THE LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE OF SAN BENITO COUNTY
DECEMBER 14, 2018
A supplement to the Hollister Free Lance
Casa de Fruta offers fun holiday outing
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San Juan Bautista Mayor Jim West eulogized GRANITEROCK EMPLOYEE’S BODY FOUND IN HIS CAR DEC. 6 Staff Report
➝ Mayor, 2
Bryce Stoepfel
San Juan Bautista Mayor Jim West, who was found dead in his vehicle at his Graniterock workplace on San Juan Highway Thursday, Dec. 6, was praised in eulogies by city and county officials. The body of the oneterm mayor was found by a fellow employee at approximately 11:30am at at Graniterock facility, according to city and county authorities. West, 75, was nearing the end of his first term as mayor. He had not sought re-election. “The City of San Juan Bautista was very saddened today to learn of the passing of its mayor and beloved resident, the Honorable Jim West,” San Juan Bautista Councilmember John Freeman said in a Dec. 6 press release. “Mayor West was a longtime resident of San Benito County and recently made San Juan Bautista his home, where he turned his attention and tireless, neverending spirit of community involvement to helping the citizens of the Mission City and the local community. “Jim was also the passionate representative of Graniterock, a company he emphatically believed in, loved and epitomized wherever he went. “Jim leaves behind many great friends, colleagues and
CANNABIS TESTING High Sierra Analytics founder Thomas Gromis checks equipment at his Hollister laboratory.
Lab prepares for weed HIGH SIERRA ANALYTICS READIES CANNABIS TESTING LAB Bryce Stoepfel Reporter
This isn't your grandad's cannabis business—unless your grandfather happens to be Captain Kirk. High Sierra Analytics in Hollister expects to open its cannabis testing laboratory within a month, in an industry that has lots of demand, but little supply. As testing requirements become tighter over the next couple of months, a vital component of the booming
cannabis industry will go through Hollister. "Everyone kept asking when we're going to open," High Sierra Analytics CEO and founder Thomas Gromis said. "I kept telling them, 'When we get it right.'" Gromis, 34, a Fresno native, worked for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife as a freshwater ecologist before embarking on a career in the cannabis industry. After Gromis could not find municipalities near Fresno that offered cannabis permits, he looked to the nearest city that would: Hollister. "I didn't want to get into growing; that seemed like a race to the bottom. I don't want to chase
margins and cut corners just to get by," Gromis said. "I looked at the regulations and the people who were getting into testing, and nobody wanted to touch the lab stuff because the regulations were pretty daunting." After Californians voted in the 2016 general election to legalize cannabis consumption, new cannabis testing rules were mandated to go along with legalization. Cannabis products must be tested for pesticides as well as potency before they can hit the market. Since High Sierra Analytics will be one of about 40 testing laboratories in the state, demand will be high. There were many hurdles to overcome since the
company signed the lease for the Airway Drive space last year. Gromis needed to provide window shading, magnetically sealed doors and biometric key cards to get a permit. The building at 1851 Airway Drive already had cameras, a gate and security personnel, which helped to simplify the permitting process. In addition to these security methods, the Hollister Police Department may access High Sierra Analytics at any time, said Gromis. High Sierra’s fee structure is based on entering contracts with growers rather than on a pay-bytest model. Contracts will be based on how many tests the customer wants
per month, with regularly scheduled pickup times that will hopefully reduce waiting time for tests to return. Time is money, and since cannabis can't hit the market until testing is complete, a quick turnaround is essential to retailers. "The more you do, the cheaper it's going to be, but right now we're looking at around $700 for a single test," said Gromis, adding that they would offer cheaper rates for bulk testing. High Sierra will focus on a 50-mile radius after it opens, moving out as far as 150 miles as operations ramp up. Most of their business will stay ➝Pot lab, 11
Six contend for superintendent post NEW FACES ON BOARD COULD DELAY HIRING DECISION Scott Forstner Reporter
The current five-member Hollister School District Board of Education convened in closed session Dec. 8 to interview six finalists for the superintendent job. The governing body was to conduct more inperson interviews with the finalists again Dec. 13 with a goal of identifying one finalist from
that group, according to Trustee Robert Bernosky. “Hopefully, from that we will have our next superintendent,” said Bernosky, adding that contract negotiations will follow shortly thereafter. However, the decision comes with a caveat, since three of the five current board members will no longer be on the board by the Dec. 18 school board meeting, at which time the new trustees will be sworn in. Bernosky recognized that the incoming trustees’ opinions as to who the next superintendent may
differ from those of the existing board. “The three brand-new board members coming in, if they don’t like our candidate, then we will have to start the process all over again,” Bernosky said. All of the school board candidates in the Nov. 6 election, as well as stakeholders in the community, were invited to take part in open session discussions and online surveys regarding the hiring process. However, the in-person interviews are in closed session and reserved for current trustees.
“I look forward to working with (the new trustees) and moving the Hollister School District forward,” Bernosky said. “The superintendent is key to any school district. If the new board members don’t exactly like what the five previous have decided, we’ll start the process over again. We all have to be in agreement and working together.” Incoming board members are Carla Deluna-Torres, Stephen Kain and Jan Grist. They are replacing departing trustees Patricia
Moore, Peter Hernandez and Elsa Rodriguez. The two remaining are Bernosky and Elizabeth Martinez, whose seats expire in 2020. Retired administrator William Barr has been filling in as interim superintendent after former superintendent Lisa Andrew unexpectedly resigned from the post two years into her tenure. At a July 6 meeting, the board agreed to hire Barr from a pool of retired administrators; Barr’s contract was for 46 days at $935 per day.
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DECEMBER 14, 2018
Man crashes into house in Hollister DRIVER ACCUSED OF DUI, DRUG CHARGES Staff report
Hollister Police
Police arrested a suspected drunk driver who crashed into a house in Hollister the night of Dec. 10. About 6:24pm, Hollister police officers were dispatched to the 1200 block of Hamilton Drive on a report that a vehicle crashed into a residence. When officers arrived, they located the vehicle that had run into the home, police said. The speeding vehicle went through a wall on the west side of the home. The front end of the car came to rest in one of the bedrooms of the home. A witness who lives in the damaged house described the impact as an “explosion,” according to police.
A photo of the accident, released by police, shows the vehicle—a Dodge sports car—within a gaping hole in the exterior wall of the home. The front of the car is inside the home while the rear of the vehicle is outside, the picture shows. “Fortunately, no one in the house was injured as a result of the crash,” reads a press release from Hollister police. The driver of the car, later identified as Joel Banuelos Ledesma, was found by police a short distance from the residence. He had suffered a leg injury, police said. Police also located a passenger in the wrecked vehicle. The passenger was injured, and flown to a trauma center for treatment. As officers interviewed Ledesma, they noticed he was showing signs of intoxication, police said. Field sobriety tests revealed a “high level (of) intoxication,”
CAPTION LEDE Hollister Police released this photo of a Dodge sports car crashed into a house on Hamilton Drive Dec. 10. and drugs were found inside the vehicle. Ledesma was transported to a local hospital for treatment of injuries
suffered in the collision. He was arrested on suspicion of felony drunk driving and drug charges, according to police.
Anyone with information about this case can call Hollister Police Officer Martin-DelCampo at (831) 636-4330. Those wishing
to remain anonymous can call the WeTip hotline at 800-87-CRIME. Information provided to WeTip may qualify for a reward.
Jim West remembered for community ➝ Mayor 1 associates in our community, and his presence will be greatly missed. “The City of San Juan Bautista wishes to extend its most heartfelt sympathies to his family and friends. You will be missed, Mr. Mayor.” San Benito County Sheriff ’s deputies said they were called to Graniterock, 2391 San Juan Highway, the morning of Dec. 6 by an employee who reported West’s death. The cause of death was not immediately determined,
and will be released pending results of an autopsy. Sheriff ’s Capt. Eric Taylor.said the death was not a criminal matter and was not work-related. West had been a fixture in San Benito County for nearly two decades. He not only served as the mayor of San Juan Bautista, he also had been elected to the San Benito County Health Care District and appointed to the County Parks and Recreation Commission. He was on the board of directors for the United Way.
“Jim touched In a Dec. 7 statehearts and lives in ment Anthony our county,” read a Botelho, chair of the Sheriff’s DepartSan Benito County ment statement. Board of Super“His generosity and visors, said, “On commitment to put behalf of the Board his community first of Supervisors of will not be forgotten San Benito County, I and is an inspiration San Juan would like to extend to us all. We send Bautists Mayor my sincerest condoour love and prayers Jim West. lences to the famto Jim’s family durily and friends of the ing this difficult time.” Honorable Jim West, mayor The San Juan Bautista of San Juan Bautista. City Council canceled a spe“Mayor West was the cial meeting scheduled Dec. consummate public servant 6 in light of West’s death. who loved his city and the
people he served. His dedication and leadership was an inspiration to others, including myself. “Throughout his long and distinguished history of public service, Mayor West served on various committees that have resulted in positive change for not only the City of San Juan Bautista, but the county as a whole. Some of his contributions to the community included serving on the Fire Protection Advisory Committee, Intergovernmental Committee, the Local Agency Formation Commission and
numerous other community charitable organizations. “Jim West was a valuable employee of Graniterock, where he developed partnerships with the county and the community for many worthwhile causes. His dedication to better the lives of the community will be sorely missed. “The County of San Benito joins the City of San Juan Bautista, Graniterock and all of those who knew and loved Mayor Jim West in this difficult time of mourning and remembrance.”
Modern Medicine, Compassionate Care
for 36 years of service from 1982 - 2018 on the San Benito Health Care District Board of Directors Hazel Hawkins Memorial Hospital congratulates Mary McCullough for 36 years of service to Hazel Hawkins Memorial Hospital and the San Benito County Health Care District. Upon her retirement, we extend our sincere thanks to Mary for her unparalleled commitment to advancing healthcare in San Benito County. Over nine consecutive terms on the board of directors, Mary McCullough dedicated her time and passion to helping Hazel Hawkins Memorial Hospital grow. During her tenure the board expanded the hospital to include the Mabie Southside Skilled Nursing Facility, an updated radiology department, the amazing Hazel Hawkins Women’s Center, and a state-of-the-art ER. In 2003, Mary was instrumental in working with the hospital to bring the first outpatient clinic to San Juan Bautista. Today, Hazel Hawkins delivers modern medicine and compassionate care at 20 facilities throughout the county, with 150,000 outpatient visits per year.
911 Sunset Drive , Hollister ▪ (831) 637-5711 ▪ hazelhawkins.com
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Feds looking at San Benito lettuce fields FEDS WON’T ID GROWERS, DISTRIBUTORS, OR FARMS IMPLICATED IN OUTBREAK Barry Holtzclaw Managing Editor
Barry Holtzclaw
Federal and state investigators have narrowed their nationwide search for the source of romaine lettuce contamination to six California counties, including San Benito County. As the search continued into its third week, officials concluded that “the outbreak cannot be explained by a single farm, grower, harvester or distributor.” In a Dec. 6 statement, the Food and Drug Administration said, “Traceback information from four restaurants in three different states so far has implicated 10 different distributors, 12 different growers and 11 different farms as potential sources of the contaminated lettuce.” The agency, which is coordinating the probe in California with the Centers for Disease Control and the California departments of public health and food and agriculture, declined to identify any of the farms or distributors under scrutiny. It added that “counties may be added or removed as the investigation progresses.” Information that investigators have collected through Dec. 6, continues to indicate that contaminated romaine lettuce from the Central Coast growing regions of northern and central
California is the likely source of the current outbreak of E. coli O157:H7 infections. The California counties FDA is including in the region are Monterey, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz and Ventura. The FDA reported that on-site investigations of farms and lettuce cooling facilities in the Central Coast collected samples of romaine lettuce, soil, water, and scat (animal droppings), and found no evidence of the E.coli strain. Results of water testing being conducted by CDC are pending. The FDA announced last week that both the United States and Canada are seeing increasing numbers of people confirmed with infections from the outbreak strain of E. coli O157:H7. Neither country has reported any confirmed deaths in relation to the outbreak. As of Dec. 6, the U.S. CDC reported 52 patients across 15 states. Canadian officials reported 27 people in four provinces have fallen ill. The outbreak strain is proving particularly virulent, having a U.S. hospitalization rate of 42 percent. Nine of the patients in Canada have been admitted to hospitals. Two people in each country have developed kidney failure. In the United States, illness onset dates range from Oct. 5 to Nov. 18. The sick people range in age from 1 to 84. Public health officials expect additional outbreak illnesses to be confirmed. “Illnesses that occurred after Nov. 14 might not yet
ROMAINE LABELS Label on this package of romaine lettuce packaged by
Fresh Express shows origin and date of the product.
be reported due to the time it takes between when a person becomes ill with E. coli infection and when the illness is reported,” the CDC reported. “Twentyfour—83 percent—of 29 people interviewed reported eating romaine lettuce. Ill people reported eating different types of romaine lettuce in several restaurants and at home.” The “traceback” investigations involve reviewing shipping records and invoices to trace the romaine that ill people who are part of this outbreak consumed backward through the supply chain to identify where it was grown and where in the supply chain it may have become contaminated.
The FDA’s advice to consumers has not changed. Based on discussions with producers and distributors, romaine lettuce entering the market is now being labeled with a harvest location and a harvest date or labeled as being hydroponically or greenhouse-grown. A random search of produce sections of local market showed smaller than usual amounts of romaine lettuce, and all of it was marked with the new labels. Consumers are warned that if romaine lettuce does not have this information, you should not eat or use it. If romaine lettuce does have this labeling information, the agency still advises avoiding “any
product from the Central Coast growing regions of northern and central California.” Romaine lettuce that was harvested outside of the Central Coast growing regions of northern and central California does not appear to be related to the current outbreak. Hydroponically and greenhouse-grown romaine also does not appear to be related to the current outbreak. There is no recommendation for consumers or retailers to avoid using romaine harvested from these sources. Neither health nor food safety officials on either side of the international border named any of the farms or other entities they have identified as
having grown or handled the romaine in question. An FDA spokesperson said the leafy greens industry has agreed to establish a task force to find solutions for longterm labeling of romaine lettuce and other leafy greens for helping to identify products and to put in place standards for traceability of products. Jennifer McEntire of the United Fresh Produce Association was leader for the traceability group of the LGMA task force earlier this year. This group evaluated current traceback programs in the produce industry and their impact on traceability during outbreak events.
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DECEMBER 14, 2018
OPINION LETTERS JAMIE JOHANSSON
Farm Bureau enters its 100th year
GUEST VIEW DAN WALTERS
Newsom faces new red flags for high-speed rail
T
he messiest bit of unfinished business Gov. Jerry Brown will bequeath to successor Gavin Newsom is one of the outgoing governor’s pet projects: a northsouth high-speed rail. One could even say it’s a hot mess, given the revelations of a new audit of the multibillion-dollar project’s first phase. That initial segment–100-plus miles of track in the mostly flat, sparsely populated San Joaquin Valley, from Chowchilla to an orchard near Shafter, north of Bakersfield–was supposed to be the easiest to design and build. However, State Auditor Elaine Howle told the Legislature that the High-Speed Rail Authority’s “flawed decision-making regarding the start of high-speed rail system construction in the Central Valley and its ongoing poor contract management for a wide range of high-value contracts have contributed to billions of dollars in cost overruns for completing the system.” Furthermore, even as costs soared, the state didn’t come close to meeting the initial 2017 deadline for completion of the segment specified in a 2010 federal grant. Howle told legislators it also won’t meet a 2022 deadline extension “unless…construction progresses twice as fast as it has to date,” adding, “Missing the deadline could expose the state to the risk of having to pay back as much as $3.5 billion in federal funds.” It wasn’t the first time that Howle and other independent analysts have criticized not only how the San Joaquin Valley stretch was proceeding, but also the project’s biggest issue: a lack of financing to extend it north to San Francisco and south to Los Angeles. Whenever track reaches that orchard near Shafter, the next phase is supposed to be connecting Chowchilla with San Jose by tunneling through the coastal mountains in the neighborhood of the Pacheco Pass along Highway 152 east of Gilroy.
In theory, getting to San Jose would allow the system to begin carrying paying passengers, because the bullet train would be “blended” with existing Caltrain service between San Jose and San Francisco that’s soon to be electrified. However, tunneling through the mountains will be expensive and the High-Speed Rail Authority hasn’t found a source of financing, even though the system gets 25 percent of the state’s revenues from auctioning off carbon emission allowances through the “cap-and-trade” system. Moreover, “blending” the bullet train with Caltrain and other commuter rail systems in Southern California would, as Howle points out, inevitably slow high-speed service. That, in turn, would make it nearly impossible to meet the 160-minute standard for trips between San Francisco and Los Angeles specified in the $9.95 billion state bond issue approved by voters more than a decade ago. So that’s the situation that Newsom will inherit next month. It’s more than likely that the 2022 deadline for the San Joaquin segment won’t be met, either, exposing the state to federal sanctions. But even were it met, it would be a train to nowhere unless some way is found to extend it farther, embarrassing every politician involved with it. “We need to make some changes and we need to make them now,” Sen. Jim Beall, a San Jose Democrat who chairs the Senate Transportation and Housing Committee, said during a hearing in late November on Howle’s sharply critical findings. The need for a bullet train has never been adequately proven and its political cheerleaders have lowballed its costs from the onset, as Howle’s audit demonstrates anew. Newsom has expressed some skepticism about the project’s viability in the past. However, he will own this managerial mess on Jan. 7 and it could easily become a white elephant on his watch. Dan Walters writes for CalMatters, a non-profit journalism project in Sacramento.
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In San Diego last week, 126 delegates from 53 county Farm Bureaus gathered for the California Farm Bureau Federation annual meeting, the 100th time that farm leaders from around the state have met to discuss, debate and set policies that will guide the organization in the year ahead. The California Farm Bureau Federation held its first annual meeting in October 1919. Farmers and ranchers now have agricultural and communications technology that our predecessors could only dream of, and crop patterns have changed markedly. For example, California grew about a million acres of barley in 1918 but pistachios were still an experimental crop. California's 100 million acres of land accommodated a population of 3.2 million then, not the 40 million of today. But certainly, the founders of the California Farm Bureau in 1919 would recognize many of the challenges we face: weather, markets, regulations, the uncertainties of water supply, the struggle to hire enough qualified employees, and others. I think Farm Bureau's founders would be impressed by the sophisticated way our organization works to address those challenges through advocacy with government officials, the courts and the media. In its early years, the Farm Bureau formed a Law and Utilities Department to advocate for its members, and the organization moved from Berkeley to Sacramento in 1979 in order to make that advocacy more immediate and effective. This year, the Farm Bureau engaged with every elected official in the California Legislature and in our congressional delegation; our advocates filed more than 3,600 pages of letters, legal briefs and comments on dozens of different issues; and our work with utility regulators saved approximately $65 million in potential rate increases for agricultural electricity customers. In the 1920s, the Farm Bureau provided farm news via motion pictures and radio broadcasts. This year, the Farm Bureau sent some 600 tweets; responded to more than 500 inquiries from local, regional, national and international media; reached approximately 1.5 million nonfarm viewers through our California Bountiful television program; and kept members informed via Ag Alert, video, websites, email and other forms of communication. The Farm Bureau formed an organization department in 1929 to help county farm bureaus with membership recruitment and retention, and began offering insurance benefits in the 1940s. Now, Farm Bureau members in California can take advantage of nearly three dozen separate member benefits on equipment, supplies, business services and more, as well as insurance through our partners at Nationwide. In 2019, the Farm Bureau will create a member advocacy department that will better equip us to customize member benefits to the individual and, more importantly, understand more fully what our members need. Organizations that endure, as Farm Bureau has, must adapt, and those examples show how the Farm Bureau has changed to meet the shifting needs of farmers and ranchers. At the same time, Farm Bureau remains focused on its basic mission: to work for solutions for the problems of the farm, the farm home and the rural community and to represent, protect and advance the social, economic and educational interests of California farmers. When I stood before delegates to the annual meeting last year, I noted that Farm Bureau is strong because of our diversity. Now, as I complete my first year in office, I'm more convinced of that than ever. Each year at this time, farmers and ranchers come together, from the south, from the north, from the coast, from the mountains and everywhere in between, to establish California Farm Bureau policies. A Farm Bureau member in 1919 was the same as today: not content merely to accept the current political landscape but insistent on making it better for farmers and ranchers. Farm Bureau is ready to move forward into its 100th year solidifying its long-standing role as the unified voice of California agriculture—a voice that serves not simply to make a statement but to make a difference for California's rural communities. I'm confident the original the Farm Bureau delegates from 1919 would be proud. Jamie Johansson is president of the California Farm Bureau.
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•Dashboard Alternative School Status (DASS) Schools. For the first time, the performance of students who attend alternative schools (such as continuation high schools and programs for incarcerated youth) are now factored into accountability indicators. Many of these schools are operated by county offices of education.
Staff report
California’s new tool to assess the quality of public schools, in its second year, expands beyond test scores to include graduation rates, absenteeism, college readiness and other measures. State education officials say that students, parents and teachers now have easier, more direct access to information on how their schools are performing with the California School “Dashboard” website. The revised Dashboard includes two new metrics for evaluating school and district performance and a new look designed to be userfriendly. It attempts to make complex data easier to understand. The Dashboard is now fully accessible on smartphones and tablets, and the state says it is easier to navigate
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and has improved graphics. The new Dashboard also has the most current data available, including 2018 test scores and graduation rates, according to the state. “The Dashboard helps schools identify strengths and weaknesses in many different areas that measure success,” said State Superintendent Tom Torlakson in a Dec. 6 announcement. “I urge educators, parents and communities to turn this data into positive action by using it to target resources where improvement is needed and to share practices where success is demonstrated.” The Dashboard is a key component of California’s five-year overhaul of the state’s school accountability system. It displays statewide data based on “status” (how each school or district performed) and “change” (how much they have improved or declined over time). School and district performance levels are indicated by color, with red the lowest and blue the highest. The
Dashboard also breaks down information by student group (lowincome, English learner, foster youth, etc.) to help pinpoint and address achievement gaps. “The Dashboard shows us which students have the greatest needs and which areas of our educational system need the most attention, which is exactly what it was designed to do,” said State Board President Michael W. Kirst. “Challenges that once may have been hidden, such as how poverty, homelessness and disability affect student learning, are now in sharp focus. It also shows us which school districts are succeeding so they can serve as models for others as we build professional sharing networks throughout the state.” The Dashboard replaces the state’s former accountability system—the Academic Performance Index (API)—which relied exclusively on standardized tests and gave schools a single score. That system was suspended four years ago.
Enrollment period open for winter and spring SAN BENITO HIGH GOES GREEN IN ‘18
Andy’s Rub
Mon-Sat 9am-7pm Sun 9:30am-6:30pm
•Grade 11 test scores. Schools, districts and county offices of education that administer the Smarter Balanced Assessments in math and English language arts in grade 11 are being evaluated for the first time with redthrough-blue colors.
‘DASHBOARD’ OFFERS MORE INFO, EASIER ACCESS F0R SCHOOL DATA
$1499
$2899 $1899
•Two new metrics. Schools, districts and county offices of education that serve K–8 students are being evaluated for the first time on school attendance. In addition, schools that serve grades 9–12 are being evaluated for the first time for college/career readiness.
State updates the school accountability system
Zinphomaniac
Treanna
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WHAT’S NEW IN NEW SCHOOL ACCOUNTABILITY PLAN
•Graduation rate. The four-year cohort graduation rate reflects changes in methodology in compliance with U.S. Department of Education requirements.
Cabernet Sauvignon or Red Blend
$1399
DECEMBER 14, 2018
Staff report
Prospective students can now enroll in winter and spring session classes at Gavilan College, which offers a variety of courses at five locations as well as online: the main campus is in Gilroy, with additional instructional sites in San Jose’s Coyote Valley, Morgan Hill, San Martin (aviation only) and Hollister. Winter Intersession runs from Jan. 2, 2019 through Jan. 25, 2019. Spring Semester begins Jan. 28, 2019 and runs through May 24, 2019. The Aviation Maintenance Technology program begins Jan. 10. The cost for California residents is $46 per unit versus $279 per unit for out-of-state residents. Financial aid is available. First-year students who graduated from a California high school may be eligible for free tuition through the Gavilan Promise program. Gavilan offers academic programs leading to Associate in Arts (AA)
degrees, Associate in Science (AS) degrees, Associate in Arts for Transfer (AAT), and Associate in Science for Transfer (AST) degrees. The AAT and AST degrees provide a clear pathway to transfer to California State University, University of California and private universities. Career programs leading to degrees, certificates and employment are offered in Administration of Justice, Aviation Maintenance Technology, Business and Accounting, Child Development, Cosmetology, Computer Science, Digital Media, Drone Technology, HVAC, Nursing, and Water Resources Management. Not-forcredit career programs include phlebotomy, Veterinary Technology, Dental Assisting, and Pharmacy Technology. Noncredit instruction is offered in English as a Second Language and GED preparation. Apply for winter intersession and spring semester classes at gavilan.edu/
Engineering teacher wins grant
San Benito High School engineering and
leadership teacher Thien Vu-Nguyen, who also is the adviser for the Robotics Club, recently won a $5,000 grant from Monsanto to offset competition expenses and purchase supplies for the school’s robotics team, according to a SBHS District announcement. “Being allowed to participate in a second competition is a big step for us,” Vu-Nguyen said. “Many teams use the first competition as a measure of what their robot can do (by) making sure the robot works properly.” The SBHS robotics team was only able to compete once in the previous season, so “we were only able to really compete in four of 10 matches,” VuNguyen said. The team will use $1,000 of its grant funding to purchase wires, tires, additional metal and hand and power tools, according to staff.
Grants for energyefficient vehicles
San Benito High School this year has used $1.3 million in grants from the Monterey Bay Air Resources Control Board to purchase four buses, a diesel-powered shop truck, ➝ Enrollment, 11
DECEMBER 14, 2018
9
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R, Y Ov E HURR wOw! SE PRICE S g! T HE M A ZIN A RE A
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$13,999 Net Price $11,999 Net Price $12,999 Net Price NEw 2018 FIAT 500 POP 2018 JEEP RENEgADE 2018 JEEP COMPASS SPORT dual air, Back up camera, alloy wheels, & more!
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90 OThER
wireless phoNe coNNectivity, exterior rear parkiNg camera, perimeter/approach lights & more!
REnEgADES TO ChOOSE FROm!
msRp.............................................................................................. $23,390 dealeR discount............................................................................-$5,891 sale pRice ...................................................................................... $17,499 jeep ca bc Retail consumeR cash* .............................................. $2,250 jeep ca ccap non-pRime Retail bonus**....................................... -$500 jeep ca non-pRime Retail bonus cash**.........................................-$750 jeep ca 2018 Retail bonus cash* .................................................-$1,000
msRp.................................................................................................$18,785 dealeR discount............................................................................. -$4,536 sale pRice .......................................................................................$14,249 Fiat ca bc Retail consumeR cash* ..................................................$1,250 Fiat 2018 conquest lease to Retail** ............................................. -$500 bonus bucks ...................................................................................... $500
1
net PriCe aFter diSCountS and reBateS
$11,999
at thiS net PriCe 2 at gilroy #504729
3 at3 atthiSgilroy net PriCe #h63034, h62724,h62814
*Residency RestRictions apply. **customeRs cuRRently leasing a competitive bRand vehicle (non Fca gRoup vehicle) and enteR into a new puRchase oR lease oF an eligible model aRe eligible to paRticipate. customeRs aRe not RequiRed to tRade-in/tuRn-in theiR competitive bRand vehicle. this pRogRam is not compatible with any RetuRning lessee/oR owneR loyalty pRogRams. oFFeRs FoR qualiFied buyeRs only. see dealeR FoR details.
msRp............................................................................................. $22,435 dealeR discount.......................................................................... -$4,686 sale pRice ......................................................................................$17,749 jeep ca bc Retail consumeR cash* ............................................ -$2,500 jeep ca non-pRime Retail bonus cash**....................................... -$750 jeep big Finish Retail bonus cash................................................. -$500
net PriCe aFter diSCountS and reBateS
$12,999
*Residency RestRictions apply. **FoR Fico scoRes below 620, must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval. ***must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval.
2018 CHRYSLER PACIFICA HYBRID LIMITED
$15,588
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20
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at thiS net SavingS 20 at gilroy
*tax cRedit Ranges FRom $0 to $7,500. actual savings FRom the FedeRal goveRnment depend on youR tax situation. check FedeRal and state websites RegaRding ev incentives as they aRe subject to change with little notice. consult youR tax pRoFessional FoR details. **must cuRRently own oR lease a non-Fca hybRid, plug-in hybRid oR ev vehicle. tuRn-in oR tRade-in not RequiRed, cuRRent RegistRation RequiRed.
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diSCountS and reBateS hurry! at thiS net PriCe 1 11 atleFtgilroy 254950 $13,999 net PriCe aFter
*Residency RestRictions apply. **FoR Fico scoRes below 620, must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval.
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wireless phoNe coNNectivity, exterior rear parkiNg camera, perimeter/approach lights & more! 76 OThER ChEROkEES TO ChOOSE FROm!
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10
dealer diSCount oFF MSrP!
leaSe For at thiS leaSe oFFer 10 at gilroy
$389 /Mo. PluS tax
27 month lease, $4,250 due at signing (inclused $4,000 customeR cash + $250 dodge ca non-pRime Retail bonus cash*) includes $0 secuRity deposit, tax and license not included. 10,000 miles peR yeaR, $.25 peR mile theReaFteR, subject to cRedit appRoval by chRysleR capital. *FoR Fico scoRes below 620, must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval.
$11,000 Net Savings
NEw 2018 DODgE CHARgER gT PLUS AwD NavigatioN, BliNd spot seNsor, leather, automatic temperature coNtrol, emergeNcy commuNicatioN system, power mooNroof & more!
5
$11,000 Discount NEw 2018 DODgE DURANgO SRT AwD NavigatioN, BliNd spot seNsor, laNe departure, distaNce paciNg cruise coNtrol, leather, automatic temperature coNtrol & more!
dealeR discount oFF msRp ......................................................-$6,750 dodge ca bc Retail consumeR cash* ......................................$1,250 dodge ca 2018 Retail bonus cash*..........................................$1,250 dodge ca non-pRime Retail bonus cash**............................... -$250 chRysleR capital cash*** ........................................................-$1,000 dodge big Finish Retail bonus cash......................................... -$500
hurry!
1
$8,000
at thiS diSCount 5 at gilroy
net SavingS oFF MSrP aFter diSCountS and reBateS
at thiS net SavingS 1 at gilroy #224658
$11,000
*Residency RestRictions apply. **FoR Fico scoRes below 620, must Finance thRough chRysleR capital subject to cRedit appRoval. ***on select units in dealeR stock.
3
dealer diSCount oFF MSrP
at thiS diSCount! 3 at gilroy #486061,232635,248231
msRp..............................................................................................$26,135 dealeR discount......................................................................... -$5,636 sale pRice .................................................................................... $20,499 jeep ca bc Retail consumeR cash* ........................................... -$2,250 jeep ca non-pRime Retail bonus cash**...................................... -$750 chRysleR capital cash*** ............................................................ -$500 jeep cpov bonus cash coupons .................................................. -$500 jeep big Finish Retail bonus cash................................................ -$500
net PriCe aFter diSCountS and reBateS
net PriCe 10 at10 thiS at gilroy
$15,999
*Residency RestRictions apply. **FoR Fico scoRes below 620, must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval. ***must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval.
$19,988 Net Price 2018 CHRYSLER PACIFICA 3rd row seats, wireless phoNe coNNectivity, exterior rear parkiNg camera, froNt dual zoNe a/c & more!
$11,000
36 OThER PACIFICAS TO ChOOSE FROm!
NEw 2018 JEEP wRANgLER 4-DOOR 4X4
msRp...............................................................................$28,785 dealeR discount............................................................-$6,047 sale pRice......................................................................$22,738 chRysleR capital cash* ...................................................-$500 chRysleR ca bc Retail consumeR cash**....................-$1,500 chRysleR ca non-pRime Retail bonus cash***...............-$250 chRysleR big Finish Retail bonus cash ..........................-$500
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Sale PriCe
5 at thiS Sale PriCe 5 at gilroy
$27,999
net PriCe aFter diSCountS and reBateS
7
at thiS net PriCe 7 at gilroy
$19,988
*must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval. **Residency RestRictions apply. ***FoR Fico scoRes below 620, must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval.
NEw 2017 JEEP wRANgLER 4-DOOR
2018 JEEP gRAND CHEROkEE LIMITED AND OvERLANDS dealeR discount..............................................................................-$6,250 ca bc Retail consumeR cash* ........................................................ -$1,750 ca chRysleR capital cash**...............................................................-$500 big Finish bonus cash ........................................................................-$500 ca Retail bonus cash ......................................................................-$2,500 diesel bonus cash..............................................................................-$500
net SavingS oFF MSrP aFter diSCountS and reBateS
10 at thiS net SavingS 10 at gilroy
$12,000
*Residency RestRictions apply. **must Finance thRough chRysleR capital, subject to cRedit appRoval.
All Roads Lead to South County A Part of the South County Family DRIVE A LITTLE - SAVE A LOT
5
at thiS diSCount 5 at gilroy
dealer diSCount oFF MSrP
$8,000
408-842-8244
@SouthCountyGilroy southcountycdjr_gilroy @SC_GilroyCDJR
*PER FCA SEPT 2018 Net Sale Prices and Factory Rebates in lieu of Special Finance, Lease and Fleet offers. † Factory consumer cash rebate in lieu of discount financing on approved credit. *Must finance through Chrysler Capital, not all customers may qualify. All prices exclude government fees and taxes, any finance charges, any dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge and any emission testing charge. Residency restrictions apply. See dealer for complete details. Vehicles pictured use for display purposes only and may vary slightly from the actual vehicle. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Not responsible for typographical errors. Sale prices end 12/16/2018.
• w w w.SouthCount yCDJR .com • w w w.SouthCount yCDJR .com • w w w.SouthCount yCDJR .com • w w w.SouthCount yCDJR .com • w w w.SouthCount yCDJR .com • w w w.SouthCount yCDJR .com • w w w.SouthCount yCDJR .com • w w w.SouthCount yCDJR .com
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10
FREE LANCE
DECEMBER 14, 2018
Save SOMe GReen at GReenwOOd!
Visit ChevroletEmployeeDiscount.com for eligible vehicles and offer details.
www.TeamGreenwoodChevrolet.com
2019 ChevroleT Spark lS auTomaTiC
2018 ChevroleT Cruze lS
MSRP ................................................... $15,195 DealeR DIScouNt ................................. $1,905 Sale PRIce .......................................... $13,290 cheVy caSh allowaNce ....................... $2,313
auTomaTiC
MSRP ..................................................... $20,465 DealeR DIScouNt.................................. -$3,738 Sale PRIce ............................................ $16,727 cheVy cuStoMeR caSh ........................ -$2,500 DowN PMt aSSISt* ............................ -$750 GM Dow
Net Price After Discount and Rebates
$10,977 2 at this Net Price VIN# 010615, 738456
Net Price After Discounts and Rebates
$13,477
*Must finance through GM Financial (GMF), subject to credit approval.
5 at this Net Price
Service 888.820.2276 • Sales 888.772.6124
2018 ChevroleT malibu lS
MSRP ......................................... $24,545 DealeR DIScouNt................... -$3,818 Sale PRIce............................... $20,727 cheVy cuStoMeR caSh ........ -$2,500 GM DowN PMt aSSISt*.............. -$750
2018 ChevroleT Camaro lT MSRP .................................................... $27,760 auTomaTiC DealeR DIScouNt............................... $3,483 Sale PRIce ......................................... $24,277 GM Select MaRket BoNuS caSh**....... $1,000 cheVy cuStoMeR caSh ...................... $500
Net Price After Discounts and Rebates
*Must finance through GM Financial (GMF), subject to credit approval.
Net Price After Discounts and Rebates
$17,477
$22,777
2 at this Net Price VIN# 237926, 288962
**Residency restrictions apply.
2 at this Net Price VIN #153769, 191263
www.TeamGreenwoodChevrolet.com
2019 ChevroleT TraverSe lS
MSRP...........................................................$33,995 DealeR DIScouNt .................................. -$4,468 Sale PRIce................................................$29,527 GM Select MaRket BoNuS caSh**.......-$750
2018 ChevroleT Silverado 1500 2019 ChevroleT Silverado Crew 4x4 lT all-STar!
DealeR DIScouNt......................-$7,750 cheVy cuStoMeR caSh ...........-$2,000 cheVy PackaGe caSh...............-$3,500 GM DowN PMt aSSISt*..............-$1,500 cheVy BoNuS caSh...................-$1,250
**Residency restrictions apply.
3 at this Net Price VIN# 193376, 192077, 184531
MSRP .................................$55,280 DealeR DIScouNt.......... -$5,003 Sale PRIce.......................$50,277 cheVy cuStoMeR caSh ..... -$500 GM DowN PMt aSSISt*..... -$1,500 cheVy BoNuS caSh.......... -$500
Net Savings OFF MSRP After Discounts and Rebates
Net Price After Discounts and Rebates
$28,777
Crew 4x4 dieSel
*Must finance through GM Financial (GMF), subject to credit approval.
Net Price After Discounts and Rebates
$16,000
4 left at this Net Savings (msrp $50,160) VIN #334926, 332230, 347127, 332867
*Must finance through GM Financial (GMF), subject to credit approval.
$47,777
1 at this Net Price VIN# 173274
Save MORe GReen at GReenwOOd!
In San Benito’s Wine Country…
us 270 San FelIpe Road, HollISteR, Ca 101 to SR
o Calif rnia
25
Service 888.820.2276 Sales 888.772.6124
Net Sale Prices and Factory Rebates in lieu of Special Finance, Lease and Fleet offers. Vehicles pictured are for display purposes only and may vary slightly from the actual vehicle. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Prices do not include government fees and taxes, any finance charge, any dealer document processing charge, any electronic filing charge, and any emission testing charge. Not responsible for typographical errors. Residential restrictions apply. Offers expire close of business 12/16/2018.
HOLLISTER PRE-OWNED!
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2017 HYUNDAI ACCENT SE VIN #218240
2017 HYUNDAI ELANTRA SE VIN #066617
2012 HONDA CIVIC EX VIN #551648
*2017 HYUNDAI ACCENT SE VIN #218240
2014 MAZDA MAZDA6 TOURING VIN #120349
$10,777 2017 FORD FUSION SE VIN #195703
$11,977 2016 HYUNDAI SANTA FE SPORT
$12,777
$12,977
2015 HONDA CIVIC SI VIN #707940
VIN #333113
$14,977 2014 FORD F-150 4X4 XLT SUPERCREW VIN #C01505
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$27,777
$16,977 2016 MAZDA CX-5 GRAND TOURING
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STOCK PHOTO
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$31,777
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$23,977
$24,977
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VIN #030964
$32,777
VIN #110962
$49,977 SOLD
STOCK PHOTO
270 San Felipe Rd Hollister CALL 831.637.5328 FOR PRE-OWNED SPECIALS
*Prices do not include government fees and taxes, any finance charge, dealer document processing, electronic filing charge and any emission testing charges. Expires 12/17/2018
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DECEMBER 14, 2018
11
FREE LANCE
Cannabis testing is careful, precise ➝ Pot lab, 1
Bryce Stoepfel
OCD people here,” Gromis said. “Our records are extremely important.” Sequoia Analytical Labs in Sacramento was a perfect example of what happens when records are improperly kept. In early December Sequoia Analytical was shut down after a lab director falsified test results. Because of the falsification, over 700 test results are now in doubt, opening the possibility of a recall of cannabis products already tested. The data, whether the product passes or fails, is sent to the Bureau of Cannabis Control, which may audit a lab at any time. With more testing regulations coming, audits may increase, and with Sequoia Analytical Labs serving as an example, the need to keep precise records is necessary to stay in business. With strict testing laws, cannabis cultivators will be held to higher standards, meaning that if the cannabis fails to pass acceptable levels of pesticides, microbes, heavy metals and other impurities, the product fails, disqualifying it for sale, and what cannot be sold is sent to be destroyed.
local, in Hollister, Salinas and unincorporated San Benito County. "We'd like to offer some lower rates here for everyone who's getting in early and work as an incubator to help this community grow," Gromis said. Demand for testing will only increase in 2019 with additional state-mandated tests for heavy metals, micro-toxins and moisture. With further testing comes more expenses, and each test could cost about $1,000. Gromis hopes to grow the testing capacity of the company while simultaneously building working relationships with clients, helping to improve efficiency while reducing costs. Along with obtaining permits, Gromis faced the daunting task of buying equipment (one piece in particular cost as much as a starter home, according to Gromis,) along with hiring qualified chemists. Since the testing industry requires meticulous record keeping, Gromis looks for people who have an eye for details. “We’re really a fan of
TESTING PERFECTION Laboratory owner Thomas Gromis checks out
precision equipment in his Hollister business.
"The stakes are higher now, and the testing is far more rigorous," Gromis said. "We're working for the state, not just our customers." Since getting into the
cannabis industry, Gromis has become a believer in what cannabis can do medically. "We find out new information every day," said Gromis, who uses
Cannabinoids to help him sleep. "This plant has a lot that we haven't discovered yet. It will change a lot of people's lives, and it already has for many
people with epilepsy. Unlocking what all these cannabinoids can do is going to be extremely interesting in the next five to 10 years."
Grants will buy electric school buses, bike racks ➝ Enrollment 8
four gas-powered shop trucks, four Traverses and an electric cart and to fund the installation of cameras on all buses, according to SBHSD staff. The funding has allowed the district to replace older, higher-polluting vehicles in
the fleet, including swapping four diesel-burning buses with clean-burning versions. All district buses now have seatbelts. A gaspowered cart used on campus was replaced by an electric cart. Future grants are
also expected to fund an electric school bus, and an Air Resource Board grant will pay for additional plants, trees, signage and bike racks on campus, according to Kristy Bettencourt, the district’s maintenance,
operations and transportation manager. Bettencourt reported to the school board on the planting of drought-resistant landscaping throughout campus, the addition of fresh paint to buildings, the installation of a new monument sign on
the 400s campus, the addition of push bar gates on the fences on the West Street side of the main campus, and an inside facelift for O’Donnell Gym over the summer. She said that the sale of district items through the Govdeals website has
netted $172,000 that is being used for campus improvements. The California Highway Patrol on Oct. 18 found all nine of the district’s school buses to be in safe operating condition, according to Bettencourt’s report.
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12
FREE LANCE
DECEMBER 14, 2018
Catholic high school denied again LAFCO VOTES 5-2 TO DENY CITY’S REQUEST Jaqueline McCool Reporter
it had been improved since the last time it was submitted, two years ago. In 2016, LAFCO denied an annexation request—also submitted by the City of Morgan Hill—for a large portion of the Southeast Quadrant with a 5-2 vote. The city then submitted a request to annex only the land for the South County Catholic High School. The request was denied in June 2016. The original request was part of a plan to annex most of the Southeast Quadrant bound by Tennant Avenue to the south, Murphy Avenue to the west, Barrett Avenue to the north and abutting an agricultural field to the east. This land has been identified in the county’s agricultural plan as “prime agricultural land.” The request presented to the committee at the Dec. 5 meeting included 66 acres of land, nearly 40 of which would be used for the high school. Committee staff recommended denial of the annexation request based on several points of the plan they said violate LAFCO standards. The LAFCO staff report said there was land available within Morgan Hill city limits as an alternate site for the school; the annexation wouldn’t create logical city boundaries; there would be a significant impact to agricultural land; the city
LAFCO
A Catholic high school has been talked about in the Morgan Hill for nearly a decade, but the Diocese of San Jose has run into a series of setbacks getting its 40 acres of land—their preferred site of the future school—annexed into the city. The latest of these hurdles is the denial of an annexation proposal Dec. 5 by the county commission charged with authorizing city boundary line extensions. The school site sits outside of the city’s Urban Services Area, so it must be annexed in order to receive city services like water, sewer and public safety. The area the city attempted to annex sits north of Tennant Avenue and east of Condit Road. Plans to annex the high school site were submitted by the City of Morgan Hill to the Local Agency Formation Committee (LAFCO) for a second time, resulting in a Dec. 5 ruling at the committee meeting. Committee staff had recommended in their report that LAFCO commissioners deny the city’s request, because staff believed the plans did not comply with committee standards. The annexation proposal failed in
a 5-2 vote, with Santa Clara County Supervisor Mike Wasserman and Santa Clara Valley Water District Director John L. Varela voting to approve the city’s request. Morgan Hill and the LAFCO committee have a complicated history when it comes to the Catholic high school project and what is designated as the city’s “Southeast Quadrant.” Many of the commissioners at the Dec. 5 meeting brought up past decisions by the committee to deny the city’s annexation requests in the area that is mostly farmland. LAFCO is an appointed body of citizens and elected officials throughout the county. The committee’s mission is, “Encouraging orderly boundaries, discouraging urban sprawl, and preserving agricultural and open space lands.” The annexation is considered critical to the success of the Diocese’s plans for Catholic high school in Morgan Hill. The City Council voted in September with a 3-2 vote to send the plans to LAFCO for approval. Council members Rich Constantine and Rene Spring voted against the plans. Spring has marked his tenure by being an antigrowth advocate. Constantine previously said he could not vote to approve the plans because he did not feel
REJECTED The proposed Catholic High School site, pictured in blue in the map above, is bound by Murphy, Barrett and Tennant avenues in southeast Morgan Hill. didn’t have the infrastructure to provide the public safety, sewer, water and storm drainage to the area; the plan isn’t consistent with the regional transportation plan; the city hasn’t annexed all of the unincorporated land still within the urban service area; and the plan wasn’t consistent with county policies. The Dec. 5 meeting was tense, with reports and comments from LAFCO staff being contradicted by Morgan Hill city staff’s presentation. Commissioner Sergio Jimenez said, when attempting to make his decision, “You all are viewing things much differently.” A major topic of discussion was the designation of the parcels as “prime
farmland.” Morgan Hill farmers made public comments about the quality of land in the annexation site and said it was not suitable for long-term farming use. George Chiala Jr. of Chiala Farms told the commission his family had trouble in the past farming on the land. “That land isn’t good farmland—if you need data to prove that I can provide it,” said Chiala. “If we can’t do it, it’s going to be hard for somebody else to do it.” Still, many commissioners said it would be against LAFCO standards to approve the annexation. Commissioner Rob Rennie said but he didn’t feel Morgan Hill had the proper plans in place for the annexation.
“These kind of annexation plans would be called sprawl,” Rennie said. He thought mitigation that was planned for by the Diocese and the city—the two chief proponents of the Catholic high school proposal—would be the best way to guarantee the land was used for agricultural purposes and not development. “I thought this was an opportunity to bring a school and protect ag land,” Wasserman told the Times. Communications and Engagement Manager for Morgan Hill, Maureen Tobin, told the Times that the city does not currently have any plans in place following the denial of the annexation request.
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FREE LANCE
DECEMBER 14, 2018
SPORTS
Submitted
WHAT A RIDE Hollister native and San Benito High junior Adam Lemke has earned a ride to race for JR Motorsports’ Late Model program. JR Motorsports is the race team and management company of Dale Earnhardt Jr., who is arguably the most popular driver in NASCAR history.
MOTOR SPORTS
Lemke on fast track SAN BENITO HIGH JUNIOR TO RACE FOR EARNHARDT JR. LATE MODEL TEAM emanuel lee Sports Editor
Serious talent
“Having a driver of Adam’s capabilities is very important to the future of JR Motorsports,” L.W. Miller, who is the director of motorsports at JRM, said in a release on jrmracing.com. “We’re very happy to have a young driver of his caliber to continue on the trail blazed by drivers like Josh Berry, William Byron and Sam Mayer. He’s been winning races and championships out West, and we think he’s going to continue to do so here in the Southeast.” As Lemke was winning races and contending in each of them, others noticed. With all of Lemke’s races being available on TV/video, any of the major players in motorsports had the opportunity to view Lemke’s performances. Lorin Ranier, who is one of the more well-known talent evaluators in NASCAR, got wind of Lemke and started tracking his performances. This eventually led to Lemke doing a test run with Ranier in North Carolina earlier this year. “It went really well, and I think that’s when Lorin realized Adam could be the one in 10,000 or one in 100,000 driver who can actually get it done,” Rodney said. “I didn’t think it would be this soon and for JR Motorsports, but Lorin is well connected (in the race world), and he was seeing Adam setting unofficial track record lap times as a 15 year old on his first lap. That is what caught Lorin’s eye, and he spent a good year finding a good seat for Adam and telling teams this is the kid you want.” Rodney also credited Chastain,
Submitted
Hollister native Adam Lemke grew up watching NASCAR, envisioning himself one day as a professional race car driver. The 16-year-old Lemke—a San Benito High junior who is on independent studies—took a big step in making that dream a reality when he was named a driver for JR Motorsports’ Late Model program for the upcoming 2019 season. JR Motorsports is the race team and management company of Dale Earnhardt Jr., the son of legendary figure Dale Earnhardt and arguably the most popular driver in NASCAR history. JR Motorsports fields a full roster of four cars in the NASCAR Xfinity Series while also being a key player with its Late Model program. Lemke, who is known for being a cool customer in the race car, finally let it all hang out when the news became final last Thursday that he would be one of the drivers in JR Motorsports’ Late Model program. “I started jumping all over my dad (Rodney) and messing with my crew chief (Randy Chastain),” said Lemke, who was reached by phone and was in Indianapolis to attend the USAC Champions Night Banquet and the Performance Racing Industry (PRI) Trade Show. “It’s crazy to think when I first started talking to you of what I wanted to do, and now I’m talking to you saying how I’m actually going to do it.” It’s no coincidence JR Motorsports decided to put Lemke in one of its Late Model cars. Lemke is coming off a spectacular 2018 season in which he won the pavement and overall championships in the USAC Western
Midget Series along with Rookie of the Year honors in the RPM Pro Late Model Series at Madera Speedway. Lemke’s race team, which consists of Rodney and Chastain—among others—was remarkably consistent, with Adam winning eight of 12 races in the USAC Midgets, including finishing no worse than third place in any of the races. Lemke also finished second in the dirt series portion of the championship. In the Late Model series, Lemke earned three topfive finishes en route to winning Rookie of the Year honors.
FAST TRACK Adam Lemke, a Hollister native and San Benito High junior, has earned a coveted ride with JR Motorsports’ Late Model program, the race team and management company of Dale Earnhardt Jr. Rod Wortham, Susan Kinnicutt, Mike and Sharon Naake, Tony Caputo and Sarah Holliday for raising Adam’s profile and getting word out on his dynamic performances on the track. As Lemke’s crew chief in the open wheel race car, Chastain has a bird’s eye view of what makes Lemke special. The reasons are myriad, starting with a natural ability to be one with the race car.
The best drivers know the precise way to relay information to their crew chief so their race car can be adjusted properly. Every word and description counts in a sport where seconds are paramount. “He can tell me exactly what the car is doing so we can talk about it and get it fixed,” said Chastain, who has been a crew chief for 12 years and has worked with over 100 drivers in that
period. “He is one of the smartest drivers I’ve ever worked with. He listens so well and can apply that to what he’s doing on the track, and that alone makes him successful. He’s very studious, listens well and that allows him to take his natural talent to the next level.” Go to sanbenito.com to view the full version of this story.
DECEMBER 14, 2018
FREE LANCE
15
Balers have high hopes for season SAN BENITO HIGH GIRLS SOCCER TEAM POISED TO GO FARTHER THAN EVER WITH 12 SENIORS ON TEAM
Bonner pointing to a couple of key reasons for the change. “We switched to this formation because a lot of players on this team have offensive mindset and are very good about moving the ball forward and passing the ball,” she said. “It’s a team formation, meaning every play counts, every movement counts. All of the girls see this at practice and are getting it down. This levels out the playing field for the entire team. For this formation to work, every player hast to move off the ball, pass and think to create opportunities while also dropping back for defense.”
emanuel lee Sports Editor
Late start
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PLAYMAKER Jada Taylor will play a pivotal role as a defender for the San Benito High girls
soccer team, which plays at Soquel on Thursday. Taylor can also excel offensively.
File photo
The poor air quality that littered the Bay Area resulting from the Northern California Camp Fire last month combined with the school’s new field situation forced Bonner to cancel practice multiple times. In essence, the team was practicing the new formation for the first time in a 7-0 season-opening loss to Santa Cruz. “We knew there would be some kinks working out of the new formation, but I’m really confident the girls will be looking fabulous by the start of the league season,” Bonner said. Key players on the backline include Garcia, Jada Taylor, Iana Arreola Padilla, Lupita Gonzalez and Aileen Ceja. “They’re a very vocal group, which is what you need from the defensive players,” Bonner said. “They’re always willing to
File photo
With 12 seniors on the roster, the San Benito High girls soccer team may have its best chance yet to make the deepest playoff run in program history. The Haybalers are nothing if not consistent. They’ve finished in third place in the Gabilan Division in each of the last four years following their last league championship in the 2013-2014 season. However, the Balers have lost their opening game in the CCS playoffs in each of the last two years, last recording a postseason victory three years ago. San Benito hopes to reign once again atop the Gabilan Division, and players like Vanessa Garcia believe the superior cohesiveness will prove to be the difference. “We have really strong chemistry and we’re all on the same page,” said Garcia, a senior center defender. “I think we will complement each other better than in previous years with our dynamic playing styles. I think we’re strong at every position, and even our second string when they come in, there won’t be a big difference from the starters. Hopefully, that will get us farther this season.” The Balers have switched from a 4-5-1 formation to a 4-3-3 set this season, with
learn and grow, and they do a really good job on the field shutting things down. From a spatial standpoint, they’re very aware of one another, which is important.” Players who are expected to have an impact in the midfield include Laine Lowi, Alex Mendoza, Stephanie Castillo and Juliza Mejia. Bonner noted the group’s footwork, speed and ability to make smart decisions. The playmaking forwards include Carli Lowi, Mayvene Navarro Molina, Arlette Fausto, Katelyn Teerman, Sam Bloom, Sophie Munoz and Ryen Ortiz. Amanda Garcia and Lauren Okamoto are also on the roster. The Balers will have a new player at goalkeeper in junior Victoria Carlsen, who takes over for the graduated Mariana Magana. Goalkeeper has been a strong position for the team in recent years, as Hailey Blackburn was solid between the pipes for four years before graduating after the 2016-2017 season and Magana last season. Bonner said Carlson has what it takes to be a strong goalkeeper. “She works hard and wants to be there,” Bonner said. “She asks questions and is developing and growing every single day. She’s very receptive to feedback, does a good job of hearing that feedback and implementing what she’s told into game situations. You can’t ask for more than that from a player. The whole team has a positive attitude, and I think they’ll do great.”
EXPERIENCED Vanessa Garcia, a senior center defender, provides stability and consistency
on the San Benito High backline. The Balers have switched to a new formation this season.
16
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934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000348 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as DB DENTAL 1381 BRIGANTINO DR. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: DONALD BOUSLOG 1381 BRIGNATINO DR. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 State: CA This business is conducted by: a INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 11/20/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/Peter Cefalu/ Deputy /s/DON BOUSLOG/ Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 12/7, 12/14, 12/21, 12/28)
942 HOL - Public Notice PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Hollister is requesting bids for a pick up truck to be used by the Hollister Animal Care and Services Division. Specific criteria is available from
Captain Carlos Reynoso at the Hollister Police Department, phone 831636-4330. Sealed bids are due in the City Clerk’s Office at City Hall, 375 Fifth Street, Hollister, CA, no later than Thursday December 27, 2018 at 3:00 p.m. Publish: December 14, 2018 December 21, 2018 CITY OF HOLLISTER Christine Black, MMC City Clerk Dated: December 6, 2018 (PUB HF 12/14, 12/21)
942 HOL - Public Notice IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR SPECTRUM TV LINEUP Communities Served: County of San Benito; Towns of Hollister and San Juan Bautista CA.Effective on or after January 15th, 2019, Pop will no longer be available on Digi Tier 2/Spectrum Gold. Pop will continue to be available on Spectrum Select with no change in channel position.For a current channel lineup, visit [ http://www.spectrum.com/ channels ]www.Spectrum. com/channels. To view this notice online, visit [ http://www.spectrum. net/programmingnotices ]www.Spectrum.net/ programmingnotices. (PUB HF 12/14)
933 HOL - Trustee Sale NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE No. 17-242-B: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED October 5, 2006. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. On JANUARY 4, 2019 AT 10:00 am, at the gated North Market Street entrance of the Superior Courthouse, 191 N. First Street, San Jose, Ca. 95113, EXCEL FINANCIAL, as Trustee, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash (payable at the time of sale in lawful money of the United States) the following described property situated in the County of San Benito, State of California, described more fully within said Deed of Trust. This Notice of Trustee’s Sale is being recorded concurrently with our Notice of Trustee’s Sale 17-242-A in Santa Clara County, which is also secured by the same Note. Pursuant to California Civil Code Section 2924g(b) the public auction sale of all of the property will take place in Santa Clara County. The street address and other common designation of
the real property described above is purported to be: 353 Barnheisl Road, Hollister, Ca. 95023 APN: 016-020-004 The undersigned disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation shown here. 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’s Sale (auction). You will be bidding on a lien. Although you will receive title to the property, placing the highest bid at a Trustee auction DOES NOT automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction you will be, or may be, responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority and amount 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, pursuant to California Civil Code Section 2924g. The law requires that information about Trustee Sale postponements be made available to you and the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you would like to know whether your sale date has been postponed, and/or the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (408) 374-7204 or visit www.foreclosureco. com and check Trustee’s Sale #17-242-B. Information about postponements that are short in duration or that occur close to the scheduled sale time may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or online. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied regarding title, possession or encumbrances to satisfy the obligations secured by and pursuant to the Power of Sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by Sandra C. Yuste, a married woman as to her sole and separate property, as Trustor, Recorded on October 24, 2006 as Instrument No. 2006-0015918 in the Office of the County Recorder of San Benito County and Re-Recorded Recorded on September 3, 2009 as Instrument No. 20090008359 in the Office of the County Recorder of San
Benito County. At the time of the initial publication of this Notice, the amount due to satisfy the obligation secured by the subject Deeds of Trust, estimated costs, expenses, fees and advances is $616,424.69. To verify the opening bid call (408) 374-7204, before the sale date. The Foreclosure Co., Inc., as Agent, 827 Cedar Street, Santa Cruz, Ca. 95060 By: Christina Leigh, Foreclosure Officer Date: December 6, 2018 This office is assisting the Beneficiary in collecting a debt and any information obtained may be used for that purpose whether received verbally or in writing. NPP0345233 To: FREE LANCE 12/14/2018, 12/21/2018, 12/28/2018 (PUB HF 12/14, 12/21, 12/28)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000347 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as HD CLEAN SWEEP LLC 1491 AZELEA CT. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: Phone: 209-628-8393 HD CLEAN SWEEP LLC 1491 AZELEA CT. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 State: CA AI#: 201831010284 This business is conducted by: a LIMITED LIABLITY COMPANY The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on 11/7/2018 and 11/20/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/Peter Cefalu/ Deputy /s/CODY DICKEY/ CEO HD CLEAN SWEEP LLC Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 12/14, 12/21, 12/28, 1/4)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000330 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as CALIFORNIA FINEST DELIVERY POWERED BY GREEN ON THE GO 201-A MCCARY STREET, SUITE 164 HOLLISTER, CA 95023 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: GREEN ON THE GO 7, LLC 10970 INTERNATIONAL BLVD., SUITE 206 OAKLAND, CA 94621 State: CA AI#201730610579This business is conducted by: LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above
on N/A and 10/31/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 GREEN ON THE GO 7, LLC PRESIDENT (PUB HF 11/30, 12/7, 12/14, 12/21)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000349 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as ALL STAR TAX AND ACCOUNTING SERVICE 470 TRES PINOS RD HOLLISTER, CA 95023 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: JOHN P ARBALLO 777 NASH RD 11 HOLLISTER, CA 95023 State: CAThis business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on 11/26/2018 and 11/26/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/JOHN ARBALLO/ (PUB HF 12/14, 12/21, 12/28, 1/4)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000357 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as PIERCE PROPERTIES 551 EAST STREET HOLLISTER, CA 95023 Phone: 831-637-0521COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: PEGGY A PIERCE 551 EAST STREET HOLLISTER, CA 95023 State: CAThis business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 12/3/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/PEGGY A PIERCE/ (PUB HF 12/14, 12/21, 12/28, 1/4)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000359 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as PIERCE REAL ESTATE 551 EAST STREET HOLLISTER, CA 95023 Phone: 831-637-0521COUNTY OF
SAN BENITO: PEGGY & RAY PIERCE LLC 551 EAST STREET HOLLISTER, CA 95023 State: CA AI# 2111254This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 12/3/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 PEGGY & RAY PIERCE, LLC /s/PEGGY A PIERCE/ CFO (PUB HF 12/14, 12/21, 12/28, 1/4)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000362 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as JUSTANHERB.COM 1920 AIRWAY DR HOLLISTER, CA 95023 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: Mailing Address: 1765 LANDESS AVE. #66 MILPITAS. CA 95035 AMANDA BACH 1765 LANDESS AVE. #66 MILPITAS. CA 95035 This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 12/04/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/AMANDA BACH/ (PUB HF 12/14, 12/21, 12/28, 1/4)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000365 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as ENCHANTED EVENTS 141 GONZALEZ DR. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: PETRA HERRERA 141 GONZALEZ DR. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 State: CAThis business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 12/05/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/PETRA HERRERA/ (PUB HF 12/14, 12/21, 12/28, 1/4)
DECEMBER 14, 2018
17
FREE LANCE
LEGAL NOTICES 942 HOL - Public Notice Public Notice NOTICE OF RECEIPT OF REPORT ON GROUNDWATER CONDITIONS OF THE DISTRICT AND PUBLIC HEARINGSAN BENITO COUNTY WATER DISTRICT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Directors of the San Benito County Water District did receive on December 17, 2018, the Annual Groundwater Report for Water Year 2018 from Todd Groundwater. Said report is available for examination at the District Office, 30 Mansfield Road, Hollister, California, Monday through Friday, from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.; on our web page at www.sbcwd.com (under Publications, Planning Documents); at the San Benito County Public Library, 470 Fifth Street, Hollister and at the San Juan Bautista Public Library, 801 Second Street, San Juan Bautista. Reproductions of said report are available at the District Office for a fee of $10.00. The Board of Directors of the San Benito County Water District will hold a public hearing on Monday, January 14, 2019, at 5:00 p.m. for the purpose of receiving public comment on said report. The hearing will be held at the District Office, 30 Mansfield Road, Hollister, California. Any operator of a water-producing facility within the District, or any person interested in the condition of the groundwater supplies of the District, may in person, or by representative, appear and submit evidence concerning the groundwater conditions and the surface water supplies of the District. Appearances also may be made supporting or protesting the written report. BOARD OF DIRECTORS SAN BENITO COUNTY WATER DISTRICT BY: /s/Sara Singleton/ Assistant Manager (PUB HF 12/14)
942 HOL - Public Notice T.S. No. 18-52214APN: 020-580-045-000 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED 4/11/2016. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public auction sale to the highest bidder for cash, cashier's check drawn on a state or national bank, check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, or savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state will be held by the duly appointed trustee as shown below, of all right, title, and interest conveyed to and now held by the trustee in the hereinafter described property under and pursuant to a Deed of Trust described below. The sale will be made, but without covenant or warranty, expressed or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note(s) secured by the Deed of Trust, with interest and late charges thereon, as provided in the note(s), advances, under the terms of the Deed of Trust, interest thereon, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee for the total amount (at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale) reasonably estimated to be set forth below. The amount may be greater on the day of sale. Trustor: NICKOLI PENGELLY AND WHITNEY PENGELLY, HUSBAND AND WIFE AS JOINT TENANTS Duly Appointed Trustee: Zieve, Brodnax & Steele, LLP Deed of Trust recorded 4/29/2016, as Instrument No. 2016-0004320, of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of San Benito County, California, Date of Sale:12/21/2018 at 11:30 AM Place of Sale: At the Monterey Street entrance to the County Courthouse 440 5th Street Hollister CA Estimated amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $636,508.97 Note: Because the Beneficiary reserves the right to bid less than the total debt owed, it is possible that at the time of the sale the opening bid may be less than the total debt owed. Street Address or other common designation of real property:1091 CYPRESS ST HOLLISTER, California 95023 Described as follows: As more fully described on said Deed of Trust. A.P.N #.: 020-580-045-000 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address or other common designation, if any, shown above. If no street address or other common designation
is shown, directions to the location of the property may be obtained by sending a written request to the beneficiary within 10 days of the date of first publication of this Notice of Sale. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien, not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder's office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property. NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you may call (714) 848-9272 or visit this Internet Web site www.elitepostandpub. com, using the file number assigned to this case 18-52214. 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. Dated: 11/19/2018 Zieve, Brodnax & Steele, LLP, as Trustee 30 Corporate Park, Suite 450 Irvine, CA 92606 For Non-Automated Sale Information, call: (714) 848-7920 For Sale Information: (714) 848-9272 www. elitepostandpub.com _________________________ ________ Andrew Buckelew, Trustee Sale Assistant THIS FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION WE OBTAINED WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE (EPP 27311 Pub Dates 11/30, 12/07, 12/14/20)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000340 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as 1) C2C BRANDS, 2) COAST TO COAST Buisness address: 2339 TECHNOLOGY PKWY, STE D HOLLISTER, CA 95023 Mailing Address: PO BOX 1295 HOLLISTER, CA 95024 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: COAST 2 COAST BRANDS, LLC 2339 TECHNOLOGY PKWY STE D HOLLISTER, CA 95023 State: CA AL#201825010599 This business is conducted by: A LIMITED LIABLITY COMPANY The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 11/8/2018 is the file date. /s/JENNIFER MORCATE/ Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/ Nancy Vigna/ Deputy Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 11/30, 12/7, 12/014, 12/21)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000338 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as SIMPLY NAILS 195 MERIDIAN ST., SUITE A4 HOLLISTER, CA 95023 Phone: 831-630-1350 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: NGO NGUYEN 532 COYOTE RD. SAN JOSE, CA 95111 This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on 1/1/2018 and 1/5/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/ Nancy Vigna/ Deputy /s/NGO NGUYEN/ Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 11/30, 12/7, 12/014, 12/21)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000339 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as SURESTAY SAN BENITO INN 660 SAN FELIPE RD. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 Phone: 831-637-9248 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: OHM LODGING INC., 922 CONIFER DR. FALLON, NV State: NV AL#2018046107433 This business is conducted by: A CORPORATION The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on 10/23/2018 and 11/6/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/ Nancy Vigna/ Deputy OHM LODGING INC. /s/ PARNAV MORAR/ PRESIDENT Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 11/30, 12/7, 12/014, 12/21)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000341 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as LEGACY STUDIO 4351 PACHECHO HWY SUITE B HOLLISTER, CA 95023 Phone: 831-750-2222 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: DANIEL PINEDA 4351 PACHECHO HWY, SUITE B HOLLISTER, CA 95023 STATE: CA
ROGELIO PINEDA 67 REDWOOD DR. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 This business is conducted by: A GENERAL PARTNERSHIP The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 11/13/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/ Nancy Vigna/ Deputy /s/ DANIEL PINEDA/ Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 11/30, 12/7, 12/014, 12/21)
939 HOL - Summons SUMMONS ON FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT (CITACION JUDICIAL) NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (AVISO AL DEMANDADO): -ROBERT M. FRUSETTA, aka ROBERT MAURICE FRUSETTA, an individual; -JAMIE DIANE FRUSETTA, aka JAMIE D. FRUSETTA, an individual; -PETER C. FRUSETTA, an individual; -JACK C. FRUSETTA, aka JACK CHARLES FRUSETTA, an individual; -LESLIE GOSS, aka LESLIE L. GOSS, an individual; -REGAN M. TULLY, trustee of the Shirley F. Tully Trust, U/D/T dated March 24, 1993; -PETER C. FRUSETTA, ANITA C. FRUSETTA, ROBERT M. FRUSETTA and NANCY B. FRUSETTA, aka NANCY B. FRUSETTA MOORE, co-trustees of the Peter C. and Anita C. Frusetta Revocable Trust, U/D/T dated June 10, 2006; -TIMOTHY BENGARD, aka TIMOTHY C. BENGARD, an individual; -LEANNE IRVINE, an individual; -MICHELLE IRVINE, an individual; -LEANNE IRVINE and MICHELLE IRVINE, co-trustees of the Warren C. Irvine Family Trust; -KATHY O'DONNELL, an individual; -KATHLEEN ANN O'DONNELL, trustee of the K. A. O'Donnell Trust, dated September 18, 2008; -JAMES O'DONNELL, an individual; -MARGARET O'DONNELL, an individual; -JAMES F. O'DONNELL and MARGARET E. O'DONNELL, trustees of the M & J O'Donnell Trust, dated January 19, 2011; -MARK PAXTON, an individual; -MARY PAXTON, an individual; -MARK MACLAINE PAXTON, aka MARK M. PAXTON, and MARY MICHAEL PAXTON, aka MARY M. PAXTON, co-trustees of the Mark Maclaine Paxton and Mary Michael Paxton Trust, dated December 8, 2003; -CRAIG PAXTON, an individual; -ANNE PAXTON, an individual; -CRAIG J. PAXTON, aka CRAIG PAXTON, and ANNE G. PAXTON, co-trustees of the Craig and Anne Paxton Family Trust, UDT dated December 10, 1993; -GARY O'DONNELL, an individual; -JANSIE STEPHENS FARRIS, aka JANAS BROWN STEPHENS FARRIS, an individual; -JANSEN BROWN STEPHENS FARRIS, a business entity of unknown type; -PAUL BROWN STEPHENS, an individual; -TERESA MARIE COLLINS, an individual; -WENDI ARENDTS, aka WENDY ANNE AREMDTS, aka WENDY ANNE ARENDTS, an individual; -CHARLES SCOTT COLLINS, an individual; -SEAN MICHAEL COLLINS, an individual; -CLAY PETER FRUSETTA, trustee of the Trust Created Under the Last Will and Testament of the Estate of George Frusetta, deceased; -DOES 41 through 60; and -All Persons Unknown, Claiming Any Legal or Equitable Right, Title, Estate, Lien or Interest in the Property Described in this Complaint Adverse to Plaintiffs' Title, or Any Cloud On Plaintiffs' Title Thereto YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: (LO EST DEMANDANDO EL DEMANDANTE): MARK CULLEN FANCHER and PATRICK HODGES FANCHER, as successor
co-trustees of the Fancher Revocable Living Trust, U/D/T dated February 23, 1994 NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo. ca.gov/selfhelp), your county law library, or the courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may want to call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia. org), the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/ selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees and costs on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil case. The court's lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case. AVISO! Lo han demandado. Si no responde dentro de 30 das, la corte puede decidir en su contra sin escuchar su versin. Lea la informacin a continuacin. Tiene 30 DAS DE CALENDARIO despus de que le entreguen esta citacin y papeles legales para presentar una respuesta por escrito en esta corte y hacer que se entregue una copia al demandante. Una carta o una llamada telefnica no lo protegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene que estar en formato legal correcto si desea que procesen su caso en la corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar para su respuesta. Puede encontrar estos formularios de la corte y ms informacin en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www.sucorte. ca.gov), en la biblioteca de leyes de su condado o en la corte que le quede ms cerca. Si no puede pagar la cuota de presentacin, pida al secretario de la corte que le d un formulario de exencin de pago de cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a tiempo, puede perder el caso por incumplimiento y la corte le podr quitar su sueldo, dinero y bienes sin ms advertencia. Hay otros requisitos legales. Es recomendable que llame a un abogado inmediatamente. Si no conoce a un abogado, puede llamar a un servicio de remisin a abogados. Si no puede pagar a un abogado, es posible que cumpla con los requisitos para obtener servicios legales gratuitos de un programa de servicios legales sin fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro en el sitio web de California Legal Services, (www. lawhelpcalifornia.org), en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California, (www. sucorte.ca.gov) o ponindose en contacto con la corte o el colegio de abogados locales. AVISO: Por ley, la corte tiene derecho a reclamar las cuotas y los costos exentos por imponer un gravamen sobre cualquier recuperacin de $10,000 ms de valor recibida mediante un acuerdo o una concesin de arbitraje en un caso de derecho civil. Tiene que pagar el gravamen de la corte antes de que la corte pueda desechar el caso. The name and address of the court is: (El nombre y direccin de la corte es): Superior Court of California,
County of San BenitoCASE NUMBER: (Nmero del Caso): CU-17-00058 450 Fourth Street Hollister, CA 95023 The name, address, and telephone number of plaintiff's attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney, is: (El nombre, la direccin y el nmero de telfono del abogado del demandante, o del demandante que no tiene abogado, es): Donald H. Glasrud (42491) PH: (559) 432-4500 / FAX: (559) 432-4590 DOWLING AARON INCORPORATED 8080 North Palm Avenue, Third Floor, Fresno, CA 93711 DATE: Nov 13, 2018 (Fecha)Clerk, by (Secretario)/s/Aurelia Rodriguez, Deputy (Adjunto) (For proof of service of this summons, use Proof of Service of Summons (form POS-010).) (Para prueba de entrega de esta citatin use el formulario Proof of Service of Summons, (POS-010)). [SEAL]NOTICE TO THE PERSON SERVED: You are served 1.0 as an individual defendant. 2.0 as the person sued under the fictitious name of (specify): 3.0 on behalf of (specify): under:0 CCP 416.10 (corporation)0 CCP 416.60 (minor) 0 CCP 416.20 (defunct corporation)0 CCP 416.70 (conservatee) 0 CCP 416.40 (association or partnership)0 CCP 416.90 (authorized person) 0 other (specify): 4.0 by personal delivery on (date): The litigation involves real property in the unincorporated area of the County of San Benito, State of California, described as follows: T 16 S, R 10 E SW 1/4 of the SE 1/4 of Section 24; Lots 2 and 3 in Section 25; W 1/2 of the NE 1/4 of Section 25; NW 1/4 of the SE 1/4 of Section 25; NW 1/4 of the SE 1/4 of Section 35; Lots 1, 2, 3, and 4 in Section 36; NW 1/4 of the NE 1/4 of Section 36; NE 1/4 of the NW 1/4 of Section 36; T 16 S, R 11 E Lots 3 and 4 in Section 19; NE 1/4 of the NE 1/4 of Section 29; SW 1/4 of the NE 1/4 of Section 29; NE 1/4 of the NW 1/4 of Section 29; South 1/2 of Section 29; All of Section 30, except the NE 1/4 of the SE 1/4; All of Section 31; All of Section 32; T 17 S, R 10 E Lots 3 and 4 in Section 1; W 1/2 of Lot 5 in Section 1; E 1/2 of Lot 5 in Section 1; E 1/2 of Lot 7 in Section 1; T 17 S, R 11 E W 1/2 of Section 5; Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 11, 13, 14, 15, 18, and 19 in Section 6; N 1/2 of Lot 10 in Section 6; E 1/2 of Section 6. Lots 8, 9, and the S 1/2 of Lot 10 in Section 6 END (PUB HF 12/7, 12/14, 12/21, 12/28)
DECEMBER 14, 2018
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MSRP............................$21,789 Customer Cash ...........-$1,500 Gilroy Toyota Discount ..-$701 Model #1201 VIN #619324
LE 4WD
MSRP...................................... $48,742 Customer Cash ..................... -$2,000 Gilroy Toyota Discount....... -$3,300 Model #6957 VIN #875145
$5700 OFF
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2018 RAV4 LE NEW
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2018 TUNDRA SR5, Large V8, Short Bed, Crew Max
MSRP...................................... $45,397 Customer Cash ..................... -$3,000 Gilroy Toyota Discount....... -$2,700 Model #8361 VIN #776371
GILROY
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MSRP............................$26,234 Customer Cash ...........-$2,500 Gilroy Toyota Discount ...-$1,236 Model #4430 VIN #208245
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SERVICE CENTER SPECIALS DON’T FORGET THE CAR GUY OR GAL ON YOUR LIST
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*Applies to Toyota vehicles only. Offer expires 12/31/18. You must bring in this ad to qualify for special.
PRE-OWNED VEHICLE SUPERSALE $
6,900
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#236670
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WAS $1
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2017 TOYOTA RAV4 XLE LOW MILES!!! #107789
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2014 CHEVROLET EQUINOX LT
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2006 TOYOTA TUNDRA
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Showroom and Sales open 9am–9pm every day Service open Monday–Saturday 7am–6pm
All vehicles are subject to prior sale. *All prices exclude government fees, license, registration, taxes, finance charges, dealer document processing charge of $80 on all vehicle purchases and electronic filing charge and any emission testing charge on used vehicles not included. Financing available on approved credit to qualified customers and not all customers will qualify. No cash payment made to customer. Monthly payments may vary depending on final price of vehicle and your qualifications. New vehicle purchases include two year or 25,000 mile of Toyota Care Service. Toyota Care covers normal factory service for two years or 25,000 miles, whichever occurs first. Excludes those items in the vehicle maintenance guide under special operating conditions. Toyota recommends service every six months or 5,000 miles.Vehicles serviced based solely on time will receive up to four services under the Toyota Care Plan. See Gilroy Toyota for details. Offers expire close of business on 12/17/2018 and are subject to stock on hand.Vehicle images are a representation and may differ from actual model in stock.
gilroytoyota.com • 408.848.8000 • gilroytoyota.com • 408.848.8000 • gilroytoyota.com • 408.848.8000
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18
DECEMBER 14, 2018
19
FREELANCE
OBITUARIES Grunnagle-Ament-Nelson Funeral Home & Crematory True Peace of Mind and Respect for Your Loved Ones Always the most Competitive prices
Neptune Society
Compare
YES YES YES YES YES
September 10, 1923 - November 18, 2018
Serving San Benito County Since 1919 Compassionate & Caring
Only on-site crematory in San Benito County
GrunnagleAment-Nelson
MARY DEAN BORNS
Local San Benito County Office Full service arrangements w/local representative Cremation handled completely in San Benito County Local facilities available for memorial service Local community support through donations & sponsorships
NO NO NO NO NO
M
ary Dean Borns was born to Jerry and Mary Holmes on Sept. 10, 1923, in Mound City, Missouri. She is predeceased by her parents, her husband and her brother Bill. In 1945 she earned a B.S. degree in Hematology from University of Nebraska. She was employed as a laboratory technologist at Denver and, later, Los Angeles General Hospitals where she met and married Fred Borns. Fred and Mary were blessed with four children, Fred, Mary Margaret, Mark and Mike. A memorial Mass will be celebrated at 11:00am Thursday January 3rd, 2019, at St. Catherine’s Catholic Church, 17400 Peak Ave., Morgan Hill, CA. Please consider donations in Mary’s honor to “Hospice of the Valley”, 1510 E. Flower St., Phoenix, AZ 85014-5656.
Trident Society
NO NO NO NO NO
870 San Benito Street • Hollister • 831.637.3757 • Fax: 831.637.8959 To send condolences & view obituaries: www.grunnagle.com FD 304 CR-81
To Place an Obituary By Telephone: 408-842-5066 Via the Web:Register and fill out form at sanbenito.com
Memorialize Your Loved One with a personalized Obituary in the Hollister Free Lance 84% of readers read their community newspaper to keep up on local news, find local information and to observe local obituaries. 2017 NNA Community Newspaper Readership Survey Report
Your Subscription Helps TRAEGER Support Local Journalism 50 100 You deserve to be well We take pride in serving our community at
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informed about McKinnon Lumber Co.,local Inc. issues that matter. 637-5767 subject to stock on hand Offer Expires 12/20/18
Name _____________________________________________ Home phone _______________________________________
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recology.com
2 ways to subscribe:
Recology Holiday Collection Schedule
Christmas Day for andcredit New Year’s Day both fall on Tuesday this year. 1 Call 408.842.2327 card payment. Collection service for garbage, recycling and organics will occur
2 Return the to the right with your check. AFTER THE HOLIDAY. oneform day later than normally scheduled MON DEC 24 Regular service
TUES DEC 25
NO SERVICE Christmas Day Office Closed
DEC 31Valley Magazine JAN 1 South
Regular service
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THURS
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è
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Service for Thursday Customers
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Service for Thursday Customers
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Morgan Hill Times
TREE RECYCLING
Hollister Free Lance
Residents can set out Amount: undecorated trees SAT first 3 weeks in DEC 29$55* (regularthe delivery) _____________________________________________ è Service for January. Trees must Friday * Customers $69 (received in the mail) _____________________________________________ be cut into sections no greater than 6 feet. è JAN 5 *Rates are per community.
Service for Friday Customers
20
FREE LANCE
DECEMBER 14, 2018
LEGAL NOTICES 942 HOL - Public Notice ORDINANCE NO. 1172 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF HOLLISTER AMENDING CHAPTER 15.24 GRADING AND BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES CONTROL OF THE HOLLISTER MUNICIPAL CODE THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF HOLLISTER HEREBY ORDAINS AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1.CODE AMENDMENT. Chapter 15.24 Grading and Best Management Practices Control is hereby amended as follows: 1.Subsection 15.24.010 Title is hereby amended to read: This chapter shall be known as the Grading and Stormwater Best Management Practices Ordinance. 2.Subsection 15.24.020 is hereby amended to read: The purpose of this chapter is to provide safe grading operations, to safeguard life, limb, and property, and to preserve and enhance the natural environment, including, but not limited to, water quality, by the regulation of clearing and grading, and the regulation of design, construction, and installation of improvements, on private property and property owned by public agencies located within the boundaries of the City of Hollister. 3.Subsection 15.24.040 Definitions is hereby amended to read: For the purposes of this chapter, the following words and phrases shall have the meanings respectively ascribed to them by this section: Applicant means any person, corporation, partnership, association of any type, or any other legal entity submitting an application to the city engineer for a permit pursuant to this chapter. As-graded means the vertical elevations and cross sections of the ground surface conditions upon completion of grading. Bedrock means in-place solid rock. Bench means a relatively level step excavated into earth material on which fill is to be placed. Best management practices (BMPs) mean and include, but not limited to, schedules of activities, prohibitions of practices, maintenance procedures, and other management practices to prevent, eliminate, or reduce the pollution of waters of the U.S., waters of the state, and local waterways. BMPs also include treatment requirements, operating procedures, and practices to control plant site runoff spillage or leaks, sludge or waste disposal, or drainage from raw material storage, or other requirements as determined by the City Engineer. BMP manual means a compilation of best management practices approved by the city engineer to provide general guidance for selecting and implementing BMPs to reduce pollutants in runoff from construction sites, newly developed areas and redeveloped areas, municipal facilities, and industrial facilities and selected commercial businesses to waters of the U.S., waters of the state, and local waterways. Borrow means earth material acquired from an off-site location for use in grading on a site. City engineer means the person responsible for the administrative and operational control of grading activities and for the construction and installation of improvements activities in the city of Hollister and duly authorized designees. Civil engineer means an engineer experienced and knowledgeable in civil engineering and certified as a professional engineer by the state of California to practice civil engineering. Civil engineering means the application of the knowledge of the forces of nature, principals of mechanics, and the properties of materials to the evaluation, design, and construction of civil works for the beneficial uses of mankind. Compaction means the densification of a fill by mechanical means. Construction Stormwater BMP Control Plan (CSCP) means a set of BMPs or equivalent measures on a particular site during
the period in which pre-construction and construction-related land disturbances, fills, and soil storage occur, and before final improvements are completed. Development means the process of adding improvements to a parcel of land. Downdrain means a conduit used to safely transport a concentration from one elevation to another along the face of a cut or fill slope without causing slope erosion. Drainageway means a natural or manmade channel, which collects and intermittently or continuously conveys stormwater runoff. Earth material means any rock, natural soil, or fill, or combination thereof. Engineering geologist means a geologist experienced and knowledgeable in engineering geology and certified by the state of California to practice engineering geology. Engineering geology means the application of geologic knowledge and principles in the investigation and evaluation of naturally occurring rock and soil for use in the design of civil works. Erosion means the wearing away of the land surface by wind or water. Erosion occurs naturally from weather or runoff but can be intensified by land-clearing practices related to farming, new development, redevelopment, road building, or timber cutting. Grade means the vertical location of the ground surface. A.Existing Grade. The ground elevation prior to grading. B.Rough Grade. The elevation of the ground that approximately conforms to the approved grading. C.Finished Grade. The final ground elevation of the site, which conforms to the approved plan. Grading means any land disturbance or cut or fill, or combination thereof. A.Engineered Grading. All grading in excess of five thousand (5,000) cubic yards performed in accordance with the approved grading plan prepared by a civil engineer. B.Regular Grading. All grading involving five thousand (5,000) cubic yards or less. Grading permit (or permit) means an approval issued by the city engineer under this chapter for land disturbance, cutting or filling of a slope or any combination thereof. Grading plan (or improvement plans) means a drawing or representation of a construction site showing existing and proposed topography, environmental controls, demolition, and improvements to land. Improvements mean activities such as grading, or subdivision improvements installed and constructed in subdivisions, or the addition of drainage, access, roads, underground utilities, street improvements, water system improvements, sanitary sewer improvements, storm drainage facilities, landscaping, recreational facilities, or structures to a parcel of land. Interceptor drain means a swale, ditch, or channel, which runs parallel to the top of a cut or fill slope and used to divert storm water runoff in an effort to minimize slope erosion over the face of the cut or fill slope. Key means a designed compacted fill placed in a trench excavated in earth material beneath the base of a proposed fill slope. Land disturbance/landdisturbing activities mean any moving or removing by manual or mechanical means of the soil mantle or top six inches of soil, whichever is shallower, including but not limited to grading. Land fill means any human activity depositing soil or other earth materials. Letter of acceptance means a document prepared and issued by city engineer evidencing completion of permitted work in compliance with the requirements of a permit. Low impact development (LID) means a method of land development that seeks to maintain the natural hydrologic character of a site by working with the natural landscape and hydrology to minimize increased peak flow rate, volume, and pollution levels in storm water runoff through source control and by retaining more water on site where it falls, rather than using traditional methods of transporting water directly
from the site through storm drain pipes into local waterways. Local waterways mean waters or waterways under the jurisdiction of the city of Hollister or the county of San Benito. Permittee means the applicant in whose name a valid grading permit is duly issued pursuant to this chapter and his or her agents, employees, and others, acting under his or her direction or acting under the authority of the permit. Post-Construction Stormwater Control Plan (SWCP) means a set of stormwater post-construction best management practices or equivalent measures on a particular site after all other planned final structures and permanent improvements have been erected or installed. Sediment means earth material deposited by water or wind. Site means any lot or parcel of land where grading is performed or permitted. Slope means an inclined ground surface, the inclination of which is expressed as a ratio of horizontal distance to vertical distance. Soil means naturally occurring, superficial deposits of dirt overlying bedrock. Soils engineer means a professional geotechnical or civil engineer experienced and knowledgeable in the practice of soils engineering, and licensed by the state of California for practice in that field. Soils engineering means the application of the principles of soils mechanics in the investigation, evaluation, and design of civil works involving the use of earth materials and the inspection or testing of the construction thereof. Waters of the U.S. means all waters and waterways under the jurisdiction of the federal government of the United States. Waters of the state means all waters and waterways under the jurisdiction of the state of California. Wet season means the period from October 15th to April 15th. 4.Subsection 15.24.110 (E) is hereby amended to read: An impervious surface, if any, of less than two thousand five hundred (2,500) square feet is created; 5.Subsection 15.24.120 (C) is hereby amended to read: Construction Stormwater Control Plan (CSCP), as specified in this chapter; 6.Subsection 15.24.120 (D) is hereby amended to read: Post-Construction Stormwater Control Plan (SWCP), as specified in this chapter; 7.Subsection 15.24.120 (I) is hereby amended to read: Performance Bond and Labor and Materials Bond, or other acceptable security; 8.Subsection 15.24.130 (A) is hereby amended to read: LID principles shall be considered and incorporated as part of site planning and design as appropriately feasible. The primary goal of LID is to mimic the natural hydrologic character of a site by working with the natural landscape and hydrology to minimize increased peak flow rate, volume, and pollution levels in stormwater runoff through source control and by retaining more water on site where it falls, rather than using traditional methods of transporting water directly from the site through storm drain pipes into any waterway. Developments shall comply with the California Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board Resolution No. R3-2013-0032, or subsequent amendment thereto, as applicable. 9.Subsection 15.24.130 (B) (6) is hereby amended to read: Location and graphic representation of proposed excavations and fills, of on-site storage of soil and other earth material, and of on-site disposal, and the design and location of all proposed improvements; 10.Subsection 15.24.130 (B) (9) is hereby amended to read: Proposed sequence and schedule of excavation, filling, and other land-disturbing and filling activities, and soil or earth material storage and disposal, and installation and construction of all proposed improvements; 11.Subsection 15.24.130 (B) (11) is hereby amended to read: Locations of the CSCP and SWCP BMP measures.
12.Subsection 15.24.131 the heading is hereby amended to read CSCP. 13.Subsection 15.24.131 (A) is hereby amended to read: The CSCP shall provide a graphic representation and brief description of all BMP control measures to be implemented. 14.Subsection 15.24.131 (B) is hereby amended to read: The CSCP shall include, but not be limited to, design, specifications, and a maintenance schedule for BMP control measures for erosion control, sediment control, wind erosion and dust control, tracking control, non-storm water management control, and waste management control. 15.Subsection 15.24.131 (D) is hereby amended to read: The CSCP shall provide a graphic representation and brief description of the vegetative measures to be used, including, but not limited to, types of seeds and fertilizer and their application rates, the type, location and extent of pre-existing and undisturbed vegetation types, and a schedule for maintenance and upkeep. 16.Subsection 15.24.131 (F) is hereby amended to read: An estimate of the cost of implementing and maintaining all CSCP BMP control measures must be submitted on a form acceptable to the city engineer. 17.Subsection 15.24.131 (G) is hereby amended to read: The applicant may propose the use of any BMP control measures in the CSCP plan provided such techniques are proven to be as or more effective than the equivalent best management practices contained in the BMP Manual. All proposed BMP control measures must be reviewed and approved by the City Engineer prior to implementation. 18.Subsection 15.24.132 the heading is hereby amended to read SWCP. 19.Subsection 15.24.132 is amended to read: The minimum standard for the appropriate selection of SWCP BMPs shall be in accordance with the BMP Manual, and shall comply with the California Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board Resolution No. R3-2013-0032, or subsequent amendment thereto, as applicable, or as approved by the city engineer. All of the following information shall be provided with respect to conditions existing on the site after final structures and improvements have been completed and when an interim BMP plan has not addressed the final structures and improvements: 20.Subsection 15.24.132 (B) is amended to read: The SWCP final plan shall also contain the following information: 21.Subsection 15.24.132 (C) is amended to read: An estimate of the costs of implementing all SWCP control measures must be submitted in a form acceptable to the City Engineer. 22.Subsection 15.24.160 (A) is amended to read: Amount of Security. The applicant shall provide security for the performance of the work described and delineated on the approved grading plans, CSCP, and SWCP in an amount determined by the City Engineer but not less than one hundred (100) percent of the approved estimated cost of performing said work prior to issuance of a permit. The applicant shall provide security for the purpose of security payment to the contractor, the contractor's subcontractor and to persons renting equipment or furnishing labor or materials for the work describe and delineated on the approved grading plans, CSCP, and SWCP in an amount determined by the city engineer but not less than one hundred (100) percent of the approved estimated cost of performing said work prior to the issuance of a permit. The permittee shall provide security to warranty the maintenance and upkeep of the final grading and permanent improvements, described and delineated in the final grading plans, CSCP, and SWCP against defective workmanship and materials in an amount to be determined by the City Engineer, but not less than twenty-five (25) percent of the estimated cost of performing said work submitted by the permittee and approved by the City
Engineer. Section 2. Effective Date. This Ordinance shall take effect and be in force thirty (30) days from and after its final passage. Section 3. Publication. Within (15) days after the passage of this Ordinance, the City Clerk shall cause it to be published one time in the Free Lance, a newspaper of general circulation in the City. INTRODUCED at a regular City Council meeting on the 19th day of November, 2018. PASSED AND ADOPTED, by the City Council of the City of Hollister at a regular meeting held this 3rd day of December, 2018, by the following vote: AYES: Council Members Gillio, Luna, Klauer, Lenoir and Mayor Velazquez. NOES: None. ABSTAINED: None. ABSENT: None. /s/ Ignacio Velazquez, Mayor ATTEST:APPROVED AS TO FORM: Prentice, Long & Epperson, Attorneys at Law /s/ Christine Black, MMC, City Clerk /s/ Jason S. Epperson, City Attorney (PUB HF 12/14)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000336 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as RANCHO DE LA LLANADA aka RANCHO LLANADA 291 BLOSSOM LANE HOLLISTER, CA 95023 Phone: 831-637-5286 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: ALLEN COROTTO 120 ALOHA AVE SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94122 CHRISTOPHER COROTTO 291 BLOSSOM LANE HOLLISTER, CA 95023 DONALD and NENETTE COROTTO 2003 TRUST 291 BLOSSOM LANE HOLLISTER, CA 95023 NANCY C. WILCOX 300 BLOSSOM LANE HOLLISTER, CA 95023 This business is conducted by: A GENERAL PARTNERSHIP The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 11/2/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/ Nancy Vigna/ Deputy /s/ NENETTE COROTTO/ Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 11/30, 12/7, 12/014, 12/21)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000329 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as 1 INCURABLE COLLECTOR 1125 FIRST STREET SAN JUAN BAUTISTA, CA 95045 PHONE : 831-905-1658 Mailling Address: PO BOX 1312 SAN JUAN BAUTISTA, CA 95045 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: CYNTHIA J. ALNAS 1125 FIRST ST. SAN JUAN BAUTISTA, CA 95045 State : CA This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on 10/1/2013 and 10/31/2018 is the file date. Original File Number: 2013-0000328 Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/ Nancy Vigna/ Deputy /s/CYNTHIA J ALNAS/ Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 11/30, 12/7, 12/14, 12/21)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000350 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as FREEMAN ENVIROMENTAL CONSULTING 22 NORTH STREET SAN JUAN BAUTISTA, CA
95045 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: Mailing Address:P.O. BOX 1003 SAN JUAN BAUTISTA, CA 95045 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: JOHN C FREEMAN 22 NORTH STREET SAN JUAN BAUTISTA, CA 95045 This business is conducted by: AN INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A and 11/26/2018 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/Carlos Godinez/ Deputy /s/JOHN FREEMAN/ Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 12/7, 12/14, 12/21, 12/28)
934 HOL - FBNS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File Number: 2018-0000353 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as OLIVAS & SONS TRANSPORT HOLLISTER, CA 95023 COUNTY OF SAN BENITO: EVERTH CARRANZA 10 FLINT RD. HOLLISTER, CA 95023 State: CA GUADALUPE OLIVAS 102 MAYFAIR DR SALINAS, CA 93905 This business is conducted by: A GENERAL PARTNERSHIP The registrant commenced To transact business under The fictitious business name or names listed above on 10/15/2012 and 11/27/2023 is the file date. Statement filed with the County Clerk of San Benito Joe Paul Gonzalez San Benito County Clerk 440 5th Street Room 206 Hollister, CA 95023-3843 /s/Peter Cefalu/ Deputy /s/EVERTH CARRANZA/Publish Hollister Freelance: (PUB HF 12/7, 12/14, 12/21, 12/28)
931 HOL - Show Name Change ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME Case No. CU-18-00194 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN BENITO TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: 1. Petitioner: WENDI DENISE PULIZ filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name: WENDI DENISE PULIZ a. WENDI DENISE PULIZ Proposed Name: a. WENDI DENISE LAMOURE 2. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING a. Date: JANUARY 17, 2019 Time: 1:30 PM Dept: N/A Room: 1 b. The address of the court is: 450 FOURTH STREET HOLLISTER, CA 95032 CIVIL DIVISION 3. a. A copy of this Order To Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: HOLLISTER FREELANCE 615 SAN BENITO STREET HOLLISTER, CA 95023 Dated: NOVEMBER 21, 2018 /s/Harry J. Tobias/ Judge of the Superior Court (Pub. HF 12/7, 12/14, 12/21, 12/28)
21
DECEMBER 14, 2018
CLASSIFIEDS A section of the Gilroy Dispatch, the Hollister Free Lance and the Morgan Hill Times
HAULING
SOUTH COUNTY CLEANUP, DEMO & HAULING LOW RATES, FREE ESTIMATES CLEANUP-Yards, homes, properties, rentals & garages DEMO-Bathrooms, Kitchens, decks, patios, small buildings. HAULING-Garbage, yard waste, rock, sand & mulch, POWER WASHING 408.430.3560
HAULING, YARD WORK, tree & brush trimming, fence Repair, vacant home & garage cleaning. FREE ESTIMATES RUBEN AT 408.310.0078
SERVICES DOORS ALL RESIDENTIAL -Installed -Finished -Repaired -Entry -Patio -Closet -Pocket and more. Call Adam at 408.710.4556 cccraftsman@gmail.com www.craftmansdoorservices.com
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references.831. 297.0553
EMPLOYMENT QUALIFIED PERSON FOR HOUSEHOLD ASSISTANCE Gilroy family seeking upbeat individual to assist couple with meals, cleaning & household needs. Have experience in cooking tasty meals and provide support for day to day needs. 8-15 hours a week @ $22.50 per hour 408.847.2000 bcunningham@cunningham. org
EMPLOYMENT MECHANIC Grass Farm is a family owned and operated sod farm since 1969. We are currently looking for a mechanic to service our sod farm equipment. This person needs to have a varied background on equipment able to perform services including diagnosing electrical issues. Clean DMV able to be insured. An ability to fabricate is a plus. Bilingual English/Spanish a plus.
Competitive wages with Medical/Dental/simple IRA / Vacation and Holiday pay. grassfarm.com (408) 846-4555 info@grassfarminc.com grassfarm.com
EMPLOYMENT NEWSPAPERS CARRIER Newspapers delivery carriers needed 7 days week , Morgan Hill & Gilroy area. Early morning hours, you must have a valid driver License and insurance.$1000-1200 Monthly 510.813.7339 al.letona@sbcglobal.net
REAL ESTATE SERVICES MORGAN HILL, GILROY, HOLLISTER Free report reviews 7 COSTLY mistakes to avoid before selling your home. Free recorded message: 1.833.234.5995 ID# 1000 morganhillhousedeals.com dre:01183425
NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
HOLLISTER/SUNNYSLOPE Remodel, 2 bedroom 1-1/2 bath, water & garbage paid. No pets. Carport, upstairs unit. No Sec. 8. $1,250 /month, security deposit $2,000. 831.262.6800
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned intends to sell the personal property described below to enforce a lien imposed on said property pursuant to Sections 21700-21716 of the Business & Professions Code, Section 2328 of the UCC, Section 535 of the Penal Code and the provisions of the Civil Code. Gilroy Self Storage, 6500 Cameron Boulevard, Gilroy, CA 95020. Date of and Time of Sale: Friday December 28, 2018, 9:30am. Auction will be conducted on site at 6500 Cameron Boulevard, Gilroy, CA 95020. Auctioneer: Joe Ward, CA Bond 758-09-52, Jeff Vercelli, CA Bond MS153-13-71. Phone: (408) 891-6108; agent for Owner.
PUBLIC AUCTIONS Emergency Auction Part 1 Friday Preview at 9:30am Auction at 10:30am San Ysidro Way, Salinas Garage and kitchen contents Fine American Western Auction Saturday Preview at 9am Auction at 10am 60 W 6th St, Gilroy Multi-million dollar estate Emergency Auction Part 2 Friday Preview at 9:30am Auction at 10:30am San Ysidro Way, Salinas Rest of house contents
ITEMS Household goods, tools.
Published in Gilroy Dispatch: Friday, December 14, and Friday, December 21, 2018. (PUB GD 12/14, 12/21)
Details: GarlicCityAuction.com
SAN JUAN BAUTISTA Brand new studio apartment. In our home. Separate entrance. (831) 578-9312 cd_leaver@me.com
SAN MARTIN Recently refurbished, 1 B/R duplex apartment on private road. Good sized bedroom, bathroom, living room, kitchen dining area and full size washer and dryer in unit, A/C. Located on a 2 acre private property.
PG&E, Water, Garbage and Wifi included in rent. Dedicated Parking (1 vehicle.) Private Entrance. 5 mins to Hwy. 101. NO pets, NO smoking, NO parties, NO drugs. NO BS. NO kidding - please no negotiating. First month's rent $800 security deposit required at move in. llkennett64@gmail.com
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HOMES FOR RENT LARGE MORGAN HILL DUPLEX W/ GARAGE 2bd., 2 ba. Heat and A/C. Clean, excellent location. $2,850/mo + $2,850 dep. No Sec. 8 408.669.7985
LOTS FOR SALE HOLLISTER single family lots with tentative map near new San Benito Sports complex AAA location close to town and shopping with credits asking $84,000/lot
DUPLEX FOR RENT marketplace.gilroydispatch.com For more info contact: classifieds@newsvmedia.com marketplace.sanbenito.com or call 408.842.6400 marketplace.morganhilltimes.com 408.842.5066
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NAME UNIT Isidra Garcia I5 (10x10)
FIREWOOD FOR SALE FIREWOOD FOR SALE Almond fire wood for sale, ready to use & free delivery. Call for price and details. 209.676.0179.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
FOR RENT
FOR RENT DUPLEX in Hollister 1 bedroom; 1 bath inside laundry, water and garbage included suitable for a couple or one person $1,100 a month plus deposit no pets or smoking 831.637.3410
FRIDAY CROSSWORD
TUNING UP
ACROSS 1. Wrong beginning? 4. Begin’s co-Nobelist 9. Dined 14. Bank acct. yield 15. Don’t match 16. Nonsensical 17. Critic __ Louise Huxtable 18. Doo-wop number 19. V-formation fliers 20. Sealed shut 23. Auspices 24. Wirewalker, e.g. 28. Like some bombs and cards 32. Stand for 33. Text-scanning initials 36. Emollientyielding plants
DOWN
38. Airline headquartered near Lod
2. Privately-owned business, informally
39. Unsoiled
3. Coaching legend Amos Alonzo __
43. “__, James!”
4. Tartan wearer
44. Done in
5. “... and to __ good night!”
45. __ appeal 46. Turns inside out 49. Eydie’s partner
LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS
BOSTONISMS
1. Sporty Mazda
6. Most Little League coaches
51. Hung ‘em up
7. Home to most Turks
53. __ of Nantes, 1598
8. Silents actress Bara
57. In great shape
9. Dieter’s concern
61. Pillow-filling fiber
10. Animals that look like flowers
30. Betsy or Diana 31. Colorful ducks
52. Works on socks
11. “Norma __” (Sally Field movie)
33. Earthy tone
54. Worth a ten, maybe
34. Garlic hunk
55. “__, but no cigar!”
35. Convened again
56. Overstrung
37. Letters on some police jackets
58. Save in Tupperware
40. Gaseous
59. Lead-in to “boy” or “girl”
64. Change the price on 65. Long, long time 66. Think the world of
12. Coast Guard off.
67. “Certainly!”
13. Barely-passing grade
68. Chucklehead
21. “__ Master’s Voice”
69. Swarms, as with life
22. Shipping-dept. stamp
70. Bed boards
25. Nuts’ partners
71. Chancellorsville victor
26. “__ of Two Cities” 27. E-mail predecessor 29. Fla. neighbor
41. Step on it, old-style 42. Protests vehemently 47. Tots’ transports 48. Film location 50. Hall, formerly of
“The Tonight Show”
60. Almanac tidbit 61. Krazy __ of old comics 62. Citrus drink 63. “The Gold Bug” author
22
FREE LANCE
DECEMBER 14, 2018