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January 15, 2022 • Vol 31 No. 2
Help Preserve Big Basin Gateway
On Jan. 11, Sempervirens Fund announced an agreement to buy 153-acres of redwood forests in Boulder Creek, which would become a new scenic entrance to Big Basin Redwoods State Park along Highway 236. Full Story page 6
Comments Due on 2045 SCCRTC Plan Full Story page 9
Elkhorn Slough Study
Remembering Archbishop Desmond Tutu
Crabs the Unsung Heroes in Restoring Marsh
Ramsar Convention as a “Wetland of International Importance”), are known for their ability to protect coastlines from rising seas. Best practices around wetland creation and restoration are always evolving and are based on the best available science. ... continues on page 4
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Archbishop Desmond Tutu, a South African Anglican cleric who in 1984 received the Nobel Prize for Peace for his role in the opposition to apartheid in South Africa, died on Dec. 26 at age 90. Full Story page 5
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No. 2
Volume 31
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Table of Contents
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Cover Elkhorn Slough Study: Crabs the Unsung Heroes in Restoring Marsh
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Community News Help Preserve Big Basin Gateway: Fundraising To Purchase Land Ongoing thru January 31 Covid Hospitalizations Up; Can Staff Cope?, By Jondi Gumz Rail Bridge Fix Scheduled Next Week Comments Due Jan. 31 on 2045 Regional Transportation Plan 8 Tens Drops Live Shows, Offers Streaming AG Bonta: California Law Does Not Criminalize Pregnancy Loss Share Your Love Story Got Mild Omicron?: Avoid ER if You Can, County Says Beware of Scams as New Tax Season Begins Westside Trail Wins Two Awards • Radical Transformation to Launch Impact Class Monarch Services: Two New Board Members • PVUSD News A Wheelchair to Dance In: Students Thankful for One-of-a-Kind Teacher, By Betwixt Jones-Cruz SC Community Health Leases Clinic Space Watsonville Rotary Seeks Idea to Help Youth
7 8 9 11 12 13 14 17 20 21 22 23 25 5
In Memoriam A Beacon of Faith and Humanity: Remembering Archbishop Desmond Tutu
Monthly Horoscope • Page 26 – Deep Reflections: Venus & Mercury Retrograde, By Risa D’Angeles Community Calendar • Arts & Entertainment – Pages 28, 29
16 18 24 24
Featured Columnists Bare Root Stock For Winter, By Tony Tomeo Robin’s Pumpkin Curry Soup, courtesy of Robin Turnquist Experience The Difference, By Ron Kustek I Owe $1,048 in Back Rent, But I Always Paid On Time, By Christopher Elliott 27 Everybody Hurts Sometimes, By Joyce and Barry Vissell 30 Significant State Funding For Improving the Soquel Corridor, By Zach Friend, Supervisor, Second District
SCCAS Featured Pet • Page 31 – Blonds Have More Fun!
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COVER STORY Patrice Edwards Jondi Gumz
publisher editor
contributing writers Jondi Gumz, Betwixt Jones-Cruz, Risa D’Angeles, Tony Tomeo, Ron Kustek, Christopher Elliott, Joyce and Barry Vissell, Zach Friend layout Michael Oppenheimer, Jim Johnson graphic artists Michael Oppenheimer, Jim Johnson photography Michael Oppenheimer, Jim Johnson, Brad King website Michael Oppenheimer, Camisa Composti production coordinator Camisa Composti media consultants Teri Huckobey, Brooke Valentine, Tara Carcamo office coordinator Cathe Race distribution Bill Pooley, James Hudson
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“Study the Slough” from page 1 In the past, ecologists have emphasized the importance of physical factors (such as elevation and hydrology) in driving how wetlands operate, but according to a new study in Elkhorn Slough published Jan. 5 in PLOS ONE, biological and physical factors also play an important role in driving marsh recovery. “It’s estimated that the estuary has already lost 70% of its historical salt marsh habitat, which is quite alarming,” said lead author Dr. Kathryn Beheshti. The majority of the marsh loss in recent years has been from the formation and expansion of pannes, or poorly drained mud depressions devoid of vegetation. The researchers were eager to gain a better understanding of what was making pannes expand so quickly. Beheshti and her co-authors conducted a two-year field study tracking panne dynamics in the estuary. “Pannes often result in pooling water, and even salt-tolerant plants like pickleweed don’t like to be underwater for long periods of time, especially anoxic, high sulfide water,” Beheshti said. Over the study period, pannes were observed contracting, and the marsh recovering. The researchers found that marsh recovery along panne edges was fastest where pannes were small, shallow, and at relatively high elevation. They also found that pannes showing signs of deposition of sediment and that had good drainage due to high densities of crab burrows were quicker to contract than those that were eroding or had poor drainage (fewer crab burrows). “It really all points to drainage, and crabs in particular, as the primary engineer in the system ... if the marsh surrounding
PHONE: (831) 688-7549 FAX: (831) 688-7551 GENERAL E-MAIL: info@cyber-times.com Patrice Edwards: patrice@cyber-times.com Publisher’s Assistant: assistant@cyber-times.com Editor: info@cyber-times.com Calendar Listings: www.tpgonlinedaily.com Graphics Department: graphics@cyber-times.com Billing Inquiries: cathe@cyber-times.com Classified Sales: sales@cyber-times.com Production: production@cyber-times.com CHECK OUT OUR WEB SITE AT: www.tpgonlinedaily.com mission statement We at the Times Publishing Group, Inc. are dedicated to providing a voice for the individuals and organizations in our community while highlighting the outstanding accomplishments of our local businesses. We seek to promote healthy family values through our coverage of youth activities, school news, senior events, community groups and entertainment 4 / January 15th 2022 / Aptos Times www.tpgonlinedaily.com
Photo courtesy of Kat Beheshti
Kat Beheshti and team anchoring the boat before starting field work. the pannes has few burrows, the water continues to work with partner agencies in pannes, especially deep, low elevation to “...ensure an additional 10,000 acres pannes, drains more slowly which drowns of coastal wetlands will be protected, the marsh plants, and recovery is slower,” restored or created by 2025, and the added Beheshti. acreage of coastal wetlands [increased] ... The PLOS ONE study shows how by 20% by 2030 and 50% by 2040.” context-dependent crab effects are in the This study comes at an opportune time estuary. in the state, when much of the focus is on Parallel work led by the same lead how to protect and create wetland habitat. author published earlier this year in Eco- As this study and complementary work sphere, showed that along tidal creek edges shows, these systems are complex, and prone to erosion, crabs negatively affect management decisions should incorporate marsh plant biomass and soil structure, those complexities. n therefore degrading marsh resilience to ••• erosive processes. Cover Photo: Annakate Clemons (from Earlier this fall, Gov. Newsom signed left), Kat Beheshti, and Hannah Levy cola budget bill which includes $500 million lecting molds of crab burrows in Elkhorn for coastal resilience. Additionally, the Slough salt marshes • Photo courtesy of California Ocean Protection Council Kat Beheshti
IN MEMORIAM
A Beacon of Faith and Humanity
Remembering Archbishop Desmond Tutu
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rchbishop Desmond Tutu, a South African Anglican cleric who in 1984 received the Nobel Prize for Peace for his role in the opposition to apartheid in South Africa, died on Dec. 26 at age 90. Mount Madonna School students first interviewed Tutu during their 2009 learning journey to South Africa and subsequent student groups met with him several times over nearly a decade. “I felt great sadness upon learning of Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s passing,” said Values in World Thought teacher and Director of Upper School Shannon Kelly (’92). “He was a truly amazing person and one of the last moral heroes of his generation. I greatly appreciate the time he took to meet with Mount Madonna School students and faculty. We walked away from our time with him filled with joy and inspired by his kindness and humor.” Archbishop Tutu left an indelible impression on many of the Mount Madonna School students and faculty who met him. “He was such an inspirational and important person in both South Africa’s history and the world at large. He contributed much to the students of Mount Madonna by speaking, laughing and singing with us over the years. MMS students’ final visit with Tutu was in 2017 as part of their Ubunye (unity) learning journey,” said videographer and MMS alumnus Devin Kumar (’06). Kumar has accompanied MMS student groups on numerous Values learning journeys to South Africa, India and Washington, D.C. “On our last meeting with him, instead of a normal interview, the students gave praise and appreciation to him for all he’s done for us over the years and how his impact on the MMS students has made a
difference,” said Kumar. “We also sang a traditional South African song for him. We will miss him greatly.” In 2011, junior Blythe Collier (’12) shared this reflection on the students’ Sawubona (I see you) blog: “Pregs Govender and Desmond Tutu both taught us to embrace the whole, whether that is a country, a people, a person or oneself. That’s exactly what the people we’ve met in South Africa have done for us. Wherever we journeyed we were greeted with unquestionable acceptance that we couldn’t help but return.” “What attracted me to Archbishop Tutu was his deep and significant participation in the historic miracle of the end of apartheid, and his leadership in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that sought restorative justice,” said Ward Mailliard, former MMS Values in World Thought teacher. “I took my students to meet him for the first time in 2009 and met him four more times after that. His legacy is that of a man who lived his convictions with kindness, humility, humor and love.
HAPPY NEW YEAR
“Desmond Tutu” page 10
TRANSFORMING YOUR WATER FOR TOMORROW S o q u e l C r e e k Wa t e r. o r g
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COMMUNITY NEWS
Help Preserve Big Basin Gateway
Fundraising To Purchase Land Ongoing thru January 31
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n Jan. 11, Sempervirens Fund announced an agreement to buy 153-acres of redwood forests in Boulder Creek, which would become a new scenic entrance to Big Basin Redwoods State Park along Highway 236.
To permanently protect the property, Sempervirens Fund launched a campaign to raise $2.86 million by Jan. 31. “The clock is ticking. We have three weeks to raise the funding necessary to complete the purchase and permanently preserve the Gateway to Big Basin,” said Sara Barth, Sempervirens Fund’s executive director. “For decades this property has been prized for its conservation potential, both for its outstanding redwood forests and its proximity to Big Basin Redwoods State Park. We are excited about this urgent and once-in-alifetime opportunity.” The $2.86 million Campaign to Preserve the Gateway to Big Basin would fund the purchase price of $2,415,000 and include $346,500 for stewardship programs to improve the health and resilience of the forest habitats on the property. “Thanks to generous donors we have raised $2.18 million, so we are on our way, but we really need the public’s support to
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make the difference,” said Barth. “If you love redwoods, Big Basin, or both, this is a big moment for their future. Donations by Jan 31, up to $100,000, will be matched.” Visit sempervirens.org/gateway to learn more or donate. Conservation Priority ccording to records, at the turn of the twentieth century, the property was almost entirely clear cut of redwood trees. A century later, the entire 153-acre Gateway property is forested from three ridges down into creeks, waterfalls, and canyons, forming a miniature basin of its own next to Big Basin. Along with waterways stemming from China Grade in Big Basin, the Gateway is among the headwaters for the Boulder Creek watershed and the San Lorenzo River. Among wildlife observed on the property are mountain lions and gray foxes. “The Gateway is a conservation gem,”
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added Laura McLendon, Sempervirens Fund’s director of conservation. “Preserving the Gateway is critical for protecting the Boulder Creek watershed and the San Lorenzo River. And it has abundant and healthy stands of redwoods, and multiple groves of Douglas firs, coast live oaks, tan oaks, and madrones throughout the property.” CZU Fire Impacts he Douglas firs are especially important, because so many were lost in the CZU Lightning Complex wildfires in August and September 2020, which scorched more than 86,000 acres, including 97 percent of Big Basin Redwoods State Park. The Gateway to Big Basin was completely burned in fire, although at a much lower intensity than the park. Most Douglas firs survived, making them invaluable as a seed bank for regrowth in nearby forests.
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“Big Basin” page 9
COMMUNITY NEWS
Covid Hospitalizations Up; Can Staff Cope? By Jondi Gumz
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ith infectious COVID-19 skyrocketing from 1,950 to 3,324 active cases in Santa Cruz County, public agencies and private operations downshifted to reduce the spread. The state Department of Public Health reports a 23 percent test positivity rate statewide, which is high, and estimates omicron, the faster-spreading variant, comprises 95% of cases statewide. Omicron is the most easily transmitted, even for the vaccinated, but it has been not as deadly as the Delta variant in countries such as South Africa and the United Kingdom. However, neither the state nor Santa Cruz County has a breakdown of variants — Delta vs Omicron — for people who are hospitalized and for people who have died. The number of cases jumped in Santa Cruz County during the winter holidays, with 325 confirmed on Dec. 29, then 504 on Jan. 4, and 527 on Jan. 5, according to the county health dashboard. The increases come despite an indoor mask mandate ordered as of Nov. 22. So far, 232 Santa Cruz County residents have died, with 79 percent having pre-existing conditions. In Santa Cruz County, the state reported 34 patients hospitalized with Covid, up from 18, including 2 in intensive care. It could be they entered the hospital with another condition or because of Covid – that data hasn’t been made available. A week ago, before those figures came out, county health officials urged people with no symptoms or mild symptoms or some other not-serious illness to stay home rather than going to the emergency rooms. Dr. David Ghilarducci, Santa Cruz County deputy health officer, advised those who have not vaccinated or “boosted” to get vaccinated now. A study out of Denmark found a third dose provided “significant” protection against Omicron for those 60 and up. For a list of test options see https:// tinyurl.com/get-tested-santa-cruz Staffing Shortages ational Nurses United planned a protest Jan 13 at hospitals around California to complain of staffing shortages. Dignity Health issued a statement Jan. 12 in response acknowledging its California hospitals, including Dominican Hospital in Santa Cruz “are experiencing a significant increase in COVID-19 patients as well as a critical staffing shortage. This is an extremely challenging situation, and we are doing everything we can to ensure our hospitals can continue to operate while also keeping our staff and our patients safe.” The statement cited state health department guidelines (aligning with CDC
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ore more opinions will be issued Jan. 13; this matter could be one of them. A march is planned Jan. 23 in Washington, D.C., by people who want a choice on vaccination. Supporters include the Front Line Covid-19 Critical Care Alliance, Children’s Health Defense and the International Alliance of Physicians and Medical Scientists. Testing esting is in high demand. Students, staff and their families in the Pajaro Valley Unified School District can get tested Monday through Saturday: Here are the locations: Cabrillo College Parking Lot K — Park and get in line. Monday through Friday: 9 am – 5 pm. Saturdays: 9 am – 3 p.m. Santa Cruz County of Education DriveThru — 399 Encinal St., Santa Cruz, Monday through Friday: 2 – 5 pm. Closed Saturday. Pajaro Valley Unified School District Drive-Thru — 294 Green Valley Rd, Watsonville, Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 9 am – 5 pm Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds — 2601 E Lake Ave., Watsonville, Thursday through Saturday: 9 am to 5 pm PVUSD staff have been planning for and distributing COVID-19 rapid antigen tests at the District Office and the new PVUSD Family Engagement and Wellness Center next to E.A. Hall Middle School in Watsonville. These antigen tests provided by the California Department of Public Health and were picked up by Dr. Michelle Rodriguez, PVUSF superintendent of schools, from the Santa Cruz County Office of Education in the District’s textbook delivery van on Dec. 31. With those test kits in hand, students and staff were able to pick them during Christmas break, giving more than 19,000 students and staff the opportunity to use their rapid antigen tests at home on Jan 9 to prepare for a safe return to in-person learning on Jan, 10.
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Rite Aid in Aptos is offering Covid Vaccine
guidelines) allowing hospital staff to work if they test positive for COVID-19, or have a close contact, and are asymptomatic (which means no symptoms). “These guidelines will be implemented only if the hospital is facing a serious staffing shortage that would jeopardize its ability to provide care,” the statement read. “While we have not yet had to implement these guidelines, we may need to adopt this approach in the near future. The statement continued, “We implore everyone in our communities to help reduce the spread of COVID-19 during this current surge by following public safety measures, wearing a mask, social distancing, and getting the COVID-19 vaccine and booster as soon as possible.” Other strategies for the surge of patients may include: Limiting visitors, pausing elective surgeries, temporary closure of non-essential services, or implementing CDPH crisis staffing protocols. These decisions are being made on a facility-by-facility basis depending on their specific situation.” Dignity Health added: “Individuals should not visit the emergency department if the symptoms of their illness are mild to moderate – including a cough, sore throat, runny nose, or body aches – or simply for the purpose of having a COVID-19 test administered and should instead consult an outpatient primary care provider.” The case are split between Dominican Hospital and Watsonville Community Hospital, while filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on which trying to orchestrate a sale to a local consortium. Impacts abrillo College alerted faculty and students to shift to online classes in January through Feb. 22. Vaccination was already required for any class with an inperson component. The Aptos Chamber of Commerce
canceled the Jan. 19 in-person luncheon featuring county supervisor Zach Friend. Ella’s at the Airport, the popular restaurant in Watsonville, closed briefly so owner Ella King could visit her parents in Texas during the holiday, but the shutdown was extended as employees reported positive coronavirus tests. Ella’s has since reopened. The approach at the Pajaro Valley Unified School District was proactive staff prepped 19,000 rapid Covid-19 tests kits so students and teachers could begin inperson classes Jan.10 with peace of mind. One Santa Cruz High basketball starter told Aptos Times he had Covid, and the games with Aptos boys and girls were rescheduled. Santa Cruz County Actors’ Theatre, which puts on “8 Tens at 8,” switched from live shows to live-streaming. The U.S. Supreme Court heard argument against a Jan. 10 mandate for employers with 100 or more workers to “vax or test” but hasn’t ruled. That order came from OSHA, the Occupational and Safety and Health Administration and was pushed by President Biden. The Court indicated one
“COVID Update” page 8
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COMMUNITY NEWS
Rail Bridge Fix Scheduled Next Week C altrans reports Highway 1 will be closed during the overnight hours from Rio Del Mar Boulevard to State Park Drive next week to allow for repairs to the railroad bridge at the South Aptos undercrossing. The railing was damaged by storms in 2017. Northbound Hwy. 1 will be closed from Rio Del Mar Boulevard to State Park Drive on Tuesday, Jan. 18 and Wednesday, Jan. 19 from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. Southbound Hwy. 1 will be closed from State Park Drive to Rio Del Mar Boulevard on Thursday, Jan. 20 from 11 p.m. to 5 a. m. The work will be performed by Graniterock Construction, under permit from Caltrans.
“COVID Update” from page 7 Superintendent Rodriguez said, “PVUSD staff worked tirelessly to prepare for this important day as the education and public health sectors aligned once again during this pandemic in support of our community’s health and wellbeing.” Safety measures will now include expanded days for the District Office Drive-Thru PCR testing, increased PPE access, continued access to booster shots
Travelers will have to detour through Aptos Village from the Highway 1 northbound off-ramps at Rio Del Mar and the southbound off-ramps at State Park Drive. Delays should be minimal. Message boards will assist everyone traveling through this area. Caltrans reminds motorists to move over and slow down when driving through highway work zones. n ••• For traffic updates on other state highways in Santa Cruz County, call Caltrans District 5 Public Affairs at 805549-3318 or visit the District 5 website at: https://dot.ca.gov/ caltrans-near-me/district-5
for those who are eligible, and updates to masking guidance. Over the past six days, approximately 3,000 members of the school community used the PVUSD District Office PCR Drive-Thru testing service to check their COVID-19 status., according to Pajaro Valley district officials. Dr. Rodriguez said, “This volume of PCR testing speaks to our continued commitment to serve our community and our community’s deep interest in keeping themselves and each other healthy and safe.”
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PVUSD will not only maintain access to site-level PCR testing for students and staff but will expand the Drive Thru testing to a daily service, Monday - Friday 9-5pm and Saturday 9-3pm at the District Office for the upcoming weeks. As of Jan. 10, all PVUSD staff will have access to N95/KN95 masks at their school sites and departments. Eligible PVUSD educational community members may continue to register for, make appointments and receive booster shots at the District Office. PVUSD received confirmation that the state will soon deploy the KF94 masks for students ,which will be distributed once available in our county. Until the district receive this protective equipment for students, Rodriguez said, “We will be encouraging all students (and families) to use at minimum cloth masks with three or more layers. For increased effectiveness surgical masks, double masking, fitted surgical masks, KN95 and KF94 have been determined to be more effective.” There are also important CDPH updates to isolation guidance for those who test positive at this time. PVUSD asks the educational community to protect themselves and each other by following CDPH guidance with any student or staff member who tests positive quarantining at home for five days. Additional information about testing, isolation guidance and masking is available in this letter from all Santa Cruz County Superintendents. PVUSD is taking these proactive measures citing research showing in-person learning is best for students. Boosters for Kids 12-15 n Jan. 6, California Department of Public Health announced that children ages 12-15 are now eligible to receive a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 booster at least 5 months after completing their two-dose primary vaccination series. In addition,
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a third dose is now available for certain immunocompromised children ages 5-11. “With the highly transmissible omicron variant quickly taking over as the dominant strain, it is important to protect our youngest community members by getting a booster,” said Dr. Cal Gordon, Santa Cruz County deputy health officer. Vaccinations are the number one tool for preventing hospitalizations and deaths from COVID-19, according to health officials. Booster shot appointments can be scheduled through https://myturn. ca.gov/ and are by checking with your local doctor and pharmacies. For a list of local COVID-19 vaccine providers, visit www. santacruzhealth.org/coronavirusvaccine. Those needing assistance in scheduling an appointment can call the Community Bridges Helpline at 831-219-8607 or 831-4403556 (English, Spanish, Mixteco and Triqui). Those with immune-compromised children should talk with their healthcare provider. For local information on COVID-19, including on where to tested, go to www. santacrushealth.org/coronavirus or call (831) 454-4242 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. n ••• Total COVID cases: 25,651 ~~~ COVID Deaths: 232 As of Jan. 10 Age 85 and older: 98 • 75-84: 52 • 65-74: 43 60-64: 14 • 55-59: 3 • 45-54: 10 35-44: 7 • 25-34: 5 Underlying Conditions Yes: 184 • No: 47 • Unknown: 1 Race White 130 • Latinx 83 • Asian 16 Black 1 • Amer Indian 1 • Unknown 1 Gender Men: 119 • Women: 113 Location At facility for aged: 108 Not at a facility: 124
COMMUNITY NEWS
Comments Due Jan. 31 on 2045 Regional Transportation Plan T he Santa Cruz County Regional Transportation Commission will hold a public hearing to solicit community input on the Draft 2045 Regional Transportation Plan for Santa Cruz County. The 278-page draft plan identifies transportation needs and priorities in Santa Cruz County over the next 25 years. It is an essential first step in securing funding from federal, state, and local sources. The hearing was scheduled for after 9:30 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 13, via Community TV Zoom at https://us02web.zoom. us/j/85771172425
“Big Basin” from page 6 “The fire that came through the Gateway to Big Basin was largely beneficial, clearing out understory and regenerating native plants,” added McLendon. “The survival of the Douglas firs on the Gateway property will be a gift to regional forests that lost so many firs in the CZU fire, including most of the firs in Big Basin.” Stewardship Challenges espite its abundance of natural and scenic features, the Gateway property is best known as the former site of a considerable collection of debris and junk, as well as a protracted lawsuit with the County of Santa Cruz. A previous owner, Roy Kaylor, collected cars and other objects that lined roads throughout the property. Kaylor, featured on a 2011 episode of the A&E show Hoarders, also battled the county over cleanup of debris and chemicals leaching on the property. Kaylor ran for supervisor in 2016, collecting 750 votes but finishing third in a 3-way race eventually won by incumbent Bruce McPherson.
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Dial-in:+1 669 900 6833 Webinar ID: 8577117 2425 A staff presentation and other items were scheduled for 9 a.m. Learn more about the Regional Transportation Plan and view the draft plan at www.sccrtc.org/2045rtp. The public comment period for the Draft 2045 Regional Transportation Plan runs through Jan. 31. The public can submit written comments by Jan. 31 to 2045rtp@sccrtc.org or mail to 1101 Pacific Ave., Suite 250, Santa Cruz, CA 95060. n
Verve Coffee Roasters co-founder Colby Barr purchased the property from Kaylor and the County in June 2020. Funding from Barr’s purchase largely went into cleaning up the property, removing cars and other junk, and improving soil conditions. Environmental assessments during that purchase and a subsequent study by Sempervirens Fund in November 2021 confirm the Gateway property, including the streams, has a clean bill of health. Working with Barr, Sempervirens Fund plans to ensure the property is free and clear of remnant debris. Resetting the property to a natural state will set the stage for Sempervirens Fund to implement forest, watershed, and habitat restoration programs at the Gateway, and improve forest resilience in the aftermath of the CZU fire. “Mr. Barr has put a lot of love and care into the Gateway property, and we are grateful for his stewardship and his commitment to restoring the natural conditions of this magnificent forest,” said Barth. “We are thrilled he would like to see it permanently preserved, especially if it can be useful to efforts to reimagine and expand Big Basin as it recovers from the CZU fire.” Reimaging Big Basin n response to the destruction of the CZU fire, California State Parks is engaging in a considerable and first-of-its-kind planning effort to reimagine a state park. With nearly all of Big Basin Redwoods State Park’s facilities, infrastructure, and trails lost or badly damaged by the fire, and ongoing hazardous conditions in the park’s interior, the effort—Reimagining Big Basin—is ongoing to engage the public in understanding how to reestablish the park for the next century. Visit the website to learn about opportunities to learn more, including attending the second webinar in
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January, completing an online survey, submitting a memory of the park, and looking for future events. “We have had serious conversations with California State Parks about the importance of the Gateway property for Big Basin’s future,” said Barth. “Nothing
is guaranteed, but we do envision it would both continue to be a dramatic entranceway into Big Basin, and possibly join the park in the future, to expand hiking, camping, and park services.” n ••• Photos by Julie Seelin
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as she blushed. ‘But,’ he said, ‘I will tell you this. At that moment I had a conversation “When I think of Archbishop Tutu, with God and I said, if you want God, you I can’t help but think of his good friend can take me now! This is enough!’ While it the Dalai Lama,” said Mailliard. “When is never easy to lose such beacons of faith we would meet each of them over the and humanity, those special moments will years, they would each speak so lovingly inspire us for a lifetime.” Junior Mara Getz (’10) participated of each other’s friendship and have some humorous comment about their dear in the MMS students’ first interview with Tutu. In 2009, she friend. One of my this reflection favorite stories was I told him how inspirational shared on the Ubuntu Project when Archbishop his message of finding joy (humanity/ I am Tutu spoke of a time when he and the Dalai in even the most difficult because you are) blog: interview with Lama were speaking circumstances has been to “Our Archbishop Tutu and laughing me. went by in a whirl. I together in a hotel — Elias Moreno asked him, ‘How did lobby before some you develop such a public event. When the press arrived, the Archbishop leaned deep faith in humankind and have you over to the Dalai Lama and said quietly, ever doubted it?’ He began his answer ‘Now, you must act like a Holy man’ and with a story about the Truth and Recthey both broke into laughter. The greatness onciliation Commission. When he was of both men rested upon never forgetting done, he explained that he has such faith themselves as humble human beings, or as in humankind because humans, by their I think of their greatness, beings embodied very nature, are good. If they were not they in ordinary people who did extraordinary would not be bothered by the suffering things and extraordinary people who did of others. I was so moved. Words cannot ordinary things. It was their willingness begin to express how great I was feeling. to speak to my students and share how What an experience. What a trip. What an they persevered through historic and dev- interview.” In 2015, junior Holden Smith (’16) astating events, to laugh with us and give radiance to the present moments we shared reflected in the students’ Uxhumano (connection) blog: “With Archbishop Tutu, with them, that meant so much.” He added, “My other favorite moment the aim of a question often goes awry in was when one of my students asked Arch- his answering. When we ask him to talk bishop Tutu what it felt like taking the about his faith he tells us about his favorite hand of Nelson Mandela and stepping prophet Jeremiah. Jeremiah was a reluctant out on the balcony to introduce him to the leader and Archbishop Tutu likens this to world as the President of South Africa. his own experience during the struggle Tutu smiled and said ‘Ooooh! you know, against apartheid. Then he discusses the some things you cannot put into words – responsibility of our generation and the like holding your first child in your arms.’ value of education. When he finishes Then he said, ‘Do you remember your first answering, he has satisfied a hunger that kiss?’ and then laughed in his unique way I never knew I had. I start to notice how “Desmond Tutu” from page 5
10 / January 15th 2022 / Aptos Times www.tpgonlinedaily.com
Tutu’s skin sags with the weight of time and tragedy, but his voice and laughter is touched by a contagious youthfulness. He takes a humble sip from a teacup that reads: ‘Everyone grows old, but you don’t have to grow up.’ I notice the Tibetan slippers, wrinkled hands, reckless laugh, and Ubuntu bracelet that amalgamate into a human of true moral character. Ubuntu symbolizes Tutu. In his words it is defined as, ‘a person is a person because of other persons.’ Desmond Tutu is a leader because people follow him without being asked to. I think about those around me: Sophia is a singer because people listen, Julia is a writer because people read, Amy and Haley are teachers because we pay attention, Sielo is a dancer because his friends at LEAP School play the drums, and we are all who we are because someone loves us.” A couple years earlier, in 2013, junior Talia Speaker (’14) reflected in the Sawubona/ Ngikhona (I see you/yes, we see you too) blog: “Throughout the interview, Desmond Tutu poured love, hope and wisdom into our eager ears. Almost immediately I developed a deep respect for him. Although we did not always get direct answers to our painstakingly and precisely worded questions, he gave us more than I could have imagined. With each question he took us on a journey through his mind and memory. His genuine, wise and utterly sincere words filled the room like music. In his presence I felt like a child, watching, taking him in with immense admiration and curiosity. He showed me, in a new light, the value of humor and true compassion. He spoke of respect, love, and humanity in ways that transformed complexity into beautifully simple principles of nature. I feel blessed and honored to have met this man who is so full of the good parts of life.” In 2017, juniors Elias Moreno (’18) and Sienna Clifton (’18) shared in their class’
Ubunye (unity) blog their impressions of the Archbishop. “Looking at his sympathetic eyes and authentic ear-to-ear smile instantly made me feel more confident, and gave me the ability to truly speak from the heart,” said Moreno. “I told him how inspirational his message of finding joy in even the most difficult circumstances has been to me. I expressed to him that I would try, in all aspects of my life, to see the joy and hope in every situation and that I would encourage others to do the same.” “As soon as we heard his infectious laughter from down the hallway, I knew what an amazing opportunity this was,” said Clifton. “Once he and his wife sat down, our class started to sing, and the smiles never left our faces. It’s hard to completely put into words how I felt. I had an overwhelming sense of joy and pure bliss being there, in front of such an inspirational person, with my class. One profound, yet very simple statement that he made, was that he was considered a great captain because he had a great team. This sentiment made me truly realize the importance of acknowledging others’ gifts, as well as being able to be proud of one’s own.” n ••• See videos of student interactions with Archbishop Tutu: Ubunye 2017: https://youtu.be/ tqKVO1Xz49g Sawubona/Ngikhona 2013: https:// youtu.be/0CB21HJUAJw Sawubona 2011: https://youtu.be/ IWRlLqnh7c4 Ubuntu 2009: https://www.youtube. com/watch?v=tqKVO1Xz49g ••• Photos: Mount Madonna School students interview South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu in Cape Town, South Africa. • Credit: Shmuel Thaler
COMMUNITY NEWS
8 Tens Drops Live Shows, Offers Streaming A fter two years of being dark, Santa Cruz County Actors’ Theatre has opted out of live performances for the famed 8 Tens @ 8 Short Play Festival Jan. 14-Feb. 6. The fast spread of the COVID-19 variant Omicron has made taking precautions priority. “Actors’ Theatre has worked so incredibly hard to get to the point of finally opening,“ said Executive Artistic Director Andrew Ceglio. “But with the Omicron data, and if things continue on their present course, our run of the 8 Tens would fall right at the peak of this current Covid surge.” After long discussions with Board President Wilma Marcus Chandler, the decision was made to cancel the live performances. “I did not enjoy making this decision,” Ceglio said. “But I feel this is the only way to ensure that we keep everybody safe. I know that many theater companies are remaining open and canceling performances or runs only if there is an outbreak or somebody tests positive. That is fine for them, and I respect the freedom of their
choice. However, my top priority is the safety and health of every single person giving their time to this organization and to the public.” The plus side to the unexpected cancellation is that Actors’ Theatre had already
planned to make a professional film of the Festival this year. A three-camera shoot is scheduled the week of Jan. 10 with an expected release date in February as an ondemand offering. “This is the way of the future,”
said Marketing Director Jana Marcus. “At Actors’ Theatre we are so fortunate to produce original content that is not beholden to large licensing houses — who have not yet caught up with the demand for streaming performance rights.” With the On-Demand platform, Actors’ Theatre will be able to reach a wider audience with what is now the longest running short play festival in America. Ticket-holders of the canceled sold-out run of the 8 Tens Festival will have options. Actors’ Theatre will be contacting patrons shortly with options of either a refund or to seamlessly move their purchase to the on-demand platform to view the film in February. Season subscriptions for the fourshow 2021 season are still available with the 8 Tens as a streaming option. n ••• Visit www.santacruzactorstheatre.org for refund and streaming options. Send email inquiries to: ATboxofficetickets@gmail.com Tickets: Season subscriptions, including the On-Demand film of the 8 Tens, are available at: www.santacruzactorstheatre.org/tickets
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www.tpgonlinedaily.com Aptos Times / January 15th 2022 / 11
COMMUNITY NEWS
AG Bonta: California Law Does Not Criminalize Pregnancy Loss O n Jan. 6, California Attorney General Rob Bonta issued a legal alert to all California district attorneys, police chiefs, and sheriffs stating that section 187 of the California Penal Code was intended to hold accountable those who inflict harm on pregnant individuals, resulting in miscarriage or stillbirth, not to punish people who suffer the loss of their pregnancy. The alert aims to prevent improper and unjust applications of the law similar to the prosecutions of Adora Perez and Chelsea Becker — two women in Kings County who were charged with “fetal murder” for allegedly causing the stillbirth of their fetuses. The charges against Ms. Becker were dismissed in May 2021. However, Ms. Perez remains in prison serving an 11-year sentence. “The loss of a pregnancy at any stage is a physically and emotionally traumatic experience that should not be exacerbated by the threat of being charged with murder,” said Bonta. “The charges against
Ms. Becker and Ms. Perez were not consistent with the law, and this misuse of section 187 should not be repeated. With reproductive rights under attack in this country, it is important Adora Perez that we make it clear: Here in California, we do not criminalize the loss of a pregnancy.” “As an organization dedicated to advocating for, and defending the civil and human rights of, all people capable of pregnancy, National Advocates for Pregnant Women is grateful to AG Bonta for his leadership as he makes clear that Penal Code Section 187 should not be misused to criminalize a pregnant person experiencing a pregnancy loss,” said Samantha Lee, staff attorney with National Advocates for Pregnant Women. “While many are simply waiting to see whether the U.S. Supreme
Court completely overturns or merely guts Roe v. Wade, AG Bonta has taken concrete action to protect the health and rights of all people capable of becoming pregnant.” “This effort by Chelsea Becker the Office of Attorney General and AG Rob Bonta is a win for the people of California,” said Jodi Hicks, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California. “Unjust prosecution of people experiencing pregnancy has been documented across the state and the nation since Roe v. Wade, and we are pleased to see Attorney General Bonta do his part to make sure that rogue district attorneys can no longer twist California law to punish pregnant people. Without a doubt, the consequences of criminalizing pregnancy loss disproportionately affect people of color, people with lower incomes, and people
living in rural parts of the state. Planned Parenthood looks forward to continuing to work closely with AG Bonta and his office to find ways to implement the recommendations put forth by the California Future of Abortion Council, and more broadly continue to protect and expand access to sexual and reproductive health care, including abortion.” “Today’s Legal Alert is a powerful affirmation of the principle that people don’t lose their right to equal protection of the law because they can become pregnant,” said Farah Diaz-Tello, senior counsel and legal director for If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice. “The recent prosecutions of women who experienced pregnancy losses disregard a legal premise that predates the founding of our nation and continues to the present day in California law: The state is forbidden from punishing people for the outcome of their pregnancies.” “Pregnancy Loss” page 13
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COMMUNITY NEWS
Share Your Love Story W e at Times Publishing Group, Inc. would like to hear about your love story. How you met, how many years you’ve had together, how you keep the fire of romance going in tough times. If you live in Aptos, Capitola, Soquel or Scotts Valley, we’d like to hear from you — by Jan. 25 for the Feb. 1 issue.
“Pregnancy Loss” from page 12 Diaz-Tello continued: “These improper prosecutions only serve to target and criminalize communities marginalized by society because of their race, poverty, immigration status, and other identities. By reiterating this protection, the Office of the Attorney General is sending an important message that the State of California will not tolerate this discriminatory criminalization of people’s reproductive lives.” Last year, Bonta filed multiple briefs in support of Ms. Perez’s work to obtain her freedom from prison. In the briefs, the Attorney General argued that pregnant individuals cannot be prosecuted or convicted under California’s statutes for murder of a fetus based on the outcome of their pregnancy. Penal Code section 187 defines murder as “the unlawful killing of a human being, or a fetus, with malice aforethought.” Reference to “a fetus” was added in 1970 when the California Legislature amended section 187. Today’s alert reiterates that the Legislature did not intend to include a pregnant person’s own actions that might result in a miscarriage or stillbirth. Rather, the intent was to criminalize violence done to a pregnant person that caused fetal death. The statute expressly excludes any act that “was
No more than 1,000 words please. Also, we’d like a photo of the two of you — a cell phone photo actual size will reproduce well in print. Any questions, call Jondi Gumz, your editor, at 831-688-7549 x 17 or email info@cyber-times.com. Let’s celebrate love in February! n
solicited, aided, abetted, or consented to by the mother of the fetus.” One negative consequence of the misuse of section 187 is that individuals facing a murder charge may feel frightened or pressured enough to accept a plea for a lesser charge such as manslaughter, which also does not apply to them, in order to avoid a longer prison Rob Bonta sentence. Today’s legal alert seeks to prevent the initial charge of murder by providing clarity on section 187’s intent. Pregnancy loss is tragically common, both for people who suffer miscarriage early in their pregnancy and for those who experience a late term stillbirth like Ms. Becker and Ms. Perez. According to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, 10% of known pregnancies are lost during the first trimester while stillbirths occur in 1 in 160 deliveries in the United States. If charges and prosecutions like those against Ms. Becker and Ms. Perez are repeated, pregnant individuals may avoid medical care out of fear of prosecution. Bonta has made the protection of reproductive rights a top priority. n
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COMMUNITY NEWS
Got Mild Omicron?
Avoid ER if You Can, County Says Editor’s note: Santa Cruz County Health officials issued the following notice Wednesday, Jan 5 ••• s the omicron variant spreads and COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations increase, Santa Cruz County public health officials are urging individuals with asymptomatic or mild coronavirus cases, or other non-serious illnesses, to avoid unnecessary trips to already burdened hospital emergency departments, and to get vaccinated or boosted if they have not already done so. Local hospitals have recently experienced an influx of patients seeking emergency department care for asymptomatic or relatively mild COVID-19 infections, as well as cases of the flu or other seasonal illness. Most individuals who contract COVID-19 do not need to visit the hospital’s emergency department and can effectively recover from their illness at home, or by seeking primary care treatment and/or speaking with their primary care provider. People with severe COVID-19 symptoms such as significant difficulty breathing, intense chest pain, severe weakness, or an elevated temperature that persists for days are among those who should consider seeking emergency medical care for their condition. Individuals should not visit the emergency department if the symptoms of their illness are mild to moderate — including a cough, sore throat, runny nose, or body aches — or simply for the purpose of having a COVID-19 test administered, and should instead consult an outpatient primary care provider. Many providers have 24 hour nurse advice lines and this can be found on the back of your insurance card. Unnecessary visits to hospital emergency departments place great strain on hospitals and the frontline healthcare workers, who continue to bravely battle the new omicron variant in this pandemic. Such visits can also cause a delay in care for
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patients experiencing a true medical crisis and contribute to the depletion of finite resources including medical staff, testing kits, personal protective equipment, and therapeutic treatments. “The best defense against serious illness and hospitalization from COVID-19 is to get vaccinated. If you have not gotten vaccinated or boosted and are eligible, please do so now,” said Dr. David Ghilarducci, Santa Cruz County deputy health officer. “Do it for yourself, your family, and your community, including the health care workers we depend on to be there when we truly need emergency care.” Santa Cruz County COVID-19 cases have increased by 121% in the last 14 days. The case rate, test positivity rate and the R effective number (how fast COVID is spreading the community) all indicate a winter surge, spurred by the increased spread of the omicron variant. The peak of this latest surge may not arrive for several weeks making it likely that its true impact on public health and the health care delivery system is yet to be fully felt. Vaccines offer strong protection against illness from COVID-19. And for those who contract a breakthrough case of the virus after being vaccinated, the vaccine reduces the risk of serious illness that leads to hospitalization or death. n ••• For local information on COVID-19, including on where to get vaccinated or tested, go to www.santacruzhealth.org/coronavirus or call (831) 454-4242 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Local hospitals have recently experienced an influx of patients seeking emergency department care for asymptomatic or relatively mild COVID-19 infections, as well as cases of the flu or other seasonal illness. Most individuals who contract COVID-19 do not need to visit the hospital’s emergency department and can effectively recover from their illness at home, or by seeking primary care treatment and/or speaking with their primary care provider.
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FEATURED COLUMNIST
Bare Root Stock For Winter
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By Tony Tomeo
ormant pruning happens during winter, while the plants that benefit from it are dormant. Obviously, it would not be dormant pruning otherwise. Such processes are less stressful to plants while they are inactive and essentially anesthetized like a surgery patient. This is also why fresh bare root stock becomes available and ready for planting during winter. Bare root stock grows on farms for a few years. Any grafting is part of the process. When stock is sufficiently mature, growers dig and separate its roots from the soil that it grew in. Much of the stock goes to retail nurseries for heeling into damp sand for sale. Some gets neat packaging with damp sawdust around its roots. Some goes out for mail order sales. Regardless of the process, it all happens quickly and early during winter dormancy. Bare root stock must then get into soil again, quickly and before the end of winter dormancy. It will not survive if it resumes growth without soil to contain new roots. Planting should be as soon as possible, so that roots can settle in with rain, and be ready to grow by spring. Bare root stock is less expensive than canned (potted) stock because it is so lightweight and easier to process. Since it occupies less space than canned stock in retail nurseries, more varieties of bare root stock are available. Bare root stock is easier to load into a car, and plant into a garden. Once in a garden, it disperses roots quickly and more efficiently. Deciduous fruit trees are the most popular bare root stock. Of these, most are stone fruits or pome fruits. The stone
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Bare roots might fail to impress.
fruits, of the genus Prunus, include cherry, plum, prune, apricot, peach, nectarine, their hybrids, and almond. Apple, pear, and quince are pome (pomme) fruits. Pomegranate, persimmon, fig, mulberry and walnut are somewhat popular as well. So much more than deciduous fruit and nut trees are available as bare root stock. Grape, kiwi, currant, gooseberry and blueberry are deciduous fruiting vines or shrubs, not trees. Blackberry, raspberry and strawberry are evergreens. Rhubarb, asparagus and artichoke are perennial vegetables. Rose, wisteria, hydrangea and so many more are fruitless ornamental plants. ••• Pomegranate s for fig, date, avocado, grape and olive, the esteemed pomegranate, Punica granatum, has been in cultivation for a very long time. Several thousands of years of domestication have generated countless cultivars. They are now popular in many regions and cultures throughout the World. They produce very well here and in other Mediterranean climates. Most locally Pomegranates are autumn popular pomeand winter fruit. granate fruits are brownish red, and about three to four inches wide. Each fruit contains hundreds of seed, which are surrounded by juicy and delicately succulent flesh. They separate easily, like many tiny and tender berries. Most are garnet red. Some cultivars produce fruit with darker purplish, lighter pink or even colorless flesh. Without dormant pruning, pomegranate trees can get taller than fifteen feet, and develop dense thicket growth. Fruit is easier to collect from well groomed shorter trees. Individual trees may develop a few trunks, and live for two centuries. Orangish red flowers bloom in spring. Leaves turn yellow prior to defoliation in autumn. Fruit ripens in autumn or winter. n ••• Horticulturist Tony Tomeo can be contacted at tonytomeo.com.
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COMMUNITY NEWS
Beware of Scams as New Tax Season Begins W ith a new tax season under way, the Franchise Tax Board reminds taxpayers to take steps to protect themselves from scam artists seeking to steal refunds and identities. As a new tax year begins, it is important that taxpayers stay vigilant and be aware of the latest tactics scammers use, so they can avoid falling victim to fraud or identity theft, said State Controller Betty T. Yee, who chairs the Franchise Tax Board. Scammers often prey on taxpayers by impersonating Internal Revenue Service or Franchise Tax Board (FTB) employees. The most common fraud-related complaints FTB sees tend to involve a taxpayer receiving a phone call, letter, or email asking for their personal information to either release their refund or process their tax return. While some of these complaints turn out to be based on legitimate requests or calls from the IRS or FTB, taxpayers are encouraged to remain on high alert whenever they receive a request for personal information. If FTB or IRS needs to reach a taxpayer to verify a return or discuss a bill, both agencies begin by sending a letter via postal mail. If the taxpayer does not respond, the FTB or IRS may reach out by phone, with courteous agents clearly identifying themselves. Further, neither agency will threaten a taxpayer nor demand immediate tax payment over the phone. Taxpayers should be suspicious of:
• Any phone call or email requesting passwords or information about credit cards or bank accounts. (FTB and IRS agents never ask for these details.) • Threats to contact local police or other law enforcement if a tax debt is not paid. • Demands for payment via third-party or pre-paid debit cards. • Claims that they can settle tax debt for pennies on the dollar. (There are legitimate tax professionals that can help you make a valid offer or settlement request.) • Ghost preparers (A ghost preparer does not sign a tax return they prepare. They will print the return and tell the taxpayer to sign and mail it to the IRS or FTB. For e-filed returns, the ghost will prepare but refuse to digitally sign as the paid preparer, which should raise suspicions.) If you receive a threatening or fishy phone call, simply hang up. If you receive a letter purporting to be from FTB or the IRS that appears suspicious, contact the FTB at (800) 8525711 or the IRS at (800) 829-1040 to verify authenticity. Taxpayers may also check the Letters webpage at ftb.ca.gov or the Understanding Your IRS Notice or Letter webpage at irs.gov (www.irs.gov/individuals/ understanding-your-irs-notice-or-letter). “Tax Scams” page 18
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FEATURED COLUMNIST
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Robin’s Pumpkin Curry Soup
f you still have a can of pumpkin puree in your pantry, here’s a tasty way to serve it. Thanks to Cathe Race who recommended the recipe and Robin Turnquist who shared it. ••• Pumpkin Curry Soup Serves 8 1 cup chopped sweet onion 6 cups chicken stock 15 ounce can pumpkin puree 4 tbs flour 4 tbs curry 2 tsps turmeric 2 cans evaporated milk (can use heavy whipping cream if you want) 2 tbs honey ½ tsp nutmeg
Share A Recipe!
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o you have a recipe that is a family favorite? Or maybe one from your childhood you would like to share? The Aptos Times will be publishing one recipe each issue from a community member. Feel free to add a little history to the recipe if you want (approximately 75 words). Every issue we will randomly choose a recipe to publish. Find your favorite and send it to cathe@cyber-times.com today!
4 tbs butter Salt to taste.
••• hop onion and saute in butter until tender. Add flour and curry powder until blended. Gradually add broth and bring to a boil. Stir about two minutes until thickened. Add the pumpkin, milk (or cream), honey, nutmeg, and turmeric. Stir until heated through. In small batches, puree in blender or use hand blender until creamy. Put back in pot and keep warm for serving. You can garnish the top with sour cream and chives if desired. Enjoy! n
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“Tax Scams” from page 17 If you receive a suspicious inquiry regarding a tax settlement program with FTB, please contact us at (916) 845-4787. You can also find additional information at the Offer In Compromise webpage (www. ftb.ca.gov/forms/misc/4045.html). Taxpayers are urged to report suspected tax scams and identity theft schemes to FTB as soon as possible, preferably online at www.ftb.ca.gov/help/ scams/index.html. The IRS offers a list of common scams and encourages taxpayers to forward phishing scam emails to the IRS at phishing@irs.gov. Unfortunately, tax preparers have increasingly become targets for cybercriminals. Sophisticated scammers steal personal data from tax preparers and businesses. Preparers and business owners who believe they have been targeted should
call the FTB at (916) 845-7088 and select option 1. n
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DECEMBER 2021
Aptos Real Estate Update
Ruth Bates 831.359.2212
ruthbates1@gmail.com CalBRE#01799929
2021 IN REVIEW 289 homes sold in Aptos in 2021, (AVG 24 per month vs. Jan 2022 with only 7 Active Listings on the market as of 1/05). Avg. Sales Price was $1,623,925 vs. $1,384,662 in 2021, a 17.3% increase. Avg. Days on Market was 21. High sale - 638 Beach Drive - $7,899,000, originally listed for $8,999,000 and was on the market for 52 days. Low sale - 114 Don Carlos - $425,000 (a “contractor’s special listed at $300,000 and received 16 all cash offers). Sales mix: >$5M – 4 sales, $2.5-5.0M – 27 sales, $2.0-$2.5M – 24 sales, $1.5-$2.0M – 62 sales, $1.0-$1.5M – 120 sales, <$1M – 52 sales. 31 Condos sold Median List Price $729,000, and Median Sales Price $779,000. 42 Townhomes sold Median List Price of $877,000 and Median Sales Price of $916,056. 15 Mobile homes sold - Medium List Price and Sales Price of $449,000. INFLATION! America closed out 2021 with decadeshigh inflation, both the Consumer Price Index and the Personal Consumption Index climbed to a 39-year high. Consumer inflation saw +6.8% Nov. 21-22. Supply chain issues keep prices high and push inflation. Average new car pricing is up to $46,000 – driven partially by chip shortages. What was a $5000 used car is now more like $8000. Rising rents are a concern across the country. The Feds are expected to raise interest rates three times this year to tame inflation and stop the economy for overheating further. What does this mean for Real Estate in 2022? It could imply downward pressure on pricing, but with so little inventory, I don’t think this will happen in Santa Cruz County. Realtor.com predicts 2.9% growth in price vs.12% in 2021 and an inventory uptick of .3% vs. a downturn of 18% in 2021. I think we will continue to see highly competitive situations and high price points with pricing increasing well over 2.9% this year. Here it will be another year-long Seller’s market. Remember that Prop 19 allows homeowners over 55 to keep their property tax basis when they sell their primary residence and buy another (of equal or lesser value). This applies to moving anywhere in the state of California. You can even buy a higher value home and only pay additional taxes on the incremental amount. Consult your tax account for more detailed information. ——— My favorite 4-letter word is “SOLD”! Call, email, text anytime and Get Results with Ruth!
COMMUNITY NEWS
Westside Trail Wins Two Awards T he City of Santa Cruz Public Works Department has been awarded a 2021 Caltrans Excellence in Transportation Award for its Coastal Rail Trail Segment 7/Phase I project. The project has also been recognized by the American Council of Engineering Companies with a California 2022 Engineering Excellence Merit Award. Sharing in the awards: RRM Design Group, the Santa Cruz County Regional Transportation Commission and Graniterock Construction. “Congratulations to everyone who worked hard to bring this project to the finish line with such measurable improvements for our City,” said Public Works Director Mark Dettle. “It is helping to increase walking, biking and safety in Santa Cruz while reducing carbon emissions.” The paved multi-use trail has more than 800 users a day, he said. Segment 7/Phase 1 cost $6.4 million. It was the second segment of the
The award-winning trail runs 11.2 miles on the Santa Cruz Westside. Monterey Bay Sanctuary Scenic Trail to be constructed. The 12 to 16 feet wide ADA-compliant trail runs 1.2 miles from Natural Bridges Drive to Bay/California streets along the coastal side of the existing rail line. It includes 10 green crossbikes, a 60-foot long steel truss bridge, a 70-foot long soldier pile retaining wall and new parking for vehicles and bikes. The annual Caltrans
Excellence in Transportation Awards are chosen from statewide submissions with one award for each of 11 categories. The Santa Cruz project won in the “Intermodal Transportation” category. Judging criteria included effectiveness in reducing highway congestion/providing options to single-occupancy vehicle use and safety improvements for travelers/workers. The ACEC awards criteria included social economic and sustainable design considerations where solutions produce value to the community environment. n
Radical Transformation to Launch Impact Class
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adical Transformation to Launch Impact is a 4-month online, professional development program for change-makers at all levels. The program is facilitated by Dr. Monica Sharma, former director of leadership and capacity development for the U.N., begins Jan. 26 and is open to all.
SANTA CRUZ COUNTY Paid Advertising
20 / January 15th 2022 / Aptos Times www.tpgonlinedaily.com
RTL Impact is a 4-month online, professional development program for change-makers at all levels. During live monthly sessions, you’ll work on an individual project of your choice, connect with other social impact professionals from across the country, unlock your inner capacity
for transformational leadership and discover practical proven tools to shift systems and create lasting change in your organization and community. New for the 2022: Optional focus areas offer opportunities to go deeper with the RTL Impact tools between sessions and connect with colleagues working on similar issues. Focus areas are: • Climate Action • Racial Justice • Reimagining Public Safety • Social Emotional Learning & Behavioral Health for Youth • Transformational Philanthropy Enrollment is at https://tinyurl.com/ rtl-impact-registration. (Full URL: https://www.impactlaunch. org/rtlregistration?utm_campaign=dba5b5bb83b8-49bd-a044-f8086b491906&utm_ source=so&utm_medium=mail&cid=8a647d4cdc2b-4e11-811d-88ae15a6de2d) RTL Impact is for anyone who is passionate about social change, regardless of your experience or title. n
COMMUNITY NEWS
Monarch Services: Two New Board Members T he Monarch Services Board of Directors announces two new members: Rafael Hernandez and Mariana España. ••• afael Hernandez: Between community organizing, filmmaking, teaching, consulting work and volunteering, he has over 20 years of experience working for immigrant and underserved communities in California and abroad. Hernandez has taught at Hartnell College and Rancho Cielo Youth Campus Rafael Hernandez and supported children’s education in the Salinas Valley. He now works on housing policy, education, and advocacy because he views housing as central to people’s lives. He earned his bachelor’s degree in Sociology fromUC Berkeley, and his master’s degree in public administration at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey. He is an Education Pioneers Fellow, an award-winning documentary filmmaker and speaks four languages. He is an avid practitioner of mixed martial arts, dancing, and he writes multilingual rap poetry. And
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supervisor. España returned home to Santa Cruz while expecting her first child and is now a stay-at- home mother. España is bicultural and fully bilingual in Spanish and English. She has volunteered helping rescue animals, raising money for research foundations to save our planet, fighting policies that reduce access and rights for individuals with physical limitations, to save our libraries, and to vote in elections. España currently offers low-cost fitness classes to the elderly, sliding scale
Zumba dance instruction, organizes book drives and mother’s groups, coaches soccer and runs for charities. When taking time for herself, she enjoys making piñatas, dancing, and drawing. ••• Monarch Services has a 44-year history in Santa Cruz County of providing advocacy and resources to community members affected by violence. Services include court accompaniments, restraining order assistance, counseling, emergency shelter, 24-hour crisis line, outreach, education and support groups. n
PVUSD News
arent conferences will be virtual with dates scheduled for Fridays, Feb. 11, 18 and 25. District staff are asking parents to save these dates. More details will be posted after the Aptos Times goes to press. New Leaders he Pajaro Valley Unified School board has elected trustee Kimberly De Serpa as president and trustee Maria Orozco as vice president for 2022. De Serpa will lead the board meeting. She can be emailed at kim_deserpa@pvusd.net. For agenda information, see https://go.boarddocs. com/ca/pvusd/Board.nsf/vpublic?open Board President Jennifer Holm served
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Kimberly De Serpa
he is a committed father whose favorite thing in the world is to be with his son. ••• ariana España: She was born in Mexico City, lived in Oaxaca, Mexico in her early childhood and spent part of her adolescence in Spain. From the time of her first arrival in the United States, Santa Cruz has been her first and most lasting home. España began her community involvement as a recreational leader Mariana España in Watsonville. She later worked in the educational system as a teacher’s aide and peer mentor to youth. After earning her bachelor’s degree in La Raza Studies, she returned to Santa Cruz and worked with Monarch Servicers as a youth advocate and then as Monarch’s children and youth program manager. España then earned her master’s degree in social work with emphasis in children and youth. She was awarded a Title Four scholarship and placement in Santa Cruz County Family Services. She then worked for San Mateo County Aging and Adult Services for six years, initially as an in-home support services social worker, but then as program
Maria Orozco
as president and Jennifer Schacher as vice president during most of 2021. New Sports Field istrict officials announced a ribbon cutting ceremony Jan. 13 at 3: 30 p.m. for the new sports field at E.A. Hall Middle School, 201 Brewington Ave., Watsonville. This project was made possible due to community support of Measure L. Live streaming was scheduled for those unable to attend in person at https://www. youtube.com/c/pvusdstreaming/live Family Center he newly opened Family Engagement & Wellness Center, serving the entire Pajaro Valley district, is nearby at 530 Palm Ave., Watsonville. Pajaro Valley district students and families will be able to access nonperishable food items through a new Community Food Co-op, sponsored and operated by Second Harvest Food Bank.
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Campus Tour January 28,10:30am Join us for a tour and stay for the show!
Beauty an∂ the Beast
Bus transportation / Nonsectarian CAIS & WASC accredited / 375-acre campus
408-847-2717
MountMadonnaSchool.org
22 / January 15th 2022 / Aptos Times www.tpgonlinedaily.com
COMMUNITY NEWS
A Wheelchair to Dance In
Students Thankful for One-of-a-Kind Teacher By Betwixt Jones-Cruz Editor’s note: Students at Scotts Valley High School produced a miracle this holiday season: They got 160 donations raising $11,265 on GoFundMe.com to buy an up-to-date wheelchair for their drama teacher, Kendra Kannegaard. ••• s the New Year creeps around the corner, we have surpassed our goal of $10,000 by nearly $2,000. Kendra has been updated on every part of this journey since she found out about the fundraiser, and every time I bring it up to her she becomes speechless, as do I. It’s incredible to me that a community can come together so quickly to do something for a beloved, and necessary part of the Scotts Valley High School family. Some may question why the GoFundMe was left open after reaching our second goal of $10,000, and that’s because after discussing costs with Kendra, I presumed that in order to fully cover her wheelchair, with top-of-theline equipment and no money out of her own pocket, we would need to raise around $12,000 — which would cover the frame, carbon fiber backrest, wheels, and anything else needed to make this new wheelchair one she can enjoy and be comfortable in. Something that Kendra once told me that sparked my initial inspiration for this
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Kendra Kannegaard and her students get emotional while discussion the GoFundMe campaign. fundraiser was her telling me, “I want a wheelchair I can dance in.” And in less than two weeks we have successfully done what needed to be done to remind Kendra that despite her struggles, despite her hardships, she is loved by entire cities, willing to help her in a time of need. By the time this article is published, the GoFundMe will be closed for donations, because we simply do not need any more. I, a student of Kendra’s, and the creator of this fundraiser, am beyond grateful to everyone involved with helping me do this for her. I could have done this anonymously and been just as happy with the outcome — seeing Miss K thrive is what keeps us going as her students. “Wheelchair” page 23
COMMUNITY NEWS
SC Community Health Leases Clinic Space S anta Cruz Community Health, a nonprofit provider of affordable health services regardless of ability to pay, is expanding its reach, opening a clinic in the San Lorenzo Valley in January. Santa Cruz Mountain Health Center, in the historic Wee Kirk church building in downtown Ben Lomond, will open Monday, Jan. 24, offering primary care services. Starting Jan. 10, people can call 831427-3500 to schedule appointments. In 2014, Dr. Steven Leib, a longtime family physician, and his wife Vivian bought the building, which was built in 1891, and restored it with historical accuracy for their practice. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2017. Dr. Leib practiced at this location until he and his wife retired in November. Santa Cruz Community Health is leasing the property. “We strive every day to improve the health of our patients and the community,” said Leslie Conner, chief executive officer of Santa Cruz Community Health. “We are proud and excited to bring health care services to more families and individuals in the San Lorenzo Valley.” Santa Cruz Mountain Health Center will initially operate 30 hours a week, serving approximately 2,000 people living in San Lorenzo Valley. The clinic will be staffed by three experienced physicians and a team of support staff with future services based on patient needs. Doctors on Staff r. Casey KirkHart: A Long Beach native, Casey attended UC Berkeley, where he studied biology and sociology. He spent a semester abroad in Costa Rica where he perfected his Spanish and salsa skills.
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“Wheelchair” from page 22 I cannot find words to express my gratitude to those who donated, shared, and spread the word about what we, together, have done. Kendra herself has said, “It’s not all about the money, it’s about the fact that these kids took the time and energy to do something like this, and I’m so lucky to have them as my students.” For me personally, this was not about the money. Although I am eternally grateful for it, and the fact that our very cherished Miss K will be able to care for herself, it’s
He moved to New York for medical school, choosing a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine) degree for its openness to complementary medicine, its approach to the patient as a whole person, and its philosophy that physicians are teachers and guides to support the body’s inherent ability to heal itself. Casey engaged in health care advocacy and activism in New Dr. Casey KirkHart York and Washington, DC, where he mobilized thousands of future physicians and community organizations to bring their voice on justice in health to the public and political forum. Casey honed his clinical, leadership and advocacy skills during residency training at Harbor-UCLA, a large county hospital in Los Angeles. Casey has served as associate medical director at Saban Community Clinic, a busy, urban family practice in Southern California. r. Rose Lovell: Dr. Lovell (she/her) is a board-certified family medicine physician. She came to love the Santa Cruz Mountains when she moved there as child. The quiet of the redwoods was quite the relief after the busy suburbs of west Los Angeles. She attended Cabrillo College and then earned her Dr. Rose Lovell bachelor’s degree in psychology from San Jose State University. Medical training required a visit to snowy New England, where she earned her medical degree from the Frank H Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University in Connecticut. She was grateful to come home to
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California to complete her residency at Natividad in Salinas. She joins the team at Santa Cruz Community Health, offering care for all ages, sexes, and genders including prenatal and reproductive care. She has a special focus on gender and sexual minority health including care for LGBTQ+ patients. A safe, trauma-sensitive environment is her goal for all her patients. “We want to serve our patients where they are,” Conner said, noting that many current Santa Cruz Community Health patients live in the San Lorenzo Valley. “SLV is a remote region compared to much of Santa Cruz and it has long been underserved. Our goal is to increase access to high-quality, affordable health care for the mountain community.” Santa Cruz Community Health a Federally qualified health center with nearly 21,000 patients. It operates the Women’s Health Center in downtown Santa Cruz and the East Cliff Family Health Center in Live Oak. The clinics offer primary care, pediatrics, prenatal care and education, mental health and substance abuse counseling, chronic disease
Vivian (from left) and Dr. Steven Leib, with Leslie Conner, CEO of Santa Cruz Community Health, and Gloria Nieto, Santa Cruz Community Health board secretary.
management, health insurance enrollment, food distribution and more. During the pandemic, clinics have been providing Covid testing and Covid vaccines. Santa Cruz Community Health is building a new 20,000-square-foot-clinic on Capitola Road in Live Oak. The project, in partnership with Dientes and MidPen Housing, is to open in late 2022. The 57 units of affordable housing are to be completed in 2023. n ••• For info, see schealthcenters.org, facebook.com/ schealthcenters or on Instagram @schealthcenters.
more about her realizing how much she means to us. Us being, her students, her friends, her family, her fiancé ... Without meeting Kendra, I never would have dreamed of being where I am now. She truly has saved me, and no amount of money will be enough to show her that. As a theater department, we consider Kendra our family. We thank you for being apart of this journey with us, and we wouldn’t be able to do it without your support. n ••• To read more about Miss K, see https:// www.gofundme.com/f/miss-ks-new-wheelchair
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FEATURED COLUMNIST
Experience The Difference By Ron Kustek
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ach business tries to differentiate itself from its competition. There are many ways business owners try to be different, as most often we try to focus on quality and price. When many businesses owners are asked what makes them different, many respond with “We have the highest quality at affordable prices.” However, if most businesses respond and compete the same way by promoting quality and affordability, then by definition, there is no differentiation. Quality and affordability are really ‘givens’ in order to just remain in business, and promoting the same ‘quality and affordability’ that everyone else does, can cause a business to get lost in a ‘sea of sameness’. So finding new ways to be truly different becomes that much more important. And keep in mind that being ‘different’ should be based on what your target customers are looking for, not just being ‘different’ if it doesn’t matter to them. Regardless of the business you are in, what matters to the majority of customers is actually their experience. The experience is BOTH online and in person. What customers ‘experience’ is often an overlooked area where you can truly be better, special, and different. Differentiating allows you to a) satisfy your customers better for improved loyalty, and
b) establish a point-of-difference that can’t be easily duplicated by your competition. For instance, if you own a restaurant, brewpub, coffee shop or retail store, it’s most likely you’re already providing high-quality food, beverages and/or items at competitive prices. But what do your customers experience the minute they exit their car or walk onto your property? Are they greeted outside with cooling-misters on hot days, or the enticing smell of food and beverages, or specific music to set their mood? Is your parking lot clean and easy to navigate, free of litter or weeds? Is your entry an open and welcoming part of your establishment, or just a door that’s possibly difficult to open? Consider your exterior, the entrance. How is each customer greeted? Are they provided any free wine or sample packet of anything while they’re browsing or waiting? Are they spoken to about their day, their origin, their family, any current situation that brought them to your business? Never dismiss or underestimate the value of ‘small talk’ with every customer — that’s how we connect with them and how they connect with you. Once inside, does the lighting fit the mood you want your customers to feel? Many businesses have lights that inadvertently shine down into the eyes of their customers as they focus on illuminating their merchandise. What about the sounds
inside — is there music that your customers want to hear, or do they hear the banter of your staff, or the clang of plates and glasses being shuffled off tables? Do you actually think your ‘table service’ is comforting, especially when you have customers walk up to a counter to order and/or have them bus their own table once they’re finished? Do you have your customers pick a number and just wait in line, without providing a smooth flow or free samples or separation from seated customers? What happens when they make a purchase? Is your packaging especially different, perhaps fully compostable or with another use beyond this transactional moment? Did your customer drop their card, their contact information, enter into any monthly free give-away? Remember information is powerful when you need to maintain constant contact with EVERY customer. Regarding you and your staff, do you greet your regulars by name, making eyecontact or asking how their recent vacation was, or how their kids are doing in school? If you have customers that are from out of town, do you know where they are from, or why they chose to be in this area, or what they’re especially looking for or needing from your business? Do you thank them for visiting you today, even before they make a purchase? All of these small but important facets combine together to form a customer experience, one that they will talk about to others. Think Disneyland. The prices are
high, the crowds can be overwhelming, and the quality of food and beverages isn’t that great. But it’s the ‘Disney Experience’ that they’re providing to the majority of customers who pay high prices and are smiling in the park and after they leave, still talking about it positively with their friends. Giving customers the most unique and best experience possible will set you apart from your competition, and give you more loyal returning customers who provide the word-of-mouth that’s critical to every business’ success! n ••• Ron Kustek is the Business Department Chair and Instructor at Cabrillo College. He was formerly a senior marketing executive with Coca-Cola USA, as well as launching multiple small businesses. You can contact Ron at: RoKustek@Cabrillo.edu
I Owe $1,048 in Back Rent, But I Always Paid On Time By Christopher Elliott
Why did Kate Syverson’s rent just go up by $157 a month? And why is her apartment manager threatening to take her to court if she won’t pay $1,048 in back rent? ••• ’m hoping you can help me with a situation I am having with my apartment management company. I’m a college senior. I recently moved out of student housing and into my own apartment at the Allure apartment complex, which is a property of Greystar Real Estate. My rent was $1,886 plus utilities every month, and when I got a dog in March of
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2020, the rent went up by $50 a month. I’ve always paid my rent on time through the resident portal and I have never had any problems with the other residents or apartment management. My parents and I agreed that we would sign a year lease last February so I would not be stressed about moving during finals and the holidays of 2021. I assumed I would get a new lease notification via email or in my resident portal account, as that is how all communication with Allure has occurred. On July 13, I received an email from
24 / January 15th 2022 / Aptos Times www.tpgonlinedaily.com
Allure that I was going month to month starting on July 13 and would now be charged an extra $157 a month. The company agreed to prorate July. A couple of hours later I received another email saying that I had been month to month since February and so they were charging me $157 a month in back rent as well. After numerous emails and attempts to resolve this issue, Allure management has sent me a notice saying I have 15 days to pay the back rent plus late fees or they will start legal proceedings. I feel like they know that hiring a lawyer is expensive, so they just think I will pay it. If there is anything you can do to assist me, I would
really appreciate it. I’d like to get $1,048 in back rent removed from my account. — Kate Syverson, Orange, Calif. ••• ou should have signed a new lease, which would have kept your rent payments at $1,886 plus utilities. Instead, it looks like you assumed that your rate would not change if and when you moved to a month-to-month lease. It wasn’t.
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COMMUNITY NEWS
Watsonville Rotary Seeks Ideas to Help Youth W atsonville Rotary Club Foundation is seeking proposals for grant funding to support programs that strive to address these needs among children and youth residing in the greater Watsonville area: 1) Safety Net & Crisis Resolution Services: Programs that help families and children meet basic human needs for safety, food, shelter, clothing and childcare; 2) Healthy Lifestyle, Learning and Living: Programs that give youth access to activities and training that support youth with positive solutions to social problems, increase access to
“PVUSD” from page 21 In addition, a new PVUSD Healthy Start Resource Center is available to work with families in need of enrollment and referral support to behavioral health counseling, medical, dental, housing, clothing and food assistance services. Mental health clinicians from PVUSD and Pajaro Valley Prevention and Student
mental health services for youth and their families and increase access to education, job skills training or enrichment opportunities; 3) Health and Youth Development: Programs that encourage making safe and healthy lifestyle choices, teach life skills, conflict resolution, teamwork and ethical behavior. The Watsonville Rotary Foundation is accepting grant proposals from eligible nonprofit organizations with annual budgets of $2.5 million or less, serving at-risk children and youth
Assistance are on site as a critical resource to the educational community. Visit wellness.pvusd.net to confirm the center’s location, hours of operation and contact information. Call the center at 831-786-2384. The Family Engagement and Wellness Center is part of the superintendent’s “Whole Child, Whole Family and Whole Community” approach toward education. n
in Watsonville and the Greater Pajaro Valley. The deadline to apply is Jan. 31 with the understanding programs will be undertaken in FY 2022-23. Grant awards will range from $750 to $5,000. Interested organizations should visit Watsonville Rotary Club’s website at http://watsonvillerotary. com/community-grants/ to review the foundation’s Community Grant Guidelines to determine if their organization may be eligible, and to
American Authors
ACROSS
1. Cause for a duel 5. Nelson Mandela’s org. 8. “____ in the shade” 12. Andean people’s chew 13. “White Wedding” singer 14. Like a haunted mansion 15. South American tuber, pl. 16. Type of cotton fiber 17. Desired forecast? 18. *”The Underground Railroad” author 20. Like West Wing office 21. Not silently 22. “When We Were Kings” subject
New shade structures at Aptos Junior High School (top) and Pajaro Valley High School.
download the grant proposal materials required to complete your application. In February, the Watsonville Rotary Foundation’s Grants Review Committee will begin its review of all submissions on a competitive basis using objective tools to identify those organization’s whose goals most closely align with Rotary’s funding objectives. Grant awards will be announced early in June. n ••• For more information, contact Kathleen King, Grants Review Committee Chair at: kkingponzio@gmail.com or by calling 234-0062.
23. Hand over (2 words) 26. Barbecued 30. The Jackson 5 1970 hit 31. Repressed 34. “Alice Doesn’t ____ Here Anymore” 35. State of dishonor 37. Three, to Caesar 38. Brightest star in Cygnus 39. Performer’s time to shine 40. “No.1 Ladies Detective ____” book series 42. African migrator 43. *”The Night Watchman” author 45. *”Little Women” author 47. Poor man’s caviar 48. Analyze
50. Canter or gallop 52. *”A Farewell to Arms” author 56. Latin dance 57. Club on the links 58. Kind or courteous 59. Los ____, CA 60. Round feed storage 61. Not odd 62. Colonial times laborer 63. Band performance 64. Theodores, to friends
7. Garbed 8. *”Moby Dick” author 9. Length times width 10. Call someone, in the olden days 11. Poetic “ever” 13. Apple invention 14. Food contaminant 19. Run off to wed 22. Jean of Dadaism 23. Out of style 24. Find repugnant 25. Burn with coffee, e.g. 26. *Ursula K. Le ____ DOWN 27. Jargon 1. Flat-bottomed boat 28. It happens at a certain 2. Scottish lake time and place 3. Antioxidants-rich 29. First novel, e.g. berry 4. Popular primo dish in 32. Near in space or time Italian restaurant, pl. 33. Not a win nor a loss 36. *”Song of Solomon” 5. Bye, to Edith Piaf author 6. Wanderer
38. *”Chronicles” author and songwriter 40. *NY Times bestselling author Atkins or playing card 41. Gambling venue 44. Smidgins 46. Young swan 48. Eagle’s nest 49. Young salmon 50. *”Miss Lulu Bett” author 51. Highest adult male singing voice 52. Snake’s warning 53. Take as a wife 54. Got A+ 55. Desires or cravings 56. Sticky substance © Statepoint Media
Answers on 31 »
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Deep Reflections: Venus & Mercury Retrograde Esoteric Astrology • Mid-January 2021 • By Risa D’Angeles
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enus continues to be retrograde in Capricorn till January 29. In its midst, Mercury, on Friday, also turns retrograde (10 degrees Aquarius). Aquarius is the sign of the new era, the new age of humanity, the future of humanity new endeavors. When Mercury retrogrades it will enter the atmosphere of the Venus retro/Pluto conjunction, creating deep pools of reflection and transformational aspirations as we step way back into the past. With two retrogrades occurring simultaneously, all things personal will be doubly reviewed, doubly reassessed, our minds flooded with multiple revelations. Make note of them. Retrograde times are like Virgo times … detailed thoughts, ideas, plans for action flow through our minds at the speed of light. No judgments are allowed — just silent observation, reflection and revelation. We will reflect upon values and resources, relationship and relatedness, communication and planning, while standing between past and future. The quality of our relationships will be on our minds. With Aquarius, friends, groups, hopes, wishes, dreams, the future and everything technological is involved. During retrogrades we research and ARIES
gather information. We also review all that we think we know & believe and eliminate what is not useful. Retrogrades are very useful in keeping us up to date. We are called to remain poised, rational, logical. When we do so, a great clarity along with a visionary perspective about the future appears. Mercury in Aquarius prepares us to step more easily into the new air age, new era, Age of humanity, of freedom, liberation, and creative innovation. As we ponder the past while looking into the future here are guidelines from Buckminster Fuller: “We are called to be architects of the future, not its victims. We never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, we build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.” These words are especially important for the United States, as this week and through February’s end, epochal transits (and thus changes) will be in effect on the U.S. natal chart. n So much more is occurring astrologically each day. To keep up, follow my Daily Postings on Night Light News — www.nightlightnews.org
LEO
It’s best to refrain from being out and about to much in the world. You will for a year experience the energies of Pisces, a noble sign, but ruled by Neptune which can make one feel at first a bit confused when in the midst of crowds for any length of time. It’s best to be more reflective, solitary, and around only a few people at a time who understand (astrology) and support your states of mind. Dreams and visions are important now. Do you have visions for the future and how/where do you see yourself in the coming year?
A new sense of reorientation concerning relationships, past present and future is creating a state of transformation in your life and in your heart. Are you having a need to create a greater sense of well-being? Do you seek a need for rebalancing and a reharmonization with others? People and place from far away call to you. You remember times past. Your present responses will change your life forever. Enter the deeper mysteries. That door has opened.
TAURUS
Signs in opposition, like Virgo & Pisces, create an interplay of dark and light, up and down, here and there, until the two, frightened of each other, finally make peace, integrate and synthesize. All the sign must integrate. With so many planets in Capricorn, and Mercury and Venus retrograde, the possibility of following your heart’s desires is real. Virgo is the sign of service preparing for the saving quality in Pisces. You are to synthesize both now.
GEMINI
You may feel exhausted when confronted with your usual work. And then you may feel a wounding difficult to express. There’s a purpose to that wounding, providing you with the ability to have compassion for and to heal others. However, you must come to a state of courage where you can clearly articulate your wound without judgment, blame and with dispassion. Wounds become life tools. They balance us. They love you. In the meantime, a giant purging and clearing out at home is good to put on the agenda.
Each day you seem to enter a dream state, a place where a new sense of creativity emerges and with it you fashion a future world of care, new values, safety and survival. You attempt to share this with others but sometimes, unable to see into the future, they can become impatient. So you stand solitary in your knowledge, knowing it’s your responsibility to bring forth the resources (land) needed to safeguard family and friends. You recognize the many others who also have gifts to share. In the meantime, care of your health is a main priority. Have you been anxious? Do you feel you have lost your way? What are you doing each day and who do relate to and what are you reading? What are your plans, what is your timing, what are you hoping for and what do you need? These are deep retrograde questions. Your answers are like a preliminary resume to what will come of your future. All answers are correct. We’d just like to get to know you more. What meadows are you in these days? What is blooming around you? CANCER
You are hungering for new experiences, new realities, new ideas. Are you considering a journey far away even in these strange times of limitation? What are you thinking and what do you perceive of our present world? Are you sorting out relationship dynamics and are there feelings of guilt? It seems essential that your home be ordered and organized. Great things can be accomplished in retrograde times. Tackle one organizing task each day. A boat (for you or a child) is a good idea to invest in.
VIRGO
LIBRA
SAGITTARIUS
Know that your well-being is intact no matter how you feel or sense things to be. No matter what you think your financial situation is, there are realistic new resources and avenues available and seeking you. So you can rest easily and not enter into states of discomfort, fear, unease, unreality or feelings of lack. Nothing needs doing. You are supported by all the energies in the cosmos, the stars too. Turn to others and offer them this support. Your supply is limitless. The heart bridges. CAPRICORN
You may be called to express yourself in ways that could change people’s belief systems. Unusually, you don’t like to shift people’s reality, always attempting a state of harmony, not causing chaos or conflict. You always express new ideas with compassion, clarity, sensitivity and kindness. This creates a heart to heart, mind to mind, Soul to Soul connection. It’s creates the “waters of life for thirsty humanity,” one person at a time. A new creative cycle begins for you late February. AQUARIUS
You’ve returned to a place where you again ask the questions, “Who am I, what am I doing here, why am I here, what is here that supports me and where do I go from here?” Vital questions that means the Soul is nearby hovering over you. At times you wonder if there are enough resources to support your visions. You dream of home, family, art, community, seeking to do only what you love. Simultaneously, you serve others, supporting their well-being, security, and self-esteem. All that you offer is returned one-hundred-fold. And the questions are answered.
SCORPIO
If you surrender completely to your deep internal level of creativity, you will be rewarded with an expansion of gifts you didn’t know existed. Creativity for you works under the inspiration of aspiration and vision, which then expresses the beauty which all forms veil. You veil so many things hidden within. You are to bring forth this revelation of beauty underlying your life’s purposes. You are to communicate things no one else can communicate. Do only what you love. •••
Risa D’Angeles • www.nightlightnews.org • risagoodwill@gmail.com 26 / January 15th 2022 / Aptos Times www.tpgonlinedaily.com
PISCES
Jupiter is in your sign of the two fishes. All Pisces will enter deep within themselves, swimming around a bit in your own inner waters of life. This happens naturally with Neptune in Pisces, but with Jupiter there dreams and visions will multiply exponentially. Notice deeper introspections, thoughts on life and death and a refinement that takes place preparing you for greater accomplishments in the future. Your visions come into manifestation. It’s like a miracle actually!
“Problem Solved” from page 24 Allure waited until July to adjust your monthly rental rate, but it then appears to have also retroactively adjusted your rate. It should have offered to fix the problem instead of threatening to take you to court — although, as you suggested, the threat was likely a form letter generated when your rent is overdue. The fix for this is easy, in retrospect. Make sure that you sign all the paperwork for your apartment lease well in advance. I Christopher Elliott understand that Allure typically communicated through its website portal, but it looks like this time it didn’t. I asked Allure to review your case. “This resident did not renew her lease, so she was put on a monthto-month status as a result of that,” a spokeswoman said. “The team is going to talk to the property owner and to her and see if we can work out a resolution.” Allure reached out to you. The blame for this is definitely shared. You know you should have been more proactive about the rental contract. But Allure should have also contacted you sooner. And that business with retroactively charging rent and then threatening you — not a shining example of good customer service. Allure offered to split the difference with you, which leaves you with $524 due. n ••• Christopher Elliott is the chief advocacy officer for Elliott Advocacy. Email him at chris@elliott.org or get help with any consumer problem by contacting him at http:// www.elliott.org/help • © 2022 Christopher Elliott.
You know you should have been more proactive about the rental contract. But Allure should have also contacted you sooner. And that business with retroactively charging rent and then threatening you — not a shining example of good customer service.
FEATURED COLUMNIST
Everybody Hurts Sometimes By Joyce and Barry Vissell
D
o you ever find yourself looking at certain people and thinking to yourself, “Surely that person’s life is totally incredible and they are not hurting like I am.” This is something most people do; they look at others, compare themselves to them, and conclude that the other person’s life is better. Whereas you are so aware of the hurt and problems in your life. My news for you, coming from 47 years of counseling people, is that everyone hurts sometimes. People can look totally together and happy on the outside, and on the inside, there is a hurt that they are feeling, but just not showing. Sometimes I watch small clips on YouTube of the winners of “Britain’s Got Talent.” I think the best one I ever saw was a 64-year-old priest by the name of Father Ray Kelly from a small city in Ireland. He sang a song called, “Everybody Hurts.” I believe it was the first time that a priest was on the show, and he got a standing ovation. Before he sang, he told the judges that he wanted to sing this song for all of his parishioners to comfort them as he knows they all hurt sometimes. The song is so beautiful and moving and if you have a chance, I would strongly suggest you listen to it: https://youtu.be/ Mx8yD3-HWTg. He sings, “Everybody hurts sometimes, but hold on ... hold on and take comfort in your prayers.” And then, at the very end of the song, he adds his own personal touch by saying in the most beautiful Irish accent, “You are not alone!” I have listened to him sing this many times and each time I feel the truth of the song, everybody hurts and we need to hold on and take comfort in our prayers and spiritual life. We are never alone in our pain, even though it can feel that way. When we are hurting, I believe it hurts even more when we compare ourselves to others and feel that their lives are free from pain, and why do we have to go through this challenge. ••• Sharing Pain arry and I love the movie, “The Gospel.” In this movie, the minister goes through his own pain and hurting and then, rather than keeping it a secret, he shares it with his church. Then he invites
B
Father Ray Kelly
the congregation, “Come on down to the altar. Can we talk about it?” As people are walking to the altar he says, “We are all going through our own storms. Can we talk about it?” In the movie, you see people walking to the altar that appeared to have no troubles whatsoever. We all have our own storms that we are walking through. Every human being hurts sometimes. Barry and I are going through our own storm right now. Because it involves someone else, we are not able to share the details, except to say that at times it hurts us very much. I can share what we are learning through going through this. Each time there is a pain and hurt within us, it is an opportunity to trust in the Divine more deeply. We are learning to trust more completely, and not lean on our own understanding and thought process. We are also finding that each adversity is bringing a gift into our lives. We often do not know the gift that is coming, but we can give thanks that a gift is
coming. Also going through this deep pain together is bringing an incredible closeness between Barry and me. We need each other very much as we face this situation. We are praying more and practicing gratitude. Sometimes I look at other people and other families and I think, “Now they do not have any challenges, their lives seem perfect.” When I compare myself to others, it is sure to bring sadness to my heart. But when I can trust, I can feel at peace. There is a sentence that I say to myself every single day as I am going through this hurt. “The darkness of adversity allows me to see the radiance of the light more clearly.” I know that I am becoming stronger in my heart and stronger in my love. As I work with others in my counseling practice, the strength of what I am going through is coming forth from such a depth within me. “Everybody hurts sometimes … hold on … hold on … take comfort in your prayers. You are not alone.” Father Ray Kelly got the biggest applause that there had ever been. The judges said that his was the best audition ever to be on the show. He had simply touched a place within us all that needs comfort when we are hurting. •••
“Everybody hurts sometimes … hold on … hold on … take comfort in your prayers. You are not alone.” — Father Ray Kelly
A Free Gift e would love to give you a free gift, our new audio album of sacred songs and chants, available for download at SharedHeart.org, or to listen on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZG ml4FDMDyI&feature=youtu.be n ••• Joyce & Barry Vissell, a nurse/therapist and psychiatrist couple since 1964, are counselors in Aptos who are passionate about conscious relationship and personal-spiritual growth. They are the authors of 9 books and a new free audio album of sacred songs and chants. Call 831-684-2130 for information on counseling sessions by phone, on-line, or in person, their books, recordings or their schedule of talks and workshops. Visit SharedHeart.org for their free monthly e-heartletter, their updated schedule, and inspiring past articles on many topics about relationship and living from the heart.
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www.tpgonlinedaily.com Aptos Times / January 15th 2022 / 27
COMMUNITY CALENDAR ANNOUNCEMENTS CALL TO ARTISTS The Santa Cruz County Department of Parks, Open Space and Cultural Services announces an opportunity for local artists to help contribute public art to library projects in Live Oak and Aptos. Both calls to artists are due Jan. 21. For details about the application processes, site plans and other materials, go to http://www.scparks.com/Home/AboutUs/WorkWithUs/CalltoArtists.aspx. Aptos Library An artist will be selected to create a site-specific public art component for new Aptos Branch Library. The new library’s design will be inspired by the concept of “forest, coastal, and terrace” and other local environmental elements. The proposed public artwork should help create an inviting space where people of all ages will gather, learn, connect, and share. Proposals should reflect the community’s identity and values while celebrating the unique culture and natural beauty of Aptos, and may incorporate a literary element and/or community participation component. All proposals for this project must address outdoor fencing and gate needs. The budget for the public artwork, which includes all costs associated with, but not limited to design, materials, travel, insurance, fabrication, installation, and documentation of the artwork, is $106,000. Live Oak Annex The budget for public artwork at the library annex at Simpkins Family Swim Center is $85,500.
Have a virtual or live event you want to promote? Send your information to info@cyber-times.com by January 21 PROPERTY TAX BILL DUE The Santa Cruz County has mailed out property tax bills, and the second installment due date is Feb. 1. The bill becomes delinquent after April 10. The first installment was due on Nov. 1 and became delinquent after Dec. 10. Penalties will be incurred if not paid before becoming delinquent. STORYWALK FOR FAMILIES Ongoing thru Jan. 31, Watsonville Public Library, 275 Main St. Triple P Positive Parenting Program offers StoryWalk, a free, educational family challenge, at Watsonville Public Library. Families can follow the StoryWalk, watching for bilingual pages from the children’s storybook “Deep Breaths,” which can be found in various places around the library, giving families a way to be part of the celebration of the 10th annual Positive Parenting Awareness Month in Santa Cruz County. Triple P is also offers free parenting classes to support families. StoryWalk, as well as parenting classes, are offered in English and Spanish. For information, call 831-465-2217.
WATER TABLE TESTING Through Jan. 24 Santa Cruz County Environmental Health has opened the Winter Water Table Testing Period for Onsite Wastewater Treatment Systems Dec. 29, through Jan. 24. If you are considering developing a property, doing SENIOR CENTER WITHOUT LIMITS a major remodel or a repair on property served by an onsite wastewater treatment system that may be This new program from Community Bridges brings subject to high ground water levels, you should arrange enrichment activities like yoga, art, music, tai chi, cooking, tech and support groups to seniors age 60 to have groundwater on your property observed multiple times throughout this testing period. and up in their homes at no cost. The testing period may be extended if rain persists. To participate, you need an internet connection and iezometer readings are required at the beginning, a computer, tablet or smartphone. middle, and end of the testing period. Piezometers To participate, view the calendar at https://communitymust be in the ground and the site plan approved bridges.org/SCWOL/ and find a class. That day and time, click on the link in the calendar to be connected. If you have beforehand. Applicants should have a site evaluation a problem connecting, call Clara Munoz at (831) 458-3481. application in place and a monitoring plan approved by Environmental Health staff. If the testing period closes, it may be reopened CAREER ONLINE HIGH SCHOOL The Santa Cruz Public Libraries invites you to jumpstart with sufficient rainfall. Groundwater levels must be your future by earning an accredited high school diploma measured throughout this period. A minimum of three and career training through Career Online High School. recorded readings are required. Is your 2022 resolution to go back to school and get For parcels with an active site evaluation application, your high school diploma? Santa Cruz Public Libraries email your inspector to schedule readings at LandUse@ santacruzcounty.us. offers a program called Career Online High School, designed for adults who were unable to complete high HOW TO START A FOOD BUSINESS school and could benefit from additional job training. 6-7:30 p.m., Online Seminars This nationally accredited program allows adult students to earn an accredited high school diploma — El Pajaro Community Development Corp. will host four free Zoom webinars in Spanish on “How to Start a Food not a GED — while gaining career skills in one of ten Business.” employment fields, from home care professional and The four virtual sessions, taught by El Pajaro CDC’s office management to homeland security. SCPL awards scholarships to qualified adult learners Cesario Ruiz, will be 6-7:30 p.m. on Monday, Jan. on a first-come, first-served basis. Career Online High 24; Wednesday, Jan. 26; Monday, Jan. 31; and School is a solution for those who need extra academic Wednesday, Feb. 2. Ruiz, the founder of My Mom’s Mole (sold at Staff of support and flexibility. Once in the program, students are assigned an academic coach who helps keep them Life), was honored as 2016 Entrepreneur of the Year. He will cover how to develop and formalize a business idea; on track and connects them with tutors if needed. how to obtain permits and licenses; how to package The online curriculum is accessible 24/7, which is helpful to those balancing work and family obligations. products to sell at wholesale; and how to sell direct to the consumer. Students have up to 18 months to complete the For English seminars, go to elpajarocdc.org. program, but many finish sooner because previously This will be the first of a series of training events earned high school or GED test credits are accepted. in 2022. It is sponsored by El Pajaro CDC and the For more information, see https://santacruzpl.mycareerhs. Regional Women’s Business Center. com/. 28 / January 15th 2022 / Aptos Times www.tpgonlinedaily.com
Suggested admission: General, $10; students / teachers / veterans, $8, free for members and children under 5.
PUBLIC LIBRARY CAREER WORKSHOPS The Santa Cruz Public Libraries presents career development workshops for teens and adults through For information and to register, call El Pajaro CDC at (831) April, thanks to grant funding. 722-1224 or go to elpajarocdc.org. Second Wednesdays: Resume and interview skill workshops at 10 a.m. SUPPORT FOR MOTHERS OF SURVIVORS Third Wednesdays: Resume and interview skill Survivors Healing Center is offering online women’s support groups and mothers of survivors of childhood workshops in Spanish, 10 a.m. sexual abuse support group. The goals are to empower Hours for English/Spanish bilingual career assistance through a healing process and prevent sexual abuse of at the downtown Santa Cruz library will begin in January. children and youth. SENIOR OUTREACH You are not alone. You are not to blame. More information: (831) 423-7601 or www.survivorshealing Family Service Agency Senior Outreach offers free one-on-one counseling for people 55 and over center.org via the phone, Skype or Zoom. Counselors are experienced. NAMI PEER-TO-PEER In-person counseling has been suspended to prevent Jan 25 thru March 15, 5-7 p.m., Online Classes NAMI Peer-to-Peer is a free, eight-session educational Covid-19 spread. Groups for men and women will be restarted as soon program via Zoom for adults with mental health conditions who are looking to better understand themselves as possible, with a women’s group starting in February. Dates are not available due to the changing Covid and their recovery. Taught by trained leaders with lived experience, this situation. program includes activities, discussions and informative Hopes are to restart peer training, for which there is a waiting list. videos. To express interest in participating, call Barbara Salata, 831Sign up at https://www.namiscc.org/peer-to-peer. 459-9351 ext. 206, who will return your call in 24 hours. html Signing up does not guarantee enrollment, but puts CABRILLO SPRING REGISTRATION you on the list to be notified about enrollment. Check Registration is under way for the your email within 5 business days of completing the form, and save anastasia@namiscc.org as a contact to spring semester at Cabrillo College, which begins Jan. 24. prevent emails from going to spam. Visit https://www.cabrillo.edu/catalog-and-classContact (831)-824-0406 or anastasia@namiscc.org with questions or if you do not hear back within 5 business days. schedules/#browse-classes for more information. AGRI-CULTURE, INC. 2022 SCHOLARSHIP DEADLINE CENTRAL FIRE DISTRICT ELECTIONS HEARING Agri-Culture is accepting applications for its four college Central Fire District of Santa Cruz County invites all interested persons to attend public hearings on district- scholarships, with Jan. 28 the deadline to apply. They are: based elections at 9 a.m. on February 10 at 930 17th • Jimmie Cox Memorial Scholarship: $4,000 for Avenue, Santa Cruz. a student entering or currently attending college Board members will discuss, consider, and take and majoring in agriculture. (includes $2,000 from action on one or more district map(s). Actions may American AgCredit). include modification of division boundaries, sequencing • Jeannie Witmer Memorial Scholarship: of elections. For more information , contact (831) 479$1,500 for a student active (past or present) 6842, or email: PublicComments@centralfiresc.org in California High School Rodeo Association Information: https://www.centralfiresc.org/2279/ReDistrict 4 or California 4-H Horse Program, Districting-Process-2021-2022. entering or currently attending college and MAH EXHIBITIONS majoring in agriculture and/or animal sciences. • J.J. Crosetti, Jr. Memorial Scholarship: Thurs. thru Sun., Noon-6 p.m., 705 Front St., Santa Cruz $1,000 for a student entering or currently Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History presents two attending college and majoring in agriculture. exhibitions starting in January. • Laura Brown Memorial Scholarship: $2,000 Jan. 14–May 15: Atmosphere, an exhibition for a student entering or currently attending by artist and filmmaker Enid Baxter Ryce featuring college and majoring in agriculture or a related paintings and soundscapes that explore the field, or majoring in culinary arts. phenomena of Monterey Bay’s fog and The online application is at: http://www.agri-culture. atmospheric rivers. Ryce’s work us/scholarships/ will be exhibited with collecTo request an application, contact the Financial Aid office tions of archival photos, an at your school or the Agri-Culture office, 141 Monte Vista interactive musical sculpture, Ave., Watsonville, CA 95076 or call (831) 722-6622 or (831) and fog collectors created in collaboration with historian Dr. 818-1193 or email: agri-culture@sbcglobal.net. William Cowan, musician Lanier Sammons, sculptor ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUPS Natalie Jenkins, and scientist Dan Fernandez. Jan. 21–March 20: Rydell Visual Art Fellowship Alzheimer’s Association is offering video and phone exhibition, honoring the legacy of local philanthropists meetings for caregivers throughout the month: Roy and Frances Rydell and featuring the 2020-2021 Second and Fourth Wednesdays Rydell Visual Arts Fund recipients: Printmaker and illus- Santa Cruz, 2-3:30 p.m. via phone — Facilitators: trator Ann Altstatt; sculptor and designer Marc D’Estout; Jill Ginghofer and Laurie McVay. choreographer Cid Pearlman; and photographer Edward First and Third Wednesdays Ramirez. Presented in partnership with Community Santa Cruz, 5:30-7 p.m. via video or phone — FaciliFoundation Santa Cruz County. tators: Francie Newfield and Kathleen McBurney.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR Second Saturdays Scotts Valley, 10-11:30 a.m. via video or phone — Facilitator: Diana Hull. Register by calling 800-272-3900 or email ymflores@alz.org. ••• Second Wednesdays Spanish, 7-8:30 p.m. via phone — Facilitator: Yuliana Mendoza. Register by calling 831-647-9890 or email ymflores@alz.org.
ONGOING EVENTS Ongoing Through January 24 WATER TABLE TESTING Santa Cruz County Environmental Health has opened the Winter Water Table Testing Period for Onsite Wastewater Treatment Systems Dec. 29, through Jan. 24. If you are considering developing a property, doing a major remodel or a repair on property served by an onsite wastewater treatment system that may be subject to high ground water levels, you should arrange to have groundwater on your property observed multiple times throughout this testing period. The testing period may be extended if rain persists Piezometer readings are required at the beginning, middle, and end of the testing period. Piezometers must be in the ground and the site plan approved beforehand. Applicants should have a site evaluation application in place and a monitoring plan approved by Environmental Health staff. If the testing period closes, it may be reopened with sufficient rainfall. Groundwater levels must be measured throughout this period. A minimum of three recorded readings are required. For parcels with an active site evaluation application, email your inspector to schedule readings at LandUse@santacruzcounty.us.
safety protocols at UC Santa Cruz. CruzHacks is free for participants. Mentors and judges are needed. See https:// www.cruzhacks.com/ for more information and follow CruzHacks on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and Reddit. To be eligible for prizes, projects must fit into a CruzHacks or sponsor category. Workshops will be available to help participants who have no to little prior technical experience. Last year, 25% of participants were first-time hackers, and 47% were from outside UC Santa Cruz. CruzCoins is returning, giving members who choose to participate a chance to earn points for workshops, social media games and riddles. The more points you earn, the better chance you have of winning additional swag! Sign up for CruzCoins at https://tinyurl.com/cruzcoins-members
Saturday January 15
SATURDAY SHAKESPEARE RETURNS WITH OTHELLO 10 a.m., Weekly Online Discussion Shakespeare’s tragedy “Othello,” along with the film version featuring Laurence Fishburne, will be examined when the Saturday Shakespeare Club begins its new sessions via Zoom. MUSHROOM HIKE The gatherings, each open to the public, begin with a lecture lasting about an hour and include a brief Saturday January 22 discussion, followed by a reading aloud of that portion 9 a.m. Start Time, Parking Lot, Big Sur River Inn, 46800 CA-1 of the play under consideration. Mushroom expert Dr Phil Carpenter, from the Fungus Federation of Santa Cruz, will lead a foraging hike UCSC Emeritus Professor Michael Warren, a noted on Saturday, Jan. 22, during the Foragers Festival. Lisa Haas and her team will display an array of wild Shakespeare authority and dramaturg for Santa Cruz mushrooms. Shakespeare, will first give an overview of the play, its Dr. Carpenter is a regional trustee for the North American Mushroom Association. He has taught foraging history, relevance to its time and ours, and aspects of and identification at UC Santa Cruz for 25 years and for restaurants, resorts and private parties. special interest. He also provides identification and consulting for mushroom poisoning for hospitals and veterinarians. On Jan. 22, Sean Keilen, associate professor of Tickets are $60. literature at UCSC and director of the university’s Meet at parking lot just north of Big Sur River Inn at 9 a.m. Shakespeare Workshop, will address the group. The See https://www.facebook.com/bigsurforagersfestival/ following Saturday, Jan. 29, a DVD lecture discussing “Othello” by Peter Saccio, professor of Shakespearean studies at Dartmouth College, will be shown. First Tuesdays of the Month Saturdays & Sundays On Feb. 5, Rebecca Clark, of the UCSC education First and Third Mondays Each Month ECOLOGICAL RESERVE TOURS AT ELKHORN SLOUGH UCSC ARBORETUM: FIRST TUESDAYS FREE committee, will examine aspects of race, gender and SENIOR LIFE ONLINE Tours start at 10 a.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. Sunday,1700 politics revealed in the play. 9 a.m. – 5 p.m., UC Santa Cruz Arboretum, 1156 High St, SC Elkhorn Road, Watsonville 4 p.m., Online Meeting Community Day at the UCSC Arboretum means The film version of “Othello” will be shown Feb. 12. Join a local group of senior citizens for “Senior Life free admission on the first Tuesday of every month Volunteers lead walks highlighting the natural history of Directed by Kenneth Branagh, who also plays Iago, it the Elkhorn Slough. Capacity is limited due to physical features Irene Jacob as Desdemona to Fishburne’s Othello. Online,” a free online (Zoom) program featuring a 9 a.m-5 p.m. presentation by a local expert. View the full schedule at Guests are invited to explore the biodiversity of the gardens, distancing requirements, and individuals must sign up Although all sessions are free, those who tune in scottsvalleyseniorlife.org/current-activities/. on a first-come, first-served basis. enjoy bird watching or relax on a bench in the shade. are encouraged to send a donation of at least $2 per Due to the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, the Groups of six or more should call ahead at (831) arboretum.ucsc.edu session or $10 for the series to Santa Cruz Shakenext Senior Life Online is on Monday, January 24 728-2822 or visit https://www.elkhornslough.org/ speare, with a check made payable to the organization at 4:00 p.m. group-reservation/ to reserve a tour. Wednesdays in January at 500 Chestnut St., Suite #250, Santa Cruz, 95060. Poet Trish Melehan will talk about her new book of For more info, visit www.elkhornslough.org/esnerr/tours/ TECH TALKS People who are not yet on the email list but would like to poetry “Journey Fantastique,” about the late, great attend and get the Zoom link should email a request to: First Sunday Every Month Santa Cruz artist and muralist James Carl Aschbacher.” 11 a.m.-Noon, Zoom Classes saturdayshakespeare@gmail.com Is your New Year’s resolution to learn more about Melehan’s discussion includes her journey to WESTSIDE MARKETPLACE technology? Then the Santa Cruz Public Libraries is creating and publishing the book. 11 a.m. – 4 p.m., Old Wrigley Building Parking Lot, 2801 Monday January 17 Participants are encouraged to bring their questions the place for you. Learn more about using your phone Mission Street, Santa Cruz or tablet with this month’s series of Tech Talks. Each DAY OF SERVICE to ask Melehan during the Q&A session. Come by on Sundays and shop at over 40 unique & To participate, you need an Internet connection and class is free. Registration is required. wonderful artists, makers & vintage sellers — there’s 9:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Homeless Garden Project Farm, Topics: a computer, tablet or smart phone. A 1-time preregShaffer Road, Santa Cruz • Thursday, Jan. 20, Google Calendar Optimized, something for everyone at the Westside Marketplace! The Homeless Garden Project will host its annual istration is required at https://tinyurl.com/SVSLA-6. Rain dates are scheduled for the following learn to organize your schedule and life with Questions? Call George at (831) 334-7763. Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service for community calendar apps for both Apple and Android users. Sundays. Senior Life Online is sponsored by Scotts Valley Senior members at the Homeless Garden Project Farm. The Market is free to attend and is 100% local! Register at https://santacruzpl.libcal.com/ Life Association (SVSLA), a 501(c)(3) non-profit whose Community members are invited to perform winter All local and state health guidelines will be followed. event/8611983. mission is to promote healthy living for senior citizens. farm tasks to prepare for spring planting. Volunteers will Call 831-427-7713 for help with registration. If you are new Please wear your mask, maintain social distance while be able to work on several different projects at the small Information is at http://scottsvalleyseniorlife.org. you shop and stay home if you don’t feel well. Hand to using zoom, see santacruzpl.org/digitallearning. farm, where assigned tasks will depend on the weather. sanitizing stations will be available. Tuesdays “Please come prepared with the flexibility to work For more info, go to the event page: www.facebook.com/ Third Thursday Each Month on different tasks,” said Volunteer Coordinator Omar FARMERS’ MARKET AT RAMSAY PARK events/ 170470481551895 Guzman. “This is a great opportunity to come to the 2–6 p.m., Ramsay Park, Watsonville PET LOSS AND GRIEF SUPPORT VIA ZOOM farm and connect with HGP, to make a difference, and El Mercado is a new farmers’ market hosted by Com- 6 to 7:30 p.m., virtual meeting to connect with the community.” munity Health Trust of Pajaro Valley. DATED EVENTS BirchBark Foundation’s Pet Loss and Grief Support During lunch, the community will hear from a guest There will be healthy locally grown produce, a Zoom group offers a free support group, moderated speaker and a trainee from the Homeless Garden Project. Friday January 14 veggie Rx redemption site, cooking demonstrations by a licensed grief counseling therapist, on the third If it rains, the event will be rescheduled to Jan. 23. thru Sunday January 16 and wellness screenings. Thursday of each month. For more information, visit homelessgardenproject.org Sponsors include Lakeside Organic, Salud Para La Gente and Kaiser Register at https://www.birchbarkfoundation.org/griefCRUZHACKS 2022 “Calendar” page 31 Permanente. Visit pvhealthtrust.org/elmercado for more info. CruzHacks 2022 will take place virtually due to COVID support or call 831-471-7255.
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FEATURED COLUMNIST
Significant State Funding For Improving the Soquel Corridor By Zach Friend, Supervisor, Second District
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he County recently held the first of two community meetings to discuss a significant investment into improvements toward improved bike, pedestrian and transit options along the Soquel corridor. While these meetings are focusing specifically on the improvements planned to the Soquel Drive corridor, the funding provides for addi- t i o n a l improvements throughout the mid and south county areas. The funding comes from an over $100 million grant from the California Transportation Commission for multi-modal improvements to our local transportation network. The funding was due to a grant application from the local Regional Transportation Commission (RTC) and is a result of funding from Senate Bill 1: the Solutions for Congested Corridors Program and Local Partnership Competitive Program. Our competitiveness for these programs was due in large part to our passage of Measure D, which provides a local match for these major transportation projects.
What challenges will the funding address? he funding works to address a number of issues that are particularly acute in the mid and south county areas. First, Highway 1 congestion. As many of you know, congestion on the highway impacts everyone including those simply trying to get to work or back home, emergency vehicles, buses and delivery vehicles. The second issue is cut-through traffic. As a result of the highway congestion, many vehicles exit the highway and create safety issues (including for bike and pedestrians) on Soquel and other side streets. The third issue is bike and pedestrian safety. Our area is the fifth worst in the state for bike collisions — there is a need to improve bike and pedestrian safety facilities and the increased vehicle usage of Soquel and other side streets is a contributing factor to these increased collisions. What will be funded? he meeting (and upcoming meeting — details are below) spoke about the significant improvement on Soquel, including 5 miles of buffered/protected bicycle lanes, 46 green bike boxes for left turn movements, new sidewalks (to connect to existing sidewalk facilities) ADA improvements, 96 crosswalk upgrades, crosswalk warning devices at 10-mid block locations, and adaptive traffic signal control with transit prioritization at 23 intersections (to improve bus transit time). A lot of these were requested by the community to improve access to local schools and major job centers. For example, near Mar Vista Elementary
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and Cabrillo College, new buffered bike lanes and sidewalks are planned that will connect to existing sidewalks to improve pedestrian access to schools. The project will also improve drainage and add retaining walls and/or hardscape where needed to improve safety in the area. Three new sets of auxiliary lanes on Highway 1 between Soquel Drive and State Park Drive — in one of the most congested corridors in the County — are also planned. Additionally, it will allow for the first 5.75-miles of a 7.5-mile hybrid buson-shoulder/auxiliary lane facility, where transit buses can travel in the auxiliary lane between intersections and on the shoulders at intersections to bypass traffic. Two new Highway 1 bicycle/pedestrian overcrossings (Chanticleer Avenue and the long-awaited Mar Vista Drive project). A bridge replacement at Capitola Avenue, with new pedestrian and bike facilities is also part of the funding. What are the benefits of these projects? s the CTC noted in their staff report, “the project will increase multimodal options, reduce vehicle miles traveled, reduce congestion, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.” It will increase safety and reduce transportation times on this congested corridor with an innovative package of projects to improve and integrate transit, active transportation, and highway/local roadway modes of travel. Transit buses can bypass traffic at intersections by traveling on the new Highway 1 shoulder and can also travel more efficiently on Soquel with signal prioritization. Safe routes to school will increase with new buffered bike lanes and new sidewalks and crosswalk improvements on Soquel as well as two new bike and pedestrian overcrossings to ensure connection between neighborhoods and new safer bike and pedestrian routes. The highway improvements will mean
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less cut through traffic on side streets and Soquel improving neighborhood safety and congestion. Overall, the projects will have equity and environmental benefits with a level of investment that hasn’t been seen in our county. Lower-income residents often are impacted the most by longer commutes and unreliable transit times and in many communities have higher rates of bike and pedestrian incidents. These improvements will improve bike and pedestrian safety, reduce commute times and improve bus service — which, while this benefits the entire community — it has the greatest impact on those that often live the furthest from employment options due to affordable housing challenges and rely on major transit. What are the next steps? he County will be the lead agency in implementation of the multimodal improvements on Soquel. A second community meeting on the Soquel Drive proposal will be held (virtually) on Jan. 20 from 6-7:30 pm. You can register for it at: http://bit.ly/soquelzoom1 The Highway 1 improvements will be constructed by Caltrans with the RTC implementing environmental clearance and final design. The RTC anticipates that all components of this extensive project will be under construction by 2023 with some sooner. For more information on the Watsonville-Santa Cruz Multimodal Corridor Program visit https://sccrtc.org/projects/ multi-modal/wsc-mc/. If you’d like to review the specific proposals for the Soquel Drive corridor you can visit www.soqueldrivebufferedproject.com. n ••• As always, I appreciate any feedback you may have on this (or any other County issue). I’m maintaining regular updates on social media at www.facebook.com/supervisorfriend and you can always call me at 454-2200.
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SCCAS Featured Pet
“Calendar” from page 29
Wednesday January 19 Saturday January 22
ECO-FARM CONFERENCE The 42nd EcoFarm Conference will be in person, Jan. 19-22 at the Asilomar State Beach & Conference Center in Pacific Grove. The theme is “Rooted in Resilience.” This annual gathering of agriculturalists working to advance just and ecological farming and food systems will offer visionary keynote speakers, skill-building workshops, expo, seed swaps, networking, and farm tours. Register at https://eco-farm.org/conference Questions: 831-763-2111 • info@eco-farm.org
Thursday January 20
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Blonds Have More Fun!
eet Canela, a sweet blonde Labrador Retriever mix who is just 3 years old and looking for her forever home! This beauty is in an awesome foster home right now and her Foster Dad says she is a very sweet and loveable dog who enjoys spending time with her people. Canela is house trained and likes to sleep on her bed with her special blanket. She is friendly with other dogs and always wants to play. She has even met cats with supervision and could coexist with cat friends if her family is patient and guides her through that transition. Canela will alert bark and try to chase or dig for squirrels and gophers, but this doesn’t change her love for walks! Canela loves to get her wiggles out with a run in a big yard and on walks she will do a lot of sniffing. She will be happy to find a family who is ready to take her on some “sniffafaris” and work with her on positive reinforcement training. Canela does well in the car and has been great with all the people she has met, including children and seniors. While she is very friendly, loves to snuggle, and get belly rubs from friends — she can take a few minutes to warm up to new people. But once she knows them, she loves them! Canela is the perfect family dog and we cannot believe she has been at the Shelter for over a month! ••• To encourage more animal adoptions, the price for all dogs over 50 lbs. will be $50 through Valentine’s Day, February 14! There are so many reasons to adopt from the Shelter. One of the best is that shelter animals make great pets. Shelter animals are also quite a bargain since their fees include spay/neuter, microchip (including registration), age-appropriate vaccinations, routine treatment for fleas/worms, and a free pet wellness exam with local participating veterinarians. Visit us today at 1001 Rodriguez St. in Santa Cruz or view adoptable animals on our website at www.scanimalshelter.org. n ••• Santa Cruz County Animal Shelter’s full-service, open-admission shelter: Santa Cruz Location (Public Entrance): 1001 Rodriguez St., Santa Cruz, 95062 Hours: Daily 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Watsonville Location: CURRENTLY CLOSED 580 Airport Blvd, Watsonville, CA 95076 SCCAS Main line: 831-454-7200. Animal Control: 831-454-7227. After-Hours Emergency: 831-471-1182 • After Hours: jillian.ganley@santacruzcounty.us
SOQUEL DR. BIKE LANES & CONGESTION WORKSHOPS 6-7:30 p.m., Online Seminars The Santa Cruz county Department of Public Works plans two virtual community workshops on plans to make Soquel Drive more walkable and bikeable and less congested. The Jan. 13 workshop is designed for Aptos residents, while the Jan. 20 workshop is for Live Oak and Soquel residents. Registers at bit.ly/soquelzoom1 for District 2 and bit.ly/soquelzoom1 for District 1. The improvements currently planned for 5.6 miles of the busiest segment of Soquel Ave/Drive from La Fonda Ave to State Park Drive include buffered bike lanes, ADA-accessible ramps, and flashing sidewalk beacons.
Saturday January 22
TRAINING TO STOP SEX TRAFFICKING Noon-2:30 p.m., Zoom Class The Santa Cruz County Branch of the American Association of University Women is hosting an antisex trafficking training session on Zoom Saturday, Jan. 22, from noon to 2:30 p.m. for groups and individuals who work with teens. Titled “Mind Games: Understanding the Predator Psychological Methodolgy,” the session will teach participants the techniques traffickers use to gain the trust of children and teens and then manipulate and control them. Speakers are: Dr. Deena Graves, an award-winning communicator, strategist and founder of M3 Transformations, an organization that designs solutions that bring children back from predators and trauma, and Derek Williams, a former trafficker who now works to stop human trafficking, explaining how traffickers work and what can be done. “We invite all those who work with teens to this valuable session,” said AAUW President Phyllis Taylor. Join the Zoom meeting at: https://tinyurl.com/ prevent-trafficking For audio, find your local number: https://us02web. zoom.us/u/kbxNMcjKt For info, call AAUW at (831) 425-1306.
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Monday January 24
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TALK BY POET TRISH MELEHAN 4 p.m., Online Zoom meeting Scotts Valley Senior Life Association has scheduled three Senior Life Online presentations with local speakers in January, February and March. Join a local group of friendly senior citizens for the first free seminar: “Senior Life Online” via Zoom. Poet Trish Melehan talks about her journey in creating and publishing a new book of poetry, “Journey Fantastique” with the late, great Santa Cruz artist and muralist James Carl Aschbacher. Participants are encouraged to ask questions during the Q&A session. To participate, you need an Internet connection and a computer, tablet or smart phone. A 1-time preregistration is required at https://tinyurl.com/ SVSLA-6.
Questions? Call George at (831) 334-7763. Biweekly Senior Life Online presentations are sponsored by Scotts Valley Senior Life Association, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit with mission to promote healthy living for senior citizens. See http://scottsvalleyseniorlife.org.
Wednesday January 26 WOMEN RUNNING FOR OFFICE FORUM 6:30 p.m., Online Discussion The Women in Leadership for Diverse Representation (WILDR) virtual forum is being coordinated by a diverse group of women in Santa Cruz County to encourage more women to run for elected positions, serve on appointed commissions, and support women running for office. Gail Pellerin and Christina Cuevas will be the moderators. The topic will be developing the pipeline of diverse women candidates: Important considerations for making a decision to run, what are the positions that will be open, and to hear how women have made decisions in the past. A panel of women will talk about supporting others who are running with endorsements, funding, and campaigning. The forum will be: • On Zoom. The link to register is https://bit.ly/ WILDRyou2022 • Open to the public, with pre-registration required • Simultaneously translated into Spanish. Panelists include: Donna Zeil, Kristen Petersen, Vanessa Quiroz-Carter, Maria Orozco, Elaine Johnson, Lynn Renshaw and Angela Marshall. Dorian Seamster coordinates the group and is the main point of contact at doseamster@gmail. com. She is working with Caitlin Brune, Chloe Magidoff, Christina Cuevas, Gail Pellerin, Gigi Kelbert, Jillian Ritter, Laura Cuadros, Lora Lee Martin, Jenni Veitch-Olson, Jennifer Schacher, Maria Cadenas, Mireya Gomez-Contreras, Sarah Marschall, Shebreh Kalantari-Johnson, Stephanie Barron Lu, Vanessa Quiroz-Carter, and Yvette Lopez Brooks.
Friday January 28 thru Sunday January 30 STARTUP WEEKEND MONTEREY BAY CSU Monterey Bay, Seaside Do you have an idea for a new business? Are you curious about entrepreneurship? Do you want to start a business but don’t know where to begin? Do you have technical or creative skills and want to understand how the business side works? At Startup Weekend at CSU Monterey Bay in Seaside, you will get experience with the process of starting a business, learn how to develop your idea, explain it to people, and meet coaches who will help you move your business ideas. Register at https://event.techstars.com/e/startupweekend_ mb/2022. If you have questions, email the organizing team at info@startupmontereybay.com.
Sunday February 6 VALENTINE’S POP-UP ARTISTS’ STANDS 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Izant Court, Soquel Valentine’s Pop-Up Event on Izant Court in Soquel features unique hand-made gifts from local artists, including: Butterfly Dream Dyes: hand-tied and ice-dyed new and upcycled clothing, purses and home goods. Coastal Candle Co.: hand-poured natural soy container candles with wood wicks and beeswax candles. Lavender Ladies: Eye pillows, and lavender items. : Tiny succulent table-top gardens and sea glass treasures. n
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