land, Improvements or the other property described above or any part or them, or breach of warranty in connection with the construction of the Improvements, including causes of action aris-ing in tort, contract, fraud or concealment of a material fact; together with G) All books and records pertaining to any and all of the property described above, including computer readable memory and any computer hardware or software necessary to access and process such memory (‘’Books and Records’’); together with (k) All letter-of-credit rights (whether or not the letter of credit is evidenced by a writing) that Debtor may now have or hereafter acquire relating to the properties, rights, titles and interests referred to herein; together with (I) All commercial tort claims that Debtor may now have or hereafter acquire relating to the properties, rights, titles and interests referred to herein; together ·with (m) All proceeds and products of, additions and accretions lo, substitutions and replacement-. for, and changes in any of the property described above, together with all supporting obligations ancillary thereto or arising in any way in connection therewith. This financing statement is filed in connection with a secured loan (the “Loan”) made by Secured Party to Debtor in the principal amount of Ten Million One Hundred Fifty Thousand and No/I 00 Dollars ($10,150,000.00), evidenced by a Secured Promissory Note (“Note”) executed by Debtor and secured by, among other things, a Deed of Trust, Assignment of Rents, Security Agreement and Fixture Filing (the “Deed of Trust”) by Debtor, as trustor, for the benefit of Secured Party, as beneficiary, encumbering certain property as therein described. The Deed of Trust, and all other agreements, instruments and documents evidencing, securing and relating to the Loan are referred to as the “Loan Documents.” Capitalized terms used above without definition have the meanings given them in the Loan Documents. The filing of this financing statement shall not be construed to derogate from or impair the lien or provisions of the Deed of Trust with respect to any properly described in it which is real property. The intention of Debtor and Secured Party is that everything used in connection with the production of income from that real property, or adapted for use in or on it is, and at all times and for all purposes and in all proceedings, both legal and equitable, shall be regarded as real property and part of the real property encumbered by the Deed of Trust, regardless of whether or not the same is physically attached lo the
Improvements. Similarly, nothing in this financing statement shall be construed to alter any of the rights of Secured Party as determined by the Deed of Trust or the priority of Secured Party’s lien thereby created. This financing statement is declared to be for the protection of Secured Party in the event any court shall at any time hold that in order to the effective against a particular class of persons, including, but not limited to, the United States Government or any or its agencies, notice of Secured Party’s priority of interest in any property or interests described in the Deed of Trust must be filed in the office where this financing statement is filed. NO WARRANTY IS MADE THAT ANY OR ALL OF THE PERSONAL PROPERTY STILL EXISTS OR IS AVAILABLE FOR THE SUCCESSFUL BIDDER AND NO WARRANTY IS MADE AS TO THE CONDITION OF ANY OF THE PERSONAL PROPERTY, WHICH SHALL BE SOLD “AS-IS, WHERE-IS”. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. Said 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 said Deed of Trust, with interest thereon, as provided in said note(s), advances, if any, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, estimated fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust, to-wit: $12,844,545.01 (Estimated). Accrued interest and additional advances, if any, will increase this figure prior to sale. The Beneficiary may elect to bid less that the full credit bid. The beneficiary under said Deed of Trust heretofore executed and delivered to the undersigned a written Declaration of Default and Demand for Sale, and a written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned caused said Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located and more than three months have elapsed since such recordation. 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. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call 916-939-0772 or visit this Internet Web site www. nationwideposting.com, using the file number assigned to this case 131286-1. 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: October 24, 2023 MORTGAGE LENDER SERVICES, INC. 7844 Madison Ave., Suite 145 Fair Oaks, CA 95628 (916) 962-3453 Sale Information Line: 916-939-0772 or www.nationwideposting.com Marsha Townsend, Chief Financial Officer MORTGAGE LENDER SERVICES, INC. MAY BE A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. NPP0442407 To: HEALDSBURG TRIBUNE 11/02/2023, 11/09/2023, 11/16/2023 (Publication Dates for Healdsburg Tribune 11/2, 11/9, 11/16 of 2023)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202302962
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: NOLASCA GARDEN CARE & LANDSCAPING, 104 BRIAN ST, WINDSOR CA 95492, COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): CARLOS VALDOVINOS-PARAMO, 104 BRIAN ST, WINSOR CA 95492, GONZALO VALDOVINOS-PARAMO, VICTOR VALDOVINOS-PARAMO, JOSE VALDOVINOS-PARAMO, 27 EVERGREEN AVE, WINDSOR, CA 95492: This business is being conducted by A GENERAL PARTNERSHIP. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on 10/20/2017. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: CARLOS VALDOVINOS PARAMO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 06, 2023. (Publication Dates October 19, 26, November 2, 9 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202302924
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: PIERCE & SONS CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT AND CONSULTING , 9778 HILLSIDE DR, FORESTVILLE CA 95436, COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): MICHAEL J PIERCE, 9778 HILLSIDE DR, FORESTVILLE CA 95436: This business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: MICHAEL J PIERCE, OWNER. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 09, 2023. (Publication Dates October 19, 26, November 2, 9 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
8 HEALDSBURGTRIBUNE.COM
THE HEALDSBURG TRIBUNE
NOVEMBER 9, 2023
POLICE LOG A PARTIAL LIST OF INCIDENTS REPORTED TO HEALDSBURG POLICE
• 3:48pm A violation of a court order occurred at Plank Coffee on Dry Creek Road. The RP indicated he was being followed by a van with a camera, and a detective took a report. Names and confidential info redacted.
Monday, Oct. 23
• 10:36pm Two callers reported battery at Victory Apartments on East Street. They said a woman was throwing rocks and banging on the neighbor’s door during a verbal altercation in which the female appeared to be the main aggressor. Officers responded and cited a 46YO woman for assault and battery, and trespassing.
• 1:18pm A hit-and-run accident occurred at CVS Pharmacy on Center Street. The reporting party (RP) indicated her vehicle was hit and the suspect was trying to leave. Officers responded and arrested a 48-year-old (YO) woman for driving under the influence of alcohol.
Tuesday, Oct. 24
• 8:51am A woman was hunched over the steering wheel of her vehicle at the bus stop near Russian River Covered RV Storage on Healdsburg Avenue. An officer responded, but medical treatment was declined. A 22-YO woman was cited for possession of drugs and drug paraphernalia. • 2:04pm The RP indicated that over the preceding weekend someone accessed a mobile mini steel container off Tucker Street and cut and stole copper wire worth approximately $1,000. An officer responded and took a report. • 2:21pm Police cited a 26YO woman at the river frontage north of the railroad bridge on Healdsburg Avenue on outstanding Sonoma County warrants regarding the possession of drug paraphernalia, public intoxication and disturbing the peace.
Wednesday, Oct. 25 • 8:00am Petty theft occurred on Lincoln Street. The RP indicated she left her vehicle unlocked on Oct. 23, and her purse was stolen. The next day someone used her credit card to buy $70 of gas at Rotten Robbie’s. An officer responded and took a report. • 7:53pm A woman was reported as having been at The Wurst on Matheson Street since noon, and the RP was concerned the woman would sleep on the patio. The RP told the woman she could not spend all day on the property. No drugs, alcohol or weapons were seen. An officer later located the woman near Safeway. The RP was sent a trespass notice form via email. • 10:12pm Trespassing occurred at the Healdsburg Bar & Grill. The RP stated a transient woman with bright-red hair was on the patio and was seen drinking two bottles of wine and urinating in a corner. The RP was concerned she would try to sleep there. The RP told the woman, who was making statements regarding zombies and satellites, that she needed to leave the property. Officers responded and arrested a 50YO woman for trespassing, shopping cart theft, public
Thursday, Oct. 26 • 10:42am Petty theft occurred at Big John’s Market on Healdsburg Avenue. A man drank a canned cocktail in the store valued at $5.44, the store wanted to press charges, saying they had surveillance and a license plate. An officer responded and took a report. Later a 50-YO man was cited for shoplifting. • 3:27pm Another petty theft was reported at Big John’s Market. The RP confronted the subject and asked for a receipt. Officers responded, but the subject was gone on arrival and unable to be located. • 4:03pm Trespassing occurred on East Street. The RP indicated an unwanted woman was in the laundry area. No drugs or alcohol were seen. Officers responded, and the woman left the property on her own after she was admonished to not return.
Friday, Oct. 27 • 2:32pm The RP stated that cars were sporadically racing on Parkland Farms Boulevard at Latigo Lane, and it seemed to be happening more frequently, occurring in the evening and nighttime hours. The RP stated it last occurred on Oct. 26 around 9pm. Patrols were advised. • 6:18pm A violation of a court order occurred on Fieldcrest Drive. The RP asked questions about an active temporary restraining order. An officer responded and took a report. • 8:36pm Reckless driving occurred at Recreation Park on Piper Street. The RP indicated a vehicle was running stop signs and speeding through the area. Officers responded. The vehicle was gone on arrival
Photo by Christian Kallen
• 4:58am Trespassing occurred at Victory Apartments on East Street. The reporting party indicated a woman who was not supposed to be on the property was in the laundry room, screaming. Officers contacted the woman and cited her for violation of probation and trespassing.
nuisance and public intoxication. The woman was taken to county jail.
THE ENFORCER Healdsburg Parking Enforcement Officer, Randy Byers, with his vehicle, outfitted with four License Plate Readers (LPR) to catch parking violators. and unable to be located. • 11:30pm An officer stopped a vehicle at Carl’s Jr. on Vine Street for altered license plates. A 44-YO man was arrested and transported to county jail for drunk driving, and his vehicle was towed.
Saturday, Oct. 28 • 4:25am A transient man and woman were yelling about the smell of a dog on West Matheson Street. No drugs, weapons or alcohol were seen. An officer responded; no further assistance was required. • 1:16pm. A 2-vehicle collision occurred on Healdsburg Avenue at Healdsburg Lumber. Fire and medical responded, both vehicles were towed. • 3:44pm Petty theft reported on University Street. The RP stated a black electric
scooter valued at $150 was stolen in September. The person the RP believes stole it walked by and flirted with his 15-YO daughter. The daughter asked for the scooter back. The RP called back to report that the suspect rode by the house on the scooter. Officers responded, but the suspect was gone on arrival and unable to be located. • 8:56pm Trespassing reported on East Street. The RP indicated that a woman was yelling “help” from the laundry room. Officers responded and advised the woman she was trespassing. The woman was transported for medical help by Bells Ambulance Service. • 10:44pm Threats made at L & M Motel on Healdsburg Avenue. The RP, a security guard, was threatened by a
man who lives on the site. The man approached the RP’s vehicle while she was on a break and stated he would “yank her out of her vehicle and beat the ---- out of her.” This was not the first time the man threatened her. Officers responded and attempted to contact the suspect, but he would not come to the door. The officer sent a report to the District Attorney.
Sunday, Oct. 29 • 3:10pm Public intoxication reported on Healdsburg Avenue at Piper Street. A man was lying down on the sidewalk. Officers responded and arrested a 33-YO man for public intoxication and resisting arrest, and transported him to county jail.
Compiled by Carolyn Brenner
LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE
T.S. No. 108851-CA APN: 002-621-072-000 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED 8/9/2017. 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 On 11/29/2023 at 10:00 AM, CLEAR RECON CORP, as duly appointed trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust recorded 8/14/2017 as Instrument No. 2017062858 of Official Records in the office of the County Recorder of Sonoma County, State of CALIFORNIA executed by: LANNY C MATSON AND CHRISTINA M MATSON, TRUSTEES, OR SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE(S) UNDER THE MATSON FAMILY 2017 TRUST, DATED APRIL 18, 2017 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, SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, OR SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF THE FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE; IN THE PLAZA AT FREMONT PARK LOCATED AT 860 FIFTH STREET, SANTA ROSA, CA 95404 all right, title and interest conveyed to and now held by it under said Deed of Trust in the property situated in said County and State described as: MORE FULLY DESCRIBED ON SAID DEED OF TRUST The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 217 HEMLOCK DRIVE, HEALDSBURG, CA 95448 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. Said sale will be held, but without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, condition, or encumbrances, including fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust, to pay the remaining principal sums of the note(s) secured by said 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: $400,649.53 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 under said Deed of Trust heretofore executed and delivered to the undersigned a written Declaration of Default and Demand for Sale, and a written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned or its predecessor caused said 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 resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (844) 477-7869 or visit this Internet Web site WWW.STOXPOSTING. COM, using the file number assigned to this case 108851-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. NOTICE TO TENANT: Effective January 1, 2021, you may have a right to purchase this property after the trustee auction pursuant to Section 2924m of the California Civil Code. If you are an “eligible tenant buyer,” you can purchase the property if you match the last and highest bid placed at the trustee auction. If you are an “eligible bidder,” you may be able to purchase the property if you exceed the last and highest bid placed at the trustee auction. There are three steps to exercising this right of purchase. First, 48 hours after the date of the trustee sale, you can call (855) 313-3319, or visit this internet website www.clearreconcorp.com, using the file number assigned to this case 108851-CA to find the date on which the trustee’s sale was held, the amount of the last and highest bid, and the address of the trustee. Second, you must send a written notice of intent to place a bid so that the trustee receives it no more than 15 days after the trustee’s sale. Third, you must submit a bid so that the trustee receives it no more than 45 days after the trustee’s sale. If you think you may qualify as an “eligible tenant buyer” or “eligible bidder,” you should consider contacting an attorney or appropriate real estate professional immediately for advice regarding this potential right to purchase. FOR SALES INFORMATION: (844) 477-7869 CLEAR RECON CORP 8880 Rio San Diego Drive, Suite 725 San Diego, California 92108 Publication Dates Healdsburg Tribune October 26, November 2, November 9 of 2023)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202302911
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: PRECISION BUILDERS CALIFORNIA , 131A STONY CIR, STE 500, COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s):
PRECISION BUILDERS GROUP, LLC, 2901 CABALLO RANCH BLVD, STE 3A, LEANDER, TX 78641-4637: This business is being conducted by A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on 09152023. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: DUSTIN BAXTER, PRESIDENT, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 03, 2023. (Publication Dates October 19, 26, November 2, 9 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202302974
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: HEARTS LIT UP, 1273 WOODHAVEN DR, SANTA ROSA CA 95407, COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): LOVE 1111, INC, 1273 WOODHAVEN DR, SANTA ROSA CA 95407: This business is being conducted by A CORPORATION. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: SHIRLEY WANG, PRESIDENT. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 09, 2023. (Publication Dates October 19, 26, November 2, 9 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202303060
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: MILESTONE EVENT TOURS, 4370 MONTGOMERY DR, SANTA ROSA CA 95405, COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): MILESTONE EVENT TOURS, LLC, 4370 MONTGOMERY DR, SANTA ROSA CA 95405: This business is being conducted by A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: DAVID LEON THOADES, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 19, 2023. (Publication Dates October 26, November 2, 9, 16 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF SONOMA 600 Administration Dr. Room 107-J, Santa Rosa, CA 95403 CASE NUMBER: 23CV00885
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS 1. Petitioner (name of each): MORGAN ALEXANDRA SPENCER BUSCHMAN, filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name: MORGAN ALEXANDRA SPENCER BUSCHMAN, to Proposed Name: MORGAN ALEXANDRA BUSCHMAN 2. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at
the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING 12/06/2023, at 3:00 PM, in Dept: 17: Sonoma County Superior Court, 3055 Cleveland Ave., Santa Rosa, CA 95403. Via Zoom. GO ONLINE TO ZOOM.US/JOIN OR PHONE IN AT Meeting ID Dial 1-669-900-6833, MEETING ID 161 126 4123 Passcode 062178. 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 Healdsburg Tribune, a newspaper of general circulation, printed in the county of Sonoma. DATED: OCTOBER 20, 2023 Hon. Bradford J. DeMeo, Judge of the Superior Court (Publication Dates October 26, November 2, 9, 16 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202302887
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: WAGNER ESTATE VINEYARD, 498 MOORE LANE, HEALDSBURG, CA 95448 COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): SELBY ENTERPRISES, INC., 498 MOORE LANE, HEALDSBURG, CA 95448: This business is being conducted by A CORPORATION. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: SUSAN L. SELBY, PRESIDENT. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on September 29, 2023. Publication Dates October November 2, 9, 16, 23 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202303110
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. ROBERT W CURTIS & ASSOCIATES, 2. CURTIS & ASSOCIATES, INC, 805 HEALDSBURG AVE, HEALDSBURG, CA 95448 COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): ROBERT W CURTIS & ASSOCIATES., 805 HEALDSBURG AVE, HEALDSBURG, CA 95448 : This business is being conducted by A CORPORATION. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on 02/01/2022. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: CHARYL A CURTIS, SECRETARY. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 25, 2023. (Publication Dates November 2, 9, 16, 23 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202303081
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. C1D1 BOOTHS, 2. ABC DRAFT, 1695 PINER RD UNIT A, SANTA ROSA, CA 95403 COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): ADVANCED BOOTH CLEANING LLC., 1695 PINER RD UNIT A, SANTA ROSA, CA 95403 : This business is being conducted by A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is
true and correct. Signed: CHRISTIAN HLUZ, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 20, 2023. (Publication Dates October November 2, 9, 16, 23 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202303109
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. SONOMA WOODWORKS, 5078 CHARMIAN DR., SANTA ROSA, CA 95409 COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: SAME: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): JESSE D. ALMOS, 5078 CHARMIAN DR., SANTA ROSA, CA 95409: This business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on 2011. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: JESSE ALMOS. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 24, 2023. (Publication Dates October November 2, 9, 16, 23 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202303123
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. ELEET ELECTROLOGY, 411 B STREET, SUITE 7., PETALUMA, CA 94952 COUNTY SONOMA, Mailing Address: 5 LEISURE PARK CIRCLE, SANTA ROSA, CA 95401: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): DIDO LILY LEET, 5 LEISURE PARK CIRCLE, SANTA ROSA, CA 95401: This business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on 2011. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: DIDO LEET. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 25, 2023. (Publication Dates October November 2, 9, 16, 23 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202303131
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. INSIGHT LLC, 2. INSIGHT NEVADA, LLC, 160 WIKIUP DRIVE, SUITE 101, SANTA ROSA, CA 95403 COUNTY SONOMA: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): INSIGHT NEVADA, LLC, 5 LEISURE PARK CIRCLE, SANTA ROSA, CA 95401: This business is being conducted by A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on 8/20/2012. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed:TIMOTHY HARRIS, CEO. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 26, 2023. (Publication Dates October November 2, 9, 16, 23 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT CLOVERDALE MINI STORAGE WILL HOLD LIEN AUCTION TO START NOVEMBER 23, 2023 AT 9:00 A.M. AND END NOVEMBER 27, 2023, AT 9:00 A.M. ONLINE AT WWW. STORAGETREASURES.COM, FOR UNDERSIGNED CLOVERDALE
MINI STORAGE, LOCATED AT 35 INDUSTRIAL DRIVE, CLOVERDALE, CA, COUNTY OF SONOMA.THE UNDERSIGNED WILL SELL ONLINE BY COMPETITIVE BIDDING, AND FOR CASH ONLY, PURSUANT TO CALIFORNIA CIVIL CODE SECTION 1988, AND/OR BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL CODE SECTION 21700 THRU 21716, THE PERSONAL PROPERTY HERETOFORE STORED WITH THE UNDERSIGNED. INCLUDING MISC. HOUSEHOLD ITEMS, TOOLS, FURNITURE, TOYS & BOXES. THE LANDLORD RESERVES THE RIGHT TO BID AT THE AUCTION. THE AUCTION IS SUBJECT TO PRIOR CANCELLATION IN THE EVENT OF SETTLEMENT BETWEEN LANDLORD & OBLIGATED PARTY. ALL GOODS ARE SOLD “AS IS” AND MUST BE REMOVED ON DAY OF AUCTION. X10, Y16 BURNS, FRANCIS TONY S29 CARDENAS, ANTONIO S22 DUBER, NOEL T. S40 FLORES, ANGELICA H2 GUTIERREZ, MARITZA S46 JOHNSON, VICKIE T48 MANDUJANO, KAREN C. J63 TAPIA, CARINNE X12 ZARCO, GILBERT CLOVERDALE MINI STORAGE WWW.STORAGETREASURES.COM PUBLISH DATES 11/09/2023 & 11/16/2023 HEALDSBURG TRIBUNE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202302939
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. COMPREHENSIVE SITE SERVICES, 25886 CLAWITER ROAD, HAYWARD, CA 94545 ALAMEDA: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): PROCRAFT EQUIPMENT LLC, 25886 CLAWITER ROAD, HAYWARD, CA 94545: This business is being conducted by A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on 08/30/2023. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: DAVID C. BECKER, MANAGER OF PROCRAFT EQUIPMENT LLC. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on OCTOBER 05, 2023. (Publication Dates October November 9, 16, 23, 30 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT - FILE NO: 202303200
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. WILSON GARAGE DOORS, 1170 HOPPER AVE #112, SANTA ROSA, CA 95403 SONOMA: Is hereby registered by the following owner(s): JACK D WILSON, 16252 EAGLE ROCK RD, HIDDEN VALLEY, CA 95467: This business is being conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious name or names above on 2/2018. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. Signed: JACK WILSON, OWNER. This statement was filed with the County Clerk-Recorder of Sonoma County on November 01, 2023. (Publication Dates October November 9, 16, 23, 30 of 2023 The Healdsburg Tribune).