Santa Barbara Independent 6/13/24

Page 1

FREE Santa Barbara JUN. 13-20, 2024 VOL. 38 NO. 961 James
,
, Dirty
, and Dirty Minds also inside
Joyce
Bloomsday
Books
A New Chapter for Chaucer’s Books by Ryan P. Cruz Purple Urchins on PBS by Matt Kettmann
Teachers
Prepare to Picket by Callie Fausey
Plus JUNETEENTH and PRIDE MONTH CELEBRATIONS
Occupation of UCSB’s Girvetz Hall Over by Jack Magargee
2 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM Grant House Sewing Center 336 E. Cota St SB 805.962.0929 HaveFunSewing com Notions, Classes, Machines, Service …did we mention FABRIC!!! 805.504.1963 16 SB Independent - Ad 01 HEAD START YOUR CHILD’S EDUCATION. ENROLL NOW 805-964-8857 CommUnifySB.org
INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 3 Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan 13 Tongues Nov 2 2024-2025 Series Subscriptions on Sale Now! (Single tickets on sale August 2 at 10 AM) Save up to 25% with a Curated series, or Create Your Own series of 4 or more events and save 10% Dance | Great Performances | Word of Mouth | Global Sounds | Jazz Roots | Hear & Now | Speaking with Pico | Vanguard | The WORKS!
8
Mavis Staples, Oct Wynton Marsalis, May
17
Julia Bullock, Oct 4 & Jan 21 Yotam Ottolenghi, Oct 14 Twyla Tharp Dance, Feb 11 Larkin Poe, Apr 27
View the full 2024-2025 lineup at ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Want it all? Get The WORKS! and save 30% on tickets to nearly 50 events.
Yo-Yo Ma, Apr 5

GOLD SPONSORS

18th Annual Champions Dinner

Because of you, CommUnify’s 17th Annual Champions Dinner raised $255,275 for our Family & Youth Services Programs.

DOUBLE DIAMOND SPONSOR

SILVER SPONSORS

BRONZE AND SUPPORTER SPONSORS

IN-KIND SPONSORS

4 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COMwww.CommUnifySB.org
INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 5 2024 SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVAL JUN 12 - AUG 3 MUSICACADEMY.ORG BELL JOSHUA DENK JEREMY MUSIC ACADEMY OF THE WEST MOSHER GUEST ARTISTS CELEBRITY SERIES BEETHOVEN MOZART STRAVINSKY TICKETS ON SALE NOW

PUBLIC NOTICE

Notice of Intent to Adopt a MITIGATED NEGATIVE DECLARATION and ANNOUNCEMENT of a VIRTUAL PUBLIC MEETING

(Study Results Available)

South Coast 101 Drainage Project

Comments will be accepted until July 22, 2024.

If there are no major comments, Caltrans will proceed with the project’s design.

Date: July 10, 2024 Time: 6:00pm

Where: The virtual public meeting can be accessed online at: https://dot.ca.gov/caltrans-near-me/district-5/district-5-current-projects/05-1j910

The California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) proposes to restore 38 culverts located within 22 drainage systems and install Transportation Management System elements at two locations in Santa Barbara County on U.S. Route 101 from the Ventura County line to the Old Coast Highway, 4 miles south of Buellton.

Caltrans has studied the effects this project may have on the environment. Our studies show the project will not significantly affect the quality of the environment, as documented in a report called an Initial Study with Proposed Mitigated Negative Declaration. This notice is to inform you that the Initial Study with Proposed Mitigated Negative Declaration is now available for you to read and comment on. This notice also offers you an opportunity to attend a virtual (online) public meeting.

The Initial Study with Proposed Mitigated Negative Declaration is available for review and copying at the Caltrans District 5 Office at 50 Higuera Street, San Luis Obispo, California 93401, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., as well as the Central Branch of the Santa Barbara Public Libraries system at 40 East Anapamu Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101, Monday through Thursday, from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., Friday and Saturday, from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Sunday from 12:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. The document is also available online at the Caltrans website at https://dot.ca.gov/caltrans-near-me/district-5 Printed copies of the document as well as associated technical studies can be provided upon request.

Read the environmental document and attend the virtual public meeting to learn more about the project. Do you have any concerns about processing the project with an Initial Study with Proposed Mitigated Negative Declaration? Do you disagree with the findings of our study as set forth in the Proposed Mitigated Negative Declaration? Would you care to make any other comments on the project? Please submit your comments in writing by U.S. mail or email no later than July 22, 2024, to Caltrans, Attention: Lucas Marsalek, Department of Transportation, 50 Higuera Street, San Luis Obispo, California 93401, or by email to lucas.marsalek@dot.ca.gov

Submitted comments will be addressed in the final environmental document. If there are no major comments, Caltrans will proceed with the project’s design.

For more information about this project, please contact the District 5 Public Information Office at 805-549-3138 or by email at info-d5@dot.ca.go or Senior Environmental Scientist Lucas Marsalek at 805-458-5408 or by email at lucas.marsalek@dot.ca.gov

BLOCK PARTY

Under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, individuals who require accommodation (American Sign Language Interpreter, accessible seating, documents in alternative formats, etc.) are requested to contact the Caltrans District 5 Public Information Office at 805-549-3138 or by email at info-d5@dot.ca.gov. Telecommunication Devices for the Deaf (TDD) users may contact the California Relay Service line at 1-800-735-2929, Voice Line at 1-800-735-2922, or contact the California Relay Service Teletype Voice Line by dialing 711.

6 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM Pa ci fi c Oc ea n Sa nt a Ba rb ar a Ca rp in te ri a NOT to SCAL END CONSTRUCTION PM 52.2 BEGIN CONSTRUCTION PM 0.0
to Ventura SA NT A BARBAR A CO UN TY Gaviot a St at e Pa rk Ca pi ta n Na pl es Goleta Sa nt a Ba rb ar a Ca rp in te ri a Goleta a
to Pismo
PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD VIRTUAL PUBLIC MEETING
WHAT IS BEING PLANNED? WHERE YOU COME IN? CONTACT SPECIAL ACCOMMODATIONS WHAT’S AVAILABLE? WHY THIS PUBLIC NOTICE?
1 M - M UNE 1 PLATINUM SPONSORS GOLD SPONSORS a local celebration of Black Independence Day
Free activit es for chi dren nc ud ng art books and ibrary serv ces Family Fun Move and groove to loca B ack bands and s ngers ASL nterpretation provided Live Music A curated marketp ace of over 30+ B ack creat ves Black Artisan Market More Information juneteenthsb org @juneteenthsb Voter Registration Get registered to vote qu ckly and eas ly Food Trucks Del c ous b tes for commun ty Games Double dutch and basketbal shooting compet t on 100 GRAY AVENUE SANTA BARBARA CA

Editor in Chief Marianne Partridge Publisher Brandi Rivera

Executive Editor Nick Welsh Senior Editor Tyler Hayden Senior Writer Matt Kettmann

Associate Editor Jackson Friedman Opinions Editor Jean Yamamura Arts, Culture, and Community Editor Leslie Dinaberg

Calendar Editor Terry Ortega Calendar Assistant Lola Watts

News Reporters Ryan P. Cruz, Callie Fausey Senior Arts Writer Josef Woodard

Copy Chief Tessa Reeg Copy Editor Nathan Vived Sports Editor Victor Bryant

Food Writer George Yatchisin Food & Drink Fellow Vanessa Vin Travel Writers Macduff Everton, Mary Heebner

Production Manager Ava Talehakimi Art Director Xavier Pereyra

Production Designer Jillian Critelli Graphic Designer Bianca Castro

Web Content Manager Don Brubaker Social Media Coordinator Stephanie Gerson

Columnists Dennis Allen, Gail Arnold, Sara Caputo, Christine S. Cowles, Roger Durling, Laura Gransberry, Marsha Gray, Betsy J. Green, Melinda Palacio, Cheri Rae, Amy Ramos, Jerry Roberts, Starshine Roshell

Contributors Rob Brezsny, Melinda Burns, Ben Ciccati, Cheryl Crabtree, John Dickson, Camille Garcia, Keith Hamm, Rebecca Horrigan, Eric HvolbØll, Gareth Kelly, Shannon Kelley, Kevin McKiernan, Zoë Schiffer, Ethan Stewart, Tom Tomorrow, Kevin Tran, Maggie Yates, John Zant

Director of Advertising Sarah Sinclair Marketing and Promotions Administrator Richelle Boyd

Advertising Representatives Camille Cimini Fruin, Suzanne Cloutier, Bryce Eller, Remzi Gokmen, Tonea Songer Digital Marketing Specialist Graham Brown

Accounting Administrator Tobi Feldman Operations Administrator Erin Lynch

Office Manager/Legal Advertising Tanya Spears Guiliacci Distribution Gregory Hall Interns Riley Burke, Angel Corzo, Nataschia Hadley, Isabella Leonard, Margaux Lovely, Jack Magargee, Tiana Molony, Caitlin Scialla, Chloe Shanfeld, Josephine Trilling, Sierra van der Brug

Columnist Emeritus Barney Brantingham Photography Editor Emeritus Paul Wellman

Founding Staff Emeriti Audrey Berman, George Delmerico, Richard Evans, Laszlo Hodosy, Scott Kaufman Honorary Consigliere Gary J. Hill IndyKids Bella and Max Brown; Elijah Lee, Amaya Nicole, and William Gene Bryant; Henry and John Poett Campbell; Emilia Imojean Friedman; Finley James Hayden; Ivy Danielle Ireland; Madeline Rose and Mason Carrington Kettmann; Izzy and Maeve McKinley

Print subscriptions are available, paid in advance, for $120 per year. Send subscription requests with name and address to subscriptions@independent.com. The contents of the Independent are copyrighted 2023 by the Santa Barbara Independent, Inc. No part may be reproduced without permission from the publisher. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. A stamped, self-addressed envelope must accompany all submissions expected to be returned. The Independent is available on the internet at independent.com. Press run of the Independent is 25,000 copies. Audited certification of circulation is available on request. The Independent is a legal adjudicated newspaper court decree no. 157386.

Contact information: 1715 State Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 PHONE (805) 965-5205; FAX (805) 965-5518

EMAIL news@independent.com,letters@independent.com,advertising@independent.com

Staff email addresses can be found at independent.com/about-us

James Joyce,

30 FEATURE by Ryan

A New Chapter for Chaucer’s Books

With graduation just around the corner, we want to celebrate our Indy interns who are turning their tassels. This week, we are highlighting graduating senior Isabella Leonard, who has been working with our news team.

What first brought you to the Independent as a news intern? Have you done journalism anywhere else before? I am in the UC Santa Barbara Professional Writing Minor program on the Journalism track, and part of our course is to find an internship for our spring semester. I had never formally done journalism outside of a classroom, so this was an incredible experience. I chose to interview with the Independent because I love their style and coverage, and I wanted experience within a local newsroom.

What has your time interning here been like? What’s been your favorite story to work on? I started interning during my spring quarter in April. I have covered City Council meetings, local events, and featured community programs. My favorite story is my feature on the Housing Authority of Santa Barbara’s Family Self-Sufficiency Program. I loved the opportunity to give space for recognition to local heroes, my interviews were so uplifting, and I was glad to be able to help raise awareness for the program. It was incredible to learn from Ryan [Cruz] and be in the newsroom with Jean [Yamamura], Jackson [Friedman], Callie [Fausey], and Nick [Welsh]. Everyone is so talented while being equally welcoming and supportive.

SUMMER

JUNE 15 – SEPTEMBER 8 1st Thursdays, 5 – 7:30 pm Saturdays & Sundays, 12 – 4 pm

The Family Resource Center becomes a studio for creative play with a new art activity featured each week. This free, interactive space for all ages is designed for the hands-on exploration of themes resonating from the Museum’s changing special exhibitions or permanent collection. It is staffed by a Museum Teaching Artist with Family Gallery Guides and a variety of art-making materials.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 7 INSTAGRAM | @SBINDEPENDENT • TWITTER | @SBINDYNEWS • FACEBOOK | SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT • NEWSLETTER | INDEPENDENT.COM/NEWSLETTERS • SUBSCRIBE | INDEPENDENT.COM/SUBSCRIBE
TABLE of CONTENTS volume 38 #961, Jun. 13-20, 2024 ON THE COVER: Illustration by Ben Ciccati. Design by
Words on Fire 26 COVER STORY NEWS 9 OPINIONS 17 Letters 17 Voices 19 OBITUARIES 20 In Memoriam 21 THE WEEK....................................................33 LIVING 37 FOOD & DRINK 41 Restaurant Guy 43 ARTS LIFE 45 ASTROLOGY 48 CLASSIFIEDS 49
Xavier Pereyra.
Bloomsday, Dirty Books, and Dirty Minds LAST WEEKS IN THE NEWSROOM
COURTESY
FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER | SANTA BARBARA MUSEUM OF ART 1130 STATE STREET | WWW.SBMA.NET
FREE!
8 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM Now featuring fresh bread daily from La Bella Rosa Bakery LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM OCTOBER 27TH THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito St GOLETA 5757 Hollister e Mahatma 2# LONG GRAIN RICE $ 1 99 BANANAS 49 ¢ By the bag BEEF TRI TIP $ 2 59 lb. Chicken LEG QUARTERS 69 ¢ lb. PORK BUTT $ 1 59 lb. $ 2 49 lb. CHORIZO $ 1 98 PORK CHOPS ROMA TOMATOES lb. 89 ¢ FUJI APPLES 89 ¢ lb. MEDIUM YAMS 59 lb. HEAD LETTUCE ea. 79 ¢ PINEAPPLES ea. $ 1 99 MESQUITE CHARCOAL $ 2 89 El Pato 7 oz. HOT TOMATO SAUCE 59 Folgers 8 oz. INSTANT COFFEE $ 5 89 Springfield 15 oz. PEAS & CARROTS 89 ¢ Springfield 8 oz. WHIP TOPPING $ 1 49 Minute Maid 59 oz. ORANGE JUICE $ 3 89 Locally Owned and Operated www.santacruzmarkets.com Now featuring fresh bread daily from LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito St GOLETA 5757 Hollister Ave Mahatma 2# LONG GRAIN RICE 1 99 BANANAS By the bag PORK BUTT 1 59 lb. Thin sliced CARNE RANCHERA 5 98 lb. $ 2 49 lb. Santa Cruz PORK CHORIZO $ 1 98 lb. PORK CHOPS ROMA TOMATOES 89 FUJI APPLES 89 ¢ lb. MEDIUM YAMS 59 HEAD LETTUCE ea. 79 ¢ MESQUITE CHARCOAL 2 89 SAUCE 59 ¢ INSTANT COFFEE 89 PEAS & CARROTS 89 ¢ Springfield 8 oz. WHIP TOPPING $ 1 49 Minute Maid 59 oz. ORANGE JUICE $ 3 89 Now featuring fresh bread daily from La Bella Rosa Bakery LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM OCTOBER 27TH THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND SANTA BARBARA GOLETA 5757 Hollister Ave Mahatma 2# LONG GRAIN RICE $ 1 99 BANANAS 49 ¢ lb. Chicken LEG QUARTERS 69 ¢ lb. PORK BUTT $ 1 59 lb. Thin sliced CARNE RANCHERA $ 2 49 CHORIZO 1 PORK CHOPS ROMA TOMATOES lb. 89 ¢ FUJI APPLES 89 ¢ lb. MEDIUM YAMS 59 ¢ lb. HEAD LETTUCE ea. 79 ¢ PINEAPPLES MESQUITE CHARCOAL $ 2 89 El Pato 7 oz. HOT TOMATO SAUCE 59 ¢ Folgers 8 oz. INSTANT COFFEE $ 5 89 Springfield 15 oz. PEAS & CARROTS 89 ¢ Springfield 8 oz. WHIP TOPPING $ 1 49 Minute Maid 59 oz. ORANGE JUICE $ 3 LIMITED STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM JUNE 13 THROUGH JUNE 19 NO SALES TO DEALERS Support local people working at locally owned businesses! SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito St Now featuring fresh bread daily from La Bella Rosa Bakery LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM OCTOBER 27TH THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito St Mahatma LONG BANANAS 49 ¢ lb. By the bag BEEF TRI TIP $ 2 59 Chicken LEG QUARTERS 69 ¢ lb. PORK BUTT $ 1 59 Thin sliced CARNE RANCHERA $ 5 98 lb. $ 2 49 lb. Santa Cruz PORK CHORIZO $ 1 98 lb. PORK CHOPS ROMA TOMATOES lb. ¢ FUJI APPLES 89 ¢ MEDIUM YAMS 59 ¢ lb. HEAD LETTUCE ea. 79 ¢ PINEAPPLES ea. 1 99 7# MESQUITE El Pato HOT Folgers INSTANT Springfield PEAS Springfield WHIP Minute ORANGE GOLETA 5757 Hollister Ave Now featuring fresh bread daily from La Bella Rosa Bakery LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM OCTOBER 27TH THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito St Mahatma 2# LONG GRAIN $ BANANAS 49 ¢ lb. By the bag BEEF TRI TIP $ 2 59 lb. Chicken LEG QUARTERS 69 ¢ lb. PORK BUTT $ 1 59 lb. Thin sliced CARNE RANCHERA $ 5 98 lb. $ 2 49 lb. Santa Cruz PORK CHORIZO $ 1 98 lb. PORK CHOPS ROMA TOMATOES 89 FUJI APPLES 89 ¢ MEDIUM YAMS 59 ¢ lb. HEAD LETTUCE ea. 79 ¢ PINEAPPLES ea. $ 1 7# MESQUITE $ El Pato 7 oz. HOT TOMATO 59 Folgers 8 oz. INSTANT $ Springfield 15 PEAS & CARROTS Springfield 8 WHIP TOPPING $ Minute Maid ORANGE $ Now featuring fresh bread daily from La Bella Rosa Bakery LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM OCTOBER 27TH THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND SANTABARBARA 324W.MontecitoSt GOLETA 5757Hollister Ave www.santacruzmarkets.com LONGGRAINRICE $1 99 BANANAS Bythebag BEEF TRITIP $2 59 lb. Chicken LEGQUARTERS 69 ¢ lb. PORKBUTT $1 59 lb. Thinsliced CARNE RANCHERA $5 98 lb. $2 49 lb. SantaCruz PORK CHORIZO $1 98 lb. PORKCHOPS ROMATOMATOES 89 ¢ FUJIAPPLES MEDIUMYAMS 59 ¢ lb. HEADLETTUCE ea. 79 ¢ PINEAPPLES ea. $ 1 99 MESQUITECHARCOAL $2 89 ElPato7oz. HOTTOMATO SAUCE 59 ¢ Folgers8oz. INSTANTCOFFEE $5 89 Springfield15oz. PEAS&CARROTS 89 ¢ Springfield8oz. WHIPTOPPING $1 49 MinuteMaid59oz. ORANGEJUICE $3 89 Now featuring fresh bread daily from La Bella Rosa Bakery LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM OCTOBER 27TH THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND SANTABARBARA 324W.MontecitoSt Ave www.santacruzmarkets.com BANANAS 49 Bythebag TRITIP 59 lb. LEGQUARTERS 69 ¢ lb. PORKBUTT $1 59 lb. RANCHERA 98 lb. $2 49 lb. CHORIZO $1 98 lb. PORKCHOPS ROMATOMATOES lb. 89 ¢ FUJIAPPLES 89 ¢ lb. MEDIUMYAMS 59 ¢ lb. HEADLETTUCE ea. 79 ¢ PINEAPPLES ea. $ 1 99 MESQUITECHARCOAL $2 89 ElPato7oz. HOTTOMATO SAUCE 59 ¢ Folgers8oz. Springfield8oz. WHIPTOPPING $1 49 MinuteMaid59oz. ORANGEJUICE $3 89 THANK YOU FOR VOTING US BEST CORNER STORE! Chicken DRUMSTICKS 98¢ lb. GREEN TOMATILLOS 99¢ lb. GREEN CABBAGE 69¢ lb. ROMA TOMATOES 99¢ lb. Beef BACK RIBS $3.98 lb. PORK CHOPS $2.98 lb. LARGE SHRIMP $5.98 lb. RED CHERRIES $1.99 lb. PEACHES & NECTARINES $1.99 lb. RUSSET POTATOES $1.29 PORK SPARE RIBS $3.98 lb. Beef T-BONE STEAKS $6.98 lb. 5 lb. bag We’re WILD about your pets! Now Open Until 7pm For Wellness And Urgent Care. Accepting New Clients! P L E A S E N O M I N AT E U S F O R B E S T P E T H O S P I TA L / C L I N I C wilderanimalhospital.com Single Family Residence 3 Bd / 1 Ba | 1200 Sq ft * plans are ongoing and both sites are subject to change Single Family Residence (Detached ADU) 2 Bd / 1 Ba | One Story 750-800 Sq ft Affordable Homes For Sale 712 E. Cota, Santa Barbara, CA

Teachers Wave ‘Strike Ready’ Signs NEWS of the WEEK

NEWS BR IEFS

ELECTION 2024

Ablur of blue and orange signs lined both sides of Santa Barbara Street on Tuesday evening. The cheerful commotion of hundreds of picketing teachers waving colorful “Strike Ready!” signs echoed for blocks.

The energy could be felt for blocks, too. Picketers were all smiles as car horns blared in solidarity. These members of the Santa Barbara Teachers Association (SBTA) gathered in frustration over wages and slow-going contract negotiations with the Santa Barbara Unified School District, but their positivity that evening was overwhelming.

n Monday, June 10, protesters occupied and barricaded themselves in Girvetz Hall on the UC Santa Barbara campus, stating in a social media post that they would not leave until their demands are met. The self-proclaimed “autonomous group of students, workers, and community members” is a collective of unidentified and masked individuals going by the title “Say Genocide UCSB.”

According to a campus-wide email sent by Chancellor Henry T. Yang, these individuals entered Girvetz Hall early Monday morning and “intimidated custodial staff and ordered them to leave.” The group had obstructed exterior entryways, prevented access to classrooms, and restricted scheduled final exams from occurring.

At 1 a.m. on Wednesday, UCSB sent an emergency notification campus-wide warning of a “large-scale operation occurring near Girvetz Hall,” telling students and faculty to avoid the area. By 1:10 a.m., the Arbor walkway was full with officers from the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Special Enforce-

ment Team and UCSB Police Department; armored vehicles and police SUVs, as well as a K-9 Unit, served as backup. As officers streamed out of their vehicles, dressed in full riot gear with helmets, masks, riot shields, and police batons, students and faculty quickly and excitedly surrounded them. Bystanders watched, turning on their cameras and speaking in apprehensive tones to those around them, as pro-Palestine supporters chanted and jeered at the reticent law enforcement.

Over the course of two hours, officers tactically cordoned off all access points into Girvetz Hall and conducted a thorough sweep of the building. However, by the time officers had arrived, the occupiers had exited. No arrests were made, and there was no physical confrontation between protesters, law enforcement, or counter-protesters; the UCSB Gaza Liberated Zone the pro-Palestinian encampment that has occupied the lawn outside Davidson Library since May 1 remains in place.

As the school year comes to an end, the image of law enforcement on UCSB’s campus is one that students, faculty, and the campus

“Teachers have really been upset with the stalling, and it’s energized us; it’s mobilized us,” said SBTA President Hozby Galindo. “We’ve always been willing to negotiate. But if the district isn’t willing to take the next step, then we’re ready to strike.”

The SBTA organizing team crafted 450 picket signs. Little by little, those signs made their way into the hands of teachers and supporters on the street outside of the District Office, where the night’s school board meeting was about to begin.

“We recognize and value the teachers union’s right to use all avenues provided during labor negotiations to ensure they are compensated at the highest possible salary,” the district said in a statement. “We are committed to reaching an agreement, keeping schools open, and letting fiscal facts lead our negotiations.”

The union has consistently reiterated that they do not want to strike. But it hinges on whether or not a settlement could be reached during the last stage of the negotiations impasse process, called fact-finding, which took place on Wednesday, June 12, after publication deadline.

Read more at Independent.com.

community won’t soon forget in a year that saw numerous protests, a short-lived academic workers strike, and uncertainty surrounding commencement ceremonies.

Occupiers had blocked windows and doors using chairs and tables, covered classroom windows, and displayed a number of banners calling for UCSB to divest from military and defense corporations. In an anonymous letter to “the University,” also posted on social media, the collective demands include the following:

That Chancellor Yang publish an email stating “the university agrees with the International Court of Justice ruling that labeled the Genocide in Palestine as such under international law.”

That “all future emails” from the UCSB administration connected to Palestine “acknowledge the situation abroad as a ‘Genocide’ in ‘Palestine.’”

That “full legal and academic amnesty” is secured for those participating in the action to take and hold Girvetz Hall.

On a ground-floor classroom was an exhibit representative of a war scene. The classroom the only internally visible part

The Santa Barbara City Council unanimously agreed on 6/11 to place a half-cent sales tax increase on the November 2024 ballot. The increase, if approved by more than 50 percent of voters, could bring in up to $15.6 million a year in revenues. Officially, the council adopted a resolution to submit the measure for the general municipal election on 11/5, and an ordinance authorizing the city tax once approved by voters. Last week, the council got a rundown on the new tax, recommended by city staff to bring in steady income and offset the city’s slow revenue growth and skyrocketing costs of business. The half-cent increase would bring the city’s tax rate to 9.25 percent and would go toward public safety, housing, and homelessness.

COMMUNITY

Dozens of Mesa residents brought out their lawn chairs 6/5 to learn about the planned improvements for the beloved Douglas Family Preserve. Parks and Rec aims to “balance the park’s mix of recreational uses with the need to preserve the area’s natural resources, including native vegetation and wildlife.” Improvements include habitat restoration, wildfire prevention, hazardous tree removal, and trail maintenance. It is part of a citywide initiative to restore 18 of its natural open spaces and reduce wildfire risks. The preserve’s endowment will fund the improvements alongside a $3 million Cal Fire grant through the city’s Wildfire Resiliency Project. Read more at independent.com/community.

The Reverend James Lawson, a right-hand strategist for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s nonviolent fight for civil rights, died on 6/11 after a short illness in Los Angeles. Lawson often visited Santa Barbara from his home pulpit as pastor of L.A.’s Holman United Methodist Church, from which he retired in 1999. Lawson met King in 1957, after he’d lived in India for three years as a Methodist missionary, learning Gandhi’s theory of nonviolence. Though an advocate of peaceful ways, Lawson was not one to mince words. When he came to Santa Barbara for MLK Day in 2020, he said of then-President Trump, “This is the first tyrant at this level we’ve ever had.”

PUBLIC SAFETY

Highway 101 through Santa Barbara came to a standstill early 6/7, when nine vehicles collided in three separate incidents, all triggered by a box truck loaded with vegetables caroming off the left guardrail and flipping to its side on a damp, foggy morning. The sideways Isuzu truck was struck by a Dodge pickup truck, which became disabled, said CHP Officer Jonathan Gutierrez, who flipped through 14 reports of accidents on the 101 that day. Another driver saw the collision ahead and braked hard, losing control of his pickup. He veered left, ran into a Honda sedan, and the Dodge coupe behind them collided with the guardrail and the Honda as it tried to slow down. As the traffic flow faltered from these accidents, four other cars crashed before highway traffic ground to a halt.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 9
JUNE 6-13, 2024
LABOR COMMUNITY
For the latest news and longer versions of many of these stories, visit independent.com/news Occupation of UCSB’s Girvetz Hall
Law Enforcement Called to Clear Protesters Demanding University ‘Say Genocide’
with INDEPENDENT STAFF
Over
CALLIE FAUSEY CONT’D ON PAGE 11 INGRID BOSTROM
CONT’D ON PAGE 10

COUNTY

Prudent Budget Cutting at the County

Santa

Barbara county supervisors heard, once again, that the $1.59 billion budget had very little wiggle room.

Growth in property tax revenue 79 percent of the budget not tied to a specific was weakened by slowing home sales due to higher interest rates, Budget Director Paul Clementi explained. The largest overall revenue source was state and federal grants and funds, but California’s projected $27.6 billion gap made the county’s budget-cutting process a cautious one.

ioral wellness, child support services, First 5, public health, and social services. Public Safety has the next highest number; this category includes court special services, district attorney, fire, probation, public defender, and sheriff’s offices.

State funding to Public Health, Behavioral Wellness, and Social Services is of concern, Clementi said. All departments were asked to make no new funding requests, and they all complied.

Altogether, the county employs the equivalent of 4,644 full-timers. Most are in Health & Human Services, such as behav-

The county was toeing a “Prudence and Progress” line, prudently putting $9.6 million toward projects to avoid the debt service on money borrowed. Another $5.2 million was being set aside for homeless services at Hope Village and La Posada in case anticipated funding did not come through.

The five supervisors thanked department heads for their prudence. Steve Lavagnino of Santa Maria said the continued funding of nearly $5 million to libraries and more than a million to warming shelters, veterans, youth safety, and other community grants reflected the county’s priorities. Jean Yamamura

of the building depicted fake dead bodies covered in rubble, dust, and blood with chairs overturned and large rocks littering the floor. Red paint covered the outward facing wall with a chalkboard reading, “SAY GENOCIDE.”

As students and faculty members watched from the Arbor walkway and Davidson Library, the protesters erected two flagpoles: one flying the Palestinian flag; the other, an upside-down American flag. The Say Genocide protesters used the rooftop of Girvetz Hall as a platform to express their support for Palestine and keep a watchful eye for UCSB administration, law enforcement, or counter-protesters. A call to “mobilize” was made on the group’s Instagram account after rumors were spread of a potential police raid on the building. No raid was conducted by law enforcement by any kind.

However, at around 11:25 p.m., according to social media reports, counter-protesters attempting to remove the American flag got into a physical altercation with protesters, leading to minor injuries to some of the proPalestinian demonstrators.

On Monday, the UCSB administration

had only interacted privately with the protesters. An unconfirmed letter from Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Margaret Klawunn communicated to the group that the administration has received their demands. Klawunn had stated they were open to having discussions with the collective as well as other campus protest groups like the Gaza Liberated Zone an encampment formed on May 1 between Davidson Library and North Hall but required the protesters to “vacate the building immediately.”

In a response on social media, Say Genocide called the letter “a cowardly move by the administration to pacify direct action and divide pro-Palestinian student organizing.”

In his letter to the campus community, Chancellor Yang stressed that “Everyone in our community has been deeply distressed by the violence in Israel and Gaza and the devastating loss of Israeli and Palestinian lives.”

“Our principles of community have been strained,” he wrote, as the administration has battled with maintaining the right to free speech and community efforts to “pursue our educational mission.” n

10 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 6-13, 2024
HALL OCCUPATION CONT’D FROM P.9
GIRVETZ
JACK MAGARGEE
AMAZING REWARDS. SB Independent - Ad 02 APPLY NOW 805-964-8857 CommUnifySB.org Another great CommUnify program. Goleta Valley Art Association Saturday June 15th • 10 am - 4 pm Camino Real Marketplace, Goleta Live music 1 pm - 4 pm with Greg LeRoy GVAA will donate a portion of proceeds to "Dignity Moves" TheGoletaValleyArtAssociation.org Presents: “The Summer Show & Sale at the Marketplace”
Officers with the Sheriff’s Special Enforcement Team swept UCSB’s Girvetz Hall — including a classroom staged by protesters to look like a war scene — early June 12.
TEACHERS WANTED.
“Playtime at Sunset” by Colleen Janee “Santa Barbara Palms” by Vandana Khare

City Budget Adopted

Deficit Lands at $7.4M; Parking, Waterfront Fees Discussed

Santa Barbara City Council finalized its budget Tuesday, with a few last-minute tweaks to the downtown parking program and an intense discussion over a proposed increase in waterfront slip fees.

When all was said and done after factoring in the council’s changes, the expected $220 million in revenues, an estimated $224.6 million in expenditures, and an extra $2.9 million the city had to use to meet its reserve policy target the city’s deficit landed at $7.4 million.

Finance Director Keith DeMartini and Budget Manager Natalija Glusac were back in front of the council to present the final version of the budget, running through the late additions and amendments recommended by staff and councilmembers.

One of these late changes was with the Downtown Parking Program, which is expected to use up the remainder of its reserves next year. City staff had recommended a major overhaul of the program, which would have implemented paid onstreet parking for the first time in the city’s history.

During a special budget hearing in May, the council reversed course, instead recommending that the free period be extended to 90 minutes and directing staff to look at other ways to fund the program.

Eventually, the council agreed to maintain the 75-minute complimentary period in city lots and garages although Councilmember Kristen Sneddon still stood firm in her support for a 90-minute free period, saying it would help bring people back downtown. The city will also draw $200,000 from its “Clean Communities” fund to cover downtown corridor maintenance and several downtown parking capital projects will now be funded through Measure C. But going forward, City Council asked that staff look into reclassifying the downtown parking fund altogether, changing it from a self-sustaining enterprise fund to a program supported by the city’s general fund.

The council nearly made a last-minute change to the plan to increase waterfront slip fees by 10 percent. One boat harbor resident described the sudden jump to another 10 percent could price him and other liveaboards and fisherman out of the harbor.

“It would become available only to the wealthy,” he said.

Waterfront Director Mike Wiltshire explained that, because the Waterfront Department is an enterprise fund that must pay for all of its own operations, it must do so by either raising parking fees, slip fees, or adjusting leases at the harbor.

Even the 10 percent increase is “still not enough” to bring the waterfront out of the red, Wiltshire said, though it could keep the department from falling further behind.

“It is a tough pill to swallow,” Wiltshire said. “But these dollars are what are required to make us a financially sustainable operation.”

City Council went back and forth on the fee increases with Councilmember Meagan Harmon floating the middle-ground compromise of 5 percent, though eventually it became clear that reducing the expected revenues even that much could cost the city more than $300,000.

After trying to work out the logistics, the council ultimately decided to increase slip fees by 10 percent. Four of the seven councilmembers voted in favor of the increase, with councilmembers Harmon and Sneddon opposed (Mayor Randy Rowse, who owns a boat in the harbor, recused himself from the vote).

Council agreed to adopt the remainder of the budget with minor changes and a few directions to city staff, including having the harbor commission find ways to make it affordable for liveaboards and to schedule a city meeting to take a deeper dive into the long list of proposed capital projects.

“I’m just not sure that every single one of the capital projects that we’re looking at are worth it at this point where we are economically,” said Councilmember Sneddon. “Seems to me that even delaying one project could balance our budget.” n

Audrey, the Santa Barbara Zoo’s 16-yearold female Masai giraffe (pictured), died after “presenting vague symptoms” on 6/6, said zoo spokesperson Jennifer Zacharias. Though her death was “unexpected,” Zacharias said, “Audrey was considered a geriatric giraffe.” Audrey’s cause of death will be determined through a necropsy (animal autopsy) and pathology report. Born at the L.A. Zoo in 2008, Audrey came to the S.B. Zoo in 2010 to breed with Michael (who died last year, also at the age of 16). In total, Audrey had four living calves with Michael, each of which went on to have calves of their own, “resulting in seven grand-calves at zoos across the country.”

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 11 CONT’D NEWS of the WEEK
CITY
NEWS BRIEFS CONT’D FROM P.9 ANIMALS
S.B. ZOO CONT’D ON PAGE 12

Chaucer's Books

UC Academic Workers Halt Strike

Academic workers at UCSB and five other UC campuses returned to work on Monday in compliance with a courtordered mandate to pause their strike.

The Orange County Superior Court ruled last Friday to halt all strikes hosted by the United Auto Workers of America (UAW) 4811 after a lawsuit was filed against the union by the UC system. The lawsuit came after the UC twice failed to end the strike, which it has described as “illegal,” through the California Public Employment Relations Board (PERB), the agency with the jurisdiction to act on unfair labor practices for state employees.

“We are extremely grateful for a pause in this strike so our students can complete their academic studies,” said Melissa Matella, associate vice president for Systemwide Labor Relations, in a statement from UC last Friday.

The UAW 4811, a union representing

TRANSPORTATION

The work to make Highway 101 through Montecito two lanes plus a carpool lane will soon turn the center median into a new lane on the northbound side. That, however, will not yet result in three lanes but only two. Once the median paving is firm, the two northbound lanes between San Ysidro and Olive Mill roads will shift over to the left. To avoid the bridge supports at the road overpasses, one lane will run in the median, and the other will run in the current southbound fast lane. Once the three lanes are completed about a year from now, the project tackles the remaining space between Olive Mill and Sycamore Creek, which runs near the zoo. Read more at independent.com/transportation.

EDUCATION

Following a sudden change that would have relocated seven of nine commencement ceremonies from the traditional lawn bordering the lagoon a move that sparked two separate online petitions that garnered nearly 9,000 signatures in three days UCSB announced 6/6 that the graduation ceremonies would be returned to their original location on the Commencement Green. The university also announced it would amend the recently changed ticketing procedures. Students had been told they would get a maximum of six tickets each, but now each ticket will admit two people into the ceremony, allowing students to bring up to 12 guests. Read more at independent .com/education.

teaching assistants and student researchers throughout all UC institutions, has been striking over what it describes as the UC system’s unfair labor practices related to crackdowns on pro-Palestinian protests at multiple campuses across the state.

On Monday, UAW 4811 President Rafael Jaime announced the union would comply with the court order to pause the strike, adding that the union had broken off mediation with UC and was shifting its focus to prepare for the upcoming trial regarding PERB’s complaint filed against the UC system earlier this month.

Following the first union strike rally at the UCSB campus on June 3, many final exams and papers typically graded by teaching assistants had to be altered or suspended due to the quickly approaching end of the spring quarter. According to Madeline Vailhe, chair of UCSB’s chapter of the UAW, most TAs and academic workers reached out to professors after returning to work following the weeklong strike to catch up on any responsibilities in the classroom. But even with finals week nearly over and commencement coming up this weekend, the union is anything but finished, Vailhe said. “The workers on our campus have a lot more energy to fight this.” Angel Corzo

S.B. Unified conducted its first community outreach meeting on 6/6 in anticipation of its new housing development for teachers on the city’s Eastside at the abandoned Parma School site, where approximately 30 affordable units managed by the city’s Housing Authority are planned. The development’s would-be neighbors expressed a variety of concerns at the meeting: what would the project’s impacts be on parking and traffic, could they speed up the two-year timeline, and what about the teachers who don’t meet the project’s low-income threshold? The Housing Authority’s Rob Fredericks responded that they were providing more parking than required and would likely be used, a traffic analysis is planned, they were hoping to “gain priority with the city” on permitting, and there will be a “big pool of eligible renters” at the Parma site the “first of many projects,” added school boardmember Gabe Escobedo.

Children in the Santa Barbara Unified School District received 5,500 books in an act to further foster and strengthen literacy in the community. The Santa Barbara Education Foundation (SBEF) in partnership with Louis Torres, founder of Lantern Tree Books in Carpinteria, distributed the books to students in grades K-3, continuing the efforts of the district’s new literacy curriculum for the 2023-2024 fiscal year. The SBEF accumulated more than $83,000 for the Open Books Project the foundation’s initiative to get more books out to children in the district in order to improve literacy rates. Read more at independent .com/education.

12 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 6-13, 2024
LABOR
INGRID BOSTROM NEWS BRIEFS CONT’D FROM P.11 CONT’D ON PAGE 15
Over 150,000 Titles for Every Age & Interest! Open 9:00am-8:00pm Daily 3321 State Street, Loreto Plaza 805-682-6787 • www.chaucersbooks.com
UCSB workers joined the strike on June 3.
Your Local Independent Bookseller Since 1974

COUNTY

BeWell Gets $85M for Drug Programs

The county supervisors voted unanimously on Tuesday to extend the agreement between the state’s Department of Healthcare Services and the county’s Behavioral Wellness Department (BeWell) by three years. This means an additional $85 million in state and federal funding for BeWell’s substanceuse disorder programs for beneficiaries of Medi-Cal, bringing the six-year total maximum contract amount to nearly $170 million for the period of July 2021 to June 2027.

In 2018, the state took a new approach to offering and funding drug services through Medi-Cal, called “the organized delivery system,” which is used by the county today. This system expanded the county’s offerings to include residential treatment, withdrawal management, and case management services, said BeWell Director Toni Navarro.

Not every county uses the organized delivery system, but Navarro said that Santa Barbara County’s program which serves about 3,000 individuals each year “has been very successful.”

“And so, it’s imperative that we keep going,” said Navarro, “in the context of a county that is really struggling with such

Legendary Agent Lee Gabler Dies Nominate Via Maestra

Legendary talent agent Lee Gabler, who helped create the iconic films and television shows of the past half-century, died on June 3 of a brain injury at the age of 84. He had lived in Hope Ranch for the past several decades, where he and his family kept bees and grew herbs and flowers, fruit trees, and chardonnay vines.

The son of Milt Gabler, who released Billie Holiday’s “Strange Fruit” on his Commodore label when Columbia turned her down, Lee Gabler got his start in the mailroom of Ashley-Steiner-Famous Artists in New York City. One of his first assignments was to book variety acts for The Ed Sullivan Show. The Ashley agency formed ICM (International Creative Management), sending Gabler to Los Angeles, where he was involved in what can only be called a series of hit programming and films.

Among his clients in the 1970s and ’80s was MTM, or Mary Tyler Moore productions, which backed the film Terms of Endearment, the winner of the Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director (James L. Brooks), Best Actress (Shirley MacLaine), Best Supporting Actor (Jack Nicholson), and Best Adapted Screenplay (Brooks, from Larry McMurtry’s novel). By 1982, Gabler was recruited by CAA (Creative Artists Agency), now one of the top agencies in the business. He became head of the television division in 1989 and co-chair and managing partner in 1996. At CAA, he represented David Letterman, including during Letterman’s dramatic

a fentanyl epidemic and the rise of methamphetamine.”

Melissa Wilkins, the division chief for the BeWell Alcohol and Drug Programs, stressed that this contract renewal is “absolutely critical,” as BeWell is the primary provider of substance-use-disorder treatments for county beneficiaries. “This contract allows us as a county to continue to provide those services,” said Wilkins.

Navarro said she and her team have seen steady participation and that the program has positively impacted the community.

For example, for the 2021 calendar year, Santa Barbara County exceeded the statewide “penetration rate” a figure comparing the estimated number of Medi-Cal members who have drug-use disorders and qualify for services with the number of those who actually access those services by nearly 70 percent, according to the fiscal year 2022-23 Behavioral Health External Quality Review.

Santa Barbara County’s penetration rate was higher than that of counties of a similar size. Wilkins said that this number does not necessarily reflect the number of active addicts in the county but suggests a significant increase in people who sought help.

COMMUNITY

move from NBC to late-night at CBS, which won his client complete ownership of the show. Gabler was involved with Aaron Spelling Beverly Hills 90210, Melrose Place Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Partners, American Idol, Everybody Loves Raymond, The West Wing, Mad Men, and Sabrina the Teenage Witch

His clients knew him to be a trusted advisor “boldly pursuing new heights for the television business, leaving a legacy of indelible contributions,” a statement from Sony Pictures described. He believed, “A good deal is where everybody walks away happy,” and in collaboration: An individual might create the idea, but “a company and the individuals in it will accomplish much more if they adopt the ‘we’ concept as a basic.”

With his wife, Elizabeth Gabler, Lee established the Gabler Promise Scholars Writing Program at UC Santa Barbara in 2019. The program mentors students from under-resourced and underrepresented groups for a full year of personal, creative, academic, and civic writing development. Elizabeth Gabler graduated from UCSB with a degree in literature and heads Sony Pictures’ division 3000 Pictures. They similarly set up the Gabler Writing Partners Program at NYU/Gallatin School.

Funeral services will be private, but a celebration of life takes place later this summer. The family suggested a donation to UCLA Neurosurgery Research and Education in lieu of flower tributes.

Jean Yamamura

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 13 CONT’D NEWS of the WEEK
BEST Italian Restaurant! 3343 State st. · 805.569.6522 Open Mon.-Sat. 8:30 am-9pm · Sunday 10am-8pm Open for Breakfast Catering Available
for

Cottage Gynecologic Oncology Clinic

Cottage Gynecologic Oncology Clinic is pleased to welcome Sumit Mehta, MD, and Heather Merrick, PA-C.

Dr. Mehta and Ms. Merrick have joined Dr. Anne Rodriguez in providing comprehensive services and personalized treatment for gynecologic and breast cancers.

SERVICES INCLUDE:

• Comprehensive assessments and diagnostic procedures

• Diagnosis and staging to determine the severity of the disease

• Surgical interventions, including minimally invasive and robotic surgeries

• Chemotherapy treatment

• Immunotherapy treatment

• Ongoing cancer surveillance

PATIENTS THROUGH EVERY STAGE OF CANCER

To make an appointment, please call 805-324-9144

For more information, visit cottagehealth.org/gynonc

2400 Bath St., Suite 102 Santa Barbara, CA 93105

14 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
GUIDING
Anne Rodriguez, MD Medical Director Sumit Mehta, MD Heather Merrick, PA-C

Hot Springs Tensions Boil Over

Though the Los Padres hot springs have existed since geologic time, they became a worldwide phenomenon during the pandemic when social media led hikers to their exact locations, past gated homes, and up the rock-strewn trail. Their vehicles began parking every where and complaints from residents have continued to this day.

A dozen man-made soaking pools and the occasional campfire ring also testify to the hundreds of visitors who have been arriving day and night. It’s a situation that makes homeowners who lived through the devastating Tea Fire in 2008 very nervous.

Things came to a head recently, when a hiker came upon residents dismantling some pools. Videos recorded an exchange of verbal taunting and some scuffling.

On Saturday, June 11, residents gathered at Cold Spring School to meet with Roy Lee, the incoming 1st District supervisor. Also present were Los Padres National Parks head district ranger Daryl Hodges and representatives from fire and law enforcement. The meeting was organized by Joe Cole, an attorney who represented homeowners in the suit against the county, and is a shareholder in this publication.

Residents complained about the cars, especially when RVs and vans parked overnight, but also that strangers, presumably hikers, had broken into their homes, jumped into their swimming pools, graffitied their mailboxes, used their water hoses, and peered through their windows.

CANNABIS

fire are routed to law enforcement and the Montecito fire department. Fire Chief David Neels, a 35-year veteran firefighter, emphasized that residents must let them know immediately if fire is involved.

Neels said that on May 10, his firefighters made the 50-minute hike up the trail to tell a camper that fires were prohibited. On May 30, firefighters went after six people carrying lighted tiki torches. “We removed the torches, but education was a challenge,” Neels said. “They just hadn’t experienced the disasters the way we have.”

Lee, who’d opened the meeting saying he was there to listen and learn, ended it by saying, “You can count on me to work with all the agencies. Come January, I hope we will have a solid plan,” Lee said. “I hope we see more smiles and less frowns.”

Jean Yamamura

CONT’D FROM P.12

Central Coast Agriculture, the operator of a large cannabis manufacturing lab in Lompoc, will pay $1.3 million to the Santa Barbara County Air Pollution Control District (APCD) to settle penalties associated with clean air violations, authorities said on 7/6. From 2020 through 2023, district officials said, the lab at 1201 West Chestnut Avenue and 1200 West Laurel Avenue was a major source of reactive organic compounds gases that contribute to the production of ozone on hot, sunny days. The Lompoc lab is believed to be one of the largest in the county, if not the state. For several years, despite multiple warnings and notices of violation, it was operating without permits or “best available” technology for air pollution control, said Aeron Arlin Genet, the APCD executive director. Read more at independent.com/cannabis n

Sunday11:30amFriday - Saturday 11:30am -

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 15 NEWS of the WEEK MONTECITO COURTESY JUNE 6-13, 2024
COURTESY
NEWS
1012 State Street ChaseRestaurant.com (805-965-4351 Sunday - Thursday 11:30am
9pm Friday - Saturday 11:30am - 10pm Sunday
Friday - Saturday
ITALIAN
CUISINE
ITALIAN NEW YORK STYLE
HAPPY
COMPLIMENTARY FRIES CATERING & EVENTS
BRIEFS
-
- Thursday 11:30am - 9pm
11:30am - 10pm
NEW YORK STYLE
CUISINE
HOUR SUNDAY-THURSDAY 4:30-6:30 PM

Top Cat

THANK YOU to Our Sponsors

THANK YOU to Our Sponsors

Our annual fundraising gala, Basil’s Big Bash, was a huge success thanks to our fantastic sponsors. Thank you for your support!

Our annual fundraising gala, Basil’s Big Bash, was a huge success thanks to our fantastic sponsors. Thank you for your support!

Top Cat

Rebecca & Jim Craig ■ Julie & Roger Davis

Rebecca & Jim Craig ■ Julie & Roger Davis

Tessa & Rachel Kaganoff

Tessa & Rachel Kaganoff

Bernard Kelmenson ■ Dan Kelmenson

Bernard Kelmenson ■ Dan Kelmenson

The Cat’s Meow

The Cat’s Meow

Karen & John Jostes

Karen & John Jostes

Cool Cat

Cool Cat

Robert & Linda Badal ■ Leslie Brtek ■ Charles & Jan Clouse

Robert & Linda Badal ■ Leslie Brtek ■ Charles & Jan Clouse

Dana Goba ■ Louise & Ron Moore

Dana Goba ■ Louise & Ron Moore

Farrokh & Sally Nazerian

Farrokh & Sally Nazerian

Helene Segal & George Konstantinow

Helene Segal & George Konstantinow

Kate Silsbury ■ Wallin Studios

Kate Silsbury ■ Wallin Studios

Cat’s Pajamas

Cat’s Pajamas

Kathi Backus ■ Paula Yurkanis Bruice ■ Marco Innocenti & Jill Title

Kathi Backus ■ Paula Yurkanis Bruice ■ Marco Innocenti & Jill Title

Renee de Jong ■ Ellen & Bob Lilley ■ Donna Peterson & Nick Pierce

Renee de Jong ■ Ellen & Bob Lilley ■ Donna Peterson & Nick Pierce

Lisa Reich & Bob Johnson ■ Paul & Isabel Wendt

Lisa Reich & Bob Johnson ■ Paul & Isabel Wendt

Cat Nip

Cat Nip

Anonymous ■ Kaitlyn & John Bathel ■ Ruth & Stuart Birdt

Anonymous ■ Kaitlyn & John Bathel ■ Ruth & Stuart Birdt

Emilda Jaccard ■ Jonathan Lipsitz ■ Victoria Manthe & Rodolfo Fidler

Emilda Jaccard ■ Jonathan Lipsitz ■ Victoria Manthe & Rodolfo Fidler

Sherry Maudsley ■ Leslee & Jeffrey Sipress ■ Lynda & Bear Thompson

Sherry Maudsley ■ Leslee & Jeffrey Sipress ■ Lynda & Bear Thompson

Jan Traphagen ■ Stephanie Welch

Jan Traphagen ■ Stephanie Welch

In-Kind Event Partners

&

16 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
In-Kind
Event Partners
Robert & Linda Badal Lori Bailey Chef Jon-Westley Jackson Crist Ray Hunter Madam Galbraith Palm Reading Natalie Montoya Steve Jones Kate Silsbury Isabel & Paul Wendt Ron Williams Photography
Lori
Robert
Linda Badal
Bailey Chef Jon-Westley Jackson Crist Ray Hunter
Palm
Madam Galbraith
Reading
Natalie Montoya Steve Jones Kate Silsbury
Ron Williams Photography Ray Hunter Madam Galbraith Palm Reading Natalie Montoya
Silsbury
Isabel & Paul Wendt
Kate

Trees Shade Habitat

I just read the excellent and timely article in the Independent on the Urban Mini-Forest by Dennis Allen. The City of Santa Barbara is creating an urban heat zone by removing and not adding trees at the Central Library and De la Guerra upgrades. The city is also getting ready to cut down 35 mature trees with amazing canopies at the corner of Santa Barbara and East Cota streets, where we are also losing the Saturday farmers’ market to the new police station.

Think of the rich and abundant mix of nature plants, trees, birds, and insects that will vanish after 20 more years. Where does nature find a home as large as this? The city will arrange tree plantings to replace the Urban Forest, but where? The Amazon?

I photographed some of the trees in the parking lot tied with a blue ribbon to give notice of the trees and all the habitat that will be cut down. In the northern forest area in the U.S., this is what the locals call the Blue Line Disease it is fatal, with no recovery.

We need to gather as a community to honor the life of these trees and the gifts of nature before they are cut down sometime after September 2024.

—Wesley Roe, S.B.

Fly the Flag

Flag Day is June 14, and I encourage you to display the United States of America flag this Friday. President Woodrow Wilson issued a proclamation in 1916 establishing June 14 as Flag Day.

—Anthony Dal Bello, S.B.

One-Sided Reporting

Reporting on housing is one-sided. There may be a lack of affordable rental housing, but take a look at Craigslist, which is the largest source of rentals for many, perhaps most, renters. Many single room and one-bedroom rentals are listed daily from about $1,100 to $1,900 per month.

Regarding “renovictions,” there have been two examples mentioned in the local media this past year one near UC Santa Barbara and the other close to S.B. City College. What are other examples, if this is widespread? Santa Barbara’s rental housing issues won’t be solved by stigmatizing and punishing

providers of housing or promoting gentrification housing projects on ag land the current approach of policy-makers. A better plan is to encourage more room rentals and accessory dwelling units (ADUs).

Just One More

Tax increases, whether Santa Barbara County’s hotel bed tax (2 percent) or the City of Santa Barbara’s sales tax (0.5 percent), must go to a vote by the people. Most, but not all, the people posting at Instagram found the ideas unpalatable but had suggestions:

daget24: Bro please bro just one more tax bro, just one more tax bro I promise, one more tax bro and we’ll have enough money bro I promise bro just one more tax and we’ll have enough money. • cordonofsantabarbara: Let’s please not try to kill tourism and leave a little money for small businesses to thrive. • mxx_frrs: Please apply this to all Airbnb, etc. Give us our local housing back.

thestouff: If they are “searching for a way to stop expenses from growing faster than revenues” perhaps we could start with the expenses part? • suzcohensb: The budget is over $680 million for a city of 85,000 people. For comparison, Santa Maria has a budget of $330 million for a city of 110,000 people and Oxnard has a budget of $235 million for a city of 200,000 people. • lori_raf: Maybe I’d be more inclined if it was just a quarter-cent raise, but they didn’t do the math on that for us, did they?

littleval.73: No! Actually do something to make us locals want to be here. This council keeps squeezing us because they don’t want or have the collective intelligence to create solutions. Add a roller rink and people will come downtown and other businesses will flourish even the parking garages.

Boom and Bust

Thanks for the coverage of the SpaceX launches. The sonic booms are rattling my windows and knocking things down. I’m concerned that they are going to break my large patio single-pane glass panels. —Matthew Paprocki, Ojai

The Independent welcomes letters of less than 250 words that include a daytime phone number for verification. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Send to: Letters, S.B. Independent, 1715 State St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101; or fax: 965-5518; or email: letters@independent.com. Unabridged versions and more letters appear at independent.com/opinions

A Special FiestaInvitation!

As our community celebrates the 100th Anniversary of our beloved Fiesta, you are invited to join the exclusive 100th Fiesta Society.

This exclusive membership is limited to the first 100 people who donate $1,000 to help offset the costs of special 100 Year activities.

In recognition of this unique and limited membership, 100th Fiesta Society members will receive a limited-edition lapel pin and leather badge, and will be acknowledged on the sbfiesta.org website.

Members, and a guest, will also be invited to a private Fiesta reception, exclusively for Sponsors and Society members.

Details on how to join at sbfiesta.org, or by calling 805.962.8101.

The 100th Anniversary Fiesta will be big! It runs July 31-August 4

Viva la Fiesta, y Viva el Centenario!

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 17
POLITICALCARTOONS.COM OPINIONS Letters
“GUILTY VERDICTS” BY DAVE WHAMOND, CANADA, Photos courtesy SB Historical Museum and Fritz Olenberger.
18 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM Learn to Speak Spanish with A lonso B enavides , ph d SIGLO XXI SPANISH LANGUAGE INSITUTE www . sigloxxispanish . com 805-252-9512 Spontaneous communication is more efficient and effective than canned dialogue or recorded conversations. Native and Highly Qualified Teachers Maximum 6 students per class. One Hour/Week for 10 weeks: $300 Two Hours/Week for 10 weeks: $600 Private one-on-one $98 per hour Package of 10 sessions: $950 JULY 8 – SEPTEMBER 13 EVENING AND WEEKEND CLASSES Learn to Speak Spanish with Alonso Benavides, ph.d. april 6 - june 26, 2020 Day and Evening Classes and Saturdays Santa Barbara SPANISH LANGUAGE INSITUTE SIGLO 21 Details: spanishschoolsbca.com 805-252-9512 Our method calls for small groups (6 maximum) and conversation as soon as it is possible 12 sessions $350 24 sessions $700 Private $90 hr. Special semester package: 12 one-hour sessions $980 CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH
2559 Puesta del Sol Santa Barbara, CA 93105 sbnature .org JUN 13 - JUL 7 TICKETS ON SALE NOW! JUL 12 - 28 AUG 2 - 25 AUG 29 - SEP 8 PCPA.ORG HAPPY HOUR SUN-FRI 4-6PM, LATE NIGHT 9PM-CLOSE Lunch Daily • Specials 12-3PM Early Bird Specials at the Grill 3-5PM (sushi bar only)
Photo by Gary Robinson

The Moral Gray Zone

Students Again Ask for Accountability and an End to Senseless Bloodshed

Ah, graduation season remembering my own high school commencement, back in June 2005

Cruising to school one last time, I remember listening to a song that gave me a sense of both nostalgia and adventure: “America” by Simon & Garfunkel. Each refrain brought me to a simpler era, when beatniks and hippies roamed the earth: “I’ve gone to look for America.”

That morning, as I sat among classmates and awaited my turn to walk, chills ran up my spine as the commencement speaker referenced that very same song in her address, along with the message: “Seek out a cause you believe in.”

This year’s graduating class, on campuses coast to coast, might appear different from past classes. Not in superficial aspects, like style and dress and music, but in values, beliefs, and priorities.

Our students have sought out a cause they believe in. And they, too, are looking for America.

Pop music is like a time capsule. When I graduated in 2005, post-9⁄11, in the midst of the Iraq War, a folk song from 1968 like “America” sounded like escapism. In fact, it was a protest. Less confrontational than “Fortunate Son” or “Gimme Shelter,” in the gentle voice of Paul Simon is the audible weariness of a country that lost its way in Vietnam.

Since World War II, each generation has faced a new, morally gray foreign war. And although the students of today don’t have to fear the draft thank you, Vietnam protesters they do face the horror of seeing their tuition money funneled to weapons manufacturers and AI surveillance companies, fueling a conflict in Gaza that has seen a record number of aid workers, journalists, professors, poets, women, and children killed.

Last month, Memorial Day honored our fallen veterans, yet, increasingly, wars are fought with remote guided missiles and unmanned drones. While this style of combat protects our soldiers, it cannot numb us to the sanctity of civilian lives caught in the crossfire.

More than 45,000 dead is not a mere statistic. Each number is a human being. Our youth innately recognize this, and that there must be another way. Otherwise, what are we doing here?

This past Mother’s Day, my husband and I visited the UCSB Gaza Solidarity Encampment to witness it for ourselves. As we arrived, we were welcomed by students to share their food and peruse their makeshift library. Nearby, a man was strumming 1960s folk songs on his guitar. A vigil began shortly after 7 p.m. to honor the mothers of Gaza and their children. Attendees brought plants from the community garden and were each handed a single flower to lay at an altar commemorating Hind Rajab, the 6-yearold Palestinian girl who cried out for her mother as Israeli snipers systematically executed the medical workers sent to rescue her. Poems of grief were read, a moment of silence followed, and attendees were given the chance to discuss and reflect. An hour later, the vigil ended, in time for the encampment’s prayers. It gave us hope, for the first time in seven months, for the future.

Why does Gaza resonate with the youth? In part, because their leaders have failed them. Lindsey Gra-

ham thinks it’s reasonable to advocate dropping a nuclear bomb on Gaza. And Democrats aren’t much better. Hillary Clinton recently gave a tone-deaf interview suggesting that student protesters “don’t know very much at all of the history of the Middle East, or even, frankly, about history in our own world.”

Nonsense. Instead of talking down to the public, perhaps politicians should listen up.

Start with the music. Retro rockers like Eric Clapton and Roger Waters are pro-Palestine, as are contemporary artists like Saint Levant and Anees. But the most explosive statement came from Grammy-winner Macklemore. In his latest single, “Hind’s Hall,” he lays out the full 76-year history of the Israel/Palestine conflict, and calls out the complicity of our leaders directly: “Pushin’ everyone into Rafah and droppin’ bombs / The blood is on your hands, Biden, we can see it all.” Followed by a call to action aimed at our most American right: “And f*ck no, I’m not votin’ for you in the fall.”

Yes, the music is aggressive, but the cause is urgent. Peaceful protests are being met with unthinkable brutality, as students risk their physical safety not to mention suspension or expulsion all the way to graduation day.

That said, the historic chaos of 1968 dwarfed our current moment, so don’t let anyone convince you this era is worse. It’s not. Back then, as now, peace is proving to be an uphill battle. As with most movements, it will be smeared, mischaracterized, and only appreciated in hindsight.

This graduation season, our students are once again asking for an end to senseless bloodshed, and to hold their country accountable to ideals it has long promised but failed to provide. I hope, in the decades to come, we can look back nostalgically at the good these students accomplished. If only we give them the chance. n

THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2024

5:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.

Tickets: $100.00 all inclusive

Join us for an evening at the beautiful Rancho La Patera gardens to sample appetizers, wine and beer from local restaurants, wineries and breweries, as well as a performance by the 2024 Spirit of Fiesta and Junior Spirit, musical entertainment by Tony Ybarra and dancing under the stars with Area 51. 21 & older only

Tickets https://goletahistory.org / esta-ranchera/

Event Sponsors

Silver: Kellogg Square, Teledyne Flir, The Towbes Group, Bronze: Stanton and Janice Howell, Insulate SB, Inc., Poulter Family

Benefi ting Old Spanish Days & Goleta Valley Historical Society

Goleta Valley Historical Society

Rancho La Patera & Stow House 304 Los Carneros Rd., Goleta

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 19
Opinions VOICES CONT’D
CELEBRATING
Mother’s Day flowers at UC Santa Barbara’s encampment MIKE CRITELLI
GATHERING IN THE GOODLAND
16 YEARSOF RANCHO LA PATERA & STOW HOUSE

obituaries

Robert Lee Hart 1/11/1945 - 3/26/2024

Robert (aka Bob) Hart passed away peacefully at home March 26, 2024 with his loving friends by his side. Bob attended college at UCLA and UCSB where his passions were music and physics. He was a masterful and gifted musician playing the piano, guitar and harmonica as well as teaching others the piano. Bob was well known and admired as a professional musician performing at various venues in Santa Barbara. For many years he worked at the law office of Ron Jehle in Santa Barbara as a paralegal and Spanish interpreter helping many in the Hispanic community. Bob is survived by his sister Carmen and best friend Darlene. He will be missed by all who knew him.

Richie Stolz

9/11/1992- 4/24/2024

Richie Stolz went to heaven on Wednesday, April 24. He was born on September 11, 1992 and was the youngest of five children. He lived in Goleta and Carpinteria his entire life attending Carpinteria schools and “congratulating” from Carp High. For the last ten years he has loved being a part of Momentum Work Inc. adult day program where he made lots of friends.

Richie had many joys in his life. He loved birdwatching, legos, puzzles, cartoons, Godzilla movies, camping with

his family, and especially Disneyland! The highlight of his week was always church, and for the last few years he really loved attending Christ Church Carpinteria.

Richie is survived by his parents, Doug and Carol Stolz and siblings Nada (Jeff) Matson, Nancy (James) Garza, Sarah (Austin) Stolz-Beede, and Michael (Amy) Stolz. Also his much loved nieces, June and Phoebe Garza, and Audrey and Alice Beede.

Monika Draggoo 11/30/1946 - 5/27/2024

Monika Draggoo passed away on Monday, May 27, 2024, at the age of 77, after a lengthy, hard-fought battle with cancer.

Monika was born in Rorschach, Switzerland, but moved to Santa Barbara with her mother, Gertrud Amacher in 1958 at the age of 11.  She attended Roosevelt Elementary, La Colina and Santa Barbara Junior Highs, she graduated from Santa Barbara High School in 1965.  She attended Santa Barbara City College and UCSB, before working at Metropolitan Theatres where she met her future husband, Jim.  After marriage, they lived in Carpinteria, California where she worked as a teller at Santa Barbara Bank & Trust for 12 years.

After having a bad experience when purchasing a home in Santa Barbara, she decided to become a real estate agent.  After working for several brokers in Santa Barbara, Monika decided to get her own Broker’s License and opened American Dream Properties of S.B. along with partner, David Back.  Her husband Jim also joined the real estate venture as CFO after retiring from Metropolitan Theatres.  Monika was a firm believer in owning property being the American Dream and helped many families in Santa Barbara achieve that goal.  She loved being able to hand first-time buyers the keys to their home.

Her husband Jim passed away in 2002, after a long bout with cancer and she started traveling.  She visited many places, among her favorites were the Getty Museum, the

Grand Canyon (the Skywalk being a highlight of her trip there), Australia, New Zealand, Guatemala and visits to Switzerland to visit her family.

Monika was involved in various community organizations throughout Santa Barbara, some of her interests being the Santa Barbara Police Department K-9 Unit and the Santa Barbara Elks Lodge #113.  She joined the Elks Lodge in 2003 after Jim passed away and she jumped in with both feet.  She loved the community involvement at the Elks and quickly served in many positions including Third Vice President, Second Vice President and culminated her tenure there as the first female Exalted Ruler in the 110-year history of the Santa Barbara Elks Lodge in 2010.

In the last few years, Monika and David started showing interest in owning and operating local restaurants in Santa Barbara with investments in Santo Mezcal and Maiz Picante Taqueria.  Monika was very proud of these establishments and was always excited by their successes.

Monika is survived by her daughter, Thia Raunsbak, sonin-law Steve and grandchildren Kelsey, Hayley and Luke.  Monika loved watching her grandkids grow up.

She is also survived by her brother Hanspeter Rubi, nephew Thomas and his wife Katrin, their son Marlon, nephew Andreas Rubi, niece Regula Rubi and her husband Ernst and their children Timo and Mona, all residing in Switzerland.

Monika is also survived by her partner, David Back.   Special recognition from David Back and the family to Barbara Clayton who joined American Dream Properties of S.B. and helped grow the company to the successful, premier business it is today.  In addition to Barbara, Griselda Madrigal and Yukiko Gonzalez help keep American Dream Properties of S.B. running smoothly and efficiently.  They have all gone above and beyond over the last few years.

David Back would like to send a thank you to the staff and doctors at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, special recognition to the nursing staff on Wood-Claeyssens 1st floor, especially nurses Kari Cortez and Ana Amparan.  Appreciation to Ridley Tree Cancer Center and Dr. Mukul Gupta.   Monika’s family would like to show special gratitude to Dr. Jeffrey Sager, her personal physician who was always available

and generous with his time.

Services will be held Tuesday, June 11, 2024 at 10:00am at Welch-Ryce-Haider Funeral Chapel, 15 East Sola Street, followed by internment at Calvary Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, please consider donating to one of Monika’s favored charities, Tunnels to Towers.

Vincent L. Whitney

8/10/1940 - 5/23/2024

Vincent L. (Lee) Whitney was born in Santa Barbara on August 10, 1940 to Vernon LeRoy Whitney and Naomi Ruth Whitney. Lee was a lifelong resident of Santa Barbara/ Goleta, attending local schools and Santa Barbara City College. Lee passed away on May 23, 2024.

Lee spent eight years in the United States Marine Corp Reserves while working as a journeyman clerk for Jordano’s grocery store and Santa Barbara County. He first joined the Sheriff’s Office in 1965, and in 1980 transferred to the Marshal’s Office, from which he retired in 1996.

Lee’s passion was for fast sport motorcycles and cars, primarily Corvettes. For years Lee and his wife Claudia were members of a co-ed motorcycle club and later the Santa Barbara Corvette Club, where Lee held several offices, including President.

Lee was a wonderful husband, father and friend. He is greatly missed.

Lee is survived by his wife of 50 years, Claudia, and their sons Michael Whitney (wife Selena) and John Whitney (wife Bonnie), and daughters from a prior marriage, Tracey Whitney and Caroline Whitney. Lee is also survived by his grandchildren and stepgrandchildren: Orion Claydon-Kiskaden-Whitney, Gavin Whitney, Jordan Kuykendall, Cameron Whitney-Giordano, Michael Buoni and Everett Buoni. Lee also leaves behind many close family members and friends.

Lee is predeceased by his parents, Vernon and Naomi Whitney; his sister, Vera Lee Hill; and his granddaughter, Andromeda Grace Whitney.

Shirl (Shirley) Aronson

3/15/1940 - 5/14/2024

(Shirl) Shirley Anne Aronson born March 15, 1940, passed away on May 14, 2024 at the age of 84, with her beloved wife at her side. A well-deserved life & love to be remembered. A very good life taken too soon. Shirl was a force to be reckoned with, fierce, a friend to many, a feisty soul, a mentor, a leader, a role model, an inspiration, a disciplinarian, a jokester, and loyal & loving to the end. She had a zest for life. She was an encourager. She was a teacher. At times not always patient, but always forgiving. Shirl loved her country and served in the Women’s Army Corp. She was involved in her community and a volunteer. She was a dedicated, devoted and passionate REALTOR. She loved laughter, music (Cher, Barbara Streisand, Jo Stafford, Abba), to name a few. She loved adventure and the outdoors. Shirl was the soulmate and longtime love & wife to Kimberley Bauman. They shared a love like you don’t see often. Shirl will be deeply missed but not forgotten, by her wife, her 2 adorable dogs, her close friends, both extended & chosen family, and all those along her journey that she was blessed to connect with.

Survived by her only, favorite wife Kimberley Bauman, beloved sister Virginia Louise (Bryan) Horstman and Gloria Kazimer (Lynn) Griebahn. Fun Aunt to many nieces and nephews. Preceded in death by her parents, Alvin Louis and Harriet Augusta Aronson; her brothers Robert Allen (MaryAnn) and William Louis (Debra) Aronson; and her sister, Marsha Jo (Michael) Gonzales.

RIP Shirl Aronson. We know you are blessing us from above with all the angels. We celebrate YOU and all that you gave to each of us. We look forward to your celebration of life at 11 am on August 18, 2024 at the Lacey Community Center.

20 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com
Continued on page 22

In Memoriam

Dr. Richard A. Ross

1943–2024

Herpetologist and Happy Wanderer

Several months have transpired since the unexpected passing of my friend Dick Ross. I’ve taken that long to rediscover serenity. My self-serving plan to avoid using gratuitous, well-meaning clichés when penning this remembrance went out the window the moment I sat down to think about the life of this extraordinary man. All of them apply, and let me add others: peripatetic, voraciously inquisitive, exuberant, generous, and kind-hearted.

Richard A. Ross was born in Orange County, California, in 1943, but he grew up on Long Island and in Manhattan. Restless, intellectually curious, and possessed of uncommon energy, he lit up every room he entered. Even at 80, such was his vitality that it animated everybody in his orbit; when he departed, we all fell down. Indeed, his passing in March made us realize how much his spirit had lifted us.

From birth, he displayed an intense curiosity in the road never traveled, and it took him to unheralded interests, uncommon hobbies, novel things to collect, and the world’s remote corners: Africa, Australia, Borneo, Bhutan, China, India, Madagascar, Papua New Guinea, and Central and South America.

He was deeply involved with snakes. Little was known about how to keep them when Dick was a teen, but he attended meetings of the local society to learn. There he met Gerald Marzec, and the two became lifelong friends. They joined forces to travel to the world’s far-flung places and co-authored seminal books on the bacterial diseases of reptiles and on breeding boas and pythons in captivity to help stem the tide of thefts from the wild. These led to widespread recognition for husbandry and conservation, and awards from the herpetological community.

Ross later explored the mysterious lives of tropical freshwater stingrays and authored two well-received books about them. Typically, he made important advances in stingray husbandry and reproductive biology. He was honored in China at a conference and is still considered the godfather of freshwater stingrays.

Richard completed education and medical degrees at Tufts University in 1969 and became a board-certified pediatrician. This was followed in California by a Master of Public Health degree. He settled in Atherton and worked for many years both as a pediatrician and treating farm workers at a clinic in the Palo Alto area. As medicine grew corporate and monetized, Ross wearied of the dictums of the insurance industry controlling how much time doctors could spend with their patients and the increasingly burdensome paperwork. An inheritance enabled him to retire and pursue his passions.

As a youngster, Richard visited the abandoned grounds of an estate near his home and there developed an abiding interest in rare plants and horticulture. His Atherton residence housed a world-class collection of ancient, cone-bearing cycads. An unprecedented freeze damaged many of them and this, plus an invitation from the Santa Barbara Zoo to develop their herpetology exhibit, resulted in a move south.

His home in Montecito became a veritable botanical garden with huge aquariums for freshwater sting-

rays and snakes. He collected Tiffany glass, exotic plants, guitars, and pinball machines and volunteered at a neighborhood clinic. Richard designed a guest house that blended seamlessly with his 1930s Spanish Colonial Revival–style house designed by architect Reginald Davis Johnson.

Sustainable Heart

Sustainable Heart ~ Transformational Life Counseling ~ Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Sustainable Heart

Sustainable Heart

Sustainable Heart

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

Sustainable Heart ~ Transformational Life Counseling ~ Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Fluent in Spanish and French, Richard continued globetrotting. And he lectured widely, providing rare pythons he bred to zoos around the country. When stateside, he indulged his passion for music by taking his Martin D-28 acoustic guitar to the Boatyard Pub in Ventura, where he played in Jim Friery’s “Bottom Feeders” bluegrass group. Richard was an auspicious volunteer and supporter of Lotusland and led humorous, highly educational tours of the gardens there. The staff recognized him as a devoted plantsman, collector, and contributor.

Sustainable Heart

Sustainable Heart

Sustainable Heart

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~ Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Sustainable Heart

Sustainable Heart

Sustainable Heart

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

Sustainable Heart

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~ Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~ Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions

Spiritual Issues

Communication

Spiritual Issues • Communication

Spiritual Issues • Communication

Richard is survived by a brother, noted sinologist Robert A. Ross, and a sister, artist Carol Ross. From his marriage to Catherine, Richard leaves stepdaughter Lauren Noon, daughter Rachael, and son David (who with wife, Nadia, gave him his granddaughters, Sierra and Sofia). When Richard met and married landscape designer Maury Treman, he found his true soulmate, and the two (or was it one?) avidly pursued life and the love of horticulture. Indeed, at the time of his death, they were planning to join me in Peru, where, despite chronic vision problems, the indefatigable Ross was eagerly anticipating adventures. We’ll make that trip, because he wants his ashes spread in the Amazon.

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Conflict

Conflict

Conflict

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~ Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Richard and I met 50 years back over snakes, but our bond was in exploring. Last month, I retraced steps we had taken many times in Peru, and I felt him everywhere I went. I think he left this world a happy man: happy over his audacious and talented children; happy with his legacy; and delighted with the priceless time he was able to spend with Maury, the person who completed him.

Last week, I watched an iridescent Peruvian hummingbird deeply sampling a flower before rapidly flitting to the next, just like Richard led his life. I loved Dick Ross, and I miss him every day. n

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

Sustainable Heart ~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Anxiety

Counseling with Wisdom and Compassion 805 698-0286

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

Helping You Navigate the Uncertainty of Our Post-Pandemic World

Sustainable Heart ~ Transformational Life Counseling ~ Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~ Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Anxiety

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Spiritual Issues

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Spiritual Issues

Spiritual Issues

Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

• Communication • Conflict

Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety

Spiritual Issues

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

• Communication • Conflict

• Communication • Conflict

Communication • Conflict

Spiritual Issues

• Communication • Conflict

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Counseling with Wisdom and Compassion 805 698-0286 www.sustainableheart.com www.sustainableheart.com

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Counseling with Wisdom and Compassion 805 698-0286

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Counseling with Wisdom and Compassion 805 698-0286

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Counseling with Wisdom and Compassion 805 698-0286

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

TAI CHI

BEGINNING CLASSES

Tuesdays | 10:45 am

Thursdays | 10:00 am

Saturdays | 10:30 am

Oak Park Stage ( Junipero/Calle Real)

Taichitoni1@hotmail 805-570-6194

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 21
SUSAN CHAMBERLIN
WE CATER! 901 Embarcadero Del Mar STE 103 Isla Vista 8am-3pm (805) 961-4555 | yetzsbagels.com Hand rolled, boiled & baked fresh every day!

obituaries

Tom McBride

8/6/1938 - 6/10/2022

In remembrance of Tom McBride (8-6-1938 to 6-10-2022)

Beloved husband, family member and friend.

We love you always and forever.

Aeternum

Others have come before –You and me.

We are older than Time –Something some scientists say isn’t even real –That Time is a thing humans created.

We are Timeless.

Jesus spoke of many dimensions In His Father’s House. I call it the House of No-Time. You and Me –We are each other’s Always.

Time Eternal.

You –There and then here. Me –

Here and somewhat, sometimes, there.

Perceiving and perceived.

We travel through the Heart’s portal.

Awake or dreaming –Our love is alive.

Souls –Free to Be –Here and/or There.

We were created for All-Time.

Here –

We are you and me.

Tom and Jan, who joined to become one. There –

We’ve always been One; the same and always.

In Heaven, we are known as Noend.

Copyright 2024 All rights reserved.

John W. Grube Jr., DDS. 11/13/1943 - 5/21/2024

John Wesley Grube Jr. was born on Nov. 13, 1943, in Biloxi, Mississippi, the son of Rev. John (Jack) Wesley Grube Sr., a chaplain in the United States Air Force / itinerant pastor, and June Mooty Grube, a beloved elementary school teacher. He and his younger sister, Joanne, traveled with their parents to Germany and England, where their father had been stationed in Europe during WW II.

John graduated from John Muir High School in Pasadena and went on to attend and graduate from UCSB in 1966 with a BS in Biology and a secondary teaching credential. He was a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity and spent many days surfing at Campus Point, working at the Santa Barbara Harbor Chandlery, and sailing. He met his future wife, Susan Hill, at UCSB and they were married on June 18, 1965.

John and Susan lived in Bogotá, Colombia for one year, both teaching in an American school, Colegio Nueva Granada, and traveling around the country in their free time.

After their time together in Colombia, John and Susan ventured to England on a Spanish passenger freighter and began teaching at an American school in London, but returned to the United States when John applied and was accepted to dental school at UCLA. After graduating from UCLA School of Dentistry in 1973 at the top of his class, he and Susan returned to Santa Barbara, where he began practicing dentistry, first in Goleta and Lompoc and eventually at his Patterson office in Goleta, until his retirement. John’s colleagues and patients regard him as he was, an excellent clinician and a kind and honest man.

John was an intensely curious person of many interests, incredible creative talent, and

a strong work ethic. When his two beautiful children, Alison and Brett, were young, John built a 40’ sailboat, christened “Dulcinea”, on which he sailed often, with family and friends, to Santa Cruz Island for weekend adventures. He also won the prestigious King Harbor race in 1979, in the split rig class. John designed and built his family’s home and over the following decades, continued to make additions and improvements to the house and property. John was a true waterman. He loved surfing, sailing, and scuba diving. He shaped and glassed several surfboards for himself and friends and “innovated” spectacular designs accentuated by his unusual choice of colors. He also enjoyed archery and made most of his own bows, strings, and arrows. John was often found in his workshop, happily working on his latest project. Also an avid private pilot, he often flew his young family to Mammoth Mountain for snow skiing weekends.

John was the director of Aeromédicos for many years, during which time he flew regularly with other volunteers, in private planes, to Mexico, to provide free medical and dental care for the underserved people in remote areas of the country. He cherished his friendships with his fellow pilots and adored the people he worked with and helped. “Juanito”, as he was popularly known, will be missed but his devotion to service will be honored by the dedicated men and women of Aeromédicos.

He was a very proud grandfather of Jack, Ella, and Clementine, who kept him amazed and “young at heart”.

The last few years of his life he and wife Susan enjoyed daily beach walks with their black lab, Charlie, making many new friends along the way.

He once painted a message over his workshop door, “Never Quit”, which was his life motto.

John is survived by his wife Susan, children Alison and Brett (Jennie), sister Joanne, nephew Brooks, cousins, and his beloved grandchildren, Jack (16), Ella (14), and Clementine (10).

There will be a paddle out and celebration of his life on June 21. For further details, one may contact the dental office.

2/20/1943 - 3/15/2024

“Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one’s courage”

Roberta Louise Gilman passed away peacefully on March 14, 2024 in Thousand Oaks, California. She was born in Pasadena, California on February 20, 1943.

As a graduate of UCLA with a degree in Physical Education, she became a PE teacher and coach at Indio High School, San Jacinto Unified High School, Moreno Valley High School and San Marcos High School (Santa Barbara).

After losing her first husband and high school sweetheart, William Earl Gilman III, she moved from Hemet, California, to Santa Barbara, California, in 1977 with her two children, Gretchen, age 7 at the time, and Bill, age 5. She then pursued advanced degrees at UC Santa Barbara. She earned two Master’s Degrees, one in History and one in Composition and Reading. She also earned a PhD in History, all the while working as an instructor at Santa Barbara City College and then a lecturer at UCSB for 25 years.

Roberta married Robert F Wilson on July 15, 1984. He was, and continues to be, a devoted stepfather to Gretchen and Bill. Roberta and Robert loved to visit national parks and travel to Flagstaff and Winona, Arizona. They went on daily walks, played lots of cards, and rooted on the Bruins and Clippers basketball.

Roberta was also a very strong woman; an athlete, coach, disciplined and active. She was a passionate intellectual who found her purpose and happiness in learning and educating others.

Most importantly, Roberta was a very loving mother and grandmother.

Roberta is survived by her husband, Robert F Wilson, daughter, Gretchen Gilman

Graves (spouse Dan Graves) , son, Bill Gilman (spouse Heather Gilman), grandchildren Joshua Graves, Margot Graves, Gus Gilman and Wiley Gilman, as well as her brother, Larry Kugler (spouse Marianne Kugler) and Gregg Gilman Uncle to Bill and Gretchen.

There will be a Celebration of Life for Roberta on June 9, 2024, at St. Mark’s Episcopal in the Valley, 2901 Nojoqui Avenue in Los Olivos, California, 2pm.

Joseph Peter Bauer Jr. 12/7/1943 - 5/27/2024

Joseph “Joe” Bauer was born on the second anniversary of Pearl Harbor, and he peacefully passed away on Memorial Day at Cottage Hospital at the age of 80. Joe was active in the Catholic Church, computer programming, and raising children. He is survived by his loving wife of 58 years, Rosemary Zea (Gecsey), 13 children, and 19 grandchildren.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at St. Raphael’s at 5444 Hollister Ave on June 17th at 10am, preceded by a Rosary service on Sunday June 16th at 6pm. A graveside service at Calvary Cemetery will follow the burial. Flowers are welcome or please consider a donation to St. Vincent de Paul.

22 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com
Roberta Louise Gilman

obituaries

Richard Bruce Rollins 9/25/1943 - 4/21/2024

“Wherever a beautiful soul has been there is a trail of beautiful memories”*

Richy Rollins, a cherished member of the Santa Barbara community known for his kindness, humor, and adventurous spirit, passed away peacefully on April 21, 2024, in the town he adored. He was 80 years old.

Richy was born on September 25, 1943, in Sacramento, California, to his loving parents Vernon and Thelma Rollins. As an only child, he was the center of their world, and they supported his every endeavor with boundless love and encouragement. His childhood was brimming with joyous memories of swim parties, backyard filmmaking and countless escapades, thanks to his parents nurturing guidance.

After graduating from West Covina High School in 1961, Rich pursued his passion for surfing and beach life, spending several memorable months in Hawaii with his close high school friends. Upon returning to the mainland he eventually settled in Santa Barbara, where he served as the manager of the local branch of Bohemian Liquor Distributing Company.

In 1976, during a vacation to Munich, Germany, Richy’s life changed forever when he met the love of his life, Heidi Fischer, in a beer tent at he Oktoberfest. Their romance was nothing short of enchanting, and Heidi, along with her daughter Vera, relocated to Santa Barbara to be with him in October 1977.

Richard was a man of diverse talents and passions. He had a knack for filmmaking, often involving friends and family in his creative and humorous projects. A skilled craftsman, he transitioned to becoming a General Contractor in 1986, leaving his mark on numerous homes in Santa Barbara. Among his proudest achievements was the personal residence he built with his

father in the early 1970s, where he and Heidi shared countless blissful years.

An ardent surfer, Rich found solace and joy riding the waves at Ledbetter beach and Rincon Point. In retirement the couple embarked on visits to Maui and enjoyed other numerous adventures around the globe, forming lasting friendships wherever they went.

In 1999 one of Richy’s greatest dreams was realized when his granddaughter Sienna was born. Throughout her childhood Sienna could always count on grandpa’s crazy surprises, his funny antics and a warm gentle hug whenever she saw him. Rich’s warmth and humor touched the lives of all who knew him, leaving an indelible mark on the hearts of many.

He is survived by his devoted wife, Heidi; loving daughter Vera; adored granddaughter, Sienna; and son in law, Dan (Henke).

In honoring Richard’s memory, let us celebrate the laughter, love and joy he brought into the world. May he rest in peace, his spirit forever riding the waves of our hearts.

*R.W. Reagan (1911-2004)

Glenn David Husack

3/8/1951 - 5/28/2024

Born in Pittsburg, PA moved to Santa Barbara & went to UCSB where he got a degree in English in 1974. Shortly there after he became a Christian and loved Jesus & music. Glenn played the Sax & Guitar & even wrote some songs. He excelled in the numerous places he worked in his lifetime. He was an S.B CO jail Chaplin for 20 years. Glenn attended Vineyard Church, Calvary Chapel, Word of Faith & Corner Stone Church. He is survived by his brother Gary of Sarasota, FL.

A memorial service will be held at Jubilee Christian Church 7190 Hollister Ave. Goleta, CA at 11am on June 22, 2024.

“Jesus Christ is Lord and the Blood of Jesus cleanses us from all sin” Thanks

Jack Robert Orr

3/9/1934 - 5/19/2024

Jack Orr, beloved husband, dad, grandfather, and friend to many, passed away peacefully at his home at Vista del Monte, Santa Barbara, CA surrounded by his family on May 19, 2024.

Jack was born in Rockford, Illinois, on March 9, 1934, second child of Esther Eichelberger Orr and Kenneth Orr. He grew up on a small family farm and truck garden in Winnebago, Illinois. He was the proud son of farmers and himself remained a farmer into his later years, trading the marketing of fruit and vegetables as a boy for tending his beloved avocado crops in a small, but grand orchard.

While in college at Illinois State University, he met the love of his life, Bonnie Jones, at a church youth work party helping elders. After acquiring an advanced degree in education at the University of Illinois, and following her graduation, they married in 1958. Last summer they celebrated a 65-year anniversary in the Northwest, with lots of extended family, love, and laughter.

Jack was a natural teacher, taught math, coached, and counseled generations of students from Byron and Geneva, Illinois to Claremont California, to Santa Barbara High School, and ultimately, Dos Pueblos High School. For Jack, it was always about the students, whatever their background, interests, passions, or abilities. He saw the best, and got the best out of those he taught and touched.

After moving to Santa Barbara in 1966, Jack became active in the First Congregational Church, United Church of Christ. He served faithfully on numerous boards and committees, sang in the choir, and devoted much time over many years as a steward of church finances.

A star multi-sport athlete in high school, Jack followed local and national sports, especially the Chicago Cubs, supported and cheered his sons in

their individual passions, and enjoyed golfing with friends in his retirement years.

Jack is survived by his wife Bonnie Jones Orr, his sons David and Bob, daughtersin-love Kelly and Audrey, and grandchildren Kirsten, Kevin, Isabelle, and Mark. He also numbered among his children, Xiaofei Kang, a “daughter” whom he had the opportunity to parent when she came as a student to the United States.

Donations in Jack’s memory may be sent to the Scholarship Foundation of Santa Barbara for the Social Justice Scholarship Fund benefiting first generation students.

A memorial service and celebration of Jack’s life will be held at the Santa Barbara First Congregational Church at 11:00 a.m. Saturday August 3rd.

Edith Mattiat Clark 12/1/1935 - 4/29/2024

Edith Mattiat Clark was born on December 1, 1935 in Berlin. She arrived in this world in a time and place of great upheaval and uncertainty. Her early childhood was full of simple pleasures of family, friends, music, and place, and surrounded by a world where fear and the coming of war overshadowed all things. These two forces shaped her deeply.

She and her family survived that time in the way that many did, by skillfully staying out of the way of trouble, and through sheer luck. Through more of that luck, and in large part because her father spoke English, they were able to move to the United States, emigrating through Ellis Island like so many others, and then driving from New York to their new home in Cleveland.

In the fifties the Mattiat family moved to Santa Barbara. Edith was the first female Vice President at SBCC. She went to school, worked, and eventually met her husband to be, Dr. Jerry Clark, up at the Plow and Angel Bar. Jerry went back into the Army, and

for the years that followed they moved from posting to posting overseas and in the US. Along they way had a son, Jon. In the early seventies they all moved back to Santa Barbara and made it their home for good. Edith was able to let her artistic talents flow and was a regular at Adult Education, mostly doing ceramics. She worked at Robinsons and Elmes Travel. She loved to travel, and went pretty much everywhere, all through the US, Europe, Africa, Asia, and even Antarctica – which was a favorite. Edith and Jerry had great friends, near and far, with whom they shared food, wine, travel, music and laughs.

In later life Edith devoted herself to her family, supporting Susan and Jon in every way she could, and being a wonderful grandmother to Austin, Nate and Sarah. When Jerry died she opened a new life chapter, becoming very involved in pretty much anything related to classical music, and volunteering at the Assistance League and at the Music Academy of the West. Mostly, Edith was just a wonderful Mother, Grandmother and friend. She loved people, music, art and dove into pretty much any conversation she could find. Her ebullient personality made others happy. She always had kind things to say. She was an aesthetic soul through and through. She was passionate about politics.

Edith died of pancreatic cancer on April 29th. She was supported by friends and family during these last two months, but in truth, she supported all of us as well, with love, wisdom, kindness and grace – and lots and lots of stories about her life and what she learned along the way.

Her memorial service will be on June 26, and she asked that any gifts in her memory be directed to Camerata Pacifica and the Assistance League.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 23
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com
Continued on page 24

obituaries

William Reid Henderson

9/29/1942 - 5/20/2024

Bill’s life was guided by his deep connection to nature. He was most joyful when sharing his knowledge of the wild.

Raised in Santa Barbara CA, Bill’s closeness to the ocean and mountains was nurtured from the beginning. He spent a year on Oahu in the 60s living out his endless summer dream. When the mountains called, Bill moved to forested Oregon where he lived for a brief time. Santa Barbara’s balance between coast and peaks always called him back, and this is where he reestablished his permanent roots.

Bill knew our backcountry like the back of his hand and spent years leading Sierra Club hikes. He went on countless backpacking trips, both solo and with friends, and had endless stories to tell about wild encounters and peaceful introspection.

In the early 2000s, Bill dusted off his surfboard in order to teach his youngest daughter how to surf. You could find him any day, no matter how big or small, between Leadbetter and Rincon, catching long rides on the inside.

As Bill’s physical ability declined, he found adventure and purpose in his walks through the San Marcos Preserve, Qigong at Alice Keck Park, and then, until the end, slow walks at Shoreline Park to watch his beloved Cormorant sea birds. He was a seeker of inner peace and lived by a mindfulness practice.

Bill leaves behind his three children, a sister, as well as his dear friends, neighbors and community. We will find Bill eternally in the mountain air and ocean breeze.

There will be a paddle out on June 15th at Leadbetter Beach at 11:00am. A celebration of Bill’s life will be held in August. (Please contact Hannah for information: hannahjdhenderson@yahoo.com)

“May you be safe. May you be happy. May you be healthy. May you be at ease.”

Bernard Martinez

7/15/1946 - 6/19/2019

In Memory

It’s been 5 years since you been gone. You are still missed and loved. You wife sons Nick & Bill grand children Christina Julyan Jaicee Jesse Ayden

Dominick

A-K-I-A

Carmen Dolores Bree

5/10/1930 - 12/31/2023

Carmen died at her home in Paso Robles, on December 31, 2023 surrounded by her family. She was born in Utah to Francisco Jimenez, an immigrant from Spain, and Virginia Morris. Carmen grew up in Lomita and graduated from Norbonne High School. She married Bob Bree in 1960 in Torrance after they fell head over heels in love in 1959. For the next 48 years of their marriage until Bob’s death in 2008 they remained as deeply in love and devoted to each other as they had been from day one. They were a great team raising 2 children and building up a real estate business in Torrance. In 1977 Bob and Carrie moved to Montecito and together they established a successful Real Estate Agency in Santa Barbara, later called Century 21 Bob Bree Realty. Carmen attended Long Beach State California State University and graduated with a Bachelors Degree in English and Psychology. Later she acquired her Master’s Degree in Psychology at Antioch University in Santa Barbara, working as a Therapist for a while thereafter.

Car men was beautiful, classy, warm-hearted, gracious and very generous. She had a great sense of humor and an infectious laugh. She was smart, savvy and very real. Carmen loved to travel, hike, write and walk. Her biggest passion was reading literature and fiction. She loved good writers. People and her friends were an important part of her life. She loved people and was was sensitive to their needs, a good listener and helper. For Carmen her family came first. She was their motivator, supporter and champion.

Carmen is survived by her children Cheryl and Jim and grandchildren, and family Jamie, Maggie, Jimmy (great grandchild), Chris, Katie and Sarah. She will always be missed. A private Celebration of Life in remembrance of Carmen was held on the 9th of June, 2024 in Santa Bar bara.

Dr (PhD) Emma Lou Diemer, age 96, died peacefully at her home on June 2, 2024. She was preceded in death by her parents, George Willis Diemer and Myrtle Casebolt Diemer, her sister Dorothy Diemer Hendry, and her twin brothers George W. Diemer II and John Irving Diemer. She is survived by a devoted family of nieces and nephews, a large contingent of extended family, friends, former students, longtime companion Marilyn MacKenzie Skiold, and the neighbor’s cat Theo, who could often be found purring on a blanket beside Em.

Emma Lou played the piano

and composed as a young child and throughout her school years in Warrensburg, Missouri. She studied composition with Howard Hanson, Ernst Toch, Roger Sessions and Paul Hindemith, earning degrees at Yale School of Music (BMus, MMus) and Eastman School of Music (PhD, 1960). She studied in Brussels, Belgium on a Fulbright Scholarship. From 1959-61 she was composerin-residence for the Arlington, Virginia schools under the Ford Foundation Young Composers Project, and then became a consultant for the MENC Contemporary Music Project.

In 1965, Dr. Diemer began teaching music composition and theory at the University of Maryland. In 1970, the University of California in Santa Barbara offered her a full-time faculty position, and there she found her home and the climate she loved. She created an electronic music program at UCSB soon after, at a time there were few to be found. She taught composition and theory through 1990, becoming Professor Emerita there in 1991, and continued to compose and publish works for organ, choir, voice, various chamber ensembles, solo piano and orchestra. Her sense of humor often shone through, as with the Pandemic Piano Collection, published in 2021. Over 250 of her compositions have been published since 1956, more than 100 of them recorded. Her organ psalm settings and hymn preludes are considered standard repertoire, as are a number of her choral compositions, including the early and very popular Three Madrigals for chorus.

Recognition for her music includes awards from Yale University (Certificate of Merit), Eastman School of Music (Edward Benjamin Award), the National Endowment for the Arts (electronic music project), Mu Phi Epsilon (Certificate of Merit), the Kennedy Center (Friedheim Award for piano concerto), the American Guild of Organists (Composer of the Year), the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers/ASCAP (annually since 1962 for performances and publications), the Santa Barbara Symphony (com -

poser-in-residence, 1990-92), the University of Central Missouri (honorary doctorate), and many others. Dr. Diemer also performed and recorded on piano, organ, harpsichord, and electronic instruments. For years, she played weekly at the First Presbyterian Church in Santa Barbara, with improvisational preludes and postludes. She performed in concert usually as organist, including concerts of her own music at Washington National Cathedral, St. Mary’s Cathedral and Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles, and elsewhere.

During the NPR program “Pipe Dreams” devoted to her work, she was described as the “remarkably prolific, imaginative, energetic and altogether delightful American composer, Emma Lou Diemer.”

Her published music ranged from music that high school groups could perform to virtuosic, but Em also loved to improvise on the piano at a moment’s notice. She delighted grand-nieces and nephews and friends, by playing “Happy Birthday” variations just for them in various styles: salsa, tango, waltz, cha-cha, swing…she could do them any style, and never the same twice. For composition students who were stuck, she amused them by readily playing many options. Her mind was always in music, even when speaking failed at times in her final year. During that time, family members, former students, and friends of all ages made pilgrimages to sit beside her, talk with her, play their instruments and sing for her. Thanks go to them and her loving caregivers, Delcher, Lola, Marisol, and Jovita. Emma Lou’s diminutive ego and physique were belied by her enormous stature, as organist, pianist and composer throughout her long, healthy and fruitful life.

After cremation, Em will be interned in the family plot in Warrensburg, MO. A Celebration of Life will be held in Santa Barbara at a later date. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to your favorite charitable organization, and please honor Emma Lou by voting!

24 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com
Emma Lou Diemer 11/24/1927 - 6/2/2024

obituaries

David James Pauletto 10/3/1947 - 6/5/2024

It is with great sadness that we announce on June 5th, 2024, our beloved David James Pauletto passed from this earth.

David was born on October 3rd, 1947, in Santa Barbara, and graduated from Santa Barbara High School in 1965. In 1969 he met the love of his life, and the woman with whom he would build a great life and big, loving family, Billie Diane Perkins. They married in 1974 and spent 55 wonderful years together.

David spent his life with Billie in Santa Barbara, raising and providing for children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. He had an unmatched work ethic and spent his working years as an autobody mechanic, though he was truly a jack of all trades. He was incredibly generous with his time, always available to assist when asked for his help or advice. David was a man among men, a remarkable example to those lucky enough to have known and loved him. He passed peacefully, surrounded by family, in the home that he built. Down the hill were his children and grandchildren, in homes that David had remodeled as a young man. He is preceeded in death by his mother and father, Palmira and Jenepero Pauletto.

He is survived by his wife, Billie Diane, daughter Mica, son Michael, son Mario (Grace), daughter Costanza (Christopher), grandson Trevor (Sabrina), granddaughter Ruby, and great-grandsons Derrik and Sebastian.

The family would like to extend a special thank you to Dr. Mukul Gupta and his staff for their expert care.

A memorial will be held on June 21st, 2pm, at Tuckers Grove, area 1. All who loved David are welcome.

Barbara Theiler 9/10/1938 - 6/5/2024

Barbara Joyce (Davis)

Theiler, age 85, passed away peacefully after a brief illness on June 5, 2024 in Cedar City, Utah. She was born on September 10, 1938 in San Pedro California to Robert and Florence (Flicker) Davis the oldest of 3 daughters.

Barbara was raised in Lomita California and graduated from Narbonne High School. After graduating from high school, Barbara married Malchom Theiler, Jr a United States Marine and raised 3 daughters in Santa Barbara, California. Barbara and her family moved to Cedar City Utah in 1997 after retiring from the Santa Barbara News Press after 30 years. During her adult years Barbara was a member of the Women’s Bowling League in California and Utah and participated in national tournaments throughout the country. Barbara had a love for books and visited bookstores to find the next book to read.

Barbara was preceded by her husband Malchom of 57 years; her parents Robert and Florence (Flicker) Davis; and her sister Bette (Davis) Boelter. Barbara is survived by her sister Bonnie (Davis) Allen of Midland MI; daughters Roberta Theiler of Cedar City UT, Rebecca (Steve Corby) Theiler of Moorpark CA, and Ruth (Michael) Raso of Washington, IL; Grandchildren Tina (Larry Good) Powell, Jeremy (Blerta) Pecharich, Shannon (Ahmed Samin) Powell and Steven (Stacy) Pecharich; and Great-Grandchildren Zoe (18), Devin (12), Claire (8), Natalie (7), William (5), Sarah (5), Madison (2) and Malik (1).

Private family members only ceremony schedule on June 15, 2024 in Cedar City. In memory of her love of animals, please donate to the local ASPCA in her name.

Jean W. Blois

12/4/1927 - 3/22/2024

Jean Williamson Blois was born in San Francisco. She spent part of her childhood in Boston and part in the Bay Area, graduating from University High School in Oakland in 1945 – shortly before World War II ended. The ‘home front’ with nightly black-outs, food, gas and shoe rationing, for example, was nearly over. Jean attended Cal (U.C. Berkeley as it is known today), paying her way through college by typing for various businesses (starting with the Naval Air Base in Alameda). She graduated in 1949 with a B.S. in Business Administration and remained a staunch Golden Bears supporter to the end. While attending Cal, she joined the Mu chapter of Delta Zeta, a national sorority, serving as president her senior year. She was extremely proud of her college education and was a lifetime member of the American Association of University Women. She met Bob Blois, a Pi Kappa Alpha at Cal studying electrical engineering, and they were married August 20, 1949. After moving around in their early years, they settled in Goleta, CA in 1964. Jean subsequently helped Bob found Blois Construction, Inc. in Goleta. Jean spent a lot of time doing the administrative work necessary for a small, start-up company and the company is still going strong today with its main office now in Oxnard. Jean and Bob welcomed five sons and celebrated nearly 55 married years before Bob passed away on August 1, 2004.

Jean is survived by her sons and their spouses: R. Steven (Brenda), Douglas (Dian), Scott, Jim (Alice), and Mike (Juli), eleven grandchildren [Jessica, Jaime (Blake), Craig (Tracy), Ben (Jessie), Isaac (Laurie), Zachary (Kimberly), Matt (Casey), Niki (Patrick), Kelsey, Will, and Stephen], fourteen great-grandchildren and counting (Claire, Owen, Jacob, Adam, Sydney, Kylan, Rynn, Iona, Aileigh, Teagan, Lucy, Morris, Emerson, and Penelope), and nephews Richard Williamson and Tom Williamson. She was preceded in death by her parents (William Arthur Williamson

and Mina Jamieson Williamson), husband (Robert Wyllie Blois), brother (John Arthur Williamson), sister-in-law (Mari Louise Williamson) and nephew (David Williamson).

Jean’s love of Goleta led her to many years of public service. Her sons all graduated from Dos Pueblos High School, and she served on the Goleta School District Board from 1970-1983, standing as President several times and representing the district at the Tri-County level as well as being elected to the California School Board Association. She next served on the Goleta Water District from 1990-2002, often as president, and was a representative to the Santa Barbara County Special Districts as well as the Association of California Water Agencies. She also served as vice-president of the Cachuma Project Authority (joint group of water company representatives re-negotiating the Lake Cachuma Agreement with the U.S. Department of the Interior). She especially treasured her experiences on the water board. She resigned only after being elected to the first Goleta City Council.

After many frustrating attempts at incorporation of the City of Goleta, Jean was absolutely thrilled when the new city was approved in the 2001 election. Jean was elected to the first Goleta City Council that worked so very hard to have things ready to inaugurate the city on February 1, 2002. The five newly elected Council members were sworn in on the steps of the Goleta Valley Community Center. She served as Mayor in 2005 and 2007.

Over her years, Jean served many other organizations within the Goleta region, often assuming leadership roles: Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital Foundation; Goleta Valley Community Center Board; Goleta Chamber of Commerce, serving as president in 1998; president of Santa Barbara County Taxpayers Association; Girsh Park board; Goleta Valley Beautiful; Goleta Valley Historical Society; and many others. She, along with Bob, was a lifetime member of the Santa Barbara Elks Lodge, and was very proud to be named a Paul Harris Fellow by the Goleta Noontime Rotary Club. She was a Founding Director of Community West Bank. Jean was named Goleta Woman of the Year in 1997 and was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2022 by the Santa Barbara South Coast Chamber of Commerce.

Jean was a lifelong member of the Presbyterian Church. Her faith was unwavering. She

served the local Goleta Presbyterian Church on Sherrill Way several times as an Elder, helped the Finance Committee Sunday mornings, taught Sunday School at many different levels, and physically helped her husband build the new Church building when other volunteers were unavailable.

Jean was also an excellent seamstress and knitter. She made nearly all her clothes for many years, many shirts and sweaters for her boys, and legendary Christmas stockings for her extended family, until her fingers started to fail her. She loved playing bridge, waterskiing, snorkeling, snow-skiing, and cheering on the Dodgers and Lakers. She was a den mother five times over – deserving a medal for this service in particular! Bob and Jean also thoroughly enjoyed traveling around the world in later years. Their many Cal Alumnisponsored trips took them on a train ride through Russia when it was still the Soviet Union to a river excursion in the depths of the Amazon, and many places in between.

Jean’s last years were spent at the Maravilla Retirement Community, where she continued serving her community as co-chair of the Residents Association and organizer of many duplicate bridge games for the residents. Jean’s second-floor, mountain-facing apartment was a constant reminder of Goleta’s beauty. Her Scottish Fold cat, My Bonny Lass, was her steadfast companion for many years. She used the COVID-19 pandemic isolation period to write her own memoirs so she could tell her life story in her own words, an account which now provides many enduring points of lighthearted debate and laughter amongst her family.

Jean passed away peacefully at her home, having lived the fullest life possible. All of her sons appreciated that they always had a ‘listening ear’ in their mom. Loving and thoughtful to the end, she prepared everyone around her for her passing, but still leaves a huge hole in the lives of her family, friends, and community.

In lieu of flowers, and in recognition of Jean’s lifelong love of and work for Goleta, please send donations to the Goleta Valley Community Center, the Goleta Presbyterian Church, or any of the other Goleta-based charities or organizations that Jean supported. There will be a memorial service for Jean at 11:00 am on Saturday, April 27th, at Goleta Presbyterian Church on Sherrill Way. There will be a celebration of life afterward.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 25
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com

WORDS ON FIRE

James Joyce, Bloomsday, Dirty Books, and Dirty Minds

James Joyce’s novel Ulysses, one of the most impactful ever written in the English language, will be celebrated on June 16 in an event known as Bloomsday. From Australia to Santa Barbara, devoted fans will mingle with the mildly curious to listen to readings from the book that was originally banned and burned in the United States for being pornographic until a federal judge finally declared it safe for American ears. In the following article, Nick Welsh tells the story of how the book became a legend, and how the same impulse to ban writing that disturbs, surprises, confuses, shocks, or tells stories outside someone’s comfort zone is still alive and well in this country. But so is the desire to protect and enjoy the freedom of expression and to read amazing writing.

LOVE AT FIRST GASP

The og of censored texts

It was a first date that rocked the world.

Though that date an evening stroll through the streets of Dublin took place more than 100 years ago, the world remains, to this day, very much rocked by its seismic reverberations.

Back in June, 1904, 19-year-old Nora Barnacle had just arrived in Dublin from Galway, having fled the savage beatings administered by the uncle with whom she lived. Tall, auburn-haired, and graced with a heavy-lidded sultriness, Barnacle walked with sass and confidence. She and a female friend used to go out dressed as men, wearing trousers and heavy boots and hiding their hair. They smoked cigarettes, told dirty jokes, and laughed loudly.

When James Joyce first saw Barnacle, she was working as a chambermaid and tending bar at a Dublin hotel. Only a few years her senior, he had been a precociously gifted child of a middle-class stability that had gone very badly to seed. Although Joyce had yet to emerge as the revolutionary writer and literary terrorist the world would know, he was already certain about his intentions. It was his exalted mission, Joyce declared, “to pierce the significant heart of everything.”

But it would be Nora Barnacle who pierced the significant heart of James Joyce.

The two first got together the evening of June 16, 1904. They meandered about the streets of Dublin, making their way to a dark, empty field by the docks where the River Liffey spills out into the bay. There, we are told, an intimate act ensued. When James Joyce groaned, Nora Barnacle reportedly smiled, asking, “What is it, dear?”

For James Joyce and Nora Barnacle, it was love at first gasp.

The two would remain together, though not always blissfully, for the next 37 years. Famously, they would love each other with a boundless sexual abandon that Joyce exalted in graphic sometimes scatological detail in his love letters to her. All was not peaches and cream, but there was never a shred of doubt who James Joyce’s muse was.

When he wrote Ulysses his hauntingly daunting and world-shaking masterpiece every word, thought, fart, echo, prayer, lustful glance, limerick, bar-room conversation, curse, and orgasm detailed within those 783 staggering stream-of-consciousness pages took place within the 24-hour time span of the very day he and Nora first went strolling: June 16.

It wasn’t until 1941, after Joyce was safely dead, that the world slowly began celebrating Ulysses. On the 50th anniversary of the day that takes place in the book, in 1954, a Ulysses pilgrimage was loosely organized through the streets of Dublin, but it apparently succumbed to inebriation and rancor at Old Bailey’s Bar.

Eventually, in 1994, the city of Dublin organized a formal celebration declaring June 16 “Bloomsday,” named after Leopold and Molly Bloom, two of the book’s central characters. That has since turned into a global event with passages being publicly read in pubs from Australia to Santa Barbara.

It took Joyce seven years to finish Ulysses, but before he was even halfway through, its steamy passages generated such moral outrage that it would be banned in both the United States and England. In 1922, two American magazine publishers Margaret Caroline Anderson and Jane Heap, both lesbians, it turns out, with socialist suffragette leanings

who wore trousers and smoked cigarettes had agreed to publish the book in serial form. For such adventurous impulses, they would be criminally charged, prosecuted, and convicted by a New York court. In this way, Ulysses would be effectively banned in the United States from 1920 to 1933. (Not coincidentally, that’s roughly the same time span Prohibition held sway.) Copies of Ulysses would be seized by authorities and burned in the United States and Great Britain. Hundreds upon hundreds would go up in smoke.

In 1932, the American publisher Random House bought the rights to publish Ulysses in this country. After some machinations, the U.S Attorney’s Office brought a case against the book the actual book, not the author or the publisher before a trial judge. In United States v. One Book Called Ulysses, the government argued that the book was obscene and should be destroyed.

But the attorney for the publisher maintained that it was not obscene and thus protected by the First Amendment. The presiding judge agreed. In his 1933 decision, he ruled that Ulysses was not pornographic, that its author was sincere, and that though some passages used “old Saxon words it must be remembered that his locale was Celtic and his season Spring.”

In Santa Barbara, Bloomsday will be celebrated, fittingly, at The James Joyce pub on lower State Street, where thespians, poets, celebrities, actors, and writers will read passages from Ulysses while Gorgonzola cheese sandwiches in a riff from the book will be served.

Saving James Joyce from the hallowed halls of academia and bringing him back to the bars and pubs and gutters that he loved all too well are a couple of highbrow-lowbrow recovering Irish Catholics, James Buckley and DJ Palladino. Like all great discoveries, Palladino, who runs the Mesa Bookstore, and Buckley, a publisher of children’s books and honorary fairy godfather of the Santa Barbara Foresters semipro baseball team, simultaneously stumbled onto the idea at the same time three years ago. Buckley and Palladino, both men of words and letters, decided to become men of action; Buckley arranged the logistics with The James Joyce pub, famous for its sawdust floors and peanuts. The two have been creative co-conspirators ever since.

Buckley is struck by the repressive parallels now taking place with what was happening in the United States when the book was being written in the aftermath of World War

26 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
COVER STORY
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
James Joyce

I; the great influenza epidemic; and the infamous Palmer Raids, during which foreignborn political dissidents were rounded up en masse and deported courtesy of an upand-coming autocratic bureaucratic named J. Edgar Hoover.

While Palladino and Buckley agree on much, they differ on the extent to which Ulysses still qualifies as a steamy book. “Make no mistake: Ulysses is a dirty book,” Palladino said. “It’s also a pretty book, a funny book, and a sad story. By contemporary standards, Buckley countered, the book’s sexual references are too obscure and too tame to be considered even risqué. “If Fifty Shades of Grey can be a best-seller, Ulysses in comparison would be in the kids’ section,” Buckley said.

In some ways, he’s right. The actual passage that got the publishers in trouble with the law and Joyce banned involved the character Gerty MacDowell, a 17-year-old girl who leans back while at the beach to allow Leopold Bloom, whom she sees staring at her from afar, enjoy a good long gander up her bloomers.

What the censors missed entirely was Bloom’s orgasm. He, it turns out, was giving himself a discreet pocket job while watching Gerty in her reveries. Even with Joyce’s allusion to Bloom’s “hoarse breathing,” it’s hard to detect.

But later in the book in portions written after the earlier chapter had been banned Joyce describes a hallucinatory brothel scene in which Bloom becomes transformed into a woman and is fisted in his/her vagina. Molly Bloom also delivers her nowfamous orgasmic soliloquy of “O!” and “A!”, where the climactic message is unmistakable.

During the New York trial in 1922, presided

TOP 10 MOST CHALLENGED B KS OF 2023

over by a three-judge panel, there was serious debate whether the offending passages could even be read out loud in the courtroom. The prosecution was concerned that the passages could corrupt any women present. The only women present were the two publishers of The Little Review magazine. Ultimately, the passages were allowed to be read.

The judges struggled with Joyce’s language fragmented, clipped, and radically reinvented into what’s now known as “streamof-consciousness.” One judge complained of Joyce’s radical stylistic innovations, stating, “It seems to me the ravings of a disordered mind.” The defense seized on this, arguing that what can’t be understood cannot sexually arouse. Ultimately, the two publishers were found guilty and fined $100. That, at the time, was a considerable sum.

In the 1933 federal trial, Judge John M. Woolsey, ruled that the book needed to be evaluated in the context of its totality, not judged based on isolated excerpts. To do otherwise would have been “artistically inexcusable.”

“Ulysses may be the greatest novel ever written, certainly the best ever written in English, but for the first 12 years of its existence, it was considered a crime to import a copy to the U.S.,” said UCSB English professor Enda Duffy. “It shows how powerful books can be: Governments fear them. If you want to have an independent mind, read lots of great books starting with the banned ones.”

All of human life, Duffy said, is revealed in Ulysses and in beautiful language. “Like life, except more so. It’s by turns wild, tiresome, superb, obscene, full of surprises and very droll,” he stated. “People say it’s difficult and a challenge just like life, right?” n

4-1-1

Celebrate Bloomsday on Sunday, June 16, at 5 p.m. at the James Joyce pub (513 State St.). Enjoy a free evening of spoken-word performances followed by an Irish concert featuring music by The Waymarkers. Ulysses readers include: Roger Durling, Matt Tavainini, Lark Batteau, Michael Katz, Chryss Yost, George Yatchisin, Bill Egan, Henry Brown, Rachel Brown, James McCarthy, and James Claffey. Light refreshments will be served and the James Joyce will offer Happy Hour prices for drinks. In addition, Donations at Bloomsday will support the Santa Barbara Public Library Foundation’s (sblibraryfoundation.org) efforts to keep books available for all.

Every year, American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF) compiles a list of the Top 10 Most Challenged Books to inform the public about censorship in libraries and schools. ALA documented a record 4,240 unique book titles targeted for censorship in 2023; of those, the most challenged and reasons cited for censoring the books are listed below.

1. Gender Queer: A Memoir by Maia Kobabe Number of challenges: 106 Challenged for: LGBTQIA+ content, claimed to be sexually explicit

2. All Boys Aren’t Blue by George M. Johnson Number of challenges: 82 Challenged for: LGBTQIA+ content, claimed to be sexually explicit

3. This Book Is Gay by Juno Dawson Number of challenges: 71 Challenged for: LGBTQIA+ content, sex education, claimed to be sexually explicit

4. The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky Number of challenges: 68 Challenged for: claimed to be sexually explicit, LGBTQIA+ content, rape, drugs, profanity

5. Flamer by Mike Curato

Number of challenges: 67

Challenged for: LGBTQIA+ content, claimed to be sexually explicit

6. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison

Number of challenges: 62

Challenged for: rape, incest, claimed to be sexually explicit, EDI content

7/8. (tie) Me and Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews

Number of challenges: 56

Challenged for: claimed to be sexually explicit, profanity

7/8. (tie) Tricks by Ellen Hopkins

Number of challenges: 56

Challenged for: claimed to be sexually explicit, drugs, rape, LGBTQIA+ content

9. Let’s Talk About It: The Teen’s Guide to Sex, Relationships, and Being a Human by Erika Moen and Matthew Nolan

Number of challenges: 55

Challenged for: claimed to be sexually explicit, sex education, LGBTQIA+ content

10. Sold by Patricia McCormick

Number of challenges: 53

Challenged for: claimed to be sexually explicit, rape

Source: ala.org/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/top10

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 27
THE SANTA BARBARA BLOOMSDAY COMMITTEE
Bloomsday Santa Barbara Founders DJ Palladino (left) and James Buckley
28 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM PLATINUM SPONSORS GOLD SPONSORS a local celebration of Black Independence Day BLOCK PARTY More Information juneteenthsb.org @juneteenthsb Free activities for children including art, books and library services. Family Fun Move and groove to local Black bands and singers. ASL interpretation provided. Live Music A curated marketplace of over 30+ Black creatives Black Artisan Market Voter Registration Get registered to vote quickly and easily.
bites for community Games
dutch and basketball shooting competition 11 AM - 6 PM JUNE 15 100 GRAY AVENUE SANTA BARBARA CA
Food Trucks Delicious
Double

RECORD NUMBER OF B KS TARGETED FOR CENSORSHIP

The number of titles targeted for censorship dramatically increased in 2023 compared to 2022, reaching the highest levels ever documented by the American Library Association (ALA). Public libraries and schools reported efforts to censor 4,240 unique book titles, topping the 2022 figure of 2,571. These numbers were compiled by the ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom using information from professional librarians and news reports throughout the United States.

The ALA identified four key trends in the data received:

• Pressure groups in 2023 focused on public librarians as well as school libraries.

• Groups and individuals demanding the censorship of multiple titles, sometimes hundreds at a time, drove the surge.

• Books dealing with the voices and lived experiences of people in the LGBQIA+ community and people of color made up almost 50 percent of the titles targeted.

• There were attempts to censor more than 100 titles in each of these 17 states: Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin.

“We must all stand together to preserve our right to choose what we read,” said Deborah CaldwellStone, director of ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom. “Each demand to ban a book is a demand to deny each person’s constitutionally protected right to choose and read books that raise important issues and lift up the voices of those who are often silenced.”

“Libraries that reflect their communities’ diversity promote learning and empathy that some people want to hide or eliminate,” said ALA President Emily Drabinski. “Libraries are vital institutions to each and every community in this country, and library professionals, who have dedicated their lives to protecting our right to read, are facing threats to their employment and well-being.”

Source: ala.org/news/2024/03/american-library-association-reports-record-number-unique-book-titles

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 29
efforts
to censor 4,240 Titles reported for 2023
COVER STORY ESCAPE COUPON PACKAGE 800-966-6490 • 805-927-4200 • 2905 Burton Dr., Cambria, CA 93428 Not valid with other promotions, subject to availability, not available on holidays. Does not apply to groups. Must mention this coupon when making reservations and present at check-in. Does not include tax. Valid 6/16/24 - 8/29/24. Sunday-Thursday nights. No Fridays or Saturdays. Blackout: 7/4/24 PLAN YOUR SUMMER GETAWAY! Package only bookable by phone at 800-966-6490 Special Code SUPRIN 15% off rooms Overnight
includes
dinner entrées & a bottle of house wine plus breakfast!
stay
two

THE NEXT CHAPTER:

CHAUCER’S BOOKS

IN

SANTA

BARBARA

SOLD AFTER 50 YEARS

Chaucer’s Books, a Santa Barbara book lover’s haven for the past half-century, will begin its next chapter under new ownership after its original owner, Mahri Kerley who opened the shop in 1974 and has run it ever since agreed to sell and pass the torch to a couple of fellow bookworms, Jen Lemberger and Greg Feitt, who not only know the shop well, but also fell in love between the shelves nearly 20 years ago.

It’s a move that although bittersweet due to its falling just before the 50th anniversary, Kerley says is a fitting next step to keeping the legacy of the shop she opened up almost by accident all those years ago. And for Feitt, a longtime Chaucer’s employee who has worked his way up to general manager, and now co-owner, it’s a lifelong dream come true.

History: Humble Beginnings

“I grew up with my nose in books,” Kerley said of her childhood, describing memories of nights spent huddled underneath the covers, reading by flashlight, until the sun rose and she could come out from the covers and continue her reading by morning light.

She says she never planned on opening a bookshop, but that Chaucer’s came to be on a whim after some light nudging by her husband, who said she needed a place to put the hundreds of books that already filled their home.

“That’s how I ended up owning a bookstore,” Kerley said. “My husband told me, ‘You already buy so many books you might as well open a shop.’”

In the beginning, Chaucer’s took up a hole-in-the-wall, 800-square-foot spot at Five Points shopping center, eking out a local following and eventually moving to its current and much larger location in Loreto Plaza in 1990.

In those decades, Kerley says she watched the industry and the world change drastically, and through it all, Chaucer’s kept growing its customer base by offering thousands of titles across a variety of genres that couldn’t be found at big box stores. And along the way, even after Amazon decimated the bookselling industry across the country, the shop remained a mainstay for its knowledgeable and friendly staff that Kerley kept by offering medical benefits, 401(k), and competitive wages.

“It’s great having survived all the change,” Kerley said. “I’ve been doing it for 50 years.”

Now just a few months away from its 50th anniversary, Chaucer’s has outlasted some of the biggest in the business. Corporate stores such as Barnes & Noble and Borders are long gone from Santa Barbara, and although Chaucer’s ownership is changing hands, Kerley says the shop won’t be going anywhere anytime soon.

“That’s why I’m so happy to sell to somebody who grew up with the store,” Kerley said. “It definitely was important that it be owned by somebody who understood Chaucer’s.”

Romance: Between the Shelves

Feitt, an avid reader, outrigger canoe paddler, former Marine, and self-described dog whisperer, has spent his entire life in Santa Barbara, where he remembers his bookworm days starting as a kid, browsing the shelves of Chaucer’s while his mother shopped for groceries a few doors down at Albertsons (now Gelson’s Market).

Throughout his life, at Laguna Blanca High School, Santa Barbara City College, and then at UC Santa Barbara, where he majored in labor history, Chaucer’s was always there when he needed a book fix.

Lemberger a former roller-derby skater turned librarian who also serves as chair of the city’s Community Development and Human Services Committee came to Santa Barbara in the late ’90s from the Bay Area, where she remembers her own “book-nerd” days hopping around independent stores for new reads.

The two crossed paths as part-time employees at Chaucer’s, where Feitt began working in 2004. Lemberger, who had just graduated after double-majoring in studio art and biology at UCSB, joined the staff in 2005.

Lemberger says that Feitt caught her eye early on, and she made sure that they would be working in the same section the history section where they got to know each other while stocking shelves. In 2006, the pair started dating, and they have been together ever since, with their relationship cemented by their love of reading.

“We’ve both always been book nerds,” Lemberger said. “Our homes have always had overflowing shelves and piles of books.”

And while their tastes differ Feitt prefers poetry or literary and historical fiction, whereas Lemberger leans toward magical realism, science fiction, and fantasy they both “deeply believe reading and literacy are instrumental for creating empathy, curiosity, well-being, sense of belonging, and general individual and community success.”

The storybook romance between the bookstore nerd and public librarian continues 19 years later, with the couple now leading the way for the shop where they found love.

Philosophy: Keepin’ it Chaucer’s

Feitt climbed the ladder at Chaucer’s, working his way up to become the shop’s book buyer and general manager in 2017. Throughout that time working in the shop, and even more so in recent years, the couple had a lingering thought, “Wouldn’t it be amazing if we could own the place?”

Together, Feitt and Lemberger would discuss the logistics of it, whether they could financially make it happen, and whether Kerley would even consider selling the shop to them. At first, it all seemed hypothetical, and while Kerley began to express an intent to retire and sell the store, she never went as far as seeking an outside buyer. Then, in May 2021, Feitt let Kerley know that, if she was really thinking of selling, the pair would be interested.

From there, Feitt says, it was a “slow walk of conversations, reiterating our interest, and eventually moving into figuring out the details.”

Working out these details came with its own set of challenges, as the reality of buying a business can sometimes

30 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
FEATURE
Jen Lemberger and Greg Feitt met while restocking shelves in the History section at Chaucer's 19 years ago; now the couple has taken over as owners.

be much more complicated than the idea of owning one. And Feitt and Lemberger wanted to assure Kerley that they wanted to keep the shop true to her vision.

“Realizing a dream is great, but in reality, there are the logistics, the contracts, the financing, etc.,” Feitt said. “We wanted to make sure throughout the process that we could actually fiscally do this, but also reassure Mahri that we weren’t looking at this as coming in and taking over.”

That means continuing to offer the same consistency and community-based focus that earned the shop its loyal customers.

“Chaucer’s is a community institution, and we want it to continue as such and continue her legacy,” Feitt said. “So, while we have ideas and tweaks for the future, Chaucer’s will remain Chaucer’s.”

Going forward, Lemberger and Feitt say they are excited to serve the community with the same events, reading, signings, and book-fair fundraisers that Chaucer’s always provides.

“Reading and learning and curiosity and comfort and new experiences and the windows and mirrors of stories are so important,” Feitt told the Independent. “Being able

Longstanding Independent Bookstore Will Continue Legacy with New Ownership

to connect a person to that one book is an amazing thing to be able to do day in and day out. If we can do that while also fostering relationships with our schools, nonprofits, local authors, and greater reading community, it’s a pretty perfect profession.”

For Kerley, who will be turning 80 this year, she is looking forward to taking her free time to work on her home and concentrate on her other love: music. She is actively involved in Santa Barbara’s classical music and opera scene, and says she looks forward to spending more time supporting local events.

Lemberger and Feitt will continue operating the shop with no interruptions in hours or service, and all scheduled events will proceed as planned. This November, Chaucer’s will celebrate its 50th anniversary with a series of events, including its traditional anniversary sale.

Visit Chaucer’s Books at 3321 State Street, or see chaucersbooks.com.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 31
Photos Chaucer's Books original owner, Mahri Kerley (left), with the shop's new owners, Greg Feitt and Jen Lemberger

WEDNESDAY OCT 30

One of the most distinguished singer-songwriters of her generation, Aimee’s successful solo career has spanned several decades with two GRAMMY® Awards, several GRAMMY® nominations, and the release of nine critically acclaimed solo albums – including the profoundly popular soundtrack for the film Magnolia, which garnered an Academy Award and Golden Globe nomination for Best Song in 2000. Her latest release, Queens of the Summer Hotel, continues to showcase her exceptional songwriting and musical talent.

PONCHO SANCHEZ

and His Latin Jazz Band

The GRAMMY® Award-winning conguero is among the most influential percussionists in jazz with his fiery stew of straight-ahead jazz, gritty soul music, and infectious melodies and rhythms from Latin American and South American sources.

FRIDAY JUN 28

WEDNESDAY JUL 24

32 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM LOBERO.ORG 805.963.0761 LOBERO THEATRE ENDOWMENT FOR AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC
Join the Brubeck Circle and get a Member’s discount on select events!
Just
with special guest Jonathan Coulton
AnnouncedOn Sale Fri at 10 AM
Featured Wine Sponsor

INDEPENDENT CALENDAR

THURSDAY 6/13

6/13-6/19: PCPA Solvang Festival Theater Presents: Little Shop of Horrors This musical follows a meek flower shop assistant in 1960s New York who pines for his co-worker following a total eclipse that turns his little plant into Audrey II, which feeds only on human flesh and blood. The play runs through July 7. (Recommended for ages 12 and up.) 8pm. Solvang Festival Theater, 420 2nd St, Solvang. $25-$64. Call (805) 922-8313 or email boxoffice@pcpa.org Read more on pg. 45 pcpa.org

6/13: Astronomy on Tap: Comet Interceptor Carrie Holt, Postdoctoral Fellow at Las Cumbres Observatory, will talk about Comet Interceptor: ESA’s (The European Space Agency’s) new mission to a pristine world. 7:30pm. M. Special Brewing Co., 634 State St. Free. Call (805) 880-1600 or email sseale@lco.global lco.global/aot/June-13-2024

6/13-6/17: Circus Vargas Presents: Jubilé! An Epic World Celebration This new production will showcase different cultures and nationalities as you see aerial acrobats, trapeze artists, and jugglers, with amazing feats performed on the Globe and Wheel of Death. Thu.: 7pm; Fri.: 4 and 7:30pm; Sat.: 1, 4, and 7:30pm; Sun.: 12:30, 3:30, and 7pm.; Mon.: 6:30pm. Earl Warren Showgrounds, 3400 Calle Real. $25-$80. Call (877) 468-3861 or email info@circusvargas.com tinyurl.com/CircusVargas24

6/13-6/16: Ensemble Theatre Presents: Alice, Formerly of Wonderland This enchanting musical tells the true story of the secret romance between the real-life Alice (Alice Liddell) and Prince Leopold, son of Queen Victoria and great-grand-uncle of today’s Prince Harry. Thu.: 7:30pm, Fri-Sat.: 8pm, Sun.: 2pm. The New Vic, 33 W. Victoria St. $40-$86. Call (805) 965-5400 or email boxoffice@etcsb.org etcsb.org/whats-on

6/13-6/14: The 51st Annual S.B. Writers Conference Join in this supportive environment where fellow writers help one another hone their skills with speakers, agents, panels, seminars, and workshops. Visit the website for the full schedule and prices. Mar Monte Hotel, 1111 Cabrillo Blvd. Email info@sbwriters.com tinyurl.com/WritersConference24

FRIDAY 6/14

THURSDAY

Carpinteria: 800 block of Linden Ave., 3-6:30pm

FRIDAY

Montecito: 1100 and 1200 blocks of Coast Village Rd., 8-11:15am

SATURDAY Downtown S.B.: Corner of Santa Barbara and Cota sts., 8am-1pm SUNDAY Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, 10am-2pm TUESDAY Old Town S.B.: 500-600 blocks of State St., 3-7pm WEDNESDAY Solvang:

or

Harbor’s commercial pier, and buy fresh fish (filleted or whole), live crab, abalone, sea urchins, and more. 117 Harbor Wy., 6-11am. Call (805) 259-7476. cfsb.info/sat

6/14: Takács Quartet Enjoy a performance by this Grammy Award–winning string quartet that was founded in Budapest, Hungary, and is now based in Boulder, Colorado. 7:30pm. Lobero Theatre, 33 E. Canon Perdido St. Ages 7-17: free; Community Access: $10; GA: $65-$70. Call (805) 969-4726 or email ticketoffice@musicacademy .org lobero.org

SATURDAY

6/15

6/15: Mosaic Makers Market Groove to the tunes of DJ Claire Zielinski and treat yourself to food and drinks (for purchase) while shopping from a selection of jewelry, art, clothing, handmade soaps, home goods, pet products, greeting cards, and more. 11am-4pm. Mosaic Locale Courtyard, 1131 State St. Free. Email hello@curated collectivesb.com curatedcollectivesb.com

6/15: DSASB 12th Annual Buddy Walk & Festival This benefit for the Down Syndrome Association of S.B. will have games, a vendor fair, silent auction, lunch, live music, and more. 11am-3pm. Great Meadow, Chase Palm Park, 323 E. Cabrillo Blvd. Free-$25. Call (805) 886-4411 or email melissa@dsasbc .org dsasbc.org

6/13, 6/15: Eos Lounge Thu.: IV’iza Island, 9pm. Free Sat.: Cutsnake, $6.18. 500 Anacapa St. Ages 21+. Call (805) 564-2410. eoslounge.com

6/13: Satellite S.B. Brett Hunter Band, 6pm. 1117 State St. Free. Call (805) 364-3043. satellitesb.com

6/13-6/15, 6/18-6/19: SOhO

Restaurant & Music Club Thu.: Amy Lavere & Will Sexton, 7:30pm. $15-$20. All ages. Fri.: Honky Tonkin’ with Sam Morrow & Ellis Bullard, 9pm. $20-$25. Ages 21+. Sat.: Jason Libs, Brayell, Val-Mar Records, 8pm. $12-$15. Ages 21+. Tue.: Micaela McCall, Spoony, Rusty Cummings, 7:30pm. $12-$15. All ages. Wed.: India & the Easy Riders with Bandit Royale, 7:30pm. $12-$15. All ages. 1221 State St. Call (805) 962-7776. sohosb.com

6/13, 6/15-6/16: Lost Chord

Guitars Thu.: Christopher Paul Stelling, 8pm. $16.74. Sat.: Johnny Irion, Chris Murphy, 8pm. $16.74. Sun.: The Hawthorns, 8pm. Free. 1576 Copenhagen Dr., Solvang. Ages 21+. Call (805) 331-4363. lostchordguitars.com

6/14, 6/18: S.B. Bowl Fri.: Daryl Hall, Elvis Costello & The Imposters, Charlie Sexton. 6pm. $55-$165. Tue.: Whiskey Myers, Anderson East, Vincent Neil Emerson. 6pm. $55.50-$105.50. 1122 N. Milpas St. Call (805) 962-7411. sbbowl.com

6/14-6/16: Maverick Saloon Fri.: 33 Thunder, 8:30pm. Sat.: Jared Nels, noon. Carmen & the Renegade Vigilantes, 8:30pm. Sun.: Natalie Wattre, 1pm. 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez. Free. Call (805) 686-4785. mavericksaloon.com/ event-calendar

6/14-6/15: M.Special Brewing Co. (S.B.) Fri.: Redfish, 7:30pm. Sat.: Neon Blonde, 8pm. 634 State St. Free. Call (805) 968-6500 or email info@mspecial brewco.com mspecialbrewco.com

6/14: M.Special Brewing Co. (Goleta) Ace Gonzalez and the Surfilm Sound, 6pm. 6860 Cortona Dr., Ste. C, Goleta. Free. Call (805) 968-6500 or email info@mspecialbrewco.com mspecialbrewco.com

6/15: Arrowsmith’s Wine Bar Jacob Cole, 7pm. 1539 Mission Dr., Solvang. Free. Call (805) 686-9126 or email anna@ arrowsmithwine.com. arrowsmithwine.com/events

6/15-6/16: Cold Spring Tavern Sat.: Smelly Cat, 1:30-4:30pm. The Rincons, Dusty Jugs, 5-8pm. Sun.: Tom Ball and Kenny Sultan, 1:30-4:30pm. 5995 Stagecoach Rd. Free. Call (805) 9670066. coldspringtavern.com

6/15-6/16: Hook’d Bar and Grill Sat.: Adrian Floy, THC, 3pm. Sun.: Traveling Hurtados, 1pm. 116 Lakeview Dr., Cachuma Lake. Free. Call (805) 350-8351. hookdbarandgrill.com/music-onthe-water

6/17: The Red Piano Franck Goldwasser & RJ Mischo, 7:30pm. 519 State St. Free. Call (805) 358-1439. theredpiano.com

6/19: Whiskey Richards Punk on Vinyl. 9pm. Whiskey Richards, 435 State St. Free.

6/15: The 36th Annual Ojai Wine Festival Enjoy award-winning wines, craft beers, ciders, and microbrews with food for purchase, live music, an artisan market, and a silent auction with funds to go toward the Rotary Club of Ojai West Foundation’s charitable projects. Noon-4pm. Lake Casitas Recreation Area, 11093 Santa Ana Rd., Ventura. $105; non-drink tickets: $25. Call (805) 646-3794 or email ojaiwinefestival@ gmail.com ojaiwinefestival.com

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 33
Copenhagen Dr. and 1st St.,
(805) 962-5354 sbfarmersmarket.org FISHERMAN’S MARKET FARMERS MARKET SCHEDULE SATURDAY Rain
terry ortega Lola watts by & JunE
2:30-6:30pm
shine, meet local fishermen on the
13-19
complete
online at independent.com/events. Submit virtual and in-person events at independent.com/eventsubmit. Volunteer Opportunity Fundraiser EVENTS MAY HAVE BEEN CANCELED OR POSTPONED. Please contact the venue to confirm the event. the
As always, find the
listings
Ages 21+. Call (818) 451-8206. tinyurl.com/punkonvinyl Shows on Tap Shows on Tap 6/15, 6/19: Carr Winery Sat.: Jonathan Firey Duo, 4pm. Wed.: Brian Kinsella, Jimmy Rankin, 5:30pm. 414 N. Salsipuedes St. Free. Ages 21+. Call (805) 965-7985 or email info@carrwinery.com carrwinery.com/event
2nd Fridays Art @ SBTC Artist Reception and Awards: AQUATIC Artists from all backgrounds will show work in oil, paint, photography, and mixed media with the hope of fostering a deeper appreciation for water and inspiring meaningful conversations about our collective responsibility to protect it for future generations. The exhibit will show through July 3. 4:30pm. S.B. Tennis Club, 2375 Foothill Rd. Free. Call (805) 6824722. santabarbaratennisclub .com/art COURTESY LUIS ESCOBAR, REFLECTIONS PHOTOGRAPHY
6/14:
“L’eau-Avec Citron” by Melinda Mettler
Brian Kinsella, Jimmy Rankin

6/15: Braille Institute Music to Inspire Meet S.B. vocalist and guitarist Meghan Downing, who was helped by the Braille Institute after losing most of her sight and is now attending Berklee College of Music, and see her perform. There will be refreshments and information about programs. Donations will be welcome. RSVP is required. 5:30-7pm. Braille Institute S.B., 2031 De la Vina St. Free. Call (323) 210-2595 or email shserpas@ brailleinstitute.org. tinyurl.com/Music-To-Inspire

6/15: A Celebration of Cultures Watch a premier screening of the documentary Drumbeat of Humanity, about the power of drums and dance from Argentina, Hawai‘i, Brazil, China, and more. There will also be live dance performances and a panel discussion in celebration of rhythmic sound and movement. 7:30-9:30pm. Center Stage Theater, 751 Paseo Nuevo. GA: free-$30; VIP: $60. Call (805) 963-0408. centerstagetheater.org

SUNDAY 6/16

6/16: Father’s Day Papas & Polo Introduce Dad to the “sport of kings” at the private club of the revered polo player Memo Gracida with complimentary tastings followed by a fast-paced polo match field-side, with the opportunity to take a lesson 10:30am-noon. La Herradura Polo Club, 3720 Baseline Ave., Santa Ynez. Free. Call (805) 736-9032. tinyurl.com/Papas-Polo

6/16: Bloomsday! A Celebration of James Joyce’s Ulysses Area authors, actors, and poets will read excerpts from the book followed by high-energy Celtic music from the Waymarkers. Donations will be accepted for the S.B. Library Foundation. 5-9pm. The James Joyce Pub, 513 State St. Free. Email jbuckley@shoreline publishing.com. Read more on pg 26. tinyurl.com/Bloomsday24

MONDAY 6/17

6/17: Chaucer’s Book Talk and Signing:

TUESDAY 6/18

6/18: Chaucer’s Book Talk and Signing: Catherine Ann Jones Local author Catherine Ann Jones will talk about and sign copies of her book East & West: Stories of India, about aspects of Indian culture that are explored through stories of seekers, heroes, frauds, victims, and of ordinary Indians. 6pm. Chaucer’s Books, 3321 State St. Free Call (805) 682-6787 or email events@chaucersbooks.com. chaucersbooks.com/event

WEDNESDAY 6/19

6/19: Educator Night Workshop: Nature’s Keepers Crafts Educators are invited to take part in a workshop to craft delightful window propagation stations and DIY nature journals in a supportive, stress-free environment. 6pm. Art from Scrap, 302 E. Cota St. $15. Call (805) 884-0459 or email sarahvl@exploreecology.org exploreecology.org/calendar/list

34 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
the
Amanda Darcy Local romance novelist Amanda Darcy will talk about and sign copies of her book Of Love & Beer, a modern retelling of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. 6pm. Chaucer’s Books, 3321 State St. Free. Call (805) 682-6787 or email events@ chaucersbooks.com chaucersbooks.com/ event 6/18: Solstice Float Building Children ages 7-17 are invited to build a float, make costumes, and take part in the Solstice Parade. 11am-3pm. S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call (805) 962-7653 or email info@sbplibrary.libanswers.com. tinyurl.com/SolsticeFloatBuilding COURTESY 54448 State of the art 75-foot catamaran provides a comfortable ride along Departs Daily from the Landing in the Santa Barbara Harbor (805) 882-0088 • 1-800-77Whale For more information go to CondorExpress.com State of the art 75-foot catamaran provides a comfortable ride along the Santa Barbara coast and the islands. Features a large raised bow, upper sun-deck, full-service bar, galley, and a professional, experienced crew. Come enjoy a day with the whales! Come enjoy a day with humpbacks, grays and giant blue whales! Celebrating 52 years since the passage of
Join female athletes and coaches for a celebration of one of the most important civil rights events in American history!
Sunday, June 23rd Time: 12pm to 130pm Location: Santa Barbara County Courthouse (Anacapa and Figueroa) Email title9event@gmail.com for media and other inquiries.
Title IX
Date:

JunE 13-19

6/15: Juneteenth in Old Town Lompoc Celebrate with live music, entertainment, food and marketplace vendors, kids’ arts and crafts, and more. The keynote speaker will be Iris Rideau of Rideau Vineyard, the first female African American winery owner in the U.S. 11am. 117 S. H St., Lompoc. Free. Call (805) 448-7869.

tinyurl.com/Juneteenth-Lompoc

Juneteenth National Independence Day celebrates June 19, 1865, when enslaved people of African descent in Galveston, Texas, learned of their freedom from the slavery system in the U.S.

6/15: Joy for the People Block Party

6/16: Juneteenth Celebration with S.B. Ring Shout Project Ring Shout is a spiritual, traditional circle dance that enslaved Africans carried out when they were brought to the U.S. to celebrate the end of slavery and involves call-and-response singing, a cappella, stomping, clapping, and beating on a wooden floor or surface with a stick to make rhythm. 11am-noon. S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Call (805) 962-7653 or email info@sbplibrary.libanswers.com tinyurl.com/SBRingShoutProject

This community block party will feature art, books, and library services for the kids, live music from local Black bands and singers, Double Dutch, basketball, food trucks, voter registration, and a curated marketplace with more than 20 Black creatives. 11am-6pm. 100 Gray Ave. juneteenthsb.org

6/17: Juneteenth Lompoc: Discovering Our Roots Experience the jubilant spirit of African-American freedom with live music, dance, games, food and drink for purchase, and more. 11am-5pm. Old Town Lompoc,100 S. H St., Lompoc. Email contact@c4lompoc.org tinyurl.com/JuneteenthLompoc24

Celebrate Pride and Joy

6/13: All the Colors of the Rainbow Mixer Dress in your favorite colors of the rainbow for this mixer, featuring delicious focaccia sandwiches and drinks (for purchase). 5pm. So Fresh Garage, 2434 Alamo Pintado Ave., Los Olivos. syvpride.org/2024-pride-events

6/15: Comedy with Pride Celebrate Pride month with stand-up comedy sets by comedian, writer, and actor Ian Harvie, comedian Jake Noll, and more. 7:30pm. Soul Bites, 423 State St. $25. Call (805) 7224542 or email noindoorvoices@gmail.com soulbitesrestaurants.com/events

6/17: Pride Month: A Little Pride History from an Early Eyewitness and Instigator In this virtual PFLAG support meeting, a local hero will be a guest speaker to discuss pride history. 7pm. Virtual. Free tinyurl.com/PFLAGMeetingJune17

6/18: Gayroake at the Maverick Celebrate Pride every Tuesday in June with singing, music, dancing, and fun! 8-11:50pm. Maverick Saloon, 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez. Free. Ages 21+. Call (805) 686-4785. syvpride.org/2024-pride-events

6/14-6/16: Pride at Riviera

Theatre Celebrate Pride month by watching movies such as Orlando, A Fantastic Woman, The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, Solo, Velvet Goldmine, The Celluloid Closet, and Call Me By Your Name Visit the website for the full schedule. SBIFF Riviera Theatre, 2044 Alameda Padre Serra. Various times. $7-$12. Email help@ sbiff.org sbiffriviera.com/pride

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 35
JONATHAN DIXON

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA OAKLAND DIVISION In re Franciscan Friars of California, Inc. Case No. 23-41723 WJL

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT, on December 31, 2023, Franciscan Friars of California, Inc. (the “Debtor”) filed for bankruptcy protection under chapter 11 of title 11 of the United States Code.

The Bankruptcy Court has established July 19, 2024 at 5:00 p.m. (prevailing Pacific Time) as the deadline to file proofs of claim against the Debtor (the “Bar Date”).

If you have a claim against the Debtor, including, without limitation, a claim related to sexual abuse committed by any person connected with the Debtor, you must file a claim on or before the Bar Date.

If you have any questions regarding the claims process and/or you wish to obtain a copy of the proof of claim form, you may do so by: (i) calling Donlin Recano & Company, Inc. at (888) 444-4055; (ii) visiting the Debtor’s restructuring website at https://www.donlinrecano. com/ffc; and/or (iii) emailing inquiries to ffcinfo@drc.equiniti.com.

IF YOU DO NOT TIMELY FILE A PROOF OF CLAIM, YOU MAY FORFEIT YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE ON ANY PLAN OF REORGANIZATION AND TO SHARE

36 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM Get to know our readers... to get your business in front of our audience. Email advertising@independent.com
89% have completed some college or higher education • 89% are between the ages of 35 and 74
67% have an annual household income of $100,000 or more *based on CVC external audit conducted Nov 2023
IN ANY DISTRIBUTIONS TO CREDITORS IN CONNECTION WITH THE DEBTOR’S CHAPTER 11 CASE. MATTRESSES & FURNITURE 4 LESS MATTRESSES • FUTONS • SOFAS • DRESSERS BUNKBEDS PLATFORM BEDS • HEADBOARDS & MORE! DAILY STUDENT DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE SERVING SANTA BARBARA COUNTY SINCE 2010 805-699-5103 5959 HOLLISTER AVE, SUITE B, GOLETA, CA 93117 WWW.MATTRESSSANTABARBARA.COM moxi.org 125 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 805.770.5000 Sponsors Rule! Thank you to our Measurement Rules Lead Sponsor: The Ann Jackson Family Foundation And special thank you for the generous support provided by: AN ORIGINAL EXHIBIT CREATED BY THE CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF PITTSBURGH JUNE 15 - SEP 22, 2024 Opening at this weekend! FOR OUR FULL LINEUP, PLEASE VISIT SOHO SB.COM 1221 STATE STREET • 962-7776 Thurs 6/13 7:30 pm AMY LAVERE & WILL SEXTON FOLK Fri 6/14 9:00 pm HONKY TONKIN' WITH SAM MORROW & ELLIS BULLARD COUNTRY Sat 6/15 8:00 pm JASON LIBS & THE LIBERATION AND BRAYELL WITH VAL-MAR RECORDS ROCK & HIP-HOP Tues 6/18 7:30 pm MICAELA MCCALL WITH SPOONY & RUSTY CUMMINGS JAZZ Wed 6/19 7:30 pm INDIA & THE EASY RIDERS WITH BANDIT ROYALE SOUL / ROCK Thurs 6/20 8:30 pm WHAT THE DANCE PRESENTS: GOOD LUCK CLUB AN UNAPOLOGETIC PARTY DJ DANCE PARTY

LIVING

Nonprofits Hungry for Conversation? Meet Talk-o-Truck

The truck modeled after a vintage LeMont, an old French bread truck, is easy to spot. For starters, it’s pink. Not Barbie pink, mind you, but that doesn’t stop women and men alike from inquiring about the vehicle. Conceived in Argentina, imported to Miami, and shipped to Santa Barbara, Talk-o-Truck isn’t actually a truck; without a motor, it’s officially registered as a trailer that has to be towed to get anywhere. And it’s actually not a place to grab your favorite carnitas and beer.

Talk-o-Truck delivers stories.

The Starfish Connection Delivers Stories and Crisis Funding Relief

A mobile recording studio set to amplify the voices of marginalized people in and around Santa Barbara, Talk-oTruck is a “safe place where people can share their story,” said Sarah Abrams, executive director of The Starfish Connection.

Since officially launching earlier this year, Talk-o-Truck has participated in events such as Earth Day, Mujeres Market for International Women’s Day, and a Mother’s Day event in Paseo Nuevo. The team partners with like-minded, purposedriven organizations, asking volunteer storytellers to answer questions around a theme. More often than not, one simple question leads to a larger story about hopes, dreams, and life.

The truck is the latest branch of The Starfish Connection, a new nonprofit startup “dedicated to building thriving communities by empowering individuals and fostering connection through crisis funding and community storytelling,” according to their website. “Everyone has a story,” Starfish Connection Founder Virginia Benson Wigle said when we met at the organization’s home office in Old Town Goleta.

Community storytelling and crisis funding might sound like an odd pairing and even as I sat with the team, it took a second for them to explain the connection but eventually, it all came back to the story of Wigle and her late husband, John. Virginia and John’s dream had always been to combine their life experiences to foster connection. “The two ideas are so divergent,” adds Abrams, “but are both foundational to Virginia and John.”

“[Once] all of that foundational piece is already done, by the time [an application is filled out], they’re relatively certain we’re going to fund it.”

Inspired by John’s belief that making a difference for one can impact all, the nonprofit’s name itself stems from an excerpt from John’s favorite Loren Eiseley poem, “The Star Thrower.” Like the poem, the Starfish Connection’s work is all about helping one person at a time.

“We don’t have a singular purpose, so we can serve any need that meets our criteria,” Abrams said. “It really gives us the opportunity to serve a broad spectrum of people.”

Unlike state-run or federally run programs that might offer one-time assistance or monetary stipends, the Starfish Connection deals directly with the vendor, says Program Coordinator Sophia Lake. From their robust website of testimonials, that can be anything from a grad school payment to securing hospice care. So, if a family needs a comfortable space for their child undergoing chemotherapy, for example, the Starfish Connection will go directly to Wayfair.com and buy a sofa.

That, and all within 24 hours of the request, chimes in Wigle.

Yes, you read that right. The truly miraculous thing that happens with this all-female, four-person team is that all decisions are made within 24 hours. That’s truly a testament to their dedication to their core principles: that “everyone is seen, heard, and honored.”

“We’re not going to solve the world’s problems by one approved crisis funding application,” Abrams adds, “but for that person receiving it, it’s just a deep breath. And sometimes that deep breath is all [one] needs to pivot, to see clearly, [and] to move forward.”

Like “The Star Thrower,” the Starfish Connection is all about giving just one person at a time a moment to exhale. And when you give someone that moment to breathe, the organization invites everyone back to share their story whether it’s through their community storytelling project, Our Story Connection, or Talk-o-Truck. “We’d love to hear your story,” says Abrams, “because there’s somebody else just like you.”

The organization’s primary focus is in providing crisis funding to people facing sudden financial crises. In partnering with regional nonprofits (ideally “smaller, community-based nonprofits,” said Abrams), the team is able to identify clients already in the system who are in dire need of immediate assistance.

In their collaborations with local organizations such as Hospice of Santa Barbara, Mental Wellness Center, LEAP, and Hearts Aligned, applications aren’t just vetted upon submission, but are done through the initial step of partnership. “We meet with the partner and we get to know their programs really well,” says Abrams.

Sometimes it’s an act of sharing a story, and sometimes it’s financial support, but the Starfish Connection is all about offering something that’ll transform a life. According to Wigle, “To witness someone’s story, and be in that moment with them, is the biggest gift to give someone.”

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 37 p. 37
Come see the Talk-o-Truck at the Juneteenth block party celebration on Saturday, June 15, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. at 100 Gray Avenue in the Funk Zone. See thestarfishconnection.org.
Connec four-per finan partner Inside the Starfish Connection Talk-o-Truck
MAIA HINTON COURTESY
Executive Director Sarah Abrams (left) and Founder Virginia Benson Wigle of the Starfish Connection

FORESTERS BASEBALL!

FIRST GAMES OF THE SEASON

FRIDAY, JUNE 14 AT EDDIE MATHEWS FIELD VS SAN LUIS BLUES, 4 :30 PM

SATURDAY, JUNE 15 AT EDDIE MATHEWS FIELD VS ARROYO SECO SAINTS 4:30 PM

SUNDAY, JUNE 16 AT ACADEMY BARONS 1:00 PM

TUESDAY, JUNE 18 AT EDDIE MATHEWS FIELD VS CONEJO OAKS, 4:30 PM

Santa Barbara High School, Eddie Mathews Field Tickets available at the gate 2024 FORESTERS HOME FIELD

All Foresters info at www.sbforesters.org

Home games streamed live on Foresters YouTube. Listen to away games on YouTube, too!

38 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
Wish your Dad a “Happy Father’s Day” with a special message or Celebrate your Graduate in our online photo gallery at independent.com/dadsandgrads2024/ are rad! GRADS DADS & 2024 0R SCAN THE QR CODE HERE

A Challenging Sport That Promotes Teamwork

Sports

LIVING

On a gloomy Thursday afternoon at Cleveland Elementary School, the Santa Barbara Tennis Patrons recognized a group of Cleveland and Franklin Elementary School students as the first graduating class of community tennis players.

While spending a semester learning tennis might seem like a breeze, for this group of kids, the challenges go far deeper than mastering strokes. The Santa Barbara Tennis patrons see the true value in the life lessons these children learn, evident in the remarkable transformation they witness from nervous beginners to confident players by the end of the five months.

“Tennis is a really, really hard sport to learn,” said Lisa Aviani, a Santa Barbara Tennis Patrons staff member, as she presented the children with certificates. “But you guys have stuck with it and shown perseverance and great teamwork.”

Lianna Contreas, the mother of graduate Josiah Juarez, also known as “Jo Jo,” joked that her 7-year-old son is naturally “very competitive” and “has to be the best at every sport.” But she acknowledged that playing tennis has helped him “learn to be a better sport.”

As Aviani announced each recipient, cheers erupted from their peers a clear indication of their support of each other’s accomplishments. After receiving their certificates, each kid walked away with a brandnew tennis racquet.

In partnership with the Santa Barbara Unified School District’s A-OK (Afterschool Opportunities For Kids Program), the Santa Barbara Tennis Patrons provide free tennis lessons to underserved children. Lessons are offered to children ages 8-17, grouped by age and skill, for a personalized learning experience.

This year, the Patrons added an element of competition to the program: an end-ofthe-season game, Cleveland versus Franklin. The competition took place on Santa Barbara High School’s tennis courts. The Cleveland Dolphins won, and the Franklin Eagles were understandably upset, but in the end, both teams shook hands over the net to show their support for one another.

Before the season started, many of the kids had never held a tennis racquet. The Santa Barbara Tennis Patrons hope that introducing the children to the sport at a young age will inspire them to continue in high school and beyond. This is why the Tennis Patrons plan to sponsor 10 children who want to attend the Summer Tennis and Swim camp this summer hosted by Santa Barbara Parks and Recreation.

After the Thursday ceremony and before a much-deserved pizza party, the kids put their new racquets to the test and continued to practice. The Executive Director of The S.B. Tennis patrons, Greg Tebbe, and I watched from the sidelines as the kids showed clear dedication to improving their skills. Tebbe pointed out that they aren’t haphazardly hitting the ball as hard as they can, but they are clearly trying to play the game. “That, to me, is a huge progression for this program,” said Tebbe. “Just to see their interest.”

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 39
For more information about the Santa Barbara Tennis Patrons, visit sbtennispatrons.com.
Santa Barbara Tennis Patrons Inspire Young Tennis Players BY TIANA MOLONY
SHYRA JAIN C10-0000293 | C10-0001190 | C10-0001124 farmacyshop.com @farmacy.ca SANTA BARBARA 128 W MISSION STREET (805) 880-1207 SANTA YNEZ 3576 MADERA STREET (805) 693-4685 ISLA VISTA 6555 PARDALL ROAD (805) 454-8473 PREMIUM CANNABIS PRODUCTS AWARD-WINNING CANNABIS SHOPS SANTA BARBARA LOCATION ONLY GET 30% OFF ALL MONTH LONG FATHER’S DAY WEEKEND SPECIALS FRI. JUNE 14TH - SUN. JUNE 16TH Not stackable with storewide discounts. LIMITED TIME ONLY 3.5g Jars: 50% Off (Minimum Purchase of 2 Jars) Vapes & 50%Prerolls Off 50% Off NEW CLOSING HOURS 9:50PM | FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS FARMACY SANTA BARBARA NEWS & UPDATES
The Santa Barbara Tennis Patrons’ first “class” of graduating community tennis players with students from Franklin and Cleveland elementary schools
40 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM NOW OPEN Primary and Specialty Care 111 East Victoria St. | Floor 2 Santa Barbara, CA | 805-564-3233 Cancer Care 111 East Victoria St. | Floor 3 Santa Barbara, CA | 805-563-0041 To book an appointment or learn more, scan or visit us at uclahealth.org/locations/ santa-barbara Care, for life Get lifelong care at our new Santa Barbara clinics Nominate Your Favorites Now At BESTOF. INDEPENDENT.COM Santa Barbara® Santa BestBarbara® of Best of READERS' POLL 2024 2024 GET YOUR DOGGONE VOTE IN!

FOOD& DRINK

s .b . schmears

Authentic New York Bagels in Isla Vista Authentic New York Bagels in Isla Vista

The scent of baking dough hangs thick in the air as Daniel Dunietz, owner and operator of Yetz’s Bagels, presides over his kitchen with a steadfast sense of urgency. Serving hand-rolled and boiled bagels from scratch out of a storefront still bearing the marks of its previous iteration, Yetz’s Bagels is the newest addition to Santa Barbara’s very small pool of local bagel spots. The Isla Vista shop, which has only been fully open for the better part of two months, marks a venture that puts quality above all else and comes years in the making for Dunietz.

“The bagels were actually part of the picture from the very beginning,” he said. “The original concept I had for a restaurant I came up with in high school. I was like 14 or 15, and the original idea was called ‘Blunts and Bagels,’ and it was a cannabis-themed bagel shop. A 15-year-old’s idea for sure.”

Dunietz, who grew up in Chicago, took his cannabis-themed bagel shop idea to the dorms of UC Santa Barbara when he started whipping up bagel-sandwich creations for his friends in Isla Vista using bagels purchased from a shop in Isla Vista.

“But then when I got serious about opening a store, I realized they wouldn’t sell to me because I was their competition, and there wasn’t another option that I was happy with,” he said. “And rather than seeing the writing on the wall 10 years ago, and seeing that there’s a huge need for this, that this is a business opportunity, I pivoted and went to bread bowls. That’s how Buddha Bowls came about.”

Until last month, Dunietz ran Dank Bowls (previously known as Buddha Bowls), a cannabis-themed restaurant slinging hefty portions of loaded mac-and-cheese-filled bread bowls out of the same storefront Yetz’s currently resides in. He says the business model he employed at Dank Bowls wasn’t sustainable: He was working six or

seven days a week and saw little growth.

“I think it’s been clear to me for five or six years that the concept is flawed. It’s so much food for a single person; the portion sizes are like two pounds. The only reason I could stay afloat was because I was in business in a college town,” he said.

It was during a trip to New York last year when Dunietz realized it was time to pursue the business he had envisioned all along. “I was going to these bagel shops in New York where it’s glass and you can see into all of the equipment. And I’m looking at it and I’ve been in food for 10 years and I’m just sitting there like, ‘What they’re doing looks so much simpler than what we’re doing at Dank Bowls.’ ”

When he returned home, craving a New York bagel, he made his first batch. Soon after, he implemented a pop-up-style version of Yetz’s during the slow mornings at Dank Bowls. “My key was no advertising. My whole thing was just to focus on making the best bagel. We started extremely small. We were using a 20-quart mixer; we were doing like four dozen at a time,” he said.

In transitioning to bagels, Dunietz isn’t looking to reinvent the wheel but rather, perfecting it. “As I’ve gotten older, I’ve started to learn that there’s something really beautiful about following in the footsteps of things that have been figured out already,” he said. “My whole ethos is that I need to make the best bagel. Like, I still have the branding from Dank Bowls; I haven’t even figured that out. In my mind, all that comes after. The most important thing is you make the best product.”

He and a small team of bakers make every bagel from scratch and offer a menu of bagel sandwiches ranging from the deluxe with classic lox, capers, red onion, and schmear to a chipotle beef melt with pico de gallo and sliced roast beef.

Dunietz’s passion for good bagels comes from a long connection to their cultural history. “I’m a Polish Jew, so for me, I’ve been eating bagels my whole life,” he said. “It’s about embracing my ancestors and the people who have brought bagels into this world. It’s one of those things that makes me feel really good about what I’m doing because it connects me to other people.”

He envisions Yetz’s as a spot that appeals to everyone something he says Dank Bowls, with its pro-cannabis ethos, wasn’t always able to accomplish. “When it comes to something like food, it’s such a universal [thing]. I have an opportunity to share my values by not shutting people out when it comes to anything that’s a little divisive. To me, it’s just about good bagels, and I think it’s clear people are getting behind it.”

Get behind it, they have. As we sat in the small storefront, a steady stream of customers poured in. “Within about a month, we went from four dozen to doing 200 on the weekends. And now we’re selling out. We did 400 yesterday, we sold out, and that doesn’t include the wholesale that was just sandwiches in-store.”

Dunietz now provides wholesale and catering services across Santa Barbara. With demand growing, he says his expansion goals have become more urgent. “I need a bigger space. I need a bigger kitchen. I need a new oven,” he said. “We’re using this oven that can do only about 150 to 200 bagels an hour, so we have to start at 1:30 a.m. on busy days. That’s the only way we can make it work, because this space was not built for what we’re doing.”

For the time being, Dunietz remains committed to filling what he sees as a (bagel-shaped) gap in Santa Barbara’s food scene from out of his Isla Vista shop. “Santa Barbara lacks affordable quality food not just cheap fast food like good-quality fast casual, and there’s so much in that,” he said. “If you want to spend $100 a person, we have a lot of that, but I think that healthy ecosystems should have all of it.”

Yetz’s Bagels are available in-store (901 Embarcadero Del Mar, Ste. 103, Isla Vista) and for catered events, offering a wide variety of catering options on their websites. See yetzsbagels.com.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 41 p.41
FOOD & DRINK
Yetz’s Bagels Was Years in the Making
COURTESY YETZ’S BAGELS
ready for a crowd
Baking up the goods
Bagels

PBS Focuses on Purple Urchin Project

PBS Focuses on Purple Urchin Project

Rarely is environmental activism so delicious as slurping purple urchin, the voracious shellfish species currently overwhelming nearshore ecosystems across California. Enabled by warming waters and the decline of usual predators, the spiky, globular echinoderms eat so much kelp that only urchin barrens remain, which isn’t great for other species. Meanwhile, the species’ gonads so prized in their red cousins as the source of uni aren’t reliably edible in the wild.

But as a team of Santa Barbara urchin divers and abalone farmers discovered, the purples can be fattened on land, and then sold at top dollar to restaurants and uni-craving individuals. Fans find the hotchis as they’ve become known, derived from the English Romani word for “hedgehog,” though directly translating to “forest urchin” to be consistently plumper and even richer in flavor than the reds.

I wrote a cover story on this collaboration between divers Harry Liquornik and Stephanie Mutz of Sea Stephanie Fish and Doug Bush of The Cultured Abalone, an aquaculture farm on the Gaviota Coast, back in February 2021. This summer, that news is going national thanks to a PBS series about aquaculture across the United States.

“My favorite part about this project is that it demonstrates that aquaculture and traditional fisheries have more to gain from productive collaboration than they do being at odds with each other,” said Bush when I called recently for an update. “It goes against the presumption that aquaculture and fisheries have a fundamentally adversarial relationship.”

Update on Efforts to Improve Nearshore Ecosystems While Creating New Seafood Product

Developing these relationships is just as critical as the work itself. “We need creativity,” said Bush of dealing with ecosystem-wide issues. “We need an approach that’s more than just ‘freak out and close shit down,’ which is the only apparent response that the large regulatory and NGO community tends to contribute.”

To be clear, eating purple urchins alone will not solve the problem. “It just adds a tool to the toolkit,” said Bush. “No one has suggested that we’re going to be able to harvest enough purple urchin to bring the ecosystem into balance within a year or two. The scale of the problem is really not well-appreciated.” Plus, the issue is often mischaracterized. “They are not an invasive species,” he explained. “They’re not mad at anybody. They’re not evil. They’re just out of balance.”

Bush believes focusing on solutions is much more effective than debating the past. “We can burn a lot of energy on how we got here,” he said. “We can talk about El Niño, as if anybody knows what El Niño is. Or warm water blobs, or anthropogenic climate change, or overfishing. But if you say any of those, you’ve alienated half the room. You’ve given them a reason to prejudge your strategy.”

Instead, he’s giving value to something that historically had none. “The demand for uni is enormous,” said Bush,

who doesn’t see the purples competing with red urchins, which have been a very well-managed fishery for decades. “We’re enriching the reputation for California and Santa Barbara as a source for very, very high-value uni. We are able to add a new menu item to the classical California seafood card.”

Bush started dabbling in purple urchin’s potential more than 15 years ago, originally thinking they could be fattened for scientific researchers. But the culinary project didn’t really kick off until about five years ago, the result of dockside conversations between him, Liquornik, and Mutz, who’s likely the most famous urchin diver in the world.

The hotchis have been chugging along ever since, with significant progress being made in the last year over certain technical kinks, particularly around shipping. There’s particular potential in a packaging technique called “ensui,” where urchins can stay fresh for five days while soaked in saltwater.

Bay. “We’ve been open-source about it. We get people calling us all the time.”

But the state’s historic lack of support for aquaculture did not lay fertile ground for innovation. “Maybe this could be a good catalyst for moving things a little further along that road as well,” said Bush.

The three-part PBS series, which is called Hope in the Water, begins airing on Wednesday, June 19, at 6 p.m. The purple urchin episode, titled “Changing the Menu,” hits the small screen on July 3 and features actor Shailene Woodley diving for urchins with Stephanie Mutz of Sea Stephanie Fish. Bush provides commentary, as does UCSB marine biology professor Halley Froehlich, and then Chef Rhoda Magbitang from Mattei’s Tavern turns the purples into uni gold. The episode also showcases the work of Fishadelphia, which introduces less-popular Atlantic Ocean seafood species to innercity high school students, and Iceland’s 100% Fish Project, which is showing how to get the most out of every single cod that’s caught.

But the whole project is still very tiny. “We can support a handful of restaurants,” said Bush, in addition to the consumers who order from The Cultured Abalone directly, where a dozen cost $140. “We are looking at taking this up a couple levels right now.”

He hopes other companies will jump in. “I have no interest in being a gatekeeper, in being the sole source of purple urchins,” said Bush, who believes similar projects, perhaps with different techniques or by fattening them on another food source, could be developed from Monterey to Bodega

“They were such delights to work with,” said Bush of the PBS team, which shot the material about a year ago. “They were efficient. They had a plan.”

Naturally, he’s proud to be getting national attention. “I’ve been a very outspoken advocate for this type of project,” said Bush. “It’s market-based. It’s regional-foodsystem-based. It engages people with food and the environment. It’s fun. It’s weird. It’s unusual. It’s a really neat project.”

Order your own purple urchin from The Cultured Abalone at culturedabalone.com.

42 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM FOOD & DRINK
television COURTESY PHOTOS
Chef Rhoda Magbitang from Mattei’s Tavern Stephanie Mutz of Sea Stephanie Fish Shailene Woodley and Doug Bush in Hope in the Water: Changing the Menu

Jonesy’s Fried Chicken Opens in Goleta

Jonesy’s Fried Chicken has opened at 282 Orange Avenue in Goleta, the former home of Red Pepper Restaurant.

“There is a big gap between some of these sit-down restaurants that are doing a $28 fried chicken and KFC chicken, and that’s where we want to come in,” says owner and longtime local chef Kyle Jones, who also runs Craft Wood Fired Catering. “It’s kind of casual dining with an intelligent twist. Our motto is ‘under-promise and over-deliver.’ When you get here, I want you to understand the attention to detail and what we are working with. The Mary’s air-chilled organic chicken, the high-quality and highly refined peanut oil we are using for the fryers, and stuff like that. We’re not breaking the bank on the price point, but we are making sure that the quality is there and the attention to detail is there.”

The Shared Plates menu includes JFC buttermilk fried wings ($16), buffalo wings ($16), handmade buttermilk biscuits ($10), fried mac ’n’ cheese balls ($14), pimento cheese and crackers ($14), and Angry Bird Fries ($12). The Chicken Plates menu includes three Mary’s tenders, with two sides ($17); five Mary’s tenders, with three sides ($24); and the Big Bird Tray ($48). The Sandwiches menu includes JFC Original ($14), Buffalo Bird ($16), Korean Nashville Hot ($16), Nashville Hot Cod ($17), and Georgia Peach ($17). Hours are 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Wednesday-Sunday. Call (805) 770-2428 or visit jonesysfriedchicken .com

COMING TO MONTECITO: Reader Olivia tells me that Brandon Boudet, owner of Little Dom’s Seafood in Carpinteria is opening a new restaurant in Montecito (technically Santa Barbara) on Coast Village Road in the former home of Oliver’s and Peabody’s. I contacted the eatery and received this response: “Thank you for reaching out and for your interest in the team’s newest concept in Montecito! We are excited to share details once the team is ready to share more and will be sure to include you on all announcement coming soon!”

SPEAKING OF MONTECITO: More than a dozen readers have told me that Coast & Olive restaurant in the Montecito Inn on Coast Village Road has closed. Earlier this week, the Inn announced on social media that they’ve formed a partnership with Good Lion Hospitality to bring a new lounge to the site.

MUNCHIEZ MOVES: Reader John PS sends an update about S.B. Munchiez: “Have not confirmed but friend says S.B. Munchiez on Hollister closed. Now listed on delivery apps as ‘Munchiez S.B.,’ and the website munchiezsb.com works. However, the address on their website is now listed as 3007 De la Vina Street, which is the address of Patio Café, but maybe they are sharing space as Patio Café closes at 2 p.m. Munchiez says that they open at 5 p.m. Also, they have a new phone number that is not in the Santa Barbara area code but instead in Anaheim: 657-213-4433.”

MO’S TO-GO COMING TO S.B.: The city of Santa Barbara is getting a new deli and catering business, Mo’s To-Go. Developed by nonprofit Momentum Work, Inc., the small business believes their success “relies on embracing a diversity of skills and experience.” Mo’s To-Go cooks up a simple menu with all items made from scratch, while providing its neurodivergent staff with a set of professional culinary and customer service skills. Momentum Work, Inc. has provided employment services to residents of the tri counties for 56 years following the state’s Employment First Policy, which means real jobs for individuals with disabilities and the dignity that arises from earning a living wage in the general workforce.

“While working at Mo’s, I hope to further refine my skills as a chef, and at the same time, gain a more in depth understanding of how to help neurodivergent individuals succeed in the workplace,” shares team member Eric Johnson. “I feel a profound sense of belonging here that I have yet to feel at any other job.”

Learn more about Mo’s To-Go and place your order online for a Thursday or Friday delivery at mos-to-go.square.site

626 W. Micheltorena, SB Daily 6am–10pm 962-4028

6527 Madrid Rd, IV Daily 7am-11pm 770-3806

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 43
DRINK John Dickson’s reporting can be found every day online at SantaBarbara.com. Send tips to info@SantaBarbara.com. JOHN DICKSON
FOOD &
FRIED WITH PRIDE: Longtime local chef Kyle Jones has opened Jonesy’s Fried Chicken in Old Town Goleta.
2030 Cliff Dr, Mesa Daily 7am–10pm 966-3863
DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS $999 VOTED SANTA BARBARA’S BEST BURRITO 27 YEARS IN A ROW! Super CuCaS BREAKFAST BURRITO EVERY DAY! $86 9 High School Students Receive Free Soda w/ Lunch! (Mon-Fri Only - Micheltorena & Mesa Locations) Santa Barbara® 2018 Best of Runner-Up Santa Barbara 2018 Best of winner Micheltorena & Mesa Locations

ALWAYS AMAZING . NEVER ROUT IN E .

44 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM Management reserves the right to change or cancel promotions and events at any time without notice. Must be 21 or older. Gambling problem? Call 1.800.GAMBLER. ©2024 Chumash Casino Resort. SCAN TO SEE ALL UPCOMING SHOWS AND PURCHASE TICKETS. AIR
JULY 12 | FRIDAY | 8PM UB40 AUGUST 2 | FRIDAY | 8PM MJ LIVE JULY 26 | FRIDAY | 8PM GERARDO ORTIZ AUGUST 16 | FRIDAY | 8PM
SUPPLY

PERSONAL ENDS TOWARD AN EXPRESSIVE MIDDLE ZONE

SCULPTOR JOAN ROSENBERG-DENT AND PHOTOGRAPHER CAROLINE KAPP JOIN FORCES

Generally speaking, the working process of fine artists entails solitary hours and internalized creative energies spent in private studios, striving toward highly personal expressive ends. Studio artists function in an inherently different, more solitary way than those working in film, music, theater, and multimedia settings.

There are exceptions, even in the Santa Barbara scene, such as the memorable Westmont Museum of Art show from 2015, Tug, with works collaboratively fashioned by artists Keith Puccinelli and Dane Goodman. We can now add to that slender collaborative exhibition list the show Timely, now gracing the walls of the Architectural Foundation Gallery.

In this case, the collaborative pact between sinuous porcelain sculptor Joan Rosenberg-Dent and Caroline Kapp, an experimental photographer who also works

with drawing, is mostly a conceptual and thematic one, with occasional hands-on interactions. The pair initially connected when they were involved together in a group show at the Channing Peake Gallery and recognized a simpatico in their separate artistic directions and visual/contextual interests.

They decided to pool their visions for the current exhibition, which summons up a special dualistic ambience in this inviting art space. Pursuant to the fluid exhibition title, Timely, the artists blend references to time’s passage, implications of rhythm, and the artistic evolution of art made in the past, present, and leaning into a still-unfolding artistic future.

Commonality of formal ideas, across the two- and three-dimensional planes, create harmonious cross-talk throughout the exhibition, starting just inside the gallery door. Dent’s “Rewind” with its spiraling arabesque and vertical bands on gray space blends naturally with the elliptical detail and deconstructionist air of Kapp’s “Parallax No. 5.” Across the room, a selection of art by both parties engages in a certain brand of visual conversation, between the porcelain minutiae of a cup; egg-like structures and the apt “Hung Up in Time” (and the shamelessly visual pun of her tangle-wired “Unplugged”); and Kapp’s witty diptych of coffee cups viewed from above and

UPCOMING EVENTS AT THE GALLERY

below, “Upwards/Downwards.”

Nearby, the fertility indexing theme continues with Dent’s symbolic blend of egg and looping forms, “Birth and Infinity,” on a pedestal below Kapp’s supple vessel image “Ellipsis No. 2.” Dent’s large relief pieces “Flow” and “Time Reveals” exemplify her seamless and reinventive way of dealing with and manipulating porcelain to suggest the fluidity of fabric. These undulant forms flank Kapp’s smaller, softer-voiced inkjet print “Trickle,” which seems to lend an optical echo or answer to the situational call.

Subtly iconoclastic visions are at work here. Just as Dent has developed a distinctive and non-conformist way of working with her chosen medium of porcelain, Kapp uses extended photographic and printing techniques to veer into surprising and sometimes surreal turf in her work. Lines between drawing and the ostensible truthtelling conceit of photography blur. With “Terminal Basin No. 5,” Kapp uses the toned cyanotype printing method to create a rustic stone image on a loose grid, with an impression at once earthy and cerebral.

Literal collaboration between the artists does land in the form of the centerpiece work “Spinning/Askew,” 24 distinct variations on the theme of a spinning top, printed as Kapp’s cyanotypes on Dent’s compact porcelain tiles, all in a roughly ordered mosaic pattern. As with other works with kinetic verbs as titles and time references, the kinetic choreography of these tops captured in frozen moments hint at a shifting, temporal spirit within the fixity of fine art on gallery walls.

Ultimately, Timely is an example of a two-person show in which the artists do not stick to their own corners or thematic interests. The gallery seems to play host to an attraction not of opposites but of interactively diverse work, hovering around similar themes and visual gestures. They cull and mingle, in a somewhat timely fashion.

Timely by Joan Rosenberg-Dent and Caroline Kapp is on view at the Architectural Foundation Gallery (229 E. Victoria St.) through August 24. See afsb.org.

• June 15, 2-3 p.m., a discussion with panelist James Glisson, Curator of Contemporary Collections at Santa Barbara Museum of Art

• July 13, 2-3 p.m., a discussion with panelists Paul Longanbach, boardmember of SBMA; and David Gersh, past boardmember of SBMA, author, collector

• July 27, 2-3 p.m., a discussion with panelists Tony Askew, Professor Emeritus, Westmont College, and artist; and Joyce Wilson, Instructor at Brooks Institute of photography, photographer All events are free and open to the public. Doors open at 1 p.m. Limited space on a first-come basis.

LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS COMES TO THE SOLVANG STAGE

your

entertainment off right, with camp, horror, love, greed, and killer plants! Welcome to Mushnik’s on Skid Row the flower shop home to the cult-classic

Little Shop of

and

,

and music by

See Little Shop of Horrors, produced by PCPA, under the stars at the Solvang Festival Theater from June 13 to July 7.

Like everything on Skid Row, Mushnik’s has lost its shine. Low-wage employee Seymour is a nobody, cranking away and pining for his coworker Audrey. One day, Seymour buys a wholesale plant for the shop (he names it Audrey II, in honor of his unrequited love) only to discover the plant’s disturbing “big-game” diet. Suckling Seymour’s bleeding finger only keeps Audrey II happy for so long and things spiral out of control as the plant’s appetite grows.

With doo-wop music and campy, B-movie-style horror elements, PCPA is presenting Little Shop of Horrors with subtle shifts for a new generation.

“My favorite part of playing Audrey is getting to update an iconic stock character,” says actor Molly Kinnon, who describes Audrey as kind and humble, just another kid on Skid Row living an unglamorous life in the cracks of society. Her home life isn’t great (her boyfriend is violent, and her choices are limited); but as Audrey II brings out confidence in Seymour, Audrey (I) begins to notice him.

Audrey II also ramps up interest in Mushnik’s otherwise quiet plant emporium, putting dollar signs in everyone’s eyes as they try to exploit the situation. “The story,” says Kinnon, “is about the inherent greed and consumerism that’s the backbone of the American Dream … the allure of possessions, notoriety, and the fortune that comes along with it, which ultimately leads to their downfall.” With a centerpiece character that is a massive, murderous mandrake, Little Shop of Horrors is bound to delight.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 45 EMAIL: ARTS@INDEPENDENT.COM PAGE 45 L I F E
MORE ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT >>>
JOSEF WOODARD PHOTOS
Start summer musical Horrors book Howard Ashman Alan Menken. —Maggie Yates See Little Shop of Horrors at Solvang Festival Theater (420 2nd St., Solvang) from June 13 to July 7. See pcpa.org.
ESCOBAR, REFLECTIONS PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO
Alexander Pimentel stars in PCPA’s production of Little Shop of Horrors. LUIS Timely by Joan Rosenberg Dent and Caroline Kapp at the Architectural Foundation Gallery “Spinning Askew“ by Joan Rosenberg Dent and Caroline Kapp at the Architectural Foundation Gallery

CLUE, MEAN GIRLS, THE TEMPTATIONS, AND THE ADDAMS FAMILY HIT THE GRANADA STAGE

Pop culture is front and center for the American Theatre Guild’s upcoming Broadway in Santa Barbara series at The Granada Theatre with a lineup of highenergy shows coming our way.

The MOMIX: Alice production (postponed after the since-repaired February water damage to the Granada) is up first on October 1. Using Lewis Carroll’s classic Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as a “taking-off point for invention,” Artistic Director Moses Pendleton’s newest creation is a mind-bending adventure filled with visual splendor and creative movement.

Remember Colonel Mustard in the library with the lead pipe?

dance production I’ve personally seen multiple times and am always ready to see again. Picture this: a lively eight-member troupe on stage, making beautiful toe-tapping, head-bobbing noise using everything but conventional percussion instruments from matchboxes to wooden poles, brooms, garbage cans, Zippo lighters, hubcaps, and more to fill the stage with fabulous and joyful rhythms.

A TRIBUTE TO THE ‘PIONEER’ WOMEN OF BIG-BAND JAZZ

JAZZ AT THE BALLROOM CELEBRATES WOMEN OF THE GENRE IN BIG-BAND SWINGING FASHION

CClue based on the 1985 Paramount Pictures movie and inspired by the classic Hasbro board game is next in the series, November 26-27. This comedic show is a whodunit that will keep you guessing until the final twist (of the dagger?).

Coming directly from Broadway January 8-9 is Mean Girls, written by Tina Fey, who also wrote the original movie in 2004 and the 2024 remake. For those five people who don’t know at least some version of this story of Queen Bees and Wannabes, it’s the musical story of a teen who grows up on the African savannah, but nothing prepares her for the vicious ways of her strange new home: suburban Illinois.

Then there’s the add-on show STOMP on January 21, a phenomenal song-and-

The Motown scene comes to Santa Barbara March 11-12 with Ain’t Too Proud: The Life and Times of the Temptations, a smashhit Broadway musical (12 Tony nominations) that follows the band’s extraordinary journey from the streets of Detroit to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

The final show of the season, May 6-7, is The Addams Family, a hit musical featuring Wednesday Addams, Gomez, Morticia, and all of our favorite characters created by the legendary cartoonist Charles Addams.

—Leslie Dinaberg

Season memberships (with the best seats and the best prices) are now available at broadwaysantabarbara.com, granadasb.org, and The Granada Theatre Box Office (1214 State St.) for a package that includes the Broadway touring productions of Clue, Mean Girls, Ain’t Too Proud: The Life and Times of the Temptations, and The Addams Family, with STOMP as an add-on. Tickets to MOMIX: Alice are currently available at granadasb.org and The Granada Theatre Box Office.

hampian Fulton, jazz pianist and vocalist, conjures a powerful image of the women of big-band jazz Peggy Lee, Ella Fitzgerald, Dinah Washington, and Billie Holiday, to name a few she pays tribute to in her show presented by Jazz at the Ballroom, Flying High: Big Band Canaries Who Soared, set to hit the Lobero stage next month. She pictures them on a tour bus, with the big bands of the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s.

“There’s 20 men in one bus, no air-conditioning, no bathroom, no interstate, no fancy truck stops, no cell phones, traveling around the country making their music. And in the midst of all of that is one woman, also making music and being a part of the artistic side as well as the social side,” Fulton said. “I think when you think about them that way, you can see that they are such pioneers, explorers in a new world doing something grand and difficult and doing it with grace.”

Fulton, the artistic director of the piece, is set to lead a swinging evening of big-band jazz in celebration of the young women, “canaries,” as they were once called, who sang in the greatest big bands of their time. She will be accompanied on stage by guest vocalists Jane Monheit and Carmen Bradford in a rare vocal trio. “I’ve always wanted to accompany other vocalists, but because I also sing, it’s something I don’t get to do very often,” Fulton said. “In this case, I’m getting to see what they like; I’m getting feedback from them; I’m getting to figure out what makes them shine, and how to make the

whole band shine. It has been wonderful to get to work with some other women in music, because mostly I’m the only woman on stage.”

Initially inspired by Women’s History Month, the show is meant to pay tribute, but also inform a new generation about the trails blazed by these artists. “Women’s History Month is an ideal time to elevate the artistry of these women and educate others about their influence on music in general and the next generation of artists in particular,” said Suzanne Waldowski, founder of the San Francisco–based nonprofit Jazz at the Ballroom (jazzattheballroom.com).

Fulton says the show, which will take place Saturday, June 29, at the Lobero Theatre, will be an improvisational and lively foray. “It’s really fun because you’ll see each singer be featured and then there’s a few group numbers where we all sing together, and it’s just a very fun and kind of loose show,” she said. “I want the audience to feel like they’re really witnessing something that’s happening for the first time, only happening right then. It’s not overly arranged or planned out.”

In addition to the show, Jazz at the Ballroom has released an album that showcases the program and its players, available to listen to at flying-high.hearnow.com/flyinghigh.

—Riley Burke

Flying High: Big Band Canaries Who Soared takes place at the Lobero Theatre (33 E. Canon Perdido St.) Saturday, June 29, 7:30 p.m. Tickets are available now at lobero.org.

46 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
COURTESY
Carmen Bradford is one of the stars of Flying High: Big Band Canaries Who Soared.
JENNY ANDERSON EVAN ZIMMERMAN FOR MURPHYMADE
Mean Girls national tour Tari Kelly and Mark Price in the touring company of Clue

A&L’S 65TH SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS ON SALE

Despite the overcast morning, the clouds parted just in time for UCSB Arts & Lectures’ 2024-2025 season reveal, unveiling a lineup that promises to be nothing less than stellar.

The event, held at the beautiful Montecito Club, is a testament to all the hard work the Arts & Lectures (A&L) team, led by Miller McCune Executive Director Celesta Billeci, puts in every year to bring an incredible assortment of dancers, authors, musicians, and more to Santa Barbara.

Launching the 65th anniversary season on Tuesday, October 1, will be the jazz-funk band Snarky Puppy. Described as “a lot of fun” and having “rabid fans,” this five-time Grammy Award–winning group promises to kick off the season in unique style.

Other highlights in music and dance include the London Philharmonic Orchestra (Oct. 12); the “Queen of Mariachi,” Aida Cuevas (Oct. 20); the Batsheva Dance Company from Israel (Feb. 25); pianists Yuja Wang and Víkingur Ólafsson (Feb. 28); Yo-Yo Ma, performing a very personal program, only performed once before, that details how he became the artist he is today (Apr. 5); the Wynton Marsalis Ensemble, playing live to accompany the silent film Louis (May 17); and sibling dynamos Isata and Sheku Kanneh-Mason on piano and cello, respectively (May 29).

29, environmental novelist Richard Powers on February 23, and conceptual artist Marina Abramović on May 6. This series is always an audience favorite, or as Associate Director Meghan Bush reminded us, “Even Oprah loves Speaking with Pico!”

Among the most unique, categorydefying events are world-renowned chef Yotam Ottolenghi as he discusses his new book, Comfort, and provides a live cooking demonstration (Oct. 14); a film concert for Disney’s Encanto attendees of all ages encouraged to dress up and sing along to a live band (Nov. 14); and the acrobats of Cirque Kalabanté, sure to daz zle with their feats of strength and defiance of gravity (Feb. 6).

Over on the “Lectures” side, Salman Khan, creator of the Khan Academy, will speak about the power of AI to aid education (Oct. 5); biochemist Dr. Jennifer Doudna on genome engineering technology and the future of health care (Oct. 22); novelist and essayist Anne Lamott, discussing her latest book, Thoughts on Love (Nov. 13); and 2024 Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient Father Gregory Boyle, speaking on the power of love to bring us together in dividing times (Dec. 3).

The fascinating Speaking with Pico series will feature poet Yung Pueblo on October

If October feels awfully far away, A&L is kicking off its series of Free Summer Films at the Santa Barbara County Courthouse Friday, July 5, with a screening of Jaws this year’s theme of “Sun, Surf, and Cinema,” these events promise to be the perfect eve ning after a day at the beach!

The true story of the secret romance between the real-life Alice and Prince Leopold the great-grand-uncle of Prince Harry.

Native Nations and community members are invited to a tour of the Ellwood Marine Terminal site to collaborate with the University of California, Santa Barbara, on its restoration for the community’s well-being and enjoyment.

JOIN A TOUR TO:

Even at its 65th season, A&L proves that it only keeps getting better. Or, as Director of Public Lectures Caitlin O’Hara perfectly summed it up: “Arts & Lectures doesn’t miss!”

—Tessa Reeg

Series subscription packages are currently on sale; single tickets will be on sale Friday, August 2. For more information on the upcoming season, visit the Arts & Lectures Ticket office or artsandlectures.ucsb.edu.

Learn about draft restoration plans to remove structures and enhance natural habitats Share initial perspectives and exchange ideas about access and connection to the space

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 47 EMAIL: ARTS@INDEPENDENT.COM
YO-YO MA, SNARKY PUPPY, AND FATHER GREGORY BOYLE ARE AMONG THE BIG NAMES COMING TO S.B. COURTESY
Cloud
LEE CHIA-YEH
RSVP
ELLWOOD MARINE TERMINAL COMMUNITY SITE TOUR JOIN US! We look forward to seeing you! Questions? Email ncos@ccber.ucsb.edu
Yo-Yo Ma
Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan
REQUIRED SCAN HERE!
ON STAGE MAY 30-JUNE 16
THEATRE COMPANY BY Mark Saltzman DIRECTED BY Jim Fall etcsb.org | 805.965.5400 Tickets starting @ $40!
SANTA BARBARA’S PROFESSIONAL
Margie Mays and Sam O’Byrne Photo: Zach Mendez

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY by

ARIES

WEEK OF JUNE 13

LIBRA

(Mar. 21-Apr. 19): The term “maze” has various meanings. Most commonly, it signifies a puzzling cluster of choices that lead nowhere and bode frustration. But there are more positive meanings of the word. In ancient myths, a maze was where heroes underwent ritual tests. There they might summon ingenuity to win access to a hidden treasure. In modern psychology labs, the maze is a structure used to stimulate learning in rats. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, the maze you are now in is metaphorically akin to the second two meanings, not the first.

TAURUS

deadline for 6/20 issue: Wednesday, June 19th in observance of

Independent will be closed on Friday, June 14th at noon

(Apr. 20-May 20): There is an abundance of good news, Taurus. In the coming weeks, your conversations could awaken realizations that will augment your wealth both the financial and emotional kind. So be eager to commune with vigorous souls who inspire your power to attract resources and goodies. Furthermore, you could generate enriching benefits for yourself by engaging with unfamiliar influences that are outside your web of expectations. Don’t be too sure you already know everything you need. Helpful surprises could arrive if you’re extra open-minded.

GEMINI

JUNE TEENTH

(May 21-June 20): Though 2024 isn’t even half over, you have already earned the title “Least Boring Zodiac Sign of the Year.” Or maybe a more positive way to frame it would be to award you the title “Most Scintillating, Interesting, and Stimulating Zodiac Sign of the Year.” Please keep doing what you have been doing, Gemini. Entertain us with your unruly escapades and gossip-worthy breakthroughs. Encourage us to question our dull certainties and dare us to be more fun. If we seem nervous to be in your stirring presence, disarm our worries with your humor.

CANCER

(June 21-July 22): Your subconscious mind is full of marvelous capacities and magic potencies. But it also contains old habits of feeling and thinking that influence you to respond to life in ways that are out of sync with what’s actually happening. These habits may sabotage or undermine your conscious intentions. Now here’s the good news: In the next nine months, there’s a lot you can do to dissolve the outmoded imprints. You will have more power than ever before to perform this wizardry. So get started! How? Ask your subconscious mind to send you intuitions about how to proceed.

LEO

(July 23-Aug. 22): The fairy tale “Jack and the Beanstalk” will serve as a prime metaphor for you in the coming weeks. Ruminate on its themes as being applicable to your life. I’ll refresh you with the main points of the story. Young Jack and his mother need money, so she decides to take drastic measures. She bids him to sell the family cow at the marketplace a few miles away. But on the way into town, Jack meets a man who coaxes him to sell the cow in exchange for magic beans not money. When Jack returns home, his mother is angry at his foolishness. In disgust, she flings the beans out the window into the dirt. Later, though, the beans live up to their promise. They grow into a giant beanstalk that Jack climbs to reach the lair of a giant who lives in the clouds. There Jack retrieves three of his family’s lost treasures, which had been stolen by the giant long ago.

VIRGO

(Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Please note that during the next 12 months, I may seem a bit pushy in my dealings with you. I will encourage you to redefine and enhance your ambitions. I will exhort you to dream bigger. There may come times when you wish I wouldn’t dare you to be so bold. I will understand, then, if you refrain from regularly reading my horoscopes. Maybe you are comfortable with your current type of success and don’t want my cheerleading. But if you would welcome an ally like me an amiable motivator and sympathetic booster I will be glad to help you strive for new heights of accomplishment.

(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Psychologist Carl Jung believed we could accomplish profound self-transformation by working hard on our psyches’ unripe and wounded aspects. That might entail honest self-examination, objective observation of how we affect others, and a willingness to recognize and forgive our mistakes. Jung also recommended another way to heal our neuroses: through the power of numinous experiences. By “numinous,” he meant mystical, sublime, or awe-inspiring. Jung said that such visitations could radically diminish our painful habits of mind and feeling. They might arrive through grace, thanks to life’s surprising interventions. They may also be coaxed to appear through meditation, dreamwork, communing with myth and fairy tales, and spiritual practices. I foresee a wealth of numinous events in your life during the coming months, Libra. May they bring you a steady stream of healing.

SCORPIO

(Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In a moment, I will list events I foresee as being possible for you during the next 11 months. They are cosmic tendencies but not cosmic mandates. Whether or not they actually occur will depend on how you wield your willpower which, by the way, could be freer and more muscular than it has been in a long time. Now here are the potential developments. (1) An offer to create one of the most symbiotic unions or robust collaborations ever. (2) Great chances for you to capitalize on the success of others. (3) Alterations in the family configuration. (4) Major shifts in loyalty and affinity. (5) A rise in rank. (6) Revelations of secrets you can use to your advantage.

SAGITTARIUS

(Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Have you been metaphysically itchy and psychologically ticklish? Are you unsure whether those tingling sensations you’re feeling are worrisome symptoms or signs of healing and awakening? I believe they are signs of healing and awakening. They suggest you are doing the metaphorical equivalent of what a snake does when it sheds its skin. Expect imminent redemption, Sagittarius! Reframe the discomfort as a herald of relief and release.

CAPRICORN

(Dec. 22-Jan. 19): It’s time for Super Mom to make an appearance. Some circumstances in your life could benefit from healing tweaks best initiated by her. And when I say “Super Mom,” I’m not necessarily referring to your actual mother. I’m envisioning a wise older woman who sees you as you really are and who can assist you in living your destiny according to your own inner necessity, no one else’s. If you have no Super Mom in your world, see if you can locate one, even hire one. I also recommend creating an inner Super Mom in your imagination. You need and deserve sympathetic input from the archetype of the sage crone.

AQUARIUS

(Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I suspect that later in 2024, I will authorize you to commune with boisterous adventures and tricky risks. But right now, I advise you to flirt with modest adventures and sensible risks. Can you contain your burning, churning yearnings for a while? Are you willing to coax your crazy wild heart into enjoying some mild pleasures? By early autumn, I’m guessing you will have done the necessary preparations to successfully roam through the experimental frontiers. Until then, you are most likely to corral X-factors on your behalf if you pace yourself and bide your time.

PISCES

(Feb. 19-Mar. 20): “Oh God, if there is a God, save my soul, if I have a soul.” That prayer was the handiwork of Piscean philosopher Joseph Ernest Renan. If his ironic minimalism is the only spiritual aspiration you can manage right now, so be it. But I hope you will strive for a more intimate, expansive, and personal connection with the Divine Intelligence. The coming weeks will be an extra favorable time for you to speak and listen to mysterious powers beyond your rational comprehension. Please take advantage! Go in quest of the sweet, deep lowdown directly from the Sublime Source!

HOMEWORK: Try letting go of a burden that’s not necessary to bear any longer. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

48 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s EXPANDED WEEKLY AUDIO HOROSCOPES and DAILY TEXT MESSAGE HOROSCOPES. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700.
advertising
reservation
The

SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT

CLASSIFIEDS

EMPLOYMENT

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF STUDENT CONDUCT

RESIDENTIAL & COMMUNITY LIVING

Utilizes advanced skills gained at the Master’s degree level in counseling fields (student affairs and/or higher education); exhibits culturally inclusive active listening skills (e.g., appropriately establishing interpersonal contact, paraphrasing, perception checking, summarizing, questioning, encouraging, avoid interrupting, clarifying) and provides counseling services for personal, social and academic issues, including but not limited to cultural identity, educational, relationship, family, sexuality and sexual identity issues. Designs, implements and evaluates cultural and academic services for the Asian Cultural Resource Center. Develops program designs and tools to assess quality of programs and events offered. Assists in campus efforts to recruit and retain underrepresented students. Reqs: Master’s Degree in counseling or related area or years of equivalent experience/training; Experience in providing in‑depth, wide‑ranging and complex academic advising and holistic services to undergraduates; Experience with social media management on multiple platforms, updating department website, and Emma application. Notes: Satisfactory conviction history background check. May work occasional evenings and weekends. May be called upon to reside in residence hall during summer program. On call during summer programs and campus emergencies.

Salary or Hourly Range: The budgeted salary range is $62,640 ‑ $65,460/yr. Full Salary Range: $61,700 ‑ $108,100/ yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu

Job # 64348

The Assistant Director of Student Conduct is a full‑time, career staff member who serves as a member of the management team within Residential & Community Living (R&CL). Under the general supervision of the Director of Student Conduct & Behavioral Interventions, the Assistant Director utilizes restorative practices and an equity mindset as they: Assist the Director with the adjudication of university‑wide cases referred for disciplinary action, including cases warranting interim measures; Maintain the administrative hearing processes as identified in the Student Conduct Code (within Campus Regulations) for university housing cases; Oversee administrative case management and response coordination for student residents living in university housing and/or students utilizing services across Housing, Dining, & Auxiliary Enterprises ‑ this includes Residence Halls, Undergraduate Apartments, Graduate Apartments, Family Student Housing Apartments, and the Dining Commons; Directly supervise 3 FTE staff (Conduct Officers) who support 29 professional live‑in staff with conduct case management across all residential communities; Serve as the departmental liaison for R&CL management team members regarding conduct inquiries originating in university housing; Lead the student conduct team in the expansion and implementation residential curriculum grounded in student development theory, restorative practices, and harm reduction; Ensure that the Conduct Officers and R&CL hearing officers (Assistant Directors of Student Live, Resident Directors, and Assistant Resident Directors) maintain a clear understanding of administrative procedures and educational initiatives across residential communities; Develop effective working relationships with the 60+ colleagues that make up our R&CL staff; Oversee and maintain the daily operations of the Student Conduct functional area; Facilitate and manage training for student conduct across all levels in R&CL – this includes but is not limited to Resident Assistants, Assistant Resident Directors, Resident Directors, and Conduct Officers; Collaborate to maintain consistent procedures, protocols, and practices within student conduct case management across all residential communities. Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree in related area and/or equivalent experience/training; 4‑6 yrs Experience in student conduct administration, preferably within a university housing organization in Higher Education; 4‑6 yrs Experience with Advocate (via Symplicity) database, or experience with a similar student conduct database and case management software; 4‑6 yrs Experience working in an environment requiring knowledge of FERPA and other privacy requirements; Experience supervising full‑time professional staff; Experience leading and modeling practices that foster equity and inclusion in a diverse community of residents, student staff, and professional staff; Experience working in a large public institution; Experience working with

varying student populations (e.g. transfer, non‑traditional, graduate, family); Experience infusing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion principles into daily work; Strong knowledge of common University‑specific computer application programs; Strong leadership skills to motivate employees and influence attitudes and behaviors; Advanced knowledge of managing high level conduct cases with layered student needs; Advanced knowledge of University and departmental policies, processes, and procedures; Advanced skills in monitoring and assessing people, processes and/or services to make improvements; Advanced skills in active listening, critical thinking, reasoning, organizing, written and verbal communication, multitasking and intercultural competence and uses these skills to develop original ideas to solve problems; Advanced skills in project and program management, social perceptiveness to be aware of others reactions and understanding why they react as they do; Advanced knowledge of Student Affairs/ Student Life specialization; Advanced knowledge of advising and counseling techniques; Advanced knowledge of risk assessment principles along with the ability to evaluate risks and the likelihood of consequences; Advanced mediation skills and Restorative Justice facilitation skills and training experience; Outstanding problem‑solving capabilities to ensure responsive resolutions; Outstanding interpersonal skills in working with college students, paraprofessional counseling skills required; Outstanding administrative and organizational skills. Notes: Satisfactory conviction history background check; Must be available to work evening and weekends; Satisfactory conviction history background check; mandated reporting requirements of Child Abuse; UCSB Campus Security Authority under Clery Act. Hiring/ Budgeted Salary Range: $85,000 ‑ $101,295/yr. UC Santa Barbara is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age or protected veteran status. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https:// policy.ucop. edu/doc/4010393/ PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/ doc/1001004/Anti‑Discrimination. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 69907

OFFICE OF BUDGET & PLANNING Works under the direction of the Budget Director to develop, implement, manage, and report on all aspects of the campus budget. This position will collaborate extensively to implement enhancements to the budget system and support the annual campus budget cycle. The preferred candidate will have experience creating and leading sophisticated budget processes within a large organization. The Associate Director will ensure appropriate levels of cross‑organizational coordination for the annual planning and budgeting cycle through effective communication, integration of business processes in operations, technical design, and administrative support functions. This

Reaching 68,000 Readers Each Week

position will assist in the development and implementation of the campus’s new analytic budgeting system (OFC EPM). Reqs: Advanced degree in related area and / or equivalent experience / training, 7‑9 years Professional business experience managing or leading sophisticated budget processes within large organizations, 7‑9 years Strong practical and technical experience in financial resource allocations, financial modeling and analysis, 4‑6 years of experience implementing budget applications within a large university or other large organization, Note: Satisfactory completion of a criminal history background check. Hiring/ Budgeted Salary Range: $101,100.00 to $146,700.00/year. Full Salary Range: $101,100.00 to $192,300.00/year. Salary offers are determined based on final candidate qualifications and experience; the budget for the position; and the application of fair, equitable, and consistent pay practices at the University. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu, Job # 69471

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT, DIGITAL FUNDRAISING

OFFICE OF DEVELOPMENT

Serves as Associate Director of Development, Digital Fundraising and is a member of the Central Annual Giving Team. Under the general direction of the Director of Development, Annual Giving Programs, works to optimize philanthropic support in response to university fundraising priorities established by the Office of Development. As a member of central development, fund raising efforts are devoted to a broad array of philanthropic initiatives, including interdisciplinary programs and other university initiatives, as appropriate. Assists in the creation, design, and implementation of a comprehensive, multi‑year, plan to increase financial support from a broad constituency of alumni, parents and friends primarily through digital fundraising programs (such as crowdfunding, Give Day, and online giving), text solicitations and email solicitations. Responsible for designing and executing effective solicitation activities for gifts ranging from $100 ‑ $25,000. Provides statistical reporting on digital fundraising efforts and recommends to the Director areas of growth. Works to ensure that all aspects of his/her development program are internally consistent, thematically related, thoroughly coordinated with all development teams and compatible with the policies and priorities of the Development Office and University. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree in related area and / or equivalent experience / training; ability to work collaboratively and courteously with colleagues, partners and the public; ability to work independently, balance priorities, multi‑task, and meet deadlines; demonstrated track record of

managing professional relationships in business, preferably in a development environment; persuasive verbal and written communication skills, and the ability to relate to and communicate with a wide array of constituents; exceptional organizational skills and judgment necessary to manage multiple priorities and long‑term projects; proficiency with Microsoft Office and donor/customer relationship databases in order to search for new possible donors to the University. Notes: Satisfactory criminal history background check; may be called upon to work occasional evenings and weekends at various Development Office, Institutional Advancement or campus wide‑events. Hiring/Budgeted Salary Range: $82,300‑$85,000/yr. Full Salary Range: $82,300‑$151,700/ yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https://policy. ucop. edu/doc/4010393/PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/1001004/ Anti‑Discrimination. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #69596

CATERING EVENT & DINING ROOM

SUPERVISOR

CAMPUS DINING

Oversees activities in the dining room meal services providing excellent customer service. This position is responsible for event execution, and supervision. Acts as the onsite manager at catering events throughout the year which can include lead oversight on evenings and weekends. Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree or equivalent combination of education and experience. 1‑3 years demonstrated ability to organize and manage a restaurant service and variety of events while maintaining a high standard of excellence. 1‑3 years proven ability to train, schedule and supervise student staff. Notes: Satisfactory conviction history background check. Valid driver’s license and clean driving record. ServSafe certification, or equivalent certification within 90 days of hire. Work days and hours will vary, evenings and weekends included. Must be able to lift up to 50 lbs and stand for up to 8 hours a day. Hiring/ Budgeted Salary Range: $47,800 ‑ $54,866/yr. UC Santa Barbara is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age or protected veteran status. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https:// policy.ucop. edu/doc/4010393/ PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/ doc/1001004/Anti‑Discrimination Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job # 69944

CHEMICAL INVENTORY

SPECIALIST

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH AND SAFETY

Under general supervision of the Laboratory Safety Program Lead, executes the Environmental Health & Safety (EH&S) Chemical Inventory Program with the support of up to six student assistants. This includes high‑level application of the RSS Chemicals software, working directly in the research laboratories for physical inventorying efforts, and hiring/supervision/coordination of student employees. Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree ‑ In related area, or equivalent combination of relevant training and experience. 1‑3 years ‑ Experience working with hazardous materials in a lab or other relevant setting. Solid, comprehensive working knowledge and understanding of EH&S practices, and principles related to the management of hazardous materials, including related laws and regulations. Strong written, verbal, and interpersonal skills to communicate effectively with diverse constituencies, including in emergency response situations. Familiarity with relevant systems, databases, and equipment. Solid organizational skills to plan, prioritize, organize, and delegate multiple projects with competing deadlines. Notes: Maintain a valid CA driver’s license, a clean DMV record and enrollment in the DMV Employer Pull‑Notice Program. Satisfactory conviction history background check. Hiring/Budgeted Hourly Range: $36.16

‑$39.99/hr. Full Hourly Range: $32.18

‑ $57.28/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified

Continued on p.50

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 49 INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 49 INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS PHON E 805-965-5205 EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM
FINANCE STRUGGLING WITH debt? If you have over $10,000 in debt we help you be debt free in as little as 24‑48 months. Pay nothing to enroll. Call Now 1‑877‑435‑4860 (Cal‑SCAN) HEALTH & FITNESS DENTAL INSURANCE from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. Coverage for 400 plus procedures. Real dental insurance ‑ NOT just a discount plan. Do not wait! Call now! Get your FREE Dental Information Kit with all the details! 1‑844‑203‑2677 www.dental50plus.com/calnews #6258 (Cal‑SCAN) SAFE STEP. North America’s #1 Walk‑In Tub. Comprehensive lifetime warranty. Top‑of‑the‑line installation and service. Now featuring our FREE shower package and $1600 Off for a limited time! Call today! Financing available. Call Safe Step 1‑888‑989‑5749
ARC
(Cal‑SCAN). PROFESSIONAL
COUNSELOR / COORDINATOR
EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY PROGRAM
ASSOCIATE BUDGET DIRECTOR

applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https://policy. ucop. edu/doc/4010393/PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/1001004/ Anti‑Discrimination. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #69739

DEVELOPMENT

ANALYST, PARENT & FAMILY GIVING

OFFICE OF DEVELOPMENT

Serves as an analyst for the Regional and Parent & Family Giving team in the Office of Development, supporting a complex and multifaceted program and supporting a subset of fundraisers within the unit. Analyst reports to the Director of Development Services, Regional & Constituent Giving, maintaining a dotted line for general supervision to the Directors of Prospect Management and Development Research as it relates to research and prospect management processes. Provides leadership for analytical functions that support the strategic goals, initiatives, and projects as outlined by the Senior Director, Regional and Parent Giving, leading toward philanthropic support from individuals, foundations, and organizations. Performs high‑level, sophisticated research to identify new prospects, detailed analysis on donor giving, coordination and execution of moves management meetings for development officer portfolio management, donor follow‑up action items, and analytic support to inform development officer travel. Additionally, the Analyst helps to coordinate and prepare development officers, senior administrators, and academic and program stakeholders for donor visits, solicitations, high‑level events, and development‑related travel. Develops, reviews, and edits sophisticated donor reports and presentations (for donor cultivation, stewardship, etc.) as well as donor proposals and gift letters. Knowledge and understanding of a complex fundraising program are essential to providing effective leadership. Maintains a close and effective working relationship with other development units, including Prospect Services (Development Research and Prospect Management), Advancement Services, and Donor Relations & Stewardship, facilitating collaborative efforts between teams. The Analyst will be privy to sensitive materials and information; therefore, the position requires the utmost degree of confidentiality. Maintains in‑depth knowledge of University policies and procedures and state and federal regulations related to fundraising and accepted business practices; uses exceptional analytical skills, excellent composition, grammar, and editing skills, and various database and software tools necessary to accomplish assigned tasks. High‑level analytical duties require independence, sound judgment, and creativity. Must be able to prioritize workload related to additional project management and analysis in the areas of fundraising.

Reqs: Bachelor’s degree in related area and / or equivalent experience / training; demonstrated experience in strong organizational skills and unfailing attention to detail and accuracy; exceptional verbal and interpersonal skills that foster positive relationships with diverse populations; 1‑3 yrs of experience and solid computer skills including proficiency in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Google Suite, social media platforms, and demonstrated ability to quickly learn various software programs; exceptional analytical skills on topics diverse in scope. Notes: Satisfactory completion of a criminal history background check; may be called upon to work occasional

evenings and weekends at various Development Office, Institutional Advancement, or campus‑wide events.

Hiring/Budgeted Salary Range: $29.55

$31/hr. Full Salary Range: $29.55 ‑

$51.77/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. Application review begins 06/18/24. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu, Job # 69887

DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND INCLUSION

COORDINATOR

(DEI COORDINATOR)

BREN SCHOOL OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & MANAGEMENT

The Bren School of Environmental Science & Management seeks a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Coordinator. The Coordinator works to promote and enhance a culture of inclusion and appreciation for diverse cultures, heritages, orientations, and backgrounds; leads the Bren School’s efforts to provide a safe and inclusive environment for students, staff and faculty; plans and implements diversity programs and initiatives; collaborates with staff from Admissions and Student Affairs to recruit and support students from diverse backgrounds; serves as a staff coordinator of the Diversity Committee and a Diversity Officer for UCSB’s Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion; organizes and leads trainings for faculty, staff, and students; and advises the deans, senior managers, faculty, and staff on matters related to diversity, equity, and inclusion. The Coordinator reports to the Assistant Dean with frequent consultation and informal reporting to the Associate Dean of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. Reqs: 3‑5 years of relevant experience, such as advising students from diverse and traditionally underrepresented backgrounds. Bachelor’s Degree or equivalent learning attained through experience and/or training. Note: Satisfactory conviction history background check. The full salary range is $67,200 to $119,600/yr. The budgeted annual salary range is $67,200 to $90,000/yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For more information, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/4010393/ PPSM‑20 and https://policy.ucop.edu/ doc/1001004/Anti‑Discrimination. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 61245

LEAD LABORER

RESIDENTIAL OPERATIONS

Serves as working lead for team of Sr. Custodians, Sr. Building Maintenance Worker, student employees and seasonal workers, working various assignments. Responsible for work assignment and quality, safety, employee training, building security, oversight of special projects and maintenance tasks, emergency response and customer service. Orders and distributes supplies, and equipment maintenance for building. May be required to work schedules other than Monday through Friday, 7:30 am to 4:30 pm to meet the operational needs of the unit and to cover seven day service. May be required to perform other duties as assigned to meet the operational needs of the department. Works in

an environment which is ethnically diverse and culturally pluralistic. Works in a team environment. Reqs: Minimum 3 years of custodial or maintenance work experience in an institution and/ or commercial setting. Demonstrated ability to work effectively with others as a team. Experience in a customer service environment. Ability to communicate effectively with a diverse work force. Ability to communicate and work effectively with staff and others such as, employees from other departments, students, parents, project managers, conference organizers, etc. Some computer experience, including Microsoft Office programs. Organizational experience. Ability to motivate staff and maintain positive morale. Notes: Maintain a valid CA driver’s license, a clean DMV record and enrollment in the DMV Employer Pull‑Notice Program. Hours and schedule may vary to meet the operational needs of the department. Satisfactory conviction history background check. Hiring/ Budgeted Salary Range: $26.53 ‑ $31.71/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https://policy. ucop. edu/doc/4010393/PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/1001004/ Anti‑Discrimination. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #69748

MACHINE SHOP SUPERINTENDENT

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING, DEAN’S OFFICE

Plans, organizes and directs the operation of the COE Machine Shop. Supervises all users of the Machine Shop, including senior staff machinist, part‑time machinist, part‑time student employees and students. Schedules work, assigns job duties and provides instruction for safe work practice for all Shop tools as needed. Ensures standard shop safety practices are followed. Maintains personnel records and initiates personnel actions in accordance with UC policies and procedures. Estimates job labor and materials costs for recharges. Purchases stock, tooling and capital equipment. Set up and fabricate precision parts and assemblies in common and exotic materials, including metal, plastic, wood, glass, ceramics, intermetallic composites, and parts with mathematically defined surfaces. Designs parts, laboratory equipment, and research apparatus using CAD/CAM software. Program and operate CNC milling machines, lathes and EDM machines. Consults and advises faculty, staff and students regarding engineering and fabrication considerations. Exhibits a high level of interpersonal communications skills required to facilitate the operation of the Machine Shop in a team‑work environment. Provides excellent customer service to researchers, students and staff while maintaining the flexibility to support the changing needs of the Mechanical Engineering Program and College of Engineering. Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree in Mechanical Engineering or equivalent experience/ training. 7‑9 years of fabrication and design experience; overall technical competence. Note: Satisfactory conviction history background check

The full salary range is $74,300 ‑ $134,500/yr. The budgeted salary range is $74,300 ‑ $99,480/yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.

For more information, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/4010393/ PPSM‑20. and https://policy.ucop. edu/doc/1001004/Anti‑Discrimination. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #68191

MAKERSPACE ASSISTANT

LIBRARY

The Makerspace Assistant plays a crucial role in the day‑to‑day operations of the UCSB Makerspace, located inside the UCSB Library. The Makerspace is a new program that provides UCSB students, faculty, and staff access to high‑quality fabrication tools, in depth instruction, and peer support on rapid prototyping and iterative design processes. Holds primary responsibility for the supervision of student assistants who staff the Makerspace during all hours of operations, ensuring a high level of customer service. Develops training materials and leads workshops for novice and experienced users interested in making. Maintains a safe, organized, and welcoming space, and proactively tracks and orders supplies. Will help in the evaluation and evolving development of the Makerspace for the UCSB community. Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree or equivalent experience and/ or training. 1‑3 years of experience in customer service and/or office administration. Note: Satisfactory conviction history background check The full hourly range is $27.88 ‑ $41.19/ hr. The budgeted hourly range is $27.88 ‑ $29.89/hr. UC Santa Barbara is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age or protected veteran status. For more information: University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy and University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 70019

MEDICAL ASSISTANT

UCSB, STUDENT HEALTH

Come join UCSB Student Health’s dynamic team! Our MAs prepare patients for their visit by checking vital signs, assisting with procedures, completing insurance referrals, scheduling patients, answering patient questions, and ensuring the clinic is properly stocked. We provide a comprehensive orientation to clinic routines and the electronic medical record. You will work hand‑in‑hand with Physicians, PAs, NPs, RNs, & LVNs in caring for the student population at UCSB. Reqs: High School diploma or equivalent. Licenses/Certifications: Certification with one of the following agencies: American Association of Medical Assistants, American Medical Technologists, California Certifying Board of Medical Assistants, Local Emergency Medical Services Agency, Emergency Medical Services Authority, Certified Nursing Assistant. Note: Applicants without a proper certification will not be considered. Notes: Student Health requires all clinical staff to successfully pass the background check and complete the credentialing process before the employment date. To comply with Santa Barbara County Public Health Department Health Officer Order, this position must provide evidence of annual influenza vaccination, or wear a surgical mask while working in patient care areas during the influenza season. Scheduling will be reviewed annually and set for the upcoming fiscal year. Weekly schedule may include Thursday evening hours if need arises. Any HIPAA or FERPA violation is subject to disciplinary action. Student Health is closed between the Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays. Budgeted

Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age or protected veteran status. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https:// policy.ucop. edu/doc/4010393/ PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/ doc/1001004/Anti‑Discrimination Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job # 57062

PHYSICAL THERAPY SUPERVISOR STUDENT HEALTH

Under the general direction of the Student Health Medical Director, the Physical Therapy Supervisor is responsible for the operation of the Student Health Physical Therapy department which has a staff of 2 physical therapists, a physical therapist specializing in orthotics (independent contractor), 1 physical therapy assistant, a physical therapy aide and an office manager. Duties include but are not limited to: designing the master schedule, managing equipment, ensuring patient satisfaction, managing staff issues and providing direct outpatient care to UCSB students. Reqs: Must have a California Physical Therapist license with specialization in outpatient orthopedic therapy. Bachelor’s Degree in related area and/or equivalent experience/training. Master’s Degree or Doctorate from an accredited postgraduate program. Experience in orthopedic physical therapy rehabilitation. Experience in pelvic floor and postural restoration. Notes: Mandated reporting requirements of Child Abuse and Adult Dependent Abuse. Student Health requires that clinical staff must successfully complete and pass the background check and credentialing process before the start date. To comply with Santa Barbara County Public Health Department Health Officer Order, this position must provide evidence of annual influenza vaccination, or wear a surgical mask while working in patient care areas during the influenza season. Per California Code of Regulations Title 8, Section 5199 Aerosol Transmissible Disease Standard requires; upon hire and annually thereafter Tuberculosis (TB) screening for all employees. The method of testing is determined by past medical history and any current symptoms. Per Cal/OSHA regulations and UCSB Campus Policy, all UCSB personnel who use respiratory protection equipment shall be included in the UCSB Respiratory Protection Program and required to complete respirator fit testing upon hire and annually thereafter, completed by UCSB Environmental Health & Safety. Any HIPAA or FERPA violation is subject to disciplinary action. Student Health is closed between the Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays. Hiring/ Budgeted Salary Range: $101,100/ year ‑ $146,700/year. Full Salary Range: $101,100/year ‑ $192,300/ year. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https://policy. ucop. edu/doc/4010393/PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/1001004/ Anti‑Discrimination. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #69547

PROGRAM SPECIALIST

UC EDUCATION ABROAD PROGRAM

The Program Specialist is a seasoned, experienced professional who knows how to apply theory and put it into practice with in‑depth understanding of the professional field; independently performs the full range of responsibilities within the function; possesses broad job knowledge; analyzes problems and issues of diverse scope and determines solutions. Independently advises on and resolves a full range of issues. Works within the organization to recommend changes to policies, practices, and procedures. Provides guidance on issues requiring in‑depth knowledge of specialized programs. Reporting to the Managing Supervisor, the Program Specialist serves as the primary operating liaison between the University of California Education Abroad Program, Systemwide Office (UCEAP) and (a) UC Study Center staff worldwide; (b) Study Abroad offices on the UC campuses; and (c) UC students participating in UCEAP. Directly responsible for all operational and logistical activities pertaining to an assigned portfolio within the more than 5,500 UCEAP program participants each year, in over 40 countries worldwide. Collaborates with all program teams to develop and integrate best practices and provide back‑up support. Works to ensure these processes are as advanced and efficient as possible. Maintains primary responsibility for communicating policies pertaining to all operational aspects of students’ programs to the staff abroad, campus offices, UCEAP staff, and students on UCEAP.

Assembles and maintains program information, manages student information, and files, and generates reports in a combination of complex in‑house and third‑party databases. Collaborates with IT and Marketing units on operational web and database issues and developments. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree in related area and / or equivalent experience / training.

Notes: The UCEAP Systemwide Office is located in Goleta, CA (near the UCSB campus). Eligible for a work arrangement which may require presence at the UCEAP Systemwide Office for occasions such as leadership and staff meetings, delegation visits, training, study abroad fairs, etc. The University is unable to pay or reimburse expenses prohibited by University policy, including travel expenses associated with commuting to the designated office. Satisfactory conviction history background check

The full salary range is $56,700 to $97,500/yr. The budgeted salary rangeis $56,700 to $69,500/yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For more information, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/4010393/ PPSM‑20 and https://policy.ucop.edu/ doc/1001004/Anti‑Discrimination. Application review begins 6/11/24; open until filled. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 69469

SPECIAL PROGRAM ADVISOR_CONTRACT (100%)

ASSOCIATED STUDENTS

Under the direction of the AS Management Group the A.S. Special Program Advisor works as a team member to advise committees in Associated Students, as assigned. Provides overall guidance in A.S. policies and procedures as well as ensures adherence to University policy. Provides some administrative

assistance as needed to the committees in the assignment area. Reqs: 1‑3 yrs experience in higher education administrative, student services, or academic role. Notes: Satisfactory conviction history background check; Campus Security Authority. Budgeted Pay Rate/Range: $24.95 – 26.31/hr. Full Title Code Pay Range: $24.95/ hr. ‑ $42.10/hr. UC Santa Barbara is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age or protected veteran status. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https://policy. ucop. edu/doc/4010393/PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/1001004/ Anti‑Discrimination Application review begins 6/20/24. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 69962 SPECIAL PROGRAM ADVISOR_CONTRACT (50%) ASSOCIATED STUDENTS

Under the direction of the AS Management Group the A.S. Special Program Advisor works as a team member to advise committees in Associated Students, as assigned. Provides overall guidance in A.S. policies and procedures as well as ensures adherence to University policy. Provides some administrative assistance as needed to the committees in the assignment area. Reqs: 1‑3 yrs experience in higher education administrative, student services, or academic role. Notes: Satisfactory conviction history background check; Campus Security Authority. Budgeted Pay Rate/Range: $24.95 – 26.31/hr. Full Title Code Pay Range: $24.95/ hr. ‑ $42.10/hr. UC Santa Barbara is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age or protected veteran status. For the University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy, please visit: https://policy. ucop. edu/doc/4010393/PPSM‑20. For the University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy, please visit: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/1001004/ Anti‑Discrimination Application review begins 6/20/24. Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 68766

UNDERGRADUATE ADVISOR

BLACK STUDIES

Advises students in all aspects of the requirements for the Black Studies major and minor. Advises students on topics such as academic planning, petition processing and post‑graduation opportunities such as employment and graduate or professional school options. Is responsible for coordinating meetings with all new majors and minors, current majors and minors, and graduating seniors to ensure that students are on track to complete the necessary courses for a Black Studies degree within four years (or two years for transfer students). Is responsible for scheduling classes and serves as the department’s liaison with the Office of the Registrar. Works closely with the department’s Undergraduate Curriculum Committee and Graduate Committee on a variety of assignments; including but not limited to providing historical course information, advising on student needs in preparation of the annual departmental curriculum plan, TA and Reader assignments including UCPath hires and assistance with all administrative matters relating to the Black Studies Graduate Emphasis.

50 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM 50 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS PHON E 805-965-5205 EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM
Pay Rate/Range: $24.69/hr. ‑ $29.50/ hr. Full Title Code Pay Range: $24.69/ hr. ‑ $30.68/hr. UC Santa Barbara is an
Continued on p. 52
EMPLOYMENT (CONT.)

SERVICE DIREC TORY

Chipped or damaged frames? Need outside noise reduction? New, energy efficient windows may be the answer! Call for a consultation & FREE quote today. 1‑877‑248‑9944. You will be asked for the zip code of the property when connecting

PEST CONTROL: PROTECT YOUR HOME from pests safely and affordably. Roaches, Bed Bugs, Rodent, Termite, Spiders and other pests. Locally owned and affordable. Call for service or an inspection today! 1‑833‑237‑1199.

PROFESSIONAL LAWN service: Fertilization, weed control, seeding, aeration & mosquito control. Call now for a free quote. Ask about our first application special! 1‑833‑606‑6777.

WATER DAMAGE CLEANUP & RESTORATION: A small amount of water can lead to major damage and mold growth in your home. Our trusted professionals do complete repairs to protect your family and your home’s value! Call 24/7: 1‑888‑290‑2264. Have zip code of service location ready when you call!

MEDICAL SERVICES

ATTENTION OXYGEN therapy users!

Inogen One G4 is capable of full 24/7 oxygen delivery. Only 2.8 pounds. Free info kit. Call 877‑929‑9587

1‑888‑292‑8225 Have zip code of property ready when calling.

DIRECTV‑ ALL your entertainment. Nothing on your roof! Sign up for Direct and get your first free months of Max, Paramount+, Showtime, Starz, MGM+ and Cinemax included. Choice package $84.99/mo. Some restrictions apply. Call DIRECTV 1‑888‑641‑5762 (Cal‑SCAN)

ELIMINATE GUTTER cleaning forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debris‑blocking gutter protection. Schedule free LeafFilter estimate today. 20% off Entire Purchase. 10% Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1‑833‑610‑1936

GET DISH Satellite TV + Internet! Free Install, Free HD‑DVR Upgrade, 80,000 On‑Demand Movies, Plus Limited Time Up To $600 In Gift Cards. Call Today! 1‑866‑479‑1516. NEED NEW WINDOWS? Drafty rooms?

DENTAL INSURANCE from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. Coverage for 400+ procedures. Real dental insurance ‑ not just a discount plan. Get your free Information Kit with details! 1‑855‑526‑1060 www. dental50plus.com/ads #6258

VIAGRA AND CIALIS USERS! 50 Generic Pills SPECIAL $99.00. 100% guaranteed. 24/7 CALL NOW! 888‑445‑5928 Hablamos Español

ARE YOU HIRING?

Post your Open Positions for free online on independent.com

Adult Beginner Flamenco Dance Classes Rosal Ortega Flamenco Get fit & embrace your spicey side! Join Rosal Ortega Flamenco for an intro to Flamenco dance for two weeks of classes for $39.99. Reduce Stress, Challenge your Mind & Body, Make New Friends! Visit www.rosalortegaflamenco.com or scan the QR code below. We can’t wait to dance with you!

crosswordpuzzle

Wish your Dad a “Happy Father’s Day” with a special message or Celebrate your Graduate in our online photo gallery at independent.com/dadsandgrads2024/

Across

1. Chain store with a cat-anddog logo 6. Archipelago nation in the Indian Ocean 13. Collectively 14. Animated movie based on a Neil Gaiman novel

15. Actor Kevin of “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Trainspotting” 17. Added fuel to, as a fire

18. Style of jeans with extra space around the thigh

20. Cast out from the body

21. Mario Party item

22. Home of Benny Beaver

24. Subj. with lab work 27. Grazed

28. Small sample

29. Aykroyd of “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire”

32. Played in turn 36. Advice to one holding tension

37. Library archives that may be in storage

38. Trout fishing lure

39. ___ loss

40. Super Bowl LIV halftime performer

41. “Animal Farm” structure

42. Gym classes, briefly

43. Dutch astronomer with a namesake “cloud”

45. Sauce for crab cakes, maybe

49. Cereal brand with a High Protein version

53. Hostess offering

55. Skyhook Foundation founder, familiarly

57. Focus of a Royal Canadian centennial on April 1, 2024

58. Apres-ski setting

59. Gets comfy

60. Squirrel away

Down

1. “Mr. ___ Passes By” (A.A. Milne play)

2. Env. stuffer

3. Wild-caught octopus, in a sushi bar

4. Awards in the ad biz

5. Historic building in Baton Rouge, LA or Springfield, IL

6. 1994 Eurodance hit based on an old American folk song

7. Los Juegos Olimpicos prize

8. TikTok offerings involving pencils, maybe

9. Couturier Cassini

10. Vehicle

11. Unpleasant obligation

12. Back-to-school mo.

14. Series with a short-lived “Cyber” offshoot

16. Manga featuring high school student Light Yagami and a mysterious black book

19. What Project Gutenberg offers, in e-book formats

23. When hands are up and down

24. Gargamel’s prey

25. What extreme Dutch sportspeople try to jump with a pole

26. 1967 Stevie Wonder title lyric that’s followed by “If you leave me sad and blue”

29. Places that may have a lot of kicks and trainers 30. ___-garde

31. Current events-related

33. Letter after ka in Spanish 34. Kraken org. 35. 3-D screening 44. What Balatro’s “arcana packs” are themed around

45. “I’m not ___”

46. “Sweet,” in Jamaica

47. Shared mine?

48. Shoe insert

50. ___-Chee All Season Portfolio (retro school folder)

51. “___ and the Swan” (Yeats poem)

Root beer dispensers

Positional start?

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 51 INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS PHON E 805-965-5205 EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 51 CLASSIFIEDS | PHON E 805-965-5205 | ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM
“Free Throw Line” it’s a themeless! LAST WEEK’S SOLUTION:
54.
56.
better ©2024 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords. com) For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-655-6548. Reference puzzle #1190 Day High Low High Low High Thu 13 2:40 am 3.9 9:58 am 0.7 5:18 pm 4.2 11:18 pm 2.6 Fri 14 4:02 am 3.4 10:40 am 1.1 5:50 pm 4.4 Sat 15 12:27 am 2.0 5:30 am 3.1 11:18 am 1.5 6:18 pm 4.8 Sun 16 1:19 am 1.4 6:51 am 3.0 11:53 am 1.8 6:46 pm 5.1 Mon 17 2:01 am 0.8 8:02 am 3.1 12:27 pm 2.1 7:14 pm 5.4 Tue 18 2:40 am 0.3 8:59 am 3.2 1:02 pm 2.3 7:45 pm 5.7 Wed 19 3:16 am -0.2 9:47 am 3.3 1:40 pm 2.5 8:18 pm 6.0 Thu 20 3:52 am -0.6 10:30 am 3.4 2:19 pm 2.6 8:53 pm 6.2 Sunrise 5:46 Sunset 8:13 Tide Guide 21 28 5 13
52.
“I’ve seen
BUILDING/ CONSTRUCTION SERVICES JACUZZI BATH Remodel can install a new, custom bath or shower in as little as one day. For a limited time, we’re waiving ALL installation costs. (Additional terms apply. Subject to change and vary by dealer. Offer ends 6/30/24 Call 1‑833‑985‑4766 (Cal‑SCAN) BUSINESS SERVICES AGING ROOF? New Homeowner? Got Storm Damage? You need a local expert provider that proudly stands behind their work. Fast, free estimate. Financing available. Call 1‑888‑878‑9091 WATER DAMAGE cleanup: A small amount of water can cause major damage to your home. Our trusted professionals dry out wet areas & repair to protect your family & your home value! Call 24/7: 1‑888‑872‑2809. Have zip code! HOME SERVICES 10 + YRS EXPERIENCE PAINTER Interior, exterior, refinish, hardwood floors, wall paper etc. call for estimate (323) 632‑8722 AGING ROOF? NEW HOMEOWNER? STORM DAMAGE? You need a local expert provider that proudly stands behind their work. Fast, free estimate. Financing available. Call
Contact
rates
are rad! GRADS DADS
2024 0R SCAN THE QR CODE HERE
advertising@independent.com for more details and in-print
&

EMPLOYMENT (CONT.)

The UA will also engage in the following tasks: requests quarterly Evaluation System for Courses and Instruction for instructors and TAs and distributes these reports accordingly, responsible for quarterly textbook orders and adoptions through the university bookstore, updates faculty and TA office hours in the office and on the website and oversees Student Assistants. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent combination of education. 1‑3 years of administrative work experience. Note: Satisfactory conviction history background check

The full hourly range is $27.29 ‑ $39.12/ hr. The budgeted hourly range is $27.29 ‑ $32.04/hr. UC Santa Barbara is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age or protected veteran status.For more information: University of California’s Affirmative Action Policy and University of California’s Anti‑Discrimination Policy Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 70078

WORKFORCE ADMINISTRATION AND ANALYTICS

SPECIALIST 3

HUMAN RESOURCES

Provides comprehensive analytical and administrative support for the Workforce Administration and Analytics unit. This involves extensive support for our Payroll and Personnel system UCPath, ePerformance administration, workforce data analytics, UCPath data integrity, and escalated ServiceNow tickets related to various HR actions such as pay adjustments, hiring, terminations, and transfers. It includes advising campus users on procedures and best practices, ensuring compliance with personnel policies and

AUTO

AUTO PARTS

DONATE YOUR Car to Veterans Today! Help and Support our Veterans. Fast ‑ FREE pick up. 100% tax deductible. Call 1‑800‑245‑0398

bargaining agreements, and providing analysis and recommendations for resolving day‑to‑day queries regarding workforce administration. Leads UCPath system projects, updates, and upgrades in partnership with the WFA Manager. Regularly assesses and analyzes the HR data in UCPath for accuracy. Utilizes various HR information systems and data analysis tools. Gathers and summarizes data, creates presentations, builds dashboards, and reports on HR metrics. Develops and provides ad hoc reports to inform and improve HR offerings, leadership effectiveness, and business outcomes. Assists the WFA Manager and Director of Compensation in managing ongoing wage implementations for 10 employee union groups and provides pay equity reports to departments and divisional control points. Serves on the UCPath Training team and maintains training materials as well as delivers instructor‑led campus training. Maintains the WFA web pages and UCPath site content, ensuring accuracy and effectiveness, and posts updated resources for campus transactors. Provides backup support during peak times for various administrative tasks and projects. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree in related area or equivalent experience/training. 1‑3 years of experience in data analysis, reporting, Microsoft Excel/Google Sheets, and HRIS systems including building dashboards, and reports on HR metrics. Note: Satisfactory criminal history background check. Salary or Hourly Range: $77,000/year. Full Salary Range: $74,300 to $134,500/ year. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. Application review begins 6/21/24 Apply online at https:// jobs.ucsb.edu, Job # 69785

MARKET PLACE

ANNOUNCEMENT

AFFORDABLE TV & INTERNET. If you are overpaying for your service, call now for a free quote and see how much you can save! 1‑844‑588‑6579.

BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices ‑ No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 1‑855‑402‑6997.

BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices ‑ No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 855‑761‑1725

BECOME A published author. We want to read your book! Dorrance Publishing trusted since 1920.Consultation, production, promotion & distribution. Call for free author’s guide 1‑877‑729‑4998 or visit dorranceinfo.com/ads

DID YOU KNOW Newspaper‑generated content is so valuable it’s taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, tweeted, discussed, posted, copied, edited, and emailed countless times throughout the day by others?

Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising. For a free brochure call 916‑288‑6011 or email cecelia@cnpa.com (Cal‑SCAN)

DON’T LET the stairs limit your mobility! Discover the ideal solution for anyone who struggles on the stairs, is concerned about a fall or wants to regain access to their entire home. Call AmeriGlide today!

1‑833‑399‑3595

ELIMINATE GUTTER cleaning forever!

LeafFilter, the most advanced debris‑blocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today. 20% off Entire Purchase. 10% Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1‑855‑424‑7581 (Cal‑SCAN)

WELL BEING

ANNOUNCEMENTS

24/7 LOCKSMITH: We are there when you need us for home & car lockouts.

We’ll get you back up and running quickly! Also, key reproductions, lock installs and repairs, vehicle fobs. Call us for your home, commercial and auto locksmith needs! 1‑833‑237‑1233.

ATTENTION: VIAGRA and CIALIS

USERS! A cheaper alternative to high drugstore prices! 50 Pill Special ‑ Only $99! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW: 888‑531‑1192.

GET YOUR deduction ahead of the year‑end! Donate your car, truck, or SUV to assist the blind and visually impaired. Arrange a swift, no‑cost vehicle pickup and secure a generous year‑end tax credit. Call Heritage for the Blind Today at 1‑844‑491‑2884 today! (Cal‑SCAN).

HOME BREAK‑ins take less than 60 seconds. Don’t wait! Protect your family, your home, your assets now for as little as 70¢ a day! Call 855‑401‑1151

JACUZZI BATH Remodel can install

a new, custom bath or shower in as little as one day. For a limited time, we’re cutting installation costs in half and offering a FREE safety upgrade! Additional terms apply. Subject to change and vary by dealer. Offer ends 3/31/24 Call 1‑844‑501‑3208

PREPARE FOR power outages today with a Generac Home Standby Generator. Act now to receive a FREE 5‑Year warranty with qualifying purchase* Call 1‑855‑948‑6176 today to schedule a free quote. It’s not just a generator. It’s a power move.

REPLACE YOUR roof w/the best looking & longest lasting material steel from Erie Metal Roofs! 3 styles & multiple colors available. Guaranteed to last a lifetime! Limited Time Offer up to 50% off install + Additional 10% off install (military, health & 1st responders.) 1‑833‑370‑1234

SAFE STEP. North America’s #1 Walk‑in tub. Comprehensive lifetime warranty. Top‑of‑the‑line installation and service. Nowfeaturing our free shower package & $1600 off ‑ limited time! Financing available. 1‑855‑417‑1306

STOP OVERPAYING FOR AUTO

INSURANCE! A recent survey says that most Americans are overpaying for their car insurance. Let us show you how much you can save. Call Now for a no‑obligation quote: 1‑866‑472‑8309

SWITCH AND save up to $250/year on your talk, text and data. No contract

and no hidden fees. Unlimited talk and text with flexible data plans. Premium nationwide coverage. 100% U.S. based customer service. For more information, call 1‑844‑908‑0605 (Cal‑SCAN).

THE DIFFERENCE in winning and losing market share is how businesses use their advertising dollars. CNPA’s Advertising Services’ power to connect to nearly 13 million of the state’s readers who are an engaged audience, makes our services an indispensable marketing solution. For more info call Cecelia @ (916) 288‑6011 or cecelia@ cnpa.com.

WESLEY FINANCIAL Group, LLC Timeshare Cancellation Experts. Over $50,000,000 in timeshare debt and fees cancelled in 2019. Get free informational package and learn how to get rid of your timeshare! Free consultations. Over 450 positive reviews. Call 866‑675‑2404 (Cal‑SCAN)

YOU MAY QUALIFY for disability benefits if you have are between 52‑63 years old and under a doctor’s care for a health condition that prevents you from working for a year or more. Call now! 1‑877‑247‑6750.

TREASURE HUNT ($100 OR LESS)

WANTED USED tenor saxophone preferably Yamaha (805) 284‑6173

WANT TO BUY

PAYING TOP CA$H FOR MEN’S SPORT WATCHES! Rolex, Breitling, Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer, Daytona, GMT, Submariner and Speedmaster. Call 1‑855‑402‑7109.

TOP CA$H PAID FOR OLD GUITARS! 1920‑1980 Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State,D’Angelico, Stromberg. And Gibson Mandolins / Banjos. 1‑877‑589‑0747

STAY CONNECTED

(Cal‑SCAN)

GOT AN UNWANTED CAR??? DONATE IT TO PATRIOTIC HEARTS. Fast free pick up. All 50 States. Patriotic Hearts’ programs help veterans find work or start their own business. Call 24/7: 1‑855‑408‑6546 (Cal‑SCAN)

TIENE UN vehiculo no deseado? Donelo a Patriotic Hearts! Recogida rápida y gratuita en los 50 estados. Patriotic Hearts ofrece programas para ayudar a los veteranos a encontrar trabajo o iniciar su propio negocio. Llama ahora: 1‑855‑ 408‑7368 (24/7) (Cal‑SCAN)

BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices ‑ No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 1‑877‑510‑9918.

DIAGNOSED WITH lung cancer & 65+? You may qualify for a substantial cash award. No obligation! We’ve recovered millions. Let us help! Call 24/7 1‑877‑707‑5707

DIRECTV STREAM ‑ Carries the most local MLB Games! Choice

Package $89.99/mo for 12 mos Stream on 20 devices at once. HBO Max included for 3 mos (w/Choice Package or higher.) No contract or hidden fees! Some restrictions apply. Call IVS 1‑866‑859‑0405

GOT AN UNWANTED CAR??? DONATE

IT TO PATRIOTIC HEARTS. Fast free pick up. All 50 States. Patriotic Hearts’ programs help veterans find work or start their own business. Call 24/7: 844‑875‑6782.

MOBILEHELP AMERICA’S premier mobile medical alert system. Whether you’re home or away. For safety & peace of mind. No long term contracts! Free brochure! Call 1‑888‑489‑3936

WESLEY FINANCIAL Group, LLC

Timeshare Cancellation Experts Over

$50,000,000 in timeshare debt & fees cancelled in 2019. Get free info package & learn how to get rid of your timeshare! Free consultations. Over 450 positive reviews. 833‑308‑1971.

LEGALS

ADMINISTER OF ESTATE

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER

ESTATE OF: PATRICIA BURNHAM CASE NO.: 24PR00313

To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of PATRICIA BUNNHAM

A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by: CHRISTINE H. SANTI in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara

THE PETITION for probate requests that: CHRISTINE H. SANTI be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent.

THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.)

The Independent Administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority.

A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: 08/29/2024 at 9:00 a.m. in Dept: SB5 of the SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, 1100 Anacapa Street, P.O. Box 21107 Santa Barbara, CA 93121‑1107. Anacapa Division

IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE‑154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special notice form is available from the court clerk.

Darrel E. Parker, Executive Officer Date: 05/22/2024 By: Monica Buenrostro, Deputy. Attorney for Petitioner: Justin D. Fox of Thyne Taylor Fox Howard, LLP, 205 E. Carrillo Street #100 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; (805) 963‑9958.

Published: May 30. June 6, 13, 2024. NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: JULIE NADEL Case No.: 24PR00255

court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority.

A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: 07/25/2024 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: SB‑5 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Anacapa Division. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney.

IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE‑154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Darrel E. Parker, Executive Officer 05/1/2024 by Monica Buenrostro, Deputy. Attorney for Petitioner: Scott Weintraub and Hillary Weintraub, 10100 Santa Monica Blvd., Suite 2200, Los Angeles, CA 90067 (310) 282‑2000

Published: May 30. Jun 6, 13, 2024. NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: HAROLD SUNGSHIK KIM CASE NO.: 24PR00331 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of HAROLD SUNGSHIK KIM

To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: JULIE NADEL

A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by: SCOTT WEINTRAUB and HILLARY WEINTRAUB in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara.

THE PETITION for probate requests that: SCOTT WEINTRAUB and HILLARY WEINTRAUB be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent.

THE PETITION requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court.

THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining

A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by: HARRY E. HAGEN, Santa Barbara County Public Administrator in the Superior Court of California, County of SANTA BARBARA THE PETITION for probate requests that: HARRY E. HAGEN, SANTA BARBARA COUNTY PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The Independent Administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority.

A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: 08/8/2024 at 9:00 A.M. in DEPT: 5 of the SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, 1100 Anacapa Street, 2nd Floor Santa Barbara, CA 93121‑1107. Anacapa Division IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative

52 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM 52 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS PHON E 805-965-5205 EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM
CLASSIC CARS WANTED Running or not. We are local to S.B. Foreign/Domestic. Porsche, Mercedes, Ford, Chevy etc. We come to you. 1-805-699-0684 Avantiauto.group
CARS WANTED
YOUR
SEARCH
FREE
Running
Deduction
Required!
DONATE
VEHICLE to fund the
FOR MISSING CHILDREN. FAST
PICKUP. 24 hour response.
or not. Maximum Tax
and No Emission Test
Call 24/7: 1‑877‑434‑6852
TRUCKS/RECREATIONAL VEHICLE FOR SALE 1996 White Chevrolet 3500 Cheyenne Dump Truck 68,862 miles Vehicle condition: damaged seat drivers’ side, driver’s side door interior handle damaged, damaged taillights, and transmission will not engage reverse. Vehicle will be sold “as is” and without warranty; minimum bid is $500. Sealed bids must be submitted on an approved bid form and will be accepted at the Housing Authority Administrative Office, 815 W. Ocean Ave., Lompoc, until 4:00 p.m. on 6/24/2024; the Bids will be opened at the same time/location. To obtain a bid form, schedule an appointment to see the vehicle or for more information, email
kelsieshroll@ hasbarco.org
REAL ESTATE MONEY TO LOAN RETIRED COUPLE $$$$ for business purpose Real Estate loans. Credit unimportant. V.I.P. Trust Deed Company www.viploan.com Call 1‑818‑248‑0000. Broker‑principal DRE 01041073. No consumer loans. (Cal‑ SCAN)
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK @sbindependent #sbindy FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM @sbindependent FOLLOW US ON X @sbindynews

LEGALS (CONT.)

appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE‑154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special notice form is available from the court clerk.

Darrel E. Parker, Executive Officer Date: 06/6/2024 By: Monica Buenrostro, Deputy. Attorney for Petitioner: Mike Munoz, Senior Deputy County Counsel 105 E. Anapamu Street, #201, Santa Barbara, CA 93101; (805) 568‑2950.

Published: June 13, 20, 27, 2024.

NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: JOHN V. LEGITTINO (aka John Vincent Legittino and John Legittino) Case No.: 24PR00289

To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of: JOHN V. LEGITTINO ALSO KNOWN AS JOHN VINCENT LEGITTINO AND JOHN LEGITTINO

A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by: TONJA E. GIES in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara.

THE PETITION for probate requests that: TONJA E. GIES be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent.

THE PETITION requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court.

THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.)

The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority.

A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: 07/1/2024

AT 8:30 a.m. Dept: SM‑4 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, 312‑C East Cook Street, Building E, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Cook Division.

IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney.

IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law.

YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE‑154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Darrel E. Parker, Executive Officer 06/4/2024 by

Robert Mendez, Deputy. Attorney for Petitioner: Danielle E. Miller, Esq. (SBN 186322) Loeb & Loeb LLP 10100 Santa Monica Blvd, Suite 2200, Los Angeles, CA 90067 (310) 282‑2000

Published: Jun 13, 20, 27 2024.

FBN ABANDONMENT

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS

NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: PODIUM CONSTRUCTION 516 E Micheltorena St Santa Barbara, CA 93103 The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 05/28/24 in the County of

Santa Barbara. Original File no. FBN 2024‑0001295. The persons or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Podium Enterprises Inc. (same address) The business was conducted by an Corporation. Signed by: ERIN GORRELL/PRESIDENT Filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on 05/30/24, FBN 2024‑0001311, E49.

I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in the Office of the County Clerk, Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SANTA BARBARA LIFESTYLE MEDICINE 1532 State Street, 2nd Floor Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Amanda L. Scott, M.D. Inc. 4580 Atascadero Dr. Santa Barbara, CA 93110 This business is conducted by a Corporation Filed by: AMANDA L. SCOTT/PRESIDENT with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Apr 25, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was

filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001046. Published: May 23, 30. Jun 6, 13, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: THE HOUSE OF HALCYON DAYS 785 Carosam Road Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Naomi Broomberg (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: NAOMI BROOMBERG/ OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 8, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland,

County Clerk (SEAL) by E47. FBN Number: 2024‑0001142. Published: May 23, 30. Jun 6, 13 , 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: J.FLORES DESIGN 1619 Calzada Ave Santa Ynez, CA 93460; Jessica N Flores P.O. Box 755 Santa Ynez, CA 93460. This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: JESSICA FLORES/CEO with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 8, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001148.

Published: May 23, 30. Jun 6, 13, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT

File No. FBN 2024‑0001069

The following person(s) is doing business as: Periwinkles Mercantile 2933 Grand Ave #C Los Olivos, CA 93441, County of SANTA BARBARA. CYNTHIA BURDITT, 2933 GRAND AVE #C LOS OLIVOS, CA 93441 This business is conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING AIR POLLUTION CONTROL DISTRICT HEARING BOARD COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA

Notice is herby given that the Santa Barbara County Air Pollution Control District (APCD) Hearing Board will hold a public hearing to consider the following matters on Wednesday, July 3, 2024, at 9:30 a.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, at the Board of Supervisors Hearing Room, 105 East Anapamu Street, Santa Barbara, California, 93310.

Case No. 2021-04-M4 - Beacon West Energy Group, LLC

(Modification of Final Compliance Date 1145 Eugenia Place #101 and Schedule of Increments of Progress) Carpinteria, CA 93013

Hearing – To consider a Petition for Modification of Regular Variance from District Rules 331.D, E, G.1 and I and 206, Part 70 Permit to Operate 9109-R5, Conditions 9.C.2.a, 9.C.2.b.i and 9.C.2.b.ii submitted on May 23, 2024, for relief from fugitive hydrocarbon component emission limits, operational limits, leak and repair requirements at Platform Houchin.

Continued on p. 64

The Petitioner is currently operating under Regular Variance Order 2021-04-M3, which provides relief through July 29, 2024, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first. Per Health and Safety Code §42356 and §42357, the Petitioner is requesting a Modification of Increments of Progress and Modification of Final Compliance Date to extend coverage through July 29, 2025, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first. If granted, the Variance would provide continued relief from fugitive hydrocarbon component emission limits, operational limits, leak and repair requirements and provide new increments of progress.

The Petitioner operates the equipment described in the Petition at Platform Houchin, located on offshore lease tract OCS-P-166, approximately 7 miles southeast from the City of Santa Barbara. The Platform is not operational and is idle awaiting decommissioning. The Modification of Regular Variance, if granted, will allow the Petitioner enforcement relief from July 30, 2024, through July 29, 2025, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first.

Case No. 2021-05-M4 - Beacon West Energy Group, LLC (Modification of Final Compliance Date 1145 Eugenia Place #101 and Schedule of Increments of Progress) Carpinteria, CA 93013

Hearing – To consider a Petition for Modification of Regular Variance from District Rules 331.D, E, G.1 and I and 206, Part 70 Permit to Operate 9108-R5, Conditions 9.C.2.a, 9.C.2.b.i and 9.C.2.b.ii submitted on May 23, 2024, for relief from fugitive hydrocarbon component emission limits, operational limits, leak and repair requirements at Platform Hogan.

The Petitioner is currently operating under Regular Variance Order 2021-05-M3, which provides relief through July 29, 2024, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first. Per Health and Safety Code §42356 and §42357, the Petitioner is requesting a Modification of Increments of Progress and Modification of Final Compliance Date to extend coverage through July 29, 2025, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first. If granted, the Variance would provide continued relief from fugitive hydrocarbon component emission limits, operational limits, leak and repair requirements.

The Petitioner operates the equipment described in the Petition at Platform Hogan, located on offshore lease tract OCS-P-166, approximately 8 miles southeast from the City of Santa Barbara. The Platform is not operational and is idle awaiting decommissioning. The Modification of Regular Variance, if granted, will allow the Petitioner enforcement relief from July 30, 2024, through July 29, 2025, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first.

Case No. 2021-12-M3 – County of Santa Barbara, Public Works (Modification of Conditions, Final 130 E. Victoria Street, Ste. 100 Compliance Date, And Increments of Progress) Santa Barbara, CA 93101

Hearing – To consider a Petition for Modification of Regular Variance from District Rule 206, Authority to Construct 14500-10, Conditions, 9.C.2.b.iii, 9.C.4.b.i, 9.C.4.b.ii, 9.C.4.b.iii, 9.C.4.b.v, 9.C.4.b.vi, 9.C.4.b.viii, 9.C.4.b.x, 9.C.4.c.i, 9.C.4.c.ii, 9.C.4.c.iii, 9.C.4.d.i, 9.C.4.d.ii, 9.C.4.d.iii, 9.c.20.b.i, 9.c.20.b.ii, 9.C.34.a, and 9.C.34.f, submitted on June 3, 2024, for continued operations of the Tajiguas Landfill Material Recovery Facility (MRF) without the MRF baghouses that were damaged by the 2021 Alisal Fire.

The Petitioner is currently operating under Regular Variance Order 2021-12-M2, which provides relief through June 15, 2024, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first. Per Health and Safety Code §42356 and §42357, the Petitioner is requesting a Modification of Conditions to remove permit conditions where compliance was achieved due to a permit modification, Modification of Increments of Progress and Modification of Final Compliance Date for Variance Order 2021-12M2 to extend coverage through July 31, 2024, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first. If granted, the Variance would provide continued relief from emission controls, maintenance, monitoring and source testing requirements for MRF equipment damaged during the 2021 Alisal Fire.

The Petitioner operates the equipment described in the Petition at the Santa Barbara County Tajiguas Landfill located at 14470 Calle Real in Goleta, California.

Case No. 2024-06-R – Santa Barbara County Public Works Department (Regular Variance) 130 E. Victoria Street, Ste. 100 Santa Barbara, CA 93101

Hearing – To consider a Regular Variance from District Rules 328.C.2, C.4, G and I.1 and 206, ATC 14500-Mod 10, Conditions 9.B.12, 9.C.9.a.i, 9.C.9.a.v., 9.C.9.b.ii, 9.C.9.b.xvii, 9.C.9.b.xviii, 9.C.9.c.xiii (ADF CHP IC engines only), 9.C.19.a (ADF CHP IC engines only), 9.C.21 (ADF and MRF CHP IC engines only), 9.C.22 and 9.C.23. submitted on June 3, 2024, for relief from the following requirements at the Tajiguas Landfill: source testing requirements for the ADF CHP IC engines, BACT emissions limits for ADF and MRF CHP IC engines, emissions controls and maintenance for the ADF and MRF CHP IC engines, CEMS requirements and data telemetry for the ADF and MRF CHP IC engines, and CEMS excursions until the repairs can be made.

The Petitioner is currently operating under Interim Variance Order 2024-05-I, which provides relief through June 19, 2024, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first. The Petitioner applied for an Interim Variance concurrently with the 90-Day Variance Petition, however, it was discovered additional coverage was necessary. As a result, the Petitioner applied for a Regular Variance on June 3, 2024. If granted, the Regular Variance would provide enforcement relief from June 3, 2024, through March 21, 2025, or the date compliance is achieved, whichever occurs first.

The Petitioner operates the equipment at the Tajiguas Landfill located at 14470 Calle Real in Goleta, California. The Petitioner recently resumed operation of the facility after a contract termination with the previous operator. The facility was in a state of disrepair when the Petitioner resumed operations. Until the repairs can be made, the Petitioner is requesting relief from the requirements specified above.

Said Petitions are on file with the Clerk of the APCD Hearing Board and available for public inspection. Interested persons may submit written evidence, arguments concerning this matter, or make arrangements to view said Petition before the hearing by contacting the Hearing Board Clerk at: variance@sbcapcd.org, or 260 North San Antonio Rd., Suite A, Santa Barbara, California 93110.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 53 INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 53 INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS | PHON E 805-965-5205 | EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM

LEGALS (CONT.)

listed above on 10/01/2017

/s/ CYNTHIA BURDITT, OWNER

This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on 04/26/2024.

Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk

5/23, 5/30, 6/6, 6/13/24

CNS‑3813280#

SANTA BARBARA

INDEPENDENT

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: THE CAT HOUSE HOTEL 1922 De La Vina Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Cat House SB, LLC 17 Hurricane St 1 Marina Del Rey, CA

90292. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Filed by: OLIVER FRIES/MANAGING MEMBER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 10, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001160. Published: May 23, 30. Jun 6, 13, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PACIFIC BLAST SUPPLY, PAC BLAST SUPPLY, PACIFIC BLAST, PAC BLAST 5945

Daley St Goleta, CA 9317; Pacific Vibe, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Filed by: DANIEL OCHOA/OWNER/ PRESIDENT with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 16, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001212. Published: May 23, 30. Jun 6, 13, 2024.

FBN2024‑0001166

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT

The following person(s) is

AFFORDABLE HOUSING KEY PARTNERS INVITATION FOR BIDS

On behalf of Affordable Housing Key Partners, the Housing Authority of the County of Santa Barbara (HASBARCO) will receive sealed bids for Installation of Steel Security Screen Doors at Evans Park located at 200 West Williams, Santa Maria, CA, until 3:30 p.m. on July 2, 2024, at 815 West Ocean Avenue, Lompoc, CA, at which time and place all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. Proposed forms of contract documents, including specifications, are available on the HASBARCO website www.hasbarco.org

A pre-bid conference will be held on June 18, 2024, at 200 West Williams, Santa Maria, CA.

Please contact Sheree Aulman, Construction Contract Coordinator, at shereeaulman@hasbarco.org if you have any questions.

Ordinance 5214

An Ordinance Amending County Code Chapter 27 – Personnel Article II – Civil Service System of Santa Barbara County Section 27 – 25 – Persons Deemed Exempt from Provisions of this Article.

Passed, approved and adopted by the Board of Supervisors of the County of Santa Barbara, State of California, on this 4th day of June 2024, by the following vote:

Ayes: Supervisors Williams, Capps, Hartmann, Nelson and Lavagnino

Noes: None

Absent: None

Abstain: None

MONA MIYASATO

CLERK OF THE BOARD

By: Sheila de la Guerra – Deputy Clerk

NOTE: A complete copy of Ordinance No.5214 is on file with the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors and is available for public inspection and copying in that office in accordance with the California Public Records Act, Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1.

COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA BOARD OF SUPERVISORS STATE OF CALIFORINIA NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Tuesday, June 18, 2024 In Santa Maria

Joseph Centeno Betteravia Government Building Board Hearing Room 511 East Lakeside Parkway, Santa Maria, CA

The meeting starts at 9:00 a.m.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on Tuesday June 18, 2024, the Board of Supervisors will hold a public hearing to consider the introduction of an ordinance to amend Section 32-12 of the Santa Barbara County Code to increase the Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT) rate in the unincorporated area of the County from the current rate of Twelve Percent (12%) to Fourteen Percent (14%).

For additional information, please contact Nancy Anderson, Chief Assistant County Executive Officer at: Email: nanderson@countyofsb.org | Tel: 805-5683400.

For current methods of public participation for the meeting of June 18, 2024, please see page two (2) of the posted Agenda. The posted agenda will be available on Thursday prior to the above referenced meeting for a more specific time for this item. However, the order of the agenda may be rearranged or the item may be continued.

Staff reports and the posted agenda is available on the Thursday prior to the meeting at http://santabarbara.legistar.com/Calendar.aspx under the hearing date or contact the Clerk of the Board at (805) 568-2240 for alternative options.

In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need special assistance to participate in this meeting, please contact the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors by 4:00 PM on Friday before the Board meeting. For information about these services please contact the Clerk of the Board at (805) 568-2240.

If you challenge this project in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence to the Board of Supervisors prior to the public hearing. G.C. Section 65009, 6066, and 6062a.

Mona Miyasato

CLERK OF THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS

(are) doing business as:

Fictitious Business Name: CENTRAL VALLEY COMMUNITY BANK

Street Address of Principal Place of Business: 445 Pine Avenue, Goleta CA 93117

County of Principal Place of Business: Santa Barbara Name of Corporation or limited liability company as shown in the Articles of Inc. / Org. / Reg.: COMMUNITY WEST BANK, State of Inc./Org/Reg. California

Business Mailing Address: 7100 N. Financial Drive Suite 101 Fresno CA 93720

This business is/was conducted by: a corporation. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on Apr 01, 2024.

BY SIGNING, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).

Signature: Shannon Livingston

Printed Name of Person Signing: SHANNON LIVINGSTON

Printed Title of Person Signing:

Executive Vice President and CFO Filed in County Clerk’s Office, County of Santa Barbara on May 10, 2024.

NOTICE ‑ In accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or Common Law. (See Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code).

Business Owner is responsible to determine if

publication is required. (BPC 17917). Filing is a public record (GC 6250‑6277).

Filing

JOSEPH E. HOLLAND

County Clerk‑Recorder CN106226 C6777‑0006 May 30, Jun 6, 13, 20, 2024

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT

File No. FBN2024‑0001164

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Extra Space Storage (#6422), 224 N A St., Lompoc, CA 93436 County of SANTA BARBARA

Mailing Address: 2795 E Cottonwood Pkwy. 400, Salt Lake City, UT 84121

Extra Space Management, Inc., 2795 E Cottonwood Pkwy. 400, Salt Lake City, UT 84121

This business is conducted by a Corporation

The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A. Extra Space Management, Inc. S/ Gwyn Goodson McNeal, Vice President, This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on 05/10/2024. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk 5/30, 6/6, 6/13, 6/20/2024 CNS‑3787684#

SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT

FBN2024‑0001168

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Fictitious Business Name: CENTRAL VALLEY COMMUNITY BANK Street Address of Principal Place of Business: 1501 State Street Santa Barbara CA 93101 County of Principal Place of Business: Santa Barbara Name of Corporation or limited liability company as shown in the Articles of Inc. / Org. / Reg.: COMMUNITY WEST BANK, State of Inc./Org/Reg. California Business Mailing Address: 7100 N. Financial Drive Suite 101 Fresno CA 93720

This business is/was conducted by: a corporation. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on Apr 01, 2024. BY SIGNING, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to

Ordinance 5213

An Ordinance Amending Chapter 7A- County Arts Plan of the Santa Barbara County Code.

Passed, approved and adopted by the Board of Supervisors of the County of Santa Barbara, State of California, on this 4th day of June 2024, by the following vote:

Ayes: Supervisors Williams, Capps, Hartmann, Nelson and Lavagnino

Noes: None

Absent: None

Abstain: None

MONA MIYASATO

CLERK OF THE BOARD

By: Sheila de la Guerra – Deputy Clerk

NOTE: A complete copy of Ordinance No.5213 is on file with the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors and is available for public inspection and copying in that office in accordance with the California Public Records Act, Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1.

Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000). Signature: Shannon Livingston Printed Name of Person Signing: SHANNON LIVINGSTON Printed Title of Person Signing: Executive Vice President and CFO Filed in County Clerk’s Office, County of Santa Barbara on May 10, 2024.

NOTICE ‑ In accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or Common Law. (See Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code).

Business Owner is responsible to determine if publication is required. (BPC 17917). Filing is a public record (GC 6250‑6277). Filing

JOSEPH E. HOLLAND County Clerk‑Recorder CN106228 C6777‑0006 May 30, Jun 6, 13, 20, 2024

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. FBN2024‑0001162

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Artemisia Floral Design, 2. Artemisia Floral Design House, 3. Artemisia, 1825 Still meadow Rd., Solvang, CA 93463 County of SANTA BARBARA Mailing Address: 1825 Still meadow Rd., Solvang, CA 93463

Rachel M Mosti, 1825 Still meadow Rd., Solvang, CA 93463

This business is conducted by an Individual

The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on N/A. S/ Rachel M Mosti

This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on 05/10/2024. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk 5/30, 6/6, 6/13, 6/20/2024

CNS‑3761627# SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: ABSOLUTE WOOD PRODUCTS, INC. 253 Pebble Beach Drive Goleta, CA 93117; Absolute Wood Products, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Filed by: JEFFREY A. WAYCO/CEO with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 20, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E47. FBN Number: 2024‑0001233. Published: May 30. Jun 6, 13, 20, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CASTANEDA PRO TINT & DESIGN LLC 12 Ashley Avenue Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Castaneda Pro Tint & Design LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Filed by: MARIO A. CASTANEDA/OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 20, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001228. Published: May 30. Jun 6, 13, 20, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CALIFORNIA PATIENT ADVOCACY 1190 North Refugio Rd Santa Ynez, CA 93460; Kenneth W Partch (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: KENNETH W PARTCH/ OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 15, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001199. Published: May 30. Jun 6, 13, 20, 2024. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: STORKE FUEL DEPOT, STORKE CAR WASH 370 Storke Rd Goleta, CA 93117; Price Properties LLC, General Partner of Channel Auto Services LP 101 W Carrillo Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Limited Partnership Filed by: JOHN PRICE/ MANAGER OF GENERAL

STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).

Signature: Shannon Livingston

a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or Common Law. (See Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Business Owner is responsible to determine if

54 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM 54 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS PHON E 805-965-5205 EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM
PARTNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 20, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL)
FBN Number: 2024‑0001230.
30. Jun 6, 13, 20, 2024. FBN2024‑0001167 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Fictitious Business Name: CENTRAL VALLEY COMMUNITY BANK Street Address of Principal Place of Business: 5827 Hollister Avenue, Goleta CA 93117 County of Principal Place of Business: Santa Barbara Name of Corporation or limited liability company as shown in the Articles of Inc. / Org. / Reg.: COMMUNITY WEST BANK, State of Inc./Org/Reg. California Business Mailing Address: 7100 N. Financial Drive Suite 101 Fresno CA 93720 This business is/was conducted by: a corporation. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on Apr 01, 2024. BY SIGNING, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS
by E30.
Published: May
Printed Name of Person Signing: SHANNON LIVINGSTON Printed Title of Person Signing: Executive Vice President and CFO
in County Clerk’s Office, County of Santa Barbara on May 10, 2024. NOTICE ‑ In accordance with subdivision (a)
Section 17920,
Filed
of

LEGALS (CONT.)

publication is required. (BPC 17917). Filing is a public record (GC 6250‑6277).

Filing

JOSEPH E. HOLLAND

County Clerk‑Recorder

CN106227 C6777‑0006 May 30, Jun 6, 13, 20, 2024

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s)

is/are doing business as: FAIRVIEW

SHELL 42 North Fairview Ave Goleta, CA 93117; Thomas Lee Price (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: THOMAS

PRICE/OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 8, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E47. FBN Number: 2024‑0001139. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: GONZO’S SMALL ENGINE REPAIR 5950 Daley Street, Unit B Goleta, CA 93117; Gonzalo Verdin (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Fi led by: GONZALO VERDIN/ OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 28, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001299. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PODIUM

BUILDERS 516 East Micheltorena Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Podium Enterprises, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Filed by: ERIN

GORRELL/PRESIDENT with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 30, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E49. FBN Number: 2024‑0001312. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: LITTLE BEAR CO. 1116 N G St Lompoc, CA 93436; Priscilla Trancoso (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: PRISCILLA TRANCOSO with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 28, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E57. FBN Number: 2024‑0001294.

Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CHRIS POTTER ART 4623 Hollister Ave, Apt B Santa Barbara, CA 93110; Julie Beaumont (same address)This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: JULIE BEAUMONT/OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 22, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001252. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: HE WASHES ME NOT, HE WASHES ME, FOAMY GALORE 5700 Via Real Apt 100 Carpinteria, CA 93013; Scott L Wilcox (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: SCOTT WILCOX/OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 23, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E49. FBN Number: 2024‑0001257. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: OCEANVIEW PSYCHOTHERAPY 629 State Street, Ste 202 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Agustina Bertone (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: AGUSTINA BERTONE with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 10, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office

of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E57. FBN Number: 2024‑0001384. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: THE GATEHOUSE 3503 Rancho Tepusquet Rd Santa Maria, CA 93454; RTV Winery LLC 132 Carrillo Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101‑1506 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Filed by: TAMMY KELLER/ COMPLIANCE ANALYST with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 24, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001278. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: AMERICAN PACIFIC MORTGAGE 1701 Anacapa Street, Unit 6 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; American Pacific Mortgage Corporation 3000 LaVa Ridge Ct. #200 Roseville, CA 95661 This business is conducted by a Corporation Filed by: DUSTIN SHEPPARD/PRESIDENT with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 20, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001231. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: STRONGHER DESIGNS 1215 De La Vina Street, Suite K Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Peak Experiences LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Filed by: STEPHEN E. PENNER/LLC MANAGER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 1, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001093. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CEBS 6950 Hollister Ave, Suite 101 Goleta, CA 93117; CEB Metasystems, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Filed by: CHRISTOPHER ARCENAS‑UTLEY/CEO with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 24, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001306. Published: Jun 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024. FBN2024‑0001169

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT

The following person(s) is

(are) doing business as: Fictitious Business Name: CENTRAL VALLEY COMMUNITY BANK

Street Address of Principal Place of Business: 122 E. Betteravia Road Santa Maria CA 93454 County of Principal Place of Business: Santa Barbara Name of Corporation or limited liability company as shown in the Articles of Inc. / Org. / Reg.: COMMUNITY WEST BANK, State of Inc./Org/Reg. California Business Mailing Address: 7100 N. Financial Drive Suite 101 Fresno CA 93720 This business is/was conducted by: a corporation. Registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on Apr 01, 2024. BY SIGNING, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true any material matter pursuant to Section 17913 of the Business and Professions Code that the registrant knows to be false is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000).

Signature: Shannon Livingston

Printed Name of Person Signing: SHANNON LIVINGSTON

Printed Title of Person Signing: Executive Vice President and CFO Filed in County Clerk’s Office, County of Santa Barbara on May 10, 2024.

NOTICE ‑ In accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk.

Except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. A New Fictitious Business Name Statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under Federal, State, or Common Law. (See Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Business Owner is

NOTICE OF REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS (RFP) for LANDLORD RECRUITMENT AND PLACEMENT SERVICES FOR PEOPLE EXPERIENCING HOMELESSNESS IN THE CITY OF GOLETA (RFP 2024-006)

The City of Goleta Neighborhood Services Department invites you to submit a proposal for Landlord Recruitment and Placement Services for People Experiencing Homelessness in the City of Goleta.

Proposals must meet the requirements and descriptions outlined in the RFP, available through the City of Goleta’s PlanetBids Vendor Portal. Proposals must be received no later than 5:00 p.m., July 8, 2024.

Firms interested in submitting a proposal may do so through the City of Goleta’s PlanetBids Vendor Portal. https://pbsystem.planetbids.com/portal/45299/ bo/bo-search

Please submit any questions regarding this Request for Proposals through the City of Goleta’s PlanetBids Vendor Portal Online Q&A no later than 5:00 p.m. on June 19, 2024.

Published: Santa Barbara Independent June 13, 2024

responsible to determine if publication is required. (BPC 17917). Filing is a public record (GC 6250‑6277).

Filing

JOSEPH E. HOLLAND

County Clerk‑Recorder CN106229 C6777‑0006 May 30, Jun 6, 13, 20, 2024

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: THE ARTISAN TILER, INC, ARTISAN TILE 4455 Falcon Drive 4455 Falcon Drive Lompoc, CA 93436; The Artisan Tiler, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Filed by: MICHAEL MORENO/PRESIDENT with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 5, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001366. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PETERS & MILAM INSURANCE SERVICES 360 S Hope Ave, C‑120 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; David L Peters (same address) Steven P Milam (same address) This business is conducted by a Copartners Filed by: STEVE MILAM/PARTNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 6, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001372. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: MSD FAMILY, GP 6873 Shadowbrook Drive Goleta, CA 93117; Matthew S, DA Vega (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: D SHANE POTHE/OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 3, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001345.

Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT

FILE NO. FBN FBN2024‑0001097

The following person(s) is doing business as: SHANNON SEAVER CAREER COACHING 2665 MEMORY LN SANTA BARBARA, CA 93105, County of SANTA BARBARA. SHANNON SEAVER, 2665 MEMORY LN SANTA BARBARA, CA 93105

This business is conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL.

The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on NOT APPLICABLE /s/ SHANNON SEAVER, OWNER This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on 05/02/2024. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk 6/13, 6/20, 6/27, 7/3/24

CNS‑3813283# SANTA BARBARA

INDEPENDENT

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: NORVELL BASS CLEANERS 3323 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93105; FMS Enterprises Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation

Fi led by: SERGIO CASTRO/ PRESIDENT with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 28, 2024.

This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001289. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CONFIDENTIALSEARCH. COM‑HRGENERALIST.AI 1117 Crestline Dr. Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Domenic R Ceaser (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: DOMENIC CEASER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 3, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001338. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: VIP PETCARE 221 E. Hwy. 246 Buellton, CA 93427; Commumnity Veterinary Clinics, LLC 230 E Riverside Dr. eagle, ID 83616 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Fi led by: JEFF CAYWOOD/SECRETARY with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County

on June 3, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E57. FBN Number: 2024‑0001336. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: MOKSHA 1810 Clearview Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Tania N Isaac‑Dutton (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Fi led by: TANIA ISAAC‑DUTTON with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 6, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001370. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: FLORES HEAVY EQUIPMENT 1117 Hutash St Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Javier Flores (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: JAVIER FLORES/OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 7, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E47. FBN Number: 2024‑0001128.

HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL

The Housing Authority of the County of Santa Barbara (HASBARCO) will receive proposals for Modernization Contract to Site and Grounds (Landscape Maintenance Services) for properties located in Santa Barbara County, CA; until 2:00 p.m. on July 11, 2024, at 815 West Ocean Avenue, Lompoc, CA. Proposed forms of contract documents, including Request for Proposal, are available on the HASBARCO website at www.hasbarco.org

A pre-proposal conference will be held on June 27, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. at 815 West Ocean Avenue, Lompoc, CA.

Please contact Sheree Aulman, Construction Contract Coordinator, at shereeaulman@hasbarco.org if you have any questions.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE SANTA BARBARA COUNTY FLOOD CONTROL AND WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT STATE OF CALIFORNIA

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that, pursuant to the provisions of Section 54703-54719 of the Government Code, a written report containing a description of each parcel of property within the boundaries of the Santa Barbara County Flood Control and Water Conservation District on which a benefit assessment is proposed to be levied, and containing the amount of a proposed benefit assessment for each such parcel has been prepared and filed with the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors. Copies of the report are available on the Clerk of the Board’s website at https://santabarbara.legistar.com/ Calendar.aspx on the following meeting dates (June 4, June 25, and July 9, 2024) or by calling the Clerk of the Board’s office at (805) 568-2240 to make alterative arrangements. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that on Tuesday, June 25, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. in the Board of Supervisors Hearing Room, the Board of Directors of the Santa Barbara County Flood Control & Water Conservation District is scheduled to introduce an ordinance (first reading) entitled “An Ordinance Amending Ordinance 3150, The Flood Control Benefit Assessment Ordinance, Relating to Benefit Assessments for Flood Control Services”; and on Tuesday, July 9, 2024, at 9:00 a.m., or soon thereafter in the Board of Supervisors Hearing Room, the Board of Directors of the Santa Barbara County Flood Control and Water Conservation District, shall hold a Public Hearing (second reading) upon the report referred to above for the purposes of considering a Benefit Assessment for flood control purposes for Fiscal Year 2024-25, at which time and place said Board will hear and consider all protests to said report, if any, including protests with respect to the amount of the proposed assessments to be levied. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Board may adopt, revise, change, reduce or modify any assessment and shall make its determination upon each assessment described in the report, and thereafter by resolution, the Board shall confirm the assessments, which are finally adopted and levied. The Board will also consider adoption of an ordinance entitled, “An Ordinance Amending Ordinance 3150, the Flood Control Benefit Assessment Ordinance, Relating to Benefit Assessments for Flood Control Services”.

In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need special assistance to participate in this meeting, please contact the Clerk of the Board at (805) 568-2240. Notification at least 48 hours prior to the meeting will enable the Clerk of the Board to make reasonable arrangements.

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 55 INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS PHON E 805-965-5205 EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 55

LEGALS (CONT.)

Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s)

is/are doing business as: 100XLIFE

302 Piedmont Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Santa Barbara House of Prayer (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Filed by: ROB DAYTON/PRESIDENT with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 6, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001369.

Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: 805 ROADSIDE TOWING at 5939 Placencia St. Goleta, CA 93117; Boucher Co. (same address) conducted by a Corporation Signed: KRISTINA

BOUCHER/VICE PRESIDENT Filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Jun 10, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by . FBN NUMBER: 2024‑0001397

Published: June 13, 20, 27. July 3 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PLANETVOTERS.COM 518 E. Arrellaga St #7 Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Global Tech and Media, LLC 133 E De La Guerra St #282 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Filed by: ROBERT

BLAKEMORE/MANAGER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on May 30, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E49. FBN Number: 2024‑0001315. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: RYVE 435 De La Vina Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Ryve (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Fi led by: VIR SINGH/ PRINCIPAL with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 3, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001342. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SAGE & HONEY BAKESHOP, ARTISAN TILE 4455 Falcon Drive Lopoc, CA 93436; The Artisan Tiler, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Fi led by: MICHAEL MORENO/ PRESIDENT with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 5, 2024. This statement expires five years from

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SPA ESCAPE 3022 De La Vina St, Suite A Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Yolanda G Rosenthal (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: YOLANDA ROSENTHAL/ OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 10, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001393. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by E30. FBN Number: 2024‑0001366. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT

File No. FBN 2024‑0001249

The following person(s) is doing business as:

CLAY SHOOTER ENTERPRISES, 4423 FOXENWOOD LN SANTA BARBARA, SANTA MARIA, CA 93455, County of SANTA BARBARA.

CODY TUCKER, 4423 FOXENWOOD LN SANTA MARIA, CA 93455

This business is conducted by AN INDIVIDUAL.

The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on NOT APPLICABLE /s/ CODY TUCKER, OWNER

This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on 05/22/2024. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk 6/13, 6/20, 6/27, 7/3/24 CNS‑3819792# SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CREATIVE FLOW 1405 Anderson Lane Santa Barbara, CA 93111; David S Pothe PO Box 61757 Santa Barbara, CA 93160 This business is conducted by a Individual Filed by: D SHANE POTHE/OWNER with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on June 5, 2024. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk.

Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL)

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Design Review Board

Hybrid Public Hearing – In Person and via Zoom Goleta City Hall – Council Chambers 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B Goleta, CA 93117

Tuesday, June 25, 2024, at 3:00 P.M.

ATTENTION: The meeting will be held in person and via the Zoom platform. The public may also view the meeting on Goleta Channel 19 and/or online at https:// www.cityofgoleta.org/goletameetings.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Design Review Board (DRB) of the City of Goleta will conduct a public hearing for the projects listed, with the date, time, and location of the DRB public hearing set forth above. The agenda for the hearing will also be posted on the City website (www.cityofgoleta.org) Conceptual/Preliminary/Final Review

Megan’s Organic Market Signage and California Environmental Quality Act Notice of Exemption 5999 Hollister Avenue (APN 071-111-046) Case Nos. 24-0003-ZC, 24-0001-DRB Final

Pacific Oaks Apartments Leasing Office Addition and Site Improvements 7170 Davenport Road (APN 073-230-050)

Case Nos. 23-0002-SCD, 23-0013-DRB Fuel Depot Canopy alteration

370 Storke Road (APN 073-100-008) Case Nos. 24-0005-DP, 24-0025-ZC, 24-0018-DRB

PUBLIC COMMENT: Interested persons are encouraged to provide public comments during the public hearing in person or virtually through the Zoom webinar, by following the instructions listed on the DRB meeting agenda. Written comments may be submitted prior to the hearing by e-mailing the DRB Secretary, Mary Chang at mchang@cityofgoleta.org. Written comments will be distributed to DRB members and published on the City’s Meeting and Agenda page.

FOR PROJECT INFORMATION: For further information on the project, contact Mary Chang, at (805) 961-7567 or mchang@cityofgoleta.org. For inquiries in Spanish, please contact Marcos Martinez at (805) 562-5500 or mmartinez@ cityofgoleta.org. Staff reports and documents will be posted approximately 72 hours before the hearing on the City’s website at www.cityofgoleta.org. In accordance with Gov. Code Section 65103.5, only non-copyrighted plans or plans that the designer has given permission have been published on the City’s website. The full set of plans is available for review at the Planning Counter during counter hours or by contacting the staff member listed for the item 805-9617543.

Note: If you challenge the nature of the above action in court, you may be limited to only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice or in written correspondence delivered to the City on or before the date of the hearing (Government Code Section 65009(b)(2)).

Note: In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need assistance to participate in the hearing, please contact the City Clerk’s Office at (805) 961-7505 or cityclerkgroup@cityofgoleta.org. Notification at least 48 hours prior to the hearing will enable City staff to make reasonable arrangements.

Publish: Santa Barbara Independent 6/13/24

by E49. FBN Number: 2024‑0001353. Published: Jun 13, 20, 27. July 3, 2024. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT

File No. FBN 2024‑0001235

The following person(s) is doing business as:

ROSS BROS BASEBALL, 141 EAST HWY 246 SUITE C., BUELLTON, CA 93427, County of SANTA BARBARA.

DANIEL ROSS, 141 EAST HWY 246 SUITE C., BUELLTON, CA 93427

This business is conducted by AN INIDIVIDUAL.

The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on NOT APPLICABLE /s/ DANIEL ROSS, OWNER

This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on 5/20/2024.

Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk 6/13, 6/20, 6/27, 7/3/24

CNS‑3818769#

SANTA BARBARA

INDEPENDENT

LIEN SALE

EXTRA SPACE STORAGE, on behalf of itself or its affiliates, Life Storage or Storage Express, will hold a public auction to sell personal property described below belonging to those individuals listed below at the location indicated: 6640 Discovery Drive, Goleta, CA 93117. June 27th, 2024 at 3:30 PM

Mishelle Cooper

Jessica Lucas

Cynthia Bollinger

Sandra Shields

Maia Brunelli

Orlin Melgar Carranza

Luis Ibarra

The auction will be listed and advertised on www.storagetreasures. com. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the above referenced facility in order to

complete the transaction. Extra Space Storage may refuse any bid and may rescind any purchase up until the winning bidder takes possession of the personal property.

PUBLIC NOTICES

2024‑2025 CIVIL GRAND JURY NOMINEES FOR SANTA BARBARA COUNTY

Pursuant to the Section 900 of the Penal Code, the following volunteer applicants for the fiscal year 2024‑2025 Santa Barbara County Grand Jury were selected and jointly nominated by the judges of the Santa Barbara County Superior Court: Ms. Jacqueline Anker, Ms. Elizabeth Baycroft, Ms. Sunanda Bhargava, Mr. Darren Brown, Mr. Ryan Brown, Mr. Frederick Cox IV, Mr. Carlyle Decker, Mr. Kent Dunn, Ms. Denise El Amin, Ms. Marcia Green, Mr. Raymond Jackson, Ms. Vijaya Jammalamadaka, Mr. Dale Kunkle, Ms. Jeffrey Long, Mr. Robert Nisbet, Ms. Sandy Pfaff, Mr. John Richards, Ms. Gwen Rigby, Mr. Stan Roden, Mr. Annie Sancedo, Mr. Steven Sereboff, Ms. Keith Staub, Ms. Cheryl Stauffer, Mr. Ted Sten, Ms. Cara Stillwell, Dr. Michelle Stivers, Mr. Daniel Vordale, Dr. Kenneth Waxman, Mr. Robert Whittier, Mr. Reynaldo Ybarra.

SUMMONS

ORDER FOR PUBLICATION OF SUMMONS OR CITATION

Moving Party: Plaintiff (s) CLAUDIA CHRISTINE FELDMANN (name) filed its/their application for an order for publication on May 14, 2024 (date). From the application and supporting evidence it appears to the satisfaction of the Court that an order for service by publication is permitted pursuant to the Code of Civil Procedure section 415.50.

IT IS ORDERED that service of the summons, citation, notice of hearing, or Elder Abuse Restraining Order (order document (s) in this action shall be made upon defendant, respondent,

or citee CARLOS RAMIREZ (name) by publication thereof in Santa Barbara Independent. A newspaper of general circulation published at said publication be made at least once a week for four successive weeks.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED

That, if the address of the party to be served is ascertained before the expiration of the time prescribed for publication of the summons, the moving party shall forthwith mail to the party to be served a copy of: (1) the summons, citation, notice of hearing, or other documents (s) identified above, (2) the complaint, petition, or motion for which notice is being served by this order, and (3) this order for publication. A declaration of this mailing, or of the fact that the address was not ascertained, must be filed at the expiration of the time prescribed for the publication.

Dated: May 20, 2024 Commissioner Carol Hubner Judge of the Superior Court Order on Request to Continue Hearing Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara 1100 Anacapa Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Darrel E. Parker, Executive Officer By Teddy Napoli, Deputy Clerk ANACAPA DIVISION CASE NO:24CV02296

Temporary Restraining Order

Protected Party: CLAUDIA CHRISTINE FELDMANN

Restrained Party: CARLOS RAMIREZ

Court date: 07/16/2024 Time: 8:30 a.m. 118 E. Figueroa St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101

Published June 6, 13, 20, 27, 2024.

TRUSTEE NOTICE

T.S. No.: 24‑10575

Notice of Trustee’s Sale Loan No.: ******0723 APN: 077‑204‑010

You Are In Default Under A Deed Of Trust Dated 9/29/2020. 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

NOTICE OF CITY COUNCIL PUBLIC HEARING

Hybrid Public Hearing – In Person and via Zoom June 18, 2024, at 5:30 P.M.

Consider adoption of resolutions modifying the City of Goleta Operating and Capital Improvement Programs Budget for Fiscal Year 2024/25.

ATTENTION: The meeting will be held in person and via the Zoom platform. The public may also view the meeting on Goleta Channel 19 and/or online at www.cityofgoleta.org/meetings-agendas.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council will conduct a public hearing to consider adoption of resolutions modifying the City of Goleta Operating and Capital Improvement Programs Budget for Fiscal Year 2024/25. The date, time, and location of the City Council public hearing are set forth below. The agenda for the hearing will also be posted on the City website (www.cityofgoleta.org).

HEARING DATE/TIME: Tuesday, June 18, 2024, at 5:30 P.M.

LOCATION: Goleta City Hall, 130 Cremona Drive, Goleta, CA, 93117 and Teleconference Meeting; this meeting will be held in person and via Zoom (with detailed instructions for participation included on the posted agenda)

PUBLIC COMMENT: Interested persons are encouraged to provide public comments during the public hearing in person or virtually through the Zoom webinar, by following the instructions listed on the City Council meeting agenda. Written comments may be submitted prior to the hearing by e-mailing the City Clerk at CityClerkgroup@cityofgoleta.org. Written comments will be distributed to Council and published on the City’s Meeting and Agenda page.

FOR PROJECT INFORMATION: For further information on the project, contact Nina Buelna, Assistant Public Works Director, at (805) 961-or nbuelna@ cityofgoleta.org. For inquiries in Spanish, please contact Marcos Martinez at (805) 562-5500 or mmartinez@cityofgoleta.org. Staff reports and documents will be posted approximately 72 hours before the hearing on the City’s website at www.cityofgoleta.org.

Note: If you challenge the nature of the above action in court, you may be limited to only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice or in written correspondence delivered to the City on or before the date of the hearing (Government Code Section 65009(b)(2)).

Note: In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need assistance to participate in the hearing, please contact the City Clerk’s Office at (805) 961-7505 or cityclerkgroup@cityofgoleta.org. Notification at least 48 hours prior to the hearing will enable City staff to make reasonable arrangements.

Publish Date: Santa Barbara Independent, June 6, 2024 and June 13, 2024

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: Saman Razani And Layla Razani Husband And Wife As Community Property With Right Of Survivorship Duly Appointed Trustee: Prestige Default Services, LLC Recorded 10/1/2020 as Instrument No. 2020‑0054120 in book ‑‑, page ‑‑ of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of Santa Barbara County, California, Date of Sale: 6/26/2024 at 1:00 PM Place of Sale: north door main entrance to County Courthouse, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara Amount of unpaid balance and other charges: $895,761.05 Street Address or other common designation of real property: 6211 Guava Ave Goleta California 93117‑2041 A.P.N.: 077‑204‑010 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. All checks payable to Prestige Default Services, LLC. 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 (877) 440‑4460 or visit this Internet Website https://mkconsultantsinc. com/trustees‑sales/, using the file number assigned to this case 24‑ 10575. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may

56 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM 56 THE INDEPENDENT JUNE 13, 2024 INDEPENDENT.COM INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS PHON E 805-965-5205 EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM

LEGALS (CONT.)

not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale. Notice

To Tenant: You may have a right to purchase this property after the trustee auction pursuant to Section 2924m of the California Civil Code. If you are an “eligible tenant buyer,” you can purchase the property if you match the last and highest bid placed at the trustee auction. If you are an “eligible bidder,” you may be able to purchase the property if you exceed the last and highest bid placed at the trustee auction.

There are three steps to exercising this right of purchase. First, 48 hours after the date of the trustee sale, you can call (877) 440‑4460, or visit this internet website https:// mkconsultantsinc.com/trustees‑ sales/, using the file number assigned to this case 24‑10575 to find the date on which the trustee’s sale was held, the amount of the last and highest bid, and the address of the trustee. Second, you must send a written notice of intent to place a bid so that the trustee receives it no more than 15 days after the trustee’s sale. Third, you must submit a bid so that the trustee receives it no more than 45 days after the trustee’s sale. If you think you may qualify as an “eligible tenant buyer” or “eligible bidder,” you should consider contacting an attorney or appropriate real estate professional immediately for advice regarding this potential right to purchase. Date: 5/13/2024 Prestige Default Services, LLC 1920 Old Tustin Ave. Santa Ana, California 92705 Questions: 949‑427‑2010 Sale Line: (877) 440‑4460 Patricia Sanchez, Trustee Sale Officer

T.S. NO. 121349‑CA APN: 073‑410‑021 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE

IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PROPERTY

OWNER: YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATED 11/21/2006. 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 7/24/2024 at 1:00 PM, CLEAR RECON CORP, as duly appointed trustee under and pursuant to Deed of Trust recorded 12/7/2006 as Instrument No. 2006‑0095216 of Official Records in the office of the County Recorder of Santa Barbara County, State of CALIFORNIA executed by: GAIL HELENE ANIKOUCHINE, AND NICOLAI WILLIAM ANIKOUCHINE, WIFE AND HUSBAND AS COMMUNITY PROPERTY WITH RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER’S CHECK DRAWN ON A STATE OR NATIONAL BANK, A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, OR A CHECK DRAWN BY A STATE OR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, OR SAVINGS BANK SPECIFIED IN SECTION 5102 OF THE FINANCIAL CODE AND AUTHORIZED TO DO BUSINESS IN THIS STATE; AT THE NORTH DOOR OF THE MAIN ENTRANCE TO THE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1100 ANACAPA ST., SANTA BARBARA, CA 93101 all right, title and interest conveyed to and now held by it under said Deed of Trust in the property situated in said County and State described as: MORE ACCURATELY DESCRIBED IN SAID DEED OF TRUST. The street address and other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 300 LA SALLE RD, GOLETA, CA 93117

The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the street address and other common designation, if any, shown herein. Said sale will be held, but without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, condition, or encumbrances, including fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trusts created by said Deed of Trust, to pay the remaining principal sums of the note(s) secured by said Deed of Trust. The total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonable estimated costs, expenses and advances at the time of the initial publication of the Notice of Sale is: $404,180.73 If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder’s sole and

exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. The beneficiary under said Deed of Trust heretofore executed and delivered to the undersigned a written Declaration of Default and Demand for Sale, and a written Notice of Default and Election to Sell. The undersigned or its predecessor caused said Notice of Default and Election to Sell to be recorded in the county where the real property is located. NOTICE TO POTENTIAL BIDDERS: If you are considering bidding on this property lien, you should understand that there are risks involved in bidding at a trustee auction. You will be bidding on a lien,

not on the property itself. Placing the highest bid at a trustee auction does not automatically entitle you to free and clear ownership of the property. You should also be aware that the lien being auctioned off may be a junior lien. If you are the highest bidder at the auction, you are or may be responsible for paying off all liens senior to the lien being auctioned off, before you can receive clear title to the property. You are encouraged to investigate the existence, priority, and size of outstanding liens that may exist on this property by contacting the county recorder’s office or a title insurance company, either of which may charge you a fee for this information. If you

consult either of these resources, you should be aware that the same lender may hold more than one mortgage or deed of trust on the property.

NOTICE TO PROPERTY OWNER: The sale date shown on this notice of sale may be postponed one or more times by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or a court, pursuant to Section 2924g of the California Civil Code. The law requires that information about trustee sale postponements be made available to you and to the public, as a courtesy to those not present at the sale. If you wish to learn whether your sale date has been postponed, and, if applicable, the rescheduled time and date for the sale of this property, you

may call (855) 313‑3319 or visit this Internet website www.clearreconcorp. com, using the file number assigned to this case 121349‑CA. Information about postponements that are very short in duration or that occur close in time to the scheduled sale may not immediately be reflected in the telephone information or on the Internet Web site. The best way to verify postponement information is to attend the scheduled sale.

NOTICE TO TENANT: Effective January 1, 2021, you may have a right to purchase this property after the trustee auction pursuant to Section 2924m of the California Civil Code. If you are an “eligible tenant buyer,” you can purchase the property if you match the last and highest bid placed at the trustee auction. If you are an “eligible bidder,” you may be able to purchase the property if you exceed the last and highest bid placed at the trustee auction. There are three steps to exercising this right of purchase. First, 48 hours after the date of the trustee sale, you can call (855) 313‑3319, or visit this internet website www.clearreconcorp.com, using the file number assigned to this case 121349‑CA to find the date on which the trustee’s sale was held, the amount of the last and highest bid, and the address of the trustee. Second, you must send a written notice

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS INVITING SEALED BIDS FOR THE

of intent to place a bid so that the trustee receives it no more than 15 days after the trustee’s sale. Third, you must submit a bid so that the trustee receives it no more than 45 days after the trustee’s sale. If you think you may qualify as an “eligible tenant buyer” or “eligible bidder,” you should consider contacting an attorney or appropriate real estate professional immediately for advice regarding this potential right to purchase. FOR SALES INFORMATION: (844) 477‑7869 CLEAR RECON CORP 3333 Camino Del Rio South, Suite 225 San Diego, California 92108.

ELLWOOD MESA MONARCH BUTTERFLY HABITAT MANAGEMENT PLAN (MBHMP) PHASE I IMPLEMENTATION – IRRIGATION MAINLINE City Project Number: 9112

PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City of Goleta (“CITY”), invites sealed bids for the above stated project and will receive such bids via electronic transmission on the City of Goleta Planet Bids portal site until Monday, June 24, 2024, at 12:00 PM PDT Late proposals will be rejected. No exceptions.

The Proposals will be publicly opened at City of Goleta, 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta, CA 93117 and posted promptly thereafter.

Copies of the Contract Documents and the Proposal Forms for bidding the project, may be obtained from the PlanetBids Website: https://pbsystem.planetbids.com Proposals which do not acknowledge addendums to the project documents will be rejected.

All communications relative to this project shall be conducted through PlanetBids. Questions about alleged patent ambiguity of the plans, specifications, or estimate must be asked before bid opening. After bid opening, the CITY does not consider these questions as bid protests.

A pre-bid meeting will be held at (NO PRE-BID MEETING WILL BE HELD FOR THIS PROJECT)

It is required that the Bidders have fully inspected the Project site in all particulars and become thoroughly familiar with the terms and conditions of the Bid Plans and Special Provisions and local conditions affecting the performance and costs of the Work prior to bidding and it is recommended that this be done prior to attending this meeting.

Pursuant to California Labor Code Section 1773, the City has ascertained the General Prevailing Rate of Wages in the County in which the work is to be done to be as determined by the Director of Industrial Relations of the State of California. Contractor is hereby made aware that information regarding prevailing wage rates may be obtained from the State Department of Industrial Relations and/or the following website address: https://www.dir.ca.gov/OPRL/2024-1/PWD/Southern.html The Contractor is required to post a copy of the applicable wage rates at the job site. Attention is directed to Section 5 LEGAL RELATIONS AND RESPONSIBILITIES of the Greenbook Standard Specifications.

The California Air Resources Board (“CARB”) implemented amendments to the In-Use Off-Road Diesel-Fueled Fleets Regulations (“Regulation”) which are effective on January 1, 2024 and apply broadly to all self-propelled off road diesel vehicles 25 horsepower or greater and other forms of equipment used in California. A copy of the Regulation is available at https://ww2.arb.ca.gov/sites/default/files/barcu/regact/2022/off-roaddiesel/appa-1.pdf. Bidders are required to comply with all CARB and Regulation requirements, including, without limitation, all applicable sections of the Regulation, as codified in Title 13 of the California Code of Regulations section 2449 et seq. throughout the term of the Project. Bidders must provide, with their Bid, copies of Bidder’s and all listed subcontractors the most recent, valid Certificate of Reported Compliance (“CRC”) issued by CARB. Failure to provide valid CRCs as required herein may render the Bid non-responsive.

Bidders must be registered on the City of Goleta’s PlanetBids portal in order to receive addendum notifications and to submit a bid. Go to PlanetBids for bid results and awards. It is the responsibility of the bidder to submit the bid with sufficient time to be received by PlanetBids prior to the bid opening date and time. Allow time for technical difficulties, uploading, and unexpected delays. Late or incomplete bids will not be accepted.

Bid must be accompanied by a bid security in the form of a money order, a certified cashier’s check, or bidder’s bond executed by an admitted surety, made payable to CITY. The bid security shall be an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the total annual bid amount included with their proposals as required by California law.

Note: All bids must be accompanied by a scanned copy of the bid security uploaded to PlanetBids. The original security of the three (3) lowest bidders must be mailed or submitted to the office of the City Clerk at 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta, California 93117, in a sealed envelope and be received or postmarked within three (3) City working days after the bid due date and time for the bid to be considered. The sealed envelope should be plainly marked on the outside, “SEALED BID SECURITY FOR ELLWOOD MESA MONARCH BUTTERFLY HABITAT MANAGEMENT PLAN (MBHMP) PHASE I IMPLEMENTATION – IRRIGATION MAINLINE.”

The Project is subject to compliance monitoring and enforcement by the Department of Industrial Relations (DIR) per California Labor Code Section 1771.4, including prevailing wage rates and apprenticeship employment standards. Affirmative action to ensure against discrimination in employment practices on the basis of race, color, national origin, ancestry, sex, or religion will also be required. The CITY hereby affirmatively ensures that all business enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this notice and will not be discriminated against on the basis of race, color, national origin, ancestry, sex, or religion in any consideration leading to the award of contract.

In accordance with the California Public Contract Code 20103.5 when federal funds are involved in local agency contracts, no bid shall be invalidated by the failure of the bidder to be licensed in California at the time of bid opening. However, at the time of award, the selected contractor shall be properly licensed in accordance with the laws of the State and the City of Goleta. Contractor shall possess a valid Class A - General Engineering Contractor license prior to award of Contract. Said license shall be maintained during the contract period. It is the Bidder’s and Contractor’s responsibility to obtain the correct Contractor’s licenses. Bidders shall be skilled and regularly engage in the general class or type of work called for under this contract.

The successful Bidder will be required to furnish a Performance Bond and a Payment Bond each in an amount equal to 100% of the Contract Price. Each bond shall be in the forms set forth herein, shall be secured from a surety company that meets all State of California bonding requirements, as defined in Code of Civil Procedure Section 995.120, and that is a California admitted surety insurer.

Pursuant to Labor Code sections 1725.5 and 1771.1, all contractors and subcontractors that wish to bid on, be listed in a bid proposal, or enter into a contract to perform public work must be registered with the DIR. No Bid will be accepted, nor any contract entered into without proof of the contractor’s and subcontractors’ current registration with the DIR to perform public work. If awarded a contract, the Bidder and its subcontractors, of any tier, shall maintain active registration with the DIR for the duration of the Project. Failure to provide proof of the contractor’s current registration pursuant to Labor Code Section 1725.5 may result in rejection of the bid as nonresponsive.

The Contractor Company, including the Responsible Managing Officer (RMO) for the Contractor Company, shall demonstrate a minimum of five (5) years’ experience successfully performing projects of substantially similar type, magnitude, and character of the work bid. The CITY reserves the right to reject all bids, reject any bid that is not responsive to the invitation, or to waive any minor irregularity and to take all bids under advisement for a period of up to ninety (90) working days. Failure to provide proof of the Contractor’s current registration pursuant to Section 1725.5 of the Labor Code may result in rejection of the bid as non-responsive. Failure to comply with enforcement provisions pursuant to Section 1771.4 of the Labor Code may result in a determination that the Bidder is not responsible.

Bids shall remain open and valid for a period of one hundred twenty (120) calendar days after the Bid Deadline.

Pursuant to Public Contract Code section 22300, the successful bidder may substitute certain securities for funds withheld by CITY to ensure performance under the Contract or, in the alternative, request the CITY to make payment of retention to an escrow agent.

The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) provides a toll-free “hotline” service to report bid rigging activities. Bid rigging activities can be reported Mondays through Fridays, between 8:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m., Eastern Time, Telephone No. 1-800-424-9071. Anyone with knowledge of possible bid rigging, bidder collusion, or other fraudulent activities should use the “hotline” to report these activities. The “hotline” is part of the DOT’s continuing effort to identify and investigate highway construction contract fraud and abuse and is operated under the direction of the DOT Inspector General. All information will be treated confidentially, and caller anonymity will be respected.

Any protest to an intended award of this contract shall be made in writing addressed to the City Clerk prior to the award. Any protest may be considered and acted on by the City Council at the time noticed for award of the contract. To request a copy of the notice of agenda for award, please contact the City Clerk cityclerkgroup@cityofgoleta. org or register on the CITY’s website (www.cityofgoleta.org)

CITY OF GOLETA

Deborah S. Lopez, City Clerk

INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 57 INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS PHON E 805-965-5205 EMAIL ADVERTISING@INDEPENDENT.COM INDEPENDENT.COM JUNE 13, 2024 THE INDEPENDENT 57

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.