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Paisley's recovery riffs COUNTRY STAR PLAYS BENEFIT FOR MONTECITO BY MICHELLE DROWN
ENDORSEMENTS: CONGRESS, GOVERNOR, CITY COUNCIL, MEASURES T & R
FOOD: LUCKY DRAGON & FINNEY'S GASTROPUB ANGRY POODLE: WHO THE HELL IS EUNICE FOOTE?
THE WEEK: MOTHER'S DAY LISTINGS
rbara Santa Ba INDY! • #XXX
section specialBY MOLLY FORSTER RÉSUMÉ
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MAY 10, 2018
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MAY 10, 2018
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Angry Poodle Barbecue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Capitol Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 In Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
31
Voices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
THE WEEK.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 FOOD & DRINK .. . . . . . . . . . 45
COVER STORY
The Restaurant Guy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Brad Paisley’s Recovery Riffs
Dining Out Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
LIVING.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Country Star Plays Benefit for Montecito (Michelle Drown)
Living Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
r
12-Page Career Guide Inside! (Molly Forster)
ON THE COVER: Brad Paisley. Photo by Derek Cressman.
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
VIDEO:
Arts Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 .
Dozens of marchers turned out, focused on housing and immigration.
A&E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Workin’ It
Theater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
ra Santa Barba
sectionR specialBY MOLLY FORSTE RÉSUMÉ TIPS
• CAREER QUIZ
WORKIN’ IT
• BACK TO SCHOOL
ERS
• TOP EMPLOY
GIGS • HAPPY • NONPROFIT
JOBS • MUCH
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Pop, Rock & Jazz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
FILM & TV. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Movie Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
ENDORSEMENTS.. . . . . . . . . . . 9 NEWS.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
News Feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
You may remember Molly Forster’s name from 2015, when she first interned for our newspaper. The San Clemente–raised UCSB communications major returned this year as part of her minor in professional writing/ editing and single-handedly reported and wrote this week’s massive “Workin’ It” special section on jobs. She’s worked in restaurants since she was 13, but the weirdest gig was at a tapas bar in Newport Beach that turned into a salsa club after midnight. “I was pretty sure their whole operation was illegal, so I lied to them about my age, my Spanish-speaking abilities, and my experience with salsa dancing,” she said. “Needless to say, I didn’t last very long there.”
ODDS & ENDS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Rob Brezsny’s Free Will Astrology . . . . . . . 71
CLASSIFIEDS.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
MAY DAY IN SANTA BARBARA
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OPINIONS.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
THE JOB OF OUR JOBS ISSUE
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Tommy Caldwell (pictured) talks climbing, missing appendages, and dirtbags, and Scottish bard Al Stewart talks history, working with Jimmy Page, and Year of the Cat.
JIMMY CHIN
volume 32, number 643, May 10-17, 2018 JEFF LIPSKY
CONTENTS
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P r e s e n t i n g t h e w o r l d ’ s f i n e s t c l a s s i ca l a r t i s t s s i n ce 1 9 1 9
’s finest classical artists since 1919
1919-2019
THIS IS CAMA AT 100: The Centennial Season of Santa Barbara’s oldest arts organization.
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Together we continue a legacy of excellence and step into the next century of community engagement in classical music. This thriving 100-year-old tradition is happening here, now, in your community, in your lifetime. Welcome!
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MAY 10, 2018
INDEPENDENT.COM
Endorsements, June 2018 T 24th Congressional District:
Salud Carbajal
In one of those contests — for the 2nd Supervisorial District — candidate Susan Epstein mysteriously dropped out at the last minute, effectively precluding anyone else from challenging the only other candidate, Gregg Hart. Three other county races are uncontested: for district attorney, superintendent of schools, and treasurer-tax collector. For those who like horse races, there’s the race to elect the councilmember to represent the City of Santa Barbara’s District 3, on the city’s Westside. Four first-time-ever candidates are
PAU L WELLM AN F I LE PHOTOS
his year’s June midterm elections are a case of feast and famine. Statewide, we have no fewer than 32 candidates running for U.S. Senate — one is inveighing against “the social sickness of transgenderism” and another against microwave poisoning — and 27 are running for governor. Yet here in Santa Barbara County, we have two supervisorial district races with uncontested candidates. The last time Santa Barbara saw two uncontested supervisorial races was precisely never.
This one’s a certified no-brainer. Even if Salud Carbajal merely showed up for the TV cameras and waved his rhetorical flag in support of Obamacare, immigrant rights, and the region’s sacrosanct ban on new offshore oil development, that would have been reason enough to send this first-term Democrat back to Washington, D.C. On such matters, Carbajal’s values are in lockstep with those of his district, which encompasses Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties with a small part of Ventura. But there’s more here than giving voice to California’s ongoing revolt against all things Trump. As of January 9, the deck chairs of our regional Titanic have been fundamentally rearranged. How we dig out and rebuild in the wake of the Thomas Fire and its subsequent debris flow are profound questions we will be asking ourselves for years to come. Federal assistance will play a critical role, as will new federal flood maps. That Carbajal spent 12 years as a county supervisor makes him the ideal member of Congress to both access and direct federal assistance. For Carbajal, county government is not a flow chart he needs to learn and master. He already knows it. He’s lived it. He’s breathed it. He knows the key players in every department by name. He knows their second and third in command. Such knowledge at this time in Santa Barbara’s history is priceless. Carbajal is facing two Republican opponents. According to federal election rules, that automatically means there will be a November runoff. In all likelihood, Carbajal will face Republican Justin Fareed, now waging his third bid for office. Fareed is no longer bombarding the airwaves with clips of his athletic prowess, running the football or riding a horse — as he has in campaigns past — but he is doing nothing to explain what qualifies him for office. It’s a mystery. We urge you to vote for Salud Carbajal.
U.S. Senate:
Dianne Feinstein By any reckoning Dianne Feinstein qualifies as the political equivalent of an 8,000-pound gorilla. Given the relationship between California and the administration of Donald Trump — war without the bullets — California desperately needs an 8,000pound gorilla in Washington, D.C. True, her rhetoric is as measured and careful as her votes. But Feinstein has been in the Senate since 1992, whereupon she beat out Santa Barbara’s then-resident carpetbaggerin-chief Michael Huffington for the seat in 1994. The issue then — as it is now — was immigration. She was on the right side then; she still is today. On gun control, Feinstein has the distinction of writing the only automatic-weapons ban this nation has ever passed. Absurdly, it has since been allowed to expire. Who knows how many mass shooting murder victims would still be alive if that were not the case. In her 26 years in D.C., Feinstein has achieved very senior leadership positions on several key committees — appropriations and judiciary, to name just two. More than that, there are the personal relationships she has cultivated in that time. Her reach, influence, and impact cannot be overstated.Yes, we’ve disagreed with some of her votes, some — like her support of the war waged on Iraq — very strongly. Feinstein’s chief Democratic rival, Kevin de León, has amassed an impressive record in the State Legislature on such critical issues as immigrant rights, the minimum wage, and climate change. But to walk away from Feinstein now, at this historical moment, would constitute an act of political self-mutilation.
running there, where voter turnout has been historically low.A candidate who can muster 450 votes might well win. Given that this councilmember will tip the council’s precarious balance of power, that constitutes a significant impact for only a few votes. The Santa Barbara Independent does not always endorse in every race. In some cases, we don’t feel strongly enough to suggest a vote; in others, we are not confident we know enough about the candidate or issue. This year we will be publishing our endorsements over a two-week period.
California Governor:
Gavin Newsom Let’s start by lamenting the obvious. After eight years of relative sanity and success, California won’t have Jerry Brown in the statehouse anymore. Brown managed to exert a degree of control, restraint, and discipline on the Legislature that none of his immediate predecessors had ever approximated. He got day-to-day things done while pursuing expansive, big-picture solutions to such global existential threats as climate change. We didn’t agree with him on everything. But when it comes to vision and pragmatism, Brown will be sorely missed. In this context, none of the contenders running to fill his shoes comes close. That being said, we’re throwing our lot behind Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, acknowledging up-front his lessthan-seemly personal history. Newsom may be slick and ambitious, but on big-deal historical issues, he’s moved the needle. It was Newsom, as mayor of San Francisco, who first recognized and allowed gay marriage. That took courage and vision. Newsom also was part of the vanguard pushing a package of gun control bills as a state initiative two years ago. On cannabis legalization, Newsom was there, again fighting for it long before it, too, became sanitized and inevitable.
City of Santa Barbara District 3:
Oscar Gutierrez
The four candidates running to represent District 3 on the Santa Barbara City Council embody all that’s good about district elections and all that’s not so good, too. Let’s start with the most obvious: diversity. Of the four candidates running, three are Latinos. The fourth is a 22-year-old woman. That’s good. But all are exceptionally green. None of the candidates has run for any kind of office. Only one has ever served on a governmental board or commission. That’s not so good. All, however, are hyper-focused on serving the neighborhood. That’s good. But all have a lot to learn. We’ve been impressed and troubled in different ways by each of the four. On balance, the candidate we think can and will represent District 3 best is Oscar Gutierrez. Gutierrez has lived on the Westside his entire life. At age 34, that gives him an edge. The son of Mexican immigrants, Gutierrez attended Harding, La Cumbre Junior High, San Marcos High School, City College, and UCSB. While attending City College, Gutierrez began covering local news as a videographer, and after graduation he put his community news chops to work at Santa Barbara’s public access television station, where he helped produce countless public affairs shows. Gutierrez developed a keen understanding of how the city operates and who makes up the human infrastructure. Physically large, soft-spoken, and quietly shrewd, Gutierrez exudes an easygoing decency combined with an innate common sense that we’re confident will serve him and the council CONT’D ON PAGE 11
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MAY 10, 2018
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Presenting the world’s finest classical artists since 1919
Presenting the world’s finest classical artists since 1919 INTERNATIONAL SERIES AT THE GRANADA THEATRE
2018-2019 CONCERT SEASON 100TH CONCERT SEASON
SEASON SPONSORSHIP: SAGE PUBLICATIONS
Nicholas McGegan Daniel Harding Olga Kern Itzhak Perlman
Thomas Søndergård
Los Angeles Philarmonic
Esa-Pekka Salonen Mikhail Pletnev
OCTOBER 28, 2018 Sunday, 4:00 PM
LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC Daniel Harding Conductor
JANUARY 15, 2019 Tuesday, 7:00 PM (early start)
ITZHAK PERLMAN Violin
FEBRUARY 27, 2019 Wednesday, 8:00 PM
RUSSIAN NATIONAL ORCHESTRA Mikhail Pletnev Conductor George Li Piano MARCH 20, 2019 Wednesday, 8:00 PM
Rohan De Silva Piano
PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA
FEBRUARY 5, 2019 Tuesday, 8:00 PM
APRIL 5, 2019 • Friday, 8:00 PM
Esa-Pekka Salonen Conductor
PHILHARMONIA ROYAL SCOTTISH BAROQUE ORCHESTRA NATIONAL Nicholas McGegan Conductor ORCHESTRA Rachel Barton Pine Violin
Thomas Søndergård Conductor Olga Kern Piano
SPECIAL NON-SUBSCRIPTION CONCERT CAMA’s Board of Directors sponsors a Free Community Concert Celebrating CAMA’s Centennial
December 11, 2018, Tuesday, 8:00 PM The Granada Theatre
LOS ANGELES CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
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masterseries AT THE LOBERO THEATRE
SEASON SPONSORSHIP: ESPERIA FOUNDATION NOVEMBER 9, 2018, Friday, 8:00 PM
RICHARD GOODE Piano MARCH 9, 2019, Saturday, 8:00 PM
TAFELMUSIK BAROQUE ORCHESTRA TALES OF TWO CITIES
ELISA CITTERIO Director MARCH 30, 2019, Saturday, 8:00 PM
GARRICK OHLSSON Piano APRIL 17, 2019, Wednesday, 8:00 PM
AUGUSTIN HADELICH Violin ORION WEISS Piano MAY 6, 2019, Monday, 8:00 PM
MISCHA MAISKY Cello LILY MAISKY
Piano
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MAY 2018 COM M10, UN I T YINDEPENDENT.COM A R T S M U S I C A S S O C I AT I O N O F S A N TA B A R B A R A , I N C
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well. We know he gets his neighborhood. We know he gets this town. But the learning curve required to become a councilmember will be steep. Gutierrez has been endorsed and strongly backed by the Democratic Central Committee and Mayor Cathy Murillo, who donated $5,000 to his campaign. Gutierrez will have to tread carefully not to fall into the personality dysfunction that now plagues a council already too cliquish for its own good. The other three candidates are to be commended for their thought and energy. Michael Vidal, clearly smart and thoughtful, proved to be an exceptionally quick study. But he’s never voted in any city election
cont’d from p. 9 since moving here, not once. That gives us pause. Ken Rivas has a prodigious record of in-the-weeds community involvement, though much of it has been on the Eastside. Given that, we’re struck by his lack of endorsements. Elizabeth Hunter, 22, has demonstrated an impressive intelligence and poise at community forums, but the difficulty reporters experienced making contact — coupled with her already-busy school schedule — makes us doubt she has the time the job requires. We hope all three will maintain their involvement in district issues.
Measure T, Cannabis Tax:
YES There’s simply no good reason not to vote yes on this. Even people who oppose the legalization of cannabis should vote for this. We don’t know exactly how much the taxation of cannabis sale, cultivation, manufacture, testing, and distribution authorized by Measure T will generate, but it will be considerable. Official estimates range in size from $6.7 million to $29.6 million. However much it is, the new regulatory regime — one of the most stringent and all-encompassing imposed on any industry — will require growers to track and trace every plant grown from seeds to smoke. For users, this means they will now know — for the first time — the quantified potency of the pot as well as the extent to which pesticides have infused the product they’re consuming. Given the growing popularity of cannabis oils — in which pesticide residues concentrate — this is a significant public-health improvement. For the past 90 years, the U.S. government and all 50 states have waged an intractably stupid and destructive war against marijuana. The toll in needless human suffering has been incalculable, as has the strain pot laws have imposed on the nation’s criminal justice system. While we think pot tends to make people more boring than they otherwise would be, the same could be said for any number of mood-altering substances currently allowed, not the least of which is alcohol. California voters were right to legalize recreational weed a year ago; the Santa Barbara County supervisors were right to pass an ordinance customized to the specific needs of county growers, retailers, and communities affected by the burgeoning, not-so-new industry. Central to all this is the ability to tax. The revenues generated are key to enforcing commonsense guidelines designed to protect communities, like Carpinteria, from the pungent intrusions caused by large-scale grow operations. Measure T may not be the panacea some of its supporters claim, but it constitutes one small step toward sanity.
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Thursday, May 17th EVENT
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Measure R, Isla Vista Community Services District Tax:
YES
Two years ago, Isla Vista voters approved the creation of a new community services district to provide that community — reputedly the most densely populated this side of the Mississippi River — a desperately needed glimmer of a hope of a dream of self-government. If passed, Measure R would create a steady, reliable revenue stream without which that dream will soon be dead. The latest estimates suggest Measure R — which imposes a surcharge on utility fees — will generate slightly more than $700,000 year. By governmental standards, that barely qualifies as chump change. But for Isla Vista, it’s a solid start. Those funds will be used to augment public-safety services especially needed during periods of weekend rowdiness. In addition, it will underwrite landlord-tenant mediation services. And it creates a reliable funding base for the new service district, created to give Isla Vista — long the bastard stepchild of UCSB — some institutional expression of self-determination. Measure R advocates say the new utility user fees will cost the average Isla Vista resident $2-$4 a month. That’s about what it costs, they say, to buy a single yerba maté. According to the opponents, it will be much more, about the price of two yerba matés. Even at the price of three yerba matés, it will be well worth it. The history of Isla Vista demonstrates there’s little benign about benign neglect. n
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MAY 10, 2018
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SHERIFF BILL BROWN. A STEADY, PROVEN LEADER SUPPORTED ACROSS PARTY LINES. BOTH DEMOCRATS & REPUBLICANS ENDORSE HIM Sheriff Bill Brown has served for more than 11 years with strength, compassion and distinction. He rigorously advocates for legislation to enhance public safety, support law enforcement and help the vulnerable, the devastated and the victims in our community. Being a sheriff today requires a chief executive who knows the job inside out. Who knows how to prepare, how to enforce, and how to collaborate.
HE HAS A STRONG TRACK RECORD OF ACCOMPLISHMENTS Sheriff Bill Brown skillfully spearheaded the North County jail project, obtaining $80 million in state funding. Since taking office he has improved transparency, crime fighting and prevention, gang and narcotic enforcement, offender re-entry, and he returned the D.A.R.E. program to our schools. All of this was achieved while leading the Sheriff’s Office through the toughest financial challenges in its history.
WHEN TRAGEDY STRIKES HE PULLS OUR COMMUNITY TOGETHER The devastating Thomas Fire and tragic Montecito mudslides called on the resources of every branch of our public services. Sheriff Brown’s office issued evacuation orders and worked around the clock to alert and help the community. In the aftermath, Sheriff Brown and his team organized air and vehicle rescues, conducted recovery operations, arranged for counselors, and provided the community with ongoing updates. His team of over 700 worked tirelessly to ensure that no effort was overlooked in this process.
North North County County jail jail under under construction construction
HE HAS EXTENSIVE EDUCATIONAL AND EXECUTIVE CREDENTIALS Sheriff Brown earned a Master’s degree in Public Administration from USC and graduated from many of the nation’s foremost law enforcement institutions, including the Delinquency Control Institute, the Northwest Command College, and both the FBI National Academy and the FBI National Executive Institute.
HE IS DEEPLY CONCERNED ABOUT OTHERS Sheriff Bill Brown serves in leadership roles with organizations such as the North County Rape Crisis and Child Protection Center, Domestic Violence Solutions, the United Boys and Girls Clubs, and the Pierre Claeyssens’ Veterans Foundation. Since 2010 he has served as a Commissioner on California’s Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability Commission (MHSOAC), and he is leading Santa Barbara County’s “Stepping Up Initiative” to divert nonviolent mentally ill offenders away from jail and into treatment — without criminal charges. Sheriff Brown has proven he’s an experienced, dedicated and involved leader whose actions have resulted in a safer, stronger and more concerned community.
On June 5th, Re-Elect Sheriff Bill Brown.
For a list of Sheriff Brown’s hundreds of endorsements, please visit: www.BillBrownforSheriff.com PAID FOR BY THE COMMITTEE TO RE-ELECT BILL BROWN SHERIFF 2018 FPPC# 1282926
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MAY 10, 2018
INDEPENDENT.COM
MAY 3-10, 2018
NEWS of the WEEK by BLANCA GARCIA, KEITH HAMM, TYLER HAYDEN @TylerHayden1, NICK WELSH, and JEAN YAMAMURA, with INDEPENDENT STAFF
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UC Santa Barbara Joins Three-Day Strike
At 4 a.m. on Monday, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) union workers (pictured left) gathered with students at the University of California, Santa Barbara’s Storke Tower to begin a three-day strike against the university. They are one of the 10 UC campuses participating in the strike. AFSCME Local 3299 is the UC’s largest employee union, representing 25,000 employees. The workers voted to authorize a strike with 97 percent support after new research revealed growing income disparities among unionized low-wage workers and people of color. The research uncovered wage differences as large as 23 percent between black women and white men. The union has been attempting to address the inequalities through a year of negotiations with the UC. However, last week, the UC announced new contract terms that would delay the retirement age, permit the UC to raise health-care premiums, continue outsourcing jobs, and leave employee wages below the cost of living. “The UC has made it clear they would much rather continue to ignore [the growing inequality],” the AFSCME wrote in a statement. At noon, students and workers marched through campus, chanting, “If we don’t get it, shut it down.” “Without us [the university] doesn’t function,” said Fermin Martinez, one of the two irrigation workers at UCSB. Given the campus size, the university should employ closer to 10 irrigation workers. Since the strike, Martinez reports seeing superintendents picking up trash and receiving calls about the toilets. “Just give us what we deserve; that’s all we’re asking,” he said. Francisco Garcia, a union member and custodian with UCSB for 22 years, was also at the rally. He cleans an average of 30,000 square feet a night, he explained. “You’d think it’d be enough,” he said, “but the university doesn’t pay us enough.” Many of Garcia’s coworkers work two or three jobs or are forced to move out of the city in search of cheaper housing. But the strike is bigger than low wages, he said. “We want to concentrate on more than a percentage or raise. It’s about dignity.” — Blanca Garcia
LAW & DISORDER
NEWS BRIEFS
Suspect Lands in Juvenile Court
COUNTY An error in the way ticket information was collected by software aboard the train doubled the initial count of ridership for the new morning service. Jennifer Bergener of LOSSAN, which operates the Pacific Surfliner, stated that in the first four weeks of Train 759’s operation, the average weekly number of passengers actually ranged between 94 and 145.8, and not the 186 previously reported. April was the month free passes were given; ridership the first week in May was 130.8.
14-Year-Old Faces Felony Charges
by Keith Hamm t least one San Marcos High School boy connected to an online video describing how to kill female fellow students with a rifle and bayonet is facing multiple felonies, according to parents closely connected to the incident. The 90-second mock instructional video—which features a young male wielding a colonial-era musket as a weapon against “thots,” an acronym for “that ho over there”—was accompanied by a chat-room list of “thots that need to be eradicated,” naming at least 16 female students at San Marcos, Dos Pueblos, and Santa Barbara high schools and a 12-year-old at La Colina Junior High. Due to privacy laws protecting minors, details remain elusive; parents attempting to follow the case could not say with certainty whether the boy in the video or one of his chat-room friends is the one now facing felony charges. “I can’t comment on an alleged juvenile case,” said Santa Barbara County District Attorney Joyce Dudley.
A
BOYS BEING BOYS? His identity obscured in these screen grabs, a San Marcos High School first-year posted this 90-second video describing to fellow chat-room friends how to load and shoot a musket — and use its bayonet — to kill female students.
Soon after the chat-room video and hit list came to light on January 19, San Marcos parent Ericka Dixon helped establish Santa Barbara Parents for High School Safety, which now has close to 100 members, representing elementary, junior high, and high school grade levels. Early on, the parent group composed a timeline of the video incident and the responses of school and district administrators. On January 29, according to the timeline, a small group of San Marcos first-year students gave statements to Santa Barbara County — Ericka Dixon, Santa Barbara Parents for High School Safety Sheriff ’s Office deputies, explaining that one of the chat-room boys had been
Are the named victims safe? ‘Because of privacy concerns, we don’t know.’
openly speaking with peers on campus about planning a school shooting, including how he was going to obtain weapons. This information was never publicized by the Sheriff ’s Office, and no arrests were made. In an unrelated incident on February 23 at Carpinteria Middle School, an unarmed 13-year-old boy made criminal threats, saying he was going to shoot up the school; he was arrested that same day and booked into Santa Maria Juvenile Hall. After attempts to reach Sheriff Bill Brown and two Public Information Officers for an explanation of why seemingly similar threats were handled differently, public information officer Kelly Hoover sent an email stating, “The Sheriff ’s Office conducted a comprehensive investigation and forwarded the case to the DA’s Office. Because the case is in the judicial
The evening of 5/4, the 805 UndocuFund, Central Coast Alliance United for a Sustainable Economy (CAUSE), and Mixteco/Indígena Community Organizing Project (MICOP) held their UndocuFund Dance fundraiser downtown. The groups set out to raise $8,000 to help the 1,400 families who lost property, wages, or employment because of the Thomas Fire and Montecito mudslide. Around 200 people attended the event, which also received donations from Radio Bronco and Mayo’s Carniceria & Tacos.
HEALTH County health officials have concluded that the Thomas Fire and subsequent debris flow were not tied to the number of valley fever cases reported during that time. County officials stated valley fever cases have been increasing markedly since January 2016, but that’s been true, they said, throughout the state. The peak, they said, took place in October and November 2017; the Thomas Fire broke out in December. Of the 56 valley fever cases reported during the fire and flood events, none were firefighters and only one was a first responder. Of the 56 cases, 47 involved North County residents and only four lived in southern Santa Barbara County. Valley fever typically mimics flu symptoms and is caused when individuals breathe in the dust of soil laden with certain bacterial n spores.
CONT’D ON PAGE 16
INDEPENDENT.COM
MAY 10, 2018
THE INDEPENDENT
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MAY 3-10, 2018
CITY
Greenlighting Granny Flats Owner Occupancy Required; Banned in Extreme-Fire-Risk Zones by Nick Welsh n as dramatic a nail-biter as Santa Barbara City Hall has seen in many years, the City Council voted to approve a new ordinance that will allow homeowners to build detached second units, popularly known as “granny flats,” in backyards everywhere throughout the city except in areas deemed extreme-fire-hazard zones. The ordinance needed a five-vote supermajority to pass, and with only five councilmembers on hand to vote — Councilmember Kristen Sneddon was forced to recuse herself due to a conflict of interest — there was no margin for error. In the end, the ordinance was defined by multiple compromises. Had the council not approved an ordinance of its own, Santa Barbara would have been bound instead by a state law passed last year designed to promote the development of new hous-
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Lodge declared, reminding councilmembers of the four times she’s been evacuated from her Riviera home. During the Tea Fire of 2008, she stated, 210 homes went up in flames in just seven hours. Cars trying to evacuate from Mission Canyon were backed up for seven-tenths of a mile. “There will be more fires in the future,” she warned. Many residents from the Eucalyptus Hill neighborhood reminded councilmembers that their streets are so narrow that trash trucks and mail carriers have a hard time navigating them. What happens when there’s a fire and residents rush out just as fire trucks are rushing in? they asked. City Fire Marshal Joe Poire made it clear the department did not want to adjudicate messy land-use matters and lacked the resources to make subjective evaluations. First responders, he assured council-
not say it was their best work, ‘Theybutmay indeed it was their finest hour.’ — Architect Alex Pujo on councilmembers one day reflecting on their historic vote
ENROLL TODAY! www.sbcc.edu/ExtendedLearning 14
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MAY 10, 2018
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ing by preventing local governments from restricting permitting for what are technically known as accessory dwelling units, or ADUs for short. What the council passed on Tuesday was far less restrictive than what city planners had first proposed. Those initial proposals had been beaten back over time by pro-housing advocates and architects—many of whom showed up wearing “Keep It Simple” stickers — who had waged a relentless campaign on behalf of the farreaching new ordinance. Architect Alex Pujo channeled his inner Winston Churchill while quoting former Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver’s adage, “If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.” When it came to the issue of housing — which he framed as a basic human right—Pujo thundered, “There are no innocent bystanders.” In his left hand, he held aloft a single sheath of paper, representing the sole ADU application submitted to City Hall in the 23 years prior to the enactment of the new state law. In his right hand, he flapped in the air more than 300 pages, representing the number of applications that have been submitted since January 2017. When councilmembers looked back on their vote, Pujo declared, “They may not say it was their best work, but indeed it was their finest hour.” Even more theatrical, however, were opponents, including former mayor and current planning commissioner Sheila Lodge, who held up a fist-sized wad of molten glass. “Glass melts at 2,552 degrees,”
members in previous meetings, could get where they needed to go. One Eucalyptus Hill resident charged that with Sneddon’s recusal, the neighborhood had been denied representation on an issue that affected it the most. District elections, she noted with bitter irony, were supposed to do just the opposite. Of the 345 ADU applications submitted thus far, 113 lie within high-fire-risk zones. Councilmember Sneddon had hoped to argue in favor of stricter restrictions in such zones; she lives in one and represents a district largely located in one. Sneddon, however, was not allowed to participate after City Attorney Ariel Calonne advised that she — as a homeowner in the highfire-risk zone—had a conflict of interest. Sneddon said she would check with the Fair Political Practices Commission on Calonne’s unprecedented action. ADUs were allowed in high-fire-risk zones but banned in extreme-risk zones. Under the ordinance, there’s no requirement that ADUs provide additional parking. New residents, coupled with their cars, critics argued, meant more on-street parking. The other major concern was over land speculators who might be inclined to buy up properties, convert them into duplexes, and then seek to make fast buck by flipping them. The council voted to impose a covenant restriction requiring that at least one of the units be owner occupied; this restriction would convey with the sale of the property.
n
Meet the Candidates with
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DANGER ZONE: One of the first in line with plans to rebuild, Mary Beth Myers (pictured) stands among the wreckage where her home used to be.
Rebuilding at Ground Zero After Losing Everything, Montecito Property Owner Eager to Come Home, Despite Risks
M
by Melinda Burns
ary Beth Myers wanted to spend the night of January 8 at her old cottage on the banks of Montecito Creek, just below the bridge at East Valley Road and Parra Grande Lane—but she couldn’t get a fire going in the chimney. “I loved being there in the rains, feeding the fire and listening to the boulders roll down the creek,” Myers said. “I tried all day to get the fire started with alcohol, dried wood, crumpled paper—but I couldn’t. It was cold, dark, and wet, so I left the cat a couple of bowls of food, and I thought, ‘No way will I stay.’ It was some kind of divine intervention. “There’s not a trace where my house was … nothing, nothing, nothing.” Before dawn on January 9, a catastrophic debris flow of mud and boulders swept through Myers’s neighborhood in the 1200 block of East Valley Road, formerly part of a historic pocket of Montecito known as Old Spanish Town. Eleven people died there, or nearly half of all those who perished in the disaster. Of the 11, nine had lived next door to Myers. Five were immigrants from Mexico and Thailand. “They were all hardworking, very busy people,” Myers said. “This was not the Montecito people think of. It was like a village in itself. I miss my neighbors.” But even as she mourns them, Myers is eager to return to the once-picturesque sycamore and oak woodland along the creek. She is asking the county to approve her plans for a two-story, corrugated steel house on nine concrete caissons sunk deep into the ground where her cottage once stood. The cottage, parts of which dated back to the 1890s, was uninsured. “My friends say, ‘You can’t possibly think about rebuilding there,’” Myers said. “But what I loved is it was literally nature. I had
this whole creek. The view was magical—an untouched acre of California, a borrowed landscape.” “Is it buildable? Yes, in theory,” Myers said. On Zillow, the online real estate marketplace, her property was valued before January 9 at $1.8 million. “Feels like countryside living,” the advertisement read. “I’m just pushing to build so that if it’s a buildable lot, then I’ll get my money out,” Myers said. “If I can build, I probably will build. Would I feel safe living there? Hard to say. If the weather’s bad enough, I’m just going to leave.”
FIRST IN LINE Myers is one of the first in line with her rebuilding plans, out of more than 200 property owners whose homes were destroyed on January 9 or remain badly damaged. Her property has been under county review since 2014, when she bought the 3,400-squarefoot parcel by the creek and set out to prove that the lot was legal. Now Myers’s plans are raising the key questions that all parties will face, if the community is to withstand the next flood or debris flow: How, when, and where is it safe to rebuild? Should some land be preserved as a memorial park to remember the dead or, for safety’s sake, as watershed open space? (There's a Facebook page for a future “Montecito Memorial Healing & Meditation Park,” but the group has not made any formal proposals.) In June last year, the Montecito Planning Commission approved Myers’s request for a waiver from county rules that require new homes to be set back at least 50 feet from the bank of a creek. The lot was so small that strict application of the 50-foot rule would have “effectively precluded” any development there, the commission found. Myers CONT’D ON PAGE 17
CA 24th District - U.S. Congress Salud Carbajal SB County Sheriff-Coroner Eddie Hsueh SB County Auditor-Controller Betsy Schaffer Goleta School Board CA 37th District Member State Assembly Luz Reyes-Martin Monique Limon Representative Goleta City Council Candidate CA Controller Betty Yee Representative James Kyriaco Jr.
ENDORSED MEASURES Local Measure R - YES Local Measure T – YES
www.demwomensb.com | info@demwomensb.com | (805) 568-5923
Paid for by Democratic Women Of Santa Barbara County Not authorized by a candidate or a committee controlled by a candidate
Elect KEN RIVAS For City Council District 3 A proven leAder in our community with experience in: • Community and neighborhood advocacy • Leadership of the Neighborhood Advisory Committee • Working with City Council and the Parks and Recreation Department • Advocating for funds for several neighborhood capital improvement projects • Implementing the Neighbor Advisory Council • Development of citywide programs, such as Youth Art Alliance, Youth Employment, and culinary program • Service as a labor organizer, representing more than 600 employees at UCSB Ken Rivas is a Santa Barbara native. He is passionate about his Westside community and the people he serves. He has demonstrated this through his actions as a youth mentor, as a leader on the Neighborhood Advisory Council, in his efforts to improve the safety of our neighborhood, and his ideas for programs for our seniors. Ken is committed to improving this special community that we share. He is a good listener who values your voice, the voice of our community. Ken Rivas is the only candidate in this race who has served on the Santa Barbara Neighborhood Advisory Council. He helped with solutions to infrastructure and human services needs that were brought to him through the neighborhood residents. As your City Council Representative, Ken will be your bridge to City Council. As the General Budget for the city and Measure C funds allow for improvements, Ken will ensure that the needs of the Westside neighborhood are fairly considered and are not overlooked. If you want your voice to be heard, Vote for Ken Rivas. Ken is not a career politician, he is your neighbor, and will be a City Council Representative you will be able to count on.
VOTE KEN RIVAS For City Council District 3 www.electkenrivas.com
Paid for by the Committee to Elect Ken Rivas INDEPENDENT.COM
MAY 10, 2018
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MAY 3-10, 2018
COU RTESY
City Cops Chase Away Canna-bus
T
he Santa Barbara Police Department received a number of calls from concerned citizens Saturday, May 5, reporting a marijuana food truck on De la Vina Street. Self-described as a mobile medical marijuana dispensary, Day 1 Dynamics (D1D) offers everything from pre-rolled joints to gummies and cannabidiol (CBD) oil, all at competitive prices. D1D, affectionately known as BudBus, also offers services for a number of occasions, including barbecues, weddings, and music festivals. At least they used to, before being reported to GREEN MACHINE: This medical-marijuana dispensary on wheels is the authorities. getting moved along as it tries to move product on city streets. The owner and driver of D1D appears to be Jeffrey Young, no affiliation with attorney Jeffrey SBPD has yet to decide what its course Young. Young’s aim, as advertised online, of action will be but lists two options: either was to “move product.” His first Instagram a criminal or an administrative violation. post as D1D dates back to November 2017 Anthony Wagner, public engagement offiand his most recent to May 5, 2018, the day cer with SBPD, expressed serious doubt about Young’s claim to ignorance of law his bus was reported to city police. When contacted and questioned by considering the investments made in the authorities, Young claimed ignorance of vehicle and supplies he had with him. “This law. In the City of Santa Barbara, cannabis is the black market,” stated Wagner. “This merchants must hold a local license and also is what the black market looks like.” Young be registered with the State Bureau of Can- did not respond to requests for comment by —Blanca Garcia nabis Control. The D1D driver had neither. press time.
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MAY 10, 2018
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SAN MARCOS THREAT CONT’D FROM P. 13 process, we refer any questions regarding this case to the DA’s Office.” Meanwhile, one parent, whose daughter was targeted and ridiculed on the chat-room list, set out “to make sure my daughter and the other girls were able to feel safe again,” she said, wishing to remain anonymous. “I wanted the school and the district to be more proactive, but they weren’t. I wanted these boys out of there for good.” Pressing school and law-enforcement officials for details on the punishments and whereabouts of the chat-room boys, she made little headway. Only after hiring a private investigator, she said, did she learn that some of the boys who had been removed from campus had resumed private online chats about school shootings and were playing a video game recreating the Columbine High School massacre. Late last month, she decided that her daughter would not attend San Marcos High School next year. Another mother has already transferred her daughter — also named on the hit list — away from San Marcos. She said the chat-room incident traumatized her daughter. She’s come home after school in tears. Her hair started falling out. She lost a lot of sleep. And in each of her classes, she’d plan where she could run or hide if San Marcos suddenly became the site of yet another national tragedy.
Dixon suggested that authorities might consider more focused monitoring of the juvenile offenders. “It’s not our place [as a parent group] to advocate for them to be placed in custody,” she said. “But we’re certainly suggesting that intervention would be beneficial. Who’s helping manage their situations? They need support.” “We’re concerned about student and community safety,” she added. “Are the named victims safe? Because of privacy concerns, we don’t know.” Based on student observations and parent talk, it’s believed that three of the chat-room boys who participated at a lesser level have returned to school; two have moved away; and two, including the one now in court, have been expelled. Outgoing San Marcos Principal Ed Behrens did not respond to calls and emails for comment. District Superintendent Cary Matsuoka said he could not comment on the boys’ disciplinary outcomes. “I’ve been on campus a lot during the past couple of months,” he added. “Things have calmed down. We’re not seeing a mass exodus of kids. In fact, enrollment at San Marcos is up for next year.” Partnering with the parent group, the district’s newly formed Task Force on School Climate and Safety will hold a community forum at 7 p.m. on May 16 at La Colina Junior High. n
NEWS of the WEEK CONT’D GROUND ZERO
CONT’D FROM P. 15 PAU L WELLM AN
is proposing to build within 23 feet of Montecito Creek. This February, the Montecito Board of Architectural Review congratulated Myers and her architect, Jeff Shelton, for a design that was “beautifully done”—a small, dark-green house with holes for woodpeckers under the eaves. But Boardmember Claire Gottsdanker was worried. She asked how she could make the required finding that the proposed home would “blend in” LOOKS GREAT ON PAPER: With blueprints described as “beautifully with the neighborhood if done” by Montecito’s architectural review board, Myers is now waiting for the neighborhood was no the newest FEMA flood maps, expected next month. longer there. “I’m having trouble be parcels that the county will not allow to doing that in my mind,” she said. be rebuilt,” Jon Frye, Flood Control engiIn an interview, Gottsdanker wondered neering manager, told the Montecito Planwhy Myers’s project was “even on the ning Commission last month. “I have never agenda.” heard that in county discussions. We don’t “Are we going to keep building houses know where that came from.” back where they might wash away? Isn’t that At the same time, the push to rebuild why we have health and safety regulations? makes some Montecitans uneasy. Joe Cole, The experts have told us it’s possible that the commission chair (and former publisher these mountains are going to come down of the Santa Barbara Independent), asked again next winter.” Frye why the county wants to get people Architectural board approval for Myers’s back in their homes “sooner rather than plans is still pending, along with county land later” when the whole community faces the use and building permits. On May 15, the danger of another debris flow in the next County Board of Supervisors will consider three to five years, given enough rain. That’s exempting other property owners from all how long it may take for the vegetation to but a building permit, should they decide grow back on the mountainsides scorched to rebuild. by the Thomas Fire. “If it’s riskier, why wouldn’t you want people to wait?” Cole asked. “Is it because you want to get people back on their feet? Is Historically, the banks of Montecito Creek it property tax?” Frye answered: “We’re looking at this where 11 people died in close proximity on January 9 formed part of a working-class recovery as a pie. The flood control is merely community along East Valley, west of Hot a piece of that pie. There are so many other Springs Road, established in the 1800s. Mex- pieces that get into legal, financial, and ican soldiers of the Santa Barbara Presidio social aspects. It all becomes a big part of were granted parcels of land there in lieu of that recovery.” Like most owners who lost their homes long-overdue pay. on January 9, Myers has decided to wait for the Federal Emergency Management Are we going to keep building Agency “recovery map” before houses back where they might be she submits her final plans for county review. washed away? Isn’t that The FEMA map, which is why we have health and safety regulations? expected in June, will show new floodwater elevations — Claire Gottsdanker, Montecito Board of Architectural Review along Montecito and Carpinteria Valley creeks, based on “I’m not ruling out the possibility, the changed topography, post-January 9. because of what happened there, that that In Myers’s blueprints, the first floor of area may be a park,” Myers said. “It’s the her proposed house is elevated two feet off least expensive area in Montecito, and it has the ground. If the FEMA map comes up historical significance. I’m trying to be men- with higher floodwater elevations for her tally prepared, either way.” property, Myers said, she will ask Shelton to Meanwhile, the County Flood Control redesign the house so that the first floor is at District, which reviews plans for building least two feet above the mapped floodwater permits, has made it clear that everyone elevation, as the county requires. who wants to rebuild in Montecito will be “You tell me where’s a safe place and no able to do so. tragedy has ever happened,” Myers said. “At “There will be some challenging par- a certain point, how do you define ‘safe’? cels, but one of the misconceptions out in How do you define ‘home’? You just can’t the community is that there are going to say no to everything.” n
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Lt. Brian Olmstead has earned the respect of first responders and the community: “Local Hero,” Santa Barbara Independent, 2017 SB Sheriff’s Office Life Saving Award, 2014 SB Sheriff’s Meritorious Service Award, 2000 California Narcotics Officer of the Year, 2000 More than 50 Letters of Commendation from citizens & SB Sheriff’s office staff
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The Weepies
FRIDAY!
Hideaway 10 Year Anniversary Tour Fri, May 11 / 8 PM / UCSB Campbell Hall Tickets start at 25 / $15 UCSB students
Arturo O’Farrill and the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra Thu, May 17 / 8 PM / UCSB Campbell Hall
Tickets start at $25 / $10 all students (with valid ID)
“Deb Talan and Steve Tannen couldn’t write a bad song if they tried... the two have found their groove with a comforting synthesis of husky vocals and springy guitar that makes any combination of words and melodies shine like gold.” NPR Backed by the musicians who played on the original recording, The Weepies celebrate the 10-year anniversary of their popular album Hideaway.
“A masterful and adventurous big band that both champions the great tradition of Latin jazz and questions its own presumed stylistic borderlines.” – Josef Woodard, SB News-Press Don’t miss this cross-cultural, cutting-edge, 18-piece powerhouse outfit on tour, delivering their unique fusion of Afro-Caribbean rhythms and jazz improvisation “spiced with hints of avant-garde” (The New York Times).
Event Sponsors: Jody & John Arnhold
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“No one on Broadway can touch her.” Los Angeles Times “One of the fullest and most versatile voices in music today.” Huffington Post Audra McDonald has been named one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people and received a National Medal of Arts. Backed by a superb trio of musicians, McDonald presents her trademark mix of show tunes, classic songs from movies and pieces written expressly for her by leading composers.
(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222 / www.GranadaSB.org
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NEWS of the WEEK CONT’D PAU L WELLM AN
MAY 3-10, 2018
#MeToo Hits SBCC Guest Lecturer Fires Back Amid Sexual Assault Allegations
I
tion from Wallace and a public apology from Napoleon by 6 p.m. the next day or he would take personal legal action against them. His demands were echoed by Professor McIntire, who said while Napoleon had tried to cancel the colloquium, “She succeeded only in fingering herself as a calumniator of the very worst stamp.” Shermer concluded his message with a “final warning” to Napoleon that he would file a restraining order against her if she continued “her defamaDr. Raeanne Napoleon tory actions going forward by following me around this small community where I live and work and play with my young son.” The 6 p.m. deadline came and went without Napoleon apologizing or The Channels capitulating. On March 26, in the middle of SBCC’s spring break, Napoleon and The Channels received cease-and-desist letters from Shermer’s Los Angeles attorney. They got a second round of letters on April 4. Napoleon retained her own lawyer after her teachers’ union declined to represent her, and a number of colleagues rallied to her side, creating a GoFundMe page to cover her legal fees. It raised more than $8,000 in a matter of days. Wallace and The Channels consulted with SBCC attorney Joe Sholder, who assured them the article wasn’t libelous. But even if it was, Sholder said, the paper and Wallace were on their own — The Channels’ content is the legal liability of the student education board, not the college. A week later, Shermer announced he was dropping his lawsuit. “Although we have an excellent case that I was defamed, it is not worth the time and cost pursuing legal recourse for what is (hopefully) an inconsequential incident,” he wrote in another campuswide email. Napoleon’s attorney, Melissa Fassett, said Shermer never had a case. For him to prove defamation, he’d have to show that Napoleon’s statements about him were known to be untrue or were made with intentional malice. “Dr. Napoleon had simply voiced concerns about reports accusing Dr. Shermer of misconduct, which had been covered by the press,” Fassett said. “It should be remembered that the First Amendment right to free speech is protected, even if one disagrees with what is said.” Patricia Stark, faculty advisor to The Channels, called the episode a hard-learned lesson for 18- and 19-yearold journalism students. “They stuck to their convictions throughout the ordeal,” she said. “I’m immensely proud of them.” The author of the Buzzfeed article — Mark Oppenheimer, a regular contributor to the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times — remains fully confident in the accuracy of his reporting. Before it was published, Oppenheimer said, the piece was closely fact-checked, then read and approved by the company attorney. “As you know, we had several women on the record talking about Shermer’s behavior,” GAGE SK I DMOR E
by Tyler Hayden n the midst of the national #MeToo movement, Santa Barbara City College is grappling with its own crisis of conduct and disclosure after a tenured chemistry professor publicly aired sexual assault allegations against an acclaimed science writer ahead of his scheduled guest lecture on campus. The disclosure triggered legal threats against staff and students and prompted continuing debate around free-speech protections and the rights of the accused. On the morning of March 19, Professor Raeanne Napoleon sent a campus-wide email that described the evening’s Faculty Colloquium speaker — Dr. Michael Shermer, a monthly columnist for Scientific American and adjunct professor at Chapman University — as “someone who has been accused of sexual harassment and sexual assault (rape) by multiple women.” She linked to a 2014 Buzzfeed article that names and quotes three women who claim to have been victimized by Shermer. “I think it’s important that we understand who tonight’s speaker is,” Napoleon wrote, “so that you can choose whether or not you will support this event.” The email prompted an immediate flurry of response from faculty and staff. “People with a known history of predatory behavior should absolutely not be invited to speak on college campuses,” wrote student advisor Chelsea Lancaster. “What happened to the principal [sic] of presumption of innocence?” asked Professor Peter Naylor. “[D]on’t contribute to the deluge of misinformation and hate-speech that is destroying our public discourse.” SBCC’s student newspaper, The Channels, published an article that afternoon describing the email exchanges and a decision by event organizers to allow Shermer’s talk on metaphysics and the afterlife to proceed. The following day, March 20, Shermer issued his own all-campus email through colloquium organizer Professor Mark McIntire. In 10 blistering paragraphs of rebuttal, Shermer called the allegations against him “disgusting, repulsive” lies, and he accused Napoleon of libel and defamation for perpetuating them. “Dr. Napoleon doesn’t know me and doesn’t know anything about me,” he wrote. “And yet she feels no compunction whatsoever to publicly hurl such calumnies against me in an act of wonton irre- Dr. Michael Shermer sponsibility.” (Shermer’s full response to the Buzzfeed feature is included in a version of this article at independent.com. He states one of the three reported encounters was consensual and the other two were misconstrued.) Shermer said it was only last fall that “a moral crusader of Dr. Napoleon’s ilk” notified Chapman University of the Buzzfeed article, and that the college “dismissed” the accusations against him as “unwarranted.” So, too, have his other employers, he said. Shermer admonished the student writer of The Channels article, Daniel Wallace, for not contacting him so he could personally refute the charges. “Any journalist worthy of the name would have called or emailed to ask for a response before publishing a hit piece like this,” he said. Shermer claimed he could prove damages in lost book sales the night of his lecture. He promised Napoleon and Wallace: “You will pay for it.” Shermer demanded a retrac-
he said. “Given women’s understandable reluctance to be named in stories like this, it’s unusual to have multiple onthe-record sources, and yet we did.” Oppenheimer said Shermer sent him a long email after the story was published that described the pain it had caused him. They spoke on the phone as well. “He insisted that the women lied, and I insisted that I stood by my story,” said Oppenheimer. “I still do.” In an email exchange with the Santa Barbara Independent, Shermer said the entire SBCC issue hinged on a statement made in Napoleon’s email and repeated in Wallace’s article that claimed “police did not bring formal charges against him.” Shermer said law enforcement never investigated the purported incidents. “What police? Where? When?” he asked. “Never in my life have I been investigated by the police — or any law enforcement agency — for anything anytime anywhere.” Shermer said because Napoleon and Wallace refused repeated requests to retract the statement, his only recourse was through the courts. “The reason I had to draw a line in the sand about this falsehood,” he said, “is because over the many years I have seen these claims grow in falsehoods; e.g., ‘alleged rapist’ became ‘known rapist’ became ‘convicted rapist.’ Convicted!” Though the ordeal left Napoleon badly shaken, with lingering concerns that she was not adequately supported by SBCC administration, she doesn’t regret sending that March 19 email. “In my mind, in 2018, you call this stuff out,” she said. “I don’t think what I did was that brave or out of the ordinary.” If nothing else, she went on, “I just want people to know how this guy operates.” Napoleon recently filed a workplace harassment complaint against McIntire after he continued to criticize her on his public Facebook page and in conversations with students. A student group calling itself STAND formed in response to what it views as the college’s failure to protect Napoleon and The Channels and its enabling silence around the Shermer allegations. Multiple faculty members have voiced similar concerns in departmental and Board of Trustee meetings. When asked about the Shermer affair and Napoleon’s pending complaint against McIntire, SBCC spokesperson Luz Reyes-Martin said the campus is committed to maintaining a climate free of harassment and has a process in place for investigating any grievances. But “[d]ue to confidentiality standards and ongoing investigations,” she said, “SBCC cannot comment on the specifics of any individual report. However, we can assert that we take these reports very seriously and are diligently following our processes and evaluating all options available to address them.” The college is also now reevaluating the rules around its all-campus email system. n
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MA is BIKY MON E TH! National Bike Challenge • Classes & Clinics • Bike to Work Week Kid’s Activities • Rides & Tours • Films • Lectures & Demos The fun continues... 5/10 • Trail & Roadside Repair Class • What to do when the unexpected happens on your ride • REI, 321 Anacapa St., SB • 6:30-8:30PM (r)(s)($) 5/10 • Adventure Travel Stories • Firsthand stories of mountain biking the 670-mile Oregon Timber Trail & New Zealand...solo! • Museum of Natural History, 2559 Puesta del Sol • 7-8:15PM 5/11 • Goleta Bike to Work Breakfast #1 • Free breakfast, prizess & bike check-ups, hosted by CIO Solutions, with additional sponsorship: the City of Goleta • 5425 Hollister Ave. • 7:15-9AM 5/12 • Velo Wings Awards & Bicycle Bob’s Just for Women Rides • Intermediate ride: 9AM • Beginner ride: 10:30AM • SBBIKE Velo Wings Award Ceremony honoring local women • 12-1PM • Bicycle Bob’s, 320 S. Kellogg Ave., Goleta 5/12-5/13 • Overnight Mountain Bike Trip to 19 Oaks Camp • Learn how to use the bike you have for a short camping trip • Ride starts at the end of Paradise Road • 5PM (r)(s) 5/14 • Amgen Tour of California • Men’s Stage 2 • Ventura to Gibraltar Rd., Santa Barbara • 11:15AM-3:43PM 5/15 • SBBIKE Community Bike Ride • Friendly & educational social ride. This month’s ride is to Draughtsmen Aleworks in Goleta • Start at De La Guerra Plaza • 5:30-6:30PM 5/16 • Goleta Bike to Work Breakfast #2 • Free breakfast, prize giveaways & bike check-ups, hosted by CMC, sponsored by the City of Goleta • 6740 Cortona Dr. • 7:15-9AM 5/16 • 1st Annual Mayor’s Ride • Join Santa Barbara Mayor Cathy Murillo for a downtown ride & lunch stop • Start at De La Guerra Plaza • 12-1:30PM 5/17 • 805Chromies • Weekly night ride • Plaza de Vera Cruz Park, SB • 7:30PM 5/17 • The Mayor’s Ride: Carpinteria • Join Carpinteria Mayor Fred Shaw for a short coastal ride to the Seal Rookery • Start at the Carpinteria Amtrak Station • 12:30-1:30PM 5/18 • National Bike to Work Day: Carpinteria Breakfast • Food, fun & prize giveaways, hosted by Procore • 6309 Carpinteria Ave. • 7:15-9AM 5/18 • Bike-In Movie • Enjoy a Friday-night movie under the stars, hosted by SBBIKE. Awesome movie TBA • Bici Centro, 434 Olive St., SB • 7:45PM 5/19 • Bike-a-rrific Craft Day • Get crafty decorating your bike, get visible with fun flare, all ages welcome • Art from Scrap, 302 E. Cota St., SB • 11AM-2PM 5/19 • Dirt Curious? • Mountain biking skills clinics, hosted by SBMTV • Beginner-Intermediate: 8:30-10:30AM • Intermediate-Advanced: 11AM-1PM • Stevens Park, 258 Canon Dr., SB (r)(s)($)
5/20 • Women’s MTB Clinic • Mountain biking skills clinic, hosted by SBMTV • Stevens Park, 258 Canon Dr., SB • 9-11AM (r)(s)($) 5/20 • Solvang Wine Ride • Scenic ride in SY Valley, winery stops & BBQ finale, hosted by SB Ski Club • Hans Christian Andersen Park, 633 Chalk Hill Rd. • 9AM-3PM (r)($) (21+) 5/20 • Butterfly Family Ride • Scenic family ride through Ellwood Mesa & Devereux Slough, recommended for 8yrs+ • Start at Hollister Ave. at Pacific Oaks Rd. • 10-11:30AM 5/20 • Bici Centro Santa Maria 1st Anniversary • Celebratory ride, ending at a local business spot for food & drinks • Bici Centro, 310 Oak St., Santa Maria • 5-7:30PM 5/23 • Downtown Bike to Work Breakfast • With prize giveaways & bike check-ups, hosted by Sonos • 614 Chapala St., Santa Barbara • 7:15-9AM 5/23 • Sunset Ride • Casual ride to More Mesa for sunset views - music provided by the CycleMAYnia BoomBoom • Start at Bicycle Bob’s, 320 S. Kellogg Ave. • 7-9PM 5/24 • Story Bikes & World Bicycle Relief, Our Impact • Wine mixer with impactful video screenings & talks • Impact Hub, 1117 State St. • 5:30-7:30PM 5/27 • Draughts and Cycles Club Ride • No-drop, fastpaced road ride that starts/ends at Draughtsmen Aleworks • 53 Santa Felicia Dr., Goleta • 9AM 5/29 • Taco Tour #2 • Tour SB’s finest taco establishments by bike, bring a big appetite • Start at Ortega Park, corner of Salsipuedes St. & Cota St. • 5:30-9PM 5/30 • Carpinteria Lunch Ride & Party • Gather your coworkers for a lunch ride at your leisure, finish with free lunch & giveaways, sponsored by the City of Carpinteria • 5103 Carpinteria Ave. • Arrive anytime 12-1:30PM 5/31 • Bike Challenge Awards & CycleMAYnia Finale • Food, music & awards ceremony to celebrate riders, hosted by Traffic Solutions & UCSB Sustainability, featuring McConnell’s Fine Ice Creams • Goleta Beach Park • 4:30-6:30PM
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CURMUDGEON RAMPAGE: When John Perlin is wielding a shovel, you don’t want to get
anywhere between him and the hole. Perlin, now in the foothills of his early seventies, is not your run-of-the-mill big-brain autodidact. Back in the early 1980s, Perlin synthesized and distilled 5,000 years of human history into one single tome, A Forest Journey, which examined the rise and fall of human civilizations based on their exploitation of timber and forests. It got Perlin on Harvard’s top 100 books. He’s also published two of the most definitive histories of solar energy ever written. Not bad for a cranky, bite-the-hand-that-feeds-you curmudgeon who knows firsthand what it’s like to live under a camper shell in someone else’s Isla Vista backyard. Before long, Perlin found himself sharing the stage at international symposia with ExxonMobil execs, schooling them on the last days of fossil fuels with his customary John the Baptist bluntness. Along the way, Perlin —now recovering from a mountain bike accident that crushed an ankle—palled around town with the late Walter Kohn, UCSB’s Nobel Prize–winning physicist; together, the two of them could out-filibuster the entire U.S. Senate. Upon their advance, bus drivers, barbers, and other captive audiences fled for their lives. And with good cause. In stark contrast to his previous work, Perlin’s latest effort — the life and times of Eunice Foote — is almost a historical miniature,
Black Dog Blues
requiring only three years of John’s doggedly obsessive—or as he puts it, “crazy John Perlin” —research. Foote is easily one of the great, untold stories of both American science and feminism, and until the last few years,
she barely rated a footnote in most scholarly journals. No explanation is needed; she was a woman. If Perlin has anything to say on the subject, Foote will soon get her rightful due as the first scientist to define the link between carbon dioxide emissions and global warming. More remarkably, she did so more than 160 years ago— back in 1856— at a time when women were barred from almost all institutes of scientific learning. Next Thursday afternoon, Perlin will share the stage at UCSB’s McCune Conference Room with a gathering of accomplished science types—including Al Gore’s daughter Sarah Maiani —to discuss Foote’s life. Having received an inspired telephonic preview this week, I wish them luck. Perlin’s enthusiasm is intoxicating. Perlin’s research illustrates how history is way too interesting to be left to historians. Foote, it turns out, was not just an accomplished scientist but an important player in the early women’s movement. Foote grew up in upstate New York, then the last stop on the Underground Railroad taking runaway slaves to Canada and freedom. This was the epicenter for insurrectionists of all stripes: abolitionists, feminists, mystics, and teetotalers. It’s where “bloomers” were
popularized as practical clothes for women in defiance of corsets and other fashion accessories designed to hobble and enshackle their wearers. In 1848, Foote would sign the Magna Carta of the women’s movement, the Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments. She was one of just five signatories who got the declaration published. By whom? By famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass, who just happened to run a printing press down the road. Foote lived next door to pioneering feminist Elizabeth Cady Stanton; Foote’s husband, Elisha Foote, it turned out, learned his law from Cady Stanton’s father. Foote’s son-in-law would later introduce the constitutional amendment banning slavery. It was that kind of space. Before that, Foote attended Troy Female Seminary, whose students were invited to attend a nearby science college started by a character named Amos Eaton. He was a convicted con man who’d been sentenced to life in prison, but was released after four years so he could pursue his life calling as an evangelist of scientific education. Apparently he hadn’t been told women couldn’t be scientists, so Foote was able to learn the nuts and bolts of chemistry and experimental techniques at his school. Back then, scientists were keenly interested in atmospheric conditions that may have sparked the earth’s transformation from what scientists call “the age of fish” into “the age of plants” and the massive die-off of species that attended this shift. Foote was not the
first to ponder the role played by changing temperatures. She was the first, however, to isolate the component gases that make up the atmosphere, thus discovering which one got the hottest in sunlight. It was, she found, carbon dioxide. The punch line, of course, is that she proved that the more CO2 that’s pumped into the atmosphere, the hotter it gets. Foote’s work was presented to a national gathering of American scientists in New York City in 1856. She, being a woman, was not allowed to read it herself. A male surrogate had to read it in her place. Three weeks later, her work won a short but enthusiastic review in the pages of Scientific American. It also got posted in the pages of the American Journal of Science, edited by John Tyndall. Three years later, Tyndall would publish an article of his own about atmospheric heating and carbon dioxide. Tyndall would boast his work was utterly original and unprecedented. But passages of Tyndall’s article, Perlin charged, were lifted verbatim from Foote’s paper. “It was a crime of science,” Perlin contended. “Tyndall claimed no one had done this work before. He was a great omitter. In fact, it turns out, he was a serial omitter.” What relevance this has today, when climate change and women’s rights remain excruciatingly front and center, I’ll leave it to you to determine. Certain echoes, however, are impossible to ignore. Having John Perlin on the phone sure helps remind us. — Nick Welsh
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PLEASE JOIN US FOR THE ANNUAL
Mental Health Fair • • • •
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FEATURING INFORMATION ON: mental health chemical dependency community resources wellness and recovery
Saturday, May 19 | 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital 400 West Pueblo Street, Burtness Auditorium
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All renderings, floor plans, and maps are artist’s concepts and are not intended to be an actual depiction of the buildings, fencing, walkways, driveways or lan to meet consumer expectations, City Ventures reserves the right to modify prices, floor plans, specifications, and amenities without notice or obligation. Squa All rights reserved. BRE LIC #01877626. All renderings, floor plans, and maps are artist’s concepts and are not intended to be an actual depiction of the buildings, fencing, walkways, driveways or landscaping. Walls, windows, porches and decks vary per elevation and lot location. In a continuing effort to meet consumer expectations, City Ventures reserves the right to modify prices, floor plans, specifications, and amenities without notice or obligation. Square footages shown are approximate. Please see your Sales Manager for details. ©2018 City Ventures. All rights renderings, floorBRE plans, maps are artist’s concepts and are not intended to be an actual depiction of the buildings, fencing, walkways, driveways or landscaping. Walls, windows, porches and decks vary per elevation and lot location. In a continuing effort All reserved. LICand #01877626. to meet consumer expectations, City Ventures reserves the right to modify prices, floor plans, specifications, and amenities without notice or obligation. Square footages shown are approximate. Please see your Sales Manager for details. ©2018 City Ventures. All rights reserved. BRE #01877626. All renderings, floor LIC plans, and maps are artist’s concepts and are not intended to be an actual depiction of the buildings, fencing, walkways, driveways or landscaping. Walls, windows, porches and decks vary per elevation and lot location. In a continuing effort meet consumer expectations, City Ventures reserves the right to modify prices, floor plans, specifications, and amenities without notice or obligation. Square footages shown are approximate. Please see your Sales Manager for details. ©2018 City Ventures. Townhomes, to Shopkeeper &LIC Live/Work All rights reserved. BRE #01877626.
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expectations, City Ventures reserves the right to modify prices, floor plans, specifications, and amenities without notice or obligation. Square footages see your Sales Manager for details. ©2018 City Ventures. All rights reserved. BRE LIC #01877626.
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Opinions
EDDIE HSUEH
CONT’D
capitol letters
for SB SHERIFF
Grand Old Nazi State Republicans Fear Avowed Anti-Semite Might Carry Party Label in Senate Race
T
here was at least one thing that delegates to last weekend’s California Republican Party convention agreed upon: Endorsing a neo-Nazi as their guy to defeat Senator Dianne Feinstein is a bad idea. So it was that GOP officials would not allow Republican candidate Patrick Little, an anti-Semitic white nationalist who placed second behind DiFi in a recent statewide poll, to register for the San Diego confab, evicting him from Patrick Little the premises as he stomped and dragged an Israeli flag behind him. “I’ve got more than twice the support” Republicans still are desperately defendof any other Republican, the 33-year-old ing seven congressional seats as Democrats Little yapped in a YouTube video made fight to win back the House—and thereafter he was kicked out. “They just had me fore need to offer their dwindling partisan expelled from the building because I won’t base a reason to vote in November. Hoping to goose turnout, the party serve Israel.” Ahead of 10 other Republicans on the changed its rules to allow for endorsements June 5 ballot, Little captured 18 percent in in primaries, but the gambit failed: The the full Senate field of 32 candidates, second hard-fought main event of the convention behind Feinstein’s 32 percent. matched the GOP’s top two challengers To their credit, party officials disavowed for governor, businessman John Cox and him: “Mr. Little has never been an active Assemblymember Travis Allen, but neither member of our party,” a spokesperson said. met the 60 percent threshold of delegates “In the strongest terms possible, we con- needed to prevail. demn anti-Semitism and any other form “We need those voters to turn out,” one of religious bigotry ….” Republican fundraiser told AP political Perhaps it is just a statistical anomaly writer Mike Blood before the vote. “That’s in a flawed poll that a Holocaust denier going to be the margin of victory, to hold campaigning for a government “free from our targeted congressional seats and the jews [sic]” is the dominant Republican Assembly and the Senate seats.” contender (for the record, Little identifies OPTION C. Amid the possibility there will himself as a “civil rights advocate”). That it’s altogether plausible a neo-Nazi be no GOP entry in the two marquee races, actually leads the GOP pack, however, tes- national Republicans are trying to gin up tifies to how Donald Trump’s race-based support for two other conservative causes: demagoguery has enabled and enlarged (1) a November referendum to repeal last the influence of previously marginal hate year’s gas-tax increase, which Democrats groups. passed to pay for infrastructure repairs, Which makes just one more factor driv- and (2) opposition to the “sanctuary state” ing California Republicans toward the fate law, limiting cooperation between local law enforcement and federal immigration of the woolly mammoth and the dodo. authorities, a stance embraced by many FUN WITH NUMBERS. The secretary of Republican candidates. state reports that only 25.4 percent of the One key, unanswered question: Will state’s nearly 19 million voters are registered Republicans in endangered House seat Republican—less than one-half of one per- races welcome Trump to campaign for cent more than No Party Preference inde- them with one of his patented red meat pendents (registered Democrats are 44.6 rallies? percent of the electorate). The decision rests on tricky political Not since 2006, when Arnold Schwar- calculus: Trump lost California to Hillary Clinton zenegger won a second term as governor, has a Republican captured a statewide by more than four million ballots, and UC office. Berkeley’s Institute of Governmental StudThis year, the forecast is so dismal that ies poll recently showed registered voters party leaders rightfully fear they will have by more than two to one— 67 to 31 perno candidate in November, for either gov- cent—holding an unfavorable view of his ernor or senator, because Democrats will presidency. finish one-two in the open primary. At the same time, however, Republicans This creates a huge headache for party overwhelmingly approve of Trump — 80 to leaders: Although there is no realistic hope 19 percent favorable-unfavorable. for a GOP candidate to win statewide office, Carthago delenda est. —Jerry Roberts
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Aging: The Lifelong Process that Unites Us All Moderator: Catherine Remak
Sat, May 19 / 3 PM (note special time) / UCSB Campbell Hall / $5 Keynote Speaker
Ashton Applewhite This Chair Rocks: How Ageism Warps Our View of Long Life “Vibrant, energetic, fact-filled and funny, This Chair Rocks is a call to arms not just for older people but for our whole society.” – Katha Pollitt, poet, essayist and The Nation columnist
Why is society’s view of aging so grim when the lived reality is so different? Anti-ageism activist and author Ashton Applewhite declares that it’s time for age pride. A TED2017 mainstage speaker, Applewhite reveals the untapped possibilities of late life – in our communities, at work and in ourselves. Media Sponsors: For information about a related TLI event and how to get a free copy of Ashton Applewhite’s book, This Chair Rocks, by visit www.Thematic-Learning.org
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obituaries
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com
Helen Roos Walker
Something tells us that you are, you lovely woman, you daughter of selflessness. You will be missed, thought of, remembered, and honored in our thoughts and in our hearts for the rest of our lives. For all the people and lives you've touched, thank you for your remarkable and special quality that you brought. The world is not as sweet a place without you here in it.
09/15/43-03/15/18
Sweet Helen was born in Chicago and grew up in Erie, Pennsylvania. Raised by beloved parents and two sisters, Helen spent cherished summers of her youth at beautiful Lake George in upstate New York. She came out west to attend college and graduated from USC. She became a devoted wife to two husbands and had one son each from these two marriages. Helen loved the arts, theater, music and film and was inspired by all that is beautiful and creative. Ever kind, compassionate, loving and gentle Helen was a true blessing to those who knew her and to the many lives that she touched. Her cheer and happiness was elevating and edifying to be near to. She had a great sense of humor and a large, booming laugh that made times a true joy for those around her. Helen was a very talented crochet artist and cook. She was truly outstanding and had a special touch in creating a dinner or holiday party in her homes in both Los Angeles and Santa Ynez. She loved spending time with animals and the cats and dogs and horses throughout her life were always attracted to her and wanted to be close to her special loving energy. Helen's sense of caring and generosity extended to many areas including environmental issues, animal welfare, the injured, the war-injured, the underprivileged and anyone she knew who ever took a hard blow in life. Her caring, thoughtfulness, and kind actions for others built up over a lifetime is truly extraordinary. Helen both endured and overcame disappointing or unfortunate events in her life with remarkable fortitude and grace. To know this and to see this in her life was to love her and also be encouraged inside oneself. To say that Helen was a sweet person, a loving person, and a truly good person cannot be overstated enough. We are shocked, crushed, and saddened by your departure. We hope you are doing freely and peacefully in your spirit's home. 24
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Jacques Alexandre Charest 1931-2018
his passing. Jacques will be greatly missed, but he leaves behind a lifetime of wonderful memories for all who knew him! The family also wants to extend its thanks to the wonderful group of ‘earth angels’ who helped dad and our family during his final weeks with us. In lieu of flowers, and if you so choose, the family would be honored if you contributed to Visiting Nurse Hospice of Santa Barbara; a truly remarkable organization. A private family observance will be held at a later date.
All Saints by the Sea, followed by a reception. If desired, in lieu of flowers, support of Santa Barbara Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital, The Music Academy of the West, New House or your favorite charity is appreciated. Arrangements made by McDermott-Crockett Mortuary.
him. Rest well my sweet husband until we meet again. There will be a celebration of Gary's life on what would have been his 80th birthday. Saturday, July 7, 2018 at 1:00 PM at Manning Park (Area 9) 449 San Ysidro Rd., Montecito, CA 93108.
Gary E. Seyle
10/16/64-04/29/18
07/07/38-02/12/18
Raul Delgadillo
John McKenna
Remembrance of a Life Well Lived A kind, generous, intellectual man, Jacques (born Quebec, Canada) adored and valued his enormous family and many friends. He loved humor and laughter and leaves behind a legacy of jokes for all who knew him. He was not only a man of science (B.S-Mechanical Eng., M.S Chemical Eng., and Ph.D in Physics and Mining) but also a noteworthy entrepreneur. He launched and built a successful company, Dynasen Inc. in 1972-present. Jacques was a boater, scuba diver, ocean enthusiast and protector (he helped to establish the S.B. Mariculture Foundation in 1975). His greatest passion was time with family and friends on his boat(s), the Getaway (I-IV), crossing to the Channel Islands (Santa Cruz), and enjoying the pristine surroundings. This was usually followed by a fun meal at the Yacht Club, Pepes, or Petrini’s, recounting island tales with family and friends. Jacques will be greatly missed by his immediate family; son Michel (Patty), grandchildren Christopher and Kelly, daughter Paula (Martin Lilly), granddaughter Jordyn, daughter Anne, and son Pierre, grandsons Nate, Tanner, and Samuel. We were honored to call him dad and grandpa. He will also be missed by many friends and loved ones who were part of his extended family. Jacques had many blessing in his 87 years, and he would tell you that two of his greatest blessings were the two loves in his life, Denyse R Charest (who preceded him in death in 2004) and Kay Utterback who was dads ‘brightest light’ until
MAY 10, 2018
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John McKenna, age 76, passed away peacefully on March 19, 2018 surrounded by family and friends. He was the son of George and Madalyn McKenna of Hope Ranch who predeceased him. John is survived by Holly Cowper McKenna, his beloved wife of 46 years, and by Martha Saxe, his first wife with whom he had three children: Deborah McKenna, Craig McKenna (wife Keti) and John McKenna, Jr. He was the proud grandfather of Alex and Jack McKenna. John had a great personal style and a keen eye for beauty and design. He surrounded his homes with colorful gardens and unique landscapes. His talents led him to a working adventure with his brother who developed an ultrasonic Watch Cleaning Machine at McKenna Labs. Eventually, he became a developer, and Realtor of Santana properties until he retired. Tennis, golf, and mean games of ping pong were threaded through John’s life. He loved sport, the camaraderie with good friends, and good stories. He knew every junk food establishment in corners of every town and loved his hot fudge sundaes. He was a music aficionado who shared his passion for sound in his beloved Music Room. His tastes varied from Opera, Dvorak, Coltrane, Ellington to Willie Nelson. John was a man who lived well, laughed often and was much loved. A Celebration of Life will be held at 2:00pm on May 19, 2018 at
Gary (79) passed away at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital due to complications of an aortic dissection. Patricia Villarreal-Seyle, his loving wife of 33 years, was as always by his side. Gary, a Santa Barbara native, was born at St. Francis Hospital, the only child of the late Lewis and Jessie Seyle. Gary graduated from Santa Barbara High School in 1956 and attended Santa Barbara City College. He was a Coast Guard reservist from 1961-1969 and worked in the grocery industry for 35 years, retiring in 1994. His lifelong love of the outdoors included surfing, kayaking, hiking and biking, which took him on many Century rides and a threeweek biking tour through Europe in 1984. Golf was a game he loved, most of the time! Other passions were photography, drawing, maps and books; he always had a book in hand. Gary leaves his three children: Cary (Ellen) Seyle, grandchildren Chris and Alex; Shelley (Pete) Overgaag, grandsons Sam and Jake; Jeff (Sonya) Seyle, granddaughters Ava and Abby. He also leaves his two loving stepsons, although to Gary there was no step: Michael (Janice) Villarreal, granddaughters Veronica, Cami and Alyssa; Jeff (Becky) Villarreal, grandsons Jacob and Isaac. Patricia's extended family will miss him dearly as well as Mark Shulman who was the brother he never had. Along with Mark, many other longtime friends will miss his long conversations and friendship. Gary always had a good story to tell and was a friend and gentleman to all. A special thank you to Dr. Kupperman, Dr. Spiegel, and the many other doctors and RN's including Robert, Lacy and Heather (MICU), who cared for
Raul Delgadillo was born and raised in Santa Barbara, passed away on April 29, 2018. He was 54 years old. Raul attended Wilson Elementary School, McKinley Elementary, La Cumbre Junior High School and Santa Barbara High School, class of 1983. Raul attended Santa Barbara City College for two years, and after learning of his good friend Alphonso Razo and Joe Demerest joining the Marines, he also joined, and all three went to boot camp together. Raul was a Desert Storm Veteran. Later, he attended Cal State Northridge to get his teaching credentials. Raul taught catechism classes at Guadalupe Church, and for many years Raul loved to donate his time at the churches Old Spanish Days Fiesta. He worked at a food booth and ran the ring tossing game. Raul worked at Franklin Elementary, SBJH, SMHS, DPHS, and SBHS where he felt most proud to work. Raul loved playing video games since the Atari system came out. Raul was passionate about collecting and building old Schwinn bicycles. Raul died in his sleep of heart failure. Raul was buried on May 4th with a military service.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 26 >>>
In Memoriam
Our Private Family Farm
Sunanta ‘Sunny’ Quinn 1954 – 2017
Santa Barbara
Instant Friend, Mom to Many
BY C AT A L L D AY y husband and I have
COURTESY
M
RANCHO PALOMINO
just returned from a trip to Thailand, where we placed my mother’s ashes in a Buddhist temple in Nonthaburi, next to her parents and grandmother. My mom, Sunanta “Sunny” Quinn, passed away on December 27, 2017, after a long, tough battle with cancer. Sunny was born in Bangkok, Thailand, on September 16, 1954. As a young girl, Sunny was a total tomboy. She grew up playing soccer and learned Muay Thai kickboxing moves from her uncles. Her father was a civil engineer for the Thai government, and her mother was the neighborhood midwife. She was the eldest of six kids, growing up in a family that was amazingly closeknit. Family dinners were a loud affair, lasting hours. They were full of laughter, with spontaneous outbursts of singing and dancing. She met her first husband, an American in the U.S. Air Force, in THE SUNNY STORY: The famed bartender at Mel’s and Pascucci, Sunny Quinn Thailand, where they married and loved Santa Barbara. And Santa Barbara loved her right back. where I was born in 1974. My father brought my mother and me to the U.S. in 1976 — we landed in Minnesota and started our the bar stools were full. She loved her customers. She new life there. Sunny had great stories about her time had regular customers from all corners of the planet. in the frigid north: her first experience with real cold When they came to Santa Barbara, one of their first weather, making spaghetti sauce with ketchup, driving stops would be to have a drink and a visit with Sunny. a riding lawn mower at a church cemetery, and getting Even when she fell ill, she couldn’t wait to get back to stuck in an outhouse in below-zero temperatures. work because she missed her restaurant family. She We moved to Southern California shortly after and encouraged her coworkers to sit down after closing to Santa Barbara in late 1978. In August 1979, Sunny and eat together because she valued that connection gave birth to my sister, Sonya. Her marriage to my that you get with others when sitting around a table father ended a brief time later, and this is when her and sharing a meal. Sunny loved Santa Barbara; it was her home for life began to take the shape that many knew her for almost 40 years. And Santa Barbara loved her right in Santa Barbara. In the early 1980s, she became a cocktail waitress back. She has often been referred to as the unofficial at Ripperetti’s and then learned how to bartend at mayor of Santa Barbara. Everyone has a Sunny story: the Mecca on Milpas Street. In 1982, before the mall Maybe she served them their first or last drink on their was built, her long run at Mel’s on De la Guerra Street 21st birthday, taught them how to mix a cocktail, made started. If that little old pool table in the back room them an unforgettable meal, or simply treated them could talk, it would have some stories. She took no like an old friend the first time she met them. crap from anyone and could easily put the biggest Family was important to Sunny. She hosted family guy in the bar right in his place if he acted out. There dinners every Sunday night. This weekly meal was are several “unconfirmed” stories of ashtrays being always attended by members of her extended adopted hurled across the bar at misbehaving patrons. She family. This meal was sacred; very few weeks passed was a straight shooter and told you exactly what she when she didn’t host this meal. She was a “mom” and thought of you — you only hoped it was positive. “grandma” to many, and she cherished this role. All People were drawn to Sunny from the moment the kids in her neighborhood called her Grandma they met her. Maybe it was because she made a stiff Sunny and stopped by her house for homemade cocktail and could hustle you in a game of pool, or chocolate-chip cookies or to hang out with one of her maybe it was because she was an amazing cook and dachshunds, Rafael or Charly. As I think back on our visit with my mom’s siblings loved to share her passion for food. Regardless, you over the past couple of weeks, I am reminded of what a couldn’t help but have fun when you were with her. During this time, Sunny met Kevin, a young Irish- special, one-of-a-kind woman my mother was. Sunny man who rode a motorcycle. During their 14-year left an impression on everyone who met her. She could marriage, they adopted a border collie named Mur- light up a room with her amazing smile. She was a wonphy, built a home bar that was legendary, and hosted derful sister, caring mother, doting grandmother, and epic BBQs, dinners, and costume parties. Sunny unconditionally loving friend. She touched so many became an American citizen and was very proud of lives, and we are all better people for having known her. both her birth country and her country of choice. After 18 years at Mel’s, she moved on to Pascucci. She was behind the bar at Pascucci for 15-plus years — Donations in Sunny’s memory may be made to the Cancer it was easy to tell when Sunny was working because all Foundation of Santa Barbara.
Mother’s Day Moms And Manes Horsemanship Clinic
Sunday, May 13 • Earl Warren Showgrounds, Gate C
2 hour clinic times: 10am, 1pm or 4:00pm • $150 X Now $100 per family! A fun class for moms and kids! Groom and spend offering: wholesome After-School Personal Enrichment Program family time with the horses. Horsemanship • Horseback Riding • Archery • Cooking RSVP at RanchoPalominoSB.com Animal Husbandry with our rescued goats, pig, cow, horses dogs, cats, chickens and turkeys • Arts • Crafts and More! Monday - Friday • Ages 6 - 15 Includes pick up from all Montecito, Santa Barbara and Goleta Schools • Home drop off available
Also New Weekend Program Starting in September. Come spend a "Summer Like Weekend" with optional Saturday night camp out! Saturdays and Sundays from 9:30 am to 3:30 pm, 2 weekends a month
Summer Sign-upS Are Open!
Daily Art, Horseback Riding, Archery, Cultural Arts, Cooking and Animal Care DailyDrop Off 9am-4pm www.RanchoPalominoSB.com or call 805.570.5075 or we offer a Sleep Away Option! VISIT OUR WEBSITE FOR ALL THE DETAILS AND TO RSVP
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1200 State Street, Santa Barbara (805) 560-6883 For the location nearest you, please call (855) 886-4824 or visit us at www.firstrepublic.com
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obituaries
To submit obituaries for publication, please call (805) 965-5205 or email obits@independent.com
Margaret Armstrong Staton 05/14/46-04/05/18
Margaret Armstrong Staton, left us to be with the angels she loved on Thursday, April 5, 2018. She passed away peacefully at her home in Montecito, California, surrounded by her loving staff and great friend, Linda Drevenstedt of Ventura, California. She was born on May 14, 1946, in Baltimore, Maryland. Her family later lived in Yonkers, New York, and then settled in Atlanta, GA. when she was two years old. Atlanta was home until she relocated to Montecito in 1996. Margaret became paraplegic as a child, though she was never Dis-Abled. She lived a full and wonderful life, always supporting the arts, many charities and the disability community. Margaret graduated from Georgia State University in 1968 with a degree in Classics and in 1974 with a master's degree in Education. Margaret was not only a strong advocate for the rights of people with disabilities, but also an educator and mentor. She created scholarships for graduate students with disabilities at Georgia State University where her contributions helped establish the Margaret A. Staton Office of Disability Services. Her endowment has already assisted over 2,000 students. The Ethel Louise Armstrong (ELA) Foundation propelled Margaret's vision to "change the face of disability on the planet." ELA, created in 1995, awarded grants to organizations that supported arts and education for people with disabilities and scholarships for women with a physical disability who were pursuing a graduate degree. ELA also funded a technical assistance program to provide needed education in the requirements for the Americans with Disabilities Act and Audio Description for theaters. Margaret, a true Steel Magnolia, enjoyed graciously entertaining friends and created a lovely home full of art and flowers. She loved football, especially watching her 26
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Atlanta Falcons; there, her fun, spit-fire nature came out to play. She was a devoted, generous and supportive friend. Margaret was predeceased by her mother, Jocelyn Botterell Staton of Winnipeg, Canada, and her father, John Curtis Staton of Atlanta, Georgia. Margaret is survived by two sisters and a brother: Mary Staton and her husband, Michel SaintSulpice (Montecito); Louise Staton Gunn, and John C. Staton, Jr. and his wife Sue G. Staton, all of Atlanta. She adored her nieces and nephews, Wendy S. Burge and John C. Staton III of Atlanta; Curtis Gunn (Tucson) and Harry Gunn (San Jose, CA) and her cousins Daphne Botterell Payne (Dundas, Ontario) and Jocelyn Botterell Allen (Toronto). There will be a memorial celebration at her Montecito home. If desired, memorial contributions may be made to an organization of your choice.
C. Becker Painting Contractor for the rest of his career. During that career he was the President of the Painting and Decorating Contractors Association for many years. Mark was a life member of Santa Barbara Elks Lodge #613. While a member he enjoyed participating in the Drum and Bugle Corps and numerous cook crews. Mark was also a member of the Rancheros Visitadores. He enjoyed working with his colleagues in the Mozos camp. After his retirement Mark enjoyed many hunting and fishing trips with his sons and traveling with Audrey by land and by sea. Mark is survived by his wife, Audrey, of 71 years, his sons Mark (Julie) and John (Noreen). He was predeceased by his son, Don, in 2003. He is also survived by five grandchildren and nine great grandchildren. His family will miss his guidance and humor. At Mark’s request no public service will be held. In lieu of flowers please consider a contribution to Visiting Nurse and Hospice Care of Santa Barbara Foundation.
Norma (Becchio) Cornish Mark Clarence Mullenary, Jr.
06/13/1915-04/26/18
06/12/28-05/03/18
1968. She is survived by her son, Mickey (Leslie) Cornish, five grandchildren, 27 great grandchildren and five great-great grandchildren. Although she was reluctant to admit getting close to 100, one of her cherished moments was a celebration of that milestone birthday at Garden Court where she resided for some of the happiest years of her life. She was especially proud of making local news with a front page article and picture of the event. Along with the blessed experience of the supportive staff at Garden Court, she was wonderfully cared for during the last 13 months at Buena Vista Care Center. A special thank you to her Becchio family, particularly Cecilia, and Gary Pesek, for their incredible devotion of time, energy and love to Auntie Norma. Also, to her dear friend for so many years, Andrea Bifano and her family. There will be a Celebration of Life and Thanks (along with ice cream!) at Garden Court, 1116 De La Vina St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101 on Friday, May 18th at 1:30 p.m. If you feel led to make a donation in her honor it would be gratefully appreciated for the Garden Court Employee Fund at the address listed above. Simply Remembered is acknowledged for their respectful care of her final arrangements.
California. Gayla’s love for Santa Barbara was fierce as was her Christian faith. Her love for Jesus Christ and for her church Calvary Chapel was just as fierce. She would like to be remembered as a fun loving, dancing, Christ loving, lipstick wearing woman. My mother was a true SB girl through and through. Hendry’s Beach was where you could find us back in the day. Growing up, she put me on the back of her bike and we would ride around town singing show tunes and laughing. I am so thankful the she was that mom that let me run around naked at the beach.... chasing seagulls and living life to the fullest. She loved her music and dancing, she owned a little business called “Dance with Pizazz”. And did she have pizazz!!! Her remains with be returned to our beloved home Santa Barbara this summer so we can celebrate her life as she lived it. You are missed every day. RIP Mom (Gayla). Email me @ rnbecca2@yahoo.com so we can discuss this summer and her life celebration! Peace and love. Rebekah Sousa
Karen Leigh Olsen 1955-2017
Gayle Joanne Molitor 11/19/48-10/31/17
Mark was the only child of Mark C. Mullenary Sr. and Mabel (Haynes) Mullenary. Immediately after graduation from Santa Barbara High School he joined the United States Marine Corps. In 1947 Mark married his high school sweetheart Audrey Callis. While in the Marines he reached the rank of staff sergeant and at the end of his tour was the Brig Warden at Alameda Air Station. After he was honorably discharged he operated the Shell gas station on Montecito Street for some time before he decided to become a commercial painter and was hired by the wonderful Becker family. He worked for and ultimately became one of the partners of Don
MAY 10, 2018
INDEPENDENT.COM
Norma Cornish, a native of Santa Barbara, passed on peacefully just before dawn on April 26, 2018, seven weeks shy of her 103rd birthday. She was born Norma Margaret Becchio along with her twin brother, Norman, on June 13, 1915 to Romano “Reno” and Catherine (Walsh) Becchio. She also had two additional siblings, Francis and Edgar. She attended Notre Dame All Girls High School which eventually became Catholic High and is now known as Bishop Diego High. She also attended UCSB when it was still located on the Riviera. She married Clayton J. Cornish on September 1, 1940. They had two sons. Clayton J. “Duke” Cornish, Jr. predeceased her in a tragic accident on December 19,
Gayle Joanne Molitor passed away peacefully October 31st with her daughter and son in law by her side. “Gayla” as she liked to be called had recently moved to CT to be with her daughter, Rebekah Sousa and her son in law Cesar Sousa. Most importantly she moved to CT to be with her one grandchild Olivia. Gayla moved to Santa Barbara when she was a teenager with her family Lloyd and Isabel Mooney and her brother Gary Mooney. She left behind her daughter, granddaughter and her brother and his family Rose, Brandon, Bailee and Mckenzee Mooney who live in Northern
The world has lost a special soul with the passing of Karen Leigh Olsen. Karen had an unrelenting spirit. She was determined, and when she put her mind to something, there was no stopping her. When Karen was told 10 years ago that she only had 6 months to live due to breast cancer, she defied the odds. She did her research and stayed alive for a decade using alternative treatments, amazing everyone around her. Karen was a talented artist who loved community, gardening, and most of all, her son. She was truly a beautiful soul, and her smile would light up a room like nothing you've ever seen. We miss you dearly, Karen, but we know your wild spirit is out there soaring. A very heartfelt thanks to Tracy, Nurse Deb and Sarah House for helping Karen's family during the toughest of times. You are angels on earth.
Opinions
SBWPC
CONT’D
Proudly Supports: DELAINE EASTIN Governor
ELENI KOUNALAKIS Lt. Governor
SALUD CARBAJAL
U.S. Congress, 24th District
MONIQUE LIMÓN
State Assembly, 19th District
OSCAR GUTIERREZ
Santa Barbara City Council, District 3 No Endorsement: Auditor-Controller- Santa Barbara County
VOTE! www.S B WPC .o rg
T
hank you to Mayor Cathy Murillo and the Santa Barbara City Council for dedicating May 12 to a critical public-health crisis most people know nothing about. Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome/fibromyalgia — also known as ME/CFS/FM —prevents sufferers from going to work or attending school. Because many are housebound or bedbound, those in our community with ME/CFS/FM are too often hidden and forgotten. It is estimated that up to 2.5 million ME/CFS patients and 5 million fibromyalgia patients live in the U.S. They often suffer from multiple debilitating symptoms that impact every aspect of their lives. Too much is still unknown about these illnesses, and millions of patients suffer in pain and receive little help. Sadly, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) fund minimal research, and it is left to the private sector to try to find answers. I work with the Open Medicine Foundation (OMF) to fund research internationally. The progress we are making is coming from individuals who see the importance of helping people return to their pre-illness lives. I am honored that our city is formally recognizing International ME/CFS/FM Awareness Day and encouraging residents to educate themselves, to show compassion, and to support funding and research. We invite you to join the fight for those who are too ill to advocate for themselves. They need each of us to stand up and be heard. More than 100 Visibility Actions will happen around the world on May 12 for #MillionsMissing, with the nearest at Santa Monica’s 3rd Street Promenade at noon. Join the action. Get involved. — Marilyn Simon-Gersuk, S.B.
Caveat Emptor, Voters
I
n 2015, voters were asked to merge our nonpartisan local elections with presidential and congressional elections. As recommended by the Independent, among many others, voters said “No.” But now the
mayor and City Council want the question back on this year’s ballot. Apparently, they weren’t happy with the outcome. The argument for such a move is that turnout is higher for national elections. That is a valid point— but if people aren’t interested in the local issues debated during local campaigns now, why would they have any interest during a national election? On the contrary, local candidates and issues would be buried and likely disappear in the context of a national election. Lacking knowledge or interest in local issues, most of the voters gained will simply vote for the candidate appearing on the same mailer as their national and state choices. In other words, they will vote for the candidate endorsed by their party. And that is why they keep reviving this stale idea. Parties would gain even more control than they already have over our supposedly nonpartisan local elections. Please, Mayor and Council, work instead to engage more voters in the local issues that most directly affect their lives. Don’t just shut those discussions down and turn the decision-making over to party central committees. There may be fewer of us engaged in those local discussions than in a media-driven national election, but at least our vote is based on those discussions—not on who is running for president. — Gerry DeWitt, S.B.
For the Record
¶ Last week’s Angry Poodle Barbecue incorrectly stated that Greka Energy paid the County of Santa Barbara only $1 million of the $2.1 million in fines and penalties owed for multiple environmental safety violations. The county, in fact, was paid in full. The Independent welcomes letters of less than 250 words that include a daytime phone number for verification. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Send to: Letters, S.B. Independent, 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.
Paid for by Santa Barbara Women’s Political Committee Not authorized by a candidate or a committee controlled by a candidate.
Roses, Hydrangeas, Color-Bowls, Rieger Begonias, Orchids, Garden Art, and more. SPRING HOURS 165 S. Patterson
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Opinions
SPRING CLEANING? FREE RECYCLING ‘Delay’ PROVIDED BY YOUR RESOURCE RECOVERY & WASTE MANAGEMENT DIVISION OF THE COUNTY PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT
Examples of residential household hazardous waste accepted: Paints, stains, paint thinner, solvents, automotive fluids and filters, pesticides, fertilizers, cleaners, batteries, aerosols, glues, corrosives, fluorescent lighting.
For more information call: (805) 882-3602 or visit us online at www.LessIsMore.org/hazwaste
No needles, controlled substances, electronics, or materials that are radioactive, biological, or explosive in nature. FREE for residents in the cities of Santa Barbara and Goleta, and in the unincorporated areas of Santa Barbara County.
• Up to 15 gallons (net liquid) or 125 pounds per month. • Fee for business waste — call ahead for more info and to schedule an appointment. • Closed for major holidays and rain.
In partnership with:
Visit Santa Barbara County’s Recycling Resource:
www.LessIsMore.org 28
THE INDEPENDENT
MAY 10, 2018
Some Call It Taking the Time to Prepare a Good Defense
R
INDEPENDENT.COM
commentary on the ongoing discussion about the causes of an alleged “culture of delay” in Santa Barbara’s criminal justice system is certainly interesting and on point to a degree. However, both Judge de Bellefeuille’s editorial and Public Defender Tracy Macuga’s observations in the Independent article “Attacking the Court’s ‘Culture of Delay’ ” may be read by some as an allegation that delay is inherently harmful to the cause of the accused, especially the indigent accused. The further implication of this is that the “system” has created a process purposefully harmful to these folks. In evaluating this thought, it is important to consider the manner by which such clients obtain counsel. In 99 percent of the cases, the first meeting is at the arraignment. No discussion has taken place between the lawyer and client; no “discovery” has occurred; no actual charges have been seen. In the most serious cases (felony matters, for example) it is an ethical and practical imperative that time be obtained for the new lawyer to read the reports, read the complaints filed, talk to the client, investigate the allegations, and talk to family and others. On any given arraignment calendar, there will be dozens of new clients seeking the appointment of an attorney. Just gathering reports, hastily reviewing them, talking to the accused, and evaluating bail or other appropriate motions needed in the case takes time. Trying to speed this up is counter to the interests of justice for both the accused and the people of the state. So perhaps the cause for delay is “culturally driven,” but that culture is arguably the end product of historical experience and accumulated knowledge. Our Constitution protects this right as “due process.” In my decades of practice, I observed numerous efforts to expedite the pace of criminal law. Almost universally, these efforts meant that the accused should sacrifice something. The bail reform of a couple of decades back, which made it affordable for poor people to post bail early, was eviscerated. Bail schedules set by judges raised the amounts to be posted. Both of these acts kept people in custody before arraignment, cynics would say, to pressure them to plead early. And if they did not plead early, sentences would often be increased. It became a specific and judicially authorized consideration to authorize harsher punishment for defendants who opted to stand on their presumption of innocence and to litigate the charges against them. Defendants, in patent violation of their right against self-incrimination, the presumption of innocence, and the attorneyclient privilege, have been compelled to give the prosecution their defenses and the identity of their witnesses. For the accused people who insisted on filing motions to suppress
COURTESY
Saturday: 9 am- 3 pm Sunday: 11 am- 3 pm
UCSB Campus Mesa Road Building 565 Goleta, CA
Is a Double-Edged Sword BY GLEN MOWRER etired judge Denise de Bellefeuille’s
Household hours:
Community Hazardous Waste Collection Center
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CONT’D
Glen Mowrer
evidence, dismiss counts, or challenge the legality of the process itself, additional charges would be filed by prosecutors and tolerated by judges. In the name of expediting the process, the size of juries is being reduced (which narrows the scope of the “peers” hearing the evidence), and the unanimous verdict requirement for conviction has been undercut in some jurisdictions. Almost always, the instinct is to press public defender attorneys to work extraordinary hours when the courts are crowded. Seldom are they granted the time to prepare in the normal business day. Concurrently, the State Legislature increased the penalties for crimes, which made the risk of litigation more dangerous for accused people. Lawmakers — both those in the Legislature and voters, via the initiative process — also took away procedures that traditionally exposed prosecution shortcomings. For example, true preliminary hearings were eliminated; traditionally, the hearing evaluated the credibility of witnesses. To this day, ideas that would speed the process somewhat — but might make it more difficult for the prosecutor to convict — go unconsidered, for example, limits on retrials when juries hang or restrictions on the addition of charges after the case has been filed. Resources made available to prosecutors (such as special places for their witnesses to await court and special counselors to advise them) have not been given to the defense, which delays the presentation of that side of a case. And so forth. So while there is cause for concern regarding the criminal justice system, as always, the solution to the perceived problems of our criminal courts should not be to compromise or adulterate our constitutional rights, as is so often the proposal. The adversary system has been proved to be the best machine for reaching a just result. Removing confrontation and due-process protections in the name of expediency is not the answer. Glen Mowrer was Santa Barbara County public defender from 1975 to 1999.
Give Homeowners a Fighting Chance
Locally Owned and Operated
www.santacruzmarkets.com
Speedy ‘Like-for-Like’ Planning Reduces ‘Out-of-Home’ Costs
M
BY ABE POWELL y mother lost her home to the
SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito After the January 9 disaster, community St
Boneless
Local (16 oz.)
$8.99
$1.49
RIB-EYE STEAK
STRAWBERRIES
Tea Fire in 2008. More than leaders realized that recovering from a maslb. 200 of her neighbors lost their sive mudslide isBy even more difficult than Mahatma 2# the bag homes in that fire as well. The loss of the recovering from a fire. There is a saying in Whole family home is emotionally and financially the disaster-relief world: “A fire cleans itself MANGOS devastating, as those of us who went through up.” When the fire comes through, it takes CHICKEN BREASTS the recovery and rebuilding process together away homes and possessions, but it doesn’t lb. can attest. leave much new debris to clean up. With the lb. lb. This loss thrusts you into a situation in Montecito mudslide, however, millions of 7# which you must cope with the emotional pounds of material were deposited all over Chicken devastation of losing all of your possessions the properties in its path. The debris flow Green PORK BUTT also changed the and place of residence, CABBAGE all while setting up course of some of the that people a new life in a rental lb. After the January 9 disaster, creeks lb. live along. This onehouse or apartment ea. and also making thou- community leaders realized two punch lb. makes El Pato 7 oz. sands of critical decirecovery exponenSeedless Beef that recovering from a sions about the future tially harder for the WATERMELON BACK RIBS of your home and survivors of the 1/9 massive mudslide is even property. disaster. But it gets more difficult than lb. lb. Suddenly you need harder still! to become an expert The Federal Emerrecovering from a fire. Folgers 8 oz. lb. in insurance company gency Management lb. Beef ROMA TOMATOES relations, building Agency (FEMA) TONGUE codes and required must redraw MonThin slicedwho has to upgrades, building contracts, landscape tecito’s flood maps. Everyone lb. design, paint colors, roof materials, bath- rebuild has to situate their home in response lb. room fixtures, flooring materials. It is com- to the new flood maps — which won’t be Springfield 15 o available until June. That means survivors pletely overwhelming. SANTADaily BARBARA Fresh 57 324 W. Montecito St To make matters far worse, you only can’t properly begin to redesign their homes PASILLA CHILES lb. GROUND BEEF lb.New have two years to get your home completely until over five months after the disaster. Mahatma 2# By the bag rebuilt before you run out of insurance flood levels, as established by FEMA, are money for the temporary rental you are liv- involved, as are the new creek paths. Worst of lb. lb. Santa Cruz $ ing in. If your house isn’t ready, you will have all, many survivors will be forced to do all of lb. to pay your mortgage and rent at the same this while struggling with the unimaginable Springfield 8 oz La Croix (12 Pk.) Springfieldlb.(18 oz.) time. Most families can’t afford to do this. grief of losing family members and friends. 7# Chicken SPARKLING WATER Thus, you must rebuild in the time allowed This sets an incredibly high bar for recovPEANUT BUTTER or face the very real possibility of losing your ery for the people who lost their homes on lb. lb. $ home and property. January 9. I believe we need to work together Building officials, from planning to to help them get over that bar. lb. ea. El Pato 7 oz. architectural review, engineering to fire preAs chief of the Santa Barbara Bucket BriMinute Maid 5 Springfield (3 Ct.) vention, play a critical role in the rebuild- gade, I joined with over 2,700 volunteers Dona Maria (8 oz.) ing process and the timeline of recovery. If who dedicated the last three months to MICROWAVE POPCORN MOLE those officials come together and offer real, helping the survivors get to the point where expedited plan processing, you have the best they could begin to rebuild. We all saw their Folgers 8 oz. ea. lb. lb. lb. chance of getting plans permitted for con- hardships, and we took action and made struction in time to get the job done before sacrifices to help them. www.santacruzmarkets.com www.santacruzmarkets.com Thin sliced $ the insurance companies cut off housing Das Williams and County Planning have Ducal (29 oz.) Minute Maid (59 oz.) benefits. Historically, in Santa Barbara, the taken action to help the survivors as well. Springfield 15 oz. BLACK BEANS By the bag ORANGE JUICE By the bag like-for-like ordilongest and hardest part of the permit pro- The county created a new BANANAS BANANAS LONG GRAIN RICE LONG GRAIN RICE BEEF TRI TIP BEEF TRI TIP ¢ lb. ¢ 99 $ lb. cess is planning and design review. It can nance, which addresses cre49 ON 1HAND • PRICES $ the 49DAYS $199 $ 59 259 problems 2 EFFECTIVE 7 FULL LIMITED take up to a year. People who have lost their ated by the flood and Chicken the new FEMA floodTO STOCKMESQUITE Chicken CHARCOAL MESQUITE CHARCOAL Santa Cruz PINEAPPLES PINEAPPLES FROM OCTOBER NOVEMBER 2ND LEG design QUARTERSflexibility $ 27TH LEG QUARTERS homes don’t have a year for design review. map. I believe that this is $ 89 289 THROUGH $ 99 $ 99 ¢ ¢ 1 1 El Pato 7 oz. 2 69for the survivors. El Pato 7 oz. 69 Springfield 8 oz. They need to get started with the building an absolutely crucial tool Sonora (Gal.) HOT TOMATO SAUCE HOT TOMATO SAUCE BUTT ¢ ROMA TOMATOES process right away. If we are going to getPORK those homes rebuilt PORK BUTT ¢ ROMA TOMATOES 59 59 PUNCH $ 59 lb. window, For this reason, after the Tea Fire, Santa within the two-year$insurance 89 ¢ INSTANT COFFEE lb. 159 89 ¢ INSTANT COFFEE 1 $ $ 89 Thin sliced Barbara County allowed people to rebuild despite all the mud, Thin theslicedrelocated creeks, 89 $ 5 FUJI APPLES 5 FUJI APPLES CARNE RANCHERA CARNE RANCHERA their homes “like-for-like” without a time- and the new FEMA map, $ 98we are all going $ 98 89 ¢ PEAS & CARROTS Minute Maid 59 o 89 ¢ PEAS & CARROTS 5 5 ¢ consuming design-review process. “Like- to need to pull together. After three months ¢ 89 Santa Cruz 89 Santa Cruz MEDIUM YAMS MEDIUM YAMS CHORIZO PORK CHORIZO for-like” meant the house would be the same out there in the mud,PORK I know that together SANTA BARBARA ¢ GOLETA SANTA BARBARA $ SANTA 49 BARBARA WHIP TOPPING $ 49 GOLETA 59 ¢ WHIP TOPPING 59 $ 2 lb. $ 49 2 $ ea. size, bulk, and scale of the original home and we can do this. 324 W. Montecito St 5757 Hollister Ave Ave 5757 Hollister 324 W. Montecito St 1 324 W. Montecito St 149 HEAD LETTUCE PORK CHOPS on the original footprint. This policy preWith that in mind,PORK I askCHOPS that you please HEAD LETTUCE JUICE By the bag ORANGE JUICE Mahatma 2# $ the ¢ $ 98 Mahatma 2# 79 ¢ ORANGENow $ 89 198bag 79daily vented gigantic homes being built without join me at the CountyBy Board of Supervisors $ 89 1 fresh bread 3 featuring from 3 LONG GR LONG GRAIN RICE community input. Crucially, it gave people a on May 15 to support theNow county’s laudable featuring fresh bread daily from Now featuring fresh bread daily from ¢ ¢ La Bella Bakery La Bella Rosa Bakery $ La Rosa Bella Rosa Bakery 99 $ fighting chance to restore their homes in the efforts to help those most $ TO STOCK 59 lb.ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS $ impacted 59 by the lb. LIMITED lb. lb. n time allotted by insurance companies. Thomas Fire and flood. FROM OCTOBER 27TH •THROUGH NOVEMBER7 2ND LIMITED STOCK ON HAND PRICES EFFECTIVE FULL DAYS
BANANAS
BEEF TRI TIP $
2
59
$1.59
LEG QUARTERS
69
$1.98
¢
PORK BUTT $
$2.98
159
LONG GRA
49
¢ 2/$1.00
PINEAPPLES
$
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$
1
$ 99 39¢
HOT TOMA
ROMA TOMATOES
5
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89
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www.santacruzmarkets.com
69¢ $5.98 FUJI APPLES CARNE RANCHERA ¢ $ 98
5
BANANAS 89¢
LEG QUARTERS
PINEAPPLES
PORK CHORIZO 2 $
2
49
8 1
LONG GRAIN
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59$¢ 99 WHIP TOP$2
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198
APPLES CARNE fresh RANCHERA Now featuring breadFUJI daily from 98 Rosa Bakery La$5 Bella 89 ¢ GOLETA 5757 Hollister Ave
SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito St
Mahatma 2#
2/$5.00
lb.
7#
$3.89
PORK CHORIZO
ea.
lb.
lb.
$
2
49
Folgers 8 oz.
lb.
lb.
ea.
PORK CHOPS$1.29 $
1
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lb.
BEEF TRI TIP lb.
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LEG QUARTERS ¢
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ORANGE JU
79 ¢
3
lb.
lb.
Minute Maid 59 oz.
BANANAS BEEF TRI TIP
249
BANANAS ea.
lb.
1
LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM OCTOBER 27TH THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND
49
7#
7#
MESQUITE CHARCOAL PINEAPPLES
MESQUI
Chicken FROM MAY 10TH THROUGH MAY 16th GOLETA
PINEAPPLES LEG QUARTERS
SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito St
1
Springfield 8 oz.
LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS FROM OCTOBER 27TH THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND
Chicken
WHIP TOPP
HEAD LETTUCE
Minute Maid 59 oz.
ea.
59 ¢ Springfield 15 oz.
Springfield 8 oz.
lb.
7#
Folgers 8 oz.
lb.
lb.
98
8
MEDIUM YAMS
Springfield 15 oz.
lb.
PEAS & CAR
Mahatma 2#
lb.
lb.
5
GOLETA 5757 Hollister Ave
SANTA BARBARA 324 W. Montecito St
lb.
lb.
$
PEAS & C
MEDIUM YAMS 49
59
$2.49 69 ¢
PORK CHOPS $
89
BEEF TRI TIP $2.29 $
1
SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT.COM 324 W. Montecito St
By the bag
$BANANAS ¢99
$
2
89
MAY 10, 2018 Mahatma 2#
GOLETA THE INDEPENDENT 29 Ave 5757 Hollister
5757 Hollister Ave
LONG GRAIN RICE
$
Mahatma 2#
99
HOW WE HEAL: Cottage Outpatient Experience (COPE) Intensive Outpatient Program Process Group: Fridays 6-7:30p.m. This group will allow individuals to process trauma in a safe space and is open to young adults and older.
HOW WE HEAL:
Trauma and Anxiety Support
FREE Cottage Health Support Groups, Post-Disaster Relief Our program will help you manage symptoms of anxiety, depression and trauma. Support available for those directly and indirectly effected by our recent disasters. Unless noted, groups are held at: Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital 400 W. Pueblo Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93105 Programs are FREE. We have licensed clinicians who will assist your recovery with personal attention to your unique situation. For more information, please contact program staff:
805-569-7501 or howweheal@sbch.org
En Español Process Group: Lunes 6-7p.m. Este grupo permitirá a los participantes procesar una experiencia traumática en un espacio seguro. Este grupo estará abierto para adultos jóvenes y mayores. Este será un grupo psicodinámico con intervenciones principalmente verbales. School Age/Teen Group: Tuesdays Group 1: child (ages 7-12) 3:30-4:30 p.m. Group 2: adolescent (ages 13-17) 4:30-5:30 p.m. Groups will involve hands-on expressive therapeutic activities such as art therapy. Process oriented group discussions will take place to address current trauma and real-time situations. Skill-based tools to be taught to aid in dealing with current stressors and emotions.
Survivor Group: Tuesdays 6-7p.m. This group will be specific to those survivors who directly experienced the disaster. It will be targeted to first responders and patients whom Cottage treated. Skill Building/Seeking Safety Group: Mondays 6-7:30p.m. This group will be skill specific and will be taught in a psychoeducational fashion. Spiritual Care Group: Wednesdays 6-7p.m. A non-denominational spiritually based support group.
Keep Saving Santa Barbara! To reduce water use & your bill: • Check and adjust your automatic sprinkler system every month. • Apply a layer of mulch to increase your soil’s water retention. • Irrigate efficiently by switching to drip or watering by hand.
Rebates may be available. Call 805-564-5460 to schedule a FREE water checkup. Learn more at SantaBarbaraCA.gov/WaterWise 30
THE INDEPENDENT
MAY 10, 2018
INDEPENDENT.COM
MUSIC AS MEDICINE: According to longtime Montecito resident Brad Paisley, his 2nd Responders benefit concert “is to help some of the [people who] are falling through the cracks,” such as those in the food service industry. As such, proceeds will benefit such area organizations as Restaurants Care and Visit Santa Barbara’s Shine Campaign.
BENJAMIN ENOS
COVER STORY
BRAD PAISLEY’S MONTECITO MISSION Country Music Superstar Hosts 2nd Responders Benefit for Thomas Fire and Flood Recovery
S
by pring is a wonderful season in Santa Barbara.
Jacaranda trees erupt in purple flowers; the air is fresh and crisp; the sun rides higher in the sky each day. Tourists and residents alike stroll State Street, shopping, dining, and enjoying the lovely weather, beautiful views, and friendly aura of the American Riviera. This April and early May have been no different. It’s shocking, then, to remember that a mere five months ago, our coastal Eden was threatened by California’s largest wildfire in history; that the streets were deserted, shops and restaurants closed due to the unbearable amount of toxic ash blanketing the city; and that the winter holidays were virtually canceled as residents evacuated and then returned and then evacuated again. Then, just as thousands of first responders heroically extinguished the Thomas Fire in the front country, Mother Nature unleashed a rare rain microburst that dropped a half inch of water in five minutes onto the charred landscape, causing a debris flow that brought the denuded mountainside racing down to the sea, indiscriminately taking with it homes and lives. While there is a sense of normalcy again and even joie de vivre, full recovery — physical, psychological, financial, and emotional — will take years. Fortunately, there’s been an astonishing outpouring of support for those affected by the fire and debris flow that has come in myriad forms, from bucket brigades to fundraising concerts.
Michelle Drown
On Saturday, May 12, country superstar — and longtime Montecito resident — Brad Paisley is joining the ranks of community members pitching in by hosting an evening of music, dubbed The 2nd Responders, with proceeds going to several area organizations. The event takes place at the Santa Barbara Bowl, where his pal and Montecito neighbor Ellen Degeneres will join Paisley onstage.
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Brad Paisley & Friends and special guest Ellen Degeneres will perform Saturday, May 12, 7 p.m., at the Santa Barbara Bowl (1122 N. Milpas St.). See sbbowl.org. S S S S S S S S S S S S S
Born in West Virginia, Paisley released his debut album, Who Needs Pictures, in 1999, which produced four hits on the country music Billboard charts. Since then, the singer/songwriter/guitar player, whose primary residence is in Nashville, has recorded 10 more studio albums, won three Grammys and
14 Academy of Country Music Awards, and become a member of the Grand Ole Opry, among other impressive achievements. Paisley and his wife, actress Kimberly Williams-Paisley, first became acquainted with Santa Barbara when they spent their honeymoon here after marrying in 2003. “We would frequently take a weekend and get away from L.A., and Santa Barbara became our destination on the weekends,” Paisley told me over the phone last week. “At some point, I finally just said, ‘We need a place there.’ Montecito and Santa Barbara and that whole area, it’s just so magical.” As for The ` nd Responders benefit, Paisley said that it “is to help some of the [people who] are falling through the cracks,” such as those in the food service industry. So, in addition to raising funds via the concert, Paisley will be patronizing various eateries in town and inviting people to join him. “I have quite a few fans who are coming in from various places [for the show],” explained Paisley “So I’m going to have sort of a scavenger hunt throughout the weekend, where I say, ‘Hey, who wants to go to Scoop and get gelato on Coast Village Road? I’ll meet you there in 30 minutes.’ ” He may also do the same for dinner before the show, “just kind of showing off our town a little bit and helping the businesses,” he said. “I was there last week, and it’s starting to look like they’re building as opposed to just cleaning up …. But it’s starting to move into that phase of, ‘Well, what do you do now?’ And that’s kind of what this concert’s for.” >>>
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THURSDAY, JUNE 21 – 7PM The Marjorie Luke Theatre | 721 E. Cota St. Tickets $25-$39 brownpapertickets.com/event3361825 Call 800.838.3006 Group Sales 321.441.9135 X2
S S S S S S S S
The following is an edited version of our conversation. I think there is a perception that because it’s so beautiful, Santa Barbarans don’t have problems. But we have suffered our fair share of tragedy. What sets us apart, perhaps, is the immediate and incredible community support.
It’s been inspiring. I’ve made lots of friends [here] over the years, and just [watched] the way [people have pitched in]. [For example,] I would call a friend of mine and see what he’s doing today, and he would say, “Oh, we’re heading up to [so and so’s place] to work on his house and help clean out.” The heartbreak, though, has been something; everybody knew somebody, even if just vicariously, [who was affected]. When the fire started, we packed up — we were going to spend Christmas in Tennessee anyway — and left a little early because of the air. But I never thought [the Thomas Fire] was on its way, because it started in Ventura, which is 35 miles away. I was trying to tell somebody in Nashville that [Ventura] is the equivalent of a town like Murfreesboro, which is probably about 30 miles away. If a fire breaks out in Murfreesboro and you need to worry [about it reaching you] in Nashville, that’s strange. That’s something new to me to get used to out in California. Then it took off, and it was a matter of just checking hourly with people as the fire started to advance on the mountains. A couple of my friends took some photos from my yard — you could see flames. It was just so weird thinking, “Is this all going up?” And then we were out of the woods.
…. During the fire, no one was shopping. And then there was the mudslide …. And we’re also helping [Visit Santa Barbara’s] Santa Barbara Shine Campaign. I’ve heard people say, “Montecito, they have tons of money; they’ll be fine.” And that makes me bristle. I’ve heard that too. That’s just
somebody trying to make it okay in their mind, but it doesn’t help …. The thing is, there are a lot of people who were not able to go to work during that entire time, when fire was raging. And then there was the mudslide, where people lost lives.
thought? Who would’ve thought Coast Village was in the line of fire?
My hometown has about 1,200 people. But Franklin is this town 20 miles south of Nashville; it reminds me of Santa Barbara a little bit … I try to explain to people who don’t realize what happened [in Montecito] … saying, “Listen, it’s like downtown Franklin, down by the restaurants and the shops and everything, just mud rolls through.” And they can’t fathom that …. And the interstate, and the loss of life — I mean, it’s just such a strange, strange thing. I just felt like I needed to do something. I think all of us who have any ties there, whether that’s Jack Johnson or Katy Perry …. Ellen and I were texting throughout and saying, “Can you believe this?” When we decided to do this concert, she said, “I want to be a part of this.” Which organizations are going to be the beneficiaries of this concert? One is called Res-
taurants Care …. It helps restaurants workers who have been so hurt — none of them worked from December to January, really. … And the Montecito YMCA, and the Unity Shoppe, which is near and dear to my heart. They do wonderful work. They’re the best
model for that kind of charity that’s ever been conceived. … And then the Santa Barbara Farmers Market. They were hugely impacted
NEW PLAYS BY MICHAEL LIN, HARRY DAVIS, BRYNN JOHNSON-SHROUT, JAZMINE BANG, ALESSANDRA ALBANESE, MALIQUE GUINN
same thing; it really is. When you’re talking about somebody’s home being completely destroyed, it doesn’t matter what that home cost; it was their home …. I feel like we can’t ignore what happened and just be completely upbeat about it. … Though this concert is meant to shine some positive light on this. It’s time to sort of celebrate the way this community rallied. …
Until the rain came. And who would’ve
Is your hometown similar in size to Santa Barbara? I come from a really small town.
2017-2018 SPRING
Nobody would say that about the victims of Katrina, but it’s kind of the same thing in that the town was hit by a natural disaster. It’s the
PAUL WELLMAN FILE PHOTO
Cover Story Cont’d
MAY 10 - 20, 2018 / STUDIO THEATER THEATERDANCE.UCSB.EDU
CABARET
BOOK BY JOE MASTEROFF MUSIC BY JOHN KANDER LYRICS BY FRED EBB
Brad Paisley at his 2006 show at the S.B. Bowl
There have been very generous people, like the video company that provides video on my tours — they donated a screen for the concert. … Basically, anybody who could give away anything for the concert did. Amtrak is going to bring people up from Los Angeles; they’ve got this initiative called [Hug] the Coast. I’ve sort of hidden in Santa Barbara as long as I’ve been there. And when this fire came through, I felt like I couldn’t do that anymore. I felt like, I can’t just reap the benefits of living [in Santa Barbara] and not do whatever I can to help …. What got me choked up was the day that tickets went on sale [for the concert] at the Bowl. There was a line that stretched all the way down the block. It was really neat to see it because any questions in my mind about, “Does the community want this? Is it too soon?” [were gone]. It was touching to feel, “Oh, this is great; people seem to be fired up.”
BASED ON THE PLAY BY JOHN VAN DRUTEN AND STORIES BY CHRISTOPHER ISHERWOOD DIRECTED BY JULIE FISHELL
PERFORMING ARTS THEATER MAY 25-26 / 8 PM MAY 29-31 / 8 PM MAY 26 / 2 PM JUN 1-3 / 8 PM JUN 2-3 / 2 PM
Use code INDYSPRING20 for 20% off your ticket!
What is the structure for the concert? [Ellen’s]
going to be funny, and I’m going to sing.
You can be pretty funny yourself. I’m going to
try to be funny.
Well, that’s all we can ask. Exactly.
n
theaterdance.ucsb.edu It’s easy to find us! More info and tickets:
893.2064 theaterdance.ucsb.edu INDEPENDENT.COM
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America’s Premier Jewelry & Bead Faires
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MAY 11, 12, 13 SANTA BARBARA Earl Warren Showgrounds { 3400 Calle Real, Santa Barbara, CA }
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WEEK I N D E P E N D E N T CA L E N DA R
MAY
10-16
E H T
BY TERRY ORTEGA
5/10-5/12:
5/15: Pomona College Chamber Choir Benefit Concert The Pomona College Glee Club from Claremont, CA, will perform a benefit concert, with proceeds going toward the S.B. Foundation Community Disaster Relief Fund, as part of its community outreach tour. Under the direction of Donna M. Di Grazia, this 30-voice chamber ensemble has traveled throughout the U.S. and internationally and they will bring to S.B. a varied program offering selections that span the 16th to 21st centuries, including Renaissance works by Byrd and Gibbons, 19th-century choral favorites by Brahms and Rheinberger, two spirituals, and contemporary works. 7:30pm. Trinity Episcopal Church, 1500 State St. Free-will offerings will be accepted. Call 965-7419. tinyurl.com/PomonaGleeBenefit
Into the Woods This Tony Award–winning Stephen Sondheim musical is a musical journey
based on the Brothers Grimm fairy-tale characters. You’ll see familiar themes of “happily ever after” that are questioned as real-life predicaments and encountered in the attempt to make dreams come true. Follow Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Jack, Rapunzel, and others, who are joined by new characters like the Witch, who has placed a curse on the Baker and his wife. 7pm. San Marcos High School, 4750 Hollister Ave. $6-$14. Call 967-4581 x5568.
ongoing: Free Support Groups Cottage Health is offering free support groups for one year to aid in the post-disaster healing process in response to the Thomas Fire and 1/9 Debris Flow to all who live and work in the greater S.B. area. For more information, contact Layla Farinpour at 569-7501 or howweheal@sbch .org. cottagehealth.org/howweheal
smhstheaterdept.com/show-dates
Rubicon Theatre, 1006 E. Main St., Ventura. $25-$55. Call 667-2900. Read more on p. 65.
5/10: S.B. Rose Society Meeting Krista Harris of Edible Santa Barbara will share the many culinary uses for these beautiful flowers. Come early (7pm) to socialize and sample free refreshments before the program. Bring any cut roses you would like to share. 7:30-9pm. Trinity Lutheran Church Fellowship Hall, 909 N. La Cumbre Rd. Free. Call 451-7695 or 680-2038. sbrose.org
rubicontheatre.org
5/10: 3rd Annual Adams School Maker’s Faire Attendees will have the opportunity take a tour of the Design Center and immerse themselves in everything relating to STEAM: science, technology, engineering, art, and mathematics! This
unique community event will include more than 30 “Make and Take” booths put together by area businesses such as Sonos, LogMeIn, and San Andres Hardware and community groups such as Dos Pueblos Engineering Academy and UCSB School of Education. 5:30-7:30pm. Adams Elementary School, 2701 Las Positas Rd. Free. Call 563-2515. adams.sbunified.org
5/10: Ted Scheinman Writer, scholar, senior editor at Pacific Standard magazine, and the son of a devoted Jane Austen scholar, Ted Scheinman will sign copies of his new book, Camp Austen: My Life as an Accidental Jane Austen Superfan, which combines journalism with frank memoir and academic savvy with insider knowledge through the world of Mr. Darcy imitations, tailored gowns, and tipsy ballroom dancing. 7pm. Chaucer’s Books, 3321 State St. Free. Call 682-6787.
chaucersbooks.com
5/10-5/13, 5/16: The Baby Dance: Mixed This play by Emmy Award–winner Jane Anderson (HBO’s Olive Kitteridge) tells a compelling and urgent story about race, class, and wanting the perfect child. The show runs through May 20. Thu., Wed.: 7pm (Wed. show includes a talk back with the cast); Fri.Sat: 8pm; Sat.-Sun, Wed.: 2pm.
Fundraiser
ongoing:
5/12:
SBPD & CAGV Anonymous Gun Buyback The S.B. Police
Department & Coalition Against Gun Violence will be hosting this event for anyone seeking to dispose of an unwanted firearm. One-hundreddollar and $200 Smart & Final supermarket gift cards will be given to people turning in functioning handguns, shotguns, rifles, and functioning California classified assault weapons, while supplies last. Additionally, free gun locks will also be given away to anybody wanting one, while supplies last. Firearms should be transported unloaded and in the trunks of vehicles. Ammunition for handguns, shotguns, and rifles will also be collected. 8am-noon. Gate C Entrance, Earl Warren Showgrounds, 3400 Calle Real. Free. Call 897-2376 or email RHarwood@ sbpd.com.
Volunteer Opportunity
Civil Discourse
Furniture Lady Offers Housing and Home Furnishings
Melissa M. Pierson and Coastal Hideaways Inc. are offering services to residents whose homes have been destroyed or heavily damaged by the Thomas Fire or Montecito mudslides. Please contact Pierson if you are in need of sofas, chairs, tables, beds, linens, dressers, lamps, towels, and kitchen utensils, or if you have unused properties available to house displaced families. Call Pierson at 448-1999 or email vacations@coastalhideaways.com. Read more on p. 51.
PAUL WELLMAN FILE PHOTO
THURSDAY 5/10
Disaster Relief
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.
ongoing: Legal Support Aid Area entrepreneurs Larry Lee and Emily Atkins have found a legal way to assist those affected by the Thomas Fire and mudslides. LegalShield offers free legal consultation and advice on a wide range of issues, such as contract reviews, dispute intervention, and more. Please go to the website for more information and to donate. legalsupportaid.com ongoing: United Way of S.B. County Relief Applications Individuals and families affected by the Thomas Fire and/or the mudslides can apply for direct financial assistance through the United Way Thomas Fire & Flood Fund. Visit the website for all the information. The application window will be open through May 11. unitedwaysb.org/thomas-recovery
FRIDAY 5/11 5/11: Carrillo Comedy Night Enjoy the laughs of Hollywood’s funniest headliners on the second Friday of every month. Host and stand-up comedian Jason Love (Comedy Central) will join Quinn Dahle (Tonight Show, Showtime) and Johnny Beehner (Second City, Letterman, Gotham Comedy Live). 8pm. Carrillo Recreation Ctr., 100 E. Carrillo St. $15.
tinyurl.com/CarrilloComedyMay11
5/11-5/13: Gem Faire Shop for precious and semiprecious gemstones, beads, crystals, gold and silver, pearls, minerals, fossils, and more from nearly 100 exhibitors from around the world. There will be jewelry repair and cleaning as well as ring sizing while you shop, with free hourly door prizes. Fri.: noon-6pm; Sat.: 10am-6pm; Sun.: 10am-5pm. Earl Warren Showgrounds, 3400 Calle Real. Free-$7. Call (503) 252-8300.
gemfaire.com
>>>
Protest INDEPENDENT.COM
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BIG NAMES. SMALL ROOM.
“Jay Farrar is an architect of modern Americana.” – No Depression
INDEPENDENT CALENDAR
MAY
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.
10-16
Dear Mama
SATURDAY 5/12 5/12: Jacqueline Winspear Author Jacqueline Winspear will discuss and sign copies of her new and 14th book in the acclaimed Maisie Dobbs series, To Die but Once, which follows Dobbs as she investigates the disappearance of a young apprentice working on a hush-hush government contract during the months following Britain’s declaration of war on Germany. 3pm. The Book Den, 15 E. Anapamu St. Free.
5/12: Miles for Moms 5K This run/walk will benefit the not-for-profit Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital. Participants are encouraged to walk with or in honor of mothers! Start at the parking lot, and go to Atascadero Creek Trail (Obern Trail). There will be a warm-up by Jenny Schatzle, music by DJ Darla Bea, prizes, a raffle, refreshments, and kids’ activities. 7:30am-noon. Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital parking lot, 351 S. Patterson Ave. Free-$45. cottagehealth.org/milesformoms
22
JAY FARRAR DUO (SON VOLT) with Johnny Irion
Founder of alternative country pioneers including Uncle Tupelo and Son Volt, Jay Farrar seeks out the ghosts of America’s past and writes songs for a better future. Best known for musical explorations with wife Sarah Lee Guthrie, Johnny Irion is one of the most exciting artists in folk-rock today. Willis Productions LOBERO THEATRE ENDOWMENT FOR AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC
ELAINE F. STEPANEK FOUNDATION
bookden.com
5/12: Mother’s Day Celebration Come hang out at the beautiful
5/12: Nature Hike to Potrero John Camp with Lanny Kaufer Experience
Grassini vineyards, where everyone is welcome. Lunch and two drink tickets per person are included. Noon-4pm. Grassini Winery, Happy Canyon, 5775 Genuine Risk Rd., Santa Ynez. Free-$40, $150/family of four. Call 883-8118. tinyurl.com/GrassiniMothersDay
spring wildflowers in the mountains, identify both useful and poisonous wild plants, and look for birds and butterflies as you hike 1.7 miles each way through chaparral. Bring your own lunch to eat in the shade of a large oak. 9am-4pm. Maricopa Plaza parking lot, 1201 Maricopa Hwy., Ojai. Free-$25. Call 646-6281. herbwalks.com
5/13: Mother’s Day Rooftop Brunch Finch & Fork’s newly appointed executive chef, Peter Cham, will prepare a tasteful arrangement of seasonal brunch items, including Avocado Toast, Watermelon Gazpacho, build-your-own egg benedicts, chilled seafood selections, indulgent dessert offerings, and so much more, including breathtaking views. 10am2:30pm. Canary Hotel Rooftop, 31 W. Carrillo St. $85. Call 879-9100.
5/12: Citizens Climate Lobby Monthly Live Video Meeting This
tinyurl.com/CanaryMothersDayBrunch
video presentation will feature guest speaker Julia Roberson, VP of Communications for Ocean Conservancy. See why her passion for communicating about the people and stories behind big environmental issues leads to action as she discusses the impact of climate change on the oceans. Coffee and refreshments will be served. 9:30-11:30am. Blake Lounge, Unitarian Society, 1535 Santa Barbara St. Free. Call 687-0890.
COURTESY
MAY
805.963.0761 LOBERO.ORG
“Mind and Mahamudra” A lecture by Venerable Khangser Rinpoche
tinyurl.com/CLLJuliaRoberson
Monday, May 14 DAVID LOMINSKA
6:30pm - 8:00 pm (Doors open at 6:00 pm)
Sponsored by the Santa Barbara Institute
Registration: $15 | Pre-register online at sbinstitute.com Contact – Information:info@sbinstitute.com The Unitarian Society of Santa Barbara, 227 E Arrellaga St, SB
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 36
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5/13: Mother’s Day Croissants + Bubbles Pairing Treat Mom to her sweet day with a croissant and sparkling wine flight. Extremely light and shatteringly crisp croissants are an excellent pairing for our dry California sparkling wines. The citrus and brioche notes of the wine enhance the buttery, sweet yeast flavors of these French favorites. 11am-6pm. Riverbench S.B. Tasting Rm., 137 Anacapa St. Free-$20.
tinyurl.com/RiverbenchMothersDay
5/13: Mother’s Day Brunch Celebrate Mom with a San Sebastian– style brunch buffet with more than 15 dishes created by Chef Peter Lee and bottomless pourings of Loquita’s fruit-rich Sangria Rojo with tempranillo and Spanish mimosas with cava and Valencia orange. Reservations are recommended. 11am-2pm. Loquita, 202 State St. $45-$75. Call 880-3380.
loquitasb.com
5/13: Mother’s Day Brunch The newly unveiled Hilton Santa Barbara Beachfront Resort will be celebrating Mother’s Day with a special farm-to-fork brunch. All moms will be treated to a complimentary Mom’s Suite (with brunch reservation), including a neck, shoulder, and hand massage along with decadent chocolate-covered strawberries and a complimentary glass of champagne. 10am-3pm. Hilton S.B. Beachfront Resort (formerly Fess Parker’s DoubleTree Resort), 633 E. Cabrillo Blvd. $35-$65. Call 884-8535.
Fundraiser
Volunteer Opportunity
5/13:
Folded Hills Pope Challenge Final
2018 The main match check-in time is 2:30 p.m. and will be followed by a pony parade, anthem singer, team introductions, and then the ball throw at 3 p.m. Keep the fun rolling after the match at the after-party featuring DJ Fab and drinks for purchase. 3pm. S.B. Polo & Racquet Club, 3300 Via Real, Carpinteria. $12$22. Call 684-6683. sbpolo.com
Civil Discourse
Protest
WEEK A L W A Y S A M A Z I N G. N e v e r r o u t i n e.
DENNIS A MURPHY
REEL TIME
FRIDAY
norm macdonald
may
11
8 PM
FRIDAY
5/10: The Charles W. Morgan Watch this one-hour documentary film,
Hollywood U2
The Charles W. Morgan, that tells the extraordinary story of America’s last wooden whale ship from her humble beginnings in New Bedford, Massachusetts, in 1841 to 37 voyages around the world and then to her 38th voyage of three months in 2014 to raise awareness of America’s maritime heritage and to call attention to issues of ocean sustainability and conservation. A Q&A with the film’s director and six-time Emmy winner Bailey Pryor will follow the screening. 7pm. S.B. Maritime Museum, 113 Harbor Wy. $5-$15. Not rated. Call 456-8747. sbmm.org
may
18
8 PM
5/11: Movies That Matter with Hal Conklin: Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom This film stars Idris Elba as Nelson Mandela and Naomie
FRIDAY
Harris as Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Mandela’s former wife, and chronicles Mandela’s life, from his childhood in a rural village to his pursuit of higher education, his 27 years in prison, and his election and inauguration as the first democratically elected president of South Africa. The screening will be preceded by an introduction to the film with special guests former U.S. second lady Tipper Gore and former U.S. representative Lois Capps. 7pm. The Granada Theatre, 1214 State St. $10-$20. Rated PG-13. Call 899-2222. granadasb.org
Sawyer Brown
MAY
25
8 PM
5/11: Friday Matinee: Steel Magnolias This 1989 film follows the story of women — played by Sally Field, Dolly Parton, Daryl Hannah, Shirley MacLaine, Olympia Dukakis, and Julia Roberts, in her Oscar-nominated performance for Best Actress in a Supporting Role — who live in a small town in Louisiana as they encounter tragedy and good fortune, growing stronger and closer in the process. 1-3pm. Faulkner Gallery, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Rated PG. Call 564-5635. sbplibrary.org
Brian Setzer's Rockabilly Riot!
5/12: Saturday Movies: Peter Rabbit Watch what happens when Peter Rabbit (James Corden) and his three sisters, Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cotton-Tail, find themselves in a battle of wills when the new owner of Mr. McGregor’s vegetable garden hatches scheme after scheme to get rid of Peter in this 2018 live-action/computer-animated comedy. Noon-2:15pm. Martin Luther King Jr. Wing, Eastside Library, 1102 E. Montecito St. Free. Rated PG. Call 963-3727. sbplibrary.org
FRIDAY
june
1
8 PM
5/16: Broke: The Santa Barbara Oil Pipeline Spill of 2015 This film documents the May 2015 break in Plains All American Pipeline’s Line 901, which sent 140,000 gallons of crude oil onto the Gaviota coast and into the ocean, closing two state beaches, affecting 150 miles of coastline, and killing more than 300 seabirds and marine mammals. The film will be followed by a Q&A with filmmaker Gail Osherenko. 7-8:30pm. S.B. Maritime Museum, 113 Harbor Wy. $10-$15. Not rated. Call 456-8747. sbmm.org
3 4 0 0 E H i g h w a y 24 6 , S a n t a Yn e z · 8 0 0 - 24 8 - 6 2 74 · C h u m a s h C a s i n o . c o m
>>>
Chumash Casino Resort reserves the right to change or cancel promotions and events.
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Celebrate Traditions
INDEPENDENT CALENDAR
MAY
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.
10-16
ART TOWN 5/13: Youth Interactive Spring Showcase: Home Creativity, craft, and entrepreneurship skills will be on full display as Youth Interactive students work throughout each semester in five different groups that function as micro-businesses that they manage as a team to produce items and works of art. See and buy unique T-shirts, clothing made from recycled yacht sails and Patagonia fabrics, and dog beds made from recycled wine barrels. 3-6pm. Youth Interactive, 209 Anacapa St. Free. Call 453-4123.
yicreativestudio.com/event-calendar
Saturday, May 19 at 5pm Santa Barbara Carriage & Western Art Museum 129 Castillo Street, Santa Barbara
Tickets: $150 single or $1,400 table of 10 Ph. 805.962.8101 www.sbfiesta.org
5/14:
Opening Reception: The Refugee Crisis: Through the Eyes of the
Children This exhibit features inspirational photos of children’s drawings and families from the Island of Lesbos, Greece. Robin and Robert Jones’s photographs put a human face on this continuing crisis and call people of all faiths to renewed awareness and action. The exhibit shows through May 24. 5-7pm. Bronfman Family Jewish Community Ctr., 524 Chapala St. Free. Call 957-1115. jewishsantabarbara.org
5/11: Opening Reception: S.B. Visual Artists 5 This show will feature works in diverse media from artists from the S.B. Visual Artists organization, whose intention is to promote art and artists as well as support other social and charitable endeavors in the Santa Barbara community. The exhibit shows through June 1. 5:30-7:30pm. S.B. Tennis Club, 2375 Foothill Rd. Free. Call 682-4722. 2ndfridaysart.com
Fiesta Attire Encouraged!
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Celebrate the Traditions of La Primavera with the Unveiling of the 2018 Fiesta Poster & Pin, the Inaugural Performances of the Spirit & Jr. Spirit of Fiesta, and a Special Performance by Grupo de Danza Folklórica Quetzalcóatl
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5/13: Studio Sunday Create a kabuki stage-set illustration by designing and coloring kimono costumes and a stage as you consider the seasons and time of day by drawing inspiration from works in The Loyal League: Images from Japan’s Enduring Tale of Samurai Honor and Revenge, now on view at the museum. 1:304:30pm. Family Resource Ctr., S.B. Museum of Art, 1130 State St. Free. Call 963-4364.
sbma.net
5/14: Maker Monday: Hummingbird Robotics Join the fun as we utilize the Hummingbird Robotics Kit to allow students to create and program robots, kinetic sculptures, and animatronics built out of a combination of electronic components and crafting materials. A product of the Carnegie Mellon University CREATE Lab, Hummingbird is designed to inspire and enable creative engineering, robotics, and making activities. Tech Lab, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. Ages 7-12. Free. Call 564-5621. sbplibrary.org ongoing:
Darwin and the Theory of Evolution This exhibit will be on view through August 31. The museum’s permanent collection includes the Velociraptor and Dino collection, Ann Baldwin’s Scriptopics, and John Herd photo/computer blends. Wed-Sun.: noon-4pm. Karpeles Manuscript Library Museum, 21 W. Anapamu St. Free. Call 962-5322.
5/12: Decoupage Class Don’t miss this opportunity to learn decoupage (decorating an object by gluing colored paper cutouts onto it) with artist Lilli McKinney. Materials are included. 1-2:30pm. Letter Perfect, 607 Paseo Nuevo. $15. Ages 8-adults. Call 560-8885 or email letterperfectsb@gmail.com to reserve your spot.
letterperfectsantabarbara.com/classes
5/12-5/13: 12th Annual Carpinteria and Summerland Artists Studio and Gallery Tour Dozens of area professional artists will open their doors to visitors who want a glimpse behind the scenes where their creative experience unfolds. Visit the website for other related events and a map and listing of this year’s Studio Tour artists. A percentage of art sales will benefit the Carpinteria Arts Center. 10am-5pm. Various locations, Carpinteria. Free. Call 684-7789.
carpinteriaartscenter.org
Brad Nack: Animals See Brad Nack’s interpretation of “old-fashioned humans” in this new retrospective of large oil paintings, as well as assorted new small prints and drawings. The exhibit shows through May 13. 6-8pm. Art From Scrap, 302 E. Cota St. Free. Call 884-0459 x13. exploreecology.org
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WEEK 5/16:
League of Women Voters of S.B. May Forum: What Is the Evolving Role of SBCC as a California Com-
munity College? This forum will address how SBCC is rising to the many challenges it faces in fulfilling its complex mission. The panelists will be SBCC President Dr. Anthony Beebe, SBCC Foundation CEO Geoff Green, School of Extended Learning Interim Vice President Melissa Moreno, History Department Chair and Professor Matthew Mooney, and SBCC Board of Trustees Student Member David Panbehchi. Noon. Faulkner Gallery, S.B. Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St. Free. tinyurl.com/LWVMayForum
MONDAY 5/14 5/14: Science Pub: The Adventure of a Lifetime — Exploring the Deep Sea Aboard the E/V Nautilus Come listen to S.B. Museum of Natural History Development Officer Melissa Baffa talk about her adventure of a lifetime exploring the deep sea alongside pioneering ocean explorer Dr. Robert Ballard in 2015, when she traveled to the Galapagos Rift Zone during his first trip back to the hydrothermal vents he discovered there in 1977. Learn about her past explorations aboard the Nautilus, the plans for the 2018 exploration season starting in June, and how you can participate live. 6:308:30pm. Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant, 18 E. Ortega St. Free. Call 682-4711 x170.
sbnature.org
TUESDAY 5/15 5/15: Victoria Price Author Victoria Price will sign copies of her new book The Way of Being Lost, about the time after a tumultuous period of crisis when she rebuilt her life by embracing a daily practice of joy, healing childhood wounds and reconnecting to the example set by her father, famed actor Vincent Price. 7pm. Chaucer’s Books, 3321 State St. Free. Call 682-6787.
chaucersbooks.com
WEDNESDAY 5/16 5/16: Kindermusik! Music never sounded so fun. Have little ones discover the power and joy of music-based learning as they sing, jump, dance, drum, move, play instruments, and do yoga. 10:15-10:45am. Multipurpose Rm., Goleta Library, 500 N. Fairview Ave., Goleta. Ages 0-4. Call 964-7878. Free. sbplibrary.org
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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.
THE UCSB MULTICULTURAL CENTER, THE ARGYROPOULOS ENDOWMENT IN HELLENIC STUDIES AND TSAKOLPOULOS FOUNDATION PRESENT UCSB MULTICULTURAL CENTER
th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
MUSIC of NOTE
Orestis Koletsos
5/11: Hollywood U2 Based in L.A., Hollywood U2 was founded by the band’s lead singer Joe Hier in 2003. The group pays tribute to U2, which was formed in Dublin, Ireland, in 1976, and conveys U2’s passionate lyrics and powerhouse performances, singing songs like “One,”“With or Without You,” and “Sunday Bloody Sunday.” In 2015, Bono himself invited Hollywood U2’s lead singer Hier up onstage to sing “The Sweetest Thing” with him, and in a radio interview a few days later, Bono said, “He [Heir] was the split of me, and he sang beautifully.” 8pm. Chumash Casino Resort, 3400 E. Hwy. 246, Santa Ynez. $10. Ages 21+. Call 686-3805. chumashcasino.com
Greek Ensemble
5/11: The Weepies Reconnect with the Weepies and the musicians who played on the original recording of their 2008 release, Hideaway, at this stop on the 10 Year Anniversary Tour. The husband-and-wife duo of Deb Talan and Steve Tannen — known for their sophisticated folk-pop songs such as “All This Beauty,”“Old Coyote,”“How You Survived the War,” and more — never toured for this album, so don’t miss this special evening. 8pm. Campbell Hall, UCSB. $15$38. Call 893-3535.
COURTESY UCSB ARTS & LECTURES
5/11: KjEE Summer Round-Up This year’s lineup of alternative chart toppers includes Dirty Heads, Cold War Kids, Awolnation, Law, and Dante Elephante. 5pm. S.B. Bowl, 1122 N. Milpas St. $44.50-$54.50. Call 962-7411. sbbowl.com
Mikis Theodorakis is one of the main figures to make Greek music globally appreciated. He was deeply inspired by Rebetiko music, which combines Byzantine modes with the harmonies of Western music. $5 FOR UCSB STUDENTS AND YOUTH UNDER 12; $15 FOR GENERAL ADMISSION. VISIT goo.gl/RNFqxH FOR TICKETS.
FRI, MAY 11TH, 7:30 PM MUSIC PERFORMANCE/MCC FOR THE FULL SPRING 2018 CALENDAR, VISIT MCC.SA.UCSB.EDU
artsandlectures.ucsb.edu
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5/12: inCourage Chorus: The Other Side: Songs of Transformation The inCourage Chorus was created and is led by song carriers Benjamin Gould and Britta Gudmunson, who share from the heart and facilitate song in the oral song tradition. They believe music is truly medicine and also every human being’s birthright. It is their mission to bring community together in a spirit of courageous, musical expression and activism while exploring the connective instrument of voice. All of the proceeds from this concert will benefit PATH (People Assisting the Homeless), an area nonprofit working to end homelessness for individuals, families, and communities. 7pm. Yoga Soup, 28 Parker Wy. $20. Read more on p. 55. yogasoup.com
5/12: Paradise Singers Presents Suave & Sassy This concert will have solos, groups, and Paradise Singers singing torch songs and standards, as well as new takes on jazz with songs from the Postmodern Jukebox songbook. There will also be a raffle! All proceeds will go toward music supplies in the S.B. elementary school district. 3pm. Unity of S.B., 227 E. Arrellaga St. Donation: $10-$15. Call 729-1159.
5/12: Poor Man’s Whiskey Album Release More than 15 years ago, while students at UCSB, this band’s members were known as Northern California outlaw-music bards and gained a reputation of high-energy live shows. Come share in the celebration in the release of the band’s new album of a rock/psychedelic fusion sound. 9pm. SOhO Restaurant & Music Club, 1221 State St. $17-$20. Ages 21+. Call 962-7776. sohosb.com 5/13: S.B. Strings Spring Concert This concert will feature the Sinfonietta and Vivace string orchestras and Toccata ensemble performing multidisciplinary and new music, poetry, and art to form a contemporary work inspired by Holst’s The Planets. The performance also includes genre-crossing works “Viva la Vida” by Coldplay and the “Love Theme” from the film Cinema Paradiso in unique arrangements for string orchestra. A complimentary reception will follow the concert. 7pm. Hahn Hall, Music Academy of the West, 1070 Fairway Rd. Free-$10. Call 245-0695. santabarbarastrings.org
5/13: Katelyn Tarver Come see L.A.-based pop singer/songwriter Katelyn Tarver, who recently released “Never Fade” as a follow-up to her hit single “You Don’t Know.” She also cowrote Cheryl Cole’s UK #1 single “Crazy Stupid Love” in addition to working with Childish Gambino collaborator Ludwig Göransson for her more recent Tired Eyes EP. 7pm. Velvet Jones, 423 State St. $12. velvet-jones.com
5/14: Fratelli A Men’s Chorus Presents We Are One! This concert will present a variety of musical styles, all sung with humor and heart to inspire a sense of well-being and harmony, and will feature internationally renowned, locally raised operatic tenor Eduardo Villa. Members of Fratelli include parents, professionals, and students with the mission to create musical experiences that inspire compassion, community, pride, and activism. 7:30pm. First United Methodist Church, 305 E. Anapamu St. Suggested donation: $12-$20. Call (415) 529-4533. fratelliamenschorus.org
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5/10, 5/12: Carr Winery Barrel Rm. Thu.: Flamenco Nights with Directors of Contra Tiempo Flamenco. Sat.: Jason Campbell Band. 6-8pm. 414 N. Salsipuedes St. Free. Ages 21+. Call 965-7985. carrwinery.com
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5/10, 5/12: Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant Thu.: Dannsair. 6:30-8:30pm. Sat.: Shepherd’s Pie; 6-7:30pm. Awesome Sauce; 9-11:30pm. 18 E. Ortega St. Free. Call 568-0702. darganssb.com
June 18-August 10 Grades K-6 and Teens Grades 7+
B & Lomo, D Shin; 9pm; $10; ages 21+. Fri.: Spencer the Gardener. 8pm. $9. Ages 21+. Sun.: S.B. Jazz Society presents CD-Release Party ft. Peter Clark, Jeff Elliott and Friends. 1pm. $5-$25. Mon.: Kate Willingham (Kayt Mar) CD-Release Party with Nick Vaughan, Reef City, Jason Paras. 7pm. $10. Tue.: Ariel Pink, DIIV. 8pm. $30-$35. Ages 21+. Wed.: Loudon Wainwright: Surviving Twin Tour. 8pm. $20-$64. 1221 State St. Call 962-7776.
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5/11-5/12, 5/15: M.Special Brewing Co. Fri.: Bryan Titus Trio. 7-9pm. Sat.: Grooveshine. 7-9pm. Tue.: Keith Crain. 6-8pm. 6860 Cortona Dr., Bldg. C., Goleta. Free. Call 968-6500.
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5/11-5/13: Cold Spring Tavern Fri.: Jamey Geston and Friends. 6-9pm. Sat.: Sean Wiggins; 1-4pm. Rankin File; 5-8pm. Sun.: Tom Ball and Kenny Sultan; 1:15-4pm. Teresa Russell and Cocobilli; 4:30-7:30pm. 5995 Stagecoach Rd. Free. Call 967-0066. 5/11: Eos Lounge Shlump, S’Akiibaum, Sinho, Jack Roy, Peitzke, Mocha. 9pm. 500 Anacapa St. $5. Ages 21+. Call 564-2410. eoslounge.com 5/11-5/12: Maverick Saloon Fri.: Soundhouse. 8-11pm. Sat.: Area 51. 8pm. Free-$5 (after 8pm). 3687 Sagunto St., Santa Ynez. Ages 21+. Call 686-4785. themavsaloon.com
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5/11: Pali Wine Co. DJ Darla Bea. 6-9pm. 116 E. Yanonali St. Free. Ages 21+. Call 560-7254. 5/11-5/13, 5/16: The Endless Summer Bar-Café Fri.: Jim Miller. 5:30-8:30pm. Sat.: Brian Black. 5:30-8:30pm. Sun.: Benny Collinson. 2-5pm. Wed.: Dave Vignoe. 5:30-8:30pm. 113 Harbor Wy. Free. Call 564-1200. 5/11-5/12: Uptown Lounge Fri.: Heart and Soul. Sat.: The Rincons. 9pm-midnight. 3126 State St. Free. Ages 21+. Call 845-8800. www.sbuptownlounge.com 5/11-5/13, 5/15-5/16: Velvet Jones Fri.: Smoke and Mirrors Drag Revue. 8pm. $5. Ages 21+. Sat.: The Cloaks, Daymarez. 9pm. $10. Ages 21+. Sun.: Ocean Park Standoff, Dales. 7pm. $12. Tue.: Sparta, Nalgadas. 8pm. $15. Wed.: Together Pangea. 7pm. $12. 423 State St. Call 965-8676. velvet-jones.com 5/12: La Cumbre Plaza The Piano Boys. Noon-3pm. 121 S. Hope Ave. Free. Call 687-6458. shoplacumbre.com/events 5/12: Mercury Lounge Dan Zimmerman Trio. 8pm. 5871 Hollister Ave., Goleta. $8. Ages 21+. Call 967-0907.
5/12: The James Joyce Ulysses Jasz. 7:30-10:30pm. 513 State St. Free. Ages 21+. Call 962-4660. sbjamesjoyce.com 5/12: Yellow Belly Green Flag Summer. 7-9pm. 2611 De la Vina St. Free. Call 770-5694. yellowbellytap.com
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hile Finney’s Crafthouse & Kitchen
but also reaching up and down the coast for —which opened in the Hotel Cali- Modern Times, Knee Deep, and more. fornian complex on April 9—offers “We’ve got to serve the beer the way it’s the slogan “Craft beer spoken here,” it nearly supposed to be served, with proper glassneeded something closer to “All about ware and at the proper temperature,” Finebéarnaise.” frock insisted. “The lines also “To the credit of [Hotel need to be cleared every two New Gastropub Opens weeks. I think most people don’t Californian] owner Michael in Hotel Californian do that. It can get a lot built up.” Rosenfeld, he was thinking a Finney’s is keenly focused high-end steakhouse should BY GEORGE YATCHISIN go in this spot but then on the gastro part as well. Finedecided the project needed a frock hired Eric BosRau, with more casual option for locals,” explains Greg 20 years of experience at Duke’s of Malibu, Finefrock, the man behind Finney’s. “He as corporate executive chef. “The goal was thought it best to have a gastropub in here to provide a high-quality dining experience to connect with the breweries and wineries for a low price,” he explained.“The guests can taste the difference and not get hit too hard in the Funk Zone.” Finefrock was the man for that. He in the pocketbook.” All sauces, dressings, opened the first Finney’s in Westlake Village and pizza doughs are made in-house daily, (where he lives) 18 months ago, a culmina- and the pastrami comes from RC Provision, tion of a 20-year background in the business where the famed Langer’s Deli gets theirs. —he was one of the first franchisees for Baja “Now you don’t have to go all the way to L.A. Fresh in Los Angeles, for example. Since his for that,” quipped Finefrock. brother and parents live in Santa Barbara, That menu — from that pastrami and this second location was a logical step for pizza to buffalo cauliflower, a house burger what he envisions as a small chain. of chuck, brisket, and hangar steak, and perThe heart of Finney’s is the beer. “We haps the first sighting of the trendy veggie have 30 core beers, and we’ll switch out Impossible burger in town — is to blame for half a dozen every two to three months,” 70 percent of Finney’s early sales coming he said. “They’re all from California, half from food and just 30 percent from the bar. from Santa Barbara County. We really have a Finefrock assumed the opposite ratio. local beer list, same with our wines and spir“Without the food, we’d just be a cool gasits.” That beer is curated into helpful types, tropub,” he said. “But the recipes that Eric from Light to Fruity to Hoppy to Hoppier came up with set us apart.” to Tastier to Malty, with hometown faves from Figueroa Mountain, Telegraph, Captain Fatty’s, M.Special, and Draughtsmen, 35 State St., Ste. A; 845-3100; finneyscrafthouse.com
flavor. Each bundle of joy packs a When you first step into Lucky serious punch. Dragon in the far corner of Another must-try is one of Storke Plaza in Goleta, you’ll get a the two boiled fish options, called menu dropped onto your table with bashu fish ($19.99) and served in a front page clearly explaining what an enormous punch bowl. The masyou’re having: Sichuan cuisine. It sive dish is doused in chili oil with is flavorful, spicy, and full of chili bean sprouts and chilies dropped oil, garlic, and that famous mouth- in. Use your spoon to fish for the numbing Sichuan peppercorn that tender pieces of fish filet floating in gives a whole new sensation to your the bowl. palate. Both the ma po tofu ($10.99) and “We don’t have beef and broccoli the Chengdu dandan noodle (8.99), here,” proclaims owner Alex Qian, with their sprinkling of ground whose American-raised clientele pork, are gems. The tofu is soft as occasionally asks for such dishes can be, the noodles perfectly chewy, common to other Chinese restau- and the rough cuts of green onion rants. But more than bring the dishes to life. 70 percent of his Here are some pro customers are UCSB Sichuan Restaurant Serves tips for your future Authentic Chinese Food visit: If the heat is too students originally at Storke and Hollister from China, which much for you, order a milk tea so that you is a demographic BY CARINA OST can subside the heat that Qian knows well: He was raised level in your mouth, near Shanghai and recently gradu- and if you get it with boba, you ated from UCSB with a degree in can distract your mouth from the mathematics. numbing it is experiencing. When Lucky Dragon opened If you’re looking for a veggie dish, in 2015, Qian hired a chef from the I’d recommend the sautéed string Sichuan region who previously ran beans, eggplant in garlic sauce, his own restaurant in Los Ange- or the baby bok choy with mushles. In fact, this authentic type of rooms. But the ultimate veggie dish Chengdu-style Sichuan restaurant is the sugar pea leaves ($13.99), is very similar to what you’d see in which can be sautéed, stir-fried, or the San Gabriel Valley. There are served with garlic. But beware: That no frills, but tons of fantastic fla- one does sell out. Qian’s team drives vors on a menu that may scare off down to Los Angeles once a week to less-adventurous eaters, with spicy get the leaves, but they don’t keep bullfrog, duck tongues, goose, and well and are quite popular. The best pig intestines listed. No matter chance to try them is on Tuesday or your penchant for obscure meats, Wednesday. though, it’s worth taking one of the There are also plenty of more fewer than 40 seats and ordering options for traditional Sichuan cuiaround until you find a favorite sine, even for dishes whose names dish. might sound familiar. Said Qian, Take, for instance, the wonton in “We do have Kung Pao chicken, red chili ($8.99), loaded with hunks because it’s from the region, but not of garlic and sprinkled with sesame in the same way Americans are used seeds. The neon-orange-hued sauce to it.” gives these delicate boiled dump6831 Hollister Ave., Ste. B, Goleta; 770-5651; lings a whole bunch of additional luckydragongoleta.com
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FINNEY’S Curates Craft on Lower State
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An Evening with Anne Akiko Meyers Saturday, May 19, 2018 8pm Saturday, May 20, 2018 3pm The Granada Theatre Nir Kabaretti, Conductor Acclaimed violinist Anne Akiko Meyers and Symphony Concertmaster Jessica Guideri join forces for Vivaldi’s Double Concerto for Two Violins, plus Barber’s Violin Concerto and Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade.
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Wednesday, May 16th from 6-8pm 1324 State St. ~ in Arlington Plaza
Moby Dick Restaurant
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BDBIT (Best Darn Breakfast in Town) Monday-Friday • 7 am to 9 am Cross this exotic destination off your travel bucket list! Experience the best Cuba has to offer- by land or by sea. Special guests from Globus & Holland America will explain how!
Jeff Lipshitz, local expert photo grapher, will share some photos & stories from his recent travels to this proud, island nation!
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est 1965
Mission Street Featuring Mission Street I c e C r e a m & Yo g u r t
McCONNELL’S FINE ICE CREAMS
I c e C r e a m & Yo g u r t
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JOHN DICKSON
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rated Owned & Ope1986! ce Shop sin Voted BEST Ice Cream & Yogurt Store for 30 YEARS!
Roost Opens
Voted BEST Ice Cream & Yogurt Store for 30 YEARS!
Near the Arlington
201 West Mission Santa Barbara- Outdoor 805.569.2323 Generous PortionsSt., - Free Parking Patio Convenient Location 201 West Mission St., Santa Barbara
805.569.2323
EGGCEPTIONAL: Roost has replaced Downey’s, which occupied 1305 State Street for 35 years.
R
eader Tony and others report that Roost
VICENTA’S COMING TO CAMINO REAL: This just in
from reader Cris: “A couple day ago I was listening to KjEE, and I swear I heard John Palminteri announce that the now-closed Pascucci in Goleta is going to be turned into a new restaurant by the owners of Los Agaves.” Soon thereafter reader David sent me a photo of the exterior. Because I live in the area, I walked over and saw a huge new sign that reads Vicenta’s atop the building at 6920 Marketplace Drive, the former home of Pascucci Goleta, Holdren’s Grill, Holdren’s Steaks & Seafood, Zaffiro, Pascucci Goleta (the first time), and Chevy’s Fresh Mex Restaurant. FALA BAR COMING SOMEWHERE: Reader Anita says
she spotted a message on Instagram that said Fala Bar vegan restaurant at 7751½ Melrose Avenue in West Hollywood will be opening a second location in Santa Barbara. The exact address has yet to be revealed. “Founded in 2014, Fala Bar takes an innovative approach to healthy cuisine, offering inspired, finecasual vegan food, made fresh daily from organic or local produce,” says falabar.com. “At Fala Bar, we are disrupting the stereotypes associated with vegan food by making plant-based food that both vegans and carnivores enjoy. While we the founders of Fala Bar are not vegan, we believe that everyone can benefit from a diet that includes meat-free meals.” ABC ON DLV: Reader Annie spotted an ABC liquor license application posted at Handlebar Coffee at 2720 De la Vina Street.
c omE c ElEbratE
TROT OVER TO GLOBE: On Saturday May 12, 10 a.m.-
m othEr ’ s d ay
2 p.m., there will be a lounge furniture and décor sale at 18 East Cota Street, the former home of Globe.
o n our lovEly patio !
STARBUCKS SET TO OPEN: A new Starbucks opens
May 14 inside Albertsons Market at 7127 Hollister Avenue, next to Costco. I’m told that you might get a free drink before opening day if you happen to stop by while workers are training. MATTEI’S TAVERN UPDATE: Last fall we reported that
Mattei’s Tavern Restaurant, built in 1886 as a stagecoach stop by Felix Mattei, had been purchased by Brian and Shamra Strange, with Chef Maili Halme leasing the restaurant, which opened in December. Last week, Halme posted the following on Instagram: “My 50th birthday is in June. These past six months at the restaurant have been the ultimate birthday celebration …. My last day at the restaurant will be June 3, and we will open early at noon for our traditional Fried Chicken Sunday Dinner. We will also be open at 11 a.m. on Mother’s Day. Please be sure to use any gift certificates you may have purchased or received before June 3. I’m grateful to have had the opportunity to fulfill my dream, and I look forward to returning to other pursuits. The future of the restaurant is in the hands of the Strange family, and they have asked the community to stay tuned for their upcoming plans.” ITALIAN AND GREEK DELI RETURN? This just in from
reader Primetime: “Verizon has now closed at 636 State Street. For years it was the famous Italian and Greek Deli with the oil-soaked delicious torpedo subs. The deli closed in 2007.” Perhaps this space has food in its future? BREWHOUSE UPDATE: Reader “Goleta Welcome
Matt” tells me that The Brewhouse at 229 West Montecito Street is having specials all month long to celebrate its 20th anniversary.
FOOD & DRINK
restaurant is now open at 1305 State Street, the former longtime home of Downey’s. I stopped by a few times during the lunch hour and at 8 p.m. last Saturday, and each time there was nobody around, with no hours posted on the door, so your guess is as good as mine as to what is the best day and time to check them out. Fortunately, Tony took a photo of the menu, which includes: Starters: Pimiento Cheese ($6), Lemon Chicken Soup ($7), Bruschetta ($8); Salads: Roost ($16), Pacific Ahi ($16); Hand Held: Roast Chicken Sandwich ($15), Porchetta ($16), Wagyu Sirloin ($16); Entrees: Mary’s Half Chicken ($21), Porchetta ($21), Wagyo Sirloin ($24), Stuffed Pasilla Chiles ($21); and a variety of side dishes.
E njoy mimosas & cocktails c omplimEntary s EEs chocolatEs for m om ! r EsErvations a ccEptEd
Lunch & Dinner • Tuesday - Sunday • Open at 11am 914 Santa Barbara St. • SB • 966-2860 • laplayaazulcafe.com
Yanni’s Greek & American Deli
Located at MacKenzie Market
Serving Santa Barbara for 32 Years! Famous Gyros & Tri-tip
RETRACTION: I recently posted an update with a
note from reader Mary that implies restaurant entrepreneur Brendan Searls continues to be affiliated with Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant. That was incorrect. Searls is no longer with Dargan’s and hasn’t been for many years.
John Dickson’s reporting can be found every day online at SantaBarbara.com. Send tips to info@SantaBarbara.com.
Full Service Deli Catering
3102 State Street • 682-2051 INDEPENDENT.COM
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866-624-1191 1129 State St., Suite 3F
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Walkabout Stout his is the third release of Walkabout,
DINING OUT
North County Public Works Building 620 West Foster Road, Orcutt For more recycling information on composting, visit www.lessismore.org
bean rounds out the edges, and the smooth and luxurious result makes for an ideal dessert, no need for a fork. It’s available now in limited draft and 500 ml bottles at Third Window. — Brian Yaeger
$14; 406 E. Haley St., Ste. 3; thirdwindowbrewing.com
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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 FRENCH PETIT VALENTIEN, 1114 State St. #14, 805-9660222. Open M-F 11:30-3pm (lunch). M-Sat 5pm-Close (dinner). Sun $25.50 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 romantic atmosphere makes the perfect date spot. Comfortable locale for dinner parties, or even just a relaxing glass of wine. Reservations are recommended. INDIAN FLAVOR OF INDIA 3026 State 682-6561 $$ www. flavorofindiasb.com Finest, most authentic Indian cuisine is affordable too! All You Can Eat Lunch Buffet $10.95 M-S dinner combos $9.95+ Specials: Tandoori- Mixed or Fish, Chicken Tikka Masala, Shrimp Bhuna. Also: meat, curries & vegetarian.Wine & Beer. Take out. VOTED BEST for 20 YEARS!Irish IRISH DARGAN’S IRISH Pub & Restaurant, 18 E. Ortega St. (next to lot 10) SB, 568-0702. $$. 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 Seafood & Meat dishes. Informal, relaxed pub-style atmosphere. Live music Thursday nights. Children welcome. Avail. for private parties. Pool & Darts. ITALIAN FINE DINING ACTORS CORNER CAFE - COOK WITH LOVE...A radio play performed live by Chef Santo. The old style radio show
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Santa Ynez Valley Recycling and Transfer Station 4004 Foxen Canyon Road, Los Olivos
comes alive with living stories that happen. Delicious colorful characters based on true fun, all served with great food and fine wine at Actor’s Corner Café. Join us and meet the Chef. Lunch served 12pm until 1pm. May 4th to the 13th. Performances Friday, Saturday, Sunday.Show Time 1:30pm. Tickets $35. www.ActorsCornerCafe.com MEDITERRANEAN FOXTAIL KITCHEN 14 E. Cota Street, open late night, daily specials, 24 craft beers, great cocktails, American burgers. Try our green falafel and red falafel www.foxtailsb.com. Food till 11 Tue-Thu,12 Fri , Sun.
Dining Out Guide
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FOOD & DRINK •
a once-a-year treat that seemingly screams late autumn or early winter owing to its chocolate and vanilla sweetness that’s draped in fresh oranges, zest and all. It’s reminiscent of those chocolate oranges you whack and unwrap at Christmastime. Third Window, from Kris Parker (Fess’s grandson), is a relatively small operation that brews just 1,000 barrels a year. Many of their beers, Parker proclaims,“are heavily influenced by ideas of foraging.” It’s why you’ll see native herbs used in the descriptions of their beers (whether said herbs are used or not). The oranges in this beer are no different. There’s a love-hate relationship folks have with this flavor combo, here presented by oranges that patrons hauled in from their backyards and chocolate from Third Window’s neighbor Twenty-Four Blackbirds. Yet even my wife, who avoids the pairing, confesses this imperial stout (8.2 percent ABV) is a delectable indulgence, even in the spring. The Madagascar vanilla
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Third Window Brewing’s
Restaurant • Lounge
Santa Barbara’s Best Italian Since 1979
Mother’s Day at the chase create more memories
HAPPY HOUR MON-FRI | 3-6 HALIBUT DINNER SPECIAL FRI/SAT NIGHT
Reservations recommended 965-4351 or chasebarandgrill.com 1012 State Street 75 min. free parking in rear
NORTHERN EUROPEAN ANDERSEN’S DANISH Restaurant & Bakery. 1106 State St., 805-962-5085. Open Daily 8am-9pm. Family owned for over 42 years. Northern European Cuisine with California Infusion. Fresh scratch made pasteries & menu’s everyday. Authentic Breakfasts, Lunches & Dinners. Happy Hour menu with equisite wines & beers, 3-7pm everyday. High Tea served everyday starting at 2pm. Huge Viking Mimosa’s & Champagne Cocktails. Private Event spaces. STEAK RODNEY’S Grill, 633 East Cabrillo Boulevard at The Fess Parker – A Doubletree by Hilton Resort 805-564-4333. Serving 5pm -10pm Tuesday through Saturday. Rodney’s Grill is a fresh American grill experience. Enjoy all natural 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 & California’s best vintages by-the-glass. VEGAN MEXICAN TACO TUYO offers amazing food that people of all diets will enjoy, whether you are herbivore, omnivore, locavore, or who-cares-ivore. Mexican vegan food is a great way to know, by experience, that vegan isn’t bland, but rather healthful and even crave worthy. Open Tues - Thurs 5-8pm, Fri 11:30-2pm, 5-8pm. 724 E. Haley, SB. 805.319.3627. Catering Available.
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PAUL WELLMAN
ariant Training Lab features all the bells and therapy model—that paves a path from “recovery to whistles of your typical gym — treadmills, weight reconditioning to performance.” machines, medicine balls, etc. But look just a little Education is a major component of that process, closer, and you’ll find a whole assortment of high-tech Pratt continued. By enrolling in the Lab’s small traingadgetry that’s nearly NASA-grade ing classes and tracking their perand completely fitness focused. sonal data through Variant’s online Just inside the entrance is a metal, member portal, clients understand doormat-sized force plate that calat a high level how their bodies culates how efficiently a person work and what they need to do transfers energy from the ground to keep them in tip-top shape. up through their body as they run “Understanding the issues is key and jump. Next to it is a waistto long-lasting solutions,” he said. tall, black-and-white machine that “We take the guesswork out.” determines — via hand and foot Though Variant caters to highelectrodes — exactly how much fat, end athletes, it welcomes any and muscle, and water a person has in all to sign up for a membership or their body. Deeper inside the lower drop in for single-session workState Street lab space is a dynamomouts. “If you have an issue, come eter chair and monitor setup that on in,” said Pratt. “Maybe you just measures the strength and torque want to get faster and stronger. of muscle groups, video motionWe can fit you anywhere on the Evan Pratt with a client analysis equipment that documents spectrum.” There are always ways the range and angle of movements, and infrared to improve performance, he continued, regardless of thermo-imaging gear, which pinpoints metabolic and ability. “True agility is reactive. It’s not predetermined.” inflammatory responses to exercise. Since their grand opening on March 31, Variant has But Variant isn’t preoccupied with “having cool already worked with polo, basketball, and rugby playthings just to have cool things,” explained President ers and is collaborating with UCSB teams and coaches. Evan Pratt, a Westmont College grad with a kinesiol- The Lab is also partnered with the Research Institute ogy degree who opened the Lab earlier this spring. The of Human Movement (RIHM), a nonprofit research equipment provides the facility’s medical clinicians platform for academics and doctors. “We’re all about and data scientists with the information they need making people feel good once they leave,” said Pratt, to heal injured bodies and fine-tune healthy athletes. “whether that means playing with your kid or playing Variant, said Pratt, utilizes a proprietary “test, treat, basketball at a professional level.” —Tyler Hayden train methodology” — different from the standard (and often ineffective) insurance-ordered physical For more information, visit varianttraininglab.com.
Close Escapes
Marine Mammals Galore
I
CHUCK GRAHAM
t was a cacophony of marine mammal sounds, the back track was constructed with a focus on public steep contrast of loud bellows delivered by one of access and an eye on protecting the craggy coast’s the world’s largest seals against the short, fanning abundance of natural resources. The route crosses bursts of seawater spewing from the heart-shaped the paved road leading to the lighthouse and finally spouts of migrating gray whales. We were hugging a ends a half mile north of Piedras Blancas. From muddy track along the craggy bluffs of San Simeon there, look south for views of the oddly shaped rock in Central California, hastily shifting between outcropping caked in seabird guano that sits just offshore. binoculars and a 300mm The Boucher Trail, a fairly lens. It was a challenge to easy hike with several confocus on just one species of venient outlooks, is part of animal, but that’s precisely California State Parks and was what you get on the newly completed during the summer constructed Boucher Trail of 2017. There are several convealong Highway 1. nient overlooks, with the main To find these throngs of attraction being the rotund gray whale spouts and the elephant seals. They appear biggest elephant seal rooklazy, wallowing on beaches proery in the mainland U.S., Elephant seals laze in the sun. tected from northwest winds, take the boardwalk from the large interpretive area at the southern end of the but these massive seals hold the record for the deeprookery and follow the Boucher Trail (pronounced est, longest dives of any marine mammal. The trail also passes through grassland and wet“boo-shay”) north, where you’ll also get scenic vistas of the historic 1875 Piedras Blancas lighthouse. land habitats and past wave-battered rock outcropAlong the way, be sure to scan the dense canopies pings that offer convenient haul-out sites for barking of giant bladder kelp for sea otters rafting up just California sea lions and sunbathing harbor seals. The waters surrounding these breathtaking coastal beyond the breaking waves. Named after Jim Boucher, a former Piedras bluffs are also part of the Monterey Bay National Blancas Light Station manager, the 3.8-mile out-and- Marine Sanctuary. — Chuck Graham
PAUL WELLMAN
Better, Faster, Stronger
Melissa Pierson in her warehouse
O
Free Furniture for Montecito
nce they got past the immediate shock of the January debris flow that swallowed their homes and possessions, dozens of Montecito residents sought to reclaim a sense of normalcy in their everyday lives. Housing was the biggest obstacle. Many started paying rent on top of their mortgage. Those that moved into empty spaces had nothing to bring with them. To make these tough times just a little more manageable, Melissa Pierson opened her heart — and her Goleta warehouse — to the displaced. As the owner and operator of Coastal Hideaways, a Montecito real estate and interior design firm, Pierson began lending out her company’s furniture and household items. It wasn’t long before she started just giving them away. “I realized I couldn’t go back to people and say, ‘Hey, I need my furniture now,’ ” she explained. “They need it a lot more than I do.” So far, Pierson has completely filled eight homes — with beds, couches, lamps, microwaves, etc. — and helped a dozen more families. She calculates she’s given away approximately $150,000 worth of furniture. “I’ve never done anything like this before,” she said. “This is a once -in-a-lifetime opportunity to help.” She’s running low on mattresses and is taking donations. Pierson called it an unfortunate assumption that all Montecitans are wealthy homeowners. Many are renters, she said, and “some lost everything.” Pierson recently furnished the home of the Benitez family, who lost four members in the disaster. She’s also assisting Ventura residents displaced by the Thomas Fire. Pierson herself was evacuated twice during the fire, her company’s bookkeeper was forced to flee Ojai for Camarillo, and her office assistant was trapped in her East Valley Road home with her husband and 5-year-old when the mud came roaring down the mountains. Many displaced Montecito residents, however, are still looking for places to rent in town, Pierson went on. “There’s a huge waiting list of victims who need homes,” she said. “People are desperate.” So Pierson is now helping connect victims with potential places to rent and is asking the community to make offers where it can. “We really need homes, empty condos,” she explained. “Even if it’s only for a few months.” The charity work has become a full-time job, and Pierson is contemplating one day, when the dust settles, starting a nonprofit. “It’s crossed my mind,” she said. — TH
To make donations or offer rental opportunities, call Pierson at 969-1995 or email her at coastalhideaways@aol.com. INDEPENDENT.COM
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The U.S. Navy INVITES YOU TO PARTICIPATE in the Point Mugu Sea Range EIS/OEIS Scoping Process
The U.S. Navy is preparing an Environmental Impact Statement/Overseas Environmental Impact Statement (EIS/OEIS) for the Point Mugu Sea Range. The Navy proposes to continue conducting testing and training activities within the Study Area as analyzed in the 2002 Point Mugu Sea Range EIS/OEIS, as well as changes in activity frequency, new mission areas, and new platforms (such as aircraft and vessels). Public Involvement
Scoping Meetings: 5 to 8 p.m.
The Navy is requesting substantive input from the public on the scope of the analysis. Comments will be accepted at the scoping meetings, online at http://pmsr-eis.com, or by mail to:
Ventura, CA Tuesday, May 15, 2018 San Buenaventura City Hall Community Meeting Room 501 Poli St.
Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division Range Sustainability Office Attention: EIS/OEIS Project Manager PMSR, Bldg. 53A, Code 52F00ME 575 I Ave., Suite 1 Point Mugu, CA 93042 Comments must be postmarked or received online by June 26, 2018, for consideration in the Draft EIS/OEIS.
Santa Barbara, CA Wednesday, May 16, 2018 Louise Lowry Davis Center Larry Crandell Room 1232 De La Vina St. Open house meetings include informational poster stations staffed by Navy representatives. The public may arrive at any time as there will not be a presentation or formal oral comment session.
For more information or to submit comments online, visit: http://pmsr-eis.com.
52
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WORKINâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; IT!
WORKIN’ IT
Why do we work? Well, most of us wouldn’t work if we didn’t get paid. But then again, money can’t be the only reason why we work. We also want to feel valued, to feel like what we do means something.
Work wasn’t always like this. Before the Industrial Revolution, people didn’t have to think about whether or not their work was fulfilling—they were too busy tending to their farms and honing their crafts to create tangible
WHY
DO WE
?
WORK
by
than how you think about that job. It turns out that results that helped them survive and proved Molly Forster everyone can find meaning and value in the work their meaning every day. In fact, some say photos by the only reason why people want to find they do, independent of what that work is. Paul Wellman meaning in their careers so badly today is In this special section, we dive into the many difunless otherwise noted because the Industrial Revolution’s soulless ferent career opportunities that Santa Barbara offers. factories and monotonous assembly lines did We outline how to go about finding meaningful work in such a good job of taking that meaning away. Santa Barbara, from applying for a job to educational opporSo how do we find fulfillment in work? Research tunities to figuring out what job is right for you to getting your suggests that enjoying your work is about context. foot in the door with some of the most successful industries in What kind of job you have is actually less important town. ✸
DOS AND DON’TS:
INTERVIEW
RÉSUMÉ I
T
, but people do judge your character on he best way to manage interview stress is with your ability to write and format a cover letter confidence in your abilities. These interand résumé. Keep yours from getting lost in view tips from Select Staffing’s Kylie Kellethe stack by following these simple tips her will give you the from résumé guru Craig Cotich, the poise and courage Kylie Kelleher director of the University of California, you need to nail your Santa Barbara’s Professional Editing next job interview. track. Most importantly, she On writing cover letters: DO “Rememadvised, “Always be yourself, and never feel ber this slightly cheesy line: ‘Ask not what the company can do for you but what you that your experience can do for the company.’ ” DO write with may not be enough …. “you-attitude,” by focusing on the reader’s There is always room potential benefits to hiring you, and DON’T to learn and grow. If an use “I” sentences if they can be avoided. employer sees potenOn writing résumés: DO remember, tial in you, they will be willing to train.” “Neatness, accuracy, and attention to t’s silly
detail are essential.” People tend to focus on content that is at the beginning and the end of the page while ignoring the middle. So, you DON’T Craig Cotich necessarily have to organize things in chronological order, but DO position the most impressive content at the beginning and the least important in the middle. DON’T leave big blank spaces on the page — instead, make sure you fill a whole page with content. Lastly, DO use active verbs when describing your work duties and DON’T use long phrases. ✸
DON’T brag about your experience.Instead, “discuss your work history in a professional manner as you are asked about it.” DO research the company ahead of time and “ask questions, [as it] makes you seem more interested than if you are quiet unless spoken to.” And “DON’T make the interview about yourself.” “DO show up to all interviews in business professional attire, unless directed to do otherwise …. This shows you are taking it seriously.” Lastly, when it comes to those dreaded curveball questions that some employers throw out there “to get a sense of an applicant’s intellect and ability to handle situations that may not be in their day-to-day job description,” DO “stay calm and focus on not going off the topic of the question ✸ being asked.”
IS RIGHT FOR YOU?
S
hould you be an engineer or a teacher? An artist
or a technician? Understanding your personality can be extremely helpful in determining which careers will be a good fit.
There are many personality-type assessments out there, from the Myers–Briggs Type Indicator to the Winslow Personality Profile. But one that focuses specifically on connecting people to their dream jobs is the nonprofit automated guidance system Eureka.org. “Our goal at Eureka is to help people figure out who they are,” said Sumyyah Bilal, Eureka’s director. She said that one of the most important When you don’t know parts of that process is discovering your “transferwhat your career calling able skills,” which most people don’t even know is, figuring out your they have because they aren’t the skills we learn personality type is a in school; they’re skills we have developed since good place to start. birth. Eureka has six different self-assessments that help people figure out who they are before matching them to possible careers. Similar to Myers–Briggs (except a little easier to interpret), they present four different personality types: Orange, Blue, Green, and Gold.
WHAT ‘COLOR’ IS YOUR PERSONALITY TYPE?
HOW TO NAIL THESE CRITICAL STEPS TO GETTING YOUR NEXT JOB
WHAT JOB
Orange You’re adaptable, fearless, competitive, and creative. Growing up, you liked to be the center of attention and your teachers often had to remind you to raise your hand in class. You would consider yourself a hands-on learner. Career matches: artist, performer, politician, sales associate Blue You’re authentic, compassionate, nurturing, and inspiring.Your biggest fear is dying alone, and your friends love to tell you about all of their problems. Finding meaning and purpose in your life is very important to you. Career matches: communications, human services, education, health care Green You’re insightful, independent, responsible, and focused. In high school you were a loner and sometimes people called you a know-it-all. You live by your own standards and never leave a task or project unfinished. Career matches: Scientist, technician, engineer, economist Gold You’re organized, routine oriented, morally driven, and helpful. In school, you took pride in being the“teacher’s pet” and never had a hard time following rules. You consider yourself to be a good citizen and you’re never late for anything. Career matches: Administrator, mechanic, clerk, officer
‘ Take the full test at eureka.org and create a free account with the SBCC code: VUOHNDU. WORKIN’ IT!
MAY 10, 2018
SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT
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Fielding Graduate University President Katrina Rogers
EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
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back to school later in life can be a However, if money and time are a problem, big, scary decision, but it is usually not Santa Barbara City College offers rich Career one that people regret. Luckily, there are and Technical Education and Career Skills many options for undergraduate and post- programs in practically every field and subgraduate programs in Santa Barbara, from ject that anyone can take. In fact, the Career UC Santa Barbara to Antioch to California and Technical Education Programs offer both State University Channel Islands’ MBA at certificates and associate degrees in about 20 Santa Barbara City College to Pepperdine to different areas, from marine diving to nursing. The Career Skills program, launched in 2015, Fielding Graduate University. “Students who go back to school later in life offers more than 120 state-approved courses have a broader experiential knowledge base,” in everything from business and technology to said Katrina Rogers, the president of Fielding. green gardening and culinary arts — most of “They are often very focused on their goals, as which are tuition-free. they know exactly what they want from the Some of the most popular courses in the Career Skills program are the “digital badge” experience.” That doesn’t necessarily mean classes, which offer certificates in such quitting your job and other fields as conflict management, responsibilities. When customer relations, and web choosing which school is design. “The whole reason why Many people are right for you, “you want to the Career Skills Institute came going back to school. into being is because, once you make sure that the institution is set up for you — that get into the workforce, it’s really Should you? they have programs that are hard to find training on some of flexible and take into considthese soft skills,” explained Jeanette eration the needs of working Chian, associate director for the School adults,” said Rogers. of Extended Learning Career Skills Institute. The people who teach the classes are Don’t worry if you haven’t studied in years. “Good study habits are similar to showing “industry experts and consultants who have up to work on time, making lists and finish- been in the workplace for a long time [and] ing them, getting our kids to school on time, could probably charge thousands of dollars running a household, and a lot of life skills for private sessions but feel the need to give you don’t think of as ‘studying’ but actually back,” said Chian. are all good practice for formal education,” This summer, they are offering some of explained Rogers. the most “sought-after badges, including CusWill it be worth it? Most likely, yes. Not tomer Relations, Accounting Basics for Small only does “national data show that people Businesses, Career Strategist, and Basic Office with advanced degrees earn more money over Software Skills,” said Chian. There are classes their lifetime and report greater life satisfac- every week (some are only one day long) and tion,” but graduating with a degree also “has registration is on a rolling basis, so there’s really intellectual and personal growth benefits,” no excuse not to take advantage of these jobsaid Rogers. ✸ elevating courses. oing
HIRING EVENT
Interested in working for the newest Luxury Hotel in the Santa Barbara? We’re looking for exceptional individuals who will rise to the challenge of keeping up the buzz about the THE AMERICAN RIVIERA REDEFINED!
http://www.thehotelcalifornian.com/santa_barbara_hotel_jobs
Apply online, then attend the hiring event on Wednesday May 16, 2018 - 10:00am to 6:00pm In the Alhambra Ballroom Seeking to fill over 30 open positions: Jr. Sous Chefs, Cooks, Bakers, Servers, Greeters, Guest Reception Agents, House Car Driver, Stewards, Engineer, Painter, Boutique Sales Associate, Sales Managers, Accounting Manager For a current listing of all open positions, please visit the careers website and apply beforehand for immediate consideration
Hotel Californian is an equal opportunity employer. http://www.thehotelcalifornian.com/stanta_barbara_hotel_jobs/ Immediate openings! Full and part time positions. 4
SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT MAY 10, 2018
WORKIN’ IT!
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County of S.B.’s Passport to Public Service in Paradise Program
JESSANY RODENAS
MY LIFE
WHO’S HIRING?
BIG EMPLOYERS T
he University of California,
Santa College to provide monthly Barbara (UCSB), is the workshops on how to apply largest employer in the and prepare for a job with Take a look at county, with both academic the county, the goal being to Santa Barbara and nonacademic positions, cultivate “a workforce that County’s top two including management, is engaged, developed, and ready to meet the needs of technical, clerical, service/ employers. our community,” said Leonie maintenance, and publicsafety jobs. Mattison, the county’s director “With a strong commitment of organizational transformation and leadership. “We see our residents to diversity and inclusion, UCSB fills approximately 500 to 600 jobs annually as customers as well as future potential and has a total campus employment of over employees.” 11,000,” said Melinda Crawford, employThe first Passport Program workshop in ment/training and development manager at March attracted about 100 applicants and 50 UCSB. She admits that it can be difficult to attendees. Applications can be found here: fill such a vast range of positions given the independent.com/passportprogram. ✸ high cost of living and competitive professional market in Santa Barbara, and she encourages people to check its online listings and apply with a strong résumé and cover letter. The second largest employer is the County of Santa Barbara, with a total of 4,213 employees and 400 different job classes in 23 different departments. This year, the county launched its new Adult Education Block Grant (AEBG) Passport to Public Service in Paradise Program, an initiative designed to create a clear pathway for employment and career success for the county. That program partners UCSB with Santa Barbara City
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WE ARE HIRING
WORKIN’ IT
Do you like working in a close-knit, fast-paced environment? Are you friendly and compassionate? Come to Lompoc Valley Medical Center and care for your community!
LompocVMC.com/Careers 1515 E Ocean Ave Lompoc, CA 93436 (805) 737-3300
JOB SEEKERS | EMPLOYERS | BUSINESSES DON’T MISS OUT ON THE OPPORTUNITY TO CONNECT, MARKET AND GROW AT THE
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Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History and Sea Center We seek individuals who want to make a difference in the natural world and our community. We have summer, full time, part time and temporary job opportunities available. Find one that is right for you. Museum Mission Campus • Camp Instructors • Community Education Coordinator • School & Teachers Services Specialist • Teen Programs Coordinator • Visitor Services • Facilities Technician – Temporary Sea Center • Program Coordinator • Exhibit Interpreter • Visitor Services Applying is easy: Visit our website at www.SBNATURE.org to apply or submit resumes to HR@sbnature2.org; we are an EOE 6
SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT MAY 10, 2018
WORKIN’ IT!
WHO’S HIRING?
TECH-TOPIA
A
Procore ProcoreCEO CEOCraig Craig“Tooey” “Tooey”Courtemanche Courtemanche
Santa Barbara’s tech compainto business opportunities.” For examnies continue to grow in ple, said Courtemanche,“at Procore, number and size, so we’ve already had two employees Santa Barbara’s do the lucrative career make their next career move to tech mini-boom, aka start their own development opportunities; with a company that sells into our quick search online, Tech-topia, continues. pages and pages of job Here’s a look at where that current client base.” Another major trend is the postings from Procore, might go in the years dedication to creating fun and QAD, Yardi, ShipHawk, to come. LinkedIn, and more appear. unique work cultures. At TrackR, And that growth is expected said Kelly, “Employees should be to continue. able to look back at their time at [at “What we’re seeing is the result of the company] and feel like it was the highthoughtful nurturing and investment that’s light of their careers, not because of the free been taking place in our community for snacks or free drinks but because they were decades,” explained Nathan Kelly, CEO of able to bring the best of themselves to work TrackR, which makes Bluetooth trackers used and make a huge impact through their work.” to keep track of belongings. He gives credit It’s the same at Procore, the Carpinteriato “visionaries in this town who built com- based company specializing in construction panies, then reinvested the money that they project management software.“Procore’s culmade back into new companies, our schools, ture is essential to our business,” explained and our universities” and to teachers and pro- Courtemanche. “Our customers see it—they fessors “who take the time to develop their continually tell us that our culture is a big part students in ways that go way beyond what’s of why they partner with us.” required in their job descriptions.” If free food, surf breaks, and a job in tech Procore CEO Craig “Tooey” Courteman- sound good to you, make sure to “study hard, che agreed, explaining, “The pool of talent work harder, and be smart with your netin Santa Barbara has grown, and I think that work,” stressed Kelly.“Tools like LinkedIn give what we’re going to see are more companies young people unprecedented access to jobs being started by the people currently work- and contacts, but in the end, nothing beats ing in tech who have good ideas that turn tenacity, diligence, and resilience.” ✸ s
WORKIN’ IT COURTESY
B E L M O N D E L E N C A N T O , S A N TA B A R B A R A
ENCHANTING CAREERS Santa Barbara’s only Forbes Five-Star resort is seeking talented hospitality professionals with brilliant service and unwavering dedication for the following departments: • • • • • •
Direct Relief
WHO’S HIRING?
THE NONPROFIT OPTION
I
ogy, sociology, child development, ence with your life, a job in or social work), plus two years of experience with social work the nonprofit sector could Santa Barbara boasts be a good fit. Be aware, and an additional one year more nonprofits per though: As seasoned of experience working with capita than most places in nonprofit worker for Tripeople with developmental Counties Regional Cendisabilities. California. How do you get “All of our positions are ter Heather Wennergren into that line of work? pointed out, “You don’t do based on our core competencies,” this unless you really love it.” said Erin Grote, human resources And while it may be easy to associate for Tri-Counties, and those volunteer for a nonprofit, landing a full-time include accountability, detail orientation, and paid position with one requires a little more initiative.“We’re looking for people who really understand what our mission is and that they forethought. Take Direct Relief, which employs about 75 are being hired to support other people.” people in Santa Barbara.“Whenever we post a But the work is fulfilling.“Being able to see job, we are very fortunate and grateful because the improvement in the quality of life for the we receive about 100-150 applications,” said people we serve, it’s just huge,” said WennerJulie Morello, human resources director. “We gren, and the benefits aren’t bad either. Trilook for purpose-driven individuals who Counties offers a state pension, amazingly agree with our mission and are collaborative, curious learners.” Although there is a lot of competition, she encourages applicants “not to be afraid if you do not have nonprofit experience, because a lot of skills from for-profit are transferable.” Different types of nonprofit work do require certain skills and credentials. Tri-Counties Regional Center, which employs Direct Relief warehouse in Goleta about 72 people in Santa Barbara and 311 people total, hires 30-50 supportive maternal benefits (most nonprofit new staff members per year. But because its workers are women), and rich medical, denemployees work with people who have dis- tal, life, and vision offerings. “It’s not a situaabilities, every service coordinator is required tion, like it is with other companies, where by the state to have either a bachelor’s or a you have to beg, borrow, and steal to get what master’s degree in human services (psychol- you need,” she said. ✸
Catering Front Office Housekeeping In-Room Dining Kitchen Maintenance
• • • • • •
Pool Restaurant Retail Sales Spa Valet
Please email your resume to recruitment.ele@belmond.com. To learn more, please visit belmond.com/elencanto BELMOND EL ENCANTO IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
f you care about making a differ-
800 ALVARADO PLACE, SANTA BARBARA, CA 93103 | BELMOND.COM
Innovative Research and Product Development • •
Employee Employee-owned small business Founded in 1980
• •
Headquarters in Goleta, CA Exceptional employee benefits!
Video Signal Processing Fusion and Tracking Antenna Design Navigation and Control Systems RF Systems Embedded Systems Systems Engineering Modeling and Simulation Hiring BS, MS, PhD • • •
Engineering Computer Science Physics and Math
For career opportunities: www.toyon.com **US Citizenship Required** EOE M/F/Vet/Disability WORKIN’ IT!
MAY 10, 2018
SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT
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WORKIN’ IT
Pure Joy Catering’s Lynee Gonsalves
WHO’S HIRING?
FOOD SERVICE AND HOSPITALITY
HINCHEE HOMES LTC Residential Homes for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities is in search of: Compassionate Caregivers, CNA, LVN, RN, Speech Language Pathologist, Special Needs Educator, and Behavior Analyst (BCaBA).
Call Warren 967-7777
Accepting Applications 2018-2019 Teaching Positions
Applications accepted through www.edjoin.org www.lusd.org (805) 742-3210 8
Special Education-Mild/Moderate Special Education- Moderate/Severe Math Spanish Physical Education Multiple/Single Subject Community Day School Teachers
SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT MAY 10, 2018
WORKIN’ IT!
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s a tourist town that’s also full
which employs about 300 part-timof locals who love good ers, says events are a great way to break into the biz. “Working eats and drinks, the It’s not too hard to events is fantastic for supplefood service and hospitalfind good work in this mental income,” said Gonity industries are huge in industry, which has the Santa Barbara. In fact, food salves. “The majority of our third-highest number of service/hospitality is the events fall on the weekend, so it’s a perfect way to pick third-largest industry secemployees in the county. tor in Santa Barbara, behind up extra work.” And every government and education/ weekend feels like a fun change of scenery because “our staff gets health services, and it definitely has its perks. to work in so many beautiful places, from While federal law requires employers to wineries to beautiful estates, oceanfront proppay tipped employees a mere $2.13 an hour, erties, historical properties, and the list goes California demands the $11 minimum wage. on,” explained Gonsalves. Haven’t worked similar gigs in the past? That means restaurant and hospitality workNot to worry — many ers in Santa Barbara can walk away from their positions don’t require any prior experience. “If shifts with full pockets and not get skimped on you would like to join their paychecks, espeour waitstaff team, you don’t have to have any cially during the sumprevious experience, mer, when business is but we do require you to booming. Many food and hospitality employstudy up before starting,” ees often find it hard to said Gonsalves. When leave the industry once applying for jobs, she they get used to having advised, “Be proactive! flexible hours, cash tips, Get out there; apply for rich social lives, free the job; introduce yourfood, and a constant flow self; do what you say of wine tastings. you’re going to do and do The industry is espeit to the best of your abilcially great for busy stuity.” And, of course, she dents or people who are looking for a second said, don’t forget to “be punctual and quick to job. Lynee Gonsalves from Pure Joy Catering, respond.” ✸
COURTESY CMC RESCUE
WORKIN’ IT
GOOD GIGS:
EMPLOYEE-OWNED BUSINESSES
E
Don’t just work for cash; work for equity. Here’s how the employee-owned business model works.
mployee stock ownership in the long-term,” explained Phillips. “Employees generally programs (ESOPs), which gained ground in the 1970s, make more money than they do allow employees to become owners in other companies, and they have of a company without taking on any of a retirement benefit that is many times the risks that traditional stock ownership more than the average company when they comes with. leave.” While ESOPs aren’t widely popular in the “There’s no real downside; everyone gets U.S., Santa Barbara is home to quite a few of paid in the end,” said Phillips. For example, them: Toyon Research, Allen Construction, one of their employees who just got married Pacifica Graduate Institute, Hardy Diagnos- and moved away after six years with the comtics, Frank Schipper Construction Co., and pany cashed out his shares for a little under ✸ $100,000. CMC Rescue, to name a few. “It’s really a long-term business model,” explained CMC Rescue CEO Rich Phillips. “You’ve created a market for the shares of a private company. It’s still private, but you’ve given it sustainability, and you’ve also invested in and changed the culture of the company. Now everybody’s an owner, and that’s quite the shift.” When wage-earning employees become owners, “the hallway conversations change,” said CMC CFO Beth Henry. “We started hearing things like, ‘Is that in our budget?’” Switching to the ESOP model is what allowed CMC, the Goleta-based safety equipment supplier, to stay local rather than sell to a bigger company. Forming the ESOP was their way of saying, “We’re going to stay here, this is going to be our home, and we’re going to be contributing members of this community,” said Phillips, “and that was a gutsy call because it’s expensive to do business here.” Statistically, though, employeeowned businesses “do better financially CMC Rescue CFO Beth Henry and CEO Rich Phillips [and] are less likely to go out of business
Looking for a great organization to join? The City of Santa Barbara is one of the largest and most established employers in Santa Barbara County. Employees of the City of Santa Barbara enjoy:
· · · · ·
The opportunity to make a difference A supportive workplace culture Opportunities to build a career Competitive pay and benefits The Santa Barbara lifestyle
Visit our website at w w w. s a n t a b a r b a r a c a . g o v / j o b s to see what opportunities are currently available.
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SBPL Works! Career Skills & Workforce Training at your library Get help with your resume, cover letter, and interview skills. Learn computer basics and improve your abilities with office software. For an appointment call (805) 962-7653 or visit the Central Library, 40 E. Anapamu St.
Preparación profesional para el trabajo Obtenga ayuda para encontrar un trabajo, crea su currículum vitae y carta de presentación. Aprenda conceptos básicos de computación y mejore sus habilidades con el "software" de oficina. Llame al (805) 962-7653 para una cita, o visite La Biblioteca Central de Santa Barbara, 40 E. Anapamu St.
SBPLibrary.org
MBA IN 16 MONTHS. S A N TA B A R B A R A
Antioch University proactively embraces best practices and workforce diversity and is committed to providing a positive, discrimination-free environment and one that encourages its employees to balance work and personal commitments. Antioch University is founded on principles of rigorous liberal arts education, innovative experiential learning and socially engaged citizenship.
POSITIONS:
CHAIR, MASTERS OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
The ChairSocially of the MA in Clinical Psychology program is responsible for administering responsible business all aspects of the degree program, including hiring and supervision of program problem solvingand retention efforts, and, in faculty, Real leadingworld faculty and student recruitment conjunction with the faculty, coordinating and implementing all phases of program Global leadership skills assessment. As a member of the faculty, the chair has teaching, advising, and committee responsibilities as well as responsibility for new course, concentration, and degree development.
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF STUDENT SERVICES
The Assistant Director of Student Services is responsible for providing support for key student support services, including Disability Support Services, Veteran and Active Military Student Services, and Commencement. This position supports FACE-TO-FACE & HYBRID SCHEDULE OPTIONS the daily operations of Student Services Department by providing administrative support in areas of student success and general administration.
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR
STUDENT SPECIALIST SUMMERACCOUNTS & FALL TERMS NOW
This position requires the ability to serve multiple constituencies on campus (faculty, staff and students); coordinate efforts with multiple departments (finance, financial aid, student services, records & registration, IT, and academics, among others); help coordinate resolution of conflicts among constituencies and departments as they relate to student accounts; apply appropriate accounting practices to the student accounts information; and source, assemble and disseminate complete and accurate information. Antioch University Santa Barbara offers a comprehensive suite of benefits consisting of: Medical, FSA/HSA, Dental, Vision, Life & AD&D insurance, Long-Term Disability, in addition to EAP, tuition remission, TIAA Retirement Planning and paid leave.
APPLY NOW!
antioch.edu/ausbjobs Antioch University is a not-for-profit, private institution accredited by the Higher Learning Commission.
50 Years Serving The Medical Field To The Oilfield Needs YOU For Outside Sales!
WE’RE HIRING!
Customer service to industrial customers in Goleta, Santa Barbara, Carpinteria and surrounding areas. Some familiarity with fasteners, shop tools an advantage. This is full time and could be permanent. K-12 desirable. Vehicle provided. Commission system based on sales. 108A AERO CAMINO – SANTA BARBARA | STORE HOURS Mon – Fri 8am – 5pm 1.800.SBBOLTS (722-6587) or 805.968.3581 FAX 805.968.3385 | EMAIL web@specialtytoolandbolt.com
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SANTA BARBARA INDEPENDENT MAY 10, 2018
WORKIN’ IT!
WORKIN’ IT GOOD GIGS:
GOOD GIGS:
WORKING FOR YOURSELF BEST PLACES TO WORK Each year, the Pacific Coast Business Times queries employees to determine where the happiest place to work is. Here are Santa Barbara’s top performers and a little bit about why.
Montecito Bank & Trust Community outreach coordinator Ashleigh Davis works “a feel-good job” because she gets to witness firsthand how much the company’s donations benefit the community. In fact, Montecito Bank & Trust gives back about $1 million to more than 200 nonprofits annually. Davis’s favorite part is hearing the happy responses from nonprofits when they hear the bank will support their event or fundraiser.“People assume that when you work at a bank that you’re just a teller, but it goes so much deeper than that,” said Davis. “I really believe that all of the people who work here truly want to make our communities betAshleigh Davis of Montecito Bank & Trust ter places to live and work.” Sandbox cofounder Kyle Ashby
Jackson Family Wines
James Rogers of Apeel
“The [Jackson] family has done a remarkable job supporting our employees,” said Katy Rogers, director of direct-to-consumer sales for the company. She said that the company recently “launched a program called JFW Cares, which is an employee assistance program that provides grant-style funding for employees who are facing financial difficulties, need crisis support [or] scholarship funding for their children, and more.” She noted that chair and proprietor Barbara Banke explained the company culture well when she said, “One thing that we pride ourselves on is we do not micromanage our winemakers or vineyard people.”
S
workspaces were pretty much fessional environment can have big effects unheard of a decade ago. Now, there are on productivity, professionalism, and the about 11,000 scattered across the ability to connect with other United States, and that’s expected professionals to grow your to double in the next two years. businesses together,” said Santa Barbara is now home to Ashby. Other professionHate the office? quite a few of them, includ- Work from home, or at least als can help you promote ing Impact Hub, workzones, your business, can serve from a more mellow The Sandbox, and Regus. A as a sounding board for big shared space. shared workspace or “coworkdecisions and questions, and ing space” is usually a big, open could potentially be your next space where people from different ✸ new client or customer. businesses gather to work. “In a shared workspace, office costs like internet service, coffee, printing, and capital expenses like equipment are wrapped in to the membership and shared by members,” said Kyle Ashby, cofounder of The Sandbox. “This eliminates both up-front costs for setup or equipment and also keeps the monthly cost down for someone who is self-employed or runs a small business.” Additionally, “the ability to get out of your Impact Hub home office into a prohared
Apeel Sciences Kallan Sheehan has been with Apeel Sciences for more than two years and feels extremely connected to the mission of the company. “We have the opportunity to dramatically change the global food system, and that’s an incredible feeling,” she said. “We genuinely value work-life balance, and we want people to feel that they have the freedom to get their work done within a framework that also supports them. We work hard, we have fun, and we really care.” ✸
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living | Sports
AMGEN TOUR TACKLES GIBRALTAR ROAD hey’ll be heading for the big hill on Monday, May 14, when the Amgen Tour of California (ATOC) brings a flock of top professional cyclists to Santa Barbara for the ninth time. Stage 2, a 96-mile race that starts in Ventura, will end with a torturous seven-mile, 3,100-foot climb up Gibraltar Road. Five more stages will follow before the 13th annual ATOC, comprising some 650 miles, winds up in Sacramento on May 19. But Monday’s stage could prove to be the most consequential in determining the overall winner. Such was the case in 2016, when Gibraltar Road, then the finish of Stage 3, shattered the usually tight pack of riders. Julian Alaphilippe of France was la crème that rose to the top, and the stage victory vaulted him into the overall lead, which he never relinquished. Such classy sprinters as world champion Peter Sagan, who had won the 2015 ATOC, trailed the leaders up the mountain by more than 20 minutes. Several gutsy riders, including California’s Peter Stetina, took turns leading the way up the steep road, but Alaphilippe put them away with a late surge, beating Stetina by 15 seconds. It broke a streak of seven American victories in ATOC stages that have finished in Santa Barbara County, including four time trials in Solvang. Last year’s fourth stage started here and ended in Santa Clarita with America’s Evan Huffman scoring a surprising victory. The overall champion was New Zealand’s George Bennett. The charismatic Sagan will return to the starting line Sunday. He takes a record 16 ATOC stage wins into the opening circuit race on the streets of Long Beach. The Slovakian rides for Bora-Hansgrohe, one of the top teams on the World Tour. Other stars include Britain’s Mark Cavendish (Dimension Data), who has sprinted to 10 stage wins in California, and Germany’s Marcel Kittel (Katusha-Alpecin). Sagan’s teammate Rafal Majka, who holds two King of the Mountain titles in the Tour de France, could be one to power up Gibraltar Road, as well as the veteran Stetina and Neilson Powless, a young American who made a strong bid here two years ago. Whoever claims the overall lead in Santa Barbara will just be trying to finish in the pack of Tuesday’s stage, which starts in King City and is expected to come down to a mass sprint on the Laguna Seca raceway. The next opportunity to make a move in the general classification (overall standings) will be Wednesday’s 21.6-mile time trial in Morgan Hill. The race to Gibraltar Road presented a new challenge to the tour organizers. Because of damages to Highway 192 caused by the Thomas Fire and subsequent flooding, an alternate route zigzagging through Carpinteria, Summer-
PAUL WELLMAN
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Pro Cyclists End Stage 2 with Seven-Mile, 3,100-Foot Climb on May 14
by John
ZANT
SHARING THE EXCITEMENT: Students at Our Lady of Mount Carmel School get up close and personal with professional cyclist Alison Tetrick. She used the upcoming Amgen Tour of California to teach them about the benefits of riding bicycles, as well as stressing that they be safe and smart.
PREPPING FOR THE BIG DAY: Our Lady of Mount Car-
mel School is a short distance from the racecourse in Montecito, and its 200 students will be ready to greet the riders with clanging cowbells after being visited last month by professional cyclist Alison Tetrick. Tetrick appeared as an ambassador in the Amgen Breakaway School Program. “Riding bikes is a powerful way to promote fitness and health and to interact with the community,” said the 33-year-old cyclist. She has ridden in seven ATOC women’s races—this year’s tour has three stages for women, in Northern California — and she is serious about being “a strong female role model.” As such, she stressed three themes that apply to cycling and life in general—“Be safe … be active … be smart” —and she led the students through a short but vigorous routine of running in place, jumping jacks, touching toes and dancing. Buttressing her program were national health statistics that show 17 percent of children in the U.S. are obese, and the numbers of children riding bikes has declined 20 percent since 2010. Tetrick grew up on a ranch in Los Alamos. “It’s cool to come back to this area,” she said. Her cycling career did not start until after she graduated from Abilene Christian University. “My grandfather, Paul Tetrick, got me into the sport,” she said. “He took up bike riding after 50 and won 17 national titles. He’s 87 now and still riding.” It is an activity for all ages. But on Monday, COAST VILLAGE ROUTE: The course for Monday’s race from Ventura to Gibraltar Road was rerouted to avoid washed-out areas of Highway 192. Here it goes through the 136 men rapidly cranking their custom Coast Village Road and up Hermosillo Drive to Hot Springs Road, where it will rejoin two-wheelers toward the sky will be a breed 192 at Sycamore Canyon Road. n apart.
ATHLETES OF THE WEEK PAUL WELLMAN PHOTOS
land, and Montecito had to be formulated. The course will now leave Foothill Road/192 at Cravens Lane and will turn onto nine different streets, including Coast Village Road, before joining Sycamore Canyon/192 at the intersection with Hot Springs Road. Live coverage of Monday’s race will be televised by the NBC Sports Network from 1-4 p.m.
S.B. ATHLETIC ROUND TABLE:
Jenny Nnoli, San Marcos track & field
Matt Mills, San Marcos swimming
In the Channel League ChamShe was the Royals’ homecoming queen last fall, and in the Channel pionships, the junior set school records in the 50-yard freestyle League Championships, the UCLA-bound athlete was queen of (21.30) and 100 free (42.26), along with torrid swims in two relays, the sprints, winning the 100 and as the Royals won their first boys’ 200 meters and anchoring two team title in 41 years. winning relay teams.
JOHN
ZANT’S
GAME OF THE WEEK
5/10: High School Baseball: San Marcos at Dos Pueblos Santa Barbara High finished the regular season with a Channel League record of 10-2. Dos Pueblos was 9-1 entering this week. A victory in Thursday’s finale on the DP diamond would crown the Chargers with their sixth title in the last seven years. The Royals (3-6-1) gave up 13 runs the last time they faced the Chargers, who have been hitting long balls lately. Chris Abbott, Evan Kling, and Jed Donelon homered in their last three games. Isaac Coffey, a standout pitcher as well, leads the team with seven round-trippers. Dos Pueblos (21-3 overall) and Santa Barbara (17-8) will find out on Monday their matchups in the first round of the CIF playoffs, which begin May 17. 3:15pm. Scott O’Leary Diamond, Dos Pueblos High, 7266 Alameda Ave., Goleta. Free. Call 968-2541.
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CONVERSATION AND BOOK SIGNING WITH
MICHAEL IMPERIOLI THURSDAY, MAY 17 5:30 – 7 PM | FREE
Actor, writer, and Santa Barbara resident, Michael Imperioli, discusses his new book and first novel The Perfume Burned His Eyes with Colin Gardner, Professor of Critical Theory and Integrative Studies at UCSB. Called by Joyce Carol Oates “a vividly imagined and compelling story,” this sympathetic coming of age narrative brings together fathers, sons, Lou Reed, first love, and the strange and sometime agony of being a teenager. Book signing to follow in Museum Store
THU MAY 17 6:30P “INSPIRE 2018: SENIOR SHOW” Santa Barbara Dance Arts presents their exciting annual spring recital. The senior show exemplifies fine accomplishments and progression gained throughout the year. For more info and tickets please visit sbdancearts.com or call 805-966-5299. Join us for this show full of high energy, innovative choreography, and fun dances for all ages!
FRI MAY 18 6:00P “INSPIRE 2018: TWEEN SHOW” Santa Barbara Dance Arts presents their sensational annual spring recital. The tween dancer show is fun for all ages! For more info and tickets please visit sbdancearts.com or call 805-966-5299. See you there!
SAT MAY 19 10:30A “INSPIRE 2018: MINI SHOW” Santa Barbara Dance Arts presents their rousing spring recital. For more info and tickets please visit sbdancearts.com or call 805-966-5299. Don’t miss this exciting show with our youngest dancers!
SAT MAY 19 4:00P “INSPIRE 2018: JUNIOR SHOW” Santa Barbara Dance Arts presents their thrilling annual spring recital. The junior show exemplifies fine accomplishments and progression gained throughout the year. For more info and tickets please visit sbdancearts. com or call 805-966-5299. Join us for this fun show for the whole family!
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Reserve tickets at the Museum Visitor Services desk, or online at tickets.sbma.net. 1130 State Street Mary Craig Auditorium www.sbma.net
EMAIL: ARTS@INDEPENDENT.COM
POKER FACES MODERN MASTERS DANCES ON
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cycles of life and the growth of leaves that calls for Amara Galloway to interact with a large, leaf-like light fixture. In Spartacus, plucky Saori Yamashita must exert control over a quartet of males: David Block, James Folsom, John Christopher Piel, and Noam Tsivkin. The effervescent Kevin Jenkins, choreographer of last year’s French-themed pop confection C’est la vie, is back with Flirting, a perfect subject for his lyrical form of satire. Leila Drake will come kicking (not screaming) out of retirement to reprise her part in Nancy Colahan’s 2011 duet K&L/In Tandem, which this time out will be known as J&L/ In Tandem to indicate that her partner will be “J” — James Folsom — rather than “K” —Kyle Castillo—as it was in the premiere. It’s all exciting, but for those who got a glimpse of the work in rehearsal, the night’s most buzzed-about number has to be Kassandra Taylor Newberry’s Fold. Set at an underground poker game, Fold features rolling office chairs and a special poker table on wheels. The dancers flip, flop, fly, and of course fold at a furious pace to a breathtaking score by Hollywood soundtrack titan Hans Zimmer. Get to the New Vic for Modern Masters—the cards are in your favor. —Charles Donelan
4·1·1
State Street Ballet presents Modern Masters at the New Vic (33 W. Victoria St.) Friday-Saturday, May 11-12, 7:30 p.m. For tickets and information, call 965-5400 or visit newvictheater.com.
THE INCOURAGE CHORUS Just when it seems like the world has gone completely to the bad, along comes a new form of community activism to reignite one’s faith. The spring session of the inCourage Community Chorus has been gathering on Monday evenings at Yoga Soup since February, and now this non-audition, nondenominational, all-ages group led by song carriers Ben Gould and Britta Gudmunson is ready to invite the world in to hear what they have been creating together. On Saturday, May 12, the group will present The Other Side: Songs of Transformation at Yoga Soup (28 Parker Wy.) at 7 p.m. in a benefit concert for nonprofit People Assisting the Homeless S.B. The
inCourage Community Chorus belongs to a larger international movement called the Ubuntu Choirs Network, in which trained leaders facilitate choral experiences designed to reach people who don’t know how to sing or who have been told they can’t sing. In this group, all are welcome, and the philosophy is that “music is medicine” and is “part of every human’s birthright.” One of the songs that inCourage will perform on Saturday was written by area rock star Glen Phillips, who also leads an Ubuntustyle choir of his own. For Gudmunson, the goal is to achieve a human connection among the members and “to make music that is both expression and activism.” — CD
COURTESY
overlapping audiences: serious dance fans, fellow professional dancers, and creative types who geek out over the fantastic inventiveness of the movement. This year, all three Electra of those groups will get served, sometimes at once. Those familiar with the history of State Street Ballet will thrill to William Soleau’s pas de deux Isle, which he originally choreographed for himself and his wife in 1984 and which then became an early signature work in the SSB repertoire. This time around it will be danced by the recent Romeo and Juliet’s fabulous Juliet, Deise Mendonça, alongside Francois Llorente, who was an electrifying Mercutio in that same production. The Modern Masters format mixes in solos and duets among larger pieces, and this year is no exception. SSB’s Cecily Nancy Colahan Stewart choreographed one of the night’s bigger ensembles for Reverie (2018), a contemplative work that aims to access the realm of dreams. It’s scored to Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” and an original work, “Wolofong” by pianist Stephen Kelly, and will feature an ensemble cast of nine. By contrast, both Electra, a world premiere from Autumn Eckman, and Spartacus (excerpts) (2018), by Edgar Zendejas, pit individual female dancers against external forces, albeit in different formats. Electra is a solo about the
COURTESY PHOTOS
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lenty of Santa Barbara organizations learned what it’s like to get knocked down in mid-stride this winter as the Thomas Fire and subsequent mudslides forced the cancellation of dozens of major performances, so there’s no saying any one suffered more than the others. Yet still, the loss of a Nutcracker season means something different for a ballet company than can be fairly compared to virtually any other event. A stage and backstage packed with precious sugarplums and snowflakes, plus an audience filled to the brim with festive family and friends—this is the heart and soul of any company with a youth program and a school. The good news is that, despite this challenging winter, at State Street Ballet (SSB) the spring has finally come, and that means not only the splendid Romeo and Juliet we saw at the Lobero in March but also the company’s freshest major venture, Modern Masters, which has now become an annual occurrence at Ensemble Theatre Company’s sleek New Vic theater. Designed to showcase shorter works both new and old by contemporary choreographers, the program lets the company’s talented dancers loose to perform in multiple styles and take aesthetic leaps that sometimes land outside the boundaries of what we have come to expect from them. As a result, the two nights of Modern Masters, scheduled this year for Friday-Saturday, May 11-12, are among the hottest tickets of the dance season and attract three distinct but
VOICES OF
SURVIVAL As led by Artistic Director Janet Adderley, the Santa Barbara Youth Ensemble Theatre (SBYET) has developed a reputation for giving young performers the benefit of professional production values and high artistic expectations. Long known as the city’s primary incubator for those children talented enough to turn pro before they graduate, SBYET this season can claim another title as a place where seemingly unbearable trauma can be treated and from which survivors like Lauren Cantin can rise again to let their voices be heard. Cantin, who lost most of her family in the Montecito mudslides and was herself buried alive until firefighters rescued her on live television, next came to the public’s attention at the Kick Ash Bash as the girl who sang “God Bless America.” Despite the savage difficulties she faced in the weeks after January 9, 2018, Cantin persevered with her training at the Adderley School on lower State Street, and, thanks to her own fortitude and the faith of both her mother and her teacher Janet Adderley, she has made the decision to be part of the show she committed to back before any of this happened, the classic musical of love and loss, Les Misérables. Talking with me about what informed that decision on Cantin’s part to continue with the show, Adderley recalled the first time she spoke to her after seeing the rescue on television. “I asked her how the responders knew where she was, and Lauren said to me ‘I screamed so they could find me,’” said Adderley. “And then I said to her, ‘Lauren, you used your voice. Your voice is what saved your life.’ ” Since that day, many others have found something life-affirming in the middle schooler’s voice. For one, Katy Perry has asked Lauren, along with the rest of the cast of Les Mis, to join her onstage at the Santa Barbara Bowl for the chorus of her hit “Fireworks” when she performs a benefit there on Saturday, May 19. Despite the excitement, it’s likely the kids will sleep well that night, as they will already have performed two shows that day at the Lobero, one at 1 p.m. and the other at 5 p.m. Sunday’s performances are at 2 and 6 p.m. For tickets and information, visit lobero.org or call 963-0761. —CD
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Wednesday, May 16th 500m, 1K & 2K Swim Kids Runs
5K Run 5K Walk
30
years
Sponsor Giveaways Raffle Prizes Live Music
Food & Ice Cream, 805 & DBA Beer
On site Registration at Leadbetter Beach • Starts 5pm Swim starts 6:25pm • 5k starts 6:35pm • Kids Sprint 7:35pm
www.nitemoves.org
tgif! MAY 11
What: When: What Time: Where: How Much:
Live Music, Beer, Wine, Appetizers, & Raffle May 11, 2018 5:30-7:30 PM Environmental Defense Center Courtyard (906 Garden St.) $15 advance ($20 at door) includes 2 drinks & appetizers
SPONSORED BY: Santa Barbara Botanic Garden Sierra Club Los Padres Chapter Urban Creeks Council Wildlife Care Network
SEASON UNDERWRITERS: Accountability Plus Energy Independence Now SunRun Zoom
LIVE MUSIC BY: Brengrass
PURCHASE YOUR TICKETS TODAY:
ENVIRONMENTALDEFENSECENTER.ORG/TGIF or 805.963.1622
The Power of Witnessing:
The Woman Who Hauled Living Water
CRISTINO’S BAKERY Breakfast
Croissant Breakfast Sandwich Breakfast Burrito & Omelets.
Lunch Chicken Sandwich, Tri Tip Sandwich, Classic Sandwich, Tortas, & Fresh Veggies Sandwich. Bread Baked Fresh On-Site ORDER TO GO Text or Call 805-455-6900 170 Aero Camino Goleta between Los Carneros & Fairview
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Join us for a Women’s Retreat exploring this wonderful life-giving story from the Gospel of John Chapter 4. Saturday, May 19th at 9 am-3pm in San Roque Parish Hall 3225 Calle Piñon Come to listen, to share, and to pray.
Our goal is that you leave empowered and refreshed. Led by Sister Susan Blomstad, OSF and Noël Fuentes, Pastoral Associate. Registration required and $30 for materials and lunch. Call (805-) 682-1097 or email education@sanroqueparish.org Women of all faith traditions welcome.
ARTISTS
FREE CARPINTERIA & SUMMERLAND COURTESY
a&e | THEATER PREVIEW
STUDIO TOUR
AUDRA McDONALD V star, vocal phenom, movie actress, and Broadway legend: Audra McDonald does it all. Her latest venture is the May 11 release of Sing Happy, a live recording of McDonald’s May 1 performance with the New York Philharmonic at the orchestra’s spring gala. The six-time Tony Award winner comes to The Granada Theatre on May 15 for a concert featuring classic show tunes and music from the silver screen, along with original pieces written specifically for her soprano styling. I recently spoke over the phone with McDonald about her upcoming performance, auditioning for roles, and the changing landscape regarding diversity awareness.
You’ve done so much in your career — what else would you like to do? I’d really like to do more Shakespeare. I feel like there’s more to learn for me as far as Shakespeare is concerned, and I’ve only wet my whistle twice, and I would love to get another opportunity to play a role. [I’d like to play] Lady Macbeth. I find her fascinating, cold, and passionate.
CHANTEUSE TO SING SHOW TUNES AND MUSIC FROM THE SILVER SCREEN by Maggie Yates
Congratulations on your new album coming out! Tell me about Sing Happy. We did a concert with the New York Philharmonic — it’s music I’ve always wanted to sing, and of course it’s the most incredible orchestra on the planet. We were offered the opportunity to film it, and I’ve always wanted to do something that is live, in recording, so it was very exciting to memorialize a concert in that way. It’s a dream come true to get the opportunity to do a concert with the New York Philharmonic — and to have someone record it for posterity.
What can we look forward to at your Granada performance? There will be some of the repertoire from the new album. I’m excited about the new material. For years I’ve been championing the works of young musical theater composers because I believe in nurturing the art form that is musical theater, but I’ve lately been going back to some of the classics. There’re so many great old tunes out there … some great Rodgers and Hammerstein, Jule Styne, and Sondheim, always Sondheim. In the past when you had to audition — I imagine you don’t have to anymore — what was your audition song? I do have to audition from time to time … that never really goes away. I sang “Meadowlark” [from The Baker’s Wife] to audition for getting an agent years ago. I [also] sang “One Night Only” from Dreamgirls.
How do you balance career and family? A good friend of mine once said: “You don’t slice the whole roast beef at once. You do one thin slice at a time.” … Me and my husband, with four kids between us and our jobs and whatnot, it’s like, “Okay, how do we work out today.” We don’t go past the next four or five hours. It’s air traffic control around here. One moment at a time.
There’s a lot of talk about getting better and more roles for people of color in the performing arts and women over the age of 30. Do you have any ideas for how we can progress in this area in a positive way? I think awareness is a huge part of it. We’re in a period right now where a lack of diversity — which used to be the norm — has become more and more glaring with each passing year. The awareness of that and the calling out of the lack of diversity is important. To quote Ragtime, “We can never go back to before.” It does feel like if we were to go into a Broadway season with no people of color or great roles for women over the age of 30, I think people would be up in arms about it, whereas years ago, no one would have blinked an eye. I think there has been progress through the simple fact that there is awareness and people who will call it out in a way that didn’t happen before.
JANET VILLA LEMAN
T
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UCSB Arts & Lectures presents Audra McDonald, who will perform new and classic songs with a trio of musicians, Tuesday, May 15, 7 p.m., at The Granada Theatre (1214 State St.). Call 893-3535 or see artsandlectures.ucsb.edu.
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care for one...that’s
LOVE
care for hundreds...that’s
NURSING
may 6–12 is nurses week thank a
NURSE
In Observance Of
MEMORIAL DAY, The Independent Office Will Be Closed
MONDAY, MAY 28 Advertising Deadline:
FRIDAY, MAY 25 • 12PM Regular Business Hours Will Resume
TUESDAY, MAY 29 • 8AM-5PM
vnhcsb.org/careers
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FIN COSTELLO
a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ PREVIEW
Dr. Kelly Doria, DVM
is proud to announce the opening of
ALL PAWS HOUSE CALLS A concierge veterinary care service in your home
AN INTERVIEW WITH
Al Stewart in 1972 at the Marquee Club in London
AL STEWART W
hen I was a child, my young mother, Kristina, When you and Paul Simon were flatmates, did you help to shape was a big Al Stewart fan. I remember listening each others’ songs or run lyrics by each other? I was 19, and to “Nostradamus” and “Roads to Moscow” as a social worker found me a flat in London. It just hapMom would dance around the living room to those pened by coincidence that I found myself living in the time-transcending, history-steeped folk songs. It was next room to Paul Simon. I was there when he wrote heady music for my young mind to assimilate yet some of those early songs … and he did indeed come beautifully packaged and realized by out and play them to me … because if the Scottish bard. you’re a songwriter, as soon as you’ve Stewart began as a folk artist during written a new song you want someone the much-lauded British folk music to hear it. So I got to hear a lot of those revival of the 1960s and ’70s, his early songs from that period of time. songs stylistically resembling those of Bob Dylan, Donovan, and Leonard How was working with Jimmy Page as a sesCohen. With the release of Past, Present sion musician on both of those songs and on your second album, Love Chronicles? Jimmy and Future in 1973, Stewart plotted an intriguing course writing history-based was a session musician — he hadn’t folk tunes that captured the imaginagone on to [the Yardbirds or] Led by Sean Mageean tions of listeners and sparked a new Zeppelin yet. He just played rhythm genre of music in the process. In total, on it … he didn’t play any big solos or Stewart has released 19 studio albums anything … I taught him how to play between 1967 and 2008, with his two platinum albums, modal D tuning, and he tried to teach me how to play Year of the Cat (1976) and Time Passages (1978), being octaves and harmonics .… [Later on, after the Yardbirds his most famous works. I spoke to the intriguing artist broke up], [Page] said: “I’m forming a band, and we’re by phone in advance of his upcoming concert at Ojai’s looking for a bass player.” What I probably should have Libbey Bowl on May 12, which will be a celebration of said is: “How hard is it to play the bass, and what’s [the band] going to be called?” At the time, I was so deep Year of the Cat. into the folk scene I just said, “Oh, well, good luck with What was it like in the mid-’60s in London’s SoHo, playing with that.” It would have been a very long shot … but he was Bert Jansch, Cat Stevens, Van Morrison, and other legendary folk looking at me very meaningfully when he said that. artists? There was a movement in the early ’60s whereby And I guess he hadn’t got John Paul Jones onboard at … English folk club singers started singing traditional that point. So, perhaps I could have had a slightly difEnglish songs … then around about ’63 or ’64, Bob ferent career if I’d have paid more attention. Dylan appeared — as if out of nowhere — and a whole load of people … me included … bought acoustic How easy or challenging was it to come up with the lyrics “She guitars and started trying to rhyme things. Eventually, comes out of the sun in a silk dress running / Like a watercolor when I got to London about January of 1965, there was in the rain / Don’t bother asking for explanations / She’ll just tell a small group of people — Bert Jansch, Davey Graham, you that she came / In the year of the cat”? I have no idea, John Renbourn, Roy Harper, Ralph McTell, and people man.… I had a girlfriend at the time who had a book on like that — who were all playing at the same time in Vietnamese astrology, and it was opened at that chapter. these little cellars and coffee bars. I think I made about So, I look at the chapter heading, and it says: “Year of three pounds — which is $6 — a night playing at Bunjies the Cat.” I don’t know very much about a whole lot of Coffee House. Van Morrison played there, Paul Simon things, but I do know a song title when I see one. That played there — pretty much everyone played there. one just jumped off the page at me!
ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS JUNE 4, 2018 Contact us at 805-453-3825 Pawsdrsb@gmail.com
SCOTTISH BARD TALKS FOLK MUSIC, WORKING WITH JIMMY PAGE, AND YEAR OF THE CAT
4•1•1
5/10 - 5:30-7:30
SBCC SONGWRITERS SHOWCASE 9:00
BENNY B & LOMO 5/11 - 8:00
SPENCER THE GARDENER 5/12 - 9:00
POOR MAN’S WHISKEY 5/13 - 1:00-4:00
SB JAZZ SOCIETY: CD RELEASE PARTY FT. PETER CLARK, JEFF ELLIOTT AND FRIENDS
VERY SPECIAL POP-UP CONCERT! 5/14 - 7:00
FUNDRAISER FOR AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
KATE WILLINGHAM W/ NICK VAUGHAN 5/15 - 8:00
DESERT DAZE CARAVAN:
ARIEL PINK & DIIV 5/16 - 8:00
LOUDON WAINWRIGHT 5/17 - 9:00
WE THE BEAT PRESENTS:
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FOR OUR FULL LINEUP, PLEASE VISIT
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Al Stewart will play Year of the Cat in its entirety with opener The Empty Pockets Saturday, May 12, 7 p.m., at the Libbey Bowl (210 S. Signal St., Ojai). Call (888) 645-5006 or see libbeybowl.org.
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San MarcoS HigH ScHool PerforMing artS DePartMent PreSentS
Attention Santa Barbara County Nonprofit organizations Hutton Parker Foundation and The Santa Barbara Independent are pleased to announce the continuation of our Media and Marketing Grant partnership for 2018. The Media and Marketing Grant program provides Santa Barbara-based organizations an opportunity for targeted, timely community outreach with a professionally produced newspaper insert specific to selected applicants.
MuSic by StePHen SonDHeiM
book anD lyricS by JaMeS laPine
May 3rD, 4tH, 5tH, 10tH, 11tH,
anD 12tH at 7PM San MarcoS HigH ScHool auDitoriuM - 4750 HolliSter ave. Sb, ca
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a&e | POP, ROCK & JAZZ FEATURE COURTESY
First Free Ascent of the Dawn Wall
Tommy Caldwell
The Push: A Climber’s Search for the Path Wed, May 16 / 7:30 PM / UCSB Campbell Hall $30 (Includes copy of Push. Limited availability.) $20 / $10 all students (with valid ID)
R&B AHOY: Singer/songwriter Mira is charting a course for success with her hit single “Merman” and new EP, Cocoa.
MEET MIRA, THE SHARK WHISPERER N
eo-soul fans of S.B., say “hej” to Mira, So she made them real, knowing deep a rapidly up-and-coming singer/song- inside that she needed to answer her own writer based in Santa Barbara and Los yearnings. “When you’re ready to just leave Angeles who hails initially from Sweden. The everything behind you, in terms of family, fierce and forward-thinking contemporary friends, and good opportunities, when you R&B artist is making waves with last year’s EP, can give everything up, is where you see what Melt, and the just-released Cocoa, which hit you want — that’s what happened to me,” she digital shelves at the end of April. Her star is said. “It took a lifetime of using every fraction on the rise, with her single “Merman” landing of courage in my body.” a top slot on Swedish national But increasingly, this is what Mira aims to stand for: radio, Sveriges Radio’s Channel P3, for independent and pursuing your inner callunsigned artists — but it ing and hunting down your wouldn’t have happened had prize. Beyond soul music, she not answered the clarion Mira shares an affinity for sharks, going by the tag Shark call to head to California. Her music is heavily rhythWhisperer as an alternate mic, with beats that boom moniker. “I love sharks,” she by Richie DeMaria beneath her breathy voice, the said. “They’re these misunproduction sleek and sultry. derstood beasts, just like me. It’s a sound not often heard from S.B.-based They’re brutal, but they’re calm, you know? I artists, but Mira felt our calm corner of the truly identify with that.” world would be the perfect place to hatch her Her songs tell of love—love of another and love of self. Her song “Cocoa,” she says, “is musical creations. She grew up on a feast of American music about the desire for connection and progress and cinema, finding wavelength resonance and how to foster a human connection.” She particularly with American soul artists. “I released the single as a musical Valentine’s used to joke in elementary school that Aretha Day gift to her fans, a personal way of reachFranklin was my best friend,” she said. “The ing out to those feeling lonesome, a way U.S. has been calling my name all my life. I of saying, “I see you.” “For a lot of people, feel it’s almost like I have a crush on America Valentine’s is a very lonely day. I felt that song and America has a crush on me.” Mira moved could be a human connection; it could be to Santa Barbara about two years ago as a their valentine.” creative home base, turning down an offer to The dream pursuit is paying off in deeper work at a promising start-up company as a and deeper ways. “A complete stranger product manager back home. “Everything I recently reached out to me, saying ‘Merman’ heard about Santa Barbara sounded like me. helped him with a really big life decision,” she It has that small-town energy, that creative said. The R&B song about reclaiming one’s energy. It’s close to L.A., but not so high power, “about having an awareness about frequency.” our situation and what you can do about The beaches and beautiful weather beck- your situation,” is in turn inspiring others’ oned, of course, but it’s more the pull of bold self-awareness. Mira testifies to the power of breaking self-expression, our Fiesta soul, that she felt. For a long time, Mira could sense that her from the pack, even if it means swimming music dreams would only find fulfillment against our usual current. “I like to bring out if she ventured far beyond her home shores the shark in people by having them listen to near Uppsala, Sweden. Also a filmmaker and their inner voice, their inner beast that knows photo editor, Mira, like many, grew up with them best,” she said. “Whatever makes you private hopes to one day make her ambitions different, that’s what you should celebrate.” Hear her new songs on Spotify or at real, even if they did not seem to match her miramusic.com. n small-town Scandinavian reality.
“Caldwell thrives on the virtually impossible.” The New York Times Tommy Caldwell made history when he free climbed El Capitan’s Dawn Wall, an epic ascent that took him more than seven years to accomplish. Caldwell has been held hostage by militants in the Kyrgyzstani mountains, he lost an index finger in an accident and his wife and main climbing partner left him. Emerging from hardship with renewed determination, Caldwell conquered the impossible and redefined his sport. Media Sponsor:
(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu
Corporate Season Sponsor:
SWEDEN-BORN, S.B.-BASED ARTIST SWIMS AGAINST THE CURRENT
presents
An Evening with Anant & Kevin Yardi
When: Wednesday, May 16, 2018 5:00 - 8:00 PM Where: Rockwood, Santa Barbara Women’s Club 670 Mission Canyon Rd. | Santa Barbara, CA SPEAKERS: Anant Yardi President & Founder Yardi
Kevin Yardi Vice President, Client Services Yardi
Yardi Systems was founded by Anant Yardi in Santa Barbara in 1982. Yardi is now in its fourth decade developing and supporting technology solutions for the real estate industry with more than 5,500 staff in over 35 regional offices in North America, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Australia. As one of the top employers in our area, Yardi has 700 staff in its Santa Barbara and Oxnard offices. Anant and Kevin Yardi will discuss the company’s formation, its growth and challenges, and their thoughts about the future. This program will be moderated by Jill Feldman, Strategic Development Associates.
Learn more and register at www.mitcentralcoast.org Thank You to Our Sponsors!
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®
THE LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS Recommends
YES - PROP 68 – California Drought, Water, Parks, Climate, Coastal Protection, and Outdoor Access for All Act.
YES - PROP 69 – Motor Vehicle Fees and Taxes. Ensures that these can ONLY be used for road and transportation improvement projects. Does not raise taxes. NO - PROP 70 – Greenhouse Gas Reduction Reserve Fund. Could increase legislative gridlock, undermine our clean
energy progress, and empower special interests.
YES - PROP 71 – Effective Date of Initiatives would be 5 days after election results are certified.
YES - PROP 72 – Property taxation: new construction: rain water capture systems. No property tax increase for
adding these water-saving systems.
YES - MEASURE R – Isla Vista Community Services District: Utility User Tax. (IV only) Provides vital funding for IVCSD’s services.
The League of Women Voters NEVER endorses candidates.
Vote with the League on June 5!
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BOOKS
A GREAT PLACE TO WORK FOR ALL
I
f only more American workplaces exhibited the attributes that make what Michael C. Bush and his research team—the people behind the Fortune 100 Best Companies list — label a great place to work for all. These attributes include maximizing human potential and trust. Bush devotes considerable focus to these two because he believes that hightrust, high-perfor-mance workplace cultures not only are better for people but also lead to increased profitability. In 2015, the Gallup organization published a survey finding that 70 percent of American workers feel disengaged at work. Echoing Gallup, Bush writes, “Many workplace cultures today are weak. Grim, even.” But Bush and his team believe the tide is turning, in the United States and around the world, as companies realize that their most important resource is the passion and commitment of their employees. High-trust,
high-performance cultures are, however, much more than perks like dry-cleaning service, daycare centers, or on-site yoga classes; they are places where leaders actually listen to their employees and believe they are worthy of being paid attention to, regardless of what job title they hold. If you have worked for any length of time in almost any industry, you might conclude that all the great work workplaces Bush refers to must be in Silicon Val Valley and that the ideas he espouses are unlikely to take root where bosses are capricious; com companies are hotbeds of dysfunction, favoritism and inequality; and the work itself rarely taps the best people have to offer. Given the huge chunks of time most people devote to their jobs, who wouldn’t want to be part of a workplace that treats employees with respect, values their ideas, and shares the rewards when the business or organization succeeds? If only such workplaces were the norm rather than the exception.
THE DEEPEST WELL:
HEALING THE LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF CHILDHOOD ADVERSITY
W
h e n Na d i n e Burke Harris opened a health clinic in Bayview Hunters Point, a poor, predominately African-American section of San Francisco, the faint outlines of a pattern emerged — a link between toxic stress in childhood and serious illnesses in adulthood. After discovering a research study on adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), Burke Harris realized she was on to something important. The repeated release of stress hormones in childhood—the fight-or-flight response — caused by physical or psychological abuse, parental addiction, domestic violence, and neglect alters biological systems and can lead to diabetes, asthma, heart disease, and other chronic health conditions. The Deepest Well: Healing the Long-Term
& ENTERTAINMENT
REVIEWS
62
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Effects of Childhood Adversity is the story of how Burke Harris meticulously connected the dots between what she saw in her daily practice and a little-known research study. This convergence changed her professional life. “The realization,” writes Burke Harris, “that this was bigger than my patients, bigger than Bayview, made my heart pound. Adversity’s detrimental impact on health had all the hallmarks of a public-health crisis hid-
den in plain sight.” Burke Harris is a determined physician and a compassionate woman on a mission to inspire action. She imagines a future in which screening for ACEs is as common as a TB test and as routine as prenatal care. The Deepest Well is a clarion call to know and understand the legacy of childhood that we carry in our bodies. —BT
AUTHOR LECTURE
& ENTERTAINMENT
TASOULA HADJITOFI
at the Granada Theatre
archeologists, art dealers, and some of the shrewdest figures in the illicit art trade. Endowed with an abundance of intelligence, grace, and warmth, Hadjitofi has devoted more than 30 years of her life to tracking down and repatriating thousands of icons, mosaics, and frescoes looted from churches after Turkey invaded Northern Cyprus in 1974. “Deep down,” Hadjitofi explained, “I am a human rights activist. The loss of one’s cultural heritage is devastating. I realized that I could become a victim or a fighter for justice.” In a world in which cultural cleansing is an all-too-common occurrence, we are fortunate that Tasoula Hadjitofi refused to become a victim. —BT BRIAN TANGUAY
O
n a sunny afternoon on April 29 at the magnificent Saint Barbara Greek Orthodox Church, Tasoula Hadjitofi, author of The Icon Hunter: A Refugee’s Quest to Reclaim Her Nation’s Stolen Heritage, spoke for two hours to an appreciative audience about how she transformed herself from war refugee into one of the world’s foremost authorities on stolen cultural artifacts. Calling herself a “negotiator of peace” and an “ordinary girl who found herself in extraordinary circumstances,” Hadjitofi wove together stories At the Saint Barbara from her childhood Greek Orthodox Church, Sun., Apr. 29. in Famagusta, Cyprus, the importance of religious artifacts to Orthodox Christians, and her dealings with law enforcement officers,
REVIEWS
NOVEMBER 27 - 28, 2018
SEASON ADD-ON/SWAP OPTION
© 2006 The Really Useful Group Ltd
POP, ROCK & JAZZ PAUL WELLMAN PHOTOS
APRIL 9 - 10, 2019
JANUARY 29 - 30, 2019
FEBRUARY 19 - 20, 2019
JUNE 11, 2019
SEASON TICKETS ON SALE NOW! BroadwaySantaBarbara.com • 805.899.2222
UCSB MULTICULTURAL CENTER
LCD SOUNDSYSTEM
L
ast Thursday night, LCD Soundsystem filled the S.B. Bowl with effervescent sounds of ’80s alt-rock and synth riffs coupled with swelling guitar solos that sent shock waves of amazement through the crowd. The groovy opening set by DJ Poolside provided a seamless transition into LCD Soundsystem’s percussion-based show, which the band peppered with mid-tempo funk hits primarily from its 2017 album, American Dream, and 2010’s This Is Happening. Frontman James Murphy cradled his microphone like a lifeline during the band’s riveting performance of “Get Innocuous!” Clad in disheveled attire that made him look like he was late for a job At the S.B. Bowl, interview, Murphy made Thu., May 3. clear his unsentimental attitude as he directed the audience toward the digital clock counting down the minutes the group had left to perform. “See, we’re going to perform until that clock hits zero,” he said. “We’re going to take a little break in the middle—you know, for bathroom purposes — and come back and perform three more songs for you.”
Formed in Brooklyn, New York, LCD Soundsystem fills the stage with its eightmember group that includes Murphy, Pat M a h o n e y, N a n c y Whang, Tyler Pope, Al Doyle, Gavin Rayna Russom, Matt Thornley, and Korey Richey. The band was keen on showcasing its music rather than engaging in nonsensical stage banter; it was here to execute a lively performance and instrumentally pinpoint why its songs have garnered legendary status. The buildup in various tunes, such as the electric deep cut “Tonite” and anthemic “Daft Punk Is Playing at My House,” roared with the boot stomping and hand clapping of twentysomethings. Saving the best for last, LCD Soundsystem packed a punch with its final song trifecta, enticing people to stand up from their sitting positions. The light show accompanying the thundering “Dance Yrself Clean” illuminated the night in dazzling reds, supplementing the spastic energy building by the three-minute mark of the band’s greatest hit. —Jasmine Rodriguez
Chirgilchin: THE UCSB MULTICULTURAL CENTER PRESENTS
th
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
MASTER THROAT SINGERS FROM TUVA
Established in 1996, Chirgilchin is a group of musicians from Tuva, a small Russian province north of Western Mongolia. Throat singing is an extraordinary vocal form in which one singer produces two or more voices simultaneously, the low sounds in the throat harmonizing with middle and high flute-like overtones, to create richly layered melodies that evoke Central Asian steppes and nomadic life. $5 for UCSB students and youth under 12; $15 for general admission.VISIT goo.gl/rXkW3n FOR TICKETS.
FRI, MAY 18TH, 7:30 PM MUSIC PERFORMANCE/MCC FOR THE FULL SPRING 2018 CALENDAR, VISIT MCC.SA.UCSB.EDU UCSBMCC
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THIS FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7:30 pm
MAY 11-12
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THE NEW VIC
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TOURNAM
LC
H A R IT Y G O L F T O
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MODERN MASTERS
GO
Kassandra Taylor Newberry (Atlanta)
18 T
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Cecily Stewart (Santa Barbara) Autumn Eckman (Tucson)
EA
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Kevin Jenkins (San Diego) Nancy Colahan (Santa Barbara)
OF R
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William Soleau (New York) Edgar Zendejas (Montreal)
ASSOCIATION
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Contemporary Choreography by
AR A RB BA
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Join us for the 2018 charity golf tournament and cocktail party fundraiser!
11:30am Tee Time • 5PM Cocktail Party
GLEN ANNIE GOLF CLUB | FRI, MAY 11, 2018 A fun day of golf Plenty of food & drink Awards & prizes Auction, networking & more Cocktail party only =
$25 includes a drink, apps, fun & more
FEATURING LIVE MUSIC WITH REDFISH SB’s favorite rock & roll party band
In support of DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SOLUTIONS providing SAFETY. SHELTER. SUPPORT in the quest to end the intergenerational cycle of domestic violence. 100% of proceeds to be donated and stay local. To Sponsor or participate 805.884.8615 or SBAOR.org
RODNEY GUSTAFSON WILLIAM SOLEAU
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THE YARDBIRDS
& ENTERTAINMENT
REVIEWS
ALBUM
YARDBIRDS ’68
T
he Yardbirds rank among the top ’60s British bands, having first boasted guitar god Eric Clapton, followed by Jeff Beck and finally Jimmy Page as its virtuoso axmen. By 1968, Page was front and center in moving the group in a more experimental, heavy, and psychedelic direction — along with its founding members, vocalist Keith Relf, dynamo drummer Jim McCarty, and ace bassist Chris Dreja. This double album has Page’s remixed recording of the band live at the Anderson Theater in New York, plus studio sketches. Shapes of things to come can be heard in The Yardies’ embryonic versions of “Dazed and Confused” and “White Summer,” which Page would revisit to huge success with Led Zeppelin. Fifty years on, Yardbirds ’68 is still epic. —Sean Mageean
THEATER JEANNE TANNER
T H I S AY SATURD
from left:
Krystle Rose Simmons and Tracey A. Leigh star in The Baby Dance: Mixed.
THE BABY DANCE: MIXED
O
ne understands a playwright’s temptation to revisit, and revise, an early hit. But this impulse comes with a big risk: What if the original material isn’t salvageable? That’s the case with The Baby Dance, Jane Anderson’s 1990 drama, which is currently being staged by Ventura’s Rubicon Theatre in what it calls a “Mixed” version. It concerns a well-off but infertile Los Angeles couple that arranges to adopt the soon-to-be-born baby of an economically struggling husband and wife in rural Louisiana. Not surprisingly, they find there is a gaping cultural gulf between them, and their mutual suspicions and misunderstandings soon put the arrangement in jeopardy. Anderson has done fine, subtle work, including the teleplay for HBO’s Olive Kitteridge. But her play At the Rubicon here is marred by shock-value violent outbursts, plot Theatre, Sat., twists that come across as dramatic contrivances, and May 5. Shows through May 20. one-dimensional characters who can be summed up in a single word. Wanda, the birth mother, is resigned; Regina, the adoptive mom, is desperate; and both of their husbands feel emasculated. Jenny Sullivan’s production boasts some fine performances —Krystle Rose Simmons and Gabriel Lawrence are outstanding as the working-class couple—but the actors are playing types, not individuals. For this revision, Anderson has added race to the mix, making the working-class couple and the upper-class woman African American. That choice seems retrograde—by this point, shouldn’t stories about people of color be told by writers of color?—and also oddly irrelevant. The Baby Dance isn’t really about race or class: It’s about gender, and its portrayal of both men and women is disappointingly reductive. —Tom Jacobs
KATY PERRY BENEFIT. . . . . . . . . . . . MAY 19 BON IVER W/ PERFUME GENIUS . . . . . . . .AUG 08 STEVE MILLER BAND/PETER FRAMPTON .AUG 15 JACK WHITE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .AUG 19 DAVID BYRNE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .AUG 24 REBELUTION W/ STEPHEN MARLEY . . . . . . SEP 09 LEON BRIDGES W/ KHRUANGBIN . . . . . . . SEP 12
JASON MRAZ W/ BRETT DENNEN . . . . . . . SEP 15 CULTURE CLUB / THE B-52’S . . . . . . . SEP 23 ALANIS MORISSETTE . . . . . . . . . . . . . SEP 27 RISE AGAINST W/ AFI, ANTIFLAG . . . . . . . SEP 29 JIM GAFFIGAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .OCT 06 KEITH URBAN WITH LINDSAY ELL. . . . . . . .OCT 08 ARCTIC MONKEYS W/ MINI MANSIONS . . . OCT 19
TICKETS AVAILABLE: SB BOWL OR AT AXS.COM / SBBOWL.COM / GOLDENVOICE.COM SBB_Indy_180510_v2.indd 1
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a&e | FILM & TV
NATIONAL BIKE MONTH
GIVEAWAY WA
MOVIE GUIDE PREMIERES Book Club (104 mins., PG-13) Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen, and Mary Steenburgen star in this romantic comedy about four pals who, after reading Fifty Shades of Grey, reevaluate their own relationships. Fairview/Paseo Nuevo (Opens Thu., May 17)
Deadpool 2 (119 mins., R) Ryan Reynolds is back in all of his quick-witted glory as Wade Wilson (aka Deadpool). This time, the pottymouthed Merc with a Mouth must protect a young mutant named Russell (New Zealand actor Julian Dennison) from time-traveling soldier Cable (Josh Brolin). To do that, Deadpool forms his own team, X-Force. Camino Real/Metro 4 (Opens Thu., May 17)
Breaking In (88 mins., PG-13) Gabrielle Union stars in this thriller about a single mom who, with her two kids, moves into her father’s estate upon his death. While there, four convicts break in with the intention of stealing the contents of her dead dad’s safe.
Let the Sunshine In (94 mins., NR) Juliet Binoche plays Isabelle, a Parisian artist who is divorced and hoping to find true love. The film is based on Roland Barthes’s 1977 book A Lover’s Discourse: Fragments. The Hitchcock
Camino Real/Fiesta 5
Life of the Party (105 mins., PG-13) Melissa McCarthy and her husband Ben Falcone wrote the script for this comedy about a woman (McCarthy) who decides to go back to college to complete her degree and embarks on a year of antics. Fairview/Paseo Nuevo Measure of a Man (100 mins., PG-13) This dramedy, based on Robert Lipsyte’s novel One Fat Summer, focuses on the lessons learned by bullied teen Bobby (Blake Cooper) during a torturous family vacation. Judy Greer, Donald Sutherland, and Luke Wilson costar. Fiesta 5
Deadpool
O ➤ RBG O Deadpool
(108 mins., R)
Marvel’s experiment in adult-portion superhero moviemaking is an almost pure success. Brash, sexual, vulgar, and extremely violent, the film, which stars Ryan Reynolds as a manufactured mutant with a very bad attitude and a very sharp wit, gets past its own gory excesses with self-referential jokes and fanboy-friendly pop-culture references. It does pander to audiences that liked Kick-Ass, but the film’s pace is the star, brilliantly mixing origin story with revenge tale. It’s decidedly not for kids, though. (DJP)
(97 mins., NR)
This illuminating and warm hearted doc about longstanding Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg opens with a lovely swatch of Italian opera and then the noxious sound of
PRESENTED BY Tully conservative mouthpiece Sean Hannity’s voice saying, “This witch, this evil-doer, this monster … She has no respect for the traditions of our constitution … That woman’s a zombie.” By contrast, Gloria Steinem states simply, “She’s the closest thing to a superhero that I know.” Directors Betsy West and Julie Cohen blend archival and modern footage to capture the diminutive, deceptively calm powerhouse—aka her rapper handle, “Notorious RBG”—in midstream, still going strong and adhering to her critical left position at age 85. The Brooklynite met her husband, Marty Ginsburg (d. 2010), in college in the ’50s. He was one of her biggest supporters, from her early years fighting against a gender-biased legal world to the equal-rights-geared cases she brought to the Supreme Court in the ’70s to her appointment to that body by Bill Clinton in 1993. As the court has leaned evermore to the right, Ginsburg has become a fiercer dissenting voice on the bench and, in terms of pop culture — including Kate McKinnon’s imitation of her on Saturday Night Live — she has “become a rock star, and she loves it,” according to one of the film’s many interviewees. Among the doc’s highlights: Ginsburg’s friendship with conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, a segment on her damnation of Trump (and subsequent apology), and the general sense of getting inside the story of a remarkable, opera-loving seeker of justice — who happens to be a woman. (JW) Riviera
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The Rider (104 mins., R) Billed as an adventure/comedy/drama, director (and Ojai resident) Chloé
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Life of the Party
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DEADPOOL 2 (R)
HHHH HHHH (HIGHEST RATING)
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Metro 4 - Camino Real _______________________
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DOUBLE FEATURE:
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Camino Real - May 17 - 4:30 pm
DEADPOOL 1 & 2
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STARTS FRIDAY, MAY 11
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MEASURE OF A
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ARLINGTON 1317 State Street
AVENGERS: (2D)
INFINITY WAR
(R)
Daily: 2:45 5:15 7:45 Juliette Binoche
A FILM BY
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August 18
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BREAKING IN Fri: (PG-13) 1:00 3:25 5:40 7:55 10:05
(PG-13)
Daily: 1:30 4:45 8:00
FIESTA 5
CC METRO 4
618 State Street
INFINITY WAR
(PG-13)
3D Fri-Sun: 2:15 5:30 8:45 3D Mon-Thu: 2:15 5:30 2D Fri: 3:00 3:45 6:15 7:00 9:30 10:15
YOU WERE 11:00 11:45 12:30 (R) BREAKING IN Sat/Sun: NEVER REALLY 3:00 3:45 6:15 Fri: 7:00 9:30 10:15 3:00 5:15 7:30 9:45HERE (R)(R) 2D Mon-Wed: 916 State Street
(PG-13)
Sat/Sun: 11:15 12:45 3:00 3:45 6:15 7:00 8:45 3:00 5:15 7:30 9:45 Mon-Thu: 2:20 5:30 7:50 2D Thu: 3:45 7:00 8:45 10:15
Paseo Nuevo
MEASURE OF A MAN (PG-13)
Fri-Sun: 1:30 4:00 6:30 8:55 Mon-Thu: 2:50 5:00 7:30
Fri-Wed: (PG-13) 12:10 2:25 5:15 7:30 10:00 Thu: 12:10 2:25 6:10
I FEEL
FAIRVIEW
225 N. Fairview Ave.
LIFE
OF THE PARTY (PG-13)
Paseo Nuevo Fairview Starts Friday
MAY 18
BLACK PANTHER
Fri-Sun: 3:30 9:00 (2D) Mon- Wed: 2:00 8:00 Thu: 1:40 4:45 (PG-13)
Sat/Sun: 10:45 1:00 3:25 RAMPAGE (PG-13) (2D) 5:40 7:55 10:05 Fri-Sun: 1:00 6:30 Mon-Thu: OVERBOARD (PG-13) Mon-Wed: 5:15 1:00 3:25 5:40 7:55 10:05 Fri: 1:35 4:10 6:45 9:20 Thu: 1:50 4:20 Sat/Sun: AVENGERS: (2D) 11:00 1:35 4:10 6:45 9:20 Starts Thursday, May 17 INFINITY WAR (PG-13) Mon-Thu: 2:30 5:10 8:00 DEADPOOL 2 (R) 7:00 8:00 9:45 10:45 Fri: 12:00 1:15 2:15 3:15 4:30 5:30 6:30 7:45 8:45 I FEEL PRETTY (PG-13) PASEO NUEVO 9:45 11:00 pm Fri: 1:45 4:20 7:00 9:35 8 W. De La Guerra Place Sat/Sun: Sat: 10:00 11:00 12:00 11:10 1:45 4:20 7:00 9:35 1:15 2:15 3:15 4:30 5:30 LIFE OF THE Mon-Thu: 2:10 4:45 7:20 6:30 7:45 8:45 9:45 11:00 PARTY (PG-13) Fri-Sun: Sunday: Same as Saturday A QUIET PLACE 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30 except: No 11:00 pm Fri: (PG-13) Mon-Thu: 2:40 5:10 7:50 2:30 4:50 7:10 9:30 Mon-Wed: 12:00 1:15 2:15 Sat/Sun: 3:15 4:30 5:30 6:30 7:45 TULLY (R) 12:10 2:30 4:50 7:10 9:30 8:45 9:45 Fri-Sun: Mon-Thu: 2:40 5:20 7:40 1:40 4:00 6:25 8:50 Thu: 12:00 1:15 2:15 Mon-Thu: 3:00 5:20 7:40 4:30 7:45 9:30 11:00 pm
A QUIET PLACE
(PG-13)
AVENGERS: (2D)
(PG)
LIVES WELL LIVED (Not Rated)
Fri-Sun: 1:30 5:15 7:15
Fri-Sun: Mon-Wed: 2:00 4:05 6:05 1:30 4:00 6:35 9:05 Thu: 2:30 5:00 PRETTY (PG-13) Mon-Thu: 2:30 5:30 8:00
Fri-Wed: 2:40 4:40 7:15 9:50 Thu: 2:40 5:00
BAD SAMARITAN Daily: 12:05 pm
OVERBOARD Fri-Sun: (PG-13) 1:00 3:40 6:20 8:55 (R) Mon-Thu: 2:40 5:00 7:45
Starts Thursday, May 17
TULLY (R)
ISLE OF DOGS
Fri-Sun: (PG-13) 2:45 3:45 6:10 8:40 Mon-Wed: 2:30 5:00 7:30 Thu: 7:15
BAD SAMARITAN (R)
Fri-Sun: Fri-Sun: 9:15 pm DEADPOOL 2 (R) 2:10 4:30 6:50 9:15 Double Feature: Mon-Wed: 2:50 5:10 7:30 Mon-Wed: 8:00 Thu: 2:50 DEADPOOL 1 & 2: 4:30 pm Thu: 2:30 Starts Thursday, May 17 DEADPOOL 2 only: BOOK CLUB (PG-13) BOOK CLUB (PG-13) 7:00 7:45 8:30 9:45 Thu 5/17: 5:30 8:00 10:30 11:15 pm Thu 5/17: 5:00 7:30
A PERFECT GIFT!
a&e | FILM & TV CONT’D FROM P. 67
Avengers: Infinity War Zhao’s film follows a young rodeo cowboy who, after suffering a massive head injury, must reevaluate his life and what it means to him to be a man in Midwest America. The Hitchcock
she is miraculously imbued with the belief that she is the most beautiful, capable woman on the planet. Michelle Williams, Busy Philipps, and Emily Ratajkowski also star. Camino Real/Fiesta 5
NOW SHOWING
O Isle of Dogs
Avengers: Infinity War (149 mins., PG-13)
In this sequel to Avengers: Age of Ultron, Iron Man, Hulk, Thor, StarLord, Captain America, Black Widow, Black Panther, Doctor Strange, SpiderMan, and many more from the Marvel Universe come together to take down Thanos (Josh Brolin), a despot from Titan who comes to Earth looking for the infinity stones, which will give him power over all worlds. Arlington (2D)/Camino Real (2D)/ Metro 4 (2D & 3D)
Bad Samaritan (110 mins., R) Two burglars rob the home of a wealthy man, only to discover a woman bound and gagged inside. When they turn to the cops, the psychopathic owner, played by David Tennant, unleashes his fury on them in this thriller by director Dean Devlin. Camino Real/Paseo Nuevo
O Black Panther
(134 mins., PG-13)
Black Panther is the latest movie in a lengthening line of both serious and kid-friendly studio films that feature lead characters with different genders, sexualities, and skin colors. But Black Panther settles too easily into tired and predictable superhero tropes. It never jumps out of third gear, and its cultural significance is hardly matched by its entertainment value. (TH) Metro 4
(101 mins., PG-13)
Writer/director Wes Anderson is at his meticulously whimsical best with the stop-motion feature Isle of Dogs. The story is easy and uncluttered: A young boy searches for his lost dog. The canine characters — marginalized and exiled by a fearmongering autocrat (sound familiar?) — are complicated and sweet. Chief (voiced by Bryan Cranston) is a stray who bites but wants to be good. Rex (Edward Norton) hangs desperately onto obedience in an upside-down world. The dogs muse, fight, love, and mourn. They perfectly personify the capriciousness and loyalty of a human’s best friend and humans themselves, all the while bounding through a world beautifully crafted by Anderson and his puppeteers. The cast also includes Bill Murray, Scarlett Johansson, Tilda Swinton, and Yoko Ono. (TH) Paseo Nuevo
Lives Well Lived (72 mins., NR) Sky Bergman’s documentary captures the life stories of more than 40 people aged 70 and up. Paseo Nuevo Overboard (112 mins., PG-13) This remake of a 1987 comedy concerns a working-class mother of three (Anna Faris) who’s cleaning the yacht of a Mexican playboy (Eugenio Derbez). When he falls off the boat after firing her, he awakes with no memory, so she convinces him that they are married and leads him into a life of manual labor. How long can she keep the ruse alive? Fairview/Fiesta 5
O A Quiet Place
I Feel Pretty I Feel Pretty (110 mins., PG-13) Amy Schumer is back on the big screen in this comedy about an insecure woman, Renee (Schumer), who falls and hits her head. When she awakens,
(90 mins., PG-13)
Audiences dare not make a sound. John Krasinski shows mastery of the horror genre, despite A Quiet Place being the first horror film he’s directed. In the film, a species of blind creature hunts humans using hypersensitive hearing. The Abbott family — husband Lee (Krasinski), wife Evelyn (Emily Blunt), deaf daughter Regan (Millicent Simmonds), and sons Marcus (Noah Jupe) and Beau (Cade Woodward) — must live silently in order to hide from these mysterious monsters. The script, setting, and production are original
and fantastically constructed. Krasinski and Blunt are married to each other in real life, and Simmonds is also deaf in real life, all of which gives a strong sense of believability to the hauntingly realistic performances. A Quiet Place has reinvigorated modern thriller storytelling, hopefully putting to rest lazy jump-scare tactics and ushering in the return of creativity and suspense in horror. (NS) Camino Real/Fiesta 5 Rampage (107 mins., PG-13) Loosely based on the 1980s video game that has enormous animals destroying entire cities, Rampage immerses audiences in a whirlwind of adventure about a group of mutant animals terrorizing urban centers. The story line focuses on an albino gorilla named George, whom primatologist Davis Okoye (Dwayne Johnson) has saved from poachers. Okoye and his primate friend communicate via sign language and the occasional fist bump. When George accidentally ingests a genealtering pathogen that enhances his size and aggression, Okoye and genetic scientist Dr. Kate Caldwell (Moonlight’s Naomie Harris) team up to save George — and the cities he is terrorizing — from the brink of destruction. Although Rampage lacks poignancy, it is a guiltypleasure film, an entertainment entrée that soothes our temporary hunger for action. (JR) Metro 4
O ➤ Tully
(96 mins., R)
Tully’s movie poster shows Charlize Theron as Marlo, a frazzled mother of two — with a third child on the way — covered in stickers. The unglamorous image accurately depicts screenwriter Diablo Cody and director Jason Reitman’s exploration of the complexities of motherhood. The movie does well creating three-dimensional characters; Theron as Marlo delivers an Oscar-worthy turn, illuminating the obstacles of postpartum depression and the emotional distress of everyday life. Even when Marlo gets help in the form of a night nanny, Tully (Mackenzie Davis), she is reluctant to relinquish any childrearing duties. Meanwhile, her husband checks out of the equation by playing video games. Tully is a sincere narrative detailing what women already know: Despite their needing help with the overwhelming load that is motherhood, that help can be difficult to find and accept. (JR) Fairview/Paseo Nuevo
The above films are playing in Santa Barbara FRIDAY, May 11, through THURSDAY, May 17. Our critics’ reviews are followed by initials: TH (Tyler Hayden), D.J. Palladino (DJP), JR (Jasmine Rodriguez), NS (Noah Shachar), and JW (Josef Woodard). The symbol O indicates the film is recommended. The symbol ➤ indicates a new review.
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H A P P Y H O S P I TA L W E E K From the 700 physicians on the medical staffs of Goleta Valley Cottage Hospital, Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, and Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital, we say thank you to the entire Cottage Health staff
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a&e | ROB BREZSNY’S FREE WILL ASTROLOGY WEEK OF MAY 10 CAPRICORN
ARIES
CANCER
LIBRA
(Mar. 21-Apr. 19): The Torah is a primary sacred text of the Jewish religion. It consists of exactly 304,805 letters. When specially trained scribes make handwritten copies for ritual purposes, they must not make a single error in their transcription. The work may take as long as 18 months. Your attention to detail in the coming weeks doesn’t have to be quite so painstaking, Aries, but I hope you’ll make a strenuous effort to be as diligent as you can possibly be.
(June 21-July 22): “Paradise is scattered over the whole earth,” wrote the scientific poet Novalis, “and that is why it has become so unrecognizable.” Lucky for you, Cancerian, quite a few fragments of paradise are gathering in your vicinity. It’ll be like a big, happy reunion of tiny miracles all coalescing to create a substantial dose of sublimity. Will you be ready to deal with this much radiance? Will you be receptive to so much relaxing freedom? I hope and pray you won’t make a cowardly retreat into the trendy cynicism that so many people mistake for intelligence. (Because in that case, paradise might remain invisible.) Here’s my judicious advice: Be insistent on pleasure! Be voracious for joy! Be focused on the quest for beautiful truths!
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Vincent van Gogh’s painting “The Starry Night” hangs on a wall in New York’s Museum of Modern Art. He created it in 1889 while living in a French asylum. Around that same time, 129 years ago, a sheepherder in Wyoming created a sourdough starter that is still fresh today. A cook named Lucille Clarke Dumbrill regularly pulls this frothy mass of yeast out of her refrigerator and uses it to make pancakes. In the coming weeks, Libra, I’d love to see you be equally resourceful in drawing on an old resource. The past will have offerings that could benefit your future.
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Now is a favorable time to discuss in elegant detail the semi-secret things that are rarely or never talked about. It’s also a perfect moment to bring deep feelings and brave tenderness into situations that have been suffering from half-truths and pretense. Be aggressively sensitive, my dear Capricorn. Take a bold stand on behalf of compassionate candor. And as you go about these holy tasks, be entertaining as well as profound. The cosmos has authorized you to be a winsome agent of change.
SCORPIO
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In his 1931 painting “The Persistence of Memory,” Salvador Dalí shows three clocks that seem to be partially liquefied, as if in the process of melting. His biographer Meredith EtheringtonSmith speculated that he was inspired to create this surrealistic scene when he saw a slab of warm Camembert cheese melting on a dinner table. I foresee the possibility of a comparable development in your life, Aquarius. Be alert for creative inspiration that strikes you in the midst of seemingly mundane circumstances.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Born under the sign of Taurus, Edmund Wilson was a renowned 20th-century author and critic who wrote more than 30 books. He also served as editor for Vanity Fair and The New Republic and influenced the work of at least seven major American novelists. When he was growing up, he spent most of his free time reading books: 16 hours a day during summer vacations. His parents, worried about his obsessive passion, bought him a baseball uniform, hoping to encourage him to diversify his interests. His response was to wear the uniform while reading books 16 hours a day. I trust you will be equally dedicated to your own holy cause or noble pursuit in the coming weeks, Taurus. You have cosmic clearance to be singleminded about doing what you love.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): It’s possible you could pass for normal in the next three weeks; you might be able to fool a lot of people into thinking you’re an average, ordinary contributor to the dull routine. But it will be far healthier for your relationship with yourself if you don’t do such a thing. It will also be a gift to your less daring associates, who in my opinion would benefit from having to engage with your creative agitation and fertile chaos. So my advice is to reveal yourself as an imperfect work in progress who’s experimenting with novel approaches to the game of life. Recognize your rough and raw features as potential building blocks for future achievements.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): These days, your friends and allies and loved ones want even more from you than they usually do. They crave more of your attention, more of your approval, more of your feedback. And that’s not all. Your friends and allies and loved ones also hope you will give more love to yourself. They will be excited and they will feel blessed if you express an even bigger, brighter version of your big, bright soul. They will draw inspiration from your efforts to push harder and stronger to fulfill your purpose here on Planet Earth.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): One of the advantages you get from reading my horoscopes is that I offer confidential information about the gods’ caprices and leanings. For example, I can tell you that Saturn — also known as Father Time — is now willing to allot you a more luxurious relationship with time than usual, on one condition: that you don’t squander the gift on trivial pursuits. So I encourage you to be discerning and disciplined about nourishing your soul’s craving for interesting freedom. If you demonstrate to Saturn how constructively you can use his blessing, he’ll be inclined to provide more dispensations in the future.
AQUARIUS
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Love everyone twice as much and twice as purely as you ever have before. Your mental health requires it! Your future dreams demand it! And please especially intensify your love for people you allegedly already love but sometimes don’t treat as well as you could because you take them for granted. Keep this Bible verse in mind, as well: “Don’t neglect to show kindness to strangers; for, in this way, some, without knowing it, have had angels as their guests.”
SAGITTARIUS
PISCES
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21): After meditating on your astrological aspects for an hour, I dozed off. As I napped, I had a dream in which an androgynous angel came to me and said, “Please inform your Sagittarius readers that they should be callipygian in the next two weeks.” Taken aback, my dreaming self said to the angel,“You mean ‘callipygian’ as in ‘having beautiful buttocks’?” “Yes, sir,” the angel replied. “Bootylicious. Bumtastic. Rumpalicious.” I was puzzled. “You mean like in a metaphorical way?” I asked. “You mean Sagittarians should somehow cultivate the symbolic equivalent of having beautiful buttocks?”“Yes,” the angel said.“Sagittarians should be elegantly well-grounded. Flaunt their exquisite foundation. Get to the bottom of things with flair. Be sexy badasses as they focus on the basics.” “OK!” I said.
(Feb. 19-Mar. 20): “My whole life is messed up with people falling in love with me,” said Piscean poet Edna St. Vincent Millay. She spoke the truth. She inspired a lot of adoration, and it stirred up more chaos than she was capable of managing. Luckily, you will have fewer problems with the attention coming your way, Pisces. I bet you’ll be skilled at gathering the benefits, and you’ll be unflummoxed by the pitfalls. But you’ll still have to work hard at these tasks. Here’s some help. Tip #1: Stay in close touch with how you really feel about the people who express their interest in you. Tip #2: Don’t accept gifts with strings attached. Tip #3: Just because you’re honored or flattered that someone finds you attractive doesn’t mean you should unquestioningly blend your energies with them.
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.
Homework: Do you allow your imagination to indulge in fantasies that are wasteful, damaging, or dumb? I dare you to stop it. Testify at Freewillastrology.com.
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OAK COTTAGE OF SANTA BARBARA In the spirit of further elevating Santa Barbara’s cocktail culture, Visit Santa Barbara and the Santa Barbara Independent have teamed up once again, to designate an official signature Santa Barbara mixed drink that celebrates the distinctive attributes of The American Riviera®. “The Official Drink of Santa Barbara” cocktail competition calls upon local restaurants, bars and lounges to craft their libation interpretation of Santa Barbara’s one-of-a-kind sense of place.
RIBBON CUTTING CEREMONY Celebrating our Community’s 3 Year Anniversary
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Setting high standards is one thing. Embracing them is another. At Cottage Health, we make it top priority to work constantly at being our best...for patients, their families, our communities and fellow team members. If you would enjoy living up to your potential at a health system that strives for – and achieves – excellence, come to Cottage.
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Cottage Business Services • Advancement Systems Analyst • Director, Planning and Analysis
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Pacific Diagnostic Laboratories • Anatomic Pathology Tech • Certified Phlebotomist Technician – FT/PT • Client Services Rep – FT/PT • CLS, Santa Ynez/Microbiology/SBCH • Lab Assistant, Lead • Lab Assistant II • Mobile Cert Phleb Tech, Lab • Quality Coordinator • Sr. Sales Representative (San Luis) • Transfusion Safety Coordinator
• HIM Outpatient Data Specialist • Manager, Annual Giving • Manager, Denials and Utilization Review • Sr. Revenue Integrity Analyst
• RENTAL & RELOCATION ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE FOR SELECT FULL-TIME POSITIONS • CERTIFICATION REIMBURSEMENT
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?
Please apply online at jobs.cottagehealth.org. Candidates may also submit a resume to: Cottage Health, Human Resources, P.O. Box 689, Pueblo at Bath Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93102-0689
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MAY 10, 2018
GRADUATE PROGRAM ASSISTANT
PHELPS HALL ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT CENTER (PASC) Assists in managing all graduate programs and services in the Departments of French & Italian; Germanic & Slavic Studies; Spanish & Portuguese; and the Programs of Comparative Literature and Latin American & Iberian Studies. Works closely with Faculty Graduate Advisors in advising students and faculty on most aspects of graduate matters. Reqs: Excellent oral and written communication skills. Strong organizational, communication and interpersonal skills to serve as an effective liaison between students, faculty and other University offices. Ability to organize, prioritize and complete work with frequent interruptions. Demonstrated work experience with strong organizational skills, attention to detail and accuracy. Ability to work on a variety of projects simultaneously, paying close attention to details, while meeting deadlines and shifting priorities. Excellent problem solving skills with the ability to pick-up complexities quickly and follow through tasks/projects completely. Must be flexible and capable of changing assignments and priorities with ease while exercising good judgment, common sense, and discretion. Ability to work effectively and cooperatively as a positive member of a multifaceted team. Ability to work within established policy and the ability to effectively communicate policy and procedures. Ability to maintain confidentiality. Strong demonstrated experience with Word and Excel. Note: Fingerprint background check required. $21.85-$22.89/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 #20180193
• Please apply to: www.pdllabs.com
• HIM Manager
Please reference “SBI” when applying. EOE
ADMIN/CLERICAL
Excellence, Integrity, Compassion
www.cottagehealth.org INDEPENDENT.COM
PERFORMING ARTS COORDINATOR
ARTS & LECTURES OFFICE Works independently to coordinate, plan, procure, and oversee all necessary backstage needs, onstage properties, and provide basic support for all Arts & Lectures on/off-campus performances, designated lectures, and special events. Coordinates Artist residency logistics, including hotel accommodations, outreach activities, hospitality, catering, and transportation. Uses computer graphics programs to create bilingual promotional materials for ¡Viva el Arte de Santa Bárbara! and negotiates print media and hotel sponsorship’s. Reqs: Experience and creativity in supervision and motivation of
numerous student employees, organization of catering and theater backstage scene, experience working in an academic environment, highly organized. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Extensive evening and weekend hours required (subject to Overtime pay in accordance with University/CBU agreement). Ability to lift/move up to 50 lbs. $21.85-$24.51/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 5/17/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20180229
COMPUTER/TECH LOGICMONITOR, INC. seeks a Financial Manager to assist the CFO in measuring real time business performance, planning for a high growth future, and helping the finance team develop and implement processes to support the needs of an evolving business; and serve as the finance bridge to Marketing and Sales. Worksite: Santa Barbara, CA. Submit resume to HR: https://www. logicmonitor.com/careers/
CONSTRUCTION MOUNTAIN SKILL Machine & Fabrication 2021 Chino St Santa Barbara, CA 93101 805-698-1412
EMPLOYMENT SERVICES AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Get FAA approved hands on Aviation training. Financial Aid for qualified students - Career placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-686-1704 MGR, ELECTRONIC Design for Visual Product Devlpmt Dept. Rqrs MS+2 or BS+5 yrs incl 2 yrs supervising for Endoscopic CCD Imaging. Mail CV attn.: S.Loza/re: MEE, Karl Storz Imaging Inc., 1 S. Los Carneros Rd., Goleta, CA 93117.
LEGAL DID YOU KNOW Information is power and content is King? Do you need timely access to public notices and remain relevant in today’s hostile business climate? Gain the edge with California Newspaper Publishers Association new innovative website capublicnotice.com and check out the FREE One-Month Trial Smart Search Feature. For more information call Cecelia @ (916) 288-6011 or www. capublicnotice.com (Cal-SCAN)
MEDICAL/HEALTHCARE
DENTIST, ASSOCIATE
UCSB, STUDENT HEALTH Join a dynamic team of dental professionals providing primary dentistry and emergency oral care to UCSB students in the campus Dental Care Center. Provides primary
dentistry and performs complex procedures for UCSB students. Performs peer reviews for quality improvement. Supervises personnel and the clinic preventive dental care program. Reqs: Must have a current DEA and California Doctor of Dental Surgery license as determined by the California Board of Dental Examiners at all times during employment in order to practice and function in the clinical role. Must maintain current CPR Basic Life Support certification as required for licensure at all times during employment. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Credentials verification for clinical practitioner. Mandated reporting requirements of Child and Dependent Adult Abuse. Student Health requires that clinical staff must successfully complete the background check and credentialing process before employment and date of hire. Must provide evidence of annual influenza vaccination, or wear a surgical mask while working in patient care areas during the influenza season. This is an 11 month, 40% time limited appointment. Scheduling varies during quarter breaks. Student Health is closed between the Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays. Multiple positions available. Salary commensurate with education and experience. 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 5/17/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20180215
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
UCSB STUDENT HEALTH Provides medical and administrative support to the physicians, physician assistants and nurse practitioners, assisting with exams and procedures, filling out necessary paperwork, taking phone messages, scheduling appointments, and running errands as needed. Reqs: Training or experience as a Medical Assistant. HS Diploma and one year of experience as a medical assistant or an equivalent combination of education and experience. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Credentials verification for clinical practitioner. Mandated reporting requirements of Child and Dependent Adult Abuse. Student Health requires all clinical staff successfully pass the fingerprint background check before the start date. Must provide evidence of annual influenza vaccination, or wear a surgical mask while working in patient care areas during the influenza season. Any HIPAA/FERPA violation may be subject to disciplinary action. Work hours may include Thursday evenings from 10am-7pm. Student Health is closed between Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays. This is a 10-month per year, 100% time position with furlough taken during quarter breaks and summer months. $20.89-$22.18/hr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment
INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS
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 5/20/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20180226
PHARMACY DIRECTOR
UCSB, STUDENT HEALTH Responsible for dispensing thousands of prescriptions annually, directing a large department, and providing consultation to medical staff. Wide range of clinical and administrative duties related to daily operations and ensuring compliance with all applicable state and federal Pharmacy laws and regulations, as well as departmental and University policies and procedures, and Standards of the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care (AAAHC). Reqs: Must have a current California State Pharmacist license at all times during employment. Must have 2 years of experience as a pharmacist. Strong knowledge of all pharmacy functions; with knowledge of all areas of pharmaceutical services and operations. Strong interpersonal skills necessary to interact effectively with customers and other individuals in the medical field. Strong skills associated with managing staff members and department budget according to campus policies and procedures. Knowledge of and skills in working with pharmacy information systems. Knowledge of electronic / medical records systems. Strong knowledge of revenue generation, pharmacy budgets and inventory control. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Credentials verification for clinical practitioner. Mandated reporting requirements of Child and Dependent Adult Abuse. Must be eligible to be bonded and must successfully complete the background check and credentialing process before employment. Must provide evidence of annual influenza vaccination, or wear a surgical mask while working in patient care areas during the influenza season. Must have and maintain a current CA State Pharmacist license at all times during employment. Any HIPAA/FERPA violations may be subject to disciplinary action. This is a 12 month 100% time position. Includes some evening and weekend work; The Pharmacy is open until 7pm on Thursday evenings. During campus emergencies will need to respond to provide services, and occasionally need to respond to pharmacy alarms after hours. Student Health is closed between the Christmas and New Year’s Day holidays. Salary commensurate with education and experience. 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 5/20/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20180227
PROFESSIONAL
CLINICAL SERVICES DIRECTOR
GEVIRTZ GRADUATE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Responsible for conducting the majority of the clinical training that takes place at the Center. The primary duties of this individual consist of (a) providing clinical training to graduate and undergraduate clinicians as they learn to conduct psychological assessments and a
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PHONE 965-5205
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E M A I L S A L E S @ I N D E P E N D E N T. C O M
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broad range of evidence-based psychological interventions and (b) providing direct clinical services (psychological assessment and intervention services) to individuals and families. This individual is also responsible for ensuring that all Center staff are aware of and adhere to all applicable legal guidelines and the strict ethical standards of the American Psychological Association. Reqs: Ph.D. in Psychology. Licensed Psychologist/License-Eligible in the State of California. Training in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA). Training in Psychological Assessment. Training in Psychotherapy Interventions. 4 years clinical experience working with autism clinical populations. Experience supervising clinician/therapist trainees. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Credentials verification for clinical practitioner. Mandated reporting requirements of Child Abuse. Ph.D. or Psy.D. in clinical or counseling psychology. Possess a current, valid license in California as a Psychologist, or must complete CA licensure within 6 months of start date. Must continue to meet all California state requirements for license renewal. Maintains confidentiality and upholds the highest ethical and legal standards in all relevant aspects of CSD work and related program activities. Salary commensurate with education and experience. 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 5/21/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20180233
CONTRACTS AND GRANTS ANALYST
CALIFORNIA NANOSYSTEMS INSTITUTE Supports the Institute’s extramural fund activities and provides administrative support including, but not limited to: proposal submission, financial management, gift processing, and special projects, in accordance with Departmental, UC, State and Federal policies and procedures. Reqs: Familiarity with federal, UC and agency-specific policies and procedures regarding financial management and/or contract and grant administration. Demonstrated strong communication skills, ability to multi-task and meet strict deadlines while maintaining a high level of accuracy. Professionalism, initiative, flexibility and analytical skills are necessary. Note: Fingerprint background check required. $53,200-$70,000/yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment
without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 5/17/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20180221
DIRECTOR OF RESEARCH INTEGRITY
OFFICE OF RESEARCH Plays a focal role in maintaining the standard of ethical excellence in research on campus. Responsible for maintaining campus compliance with several Federal and State mandates, as well as associated statutes, regulations and policies. The Director leads a team of subject matter specialists through strong leadership, mentoring, and providing professional development opportunities when possible. Must employ excellent judgment in making risk-based decisions that affect individual programs and the campus as a whole. This position is charged with maintaining standards that are essential for the conduct of legal and ethical research at UCSB. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree and a minimum of 5 years of experience in the field of research compliance (export control, human and animal subjects research, conflict of interest, etc.), preferably in an academic environment or equivalent combination of education and experience. Experience interpreting and applying federal/ state/university regulations, policies and procedures. Note: Fingerprint background check required. Salary commensurate with experience and qualifications up to $115,000/ year. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 5/16/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20180223
DIVISIONAL FINANCE MANAGER
OFFICE OF RESEARCH Serves as the Chief Financial & Operations Officer for the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research (OR). Assists the Assistant Vice Chancellor for Research (AVCR) in financial and administrative management under the VCR’s jurisdiction, currently consisting of Organized Research Units (ORUs), research centers, and
the Animal Resource Center (ARC). Works directly with the AVCR on new initiatives affecting the division and across divisional units (e.g., Executive Vice Chancellor, Colleges, Graduate Division, Chancellor, etc.). Reqs: Bachelor’s degree and/or equivalent combination of education and experience. Knowledge of and experience with financial analysis, trends, accounting, payroll, budgeting and reporting techniques. Ability to use independent judgment, initiative, problem solving and analytical skills to address complex financial issues. Excellent interpersonal skills to communicate policies and procedures. Ability to manage conflicting deadlines and to work efficiently with frequent interruptions. Experience with supervision and staff training. Proven ability to apply knowledge to day-to-day operations of a department. Ability to interact effectively with various levels of administration. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Form 700 Statement of Economic Interests Filer. $76,100-$98,000/yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 5/16/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs. ucsb.edu Job #20180218
ECE LEAD TEACHER
CHILDCARE CENTER Plans and implements a quality program for a nationally accredited child care center for one specific group of children and parents. Works cooperatively with other staff to coordinate program for entire center. Reqs: AA in ECE or related field, possess CA CDE Child Dev Master Teacher permit (or qualify for), and experience in group care setting. Infant / Toddler positions require 3 units Infant / Toddler development. Previous experience working with children in a preschool or infant/toddler setting. Notes: This is an 87%-100% time per year position. Fingerprint background check required. Mandated reporter for requirements of child abuse. Acceptable Statement of Health to include negative TB test results and immunization records. Pediatric CPR and 1st aid cert prior to start date. $20.78-$22.89/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 5/14/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20180203
NOW HIRING
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
EVENTS 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: At least three years of significant event management experience handling events with 100-500 attendees. 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. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Maintain a CA driver’s license. Must be available to work weekends and evenings as needed. $53,200-$67,000/yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 5/1618, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20180219
PROGRAM DIRECTOR
MULTICULTURAL CENTER In collaboration and consultation with the Director, works with faculty, staff, students, other campus departments, and community members/agencies. The MultiCultural Center’s (MCC) Program Director assumes primary responsibility for researching, developing, planning, and implementing programs and events such as lectures, films, discussions, musical performances, spoken word events, film discussions, workshops representing a wide range of perspectives based upon race, class, national origin, sexual
orientation, ethnicity and other issues pertaining to marginalized communities. Reqs: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent combination of years of experience. Demonstrated experience in programming events for diverse populations and in a university setting. Understanding of budget, time and policy constraints. Demonstrated political acumen and social perceptiveness to identify good programming decisions and identify potential issues and resolutions for them. Strong interpersonal, written and verbal communication skills. Experience with social media, experience and knowledge of Adobe Creative Suite, Photoshop, and Word. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Evening and week-end work required. Evening and week-end work required. $53,200-$63,000/ yr. The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law. For primary consideration apply by 5/17/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job #20180225
RETAIL
CircaTerra Travel Outfitters is hiring! (3317A State St.)
Looking for a dynamic individual with an interest in international travel to join our team of sales associates in our Santa Barbara retail store. We are a locally-owned travel store with an established base of loyal customers who come to us for everything from luggage, handbags, and travel gear to adventure clothing and women’s casual fashion. Our friendly and knowledgeable staff works one on one with each customer to find the best solutions to their travel needs. We provide product training and good team support. Previous retail experience preferable. 4 days per week. Competitive pay. Email resume to mgallo@ circaterratravel.com We are located in bustling Loreto Plaza with other unique stores like Chaucer’s Books, Harry’s Plaza Cafe and Renaud’s Cafe.
SKILLED
LIMITED PAINTER
RESIDENTIAL OPERATIONS Performs skilled painting tasks for University owned Residential Halls/ Housing and its related buildings at on and off campus locations as outlined below, and may be assigned other duties (including those in other craft areas) to accomplish the operational needs of the department. In compliance with HDAE goals and objectives, affirms and implements the department Educational Equity Plan comprised of short and long term objectives that reflect a systematic approach to preparing both students and staff for a success in a multi-cultural society. Works in an environment, which is ethnically diverse and culturally pluralistic. Works effectively in a team environment. Reqs: 4+ years demonstrated work in the painter trade, showing multiple skills within the paint trade. Similar type apartment paint work experience as well as paint applications to wood and stucco buildings. Knowledge and ability to perform interior and exterior wall repairs to various wall types such as drywall, wire lath and plaster and stucco. Ability to safely erect, work on, and or operate scaffolding, high ladders, various lifts, power washers, airless and HVLP spray systems, and air compressors. Ability to meet critical timelines and work independently or in teams. Demonstrated ability to work in a diverse work environment. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Maintain a valid CA driver’s license. Must be able to lift a minimum of 50 pounds and work while on a ladder. Will be fitted for a respirator upon hire. Multiple positions available. $33.49/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 on line by 5/27/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job# 20180228
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NOW HIRING
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
The Santa Barbara Independent is seeking a part-time in-house graphic designer. Candidate must have knowledge of Adobe Creative Suite on a Mac platform. Candidate will preferably have experience in font management and familiar with print publishing and file handling. The candidate will possess strong and professional communication skills, and be able to work well under pressure. This position works alongside multiple departments and under strict deadlines. Please send resumes and online portfolio links to hr@independent.com. No phone calls. EOE F/M/D/V
Santa Barbara Independent is seeking a full-time in-house graphic designer. Candidate must have knowledge of Adobe Creative Suite on a Mac platform. Candidate will preferably have experience in font management and familiar with print publishing and file handling. Design includes ad design, paper layout, marketing and promotional design, and other production related tasks. The candidate will possess strong and professional communication skills, and be able to work well under pressure. This position works alongside multiple departments and under strict deadlines. Please send resumes and online portfolio links to hr@independent.com. No phone calls. EOE F/M/D/V
Please email resume and/or questions to
Please email resume and/or questions to
hr@independent.com
hr@independent.com
INDEPENDENT.COM
MAY 10, 2018
THE INDEPENDENT
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INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYMENT
(CONTINUED)
RESIDENTIAL OPERATIONS Promotes a customer service environment to residence and clients. Assists with the development and maintenance of a work environment which is conducive to meeting the mission of the organization and supports the EEP. Responsible for completing job duties that demonstrates support for the Operations Team. Initiates communication directly with co-workers and or supervisor to improve and clarify working relationship, identifying problems and concerns, and seeking resolution to work-related conflicts. Reqs: Working knowledge and experience in utilizing the following equipment: vacuums, conventional and high-speed buffers, extractors and related custodial equipment desirable. Will train on
all equipment and chemicals used. Demonstrated ability to work effectively with others as a team. Must have effective communication skills. Ability to interact as a team member with sensitivity towards a multi-cultural work environment. Notes: Fingerprint background check required. Maintain a valid CA driver’s license. May be required to work schedules other than the assigned schedule to meet the operational needs of the unit. May be required to perform other duties as assigned to meet the operational needs of the department. $18.61-$20.14/ 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 online by 5/16/18, thereafter open until filled. Apply online at https://jobs.ucsb.edu Job # 20180220
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PERSONAL SERVICES
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LEGALS ADMINISTER OF ESTATE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: Jeroen Peter Koornwinder Case No.: 18PR00188 To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of Jeroen Peter Koornwinder. A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by: Diane Koornwinder in the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara. THE PETITION for probate requests that: Diane Koornwinder be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The Independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the petition will be held in this court as follows: 05/31/2018 AT 9:00 a.m. Dept: 5 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, located at 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Anacapa Division. IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58 (b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code Section 1250. A Request for Special notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for Petitioner: Alexander Saunders: Saunders Law Office, 15 W. Carillo St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101, (805) 699-5086 Published APR 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018.
REAL ESTATE RENTAL PROPERTIES APARTMENTS & CONDOS FOR RENT $1260 1BD Corner of Hope & San Remo-N State St-Barbara Apts Quiet NP 687-0610 1BD NEAR Cottage Hospital. 519 W Alamar. Set among beautiful oak trees across the street from Oak Park. NP. $1260. Call Cristina 687-0915 1BD NEAR SBCC & beach @ Carla Apts NP. 530 W Cota $1260 Rosa 965-3200 2BDS $1680+ & 3BD flat or townhouses $2430. Near UCSB, shops, park, beach, theater, golf. Sesame Tree Apts 6930 Whittier Dr. Hector 968-2549 STUDIOS $1260+ & 1BDs $1380+ in beautiful garden setting! Pool, lndry & off-street parking at Michelle Apartments. 340 Rutherford St. NP. Call Erin 967-6614
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CARPINTERIA EYE CARE CENTER OF OPTOMETRY at 1013 Casitas Pass Rd, Carpinteria, CA 93013; Steven M. Kleen Optometric Corporation: 640 Mayrum St, Santa Barbara, CA 93111; Steven R. Kleen Optometric Corporation: 2745 Moliere CT, Henderson, NV 89044. This business is conducted by a General Partnership, Signed: Steven Kleen. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 11, 2018. 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: 2018-0001115. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PROSPERITY PEST CONTROL at 2142 N Refugio Rd, Santa Ynez, CA 93460. Sierra West Business Services Inc (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Kevin O’Connor. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 12, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001130. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: THE FINE LINE at 4036-B Via Diego, Santa Barbara, CA 93110. Dale Stanley Pekarek (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Dale S. Pekarek. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 12, 2018. 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: 2018-0001146. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CAMP LORR WHEN PIGS FLY, EAST BEACH, SHIRTAGEOUS at 1422 Lou Dillon LN, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. Jake W. Richards, Jeannine Richards (Same Address). This business is conducted by a General Partnership, Signed: Jeannine Richards. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 03, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001022. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: RIVIERA PROVISIONS at 214 E. Victoria St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Caroline Law: 731 W. Sola St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Caroline Law. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 05, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001051. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: EQUALITY SALES CONSULTING, EQUALITY SALES TRAINING at 500 Los Verdes Dr #A, Santa Barbara, CA 93111. Dana Lynne Ochoa (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Dana Lynne Ochoa. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 10, 2018. 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: 2018-0001100. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: AMO TERRA CO. at 1522 Olive St #3, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Sarintha Bell, Ian Logan (Same Address). This business is conducted by Copartners, Signed: Ian Logan. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 13, 2018. 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 Margarita Silva. FBN Number: 2018-0001160. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: GOLD LINE TRUCKING at 3623 Via Orilla, Lompoc, CA 93436. Jorge Luis Alvarez (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Jorge L. Alvarez. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 13, 2018. 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 Margarita Silva. FBN Number: 2018-0001164. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: I-CARAMBA at 6549 Pardall Rd. STE. C, Isla Vista, CA 93117. Donavan Christensen: 60 Oceano Ave #1, Santa Barbara, CA 93109. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Donavan Christensen. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 16, 2018. 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 Margarita Silva. FBN Number: 2018-0001172. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: LA TOLTECA. at 728 Union St, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. Anitas Mexican Foods Corp.: 3454 N Mike Daley Dr, San Bernardino, CA 92407. This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Luis Robles. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 13, 2018. 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: 2018-0001157. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: 11 OAKS at 2140 Adobe Canyon Rd, Solvang, CA 93463. Brooke P. Carhartt, Michael S. Carhartt: 1541 Rancho Santa Ynez Rd, Solvang, CA 93463. This business is conducted by a Married Couple, Signed: Brooke P. Carhartt. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 12, 2018. 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 Marlene Ashcom. FBN Number: 2018-0001144. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: YOUR STORY BOOKKEEPING at 245 Chateaux Elise Unit D, Santa Barbara, CA 93109. Austin Snider (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Austin Snider. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on MAR 22, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0000895. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: LOACOM at 508 E. Haley St, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. LOATREE INC (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: David Fortson. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 12, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001137. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: LA CALENDA at 2915 De La Vina St, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. Bany Vargas: 107 N. Alisos St, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Bany Vargas. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 17, 2018. 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 Margarita Silva. FBN Number: 2018-0001186. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: DEBBIE’S DELIGHTS, DIE BRETZEL, SANTA BARBARA BAKING CO. at 233 E Gutierrez St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101; Debbie’s Delights, INC (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Peter Gaum. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 10, 2018. 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: 2018-0001092. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: PARTY PROPER PRODUCTIONS at 101 Juana Maria Ave, Santa Barbara, CA 93103; Andrew Scott Elia (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Andrew S. Elia. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 10, 2018. 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 Rachel N. Gann. FBN Number: 2018-0001097. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: CONNEKT4 at 3530 Madrona Dr, Santa Barbara, CA 93105; Alan J. Cavaletto (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: AJ Cavaletto. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 05, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001059. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: WOLFF- WALKER LAW FIRM at 1015 De La Vina St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. William Wolff: 220 C Santa Barbara St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: William Wolff. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 12, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001122. Published: APR 26, MAY 03, 10, 17, 2018.
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E M A I L S A L E S @ I N D E P E N D E N T. C O M
Tide Guide Day
High
Sunrise 5:57 Sunset 7:52
Low
High
Low
High
Thu 10
1:11 am 1.9
6:41 am 3.8
1:04 pm 0.5
7:41 pm 4.5
Fri 11
1:51 am 1.3
7:33 am 4.0
1:38 pm 0.5
8:06 pm 4.9
Sat 12
2:28 am 0.7
8:22 am 4.0
2:11 pm 0.7
8:32 pm 5.3
Sun 13
3:07 am 0.1
9:09 am 4.1
2:44 pm 0.8
9:01 pm 5.7
Mon 14
3:47 am -0.4
9:57 am 4.1
3:18 pm 1.0
9:33 pm 6.0
Tue 15
4:29 am -0.8
10:47 am 4.0
3:54 pm 1.3
10:09 pm 6.2
Wed 16
5:15 am -1.1
11:41 am 3.8
4:33 pm 1.7
10:48 pm 6.2
Thu 17
6:04 am -1.2
12:41 pm 3.7
5:17 pm 2.0
11:32 pm 6.1
15
21
29 D
7 H
crosswordpuzzle
tt By Ma
Jones
“An Increasing Problem”-- it’s in all the papers.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG) PROGRAM 2018-2019 Program Year Goals, Projects and Funding Allocations NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Goleta will conduct a public hearing on the date and time set forth below to consider the following: Potential projects and funding allocations for the City’s Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) 2018-2019 program year. This is the second of two public hearings to gather public input and obtain Council direction regarding housing and community development needs, goals and priorities, and funding allocations for the 2018-2019 program year. The City Council will consider the recommendations of its Standing Grant Funding Review Committee regarding funding allocations based on applications the City received from social service providers and identified City-sponsored capital projects. As a CDBG Entitlement Community, the City of Goleta receives funding annually from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The primary objectives of the CDBG program are the development of viable communities, decent and affordable housing and expanded economic opportunities for persons of very low, low and moderate income. The City of Goleta is required to prepare an annual Action Plan which identifies activities that will be undertaken to address public services, housing and community development needs. All interested citizens, residents, and public or private agencies serving the Goleta community are invited to attend the public hearing. Please note a change in the public hearing date: MEETING DATE AND TIME:
MEETING LOCATION:
Tuesday, June 5, 2018 – Meeting begins at 1:30 p.m. (The public hearing originally scheduled for May 15, 2018 has been changed to the above date and time.) City Council Chambers, Goleta City Hall 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B Goleta, California 93117
FOR MORE INFORMATION: The staff report for this meeting will be posted on the City’s website at www.cityofgoleta.org three (3) days prior to the meeting date. Citizens wishing to submit written statements to the City Council for consideration at the public hearing can contact Deborah Lopez, City Clerk, City of Goleta, 130 Cremona Drive Suite “B”, Goleta, CA 93117. Note: In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need special assistance to participate in this meeting, please contact Deborah Lopez, City Clerk, at (805) 9617500. Notification at least 48 hours prior to the meeting will enable City staff to make reasonable accommodation arrangements. For more information, please contact Dana Grossi, Management Analyst, at (805) 5625507 or by email at dgrossi@cityofgoleta.org Information is also available on the City’s website: http://www.cityofgoleta.org/city-hall/neighborhood-services-and-public-safety/ neighborhood-services/community-development-block-grant-program Date of Publication:
May 10, 2018 (Santa Barbara Independent
64 “If all ___ fails ...” 65 23rd of 50 66 ___ pot (sinus-cleaning 1 Young ‘un apparatus) 6 “Monsters, ___” (2001 Pixar 67 Ending for pun or hip film) 68 “Watching the Detectives” 9 Prehistoric squirrel in “Ice Age” singer Costello 14 “SNL” alumna Cheri 69 Nicholas II was the last one 15 “Boyz N the Hood” actress Long 16 Coffeeshop lure 17 START OF A ONE-LINER 1 “Today” co-anchor Hoda 20 Road shoulder 2 “Am ___ only one?” 21 Plays first 3 John with a green-and-yellow 22 Helper, briefly logo 23 PART 2 OF THE ONE-LINER 4 Eugene O’Neill, for instance 26 “The Wind in the Willows” 5 Ending for human or planet creature 6 Place for two (or more) peas 27 Scouring items 28 Part of the acronym NASCAR 7 S.F. NFLer 8 It makes felines go nuts 31 Shingle replacer 9 2012 AFTRA merger partner 35 “Mr. Holland’s ___” (1995 10 Vanilla-flavored soft drink movie) 11 “Arrested Development” 36 Adjust, as text actress Portia de ___ 40 Comedian Chappelle 12 “Caught a Lite Sneeze” singer 41 Classic Chevy, for short Tori 43 PART 3 OF THE ONE-LINER 13 President with a specially 44 Hit the floppy disk icon made bathtub 45 Mag. positions 46 Growing-sprouts-on-terra-cotta 18 Big trip 19 Heavenly home of the Norse gift gods 49 Hosp. facilities 24 Jake Busey, to Gary Busey 50 Held up 25 “Much ___ About Nothing” 52 “All in the Family” creator 28 Go from place to place Norman 29 Impersonated 54 END OF THE ONE-LINER 57 British comedian known for his 30 Doesn’t hold back 32 They may get played one-liners (like this one) 33 At all times 60 Laughfest 34 Baby ___ (some potato 61 Plane steerer options) 63 Chemistry class model
Across
Down
INDEPENDENT.COM
MAY 10, 2018
37 ___ tai (rum cocktail) 38 Period for the history books 39 Kathmandu’s country abbr., if they were in the 2018 Winter Olympics 42 ___ Cooler (“Ghostbusters”themed Hi-C flavor) 44 Educational acronym sometimes paired with the arts 47 Bailout request 48 Influential groups 51 In pursuit of 53 ___-garde 54 Uno + dos 55 Mr. Chamberlain 56 Make a call (even though nobody physically does it) 57 “Home” author Morrison 58 “___ creature was stirring ...” 59 Qatar ruler 62 Deck count with two jokers, in Roman numerals ©2018 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@ jonesincrosswords.com) For answers to this puzzle, call: 1-900-226-2800, 99 cents per minute. Must be 18+. Or to bill to your credit card, call: 1-800-655-6548. Reference puzzle #0872
LAST WEEK’S SOLUTION:
THE INDEPENDENT
75
INDEPENDENT CLASSIFIEDS
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E M A I L S A L E S @ I N D E P E N D E N T. C O M
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SCG MOTORSPORTS at 810 De La Vina St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Scot Gustafson: 87 San Clemente St, Ventura, CA 93001. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Scot Gustafson. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 18, 2018. 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 Margarita Silva. FBN Number: 2018-0001216. Published: APR 26, MAY 03, 10, 17, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: A1 COMMERCIAL SWEEPING INC. at 925 N. Ontare Rd, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. A1 Commercial Sweeping Inc. (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Eduardo Castillo. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 11, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001107. Published: APR 26, MAY 03, 10, 17, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: CUSTOM ALARM CO. at 725 1/2 W. Sola St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Brandon Chliwnyj (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Brandon Chliwnyj. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 12, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001134. Published: APR 26, MAY 03, 10, 17, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PRAJA CONSTRUCTION at 1308 E. Yanonali St, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. Punamchand Prajapati (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Punamchand Prajapati. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 16, 2018. 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 Margarita Silva. FBN Number: 2018-0001173. Published: APR 26, MAY 03, 10, 17, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SURFPACK GEAR at 2255 Las Tunas Rd, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. Tamlorn Chase(Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Tamlorn Chase. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 24, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001258. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: YOGA ISLA VISTA at 900 Embarcadero Del Mar, Suite D, Isla Vista, CA 93117. Simarjot Gulati: 6888 Evening Song CT, Goleta, CA 93117. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Simarjot Gulati. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 09, 2018. 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 Rachel Gann. FBN Number: 2018-0001082. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: THE BLUE OWL at 5 W. Canon Perdido, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. J & MT LLC: 2779 Exeter Place, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company, Signed: Mathieu Crivellaro. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 30, 2018. 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: 2018-0001312. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: KENEXX, SHAREKNX, RETAINED EARNINGS, THE LEADERSHIP GROUP at 81 David Love PL, Santa Barbara, CA 93117. Trygve Duryea: 134 Marina Wy, 1-L-16, Santa Barbara, CA 93120. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Trygve Duryea. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 30, 2018. 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 Connie Tran, Melissa Mercer. FBN Number: 2018-0001310, 2018-0001322. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: 805 ROADSIDE TOWING at 5939 Placencia St, Goleta, CA 93117. Aaron Alexander Boucher: 434 Farmland Dr, Buelton, CA 93427. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Aaron Boucher. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 12, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001124. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: PAYROLL VAULT at 115 S La Cumbre Lane, Ste 100, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. PRVSB, INC: 213 N. Ontare Rd, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Ovidio Mora. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 30, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001317. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: SANTA BARBARA EV CHARGERS at 1121 N. Milpas St, APT B, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. Shaw Leonard (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Shaw Leonard. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 24, 2018. 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: 2018-0001259. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: IMPERIAL CROWN VENDING at 3671 Orange Dr Unit A, Oxnard, CA 93036. Francisco Hernandez (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Francisco Hernandez. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 12, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001129. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: HAY VERDE VIDA at 329 N Quarantina St, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. Luis Angel Montanez Vazquez (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Luis Angel Montanez Vazquez. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 19, 2018. 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: 2018-0001227. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: NEST ASSURED at 1624 Shoreline Dr, Santa Barbara, CA 93109. Shannon Michele Trotta (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Mark Driscoll. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 17, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001199. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: OMNI COLLECTION at 5516 Tellina Way, Santa Barbara, CA 93111. Ariana Francesca Anderson (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Ariana Anderson. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 17, 2018. 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: 2018-0001195. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: A LOTUS BLOOMS, DORBE HOLDEN COACHING, DORBE HOLDEN COMPANION CAREGIVER at 2046 Elise Way, Santa Barbara, CA 93109. Dorothy Holden (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Dorothy Holden. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on MAY 07, 2018. 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: 2018-0001379. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: DISTINCTIVE FRAMING ‘N’ ART, DISTINCTIVE PICTURE FRAMING, RELECTIONS A DIGITAL LAB at 1333 State St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. KDL Holdings LLC: 868 Greensboro Rd, Ventura, CA 93004. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company, Signed: David V. Lombardi. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 17, 2018. 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: 2018-0001188. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: KIRK PROPERTIES at 1114 State ST. #296, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Kirk Cuttrell: 1412 Santa Rosa Ave, Santa Barbara, CA 93109. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Kirk Cuttrell. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 20, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001235. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
NOTIFICACIÓN DE AUDIENCIA PÚBLICA Programa de Subsidios Globales para el Desarrollo Comunitario (CDBG por sus siglas en inglés) METAS, proyectos y asignaciones PARA EL ANO DEL PROGRAMA 2018-2019 SE NOTIFICA que el Concejo Municipal de la Ciudad de Goleta llevará a cabo una audiencia pública en la fecha y hora indicadas abajo para considerar lo siguiente: Consideración de posibles proyectos y la asignación de fondos del Programa de Subsidios Globales para el Desarrollo Comunitario (CDBG por sus siglas en inglés) durante el año del programa 2018-2019. Esta es la segunda de dos audiencias públicas para recibir opiniones del público y obtener la dirección del Concejo Municipal relativo a necesidades de viviendas y desarrollo comunitario, objetivos y prioridades, y la asignación de fondos para el año del programa 2018-2019. El Concejo Municipal considerará las recomendaciones de su comité de revisión de financiamiento de subvenciones con respecto a las asignaciones de la financiación basadas en aplicaciones recibidas por La Ciudad de proveedores de servicios sociales y de proyectos Ciudad-patrocinados identificados. Como una comunidad de CDBG de derecho, la Ciudad de Goleta recibe fondos anuales de los EE.UU. Departamento de Vivienda y Desarrollo Urbano (HUD). Los objetivos primarios del programa de CDBG son el desarrollo de comunidades viables, vivienda decente y asequible y oportunidades económicas ampliadas para las personas de ingresos muy bajos, bajos y moderados. Se requiere que la Ciudad de Goleta elabore un Plan de Acción anual que identifique las actividades que serán emprendidas para dirigir servicios públicos, necesidades de la vivienda y del desarrollo de la comunidad. Todos los interesados ciudadanos, residentes y agencias públicos o privados sirviendo a la comunidad de Goleta están invitados a asistir a la audiencia pública. Tenga en cuenta el cambio en la fecha de la audiencia pública: Reunión FECHA Y HORA:
Martes, 5 de Junio 2018 - Reunión comienza a las 1:30PM (La audiencia pública originalmente programada para el 15 de mayo de 2018 ha sido cambiada a la fecha y hora anteriores.)
UBICACIÓN DE LA Reunión:
Cámaras del Concejo Municipal, Ayuntamiento 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B Goleta California 93117 PARA MÁS INFORMACIÓN: El informe de calificación para esta reunión será disponible en el sito web de la Ciudad en www.cityofgoleta.org tres (3) días antes de la fecha de la reunión. Para información en español, por favor llame al (805) 961-7555 y pregunte por Vyto Adomaitis o por correo electrónico a vadomaitis@cityofgoleta.org. Los residentes que desean presentar declaraciones escritas al Concejo Municipal para la consideración en la vista pública pueden entrar en contacto con: Deborah Lopez, Secretario Municipal (City Clerk), 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta, CA 93117. Nota: En cumplimiento con la Ley de Estadounidenses con Discapacidades (ADA), si usted necesita asistencia especial para participar en esta reunión, por favor póngase en contacto con Deborah Lopez, Secretario Municipal, al (805) 961-7500. Notificación al menos 48 horas antes de la reunión permitirá a personal de la Ciudad a tomar las medidas razonables de alojamiento. Fecha de publicación: 10 de mayo, 2018 (Santa Barbara Independent) 76
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THE INDEPENDENT
MAY 10, 2018
INDEPENDENT.COM
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: F.W. WILLIAMSON CELLARS, F.W. WILLIAMSON ESTATE, RIVAHIL at 2901 Grand Ave, ste C, Los Olivos, CA 93441. Williamson Family Winery LLC: 1980 Paquita Dr, Carpinteria, CA 93103. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company, Signed: Lea Fainer. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 16, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001183. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: LUX BY MIGHTY BRIGHT, MIGHTY BRIGHT at 5540 Ekwill St Suite 130, Santa Barbara, CA 93111. Gold Crest LLC (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company , Signed: Roger Edgar. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 26, 2018. 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 Connie Tran. FBN Number: 2018-0001293. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: SWISS DESIGNS PAVERS at 1407 A Firestone Rd, Santa Barbara, CA 93117. Swiss Designs Construction INC (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Remo Schluep. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 26, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001284 Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: RAISING CASH AUCTIONS at 436 Venado Dr #B, Santa Barbara, CA 93111. Alicia Dawn Williams (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Individual, Signed: Alicia Williams. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on MAY 01, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001330. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: BILL’S BUS at 423 State St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Bill’s Bus Inc (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Craig Jenkins. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 26, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001285. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/ are doing business as: POSH DICHROIC JEWELRY at 1133 Quinientos St, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. Sonia A. Leon (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Individual, Signed: Sonia A. Leon. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on MAY 07, 2018. 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 Margarita Silva. FBN Number: 2018-0001370. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SB WOODCRAFTS at 128 W Arrellaga St, APT C, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Marisa Hanson-Lopez (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Marisa Hanson-Lopez. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 20, 2018. 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: 2018-0001234. Published: MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: ACACIA COUNSELING & WELLNESS at 948 Embarcadero Del Norte #102, Goleta, CA 93117. Acacia Psychological Corporation (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Jessica P. Rodriguez. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on MAY 07, 2018. 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: 2018-0001378. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: GOODLAND CPA at 911 Chapala St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Fabio De Oliveira: 7052 Marymount Way, Goleta, CA 93117. This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Fabio De Oliveira. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 17, 2018. 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 Rachel N. Gann. FBN Number: 2018-0001192. Published: APR 26, MAY 03, 10, 17, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SUSTAINABLEFUTURE.ORG at 1111 Chapala St Suite 200, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Santa Barbara Foundation (Same Address). This business is conducted by a Corporation, Signed: Jonathan Bower. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on MAY 03, 2018. 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 Jazmin Murphy. FBN Number: 2018-0001343. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: G-FORCE CONSTRUCTION at 8 Hollister Ranch Rd, Goleta, CA 93117. Bruce E. Gale (Same Address). This business is conducted by an Individual, Signed: Lilinoe Gale. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on MAY 02, 2018. 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: 2018-0001337. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SOL ET LUNA at 121 W. Pueblo St Suite 14, Santa Barbara, CA 93105. Keely Cross, Paul Zagala: 460 Fellowship Rd, Santa Barbara, CA 93109. This business is conducted by a General Partnership, Signed: Keely Cross. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on APR 27, 2018. 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: 2018-0001306. Published: MAY 10, 17, 24, 31, 2018.
NAME CHANGE IN THE MATTER OF Madeline Leilani Bjerke Lee ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 18CV01831 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: Madeline Leilani Bjerke Lee TO: Madeline Leilani Bjerke Lee THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must aooear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed , the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING June 20, 2018 9:30 am, Dept 6, Courthouse, SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT HOUSE 1100 Anacapa St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101. A copy of this order to Show Cause shall be published in the Santa Barbara 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: APR 12, 2018 by Darrel E. Parker, Executive Officer; Terri Chavez, Deputy Clerk; Pauline Maxwell, Judge of the Superior Court. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018.
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IN THE MATTER OF MARWAN MOUNIR BOULOS ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 18CV01721 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: Marwan Mounir Boulos TO: Alexander Boulos. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must aooear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed , the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING June 27, 2018 9:30 am, Dept 6, Courthouse, SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT HOUSE 1100 Anacapa St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101. A copy of this order to Show Cause shall be published in the Santa Barbara 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. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. IN THE MATTER OF Lizette Buckley ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 18CV01478 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: Lizette Alice Peters Buckley TO: Lizette Alice Buckley. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must aooear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed , the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING June 13, 2018 9:30 am, Dept 6, Courthouse, SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT HOUSE 1100 Anacapa St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101. A copy of this order to Show Cause shall be published in the Santa Barbara 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. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018. IN THE MATTER OF Hayley Forrest Kidd ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE NUMBER: 18CV01657 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: Hayley Forrest Kidd TO: Astrid Forrest Kidd Clarke. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must aooear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING June 27, 2018 9:30 am, Dept 6, Courthouse, SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT HOUSE 1100 Anacapa St. Santa Barbara, CA 93101. A copy of this order to Show Cause shall be published in the Santa Barbara 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. Published: APR 19, 26, MAY 03, 10, 2018.
SUMMONS SUMMONS (CITACION JUDICIAL) NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (AVISO AL DEMANDADO): Danae Cardenas and DOES 1-40 YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: (Lo Esta Demandando El Demandante) Serzhan Seilkhanov NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the information below. You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this Summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use your for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self-Help Center(www. courtinfo.ca. gov/selfhelp), If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You
may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. Tiene 30 DIAS DE CALENDARIO despues de que le entreguen esta citacion y papeles legales papa presentar una respuesta por escrito en esta corte y hacer que se entregue una copia al demandante. Una carta o una llamada telefonica no lo protegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene que estar en formato legal correcto si desea que procesen su caso en la corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar para su respuesta. Puede encontrar estos formularios de la corte y mas information en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www.courtinfo. ca.gov/selfhelp/espanol/), en la biblioteca de leyes de su condado o en la corte que le quede mas cerca. Si no puede pagar la cuota de presentacion, pida al secretario de la corte que le de un formulario de exencion de pago de cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a tiempo, puede perder el caso por incumplimiento y la corte le podra quitar su sueldo, dinero y bienes sin mas advertencia. Hay otros requisitos legales. Es recomendable que llame a un abogado inmediatamente. Si no conoce a un abogado, puede llamar a un servicio de remision a abogados. Si no puede pagar a un abogado, es posible que cumpla con los requisitos para obtener servicios legales gratuitos de un programa de servicios legales sin fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de lucro en el sitio web de California Legal Services, (www.lawhelpcalifornia. org), en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California, (www.courtinfo. ca.gov/selfhelp/espanol/) o poniendose en contacto con la corte o el colegio de abogados locales. CASE NO: 17CV05589 The name and address of the court is: (El nombre y direccion de la corte es) SANTA BARBARA SUPERIOR COURT, 1100 Anacapa St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. The name, address, and telephone number of plaintiff’s attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney, is: Renee J. Nordstrand: 33 W Mission St, #206, Santa Barbara, CA 93101; (805) 962-2022 (El nombre, la direccion, y el numero de telefono del abogado del demandante que no tiene abogado es): The name and address of the court is: Santa Barbara Superior Court (El nombre y direccion de la corte es): 1100 Anacapa St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. DATE: DECEMBER 12, 2017. By Terri Chavez, Deputy Published MAY 03, 10, 17, 24, 2018.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING City Council Meeting 1:30 p.m. May 15, 2018 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Goleta will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, May 15, 2018 at 1:30 p.m., at the City of Goleta, City Hall, 130 Cremona Drive, Suite. B, Goleta, CA to: Consider adoption of resolutions modifying the City of Goleta User Fees and Charges Schedules. The User Fees schedules include but are not limited to all City service, permitting and use fees with the exception of Developer Impact Fees. A list of proposed fees is available for public viewing during normal business hours at the City of Goleta Offices, at 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta, CA. PUBLIC COMMENT: All interested persons are encouraged to attend the public hearing and to present written and/or oral comments. All letters should be addressed to Finance Department, City of Goleta, 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta, CA 93117, to the attention of Luke Rioux, Finance Director. Letters must be received by Finance Department on or before the date of the hearing or can be submitted at the hearing. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: Please see the posted agenda, available on Friday, May 11, 2018. Note: In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need special assistance to participate in this hearing, please contact the City Clerk at (805) 961-7505. Notification at least 48 hours prior to the hearing will enable City staff to make reasonable arrangements.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Planning Commission May 21, 2018; 6:00 p.m. Cannabis Land Use Ordinance NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Goleta Planning Commission will conduct a public hearing to consider a Resolution recommending to the City Council adoption of a Cannabis Land Use Ordinance (Case No: 18-035-ORD). The date, time, and location of the public hearing are set forth below. HEARING DATE AND TIME: PLACE:
Monday, May 21, 2018, at 6:00 P.M. City of Goleta, Council Chambers 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B Goleta, California 93117
PROJECT LOCATION: The regulations would apply citywide, including areas of the City within the Coastal Zone. PROJECT DESCRIPTION: With the passing of Proposition 64 by California voters in 2016, recreational adult-use cannabis became legal beginning in 2018. In response to Proposition 64, the state adopted Senate Bill 94 in 2017, which outlines a state regulatory system for the various commercial activities associated with the legalization. As part of the state regulatory scheme, local jurisdictions may prohibit or allow various cannabis uses outlined in state law and, if they allow them, identify appropriate locations for and restrictions on those uses. Currently, the City has a ban on cannabis businesses; allows for indoor and outdoor personal cannabis cultivation; and allows for cannabis deliveries to be made in Goleta, but delivery businesses cannot be in Goleta. The City is considering a cannabis land use ordinance that would allow for, and regulate, various cannabis business types and activities throughout the City. The cannabis land use ordinance includes sections addressing: • Definitions and Use Classifications – These sections include definitions for words used in the ordinance and the definitions of the various uses allowed under the Draft Ordinance. • Personal Cultivation – State law requires the City to allow cultivation for personal use. • Allowed Cannabis Uses – Each proposed allowable cannabis use is included and where each use is allowed, the permit path is indicated. City staff developed these allowances based on the land use designations in the City’s General Plan Land Use Element. • Accessory Uses – The Accessory Uses section allows for multiple cannabis uses at one location as long as the primary use is allowed in that land use designation and that the other cannabis uses are clearly subordinate to that primary use. • Specific Use Standards – This section identifies specific standards that apply to all cannabis uses and to each use type. • Permit Procedures – This section provides the permit path for each cannabis use. For all but storefront retail, a Land Use Permit/Coastal Development Permit is proposed. • Inspection, Revocation, and Enforcement – These sections include the right to inspection for City staff and other agencies and includes references to existing zoning regulations related to permit revocation and enforcement. The Draft Ordinance also repeals previous City regulations that prohibited cannabis businesses from locating within the City and regulated personal cannabis cultivation. ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW: Pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) City staff drafted an Addendum to the City’s General Plan/Coastal Land Use Plan 2006 Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR), 2009 Supplemental EIR, and subsequent addenda. The Addendum did not identify any new impacts not identified in the previous CEQA documents. DOCUMENT AVAILABILITY: The staff report may be obtained at the City of Goleta, 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta, CA 93117. The documents will be posted on the City’s web site at www.cityofgoleta.org at least 72 hours ahead of the meeting. PUBLIC COMMENT: All interested persons are encouraged to attend the public hearing and to present written and/or oral comments. All letters should be addressed to Andy Newkirk, Senior Planner, Planning and Environmental Review Department, City of Goleta, 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta, CA 93117. Letters must be received by the Planning and Environmental Review Department on or before the date of the hearing, or public comment can be submitted at the hearing. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: Additional information is on file at the Planning and Environmental Review Department, Goleta City Hall, 130 Cremona Drive, Suite B, Goleta, CA 93117. Contact Andy Newkirk at (805) 961-7544 or anewkirk@ cityofgoleta.org for more information regarding the project or visit http://www. cityofgoleta.org/projects-programs/studies-and-other-projects/cannabisregulations. [Para información en español, por favor llame Sr. Jaime Valdez, (805) 961-7568.] Note: In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need special assistance to participate in this hearing, please contact the City Clerk’s Office at (805) 961-7505. Notification at least 72 hours prior to the hearing will enable City staff to make reasonable arrangements Note: If you challenge the City’s final action on this project in court, you may be limited to only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the City on or before the date of the hearing (Government Code §65009[b][2]). Publish: Santa Barbara Independent, May 10, 2018 INDEPENDENT.COM
MAY 10, 2018
THE INDEPENDENT
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