Our 164th Year
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4HE SIDEWALKS ALONG 3TATE 3TREET HAVE EXPERIENCED MUCH LESS FOOT TRAFlC IN RECENT WEEKS DUE TO THE CLOSURE OF BUSINESSES AMID THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC
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!MERICAN 2IVIERA "ANK HAS FUNDED APPROXIMATELY 0AYCHECK 0ROTECTION 0ROGRAM LOANS TOTALING APPROXIMATELY MILLION INCLUDING MILLION IN LOANS THROUGHOUT 3ANTA "ARBARA #OUNTY
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$EIRDRE 3MITH INMATE SERVICES MANAGER AT THE 3ANTA "ARBARA #OUNTY *AIL WEARS ONE OF THE FACE SHIELDS RECENTLY MADE BY INMATES 4HEY RE PROVIDING COMMUNITY SERVICE THROUGH THE 3UCCESS 3TORIES PROGRAM #OMPLETE STORY ON "
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LOTTERY RESULTS Saturday’s SUPER LOTTO: 4-19-24-39-45 Meganumber: 14 Friday’s MEGA MILLIONS: 5-20-22-61-70 Meganumber: 4 Friday’s DAILY DERBY: 07-03-11 TIME: 1:49:14 Saturday’s Daily 3: 2-5-3 / Evening: 9-1-0
Saturday’s DAILY 4: 2-4-1-4 Saturday’s FANTASY 5: 14-17-19-27-28 Saturday’s POWERBALL: 12-18-42-48-65 Meganumber: 19
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SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
NEWS
SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020
4WO INJURED IN 3ANTA -ARIA AREA CRASH #Z .*5$)&-- 8)*5& /&84 13&44 45"'' 83*5&3
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! MAKE SHIFT MEMORIAL WAS SET UP LAST 3EPTEMBER AT THE 3ANTA "ARBARA (ARBOR TO REMEMBER THE PEOPLE WHO WERE KILLED WHEN THE #ONCEPTION WENT UP IN mAMES OFF THE COAST OF 3ANTA "ARBARA
#ONCEPTION OWNERS SEEK DISMISSAL OF DAUGHTER S LAWSUIT
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4WO PEOPLE WERE TAKEN TO THE HOSPITAL FOLLOWING A MULTI VEHICLE CRASH ON 3ATURDAY
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county announces 11 new COVID
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0ASEO .UEVO STANDS ALMOST COMPLETELY EMPTY THESE DAYS )N THE PAST IT HAS BEEN A BUSTLING MALL DRAWING LOCALS AND TOURISTS ALIKE
VOTES COUNT ON 3UPER 4UESDAY
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6OICES EDITORIAL PAGES
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35"3#2)04)/. 2!4%3 (OME DELIVERY IN 3ANTA "ARBARA #OUNTY PER WEEK INCLUDES SALES TAX DAILY AND 3UNDAYS 7EEKENDS AND HOLIDAYS ONLY PER WEEK INCLUDES SALES TAX 3INGLE COPY PRICE OF ` DAILY AND 3UNDAY INCLUDES SALES TAX AT VENDING RACKS 4AX MAY BE ADDED TO COPIES PURCHASED ELSEWHERE h4HE 3ANTA "ARBARA .EWS 0RESSv 5303 #IRCULATION REFUNDS FOR BALANCES UNDER INACTIVE FOR MONTHS WILL BE USED TO PURCHASE NEWSPAPERS FOR ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CLASSROOMS
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WWW NEWSPRESS COM .EWSPRESS COM IS A LOCAL VIRTUAL COMMUNITY NETWORK PROVIDING INFORMATION ABOUT 3ANTA "ARBARA IN ADDITION TO THE ONLINE EDITION OF THE .EWS 0RESS
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0ERIODICALS 0OSTAGE 0AID AT 3ANTA "ARBARA #! 0OSTMASTER 3END ADDRESS CHANGES TO THE 3ANTA "ARBARA .EWS 0RESS 0 / "OX 3ANTA "ARBARA #! 0UBLISHED DAILY DAYS PER YEAR
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SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020
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A
SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
NEWS
SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020
)RON CREATIONS
'OING AROUND 3ANTA "ARBARA CAN BE AN ARTISTIC EXPERIENCE &OR THE PROOF LOOK AT THE IRON WORKS THAT GRACE SITES SUCH AS THE 0RESIDIO 0HOTOS BY 2AFAEL -ALDONADO
SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
NEWS
%IGHT 6AQUEROS HEADED TO NEXT LEVEL #Z ."3, 1"550/ /&84 13&44 4&/*03 83*5&3
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Community Health is Our Commitment Many appointments are being conducted via Telehealth, allowing you to see a Sansum doctor from the safety of your home. • In-clinic appointments as needed
• Urgent Care for unplanned medical conditions • Telehealth visits for primary & specialty care
Please call (805) 681-7500, or visit telehealth.sansumclinic.org, and we can help you determine if a Telehealth visit is medically appropriate for you. Text #COVID to (805) 681-7500 for immediate information about COVID-19 symptoms, Telehealth appointments, and more.
200 Doctors. 30 Specialties. 23 Locations. Working together to get our community through this challenging time.
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SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS / SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020
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05",)# ./4)#%3 CITATION FOR PUBLICATION UNDER WELFARE AND INSTITUTIONS CODE SECTION 294 CASE NUMBER 19JV00459 1. To Araceli Munoz and anyone claiming to be a parent of: Arely Munoz Garcia born on: 11/03/2019 at Cottage Hospital Santa Barbara, CA. 2. A hearing will be held on: 06/17/2020 at: 9:00 AM in Dept.: SMJ-1 located at 4285-B California Blvd, Santa Maria, CA 93455, Santa Maria Juvenile Division 3. At the hearing the court will consider the recommendations of the social worker or probation officer. 4. The social worker or probation officer will recommend that your child be freed from your legal custody so that the child may be adopted. If the court follows the recommendation, all your parental rights to the child will be terminated. 5. You have the right to be present at the hearing, to present evidence, and you have the right to be represented by an attorney. If you do not have an attorney and cannot afford to hire one, the court will appoint an attorney for you.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT File No. 2020-0000974 The following person(s) is doing business as: Pepper Oaks Farm, 3737 Baseline Avenue, Santa Ynez, CA 93460, County of Santa Barbara. Michael Carpenter, Trustee Patricia Youngman Administrative Trust Dated July 25, 1996, 3737 Baseline Avenue, Santa Ynez, CA 93460 This business is conducted by a Trust. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on 3/1/1994. /s/ Michael Carpenter This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara County on April 16., 2020. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk By: John Bech, Deputy 5/3, 5/10, 5/17, 5/24/20 CNS-3362496# SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
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MEDICAL/DENTAL PT POSITION MEDICAL ASST. & MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST Hours vary. $DOE. Fax cover letter and resume to: 805-682-3278. No phone calls please.
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Plans and specifications will be on file and available to view, download or purchase on, or as soon as possible, after the mandatory job walk and pre-bid conference at the Santa Barbara Unified School District Planning Department office at 724 Santa Barbara St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Plans and Specifications may also be viewed or purchased through Cybercopy at http://www. cybercopyplanroom.com
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LEGAL AD DEADLINES
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Publication Day ......... Due Saturday-Monday....... Thursday 9 a.m. Tuesday...................... Friday 9 a.m. Wednesday ................ Monday 9 a.m. Thursday.................... Tuesday 9 a.m. Friday ........................ Wednesday 9 a.m.
7. The court will proceed with this hearing whether or not you are present.
For additional information, please email legals@newspress.com or call (805) 564-5218.
APR 19, 26; MAY 3, 10/2020--56005
MONTECITO PLANNING COMMISSION NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING DATE OF HEARING
IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING PUBLIC PARTICIPATION Based on guidance from the California Department of Public Health and the California Governor’s Stay at Home Executive Order N-33-20, issued on March 19, 2020, to protect the health and wellbeing of all Californian’s and to establish consistency across the state in order to slow the spread of COVID-19, the Santa Barbara County Planning Commission hearings will no longer provide in-person participation. We have established alternative methods of participation in the Montecito Planning Commission hearings, pursuant to the California Governor’s Executive Order N-29-20, issued on March 17, 2020, which states: • Providing an opportunity to “observe and address the meeting telephonically or otherwise electronically,â€? alone, meets the participation requirement; and • “Such a body need not make available any physical location from which members of the public may observe the meeting and offer public comment.â€? The following alternative methods of participation are available to the public: 1. You may observe the live stream of the Montecito Planning Commission meetings on (1) Local Cable Channel 20, (2) online at: http://www.countyofsb.org/ceo/csbtv/livestream.sbc; or (3) YouTube at: https://www.youtube.com/user/CSBTV20 2. If you wish to make a general public comment or to comment on a specific agenda item, the following methods are available: • Distribution to the Montecito Planning Commission - Submit your comment via email prior to 12:00 p.m. on the Friday prior to the Commission hearing. Please submit your comment to the Recording Secretary at dvillalo@countyofsb.org. Your comment will be placed into the record and distributed appropriately. • Read into the record at the meeting – Submit your comment limited to 250 words or less via email to the Recording Secretary at dvillalo@countyofsb.org, prior to the close of public comment on the agenda item the comment is related to, unless otherwise directed by the Chair. Please state in your email that you would like this “read into the record.â€? Every effort will be made to read your comment into the record, but some comments may not be read out loud at the hearing due to time limitations. Comments timely received will be placed into record and distributed appropriately. • By ZOOM – If you wish to participate via ZOOM, please send your contact information (email address) to the Recording Secretary at dvillalo@countyofsb.org ahead of the hearing (no later than Tuesday, May 19, 2020 at 5:00 p.m.), and a participation ID link will be emailed to you with log-in instructions including the ability to dial-in on the telephone if an internet connection is unavailable. Public members participating via Zoom will not have the ability to share their camera nor their computer screen. Any physical evidence (e.g. photographs, documents, etc) the public wishes to share with the Commission must be emailed to the recording secretary at dvillalo@countyofsb.org no later than Friday at noon before the Wednesday hearing. Audio controls will be unavailable until the recording secretary has been directed to allow public comment by the Commission Chair. Please indicate your desire to speak on an item by using the “Raise Handâ€? feature. The clerk will allow your audio to be shared during the public testimony portion of the hearing. The chat feature will be unavailable during the hearing. For technical assistance during the hearing, please contact (805) 568-2000 to be directed to our technical team. The Commission’s rules on hearings and public comment, unless otherwise directed by the Chair, remain applicable to each of the participation methods listed above. The Montecito Planning Commission hearing begins at 9:00 a.m. The order of items listed on the agenda is subject to change by the Montecito Planning Commission. Anyone interested in this matter is invited to speak in support or in opposition to the projects. Written comments are also welcome. All letters should be addressed to the Montecito Planning Commission, 123 East Anapamu Street, Santa Barbara, California, 93101. Letters, with nine copies, and computer materials, e.g. PowerPoint presentations, should be filed with the secretary of the Planning Commission no later than 12:00 P.M. on the Friday before the Montecito Planning Commission hearing. The decision to accept late materials will be at the discretion of the Montecito Planning Commission. Maps and/or staff analysis of the proposals may be reviewed at https://www.countyofsb.org/plndev/ hearings/cpc.sbc or by appointment by calling (805) 568-2000. If you challenge the project(s) 19DVP-00000-00030, 19CDP-00000-00098, 19RMM-00000-00002, or 20VAR00000-00001 in court, you may be limited to raising only those issues you or someone else raised at the public hearing described in this notice, or in written correspondence to the Montecito Planning Commission prior to the public hearing. In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, if you need special assistance to participate in this hearing, please contact the Hearing Support Staff (805) 568-2000. Notification at least 48 hours prior to the hearing will enable the Hearing Support Staff to make reasonable arrangements. * This is a partial listing of the items to be heard at the Planning Commission Hearing of May 20, 2020. Previously noticed Case Nos. 19DVP-00000-00030/19CDP-00000-00098 (San Ysidro Roundabout) were continued to this hearing from the hearing of April 22, 2020. See previous notice for full descriptions of these items. If you have any questions, call Planning and Development at (805) 568-2000. 19RMM-00000-00002 Eppink Recorded Map 20VAR-00000-00001 Modification and Variance 1711 E. Valley Road Exempt, CEQA Guidelines Section 15305 Tess Harris, Supervising Planner (805) 568-3319 Willow Brown, Planner (805) 568-2040 The hearing is a request by Erik Eppink, property owner, to consider Case Nos. 19RMM-00000-00004 and 20VAR-00000-00001 [application filed on October 29, 2019]to revise an existing building envelope from Tract Map 13,877 in compliance with County Code Chapter 21, Section 21-15.9, to allow a two and a half foot variance to the height limit for the Planned Residential Development (PRD) zone; and to accept the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) exemption pursuant to CEQA Guidelines 15305 [Minor Alterations in Land Use Limitations] of the State Guidelines for Implementation of the CEQA. The application involves APN 007-540-014 located at 1711 East Valley Road, in the Montecito Community Plan area, First Supervisorial District.
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Additionally, provide mitigation of asbestos, lead and any other hazardous materials throughout area of work. Contractor’ License required: B (General Building Contractor) Prequalification of Bidders and E/M/P subcontractors: As a condition of bidding on this Project, and in accordance with the provisions of Public Contract Code section 20111.5 and 20111.6 all Bidders and all electrical, mechanical and plumbing subcontractors listed in the Bidder’s proposal must either be pre-qualified for at least five business days before the date of the opening of the bids or must submit a completed prequalification package by the deadline stated below. Bids not conforming to this requirement will not be accepted. Prequalification packages are available through Cybercopy at http://www.cybercopyplanroom.com. Pre-qualification questions must be directed to L.M. Sweaney at lynns11s@aol.com or leave a voice message at (909) 377-8302.
MAY 20, 2020
MAY 10 / 2020 — 56042
2020 CUSTOMER LOYALTY OFFER
A mandatory job walk and pre-bid conference will be conducted on, May 22, 2020, beginning at, 10:00 a.m.. Meet at the flagpole at San Marcos High School at 4750 Hollister Ave., Santa Barbara, CA, 93110. Bids will not be accepted from contractors not attending the mandatory job walk and pre-bid conference. Prospective Bidders arriving after the above-designated starting time for a mandatory job walk and pre-bid conference shall be disqualified from submitting a bid for this project.
CLEARLY MARK BID RESPONSE ENVELOPE WITH TIME/DATE OF BID OPENING AND PROJECT NAME. Bids so received shall be opened and publicly read aloud at the Santa Barbara Unified School District Administration Office, 720 Santa Barbara Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101. All bids shall be made on the forms provided in the specifications and each bid must conform to the Contract Documents. Each bid shall be accompanied by the bid security specified in the Instructions to Bidders.
classad@newspress.com or for additional information call 805-963-4391
MONTECITO COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION RECORDING SECRETARY (568-2000)
1:00 p.m. on June 8, 2020 for the San Marcos High School Restrooms ADA Upgrades – Phase II Project (“Project�).
The deadline for pre-bid questions or clarification requests is, May 29, 2020. All questions are to be in writing and directed to the Project Architect/Engineer, Joe Wilcox, Kruger Bensen Ziemer Architects, Inc. at joew@kbzarch.com.
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6. If the court terminates your parental rights, the order may be final.
Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the Board of Education of the Santa Barbara Unified School District at the Administration Offices, 724 Santa Barbara Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101 not later than:
Email:
Clerk, by Mary K Allen, Deputy
Hauling
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MAY 3, 10, 17, 24/2020--55956
Date: April 15, 2020
Gardening
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NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS CALLING FOR BIDS
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Start adding a photo to your rental ad today! Email: classad@newspress.com or Call 805-963-4391 to get started.
Prequalification packages must be submitted to L.M. Sweaney & Associates, 180 Grass Valley Rd., Lot 3, Lake Arrowhead, CA 92352 (UPS or FED-EX ONLY) (Voice Message: 909-336-2771) no later than, May 25, 2020. [Note: Per PCC 2011.6 – must have submitted package at least 10 business days before bid opening, can specify earlier date]. FAXED PRE-QUALIFICATION APPLICATIONS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 1773 and 1773.2 of the Labor Code of the State of California, the District has obtained from the Director of Industrial Relations, the general prevailing rate of per diem wages and the general prevailing rate for holiday and overtime work in the locality in which the work is to be performed for each craft, classification or type of workman needed to execute the contract which is available for review at http://www.dir.ca.gov/dlsr/statistics_research.html. During the Work, the Department of Industrial Relations (“DIR�) will monitor compliance with prevailing wage rate requirements and enforce the Contractor’s prevailing wage rate obligations, with a copy of the same being on file with the clerk of the District’s governing board. It shall be mandatory upon the contractor to whom the contract is awarded, and upon any subcontractor under him, to pay not less than the said specified rates to all workmen employed by them in the execution of the contract, and to comply with all prevailing wage requirements set forth in the Labor Code. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 1771.1 of the Labor Code of the State of California, a contractor or subcontractor shall not be qualified to bid or engage in the performance of any contract for this project unless; (1) currently registered and qualified to perform public work pursuant to Section 1725.5; or (2) expressly authorized to submit a bid by Section 1771.1 and provided the contractor is registered to perform public work pursuant to section 1725.5 at the time the contract is awarded. This project is subject to compliance monitoring and enforcement by the Department of Industrial Relations. The successful Bidder will be required to post all job-site notices required by DIR regulations and other applicable law. The successful bidder and its subcontractors will be required to follow the nondiscrimination requirements set forth in the General Conditions. The District will be participating in the Disabled Veteran Business Enterprises (DVBE) Participation Goal Program pursuant to Education Code section 17076.11 and Public Contract Code section 10115. No Bidder may withdraw his bid for a period of sixty (60) days after the date set for the bid opening. The District reserves the right to reject any and all bids or to waive irregularities in any bid. BY THE ORDER OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE SANTA BARBARA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT By: Steve Vizzolini, Director of Facilities and Modernizations Planning Department MAY 3, 10 / 2020 — 55948
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS CALLING FOR BIDS Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the Board of Education of the Santa Barbara Unified School District at the Administration Offices, 724 Santa Barbara Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101 not later than: 1:00 p.m. on June 15, 2020 for the Dos Pueblos High School CTE Pavilion Project (“Project�). A mandatory job walk and pre-bid conference will be conducted on, May 29, 2020, beginning at, 10:00 a.m.. Meet at the flagpole at Dos Pueblos High School at 7266 Alameda Ave, Goleta, CA 93117. Bids will not be accepted from contractors not attending the mandatory job walk and pre-bid conference. Prospective Bidders arriving after the above-designated starting time for a mandatory job walk and pre-bid conference shall be disqualified from submitting a bid for this project. Plans and specifications will be on file and available to view, download or purchase on, or as soon as possible, after the mandatory job walk and pre-bid conference at the Santa Barbara Unified School District Planning Department office at 724 Santa Barbara St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101. Plans and Specifications may also be viewed or purchased through Cybercopy at http://www. cybercopyplanroom.com The deadline for pre-bid questions or clarification requests is, June 12, 2020. All questions are to be in writing and directed to the Project Architect/Engineer, Joe Wilcox, Kruger Bensen Ziemer Architects, Inc. at joew@kbzarch.com. CLEARLY MARK BID RESPONSE ENVELOPE WITH TIME/DATE OF BID OPENING AND PROJECT NAME. Bids so received shall be opened and publicly read aloud at the Santa Barbara Unified School District Administration Office, 720 Santa Barbara Street, Santa Barbara, California 93101. All bids shall be made on the forms provided in the specifications and each bid must conform to the Contract Documents. Each bid shall be accompanied by the bid security specified in the Instructions to Bidders. The Project description is as follows: The Project includes (2) two new CTE buildings; one for media arts and the other for showcasing students work. The scope of work includes, but not limited to: A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H.
A new 10,000 sf Media Arts building with classrooms and restrooms. A new 14,000 sf assembly/showcase building with roof top offices and outdoor classrooms. New site work including hardscape and landscape, new ramps and stairs. New elevator and (2) two stairwells. New plumbing, electrical, and mechanical. New fire sprinkler system. New fire alarm system. New parking with accessible spaces.
Contractor’ License required: B (General Building Contractor) Prequalification of Bidders and E/M/P subcontractors: As a condition of bidding on this Project, and in accordance with the provisions of Public Contract Code section 20111.5 and 20111.6 all Bidders and all electrical, mechanical and plumbing subcontractors listed in the Bidder’s proposal must either be pre-qualified for at least five business days before the date of the opening of the bids or must submit a completed prequalification package by the deadline stated below. Bids not conforming to this requirement will not be accepted. Prequalification packages are available through Cybercopy at http://www.cybercopyplanroom.com. Pre-qualification questions must be directed to L.M. Sweaney at lynns11s@aol.com or leave a voice message at (909) 377-8302. Prequalification packages must be submitted to L.M. Sweaney & Associates, 180 Grass Valley Rd., Lot 3, Lake Arrowhead, CA 92352 (UPS or FED-EX ONLY) (Voice Message: 909-336-2771) no later than, June 1, 2020. [Note: Per PCC 2011.6 – must have submitted package at least 10 business days before bid opening, can specify earlier date]. FAXED PRE-QUALIFICATION APPLICATIONS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 1773 and 1773.2 of the Labor Code of the State of California, the District has obtained from the Director of Industrial Relations, the general prevailing rate of per diem wages and the general prevailing rate for holiday and overtime work in the locality in which the work is to be performed for each craft, classification or type of workman needed to execute the contract which is available for review at http://www.dir.ca.gov/dlsr/statistics_research.html. During the Work, the Department of Industrial Relations (“DIR�) will monitor compliance with prevailing wage rate requirements and enforce the Contractor’s prevailing wage rate obligations, with a copy of the same being on file with the clerk of the District’s governing board. It shall be mandatory upon the contractor to whom the contract is awarded, and upon any subcontractor under him, to pay not less than the said specified rates to all workmen employed by them in the execution of the contract, and to comply with all prevailing wage requirements set forth in the Labor Code. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 1771.1 of the Labor Code of the State of California, a contractor or subcontractor shall not be qualified to bid or engage in the performance of any contract for this project unless; (1) currently registered and qualified to perform public work pursuant to Section 1725.5; or (2) expressly authorized to submit a bid by Section 1771.1 and provided the contractor is registered to perform public work pursuant to section 1725.5 at the time the contract is awarded. This project is subject to compliance monitoring and enforcement by the Department of Industrial Relations. The successful Bidder will be required to post all job-site notices required by DIR regulations and other applicable law. The successful bidder and its subcontractors will be required to follow the nondiscrimination requirements set forth in the General Conditions. The District will be participating in the Disabled Veteran Business Enterprises (DVBE) Participation Goal Program pursuant to Education Code section 17076.11 and Public Contract Code section 10115. No Bidder may withdraw his bid for a period of sixty (60) days after the date set for the bid opening. The District reserves the right to reject any and all bids or to waive irregularities in any bid. BY THE ORDER OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE SANTA BARBARA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT By: Steve Vizzolini, Director of Facilities and Modernizations Planning Department MAY 3, 10 / 2020 — 55947
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SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS / SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020
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SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
HINES, Carter Willis 7/24/1941 - 5/1/2020
Carter Willis Hines, 78, passed away Friday evening, May 1, 2020, at his Montecito home with his beloved wife, Victoria, at his side. Carter’s sudden death from a heart attack followed a prolonged illness of several years. Carter was born in Long Beach, California to Martha and William Hines. In the fourth grade he and his mother moved to Santa Barbara where he became a well-known and much-loved figure in this community for the rest of his life. He attended Jefferson School, Santa Barbara High School (class of 1959), and immediately after graduation he enlisted in the Army and was stationed in Hawaii for two years where he served as the Company Commander’s driver. He returned to Santa Barbara and attended Santa Barbara City College and later Long Beach State. He enjoyed playing football as a SBHS Don and also at SB City College where he made lifetime, enduring friendships. After college, Carter started his lifelong business, Carter Hines Drapery, which flourished for the next 55 years. He loved working with his clients and making their homes more beautiful. He will be best remembered for his exceptional customer service and special window coverings, a tradition to be carried on by his wife Victoria. Carter was loved by everyone. His friends relished visiting him tending bar at The Nugget in Summerland for their favorite cocktails! He was part of a special friends group (The Breakfast Club) who met every morning for breakfast at the San Ysidro Pharmacy. He played tennis with the Montecito Tennis Mafia for years, was a long time member of Birnam Wood, and especially enjoyed all the years he spent as a member of The Coral Casino...working out, walking around the pool, and socializing with his numerous friends and acquaintances at Tydes. He met the love of his life, Victoria, at the Pioneer Saloon in Sun Valley, Idaho. They were together for 40 years, during which time they traveled the world together, returning to Sun Valley many times, ocean cruising to Tahiti, skiing in Europe, and flying yearly to their favorite vacation spot at the Mauna Kea Hotel in Hawaii. He looked forward to his guy trips to Cabo, Cuba, and Costa Rica with his many wild-haired buddies. Carter had an abiding passion for fun and revelry. Known as “Mad Dog” and “Dukie” to his dearest friends, he never had an unkind word for anyone. His zest for life also endeared him to his Brazilian Familia. He was most fond of telling outrageous stories and regaling friends with his unbridled charm and mischievous nature. We will miss him madly. Carter is survived by his wife Victoria, his three children from his first marriage to Gale Gill, Darrin, Damon, Danielle & son-in-law Jim McKechnie and 2 grandchildren, Drake Carter (15) and Kendall (12). The family would like to express their deepest appreciation for the compassionate care by Dr. Babji Mesipam, Dr. Jeffrey Kupperman, and Dr. Harris Gelberg. May Carter rest in peace and his spirit soar above his beloved Santa Barbara home and linger in the hearts and minds of his many cherished friends forever. We look forward to a Celebration of Carter’s Life later this summer! Meanwhile, please toast Carter, who loved life and all his friends!!!!
HARGIS, Wanda Lucile Wanda Lucile Hargis, 92, passed away on February 18, 2020 after a short illness. Wanda was born october 16, 1927 in Fullerton, CA and raised in Pasadena. She moved to Santa Barbara with her family in 1943 and graduated from Santa Barbara High School in 1944. After graduation, Wanda earned a teaching credential from the Riviera campus at the State Teachers College in Santa Barbara. This school later became UCSB. She first taught elementary school in Morro Bay, CA and later moved back to Santa Barbara and taught at McKinley elementary. Later, she taught at Garfield, Wilson and Adams elementary schools. She finished her career as a math resource teacher at Adams. Wanda met her future husband Daniel B. Hargis when she drove a church group to the Rose parade. On the way down to the parade, Dan rode in the back seat. However, on the return trip he rode in the front seat. They were married in June 1956 and three boys quickly followed, Jerry in 1957, Jeff in 1958 and Joel in 1962. Wanda returned to teaching when Joel started kindergarten in 1967. Wanda had to take early retirement in 1984 due to severe hearing loss in both ears. After Dan retired, they decided to sell their Goleta home and start a new life of retirement in the Quail Meadows community of Santa Maria. A new community with new neighbors of all about the same age and varied backgrounds meant a whole new life of friends, social activities and travel. Some of the highlights of their travel was a three-week trip to Australia and New Zealand. They also had a lengthy cruise on the Rhine and other rivers in Europe. Wanda was preceded in death by her parents Charles and Edith Dooling, brother Bob, husband Daniel and son Joel. Wanda is survived by her oldest son Jerry (Evelyn), her son Jeff and her niece Lorri Kirker (Randy) along with her grandson Garrett and many step-grandchildren. Daughter-in-law Evelyn said Wanda was the best mother-in-law ever. Evelyn often said she hoped she could relate to her own relatives the way Wanda did with hers. Evelyn often used the phrase “WWWD.” What would Wanda do? No services are planned at this time. However, donations can be made to any local animal shelter in Wanda’s name. She had a special place in her heart for all of the furry friends she had over her life.
CHANEY, Marjorie Evelyn December 15, 1919 - March 30, 2020
Marjorie was born in San Francisco to Freda Friebel Nunez and David Richard Nunez. She and her sister Betty spent their childhoods in Burlingame. Marjorie was very proud of her grandmother, Alma Friebel, who after arriving from Dresden, Germany, traveled across the country with her grandfather, Fred Friebel, by covered wagon and settled in Sheridan, Wyoming, where Marjorie’s Mother and Aunt were born. Alma was a wonderful cook and told stories of Buffalo Bill Cody being a guest at their house for dinner. After high school, Marjorie attended San Mateo Junior College and shortly thereafter married Frederick C. “Ted” Talbot, Jr. of Hillsborough in 1941. As Ted worked for the family lumber business, Pope and Talbot, they lived in Seattle, Portland and then New York, finally returning to California in 1955. By then she was an avid fan of Giants baseball, following each season for the rest of her life. Living first in Kentfield, the family moved to Pebble Beach in 1961, where she joined Monterey’s Casa Abrego Club and with Ted, the Cypress Point Club. Further moves saw them in Palm Springs, Tahoe City and then Menlo Park in 1980. After Ted passed away in 1981 Marjorie married Alger Chaney in 1983. They had a very happy 19 years together and traveled extensively until his death in 2002. They built a wonderful home in Montecito, CA. and were members of Birnam Wood Golf Club and The Valley Club. Marjorie was an avid bridge player throughout her life, being taught as a teenager. She also adored Frank Sinatra, even getting to meet Frank once and having a conversation with him! She loved her family and friends, LOVED chocolate, loved to dance, animals and flowers, loved a good joke, and loved to read and watch old movies. She was so good to her family, especially with the gift of education. She sent cards with a handwritten note to family and friends for every holiday, event or just to say hello. No email! We all loved her so much and were lucky to have her as long as we did. Marjorie celebrated her 100th Birthday in December 2019. Amazingly, her two best friends from high school also reached 100 and 101. She was always healthy, always had a positive attitude, never complained. And, as she often said, “I still have all my marbles”! She had a full life, lots of friends, met many interesting people and had an astonishing memory for names and events. She was a classy, sweet lady and we will miss her always. Predeceased by her sister, Betty Baum, and niece, Marcie Preader, she leaves her daughters Suzanne Talbot and Pamela Talbot, her grandsons Scott Michael Talbot and Luke Thomas Wagner, and Great-Grandchildren, Aidan and Amara Talbot. She leaves her step-children, Henry Chaney and Susan Chaney Purel and Susan’s children, Derek and Hunter Steffien, all of whom she loved very much. Marjorie passed away peacefully in her sleep at Casa Dorinda on March 30, 2020 in Montecito. She will be buried next to her late husband, Alger Chaney, in the Santa Barbara Cemetery with a celebration of her life being held at a later date. The family wishes to thank the staff and care-givers of Casa Dorinda, where Marjorie had resided since 2004. In lieu of flowers, remembrances to The Braille Institute of Santa Barbara, 2031 De La Vina St., Santa Barbara, CA 93105; or the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 2559 Puesta del Sol, Santa Barbara, CA 93105.
OBITUARIES / WEATHER
DONOVAN, David D.
July 10, 1957 – April 8, 2020 David was born on July 10, 1957 to Jack and Norma Jean Donovan. He was raised in Carpinteria where he attended Carpinteria High School. After high school David joined the US Marines, with his brother Kelly. David worked alongside his father Jack as a roofer from a young age, later working with his Uncle Larry and Cousin Steve as an electrician. David passed peacefully at his home in Lompoc, CA where he lived and was loved/cared for by his daughter Christine. He was preceded in death by his parents Jack and Norma Jean Donovan and brother Kelly Donovan. He is survived by his children: Nicole Donovan and granddaughter Naomii (Bullhead, AZ), Christine Donovan (Lompoc, CA), Jack Donovan and fiancé Jennifer (Long Beach, CA). David’s oldest daughter found him after 40 years just a couple months before his passing, along with her husband and three children. His siblings: Joy Wheatley (Roger), Robin Gonzales (David), Julie Jimenez (Joey), nieces & nephews, Uncle Larry & Aunt Bonnie Donovan, Aunt Roberta Germanetti and many Dear cousins. The family wishes to express their sincere thanks to all who have offered their condolences to the family at this difficult time. For the time being there are no services planned (TBD for a later date).
SHOEMAKER, Bryant
Bryant Shoemaker passed away from a difficult battle with pancreatic cancer on March 6th at age 63 at his home in Santa Barbara surrounded by his family. Bryant was born in St. Louis to parents Ed and Barbara. He had two siblings, Sally and Mark with whom he remained close his entire life. He went to UCSB and graduated with a degree in film. At UCSB he met the love of his life, Peggy, and married her in 1984. Bryant and Peggy had 4 children together, Sarah, Sean, Ann and Elizabeth. He worked at local company Yardi Systems for over 30 years, retiring shortly before his passing. Bryant was an expert at enjoying life and he brought joy to everyone he met. During Bryant’s battle with cancer he would save his best jokes for his Oncology team to brighten up his appointments. Prior to his diagnosis, Bryant played tennis and golf multiple times a week, rode his bike and enjoyed swimming in the ocean and pools as frequently as possible. Bryant was an avid gardener who took pride in growing vegetables, fruit trees, and native plants. His Wednesday golf game and Harry’s nights were some of the things he missed most after his diagnosis. During the times when he felt good enough to meet his friends and indulge in a margarita he would excitedly update his whole family. His tennis community brought him such joy through the years, and while he loved being on the court competing, it paled in comparison to the friendships he built off the court. The support of his friends through his battle brought Bryant and the family such comfort. He will be remembered for his good humor, kindness, love of family, and friendship.
SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020
BENTON, Judith “Judy”
Judy Benton (Terrell), was born June 27, 1942 in Milwaukee Wisconsin and went to be with our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ on April 15, 2020 in Prescott Arizona. She met the love of her life, Max Benton, while working in the UCLA Engineering Department. They married on Judy’s 22nd birthday in 1964 and welcomed their first daughter, Kim, in 1966. They moved to Santa Barbara, CA in 1967 and brought their 2nd daughter, Kay, home in 1968. The family lived in the Santa Barbara area until 1999. Judy and Max, along with 2 friends, founded AEC-Able Engineering Co. in 1975 and found great success, creating deployable structures for various space crafts. The company also brought Max and Judy many lifelong friends. Upon retirement, Max and Judy moved up to Lake Almanor, CA where they built their dream home on the lake shore and lived out Max’s days there, looking out over the lake. After Max’s passing, Judy moved to Paradise, CA and then to Prescott, AZ where she became very involved in her church, First Evangelical Lutheran Church. Judy’s true love was The Lord. She lived each day of her life praising and honoring Him. As the nearest Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Church was 100+ miles away, a pastor from Thousand Oaks agreed to travel and minister to the Santa Barbara flock as long as Judy was there. This was the beginning of what has become Our Redeemer Lutheran Church in Santa Barbara. Judy was passionate about art and books. She received her bachelor’s degree in studio art and her master’s degree in art history from UCSB. She traveled the world painting and collecting art, and enjoyed expressing herself through her painting. Her refuge was always found in books. An avid reader from childhood, Judy was always surrounded by books, usually reading 3-4 books at any one time. The epitome of a true friend, she was always available with a kind word and a welcoming hug. She had the quickest wit, with a pun or joke popping up in any conversation and she seemed to know a little bit about everything. Judy was predeceased by her parents, Paul and Eva Terrell, and her Husband, Max Benton. She is survived by her daughters, Kim Pisano and Kay Baker (Dwayne); her grandson, George Patterson; great-grandchildren Destinee and James Patterson; her brother and sister-in-law, Brian and Jan Terrell; and niece and nephews Scott Terrell (Larissa), John Terrell (Rebecca), Andrew Terrell, and Kristen Terrell. Judy will be deeply missed by all who knew her. We find comfort with the knowledge that she and Max are dancing together in heaven at the feet of The Lord and we will be with them again someday. In lieu of flowers, a fund has been set up for donations to First Evangelical Lutheran Church, Prescott, AZ. The Celebration of Her Life/Memorial date is TBD.
Bryant is survived by his wife Peggy, child Sarah, her husband Matthew, son Sean, twin daughters Ann and Elizabeth, two grandchildren Brennan and Owen, siblings Sally and Mark, nieces and nephews, and many cousins. Bryant was a family man, who loved nothing more than being with his family. The joy he exhibited when everyone was together was contagious, and he imparted on his children a deep understanding of the importance of family. Bryant’s advice to his family was to live a life of joy, build deep friendships, and always work on cultivating new ones. His loss will forever be a source of pain, but his children all feel a deep gratitude for having had him in their lives. A remembrance of life will be held later in the year. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network or Ridley Tree Cancer Center. The family would like to thank the staff of Ridley Tree Cancer Center, Dr. Davis and Dr. Meyers for their support through the long battle. Their dedication to his case and support through the progression of the disease made a difficult journey much easier.
DARBY, Doris M. Doris Mathilde Darby passed away peacefully in Santa Barbara on November 21, 2019. Doris lived in Santa Barbara and Arroyo Grande for more than 40 years. She met her future husband, Phil N. Darby, walking on East Beach, and married on February 22, 1975. Phil passed away in 2013. Born on December 11, 1920 to Hans Conrad Dumelin and Emma Hedwig (Buechi) Dumelin in New Haven, CT. Doris spent her early years in the eastern United States. She was the youngest of three children. Her two brothers, Edward Max Dumelin, Arthur Hans Dumelin; her nephew, Edward Dumelin, Jr., and a grand-nephew, Mathew Verneris, predeceased Doris. Both Conrad and Hedwig were closely connected to Switzerland by birth and by parentage. Doris developed a love for travel early when her mother took her at age 10 to visit relatives in Switzerland. Afterwards, the Dumelins traveled to Paris on the Orient Express. This was the first of many worldwide adventures for Doris as a young woman, and then later with her husband, Phil. Doris and Phil often traveled extensively with her brother Art and his wife, Janet. Their many trips included: Europe, North Africa and Mexico, as well as many parts of the United States. After graduating from Hamden High School, Doris attended the University of Connecticut, and was a life long fan of the UConn Huskies. Following two years of college, she attended Katherine Gibbs School in Providence, RI, as well as additional classes at Connecticut’s State Teachers College, and the Berlitz School. During World War II, Doris served as a Nurses Aide for the New Haven Chapter of the American Red Cross.
LOCAL FIVE-DAY FORECAST TODAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
Low clouds, then sunshine
Low clouds breaking
A stray shower
Low clouds, then some sun
INLAND
INLAND
76 46
77 47
80 47
64 49
64 52
69 52
69 53
73 54
COASTAL
COASTAL
Pismo Beach 63/46
COASTAL
New Cuyama 90/45
Leonard was a sought-after sheet metal machinist, inventing and designing tools throughout his career, and doing specialized work for the government. He was the epitome of an excellent dedicated worker, taking pride in a job well done. He retired from Delco Electronics in Goleta in the ‘90s. He instilled his work ethic, faith, strength, and values in his daughters. Leonard and Agnes Ann moved to El Dorado Hills in 2003 to be close to their grandchildren. They traveled to Canada, Europe, Mexico, Holy Land, Hawaii and many states, but his favorite place was home with family. Leonard is survived by daughters Lenora, Denise, Roberta and Adella; grandchildren Janel, Jaline, Georgio, Arielle, Kyle, Tarah and Chad; brothers David (Bro. Leo, OFM) and Videll Jr.; and sister MaryAlice. He was preceded in death by his loving wife Agnes Ann; daughter Georgette; parents Vidal and Justina; brothers Gilbert, Arthur and Henry. Services will be at Calvary Cemetery in Santa Barbara at a later date.
Obituary notices are published daily in the Santa Barbara News-Press and also appear on our website www.newspress.com Text can be submitted by email to obits@newspress.com, faxed to (805) 966-1421, or brought in to our De La Guerra Plaza office. Please include: name, address and contact phone number. The deadline for Tuesday-Friday’s edition is 10 a.m. the previous day. Saturday, Sunday and Monday’s edition deadline is at 12 noon on Thursday. All obituaries must be prepaid. We accept all major credit cards by phone, or payment can be made at our office. The cost is approximately $6.00 per/line daily and $6.35 per/line Sunday plus $25 per photo*, **. * All obituaries include a $40 Service fee. **Ask our representative about Spotlighting your obituary online for an additional $10. A line consists of approximately 75 characters, which include spaces & punctuation without a photo and 40-55 characters with a photo. Photos can be submitted digitally (jpeg format/at least 200 dpi) or an original can be brought into our office for scanning. For further information, please call 564-5249. Free Death Notices must be submitted by your mortuary. The News-Press can not accept Death Notices from individuals, please consult your mortuary.
Ventucopa 83/47
Los Alamos 77/46
Lompoc 63/45 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2020
Buellton 74/44
Solvang 75/44
Gaviota 66/50
SANTA BARBARA 64/49 Goleta 67/50
Carpinteria 66/51 Ventura 66/54
AIR QUALITY KEY Good Moderate
Source: airnow.gov Unhealthy for SG Very Unhealthy Unhealthy Not Available
Santa Barbara through 6 p.m. yesterday
TEMPERATURE 66/57 69/51 89 in 1993 40 in 2003
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. Month to date (normal) Season to date (normal)
City Cuyama Goleta Lompoc Pismo Beach Santa Maria Santa Ynez Vandenberg Ventura
Today Hi/Lo/W 90/45/s 67/50/pc 67/44/pc 63/46/pc 70/46/pc 82/45/pc 62/47/pc 66/54/pc
STATE CITIES Bakersfield Barstow Big Bear Bishop Catalina Concord Escondido Eureka Fresno Los Angeles Mammoth Lakes Modesto Monterey Napa Oakland Ojai Oxnard Palm Springs Pasadena Paso Robles Sacramento San Diego San Francisco San Jose San Luis Obispo Santa Monica Tahoe Valley
94/58/s 97/61/s 69/31/s 92/48/s 66/52/pc 75/51/pc 78/55/pc 61/48/c 92/58/s 77/57/pc 69/38/s 88/52/pc 66/49/pc 74/47/pc 70/53/pc 76/50/pc 67/54/pc 101/66/s 78/55/pc 78/43/pc 81/50/pc 72/63/pc 68/52/pc 77/50/pc 69/47/pc 69/56/pc 71/40/pc
0.00” 0.00” (0.16”) 11.48” (17.23”)
74/50/s 59/47/pc 52/35/r 80/57/s 65/38/pc 82/59/s 80/71/r 48/34/pc 63/49/pc 63/49/pc 97/74/pc 85/56/pc 60/40/pc 82/60/pc 84/58/pc 66/51/pc
Wind west-southwest 4-8 knots today. Waves 1-3 feet with a south-southwest swell 2-4 feet at 16 seconds. Visibility clear.
POINT ARENA TO POINT PINOS
Wind west-southwest at 4-8 knots today. Wind waves 2-4 feet with a south swell 3-6 feet at 18-second intervals. Visibility clear.
POINT CONCEPTION TO MEXICO
Wind west-southwest at 4-8 knots today. Wind waves 2-4 feet with a south swell 3-6 feet at 18-second intervals. Visibility clear.
TIDES Mon. Hi/Lo/W 82/44/s 67/52/pc 67/47/pc 62/50/pc 69/51/pc 79/46/pc 62/50/pc 64/52/pc
SANTA BARBARA HARBOR TIDES Date Time High Time May 10 May 11 May 12
1:46 p.m. none 12:19 a.m. 3:06 p.m. 1:12 a.m. 4:38 p.m.
3.6’ 5.7’ 3.5’ 5.1’ 3.6’
LAKE LEVELS
Low
7:01 a.m. 6:00 p.m. 8:00 a.m. 6:57 p.m. 9:04 a.m. 8:21 p.m.
-1.0’ 2.5’ -0.7’ 2.9’ -0.3’ 3.1’
AT BRADBURY DAM, LAKE CACHUMA 86/56/s 90/57/s 65/33/s 85/45/s 63/52/s 73/54/pc 76/51/pc 63/52/r 86/58/s 73/55/pc 62/31/s 81/56/pc 69/54/pc 67/52/pc 70/56/pc 72/46/s 65/52/pc 96/62/s 74/53/pc 74/47/s 77/52/pc 72/60/pc 70/55/pc 72/54/pc 69/51/pc 67/54/pc 62/37/pc
NATIONAL CITIES Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Houston Miami Minneapolis New York City Philadelphia Phoenix Portland, Ore. St. Louis Salt Lake City Seattle Washington, D.C.
MARINE FORECAST
SANTA BARBARA CHANNEL
LOCAL TEMPS
Leonard had many pastimes including taking his boat out to the Channel Islands to fish with family and friends; being on bowling leagues throughout his life winning many trophies; tending to his flourishing fruit trees and working in his beautifully landscaped yard where he enjoyed many BBQs. He loved making wind chimes, fixing cars, and sharing a good joke.
COASTAL
Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
Santa Maria 70/46
Vandenberg 62/47
High/low Normal high/low Record high Record low
Leonard was devoted to his family, church and work. He loved singing in the choir at Holy Cross Catholic Church in Santa Barbara; being a Knight and serving on the Church Council at St. Raphael’s in Goleta; and becoming a 4th Degree Knight for the Knights Of Columbus at Holy Trinity Church in El Dorado Hills. He always took time to pray and encourage others. Leonard had a tender, kind heart and would do anything to help others.
COASTAL
Maricopa 93/58
Guadalupe 66/48
Doris belonged to Sweet Adelines International in Santa Barbara and Arroyo Grande. Besides travel, Doris played golf, loved swimming, and enjoyed the company of dogs.
Leonard Gonzales, 89, passed suddenly on April 24, 2020 after a fall while walking. Leonard was born in Ventura, raised in Goleta. He was married to Santa Barbara native Agnes Ann Romero until her death in 2007. They raised five daughters.
INLAND
79 46
ALMANAC
GONZALES, Leonard
INLAND
82 45
Doris moved to Seattle and then Phoenix before settling in Santa Barbara, where she worked for New York Life for many years. Her earlier work experience was vast, having worked at jobs in New York City, New Jersey, Connecticut, and even a spell at a ranch in Phoenix.
Doris is survived by her stepchildren: Philip Darby of Palm Springs, Nancy Darby Walker (David) of Reno, NV, and John Darby (Lisa) of Ventura, along with lots of grandchildren. Doris is also survived by her beloved nephews and nieces: Diane Verneris, Nancy Daniel, Linda Williams (Robert), Bruce Dumelin (Donna), Charles Labonte (George), and great nieces Brenda Sproul (Joseph) and Stacie Dumelin.
INLAND
Partly sunny
68/47/s 60/42/r 52/38/pc 80/64/c 59/40/r 83/67/s 86/73/c 55/33/pc 59/38/sh 59/41/sh 98/70/s 70/52/sh 59/45/pc 83/57/pc 74/53/c 60/42/sh
At Lake Cachuma’s maximum level at the point at which water starts spilling over the dam holds 188,030 acre-feet. An acre-foot is 325,851 gallons, equivalent to the amount of water consumed annually by 10 people in an urban environment. Storage 156,161 acre-ft. Elevation 740.15 ft. Evaporation (past 24 hours) 43.2 acre-ft. Inflow 71.9 acre-ft. State inflow 0.0 acre-ft. Storage change from yest. -80 acre-ft. Report from U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
SUN AND MOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Last
New
May 14
May 22
Today 6:01 a.m. 7:51 p.m. 11:47 p.m. 8:50 a.m.
WORLD CITIES
First
May 29
Mon. 6:00 a.m. 7:52 p.m. none 9:47 a.m.
Full
Jun 5
Today Mon. City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Beijing 79/54/s 84/56/s Berlin 74/46/sh 49/36/sh Cairo 87/62/s 90/65/s Cancun 81/74/t 84/76/t London 64/40/sh 54/36/pc Mexico City 74/52/t 75/54/pc Montreal 53/35/c 53/32/pc New Delhi 102/80/pc 100/79/pc Paris 73/43/t 56/39/r Rio de Janeiro 78/62/s 79/66/s Rome 72/59/pc 71/57/pc Sydney 65/47/s 66/47/s Tokyo 75/68/sh 80/65/pc W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
page
B1
life@newspress.com / 564-5107
Life
SU N DAY, M AY 10 , 2 0 2 0
A new direction
Santa Barbara County inmates serve community through Success Stories
By DAVE MASON MANAGING EDITOR
R
oy Duran Jr. and Ricardo Sanchez, two inmates at the Santa Barbara County Jail, are giving their children a big reason to be proud. “When I talk to my kids, I have something positive I can tell them that their father is doing,” Mr. Sanchez, 38, told the News-Press by phone from the jail in Santa Barbara. He and Mr. Duran are headed in a constructive direction through a new program, and its name says it all. Success Stories. Mr. Duran, who participated in Success Stories when he was incarcerated at the Soledad State Prison, introduced the program to the Santa Barbara County Jail after he transferred there last year. He is a coach of other inmates who serve as facilitators. They work together to plan and carry out community service projects. Recently they created 3,200 face shields for first responders and deputies working inside and outside the jail. The inmates also cut strips of cloth for the Santa Barbara Bucket Brigade, which has used them to make masks. The brigade later donated 1,100 masks to the inmates and workers in the jail. “It makes me feel better to have my kids tell me they’re proud of me. They want me to make them a mask,” said Mr. Sanchez, who has five sons, five daughters and one grandson. Before the face shield project, the inmates in Success Stories were planning to work on a benefit for Single Parents Arriving Ready for College. It’s a group at Santa Barbara City College and UCSB. When the COVID-19 pandemic meant delaying that fundraiser, the men in Success Stories found another way to serve their community. “One of my mentors told me that the best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others,” Mr. Duran, who has been incarcerated since 2008, told the News-Press by phone from the jail. After watching the program’s impact on Mr. Duran, Deirdre Smith, the inmate services manager, saw the Success Stories program as a no-brainer. Mr. Duran was featured in a 2017 CNN documentary on the program, and Ms. Smith enthusiastically supported him in starting the program at the Santa Barbara County Jail. “I was blown away by what I saw in the documentary,” Ms. Smith said. “The peer facilitation is incredibly important. It’s something we haven’t had here,” she said. “I would like to see it in other county jails.” Ms. Smith said Success Stories has been well-received as part of the Sheriff’s Treatment Program. She also noted there are plans for Success Stories to expand throughout the jail in Santa Barbara and to be added at the new Santa Maria jail when that facility opens. “The biggest thing is giving these individuals the opportunity to step outside their criminal identity and focus on their strengths,” she said. “A lot of these gentlemen have leadership qualities, but they’ve never had the opportunity to show them off and put them on display. This gives them the opportunity to do just that. “We’ve seen these gentlemen blossom as the result,” she said. Mr. Sanchez said the program gives the inmates something positive during a difficult time. “There’s been a lot of anxiety.” Because of COVID-19, court appearances have been delayed, and inmates’ families can’t visit them at the jail. “They’ve been giving us phone calls, so we can at least talk with our families,” Mr. Sanchez said. Today, those phone conversations include his accomplishments through Success Stories. Mr. Duran said Richard Vargas, a Soledad Prison inmate who started the Success Stories program, saw leadership qualities that Mr. Duran didn’t know he had. “It completely changed my life,” he said, adding that Success Stories is helping other inmates. “One of the most gratifying parts of it is leading people to the same or similar realization that we have the key to unlock our potential.”
COURTESY PHOTOS
Deirdre Smith, the inmate services manager at the Santa Barbara County Jail, wears one of the face shields made by inmates.
Email: dmason@newspress.com
FYI
To see a documentary about Success Stories, go to www.youtube.com/ watch?v=JYxTzsabkH8.
From left, Ernesto Solis, Robert Castaneda and Keegan Bailey work on face shields through Success Stories at the Santa Barbara County Jail. At right, face shields are being made by, from left, Ricardo Sanchez, Roy Duran Jr. and Da’vosia Harper. Mr. Duran is a coach for Success Stories at Santa Barbara County Jail.
B
PUZZLES
SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS No. 0503
PUZZLE
TURN, TURN, TURN
SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020 TE: 5/10/2020
BY ROYCE FERGUSON / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
Royce Ferguson, 34, is an American living in London, currently between jobs. He says one perk of residing in Europe is that the international edition of The New York Times prints both the Saturday and Sunday puzzles on Saturday, “enabling a regular Saturday crossword binge.” He got the idea for this puzzle while on holiday in Switzerland, a nation known for its 47-Acrosses. This is Royce’s crossword debut. — W.S.
50 Statement that may precede ‘‘Wish me 1 1969 hit for Neil luck!’’ Diamond 51 Per ____ 6 Big dipper? 9 Event at a convention 52 Arc on a musical score center 53 Go back (on) 13 Southern bread 55 British ending 17 Risk maker 56 Conventional 19 What a plastic bag might come with, 59 Deal with nowadays 60 Suffix with block 20 Comics mutant 61 China’s Zhou ____ 21 Specks of dust 62 Hound 22 Ad label in red and 64 Some bolt holders white 67 Arroz ____ cubana 24 What Santa does (Cuban-style rice) before Christmas 70 Demerit 26 They do dos 72 Once-ubiquitous 27 Tempe sch. electronics outlets 28 Invites out for 77 A hot one can burn you 29 [Let it stand] 78 Stars in western 30 Pop singer Ora movies, e.g. 31 Heats 80 ‘‘That’s my foot!!!’’ 33 Bête noire 81 Son of George and 34 Italian pal Jane Jetson 35 Burning 82 Verbal concession 40 Some of the American 84 Start to pay attention heartland 86 See 47-Across 44 Belief in Buddhism 87 Sea that Jesus is said and Hinduism to have walked on 45 Certain make-yourown-entree station 88 Beloved members of the family 47 With 86-Across, 89 Having a fix fixation problem 90 South American suggested by this barbecue puzzle’s theme 48 One hanging around 91 Rather eccentric the yard 94 D.C. types 95 It fits a big frame, for Online subscriptions: Today’s short puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, 97 1990s Nickelodeon nytimes.com/crosswords show about a ($39.95 a year). preteen boy ACROSS
5 10
SOLUTION ON B3
HOROSCOPE Horoscope.com Sunday, May 10, 2020 ARIES — Finances, business ideas, and career goals can flourish this week because positive energies can contribute to your security and success. TAURUS — Whether you’re eager to get away from it all or want to start a course of study, this week could find you eager to get moving. GEMINI — This week It wouldn’t be surprising if dreams became more vivid and you uncovered the answers to certain life issues while you sleep. CANCER — This can be an exciting week, with many good things in store for you. You might enjoy moving in new circlesor connecting online with others who share your interests. LEO — a project or business development might work out well for you this week if you’re willing to put in the effort. It just needs a sound strategy to succeed. VIRGO — Whether you’re eager to get away from it all or want to start a course of study, this week could find you eager to get moving. LIBRA — This can be a good week to discuss home projects, especially if they require an injection of cash. Talking with a financial adviser or bank can get the ball rolling. SCORPIO — There could be a potentially volatile quality about certain associations. If someone has been holding their feelings back, these emotions might now come out into the open. SAGITTARIUS — This week can be a call to come to grips with everyday issues. The more organized you are, the easier it will be to deal with them. CAPRICORN — Do you need a chance to unwind? This week there’s an upbeat focus on your leisure sector, so this is your time to indulge in those activities you enjoy the most. AQUARIUS — In the coming week, some quiet reflection could allow powerful ideas to bubble up. Don’t dismiss these, because they could take your life in a new and profitable direction. PISCES — This week can be a great time for moving ahead with online projects and marketing, networking, and generally staying in touch with the people who matter.
3
4
5
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6 18
22
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8
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26 30
41
42
27
28
35 45 49
52
53
57
58
61 68
62
69
70
77
71
78
82
83
87 91 95 103
104
92
39
74
75
76
99
100
101
60 64
65
66
81 86 89
93
94 97
98
107
110
111
112
113
114
116
117
118
69 It stops at Union and Penn Stations 71 Understand 73 Agnus ____ (prayers) 74 Banned aid? 75 Lead-in to Aid 76‘ ‘Auld Lang ____’’ 78 Gambler’s alternative to Las Vegas, NV, or Atlantic City, NJ 79 One with special I.T. privileges
38
46
80
109
52 Sedate state 54 State 57 Gerontologist’s study 58 The driving force behind this puzzle? 63 Cheerfulness: Var. 65 Nonbinary pronoun 66 A dip, or a series of steps 67 Spanish girlfriend 68 Things once tossed in the Trevi Fountain
37
55
85
106
36
73
96
105
16
50
88
90
15
59
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83 Throwing away 85 Pond critter 86 Latin version of the Bible 89 Doesn’t give a hoot, colloquially 92 Applebee’s competitor 93 Kitchen gadgets 94 System of government 96 ____ dog 97 Loading areas
98 Championship 99 Texas A&M athlete 100 Lugs 101 Add oil and vinegar to, say 102 Bit of chemistry 103 Legal cover? 104 Plugging away 105 Testing stage 107 Ratchet (up) 108 Command to a dog 110 Buckeyes’ sch.
SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE
11 Alan who directed ‘‘All the President’s Men’’ 12 Any nonzero number raised to the power of zero 13 Florida county named for a president 14 Los Angeles’s ____ College of Art and Design 15 Where talk is cheep? 16 This: Sp. 18 Way to run someone out of town, idiomatically 21 Heavy defeat 23 QB-protecting group, for short 25 Cousin of cream cheese 31 Not outstanding 32 Aware 33 German city on the Weser 34 Try to see if anyone is home, maybe 36 Adversary DOWN 37 Island famous for its 1 Bygone kings nightlife 2 Attended 38 Was livid 3 Nail-polish brand 39 Slowly disappear 40 Orgs. running drives 4 Who said: ‘‘No good for school supplies movie is too long. No bad movie is short 41 Little piggy enough’’ 42 Sullivan who taught 5 Dos más uno Helen Keller 6 Worth mentioning 43 Temper 7 Subsidiary of CVS 44 Enlist again Health 46 Early king of Athens, in Greek myth 8 Races in place 48 Magical rides 9 Ken Griffey Jr. or Ichiro Suzuki 49 No longer working: Abbr. 10 Short winter days?
2
SOLUTION ON B3
CODEWORD PUZZLE
98 Former Saudi king 102 Peninsula with seven countries 106 Hosp. area 107 What torcedores can skillfully do 109 Hierarchical systems, so to speak 111 It may spit venom 112 News items often written in advance 113 Beget 114 Nasdaq, e.g.: Abbr. 115 Things that can bounce 116 Bone connected to the wrist 117 Founding member of the U.N. Security Council, for short 118 Humanities dept. 119 Like the entire 290page Georges Perec novel ‘‘A Void,’’ curiously enough
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2020-05-10
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How to play Codeword
Sunday, May 10, 2020
Codeword is a fun game with simple rules, and a great test of your knowledge of the English language. Every number in the codeword grid is ‘code’ for a letter of the alphabet. Thus the number 2 may correspond to the letter L, for instance.
SOLUTION ON B3
All puzzles come with a few letters to start you off. Your first move should be to enter these letters in the puzzle grid. If the letter S is in the box at the bottom of the page underneath the number 2, your first move should be to find all cells numbered 2 in the grid and enter the letter S. Cross the letter S off the list at the bottom of the grid. Remember that at the end you should have a different letter of the alphabet in each of the numbered boxes 1 - 26, and a word in English in each of the horizontal and vertical runs on the codeword grid.
© 2020 Ashleigh Brilliant, 117 W. Valerio Santa Barbara CA 93101 (catalog $5). www.ashleighbrilliant.com
Sunday, May 10, 2020
PUZZLES
SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
NYT CROSSWORD SOLUTION
S H A H S
W A S A T
E S S I E
E B E R T
P T A S
R U N T
A M I G A
L I R A S
A I N N N U E R E A C E S L I A D
A T O M
R A B O T E B I T E T A
T O R O F E N O N S A L O R I T B A N E R I E E L F M S L E O T Y N L A I D I N B A D G I G N L E E O S C X L S H I A I M P O L S S I U S
A E T N A
R E V S
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X M A S E S
P A K U L A
O N E S A I M N T A H E E G K E N U O S W V C U O L U G L A D T E
R E N T A T D I E O I N S P D O O L C I K T S Y
P O N E M O T E S A L I S T S K S T O S A F I R E C O B A R R E I G O E Z E D A D E T S H A C K S E L R O Y I S I O N R A B L E S F A H D C I G A R O N G U E M A I L S E L E S S
CROSSWORD SOLUTION
Sunday, May 10, 2020
Š 2020 UFS, Dist. by Univ. Uclick for UFS
CODEWORD SOLUTION 7
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SUDOKU
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INSTRUCTIONS Fill in the grid so every row, every column and every 3-by-3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9. that means that no number is repeated in any row, column or box. Sudoku puzzles appear on the Diversions page Monday-Saturday and on the crossword solutions page in Sundayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Life section.
SOLUTION TO YESTERDAYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PUZZLE Solutions, tips program at www.sudoku.com
'LIILFXOW\ /HYHO
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Š Puzzles by Pappocom
Woman is ready to start new life
D
ear Abby: I am 55 now. Between the ages of 18 and 26, I was married four times to three different men. I was stupid. I had no direction in life and thought marriage was the answer. At 27, I went back to college, graduated and became a CPA. I married again at 34. My husband was abusive, and the marriage was rocky, to say the least. He hit me, shoved me, kicked me, drank too much, passed out in the street and was a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde to live with. I hung in with him for 20 years because I was desperate to make a marriage work and avoid further shame. I finally left Abigail him last year. I Van Buren feel damaged, empty and ashamed, and I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know how to start over at this point. I have been fighting a chronic illness for eight years, which contributes to my feelings of hopelessness. Have you any advice about where I can turn to start a new life? Please donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t suggest counseling. I have already done that and gotten as much healing from it as possible. Now I need to know how to move forward. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Shamed but not Stupid Dear Shamed: Your new life began the moment you walked out the door and left your abuser behind. I have often asked, â&#x20AC;&#x153;If marriage is the answer, what is the question?â&#x20AC;? Now that you know marriage isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t the answer, you can begin building your new life by first forgiving yourself, and then learning to like yourself again. There are online support groups for divorced people as well as those recovering from abusive relationships. It may be helpful to sample a few to see if you can find the support youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re looking for. I wish you luck, because you are finally on the right track. Dear Abby: My husband of 20 years has always been a smoker. I worry nonstop about it affecting his health. Our children have begged him to quit. A couple of months ago we made a bet. I would give up social media for a week if he would quit smoking for a week. It was awesome! He quit smoking â&#x20AC;&#x201D; or so I thought. I found out last week that he only quit smoking AT HOME. He has still been doing it at work. I asked him to please not start smoking at home. After all, if he can go all weekend without a cigarette, why does he need to smoke at all? My issue: I caught him smoking in the garage. I was furious and didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t handle it well. Am I wrong for being upset that he went against my wishes? By the way, the kids donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know he has started again. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Smoke-Free Wife Dear Smoke-Free Wife: No, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re not wrong. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s understandable that you are upset. You love your husband. If the kids donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know he has started smoking again, theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll soon realize it because theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll smell it on him. It should be clear to you that your husband has a serious addiction to nicotine. You have my sympathy, but you cannot â&#x20AC;&#x153;makeâ&#x20AC;? him do this or do it â&#x20AC;&#x153;forâ&#x20AC;? him. Secondhand smoke is unhealthy for those who are exposed to it, so unless you can convince your spouse to get help from his doctor, the rule should be that he smokes outside the house when he needs a â&#x20AC;&#x153;fix.â&#x20AC;? Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
5/10/20
SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020
B
Sister-in-law refuses to expose family lying on their kidsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; vaccination forms
D
ear Carolyn: My sister-in-law recently opened a now-successful consulting business that provides behavioral therapy for children and young adults. Some of her clients attend the same small private preschool my kids attend. The school adheres to a strict vaccine policy that does not accept conscience exemptions (rampant in our state), only medical. I was a leader in bringing this policy to the school because my son is severely immunocompromised. My sister-in-law let it slip that she definitely knows of a family â&#x20AC;&#x153;lying about their vaccination forms.â&#x20AC;? She never revealed the name and I didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t push. I did suggest she immediately contact the preschool director, but she told me, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m not in the business of telling on my clients.â&#x20AC;? I was initially beside myself with anger. I didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t feel comfortable telling the director myself, since I didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have a name or evidence, just hearsay -- and if Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m honest with myself, I didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t want my sister-in-law to lose access to clients. My husband doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t speak much to her and gave me a flat â&#x20AC;&#x153;noâ&#x20AC;? when I asked him to talk his sister about it. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s been a while, and Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m still mad and perplexed at the way the situation was handled. Should I have pushed more? Did I fail my son by protecting her business over him? Did she have an ethical obligation to report? Was I asking/expecting too much? Where have societyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s morals gone?! â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Anonymous Anonymous: You tell us, since youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re the one who helped your relative help a client cheat because it was good for her business. I do appreciate your candor, with yourself and with us. Please now shine that ray of light on â&#x20AC;&#x153;societyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s moralsâ&#x20AC;?: You describe making a bunch of small calculations that you no doubt
TONIGHT
see as well-intentioned, and those calculations led you to choose pragmatism on your sister-inlawâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s behalf over principle. So why canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t it be that other people, just like you, are also making a bunch of small calculations they also think are well-meaning, and coming to a flawed, even dangerous conclusion? Why do you see these nameless people in â&#x20AC;&#x153;societyâ&#x20AC;? as so immoral while youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re generally OK with yourself? You are now questioning your role, yes, thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s no small thing â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d like to see record-falsifying parents prosecuted for fraud. Notwithstanding, your view of other people is a textbook illustration of fundamental attribution error. For you, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a wrenching decision under complicated circumstances; for other people, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s ... bad morals? Please clean up your thinking here. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all people with wrenching decisions under complicated circumstances. From there, of course, people make better and worse decisions, from heroic to criminal â&#x20AC;&#x201D; many of them not knowing (or unable to judge) their impact. Anti-vaxxers feel justified, too, remember. The first right thing for bystanders to do, when deciding how to act on knowledge of othersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; bad decisions, is put selfish motives aside. Followed by a hard â&#x20AC;&#x153;Is this necessary?â&#x20AC;? reckoning. It was your sister-in-lawâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s responsibility to drop this client and to ask the director -names withheld -- what the schoolâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s policy and recommendations are for these situations. It was and remains your responsibility to risk family backlash and challenge her â&#x20AC;&#x153;donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t tell on clientsâ&#x20AC;? ethos with a â&#x20AC;&#x153;kids like your nephew count on us to act in good faithâ&#x20AC;? argument. Because you can, and because they do. Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com or chat with her online at 9 a.m. each Friday at www. washingtonpost.com.
KEY: SANTA BARBARA 0 0 SANTA MARIA/SANTA YNEZ/LOMPOC
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Sunday, May 10, 2020
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voices@newspress.com
B4
Voices SANTA BARBARA NEWS-PRESS
IDEAS & COMMENTARY
SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020
guesT oPINIoN
Who ordered apocalypse now?
N
obody has described what we just did to our society and economy better than Professor of Medicine, Professor of Health Research and Policy, and Professor of Statistics at Stanford University, John Ioannidis: “The current coronavirus disease, COVID-19, has been called a once-in-a-century pandemic. But it may also be a once-in-a-century evidence fiasco. The perfect storm of that quest for very urgent, spectacular, exciting, apocalyptic results.” The tragedy here is that the apocalyptic results did not emanate from the virus, which, after all the hype, had a death rate lower than an average flu. No, the disaster was triggered by politicians, bureaucrats, and technocrats who kept their finger pressed down on a panic button that unleashed a nuclear scale meltdown of our economy, while severely afflicting our mental and emotional well-being. How bad is our situation? The US Treasury just borrowed $2.99 trillion in the current quarter, more than five times the previous record, and even that hasn’t made a dent in this government-induced economic
catastrophe. California is already resilient to succumbing to this having to borrow money to meet virus that spread unchecked for unemployment claims. One of months before the governor’s four businesses in America are shutdown order. on the verge of bankruptcy, and Sweden is now being hailed by some sectors of our food supply the World Health Organization chain are breaking. for their approach which Of all the ironies, shunned an economic government’s “selection shutdown and stay-atbias” to keep us healthy home orders. has resulted in a Sweden instead isolated medical catastrophe. and protected the most California hospitals vulnerable while leaving alone have suffered $14 it up to its citizenry to billion in losses. Tens practice common sense. As Andy Caldwell of thousands of medical one European official put practices, including it, it was not Sweden, but Sansum Clinic, are on the rest of the world, that the ropes. Patients have attempted a grand experiment foregone potentially life-saving by way of quarantining healthy diagnostics and procedures people. because they were told nothing Lowell Ponte, PhD., summed but the virus warranted our up our mistake quite well, “The attention. less some scientists know about What are details of the a deadly new virus, the more overreaction as it relates to the they tend to make worse-case spread of the virus in Santa predictions and urge worst-case Barbara County? As it turns out, policies. Dr. Fauci now admits to over 300 of the 526 confirmed having relied on false information cases of the virus in our county and wildly inaccurate computer occurred within the confines models. of institutions that were closed The doctor’s second role is as a to the general public, namely, high bureaucrat and coronavirus nursing homes and the Lompoc commissar. Federal Prison. The rest of us, The reflexive position of that is, all but 150 people out bureaucrats is to delay and of 440,000, proved remarkably demand more studies. A
bureaucrat is never fired for saying ‘no’ — only for saying yes to some policy or project that fails.” In conclusion, as Scott Atlas, M.D., Stanford Medical Center and Hoover Institution, states: “The overwhelming majority of people do not have any significant risk of dying from COVID-19. Vital population immunity is prevented by total isolation policies, prolonging the problem. We know from decades of medical science that infection itself allows people to generate an immune response — antibodies. That has been falsely portrayed as a problem requiring mass isolation. In fact, infected people without severe illness are the immediately available vehicle for establishing widespread immunity. People are dying because other medical care is not getting done due to hypothetical projections.” Hence, we have just witnessed the worst man-made disaster in the history of this country. Andy Caldwell is the executive director of COLAB and the host of The Andy Caldwell Show weekdays from 3-5 p.m. on NewsPress Radio AM 1290.
DRAWING BOARD
Don’t let fear destroy our education system
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oing to school is a core function of a civilized society. Yet, due to the coronavirus pandemic that spurred nationwide lockdowns in March, American schools closed their doors. Since then, most of our nation’s 57 million children in grades K-12 have been isolated at home, cut off from face-to-face human contact, friends, sports, school activities and normal life. This cruel and unusual punishment cannot continue indefinitely, especially since it’s well-known that the coronavirus mostly affects the elderly and those with underlying medical conditions — not children. So though the main reason for justifying the mass closure of America’s schools is to protect children, our kids are not a highrisk group. Does that warrant this radical upheaval to their lives? Does that warrant the impact on millions of parents nationwide who can’t pay their bills and feed their families because they can’t go to work with children at home?
According to the Centers for we have at this time simply Disease Control, 10 children in the doesn’t warrant it. Of course, the U.S. between ages 0-14 have died pandemic is a fluid situation and from COVID-19 as of May 6. As things could change for better or tragic as that is, for comparison, worse in the coming months. 107 kids in the same age group Some have concerns that if have died this year from kids go back to school they could pneumonia and 85 from the flu. transmit COVID-19 to teachers or But we would never close schools other adults; however, it’s simply a for those deadly diseases. guessing game how transmissible For the 15-24 age it is between these bracket, 48 died in populations. The Adriana Cohen the U.S. from COVIDspeculation varies 19 as of May 6, while The author writes depending on who you 143 have died in the ask. But we do know for Creators same age range of kids can be carriers and Syndicate, Inc. pneumonia and 41 transmitters of influenza from the flu. Similarly, — another contagious our nation doesn’t close down virus that kills thousands each colleges and universities for those year — and again, we don’t close non-COVID cases. schools because of it. Parents ought to remember that In a piece in The New York when school and/or government Times, Apoorva Mandavilli officials inevitably succumb to writes, “Jennifer Nuzzo, an teachers unions laundry list of epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins demands come September, which University’s Bloomberg School of could result in continued school Public Health, said the decision closures, subjecting millions of to reopen schools cannot be made youth to more unhealthy isolation based solely on trying to prevent and subpar online learning. transmission.” Nuzzo said, “I think No parent should accept this we have to take a holistic view of as “the new normal.” The data the impact of school closures on
kids and our families. I do worry at some point, the accumulated harms from the measures may exceed the harm to the kids from the virus.” Exactly. We can’t let the cure be worse than the disease. And if parents don’t speak up and demand that schools reopen this fall, that’s likely what will happen — regardless if a resurgence of the virus takes place or not. The stark reality is that the coronavirus may be with us indefinitely, just like the seasonal flu, and we must adapt to it rather than canceling youth sports and revamping the entire U.S. education system. What schools should do is offer teachers and parents a choice. For parents who are afraid to send their children back to school, those students should stay home and either do homeschooling or continue with online learning. Same with teachers. If any are fearful to return to school, they, too, should remain at home and teach online while the rest of the healthy population gets back together in the classroom.
Big Google is watching your children
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chools remain and software primarily targeting shuttered across the students under the age of 13, country, 30 million whose face templates and Americans are out of voiceprints are illicitly collected, work, and food banks along with their: physical are running low, but the edutech locations; websites they visit; sector is booming. Silicon every search term they use in Valley companies are feasting Google’s search engine (and the on an exploding client base results they click on); the videos of quarantined students held they watch on YouTube; personal hostage to “online learning.” Big contact lists; voice recordings; Google is leading the way — and saved passwords; and other that is not OK. behavioral information. Unsuspecting parents Despite signing a “Student cheering all the software and Privacy Pledge” promising not hardware donations during the to collect, share and retain pandemic shutdown have no idea private personal data, Google the privacy price their children Chromebooks scan students’ are paying. This isn’t charity. faces and unique acoustic details It’s big tech recruitment of of students’ voices to identify vulnerable generations of future them by name, age, gender and Google addicts. In California, location while using Google Gov. Gavin Newsom and Google platforms. Farwell realized inked a deal to provide 4,000 his kids’ biometric data was “free” Chromebooks to students, being stored in a vast database along with “free” Wi-Fi to when he discovered they were 100,000 families. required to speak and Michelle Malkin In Kentucky, the look into the laptops’ Jefferson County microphones and The author writes cameras in order to use public schools for Creators gave away 25,000 the school products and Syndicate, Inc. Chromebooks. In apps. Philadelphia, public A similar lawsuit officials earmarked by the New Mexico $11 million to purchase 40,000 Attorney General’s office filed Chromebooks for homebound in federal court in February kids. exposed how Chromebooks Google CEO Sundar Pichai and G Suite for Education apps crowed a few weeks ago that mined students’ Gmail accounts the company now has 100 for advertising purposes. The million students and educators New Mexico AG’s brief also hooked on Google Classroom. bolstered my previous exclusive Bent on conquering the virtual reports, based on whistleblowing meeting market, the online giant by Missouri teachers Brooke announced that its premium Henderson and Brette Hay, Google Meet videoconferencing on Google’s access to student features are now free to all 80 profiles and family computer million customers of its G Suite passwords through the default for Education apps through the Chrome Sync function — which fall. Google Meet is racking up can only be blocked by creating 2 million new users a day as a passphrase buried in settings school districts abandon Zoom, that school officials never inform the dominant virtual meeting students about (let alone their app that recently admitted parents left in the dark from the “mistakenly” routing nonmoment schools require kids to Chinese calls through its Beijing- create Google logins as early as based data centers. kindergarten). But if educators think Google And now governments will provide more protections are entrusting Google to for American students than the help develop contact-tracing ChiCom government, they’re technology on the promise blind, dumb or bought off. that they won’t collect location As I’ve chronicled regularly data, won’t exploit data for in this column over the past commercial purposes, and won’t decade, the Silicon Valley grant access to unauthorized giant has repeatedly breached parties? Fox, meet henhouse. federal privacy laws to extend Regulatory slaps on the wrist its tentacles into children’s by toothless federal agencies emails, browsing habits, search have done nothing to deter engine activity, voice memos the deceitful data usurpers. and more without parental Why hasn’t every other state consent. Google’s information attorney general filed a similar predators have previously suit? Where is Congress, which admitted to unauthorized passed the Family Educational scanning and indexing of student Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 email accounts and targeted and the Children’s Online online advertising based on Privacy Protection Act of 1998 search engine activity, as well to prevent exactly the kind of as autosyncing of passwords, routine marauding of students’ browsing history and other digital lives perpetrated by private data across devices and Google and other EdTech accounts belonging to students vultures? Instead of pushing and families unaware of default back, Congress passed the tracking. “Every Student Succeeds A new lawsuit seeking classAct” and the “Foundations action status against Google filed for Evidence-Based Policy in Illinois serves as a warning Act” — deceptively titled bills to all the millions of families expanding third-party access to enthralled by their pandemicsensitive personal data. gifted Chromebooks. FatherThe Invisible Enemy is of-two Clinton Farwell alleges right under our noses, in our that Google illegally collected homes and on our kids’ laptops. personally identifying biometric Instead of removing children information from his children en masse from their classrooms through their public schoolin the name of public health, issued Chromebooks (loaded responsible adults should be with G Suite for Education apps) de-platforming Google’s privacy dating back to 2015. His suit lays pillagers from every school in out how Google has “infiltrated” America in the name of public K-12 education with hardware safety.
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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020