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25 minute read
Behind the Vine
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• The Voice of the Village • 27 February – 5 March 2020 MONTECITO JOURNAL 43 Hana-Lee Sedgwick is a writer, wine consultant and lover of all things wine and food. As a Certified Specialist of Wine and Sommelier, she loves to explore the world of wine in and around her hometown of Santa Barbara. When not trying new wines or traveling, she can be found practicing yoga, cooking, entertaining and enjoying the outdoors. Visit her popular blog, Wander & Wine, for wine tips, tasting notes and adventures in wine and travel: wanderandwine.com Behind the Vine
by Hana-Lee Sedgwick Santa Barbara’s Inaugural Culinary Experience T hough we are all captivated by Santa Barbara’s stunning scenery, historic charm, and laidback vibe, there’s no denying that Santa Barbara County has become a destination in its own right for food and wine. What we lack in Michelin stars and grandiose dining experiences we make up for in talented winemakers, skilled chefs, dedicated farmers, passionate mixologists, restaurants that are committed to sourcing regional ingredients, and a growing population of oenophiles and foodies that live by the “eat local, drink local” mentality.
Indeed, Santa Barbara’s burgeoning food and wine scene is pretty special. It’s no wonder the legendary cookbook author and TV personality Julia Child chose to spend her last few years here, where she regularly visited the farmers market, dined at area restaurants, and mingled with chefs and winemakers. In fact, it was Julia’s love of food, wine, and Santa Barbara that has inspired the upcoming Santa Barbara Culinary Experience, a unique culinary-focused event that celebrates the bounty of our region.
Held in partnership with The Julia Child Foundation for Gastronomy and the Culinary Arts, the Santa Barbara Culinary Experience is set to take place March 13 - 15, 2020 at various locations throughout Santa Barbara and Montecito. This one-ofa-kind event features a curated collection of cooking classes, wine seminars, exclusive dinners, and other special events that are thoughtfully designed to enrich, educate, and entertain, providing participants with the opportunity to become fully immersed in Santa Barbara’s culinary, artisan, and wine communities.
Highlights of the daytime events include a soufflé and salad cooking class with food writer and cookbook author Pascale Beale; a tour of one of Santa Barbara’s rare macadamia nut groves; a donut-making workshop with pastry chef Christina Olufson; a cheese board and cocktail workshop with Slate Catering and Glass House Cocktails; a farmers market tour and Julia Child-inspired cooking experience for young chefs-in-the-making; an interactive wine and chocolate pairing experience with chocolatier Jessica Foster and winemakers Chad Melville and Andrew Murray; and a wine blending seminar with Doug Margerum of Margerum Wine Company – to name a few.
Evening events involve such experiences as a San Ysidro Ranch wine cellar tour and four-course dinner inspired by Julia Child’s favorite dishes; a sunset sail and wine tasting aboard the Double Dolphin; a family-style Indian feast at Bibi Ji with unique wine pairings selected by owners Rajat Parr and Alejandro Medina; a five-course collaboration dinner at Bettina featuring guest chef Chris Bianco of the acclaimed Pizzeria Bianco; and a Winemaker Dinner with Matt Dees of Jonata, The Hilt, and The Pairing showcasing the labels’ wines paired with food from The Lark’s Executive Chef Jason Paluska. Even more, The Alisal Guest Ranch & Resort in Solvang will play host to the official Santa Barbara Culinary Experience After Party, with special events taking place Sunday, March 15 and Monday, March 16. Though the resort is offering a 3-day, 2-night package for the ultimate experience, tickets to each event are also available á la carte without an overnight stay required.
The After Party at The Alisal will feature a spice-blending workshop with Solvang Spice Merchant; a Chardonnay and Pinot Noir wine panel and cooking demonstration; and a Sunday evening potluck featuring the food of some of the Santa Ynez Valley’s most dynamic chefs. To close out multiple days of hedonistic fun, The Alisal will welcome James Beard Award finalist Chef Ludo Lefebvre on Monday evening for a rare dining experience under the stars. After a cooking demo and hayride, this extraordinary dinner will take place in the rustic setting of the ranch’s historic Old Adobe, where Chef Ludo and The Alisal’s Executive Chef Anthony Endy will create a French-inspired feast highlighting local, seasonal ingredients. Further paying tribute to Julia Child, Valerie Gordon of Valerie Confections will prepare one of Julia’s classic desserts. It all promises to be a spectacular finish to what can only be described as one delicious celebration of Santa Barbara. •MJ PHORUM PERSPECTIVES IN HEALTHCARE 2020 PHENOMENAL RESEARCH ON END-OF-LIFE EXPERIENCES THURSDAY MARCH 12 5:00–7:00 PM FREE Community Event with Advanced Registration www.vna.health/phorum Sponsored By Dr. Chris Kerr Returning Keynote Speaker In Conversation with Dr. Michael Kearney
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27 February – 5 March 2020 MONTECITO JOURNAL44 “Where words fail, music speaks.” – Hans Christian Andersen Luxury Real EstateSpecialist www.DistinctiveRealEstateOnline.com WENDY GRAGG 805. 453. 3371 Luxury Real Estate Specialist for Nearly 20 Years Lic #01304471
ENTERTAINMENT Page 524 acteristics for each one so it’s very exciting to learn, and it encompasses both virtuosity and lyricism. I talked to her a couple of weeks ago about her inspirations for each movement and you can hear a lot of things going on now that I understand that. It’s so fun that I get to unravel everything, and I feel so lucky that she’s trusting me with such a personal work.
Can you take us through the piece and how you connect to it?
The first movement is for Ursula Oppens, an important pedagogue, and you can hear a lot of jazz influences, from the walking bass line in the left hand and the free rhythm in the right. And the rest of the movements have different elements of Stravinsky and Bach. There are some movements that are very lyrical, personal and intimate, and that was one of the things I grasped onto immediately, and there are also very virtuosic ones. My hands are just flying all over the keyboard. Even though I’m spending a lot of time learning them, once I get the hang of it, it will be a lot of fun. I’m getting there.
How do you think the piece will evolve as you continue to practice and perform it and develop a relationship to it?
Each movement has such a distinct characteristic, so they’ll evolve differently. I’ve never played jazz before, but day after day I’m getting more comfortable with the idea of tempo freedom, having a less strict ideology that I can relate to. Amy plays a lot with different textures you don’t find very often in western classical music. So I need to experiment and find what I like best, which is why each performance will be slightly different. That makes it cool.
How did you choose the other works on the program (Bach’s Capriccio sopra la lonrananza del suo fratello dilettissimo, Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 18 in E-flat Major, Op. 31, No. 3, and Schubert’s Wanderer Fantasy in C Major, Op. 15)? They’re all works I love, and they each have an aspect, a theme of wandering out into the horizons and having a sense of traveling. The Bach I first heard a few years ago in a master class by Leon Fleisher (who, coincidentally, was a guest artist at MAW two years ago) and I thought it was so beautiful as the suite, which is about his brother, goes thru the entire emotional process of feelings, and is very sentimental. The Beethoven is nicknamed The Hunt because of the horn call that comes in the first three notes, which represents sending someone off who is leaving, while the Schubert, his most technically difficult solo piano work, encompasses a lot of journeys the pianist has to go through to make it to the end.
What’s your growth edge now? Honing the technical ability for the piano is important, but much more, what differentiates great performers, is being able to put oneself in the music without being too intimate. That can only come from life experiences. I have had teachers who told me to get a girlfriend because he can’t teach me how to play pieces about love otherwise. Or that I have to lose someone to truly know what pain and loss feel like. I get that. The pianist can share his own experiences with the audiences through the pieces. SBCC Takes on ‘Curious Incident’ Katie Laris wasn’t moved much when she took in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time on Broadway back in 2014. Despite having enjoyed the original 2003 novel by Mark Haddon that is narrated in the first-person perspective by Christopher, a 15-year-old boy afflicted by unnamed Asperger syndrome, the veteran SBCC Theater professor and director was left a little dry by the Tony Award-winning theatrical version.
But Laris felt a ton of emotions when she read the script itself.
“Weirdly I wasn’t much of a fan when I saw it in New York,” she said. “The technical effects employed were amazing, but I was actually more impressed by the technology than moved by the story. But when I read it, I had a very different response. I was so emotionally affected... The play is more personal and human-sized than it seemed on Broadway, much more intimate. It’s such a beautiful story about parents and a brilliant but challenged child and the constellation of people around him. It was that core story that I wanted to tell.”
Laris gets that opportunity when SBCC Theater Group presents the area debut of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time – which was adapted for the stage by Simon Stephens and originally produced by the National Theatre in 2012 – on February 26-March 14 in the Garvin Theatre, with a full cast of mostly SBCC veterans and other professional actors along with 16-year-old Daniel Sabraw, a junior at Santa Barbara High School who has appeared in two previous SBCC shows, portraying Christopher. It’s a tough role because the character barely leaves the stage at all, and, as Laris said, the responsibility for the show working rests on his shoulders because he has to be easy to empathize with despite having trouble with human interaction.
Sabraw is proving up to the task, she said.
“Daniel is very smart and energetic, but also has a way of reaching the audience, projecting his heart and mind right out into the theater. It’s incredible to watch him work. We have a cast of incredible actors with vast experience and Daniel is absolutely able to hold it together with the best of them.”
The staging and production also matter, of course, with SBCC enjoying a much more limited budget than available on Broadway, as well as Laris’ desire to tell a more intimate story.
“It’s very different from the plays we usually do in the Garvin, which have realistic, detailed period-appropriate sets that look so much like rooms in houses that people often tell me that they want to live in our set,” Laris said. “This is a very simple set but technically much more elaborate, with projections, sound, music, lighting that are all very complex and complicated to take the audience through many locations.” More importantly, the actors are asked to physically create environments, too, to invite the audience into Christopher’s imagination, which takes up a good part of the second act as his therapist asks him to turn diary-like story into a play. That’s a lot to cover, Laris said.
“You get into the lives and the hearts of the parents, and his teacher and other people around him. It’s also very intimate, covering the day to day life of him and family, but also has the aspect of the epic scope of where he is fascinated by the idea of space travel. There’s both micro and macro perspectives and we have to show all of that theatrically.”
If it sounds like Christopher’s world is so foreign that audiences can’t relate, Laris was quick to explain that’s what makes the play so compelling.
“It’s about being different, what is it like to go through the world that way, lonely and alienating and very hard. But in some ways he never lets that deter him from his goal, the pursuit of information, achievement, and his own sense of where he’s going. That’s something we can all understand.” 5Qs with Keaton Eckhoff
Buddy Holly died more than 60 years ago in a famous plane crash that also killed Richie Valens and The Big Bopper. But it seems the early rock star just won’t stop touring.
And the ongoing Holly performances aren’t even in the guise of tribute bands. Unlike Elvis and the Beatles, say, Holly hasn’t attracted too many guys wanting to don his nerdy glasses and hiccup their way through his catalog. But just last year Holly himself appeared at the Granada in the first holographic show to hit town. And this week, the 30th anniversary tour of the Broadway musical Buddy, the Daniel Sabraw stars in SBCC Theater Group’s production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the NightTime
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The Cold Spring Crew (L to R): Aaron Songer, Abby Brown, and Hulett
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Mayfield runs across a loose slide covering San Ysidro Trail
in partnership with Santa Barbara Mountain Bike Volunteers, which has since become Sage Trails Alliance,” Mayfield tells me. “That was critical to opening up Romero Canyon Trail. It was five miles of fire road restoration, just a month clearing debris.”
With help from a local family who provided a generous grant, the MTF’s next project was to restore the Cold Spring Trail, which had remained closed because unlike the other trails in the Los Padres Forest, it was subject to both city and county jurisdiction. “We knew we needed a machine operator, so we hired a company in Auburn called Trailscape Inc.,” Mayfield recalls. “They spent four months in Cold Spring working one end to the other.”
“The work Ashlee and the Montecito Trails Foundation and others have done helps facilitate our response,” says Montecito Fire Chief Kevin Taylor. “It’s really inspiring to see a community group just go do something for the benefit of everyone. That and the work that TPRC has done has brought us to a return to normal. It’s the very definition of resiliency. It’s inspiring.”
Steep Work
Three individuals played critical roles in helping to restore Montecito’s front country trail system: Aaron Songer, Abby Brown, and Doug Hulett, who has been building trails for 30 years, the last four for Trailscape. “Ashlee got my contact and I ended up in Montecito,” Hulett says. His first job, in late summer 2018, was to restore the Cold Spring Trail by heading north from Gibraltar Road. “The whole project was scary,” he recalls. “We had a mini-excavator that we had to collapse down to just three feet wide.”
San Ysidro Trail, which required Hulett to operate a 2,500-pound
machine down a steep, narrow path, was “really hair raising,” he remembers. “In a few places the edge of my tracks were hanging in space. You can’t go back.” The whole experience lasted 77 days, Hulett recalls. “It was a whole lot of nail biting. Gravity is trying to suck you out of your seat, and when you pull on the ground with the bucket, you are sliding out of your seat.”
Hulett credits Mayfield and other volunteers he’s encountered on the trail with cheering him up and motivating him to finish the job. “There are now twenty bikers or hikers I know as friends, people just walking on the trail, really tender people who had endured the fires and debris flow and really appreciated the work we were doing.”
Meanwhile, other mini-ex operators worked with LPFA and MTF to restore Buena Vista Canyon and MTF and Bucket Brigade sponsored volunteer days in which dozens of people worked on the trails in conjunction with both the city and county.
“The first time seventy-five people showed up,” Mayfield says. Gradually work also began on several community trails lower down in Montecito. “A different crew was helping out in the Ennisbrook Open Space and we partnered with the Bucket Brigade and Peter Bakewell Open Space and broke ground on a new trail, the North Jameson walking path.”
According to Mayfield, San Ysidro was the last trail in the network to be restored because it’s the most difficult to access. “It is not an easy place to get your crew in,” she says. “We had to have enough opinions weigh in and decided whether to try to helicopter an extra machine in there or restore it by hand. We let it sit there over the winter and have some growth.”
Fortunately a wet winter last year helped regrow much of the vegetation. “We had an incredible winter,” Mayfield says. “Now when you go up there it is a whole different place.”
The Psycho Slide
About half a mile above where Mayfield and I encountered the LPFA work crew is a patch of missing trail at least ten yards wide stretching above a certifiably steep, boulder-strewn slope. All along the trail, there had been intermittent spots where it had eroded beyond recognition, but usually the missing section was only a few yards wide. Conant isn’t 100 percent sure but believes he came up with the popular name for this spot on the San Ysidro Trail: the “Psycho Slide.”
“The Psycho Slide is a real problem,” says Conant. “It is scary, just incredibly steep. If someone falls there it’s bad.” His first visit to the Psycho Slide was on behalf of the Forest Service’s Burn Area Emergency Response, or BEAR team. “I came out and looked at it. MTF brought in three or four people and we considered whether to attempt a reroute or a repair.”
In the end, the experts decided to let the 2019 winter weather take its course before attempting a repair job in the spring. One of those experts is Yonni Schwartz, a U.S. Forest Service geologist. “First of all, this whole area is very unstable,” Schwartz tells me. “This mountain range has some of the steepest mountains in North America
– they are uplifting faster than they are eroding. The geology leads to unstable slopes. You add a fire to it that undermines all the support to this soil, and you are adding an additional factor to this natural instability.”
A year and a half after the debris flow, Schwartz hiked up and down every drainage from Carpinteria to Montecito, as well as the backcountry near Ojai, including San Ysidro Canyon. He says the so-called Psycho Slide isn’t so much a deep slide as it is a steep one. “It’s actually a pretty shallow slide but is on a steep slope and the conditions around that slope, with alternating shale and sandstone makes fixing it very difficult. And because the slide is taking place at a deep gully, it is going to get deeper and larger over time.”
Fortunately, Mayfield says, since the 1/9 debris flow, MTF has raised a $750,000 endowment to help maintain Montecito’s trails, money that will continue to grow for years to come. Meanwhile, the San Ysidro Trail is scheduled to open this June. “It’s all been done by hand,” Mayfield says. “To be standing here two years later on our last full trail restoration project is beyond our wildest dreams.” •MJ Los Padres Forest Association workers busy on the upper San Ysidro Trail
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Council of the City of Santa Barbara will conduct a Public Hearing on Tuesday, March 10, 2020, during the afternoon session of the meeting which begins at 2:00 p.m. in the Council Chamber, City Hall, 735 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara. The hearing is to consider the appeal filed by Victoria Valente of the Architectural Board of Review’s Project Design Approval of Application PLN2019-00192 for property owned by Teri Baggao Tuason located at 601 Alameda Padre Serra, Assessor’s Parcel No. 031-261-004; R-2, Two-Unit Residential, General Plan Designation: Medium Density Residential, 12 dwelling units per acre. The project involves the construction of a second residential unit on a site currently developed with a single residential unit. The project consists of an addition of a 1,724 square foot, three-story unit to the rear of an existing 2,453 square foot, two-story residential unit. A new two-car garage is proposed with driveway access from Alameda Padre Serra. The project also requires two Minor Zoning Exceptions for an over-height wall proposed within ten feet of the front property line and to allow hedges to reach a maximum of twelve feet along the southerly interior lot line to be considered by the Architectural Board of Review at a Final Approval hearing. The project will address all violations in Enforcement Case ENF2019-00519.
If you challenge the Council's action on the appeal of the Architectural Board of Review’s decision in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence delivered to the City at, or prior to, the public hearing.
You are invited to attend this hearing and address your verbal comments to the City Council. Written comments are also welcome up to the time of the hearing, and should be addressed to the City Council via the City Clerk’s Office, P.O. Box 1990, Santa Barbara, CA 93102-1990.
On Thursday, March 5, 2020, an Agenda with all items to be heard on Tuesday, March 10, 2020, will be available at City Hall, 735 Anacapa Street, and at the Central Library. Agendas and Staff Reports are also accessible online at www.santabarbaraca.gov under “Most Popular”. Regular meetings of the Council are broadcast live and rebroadcast on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 7:00 p.m., and on Saturday at 9:00 a.m. on City TV Channel 18. Each televised Council meeting is closed captioned for the hearing impaired. These meetings can also be viewed over the Internet at www.SantaBarbaraCA.gov/CouncilVideos.
In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need auxiliary aids or services or staff assistance to attend or participate in this meeting, please contact the City Administrator’s Office at 564-5305. If possible, notification at least 48 hours prior to the meeting will usually enable the City to make reasonable arrangements. Specialized services, such as sign language interpretation or documents in Braille, may require additional lead time to arrange.
(SEAL)
/s/ Sarah Gorman, MMC City Clerk Services Manager February 20, 2020
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Dax and Milo, 1331 Virginia Rd, Santa Barbara, CA 93108. Amanda Suzanne Tenold, 1331 Virginia Rd, Santa Barbara, CA 93108. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on February 21, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by John Beck. FBN No. 2020-0000572. Published February 26, March 4, 11, 18, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Zip Kleen INC, 1998 Cliff Dr., Santa Barbara, CA 93109. Zip Kleen INC, 1998 Cliff Dr., Santa Barbara, CA 93109. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on February 19, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by Maria F. Sanchez. FBN No. 2020-0000541. Published February 26, March 4, 11, 18, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Pacific Party Services; Santa Barbara Face Painting, 5773 Encina RD #201, Goleta, CA 93117. Samantha Marx, 5773 Encina RD #201, Goleta, CA 93117. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on February 6, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by John Beck. FBN No. 2020-0000431. Published February 19, 26, March 4, 11, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Pacific Party Services; Santa Barbara Face Painting, 5773 Encina RD #201, Goleta, CA 93117. Samantha Marx, 5773 Encina RD #201, Goleta, CA 93117. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on February 6, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by John Beck. FBN No. 2020-0000431. Published February 19, 26, March 4, 11, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Marisol’s Cleaning, 5926 Corta St., Goleta, CA 93117. Marisol Aguirre, 5926 Corta St., Goleta, CA 93117. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on January 27, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by John Beck. FBN No. 2020-0000278. Published February 19, 26, March 4, 11, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Miller Group Construction & Development, 1224 Coast Village Cir #20, Santa Barbara, CA 93108. Robert F. Miller III, 559 Friendly Ct., Murphys, CA 95247. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on February 7, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by Brenda Aguilera. FBN No. 2020-0000437. Published February 12, 19, 26, March 4, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: HOMES805, 1187 Coast Village Road #187, Santa Barbara, CA 93108. HOMES805 INC, 1187 Coast Village Road #187, Santa Barbara, CA 93108. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on February 6, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by John Beck. FBN No. 2020-0000415. Published February 12, 19, 26, March 4, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Key 2 Fitness, 324 State Street STE C, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Brian Sawicki, 324 State Street STE C, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on January 30, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by John Beck. FBN No. 2020-0000350. Published February 5, 12, 19, 26, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Jhana Studio, 5809 Encina Rd. #101, Goleta, CA 93117. Max Hennard, 5809 Encina Rd. #101, Goleta, CA 93117. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on January 17, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by Thomas Brian. FBN No. 2020-0000191. Published February 5, 12, 19, 26, 2020.
F I C T I T I O U S BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following person(s) is/are doing business as: Clearwater Engineering, INC., 28 El Arco Dr., Santa Barbara, CA 93105. Clearwater Engineering, INC., 28 El Arco Dr., Santa Barbara, CA 93105. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on January 13, 2020. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the Office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL), filed by Maria F. Sanchez. FBN No. 2020-0000132. Published February 5, 12, 19, 26, 2020.
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME: CASE No. 20CV00524. To all interested parties: Petitioner Rosemary Ann Seegert filed a petition with Superior Court of California, County of Santa Barbara, for a decree changing name to Teri Ann Huestis. The Court orders that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. Filed February 18, 2020 by Elizabeth Spann. Hearing date: April 15, 2020 at 9:30 am in Dept. 6, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Published 2/26, 3/4, 3/11, 3/18