Santa Barbara Independent, 9/15/2016

Page 1

Remembering Ripkyn Strader-Murphy by Ann Louise Bardach sept. 15-22, 2016 VOL. 30 â– NO. 557

Is it

High

Time? pot prop's Pros and Cons by tyler hayden

Also Inside Fareed Zakaria Interviewed happy birthday to

Montecito

barbers

New Photography Curator Joins

SBMA

Wassup with Sous Vide

Fall TV Roundup

from Luke Cage to Gilmore Girls

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

1


2

THE INDEPENDENT

September 15, 2016

independent.com


Do-not-miss Fall Concerts on Sale Now! Santa Barbara Debut An Evening with

Iron & Wine

Sun, Sep 25 / 7 PM (note special time) / UCSB Campbell Hall

Tickets start at $25 / $10 UCSB students

“Sam Beam, Iron & Wine’s eternally bearded songwriter, is responsible for some of his generation’s most affecting records.” Rolling Stone The last decade has seen Sam Beam, under the stage name Iron & Wine, become a bona fide superstar in indie circles. The release of his debut album, The Creek Drank the Cradle, heralded the arrival of a strikingly original vocal talent with hushed tones backed by sparse instrumentation. Beam returns to the unforgettable lo-fi sound of his beginnings in this intimate solo-acoustic performance.

Vince Gill & The Time Jumpers

featuring Kenny Sears, Ranger Doug Green and Paul Franklin Thu, Sep 29 / 8 PM / Granada Theatre

Tickets start at $30 / $15 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

“[Vince Gill & The Time Jumpers] represent the best of roots music… They dip into Western swing and pop standards and real, straight hard-core country. They can do anything.” – Rosanne Cash Event Sponsor: Barrie Bergman in honor of Arlene Bergman

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis

Tue, Oct 4 / 8 PM / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $35 / $19 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

“Wynton Marsalis is the public face of jazz. He is a cultural force, a symbol, a spokesman.” JazzTimes Event Sponsors: Jody & John Arnhold Sara Miller McCune With support from our Community Partner the Orfalea Family

(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Corporate Season Sponsor:

Media Sponsor:

Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222 www.GranadaSB.org independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

3


LIVE OAK CAMPGROUND 13 Miles East of Santa Ynez on Highway 154

camping $25

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

parking $5

For more information visit chumashcasino.com

4

THE INDEPENDENT

September 15, 2016

independent.com


DJI INNOVATIONS DOMKE DYNALITE ELINCHROM EPSON

FUJI (SOME

EXCLUSIONS APPLY)

EXPO IMAGING GARY FONG

GIOTTOS GITZO GOSSEN HAHNEMUHLE HELIOPAN

U GOT IT AT S AM YO E L I

•S

M

CAPTURING COUTURE CECILIA GALLERY CHIMERA COMODO COOL-LUX D|FOCUS DAVIS & SANFORD EXCLUSIONS APPLY) DELKIN (EXCLUDES

S• Y’

AUDIO-TECHNICA AVENGER AZDEN BARBER SHOP BENRO BLACK RAPID BOWENS CANON (SOME

DIGITAL CARDS)

NISHUVA KUPO LASTOLITE LEGION PAPER LENMAR LEXAR LIMELITE LOMOGRAPHY LOWEL

LUMIQUEST MAMIYA LEAF

NITE IZE NOVOFLEX OLYMPUS OP/TECH PACIFIC IMAGE PANASONIC

(EXCLUDES UPGRADES)

MANFROTTO MEFOTO METZ MINDSHIFT MINOX MIZCO

(EXCLUDES PRO PRODUCTS)

PENTAX PEAK DESIGN

197 PH

SS

I

OTO G R A P H E R

PREMIER IMAGING PROFOTO

SEKONIC SENNHEISER SETWEAR (EXCLUDES PRO & PROMOTIONAL SIGMA PRODUCTS) SKB CASES QUANTUM SKUTR R.T.S. SLIK RICOH SMITH VICTOR SONY (SOME RODE MIC EXCLUSIONS ROTATRIM APPLY)

PHOTTIX PHOTOFLEX PHOTOGENIC PHOTOTOOLS PINA ZANGARO PLUSTEK

SPEEDOTRON SPIDER HOLSTER STO-FEN TAMRAC TAMRON TENBA TETHERTOOLS THINK TANK

TIFFEN FILTERS TOKINA TOYOVIEW WESTCOTT VIVITAR VU FILTERS YUNEEC ZACUTO ZOOM

SAVE $200

N

ED

CE

ST

BY

PELICAN PHASE ONE

(EXCLUDES UPGRADES)

ANNIVERSARY NO TAX SALE ON 1000S OF ITEMS INCLUDING THESE BRANDS

6•

• TR U

AVAILABLE IN BLACK, YELLOW, RED & WHITE

HENSEL HOYA ILFORD INKJET IMPOSSIBLE PROJECT INDIPRO TOOLS INDURO ITOYA KAISER KELLY MOORE/

WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

SAVE $399

WIFI 1 S2 WITH 11-27.5MM LENS

AVAILABLE IN BLACK & WHITE

MIRRORLESS DIGITAL CAMERA

16

MEGAPIXELS

18

1080P WIFI

WAS $446.95

MEGAPIXELS

1080P

4

FPS

18-55MM LENS

NOW $199

00 NO TAX!

$499

00 NO TAX!

$699 - $200 INSTANT REBATE

PRO 100 PRINTER

$000

• 4800 x 2400 dpi • Print Sizes up to 13x19"

NO TAX!

$350 - $350 MAIL-IN REBATE WITH SELECT CANON CAMERA PURCHASE ENDS 9/18/16

ALL CANON ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE INCLUDES CANON USA 1 YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY REGISTRATION CARD.

FREE BINOCULAR

FREE

OPEN BOX LIMITED STOCK

10X25 UPCLOSE G2 ROOF BINOCULAR

1080P

9.2

MEGAPIXELS

WITH ANY DSLR CAMERA PURCHASE FREE GROOVY CASE & WALLET ALBUM

INCLUDES FREE 2-PACK INSTANT COLOR FILM

HDR-CX405

MIX & MATCH HD HANDYCAM CAMCORDER COLORS WAS $229.95 NOW $14995 NO TAX! AVAILABLE IN 6 COLORS

$11995

INSTAX MINI 70

Instant Film Camera

NO TAX! $20 INSTANT REBATE ENDS 9/17/16

FREE 32GB SD CARD, CASE, WIFI & BATTERY

SAVE $10

Be a HERO.

ALL NIKON PRODUCTS INCLUDE NIKON INC. USA LIMITED WARRANTY. AUTHORIZED NIKON DEALER, NIKON USA INC.

INSTAX MINI 8

Instant Film Camera

$5900

NO TAX!

$69 - $10 INSTANT SAVINGS

NO TAX!

FREE DOMESTIC FLIGHT

$44900

WITH OM-D E-M5 II CAMERA PURCHASE

AERO 94 COMPACT CAMCORDER/CAMERA BAG

$1400

NO TAX!

HERO4 BLACK

SAVE $650

AVAILABLE IN 7 COLORS

W/ 18-55MM & 55-300MM

$27.95 - $13.95

$104695

INSTANT SAVINGS

WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

24.1 MEGAPIXELS

12

MEGAPIXELS

1080P

PLUS TAX

$1696.95 - $650 INSTANT REBATE

DUST WATER FREEZE

RESISTANT RESISTANT RESISTANT

MVP

WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

FAZE Ultra Small Quadcopter

SANTA BARBARA (805) 963-7269 530 STATE STREET

MON - FRI 9AM - 6PM SAT 9:30AM - 6PM

(RENTAL & FILM DEPT 9:30AM - 3PM)

SUN 11AM - 5PM

(RENTAL DEPT CLOSED)

$24.99 - $5 INSTANT SAVINGS

SAMY’S MAIL ORDER:

(800) 321-4726 STA TE ST. CH AP AL AS T. DE LA VIN AS 101 T. FW Y.

ST .

SAMYS.COM

NO TAX!

Samy’s

HA LE Y

Samy’s Camera

$1999

ST .

AVAILABLE IN SILVER & BLACK

CO TA

1080P WIFI $109900 NO TAX! 16

MEGAPIXELS

W .C AR RI LL O

OM-D E-M5 MARK II BODY

SAVE 20%

• Easy to use flip mode • USB charge cable gets you • 100 mAh internal LiPo back flying in minutes flight battery • 4 replacement • Compact 2.4GHz transmitter propeller blades

NEW LOCATION

SAVE 50%

WIFI

4K

SAMY’S CORPORATE SALES:

(866) 726-9463

TRADE IN & TRADE UP YOUR USED EQUIPMENT STORE CREDIT ONLY

CALL US! (800) 321-4726

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SEPTEMBER 21, 2016 EXCEPT WHERE INDICATED. Not responsible for typographical errors. Limited to stock on hand. First come, first served. No rainchecks and no holds. Prices subject to change without notice. Colors of some cameras vary by location. Samy’s pays Sales Tax on select items. Mail Order, samys.com and all Used, Demo or Refurbished purchases are excluded from the “No Sales Tax” Promotion.

NO INTEREST IF PAID IN FULL WITHIN 6 OR 12 MONTHS* 6 Months* on purchases of any amount. 12 Months* on purchases of $499 or more with your Samy’s Camera credit card made between September 15, 2016 to September 21, 2016. Interest will be charged to your account from the purchase date if the promotional purchase is not paid in full within 6 or 12 Months or if you make a late payment. Minimum Monthly Payments Required. *Subject to credit approval.

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

5


ARROYO BURRO BEACH • BUTTERFLY BEACH CHASE PALM PARK • WEST BEACH • 2 EAST BEACH ARROYO BURRO BEACH • BUTTERFLY BEACH CALIFORNIA SITES • LOOKOUT PARK • CHASE PALM PARK • WEST LEADBETTER BEACH • HA BEACH • 2 EAST BEACH MMOND’S BEACH • PARK ELL• BUTTERFLY SITES • LOOKOUT • C L EBEACH ARROYO BURRO BEACH A N U P WOOD •BEACH GOLETA CHASEBEACH PALM PARK • WEST LEADBETTER • HA BEACH••HASKELL’S 2 EAST BEACH MMOND’S BEACH •BEACH ELL BEACH • SITES • LOOKOUT PARK • WOOD BEACH GOLETA CAMPUS POINT • ISLA VI LEADBETTER BEACH • HA BEACH • HASKELL’S BEACHSANTA • BARBARA COUNTY STA STREETS • GUADAL MMOND’S BEACH • ELL CAMPUS POINT • ISLA VI WOOD BEACH • GOLETA UPE DUNES • JALAMA SEPTEMBER 17TH STA STREETS • GUADAL BEACH • HASKELL’S BEACH • BEACH • GAVIOTA 9:00AM–12:00 PM CAMPUS POINT • ISLA VI UPE DUNES • JALAMA BEACH • TAJIGUAS STA STREETS • GUADAL BEACH • GAVIOTA Carpinteria and LET’S CLEAN UP BEACH •R UPE DUNES • JALAMA Summerland Areas BEACH • TAJIGUAS Carpinteria Creeks BEACH • GAVIOTACarpinteria EFUGIO State Beach OUR BEACHES! BEACH • R Jelly Bowl Beach BEACH • TAJIGUAS BEACH • Lookout Park (Summerland) EFUGIO BEACH • Lompoc R Rincon Beach Join thousands of Santa Claus Lane ELBEACH CA Jalama Beach • EFUGIO volunteers, statewide Santa Barbara Area Gaviota Coast PITA EL CA BEACH • El Capitan State Beach Arroyo Burro (Hendry’s) Beach Butterfly Beach in an effort to Gaviota State Beach EL CA PITA N BEACH • Ranch East Beach (3 Locations) Hollister Beach protect our beaches Refugio State Beach PITA N BEACH • Hammond’s/Miramar SANTA Leadbetter Beach Tajiguas Beach N BEACH • West Beach SANTA Santa Ynez CLAUSE SANTA Goleta/Isla Vista Area For more information: Zanja De Cota Creek CLAUSE Bluffs/Beach CLAUSE LANE • Maria and GoletaElwood Santa Beach (2 Locations) Mariana@ExploreEcology.org Guadalupe Haskell’s Beach LANE LANE •• Area RINCON Guadalupe Dunes Isla Vista Streets (805)884-0459 ext. 16

COASTAL

DAY 2016

Are you looking for a new Dentist?

No Insurance? No Problem!

Now OPEN Satu

Membership plan ONLY $225 a year!

rdays !

Exclusive membership includes:

2 Regular Cleanings 20% OFF Most Dental Procedures $500 Off Braces & Invisalign

Join us at our FREE Educational Seminar & LEARN more about Dental Implants & Sedation

FREE

New Patient Special Includes: Digital X-rays. Exam & Second opinion

$1395

Dental Implants

Includes x-rays, exam and second opinion. Must present coupon. Some restrictions apply. Expires October 10, 2016.

Cash paying patients only. Must present coupon, cannot be combined with Any other offers. Does not include crown, abutment or bone graft. Some restrictions apply. Expires October 10, 2016.

Se Ha bla Españ ol

Call Toda y!

805-880-1299 www.JohnsonFamilyDental.com

3906 State Street Santa Barbara, CA

RINCON RINCON

Editor in Chief Marianne Partridge C O V E IS R

Executive Editor Nick Welsh; Senior Editors Michelle Drown, Matt Kettmann; Editor at Large Ethan Stewart; Photography Editor Paul Wellman

·

News Editor Tyler Hayden; News Reporters Kelsey Brugger, Brandon Fastman, Keith Hamm; Columnists Barney Brantingham, Roger Durling, Jerry Roberts, Starshine Roshell; Opinions Editor Jean Yamamura; Videographers Phyllis de Picciotto, Stan Roden

E

OWE MP R

UCAT E ED ·

D

Executive Arts Editor Charles Donelan; Assistant Editor Richie DeMaria; Arts Writers Tom Jacobs, D.J. Palladino; Calendar Editor Terry Ortega Copy Chief Jackson Friedman; Copy Editors Diane Mooshoolzadeh, Amy Smith

www.facebook.com/sbcoast www.sbprojectcleanwater.org/ccd www.facebook.com/sbcoast www.facebook.com/sbcoast

www.sbprojectcleanwater.org/ccd www.sbprojectcleanwater.org/ccd

41274

a Help end sexual violence by Santa BarbCaernter participating in a state certified training Rape Crisis in sexual assault crisis intervention! Upcoming Evening Training:

Sept. 26 - Nov. 23 • Mondays & Wednesdays • 6:00pm - 9:30pm Special invitation to men and individuals who are Spanish/English Bilingual. Contact us now for more information!

We guarantee that your life will never be the same! 6

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

Karla@sbrcc.net (805) 963-6832 ext. 19 office (805) 564-3696 24 hour hotline 433 E. Canon Perdido St.

www.sbrapecrisiscenter.org

independent.com

Art Director Ben Ciccati; Associate Art Director Caitlin Fitch; Editorial Designer Megan Illgner; Web Producer/Social Media Michael S. Gahagan; Web Content Assistant Nya Burke Sports Editor John Zant; Outdoors Editor Ray Ford; Food Writer George Yatchisin; Contributors Michael Aushenker, Rob Brezsny, Cynthia Carbone Ward, Victor Cox, John Dickson, Marilyn Gillard, Rachel Hommel, Rebecca Horrigan, Eric HvolbØll, Shannon Kelley, Mitchell Kriegman, Kevin McKiernan, Ninette Paloma, Michael Redmon, Elizabeth Schwyzer, Carolina Starin, Tom Tomorrow, Maggie Yates; Editorial Interns Gilberto Flores, Arianna Irwin, Savanna Mesch, Elizabeth Norman, Tricia Paulson, Sarah Sutherland; Founding Staff Emeriti Audrey Berman, George Delmerico, Richard Evans; Honorary Consigliere Gary J. Hill Copy Kids Henry and John Poett Campbell, Chloë Bee Ciccati, Miles Joseph Cole, Asher Salek Fastman, Izadora and Savina Hamm, Madeline Rose and Mason Carrington Kettmann, Simone and Zoe Laine, Izzy and Maeve McKinley, Miranda Tanguay Ortega, Marie Autumn Smith, Sawyer Tower Stewart Office Manager/Legal Advertising Tanya Spears Guiliacci; Administrative Assistant Gustavo Uribe; Distribution Scott Kaufman; Advertising Representatives Camille Cimini Fruin, Suzanne Cloutier, Rachel Gantz, Lynn Goodman, Laszlo Hodosy, Tonea Songer, Brandi Webber; Marketing and Promotions Manager Emily Cosentino Production Manager Marianne Kuga; Advertising Designers Helene Laine, Alex Melton Chief Financial Officer Brandi Rivera; Director of Advertising Sarah Sinclair Publisher Joe Cole The Independent is available, free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Back issues cost $2 and may be purchased at the office. The Independent may be distributed only by authorized circulation staff or authorized distributors. No person may, without the permission of publisher, take more than one copy of each Independent issue. Subscriptions are available, paid in advance, for $120 per year. The contents of The Independent are copyrighted 2016 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 published every Thursday at 12 E. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Advertising rates on request: (805) 965-5205. Classified ads: (805) 965-5208. The Independent is available on the Internet at independent .com. Press run of The Independent is 40,000 copies. Audited certification of circulation is available on request. The Independent is a legal adjudicated newspaper — court decree no. 157386.

Contact information: 12 E. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101 PHONE (805) 965-5205; FAX (805) 965-5518; CLASSIFIED (805) 965-5208 EMAIL news@independent.com, letters@independent.com Staff email addresses can be found at independent.com/info


This Modern World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19 Barney Brantingham’s On the Beat . . . . .  21

the week.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 living.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Living Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Food & Drink . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 The Restaurant Guy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47

a&e. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

Arts Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

Art . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53

Is It High Time? (Tyler Hayden)

film & tv. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63

ON THE COVER: Photo by TTurner + Fitch.

Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58

Listings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60

Feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63

news.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Movie Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63

opinions.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13

In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17

Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19

independent.com

Pop, Rock & Jazz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Positively State Street . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57

Pot Prop’s Pros and Cons

online now at

odds & ends. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Rob Brezsny’s Free Will Astrology . . . . . . . 67

Classifieds.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68

courtesy

Cover STORY

With the topic of this week’s cover story diving into Proposition 64 and the potential legalization of recreational pot, we had to ask the writer the question. After a moment of thought, Tyler Hayden replied only that the edibles he’d seen looked so delicious, it kind of freaked him out: “You just don’t know the potency, and people get themselves in trouble.” The Indy news editor got no trouble from his sources, however. “Most people were super forthright,” he said of the collective owners and substance-abuse experts he talked with. “They were honest and unafraid” — and well-versed on the upcoming ballot measure, which you will be, too. The reading begins on page 23.

paul wellman

23

Dining Out Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49

did he inhale ?

caitlin fitch

volume 30, number 557, Sept. 15-22, 2016 turner + fitch

Contents

s.B. QUestionnaire

Roger Durling talks to Monica Orozco (pictured) about her new role in charge of the Old Mission. � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �

independent.com/sbq

free listings

Post your event for free to be part of Santa Barbara’s best online calendar. � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �

independent.com/events

sports

Kayla Day (pictured) wins U.S. Open juniors title. by John Zant � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �

independent.com/sports

annoUnCements

More than 45 press releases and community notices published this month so far! � � � � � � independent.com/pr

See why Montecito Plastic Surgery has the CoolSculpting Advantage

We are among the first in the nation to get the newest CoolSculpting equipment which allows for shorter treatment times, better patient

comfort, and larger treatment areas. CoolSculpting is the non-surgical treatment that reduces fat with targeted cooling and naturally eliminates bulges from your body. There are no needles, no surgery, and no downtime, making CoolSculpting a great alternative to liposuction.

Call 805.969.9004 for your consultation

sbplasticsurgeon.com independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

7


News of the Week

September 8-15, 2016

pau l wellm an

by Kelsey Brugger @kelseybrugger, @kelseybrugger Keith hamm amm, tyler hayden @TylerHayden1,, and nic icK K welsh elsh, with Independent staff

news briefs law & disorder

cou rtesy

transportation

101 Decongestant on Time-Release

CHOKED, SMOKED, AND CROAKED: The Casitas Pass freeway bridge strains under the intense demand of early-morning rush hour.

Carpinteria Bridge Expansion Projects May, In Years, Offer Relief

T

by N i c k W e l s h

he new, bigger, wider Highway 101 bridges that will someday carry Casitas Pass Road and Linden Avenue in Carpinteria may never rival the San Francisco Bay Bridge for sheer visual wallop, but to many Carpinteria residents stranded by early-morning congestion, the $100 million expansions may bring some hint of relief. The two projects are necessary for the Highway 101 widening to proceed; for many Carpinterians and commuters from Ventura County forced to brave intense northbound morning gridlock, the widening has long been regarded as a no-brainer. How soon relief will come, however, remains a matter of conjecture. Construction—which has yet to actually start—is scheduled to take four years. In the meantime, business owners in downtown Carpinteria are anxious about inevitable disruptions the complex endeavor will inflict on their customers and their bottom lines. Yet this Monday morning it was all smiles and optimism as Caltrans statewide czar Malcolm Dougherty showed up with a silver shovel for the ceremonial groundbreaking event, attended by a flotilla of Carpinteria officials, 1st District County Supervisor Salud Carbajal, and State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson. Actual construction won’t start for some time to come. The wheels of justice, it is said, grind exceedingly slow, but nothing compared to the pace of freeway widening. The planning process for the new bridges commenced back in the mid-1990s. For many moons, the City of Carpinteria and Caltrans found themselves at bitter loggerheads over the design, dimension, and aesthetics of the 8

THE INDEPENDENT

new structures. As current city manager Dave Durflinger described it, the original Caltrans plans were “overdone and too vanilla” for Carpinteria’s taste. Eventually, Caltrans would create a local design review board made up of various stakeholders and state engineers to hammer out an acceptable compromise; after six months of meetings around a middle school cafeteria table, a deal was hashed out. Because the footings for the new bridges impinge upon agricultural land and creek drainage, City Hall had to amend its fundamental planning documents. That leverage —coupled with the insistence of the California Coastal Commission — requires the new project to include two new stretches of coastal bike lanes, one to the west of Santa Claus Lane and the other linking downtown Carpinteria to the Rincon. No funding, however, has been identified for these projects, which each cost in the neighborhood of $7 million. The Rincon Trail — further along in the design review process — has twice sought statewide transportation grants and twice come up short. Whenever built, these additional lanes will help fill in key gaps in what could one day become a new and scenic coastal bikeway. Not coincidentally, a host of movers and shakers assembled last Friday to exalt at the tourist-drawing potential of the new and improved bike lanes. This project was the joint brainchild of Supervisor Carbajal and Ventura Supervisor Steve Bennett, who, unlike Carbajal, actually wears Lycra and whose wife is reportedly an ardent cyclist. The group exclaimed over the growth of tourist-related businesses drawing on the Central Coastal as a destination for cycling enthusiasts.“You know what they say: Cycling is becoming the new golf,” explained

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

Ed France, head of the Santa Barbara Bicycle Coalition. Many of the growing legion of cycling tourists, he said, are of advanced years and seeking vigorous activities that inflict low impact on the body. And Santa Barbara hotels are making a conspicuous point to provide bicycles for guests. The new group, France said, would promote cycling via a myriad of social media options with about $30,000 in funding collected from the public and private stakeholders meeting over the past two years. France was mindful that funding for the two new bike paths necessary to make the coastal bikeway a reality remained hypothetical. “It’s problematic,” he said. “They’ve been advertised as the smiling, happy face of the 101 widening project, and we’re going to make sure that promise is kept,” he said. In the City of Santa Barbara, where public sentiment about the freeway widening is more complicated, City Hall remains poised to see the first draft of the revised environmental impact report for the freeway project. Early this year, Judge Thomas Anderle ruled the environmental analysis was flawed because it failed to account for the significant congestion problems the freeway-widening project would cause for 18 Santa Barbara intersections. The report prepared by Caltrans declared that congestion for those intersections should not be considered “significant” in light of the broader benefits the project would generate. Anderle disagreed. The new report is due out sometime in the next two months, and it remains to be seen how many of those impacted intersections are deemed “significant,” what alternatives are listed, and what, if any, mitigations are proposed.

n

Former KEYT news anchor Paula Lopez (pictured) is suing her former employer and its parent company, NPG of California, for a long list of alleged labor code violations. Lopez, 51, was demoted then fired last year after two drunk-driving arrests and a mysterious disappearance. Lopez alleges KEYT fired her without just cause, claiming she was discriminated against for being middleaged, Hispanic, and suffering from alcoholism. She says she was replaced by young, white anchors with less experience and lower ratings. Lopez’s attorney, Janean Daniels, said her client is coping with alcoholism, “a legally protected disability under state and federal law.” Daniels added, “We hope that Paula’s struggle will help raise awareness regarding this devastating disease and trust that ultimately, justice will be done.” KEYT general manager Mark Danielson said: “NPG of California does not comment on current or former employees and it cannot comment on any potential litigation.” Two men reported missing from Lompoc on 9/7 were found dead the afternoon of 9/11 near their car, which had had plunged 500 feet over the side of Gibraltar Road. A hang glider spotted the wreckage and notified authorities. David Esquivel, 24, of Santa Maria, and Oscar Hernandez, 23, of Lompoc, had both been ejected from the vehicle and were declared dead at the scene. The incident remains under investigation. Robert Lorin Musich was arrested in Pomona on 9/1 on a bench warrant from Santa Barbara County for a fire inspection scam in several California counties. District Attorney’s Office investigators had looked for Musich, following a trail of invoices he’d mailed to businesses for $411.11. Nearly 900 businesses had paid the invoice, including 10 in S.B., for “an annual state required fire safety equipment inspection, test and certification” by Red Mountain Security and Fire Protection or RMS. All invoices amounted to more than $200,000 total. Musich was arraigned on 9/9. Charles A. Banks — a former Santa Barbara resident whose Terroir Capital firm is partial owner of Qupé Winery among other worldwide brands — was indicted on federal wire fraud charges related to investments he made on behalf of basketball star Tim Duncan. Banks turned himself in to San Antonio


Parental Nightmare

Judge Brian Hill ruled there was ample evidence to warrant a full criminal trial against Matthew Robert Torres, accused of slipping quietly into the second-story studio apartment rented by a family of British tourists this May, sliding into the bed shared by the two young daughters, and molesting them. If the case goes to trial and Torres is convicted, he’s looking at life behind bars. Torres, known to Santa Barbara City Police since 2009, broke into the studio — one door was unlocked — around 4 a.m. on July 23, got in bed with the two girls, pulled down their pants, and licked “their unseeables.” When he forcibly tried to get the older, age 7, to do the same to him, she resisted. When he then yanked her by the arm, she worried Matthew Torres — according to the testimony of three police officers — he was trying to “steal” her. He then focused his attentions on the younger girl, age 5, hoisting her into the air and kissing her bottom. She kicked her feet at him, and he threw her to the bed. At that point, Torres reportedly walked to the parents’ bed and woke the father, either by grabbing his foot — according to police officers’ testimony — or by licking it. Officer Richard Washington testified that the girls’ father described Torres as being “very calm and matter of fact” and announced that his name was “Matthew.” The father quickly escorted Torres out of the apartment and then called 9-1-1. Torres was arrested that evening. Subsequent DNA tests matched Torres to the victims. While defense attorney Michael Hanley quibbled with the tests, he didn’t dispute his client’s guilt. By his questions, Hanley suggested that Torres’s mental health or state of mind might — Nick Welsh become an issue at trial.

authorities 9/9 and was released after posting a $50,000 cash bond in lieu of $1 million bail. Duncan claims Banks misled him into making investments in a sports merchandise company called Gameday Entertainment. Duncan sued Banks personally last year, and this federal case, although not explicitly naming Duncan, mirrors those same details.

pau l wellm an fi l e photo

county

Bruce Porter The District Attorney’s Office is looking into the origins of a 3rd District supervisor race political poll portrayed as sponsored by the Coalition of Labor, Agriculture, and Business (better known as COLAB), which the organization vehemently denied. COLAB director Andy Caldwell speculated the pollster could be sponsored by candidate Joan Hartmann’s campaign or an independent group trying to gauge how a particular issue influences 3rd District voters. So-called push polls pretend to gather information but try to influence voters’ perception of candidates. Hartmann’s campaign manager, Mary Rose, denied any involvement and noted an independent expenditure committee has not been set up for the candidate. Candidate Bruce Porter, however, does have an independent expen-

diture committee —“Keep Santa Barbara County Working, a Committee sponsored by energy producers to elect Bruce Porter”— Porter” set up for him. It has raised $60,000. Porter said he does not have any contact with that group and denied involvement with the poll. Bob Field, a Republican and former supervisorial candidate, announced last week he is supporting Democrat Joan Hartmann over Republican Bruce Porter in the race to represent Santa Barbara County’s 3rd District. Field said, for him, the key county issue in the contest is preserving the Santa Ynez Valley’s rural character. He said Hartmann is the “only one who serves this goal.” Field joins former right-wing candidate Karen Jones in supporting Hartmann.

A federal effort to better protect vulnerable neighborhoods from wildfire has gained ground with the launch of the Santa Barbara Mountain Communities Defense Zone Project. Los Padres National Forest Initiative aims to create and improve fire breaks in the Painted Cave, Trout Club, Haney Tract, Rosario Park, Refugio, and Gaviota areas, where private property is surrounded by federal lands choked with dead trees and drought-ravaged chaparral. The clearing and chipping may start this winter, as firefighting teams regroup after the current wildfire season.

state Gov. Jerry Brown signed a bill this week that will require employers to pay overtime to farmworkers who work more than 40 hours in a week or over eight hours in a day. Proponents argued this bill closes a loophole in overtime pay, as nearly all other hourly jobs

pau l wellm an f i le photo

fiND us oNliNe aT independent.com, faceBook, aND TWiTTeR

county

IN FOR THE NIGHT: Two guests of Santa Barbara’s sobering center sleep it off.

i.V. sobering center ‘stuck stuck in the Mud’ s

Hundreds Transported to County Jail Every Year

A

by k e l s e y B R u g g e R

t a recent meeting at Isla Vista Foot Patrol, the room buzzed with surprise when John Doyel, Santa Barbara County drug and alcohol guru, announced he was pulling support for the proposed sobering center, in the works for years. Doyel may have spoken too soon. He has a meeting this week to discuss the project’s future with Supervisor Doreen Farr, who represents Isla Vista. “[It’s] stuck in the mud,” he said. Two years ago, plans for an I.V. sobering center, formally known as the Safe Center, revived after being dormant for years. Simply put, its purpose is to offer a place for intoxicated young people to sober up — instead of the County Jail. Every weekend, Isla Vista cops arrest scores of drunken people, fearing they are a risk to themselves or others. They are taken to jail, where they spend the evening and could face criminal charges. (That said, District Attorney Joyce Dudley does not often file such cases, which are difficult to prove based on the way the law is written, she said.) Now optimism about the center’s future depends on to whom you speak.“It’s basically dead in the water,” attorney Robin Unander, who has been closely involved, said in an email. If the county’s Behavioral Wellness department— where Doyel is a director— were no longer the lead agency, she doubted anyone from the university would step in to take the reins. “Sometimes it feels like it’s two steps forward and one step backward,” said Supervisor Farr, who is retiring at the end of her term this year. Farr heard about the project during her first campaign for supervisor in 2008. “We’re closer now than we’ve ever been.” Most people support the concept in theory, but— but like many things in Isla Vista— Vista its progress has been slow. Logistical roadblocks have stalled it. For starters, its proposed location — the first floor of the I.V. clinic building — shares a parking lot with the clinic and a park, where children are present during the day. Its hours of operation were also at issue. Originally it was slated to be open Thursday afternoon to Sunday, around the clock. But concerns from other clinic tenants reduced its purposed schedule to be weekend overnight hours. And the funding model remains amorphous. On two occasions — once in 2014

by the student body and once this year by the student senate—a student lock-in fee to improve safety in Isla Vista failed. The center would also be paid for by a $300 fee by patients, who would also be required to complete an alcohol and drug course. (Earlier this year, I.V. developer Ed St. George pledged to donate $50,000 to renovate the space.) Though the UC Police Department had previously expressed concerns, Lt. Mark Signa said he was optimistic about the center’s future.“It’s not easy,” he said.“There are a lot of little things that need to be worked out.” Signa said he was not aware of similar centers near other UC campuses. Debbie Fleming, UCSB’s associate vice chancellor for Student Affairs, said the plans stalled “not due to lack of support or interest on the part of those who were involved in the initial discussion” but rather funding challenges. She added,“If the community services district is supported in the upcoming election, and with full implementation this fall of UCIV, a public volunteer program, it’s possible the community will want to revisit the goals or the format of a sobering or safe center.” The sobering center in the City of Santa Barbara—a model for this one—saves police officers considerable time that they would otherwise have spent transporting drunken subjects to County Jail, said police Sergeant Riley Harwood. Last year in Isla Vista, there were 458 public intoxication arrests, which decreased since 2013, when there were 671. All arrestees were booked, some overnight. From 2011-2014, roughly 850 alcohol-related ambulance trips were made on Fridays and Saturdays from Isla Vista to Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital, a minimum $1,400 cost. Most of those people, however, would probably still be transported to the hospital for a medical evaluation rather than checked into a sobering center should one be established, said AMR Operations Director Dave Schierman. Ultimately, Doyel was unsure if there is enough support—financially or philosophically—from all stakeholders to make it work, though he emphasized the center’s revolutionary nature. “It’s a huge project,” he said. “I don’t think anyone went into it with any illusions.”

n

cont’d page 10  independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

9


EARN A CSU DEGREE in Santa Barbara • MBA • BS Business • BA Psychology

News of theWeek

news briefs cont’d

receive the benefit. Opponents charged the law will merely force farmers to hire more workers rather than pay existing employees for long days. The law will phase in from 2019-2022 (for farms with more than 25 employees) and from 2019-2025 for smaller farms (with less than 25 employees). State Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson’s bill to extend paid family-leave job protection for working parents passed the State Legislature but still needs the signature of Gov. Jerry Brown to become law. The bill was bitterly opposed by the California Chamber of Commerce, which dubbed it a “job killer.” Though Jackson made several amendments — increasing the size of the businesses affected to those with 20-49 employees and pushing back when the bill goes into effect — the Chamber never relented. The bill is designed to extend job protections that currently exist at employers of more than 50 people that allow parents to take time off to tend to their newborns.

http://ext.csuci.edu

805-312-6367

sports Kayla Day, 16, of Santa Barbara capped a brilliant run in the U.S. Open tennis championships by winning her first Grand Slam title on 9/ 11 in New York City. The No. 5-seeded Day defeated No. 13 Viktoria Kuzmova of Slo-

Extended University & International Programs

Join us for an Session CONTACT USInformation TO LEARN MORE!

Open House Saturday, Sept. 24 • 10 AM - 12:00 PM RSVP: 805-682-7609

Come explore how The Oaks preschool can make a difference in your child’s and family's lives. We are a play-based, child-centered cooperative preschool. Our Open House is open to parents and children.

Spaces open for Fall 2016! “Nurturing children and families since 1947” 605 W. Junipero St. • theoakspcw.org 10

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

cont’d

vakia, 6-3, 6-2, in the junior girls singles final and became the No. 1 world-ranked player. She is the third S.B. junior to win a U.S. Open singles title, joining boys champions Mike Falberg (1980) and Tim Trigueiro (1985). All three were initially coached by hometown teaching pro Larry Mousouris. Day, who turns 17 on 9/ 28, will have to decide which of her goals to chase next year: winning the Wimbledon girls’ title or joining the professional women’s circuit.

people Before Stanley Sheinbaum — who died this week at age 96 — gained renown as a major mover and shaker in Los Angeles progressive circles, he helped found a left-wing alternative newsweekly in Santa Barbara — the News & Review — where he also ran twice for Congress as an anti-Vietnam War activist. Sheinbaum moved to Santa Barbara in 1960 as a research economist with the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, then one of the nation’s premier left-leaning think tanks in a town better known for its right-wing sensibilities. After leaving town, Sheinbaum ensconced himself in Brentwood, where he became a force to be reckoned with as a UC Regent, civil libertarian, and left-wing power broker with national clout. n

finally a fix for stinky Bird Refuge?

On and off for more than 80 years, the Andreé Clark Bird Refuge has emanated a rotten-egg stench that wafts far over the east end of Santa Barbara and into Montecito. Occasionally, it smells more like garlicky seafood. A solution to the pungent nuisance has so far evaded City Hall — minutes from a 1933 Parks Commission meeting show it was being discussed even back then — but this week officials announced they may finally be headed toward a fix. The issue dates back to the late 1920s when the Bird Refuge, once connected to Sycamore Creek and the Pacific Ocean and subject to tidal influence, was dammed in and dredged to ensure water would remain in it year-round. That, however, stymied any natural outflow or replenishment of the 29-acre lake, other than the occasional rainstorm and, from the lawns and golf course above it, constant runoff full of fertilizers and other nutrients. Those nutrients feed algae blooms that eat up all the dissolved oxygen and eventually die, attracting bacteria that munches on the dead material and releases hydrogen sulfide, hence the stench. The unnatural phenomenon has also slowly killed off the small aquatic organisms that feed birds, reducing their numbers and diversity. Previous efforts to aerate the shallow lake, only three feet deep on average, did not work. In a presentation Tuesday afternoon to the City Council, Creeks Division Manager Cameron Benson requested that a coastal engineering firm be paid up to $150,000 to study the problem and determine the viability of three potential solutions already identified by city staff. The council voted unanimously for the contract. Benson said the first option is to do nothing, to let the Bird Refuge fill in with sediment over the next 100 years. He acknowledged there is little support for that idea. The second option is to improve flushing by modifying the lake’s small dam — called a weir — and its gate at Cabrillo Boulevard and ocean outfall on East Beach. That would cost around $500,000, Benson said. The third option would involve weir improvements, periodic opening of the ocean outfall, partial dredging to create a smaller but deeper lake, habitat restoration, and the creation of a trail around the refuge. That would cost around $2 million. Benson said his department has been saving funds toward the project and would be applying for grants to help cover the expense. He expects final design plans to be hammered out in spring 2019 with construction tentatively scheduled for June-November 2019. He acknowledged any work in the protected coastal zone will require the approval of many state and federal agencies, and lengthy and complicated process. “This is one of those Rubik’s cubes in our city that we have not been able to figure out,” said Councilmember Bendy White. “I appreciate that one more run is being made at this very difficult and important issue.” Mayor Helene Schneider agreed: “Hopefully by next spring we’ll get some — Tyler Hayden better answers.”


pau l wellm an f i le photo

environment

EntErprisE Fish Company established 1977

$1.00

OYSTERS SELECT OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL*

WITHOUT A PADDLE: County water czar Tom Fayram laments the lack of urgency with which the drought has been greeted up until now.

glug, glug, glug Three Steelhead in a Tub; Lawn Ban Looming

W

by N i c k W e l s h

ith California’s drought in its fifth year and Lake Cachuma all but reduced to a proverbial “gob of spit,” the Santa Barbara City Council is finally about to consider whether or not to impose an outright ban on lawn watering. Lake Cachuma is nearly depleted, and the start-up date for the new and improved desal plant has been delayed. City water conservation planners estimate a lawn-watering ban could save 450-1,250 acre-feet a year. This Thursday the water commission will discuss how such a prohibition might be structured, and who would be exempt. Then, on Tuesday, the matter will go before the council, but for discussion only, not action. Into this dismal situation came the news last week that the State Water Resources Control Board was ordering the Bureau of Reclamation and all water agencies drawing on Lake Cachuma to release five-fold more water into the Santa Ynez River in order to restore endangered steelhead trout populations to “good condition.” The new ruling is intended to affect steelhead during their spawning season — typically the first two months of the year—but it only applies in years with above-average rainfall. There will be less water to go around for sure, but by how much is uncertain. According to Michael Buckman with the State Water Board, water agencies drawing on Lake Cachuma will have to release 225 acre-feet water more a year from the dam —on average—than they have since 2000. Such averages, however, mask the volatile complexity of the new approach. In 1967, which had plentiful rainfall, for example, the dam would have had to release nearly 8,000 acre-feet more water, according to Buckman’s estimates. Such required releases will reduce the dam operators’ ability to stockpile water in wet years to use in times of drought. Buckman thought that could generate shortages as high as 1,500 acre-feet a year or 3,881 over a three-year stretch.

This ruling, still in draft form, reflects the realization that all efforts to restore the steelhead have fallen woefully short. Despite considerable effort and expense, the largest number of adult steelhead counted on the Santa Ynez since 2000 has been just 16. That was in 2008. Before Lake Cachuma was built, the river teemed with 30,000 steelhead trout. According to the draft report, the dam is responsible for the 99 percent plunge in population by blocking the fish from reaching their prime spawning grounds above the lake. Existing federal regulations only require dam operators to “avoid jeopardy” for the remnant populations. According to the new order, however, they must restore the population to “good condition.” That’s a radical departure. Water agencies will now be required to conduct studies on how to get steelhead above the dam. Previous studies on the same question have concluded such efforts are not feasible. In addition, water agencies will be required to explore ways to eliminate nonnative fish species that have preyed upon steelhead and their spawn. The draft order, expected to be adopted by the State Water Board later this year, will increase steelhead rearing and spawning habitats. This will be an almost total vindication for the conservation group CalTrout, represented by Santa Barbara’s Environmental Defense Center, which began focusing on steelhead depletion in the Santa Ynez River in 1987. For Tom Fayram, head of the county’s Water Agency, the directive serves to reinforce what most players already understood: that the amount water agencies can expect to take out of Lake Cachuma needs to go down. The traditional 25,700 acre-feet safe yield, he said, is clearly a pipe dream. Probably a safer number is below 20,000. And with the new ruling, it will be even less. “Is it 1,000 acrefeet less? Five thousand? Ten thousand?” he asked.“We don’t know yet. “ Into this reality, the Santa Barbara City Council will begin considering whether residents can continue to water their lawns. n

S Y A D S E N OM & BAR D E W Y A A L L D N DINING RO B AVAILA

LE I

*while supplies last, excludes charbroiled oysters

225 State Street

805-962-3313

enterprisefishco.com Parking available at Rey Rd./Montecito St.

w ! Santa Barbara NOE N Body Contouring Op NON-INvASI v vASI vE bODY SLIMMINg Increased collagen and elasticity (skin tightening)

before

after

LED body Contouring

LOSE INCHES IN JUST ONE TREATMENT! SAME DAY RESULTS No Pain – No Surgery – No Bruising – No Downtime First session is

59

$

introductory oFFer

Call to make your appointment today!

805.689.9964

www.santabarbarabodycontouring.com

23 W. Micheltorena St. • iNfo@SaNtaBarBaraBoDycoNtouriNg.com independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

11


FLOORING

SALE!

1-800-HARDWOOD lumberliquidators.com

September 14-20 (Wed - Tues)

*No Sales Tax Offer Valid in AR, AZ, CA, GA, MA, MD, NJ, NM, SC, WA & WI only.

FLOOR TRENDS | FALL 2016

You’ll pay NO SALES TAX ON EVERYTHING in our stores!* Quality Floors you want, LOW PRICES you deserve. Hot Styles HOT DEALS! THIS WEEK ONLY! 25 Styles of 3/4” Solid

1

$ 00

OFFsq ft

Wood-Look Tile

North American & European from

Laminate

59

99 from

¢

sq ft

¢ sq ft

We’ll pay any portion of the sales tax not paid by the purchaser. While supplies last. Product prices & availability are subject to change. See store for details.

Roommate3of5

@Cutiecake2222

When bae’s face is buffering on video chat because your roommate won’t stop streaming Game of Thrones. #collegeproblems

1:30 PM ⋅ Aug 13

With Cox, every roommate gets their share of entertainment.

COX HIGH SPEED INTERNET SM

EXCLUSIVE COLLEGE OFFER

39

$

Prices starting at

877-279-6143

|

99 per mo. for 12 mo.*

Cox Solutions Store®

|

cox.com/college

*Offer ends 09/30/16. Available to new residential customers in Cox service areas. $39.99/month includes Internet Essential. After 12 months, regular rates apply. See www.cox.com for current rates. Prices exclude installation/activation fees, equipment charges, inside wiring fees, additional outlets, taxes, surcharges (including $3.00/mo. video Broadcast Surcharge), and other fees. Not all services and features available everywhere. A credit check and/or deposit may be required. Offer not combinable with other offers. 5 GB free cloud storage included. A DOCSIS 3 modem is required to consistently receive optimal speeds for Essential and higher tiers, and is strongly recommended for all other tiers. Uninterrupted or error-free Internet service, or the speed of your service, is not guaranteed. Actual speeds vary. See www.cox.com/internetdisclosures for complete Cox Internet Disclosures. Other restrictions may apply. ©2016 Cox Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.

12

THE INDEPENDENT

cont’d

pau l wellm an f i le photos

News of theWeek

THE TAX IS ON US

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

Steve Balash

Darryl Genis

ineffective counsel alleged

Attorney Steve Balash is seeking a new trial for Benjamin Lee Bettencourt — sentenced to five years last year for the death of a passenger in his van during a drunkdriving accident — alleging ineffective representation by Bettencourt’s former defense attorney, Darryl Genis. Balash argued in court papers that Bettencourt should have been called as a witness in his own defense. Because he was not, Balash charged, Genis provided no direct evidence that the victim — Jennifer Clark — grabbed the wheel from Bettencourt and caused the crash herself. Likewise, Balash contended that Genis provided no evidence Bettercourt was diabetic, a fact which could have been used to challenge blood alcohol readings that indicated he was drunk at the time of the accident. At the time of the accident, Bettencourt was a paraplegic stemming from a prior car crash that left another passenger dead. In that crash, no intoxicants were involved, but Bettencourt was convicted of reckless driving. In his pleading papers, Balash also complained that Genis and his prosecutorial counterpart Kevin Duffy insulted each other so relentlessly that the judge had to repeatedly intervene. Genis explained in court papers that if Bettencourt had testified — given scheduling particulars idiosyncratic to this case — there would have been an 11-day gap between his first and last days of testimony, which would have given the prosecution undue time to prepare a detailed cross-examination. Ultimately, Genis said, Bettencourt could have testified if he wanted to. “Benjamin Lee Bettencourt is a very intelligent young man who is not a shrinking violet,” Genis stated. He also strongly recommended Bettencourt not take the stand. “The first rule of lawyering is to never let your client testify unless there’s no other way,” he said. Genis himself has been no shrinking violet and has clashed with several judges as well as the District Attorney’s Office. Responding to complaints from several judges and prosecuting attorneys about over-the-top courtroom behavior, Genis was suspended by the state bar for 90 days. On appeal, the number was reduced to 30, which — Nick Welsh Genis served last fall.

love May save east Beach grill

T

he power of the people was on dramatic display Tuesday afternoon as dozens of supporters of the East Beach Grill convinced the Santa Barbara City Council to give the 33-year-old restaurant a better chance for revival when its lease runs out next year and its Cabrillo Pavilion Bathhouse home is closed soon after for renovation. Outdated and uncharmingly shabby, the bathhouse is scheduled for a massive and lengthy $12 million makeover that will preserve much of the outside aesthetic but redo most of the interior, including its upstairs event space and offices, as well as its downstairs gym, bathrooms, and restaurant. Work is expected to begin early 2018. East Beach Grill owner Francisco Aguilera, who also runs Char West and the ice cream parlor on Stearns Wharf, petitioned City Hall to give him first crack at resecuring a lease when the bathhouse reopens. He asked for six months of exclusive negotiating rights before the city solicits proposals from other restaurant operators. Parks and Recreation director Jill Zachary and her staff recommended against Aguilera’s request, saying all bids should be considered at the same time. Zachary said Parks and Rec will be looking for a tenant who can provide a more expanded food service than the one currently offered by East Beach Grill, a casual breakfast and

lunch joint open five days a week. The new restaurant will operate seven days a week, serve dinner, and be able to invest around $500,000 in new kitchen and dining equipment. Zachary said the upgraded eatery will generate much-needed revenue for her department, which was recently forced to cut public youth and sports programs. An open bidding process would allow City Hall to better gauge the market, get a fresh look at new ideas, and be more objective in its selection, said Zachary. She stressed Aguilera’s overall good standing as a city tenant and never said he wouldn’t be up to the task. A long line of loyal customers and friends took turns asking the council to consider more than City Hall’s bottom line. They talked about Aguilera’s deep Santa Barbara roots, his ascension from dishwasher to restaurant owner, his commitment to his employees, and how the East Beach Grill is a beloved destination for Junior Lifeguards, triathlon participants, morning walkers, and passersby looking for a quick and inexpensive bite. Keep it local, and keep it authentic, they said. Swayed by the outpouring, the council in a 6-1 vote agreed to let Aguilera have 120 days of one-on-one negotiations before other proposals are taken. “Your turnout made the difference,” Mayor Helene Schneider told the crowd. —Tyler Hayden


world

Bull session with

fareed Zakaria

News Analyst Chats Foreign Policy in Advance of Santa Barbara Event

mong the cacophony of cable-news squawkfests, socially mediated newsfeeds, and listicles, believe it or not, there’s still a niche market for sober analysis of current events. Fareed Zakaria’s got that market cornered. The host of a foreign affairs program on CNN, writer of a weekly column in the Washington Post, and author of five books, Zakaria is a rare specimen of that endangered American species called the public intellectual. Zakaria has fashioned himself into an authoritative voice on matters of geopolitics, offering historical and political context to the events shaping our ever-globalizing world, all the while peppering his prose with timely allusions plucked straight from the Great Books curriculum. It was a bit jarring, given such gentility, to read a recent column of Zakaria’s titled “The Unbearable Stench of Trump’s B.S.” It was less shocking to find out that Zakaria borrowed his definition of the term “bullshit” from a Princeton philosopher named Harry Frankfurt. When Zakaria called in to chat with The Santa Barbara Independent in advance of his talk at the Granada Theatre on September 27, it was on that subject that our conversation began.

last 30 years, China has been on a path to greater openness, greater integration with the world economy. But right now it is going through something very different. Economic growth is slowing, and the Communist Party has decided to reassert control in a very substantial way. Dissent is being crushed, people are being purged; there is much stronger nationalism to Chinese policy. The same Western companies that they courted are now being discriminated against. If China moves in a substantially protectionist direction, that will change the geopolitics of Asia and the world. Let’s remember China is the second largest economy in the world. Even with this slowdown, it is growing at least twice as fast as the United States. If there is a serious conflict between China and the United States, then we move from the world we’ve been living in for the last 20 years to a world that looks much more like the Cold War where you have two great antagonists in two camps, countries have to choose sides, and systems get closed rather than opened. cou rtesy

A

by B R a N D o N fa s T M a N

I think the topic of bullshit is more interesting than the topic of Trump. I hope you’re right because one of Trump’s strategies during the primary was to stay interesting, which meant he dominated media coverage. If he’s getting to the point where we’re all getting bored of him, that would be a very good thing. Does a little part of your soul die every time you have to talk about him? I find it deeply frustrating that we have to analyze every tweet or every comment he makes on foreign policy or economic policy as if it is some serious expression of policy, that there’s some thought behind it, that there’s an ideology behind it. It’s all nonsense. These are kneejerk reactions that mean nothing. He could change his mind tomorrow. Frankfurt says that one cause of bullshit is the fact that public life compels people “to speak extensively about matters of which they are to some degree ignorant.” You work on a cable news network where people have to talk 24 hours a day. To what extent is Trump a product of our media climate? He is very much a creature of the modern media age in which speed is essential. Short, controversial, obnoxious, sensational statements get you enormous currency. Then they disappear and then you’re on to the next thing. You don’t have time to develop outrage about the John McCain comment because then Trump is on to Mexicans; then he’s on to Muslims. He’s consumed the limelight in a way that makes everybody else look small. There’s certainly a kind of genius in that. It also reminds us that the people interested in politics in a serious sense are a small subset of Americans. Jefferson said an educated citizenry is the key to preserving our democracy. Most Americans are sensible, smart people. When they make an important decision, they do careful research; they are very sober. But when it comes to exercising their rights as citizens, there is this strange tendency to suspend that kind of rational thought process and instead look for somebody who is going to affirm you emotionally or give you psychological comfort. Let’s get to foreign affairs. The G20 meetings just ended in China, a country that has swiveled inward. Is this the beginning of a long-term economic uncoupling from the United States? China may be going through the most important changes since the Cultural Revolution. For the

Fareed Zakaria You are a supporter of the Trans Pacific Partnership trade deal, and you feel like the presidential candidates are being demagogues in opposing it. Is that right? I think Hillary Clinton knows enough to know that it’s a good agreement. Donald Trump knows nothing about it or any major public policy issue, so I have no idea whether he’s being sincere or not. The vast majority of what the TPP does is open up Asian markets. This deal makes it easier for America to export goods into Japan, which is still the third biggest economy in the world, to Indonesia, to other countries in East Asia. It also, for the first time, raises environmental standards and talks about worker rights in a substantial way. As important as the economic issue, there’s a very important foreign policy issue here, which is: who will get to write the rules? The real prize here is for the United States to stay the dominant, agenda-setting power in the world. To do that, it has to be able to do it in the Asia Pacific. In 10 years, four of the five largest economies of the world will be in the Asia Pacific. That is where the pivots of the 21st century lie. President Obama has been trying to make his pivot to Asia, but the Middle East keeps occupying his attention. He’s been reluctant to use military force in Syria despite pressure from those on both sides of the political spectrum. How do you think he is playing his cards? It has showed incredible discipline and, in my opinion, strategic wisdom to

not get substantially involved in the Syrian Civil War. This is without question the most complicated Civil War that I have witnessed in my 30 years of studying international relations. The American intelligence community estimates are that there are 1,000 different militias fighting in Syria. There are at least five to six major powers with stakes in Syria. They are all backing different sides. You have in Syria this fundamental problem. We are unalterably opposed to the strongest power, the Assad regime, and we are also unalterably opposed to the Assad regime’s primary military rival, ISIS. We’re against the other jihadi groups there. The idea that in that chaos, substantial American involvement would somehow sort this all out is crazy. What I think is much more likely is that the United States would drain enormous blood, treasure, time, energy, and attention in a no-win quagmire. Do you worry about a potential President Clinton who is more hawkish than Obama? I do worry that Hillary will not have the same disciplined, strategic approach to the use of military force that Obama has had. I think that Hillary Clinton comes out of a Democratic party that felt as if it was on the defensive in the 1980s and 1990s when they were constantly accused by Republicans of being soft on Communism, of being soft on military intervention. It was a legacy of the Vietnam experience. Because of that, both Bill and Hillary Clinton decided that the way they were going to demonstrate that they were not those kinds of Democrats was to be tougher. The danger of that is that is a political strategy that may not be good foreign policy strategy. On the other side of Syria is Turkey. Were you surprised by the coup attempt, and are you worried about the prospects for a U.S. alliance with an increasingly authoritarian regime? I was surprised by the coup and the counter-coup. For a long time, it seemed as if Turkey was exempt from the instability that has been consuming the Middle East. Now, it is unfortunately clear that that instability has entered Turkey. Partly, the Kurdish issue has been revived, partly ISIS. One piece of it seems to be that Turkey is going through a fundamental debate internally whether it is still the bastion of secularism and modernized Islam that Attaturk had created or if it is going to be very different. President Erdogan has played with these forces in a way that has not been productive. But let’s talk about when Turkey really began to change. That was when the Europeans made it clear to Turkey that it would never be a member of the European Union. A lot of Turks believed it was simply because they were Muslim. That was a much more dramatic shift than people realize, and Erdogan began this project of redefining Turkey, which has produced a lot of opposition and tension. When you recently interviewed President Obama on your show, GPS [Global Public Square], you ended by asking him what he’s reading, so I’ll do the same with you. I read a forthcoming biography of Alan Greenspan by Sebastian Mallaby. It was a wonderful portrait of the economic conservative movement, free marketers who wanted the Republican Party defined by openness and internationalism, now so bereft because Donald Trump in no way represents them. What you have now is a Republican Party with a standard bearer who believes in walls and tariffs.

4•1•1

UCSB’s Arts & Lectures brings Fareed Zakaria to the Granada Theatre on Tuesday, September 27, at 7:30 p.m. For tickets and information, visit artsandlectures.sa.ucsb.edu.

independent.com

September 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENt

13


UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

SPANISH GUITAR ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS

THE NATIONAL PARKS FILMS

BENISE

SAT SEP 24 12PM SUN SEP 25 12PM

SUN OCT 2 7PM

UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

FAREED ZAKARIA

JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA WITH WYNTON MARSALIS

TUE SEP 27 7:30PM

THE

ime

TUE OCT 4 8PM

UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

CAMA

THE TIME JUMPERS

PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA

THU SEP 29 8PM

THU OCT 6 8PM

OPEN CALL

UCSB ARTS & LECTURES

KEN BURNS SUN OCT 2 12PM

The Granada Theatre is giving away the chance for one lucky a cappella group to perform as the OPENING ACT for VOCALOSITY when they come to Santa Barbara on Nov. 11th

visit granadasb.org for details

THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN ARM SAY AMEN SOMEBODY MACARIO

14

THE INDEPENDENT

September 15, 2016

independent.com

MON SEP 26 7PM

MON OCT 17 7PM

SUN NOV 13 3PM


News of theWeek

cont’d

cont’d

Dissension fuels carp school Board Race

C

iting “significant differences … in style, philosophy and vision,” the separation agreement between Carpinteria Unified School District’s Board of Education and departed superintendent Micheline Miglis was released last week. While many details “shall remain confidential,” according to the document, an outspoken critic of the board said Miglis’s departure had nothing to do with performance. “The single biggest issue was in the tone Ms. Miglis set for collaborating and decision-making,” said Jay Hotchner, a Carpinteria Middle School teacher and president of labor union CAUSE (Carpinteria Association of United School Employees), which has been at an impasse with the district over salary negotiations since April. “Her tone was respectful and diplomatic, and she created a dialogue of empowering people. That was unacceptable to the board.” Longtime boardmember Terry Banks did not return calls and emails for comment. Board president Andy Sheaffer could not be reached before deadline. Miglis will receive her full salary for one year. Her benefits expire on June 30, 2018, or when she receives benefits through a new employer, whichever comes first. Looking ahead to the coming board election, with two of five seats up for grabs,“It’s hard to say if there will be a change in the voting bloc,” Hotchner said, “but I would hope to see more transparent conversations [between the board and the community].” Of three candidates, CAUSE has endorsed Gary

Blair and Rogelio Delgado. Blair is a retired Santa Barbara Superior Court executive officer with twin daughters at Carpinteria High School, where he serves on the Measure U facility improvement advisory committee. Blair said one of his focuses would be Title IX compliance for facilities and equipment for female sports. Delgado — who has a Carpinteria High School grad now at Harvard and two more kids in the district — said class sizes are too big, teachers are underpaid, and many families in the district, which is 70 percent Hispanic, don’t know what’s going on. “I can talk with them directly,” he said. Delgado and Blair have also been endorsed by the Santa Barbara Democratic Central Committee. “I’m sure [Maureen Foley Claffey] would be a competent boardmember,” Hotchner said of the race’s third candidate. “We wish [CAUSE] could have made three endorsements. But there are only two seats.” Endorsed by the Santa Barbara Women’s Political Committee, Claffey is a sixth-generation Carpinteria native. Her mom was a teacher in the district and her father a school board president. Her 4-year-old daughter was enrolled in the district’s transitional kindergarten program before the board abruptly pulled the plug on its expansion earlier this year and then rescinded that decision two months later,“sending many families into chaos,” Claffey said. “The biggest problem with the board is that there hasn’t been enough focus on children and how to help teachers do well. And there’s an impression that they’ve been very cavalier with the public trust.” The — Keith Hamm election is on November 8.

‘kumbaya’ after years of ‘issues’ On July 2 last year, a Sheriff’s deputy fell 20 feet from a helicopter hoist during a marijuana-eradication operation. The cause, according to the county’s Risk Management Division, was a mechanical malfunction. His injuries were non-life-threatening, but he is still out on workers’ compensation. Litigation is pending. The incident highlighted a rift long widening in the county’s Aviation Unit, which combined Sheriff’s deputies and firefighters in 2012 to save money to the tune of a few hundred thousand dollars. The unit has four pilots and a handful of other assisting personnel. Its mission ranges from fighting wildfires to supporting Sheriff’s deputies on the ground to locate criminal suspects. The mix forced the agencies to confront longtime differences — in missions and training protocols — between the two departments. Though for years it appeared as though the Aviation Unit could split again, the county supervisors this week re-upped its Memorandum of Understanding (MOU). The supervisors acknowledged “issues” existed, but they ultimately basked in what Supervisor Salud Carbajal called a “kumbaya” moment. “For a while there, we weren’t sure we were going to get [there],” he said. Per the MOU, a fifth pilot to focus on fire and emergency response was added for a $202,000 annual cost. (All pilots, though, are trained to respond to any mission.) The MOU also allotted $51,000 for an increase in training costs. The so-called issues included, among other things, personality conflicts among firefighters and deputies. Conflict escalated when things were slower, according to various sources, and relations tended to be better when they were busy. The agreement also calls for an executive meeting to convene quarterly, which Undersheriff Bernard Melekian said could help prevent issues. “A lot of work has gone into creating this agreement,” he said. Fire Chief Eric Peterson admitted he had doubts when the process started. “I think we have a really good compromise here,” he said. — Kelsey Brugger

Innovations at Evolutions • Do you sweat under your arms more than you’d like? • Do you ever worry about having a bad underarm odor at the end of the day? • Are you sick of wearing aluminum-based antiperspirants that don't work well? • Are you tired of sweat and antiperspirants ruining your clothes? If you answered “yes” to any of the above questions, miraDry might be for you! Evolutions is pleased to offer the most advanced treatment for underarm sweating on the market today. miraDry is an FDA-cleared, non-invasive solution to significantly and permanently reduce underarm sweat and odor. (Only 2% of the body’s sweat glands are under the arm, so it is totally safe to stop the sweating there!) This treatment can be life-changing and is only available in Santa Barbara at Evolutions.

m e d i c a l

&

d a y

s p a

Terry T erry J. J. Perkins M.D.. - Owner/Medical Director

350 Chapala St. #103

“Immediately after the miraDry procedure I knew that it was working, I wasn’t sweating anymore and it was great. It’s been about two years since I’ve had the procedure and I’m still experiencing the same results!” - Joanna (miraDry patient)

www.evolutionsmedicalspa.com ww independent.com

805.284.9007 SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

15


obituaries

To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com

Jose Antonio Ortiz 03/19/92-09/16/13

3rd Year Anniversary Your presence we miss, Your memories we treasure, Loving you always, Forgetting you never. Love Mom, Gabe, Mari and Izaiah. Memorial Mass in his honor will take place Friday, September 16th at 8am @ St. Raphael's Church, followed by hike.

Virginia C. Cashman 12/24/25-08/30/16

(Gini) Virginia Christanne Cashman age 90, died peacefully in her Santa Barbara home on Tuesday, August 30, 2016 at 5:45 a.m. Gini’s life flourished with wonder and synchronicity. She had an ability to transform and create diverse connections. She could transcend humanmade boundaries of nationality, religion, race and even age. She will be deeply missed. Born on Christmas Eve, 1925 to Ed and Mary Ellen (LuLu) Kelly, Gini was the second youngest of thirteen children. Her folks were adventurous, young homesteaders who moved from Iowa to South Dakota and built a grand house, including the first electric-generating windmill in Wagner County. Her family successfully farmed corn, soybeans and wheat, and raised cattle until the tragic Dust Bowl and Depression of 1929 prompted their return to Iowa. She attended the University of Iowa where she met the love of her life, Jim Cashman, a Korean War vet, completing 16

THE INDEPENDENT

his law degree. On September 9, 1947, they were married in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. In 1952, they moved to California and settled in Santa Barbara, where they raised a family of eleven. They enjoyed a rich community and family life that centered on beach trips and mountain camping adventures. Gini was very involved with school, friends and church activities. Summers were spent at a family cabin in Paradise and at Lake Almanor. Gini was an avid reader and lifelong learner. Shakespeare classes, philosophy, foreign travel, UCSB Art and Lectures Programs, bridge, tennis and thrift stores excited her. However her true passion was personal growth. Gini was a PRH facilitator, practicing in the Santa Barbara area for 20 years. She believed in the evolution of consciousness and the divinity of all beings. Having experienced the reality of the Depression and the Dust Bowl, she felt a lifelong commitment to make a dif difference at every opportunity. She generously supported many charities and organizations and opened her home to everyone. She was committed to her volunteer work in the early formation of Santa Barbara Hospice and co-founded the Word and Life Lecture Series and the Sophia House Meditation Group. Gini was blessed with many caring and beloved friends. She lived entranced by life’s joy and wonder and delighted in meaningful synchronicities. She trusted and lived her intuitive convictions. We will miss her magical spirit! Gini is survived by her 11 children, 20 grandchildren, 7 greatgrandchildren and treasured nieces and nephews. Her children, their spouses and her grandchildren are: Linda Williams (Geoffrey, Tucker, Darian) San Francisco, CA; Cynthia Mitchell (Jeff, Jed, Cash) Corvallis, OR; Jessica Cashman (Harold Marcuse,) Santa Barbara, CA; Tim Cashman (Linda, Angie, Kent, Scott) Gig Harbor, WA; Paul Cashman (Leigh, Katie, Molly) Santa Barbara, CA; Kelly Cashman (Katie, Luke) Simi Valley, CA; Mary Lucero (Jimmy, Dolan, Ginger) St. Maarten, Caribbean; Tom Cashman (Carla, Tyler, Kira) Irvine, CA; David Cashman (Laurie, Alexandra, Joe) La Mesa, CA; Ellen Guettler (Kevin, Gibson, Aiden) Bozeman, MT; Anne Argent (Quinn, Camron) Denver, CO. A celebration of her life will

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

be held on Sunday, October 23, 2016, at the Cabrillo Arts Pavillion (“the Bath House”), located at 1118 E Cabrillo Blvd, Santa Barbara, CA 93103 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to The Beatitude House; C/O Guadalupe Catholic Worker, 267 Campodonico Ave Guadalupe, CA 93434 and/or La Casa de Maria Retreat and Conference Center, 800 El Bosque Rd. Santa Barbara, CA 93108.

Fred B. Meisel 12/08/26-09/04/16 Our dear Fred Meisel passed away quietly on September 4, 2016. He lived his life by the refrain, “You can’t go wrong by doing right.” He blessed us all with his love, thoughtfulness, unselfishness, and with his ever-present humor. Fred was born on December 8, 1926 in Prospect Park, PA to Alexander and Sophia Meisel. He graduated from Prospect Park High School during WWII and enlisted in the Navy. At war’s end, Fred entered Temple University School of Pharmacy, and upon graduation worked with his uncle and his father in their respective pharmacies. When Alexander passed away in 1952, Fred seamlessly ran the pharmacy in a manner that supported his own family and that of his mother, while providing assistance for brothers Harris and Paul to attend college. In 1954, Fred married Rita Steiner. The couple had two children, Alexandra and Irene. After that marriage dissolved, Fred sold the family pharmacy, and began a career in hospital pharmacy, notably Misericordia Hospital in Philadelphia. In 1976 Fred married Judith Cohen, and in 1981 Fred and Judy moved to Santa Barbara. Fred worked first at Nogales Pharmacy, and then at Goleta Valley Hospital, while Judy initiated and developed a preschool program at Congregation B’nai B’rith. Fred and Judy truly made their home in Santa Barbara’s Jewish and civil rights communities, hosting diverse groups at their Friday night Sabbath dinners, and travelling across the country for Judy’s presentations to young people about civil rights and the Holocaust. We will all miss Fred’s wit, his wisdom, his sweetness and generosity of spirit. Fred is survived by his wife, Judith, his daughters, Irene

independent.com

Meisel, Alexandra Bricklin (and Jonathon Bricklin), his granddaughter Rebecca Bricklin; siblings Harris and Fredda Meisel, Paul and Joni Meisel; step-children Mina Cohen and Jeffrey Berenson, Michael and Soni Cohen, Debby and Sam Tucker; stepgrandchildren Aaron and Ben Cohen, Jennifer Shopsin and Seth Tucker, Elana Pesah and Yael Berenson; and nieces and nephews, and grandnieces and nephews of these families. Donations in Fred’s memory can be sent to Camp Havarim, through the Jewish Federation of Greater Santa Barbara, Congregation B’nai B’rith in Santa Barbara, or to a charity of your choice.

Mark Witold Piasecki 1938-2016

Mark Witold Piasecki, age 78, passed away on Saturday, September 10th. He was born in the Netherlands, where his father was stationed with the Polish Navy. He and his mother fled Warsaw, Poland to Scotland during WWII. After immigrating to the U.S. and settling in Los Angeles, Mark attended Loyola High School and graduated from UCLA. After college, he accepted a position as an engineer at Raytheon in Santa Barbara, where he lived the rest of his life. It was in Santa Barbara that he met his wife, Kathy. They were married in 1970 at Old Mission, Santa Barbara. A gentle and loving family man, Mark was a devoted husband, father, brother, and son. Mark is survived by his wife, Kathy, his children, Derek Piasecki (Christy), Mara Cotich (Craig), and Andrea Wiemann (John), his grandchildren, Carter, Dylan, and Chloe, his sister, Dr. Christina Puchalski, his stepfather Anthony Puchalski, and many nephews, nieces, and friends. Funeral Services will be held September 16, 2016, at 10:30am, St. Raphael Catholic Church: 5444 Hollister Avenue, Goleta.

Patrick John Drazenovich 12/04/61-09/01/16

Pat, a Santa Barbara native, died suddenly. Pre-deceased by his parents Thelma (Langlo) and George. He attended Adams School, graduated from San Marcos, where he was an outstanding baseball player and athlete. He loved sports—played tennis, golf, baseball; and games—playing backgammon and scrabble weekly, but hated the New England Patriots! His contractor's license was with Drazenovich Concrete. He was bright, perceptive, gentle, and known to many as a good friend. At the dog park daily with Nashoba and Moochie, he was a devoted dog 'dad'. All at the coffee shop every evening. He was a nice guy, a good person, an excellent friend, and he is missed. Memorial information: Tues. Sept. 20, 3-6 Tucker's Grove pot luck RSVP and info: patsmemorial@egan.org

Frances Scafidi

Death Notices Darlene M. Pitney, DOD 09/05/16 (84), Santa Barbara, CA. Walter Gelb, DOD 09/12/16 (98), Santa Barbara, CA. Barbara K. Chaney, 09/02/26-08/14/16 (89) Santa Barbara, CA.


in Memoriam

ripkyn strader-Murphy

Global Thinker, Columnist and CNN Host

Fareed Zakaria

Election 2016: A View from Home and Abroad

1996 – 2016

I

The Beauty and Paradox of Powerlessness

minutes. He could have continued for even one half hour … In these days of rampant materialism, Kamal n truth, I was never keen to have children. Moth- is one in a billion.” erhood, after all, would have dampened my Within a few months of living in Kolkata, Ripkyn fevered ambitions, and kids, of course, would was reasonably proficient in both Sanskrit and Benhave ended my own lifelong childhood. gali. And he was clean and sober — until he wasn’t. Then I met Ripkyn, age 14 — skinny, slouched, with Back home in Santa Barbara, he hit another bottom. shaggy dark hair and majestically broad eyebrows Then he dove deeply into recovery, attending AA meetlurching above black horn-rimmed eyeglasses and ings daily, nailing a 3.9 GPA at City College, holding teenage zits. Maybe it was his ferdown a job, dating an old friend, ret mind ever on the hunt that and staying with us from time to snared me or that hungry heart time. of his that sponged up the world. At 17, he wrote an essay for his I first met Ripkyn at the Santa English class titled “Epiphanies of Barbara Vedanta Temple where Powerlessness,” confessing,“I have the nuns — being close to several personally experienced the force family members — offered him of powerlessness in all its beauty an occasional second home. They and paradox in my own life … had discerned in Ripkyn a keen I myself felt for most of my life spiritual hunger — one typically that I was in control of my situfound in the elderly, not pubesation, even as — at the tender age cent teenagers. of 13 — I spiraled into addiction When he was 15, Ripkyn lost and near madness. Even after my his father — a dazzling guyfather’s death and my subsequent about-town who died too soon recognition of the peril I faced and too young. Alternately as a fellow alcoholic and addict, brooding, grieving, and hilarious, I continued to make bets … It was Ripkyn liked hanging around not until I received my revelation, LAST RUN: In the end, it was Ripkyn’s our house, tending to our beagle thorough the medium of Alcoholgoodness that made you swoon. ics Anonymous, that I watched Lupe, chowing down on endless almond butter and jelly sandmy life transform miraculously.” wiches, and talking books, drugs, recovery, politics, Epiphanies, he stressed,“require both insight and revand booze. elation, a conscious effort and an experience of grace.” I have met more than my share of hope-to-dieRipkyn, it turned out, was my dream kid. When I gave him James Joyce’s Dubliners, he inhaled it in two addicts, and Ripkyn rivaled all in appetite, or, as he put days. And how he was dazzled by Milton’s glorious it, his quest for “the ecstatic.” But Ripkyn had a quality invocation in Paradise Lost —“What in me is dark / rare among addicts, for whom it is an article of faith, Illumine …” In July, I sent him Richard Ellman’s biog- even a cliché, that moving lips are lying ones. It’s the DNA of addiction — but Ripkyn invariably told the raphy of Joyce, which he promptly devoured. Ripkyn came from good Santa Barbara stock — a truth — to himself and others. “I’m going on a run,” family, as he liked to regale us, chockablock with saints, a binge, he would tell his pal Christian, who like so smarty-pants, surfers, and drunks — all exceptionally many in Santa Barbara, credits his life and recovery good looking. He was a natural writer and storyteller to the rescue efforts of Ripkyn. It was Ripkyn’s goodwith a trove of tales. There was the story of the rela- ness, in the end, that made you swoon. In his last letter tive who hustled drugs out of Southeast Asia under to his mother, he wrote, “When I drink and use, I do diplomatic cover, the king surfer-dude who left for crazy, bad stuff. It’s not me … Thank you, thank you, Mexico, the marine biologist great-grandfather, and, beautiful mom. I love you and I’ll see you and look the coup de grâce, the geriatric meth dealer relation out from above.” Ripkyn was a truth teller with a yearning that (until he sobered up). When I asked him to compose a genealogy, he tracked relatives going back more than seemed no less than that of Augustine — even amid a century, noting birth and death dates — an exercise the battle fatigue and demoralization of relapse. that turned into a meditation on the unforgiving beast I had told Ripkyn that I would help him write his of alcoholism. memoir — his saga of survival. That was the plan. In At 16, Ripkyn went to India to study at Ramakrishna early August, he called a few times and wrote,“Thanks Mission Vivekananda University outside of Kolkata again for not giving up on me. I will try my best to do for six months. He was given the spiritual name Kamal, the same.” I could hear his cryptic laugh punctuating meaning“lotus,” engendering plenty of ribbing from the that last clause. Vedanta nuns, who dubbed him Little Lotus. In his essay on epiphanies, Ripkyn wrote that “the A revered monk, the late Swami Tathagatananda source of beauty is awe … And the more we are filled wrote Ripkyn’s hard-working, single mother when he with this awe … the more we can experience the left the States: “I am almost 35 years in this country … unfathomable mystery and uncompromising reality but your son is special for his purity of character and of the world and the more we may enjoy peace and spiritual longing which appeared at a very young age. the power that comes after powerlessness.” Oh, how we will miss him so. I cannot recall that I have seen such a boy in the U.S. Even in India, these sorts of boys are very rare.” Once, he asked Ripkyn/Kamal to recite a passage from the Bhagavad Gita. To his astonishment, Ripkyn, from A memorial will be held at Vedanta Temple (927 Ladera Ln., memory, “chanted the verses in English for about 10 Montecito) on Saturday, September 17, at 11 a.m. courtesy

by A n n L o u i s e B A r d A c h

Just one day after the first presidential debate!

note special time

Tue, Sep 27 / 7:30 PM / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $25 / $15 all students (with valid ID) A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

Event Sponsors: Monica & Timothy Babich Additional support: Suzi & Glen Serbin With support from our Community Partner the Orfalea Family Media Sponsor:

(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222 www.GranadaSB.org

old mission santa barbara Docent Training Class October 4 - November 15 Tuesdays 9:30am - 12:30pm

We welcome interested people of all faiths to join our dedicated docents who: Lead tours for visitors from all over the world • Instruct school children on early mission life • Guide guests through La Huerta Historic Garden • Welcome visitors to the Mission church • Conduct special tours on Mission art and architecture •

For more information, contact Laura Foss (805) 682-4713 (x166) / museumtours@sboldmission.org Application: www. santabarbaramission.org/docents

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

17


You get the credit.

Maria Dimaggio, Vist Steel Co., customer since 1992, with Joanne Funari, American Riviera Bank Exec. VP & COO

We specialize in lines of credit for local businesses.

Bank on better.

Branches as close as your work, home, or even your phone! Santa Barbara

Montecito

Goleta

Online

AmericanRivieraBank.com | 805.965.5942 18

THE INDEPENDENT

September 15, 2016

independent.com

Mobile App


Opinions

WANT TO RESTORE YOUR YOUTHFUL APPEARANCE?

CONT’D

Are you curious about the benefits of Botox? Botox will help: Restore that youthful appearance Eliminate frown lines · Refresh your eyes Smooth fine lines · Prevent wrinkles

Dr. Frawley’s Medical Group is proud to announce additional dermatological services provided by Shannon Witt, FNP-C.

Schedule before November to receive a 10% discount Call Dr. Frawley’s office today at 805-730-1580 and ask about a full-face assessment and receive a complimentary initial consult.

Dr. Frawley’s Medical Group 3891 State Street Suite 201

letters

Save Small Wineries

S

anta Barbara County officials have been working for several years on a slew of updates to the Winery Ordinance first enacted in 2001. It appears this arduous process is coming to an end, though not without continued controversy. The industry in California and around the world has changed considerably in the last five years. More people are traveling to wine regions to meet winemakers and to experience the culture of these unique places. For small wineries, the vast majority of their wine sales come from visitors at the winery. At the same time, there has been a mass consolidation in the wine wholesale business. The four largest wine distributors in the United States sell 60 percent of the wine sold to restaurants, retailers, and grocery stores. They mostly deal with wineries producing tens of thousands of cases, not hundreds or a few thousand. The S.B. County Vintners’ Association submitted a recommendation to allow smaller vineyard parcels to have a boutique winery and up to a 400-square-foot area for limited, by-appointment visits by wholesale and retail wine buyers. This low-impact, agriculturecentric recommendation gives boutique winery owners an opportunity to educate customers directly where the wine has been grown. We understand the need for reasonable regulation, and a spirit of partnership from county officials will go a long way toward allowing small, local vintners to stay in business. In turn, vintners will continue to preserve so much of what makes Santa Barbara County a special place. —Morgen McLaughlin, Executive Director, Santa Barbara Vintners

Techno Travails

I

t seems the Metropolitan Transit District is operated by car-driving technophiles, with little empathy or experience of daily ridership. After years of loud, two-way driver-terminal radios, a bilingual announcement system was recently added to the noise level. Rare is the 10- to 15-minute ride without a recorded request to move to the back of the bus,

(in the Galleria Mall)

even though the bus is usually far from crowded. One is randomly admonished to wear shoes and shirts, or not to spit, smoke, or throw things out the window. In many years, I’ve never observed such conduct on the bus. These intrusive technologies make it more difficult —Paul B. Slater, S.B. for riders to relax, read …

Why Joan Hartmann?

T

his November, voters in the 3rd District, the county’s largest and most diverse, will elect a new supervisor to replace retiring Supervisor Doreen Farr. Joan Hartmann has all the necessary skills, knowledge, and experience to replace her. She has the knowledge, based on her many years in public policy work; the experience, based on her work with public and private coalitions solving problems of water-use, land-use, and environmental issues; and the passion to propose creative solutions for mental health, public safety, urbangrowth boundaries, and much more. We sometimes forget that citizens living outside a city boundary—and there are many of us in the 3rd District—rely on our supervisor as the ombudsman for issues affecting us. These can be as mundane as a fallen tree and as crucial as mental-health services. Our supervisor’s office is often the first place we call when we have questions about land use, roadway safety, or needed infrastructure improvements. Joan Hartmann has committed to answer every phone call or email from her constituents within 24 hours. That is a commitment based on a passion to serve, a respect for citizens, and an abiding belief in the necessity of good governance. Doreen Farr has enthusiastically endorsed Joan. I and many others stand with her in that endorsement. —Jim Farnum, Joan Hartmann is the real deal.

Santa Barbara CA

Do Your Feet Hurt? Dr. Lorie Robinson announces the relocation of her office to Santa Barbara/Goleta. Experience Matters — Over 25 years treating:

Foot Pain Ingrown Toenails Thick Fungal Nails Heel pain Sports Injuries Patients with Diabetes Neuropathy Warts Bunions Hammertoes Painful Corns & Calluses

Dr. Lorie robinson

Los Olivos

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, The Independent, 12 E. Figueroa St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101; or fax: 965-5518; or email: letters@independent.com. Unabridged versions and more letters appear at independent.com/opinions.

Board Certified ABFAS

5370 Hollister Ave., Suite 7 805-683-5674 University Professional Bldg.

Medicare, Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield accepted

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

19


Celebrate SB’s 17th Annual

Creek Week

September 17-25, 2016

17

• 8am-1pm SB Aquathon with Channelkeeper Swim, SUP, surf and clean up Leadbetter Beach. For details visit aquathon.info. saturday

• 9am-12pm Coastal Cleanup Day Help clean up various creek & beach locations Countywide. Sign up to volunteer at your favorite spot at sbprojectcleanwater.org/ccd.

• 10am Carpinteria Salt Marsh Docent Tour Meet at the Salt Marsh entrance on Ash Avenue near Sandyland Road. For details contact Andrea at (805) 684-8077. • 10-11:30am Housing and Habitat: North Campus Faculty Housing at UCSB Meet at coastal access parking lot at Phelps Road & Cannon Green in Goleta. For details contact Katie Maynard at kmaynard@geog.ucsb.edu. • Check sbcreekweek.com for newly added events!

18

• 9:30am Wildlife Paddle with the City of Carpinteria Explore the coast by land and kayak. Space is limited, $5 RSVP Required to Erin Maker at sunday erinm@ci.carpinteria.ca.us.

23 friday

• 9:30am Wildlife Paddle with the City of Carpinteria Explore the coast by land and kayak. Space is limited, $5 RSVP Required. For details contact Erin Maker at erinm@ci.carpinteria.ca.us.

• 9:30-11am Leadbetter Beach Clean-Up with BabywearingSB Bring the whole family to clean up Leadbetter Beach. For details contact Jen Hollywood at jhollywood@santabarbaraca.gov. • 4-6pm Bird Walk with the City of Goleta Meet at foot of the pier at Goleta Beach County Park. For details contact Everett King at (805) 961-7565 or eking@cityofgoleta.org. • Check sbcreekweek.com for newly added events!

24

• 10am-12pm Land Shark Tour with the City of Santa Barbara Creeks Division Space is limited, $5 RSVP required. Visit bit.ly/LandShark2016 to sign up! For details contact Liz saturday Smith at (805) 897-2606 or LSmith@SantaBarbaraCA.gov.

• 10am-12pm San Jose Creek Clean-Up with the Environmental Defense Center & City of Goleta Meet at footbridge over San Jose Creek at Berkeley Rd in Goleta. For details contact Brian Trautwein at BTrautwein@EnvironmentalDefenseCenter.org or (805) 963-1622 x108. • 10am Carpinteria Salt Marsh Docent Tour Meet at the Salt Marsh entrance on Ash Avenue near Sandyland Road. For details contact Andrea at (805) 684-8077. • 10am-3pm OceanFest at the REEF at UCSB Family celebration with activities for all ages. Park at Lot 10 at UCSB ($4 for all day) and ride shuttle to Campus Point. For details contact Jodi Switzer at jodi.switzer@ucsb.edu. • Check sbcreekweek.com for newly added events!

• 12pm-3pm Arroyo Burro Watershed Event with Urban Creeks Council & Friends of Arroyo Burro Explore the City of Santa Barbara’s new open space park on Arroyo Burro. Meet at the end of Alan Rd. For details contact Eddie Harris at eharris@silcom.com. • Check sbcreekweek.com for newly added events!

20

• 5:30-6:30pm Getting Back to Our Roots: North Campus Open Space at UCSB Meet at Ocean Meadows Golf Course parking lot, 6925 Whittier Drive in Goleta. tuesday For details contact Katie Maynard at kmaynard@geog.ucsb.edu.

• Check sbcreekweek.com for newly added events!

Carpinteria Wildlife Paddle

Goleta Bird Walk

21

• 12:30-1:30pm Tour Goleta Sanitary District’s Wastewater Treatment Plant Meet at One William wednesday Moffett Place. Wear closed-toe shoes and be prepared to climb stairs. RSVP required to Everett King at (805) 961-7565 or eking@cityofgoleta.org.

• 5:30pm Arroyo Burro Restoration at Barger Canyon Tour with the Creeks Division Meet at 620 Laguna Street. Wear sturdy closed-toe shoes. RSVP required to Liz Smith at (805) 897-2606 or LSmith@SantaBarbaraCA.gov. • Check sbcreekweek.com for newly added events!

Join the Creek Week Scavenger Hunt!

Celebrate Creek Week, explore our watersheds, and win!

OceanFest at UCSB’s REEF

Explore Ecology’s Wonders of Water

25

• 11am-1:30pm Wonders of Water Children’s Creek Week Celebration with Explore Ecology Family fun at the Watershed Resource Center at Arroyo Burro sunday County Beach Park, 2981 Cliff Drive. For details contact Caroline Bargo at (805) 884-0459 or caroline@exploreecology.org.

• 11am-3pm Arroyo Hondo Watershed Tour Join The Land Trust for a tour of the Arroyo Hondo Preserve. RSVP required to John Karamitsos at johnk@cosbpw.net by 5pm Tuesday, September 20. Please include contact info and number of people in your party - minimum of 12 participants are needed to avoid event cancellation. • 1-2pm Redirecting Runoff: San Clemente at UCSB Tour the San Clemente Habitat Restoration Area. Meet at the West end of San Clemente Housing by El Colegio Road. Park in Lot 30 at UCSB ($5 for 2 hours) or free street parking may be available in Isla Vista. For details contact Katie Maynard at kmaynard@geog.ucsb.edu. • Check sbcreekweek.com for newly added events!

Like us at facebook.com/sbcreekweek or visit sbcreekweek.com for more information!

1) Download the GooseChase app on your iPhone or Android. 2) Find the “Creek Week 2016” game, password “creekweek” to join. 3) Complete missions and win fun prizes!

Visit facebook.com/sbcreekweek for details!

20

THE INDEPENDENT

IndyFullPageCreekWeek.indd 1

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com 9/12/2016 11:08:59 AM


Opinions

cont’d

on the beat

Helping Hands Across the Sea

a group of Santa Barbara women are setting an example to the world. Led by Janet Reineck, they’ve used dance as a means to raise funds to aid survivors of the catastrophic 1994 genocide in the African nation of Rwanda. Money raised by World Dance for Humanity goes to 20 communities of people by “providing goats, cattle, student stipends, training, and support for small businesses,” Reineck told me. “Each of these communities has its own profile. One is made up of former sex workers, while others include genocide widows, unwed mothers, orphans, disenfranchised poor farmers, and the Twa [pygmies], who emerged from their forest life to try to survive in the lowlands. “Our largest group, Never Again Fellowship, is an extraordinary community focused on reconciliation between the Hutu, Tutsi, and the Twa — the three ethnic groups who had perpetrated or been the victims of unfathomable atrocities during the 1994 genocide. “In 2008 a dozen people from the three groups made the courageous move to pool their efforts to stay alive. The idea worked. The members live together, work together, and are planning their future together, having sworn ‘never again’ to [engage in] ethnic violence. “Our support has given them the means and confidence to save money, invest, and grow.

Fran Collin

GENOCIDE OF 1994: Quietly, without fanfare,

DANCE TO THRIVE: Through her World Dance for Humanity, Janet Reineck (center, in pink) raised funds to help women of the Twirererabana Cooperative purchase this farmland in Rwanda.

There are now 2,666 people in Never Again Fellowship, divided into seven cooperatives.” Reineck, a 2012 Independent Local Hero, teaches dance classes at the Santa Barbara Dance Center and City College Adult Ed, with all proceeds going to Rwanda. Throughout the year, the World Dancers reach out to wheelchair-bound seniors and disabled adults, “connecting through music and movement. “When we’re not dancing, World Dancers volunteer at the Westside Boys & Girls Club, helping them serve 100 kids a day with limited staff,” said Reineck. On October 29, about 200 dancers will move as one in the Courthouse Sunken Gardens, performing Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” joining dancers in a worldwide movement, according to Reineck. Donations will go to the Rwanda Education Fund. Rehearsals start

Sunday, September 17. Details are at worlddancersforhumanity.org. Smaller “flash mobs” in Halloween-ish costumes will perform around town and in the North County. To us, a goat may be just a rural oddity, but to the poor of Rwanda, a goat is hope on four legs. World Dance partnered with Santa Barbaran Betsy Kain’s Goats for Life and then took on her legacy when she retired in 2013. A woman named Catherine, as she held a black goat, said, “I am holding a brighter future for me and my family …. A goat is going to be the bringer of … change in my family. We live on doing agriculture in a poor way, [but] this goat will positively impact our production, and it will provide us with financial necessities while having offspring from it. “There is no way to thank donors [who made] this happen for us. God bless them.”

Barney Brantingham can be reached at barney@independent.com or 965-5205 x230. He writes online columns and a print column for Thursdays.

A woman named Gratia said: “These are not just goats. They are so meaningful to us. We used to keep livestock before genocide, but genocide has taken everything away, including our hope to have livestock again. We did not have hope for our future, but because of you and your support, we have our livestock back, and we have hope for the future. “We thank you to infinity and beyond, and I cannot thank you enough ….” Margaritha sits next to a handsome blackand-white goat: “A goat you see me holding is the answer to my wish to belong to the community of change, well-being, hope, and respect in all ways. This goat will soon take me there. I am so appreciative to our donors.” Peter Haslund, member of the Santa Barbara City College Board of Trustees, is board chair of World Dance. “I don’t know of any other philanthropic endeavor that more directly affects the lives of desperate people more effectively or more immediately than World Dance for Humanity. “The driving force is the ability to provide a sense of hope where none existed, a sense of encouragement when only conflict prevailed, a sense of a positive future for all, regardless of tribal affiliation.” In all, World Dancers donated $91,000 to Rwanda communities last year, Reineck said. — Barney Brantingham

Presenting the world’s finest classical artists since 1919

independent.com

September 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENt

21


Pacifica Open House October 1st

The October 1st Open House at Pacifica Graduate Institute will feature a presentation by Pacifica Graduate Kelly Carlin, daughter of legendary comedian George Carlin.

There’s still time to become part of Pacifica’s 40th Anniversary Class. Start your application online at pacifica.edu and attend our Open House on October 1st. The event is free but advance registration is required. Registration includes lunch and a $5 gift certificate for Pacifica’s Bookstore. The $75 application fee will be waived.

Kelly will discuss memoir, personal mythology, and

Register at pacifica.edu, call 805.879.7305 or email admissions@pacifica.edu

individuation—topics she dealt with in depth during the creation of her recent book, A Carlin Home Companion: Growing Up with George.

22

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com


cover

STory

Is It

T

High Time?

his November, exactly 20 years after California became the first in the union to decriminalize medical marijuana, state voters will decide once and for all if they can get high for fun, legally. Four other states and the District of Columbia have already passed recreational cannabis laws, but if Proposition 64 is approved in California— the sixth largest economy in the world where California marijuana is the biggest cash crop — it will send waves of drug-policy sea change across the country. The creators and supporters of Proposition 64, the Adult Use of Marijuana Act, or AUMA, say the ballot measure will finally legitimize an activity in which millions of Golden State residents already partake. They argue that taxing and regulating the commodity will create a tax boon of a billion dollars a year, benefiting youth programs and law enforcement, and that the new state oversight will set quality-control and pricing standards that would edge out Mexican cartels. Opponents, however, say the initiative would expose more children to a gateway drug, flood the roads with stoned drivers, and actually increase black-market activity. More immediate is the fact that marijuana remains classified as a Schedule I drug by the Federal Drug Enforcement agency, which puts it in the same category as heroin and ecstasy. U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein and many sheriffs and district attorneys have all come out against the ballot measure. Nevertheless, Prop. 64 appears poised for voter approval —Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, the California Medical Association, mega-rich tech philanthropist Sean Parker, and many others support it; the “Yes” campaign has vastly out-fundraised the “No” contingent so far, $11.7 million to $173,000; and the most recent polls showed 63.8 percent of respondents favor legalizing recreational marijuana. In 2010, California voters narrowly rejected a similar but less carefully crafted ballot initiative. Not as measureable has been the steady cultural acceptance of marijuana as a viable medical aid and means for adult relaxation. The seeds of this revolutionary change, planted in the ’60s and ’70s, now seem to be bearing political fruit. In November, eight more states will decide whether to

medical marijuana community is watching the ballot item with intense interest, curious how it will affect the price of medicine. And casual pot smokers, from those harking back to the 1960s to young adults who just became of legal age, are beginning to wrap their heads around the idea that they might soon be able to stroll into a store and buy a few joints.

Santa Barbara and the Pot Prop by Tyler Hayden

allow recreational or medical marijuana. That most certainly will widen the gap between state and federal marijuana laws, therefore increasing pressure on Congress and the next presidential administration to reconcile the conflicting policies. Santa Barbara County would surely be affected by the AUMA, as it’s uniquely positioned to grow an even healthier marijuana industry than it already supports. Even now, farmland and greenhouses are being bought by Prop. 64 prospectors. The City of Santa Barbara’s relatively permissive laws allowing medicinal storefronts and delivery services have perhaps paved the way for a recreational sector. And as a tourist destination that boasts world-class wine and beachside sunsets, Santa Barbara may one day, too, be marketed as a premier destination for cannabis connoisseurs. However, detractors say, all this could also portend the ill effects of a speculative market. Police officials and neighborhood activists point to the crime and lawsuits that came with the city’s initial gold rush of medical marijuana dispensaries, wiped out five years ago in a federal crackdown. Prop. 64 opponents in Santa Barbara also worry that the county and our cities will never see a dime of the new tax dollars that a ravenous state government will be collecting. With election season underway, Santa Barbara’s politicians are starting to voice strong opinions on both sides of the issue, as it will be up to them whether recreational marijuana businesses are even allowed in their jurisdictions. The

•••

Prop. 64 supporters argue that marijuana would be subjected to many of the same restrictions as those put on alcohol. Only state-licensed businesses could sell it to adults 21 and older through established storefronts or delivery services. People 21 and older could smoke marijuana only at a private residence or permitted business. They could possess up to an ounce of the plant or eight grams of its concentrate (oil or hash), and grow a maximum of six plants in their homes. Smoking in public or while driving would be illegal. Any business that sold alcohol or tobacco would not also be able to sell marijuana. Similarly, businesses allowing on-site consumption could not also allow drinking alcohol or smoking cigarettes. The initiative covers all forms of marijuana use, including vaping and edibles. It also acknowledges that weed is still illegal in the eyes of the federal government, but it states that the U.S. Department of Justice declared it would not prosecute businesses or individuals complying with state cannabis laws. Most significantly, Prop. 64 would allow city and county governments to ban all recreational marijuana businesses. Personal use and cultivation, as well as transport of marijuana between jurisdictions, could not be outlawed, however. This entire regulatory framework would be overseen by a new state agency, the Bureau of Marijuana Control. It would issue permits for commercial cultivation, as well as manage quality-control inspections, labeling requirements, tracking procedures, and all the other governmental oversight that comes with selling an intoxicant. The bureau would also regulate medical marijuana. Prop. 64 would place a state excise tax of 15 percent on retail sales of marijuana, and state cultivation taxes of $9.25 per ounce of flowers and $2.75 per ounce of leaves. The revenue generated— generated predicted to reach as high as a billion dol-

>>> independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

23


ved

Impro d n a w e N

ALEXANDER CouRt Memory Care

story

paul wellman file photos

cover

ALEXANDER COURT A Specialized Memory Care Experience

PRE-COMPLETION SPECIALS AVAILABLE CALL FOR DETAILS

Alexander Court Memory Care (805) 898-2650 325 W. Islay St • Santa Barbara, CA 93101 WWW.ALEXANDERCOURTSB.COM • LIC# 4258016752

12 Lunch items under $10 M-F Fresh Fish, Salads, Pasta, Burgers & More

Santa Barbara’s best Italian

N ig htly di n n er specials Osso Bucco FRI DAY Rese rvati on s 965-4351 f r e e pa r k i n g i n r e a r

- 75

min.

new happy hour M-F 3-7

Restaurant • Lounge est. 1979

Award-Winning Italian

1012 State Street 24

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

lars annually — would be funneled to youth programs rado, where he said impaired driving rates spiked 48 (60 percent), environmental cleanup of illegal grow percent and 36 percent, respectively, after those states sites (20 percent), and initiatives to reduce impaired legalized recreational marijuana. “It’s been a disaster driving and offset any negative public-health impacts all the way around,” he declared. Further, there isn’t a created by the law (20 percent). Marijuana is already reliable way to determine if someone is driving high. on track to become a $6.6 billion market in California Blood analysis doesn’t work, as THC can stay in a perby 2020, according to market research firms. The state son’s bloodstream for weeks, and field sobriety tests currently accounts for nearly half of all pot sales in the are an imperfect science. Brown recalled a recent incident in Ventura where a stoned driver hit and killed country, both legal and illegal. The Tax Foundation, a Washington, D.C.–based a motorist stopped on the side of the road. “We have think tank, just reported weed revenues in Colorado enough misery and tragedy from substances that are and Washington have come in higher than expected. already legal,” Brown summed up. “We don’t need to For the fiscal year ending June 30, Colorado collected make it easier to buy another intoxicant.” Ed Stonefelt, president and CEO of the county’s $157 million in marijuana taxes, licenses, and fees, up 53 percent from a year earlier. Oregon collected more Center on Alcohol and Drug Abuse (CADA), which than $25 million by July 31, higher than the $18.4 mil- has treated 5,000 students and their families at its lion projected. If every state legalized pot and cap- youth addiction center during the last decade, has tured most of the black market, they’d collect a total of witnessed firsthand the detrimental effects of marijuana on young people $18 billion a year, the Tax Foundation projected. who use and abuse it. He referenced a NorthThat’s the same amount western University study tobacco taxes generated in 2013. that showed abnormal Sheriff Bill Brown, like brain development in many of his colleagues, heavy pot users at a thinks Prop. 64 is a teryoung age, which led to poor memory, pararible idea, despite all its promises. The enticement noia, and schizophrenia. of tax revenue is a predict“Legalization does not able formula used by pubequate to safe,” Stonefelt lic interest groups to win said of Prop. 64, which over voters, he said, but includes provisions it is a drop in the bucket aimed at protecting WHAT’S AHEAD? Ed Stonefelt, CADA president and CEO, compared to costs of kids, such as keeping predicted that an early fragmented market of pot purveyors will eventually give way to large cannabis corporations. “It’s going to controlling the problems growing and smoking be the Wild West and a new frontier for Big Marijuana,” he said. caused by the law. out of public view and Prop. 64 has been prohibiting businesses attacked for allowing marijuana ads on primetime from opening near schools.“That’s a false premise,” he TV, Sheriff Brown said. Children would be subjected to complained, “because you’re simply making distributhe Joe Camel effect of cartoon characters peddling pot tion and consumption easier. Prop. 64 would make in the middle of their favorite shows. The ballot argu- [CADA] flourish, and that’s exactly what we don’t want ment against Prop. 64 stresses the advertising point to do.” more than any other. But proponents call the argument Dr. Cary Matsuoka, Santa Barbara Unified School a red herring, explaining federal law, which regulates District’s superintendent, has also seen too many California’s TV and radio stations, still prohibits adver- students zombified by heavy marijuana use. Today’s tising a substance the DEA classifies illegal. The true potent product is nothing like the weed of the ’60s and legalities remain murky, and both sides were recently ’70s. “Once they get to the point of self-medicating, chided in court to tone down their ballot rhetoric on they really struggle,” he said.“They really are no longer students. They become so preoccupied with smoking the subject. For a predictor of what would happen on Califor- pot that they lose touch with reality.” It’s like a time-out nia’s roads and highways, Brown continued, look no from life, Matsuoka said, and checking out of school further than what’s occurred in Washington and Colo- for a few months to a year creates a number of long-

independent.com

paulwellman

Come See The Difference!

IT’S GOT THEIR VOTE: From left, 1st District Supervisor Salud Carbajal, State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson, and Santa Barbara Mayor Helene Schneider all support Proposition 64, in part because marijuana is so prevalent already. “For young people, this train left the station long ago,” said Jackson.


term consequences. Twenty percent of Santa Barbara Unified’s 11th graders admitted to using marijuana in a 2015 survey. “I don’t think legalizing, essentially condoning, another intoxicating substance is good for public safety,” said District Attorney Joyce Dudley. For young people, marijuana is too often a gateway drug, she said, and the public cost of dealing with addiction problems and the crimes they engender “will far outweigh any possible tax revenue.” Dudley also believes Prop. 64 would ultimately help cartels, as a taxed product will inevitably create a market for cheaper, untaxed alternatives. In the last 10 years, the Santa Barbara District Attorney’s Office has dealt with more than 4,200 cases that included one or more marijuana charges. The AUMA would mandate the resentencing of individuals arrested for marijuana offenses now made legal. To reopen those cases would mean a lot of extra work for the department, said Deputy District Attorney John Savrnoch. “You are revisiting an issue that was previously resolved and adding it to an already busy court calendar,” he said.

Dr. GreGory S. Keller rejuvalaSe MeDi Spa Southern California’S MoSt aDvanCeD MeDi Spa presents

The NATuRAl-loo l-looKiNG WAy WA WAy WA To A NeW fAce, iN leSS SS ThAN oNe houR.

• Immediate Results • Minimal Downtime

•••

For supporters of the Adult Use of Marijuana Act, temporary inconvenience to the government is a small price to pay after what they lament as decades of failed drug policy. Goleta City Councilmember Michael Bennett supports the proposition.“The war on marijuana has been an absolute, abject failure,” he said.“We’ve spent billions and incarcerated untold people, and for what?” If history has taught us anything, Bennett said, referencing Prohibition, it’s that such blanket criminalization does not work. Goleta currently has two medical marijuana dispensaries, both grandfathered in when the city put a moratorium on additional storefronts in 2009. The councilmember doesn’t think recreational businesses, in Goleta or anywhere else, would inspire crowds of new users, as some opponents predict. “They won’t make people start smoking,” he said. As a younger man, Bennett partook. “I did smoke, I did inhale, and I enjoyed every minute of it.” He doesn’t — Michael Bennett, anymore, but if the mood Goleta city councilmembeR strikes, he’d consider taking another drag. Still, he’s not rushing to the first store that opens, and he doesn’t see many other people doing that, either. Nationwide, pot use among teens peaked in the late 1990s and has been declining ever since, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Abuse rates across all age groups have been falling since 2002. Contrary to early prognostications, teenage use rates did not increase in either Washington or Colorado after marijuana was legalized in both states in 2012, their health departments have reported. Bennett is joined in his Prop. 64 opinion by a number of other Santa Barbara lawmakers. First District Supervisor Salud Carbajal, now running for Congress, said the current prohibition on marijuana “has wasted tax dollars and ruined countless lives.” A careful rollout of the law with clear guidelines and monitoring will “ultimately benefit our state,” he said. State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson said the AUMA would “really just be legalizing something that’s been going on for a long time. … For young people, this train left the station long ago.” Santa Barbara Mayor Helene Schneider said she agrees with Lt. Governor Newsom’s long list of arguments in favor of legalization. “It makes a lot of sense,” she said. Randy Rowse finds less logic in the law, which he called more emotional than practical.“People are in denial about pot,” he said.“It causes real harm.” If there’s to be anything gained from the AUMA, he went on, it’s an admittance that medical marijuana collective laws have been “a joke.”While some palliative care patients may legitimately need canna-

I did smoke, I did inhale, and I enjoyed every minute of it.

Advanced Suspension Technology LIFTS Underlying Facial Tissue

Non-Surgical way to lift facial skin - Introducing

Silhouette InstaLift™.

We are excited to announce that we are now offering Silhouette InstaLift™ - the latest facial rejuvenation procedure. Sagging skin is one of the major contributors to an aged and tired appearance. Silhouette InstaLift™ is a simple in-office procedure to re-contour your face by lifting the deeper layers of your skin for a more youthful appearance.

REJUVALASE MEDI SPA Gregory S. Keller, MD, F.A.C.S. 221 W. Pueblo St., Suite A, Santa Barbara

805-687-6408

www.GregoryKeller.com | www.RejuvalaseMediSpa.com

10-20% OFF ALL 2016 BikES

20-30% off all 2016 demo bikes

15 HitcHcock Way Santa BarBara

(across from Whole Foods)

5887 HolliSter aVe. Goleta VeloPro.com

>>> independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

25


story

paulwellman file photo

cover

MISSION DRIVEN: Ryan Howe is set to open Santa Barbara’s first medical marijuana dispensary after the federal sweeps of 2011 and 2012. He said he personally has no interest in selling nonmedical marijuana but knows other dispensaries do.

$35 Single Color and Blow-dry Style With Riley or Olivia ($65 value)

*expires September 30, 2016

courtesy

NEW TALENT SPECIAL

bis, the system was too often gamed by teens bara County adopted regulations in January looking to toke up, he said. Rowse, who owns that prohibit the cultivation and processing the Paradise Café and Bar, and whose wife is of medical marijuana. Long-standing grow an outspoken critic of all things marijuana, sites that have conformed to the state’s Comconceded alcohol has produced a lot of pain passionate Use Act were allowed to stay, but and heartache around the world. Still, he the county put the kibosh on any new pot said, weed shouldn’t be treated so cavalierly. farms. The working theory among county State Assemblymember Das Williams officials is that entrepreneurs say they’ll be said, if done correctly, legalization could growing medicinal marijuana when in fact deny drug cartels their largest source of they have every intention of switching to revenue. That would require a sophisticated recreational after November. The county Board of Supervisors hasn’t tracking system to ensure marijuana sold in California stores wasn’t actually grown south discussed Prop. 64 yet. Even if the AUMA is of the border. But Williams said he isn’t sure if the state is capable of implementing such a safeguard at the moment. The stakes may be highest in Supervisor Doreen Farr’s 3rd District. “I know the agricultural community is very interested in this,” she said. “It’s a big deal.” Farr and others have heard of land grabs taking place up and down the coast. Growers hoping to corner the recreational market early FIELDS OF GREEN: Cody Hemmah with My Farm Collective grows are leasing and buying up medical marijuana on San Marcos Pass Road for more than 500 North County farmland and patients. “I’ve seen it help so many people,” he said. Carpinteria greenhouses at a rapid rate. Farr recently met with two young entrepreneurs lobbying her voted in, state licenses for nonmedical marijuana businesses and cultivation sites won’t to support their proposed operation. The worry, Farr explained, is that mari- start being issued until 2018. Still, given the juana could one day become Santa Barbara’s potential implications, Supervisor Janet Wolf main cash crop to the detriment of its other hopes that “we’ll be proactive with this.” harvests. “Agriculture always has to be nimble and flexible to get the most dollars per acre,” she said. “And it will be hard to beat marijuana.” Eventually, if a recreational weed When Santa Barbara County’s medical market becomes deeply rooted, strawber- marijuana dispensaries started withering ries and broccoli will grow scarce, and their under federal crackdowns in 2011 and 2012, prices would shoot way up.“That really does delivery services became the only means by which patients, real or pretend, could receive concern me,” said Farr. County planner Allen Bell confirmed his their cannabis. Since then, these distribution office is regularly receiving inquiries from operations have flourished, mostly under people looking to build commercial opera- the radar. They’re technically regulated by tions. But Bell then explained how Santa Bar- 20-year-old state law, but they receive very

•••

Cut | Color | Waxing | Retail 1428 Chapala Street | 962-1884 darinjonstudio | Facebook | Instagram | Yelp 26

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com


nostalgia for a short time and then quickly become passé, based on what he’s seen in Washington and Colorado.“For the first six months to a year, baby boomers will walk into a store and get their minds blown,” he said. “After that, it’s just another way to have a little fun in the privacy of your own home.’” Ryan Howe is poised to open the first medical marijuana dispensary, at 118 North Milpas Street, since the crackdown thanks to the City Council voting six years ago to permit three medical storefronts. He said he has no desire to wade into the recreational pool, which he thinks will get crowded and messy when Big Marijuana takes over the market. “It’s going to be Miller beer versus Budweiser beer,” he predicted. Howe hopes casual on-site consumption isn’t allowed at dispensaries or stores. “I think marijuana is medical, so it should be treated that way.”And he’d like owners to use a high degree of care in deciding what they offer.“I don’t think gummies or candies or anything that a kid could mistake for a treat should be in the world of marijuana,” he said. Right now, mobile delivery services are selling Froot Poofs with pictures of Tokin’ Sam, as well as rice crispy treats and ice cream push pops laced with THC. For that reason, and a few others, Howe isn’t sure he’ll vote for the AUMA. He also scorned high-octane products that would catch many users by surprise — “moon rocks” are a hunk of marijuana coated with concentrated oil and sprinkled with kief, the dry resin of cannabis flowers.“It’s like taking an acid hit,” Howe said.

FREE Film Screenings

The National Parks: America’s Best Idea

Sat, Sep 24 / Granada Theatre

12 PM The Scripture of Nature (1851-1890) 2 PM The Last Refuge (1890-1915) 4 PM The Empire of Grandeur (1915-1919)

Sun, Sep 25 / Granada Theatre 12 PM Going Home (1920-1933) 2 PM Great Nature (1933-1945) 4 PM The Morning of Creation (1946-1980)

– Photo Contest! – Submit your best National Park photo by Sep 19 to Info@ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu and enter to win an Island Packers Excursion Pass for two to Santa Rosa Island. Photo finalists will be displayed prior to the film screenings at the Granada Theatre and published in the Santa Barbara Independent.

Lecture

Ken Burns

The National Parks: A Treasure House of Nature’s Superlatives

•••

“The most accomplished documentary filmmaker of his generation” The New York Times

As Howe prepares for the grand opening of his dispensary, Canopy, in the coming months, he’ll also be watching a city measure on November’s ballot that will ask voters whether they want to slap a 20 percent tax on medical and — if Prop. 64 passes — recreational cannabis sold within Santa Barbara. City Hall estimated the Santa Barbara Marijuana Control Act would annually generate an estimated $1.1 million-$2.2 million a year for the General Fund, which pays for basic services such as police enforcement and road repair. Earlier this year, the

In celebration of the National Park Service’s 100th anniversary, Ken Burns will revisit the stories of those who devoted themselves to saving the land they loved. This special lecture will be an appreciation for what the parks have added to our collective and individual spirit.

Sun, Oct 2 / 12 PM / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $25 / $15 all students (with valid ID) A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

paulwellman file photo

little oversight and are considered a low priority among local law enforcement. Under the package of pending medicinal regulations signed into law last year, called the Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act, they will be more tightly governed. Under the AUMA, nonmedical deliveries would be allowed but only through statelicensed businesses. Zach Schaefer has helped run Evergreen Compassionate Care since 2013, supplying 2,200 Santa Barbara area patients with marijuana. He estimated there are approximately 40 delivery services sprinkled throughout the county, only a handful of which actually abide by state rules, have a license, and pay their taxes. He’s one of them. A search of weedmaps.com, the Yelp of the medical marijuana world, confirms Schaefer’s overall estimate, with dozens of cannabis runners from Lompoc to Carpinteria advertising all manner of strains, edibles, and tinctures. Schaefer doesn’t know where he lands on Prop. 64. “On one hand, it will benefit patients by creating a more stable atmosphere,” he said.“On the other hand, medicinal marijuana will be taxed to pay for the costs of testing and controlling nonmedical.” That, Schaefer said, could drive up prices for patients. In the meantime, he’s busy fielding daily solicitations from growers who want him to buy and distribute their product.“I have to fight them off with a stick,” he said. Zach Pitts with Goddess Delivers is wholeheartedly excited about Prop. 64. “It’s something we desperately need,” he said. “It’s funny to be in an industry where you’re crying out for authorities to regulate you.” The AUMA would “create jobs and prosperity,” Pitts said, and finally establish a set of clear laws that protect patients and their providers. “In Washington and Colorado, it was stunning how people got on board when they knew they wouldn’t be raided for following the rules,” he said. Goddess Delivers, based in Southern California, distributes anywhere in the state overnight. Many of its patients, older and with a preference for front-porch service, live in Santa Barbara. Pitts predicts if Prop. 64 passes, the availability of recreational marijuana will spark a bit of novelty and

Happy 100th Birthday National Park Service!

note special time

Event Sponsor: Supported in part by:

Presented in collaboration with Channel Islands National Park and the UCSB Natural Reserve System

The Lynda and Bruce Thematic Learning Initiative: Creating a Better World With support from our Community Partner the Orfalea Family Corporate Season Sponsor:

(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu

SUPER SKEPTICAL: Councilmember Randy Rowse has grave concerns about Prop. 64, mainly its potential impact on children. But he’s hopeful it could finally bring order to the often abused medical collective system set up by state law 20 years ago. “The AUMA is one of the first reasonable approaches to get it out of the Beavis and Butt-head mode it’s been in so far,” he said.

>>>

Media Sponsor:

Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222 www.GranadaSB.org independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

27


DiD D you know... Ants often go unnoticed outdoors until their nests and numbers start to swell. When weather extremes or a lack of food or moisture send them foraging, some ants move inside and wreak havoc in your home. The good news is you

can stop these frequent, persistent pests in their tracks — before they make their way indoors. effective, proactive treatment can protect your home and its

A COMMUNITY

perimeter from ant invasions.

dedicated TO EDUCATION

Free estimates! Bed Bugs, Rats, Mice, Ticks, Ants, Fleas, Spiders, Roaches

Kevin O’Connor President

mart Eco S duct n Pro Gree

VOted #1 Best Pest & termite CO.

805-687-6644 • www.OConnorPest.com

For over 45 years, The Santa Barbara & Ventura Colleges of Law has prepared students for successful careers in law by creating a learning environment that is supportive and fosters growth

PAM FISHER, N.P. Certified Naturopath and Holistic Health Practitioner Office: 2030 Viborg St, Unit 103, Solvang, Ca. 93463 www.thehealthycloset.com

LEARN MORE AT C O L L E G E S O F L AW. E D U

No Text Phone: 805-863-5313 email: pamfisher@thehealthycloset.com

Financial aid may be available for those who qualify. The Colleges of Law is regionally accredited by the WASC Senior College and University Commission (WSCUC). The JD program is accredited by the Committee of Bar Examiners of the State of California.

Medical Marijuana

Evaluations

Recommendation Letter/ ID Card $100.00

805-497-9190 28

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

G.C. Urban Grow


story courtesy

cover

Dr. GreGory S. Keller rejuvalaSe MeDi Spa Southern California’S MoSt aDvanCeD MeDi Spa SAVE THE DATE

END OF SUMMEr EVENt thUrSDay, SEPtEMBEr 22nd

11:30aM – 2pm

CALL TO RSVP 805-687-6408

Attendees Will Enjoy: Live Presentations Cellfina – Ultherapy Raffle – Food & Beverages Complimentary Consultations Specials on Package Pricing

NOT ON MY WATCH: Sheriff Bill Brown stood behind a mountain of seized marijuana when he announced in 2007 that the murder of 23-year-old Adan Ruiz — his body found dumped in a sleeping bag along Highway 154 — had been linked to a massive cartel grow site outside Lompoc.

city approved an ordinance that permits qualified medical marijuana patients to grow 100 contiguous square feet of marijuana indoors or outdoors for personal use. Currently, Santa Barbara is the only city in the entire tri-county area to permit medical dispensaries, a fact not lost on some councilmembers who think the city unwisely gave clearance to a type of purveyor they say attracts crime and costs a lot of money to enforce. Police spokesperson Sergeant Riley Harwood said while there wasn’t an increase in serious crime around the former iteration of dispensaries, they did generate complaints over parking and loitering. There were a few robberies, as well. Even more concerning, Harwood said, are the underground labs making concentrated marijuana with volatile chemicals. Explosions and injuries have occurred.

It’s funny to be

in an industry where you’re

crying out for authorities to

regulate you.

—Zach Pitts with Goddess Delivers

For years, enforcing low-level marijuana laws has been at the bottom of the police department’s to-do list, said Harwood. Officers still arrest dealers and make big busts, but the overall de-prioritization was brought about by new municipal code, limited resources, and subtle messaging from state and federal prosecutors that such cases are often more trouble than they’re worth.“Sometimes you’re doing a lot of investigation and work for a case that ends in probation,” said Harwood. Since 2010, Santa Barbara police have issued 1,772 misdemeanor citations for simple possession; they’ve made 165 felony arrests for sales and transportation. If the AUMA goes on the books, Harwood expects his department will start fielding complaints from residents annoyed by their neighbors smoking and growing marijuana. Live plants themselves are

quite pungent, Harwood noted, “and a lot of people take offense to the smell of others smoking around them.” From a legal standpoint, Harwood said, he isn’t sure what officers will be able to do in those situations. The Sheriff ’s Office still spends considerable resources on marijuana-related crimes that are a real threat to public safety—since 2010, the department has recovered or apprehended 30 panga boats carrying 41,000 pounds of Mexican weed. Last year alone, it eradicated 43,000 plants in illegal backcountry grows, which are often tended by gun-toting cartel members. The Soberanes Fire that scorched more than 67 square miles of Big Sur forest and killed one person was started by an abandoned campfire at an illegal grow. Over the last six years, the Sheriff’s Office has made 1,465 misdemeanor arrests and 843 felony apprehensions for marijuana crimes. Prison sentences can result from simple possession charges, but those cases are exceedingly rare, and are often the result of a parole or probation violation. The U.S. Justice Department estimated that 3.6 percent of state prison inmates in 2013 had drug possession as their most serious offense, but that includes all drugs, not just marijuana. NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) has said there are 50,000-110,000 cannabis-only offenders in prison throughout the United States, most for cultivation, sales, or trafficking. Last Tuesday, the Santa Barbara City Council took early steps toward implementing an emergency ordinance that would prohibit the local licensing of nonmedical marijuana businesses for two years while Santa Barbara gets used to the idea of Prop. 64, if it passes.“This would give us maximum flexibility,” said Mayor Schneider. Staff needs time to study the measure. The vote to approve the ordinance, which needs ayes from six of the seven councilmembers, is set for mid-October. With an election in November 2017 for three council seats and the mayor’s position, it’s difficult to predict how Santa Barbara’s decision makers will regard nonmedical marijuana in the coming years. Residents have proved relatively tolerant of cannabis on the whole—in 2010 they voted down with gusto a measure that would have banned dispensaries outright—but whether those same views will survive on the dais is hard to say. And if past intense debates on the subject are any indication, Santa Barbara is in for another wild ride.“This is something we need to n get ready for,” said the mayor.

ULthEraPy — the Non-Invasive Lift Ultherapy is the only non-invasive procedure FDacleared to lift skin on the neck, under the chin and on the eyebrow. Now also FDa-cleared to improve the appearance of lines and wrinkles on the décolletage, Ultherapy can help you achieve a fresher, more youthful look from your brow to your chest! CELLFINa — Smooth that Lasts

an FDa-cleared, minimally invasive, one-time procedure that is clinically proven to treat the primary structural cause of cellulite for long-lasting results.

Freeze Your Fat away & get Beach Ready with

Real Results for Both men & women

Photos courtesy of Leyda E. Bowes, MD (–6pounds)

Receive $100 off each area! For a limited time

Boost YouR CoolsCulpting® Results BY 22% with ZimmeR Zwave! Complimentary ZWave when bundled with CoolSculpting ~

$1,100 in value!

REJUVALASE MEDI SPA Gregory S. Keller, MD., F.A.C.S. 221 W. Pueblo St., Suite A, Santa Barbara

805-687-6408

www.GregoryKeller.com | www.RejuvalaseMediSpa.com

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

29


You

voted

for them; now it's time to

celebrate

!

them

You’re

Invited!

★ BEST

FEST ★

A Celebration of the

2016 best of santa anta barbara barbara®

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

thursdaY, thursdaY hursda , october 20 hursdaY

Carriage Museum of Santa Barbara • 5:30-9:00 PM ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tickets available at

independent.com/

bestfest

Food • drinks • photobooth

presented by our winners

with beats by dJ darla bea

30 Y E A R S

30

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com


week I n d e p e n d e n t Ca l e n da r

e h t

sept.

15-21 by terry Ortega and rIchIe deMarIa

members of the S.B. Astronomical Unit will be on hand to answer your spacey questions. 7-10pm. Keck Telescope, Westmont Observatory, Westmont College, 955 La Paz Rd. Free. Call 565-6272. tinyurl.com/

courtesy

courtesy

As always, find the complete listings online at independent.com/events. And if you have an event coming up, submit it at independent.com/eventsubmit. Call 884-0459.

sbprojectcleanwater.org/ccd 9/17: First Annual S.B. Aquathon Make a splash and dive in with other dedicated ocean lovers of all ages at this all-day athletic event and fundraiser, where you can compete to be the fastest in 500m, 1K, and 1.5K swims to benefit S.B. Channelkeeper’s ocean-preservation efforts. 8am-1pm. Leadbetter Beach, 801 Shoreline Dr. $45. Call 563-3377.

WestmontPublicTelescopeNight

9/16-9/21: The Mary Jane McCord Planned Parenthood OpeningNight Reception and Book Sale The largest used book sale in the tri-county area, this Planned Parenthood fundraiser will offer thousands of carefully selected titles, ranging from American-history to young-adult books to guides on business, cookbooks, and literature. The sale runs through September 25. Thu. opening reception: 5-9pm; $25. Fri.-Sat.: 10am8pm. Sun.: 10am-6pm. Mon., Wed.: noon-8pm. Earl Warren Showgrounds, 3400 Calle Real. Free. Call 722-1522.

9/16-9/18: CarneyMagic: A Show about Secrets, Mentors, and the Beauty of a Perfect Illusion Prepare to have your mind blown by this expectationdefying magic show, when John Carney, considered one of the top sleight-of-hand performers in the world, will put on a hilarious and unique evening of clever tricks, wit, and audience-participation segments. Fri.Sat.: 8pm; Sun.: 2pm. Plaza Playhouse Theater, 4916 Carpinteria Ave., Carpinteria. $25. Call 684-6380.

9/15:

Cliff Simon and Loren Stephens Co-authors Cliff Simon

and Loren Stephens will sign copies of Paris Nights: My Year at the Moulin Rouge, a memoir about Simon’s journey from being a bored 27-yearold in South Africa to becoming a can-can dancer in Paris, training for the Olympics in London, enrolling in the South African military, and then coming back to the Moulin Rouge and harsh street life of Paris. 7pm. Chaucer’s Books, 3321 State St. Free. Call 682-6787. chaucersbooks.com

thurSday 9/15 9/15: Jazz at the Plaza: Luis Muñoz & Teka Costa Rican composer and drummer Luis Muñoz—one of today’s most sensitive, melodic, talented jazz composers—will perform with Teka Penteriche on voice and guitar to benefit the S.B. Dance Institute, which teaches dance classes that help inspire children to realize their potential by motivating them to believe in themselves, value artistic expression, and develop a personal standard of excellence. 5-7pm. La Cumbre Plaza, 121 S. Hope Ave. Free. Call 312-9790.

shoplacumbre.com/events

9/15: S.B. Event Professionals Showcase Mix, mingle, and network with like-minded event professionals, and swap ideas on your next planning ventures with more than 25 vendors

plazatheatercarpinteria.com

9/16: Devon Tsuno’s Los Angeles River: Urban Reclamation With spray

as you enjoy live entertainment, a raffle, food, wine, and beer tastings. 6-9pm. Montecito Event Ctr., 30 Los Patos Way. Free. Call 569-6566. sbep.com

paint and acrylic on handmade papers and canvas, artist Devon Tsuno creates vivid portraits of the L.A. River’s ecosystem as commentaries on the intersection of urban and wild lives and the need for restoration. The exhibit shows through December 2, with a lecture on October 13. Reception: 5-7pm. Atkinson Gallery, SBCC, 721 Cliff Dr. Free. Call 965-0581 x3484. gallery.sbcc.edu

Friday 9/16

Saturday 9/17

9/16: Third Friday Swing Dance: Dave Stuckey and the Hot House Gang Swing into the weekend with hopping music from Dave Stuckey and the Hot House Gang, with a welcoming environment open to all levels with a beginning swing dance lesson. Class: 7:30pm; deejay: 8:15; band: 8:45-11:30pm. The Carrillo Ballroom, 100 E. Carrillo St. $12-$15. Call 897-2519.

dancesantabarbara.com

9/16: Westmont Public Telescope Night See Venus, Mars, and Saturn all sparkling in the September sky using Westmont’s telescope. Westmont professors and

9/17-9/18: Harvest of Colors: A Members’ Showcase Quilt Show

9/16-9/18: Solvang Danish Days From

aebleskiver-eating contests to Viking villages, the streets of Solvang will come alive with the sights, sounds, and tastes of the foundational cultures of the most Danish little town in California. Fri.: 4pm; Sat.-Sun.: 8:30am. Solvang. Free-$55. Call 350-0771. solvangdanishdays.org $15. Call 962-7776.

tinyurl.com/4thAnnualFeedTheFunk 9/17: Coastal Cleanup Day Head to the beach to assist in the effort with area organizations to clean up the thousands of pounds of garbage that pollute our beaches. Bring your own buckets, bags, gloves, and water, and wear sunscreen and shoes. Teens are eligible for community service hours, so bring your paperwork to be signed. 9am-noon. Various locations. Free.

This show will feature Quilting in Paradise Santa Barbara County, a group of more than 30 quilts depicting S.B. County, the two quilts that hung in Representative Lois Capps’s office in Washington, D.C., from 1995 to the present, more than 200 traditional, modern, and art quilts made by quilt members, activities for children and adults, demonstrations, a merchant mall, and a raffle. Proceeds will go toward the Coastal Quilters Guild. 10am-5pm. Earl Warren Showgrounds, 3400 Calle Real. Free-$10. Call 569-3930.

coastalquilters.org

9/17-9/18: S.B. County Riding Club Horse Show Gallop on over to see S.B. riders and their horses compete in jumping, hunting, and equitation in this thrilling horsemanship show. 8am-5pm. Earl Warren Showgrounds, 3400 Calle Real. Free. Call 484-4773. sbcrc.com

9/17: Summer Sips: A Celebration of Condors Wine takes wing at the last of the Summer Sips lecture series, when Dr. Estelle Sandhaus will discuss the iconic California condor in all its majesty as you enjoy a unique tasting menu paired with just the right wine. 4-6pm. Blaksley paul wellman file photo

booksale.ppsbvslo.org

aquathon.info

9/17: 4th Annual Feed the Funk Benefit Concert This year’s Feed the Funk will welcome all ages the first part of the evening, with The Jewish Federation’s Teen Comedy Club kicking off the evening, followed by the Cate School Advanced Jazz Combo and the Notes for Notes Jazz Villains. And then for the 21-and-older crowd, there will be all-star funk super group Funkstication, as well as The New Vibe, who will play a Prince tribute set. Proceeds go toward area teen mentorship arts and music programs. All ages: 7-9pm; ages 21+: 9pm-close. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10-

9/16-9/21:

The Mary Jane McCord Planned Parenthood Opening-Night Reception and

Book Sale The largest used book sale in the tri-county area, this Planned Parenthood fundraiser will offer thousands of carefully selected titles, ranging from American-history to young-adult books to guides on business, cookbooks, and literature. The sale runs through September 25. Thu. opening reception: 5-9pm; $25. Fri.-Sat.: 10am-8pm. Sun.: 10am-6pm. Mon., Wed.: noon8pm. Earl Warren Showgrounds, 3400 Calle Real. Free. Call 722-1522. booksale.ppsbvslo.org

>>> independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

31


restOre. rejuveNate. reNeW! exClusive to

sept.

Tighten your neck today. Call for your free consultation and special offers 805-687-6408

The Natural Lift Actual patient of Dr. Keller

Library, S.B. Botanic Garden, 1212 Mission Canyon Rd. $25-$35. Call 682-4726.

tinyurl.com/summersips

courtesy

15-21

Rejuvalase Medi Spa in Santa Barbara

Treatments for a Sexier Neck!

As always, find the complete listings online at independent.com/events. And if you have an event independent.com/events coming up, submit it at independent.com/eventsubmit.

9/17: Amy Schumer This hilarious comic has risen to the top with her frank humor about gender double-standards and the awkwardly funny pitfalls of the dating world, and she continues to stand out as a leading comic voice on contemporary issues. 7pm. S.B. Bowl, 1122 N. Milpas St. $64.50-$114.50. Call 962-7411.

sbbowl.com

9/17: Lovely Leaf Prints with Marilee Krause Preserve nature’s

Ultherapy Non-invasive lifting & tightening

delicate artistry through your own creativity, as Marilee Krause guides you with this workshop on making beautiful leaf prints. 10am-noon. Art from Scrap, 302 E. Cota. $8. Children ages 6 and younger must be accompanied by an adult. Call 884-0459 x11. exploreecology.org

9/17: De Marcos Fashion Academy 7th Annual Student Show

ThermiTight RF Real Results in One Treatment

The DMFA will once again showcase original up-and-coming student fashion designers, as well as established designers, using models trained by Jodi De Marcos in a live runway show in the foyer of this historic S.B. theater, with the show benefiting the Grace Fisher Foundation. 8pm. Arlington Theatre, 1317 State St. $50-$100. Call 963-4408.

tinyurl.com/DMFAStudentShow

9/17:

25th Annual Day of Caring Participate in a wide range of

important projects in Carpinteria, Goleta, and S.B., including painting and cleanup at the Veterans’ Memorial Building, landscaping at Bohnett Park, coastal cleanups, and more. The day will start with a kick-off breakfast at the Ben Page Youth Center. 8am-1pm. Ben Page Youth Ctr., 4540 Hollister Ave. Free. Call 965-8591. unitedwaysb.org

9/17: Picture This: Cataloging Digital Family Photographs Archivist, librarian, and genealogist Nancy Loe will teach you how to catalog your family photographs so that you can feel confident about keeping your captured memories secure. 9:30amnoon. First Presbyterian Church, 21 E. Constance St. Free. Call 886-5438.

sbgen.org

9/17: Montecito Trails Foundation BBQ Hikers, runners, bikers, and riders are invited to this annual event celebrating the

Courtesy of Thermi

outdoors. There will be guided hikes and horseback and bike rides before the BBQ, which will be followed by music, dancing, and an auction, with the majority of the proceeds going to trail maintenance. 9am3pm. Montecito Valley Ranch, at the corner of Sheffield Dr. and Ortega Hill Rd., Montecito. $50-$70. Call 969-3514.

tinyurl.com/MontecitoTrails FoundationBBQ

Sunday 9/18 9/18: British Art from Whistler to World War II Exhibit Opening With

Say Goodbye to Baldness!

pieces selected entirely from the permanent collection, this exhibit curated by SBMA art historian Peyton Skipwith captures British artistic sentiment as the industrial age met modernity, with more than 50 works from 1890-1945. The exhibit shows through January 8, 2017. Tue.-Sun.: 11am-5pm; Thu.: 11am-8pm. S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free-$10. Call 963-4364.

NOW Featuring SafeGrafts™ The most advanced technique. Minimal discomfort, no scarring, guaranteed results!

sbma.net

9/18: Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom Dance Performance This dance will

Come in for your complimentary surgical consultation with Dr. Keller

“Mission San Gabriel” (c. 1832) by Ferdinand Deppe

9/17:

rejuvalase medi spa Gregory s. Keller, md., F.a.C.s. 221 W. Pueblo St., Suite A, Santa Barbara

805-687-6408

www.gregorykeller.com | www.rejuvalasemedispa.com 32

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

The Mystery of Narciso: An Indian Convert or Rebel at Mission San José, California? James A. Sandos, Farquhar

professor of the American Southwest at the University of Redlands, and his wife, Patricia Tish Sandos, will speak on American Indian Narciso and whether he was a trusted subject, as the priests claimed, or an anti-establishment insurgent, as the soldiers thought. Also learn about reconfigured maps showing the correlation between the Indian Village’s location and Jed Smith’s route through California’s Central Valley. 10:30am. Santa Bárbara Mission Archive-Library, 2201 Laguna St. $5-$8. Call 682-4713 x166. sbmal.org

commemorate the life and works of the legendary interpretive dancer Isadora Duncan with a free performance honoring WILPF and its work in securing peace and equal rights for women. 2-3:30pm. Faulkner Gallery, S.B. Central Library, 40 E Anapamu St. Free. Call 624-6724. sbplibrary.org

9/18: Goodland Drive Electric Car Show As part of National Drive Electric Week, this exhibition of today’s coolest electric vehicles will highlight the benefits of plug-in transportation, from cars and trucks to motorcycles and more, with owners on-hand to share their experiences. 10am-2pm. Camino Real Marketplace, 7004 Market Pl. Dr., Goleta. Free.

cecsb.org/events/list

Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events.


week

e

th

Music of Note 9/15: Chuck Ragan, W.T. Newton This raspy-voiced singer of Hot Water Music will bring his bracing and forceful songcraft to S.B., with material from his newest release, Till Midnight. W.T. Newton will open the show with his southern Illinois Americana. 8:30pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $15-$18. Ages 21+. Call 962-7776.

sohosb.com

THURSDAY

9/16: Camerata Pacifica Season Opening The eight-piece ensemble will

SEP

MORRIS DAY & THE TIME

revitalize works by Schubert, Grieg, and Dvořák with beautiful sensitivity and incredible depth and skill. 7:30pm. Hahn Hall, Music Academy of the West, 1070 Fairway Rd. $56. Call 969-4726. tinyurl.com/cameratapacifica

29

9/16: Mike Love, Earthwake, DJ 9lives, Singing Dirt Oahu’s rising reggae star Mike Love sings of change-making with music aimed at making the world a more peaceful place, along with NoCal’s reggae man Earthwake, chill-out master DJ 9lives, and soulful folk music from Singing Dirt. 9pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $15-$20. Ages 21+. Call 962-7776. sohosb.com

9/16-9/18: ¡Viva el Arte de Santa Bárbara! Los Cambalache Hailing from East L.A., Los Cambalache play son jarocho music from Veracruz, Mexico, promoting traditional music with spirited crowd-involvement and fandango celebrations, plus a workshop on son jarocho music. 7pm. Fri.: Isla Vista School, 6875 El Colegio Rd., Isla Vista; 252-3493. Sat.: Guadalupe City Hall, 918 Obispo St., Guadalupe; 343-2455. Sun.: The Marjorie Luke Theatre, 721 E. Cota St. Call 884-4087. Free. tinyurl.com/viva-cambalache

THURSDAY

OCT

SCOTTY MCCREERY

20

9/17: The Frights, The Soaks, The Regrettes, Nucklehead Inspired by

THURSDAY

1950s Halloween house party bands, The Frights make music that has a spirit of fun, with fuzzy garage rock band The Soaks, femme-power rock band The Regrettes, and Ventura power pop/punk band Nucklehead opening the show. 8pm. Velvet Jones, 423 State St. $12. Call 965-8676. velvet-jones.com

SÉRGIO MENDES NOV & BRASIL 2016

shawn york

3

THURSDAY

NOV

17

OLIVIA NEWTON-JOHN THURSDAY

Ringmasters

MOSCOW BALLET DEC NUTCRACKER (ON SALE SOON)

9/17: Pacific Sound Chorus Presents Seaside Rendezvous Join the Pacific

15

Sound men’s chorus along with special guests C’est La Vie, Ringmasters, and Carpe Diem Chorus. Don’t miss this night of beautiful harmony. 2 and 7pm. Marjorie Luke Theatre, 721 E. Cota St. $15-$50. Call (800) 353-1632. tinyurl.com/PSCSeasideRendezvous

9/17: Gap Tooth Mountain Ramblers Back for the first time in years, Old Time Fiddlers’ Convention founder Peter Feldmann’s bluegrass and Americana act plays fierce fiddle hoedowns and heart-turning ballads with energetic aplomb. 7:30pm. Santa Ynez Valley Grange Hall, 2374 Alamo Pintado Ave., Los Olivos. $15. Call 688-9894.

bluegrasswest.com/tickets.htm

9/17: Steph Johnson Trio Ever since leaving behind her career in banking to pursue music-making full-time, Steph Johnson has been honing her fine-tuned jazz and soul/ R&B and winning accolades in overlapping musical circles. Come celebrate the release of their new CD Music Is Art. 8pm. Piano Kitchen, 430 Rose Ave. $5-$10.

tinyurl.com/stephjohnson

BOX OFFICE cont ’ d on

CHUM ASHC ASINO.COM

800.248.6274

p. 37

>>>

CHUMASH CASINO RESORT SUPPORTS RESPONSIBLE GAMING. FOR INFORMATION ABOUT PROBLEM GAMBLING, CALL THE PROBLEM GAMBLING HELPLINE AT 1-800-522-4700. MUST BE 21 OR OLDER. CHUMASH CASINO RESORT RESERVES THE RIGHT TO CHANGE OR CANCEL PROMOTIONS AND EVENTS.

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

33


OPENING THIS WEEKEND

EVENTS

British Art from Whistler to World War II

Thursday, October 6, 5:30 pm

September 18, 2016 - January 8, 2017 ALSO ON VIEW

Lecture by Peyton Skipwith Guest curator of British Art from Whistler to World War II discusses the exhibition and key figures.

Thursday, October 13, 5:30 pm

Cecil Beaton’s “London’s Honourable Scars”: Photographs of the Blitz

Longing and Disappointment: Geoff Dyer and Andrew Winer

For more exhibitions and events, visit www.sbma.net.

Reserve or purchase tickets at the Museum’s Visitor Services desks or online at tickets.sbma.net.

1130 State Street, Santa Barbara, CA Tuesday–Sunday: 11 am–5 pm • Chase Free Thursday Evenings: 5–8 pm

WOOD-FIRED PIZZA FRESH FISH • SEAFOOD • RISOTTO ORGANIC VEGETABLES • SALADS GRILLED STEAKS • CICCHETTI BURRATA • BRUSCHETTA GELATO • TIRAMISÚ LARGE PATIO, DOG FRIENDLY!

OVER 2O LOCAL AND ITALIAN WINES BY THE GLASS AND QUARTINOS!

William Rothenstein, Portrait of Rodin, n.d. Lithograph on paper. SBMA, Gift of Wright S. Ludington.

OPEN EVERYDAY 11 AM TO CLOSE 436 STATE ST. 805.957.4177

www.bucatini.com

Need Support?

Schedule Your Historic Window Restoration Before the Winter Season! • Make your original windows energy efficient and fully functional • Avoid vinyl and choose a greener option • Over 3,500 windows restored

We help families and individuals where a loved one is challenged by conditions such as depression, schizophrenia, or bipolar disorder – providing therapy, case management, and group services.

Mainstream

Your choice for private, holistic mental heath support.

HOME WINDOW REPAIRS

Call us today at 805 -845 - 070 0 or visit discovermainstream.com 34

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

$25 OFF

with 4 or more windows repaired

Call today for a free estimate!

805-924-4004

HomeWindowrepairs.com

Licensed & Bonded CA Lic. # 1011636


sept.

15-21 back to save the world for a second time in the sequel and are now official OSS agents who must reclaim the powerful Transmooker Device before it gets in the wrong hands. 1-3pm. Island Rm., S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Rated PG. Call 564-5603. sbplibrary.org

Valeria Villa

9/18: Family Movies at the Central Library: Spy Kids 2: Island of Lost Dreams The super-spy siblings are

week e

th

9/18:

This Postpartum Education for Parents’ (PEP) event will offer kids the opportunity to see, touch, get behind the wheel, honk horns, and learn about trucks, construction equipment, and public safety vehicles. They can meet the men and women who protect, serve, work, and build in our community. There will be food and refreshments available for purchase, community vendors and exhibitors on Truck Alley, a Fun Zone with bounce houses, face painters and activities, and a new quiet hour with no horns or sirens, starting at 1 p.m. All proceeds will benefit PEP. 9:30am-2pm. West Campus Parking Lot, SBCC, 800 block of Cliff Dr. Free$5; $20/family.

9/18: Cecil Beaton’s London’s Honourable Scars: Photographs of the Blitz Exhibit Opening These powerful images by Sir Cecil Beaton offer a sobering and heart-wrenching look at the moments following the German Blitz of London, with pictures of heroism and destruction all captured in black-andwhite. The exhibit shows through January 8, 2017. Tue.-Sun.: 11am-5pm; Thu.: 11am-8pm. S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free-$10. Call 963-4364. sbma.net

9/18: Goleta Education Foundation’s Lemon Run Race along the Obern Trail bike path in a 10K, 5K, or Family Fun Run 1K set in this familyfriendly fundraiser for the Goleta Valley’s nine schools, with an art table, blender bike, drum circle, and food from Wahoo’s Fish Tacos at the finish line. 8am. Goleta Beach, Sandspit Rd., Goleta. Free-$50.

goletaeducationfoundation.org

Monday 9/19 9/19: Happiness and Meditation Hour The Goleta Library and the Art of Living Foundation are partnering to offer an hour once a week where you can bust your stresses, energize your breathing and alertness, and calm your mind to a state of deep relaxation. 4-5pm. Multipurpose Rm., Library, 500 N. Fairview Ave., Goleta. Free. Call 964-7878.

sbplibrary.org

6th Annual Touch-A-Truck

BLOCK PARTY! Mood Swing 20 Funk Zone Artists Curated by Jan Ziegler

This is a unique opportunity to view the works of this burgeoning arts community side-by-side in the same venue.

Reception Sept. 16, 5 – 8 pm Panel Discussion at 6:30 with Ted Mills Show runs Sept. 9– Nov. 6 Curated by Jan Ziegler

peptouchatruck.org/about-1

Gwyneth Kinports explores a firetruck at PEP’s Touch-A-Truck.

tueSday 9/20 9/20: Final Sip & Swirl Take advantage of the last of these summer gatherings on the rooftop, where five local wineries paired with C’est Cheese cheeses will make for a perfect sundown soiree. 5:30pm. Canary Hotel, 31 W. Carrillo St. $35. Call 879-9100.

tinyurl.com/FinalSipAndSwirl

9/20: Talk TED: George Takei Hear and discuss George Takei’s fascinating TED talk about how his father raised him to be patriotic despite the hardships and injustices his family faced while growing up in an internment camp. 6-7:30pm. Goleta Library, 500 N. Fairview Ave., Goleta. Free. Call 964-7878. sbplibrary.org

WedneSday 9/21 9/21: Ballot Measures: League of Women Voters Recommendations The LWV will provide their recommendations on what to vote for this November and why, with insight on all of the propositions and views on issues including schools, health care, and legislature transparency. Noon-2pm. Louise Lowry Davis Ctr., 1232 De la Vina St. Free.

lwvsantabarbara.org

9/21: Journals — Your Way! Learn to craft the most beautiful personal nature journal with artist and Education Programs Coordinator Kate Davis, who will teach you various literary, photographic, and artistic tips for sketching and documenting your observations of nature. 3pm. S.B. Botanic Garden, 1212 Mission Canyon Rd. $45-$100. Call 563-0352.

sbbg.org

MICHAEL KATE INTERIORS 132 SANTA BARBARA STReeT (805) 963-1411 / OPeN 6 DAYS CLOSeD WeD. / miChAeLkATe.COm

e stad i r Ch

lphians of santa Ba rba ra

100tH anniversary Celebration

sat. septemBer 24

emory Douglas/artists rights society (ars)

11am-4pm

Free BBQ • Food drive • open House petting Zoo • Kids CraFts • silent auCtion

9/19:

Donate A Non-Perishable Food Item

50 Years Strong and Counting: The Revolutionary Art of the Black Panther Party Exhibit Opening Black Panther Party artists Emory Douglas and Akinsanya Kambon showcase the bold and

empowering works that continue to influence and inspire black communities and revolutionary movements to this day. The exhibit shows through December 9. Mon.-Thu.: 8am-10pm; Fri.: 8am-5pm. MultiCultural Ctr. Lounge, UCSB. Free. Call 893-8411. mcc.sa.ucsb.edu/events/fall-2016

Need more? Go to independent.com/events for your daily fix of weekly events.

>>>

The Christadelphians & Unity Shoppe - Supporting Our Local Community the little Church on the Corner • 206 stanley drive

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

35


act now

Limited Space Remains in all of Pacifica’s Masters and Doctoral Degree Programs

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE WITH A DEPTH PSYCHOLOGICAL ORIENTATION M.A. in Counseling Psychology

M.A./Ph.D. in Depth Psychology with Specialization in Community Psychology, Liberation Psychology, and Ecopsychology

Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology Psy.D. in Clinical Psychology M.A./Ph.D. in Depth Psychology with Specialization in Somatic Studies M.A./Ph.D. in Depth Psychology with Specialization in Jungian and Archetypal Studies*

Ph.D. in Depth Psychology with Specialization in Integrative Therapy and Healing Practices M.A./Ph.D. in Mythological Studies M.A. in Engaged Humanities and the Creative Life*

* Blended Online/Low-Residency Degree Program

Pacifica Graduate Institute is an innovative, employee-owned graduate school with two campuses near Santa Barbara, California. At Pacifica, students are mentored by dedicated and distinguished faculty as they engage in rigorous degree

A Tribute to Isadora Duncan free

Sunday, September 18th 2:00 p.m.

programs that have been designed to develop both the intellect and the

Faulkner Gallery

innate intelligence of the human imagination.

at the Santa Barbara Public Library

Pacifica is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC).

Awards Honored to

For gainful employment information, visit pacific.edu/gainfulemployment.

Deborah Winant, Judith Evered, and Dorothy Holland.

CLASSES BEGIN IN SEPTEMBER & OCTOBER Speak to an admissions counselor at 805.879.7305 Apply online at pacifica.edu

Presented by

Helene Schneider Event sponsored by the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (W.I.L.P.F.) Santa Barbara group. For more information or to request an interpreter* please call 805-624-6724. *Interpreter requires 72 hrs. notice

TREATMENT FOR ADDICTION, TRAUMA, MOOD DISORDERS, DUAL DIAGNOSIS, AND MENTAL HEALTH ••• The most individualized and in-depth intensive outpatient treatment anywhere — now in Santa Barbara ••• www.ONEtx.com 2020 Alameda Padre Serra, Suite 123 888.573.1110

you have our undivided attention 36

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

®


week e

th

Music of Note courtesy

9/17: Bowlful of Blues Back after an 11-year hiatus, this festival returns with a knock-your-socks-off lineup of internationally known blues artists and area favorites, bringing a spirit of the Deep South to Ojai. The Ojai Mardi Gras will serve Queen Rondia’s fried-chicken dinners, and beer, wine, and refreshments will also be available. Net proceeds will be used to bring music and art supplies and extended educational Arthur Adams opportunities to area youth. 3-9pm. Libbey Bowl, 210 S. Signal St., Ojai. Free-$100. bowlfulofblues.org

Calvin Liang, Fishing Boats in Santa Barbara, 16x20

coNt’d froM p. 33

9/18: Brett Dennen, Lily & Madeleine The thoughtful and quirky songwriter/ winemaker will play low-key material from his serene new album, Por Favor Favor, plus old favorites. Sisters Lily & Madeleine will open the show with their brand of American folk pop. 7:30pm. Lobero Theatre, 33 E. Canon Perdido St. $25-$33. Call 963-0761. Read more on p. 55. lobero.com

9/19: Tommy Alexander, Django Koenig The S.B. born singer/songwriter Tommy Alexander approaches his craft with uncommon depth of feeling and emotional weight, with Americana singer Django Koenig as opener. 7pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $10. Call 962-7776. sohosb.com

9/19: La Misa Negra Oakland’s La Misa Negra will excite your soul and senses with their nine-piece powerhouse sound, blending 1950s and ‘60s style cumbia and high-energy Afro-Colombian dance music. 7:30-9pm. San Miguel Stage, San Miguel Residence Hall, UCSB. Free. Call 893-8411. mcc.sa.ucsb.edu/events/fall-2016

9/21: Ottmar Liebert & Luna Negra Having departed from traditional flamenco music, platinum-selling German guitarist Ottmar Liebert creates a delicate balance of electric and acoustic guitar with his group, Luna Negra. Maybe he’ll perform something from Waiting n Swan, his 2015 album that contains some Bob Marley covers! 6:30pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $35-$73. Call 962-7776.

sohosb.com

9/21: The Crookes, The Young Wild, Naked Walrus Hailing from Sheffield, England, indie pop band The Crookes reinvent British rock with heart-breaking lyrics and will bring their upbeat melodies and electrifying guitar hooks to S.B., with melodic L.A. pop band The Young Wild and alternative so-cal rockers Naked Walrus opening the show. 8pm. Velvet Jones, 423 State St. $12-$15. Call 965-8676. velvet-jones.com

Artwalk Artists

2016

of

Distinction

SATURDAY & SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 24 & 25 Members FREE; non-members $10; children under 12/FREE www.sbnature.org/artwalk or 805-682-4711 ext. 100 Proceeds support the Museum’s programs.

FarMers Market schedule

THuRSDAY

Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, 3-6:30pm Carpinteria: 800 block of Linden Ave., 3-6:30pm

FRIDAY

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

SATuRDAY

SuNDAY

Goleta: Camino Real Marketplace, 10am-2pm

TuESDAY

Old Town S.B.: 500-600 blocks of State St., 4-7:30pm

WEDNESDAY

Solvang: Copenhagen Dr. and 1st St., 2:30-6:30pm

2559 Puesta del Sol, Santa Barbara, CA 93105 805.682.4711 . sbnature.org SPONSORED IN PART BY Scott Newhall, Union Bank, Robert & Christine Emmons, Richard Banks, Santa Barbara Community Bank, Waterhouse Gallery, and Jill Vander Hoof. Wine generously donated by Viva Modern Mexican Restaurant.

Downtown S.B.: Corner of Santa Barbara and Cota sts., 8:30am-1pm

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

37


Back-to-School

Bike Giveaway presented by

enter for a chance to win a Nirve Cruiser!

iNdepeNdeNt.Com/BikeGiveaway Contest ends September 23, at 5pm. winner will be announced on September 29 in The Santa Barbara Independent.

30 Y E A R S

38

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com


Scene in S.B.

Text and photo by Caitlin FitCh

living p. 39

beauty and spa

paul wellman

Shave & a Haircut

Stoked on the Stretch Station “I just heard about this on the radio and came to check it out,” said Garrett Briggs (far left), who, along with his friend Miguel Martinez (center), tested out the Bird Refuge Stretch Station at the Andrée Clark Bird Refuge last Friday. Madeleine White (right) also stopped to warm up her muscles before a run down the bike path. The Stretch Station is the first of its kind in the city of Santa Barbara and has three different pieces of equipment designed to gently stretch different parts of the body. It’s now open for use during the park’s usual hours, sunrise to 10 p.m.

Montecito BarBerShop Quartet: (From left) Steve Hirata, Tim Sanchez, Juan Mendez, and original cofounder Jess Martinez (seated).

Beauty

Chantal Evrard’s aromatherapy atmosphere a

Chantal Evrard meditates at Lotusland.

better person every day and to help people. Especially right now in a world of violence, we need to create peace and love and kindness.” To do so is “very simple,” said Evrard, explaining, “If you want to live peacefully, you need to live in a good atmosphere.” This atmosphere, she finds, is best produced through aromatherapy, which is why she’s

created a line of scented water mists and essential oils, all organic and un-manipulated by machinery. They’re called Fleurs de Chantal and can be purchased at fleursdechantal.com. Aromatherapy Water Mists: These come in three

aromas: rose (“Rose opens your heart,” said Evrard), lavender (“Very soothing and calming, it will cleanse your aura”), and jasmine (which she says “is allure and attraction. It sends a sweet energy to your brain”). courtesy

B

orn on the French Riviera and a veteran of the fashion industry of Paris, Chantal Evrard started studying pranic healing in the United States 20 years ago, and she now lives on the American Riviera, where she teaches yoga and meditation, performs energy work, sings in a choir, and leads tours at Madame Ganna Walska’s Lotusland. “I’m not claiming to be anything,” explained Evrard, who studied under the late energyhealing teacher Choa Kok Sui. “I’m just trying to be a

Aromatherapy Essential Oils: Three types are also

available: lavender, whose “electraviolet color gets rid of any negativity on you,” said Evrard; eucalyptus, which is good for sinus problems or respiratory congestion since it “opens your lungs and helps with breathing”; and tea tree oil, which is a natural antiseptic and, “something everybody should have in the kitchen.” she said.

Lotusland Yoga and Meditations DVD: Evrard also produced a DVD about

yoga and meditation, from the beautiful gardens of Montecito’s Lotusland, that you can watch at home. “When you have peace, you can absolutely accomplish more, and so we have meditation to help relax and yoga to help balance body and mind,” she explained. — Anjalie Tandon

50 Years of monteCito BarBers

B

arbering is in Tim Sanchez’s blood. His grandfather Bob Sanchez cofounded Montecito Barbers with Jess Martinez in 1966 at its present location near the Coast Village Road roundabout. Tim’s father, Matt Sanchez, a former Eastside gang leader who turned his life around to help the wayward get a second chance, worked at the shop for nearly 25 years. Early on, young Tim worked alongside them both — three generations of Sanchez men, cutting and shaving generations of steady customers — before taking the reins when his father passed away in 2012. While Bob is retired from the trade, Tim still gets primarysource nostalgia from Martinez, now 84, who comes in to cut hair on Wednesdays. Working from the chair by the window, Tim and his deft clipperover-comb technique and artfully efficient fades are admired by fellow barbers and appreciated by his clientele. Combine this refined skillset with straightforward pricing, long hours, sports on flat-screen TVs, and just enough chatter to keep the shop colorful with opinion and laughter, and there’s little wonder as to why it takes four chairs to handle a revolving door of walk-ins and appointments. A few months back and three seats over from Tim’s chair, Steve Hirata, 66, wrapped my five-o’clock shadow with a hot towel. As I closed my eyes and slipped into a reclined angle of lathered repose, I asked casually about his barbering background. He slid a straight razor down my jawline and told me about learning to cut and shave while in state prison, after failing on the outside as an incompetent drug slinger. Hirata’s been a friend of the Sanchez family for decades, he said. “And when I finally started getting sober, Matt invited me to work with him on Hoods in the Woods,” where young men from rival neighborhoods go camping together. The experience was a second chance for them all. These days, said Hirata, he’s again grateful for another boon from the Sanchez clan. “I just get to do what I really enjoy,” he said. — Keith Hamm

1029 coast Village rd.; 969-1314; montecitobarbers.com

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

39


W E n

Extra happy hour

7 days a week until 9pm and during nfl games

$

$

2 oFF $ 6

5 $ 8

appetizers, Burgers, 12oz well drinks salads & wraps 16oz drafts & mimosas no discounts on take-out food

12oz call drinks 24 oz paBst cans 22 oz Bud drafts

$

16oz Bloody marys 16 oz margaritas 12 oz prem. drinks

15

64oz pitchers Budweiser og

40

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

235 W. MontEcito St.

Corner of Bath • 21 and over • valid i.d. required theneighBorhoodBar.com


living | Sports paul wellman

GauchOs need GOals UCSB Soccer’s Big September Schedule; Plus, Undefeated Women’s Teams and Athletes of Week

• Saturday, September 17, vs. UCLA • Wednesday, September 21, vs. Loyola Marymount • Saturday, September 24, vs. Cal UCLA has a decided edge in its series with UCSB, but the Gauchos have scored two significant victories. In 2006, they faced the Bruins in the NCAA championship game at St. Louis and won the College Cup, 2-1. In 2010, they blanked UCLA 2-0 before a Harder Stadium crowd of 15,896, the largest on-campus regular-season attendance in NCAA soccer history. “I saw a video of that game, and that’s one reason I transferred here,” said Kevin Feucht, UCSB’s junior midfielder from Germany.“I’m excited to play UCLA in front of a big crowd.” Santa Barbara has led the nation in college soccer attendance for nine consecutive years. Harder Stadium is festooned with banners, including a large one that blankets the southwest corner of the stands. It reads as follows:

by John

Zant

to him about taking something off. It’s like baseball: You don’t hit a home run by swinging harder but by making good contact.” Feucht did just that against San Diego, smacking a ball 30 yards into a corner of the goal. Vom Steeg praised both Feucht and DePuy for their work rate. “It’s unbelievable,” the coach said. “We have GPS on our players. Kevin and Nick are consistently the top two in terms of miles run. They go somewhere between eight and nine miles a game.” DePuy hopes his hustle pays off with more goals. He has two this year, as do junior striker Ahinga Selemani and freshman Daniel Amo. On the defensive side, the Gauchos have had issues trying to clear loose balls out of the penalty area. Their freshman goalkeeper, Titouan Le Roux, has acquitted himself well. UCSB will be under siege Saturday night. Akron came out west two weeks ago with a No. 1 ranking. UCLA scored an astounding three goals in 32 seconds and humiliated the Zips, 6-1. “You saw how explosive UCLA is,” Vom Steeg said ominously, “and you knew Akron was going to be ready for us after a bad weekend.” WINNING WOMEN: After opening the soccer season with a 3-2 victory in overtime at Fresno State, the Gaucho women made the most of a six-game home stand. They

IRON TRAP: Goalkeeper Brittney Rogers has stopped every shot in six consecutive Gaucho women’s games.

S.B. AThleTiC RoUnd TABle:

athletes of the Week Sept. 4-10

paul wellman photos

month of the men’s college soccer season. The Gauchos made two trips there. They notched a pair of victories on the first tour, including a 1-0 shutout of Ohio State that gave them a boost in the polls. On their return last weekend, a pair of nationally ranked teams inflicted their first setbacks, 4-2 to Butler and 2-0 to Akron. With a 4-2 record, the Gauchos are still a solid top-20 team, and they have a chance to go into Big West Conference play as the alpha dog if they are successful in their upcoming home stand (all three games kicking off at 7:05 p.m.):

Jesse Morrison, San Marcos water polo

The senior scored 19 goals as the Royals went 4-1 in the Santa Barbara Invitational, losing only by a goal to top-seeded Orange Lutheran. Mikala Triplett, Dos Pueblos tennis

paul wellman

O

hio was UCSB’s battleground state during the first

The 9th grader swept all three singles matches, including a victory over the defending league champion, as the Chargers defeated San Marcos, 11-7.

Aug. 28-Sept. 3

LOUDEST STADIUM IN COLLEGE SOCCER

Kellen Roberts, Dos Pueblos football

The senior passed for 362 yards, including four first-half touchdowns, and scored on a quarterback keeper in a 37-0 win over Cabrillo.

The fabric sign may be removed to open up seats for the upcoming matches. Feucht (pronounced: Voy-sht), who scored the goal that beat Ohio State in overtime, will POWER COUPLE: Kevin Feucht and Nick DePuy roam all over the pitch for UCSB’s soccer team. Kelly Bickett, Laguna Blanca volleyball play a big part in making the stadium noisy, as will Nick DePuy. They combined on the winning goal extended their record to 7-0 with six consecutive shutout The sophomore was MVP of the in UCSB’s last home game, a 1-0 win over St. Mary’s. Late in wins. Dynamic junior Amanda Ball has scored seven Laguna Blanca Invitational for the second half, Feucht threaded a pass to a closely guarded goals. Now they hit the road for four games, including a the undefeated Owls, who DePuy. visit to Texas, before returning home October 2 against later scored a sweep over “He put it between two or three guys to my right foot, which Hawai’i. Santa Barbara. was good,” DePuy said. “It was at an angle where if I turned Westmont College ’s that way, I could spin around the defender.” The ball rocketed women also are unbeaten (6-0). The Warriors are ranked No. 7 off DePuy’s right foot into the net. The Gauchos are undefeated (18-0-4) in games when in the NAIA and have a scoring DePuy, a senior from Irvine, scores a goal. The 65 striker machine in senior Brooke LilJohn hit the net 15 times last year. He is on the watch list for the lywhite (nine goals). Hermann Award, college soccer’s Heisman. It has become obvious to UCSB’s opponents that their chances of winning are improved if they can shut out DePuy, PARALYMPICS: Santa Barbara 9/16: High School Football: Santa Maria St. Joseph at Bishop Diego and he usually has to bang against two defenders.“Everybody amputee Andre Barbieri had Two of the county’s perennial powers meet for the first time since 2009. Bishop’s Cardinals says,‘Be on him. Be on him. Be on him,’” Feucht said.“I always to sit out the triathlon at the (3-0), the No. 2–ranked team in CIF Division 5, have won 15 consecutive regular-season look for him, but we don’t have just Nick. We have 10 players Paralympics in Rio last weekgames. St. Joseph (1-2) has lost to a pair of Division 2 juggernauts, Sherman Oaks Notre end. The winner was Andy who have to be able to score.” Dame and St. Bonaventure. Bishop’s junior running back John Harris has already rushed for The 63 Feucht himself leads the team with three goals. Lewis, a 33-year-old Brit who 588 yards and seven touchdowns. The Knights are led by quarterback Dino Maldonado (471 “He hits the hardest ball on the team,” head coach Tim Vom lost his right leg in a motorbike passing yards and five TDs). 7:30pm. La Playa Stadium, S.B. City College. $5-$7. Call 967-1266. Steeg said.“His shots would always sail over the top. We talked accident at the age of 16. n

Zant’s

independent.com

Game Of the Week

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

41


CENTER FOR DERMATOLOGY 2015_SB.qxp_SB3X8.25 7/7/16 4:08 PM Page 1

BEFORE

AFTER

When y ou want to buy local

TJ’S CARPETS & FLOORING

(805)685-3439

MODEL

MODEL

NEOGRAFT® STATE-OF-THE-ART SOLUTION FOR HAIR LOSS

Hardwood, Laminate, Vinyl, Tile

Locally owned and operated

FREE CONSULTATION

Visit our showroom 139 Aero Camino, Goleta

ASK ABOUT OUR

ZERO %

Lic # 815253

FINANCING!

MODELS

empress palace Chinese & Japanese Food

• Less invasive procedure for hair transplantation • Patients feel little to no discomfort • No stitches or staples • No unsightly linear scar • Shorter recovery time • Less activity restrictions after procedure • Patients can frequently go back to work the next day • Provides natural looking results • Flexibility for any hair style of your choice, short or long

Andrew J. Kaufman, M.D., F.A.C.P.

SANTA BARBARA

Andrew J. Kaufman M.D., FACP

Nancy Moharram PA-C

805.682.7874

OR

FREE ROLL OR ENTREE Buy 2 Chinese or Japanese entrees, get the 3rd FREE Mon – Thur, To-go only, cannot be combined with any other offers

haPPy hOuR Beer, Wine & Saké $3.50

Mon – Sun | 4-6pm

aLL yOu CaN EaT sushi

805.497.1694

2320 Bath Street, Suite 317, 7 Santa Barbara, CA 93105 7,

W W W .F I X M Y H A I R .C O M @DrAndrewKaufman

THE CENTER FOR DERMAT A OLOGY CARE AT

1995 Lunch • $2695 Dinner Mon – Sun

$

2251 Las POsiTas Rd. • 898.2238 • empresspalace1.com

Don't look back!

is a 9-week fitness program before

after

"I lost 16 pounds and 24 inches in KUT, and I built healthy habits I will keep for life!" -Ann

that combines kickboxing, nutrition, flexibility and resistance training with a team of coaches, instructors and fellow teammates that will help you achieve the body that you've always wanted!

hurry! next kut starts

september 17!

Registration deadline Friday, Sep. 16 at 6pm 42

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

Martial Arts Family Fitness 122 E Gutierrez St., SB • 963-6233 independent.com

Isla Vista 888 Embarcadero Del Norte


paul wellman

p.43

fooD & Drink •

Dining Out Guide

• wine Guide

paul wellman

eet state str

nirasha rodriguez

fooD &Drink

er

n s cor chef'

Donald Hardin (left) with Ian and Diane Trenwith

STATE STREET SIPS: Former barista Danielle Ogaz serves Central Coast wines and more.

wine THerapy’s “

glass is Half-full

I

t should feel like a good friend’s “I tried to pick wine that I thought either house,” Danielle Ogaz said of Wine had a good story or was local and delicious,” Therapy, her new bar on State said Ogaz of her list, which includes a wide Street. range of Central Coast red, white, pink, and As she excitedly poured me a taste of her bubbles, including favorites like the Stolpman go-to rosé, gushed about compelling con- sauvignon blanc and Fableist pinot noir. Her versations with winemaker Louis Lucas, and favorite wind-down wine is Halter Ranch’s set out complimentary popcorn for visitors, rosé of grenache, picpoul blanc, syrah, and it certainly felt as though I could curl up in mourvèdre. There’s also refreshing sangria one of their lush beanbag chairs for a full-on packed with farmers’ market fruit, and the beer selection features Captain Fatslumber party. ty’s and M.Special, among others. “For me, wine is about people and stories,” she In the near future, Ogaz hopes said, “so it’s been my to feature food options and pleasure to get to know live music on their mounwinemakers and the tain-facing patio and will keep adding to the already people who come in 637-7492, here.” impressive board game santabarbarawinetherapy.com Ogaz honed her collection, which includes personality during nine a custom-built chess board years working at Starand checkers table. bucks, where she admired “This place feels like home their respect for their coffee, to me, and I’m hoping that it feels customers, and employees. “That’s like home to others,” said Ogaz, who a lot of what inspired me here,” said Ogaz, decorated the inviting space with furwho majored in French and then lived in niture she purchased secondhand or the South of France, where she fell in love built with Schmidt. “This is the place with the Provençal-style rosé. Upon returnfor people to go when they want to ing to the States, she worked in retail, cofhave something after dinner that isn’t fee, and dentistry but held onto her dream of a ‘bar bar.’ It’s a little more mellow; we have games you can play; it’s great opening a wine bar. With the encouragement for big groups. This is a place where of friends, who said she was “born to have a wine bar,” Ogaz teamed with business partner it’s easy to connect with and carpenter Neil Schmidt to open Wine people.” Therapy in July on the 700 block of —Rebecca Horrigan State Street.

732 sTaTe sT.,

DonalD HarDin and ian & Diane TrenwiTH @ Jolly BroTHers Catering

Tenure: In 1978, Ian and Diane Trenwith founded Jolly Broth-

ers Catering and started nearly four decades of serving to myriad private and corporate events. Five years ago, Donald Hardin left his job at Idaho Hillcrest Country Club in Boise after 15 years to buy the business from the Trenwiths, to whom he was once related through marriage. “He still loved the business, but he didn’t want to do the business side of stuff,” said Hardin of Ian. “[The country club experience] helped me with running the front of the house a lot, organizing parties.” So Ian and Diane remained as head cook and sous chef, respectively, and together the trio caters events from Los Angeles to Lompoc. Recent dishes served: For a housewarming party: fajita-style

carne asada, peppers, onions, guacamole, vegetables, homemade chips, and brownies; for a birthday party: rosemary chicken, roasted potatoes, cilantro lime shrimp, and angel food cake; and for a veterans group: BBQ ribs and grilled chicken, vegetables, beans, garlic bread, quinoa arugula salad, fruit salad, chocolate chip cookies, and brownies. Unusual assignments: Most of Hardin’s clientele requests Mexi-

can food and Santa Maria tri-tip, though they do French and Italian frequently and Asian on occasion. Some gigs get more obscure, including one wedding with a lavender theme that wanted lavender mixed into the food, and another where a woman requested ribbon sandwiches, which are a loaf of bread sliced laterally and filled with different layers in the center, including chicken and ham-and-egg salads, and then frosted over with cream cheese and served in a cake-like presentation. “I had never heard of it,” said Hardin. Ups and downs: “I love meeting people,

791-5593;

jolly.bros1@gmail.com;

jollybros.com

independent.com

the planning process, working the parties, and making good memories,” said Hardin, who likes to see new homes and different venues, adding with a laugh, “I love everything until it’s time to do all the dishes.”

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

— Michael Aushenker

THE INDEPENDENT

43


Treasures Found september 24 10 – 6

— vinTage accessories — — home decor — — giFT iTems — — arT + more! — open saturdays & sundays | 10 – 3 130 n. calle cesar chavez, suite F santa Barbara, ca 93103

treasuresfoundsb@gmail.com

McConnell’s

on Mission

Conveniently Located • Free Parking • Outdoor Patio Friendly Service • Generous Portions Home of the worlds best ice cream & yogurt Locally owned & scooping for thirty years

McConnell’s on Mission Fine Ice Cream and Yogurts 201 West Mission St. • 569-2323

Dick JOrgEnsEn

First Annual Antioch Alumni Homecoming

'O Tomodachi: One American's Experience in Postwar Japan'

Wednesday, September 28 5:30-7:30 pm

Lecture by Dick Jorgensen

AUSB campus, 602 Anacapa Street

Faulkner gallery at Santa Barbara Public Library

All grads and their families are welcome to celebrate!

40 E Anapamu, Santa Barbara, CA 93101

For further information, Lcrissman@antioch.edu

44

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

antiochsb.edu

Thursday, september 29, 2016 7:00 PM- 9:00 PM


Wildlife Educator and Advocate

paul wellman

gadgets

Peter Gros from the Original

Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom

Sun, Oct 9 / 3 PM / UCSB Campbell Hall $16 adults / $12 children (12 & under) “Each of us can make a daily difference in preserving our natural world.” – Peter Gros

The author and his machine

kiTcHen

TraDiTion

progress?

Dining Out Guide • wine Guide

o tell the truth, I hate kitchen gadgets. vide in a pasta pot, cooked the plastic-wrapped To me, everything beyond sharp fish for a half-hour at 132 degrees, then browned knives, tongs, whisk, spatula, and the exterior in a pan of hot olive oil. The results wooden spoon seems suspect. I tease were completely off-putting. I’m used to fish my wife for her Crock-Pot and Vegthat flakes tenderly—this was more O-Matic obsessions and believe like fish sponge. We almost broke firmly in the dignity of seat-ofup over the flop. But then I the-pants grillwork. realized that it’s me that’s Then along comes the the problem, sous vide, not sous vide. Its name means you. “under vacuum,” and, for Our affair was reigor years now, it just felt ludinited by the tri-tip at Barcrous. The whole process bareño on West Canon seemed more the realm Perdido Street, where they that is the Question smoke, sous vide, and grill of effete molecular chefs, the meat. But I wanted bristhose Dadaists who make by D.J. PallaDino foams, emulsions, and gasses ket, the elusive king of all barfrom foodstuff. becued meats. Smoking brisket is The sous vide was expensive and tricky because it has a lean end and a complicated, too. You need a vessel to hold fatty one, so the required 12 hours of burning warmed water, a wand to heat said water to a timber and clouding up the ’hood present seripreset temp, and another machine to seal the ous quandaries, like whether you wrap it in foil. to-be-cooked item airtight in a plastic bag. Then But if you abandon the orthodoxy, the sous vide that goes in the water warmed with calculations results are brilliant. only subatomic scientists understood, thereby With thanks to the Modernist Cooking Cuiquarking the meat, fish, or veg super slow and sine website and my deepest apologies to Texas, melting that connective tissue, tendons, and gris- here’s what to do: Rub a three- to four-pound tle. The Crock-Pot of the bourgeoisie—though, brisket with salt, pepper, paprika, garlic powder, and coffee grounds. Fire up your smoker or grill I admit, with succulent results. But when the price came down, I wasn’t so with coals on one side and drip pan to about snotty. My son bought me the Anova wand for 250 degrees for four hours. Remove meat, let it Christmas and won me over with a porchetta cool, and then cut it in half between lean and he had sous vided for 24 hours before finishing fat ends. (This is where the Lone Star State rises on a grill to get that desired caramelization. It to kill me.) Put it in two separate sous vide sounds like a long time, but conventional meth- bags and sous vide it at 185 degrees for 12 hours ods would require brining, smoking, and brais- overnight. ing to get the same lovely meaty tenderness. Pull the meat out, save the liquid in the bag, In the rush to try out my own, I immediately and add it to your favorite BBQ sauce, perhaps failed to impress myself. Starting small seemed cooked down a little. Start a hot fire on your grill, logical, for there are few guide books available slurp the sauce on the brisket, and cook it until and the wand’s tiny brochure was useless. Asking there’s a nice bark, maybe an hour. Rest it for half around, consulting the Internet, and improvis- an hour, and carve against the grain. ing brought me to the false conclusion that I The results will be much too good to sustain should start with halibut, since its cooking time offense, either from a purist or some other joker was short and the guarantee of a moist, tender who does not fancy gadgets. But don’t even talk product was all but ensured. I set up the sous to me about herb scissors. n

fooD & Drink •

T

sous ViDe or noT sous ViDe

Meet some of the world’s friendliest exotic animals up close! With action-packed stories from nearly 30 years in the field with sharks, tigers, elephants and more, Peter Gros will introduce a connection to the natural world that can rarely be experienced.

Media Sponsors:

The fun starts early! Bring your kids an hour before the event for balloons, face painting and crafts. Family Fun series sponsors:

(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu

DERMATOLOGY EVENT Fri., Sep. 30 • 8:30am-5pm

2320 Bath St. Ste 203 (across from Cottage) 8:30am-2pm: Free Individual Patient consult. (Must be scheduled in advance) 2-3pm: Micro-needling & Filler correction demo 3-4pm: Bella-fil & Regenica Education Session 4-5pm: Q & A Session and Closing Remarks Receive $200 off Bellafill syringes & up to $60 off Regenica products if booked/purchased day of! Bellafill® filler last 5 years & is FDA approved for Acne Scars.

805.687.5538 • CASkin2016@gmail.com CaliforniaSkinDoctor.com

Louise H. Stewart, M.D. Rikk N. Lynn, M.D. Alexis Dougherty, M.D. Dermatology

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

45


SKI Mammoth Snowmass Whistler

Join the

Santa Barbara Ski & Sports Club And Leave the Planning to Us!

Kick-off Event

Tuesday • September 20, 2016 7:30 PM - 9:00 PM

b Chase Palm Park Ctr u l e C day! 236 E Cabrillo Blvd h t Santa Barbara oin To

J

line n O

7th AnnuAl

Foodie AwArds Join us to applaud the winners

(the one on the beachside)

Join the Club for Weeklong & Weekend Ski Trips Plus Year-Round Sports & Social Activities

www.sbski.org

Monday, September 26 • 5:30pm Tickets available at independent.com/foodietickets

Moby Dick Restaurant Providing fresh food, great service and spectacular harbor views from every seat! Happy Hour Every Day • 4-6pm certain restrictions apply

FREE BREAKFAST!

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Buy one breakfast entree and two drinks at regular price & receive 2nd entree of equal or lesser value free Valid through September 29, 2016 with this coupon. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Dine in only – Certain Restrictions Apply

LOCALS DISCOUNT 20% OFF YOUR ENTIRE BILL! Valid through September 29, 2016 with this coupon. Full priced items only. Not valid with any other offer, promotions, specials or happy hour. Excludes alcohol. Dine in only – Certain Restrictions Apply

for over 40 years 46

THE INDEPENDENT

Serving Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner 7 days a week 7am-9pm 220 Stearns Wharf, Santa Barbara

mobydicksb.com • 805.965.0549 SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

Start time 7:00am • Leadbetter Beach Half Marathon • 2-Person Relay • 5 Mile Race Register Today

sbmarathon.com


T

GUY • b y

John diCKson phoTos

AURA ST N E

Dickson hn Jo

The R

SANDOS AND SMOKE: The Santa Barbara–based deli Pickles & Swiss (above) and Dickey’s Barbecue Pit (below), which is billed as the nation’s largest BBQ chain, are now open in the Hollister Village Plaza.

P

and was told by management that a location will be coming to Hotel Indigo on lower State Street and to Oxnard, as well. The location is 119 State Street, former home of Nuance, Blue Tavern,

• wine Guide

MESTIZO COMING TO LOWER STATE STREET: I was dining recently at Los Agaves

Anchor Woodfire Kitchen, and Subway. Then I ran into Los Agaves owner Carlos Luna at Taste of the Town, where he told me the name would be Mestizo, which refers to people of mixed Native American and Spanish descent. Scheduled to open in December, Mestizo will offer Mexican cuisine with a menu similar to Los Agaves. The opening of Los Agaves at The Collection in Oxnard is set for January 2017.

Dining Out Guide

ickles & Swiss and Dickey’s Barbecue Pit are the latest tenants to open in Hollister Village Plaza, at 7060 Hollister Avenue. This is the second South Coast location for Pickles & Swiss, which is also at 811 State Street in downtown Santa Barbara. The menu has been updated for the Goleta deli, and those changes will also come to the downtown location, according to manager Blake Hayashi. That includes the new “All Day Brunch Dunch” egg sandwich and an upgraded signature “Pickles & Swiss” sandwich. “We definitely stepped it up,” said Hayashi of that offering. “There is ham and prosciutto; the Swiss cheese gets melted; we have a sweet onion jam that goes on the bottom; there’s a homemade aioli and a pickled swath that goes on top. All this comes together, it’s unique, it’s different, and it is really delicious. It’s something you’ve never had before.” Hours are 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Visit picklesand swiss.com. Opening next door on September 16 is Dickey’s Barbecue Pit, billed as the nation’s largest barbecue chain, with locations from coast to coast. According to its website, dickeys.com, this “true American success story” started in 1941 when World War I veteran Travis Dickey opened his first spot in Dallas.“Dickey was a true Texas character blessed with the gift of gab and the love of authentic, slow-smoked barbecue,” explains the website.“In the beginning, Dickey’s Barbecue Pit was truly a family operation with Travis working the block and Miss Ollie Dickey serving sandwiches. Space on the restaurant sign was rented out to help pay the start-up costs for the restaurant and the menu was limited to beef brisket, pit hams, barbecue beans, potato chips, beer, bottled milk, and sodas.” In 1967, brothers Roland and T.D. Dickey took over and expanded throughout the Dallas–Fort Worth area. Franchising began in 1994, and there are more than 530 locations in 43 states today.

fooD & Drink •

pickles & swiss and Dickey’s BarBecue Open in Goleta

Your ONE STOP Shop! Parts . Service . Spas 534 E. Haley (at Salsipuedes)

(805) 963-4747

Village Pool Supply THE ULTIMATE IN POOL & SPA SALES, SERVICE AND REPAIR PARTS • MAINTENANCE • REPAIRS • RESURFACING For all your pool and spa needs since 1972 lic.# 342321

CA’ DARIO COMING TO GOLETA: Ca’ Dario Trattoria and Pizzeria is coming to Goleta next to the new French Press in the Kmart Shopping Center, a few doors north of Rusty’s Pizza. I believe this space is the former home of Sam’s To Go, which moved across the parking lot in 2012. Owner Dario Furlati tells me that prices will be lowered without cutting quality. Opening is scheduled for November or December, depending on when permits are ready.

Parking on Salsipuedes

ESCAPE COUPON PACKAGE

Includes two dinner entrees & bottle of House wine. Complimentary breakfast buffet. Rooms from $149 (value up to $267) Suites from $179 (value up to $377) 25 acres of Monterey pines & gardens! Nightly entertainment in the Fireside Lounge Outdoor heated pool & spa

RENAUD’S COMING TO CARPINTERIA:

Renaud’s Patisserie & Bistro, available locally at 1324 and 3315 State Street, will be coming to a new building being constructed at the corner of Carpinteria Avenue and Holly Avenue in Carpinteria. Opening is scheduled for early 2018. SOJOURNER UPDATE: Food news junkie and

rumormonger Chompee McGillicutty tells me that a taco joint and sushi restaurant, perhaps connected to Miso Hungry, will split the old Sojourner spot at 134 East Canon Perdido Street.

2321730R

Online ReseRvatiOns: CambRiaPineslOdge.COm (sPeCial COde sabi) must PResent this COuPOn at CheCk-in

800-966-6490 805-927-4200

2905 buRtOn dRive 93428

Limited number of packages available. Does not apply to groups. Excludes holidays, peak periods, and some weekends. Not valid with other discounts or promotions. Must mention this coupon when making reservation. Does not include tax. Expires 9/30/16

John Dickson’s reporting can be found every day online at SantaBarbara.com. Send tips to info@SantaBarbara.com. independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

47


neW

late night happy hour 10 pm until close • 7 days a Week

2 for 10 $

$

2 off

Your choice of 2: Draft Beers, appetizers, Burgers & pizza Wine, call Drinks, call shots 10pm-11pm no Discounts on to-go fooD

235 W. Montecito St Corner of Bath • 21 and over • valid i.d. required • t h e n e i g h B o r h o o d B a r . C o m

THE SANTA BARBARA SYMPHONY PRESENTS

2016-17 Opening Weekend

Ode To Joy: Beethoven’s 9th

With this coupon. Expires 9/21/16.

WEEKLY SPECIALS Wild Coho Salmon Fillet — $12.95 lb

10% OFF

Local Stone/Rock Crab Claws — $9.95 lb Local Uni Tray 40 gram — $6.95 each

Nir Kabaretti, Conductor

117 Harbor Way, Suite A, Santa Barbara, CA 93109 | ph. 805.965.9564 | www.sbfish.com

Rouse: Rapture Beethoven: Symphony No. 9

COUPLES

October 15, 2016 8pm I October 16, 2016 3pm I The Granada Theatre Our Opening Weekend concert unites 150 singers across the Santa Barbara region from the Santa Barbara Choral Society, The Quire of Voyces, Westmont College, UCSB and San Marcos High School for one of classical music’s most celebrated works. Note: No intermission Tickets start at $29 I Student tickets $10 Adults ages 20-29 $20 with ID

Jeanine De Bique

Mikki Andina Chris & David Chernof Stephen Erickson Barbara Burger & Paul Munch Brett Moore Brooks & Kate Firestone

Nina Yoshida Nelsen

Benjamin Brecher

Artist Sponsors

Media Sponsors

For tickets call 805.899.2222 or visit thesymphony.org

48

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

Therapeutic Coaching

The New Rules of Marriage Program (Terry Real) Is Your Marriage in Crisis?

DeAndre Simmons

WENDY ALLEN,

Concert Sponsors

Selection Sponsors

MARRIAGE

Are You In Pain About Your Marriage?

Marilyn & Richard Mazess

Principal Concert Sponsor

excluding specials IN STORE ONLY

independent.com

Ph.D, MFT 1207 De La Vina Santa BarBara 805-962-2212 www.wendyphd.com #mFC21158

From Marriage Tune-up to Last Chance Intensive Therapy Fast Paced, No-Nonsense Therapy

I WILL HELP YOU.


dining out

Guide

Brazilian Brasil Arts Café offers Brazilian cul‑ ture by way of food, drink, and dance! Come try our Brazilian BBQ plate or Moqueca (local sea bass in a coconut sauce). Enjoy our breakfast or $9.95 lunch specials or the best Açaí bowls in town. Be ready to join in a dance class! www.brasilartscafe.com 805‑845‑7656 1230 State Street

french Petit Valentien, 1114 State St. #14, 805‑966‑0222. Open M‑F 11:30‑3pm (lunch). M‑Sat 5pm‑Close (dinner). Sun $24 four course prix fixe dinner. In La Arcada Plaza, Chef Robert Dixon presents classic French comfort food at affordable cost in this cozy gem of a restaurant. Petit Valentien offers a

wide array of meat and seafood entrees along with extensive small plates and a wine list specializing in amazing quality at arguably the best price in town. A warm roman‑ tic atmosphere makes the perfect date spot. Comfortable locale for dinner parties, or even just a relax‑ ing glass of wine. Reservations are recommended. FREE corkage M‑Th, through Summer. indian Flavor of India 3026 State 682‑6561 $$ www.flavorofindiasb.com Finest, most authentic Indian cuisine is affordable too! All You Can Eat Lunch Buffet $10.95 M‑S dinner combos $9.95+ Specials: Tandoori‑ Mixed or Fish, Chicken Tikka Masala, Shrimp Bhuna. Also: meat, curries & vegetar‑ ian.Wine & Beer. Take out. VOTED BEST for 20 YEARS! irish Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant, 18 E. Ortega St. (next to lot 10) SB, 568‑0702. $$. Open 7 days 11:30a‑Close (Food ‘til 10p, 11p on Sat/Sun). AE MC V Disc. Authentic Irish food & atmosphere in downtown SB. Specialties from Ireland include Sea‑ food & Meat dishes. Informal, relaxed pub‑style atmosphere. Live music Thursday nights. Children welcome. Avail. for private parties. Pool & Darts. steak

Rodney’s Grill, 633 East Cabrillo Bou‑ levard at The Fess Parker – A Double‑ tree by Hilton Resort 805‑564‑4333. Serving 5pm ‑10pm Tuesday through Saturday. Rodney’s Grill is a fresh Amer‑ ican grill experience. Enjoy all natural

The Independent Independent’s Dining Guide is a paid advertisement and is provided as a service to our readers. Restaurants are listed according to type of food served. Bon appétit!

QUESTION: I don’t drink coffee. Why do my teeth stain? ANSWER: There are a variety of foods and drinks that can stain your teeth. Enamel is porous so it can pick up the color from what you eat like a sponge. You might be surprised to learn that it is not just coffee, tea, soda and red wine that can stain your teeth. The following can be staining culprits as well:

AVERAGE PRICE PER MEAL $ Up to $10 $$ $11-$15 $$$ $16-$25 $$$$ $26-Up

Curry Chilis Ketchup

hormone‑free beef, locally‑sourced seafood, appetizers, and incredible desserts. The place to enjoy dinner with family and friends by the beach. Private Dining Room for 30. Full cocktail bar with specialty cocktails. Wine cellar with Santa Barbara County & Califor‑ nia’s best vintages by‑the‑glass. thai

Zen Yai Thai Cuisine, 805‑957‑1193, 805‑957‑1102 Reminiscent of things Thai. Cooking from our hearts to you! Creative Thai dishes from delicious curries to spicy noodles. Beer & Wine • Open 7 days Dinner at 5pm. Lunch Tue‑Sat 11:30‑3:00 • 425 State St. Wineries/ tasting rooms

Santa Barbara Winery, 202 Anacapa St. 963‑3633. Open Sun‑Thurs 10a‑6p & Fri‑Sat 10a ‑ 7p, small charge for extensive tasting list. 2 blocks from both State St & the beach. This venerable winery is the county’s oldest‑ est.1962, and offers many internationally acclaimed wines from their Lafond Vineyard in the Santa Rita Hills. Try some of Winemaker Bruce McGuire’s small production bottling. www.sbwinery.com

• wine Guide

r Sip This

ButtonwooD Farm HoP on Brewers are longtime fans of incorporating elements of winemaking into their ales, from adding grape must to aging in used barrels. But the tables are turning, thanks to winemaker Karen Steinwachs at Buttonwood Farm Winery & Vineyard, who just received what she believes is the first federal approval for adding hops to sauvignon blanc. “I love hops and I love IPAs and I come from a brewing family, so I thought, ‘What if?’” said Steinwachs, who was inspired by a Scar of the Sea hopped cider that she tasted during a World of Pinot Noir technical session years ago. She bottled the hopped sauv blanc last fall, but it took about a year of wrangling with the feds to determine what it could be called—it’s “white wine with natural flavors,” technically—and what would be allowed on the label, as the vintage, region, and even grape variety had to be removed due to backward alcohol laws. (Why does the government want you to know less about what’s in the bottle?) The result is Hop On, in which Galaxy and Glacier hops give a pleasantly floral and slightly skunky kick to the nose of the stereotypically grassy wine. “I wanted the IPA aromatics, but without the bitterness,” said Steinwachs. The blessing in disguise from not being able to include a vintage is that Buttonwood can crank out the Hop On as needed, and batch No. 2 is already in the works, with Pacific Valley Hops from Lompoc to be added in fresh form. In addition to the 25 initial cases, Hop On will also be available around the area in kegs, so expect to see it at Firestone Walker and other on-tap purveyors soon. —Matt Kettmann See buttonwoodwinery.com.

ASK THE DENTIST

Dining Out Guide

ethiopian Authentic Ethiopian cuisine Featured at Petit Valentien Restaurant 1114 State St. #14, 805‑966‑0222. Serkaddis Alemu offers an ever changing menu with choices of vegetarian, vegan, and meat options. Catering Avaliable for parties of up to 40 people. Sat/Sun lunch 11:30‑2:30

advertisement

fooD & Drink •

coffee house SB Coffee Roasting Company 321 Motor Way SB 962‑5213– Santa Barbara’s premier coffee roaster since 1989. Come in and watch us roast the freshest and most delicious coffee ev‑ eryday in our cafe. Enjoy a warm pastry and our Free WiFi ‑ Corner of State St. & Gutierrez. Coffee Services, Gift Boxes & Merchandise available. sbcoffee.com

z

paid

Red Meat Orange Juice BBQ Sauce

Soy Sauce Chilies Pickles

Beets Spinach Balsamic Vinegar

If the food is acidic, it is best to rinse with water after you have them and wait 30 minutes before brushing so you do not damage your enamel. Stains on your teeth can be polished with a dental cleaning or professional whitening if you would like to brighten your smile further. SPONSORED BY:

www.EricsonDental.com Santa Barbara 536 East Arrellaga, Suite 101 Santa Barbara, CA 93103 P 805.884.1874

Lompoc 1201 East Ocean Ave, Suite G Lompoc, CA 93436 P 805.735.2702

Nepalese, Indian & Tibetan Cuisine

FREE DELIVERY • within 4 miles, minimum $30

himalayankitchensantabarbara.com Open Daily · Lunch 11am-2:30pm · Dinner from 5pm

$1 off lunch buffet · Reg/ $9.99 $10 off dinner purchase of $50 or more

Not valid for delivery, no cash value, present coupon when ordering.

431 State St. · 805.882.1000

GlOBAl lATin cuiSinE

“let’s celebrate life” 30 E. ORTEGA • OvEjABlAncASB.cOM • 963-1012 independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

49


41073

Pacific Sound Chorus presents...

SEE THE PREMIERE FRIDAY / SATURDAY

SEPTEMBER

Seaside Rendezvous

LOBERO / 8 PM

This Saturday Sept. 17

This Star-Studded night includes two choruses and three quartets, all A Cappella Champions!

23 & 24

Photo: David Bazemore

2 Shows - 2:00 & 7:00pm

Against an original pulsating sound score, the ground breaking new work, FUTURE PERFECT, confronts the paradox of contemporary life head on. With daredevil physicality, VIM VIGOR communicates the complexity of human relationships through their signature dance-theater aesthetic.

Marjorie Luke Theatre 721 E. Cota St.

R I N G M A S T E R S

International Quartet Champions 800-353-1632 http://pacsoundchorus.bpt.me

18 BRETT DENNEN

OCTOBER

3

JERRY DOUGLAS BAND with special guest Maura O’Connell

“If Clapton is God, Jerry Douglas is the Holy Ghost. There are things this man can do with a dobro, or even a slide on electric guitar, that a lot of guitarists can’t do with 10 fingers.” – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Th

KCRW presents

SEPTEMBER

n g F or T h i e en 49

BIG NAMES. SMALL ROOM.

Scr e

805.963.0761 or sbdanceworks.com

est. 1968

The nation’s longest running artisan holiday cooperative

PaSeo nuevo Mall #101 In the Heart of Downtown Santa Barbara

7 days a week through December 24th

aPPly For early Screening aT: SanTaBarBarayeSSTore@gMail.coM Please include: • Name, Address, Phone #, email, and category • Description of your work, including materials and techniques • D oes anyone help in any phase of your work If so, how many and exactly what do they do • 5 (jpg) images of your work, each with a description, price and dimensions

Mail: The yes Store | P.o. Box 1390 | lompoc, ca 93438 Please include all of the above and 5 photos of your work instead of jpgs

DiScounTeD regiSTraTion For early accePTeD arTiSanS Early Deadline:

September 23, 2016 Final Deadline:

LOBERO THEATRE ENDOWMENT FOR AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC

805.963.0761 or Lobero.com 50

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

October 17, 2016


email: arts@independent.com

SBMA Hires new Curator of PhotogrAP Photogr hy l I f e page 51 courtesy

Museum of Art (SBMA) lost its longtime curator of photography Karen Sinsheimer to cancer a year ago, but thanks to her extraordinary gifts as a collector, it was a tragedy that also created an important opportunity. For 25 years, Sinsheimer exerted her considerable acumen in acquiring a substantial and wideranging body of photographic work for the museum’s permanent collection, thus establishing the SBMA as a major player in this increasingly important field of art history. In April of 2016, the museum announced the appointment of Charles Wylie to the newly renamed position of curator of photography and new media. Wylie, who goes by Charlie in his professional life, comes to us from Dallas, where he served as Lupe Murchison curator of contemporary art at the Dallas Museum of Art for 15 years. On Sunday, September 18, Wylie will open the first show he has organized here, Cecil Beaton’s London’s Honourable Scars: Photographs of the Blitz. Although it’s a relatively small show — 15 haunting images — it’s a big step, as with it the museum enters a new era in which the category of fine art photography will merge not only with new media, such as video and the Internet, but with multiple larger trends visible across the dynamic spectrum of contemporary art practice. To be clear, Wylie has sterling credentials when it comes to the traditional category of photography. While at the Getty Center, he cataloged thousands of images by the great German photographer August Sander and organized an important collection of the photos of the influential team Bernd and Hilla Becher. In fact, it was his study of German photographers and of the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf (where Bernd Becher mentored Thomas Struth and Andreas Gursky, among others) that led Wylie to his role in Dallas, where he curated successful

paul wellman

I

t was tragic when the Santa Barbara

from left: Kathy Marden, Ken Gilbert, Meredith McMinn Josh Jenkins, and E. Bonnie Lewis

Charlie Wylie Brings Contemporary Art ExpEriEncE To MuseuM’s PhoTo/New Media PosT

traveling exhibitions of such major contemporary artists as Brice Marden, Robert Ryman, Gerhard Richter, and Sigmar Polke. Speaking with him in the museum’s basement conference room this fall, I was impressed with Wylie’s breadth of interests, his knowledge of the international scope of contemporary art, and particularly with the ease with which he navigated conversational transitions between the abstruse (e.g., the philosophical basis of German objectivism) and the popular (Wylie curated the Dallas Cowboys Art Collection that’s now on view in AT&T Stadium). When asked

if his relationship with the Jones family depended on his knowledge of football, Wylie smiled and offered the characteristically humble observation that his bachelor’s degree from the University of Notre Dame “didn’t hurt.” Going forward, visitors to the SBMA can expect to feel Wylie’s impact through a combination of things: shows like London’s Honourable Scars designed to highlight the museum’s extensive and all too often hidden existing strengths in photography, thoughtful investigations of contemporary work involving moving images and sound, and shows introducing Santa Barbara to genredefying international artists such as Willie Doherty and Leo Villareal.With the upcoming show of wartime work by Cecil Beaton, a gift from the museum’s former director Ala Story, he has made a splendid start. — Charles Donelan

Feed the Funk

“Incredible show. I couldn’t stop dancing,” wrote one happy fan on Facebook of the New Vibes’ Prince tribute concert they performed at Randy’s Tap Room in Solvang recently. Folks in South County have a chance to groove to the rhythms of the Purple One when the New Vibes brings its show to SOhO on Saturday, September 17. The occasion is the fourth annual Feed the Funk Benefit Concert, which raises money to help support “music, community leadership, and service,” according to their press release. This year’s beneficiaries include the teen music mentorship program Notes for Notes and the Boys & Girls Clubs, among others. Hosted by the Jewish Federation of Greater Santa Barbara’s Young Adult Division, the evening features myriad entertainment before the New Vibes take

the stage. While patrons dine (7-9 p.m.), they will be regaled by teen acts including the Jewish Federation’s Teen Comedy Club, the Cate School Advanced Jazz Combo, and the Notes for Notes Jazz Villains. Come 9 p.m., the energy will be kicked up a notch for the 21-and-over crowd when Santa Barbara’s Funkstication takes the stage. Last, but not least, the New Vibe will close out the evening with selections from Prince’s ample musical catalog. Feed the Funk takes place Saturday, September 17, 7 p.m. (doors open at 6:30 p.m.), SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State Street. Tickets are $10 (pre-sale) or $15 (door). Dinner is not included in ticket price, reservations recommended. Call SOhO at 962-7776. For more information, see jewishsantabarbara.org/funk. — Michelle Drown

The Boondawgle estate When SBCC professor R. Michael Gros gave Ken Gilbert and E. Bonnie Lewis of DramaDogs a copy of Peter McDonough’s The Boondawgle Estate last January, he was just looking for a reliable group of seasoned performers to read it at PlayFest 2016. “If it doesn’t grab you within the first 10 pages, don’t give it another thought” is how Gilbert remembers what Gros said when he handed over the script. Little did either know that less than a year later, Gilbert would be directing a fully staged version of the show at Center Stage Theater, or that it would be getting its world premiere in Santa Barbara by popular demand. Audiences at the PlayFest staged reading in January were floored by the comedy, which is a modern take on the kind of period farce that was such a staple here in Santa Barbara at the Circle Bar B Dinner Theatre. There’s an inheritance at stake — of course — and a goofy, useless brother hanging around to thwart every rational move by the protagonist. And there’s also that staple of a classic 1930s farce, the sudden pratfall. But this time that particular moment gets a different treatment — one that’s a great example of what DramaDogs is about. Director Gilbert explained: “We’ve had lots of time to work on the physical aspects of the show, and one thing we decided was important was to keep the set to a minimum, so that the only things onstage are things that are needed by the actors.” In some cases, and I’ll let what those are remain a surprise, actors encounter obstacles that are in the script but not on the stage in front of them. With this talented cast and some seriously witty, lyrical dialogue, The Boondawgle Estate is sure to make you laugh. DramaDogs presents The Boondawgle Estate at Center Stage Theater (751 Paseo Nuevo) ThursdaySunday, September 15-18. For more info, call 963-0408 or visit centerstagetheater.org. — CD

m o r e a r t s & e n t e r ta i n m e n t > > > independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

51


NEW

Happy Hour MENU

NOW GET YOUR KICKS FROM 3:00 - 6:00 MONDAY - FRIDAY AND ALL DAY SATURDAY AND SUNDAY! Served in Lounge and Oyster Bar Area Only

SELECTED DRAUGHT BEERS $4.50

9/15 - 8:30

chuck ragan, w.t. newton 9/16 - 9:00

MIkE LOVE

eARtHwAKe, DJ 9LIVeS, SInGInG DIRt 9/17 - 7:00

FEED ThE Funk YoUnG PeRFoRMeRS tHe new VIBe FUnKStICAtIon 9/18

caLL cLuB 9/19 - 7:00

805 Blonde Pacifico Figueroa Mountain Pilsner

TOMMY aLEXanDEr

WELL DRINKS $4.50 HOUSE WINES $4.75 MAI TAI $5.25 ORIGINAL MARGARITA $5.25

nIcOLa gOrDOn, LucY & La MEr, SuSan MarIE rEEVES

NEW SMALL TASTY BITES

OTTMar LIEBErT & Luna nEgra

w/ DJAnGo KoenIG 9/20 - 6:30

9/21 - 9:00

CLAM CHOWDER $5.00 OYSTER ON HALF SHELL EACH $1.50 GUACAMOLE & CHIPS $5.00 PRAWN COCKTAIL $5.00 CEVICHE $5.00

9/22 - 8:00

SISTEr SParrOW & ThE DIrTY BIrDS w/ KoLARS

FoR oUR FULL LIneUP, PLeASe VISIt

SoHoSB.CoM 1221 State Street • 962-7776

CALAMARI $5.00 STEAMERS – MUSSELS OR CLAMS $5.00 TACOS – FISH OR BEEF (2 PER) $5.00 FILET MIGNON SLIDERS $5.00 AHI POKE $5.00

805-964-7881 beachside-barcafe.com

CHANNELKEEPER SWIM | PADDLE | SURF LEADBETTER BEACH

9.17.16 | 8AM - 1PM

Register today at

www.aquathon.info

52

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com


a&e | ART REVIEW

AbstrActions, contrActions, intersections:

FrAncis scorzelli And JoAn rosenberg-dent At GraySpace Gallery. Shows Sept. 23-Nov. 26.

A

thread of interplay between two and three-dimensionality is one of the most distinctive elements of a new collaborative exhibition: Abstractions, Contractions, Intersections that brings together painter Francis Scorzelli and sculptor Joan Rosenberg-Dent. Rather than relying on the viewer to ascribe emotional meaning, or using divisive ideological snippets, these pieces are intrinsically valuable because of their optical wit. The exhibition runs September 23November 26 at GraySpace, 219 Gray Avenue, in the heart of the Funk Zone. As part of a growing movement of Santa Barbara–centric artists with a shared vision of their idyllic community, the works featured in the show epitomize an emotional response to the menacing media culture of INTERSECTION CONNECTION: Joan Rosenberg-Dent’s the times. A sophisticated palette whimsical sculptures are a perfect pairing for Francis of aubergine, poppy, and periScorzelli’s paintings. winkle pours emotion into the hard angles and swerving lines that bonded Rosenberg-Dent and Scorzelli’s of work. They had little communication as they worked, simply passing their works-insingular vision for the series. Distinctly aloof from the mainstream, progress back and forth and then marveling these artworks embody a parallel world in at the end results, which often shared remarkwhich optical optimism reigns supreme. able similarities. Rosenberg-Dent is primarily a whimsical Both of these lifelong artists are also ceramic sculptor and Scorzelli is an abstract academically trained. Rosenberg-Dent holds painter; they worked in tandem over the three degrees, including a master’s in fine arts better part of a year to create this series of from the Cranbrook Academy of Art. Scor15 painting-sculptures that embrace and zelli studied at the Maharishi University of deindustrialize various elements of the Management, formerly known as Maharishi cityscape, while reworking them in a char- International University, during its formative acteristically Californian style. Pieces such as years. It’s clear that Josef Albers’ color theory “Art in the Square” recall Kazimir Malevich’s and screen-print-based color exercises were suprematist paintings, but with enhanced highly influential on Scorzelli. He creates features that bring to mind the Milan-based unique, self-contained color worlds in his loft Memphis group and its visionary leader, studio; from the dining chairs to the railings Peter Shire. and of course all of his paintings, the style of “Window Box” is perhaps the centerpiece the space evokes a beatnik sensibility that’s of the show; its gloriously painstaking cut- somewhat at odds with a town so full of suncanvas flowers each took Scorzelli longer worshipping solidarity. Meanwhile, at Rosento create than a single one of his large-scale berg-Dent’s Montecito studio, daylight pours works. No shape is repeated, and each side of in from the sun above and as reflected in the the flower has its own palette and design, so ocean below. Her “white cube” minimalist the work is infinitely engaging. The effect is a home is punctuated by pops of verdant hues visual euphoria of awe at its fine craftsman- and a fine balance of abstract and Asian art; ship, with currents of humor at its psychedelic she muses,“It just came together, like magic.” rendering. The generous scale of the works and the Scorzelli’s canvas portion of “Griffith Park” yellow center dividing line from the ceiling is one of a handful of small sketch paintings of the gallery out to the street combine to that were created prior to the collaboration’s transform Charlene Broudy’s minimalist inception. In 2006, the two artists were gallery space into a high-impact sensation. featured in a group show together at the Cor- Abstractions, Contractions, Intersections pays ridan Gallery on Milpas Street; it was then homage to the pleasures and madness of a and there that the two artists recognized the modern life, and brushes existential anxieties parallels in their styles and agreed that a col- aside with the lightness of a cloud. laboration could make for an interesting body — Hannah Kymila Johnson

18+ Onlyy

 

  

    

independent.com

September 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENt

53


HIS

T SATURDAY

Is Your Boss Violating Your Rights? Adams Law focuses on Advocating employee rights in claims involving:

AMY SCHUMER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SEP 17 DOLLY PARTON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SEP 25 GARY CLARK JR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SEP 30 THIEVERY CORPORATION / CAFÉ TACVBA . . .OCT 01 BLINK-182 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OCT 05 THE WHO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . OCT 06 VAN MORRISON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .OCT 15 NORAH JONES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .OCT 27 MORRISSEY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NOV 05 PRETTY LIGHTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NOV 10

• Wrongful Termination • Pregnancy Discrimination • Disability Discrimination • Hostile Work Environment • Sexual Harassment • Racial and Age Discrimination

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

• Working “Off the Clock” • Unpaid Overtime Compensation/Bonuses • Reimbursement for Work-Related Expenses

CALL US TODAY 805-845-9630 Visit our website at www.adamsemploymentlaw.com

Adams Law Serving the Employment Law Needs of California’s Central Coast

TICKETS AVAILABLE: SB BOWL OR AT AXS.COM / SBBOWL.COM / GOLDENVOICE.COM

54

• Misclassified “Salaried” Employees and Independent Contractors

independent.com

(805) 845-9630


a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ PREVIEWS

lily & maDeleine w

hen we were in high school, we had started Keep It Together, for which they are currently on tour. singing songs together, and then we met “We started out just making music kind of as a fun [producer Paul Mahern], and he thought project, but when it started taking off, we decided that we had some potential,” explained Mad- we needed to keep the ball rolling and put out more eleine Jurkiewicz, one half of Lily & Madeleine, of the material,” said Madeleine in a recent interview with The Santa Barbara Independent. duo’s origins. “So he challenged us to try to write our own music, “We’ve worked really hard the and ‘In the Middle’ was one of past couple of years to get three the first songs we ever wrote full-length records and an EP together. We just filmed it in his out, and now we finally have studio and then [posted it on a second to breathe and think YouTube] for fun.” about the next thing that we by Michelle Drown What started as a lark quickly want to put out.” became a career for the JurkieAlthough they were both wicz sisters, Madeleine (now teenagers when they made their age 21) and Lily (now 19). In fact, the duo has put out debut, the sisters’ songwriting has the gravitas one might multiple records since 2013, including the recent release expect from a more seasoned duo. Keep It Together is no exception and sees the pair exploring their most personal material yet. “Nothing” is a particularly haunting ballad about the disintegration of a romance and its emotional debris.“Hotel Pool,”“Westfield,” and “Hourglass” are other standouts, but the entire album is an original, captivating aural experience. With their trademark close harmonies and compelling music compositions that feature folk, rock, and tinges of jazz, Lily & Madeleine have been garnering a wide range of fans outside their home state of Indiana. Don’t miss them when they stop in Santa Barbara Sunday, September 18, at the Lobero Theatre. For the complete interview with Lily & Madeleine, see independent.com/ KEEP IT TOGETHER: Writing songs since teenagers, the duo just released a new album lilyandmadeleine. n that has the gravitas one might expect from a more seasoned pair.

CloSe harmonieS, DynamiC muSiC make Duo oneS to watCh

courtesy

TICKETS: ARLINGTON THEATRE / WALMART / CHARGE BY PHONE 805-963-4408 TICKETMASTER.COM / THEARLINGTONTHEATRE.COM

Brett Dennen’S Serene SounDS

S

ongwriter, adventurer, and now vintner Brett Wines as a reminder that “life is a celebration,” learning Dennen loves the good things in life. When not the process as he goes. penning plaintive songs such as the delicate, When asked if the winery was a whole new shade of dreamy tropical numbers that garland his gra- his identity or an expansion of it, Dennen said the rosés cious new album, Por Favor—which will be on full dis- serve as a complementary extension of the creativity play during his set at the Lobero Theatre (33 E. Canon already pouring out. “I feel like I’m creating a brand Perdido St.) on Sunday, September 18, at 7:30 p.m.—the that can help me musically; it can be a sponsor or a way intrepid Californian soaks up the bounty of his home to enhance what I do,” he said. How enhanced? Down state’s riches, like with solo retreats into the serenity of the road, Dennen imagines embarking on wilderness the Emigrant Wilderness north excursions with fans, horseback of Yosemite, or more recently, escapes where food and wine is through crafting—and drinking hoofed in and his songs are sung — a very fine pair of Dennen under the stars. brand rosé wines. Because for all the identityexpansion, there’s an untram“I’m really proud of the rosés, meled patch of quiet solitude because I was aiming to make a rosé that was easy drinking and in Dennen’s soul to which he that doesn’t have the pressure attends when out of the stage by Richie DeMaria of being a full-bodied drinking spotlight. In lands of granite, experience; it’s more like a casual, volcanic basalt, and pines, Denany-time-of-year drink that will hold up a bit in the nen finds inspiration for recent songs such as “Burnwinter,” he said of his 2015 Dennen Vacationer Califor- ing Spirit,” singing, “I’m sitting in the meadow asking / nia Rosé and his Dennen Charismatic Fool Rosé, which How to bend when the strong wind blows / I’m trying won a 91-point score from Wine Spectator. A previously to remember / What my soul already knows”— big unexplored venture for the exploratory songwriter, questions to ponder, but nothing a glass of rosé can’t Dennen concocted his wines with partner J.W. Thomas assist with.

Songwriter turneD winemaker CeleBrateS life with muSiC, wine

4•1•1

Lily & Madeleine open for Brett Dennen on Sunday, September 18, at the Lobero Theatre, 33 E. Canon Perdido St. Call 963-0761 or visit lobero.com. independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

55


PRICED OUT santa barbara’s housing crisis

THE U LTI M ATE FALL WINE & FOOD WEEKEND CELEBRATING 25 YEARS

join the conversation

thursday, october 6th

Center Stage theater | 6pm reCeption | 7pm DiSCuSSion followeD by Q&a

OCTOBER 7-10, COLUMBUS DAY WEEKEND

Photos by Tenley Fohl Photography

FESTIVAL GRAND TASTING SATU RDAY, O C T O BE R 8 , 2016 MISSION SANTA INÉS, SOLVANG, 1 TO 4PM

$80.00 (+Ticketing Fee), at the door $90 (+Ticketing Fee) Taste 100+ wineries producing “fine wines of distinction” paired with dozens of wine country restaurants & food purveyors showcasing freshly harvested regional produce. For an elevated & more intimate wine tasting experience become a Connoisseur Club ticketholder… Enjoy food & wine demos, seminars and live music.

We e k e n d W i n e r y H i g h l i g h t e d E v e n t s : Friday, Oct. 7: 6:30pm-9:30pm Presqu’ile Winery- 5391 Presqu’ile Dr., Santa Maria, CA; An unforgettable harvest dinner with Chef Erik Kelley of The Cheese Store of Beverly Hills and wines from Presqu’ile Estate. $85; cameron@presquilewine.com or 805-937-8110 ext. 103 Sunday, Oct. 9: 11am-3pm Au Bon Climat & Qupé Semi Annual Open House & Wine Sale at Winery in Santa Maria- Extensive tasting of current releases & library wines (over 70 wines!), hot lunch by Jim Clendenen ; $20; www.aubonclimat.com ALL WEEKEND…Friday night Harvest Dinner, Winemaker dinners, Saturday morning wine seminar, winery & tasting room open houses. VINTNERS’ VISA: Extend your stay and see wine country! Get your wine tasting pass for October 7 - 10 and choose from dozens of participating wineries. A great value at $50 each (+Ticketing Fee)

For information & tickets visit celebrationofharvest.com or call 805-688-0881 56

THE INDEPENDENT

September 15, 2016

independent.com

FREE WITH RSVP kcrw.com/pricedout


a&e | POSITIVELY STATE STREET

Annie & the Hot Club

GREAT ACOUSTICS by Richie DeMaria CALLING ALL LUTHIERS: There is nothing like the beautiful crafting and design of a handmade acoustic instrument. While any factory can churn out a dinky ukulele or assembly-line guitar in a serviceable fashion with a serviceable tone, few hands can shape a sound as beautifully resonant as an expert luthier can, and few strings can sing as sweetly as those strummed and slid by a skilled set of luthier fingers. From Thursday, September 29, to Monday, October 3, the 2016 Santa Barbara Acoustic Instrument Celebration (SBAIC) will honor such expertly handmade acoustic instruments, the craftspeople who create them, and the communities who surround them with a series of concerts and classes dedicated to the choicest chordophones on the planet. Based at Earl Warren Showgrounds and with additional performances in venues all over town, master musicians and woodworkers from around the world will converge on Santa Barbara stages and show spaces to showcase some of the finest instruments directly with the public, where appreciators of the form can meet one another and hear new frontiers in instrument fabrication and acoustic composition. The festival continues the legacy started two decades ago in Healdsburg, California, by Charles Fox, Tom Ribbecke, and Todd Taggart, who founded the Healdsburg Guitar Festival as a way to meet other luthiers and for luthiers to sell their wares and preserve the art of handmade guitars. The festival lasted until 2014, when the Luthier Mercantile could no longer afford to keep up the gathering, and SBAIC director Kevin Gillies saw a void to be filled. A woodworker who has worked in architecture and furniture-making, Gillies finds the timeless design of acoustic instruments to be infinitely compelling. “The acoustic instrument is something to behold; it really is. The violin has hardly even improved over 400 years, and that’s remarkable if you consider how rapidly information changes,” he said. “Just to be in the room with an amazing instrument is a real joy.” For the whole weekend, acoustical joys Claude LaFlamme will abound. The festival kicks off on Thursday, September 29, at SOhO Restaurant & Music Club (1221 State St.) with a guitars-in-the-round concert featuring finger-style masters Michael Chapdelaine, Sean McGowan, and Kinloch Nelson, who will play both rootsy traditional songs and stump-the-crowd deep cuts. Friday night features numerous performances, starting with Celtic guitar player Tony McManus at Earl Warren Concert Room (3400 Calle Real), followed by fiery playing from Stevie Coyle and Walter Strauss at SOhO, with a classical guitar celebration by Andre Feriante, Giacomo Fiore, and Michael Chapdelaine ending the night at Center Stage Theater (751 Paseo Nuevo). More shows fill out Saturday, with a headlining show at the Lobero Theatre (33 E. Canon Perdido St.) by gypsy jazz wild children Annie & the Hot Club, guitarist Richard Smith, and harp-guitarist Muriel Anderson. Sunday’s closing celebration at the Marjorie Luke Theatre (721 E. Cota St.) will shine a light on the Acoustic Guitar Gods of the Future with rising string-strumming stars Antoine Dufour, Craig D’Andrea, Trevor Gordon Hall, and Claude LaFlamme. And if that weren’t enough, the Lobero offers a post-celebration treat with the legendary dobro act the Jerry Douglas Band and singer extraordinaire Maura O’Connell on Monday night. But one of the coolest things about the festival is its huge selection of master classes. From meticulous tone production and alternate tunings to nifty percussive techniques and outside-the-box approaches, the master classes will touch on just about every aspect of acoustical performance and production, where music fans can meet the artisans and see their oneof-a-kind creations in show-and-sell sessions in the afternoon. In an everdigitized world, the SBAIC promises a chance to connect with the deepest of musical roots: the instruments and their raw ingredients, the creators and their creations, the people, the binds they share, and the yoking strings of community. The SBAIC runs in venues across town Thursday, September 29-Monday, October 3. For more information, visit sbaic.com. n

AdvAnced chiroprActic Group welcomes

neils c. lArson, d.c. dr. larson uses the newest technology and gentle techniques to provide you and your family with the highest level of chiropractic care. less pain

better sleep

fewer headaches

more energy

lower stress

less arthritis and joint pain

surgery prevention

A d v A n C e d

CHiroprACtiC

- free - no obligation consultation, exam and first adjustment (if necessary) with this ad* ppo provider for most insurances, including medicare. *Free offer excludes medicare patients. offer expires september 30, 2016

independent.com

Group

(805) 681-7322 AdvancedChiropracticGroup.com 5350 Hollister Ave. Suite A-3

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

57


& entertainment

ReviewS

Thomas long

Lake Cachuma Capacity



April 2014 35 percent

PoP, rock & Jazz

Renew your commitment to water conservation. For more information visit www.WaterWiseSB.org

Announcing presents

Artificial Intelligence: Friend or Foe?

ay LaMontagne’s performance at the Santa Barbara Bowl last Saturday night accomplished a feat few singers/songwriters can master: to redefine a musical genre as one’s own. The show started with a low-key solo acoustic set, playing fan At S.B. Bowl, favorites “Burn,” “Jolene,” Sat., Sept. 10. the heartbreaking “Like Rock & Roll and Radio,” and “Trouble.” The mood shifted when members of My Morning Jacket joined LaMontagne, introducing themselves with a dreamy blend of drums, bass guitar, and keyboard. LaMontagne seldom spoke during the show, only pausing to introduce the band and thank the audience.“This tour is special to me; to be able to make music with your friends is a beautiful thing,” he said.“The Jacket boys and I are glad you could be here for it.”

theater

presents

ArtificialSeptember Intelligence: Wednesday, 21, 2016 Cabrillo Pavilion Arts Center Friend or Foe? 1118 E. Cabrillo Blvd. | Santa Barbara, CA 93105 When: Wednesday, September 21, 2016 Where: Cabrillo Pavilion Arts Center Speakers: 1118 E. Cabrillo Blvd. | Santa Barbara, CA 93105 Luke Nosek Miles Ward John Denning Luca Foschini Speakers: PayPal & Google Cloud Princeton Artificial Evidation

Founders Fund Luke Nosek

Platform Miles Ward

Intelligence John Denning

Health Luca Foschini

PayPal & Google Cloud Princeton Artificial Evidation Is humanity at the dawn of a new age of enlightenment, inspired by Founders Fund Platform Intelligence Health

benign AI enabled tech; or on an unalterable path to computer driven Is humanity at thetodawn a new age ofselfaware enlightenment, inspired by benign AI enabledthe subservience AI ofpowered, machines? At present, tech; or on to computer driven subservience to AI of powered, selfbenefits ofan AIunalterable enhancedpath applications spanning a plethora technologies aware machines? present,ofthe benefits of AI transportation, enhanced applications spanning a data emerging in theAtareas healthcare, security and management, dominate the inrealm of ofpublic commentary. plethora of technologies emerging the areas healthcare, transportation,Please security join usand for a management, discussion dominate of today’s exciting AIcommentary. enabled technologies, data the realm of public Please join us for aand how to address the common sense moral and questions being discussion of today’s exciting AI enabled technologies, and ethical how to address the common created as we expand machine’s ability to learn, and implement sense moral and ethical questions being created as we expand machine’s ability tothem learn, as decision making agents in our communities. and implement them as decision making agents in our communities.

Learn Learnmore moreand andregister registeratatwww.mitcentralcoast.org www.mitcentralcoast.org Thank Our Sponsors Sponsors Thank You You to to Our

58

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

The OdySSey PROjecT

LaMontagne and My Morning Jacket then took the audience on what felt like a trip to the moon, playing his latest record, Ouroboros, from start to finish with an animation of a solar eclipse as a backdrop. The album mostly consists of ethereal instrumental music with haunting vocals, but the highlight of the show was an electrifying performance of “Hey, No Pressure.” Ouroboros is reminiscent of Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon and captured the crowd’s attention, as if hypnotized by the bluesy, soulful psychedelic rock music. The show ended with songs from his 2014 album Supernova, to which the audience tapped their feet, swayed, and sang along, including on favorites “Ojai” and “Supernova.” LaMontagne’s set was an intriguing mix of genres beautifully strung together by his style: nonchalant yet excitingly captivating. —Savanna Mesch clarrissa koenig

September 2016 7 percent

Ray LaMOnTagne R

S

eldom have I been as conscious of how exposed performers can feel onstage as I was at this fascinating presentation, which brings together students from UCSB with young men serving sentences at the Los Prietos Boys Camp correctional facility. UCSB professor of theater Michael Morgan and his team train the group in a variety of techniques while asking each individual to At Center Stage Theatre, Sun., Sept. 11. consider the ways in which his or her own journey through life resembles that of brave Odysseus, the “man of many twists and turns” whose greatest desire is to get back to his home. Listening to the litany of descriptions of the dark places from which these young people have emerged, the broken homes, the incarcerated or addicted parents, and the seemingly hopeless environments, it became clear that in order to participate in the project they had to overcome a different kind of stage fright, one associated not with the fear of failing to portray a character, but instead with the fear of what it might mean to portray oneself.

The result, I’m happy to say, was uplifting in the extreme. When, at the end of the show, the actors joined together in testifying to the value of their own voices, one could hear the newfound confidence that was born out of this theatrical challenge. —Charles Donelan


theater

tand-up comedian Kliph Nesteroff has parlayed an obsession with the obscure roots of his chosen art form into one of the year’s most compulsively readable books, The Comedians: Drunks, Thieves, Scoundrels, and the History of American Comedy. Beginning with the often violent acts that gave vaudeville its yuks, Nesteroff traces the evolution of the American comedian from such overlooked figures as Frank Fay, the first man to stand still and

scantily clad Aussies would venture into the audience and select a lady to bring onstage, where he then gyrated in her face and maneuvered her into various sexual positions before releasing her back into the crowd. Some of the “volunteers” were as voracious as the men, some were understandably timid, and the audience loved every minute of it. Thunder from Down Under is a naughty romp featuring enviably fit men who encourage pawing from the ladies. Who can say no to that? —Michelle Drown

Presented by Renowned Fertility Experts: Dr. Mark Surrey, Dr. Carolyn Alexander and Dr. Daniel Rychlik

Intrauterine Insemination (IUI) In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) Fertility Preservation: Egg, Embryo And Sperm Freezing

Third Party Reproduction Egg Donation Surrogacy Gestational Carrier

TUESDAY INN AT SPANISH GARDEN

SEPT 27

6:30-8:30PM

915 GARDEN STREET SANTA BARBARA, 93101

*Underground parking and Street parking available Catered by:

SPECIAL OFFER $500 VALUE: Attendees will receive a gift certificate for a complimentary consultation and ultrasound

RSVP REQUIRED RSVP TODAY

scrcivf.com/upcoming-events tell jokes, all the way to the superstars of today such as Jerry Seinfeld and Chris Rock. Fans of sentimental celebrity biographies be warned—Nesteroff pulls no punches in detailing the sordid connections between the comedy clubs and the Mob, for example. What emerges is a revolutionary portrait of American culture on the move as it confronts rapidly changing demographics, technologies, and, of course, the simple pain of being alive. — CD

Drive to UCSB’s Campus Point and follow signs for parking

msi.ucsb.edu

893-8765

UC Santa Barbara’s

new releases

OceanFest

de La SOuL’L’LS

and the anonymous nobody …

T

he arena-rock stomp of “Lord Intended” sees Posdnuos, Trugoy, and Mase assuming studio mikes for this long-awaited “requel.” The tracks “CBGBs” and “Royalty Capes” (replete with kingly blasts of brass) remind us how the MIA threesome can still flow. Guests include Usher, 2 Chainz, Justin Hawkins, Pete Rock, Jill Scott (the tedious spoken-word intro “Genesis”), and Snoop Dogg (miscast on “Pain”) while former Talking Heads leader David Byrne proves an inspired, ethereal-voiced choice (“Snoopies”). Perhaps predictably, Blur’s Damon Albarn (“Here in After”) returns the favor for Gorillaz’ “Feel Good Inc.,” the 2005 hit that maximized De la Soul, reintroducing them in the 21st century. Too bad there’s nothing as

“Latest Advancements in Infertility”

COVERING:

books

The cOMedianS S

FREE EDUCATIONAL SEMINAR

ReviewS

richie d e maria

he “revue” may have its roots in the 19th century, but Thunder from Down Under’s all-male production is purely 21st century. Bringing their mix of dancing, stripping, and cheeky humor to the Chumash Casino Resort last Thursday, hard-bodied Australian men made the ladies —and a few gentlemen — swoon as they plied their trade in the packed Samala Showroom. The attendees screamed with anticipatory fervor before the fellows had taken the stage. Once they emerged, dressed in suits as if they were businessAt Chumash men heading to their highCasino Resort, powered jobs, the din rose Thu., Sept. 8. to the equivalent of a Category 5 hurricane. When the “businessmen” finished, the emcee, Kurt, verbally worked the crowd with innuendofilled and straight-up dirty talk. “All right, Thunder virgins. We will be popping some cherries tonight,” he exclaimed, before bringing the dancers/strippers back to the stage. During each themed segment — e.g., “Jungle,”“GI Joe,”“Firemen,” etc.—one of the



ThundeR fROM dOwn undeR T

& entertainment

at SepteMber 24 • 10 am – 4 pm (FREE) breakneck or catchy here. While not as risktaking as Nas, eclectic as N.A.S.A.’s The Spirit of Apollo, assured as Dr. Dre’s Compton, or smile-inducingly organic as 2 Chainz’ ColleGrove, Anonymous is refreshingly not content to recycle the Long Island trio’s aural past. — Michael Aushenker

Families! Join The REEF

and UCSB’s Sustainability at Campus Point for a day of ocean celebration, with activities and adventures for all ages.

Live Music! independent.com

• • • • •

NautilusLive! Interactions Touch tanks and eco-labs Plankton exploration Water activities—surfing, snorkeling, paddling available for rent Art sculptures with ocean plastics, and more!

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

59


arts & entertainMent listinGs

Música, Danza, y Mucho Más

Camba laChe son jarocho

SEP 16

7 pm • iSLa ViSTa SchooL

SEP 18

7 pm • marjorie Luke TheaTre, SanTa BarBara jr. high

¡entr a

6875 EL COLEGIO ROAD, ISLA VISTA, CA • (805) 252-3493

da G r

Free e

atui ta!

vent s!

721 E. COTA STREET, SANTA BARBARA, CA • (805) 884-4087 x7

art exhibits

 TALLER DE LA MÚSICA Y BAILE JAROCHO 

SEP 15

JAROCHO MUSIC AND DANCE WORKSHOP 7 - 8:30 pm • La caSa de La raza

MuseuMs

601 E. MONTECITO STREET, SANTA BARBARA, CA

Co-presentado por / co-presented with La Casa de La Raza

www.facebook.com/VivaelArteSB

Where events go to be seen.

JAN 1

JAN 1 YOUR EVENT HERE

JAN 1 YOUR EVENT HERE

Add your listing to our calendar. It’s fast. It’s free. With just a few mouse clicks, your event listing is in front of thousands of users looking for something to do. independent.com/events

RS

A YE 30 as

Santa Barbara’s

L❤VE DOCTOR ❤ ❤ ❤

Love yourself Love your partner Enhance your level of intimacy

Specializing in Relationships, Intimacy and Sexuality Issues

CHANNELKEEPER SWIM | PADDLE | SURF LEADBETTER BEACH

9.17.16 | 8AM - 1PM

Register today at

www.aquathon.info

Psychologist Psy 11846 Diplomate, AASECT Sex Therapist Call (805) 963-3329 THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

Elverhøj Museum – Manna From Heaven, through Nov. 6. 1624 Elverhoy Wy., Solvang, 686-1211. Karpeles Manuscript Library Museum – Ann Baldwin: Scriptopics, ongoing. 21 W. Anapamu St., 962-5322. Museum of Contemporary Art S.B. – assume vivid astro focus: avalanches volcanoes asteroids floods, through Dec. 31. 653 Paseo Nuevo, 966-5373. Rancho La Patera & Stow House – Multiple permanent exhibits. 304 N. Los Carneros Rd., Goleta, 681-7216. S.B. Historical Museum – Project Fiesta!, through Sept. 26; Hidden Treasures, through Oct. 16; Haunted Mirror and The Story of Santa Barbara, permanent exhibitions. Free admission. 136 E. De la Guerra St., 966-1601. S.B. Maritime Museum – Tattoos & Scrimshaw: The Art of the Sailor, through Oct. 31. 113 Harbor Wy., 962-8404. S.B. Museum of Art – British Art from Whistler to World War II, Sept. 18–Jan. 8.; Cecil Beaton’s London’s Honourable Scars: Photographs of the Blitz, Sept. 18-Jan. 8; Highlights of the Permanent Collection, ongoing exhibitions. 1130 State St., 963-4364. S.B. Museum of Natural History Sea Ctr. – Multiple permanent installations. 211 Stearns Wharf, 962-2526. UCSB Art, Design, & Architecture Museum – Done. Undone. Redone. The Chair, through Dec. 4. UCSB, 552 University Rd., 893-2951. Wildling Museum – Celebrating the National Parks of California, through Oct. 3. Where Land Meets Water, through Oct. 17. 1511-B Mission Dr., Solvang, 686-8315.

Galleries

Dr. Suzanne E. Rapley

60

HAZY DAYS OF SUMMER: Lisa Pedersen captures nature’s open spaces in the plein air style, such as in this work currently showing at the Porch Gallery in Carpinteria.

independent.com

10 West Gallery – Abstract and Contemporary Art: Penny Arntz, Peggy Ferris, Maria Miller, Karen Zazon, Stuart Ochiltree, Marilyn McRae, Karin Aggeler, Rick Doehring, Mary Thompson, through Sept. 26. 10 W. Anapamu St., 770-7711. Allan Hancock College Library – Children’s book illustrations, ongoing. 800 S. College Dr., Santa Maria, 922-6966. Beatrice Wood Ctr. for the Arts – American Ceramic Society, through Oct. 2. 8585 Ojai-Santa Paula Rd., Ojai, 646-3381. Bella Rosa Galleries – Asandra: Recent Abstract Paintings and Malcolm Tuffnell: Butterflies, clouds and flowers, through Sept. 30. 1103-A State St., 966-1707.

Bronfman Family Jewish Community Ctr. – S.B. Art Association Exhibit 2016, through Nov. 2. 524 Chapala St., 957-1115. The C Gallery –Dan Holland & Albert McCurdy: California Scene Painting, Sept. 17-Nov. 16.466 Bell St., Los Alamos, 344-3807. Cancer Ctr. of S.B. – Art Heals, a permanent exhibit. 540 Pueblo St., Ste. A, 898-2204. Carpinteria Arts Ctr. – Going Abstract, through Oct. 24. 855 Linden Ave., Carpinteria, 684-7789. Casa Dolores – Máscaras Místicas/Mystical Masks, through Jan. 7, 2017. 1023 Bath St., 963-1032. Casa de la Guerra – Reginald D. Johnson: Building Community, through Sept. 18. 15 E. De la Guerra St., 966-1279. Distinctive Art Gallery – Karl Dempwolf: In Praise of Nature, through Oct. 1. 1331 State St., 845-4833. Divine Inspiration Gallery of Fine Art – Olga Hotujac and Carlos Lomeli: Beyond The Surface, through Nov. 23. 1528 State St., 570-2446. Faulkner Gallery – ArtSee, through Sept. 29. 40 E. Anapamu St., 564-5608. Gallery 113 – Jane Hurd, Beth Schmohr, Dahlia Riley, Jo Merit, Sue Slater, and Michael Heffner, through Oct. 1. La Arcada, 1114 State St., 965-6611. Gallery Los Olivos – Linda Mutti and Sheryl Knight, through Oct. 1. 2920 Grand Ave., Los Olivos, 688-7517. Goleta Library – Goleta Valley Art Association Sept. Exhibit, through Sept. 28. 500 N. Fairview Rd., Goleta, 898-9424. JadeNow Gallery – Jeff and Ryan Spangler, ongoing. 14 Parker Wy., 845-4558. Jared Dawson Gallery – Nell Campbell: Images of Cuba, through Sept. 17. 4646 Carpinteria Ave., Carpinteria, 318-1066. Los Olivos Café – Life and Its Many Moods, through Nov. 3. 2870 Grand Ave., Los Olivos, 688-7265. Lucky Penny – Campbell Baker, ongoing. 127 Anacapa St., 284-0358. Marcia Burtt Studio Gallery – On Paper, through Oct. 2. 517 Laguna St., 962-5588. MichaelKate Interiors & Art Gallery – Block Party! Funk Zone Studio Artists Sampler, through Nov. 4. 132 Santa Barbara St., 963-1411. Oliver and Espig – Sue DiCicco, Robert Ervin, Oleg Ardimasov, and Kestas Urbaitis, through Sept. 30. 1482 E. Valley Rd., Ste. 50, Montecito, 962-8111. Pacifica Graduate Institute – Mythic Threads: Art, Healing and Magic in Bali, ongoing. 801 Ladera Ln., 879-7103. Porch Gallery – Lisa Pedersen, through Oct. 27. 3824 Santa Claus Ln., Carpinteria, 684-0300.

To be considered for The Independent’s listings, please visit independent.com and click “Submit an event” or email listings@independent.com.


sean Michael hower

sept. 15-22

~ Fall Special ~

• Spider Veins Consultation • One Session of Sclerotherapy • One Pair of Compression Hose

Only $250 ($620 Value)

mention this ad and additional specials will be offered on the day of consultation

Call Today For Your Consultation

No Surgery No Downtime Look and Feel Beautiful Before

ONE LOVE: Lucidity Music Sessions presents Hawaiian-born and -raised rising star Mike Love, who will bring his reggae sounds to SOhO this Friday, September 16. El Presidio de Santa Bárbara State Historic Park – Nihonmachi Revisited: Santa Barbara’s Japanese American Community in Transition, 1900-1940 and Memorias y Facturas, ongoing. 123 E. Canon Perdido St., 965-0093. S.B. Artwalk – Arts & Craft Show, ongoing Sundays. Cabrillo Blvd. at State St. S.B. Tennis Club – Captured 4, through Oct. 7. 2375 Foothill Rd., 682-4722. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – Morrison Hotel Gallery, ongoing. 1221 State St., 962-7776. Sullivan Goss, An American Gallery – Frank Kirk: The House Across the Street, through Oct. 2. 11 E. Anapamu St., 730-1460.

classical Hahn Hall –Music Academy of the West, 1070 Fairway Rd., 884-8410. fri: Camerata Pacifica: Goldberg Variations (7:30pm)

liVe MusiC pop, roCk & jazz

Chumash Casino Resort– 3400 E. Hwy. 246, Santa Ynez, (800) 248-6274 thu: Sheila E. (8pm) Cold Spring Tavern – 5995 Stagecoach Rd., 967-0066. fri: The Riverside (7-10pm) sat: Fort Taylor, CA (2-5pm); Jacob Cole (6-9pm) sun: Tom Ball and Kenny Sultan (1:154pm); Sean Wiggins Loan Goat (4:30-7:30pm) La Cumbre Plaza – 121 S. Hope Ave., 687-6458. thu: Luis Munoz & Teka (5pm) Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant – 18. E. Ortega St., 588-0702. thu: Dannsair (6:30pm) Goleta Valley Community Center – 5679 Hollister Ave., 722-8155. sat: Earl Thomas (8pm) The James Joyce – 513 State St., 962-2688. sat: Ulysses Jasz (7:30pm)

Libbey Bowl – 210 S. Signal St., Ojai, 272-3881. sat: 23rd Annual Bowlful of Blues (3pm) Lobero Theatre – 33 E. Canon Perdido St., 963-0761. sun: Brett Dennan, Lily & Madeleine (7:30pm) M.Special Brewing Co. – 6860 Cortona Dr., Bldg. C, Goleta, 968-6500. fri: Stiff Pickles Orchestra (6pm) sat: O.N.E. (6pm) Marjorie Luke Theatre – 721 E Cota St., 884-4087 x7. sun: ¡Viva el Arte! Los Cambalache (7pm) Pickle Rm. – 126 E. Canon Perdido St., 965-1015. tue: Soul Jazz with Cougar Estrada and John Schnackenberg (7pm) S.Y. Valley Grange Hall – 2374 Alamo Pintado Ave., Los Olivos, 688-9894. sat: Gap Tooth Mountain Ramblers (8pm) SOhO Restaurant & Music Club – 1221 State St., 962-7776. thu: Chuck Ragan, W.T. Newton (8:30pm) fri: Mike Love, Earthwake (9pm) sat: 4th Annual Feed the Funk Concert (7pm) mon: Tommy Alexander, Django Koenig (7pm) wed: Omar Liebert & Luna Negra (9pm) thu: Sister Sparrow & the Dirty Birds, Kolars (8pm) Velvet Jones – 423 State St., 965-8676. fri: Space Cadet, Kollegekado, Quez., Deeloyoung (7pm) sat: The Frights, The Soaks, The Regrettes, Nucklehead (8pm) wed: The Crookes, The Young Wild, Naked Walrus (8pm) thu: Sloan (8pm)

theater Center Stage Theater – The Boondawgle Estate, 751 Paseo Nuevo, 963-0408. thu-fri: 7:30pm sat: 2pm, 7:30pm sun: 2pm, 6pm

After

For new patients only. Not to be used in conjunction with any other offers. Expires October 31, 2016

805-845-2500

for more information and videos visit

216 W. Pueblo St. Ste A www.fabulouslegs.com Santa Barbara

D E VO N T S U N O

Los Angeles River: Urban Reclamation Reception: Friday, September 16 | 5 – 7 p.m. Lecture: Thursday, October 13 | 4:30 p.m. | PS-101

Follow us on

TwiTTer

@SBindpndnt #sbindy Image credit: Invasive Horticulture (central panel), spray paint and acrylic on canvas, 108” x 216”, 2015

30

| Humanities Building 202

Y E A R S

(805) 897-3484 | gallery.sbcc.edu | facebook.com/AtkinsonGallery

independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

61


IS THERE A HOLLAR IN YOUR FAMILY?

SHARLTO CHARLIE RICHARD ANNA JOHN MARGO COPLEY DAY JENKINS KENDRICK KRASINSKI MARTINDALE

MARGO MARTINDALE’S HILARIOUS AND HEARTBREAKING PERFORMANCE IS PROOF POSITIVE BEST ACTORS ON THE PLANET.”

THE HOLLARS WRITTEN BY JIM STROUSE DIRECTED BY JOHN KRASINSKI WWW.SONYCLASSICS.COM

EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT STARTS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16

SANTA BARBARA Paseo Nuevo (877) 789-6684 CALL THEATRE FOR SHOWTIMES

PICK

VIEW THE TRAILER AT WWW.THEHOLLARSFILM.COM

DAZZLING...

Weisz gives an intoxicating movie-star performance.”

STARTS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16

SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT

“A CHIC , CRYPTIC IDENTITY DRAMA.” “

THU 9/15 2 COL. (1.75") X 4.04"

MR

ALL.SWD.0915.SBI

Saturday September 17, 2016 Page Youth Center 8 am-1 pm

OCTOBER 1, 2016 Spirit of Santa Barbara: Past & Present

Lend a hand, build a community!

Architectural Tour

Be part of the largest single-day volunteer event in the Tri-Counties!

TICKETS AIASB.com 805-966-4198

#1

EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT STARTS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16

SANTA BARBARA Riviera Theatre (877) 789-6684

Showtimes for September 16-22 H = NO PASSES

FAIRVIEW

CAMINO REAL

PASEO NUEVO

7040 MARKETPLACE DR, GOLETA

8 WEST DE LA GUERRA PLACE, SANTA BARBARA

225 N FAIRVIEW AVE, GOLETA

H BRIDGET JONES’S BABY E 1:40, 4:30, 7:30 THE WILD LIFE B Fri to Sun: 1:15, 3:30, 5:45; Mon to Thu: 3:30, 5:45 NO MANCHES FRIDA C Fri to Wed: 2:00, 4:50, 7:45; Thu: 2:00, 4:50 SUICIDE SQUAD C 8:00 PM H STORKS B Thu: 7:45 PM

RIVIERA

H SNOWDEN E H BLAIR WITCH E 12:30, 2:45, Fri to Sun: 12:40, 3:40, 6:40, 9:40; 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 Mon to Thu: 2:10, 4:30, 7:30 H SNOWDEN E 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:10 SULLY C Fri to Sun: 12:00, 2:20, 4:45, 7:10, 9:30; Mon to Thu: 3:00, 5:30, 8:00 THE DISAPPOINTMENTS ROOM E 1:40 PM THE HOLLARS C SULLY C 12:25, 2:50, 4:00, 5:10, 6:20, 7:30, 8:40, 9:55

DON’T BREATHE E 2044 ALAMEDA PADRE SERRA, Fri to Wed: 12:45, 3:00, 5:15, 7:25, SANTA BARBARA

Thanks to our Sponsors:

$

297

Albertsons/Vons Keyt Easy Lift Transportation Exxon Mobil Metropolitan Theaters Montecito Bank & Trust Pacific Coast Business Times Page Youth Center Citibank

COMPLETE UNKNOWN E Fri: 5:00, 7:30; Sat: 2:30, 5:00, 7:30; Sun: 5:00, 7:30; Mon: 5:00 PM; Wed: 5:00 PM; Thu: 5:00, 7:30

METRO 4 618 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA

9:40; Thu: 12:45, 3:00, 5:15

HELL OR HIGH WATER E Fri to Wed: 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:35; Thu: 2:00, 4:30

THE DISAPPOINTMENTS ROOM E Fri to Sun: 2:10 PM; Mon to Thu: 2:30 PM

SIGN UP TODAY!

DON’T BREATHE E Fri to Sun: 1:15, 3:30, 5:40, 7:55, 10:05; Mon to Thu: 2:15, 5:45, 8:00

Register online: unitedwaysb.org/doc

BAD MOMS E Fri to Sun: 4:30,

PETE’S DRAGON B Fri to Sun: 12:50, 3:20; Mon to Thu: 4:30 PM

JASON BOURNE C Fri to Sun: 5:45, 8:40; Mon to Wed: 2:50, 7:15; Thu: 2:50 PM H THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN C Thu: 7:00, 8:15

ARLINGTON 1317 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

HELL OR HIGH WATER E Fri to Sun: 1:30, 4:00, 6:30, 9:10; Mon to Thu: 2:00, 5:10, 7:45

FIESTA 5 916 STATE STREET, SANTA BARBARA

H WHEN THE BOUGH BREAKS C Fri to Sun: 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:40; Mon to Wed: 2:40, 5:25, 8:00; Thu: 2:40, 8:00

SULLY C Fri to Sun: 1:00, 3:20, 5:45, 8:10; Tue & Wed: 2:00, 4:30, 7:00

THE WILD LIFE B Fri to Sun: 12:45, 3:00, 5:15; Mon to Thu: 2:00, 4:15

PLAZA DE ORO

NO MANCHES FRIDA C Fri to Sun: 12:55, 3:45, 6:30, 9:10; Mon to Thu: 2:05, 4:45, 7:30

371 SOUTH HITCHCOCK WAY, SANTA BARBARA

KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS B LIVE ANOTHER DAY B 2:30, Fri to Sun: 1:10, 6:20; Mon to Thu: 5:10 PM 5:00, 7:45 THE LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS C 4:45, 7:30 FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS C 2:10 PM

CHECK OUT OUR NEW WEBSITE!

THE INDEPENDENT

Fri to Sun: 12:10, 2:25, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20; Mon to Thu: 2:25, 4:40, 7:00

H BRIDGET JONES’S BABY E H THE MAGNIFICENT Fri to Sun: 1:00, 3:50, 6:40, 8:00, 9:30; SEVEN C Thu: 7:00, 8:30, 9:55 Mon to Thu: 2:10, 5:00, 6:30, 7:50

H BLAIR WITCH E Fri to Sun: 1:00, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45, 10:00; Mon to Thu: 3:15, 5:30, 7:45

7:00, 9:30; Mon to Wed: 5:00, 7:30; Thu: 5:00 PM

62

CHECK DIRECTORIES FOR SHOWTIMES NO PASSES ACCEPTED

WAR DOGS E Fri to Sun: 3:40, 8:50; Mon to Wed: 2:30, 7:40; Thu: 2:30 PM H STORKS B Thu: 6:15, 8:30 877-789-MOVIE

www.metrotheatres.com


Learn to

a&e | FILM & TV

Speak Spanish

TV THIS FALL A Brief Roundup of Shows Premiering and Returning

with Alonso Benavides, ph.d.

T

his summer TV fans witnessed an apotheosis of the lowly couch potato. All by itself, Stranger Things swept television watching into a pop aesthetic heaven that movies haven’t achieved since Spielberg and Lucas were good — a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away. Nobody predicted it. The show’s potent combo of suspense, nostalgia, and emotional connection had everybody talking about it afterward, creating a new sense of crazy TV possibilities. Who knows what this now-surprising media might pull off this fall? Here are some promising things. There were meant to be two shows based on that travel-hub Southern city that travel writer Pico Iyer scorned for its “placelessness.” The first (now nixed) was a comedy series produced by Lorne Michaels called Brothers in Atlanta starring Diallo Riddle and Bashir Salahuddin; a pilot was made though the show never followed. That’s probably because of Atlanta, which launched September 6 on FX and is being produced by the prodigiously talented Donald Glover. Glover, best known from Community, was also a writer on 30 Rock, though the kids know him as the rapper Childish Gambino. Those are lavish enough credentials for a show about Atlanta, the city that gave us OutKast, and maybe Iyer will someday change his mind. On September 9, Quarry comes to Cinemax. Based on super-prolific Max Allan Collins’s (Road to Perdition) murder mystery series, Quarry is about a disillusioned Vietnam War vet named Mac Conway, and New Orleans and Mississippi scenery costar. On broadcast TV we celebrate the epic accomplishment nobody expected. South Park marked its 20th season on Comedy Central on September 14. The stillaudacious cartoon, which puts adult-strength language in the mouths of babes, has survived on a brilliant barrage of smut-peppered dialogue, cut-rate but cool animation, and the sharp edge of its topical humor. NBC offers a potentially bizarre combo with The Good Place, starring the unlikeliest duo of the season (after Barbra Streisand and Jamie Foxx): Kristen Bell and Ted Danson. Bell (known to Veronica Mars lovers) and Danson play dead in this show about the Pearly Gates. Through a celestial bureaucratic error, Bell’s gone to heaven, which turns out to be stuffy surroundings. It premieres September 19.

Oct. 3 — dec. 23, 2016 Day and Evening Classes and Saturdays

Our method calls for small groups (6 maximum) and conversation as soon as it is possible

Gilmore Girls

Back for its third season of revolutionizing television representations of gender and sad love is Transparent. Are more remarkable plot swerves possible? Find out September 23 on Amazon Video. Also, Transparent writer Noah Harpster, a UCSB theater grad, costars in an overdue Tig Notaro starring vehicle, One Mississippi, due in November also on Amazon. Spinning off from the remarkable Marvel series Jessica Jones comes Luke Cage, about a bulletproof bartender (the best kind) continuing the gritty superhero genre Krysten Ritter’s Jones created with a combination of noir antiheroes, comic-book melodrama, and a surprisingly deep investigation of free will. But it is Woody Allen who helms the most anticipated TV offering this year. Amazon’s Crisis in Six Scenes teams Allen with the likes of Miley Cyrus and Elaine May in a show that explores a volatile time in American history. It’s hard to imagine arch-cineaste Allen doing television, but it’s also further recognition of the new power the small screen has gained. It premieres September 30. And on October 2, we finally get to see what all the fuss was about the future. HBO’s Westworld has been years in the making, based on a very mediocre 1973 Michael Crichton sci-fi horror film, but the combined talent employed in making the remake is astounding, including Christopher Nolan’s brainy brother and writing partner Jonathan collaborating with J.J. Abrams on a lavish, epic look at artificial intelligence. It stars Anthony Hopkins, Ed Harris, and Evan Rachel Wood, just for starters. And finally, everybody say, “Auwhhh!” Gilmore Girls is coming back November 25. One of the best-written of the old-school shows — by Amy Sherman-Palladino, no relation — the new show is a four-part “movie,” and where she leads, we couch potatoes will follow. —D.J. Palladino

MOVIE GUIDE

PREMIERES Blair Witch (89 mins., R) This sequel to 1999’s The Blair Witch Project stars James Allen McCune as Heather Donahue’s brother, who, along with some college friends, heads into Maryland’s Black Hills Forest to find out what happened to his sister nearly two decades ago.

Camino Real/Metro 4

Bridget Jones’s Baby (122 mins., R) It’s been 12 years since her last quandary, and now Bridget Jones (Renée Zellweger) is stuck in another pickle. This time, she’s having a baby, and she’s not sure who the daddy is — now ex-flame Mark Darcy (Colin Firth) or new beau, Jack (Patrick Dempsey).

Fairview/Fiesta 5

Complete Unknown (94 mins., R) In this twisty mystery, Rachel Weisz plays Alice, a woman who continues to reinvent her identity, and Michael Shannon is Tom, the man who is determined to uncover who she really is. Riviera The Hollars (88 mins., PG-13) John Krasinski directs and stars in this comedy about a man who returns to his hometown when he finds

out his mother needs brain surgery. Dysfunctional family mayhem ensues. It also stars Anna Kendrick, Richard Jenkins, and Sharlto Copley. Paseo Nuevo

Details:

www.spanishschoolsbca.com

805-252-9512

12 sessions $300 24 sessions $600 Private $75 hr.

SpAniSh LAnguAge inSitute SigLO 21

Santa Barbara

Adolescent Group Therapy Program for 10th, 11th & 12th Graders & Parents

Improve Cooperation & Happiness at Home Find Ways to Make & Keep Friends Increase Mutual Listening, Sharing & Respect Cope Better with Intense Emotion & Confusion Effective

·

Supportive

·

Cost-Efficient

Call to Schedule an Initial Interview.

Revel Miller, Ph.D. Certified Group Psychotherapist Clinical Psychologist

805-448-5053 www.DrRevelMiller.com CA State License: 15868

Sustainable Heart

~ Transformational Life Counseling ~

Relationships • Occupation and Career • Meditation Grief and Loss • Major Life Transitions • Anxiety Spiritual Issues • Communication • Conflict

Michael H Kreitsek, MA

Transpersonal Counseling Psychology Counseling From a Buddhist Perspective 805 698-0286

Live Another Day (105 mins., PG) This documentary explores how the housing crisis and Lehman Brothers’ collapse led to the demise of the auto industry, and the U.S. government bailout of the companies. Plaza de Oro The Magnificent Seven (132 mins., PG-13) Training Day director Antoine Fuqua helms this remake of the 1960s classic about a group of gunfighters hired to protect a small town from marauding bandits. It stars Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke, and Chris Pratt.

Camino Real/Metro 4 (Opens Thu., Sept. 22)

Snowden (134 mins., R) In this Oliver Stone–directed biographical political thriller, Joseph Gordon-Levitt portrays Edward Snowden, who infamously leaked thousands of classified NSA documents to The Guardian in 2013. The cast also includes Melissa Leo, Zachary Quinto, Tom Wilkinson, and Scott Eastwood.

Explore our super store!

SAVE 50%

609 E ast halEy – look for thE bluE wall ThriftyShopper.org • (805) 966-9659 • Open Daily 9:30 - 5:25

Camino Real/Paseo Nuevo

CONT’D ON P. 65 >>>

on selected items EVERY Thursday!

independent.com

All ThrifT STore proceedS help SupporT our

locAl communiTy ServiceS progrAm. September 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENt

63


Sat Sep 17 2:00p & 7:00p “SeaSide RendezvouS” Pacific Sound Men’s Chorus presents a cappella performances by several championship quartets and choruses! These star-studded shows feature the Ringmasters, C’est La Vie, and the Carpe Diem Chorus. For tickets please visit http:// pacsoundchorus.bpt.me or call 1-800-353-1632. Don’t miss these spectacular shows!

Sun Sep 18 7:00p “LoS CambaLaChe” We celebrate the beginning of Viva el Arte de SB’s 12th Season

For current exhibitions, events, membership information or to donate go to:

with this FREE family show presented by the Luke Theatre and UCSB A&L! The first event features the son jarocho stylings of Los Cambalache from Los Angeles, a show that will include traditional tarima dancers. For more info please visit facebook.com/VivaElArteSB or call 805-884-4087 x7.

www.mcasantabarbara.org

Sat Sep 24 2:00pm L heRoeS” Alpha Resource Center presents this amalgamation of Vaudeville, “unLikeLy Ly

805.966.5373

Melodrama, and Silent Film - in Medieval Times! For more info please visit www.alphasb.org or call 805-964-3547. This FREE annual celebration includes a 1:00p silent auction of artisan crafts created by the talented members of the art program Slingshot. This event is always a blast!

Paseo Nuevo | 653 Paseo Nuevo Santa Barbara | CA 93101

Sun oCt 2 7:30p “aCouStiC GuitaR GodS” The Santa Barbara Acoustic Instrument Celebration

Waves of Beauty Sunday, September 25, 2016 Hahn Hall, Music Academy of the West Garden Reception: 4:30-5:30pm Awards Ceremony: 6pm

Photo by Nell Campbell

Special Award Recipients

PRESIDENT’S AWARD Marilyn Horne Main House

JACARANDA AWARD Kellam de Forest

SANTA BARBARA BOTANIC GARDEN NATIVE CHOICE AWARD 854 Norma Way, Goleta CA

MORETON BAY FIG AWARD Leon Olson

PLAYA DE SANTA BARBARA AWARD

CITY OF SANTA BARBARA ARTS ADVISORY COMMITTEE’S BUSINESS IN ART AWARD Alan Macy, SBCAST Founder

Audited. Verified. Proven.

presents an unparalleled lineup of four of the world’s most talented contemporary acoustic guitar players in a wide-ranging and entertaining concert pushing the limits of the instrument. For more info and tickets please visit www.sbaic.com. Don’t miss this spectacular event!

Follow The Independent on

Featuring Team Awards for outstanding properties in seven categories. Admission is $55 per person • ONLINE Payments www. sbbeautiful.org For more info call (805) 965-8867 or email info@sbbeautiful.org

Santa Barbara Beautiful is a 501 (c) 3. • Donations may be tax deductible TAX ID: 23-7055360 2016 SPONSORS: Platinum Sponsors: Roadshow Media, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. Gold Sponsors: Becker Construction, Lieff Winery, Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, Santa Barbara Independent, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Schipper Construction, Voice Magazine. Silver Sponsors: Il Fustino, Jacoby Family Fund, La Arcada Investment Corporation, Lorraine Lim Catering, Montecito Bank & Trust. Event Sponsors: American Riviera Bank, Architectural Foundation of Santa Barbara, Blue Star Valet, Four Seasons Resort - The Biltmore Santa Barbara, Firestone Walker Brewing Co., Gazebo Flowers, Lotusland, Por La Mar Nursery, Santa Barbara Essential Foods, Sepps (Susan Elledge Planning/Permitting).

64

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

independent.com

@sbindependent #sbindy #sceneinsb


“WARM AND INSIGHTFUL”

a&e | FILM & TV CONT’D FROM P. 63

Variety

Storks (89 mins., PG) In this animated feature, storks now shuttle packages around the globe for an international Internet company. But when the Baby Making Machine accidently spits out a human bundle of joy, stork Junior (Andy Samberg) must deliver her before his boss finds out.

“MIRACLE OF A FILM” The New York Times

Fairview/Fiesta 5 (Opens Thu., Sept. 22)

SCREENINGS OFatima (79 mins., NR) French-Algerian writer/director Philippe Faucon’s wondrous film, about an impoverished single Algerian emigrant mother and her two very different daughters, tells its simple tale with an admirable and magnetic subtlety throughout. Larger points about the hardships and oppressions of the immigrant life in France and elsewhere linger in the margins of what is a beautiful, painful, ultimately heartwarming slice of life from the vantage of the presumed “other.” (JW)

Sun.-Wed., Sept. 18-21, Riviera

The Wild Life a plot eventually and a lot of weird lessons learned. (DJP) Fairview/Fiesta 5

Florence Foster Jenkins (110 mins., PG-13)

Real-life New York heiress and socialite Florence Foster Jenkins (1868-1944) dreamed of being an opera star— star despite the fact that she couldn’t carry a tune. Meryl Streep and Hugh Grant star. Plaza de Oro

Nefarious: Merchant of Souls

O Hell or High Water

(96 mins., NR)

This grim-toned tale of two bankrobbing brothers (Chris Pine and Ben Foster) and the sheriff (Jeff Bridges) who tries to stop them is something more than a shoot-’em-up. With a taut soundtrack and starkly southwestern cinematography, the film has enough gravitas and emotional ambiguity to give it an air of greatness. (RD)

Sex trafficking doesn’t just occur in third-world countries; it also exists here in S.B. County. To increase awareness of the issue, Benji Nolot made this documentary film. Nolot will be at the screening for questions and answers.

Fri., Sept. 16, 7pm. First Baptist Church, 949 Veronica Springs Rd.

(102 mins., R)

Camino Real/Paseo Nuevo

NOW SHOWING O Bad Moms

(101 mins., R)

Mila Kunis stars as an overworked, under-joyed mom who decides to live a little more freely. The jokes are goodnatured if a little ordinary, and what it lacks in creative edge it makes up for in the pertinence and timeliness of its much-needed comic takedown of domestic inequalities. (RD) Metro 4 The Disappointments Room

Jason Bourne (123 mins., PG-13) Welcome back to the gray-green world of Paul Greengrass’s mighty moneymaking Bourne franchise. The plot is as murky as the director’s vision: Even Las Vegas seems like an existential destination, though the car chase through downtown and The Strip livens up the Bourne self-repeating plot mechanism. (DJP) Metro 4 Kubo and the Two Strings

(92 mins., R)

(101 mins., PG)

D.J. (Disturbia) Caruso’s The Disappoint Disappointments Room opens in that most conventional horror-movie fashion: A family, mysteriously wounded, head to a remote old house expecting to piece back their old lives. Maybe it’s not the Overlook from The Shining Shining, but the creaking sounds and found toys soon tell a story about the building’s dysfunctions, too. What follows is uncanny, a bit scary, but far too loosely constructed to be taken as terror. Kate Beckinsale is most of the show, and the rest of the goods are thefts from Kubrick and Argento. (DJP)

The stop-motion-animated feature follows a young villager named Kubo, who is thrown into an adventure when he accidentally summons an ancient and vindictive spirit and must uncover his samurai legacy. Fiesta 5 (2D and 3D)

Camino Real/Metro 4

Don’t Breathe (88 mins., R) Thieving young rapscallions get more than they bargained for when the owner of the home they invade turns out to be a a man with a sixth sense for murder. Though well-made and wellacted, it’s essentially a long chase scene. (RD) Camino Real/Metro 4

The Light Between Oceans (133 mins., PG-13)

Alicia Vikander plays a lighthouse keeper’s wife on an island called Janus in between two oceans. Immediately after her second miscarriage a live baby washes up on the shore in a small boat, and the couple decides to keep her. Then the director loses his nerve and ends it as a twitchy forgiveness lesson. It’s a tear-jerking but frustrating film; a better director might have made this great. (DJP) Plaza de Oro

O No manches Frida

(100 mins., PG-13)

This Mexican studio’s remake of a German film that is a nicely askew take on Asphalt Jungle and To Sir with Love. There are lots of funny slapstick skits, some politically incorrect, that veer into

Pete’s Dragon (102 mins., PG) In this Disney remake of the 1977 film, forest ranger Grace Meacham (Bryce Dallas Howard) happens upon a young boy who has been living in the woods with a dragon named Elliot. When Grace tries to find out who Pete really is, dragon hunters make plans to capture Elliot.

SBIFF’s THE SHOWCASE PRESENTS

FATIMA

3x Cesar Award Winner including Best Picture Sunday September 18 @ 2:00pm Monday September 19 @ 7:30pm Tuesday September 20 @ 5:00pm W ednesday September 21 @ 7:30pm at the Rivier a T heatr e 2044 Alameda Padr e Ser r a

Metro 4 (2D)

UPCOMING FILMS DEMON The final work by Marcin Wrona SAND STORM 12x Ophir Award Nominations

Suicide Squad (123 mins., PG-13) This is all flab: despite some great work by Margot Robbie and Will Smith, Suicide Squad feels like a long, discursive intro followed by a prolonged preface, until we realize this gunk is going to be the movie. (DJP) Fairview (2D)

OSully (96 mins., PG-13) In Sully Sully, Tom Hanks plays Chesley Sullenberger, the beloved pilot who in 2009 crash-landed a U.S. Airways flight in the Hudson River, saving all aboard. Much of the humbly tempered movie concentrates on Sully’s behind-the-scenes wrangling with PTSD and insurance suits who grill him on his competency. In the end, heroism triumphs in a gently inspiring if crowd-pleasingly dull way, and Sully is a welcome reminder of unambiguous human goodness. (RD) Arlington/Camino Real/Paseo Nuevo

War Dogs (114 mins., R) The true story of two young guys riding prevailing political winds into unlikely arms-dealing success feels a little The Wolf of Wall Street exploitative at times, but it springs an unexpected wallop at the end(DJP) Fiesta 5

WWW.SBIFF.ORG

Live Music

Thurs 9/15 8:45pm SINGING DIRT Fri 9/16 9:00pm BRYAN TITUS

Sat 9/17 9:00pm Beer! Food! Fun! LITTLE BIG HERE sbbrewhouse.com wed 9/21 8:30pm 229 W. Montecito St. 805-884-4664 U GEYSER GRATE

When the Bough Breaks (107 mins., PG-13)

After unsuccessfully trying to have a baby, John (Morris Chestnut) and Laura Taylor (Regina Hall) turn to a surrogate, Anna (Jaz Sinclair), for help. Things turn deadly when Anna develops a psychotic obsession with John. Fiesta 5 The Wild Life (90 mins., PG) This animated adventure/comedy tells the story of Robinson Crusoe, but from the points of view of the animals he encounters while stranded on a tropical island. Fairview (2D)/Fiesta 5 (2D)

The above films are playing in Santa Barbara FRIDAY, September 16, through THURSDAY, September 22. Descriptions followed by initials — RD (Richie DeMaria), DJP (D.J. Palladino), and JW (Josef Woodard) — have been taken from our critics’ reviews, which can be read in full at independent.com. independent.com The symbol O indicates the film is recommended. The symbol indicates a new review. independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

65


7th AnnuAl

Foodie AwArds Join us to applaud the winners

Monday, September 26 • 5:30pm Tickets available at independent.com/foodietickets 66

THE INDEPENDENT

September 15, 2016

independent.com


a&e | Rob bRezsny’s fRee will astRology week of septembeR 15 ARIES

CANCER

LIBRA

(Mar. 21-Apr. 19): What should you do if your allies get bogged down by excess caution or lazy procrastination? Here’s what I advise: Don’t confront them or berate them. Instead, cheerfully do what must be done without their help. And what action should you take if mediocrity begins to creep into collaborative projects? Try this: Figure out how to restore excellence, and cheerfully make it happen. And how should you proceed if the world around you seems to have fallen prey to fear-induced apathy or courage-shrinking numbness? My suggestion: Cheerfully kick the world’s butt — with gentle but firm good humor.

(June 21-July 22): “Dear Soul Doctor: I have been trying my best to body-surf the flood of feelings that swept me away a few weeks ago. So far I haven’t drowned! That’s good news, right? But I don’t know how much longer I can stay afloat. It’s hard to maintain so much concentration. The power and volume of the surge doesn’t seem to be abating. Are there any signs that I won’t have to do this forever? Will I eventually reach dry land? - Careening Crab.” Dear Careening: Five or six more days, at the most: You won’t have to hold out longer than that. During this last stretch, see if you can enjoy the ride more. Re-imagine your journey as a rambunctious adventure rather than a harrowing ordeal. And remember to feel grateful: Not many people have your capacity to feel so deeply.

(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “Brainwashing” is a word with negative connotations. It refers to an intensive indoctrination that scours away a person’s convictions and replaces them with a new set of rigid beliefs. But I’d like to propose an alternative definition for your use in the coming days. According to my astrological analysis, you now have an extraordinary power to thoroughly wash your own brain — thereby flushing away toxic thoughts and trashy attitudes that might have collected there. I invite you to have maximum fun as you make your inner landscape clean and sparkly.

TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): For the foreseeable future, your main duty is to be in love. Rowdily and innocently in love. Meticulously and shrewdly in love. In love with whom or what? Everyone and everything — or at least with as much of everyone and everything as you can manage. I realize this is a breathtaking assignment that will require you to push beyond some of your limitations and conjure up almost superhuman levels of generosity. But that’s exactly what the cosmic omens suggest is necessary if you want to break through to the next major chapter of your life story.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What do you hope to be when you are all grown up, Gemini? An irresistible charmer who is beloved by many and owned by none? A master multi-tasker who’s paid well for the art of never being bored? A versatile virtuoso who is skilled at brokering truces and making matches and tinkering with unique blends? The coming weeks will be a favorable time to entertain fantasies like these — to dream about your future success and happiness. You are likely to generate good fortune for yourself as you brainstorm and play with the pleasurable possibilities. I invite you to be as creative as you dare. Homework: Read my response to the periodic Internet rumors that astrology is based on wrong assumptions, and that there’s a 13th sign: bit. ly/13thsignhoax.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): If there can be such a thing as a triumphant loss, you will achieve it sometime soon. If anyone can slink in through the back door but make it look like a grand entrance, it’s you. I am in awe of your potential to achieve auspicious reversals and medicinal redefinitions. Plain old simple justice may not be available, but I bet you’ll be able to conjure up some unruly justice that’s just as valuable. To assist you in your cagey maneuvers, I offer this advice: Don’t let your prowess make you overconfident, and always look for ways to use your so-called liabilities to your advantage.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Caution: You may soon be exposed to outbreaks of peace, intelligence, and mutual admiration. Sweet satisfactions might erupt unexpectedly. Rousing connections could become almost routine, and useful revelations may proliferate. Are you prepared to fully accept this surge of grace? Or will you be suspicious of the chance to feel soulfully successful? I hope you can find a way to at least temporarily adopt an almost comically expansive optimism. That might be a good way to ensure you’re not blindsided by delight.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): My astrological divinations suggest that a lightning storm is headed your way, metaphorically speaking. But it shouldn’t inconvenience you much — unless you do the equivalent of getting drunk, stumbling out into the wasteland, and screaming curses toward heaven. (I don’t recommend that.) For best results, consider this advice: Take shelter from the storm, preferably in your favorite sanctuary. Treat yourself to more silence and serenity than you usually do. Meditate with the relaxed ferocity of a Zen monk high on Sublime Emptiness. Got all that? Now here’s the best part: Compose a playfully edgy message to God, telling Her about all the situations you want Her to help you transform during the next 12 months.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Novelist Tom Robbins said this about my work: “I’ve seen the future of American literature and its name is Rob Brezsny.” Oscar-winning actress Marisa Tomei testified, “Rob Brezsny gets my nomination for best prophet in a starring role. He’s a script doctor for the soul.” Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter Jason Mraz declared,“Rob Brezsny writes everybody’s favorite astrology column. I dig him for his powerful yet playful insights, his poetry and his humor.” Are you fed up with my boasts yet, Sagittarius? I will spare you from further displays of egomania under one condition: You have to brag about yourself a lot in the coming days — and not just

with understated little chirps and peeps. Your expressions of self-appreciation must be lush, flamboyant, exultant, witty, and sincere.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): By normal standards, your progress should be vigorous in the coming weeks. You may score a new privilege, increase your influence, or forge a connection that boosts your ability to attract desirable resources. But accomplishments like those will be secondary to an even more crucial benchmark: Will you understand yourself better? Will you cultivate a more robust awareness of your strengths and weaknesses, your needs and your duties? Will you get clear about what you have to learn and what you have to jettison?

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I’m confident that you would never try to sneak through customs with cocaine-laced goat meat or a hundred live tarantulas or some equally prohibited contraband. Please use similar caution as you gear up for your rite of passage or metaphorical border crossing. Your intentions should be pure and your conscience clear. Any baggage you take with you should be free of nonsense and delusions. To ensure the best possible outcome, arm yourself with the highest version of brave love that you can imagine.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Should you be worried if you have fantasies of seducing a deity, angel, or superhero? Will it be weird if some night soon you dream of an erotic rendezvous with a mermaid, satyr, or centaur? I say no. In fact, I’d regard events like these as healthy signs. They would suggest that you’re ready to tap into mythic and majestic yearnings that have been buried deep in your psyche. They might mean your imagination wants to steer you toward experiences that will energize the smart animal within you. And this would be in accordance with the most exalted cosmic tendencies. Try saying this affirmation: “I am brilliantly primal. I am wildly wise. I am divinely surprising.”

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.

Alonzo King LINES Ballet

Sat, Oct 8 / 8 PM / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $35 / $19 UCSB students A Granada facility fee will be added to each ticket price

“Gripping, urgently beautiful choreography.” San Francisco Chronicle

“[Alonzo King] possesses a sort of magical science of gesture and spatiality. The technique is classically based – the women are en pointe – but the capacity for choreographic innovation is boundless.” Le Monde (France) Guided by the unique artistic direction of Alonzo King, “one of the few bona fide visionaries in the ballet world today” (San (San Francisco Chronicle), Chronicle this California-based company of extraordinary dancers redefines what you thought you knew about ballet. Dance series sponsored in part by: Annette & Dr. Richard Caleel Margo Cohen-Feinberg & Robert Feinberg and the Cohen Family Fund

Wine Sponsor:

Community Dance Class with Alonzo King LINES Ballet Fri, Oct 7 / 5:30 PM – 7:30 PM / Co-presented with Gustafson Dance For reservations and information: (805) 563-3262

805) 893-3535

|

www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu

Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222 | www.GranadaSB.org independent.com

SEPTEmbEr 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

67


INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS

|

PHONE 965-5205

|

E M A I L S A L E S @ I N D E P E N D E N T. C O M

EMPLOYMENT

COMMITMENT TO OUR COMMUNITIES.

Because we care for our neighbors. A career at Cottage Health is an experience in caring for and about the people who call our coastal area of California home. Our not-for-profit health system identifies closely with the communities we serve and has a long tradition of providing area residents with highly personalized, clinically excellent care. Patients aren’t just patients here – they’re neighbors. Be there for them through one of the openings below.

Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital

• • Nursing • • Anesthetics • • • Bed Control Coordinator (RN) • Clinical Documentation Specialist • • (RN) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Cottage Business Services

Non-Clinical

CNC – Surgery Cottage Residential Center Emergency Endoscopy Hematology/Oncology Infection Control Practitioner Manager – Cardiology Manager – Endoscopy Manager – Palliative Care Med/Surg – Float Pool Neurology/Urology NICU Orthopedics PACU Pediatric Outpatient Pediatric Research Coordinator Peds Psych – Per Diem Pulmonary Renal Research Coordinator Surgery Surgical Trauma SWOT Trauma Program Manager Utilization Management Case Manager

• • • • • • • • •

Allied Health • • • • •

Behavioral Health Clinician Occupational Therapist – Per Diem Physical Therapist – Full-time Physical Therapy Aide Speech Language Pathologist – Per Diem • Surgical Tech I • Support Counselor – SLO Clinic

Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital • RN – ICU – Nights/Days

Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital • • • • •

Clinical • LVN – EDHU • Medical Assistant – Peds Ventura Clinic

Catering Set-Up Concierge – Part-time Environmental Services Rep Environmental Services Supervisor HIM Outpatient Data Specialist Information Security Analyst Information Security Technical Writer Interpreter – Per Diem IT Project Manager, Sr. IT Systems Engineer – Citrix Medical Clinical Assistant Patient Transporter PBX Operator Research Coordinator Room Service Server Security Officer

• • • • • • • • • •

Compensation Analyst Director – Contracting Director – Corporate Finance Financial Analyst Financial Assistant Manager – Accounting Manager – Decision Support Manager – HIM Payroll Manager Supervisor – Admitting

• • • • •

CCRC Family Counselor CCRC Office Manager Neuropsychologist – Part-Time/Exempt Occupational Therapist – Per Diem Speech Language Pathologist – Per Diem

Pacific Diagnostic Laboratories • Account Manager – Sales (LA Service Area) • Certified Phlebotomy Techs – Full-Time, Part-Time, Per Diem • Clinical Lab Scientist – Days/Nights/Evenings – Core Lab/SBCH Clinical Lab • Lab Assistant – Per Diem • Histotechnician • Lab Manager – Blood Bank (CLS) • Sales Representative – Lab • Transfusion Safety Coordinator

• RENTAL & RELOCATION ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE FOR SELECT FULL-TIME POSITIONS • CERTIFICATION REIMBURSEMENT

68

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEMBER 15, 2016

ADMIN/CLERICAL

FINANCIAL & PERSONNEL COORDINATOR

PHELPS ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT CENTER Manages all departmental fiscal activities and accounting systems for the Departments of French & Italian, Germanic & Slavic Studies, and the Program in Comparative Literature. Prepares all documents for financial transactions. Interprets policy and advises faculty, staff and students of proper university guidelines regarding policies for personnel, purchasing, entertainment and travel. Analyzes expenditures and spending

Manages department statistics. Provides and supports conflict resolution and communications training and outreach to campus. Responsible for all administrative and business functions for this small unit, related to personnel and budget transactions. Reqs: Bachelor’s Degree. Excellent communication, interpersonal, and analytical skills. Ability to keep absolute confidentiality and maintain neutrality. Ability to set priorities and meet deadlines while managing multiple tasks with frequent interruptions. Ability to interact effectively with a wide variety of people with diplomacy, empathy, and positivity. Sound judgment. Ability to take initiative, work independently, and handle stressful situations. Interest and ability to learn new systems and technology and be flexible. Strong organizational skills and attention to detail. Demonstrated proficiency in MSWord and Excel and capacity to create and manipulate financial and statistical data. Desired: Advanced degree. Ombuds training. Experience working in the UC. Note: Fingerprinting required. $22.29 $26.75/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 primary consideration apply by 9/28/16, thereafter open until filled. Job #20160461

PROFESSIONAL

CO - COORDINATOR - INFANT / TODDLER / PRESCHOOL PROGRAM

ASSISTANT OMBUDS/OFFICE MANAGER

OFFICE OF THE OMBUDS Provides ombuds services to undergraduates, intake for faculty, staff and students, and office admin. Researches policies, procedures, and historical data as needed for cases.

The County is Hiring! Highlighted Jobs: Custody Deputy

Visit our website for a list of all our current openings at:

Please apply online at jobs.cottagehealth.org.

Please reference “SBI” when applying. EOE

ENTERPRISE TECHNOLOGY SERVICES Serves as financial administrative support, responsible for the allocation and audit of the general ledger for the entire ETS organization. Duties include reconciliation, preparing financial journals, as well as general accounts payable. Reqs: Proficient in Microsoft Office Suite. Experience with ledger reconciliations and audits requirements. Requires a high degree of accuracy and the ability to meet deadlines. Demonstrated ability to work as part of a team in a customer service environment. Note: Fingerprinting required. $20.59 $24.20/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or any other characteristic protected by law including protected veterans and individuals with disabilities. For primary consideration apply by 9/25/16 thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20160469

patterns, resolving discrepancies. Reconciles financial transactions with the general and payroll ledgers. Produces accurate monthly cost projections and financial reports for management review. Participates in fiscal closing, budget projections and financial planning. Administers and coordinates employment activities and processes personnel actions for faculty, staff and students. Ensures data integrity and compliance with University, Federal, agency and union policies. Maintains current knowledge of University policies and procedures of Accounting, Travel, Human Resources, Academic Personnel, Graduate Division, Purchasing and Business Services on all fund sources. Works collaboratively with others in a team environment. Reqs: High School Diploma or equivalent. Excellent written and oral communication skills, effective interpersonal skills. Must be organized, detailed oriented, accurate and dependable. Ability to prioritize and coordinate multiple tasks with frequent interruptions while meeting strict deadlines. Excellent computer skills including proficiency in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and e-mail software programs, including experience with spreadsheet and database applications. Note: Fingerprinting required. Salary: $20.59 - $21.57/ 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. Open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 20160414

Sheriff's Deputy Trainee

We offer an excellent compensation package that includes above-market salaries, premium medical benefits, pension plans, tax savings accounts, rental and mortgage assistance, and relocation packages. What’s holding you back?

Or to submit a resume, please contact: Cottage Health, Human Resources, P.O. Box 689, Pueblo at Bath Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93102-0689

FISCAL & BUDGET SUPPORT SPECIALIST

Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital

• Please apply to: www.pdllabs.com

CLS – Day/Evening Environmental Services Rep Lead RN – Cardiac/Rehab RN – Emergency – Part-Time RN – Med/Surg – Per Diem

ACCOUNTING/ BOOKKEEPING

Excellence, Integrity, Compassion

www.cottagehealth.org INDEPENDENT.COM

www.sbcountyjobs.com

CHILDCARE CENTER Assumes responsibility for the daily operation of the Center for the Infant/Toddler/Preschool Programs. Responsible for meeting the daily Center staffing requirement, planning the Center’s staff development program, supervising and evaluating the teaching staff, maintaining NAEYC accreditation guidelines, and meeting State Department of Social Services licensing standards. Facilitates communication between teachers and parents. Promotes a multicultural/ anti-bias community environment that supports the mission of the University and reflects the diverse population served by the Children’s Center. Reqs: Must hold a Child Development Site Supervisor permit issued by the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing. Must hold and maintain First Aid and Infant/Toddler CPR certificate. Acceptable statement of health to include negative TB test results. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Mandated reporter for requirements of child abuse. $51,181-$53,740/ 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 primary consideration apply by 9/20/16, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20160453


INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS

EMPLOYMENT ENGINEERING & THE SCIENCES ADMINISTRATIVE BUSINESS ANALYST

OFFICE OF DEVELOPMENT Reviews, analyzes, and assesses existing practices and resources, and recommends, develops, and implements systems that benefit the Engineering & the Sciences Development unit goals. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent combination of education and experience. Strong organizational skills and unfailing attention to detail and accuracy. Excellent computer skills including proficiency in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Internet and e-mail and demonstrated ability to quickly learn various software programs. High level of initiative, creativity, and energy. Ability to work independently and maintain strict confidentiality in all aspects of work. Ability to prioritize duties, and work under tight and shifting deadlines. Ability to effectively solve problems, demonstrate sound reasoning and judgment, and achieve planned goals. Ability to establish and maintain cooperative working relationships. Excellent grammar, composition and proofreading skills. Note: Fingerprinting required. $20.27 - $23.46/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 primary consideration apply by 9/21/16, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20160459

FELLOWSHIPS ANALYST

GRADUATE DIVISION Administers distribution of Graduate Student Fellowship Support for UCSB including both student fees and stipends. Serves as liaison between the Graduate Division and departments on matters pertaining to fellowship eligibility and guidelines, providing guidance on graduate student support options. Administers and facilitates central fellowship competitions. Key member of the Fellowships team. Reqs: Requires understanding of accounting principles and financial administration. Ability to understand, interpret and apply policy and regulations. Demonstrated ability to work in a team environment and meet deadlines. Demonstrated experience with database applications and spreadsheets. Excellent communication and analytical skills. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Some nights and weekends. $22.29/hour$24.00/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified

(CONTINUED)

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 primary consideration apply by 9/21/16, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20160462

PROGRAMS DIRECTOR

OFFICE OF EVENT MANAGEMENT AND PROTOCOL Has overall responsibility for campus programming for public events intended to foster a culture of philanthropy. Responsible for strategic planning and design of programs that achieve Event Management and Protocol, campus, division and department goals and objectives. Contributes to long-range planning, decision-making and policy and procedure formulation and management, both related to primary program areas as well as objectives needed to reach department, division and campus goals. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree in communication, marketing, public relations, or other field related to event management, and /or equivalent combination of education and experience. Advanced knowledge of concepts, principles, and best practices of event planning, including design and organizational production of complex events. Knowledge and skills to apply event management principles, practices, and techniques in support of effective event management, particularly high visibility, high impact, and high risk events. Highly developed political acumen skills and social perceptiveness to successfully meet the needs of clients and ensure guest satisfaction. Ability to maintain confidentiality, and act with tact and discretion. Personnel management skills in order to plan, organize, and motivate staff and volunteers. Experience in effective contract negotiation, developing event budgets and ability to forecast expenses. Demonstrated excellent social, communication, organization and time management skills. Demonstrated frequent and proficient use of various software programs and web-based data bases. Notes: Fingerprinting required. Maintain a valid CA driver’s license. Must be available to work weekends and evenings as needed. $4,265 - $5,000/ mo. For primary consideration apply by 9/18/16, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20160452 SEEKING WELL-EXPR MGR for LG APT Complex in SB Area. Must have computer skills & well-versed in mgmt software such as Yardi. Email resume to razmanrs@aol.com.

SOCIAL SERVICES SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-966-1904 to start your application today! (Cal-SCAN)

|

PHONE 965-5205

DOMESTIC SERVICES

MEDICAL SERVICES

SILVIA’S CLEANING

FINANCIAL SERVICES

CASH FOR DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! Up to $35/Box! Sealed & Unexpired. Payment Made SAME DAY. Highest Prices Paid!! Call Juley Today! 800-413-3479. w w w. C a s h F o r Yo u r Te s t S t r i p s . c o m (Cal-SCAN)

DO YOU owe over $10,000 to the IRS or State in back taxes? Our firm works to reduce the tax bill or zero it out completely FAST. Call now 855-993-5796 (Cal-SCAN)

LIFE ALERT. 24/7. One press of a button sends help FAST! Medical, Fire, Burglar. Even if you can’t reach a phone! FREE Brochure. CALL 800-714-1609. (Cal-SCAN)

SELL YOUR structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-673-5926 (Cal-SCAN)

LUNG CANCER? And 60 Years Old? If So, You And Your Family May Be Entitled To A Significant Cash Award. Call 800-990-3940 To Learn More. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket (Cal-SCAN)

If you want to see your house really clean call 682-6141;385-9526 SBs Best

HOME SERVICES A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted,local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-800-550-4822. (Cal-SCAN) DISH TV 190 channels plus Highspeed Internet Only $49.94/mo! Ask about a 3 year price guarantee & get Netflix included for 1 year! Call Today 1-800-357-0810 (CalSCAN)

ELECTRICIAN-$AVE!

$55/hr Panel Upgrades.Rewiring Small/ Big Jobs! Lic707833 698-8357 KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Effective results begin after spray dries. Odorless, Long Lasting, Non-Staining. Available: Hardware Stores, The Home Depot, homedepot.com (AAN CAN) PROTECT YOUR home with fully customizable security and 24/7 monitoring right from your smartphone. Receive up to $1500 in equipment, free (restrictions apply). Call 1-800-918-4119 (Cal-SCAN) ULTIMATE BUNDLE from DIRECTV & AT&T. 2-Year Price Guarantee -Just $89.99/month (TV/fast internet/ phone) FREE Whole-Home Genie HD-DVR Upgrade. New Customers Only. Call Today 1- 800-385-9017 (Cal-SCAN)

MARKET PLACE

PERSONAL SERVICES

55 Yrs or Older?

Need Help At Home? Call REAL HELP because this Non-profit matches workers to your needs. 965-1531 PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Call us first. Living expenses, housing, medical, and continued support afterwards. Choose adoptive family of your choice. Call 24/7. 1-877-879-4709 (Cal-SCAN)

High

Thu 15

3:18 am -0.2

9:33 am 5.0

3:14 pm 1.1

9:22 pm 5.9

Fri 16

3:51 am -0.2

10:04 am 5.3

3:58 pm 0.7

10:06 pm 5.8

Sat 17

4:26 am 0.0

10:38 am 5.6

4:45 pm 0.4

10:53 pm 5.5 11:45 pm 5.1

Sun 18

5:02 am 0.4

11:15 am 5.7

5:35 pm 0.3

Mon 19

5:40 am 0.8

11:56 am 5.8

6:32 pm 0.3

Tue 20

12:44 am 4.5

6:22 am 1.4

12:42 pm 5.7

7:37 pm 0.4

Wed 21

1:56 am 4.0

7:11 am 1.9

1:36 pm 5.5

8:54 pm 0.5

Thu 22

3:30 am 3.6

8:17 am 2.4

2:44 pm 5.3

10:20 pm 0.4

1 D

9 H

16

23

crosswordpuzzle

30 D

s tt Jone By Ma

“Breaking Story” -– putting the details back together.

VIDEO TO DVD

TRANSFERS- Only $10! Quick before your tapes fade! Transfer VHS, 8mm, Hi8 etc. Scott 969-6500

AUTO CAR CARE/REPAIR DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. FREE 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care of. Call 800-731-5042 (Cal-SCAN)

TRUCKS/RECREATIONAL GOT AN older car, boat or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1800-743-1482 (Cal-SCAN)

MISC. FOR SALE

PIANO TEACHER and tutor in reading, writing, study skills, & math. Grades 2-9, credentialed teacher Dianne 805-966-1843

113 W. Mission st, suite F 805.708.3235 | toMpeet.coM

Low

Virus/Spyware Removal, Install/ Repair, Upgrades, Troubleshoot, Set-up, Tutor, Networks, Best rates! Matt 682-0391

MUSIC

Guitar ~ bass ukulele ~ drums

High

COMPUTER MEDIC

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 855-404-7601(Cal-SCAN)

music

Low

TECHNICAL SERVICES

CASH FOR CARS: We Buy Any Condition Vehicle, 2002 and Newer. Nationwide Free Pick Up! Call Now: 1-888-420-3808 www.cash4car.com (AAN CAN)

HOME FURNISHINGS

High

We will haul anything between Goleta and Carpinteria 805-403-4719

DOMESTIC CARS

MOVING SALE ALL MUST GO. Tools, furn, plants, etc. Saturday, 9/17 9a-2p

Day

Sunrise 6:44 Sunset 6:59

HAULING SERVICE

CREATIVE WRITING Class with Bestselling Author Jay North, www. ProfessionalWriterJayNorth.com more info 805-794-9126

GARAGE & ESTATE SALES

Tide Guide

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

ANNOUNCEMENTS

tompeet’s school of 297

E M A I L S A L E S @ I N D E P E N D E N T. C O M

SERVICE DIRECTORY

HOVERROUND - MPV5 Scooter/ Wheelchair. Perfect condition $600. Call 563-2842

$

|

MUSIC LESSONS

WONDERFUL TEACHER

Enjoy Piano, Voice or Harp Lessons. Exciting new approach to a full musical experience. Read, memorize, compose or improvise any music w/ ease. Vocal audition prep. $52/hr. 1st lesson 50% off!! Christine Holvick, BM, MM, 30 yrs exp sbHarpist.com Call 969-6698

NOW PLAYING

HARPIST VIRTUOSO

FOR ALL EVENTS. Weddings, Concerts, Parties, Churches, Recording Studios. Classical, pop, folk, jazz...Christine Holvick, BM, MM www.sbHarpist.com 969-6698

across

65 Long-running TV science show that hints at the other long entries 68 Business letters? 69 Caesar salad base 70 Treasure hunter’s need 71 Kickoff need 72 Pick-up area 73 Toilet paper layer

34 “Chicago” actress Zellweger 38 Growing planes? 40 “I remember well ...” 1 It may be dank 42 ___ 500 4 Civics field, for short 45 French connections? 11 It gets laid down 47 AKA, before a company name 14 “Now I get it!” 50 “___ doin’?” (Joey Tribbiani 15 Surname on the sitar greeting) 16 Decorate with frosting 51 Got the highest score, in golf 17 1967 hit by The Doors 54 Leave out 19 Unpaid bill 55 Jacob’s Creek product 20 Just meh 57 Fast money sources 1 Buds 21 A bit of 58 “The New Yorker” cartoonist 2 Athens is there 22 “A Change is Gonna Come” Addams, for short 3 Makes it? singer Redding 59 “In memoriam” bio 4 L.A. clock setting 23 Possesses 61 Burlap material 5 Bit of resistance? 26 Hammer or sickle, e.g. 62 Administered by spoon 6 Places down, as carpeting 28 Part of one of the Ten 63 Catch sight of 7 Dope Commandments 65 What Elmo calls Dagwood in 8 Take money off the top 35 He followed Peyton as Super “Blondie” 9 “___ comment?” Bowl MVP 66 “Wooly Bully” opening number? 10 Acrimony 36 Boutros Boutros-Ghali’s 11 Comic-strip girl who debuted in 67 Sapphire’s mo. birthplace the 1930s 62 Word with Palmas or Vegas 37 “TMZ” subject 12 Berry for the health-conscious ©2016 Jonesin’ Crosswords 39 Milhouse’s teacher (editor@jonesincrosswords.com) 13 Halloween decorations For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-22641 “Three Coins in the Fountain” 18 Swiss Roll lookalike 2800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+. fountain Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-65522 Expressed admiration 43 Frank Herbert book series 6548. Reference puzzle #0789 24 Compass tracing Last week’s soLution: 44 River of forgetfulness in Hades 25 “Chop-chop!” 46 Three of ___ 27 Available without a 48 Made the first play prescription, for short 49 T-Bone Walker’s genre 28 Achilles’ vulnerable spot 52 Cuban coin 29 With more “years young” 53 7 1/2-foot Ming 30 Well out of medal contention 54 Wise crowd 31 Distiller ___ Walker 56 Texas city 32 Northern California town that 60 Converse, e.g. once had a palindromic bakery 64 Woody’s ex 33 “___ Out” (musical based on Billy Joel songs)

INDEPENDENT.COM

Down

SEPTEMBER 15, 2016

THE INDEPENDENT

69


INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS

WELL BEING FITNESS ELIMINATE CELLULITE and Inches in weeks! All natural. Odor free. Works for men or women. Free month supply on select packages. Order now! 844-703-9774. (Cal-SCAN)

HEALING GROUPS ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS WE CAN HELP. 24/7: 805-962-3332 or SantaBarbaraAA.com

HOLISTIC HEALTH

Herbal Health-care

Herbal programs for weight-loss, heart conditions, inflammation & pain, blood sugar conditions, colon cleanse, liver detox. Naturopath, Herbalist, Khabir Southwick, 805-308-3480, www.NaturalHealingSB.com

IN-HOME HEALTH CARE CAREGIVER AVAILABLE, mature, European, dependable! Please call Magda (805)722-5193

MASSAGE (LICENSED)

#1 in SB

Improve posture, physical performance, & flexibility. Relief from long standing issues & chronic pain. 14 yrs. exp. 805-665-3728 sbrolfingandmassage.com

DEEP TISSUE QUEEN

Expert in Deep Tissue, 20 yrs exp. Work w/chronic pain, stress & injuries. 1st time Client $50/hr. Gift Cert available, Outcall. Laurie Proia, LMT 886-8792

WELLNESS LOWEST PRICES on Health & Dental Insurance. We have the best rates from top companies! Call Now! 888-989-4807. (Cal-SCAN) SAFE STEP Walk-In Tub! Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors. American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-799-4811 for $750 Off. (Cal-SCAN)

LEGALS ADMINISTER OF ESTATE NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: PHILIP C. PETRE NO: 16PR00370 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of PHILIP C. PETRE A PETITION FOR PROBATE: has been filed by: CYNTHIA LEE WALWICK in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara THE PETITION for probate requests that (name): CYNTHIA LEE WALWICK 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.

REAL ESTATE for rent $1140 1BD Corner of Hope & San Remo-N State St-Barbara Apts Quiet NP 687-0610 1 BD. Townhomes/Goleta -$1275 Incl. Parking 968-2011 or visit model www.silverwoodtownhomes.com 1BD NEAR Cottage Hospital. 519 W Alamar. Set among beautiful oak trees across the street from Oak Park. NP. $1140. Call Cristina 687-0915 1BD NEAR SBCC & beach @ Carla Apts NP. 530 W Cota $1140 Rosa 965-3200 2BDS $1560+ & 3BD flat or townhouses $2310. Near UCSB, shops, park, beach, theater, golf. Sesame Tree Apts 6930 Whittier Dr. Hector 968-2549 OCEAN VIEW MESA- ground floor 2BD/1BA 1 yr. lease NP/NS incl TV/ lndry/water/prkg $2100 + =dep 962-9074 STUDIOS $1140+ & 1BDs $1260+ in beautiful garden setting! Pool, lndry & off-street parking at Michelle Apartments. 340 Rutherford St. NP. Call Erin 967-6614

ROOMS FOR RENT

PHONE 965-5205

|

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: on 10/06/2016 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: Five 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 form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Nicholas J. Schneider State Bar No. 162462, Seed Mackall 1332 Anacapa St., Ste.200 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; (805) 805-963-0669. Published Sep 8, 15, 22 2016.

Share 2 bedroom, garden setting, Montecito, plz. no texting, bad eyesight. Calls only.

$725/mo. NS/NP/ND Call 886-3002.

FBN WITHDRAWAL

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Soma Get Fit, Sparkling Spa at 903 State State Street Suite 209 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 03/16/2016 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2016-0000805. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Scott Crawford 1187 Coast Village Road #433 Santa Barbara, CA 93108 This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 02 2016, I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office, Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Melissa Mercer. Published. Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016.

STATEMENT OF WITHDRAWAL OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following persons (s) has (have) withdrawn as partner (s) from the partnership operating under: TMI Research Services 340 S. Kellogg St. #J Goleta, CA 93117. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 08/05/2014 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2014-0002287. The person or entities withdrawing use of this name are as follows: Derek Taylor 543 Carlo Drive Goleta, CA 93117 This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 10, 2016. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office, Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk SEAL by Alejandro Torres. Published. Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016.

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Santa Barbara Wine Spa at 29 West Micheltorena Santa Barbara, CA 93101 The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 07/10/2015 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2015-0002164. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: SBCLNH (same address) This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Sep 02 2016, I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office, Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Melissa Mercer. Published. Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016. STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following Fictitious Business Name is being abandoned: Wright Mandan at 6252 Parkhurst Drive Goleta, CA 93117. The original statement for use of this Fictitious Business Name was filed 08/11/2014 in the County of Santa Barbara. Original file no. 2014-0002331. The person (s) or entities abandoning use of this name are as follows: Wright Mandan (same address) This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on Aug 09 2016, I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office, Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL) by Noe Solis. Published. Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016.

Coastal Hideaways (805) 969-1995 Luxury Vacation Rentals Serving the Santa Barbara community for 20 years

Melissa M. Pierson, Owner vacations@coastalhideaways.com www.coastalhideaways .com 1211 coast Village R d., suite 4 montecito

Meet Sage

Sage is a sweet soul that is a little shy at first. She’s been with us a while and would love a family of her own!

Meet Paulie

Paulie is young terrier looking for an active family to love. He loves walks and would make a great hiking buddy!.

THE INDEPENDENT

SEPTEMBER 15, 2016

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Vibes Don’t Lie at 22 W Mission Street Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Linda Sue Redenbaugh 535 Amber Way Solvang, CA 93463 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 25, 2016. 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. Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016-0002470. Published: Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Barbers, SB Barbers at 1 W. Ortega Street Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Joshua 5008 Caire Santa Barbara, CA 93111 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 16, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002372. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Montecito Barbers at 1028-B Coast Village Road Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Dawn Sanchez 5008 Caire Cir Santa Barbara, CA 93111 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 16, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002371. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Cybersitter, Solid Oak Software at 1209 De La Vina Street #B Santa Barbara, CA 93101; 27Labs, LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 03, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002247. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016.

Meet Lady

Lady is a tiny terrier that has had a hard life. She needs a home that she can feel safe and loved in.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Koa Kini, Koa’Kini, Koakini at 4831 Dorrance Way #B Carpinteria Way #B Carpinteria, CA 93013; Brittany Dailey (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Jul 28, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002192. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Cloudsme USA at 1730 Garden St. Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Giuseppe Domenico Padula Via Santa Chiara, 64 Rimini (RN), Italty 47921 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 09, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002308. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dwight Gregory And Associates, Architecture at 2800 Exeter Place Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Dwight E. Gregory (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 19, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002413. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: A-OK Power Equipment at 5777 Hollister Ave Goleta, CA 93117; A-OK Mower Shops, Inc N Milpas Street Santa Barbara, CA 93103 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 22, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002429. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: The Cube at 3905 State Street 7-405 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Roman Tkachuk 712 W Anapamu #1 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 04, 2016. 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. Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016-0002271. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Innovative Fruition at 6647 El Colegio Rd. #D-320 Goleta, CA 93117; Bart C. Glasmacher (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Bart C. Glasmacher Santa Barbara County on Aug 08, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes. FBN Number: 2016-0002282. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016.

Meet Sammy

Sammy is looking for an owner who is the boss and will continue his training. He is 4 years old, neutered, has all shots and is housebroken.

Cold Noses Warm Hearts

Cold Noses Warm Hearts

(805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117

(805) 964-2446 • (805) 895-1728 • www.coldnoses.org 5758 Hollister Avenue, Goleta, CA 93117

These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home

70

E M A I L S A L E S @ I N D E P E N D E N T. C O M

FBN ABANDONMENT

Short or Long Term

Prayer Christ The King Healing Hotline EPISCOPAL CHURCH 284-4042

|

INDEPENDENT.COM

These dogs would be ever so thankful if you could give them their forever home

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Ticketsb. org at 1214 State St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Santa Barbara Center For The Performing Arts, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 17, 2016. 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. Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2016-0002387. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SBCPA at 1214 State Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Santa Barbara Center For The Performing Arts, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 18, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002399. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Granada Theatre, The Granada, The Granada Thearte at 1214 State St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Santa Barbara Center For The Performing Arts, Inc 1330 State St Ste 101 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 16, 2016. 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. Tara Jaysinghe. FBN Number: 2016-0002386. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Brasil Stone Granite Marble at 1233 De La Vina St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Haroldo Souza (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 19, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016-0002416. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: M.O.B.S. Members Only Barber Shop at 716 Western Avenue Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Henry R. Franco (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 16, 2016. 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. Adela Bustos. FBN Number: 2016-0002377. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: TMI Research Services at 5949 #C Hollister Ave Goleta, CA 93117; John L. Taylor 543 Carlo Dr Goleta, CA 93117 This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 18, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002400. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Good Wag at 3 La Cumbre Circle Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Sandra Jo Stinson (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 18, 2016. 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. Alejandro Torres. FBN Number: 2016-0002402. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016.


INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS

LEGALS

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Loquita at 202 State St Suite A Santa Barbara, 93101; Acme 202 State St LLC 218 Helena Ste A Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 18, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016-0002397. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Hahka Kitchens at 72 Santa Felicia Drive Goleta, CA 93117; Hahka Builders, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 04, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes. FBN Number: 2016-0002256. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Real Gardening at 1075 A Linden Ave Carpinteria, CA 93013; Michael Reukauf (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 17, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002385. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: J&K Properties, Rumor Mill Recording at 1068 Oak Glen Road Santa Ynez, CA 93460; Joel Jacks (same address) Katie Jacks (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 08, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes. FBN Number: 2016-0002283. Published: Aug 25. Sep 1, 8, 15 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Obstacle Solutions at 5230 Califia Ct. Goleta, CA 93111; Leighann Ruppel (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: L. Ruppel Santa Barbara County on Aug 15, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002355. Published: Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Teeccino Brewing Company at 1015 A Cindy Lane Carpinteria, CA 93013-2905; Teeccino Caffe, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Caoline Macdougall, CEO Santa Barbara County on Aug 18, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002395. Published: Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Mac Design Associates at 1933 Cliff Drive, Suite 6 Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Caccese Design Associates, Inc. (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Michael A. Caccese Santa Barbara County on Aug 19, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002409. Published: Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016.

|

PHONE 965-5205

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Association of Classroom Teacher Testers at 1187 Coast Village Rd., Suite 378 Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Computerized Assessment & Placement Programs 3463 State St. Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 24, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002465. Published: Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: American Riviera Car Share, SB Carshare, American Riviera Limited, Sbcarshare.com, Santa Barbara Carshare at American Rivera Enterprises, LLC 1621 Central Ave Cheyenne, WY 82001 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 23, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002437. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: D’Angelo Bread at 25 W. Gutierrez St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Breadhead Inc. 114 E. Haley St. Ste. O Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 26, 2016. 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. Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2016-0002472. Published: Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Institute For Blood & Cancer Research (ICBR) at 1111 Chapala Street Suite 200 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Santa Barbara Foundation (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Santa Barbara County on Aug 31, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002513. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Brady Wealth Management, Insurance And Financial Services at 735 Juanita Ave Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Secure Capital Solutions, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 16, 2016. 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. Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2016-0002369. Published: Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Beefhearts at 242 San Rafael Ave Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Nicholas Bodden (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Nicholas Bodden Santa Barbara County on Aug 30, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016-0002503. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Launch Yourself, West End Group at 1482 East Valley Road, Suite 245 Santa Barbara, CA 93108; West End Partners, Inc. (same address) WT Acquisition LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a limited Partnership Santa Barbara County on Aug 29, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002490. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Naftek at 330 Sierra Vista Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93108; Alan Nafziger (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Signed: Alan Nafziger Santa Barbara County on Aug 26, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes-Sadler. FBN Number: 2016-0002479. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Afternoon Auto, Alltimetracking.com, All Time Tracking, Trackmytracker. com, Track My Tracker at 93455 Inc. 130 S. Patterson Ave Unit 876 Santa Barbara, CA 93111; 93455 Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: Santa Barbara County on Aug 23, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002438. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Soma Get Fit, Sparkling Spa at 903 State Street Suite 209 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Princess Tabs, Inc 1187 Coast Village Rd, 433 Santa Barbara, CA 93108 This business is conducted by a Corporation Santa Barbara County on Sep 02, 2016. 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. Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016-0002538. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Holton Building Enclosures at 6170 Malva Ave Goleta, CA 93117; Scot James Miller (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Aug 30, 2016. 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. Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016-0002509. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Castillo Inn at 22 Castillo Street Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Twin Pines Apartments, LP 125 E. Victoria Street, Suite G Santa Barbara, CA 93101 This business is conducted by a Limited Partnership Santa Barbara County on Aug 26, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002478. Published: Sep 8, 15, 22, 29 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Constellation House at 110 Vega Dr Goleta, CA 93117; Thuy Trang Dang 5155 Tabano Way Santa Barbara, CA 93111 This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 06, 2016. 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. Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2016-0002550. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Clean Kut at 122 E Gutierrez St Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Hapkido International (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Santa Barbara County on Sep 06, 2016. 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. Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2016-0002547. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016.

|

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Island Beauty at 425 Linda Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Diana C. Pedersen (same address) Vagn A. Pedersen (same address) This business is conducted by a Married Couple Santa Barbara County on Sep 06, 2016. 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. Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2016-0002549. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Santa Barbara Pro Skills Academy at 820 E Yanonali St Apt B Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Manuel Anthony Murillo (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 06, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016-0002544. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Charmadillo Productions at 900 Mission Canyon Road Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Charlene Maria Huston (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 07, 2016. 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. Alejandro Torres. FBN Number: 2016-0002566. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Magic Dragon Collective, Magic Dragon Dispensary at 328 S. Fairview Ave Goleta, CA 93117; Jamie Lynn Hale 23218 Village 23 Camarillo, CA 93102 This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 07, 2016. 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. Tara Jayasinghe. FBN Number: 2016-0002573. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Sattva Family Healthcare at 5901 Encina Rd. Suite C3 Goleta, 93117; Su Wyatt 884 Cheltenham Rd Santa Barbara, CA 93105 This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 07, 2016. 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. Alejandro Torres. FBN Number: 2016-0002581. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Valencia Tree & Landscape at 321 N Quarantina St Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Rosendo G Valencia 231 S Voluntario St Santa Barbara, CA 93103 This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 07, 2016. 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. Alejandro Torres. FBN Number: 2016-0002579. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dental Education Laboratories at 1515 State Street Suite 16 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Dental Engineering Laboratories LLC (same address) This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company Santa Barbara County on Sep 08, 2016. Signed: Mary Jane Ingalls CFO 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002587. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016.

E M A I L S A L E S @ I N D E P E N D E N T. C O M

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Garden Artist at 645 Avendia Pequena Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Scott Kimball (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 06, 2016. 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. Christine Potter. FBN Number: 2016-0002543. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Blue Lief Designs at 102 W. Constance Ave #2 Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Kathleen Hinson (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 01, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002526. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Triple Threat Renee at 219 West Islay #5 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Holly Renee Walton (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 12, 2016. 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. Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016-0002631. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Green Submarine, Heal US Naturally, Green Submarine.com, Heal US Naturally.com, Green Submarine. org. Heal US Naturall.org at 6 Harbor Way #237 Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Heal US Naturally, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Santa Barbara County on Sep 09, 2016. 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. Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2016-0002619. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Brophy Bros. Clam Bar & Restaurant, On The Alley, The Store at 119-A Harbor Way Santa Barbara, CA 93109; Brophy & Sons, Inc (same address) This business is conducted by a Corporation Santa Barbara County on Sep 08, 2016. 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. Noe Solis. FBN Number: 2016-0002585. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Flower Essence Apothecary at 1410 Garden St #3 Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Holly Blanca Goldberg (PHD) (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Aug 24, 2016. 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. Jessica Sheaff. FBN Number: 2016-0002462. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Everscent at 6585 El Colegio Road Goleta, CA 93117; Storm Silva (same address) This business is conducted by a Individual Santa Barbara County on Sep 02, 2016. 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. Tania Paredes. FBN Number: 2016-0002534. Published: Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016.

INDEPENDENT.COM

NAME CHANGE IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF KATHERINE PATRICE CORNAN TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 16CV03627 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: A petition has been filed by the above named Petitioner(s) in Santa Barbara Superior court proposing a change of name(s) FROM and TO the following name(s): FROM: KATHERINE PATRICE CORNAN TO: KATHERINE PATRICE MARCHAN THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Oct 26, 2016 9:30am, Dept 1, Courthouse, SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT HOUSE A copy of this order to Show Cause shall be published in the Independent, a newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county, at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated Aug 31, 2016 . by Judge James E. Herman of the Superior Court. Published. Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF EDWARD MICHAEL LAWLOR TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 16CV03395 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: A petition has been filed by the above named Petitioner(s) in Santa Barbara Superior court proposing a change of name(s) FROM and TO the following name(s): FROM: EDWARD MICHAEL LAWLOR TO: MICHAEL LAWLOR THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Oct 12, 2016 9:30am, Dept 1, Courthouse, SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT HOUSE A copy of this order to Show Cause shall be published in the Independent, a newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county, at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated Aug 10, 2016. by Judge James E. Herman. of the Superior Court. Published. Sep 1, 8, 15, 22 2016. IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF THOMAS KAUFMANN TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 16CV03499 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: A petition has been filed by the above named Petitioner(s) in Santa Barbara Superior court proposing a change of name(s) FROM and TO the following name(s): FROM: THOMAS KAUFMANN TO: THOMAS BEACON KAUFMANN THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Oct 19, 2016 9:30am, Dept 1, Courthouse, SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT HOUSE A copy of this order to Show Cause shall be published in the Independent, a newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county, at least once each week for four successive

SEPTEMBER 15, 2016

weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated Aug 30, 2016. by Judge James E. Herman. of the Superior Court. Published. Sep 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBAR AANACAPA DIVISION CASE NO. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of: THE PATRICIA K. BAKER TRUST, Settlors (Deceased) I’ ERIK D. BLACK, Trustees of the PATRICIA K. BAKER TRUST dated July 5,1995, do hereby file the following proposed Notice to Creditors for purposes of an assignment a proceeding number, pursuant to Probate Code Section 19004, to be followed by publication pursuant to Probate code Section 19040 as follows: In the Matter of PATRICIA K. BAKER, deceased. Beneficiary: NOTICE TO CREDITORS Probate Code 19040 Notice is hereby given under Califomia Probate Code Sections 19000 et seq. to the creditors and contingent creditors of the above-named decedent, that all persons having claims against the decedent are required to file them with the Superior Court at 1100 Anacapa St.,santa Barbara, california, 93121, and mail a copy to ERIK D. BLACK, Esq., Trustee, of the PATRICIA K. BAKER TRUST, originally created July 5, 1995, wherein the decedent was the Settlor, at: Erik. D. Black, Esq.1114 State St., Suite 272 Santa Barbara, CA 93101(805) 957-1922 within the later of four (4) months after (the date of the first publication of notice to creditors) or, if notice is mailed or personally delivered to you, 30 days after the date this notice is mailed or personally delivered to you. A claim form may be obtained from the court clerk. For your protection, you are encouraged to file your claim by certified mail, with return receipt requested to: Erik D. Black, Esq. 1114 State St., suite 272 Santa Barbara, CA 93101 (805) 957-1922 DATED: August 23 ,2016 ERIK D. BLACK, Esq., Trustee of the PATRICIA K. BAKER TRUST Published Sep 15, 22, 29 2016. NOTICE TO Creditors of Sally M. Wilkinson Notice is hereby given to the credtors of the decedent, Sally M Wilkinson, that any and all persons having claims against the decedent named above are required to file claims with the undersigned at 2925 Valencia, Santa Barbara, CA within four (4) months of the first publication of this notice to creditors. Since my mother had limited or few assets, there will be no probate administration of her estate. For your protection, you are encouraged to file your claim by certified mail, with return receipt requested. Dated, September 8, 2016. Signed, Kristina Foss. Published 15, 22, 29. Oct 6 2016.

Like Us Facebook.com

/SBIndependent

THE INDEPENDENT

71


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.