February 19 – March 4, 2015

Volume 27
HOME &
GARDEN
•
Issue 43
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015
gourmet
{ pages 21-28 }
expo
guide
YOUR COMMUNITY IN YOUR HANDS
LOS OSOS
MORRO BAY
CAYUCOS
CAMBRIA
Kyle Shaffer of Estero Bay Surf Club cuts back
during Saturday’s 25th Annual Big, Bad & Ugly
Surf Contest at Morro Rock. Results, more
photos on Page 8. Photo by Neil Farrell
New Proposal for
Cayucos School
Flushed Over Sewer Plant
Listen Up!
By Neil Farrell
By Neil Farrell
C
ayucos
Elementary
School’s 8th graders
might some day get to
pick which public high school
they want to attend, if a proposal arising now is ultimately
approved by the town’s voters.
Cayucos Elementary School
District Superintendent, Anne
Hubbard, who also serves as
the one-school district’s principal, is proposing a new scenario
that would clear the way for her
8th graders to go to Morro Bay
High School, or whatever public
school they want
It’s an issue that has been
simmering for years and the last
two attempts to come up with a
solution fell short. It was also
dumped into her lap on her first
day on the job.
In essence, this new plan
would change Cayucos Elementary School District into a
K-12th instead of K-8th as it is
now and cut ties with the Coast
Unified School District.
Under the current set up,
which has been in effect since
the 1920s, every property in
Cayucos’ zip code is included in
the Coast Union district, so the
portion of the town’s property
taxes designated for secondary
education (high school) gets
sent up to Cambria.
The problem is that very few
of the Cayucos kids actually
goes to Coast Union, she said.
Page 9
50 Shades of
Lousy
Page 35
See Proposal, page 4
tolosapress.com
Bridge Job
Breaks Ground
I
’ve been covering the Los
Osos sewer since 1992, and
have probably written a
thousand stories about it over
the past 23 years. But to be
honest, I really had no concept
of the shear enormity of this
project until last week, when
I tagged along with a Cal Poly
construction management class
for a tour of the sewer treatment
plant, located on farmland behind the Los Osos Cemetery.
The enormity of this project
left me a little flushed, if you’ll
forgive the pun.
Seeing the job while it’s still
being built, has led to a greater
appreciation for why it took so
long to get built and why folks
fought so hard to move the
plant out of town.
Now granted, the project being built — with oxidation ditches and clarifiers — is not what
was proposed for the middle
of town back in the early years
of this century, so it’s comparing oranges to tangerines, still,
moving the plant sure seems
smarter to me now, despite the
increased costs.
It had rained hard over the
weekend so that Monday (Feb.
9) the place was a muddy mess
and no one was working despite
the morning being warm and
sunny.
We slipped and slid our way
across the job site, which covers
See Sewer, page 10
2
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Bay News
Bret Colhouer
publisher
[email protected]
Neil Farrell
managing editor
The Bay News
[email protected]
Theresa-Marie Wilson
managing editor
The Coast News
[email protected]
Table of
Contents
Police Arrest Flasher ......................................3
City-State to Burn Brush ............................... 37
Two Arrested in Alleged Car Thefts ................3
Board Seats Filled, Almost ........................... 37
Police Blotter ............................................. 6-7
Old Fire Truck is Gone, New One Coming....38
25th Big, Bad and Ugly .................................8
Suspected Drug Lab Explodes......................38
Bridge Job Hits Troubled Waters ....................9
Senior Apartment Complex Breaks Ground ..39
Gareth Kelly
business / lifestyle reporter
[email protected]
Osos Chamber Hands Out Awards .............. 10
Sports Shorts ..............................................40
Michelle Johnson
art director
UCSB Wins Regatta .................................... 11
State Lets Transportation Monies ..................41
Christy Serpa
editorial design
Letters To The Editor .................................... 12
Business Matters .................................... 42-45
Kathrene Tiffin
copy editor
Central Coast Life .................................. 13-36
Biz Briefs ............................................... 46-47
Camas Frank
section editor
SLO City News
[email protected]
Michael Elliot
sports reporter
[email protected]
Jessica Padilla
marketing coordinator
[email protected]
ADVERTISING
Jessica Micklus
sales manager
[email protected]
Dana McGraw
senior advertising executive
[email protected]
Zorina Ricci
coast news advertising executive
[email protected]
Carrie Vickerman
bay news advertising executive
[email protected]
Wiley Poole
slo advertising executive
Dave Diaz
internet, text & loyalty marketing
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS &
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Teri Bayus
Michael Gunther
King Harris
Vivian Krug
Evanne Mingori
Betsey Nash
SLO Nightwriters
Ray Ambler
Ruth Anne Angus
Amy Joseph
Carrie Jaymes
Erin O’Donnell
Paul Winninghoff
This is a publication of Tolosa Press, Inc., Copyright 2007–2013 all rights reserved. One free copy
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Bay News • February 19 - March 4, 2015
News
Police Arrest Alleged Flasher
M
orro Bay police
have arrested a
local transient man
after he allegedly exposed
himself in a city park.
According to Cmdr. Bryan
Millard, at about 2:15 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 9 police
responded to Del Mar Park,
in North Morro Bay, for a
report of a man “exposing
his genitals to children in the park.”
Arriving police reportedly watched
the suspect “actively exposing himself
with several children in the nearby
area,” Millard said.
When
officers
tried
to arrest the suspect,
he reportedly struggled
with them but no one
was injured, according to
Millard. Police arrested
William Kirk Tallman, 46 a
local transient, on suspicion
of indecent exposure and
resisting arrest.
Police are asking anyone
with questions or concerns about the
case or who might have additional
information about the suspect, to call
them at 772-6225.
Cayucos Election March 10
T
he Cayucos Citizens Advisory
Council Election is set for 7 a.m.
to 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 10 at
the Cayucos Vet’s Hall.
CCAC reviews projects and policy
changes on the County level, advising
the County supervisors on the
community’s wishes. Any Cayucos
registered voters can pop in and vote.
Candidates are: Precinct 1: Carol
Baptiste vs. John Carsel; Precinct 2:
Paul Choucalas, Bill Shea, and Marie
Jaqua; Precinct 3: David Dabritz;
Precinct 4: Roland Hutchinson vs.
Francie Farinet; Precinct 5: Steven
Beightler vs. Steve Geil; Precinct 6:
DeAnne Harland vs. Carol Chubb;
Precinct 7: Greg Bettencourt; Precinct
8: Larry Fishman vs. Gil Igleheart.
Two members and one alternate can be
elected per precinct.
•
3
Two Arrested in Alleged Car Thefts
T
wo women were arrested and
a stash of stolen property
recovered by Morro Bay Police
after they allegedly broke into
numerous cars in Morro Bay.
Sometime overnight Feb. 1-2, there
were 11 reported thefts from vehicles
in the northwest side of the City,
according to a new release from the
MBPD.
Also, a dry cleaner shop in
Downtown was also burglarized. “The
losses from these thefts,” said Cmdr.
Bryan Millard, “included several
small electronic items, power tools,
cash money, and blank business
checks totaling several hundred
dollars in value.”
A police investigation led to the
arrest of a 32-year-old woman and
subsequently arrested an 18-year-old
woman in connection with the cases.
Following up on more leads,
Millard said, police recovered more
suspected stolen property at a
home in the south side of town and
“contacted two adult male subjects in
the early morning hours of Feb. 5,”
Millard said, “who admitted taking
property from more than 30 vehicles
that morning, and had numerous
property items in their possession.”
Those items, are being held by
police until the owners can be located.
There may be as many as 51 car
thefts, Millard said, as the two men
reportedly admitted to “30-40” thefts.
More suspects have reportedly been
identified, “but no other arrests have
been made, pending the completion
of this investigation,” he added.
Thus far, police arrested Heather
Hair, 32 of Morro Bay on suspicion
of possession of stolen property,
criminal conspiracy, and possession
of drug paraphernalia. A second
suspect, Ariel Martine Adams, 18 of
Morro Bay, after she allegedly tried
to cash a suspected forged check
that police say was “identified as a
stolen in one of the associated thefts.”
Adams was charged with suspicion
of possession of stolen property,
forgery, and conspiracy. Both women
were cited for misdemeanors and
released, Millard said.
Police are asking any citizens with
information about recent thefts, or
are missing property out of their
vehicles, to call them at 772-6225.
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4
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Bay News
Proposal, from page 1
Out of the 32, 8th graders who graduated
from Cayucos last year, 24 are attending
MBHS, according to information
Hubbard put together. Four went to
Coast Union and four others went
elsewhere — some to Mission Prep or
other private schools.
Some 17 Cayucos kids from 2013 went
to Morro Bay, 21 in 2012 and 15 in 2011
(77 total), she said. Over the past four
years, her research shows, a total of 21
have gone to Coast. Last year’s class of
32 was actually big for little Cayucos.
“We have 23 this year,” said Hubbard.
News
The main issue with this is that the tax
dollars for educating Cayucos’ kids are
not going to the school district that is
actually doing the educating.
The State’s formula for paying school
districts — based on Average Daily
Attendance — is about $10,500 per pupil
per year, she explained, meaning the San
Luis Coastal School District, which has
MBHS, is not getting about $250,000
in reimbursement for educating just
Cayucos’ freshmen.
For all of the current students, “I’d
estimate it at about a half million,” said
Hubbard. “It is a significant amount
of money.” And in an informal poll of
current Cayucos 8th graders, she said,
not one of them said they wanted to go
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to Coast Union but many said Morro
Bay.
San
Luis,
Cayucos,
Cambria
Elementary and Coast Union districts
are all basic aid districts, meaning they
get their monies directly from property
taxes not from State funding, so these
numbers are only estimates. And in
little Cayucos, property tax revenues are
substantial. Cayucos’ K-8 school has a
$2.8 million budget for the 2014-15 fiscal
year. An additional amount, Hubbard
is unsure how much, goes to the Coast
Union district for secondary education.
To remedy the situation, Hubbard
said, they want to be able to collect
those “high school” taxes and have the
money follow the students. So if a kid
wants to go to Templeton because of its
music program, she said, they could do
it, or Morro Bay for its STEAM program
or San Luis High for its athletics. The
situation would apply to any public
school district that signs a memorandum
of understanding that would also be
developed, she explained. Private
schools would be excluded, “because
they charge tuition.”
“Cayucos citizens would get their
choice of high schools,” Hubbard said,
“and the taxes generated will follow
the students. The money targeted for
high school students all go to Coast
Union but they’re only educating a small
percentage of our students.”
Essentially, Cayucos would become a
K-12 district without a high school, and
direct monies to where the students go to
school. But like any other major change,
this one has a long road ahead of it.
First step is a town meeting set for
7 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 18 at the new
school gym. This is an informational
meeting only and a way for the district to
answer questions, allay fears and dispel
incorrect rumors that have been going
around, she said.
What they need are three people to
form a committee, write the petition
and launch a signature drive, she
explained. This “unification” petition
will be lengthy, she said, noting that such
petitions done elsewhere in California
ran eight-20 pages.
Some 25% of the 2,032 registered
voters (according to the County Clerk’s
records) must sign, but Hubbard said
they hope to get a lot more than the 508
or so needed.
The County Office of Education, whose
new superintendent is Jim Brescia,
Cayucos’
former
superintendent/
principal, must verify them. Then the
petition goes up to Sacramento and the
State Department of Education for its
approval. It would then go back to the
County to set an election date. They
don’t have a target date for an election
in mind right now, she said, as there is a
long ways to go.
However, she explained, the State
Board of Education could approve the
change without an election being held.
“They have the authority to do that,”
Hubbard said, “if an overwhelming
number of voters wanted it.”
Indeed, she explained, the only reason
they are doing this at all is because
Cayucos residents have asked for it.
Thank You…
To every one to who participated in, sponsored and/or supported our
SOLD OUT
“TEAL MAGNOLIA”
Fashion/Luncheon Show, in Oceano CA on Saturday January 17, 2015.
Our signature “Teal Magnolia” bubbly drink was a huge success.
The goal of our fashion and luncheons are directed at empowering
women with the necessary tools and information on ovarian cancer.
Ovarian cancer is considered to be a silent killer, we don’t agree as
there are many signs that are misdiagnosed. We feel that once a woman understands the signs to look for she is then able to be her
own advocate in her healthcare and insist that necessary tests be taken.
Sharon Leigh President of the Sharon Leigh Ovarian Cancer Foundation spoke on the BRCA gene and its relationship to ovarian
cancer.
Cristina Martins-Sinco Vice President, of the Sharon Leigh Ovarian Cancer Foundation spoke on the signs and symptoms of
ovarian cancer.
Our deepest thank you to the Elks Lodge, Tony and Margaret were wonderful to work with.
Sharla Cannon owner of Le Papillion from the village in Arroyo Grande, partnered with our foundation with her beautiful line of
clothes
for our radiant models.
Our Models: Judy Hearn, Blanche Hollingsead-Fuguate, Jeannie, and Cindy Miranda, graced the runway.
The fantastic committee of women who came together and created a beautiful setting for our guests, Kathy Fissori,
Kim Jeffers, Sylvia Dodd, Linda Fielder, Debra Jackson.
Hair and make-up: Susie Almaquer, Alexandria Silveira Goncalves and Cassandra Sigala.
Our sponsors: SLOCO Data, Sierra Auto of Grover Beach, PGE
Graphics by Michelle Kossuth
Bay News • February 19 - March 4, 2015
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•
5
6
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Morro Bay
• Feb. 2: Police took several reports
of some larcenous scoundrels
getting into parked cars overnight.
Reports were in the 2200 block of
Emerald Cr. (four), 2200 Coral, 100
Andros, 165 Hatteras, 100 Damar,
and 200 Gilbert. Thankfully,
through some good police work,
officers arrested two women in
connection with these cases and
then discovered two men who
reportedly confessed to untold
more car thefts. Police estimate the
case could involve more than 40
and have a pile of suspected stolen
property they want to return to its
owners. There were also several
vandalism to vehicles cases, as the
gang that couldn’t’ shoot straight
apparently couldn’t get past the
door locks.
• Feb. 3: Some sinner vandalized
the window of a business in the
1000 block of Kennedy Way. And
in another chicken-sh*t crime,
someone stole a check from a
mailbox in the 100 block of Easter
St., and then cashed it in SLO.
• Feb. 3: Police responded at 5:51
p.m. to Rite Aid where they’d
caught a suspected shoplifter. Logs
indicated a 20-year-old, stickyfingered woman was cited and
released with a no doubt crossyour-heart promise to appear. They
caught another one Feb. 6, that
time it was a 27-year-old thief-ette,
whom logs said made the long ride
to the pokey.
• Feb. 3: A woman in the 300
• Feb. 5: A woman in the 300 block
of Avalon said someone stole a
$1,000 laptop out of her vehicle.
• Feb. 3: Police responded at 3:35
p.m. to the 700 block of Pacific
where a building jumped in front
of a vehicle. There were no injuries
though the building might disagree.
The following day, they went to Del
Mar Elementary on Sequoia where
the janitor said a planter box got
into someone’s way.
• Feb. 4: Police took a report of
someone doing a Carrie Underwood
to a parked car at the high school.
on Costa Brava. He was taken to
an area hospital to have his head
examined.
doing construction and had hit his
head.
• Feb. 7: A guy used the restroom
for an “extended” period of time
at the Five Cities Drive
Shell Station. The clerk
told him to leave but
A naked guy out with a pit bull
later found him coming
was reportedly out for a stroll on
out of the back area. The
West Point. The caller had also
caller believed the guy
had a knife, but police
come across a car with the engine
could not locate him.
running that had a shotgun
• Feb. 11: Some guy wearing tan
Pismo Beach
• Feb. 12: Police were unable to
locate a car that had driven through
the area on Narlene Way several
times, which didn’t used to be
against the law.
• Feb. 12: A guest at the Ocean
Palms Hotel reported that his fiance
was hitting him with a pillow. Not
exactly 50 Shades of Grey, but the
two were separated for the night.
• Feb. 12: Several people on a kayak
in the ocean reportedly looked
distressed. Cal Fire determined that
all was OK.
• Feb. 12: Security at the Outlet
Center reported that two employees
were having a spat behind the
building.
• Feb. 12: A caller on the 200 block
of Dolliver reported that a guy she
had a restraining order against
and who had been threatening to
killer her via text, was now in her
backyard. Reportedly the guy had
also taken the caller’s car and kept
it for two days. Police could not
locate the rejected Romeo Lecter.
• Feb. 12: A suspicious car of
unknown color was reported across
from the construction trailer by
McLintocks. It turned out to be a
woman watching the sunset, which
is something the caller might try
doing.
“A guest at the Ocean Palms Hotel
reported that his fiance was hitting
him with a pillow. Not exactly 50
Shades of Grey, but the two were
separated for the night.”
block of Rennel said two unknown
battleaxes assaulted her.
Police Blotter
• Feb. 11: Three guys
chowed
down
on
$46 worth of grub at
Denny’s, and when it
was time to pay, their
card was denied. One
guy said that he would
return the next day and
pay the bill.
• Feb. 11: A naked guy out with a pit
bull was reportedly out for a stroll
on West Point. The caller had also
come across a car with the engine
running that had a shotgun and
drugs inside, presumably belonging
to the slow-speed streaker. He was
reported again standing behind
McLintoks. Another caller reported
that he had bumped into the guy
who responded by saying, “I should
kill you.” Officers taxed the guy,
which didn’t have to much of an
impact. They did manage to catch
Mr. Full Monty inside a home
and drugs inside, presumably
belonging to the slow-speed
streaker. He was reported again
standing
behind
McLintoks.
Another caller reported that he
had bumped into the guy who
responded by saying, “I should
kill you.” Officers taxed the guy,
which didnʼt have to much of an
impact. They did manage to catch
Mr. Full Monty inside a home on
Costa Brava. He was taken to an
area hospital to have his head
examined.
pants and carrying an umbrella
was reportedly walking on the
Boardwalk yelling obscenities.
Police caught up with the guy who
said that he was merely singing to
himself. “Under the Boardwalk,
we’ll be having some fu-un…”
Everybody sing along.
• Feb. 11: Cal Fire responded to a
report of a man down by Harry’s on
Cypress. The guy fell off the wagon
and off the curb.
• Feb. 11: A house on the 100
block of Florin was being tented
for fumigation and some termite
wanted police to check out the
workers. Everything was okay.
• Feb. 11: A guy who liked to sleep
under the stairs at a residence on
the 100 block of Ocean View. He
was arrested and hopefully got to
sleep with a roof over his head.
• Feb. 10: A woman entered the
station to report that her exboyfriend has been breaking into
her house and backyard to steal her
dog.
• Feb. 10: A man claiming to work for
Charter entered Orchard Hardware
Supply on official business. The
caller got in touch with Charter who
said that they hadn’t sent anyone
out.
• Feb. 10: A caller reported a guy
yelling on Price Street. The lug was
• Feb. 7: A loud party
was reported in the hot
tub area at Pismo Shore
Estates. An officer was
sent to break up the
partying prunes.
• Feb. 6: A caller on the
100 block of Narlene
Way reported a guy that
wasn’t supposed to be at
a home had jumped the
fence and was “creeping
around” the corner of
the house.
• Feb. 6: A caller
reported a man on the
sidewalk on 4th street
wearing camouflage clothing and
using a machete chopping at the
trees. As it turns out, he was doing
landscaping.
San Luis Obispo
• Feb. 13: Police responded at 12:14
a.m. to the Buffalo Bar in the 700
block of Higuera where a cocker
spaniel had been tied outside to a
pole for two hours. Logs indicated
the dog was OK and police would
check back through the night, until
the mutt owner comes back for it.
• Feb. 13: Someone at Amtrak
called at 1 a.m. to report a transient
woman was trying to hop a freight.
• Feb. 13: A silent teller hold-up
alarm went off at Heritage Oaks
Bank on Froom Ranch Rd., clearly a
false alarm as it was 1:34 a.m.
• Feb. 13: A woman in the 1100
block of Seaward called police at
2:31 a.m. after finding a strange
man inside her house. The 21-yearold boozeheimer was arrested.
Feb. 12: The Grocery Outlet on
Madonna Road called at 8 a.m.
after they caught two 12-yearold girls with sticky fingers. The
uncooperative hooliganettes were
being detained.
• Feb. 12: Police responded to
Police Blotter
County Mental Health on Johnson
where one of the patients assaulted
a staff member. The 27-year-old
berserker was arrested for suspicion
of battery and of course probation
violation.
• Feb. 12: Someone
reported five homeless
men pushing a disabled
motor home out of
a parking at Morro
and Pacific, a case of
manpower taking over
for horsepower.
• Feb. 12: A citizen called at 4:10
p.m. from Madonna and El Mercado
and said a homeless woman on
the corner has a sign that says she
needs help and has a lot of luggage,
“A citizen in the 1100 block of
Laurel called to report some
college kids were moving out and
they left their couch, and it smells
like college students.”
• Feb. 12: Someone
reported at 9:55 a.m. that some
donut hole was sleeping in the
doorway next to House of Bagels in
the 100 block of Higuera.
• Feb. 12: A citizen in the 2400 block
of Sendero called at 10:27 a.m.
to report two baby cows running
through the cul-de-sac.
• Feb. 12: A citizen in the 1100 block
of Laurel called to report some
college kids were moving out and
they left their couch, and it smells
like college students.
• Feb. 12: Someone called police at
1:52 p.m. from JB Dewars on Prado
Road to report some homeless man
was chopping a tree down. Ol’ Paul
Dumbyon said he didn’t like the
trees.
• Feb. 12: A citizen in the area of
Drake and Oceanaire reported that
a POS travel trailer up on blocks for
months, now has a “For Sale” sign
in the window.
• Feb. 12: Some thief no doubt got
a charge out of stealing a Honda
generator from Arsenal Equipment
Rentals in the 3500 block of
Higuera.
• Feb. 12: Someone in the 1700 block
of Beach St., complained about
a car parked outside Sandercock
Transfer Co. It was an old Ford
Taurus painted white with grass,
butterflies and ladybugs, so yeah,
tow that thing outta here.
• Feb. 12: Police and firefighters
responded at 3:30 p.m. to the
Hwy 101-LOVR construction zone
for a “bulldozer vs. traffic signal”
collision with live wires down, as
you can’t make an omelet without
breaking a few eggs.
• Feb. 12: At 3:44 p.m. a woman
called police and said her apparently
troubled daughter just left and she
believes the girl is over-medicated,
ya think?
or might that be baggage?
• Feb. 12: Someone at Bishop’s Peak
School on Jaycee needed help in the
perhaps poorly named, Sun & Fun
Room.
• Feb. 12: A man became dizzy and
needed medical attention at Toyota
of San Luis Obispo, no doubt
suffering sticker shock.
• Feb. 12: Someone at Fire Station
1 at Santa Barbara and Broad
reported a woman in the parking
lot was being chased by a transient
man and woman.
• Feb. 11: Someone
called at 7:24 a.m.
because some Hoss
left the barn door
open
at
Cowboy
Cookie.
Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
arrived with the rope.
• Feb. 11: A citizen in the 600
block of Monterey at the Leitcher
Apartments discovered the secret
hiding spot of a transient man, who
shimmied through a hole in the
back fence and grabbed a sleeping
bag and other assorted stuff.
• Feb. 11: Someone was in the police
station lobby from the Be Happy
Wellness Café on Foothill, upset
and just sick about something.
• Feb. 11: Someone called at 2 p.m.
from the YMCA parking lot to
report two dudes in a Ford sedan
rolling a joint and smoking the evil
weed. Police didn’t cite anyone as
the evidence no doubt all went up in
smoke.
• Feb. 11: Police responded to the
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity in the
1200 block of Foothill as apparently
some frat boy’s car got repossessed,
and when that happens there’s only
one thing to do — To-ga! To-ga!
• Feb. 11: At 6:11 p.m. someone at the
Marsh Street Post Office thought a
man suspicious looking because he
“Some guy wearing tan pants and
carrying an umbrella was reportedly
walking on the Boardwalk yelling
obscenities. Police caught up with
the guy who said that he was merely
singing to himself. “Under the
Boardwalk, weʼll be having some
fu-un…” Everybody sing along.”
• Feb. 11: Someone
asked police to check
the welfare of a
person at 7:30 a.m.
in the Marsh Street
parking garage. Logs
indicated officers should drive up
the ramp to the second level and
just look to the right.
• Feb. 11: Someone called at 8 a.m.
from Meadow Park to report a
transient man sleeping in affordable
housing — a cardboard refrigerator
box — and taking up space on the
grass. At 8:23, someone at House of
Bagels on Higuera reported another
freeloader has been sleeping and
living in their trash bin and is
starting to make himself at home.
And at 9:06 another transient man
was discovered sleeping on the
front porch at San Luis Financial,
and since he’s not there for a loan,
it was hasta la bye-bye time.
• Feb. 11: At 9 a.m. someone called
from the 600 block of Higuera at
West End Espresso Bar to report
that some degenerate smoker was
fouling his or her air. The smoke
apparently cleared before officers
was walking two bicycles down the
sidewalk.
• Feb. 11: Police responded at 8:30
p.m. to LOVR and Oceanaire for a
3-car meet n’ greet, as a tan Camry
said hello to a blue Altima, which
was then introduced to a silver Kia
and they were blocking the roadway.
•
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• Feb. 11: Someone called at 8:36
p.m. from Higuera and Bianchi
to report an angry transient man
loudly cussing and swearing for the
“past few hours,” shoot more likely
the past few years.
• Feb. 12: Police were called at
5 a.m. after a citizen found two
transients sleeping outside the SLO
Symphony’s Office on Higuera, and
ol’ Beethoven had already told them
— “Get-out-of-heeer!” “Get-out-ofheeer!”
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7
8
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Bay News
Sports
Sunny Skies, Good Waves at 25th Big-Ugly
Photos by Neil Farrell
Hayley Cameron
Tom Kellerman and Dana Pitman
T
he 25th Annual Big, Bad & Ugly
Surf and Turf contest saw some of
the best waves in years Saturday,
as surfers from some eight surf clubs,
representing from San Onofre to Pedro
Point converged at Morro Rock. With
overhead sets and 80-degree weather,
the Big Ugly this year drew hundreds of
fans.
Surf Clubs that took part were: San
Onofre Surf Club, Malibu Boardriders,
Estero Bay Surf Club, Ventura Surf Club,
Santa Barbara County Surf Club, Pedro
Point Surf Club, Santa Cruz Longboard
Union, Big stick Surfing Association.
Estero Bay took the team title, Santa
Cruz Longboarders was second and the
Big sticks were third.
Danny Johnson
Ray Savoie
Division winners were:
Grommets 10-under — 1st Otis Kelly,
2nd Ginger Russell, 3rd Ryker Robson.
Grommets 11-16 — 1st Fisher Baxter,
2nd Levi Krull, 3rd Shane Naime.
Junior Men 13-19 — 1st Riley Proano,
2nd Julien Putnam, 3rd Dean Moye.
David Girard
Men 20-34 — 1st Keary Kennedy, 2nd
Garret Swanson, 3rd Kyle Schaffer
Masters Men 35-49 — 1st Ryan Devine,
2nd Dave Morgan 3rd Charlie Howland.
Men’s Grand Masters 50-59 — 1st
Tom Kellerman, 2nd Kevin Swanson, 3rd
Paul Hughes.
Legends 60+ — 1st Bob Matchett, 2nd
Phil Rovai, 3rd Joel Baldwin.
Senior Women 35+ — 1st Hayley
Cameron, 2nd Tee Hardy, 3rd Jane
McKenzie.
StandUp Paddle Open — 1st Rusty
Birchell, 2nd Jason Mussallem.
Men’s Shortboard — 1st Danny
Hart, 2nd London O’Regan, 3rd Kevin
Swanson.
Tee Hardy
Women’s Shortboard — 1st Hayley Cameron, 2nd Tee
Hardy, 3rd Amy Christy.
Dog Meat Heat — 1st Keary Kennedy, 2nd Danny Hart, 3rd
Dave Morgan
Golf (at Sea Pines Sunday) — 1st Jerry Myers, 37, 2nd Dave
Carter, 42, 3rd John B. 43.3.
Evan Savoie
Bay News • February 19 - March 4, 2015
News
•
9
Bridge Job Breaks Ground, Hits Troubled Waters
By Neil Farrell
B
uilding the Morro Creek Bridge
has started out in somewhat
troubled waters, after work began
without first getting an OK from Native
American archaeological monitors. But
despite that initial glitch, City, State
and County officials joined with about
50 residents for a ground-breaking
ceremony last Wednesday and the
city manager vowed to have the bridge
open by July.
And while the ceremony brought
out a lot of laughs and smiles that the
project, some 20-plus years in the
making, was finally getting built, it
wasn’t a jovial occasion when work
began the week before.
CalPortland, the contractor hired
to build the $1.7 million Morro Creek
Bridge and Harborwalk extension in
Morro Bay, came to a halt Feb. 4 after
representatives of the local Chumash
pointed out that they’d not been
consulted before work began.
The job got underway that Monday
with CalPortland removing a pole-wire
fence that ran along the west side of the
dirt roadway, fencing put in years ago
as part of the first Harborwalk project.
Some minor grading was done along
that stretch where the walking and
bike lanes will go, and orange, plastic
fencing was strung along Morro Creek
where the bridge will be to protect the
creek.
A crewman said they’d also discovered
some protected plants while removing
ice plant from the job area. Those were
dug up and replanted further into the
dunes, he said. But rare plants being
found paled in comparison to the brooha-ha that erupted when the Native
Americans arrived on scene.
Public Works Director, Rob Livick,
said there was a “communication
breakdown” with the Native Americans
and the City temporarily stopped the
job.
The consultant, SWCA Environmental
Consultants with an office in SLO, was
supposed to prepare an archaeological
PHQWLRQ
The “G” Shop
JHW2II
monitoring
plan
and
circulate
it
to the Native
Americans for
review
and
approval before
work started.
T
h
e
consultant gave
the
go-ahead
to start work
before that was
done,
Livick
said. After a
closed
door
meeting with the Chumash reps, Livick
said they fired SWCA for that portion of
the contract and are bringing in Rincon
Consultants, also with an office in SLO,
to handle the archaeological part.
Rincon produced the environmental
impact report for the project and
SWCA will still be the environmental
consultants on everything else, he
added.
A request for comment to the SLO
office of SWCA was not returned.
At this time, Livick said, there hasn’t
been any work done that would require
a monitor on site. He wasn’t sure when
the archaeological monitoring would
be needed. The bridge abutments
call for drilling down into the earth,
forming circular, rebar cages and filling
with concrete. That drilling work will
produce tailings that will be monitored,
he said.
Livick said they don’t expect to find
much in the tailings, as that area was
topped with fill back in the 1940s when
the Army Corps of Engineers dug the
current creek channel moving it away
from its original course through what is
now the power plant property dumping
into the bay near today’s Coleman
Beach. Moving the creek allowed the
ACOE to drain the old creek delta and
fill it for a short-lived Navy training
base.
At the groundbreaking ceremony,
City Manager David Buckingham said
the bridge will allow residents to ride
bikes or walk safely out to Morro Rock
or the Embarcadero and the RVers
in the area will be able to walk across
the street to the new Morro Bay High
School swimming pool, or over to the
harbor and Embarcadero.
He called the project a bridge between
“the past and the future of Morro Bay.”
He also promised those in attendance
that the project would be completed by
July 3.
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10
•
January 22 - February 4, 2015 • Bay News
News
Osos Chamber Hands Out Awards; Turns 60
T
he Los Osos/Baywood Park
Chamber of Commerce held
its 2015 Installation & Awards
Dinner, and celebrated its 60th
anniversary on Jan. 23rd at Los Osos
Memorial Park.
The 2015 Board of Directors was
installed, and awards for Business of
the Year, Volunteer of the Year, and
Citizen of the Year were presented.
Over 75 people attended, enjoying
a delicious buffet catered by Celia’s
Garden Cafe. Bob Wacker was the
emcee and CSD Director, Marshall
Ochylski, swore in the new board.
The new officers are: President Steve
Vinson of Central Coast Realty Group,
President-elect Gari Cave a California
Senior Legislator, Treasurer Cheri
Grimm of Cheri Grimm Bookkeeping,
Secretary Shar Gregory of The Mortgage
House, and Immediate Past President
Jim Stanfill.
The new directors are Mike Elliot
of Los Osos Valley Memorial Park,
Christina Grimm of Knight & Day
Publishing, Gene Heyer, Wendy Hill
of Chase Bank, Brain Hamilton of Sea
Pines Golf Resort, Simon Van Beurden
of Bay Osos Brokers, Jonnipat Mobely
of the Friends of the Los Osos Library
and attorney AJ Fudge.
The Business of the Year Award went
to Los Osos Rexall, owned by Gary and
Judi Tewell. For over 30 years, Los
Osos Rexall Pharmacy & Gift Store, a
family owned and operated business,
has supported both the community and
Attention
Morro Bay Residents…
get ready for Morro Bay BEAUTIFUL’S Annual CityWide Yard
Sale April llth & 12th with a preview on the 10th.
Save anything you can’t or don’t use anymore: clean it out, make some
money, recycle and have fun!
MBB will bring you the buyers by advertising in four counties. We will list
your address and special items on our Treasure Map.
For more information and to download a seller registration form…go to
www.morrobaybeautiful.org
Deadline to register is March 25th.
the Chamber. Leon Van Beurden of
Bay Osos Brokers, who was last year’s
winner, presented the award.
The Volunteer of the Year Award,
presented by Joe Asire the 2012 winner,
went to Simon Van Beurden of Bay Osos
Brokers. Joe talked about how Simon,
as a first time board member, jumped
right into co-chairing the Membership
Committee, chairing the Holiday
Parade, helping with the Golf Ball Drop
and assisting anywhere he was needed.
The Citizen of the Year Award was
presented by last year’s winners Bob
and Beth Crizer, owners of Crizer
Contruction, to John Lindsey, public
information officer and meteorologist
at PG&E’s Diablo Canyon Nuclear
Power Plant and a weather columnist
for the Tribune.
In addition to the presentation of
recognition certificates to the award
winners, the Chamber was presented
certificates recognizing its 60th
anniversary by Assemblyman Katcho
Achadjian and Annie Aguiniga of State
Senator Bill Monning’s office.
Sewer, from page 1
In Waddell’s last monthly update,
dated last December, he said that
Auburn already had poured 4,665 cubic
yards of concrete and the clarifiers and
oxy ditches still need many more yards
before they are done.
Several buildings — the electrical
works, administration and lab, and the
primary clarifiers — have only had the
foundations poured, no walls had gone
up.
But I can say in all honesty, this
sewer plant will have a million dollar
view of Hollister Peak and Los Osos
Valley marred only by the high voltage
transmission wires and towers that
cross the landscape.
A couple of things I took away from
the tour: The County is holding a town
hall meeting to give the residents an
update on the project and to start
discussing the how and when of
everyone hooking up to the system,
expected to be sometime in 2016. There
will be two sessions — from 4-5 and 6-7
p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 25 at Los Osos
Middle School. All are invited to attend.
And starting up the plant is another
sticky wicket the County and the
contractors are sorting out. With some
4,700 properties to be hooked up to the
system, project construction manager
Steve Mimiaga explained that even if
they could do 20 hook ups a day it will
still take a full year to complete.
And as this is a biological treatment
process, they will have to bring in
bacteria from an outside source (i.e.
sewer sludge) to implant the microbes
and grow them in the oxy ditches.
They’ve been attempting to calculate
the number of hook ups they’ll need in
order to get enough wastewater flowing
through the plant to start the biological
process and sustain the bacteria that
eat up all the nasty stuff in sewage.
See photos of the plant at: www.
tolosapress.com.
And one other thing, Morro Bay and
Cayucos are leaning towards building
this same type of plant, so there is much
to be learned here about the size and
implications with pursuing this type of
plant.
If readers want to keep up with the
Los Osos plant’s progress, they can see
the county’s project website at: www.
slocounty.ca.gov/PW/LOWWP.htm.
about 10 acres, plus many acres more
in ponds that have been dug behind the
plant itself.
This old man was worried he’d slip
and fall on his arse in front of all those
kids, but I managed to stay on my feet,
despite a pound or so of sticky, claymud sticking to my shoes. At least this
wasn’t the icky Back Bay mud that
destroys shoes.
No, this was untouched soil that had
been dug out of the huge retention
pond and an over-flow pond and piled
on the plant site, where is was graded
and compacted.
Interestingly, Auburn Constructors,
the contractor for the $48 million
plant, dug so far down that it hit clean,
primordial and prehistoric beach sand.
I can say primordial because John
Waddell, the County’s project manager,
said they haven’t found any fossils in
that sand, even though it was likely
once seafloor that was covered over
by the volcanic Seven Sisters, which
have been extinct for an estimated 20
million years.
And since the clarifiers and the oxy
ditches are for the most part going to
be buried, the sand has proved a God
send, as the concrete walls of these
massive structures have to have sand
for drainage when they are buried,
Waddell explained.
The discovery of the sand, which
is about 40 feet below the surface,
was fortunate indeed and will greatly
reduce the number of truck trips just to
bring sand in.
Looking at a site plan in a map, you
see the oxy ditches as two small oval
shapes that don’t look like much. But
up close these massive facilities cover
a football field in area and are 25-feet
deep.
When finished, Waddell said, just the
top 4-5 feet of them will be showing.
The two secondary clarifiers, cylindrical
and about 40-50 yards in diameter are
also just as deep. Both structures have
foot-plus thick walls supported by
1-inch rebar. Impressive for sure and
easy to see why, including design and
permitting costs, it’s well north of $50
million.
Bay News • February 19 - March 4, 2015
Community
UCSB Wins Collegiate Regatta
Photos by Neil Farrell
T
hough it wasn’t much of
a weekend for sailing,
nevertheless nine schools
— a total of 24 collegiate sailing
teams — converged on Morro Bay
Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 7-8, for
the Cal Poly Mustang Regatta, a
sanctioned collegiate sailing event.
Schools were Cal Poly, UC Santa
Barbara, UCLA, UC San Diego,
4-H Presentation Day
Photos by Christopher Gardner
CSU Monterey, UC Santa Cruz, the
California Maritime Academy and
Westmont College. Saturday saw
nearly zero wind and lots of rain,
as the races were held south of the
launch ramp.
Weather forecasts had been
for high winds and well, nasty
conditions. They had been planning
to race in the open waters between
the two jetties. Instead they got no
wind and a strong current, getting
in just two races on Saturday.
On Sunday, while still rainy and
miserable, winds were brisk and
topped out at a steady 18 knots and
they got in four races. The course
was moved to open waters off the
South T-pier and made for easy
viewing. The winning school was
UC Santa Barbara with California
Maritime Academy taking second.
The regatta was co-sponsored by
the Morro Bay Yacht Club, which
hosted the teams and served as the
race headquarters, and the Cal Poly
Sailing Team.
The race is part of the Intercollegiate Sailing Association or
ICSA that includes schools from
across the nation. This weekend’s
schools compete in the Pacific Coast
Collegiate Sailing Conference. Like
at Cal Poly, the majority of the
schools in the conference are club
sports teams, except there are three
teams that are actually varsity sports
— Stanford, Hawaii, and USC. See:
http://scores.collegesailing.org/
s15/mustang-open for complete
Nicholas York of Huasna Valley 4-H, presented a book
report on ‘I survived the Battle of Gettysburg.’
Kayla Hurl of Parkfield 4-H gave a
“Got Eggs?” speech.
Michael from Parkfield 4-H was the flag bearer for
the event.
Leona Moylan of Los Osos 4-H
demonstrates how to make Nutella
swirled peanut butter chip blondies.
Reese Demarest of Los Osos 4-H
demonstrated encaustic painting.
•
11
12
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Bay News
Opinion
Parklet Issue Has Gotten Out of Hand
By Pat Bietz
As a business owner in Morro Bay, I
have always believed in the simple truth
that positive growth only comes from
change.
Braving new territory is always
something that simply made sound
business sense to me, so when the City of
Morro Bay expressed interest in putting a
parklet in front of my business (Top Dog
Coffee Bar) to help all of the businesses
on Main Street (and that was how it was
explained to me), I could think of no
serious objections.
Sure, it took up two parking spaces, but
any business that is impacted because of
a minor parking deletion has far greater
issues than losing two spaces out of an
entire block.
It was after all, directly in front of my
store, so the impact on other businesses
would hopefully be minor. And I figured
that we should be able to withstand
any additional pressure from this
liability easier than some of the smaller
businesses.
I also understood that as a business
owner most of my life, I simply do not
own the street. In truth any city can do
what it wishes with parking spaces. They
really did not need to discuss the matter
with me, so my agreeing or not is a moot
point and of no consequence either way.
This is the reality of owning a business.
It was also explained to me very clearly
that this was a public space, anyone could
use it and just because it was in front of
my store, I had no special privileges or
rights. Fine. I want my street to do better.
Period.
I did not expect my neighboring
business to start a petition drive. My
business has slowed to almost a stop,
as rumors circulated about how we
controlled and manipulated the parklet.
We have sent minimum wage
employees home daily without them
getting their full hours. These are kids,
they depend on their tips, and as a result
they have all struggled to make a living. I
regularly apologize to them and they are
aware of the issues and are disappointed
by these unexpected reactions.
I was not aware that my neighbors so
hated this parklet concept that they were
willing to start a petition and name us, a
fellow business owner in the header. This
is not the Morro Bay I was familiar with.
I then realized I had to go in front of the
City Council in the hopes that a 3-minute
statement would be enough to change
the critical negativity that we have faced
in social media and the press. I outlined
nine points. Here they are:
1. Top Dog did not request the parklet...
period.
2. Top Dog did not request in any way,
the parklet to be placed where it currently
is.
3. Top Dog understands that we do not
own the street, or anything on it.
4. I do not serve on any board in Morro
Bay or anywhere, in any capacity where
Ì
Ì
I could have used any perceived power
to sway either the implementation or
placement of the parklet.
5. In actuality, the parking that was lost
was directly in front of Top Dog Coffee
Bar.
6. For me, it is empirical evidence that
positive growth only comes from change.
We should at the very least, in the spirit of
a unique business opportunity, be willing
to give this a chance. (It is only a six short
month trial period)
7. In light of the petition from my
neighbor, we have to send employees
home daily, due to a lack of business. Of
course, after signing a petition with the
offending business named in front of the
offending parklet, most folks won’t visit.
8. It is my belief that after several
conversations with City Manager David
Buckingham that neither he nor the
Council had any malicious intent or
harm directed at Old Town. Rather they
understand the steps we should attempt
as a business community to remain
economically sound. (In other words,
they were trying to help us.)
9. Lastly, it saddens me that we can’t
work together as a community to look
forward to the future together. There is
no progress in looking backwards. As a
community, we must look forward and
as a business owner who has created
many jobs here in Morro Bay alone, it is
my hope that together we can embrace a
positive economic environment for us all.
I understand there are two sides to
every argument. I also understand that
there are times we must simply agree to
disagree. But I do not understand the
animosity over this issue, because no one
meant any harm. Turning on each other
truly is counterproductive to the larger
issues we should be focusing on.
Sometimes outside pressures on
business owners cause them to lose sight
of the real goals and focus on non-issues.
How will we be able to critically analyze
the very short, 6-month test period on
this pilot project, if all we do is constantly
bring it up in a negative light. We won’t
have the understanding to evaluate it
properly, either pro or con.
During Farmer’s Market, it is packed
with people, eating different food from
various vendors on Saturday afternoon.
It seemed like it worked for those folks.
Maybe we should all relax a little and
try to have some civilized conversation
without the blame and finger pointing.
This is why I have decided to invite the
community over for a FREE cup of coffee
for two weeks to start a community-based
dialog about the parklet issues. To my
way of thinking, this is truly the type of
coalescence our community genuinely
needs.
Pat Bietz is owner of Top Dog
Coffee Bar, 857 Main St., Morro Bay.
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Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
13
Nightwriters
Boys Will Be Boys
By Ed Longstreth
I
t’s been thirty years and it’s time
to confess. I was in my front yard
throwing hard-tipped darts with
my buddies Mike and Robert. Robert,
a ten-year-old “Italian Stallion” with
fully grown armpit hair was hurling
them like a catapult, trying to pierce
the back side of my dart board.
“Mike, get out of the way,” I said.
“Robert’s whizzing those stickers pretty
hard.”
“It’s my turn next,” said Mike. “I’ll
show you guys how it’s done.”
“Whatever, Mike. Just get out of
the way,” I said. Robert leaned back
and widened his stance. He swung,
throwing like a Spartan heaving a
javelin over Olympus.
“Raaah.” The dart flew and we heard
a thunk, like a sledgehammer hitting
a tree. I looked at the target expecting
to see his projectile penetrate the
dartboard, flights and all.
“Where’d it go?” I noticed Mike
standing about eight feet from the
target with his left hand in a fist against
his head. He staggered in the grass
doing the noodle-leg Polka.
“Nice one, Mike,” I laughed at his
antics. Then our eyes met and his face
formed a ghastly demeanor.
“Oh my God, oh my God!” cried
Robert. “What ‘r we gonna do?”
Mike’s eyes turned from fear to terror
as Robert freaked, walked in circles,
and mumbled. The dart was stuck in
Mike’s head like Wiley Coyote after a
Roadrunner trap gone bad.
“Someone’s got to get that thing
out of his head,” I coolly declared as I
inspected the wound.
“It’s not so bad. . . it’s not even
bleeding. Are you dizzy or having
trouble seeing stuff?”
“No, I don’t think so.” Mike stood
there acting like a dart sticking out of
his head was normal.
“Rob, you’re gonna have to pull it
out,” I said.
“I’m not doing it. You do it.”
“Look Robert, you’re the one who
put it in there. If Mike’s mom sees that
dart in his head she’s going to sue your
parents and your whole family will be
on the street. Just pull it out. How hard
can it be?”
“All right, I’ll do it.” Robert gently
placed his hand over the mini-arrow and
Mike screamed. Robert quickly let go.
“Come on, Rob. Remember your
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family, you know, the streets . . .”
Robert sighed and this time grabbed
the dart with a determination that
left me cringing. Screams bellowed as
Robert tugged with all of his might.
After what seemed like an eternity, the
dart popped out and Mike stood tall
with a satisfied look.
“There you go. You’re gonna be fine,”
Robert proudly announced.
As the words left his lips, a six-inch
fountain of blood shot from Mike’s
head. Robert and I looked at each other
and screamed.
“Put your finger on it, Mike!” I
shouted. His finger went straight to the
hole and the bleeding stopped.
“You’re all…rr…right,” stuttered
Robert. He looked at me and nodded.
That was my cue.
“Look, no more blood. You’re gonna
be fine,” I reaffirmed. Mike smiled and
removed his finger from the wound.
Blood squirted again.
“Jesus Mike, keep your finger on it!”
Robert screamed as the blood splashed
onto his face.
“Look Mike, you can’t tell anyone,” I
insisted. “Promise?”
“I promise,” Mike agreed as we rinsed
the
blood
with a garden
hose and sent
him
home.
Shortly
after
our daring dart
experience, he
moved, never
to be heard
from
again.
Wherever you
are
Michael
Levindowsky,
let us know. We
put a hole in a
loyal friends head, but now the gap is
growing in our hearts.
Ed Longstreth is a member of SLO
NightWriters, the premier writing
organization on the Central Coast
of California. He is the author of The
Joy In Wealth, about how to gain and
maintain financial security in a debtridden society. He is presently finishing
Wild Canyon, a historical teen fiction
novel that takes place during the two
most exciting times in our American
history - the gold rush and prohibition.
Photo credit: Dennis Eamon Young.
14
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Coastal Culture
From Kazakhstan to Oceano
Story by Gareth Kelly
Photos courtesy of Zhanna Stinson
W
hen some people think of
Kazakhstan, they of think of
either the ridiculous Borat
movie or some place near Russia behind
the iron curtain. In truth Kazakhstan is
a modern vibrant mineral rich nation
and host to many foreign companies
and investment. Fifteen years ago while
working for one of those companies
Kazak native Zhanna Stinson’s life was
about to change forever.
“At 30 and still single I was
considered something of an old maid,”
said Stinson. “Many friends and family
had tried to set me up with men, but I
told them I wanted to wait for the right
one, my prince. One day I was walking
down the hallway at work and I saw the
back of a man. A shiver went through
me, my body tingled and I knew I had
found him.”
That man was Arroyo Grande native
James Stinson. The pair did indeed
fall in love and Zhanna returned to the
United States with her husband where
they have made their home, along with
their son Justin, in Oceano.
“The first four years were hard,”
said Stinson. “I didn’t know anyone,
I spoke pretty good English but it took
me some time to get used to life here. I
grew up in a village of about 20 people.
We had more animals than people, and
they were my friends. I gave them all
names and would talk to them.”
Luckily the adjustment to her new
life became easier as Zhanna met
more people and made more friends
and, with the help of her mother-inlaw, others from Kazakhstan and its
neighbor Russia.
Working as a caregiver, Stinson was
happy with her life but wasn’t feeling
quite fulfilled and felt she could do
more. Through friends and the Internet
she found out about the annual Miss
Asia, and its married counterpart, Mrs.
Asia pageantry competition hosted in
Los Angeles. After fundraising efforts
and the support of local businesses and
her friends she decided to enter the
contest now in its 26th year.
“I’d never done anything like this
before and at age 44 I did have some
reservations but I wanted to do this for
my son,” said Stinson. “We have a photo
book and I wanted to add some photos
we could look back on years from now.”
With 30 ladies competing from
countries all over Asia, Bahrain,
China,
Russia
and
Kazakhstan to name just
a few, Stinson had to
go through an intensive
interview
process,
attend
events
where
the ladies got lessons in
etiquette and politics as
well as preparing them
for answering a whole
host of current affairs
questions, some of them
controversial such as
their thoughts on gay
marriage and the lives of
other Asian women.
Wearing
her
national
costume
and
an
evening
gown (the Mrs.
contestants
are
excused
the swimsuit
s e c t i o n )
answering
questions
in
the Q and A,
Stinson finished second runner up.
“I got this really beautiful crown
and I have to go back to LA and attend
various events of social and cultural
significance,” said Stinson. “I made
so many great friends and loved the
entire experience. The owners of the
pageantry really want to empower the
ladies and give us many opportunities. I
have a fundraiser with the Red Cross in
Santa Barbara coming up soon. I would
also like to reach out to other minorities
in this area to try and spread some
cultural diversity and tell their stories.
My home is here in the US and I’m a US
citizen now but I think it’s important to
keep our ethnic culture and traditions
alive.”
Stinson is hoping to write stories
about her life in Kazakhstan and still
visits at least once a year. This intelligent
and engaging beautiful lady would love
to hear from people of all backgrounds
that are interested in having her come
to talk to various groups about her life
and experiences. You can email her at
[email protected]
The nights are getting longer and
the days warmer. What will you be
springing into this spring? Send Gareth
an email to [email protected]
and maybe he’ll ramble about them.
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Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
15
On Assignment
Showcasing Music Promoter
By Judy Salamacha
“W
here words fail, music
speaks,” author Hans
Christian Andersen said.
But who speaks for the artists? How
many musicians would fail to find
an audience to hear their music if it
weren’t for the music promoter?
The Central Coast is fortunate to have
exceptional talent living or on tour in
our county. Meet Steve Key, one of
several passionate, music aficionados,
who introduces us to songwriters and
musicians we might never discover
without a promoter’s efforts to bring us
the music.
Recently, Key and wife Bonnie
Nelson celebrated their fifth year of
producing the “Songwriters at Play”
concert series. Key has spent a lifetime
discovering he’s a songwriter and
musician who enjoys promoting fellow
acoustic musicians. The “showcase” is
his preferred musical production.
A showcase will have three or four
talented artists playing several sets
of original works or covers with the
support of a decent sound system, at
a venue where the audience is there
the Central Coast, his
musical journey took him
to Northern California,
Portland,
Ore.,
Greenwich Village, N.Y.,
Nashville and beyond.
In San Francisco, his
day job was writing for
community newspapers.
At night he’d play his
guitar and sing original
songs and covers at
various nightclubs.
In
Portland
he
discovered a comfortable
network of musicians but
he found his muse in the
Big Apple. He discovered
folk music was still alive
in Greenwich Village
and wrote, played and
toured from Maine to the
Carolinas.
Someone
in
his
Pictured from left are: Cliff Stepp, Steve Key and
Greenwich
Village
Bonnie Nelson at Sculpterra Winery celebrating
the 5th Anniversary of Songwriters at Play. Photo network was first to
record one of his songs.
by Judy Salamacha
Kathy Mattea picked up
another, which triggered
a move to Nashville
specifically to listen to the music. It
where
his
writing
style became “a little
often teams emerging local talent with
bit
country.”
He
was
honored to play
fan-followed veterans.
several
times
at
the
famed,
Blue Bird
Many
Songwriters
at
Play
Café,
which
invites
songwriters
and upperformances are free, but, Key said
and-coming
country
stars
to
jam.
with a smile, “I’m aggressive with the
In Nashville he re-discovered the
tip jar.” The musicians get the tips and
difference
between an open mic
sell their CDs.
Key’s lifetime career experience amateur and the musician. The
taught him to book talent with loyal amateur shows up and wins the chance
followers. As producer, Key markets the to sing by putting their name in a
show, MCs, controls sound and website hat. The musician is asked back and
podcasting. And he’ll often work in rewarded with an invitation to play
a set of his own music. Marketing the Speakeasy Musicians Cooperative.
includes a 5-year history of hosting and Recognized talent is invited to play one
interviewing musicians on “Showcase set or maybe three. And once you pass
Highlights” produced by Cliff Stepp that talent test, you become a Showcase
and aired Mondays and Fridays on featured artist, he said, especially if you
can bring your own audience.
KRUSH 92.5 FM.
“I wrote a lot of songs, got a lot of
Music is in Key’s DNA. Before
contracts
but never made it to the next
following his sister and parents to
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level
scoring
hits,” said Key.
Eight years
ago he decided
to
join
his
family on the
Central Coast
and
started
putting shows
together.
He met and
m a r r i e d
Bonnie
and
re-invented his own career playing his
music and showcasing local talent.
“I broke into the music market here
[San Luis Obispo] booking music at
Linnaea’s Café,” Key said. “I wanted to
branch out and produce showcase and
tribute shows so created Songwriters at
Play. My goal is to give respect to local
acoustic artists and find appreciative
audiences for touring artists.”
His schedule is as lively as his live
music presentations at venues all
around SLO County and Santa Barbara.
In Paso Robles, Sunday afternoons
mean concerts at Sculpterra Winery
and he’s at D’Anbino Cellars the second
Friday of the month.
Monday evenings the shows are at
Bang the Drum Brewery in San Luis
Obispo. Thursdays belong to Pismo
Beach’s Shell Café. His next show in
Santa Barbara is a tribute show to
Townes Van Zandt at SOhO on March
24.
U2 front man, Bono said, “Music can
change the world because it can change
people.” Many thanks to all the SLO
music promoters. Our world needs the
music!
Former Bay News publisher, Judy
Salamacha, is an author, freelance
writer and was the 2013 Citizen of
the Year. She and husband Bob live in
Morro Bay. Her Then & Now column
appears regularly in Tolosa Press.
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16
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Community Calendar
The Italian Catholic Federation
(I.C.F.) at St. Patrick’s Church in
Arroyo Grande will host five Fish Fries
during Lent. Mark your calendar and
join us for a delicious fish and chips
and coleslaw dinner. Fish fries will be
held on the following Fridays: February
20, February 27, March 6, March 20
and March 27 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.
in St. Patrick’s Church Hall, 501 Fair
Oaks Ave., Arroyo Grande. Prices range
from $6 for a 1-piece fish dinner up to
$12 for a 4-piece fish dinner. Takeouts will be available. Beer, wine, soda
and bottled water will be available for
purchase and desserts will be available
for a donation. Everyone is welcome.
For more information, call (805) 4892680.
vigil campaign from Feb. 18-March
29 at 743 Pismo St., SLO. See:
https://40daysforlife.com/localcampaigns/san-luis-obispo for more
information.
•••
•••
Don’t miss the Wine Country
Runs Half Marathon Run/Walk, a
fundraiser for local non-profits on
Sunday, March15, at River Oaks Hot
Springs, 800 Clubhouse Drive, Paso
Robles. Winery neighbors help cheer
you on and provide their own style
of aid station. Walk start time is 7:15
a.m. and run start time is 8 a.m. Cost
is $75 through Feb. 28 and $85 March
1 through race day. There is a 5K Individual with a start time of 8:15 a.m.
with a cost of $40 through Feb. 28 and
$45 March1 through race day. A Kids
Wine Stomp starts at 9:15 a.m. There
is a ½-mile fun run just for kids at a
cost of $20. For more information, visit
http://www.winecountryruns.com.
•••
Volumes of Pleasure Bookshop in
Los Osos is hosting its 12th Annual
Chinese New Year Celebration at 2
p.m. Saturday, Feb. 21. The Cal Poly
Lion Dance Team will again perform
a ceremonial dance with drum and
cymbals and a blessing ritual dating
back centuries. Free. We are ending the
year of the horse in the Chinese Zodiac
and entering the year of the sheep
or ram. Traditionally, the year of the
sheep is highly creative and people may
express their artistic natures and find
greater pleasure in simply following
their heart’s desires, while allowing
others the freedom to do the same. It
can be a year when world conflicts and
upheavals are less likely, or let’s at least
hope so. Volumes of Pleasure is located
at 1015 Los Osos Valley Rd., corner
of 10th Street in the Vons Shopping
Center.
•••
Author, D. Williams, will sign his
new book, “There Are Times When…
A new day a new adventure, live it!”
from 2-4 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 21 at
The San Luis Obispo Botanical Garden has several special events
coming up in March including an earth oven workshop series.
Coalesce Bookstore, 845 Main St.,
Morro Bay. The book is a collection
of incidents, choices and non-choices
that are routinely a part of people’s
lives. Williams has spent most of his
life in schools, teaching and attending
mainly in California. Born and raised in
Arkansas working the fields; school and
all work thereafter seemed incredibly
easy.
He
attended
Pepperdine,
Sonoma state and UC Merced, earning
a Bachelor’s, master’s and PhD
(respectively) plus a law degree from
New College of California School of
Law. His first book, “The Killing of
Mr. Floyd & Other Stories,” touches on
many aspects of that former Arkansas
life.
•••
The San Luis Obispo Botanical
Garden has several special events
coming up in March. The Garden is
located in El Chorro Regional Park,
across Hwy 1 form Cuesta College.
• Edible and Medicinal Plants of
SLO County Lecture, 6-7:30 p.m.
Friday, March 6. Discover the historic
and modern uses of some of the many
useful plants of SLO County. Cost is
$5 for garden members and $10 nonmembers. No reservations required.
More info at: slobg.org/useful-plants.
• Herbal Workshop I — SLO County
Bioregional Field Exploration 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Saturday, March 7. Spend
the day hiking through a number of
different plant habitats, identifying and
discussing many of the useful plants
with herbalist, Tellur Fenner. Limited
space available. Cost is $45 garden
members and $55 public. See: slobg.
org/useful-plants.
• Herbal Workshop II: Wildcrafting
and Plant Preparation Methods 10-4
Sunday, March 8. Spend a day learning
the principles of plant harvesting,
processing, and botanical pharmacy
work. Limited space available. Cost is
$45 garden members and $55 public.
See: slobg.org/useful-plants.
• Container Garden Workshop
1-3 p.m. Saturday, March 14. Create
your own nature haven with a
container garden. Landscaper, Pat
Thomas, teaches about containers for
ornamental plants and vegetables.
After a demonstration, plant your own
containers to bring home. Participants
should bring a planting container
approximately 18” diameter by 18” deep
or larger to the program. Some plants
will be provided and others will be for
sale, or bring your own. Soil, trowels
and gloves are provided. Followed at
3PM by a free docent led tour of the
Garden. Limited space available. Cost
is $10 garden members and $15 public.
For information and supplies list, see:
slobg.org/container.
• Spring Plant Sale fundraiser 10-1
Saturday, March 28. Garden volunteers
have worked all year cultivating
beautiful Mediterranean-climate plants
for your garden that will also save
money on water bills. Proceeds benefit
the Garden’s mission to honor and
preserve our connection with nature.
See: slobg.org/sale.
• Earth oven workshop series.
Saturdays-Sundays, March 7- 8, 1415, and 21-22. Learn how to make an
earthen oven and earth-bag structures
for an outdoor kitchen. Earth oven
masters from N’credible Edibles will
lead the process of designing, building,
and cooking in an outdoor kitchen.
Cost is $30 a day or sign-up early for a
discount. More info and registration at:
slobg.org/earthoven.
•••
Anti-abortion activists will be
holding a “40 Days for Life” prayer
The Lightshare Center in Santa
Margarita is holding a grand opening
and fundraiser at its new location,
22701 El Camino Real, at 4 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 22. There’ll be an array
of artisan offerings, healing services
gift cards, a metaphysical book sale
and free refreshments by Vert Foods.
An evening concert of sacred songs
and guided meditation with soprano,
Marissa Bloom, starts at 6 p.m. Concert
admission is $20 at the door. Proceeds
will help Lightshare finish construction
on the new center.
Also, Lightshare is hosting free
energy balancing sessions on Saturday,
Feb. 21 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Sierra
Vista Hospital, 1010 Murray St., in SLO.
Sessions are 25 minutes, appropriate for
all ages and no appointment necessary.
All are welcome. See: www.lightshare.
us for more information about their
services.
•••
Artist, Barbara Rosenthal of Los Osos
is showing her work through May 1 at
Deanna Richards’ Edward Jones Office,
1236 Los Osos Valley Rd., Ste. J. An artist
reception is set for 5-7 p.m. Friday, Feb.
27. On sale will be Rosenthal’s mixed
art works, paintings and etchings. Also
for sale will be T-shirts and mugs of the
Elfin Forest mural, benefiting SWAP.
•••
The Eco Rotary Club of Morro Bay
is bringing in Kyle Wiens, founder of
iFixit, for its next monthly meeting, set
for 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 26 at the
Morro Bay Community Center, 1001
Kennedy Way. Free, and guests are
welcome. Wiens will discuss his goals
to reduce electronic waste by teaching
people to repair their own gear and
offering tools, parts, and a forum to
discuss repairs.
•••
Morro Bay residents interested in
taking part in the 12th Annual Citywide
Yard Sale in April and sponsored by
Morro Bay Beautiful, should see the
MBB website at: morrobaybeautiful.
org, download an application, fill it
out and send it in. The event is set for
Friday-Sunday, April 10-12, with Friday
the 10th a “preview day” and a chance
to get an early look at the offerings.
The deadline to sign up and get your
address on the official yard sale map,
Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
17
World Class Dentistry
in Los Osos
Come experience what we have to offer,
printed in the Bay News, is the end of
March. Brenda Sue’s Consignment on
Morro Bay Blvd., at Morro Ave., will be
the event headquarters. Event posters
were slated to go up all over town this
week.
•••
The Central Coast Watercolor
Society will host a free program by
teacher, painter, and printmaker,
Tricia Reichert set for 7 p.m. Tuesday,
Feb. 24 at the Methodist Church,
1515 Fredericks St., in SLO. Reichert
will demonstrate mixed media with
watercolor. For more information see:
www.ccwsart.com.
•••
Work on the remodeling the Morro
Bay Library is now completed and
the library is moving back in from its
temporary home a block away. And
March 1, people will have a chance to
tour the building at an open house,
set for 2-4 p.m. Sunday, March 1.
Guy Budd and Inga Swearingen will
perform. Friends of the Library will
have refreshments and they’ll give
away commemorative bookmarks. The
library will open for good Tuesday,
March 3 (they’ll still be closed
Mondays) at 9 a.m. They are changing
their hours too, staying open until 6 on
Tuesdays and Wednesdays open from
10-5 Thursdays-Saturdays.
•••
The Gallery at the Network in SLO will
present “Hands on Wood,” showcasing
the woodworking of Jim Amberg, Roger
Combs, Barry Lundgren, Ernest Miller,
Pete Skarda and Dave Vradenberg
March 1-31. On display will be cutting
boards, sushi trays, fine furniture,
turned bowls, vases and lidded jars.
There’s a free artists’ reception set for
6-9 p.m. Friday, March 6, during the
monthly Art After Dark. Live music
with Terry Sanville and refreshments
will be served. The Gallery is located
at 778 Higuera St., Ste. B. See: www.
thegalleryatthenetwork.com.
•••
The non-profit, Lifelong Learners of
the Central Coast is offering five new
classes in March for its members. They
include: “Edwin Gardner Lewis and
Atascadero” on March
3;
“Understanding
Memory Loss” on
March 11; “A Day with
Bernstein,
Copeland
and Saint-Saens” on
March 14; “Medicare:
How is it Really
Funded” on March
17; and an “Escorted,
Wild,
Walk-Around
Tour of the Atascadero
Zoo” on March 25.
Courses are open to the
general public and cost
very little. For more
information see: www.
lifelearnerscc.org and
The Gallery at the Network in SLO will
register for classes or
present “Hands on Wood”
become a member.
Membership is $25 a
executive officer of the Local Agency
year.
Formation Commission or LAFCo.; and
Michael LeBrun, GM of the Nipomo
•••
Community Services District. Space is
Central Coast Youth Football & Cheer limited and reservations are required.
League opens registration soon, with RSVP to Ann Havlik at (805) 781-9624
practices beginning in late July for or email: mailto:[email protected].
the season next August. Registration
•••
is open to boys and girls ages 7 to 14,
and attending elementary or middle
Pickleball players will have a new
school. Local chapters will be offering
registration dates in March. For place to play when the Los Osos
additional information see: www. Community Center opens a court on
eteamz.com/CCYFLSLO or call our PR the second and fourth Tuesdays of the
month, starting Tuesday, Feb. 24 from
director Pam Peca, at (805) 434-8918.
4-6 p.m. No equipment necessary,
wear comfortable athletic shoes.
•••
No fees either. For information call
The League of Women Voters of Stanley Stern at 528-6557 or email to:
San Luis Obispo County is hosting a [email protected].
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February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Tax Advice
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t has been a real
struggle for families to
set up a savings safety
net for their loved ones
who are disabled. If a
disabled person’s savings
are too high, they are at
risk for losing benefits
such as Social Security,
Medicaid or housing. The
Achieving a Better Life
Experience Act (ABLE)
will change that and
families will feel more secure that their
loved one will have access to emergency
funds even after they are gone.
The ABLE Act was passed this
last December as part of the Federal
Extender Act. It goes into effect this
year--not going back to last year.
The ABLE act allows states to set
up tax-exempt savings accounts for
the disabled to be used for qualified
expenses related to their disability.
This includes but not limited to
health care expenses, education,
assistive technology, transportation,
employment training, and personal
support. It covers a lot of expenses
and the list will become clearer as these
accounts are set up.
The accounts will be similar to the
529 college savings vehicles. Funds
going in will not be deductible from
the givers tax return but all earnings
will be tax-exempt. To qualify, the
beneficiary must have
become severely disabled
or blind before the age
of 26. The maximum
annual
contribution
cannot be more than the
annual gift tax exclusion
amount which is $14,000
for 2015. The account
can reach $100,000
before any means-tested
benefits are impacted.
Now, what happens
if the funds are withdrawn to use for
something that are not a qualified
expense? There is a 10% penalty on
the funds withdrawn and the earnings
on the funds that are withdrawn do
become taxable. ABLE accounts can be
rolled over into another ABLE account
for the same person or for a sibling who
is also disabled.
This is just an overview of what
is coming. More information shall
become available as states set up these
accounts.
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Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
Affordable Care?
•
19
5K
Michele S Jang, PT
T
his is just my personal perspective
of the healthcare industry. I do not
speak for any other physical therapy
owner. My goal here is to let the public
know how the changes in healthcare
have affected my business.
First the good news; we saw 306
more patients in 2014 compared to
2013. I wish there was more good
news to report, but there’s not. Yes,
I am glad to have served an increased
numbers of patients.
Now for the bad news; despite
seeing an increase in the number
of patients, we made about
$6,500 less than we did
the previous year! How
can that be?
Our
reimbursement
rates were
slashed.
W
e
were
f o r c e d
into contracts to accept
smaller payments for our services.
Simultaneously, we had an increase in
demand for documentation with higher
regulations & restrictions surrounding
people being seen for physical therapy.
Last year, in the same month I
received a couple of letters. One letter
expressed that if I was to participate
in seeing subsidized health plans I
had to agree to a non-negotiable cut in
reimbursement rates by approximately
30%.
I also received a letter from
my health insurance saying that my
personal healthcare premiums were
going up, as they typically do every year,
and that there will be other increases in
my premium in order to offset cost of
providing subsidized plans.
There was the promise of seeing a
plethora of patients who would now
have insurance and be able to utilize
my services. We have not found that
to be completely true. A number of
these plans have very high deductibles
so many are unwilling to come in for
treatment.
Yes I am glad that
more people have health
insurance.
However,
it does not seem to be
“affordable”.
For my
business to be viable,
I have to treat more
clients, which means
hiring more help to treat
clients. Taking on
more employees
e n t a i l s
inheriting
additional cost such
as
increases
in
liability
insurance,
t a x e s ,
administrative
cost, marketing,
etc.
This is a dilemma
I face. I don’t have an
answer on how to “fix”
the healthcare system. I
went into this profession
to try to help people. I am an
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TECH
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and Student-Centeredness
optimist at heart and I
will hold onto the fact that
we truly help to change
people’s lives for the
better no matter “what
the cost” is.
Michele S Jang, PT
is a physical therapist
who likes to look outside
the box. She has been a
physical therapist for
over 20 years and has
extensive training in manual therapy
or the use of hands to help rehabilitate
the body. Michele has been an instructor
both in the United States and abroad.
She offers Free Consults on Tuesday
afternoons. Michele also has a team of
therapists at Spirit Winds who offer
an array of expertise on exercise, fall
prevention, foot and shoe assessments,
body mechanics and proper breathing
technique to increase awareness and
healing. Michele can be reached at 805
543-5100 or info@spiritwindstherapy.
com.
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Running
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Extra
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> Nutrition Tip: You need a good
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20
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Good to be King
Gaga Over Franco
Good to be King
By King Harris
W
hen he was a young lad
living in Carpinteria, Nick
Franco, spent many a day
cavorting nearby on the world’s
safest beach, and by the time he
was 17, he was hooked on the status
of the State Park folks who were
responsible for keeping up the
scenic area.
So he became a park aide, and has
been involved with parks ever since.
As of February of this year, Franco
left the State Park System and is
now the man responsible for all the
parks in San Luis Obispo County.
“I love this county,” Franco said,
“so I wanted to stay here, and I get
to keep working with parks.”
Franco has been all over the state
as a ranger and a superintendent —
from the Santa Monica Mountains
to the Oceano Dunes to the Big
Basin Redwoods, San Juan Batista,
even Angel Island in the San
Francisco Bay.
“One of the highlights
of my working for the
State Parks System was
my experience on that
remote but spectacular
island,” he recalled.
“There were no more
than 20 employees living
there in buildings once
used by the military.
There is so much history
there.
“For example, in the
1970s, they were going to demolish a
lot of the old mothballed structures,
when one ranger discovered there
were a huge amount of carved
Chinese poetry on the inside walls.
The poetry was written by Chinese
detainees who weren’t allowed to
immigrate because of the Chinese
Exclusion Act in the late 1880s, the
first of its kind to be based on race.
“If the walls could talk, there
would be stories of what it’s like to
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be excluded. Those are
powerful statements and
say a lot about our history,
and I love passing that on
to travelers who visit the
island. Needless to say,
the structures remained
so all can see the heartfelt
writings.”
Franco left Angel Island
to come to San Luis
County, where he has
been district supervisor
for nearly 12 years. “It’s the longest
I’ve been anywhere in my life.”
I asked him how state parks will
be different from county parks?
“I think the County is in better
financial shape,” he said. “One of
my biggest disappointments while
with State Parks was the proposed
closure of all the parks due to
budget concerns. That riled a lot
of people, so the State kept them
open, but not without a fight. Parks
are very popular, especially when
there’s an economic downturn or
recession. Not only that, they are
very important for the economies of
the state and our county. Tourism is
a huge business here, and without
travelers coming to our parks, local
businesses would suffer greatly.
Other than that, the politics and
methods may be different between
the County and State, but it’s all
about maintaining and modifying
the parks for those who visit.”
Franco will be in charge of the
large parks like Lake Lopez and Lake
Santa Margarita, to the smallest
trails that wind through our hills.
Perhaps Franco’s biggest claim to
fame was the notoriety created by
Lady Gaga coming to Hearst Castle.
“People still ask me about that
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experience almost every day,” he
said. “I’m simply amazed that you
can Google ‘Nick Franco Lady Gaga’
and have us both come up on the
same page. I never thought that
would happen in a million years.”
During negotiations between
Lady Gaga, the parks system, and
Hearst Castle, Franco was put on
administrative leave for a while,
incommunicado. The way I’ve
heard it, the entire bru-ha-ha began
when Lady Gaga, who is into the art
scene, approached Ann Hearst, who
is also an avid art lover, and asked if
she could use San Simeon as avenue
to record music and a video.
The Hearst people liked the idea
because she would reach out to
those younger folks who otherwise
wouldn’t know about the legacy of
William Randolph Hearst. One of
the wrinkles in the project came
about when she wanted to fill the
outdoor Neptune Pool at the castle
while we were in the middle of a
drought. Eventually deals were
made to satisfy everybody, including
State Parks.
“My mom and dad were worried
at the time,” Franco said, “but I
told them everything was fine and
I’ll be OK. I wasn’t disciplined or
anything like that. And it’s funny to
think that younger visitors did start
appearing after Lady Gaga’s video.
So everything worked out. But I
will miss the castle. It was always
a delight to see the amazement
in people’s eyes when they first
glanced upon the castle.”
Franco’s tenure with the County
may not be as glamorous and
celebrated as his work with the
State, but our local parks will be
better for it.
FOLLOW
US!
@
@TolosaPress
get inspired. get connected. get started.
Paso Robles Event Center > Feb 21 & 22
Sat 10 am - 5 pm | Sun 10 am - 4 pm
HOME
GARDEN
&gourmet
ex p o
enjoy connecting and meeting face-to-face with over 100
home & remodeling experts, get ideas, and experience…
>
gourmet food tasting
>
>
do-it-yourself workshops
home improvement ideas
>
cooking demos
>
wine tasting benefiting local
non-profit, The Wellness Kitchen
guide
visit www.slohomeimprovement.com for up-to-date event details and giveaways | 805-772-4600
22
•
Februay 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press Special Publication
closet solutions designed around you
get inspired. get connected. get started.
saturday events
11:30am - Cooking Demonstration
Tortellini Al Forno with Dream Dinners
garage solutions designed around you
Find out how to make this restaurant quality,
healthy and stress free meal...This delicious oven
baked tortellini dish is paired with creamy alfredo and diced tomatoes. Just a touch of a special
spice blend and cheese make it an instant favorite for the whole family. Only 570 calories and It
can be baked from frozen too!
12:45pm - Workshop with Barbara
Bullock from Farm Supply Commpany
Backyard Chickens
There is nothing better than fresh eggs from
your very own backyard chickens. Learn everything you need to know about raising backyard chickens from
local expert Barbara Bullock. Barbara will answer all of your chicken questions from selecting birds, care and nutrition. Seminar
provided by Farm Supply.
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1:30pm - Cooking Demonstration
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and Ingrid Hilton from Talley Farms
Come enjoy this three-part cooking demonstration and produce information session! Manager
of Talley Farms Fresh Harvest will first walk you
through Talley’s CSA program. Next, local chef
and food blogger Kathleen Snyder will provide
a cooking demonstration on cooking with fresh
and local produce. Ingrid Hilton, Master Food
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to can and preserve their fruits & vegetables.
2:45pm - Workshop with Jim Magill
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about the importance and ease of drip irrigation for landscapes and gardens. Jim can discuss products, installation and how to get the most out of your
system. Seminar provided by Farm Supply.
get inspired. get connected. get started.
Tolosa Press Special Publication •
Februay 19 - March 4, 2015 •
23
sunday events
11:30am -
Cooking Demonstration with
Head Chef Travis Borba from Estrella
The Magic of Brining
Learn how to make a flavorful meal for your
friends and family with Chef Travis Borba! This
will be a demonstration of brining techniques
that are easy to do at home and will bring a ton
of flavor to your dinner table!
12:45pm - Cooking Demonstration
Clean out
the CHAOS
with Karen Forth from Velata
Fondue!
Bring togetherness back to the family starting
with Velata Fondue! Start with appetizers and
dessert.
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1:30pm - Cooking Demonstration
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Put Your Olive Oil Work with Fun Mashups & 2015 Food Trends!
We’ll be cooking and serving up our traditional
garlic sausages served with a cauliflower salsa
and giving hummus a spicy little makeover. Put
your olive oil to work in 2015 with tasty superfood twists and ice cream with olive oil for dessert, of course.
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24
•
Februay 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press Special Publication
109
108
107
110
100
106
121
111
99
105
122
112
98
104
123
113
97
103
96
102
95
101
Exhibitor Lounge 120
Expo Office
124
126
127
115
125
expo
map
118
117
131
129
116
P
B
Y
R
O
C
X
S
N
D
W
T
M
E
V
U
L
GourmetSampling
&WineTasting
H
I
K
67
59
58
63
57
74
76
61
56
78
77
60
55
50
81
92
91
82
90
46
48
41
44
42
37
53
45
27
26
1
21
22
28
43
23
29
25
24
30
39
Food Court
54
49
83
Cooking Demonstrations
Q
G
79
40
Z
68
65
66
73
133
A
69
75
94
130
F
72
80
93
128
70
71
36b
31
36a
35
34
Showcase
Entrance
Farm Supply
Seminar Area
J
Exit
* Floor Plan Subject to Change
home & garden
SILVER HOME EXHIBITORS
PARTICIPATED IN 10+ EXPOS
BRONZE HOME EXHIBITORS
PARTICIPATED IN 5+ EXPOS
A-1 Concrete 113
Cutco Cutlery-SLO 103
Magic Masseuse 128
SCI Simons 106
A Place to Grow 66
Danmer Custom Shutters 31
Marketing Solutions 25
Sears 42
A-American Sliding Door 83
Dusty Lady Cleaning 126
Mid State Roofing 54
Sentinel Security Systems 117
All Star Spray Insulation 99
Eddie Navarro Painting 23
Mobile Oil Changers 108
Shoreline Awning 93
American Builders Supply 107
Edward Jones 55
Smitty Built Construction 51
Apex Auto Glass & Tinting 45
Embers Fireplaces and Grills 120
Nature’s Select Central
Coast Premium Pet Food 96
Archies Pest 57
Armet’s Landscape 21
Atascadero Glass 53
Empower SLO 61
Energy Smart 97
Farm Supply Seminar
B&B Garage Door 104
Hague Quality Water 69
Backyard Visions 94
Hamon Overhead Door Company 68
Bayly Art 65
Holland Distributing 78
Brad’s Overhead Door 40
Home Elegance Fine Furnishings 72
Brandt House Movers 76
Home Star Construction 1
Browder Painting 44
Home Star Construction 43
Brykalski Builders 70
Idler’s Home 131
California Solar 80
Interior Pros Online - Floor Design 125
California Woodcraft 34
James V Shepard Company 73
Chameleon Style 37
Kelly-Moore Paint Co. Inc. 56
Clearview Retractable Screen Doors 22
Kitchen Craft 115
Comfort Zone 116
KSBY 102
Communications 4 Less 110
Leticia’s Cleaning 30
Culligan San Paso 36
LifeSource Water Systems 46
NHance 74
One Hour Heating & Air 35
One Source Home Solutions 48
Solar City 100
SolaraloS 27
Solarponics, Inc. 28
Pacific Energy Company 101
Solatube Skylights
by Tubular George 24
Paso Robles Children’s Museum 71
Steven Rogall Painting 67
Paso Robles Glass 39
Stone Tech 29
Paso Robles Handyman 121
Summerwind Resorts 111
Power Plumbing 124
Sunrun 49
PremierTV 26
Tailored Living 75
Protective Weather Structures 41
Talley Farms Fresh Harvest 60
Rainscape 118
Tandy Leather Factory 105
REM Sleep Solutions 127
The Event Factory 2
Sacramento Hot Tub Warehouse 63
The Tribune 123
Sage Ecological Landscapes 77
Traeger Pellet Grills 58
Salad Master 79
Trombley Painting 129
SLO County Integrated Waste 98
Tuff Shed-Bakersfield 38
Scentsy 81
Wighton’s Heating & Air Conditioning 95
Tolosa Press Special Publication •
Februay 19 - March 4, 2015 •
Visit us in
booth #61
gourmet
visit these gourmet vendors
California Toffee
Company
Paris Coffee
Serving
Paso Robles, Templeton,
Morro Bay, Cambria,
Pismo Beach, San Luis Obispo
& Atascadero Since 1998
Services Specializing in
Vacation Rentals | Commercial | Residential
Move in/out | Construction Clean-up | Yard Clean-up
www.emPowerSBC.org
(805) 237-1089 | (805) 610-7478
LeticiasCleaning.com
Like us on Facebook: http://tinyurl.com/bdyqxf
Tastefully Simple
Centrally Grown
The Groves on 41
Christian Lazo Wines
The Sweet Pea Farm
Come see us at booth #68
for a great deal on a garage door!
Dream Dinners
Velata Fondue Warmers
#28
Foxdale Farms
Freedom Kettle Corn
Wellness Kitchen &
Resource Center
Harmata Family Wines
(800) 243-8590
25
26
•
Februay 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press Special Publication
Water Wise Gardens
here’s nothing like the taste of home
grown vegetables. Store bought
produce just can’t compare to
the fresh, flavorful vegetables that you
can grow right at home. If you plan
on having a garden this season, make
a simple, inexpensive, automated drip
system a part of the plan.
T
When it comes to garden irrigation,
simplicity is a virtue.
Plant your
vegetables in rows, and use inline
emitter tubing, or irrigation tape to deliver
water on the top of that row right next
to the plants or seeds. Use ½ inch drip
tubing as a header and a hose bib timer
to regulate watering time. If necessary,
include a simple pressure regulator, and/
or filter.
Drip irrigation is not only easy to use,
it’s very inexpensive as well. A complete
drip system for a backyard garden
should have an initial start up cost of
less than $100.00, and that includes an
automatic timer. Irrigation tape is very
inexpensive as is inline emitter tubing.
Hose bib timers are relatively inexpensive
or a drought in your
backyard. Plus it can
save on a water fine.
as well, and that’s the most expensive
item of the whole system.
Over watering and under watering
have this in common; they can ruin a
perfectly good crop of vegetables in no
time at all. Installing an automatic timer
will provide consistent, reliable water to
your plants, which will help your garden
to thrive. Don’t rely on memory, or the
neighbor’s kid to turn your system off or
on. Put your faith in a good hose bib
time and reduce the chance of a flood,
There is a lot of
satisfaction that comes
from
growing
and
eating your own crop of
vegetables. Preparing
your soil, purchasing the
right vegetables for your
climate and installing a
complete drip system will
go a long way towards
making your garden a
big success.
Saving
time, money, and water never tasted so
good.
Stop by a Farm Supply near you, let
us help you with the ground work for a
successful planting season. In addition
to irrigation supplies we have vegetable
seeds and starts. But first you’ll want to
start with soil amendments. The most
successful gardens begin with optimum
soil preparations and conditions. We
have experts in all five of our stores. We
are more than happy to get you started
and share our favorite gardening tips!
Farm Supply is the proud sponsor
of the Inspired Home Show Expo’s
Education Center. Join our experts
on Saturday, February 21st. At 12:45
p.m. Barbara Bullock will talk about the
benefits of raising backyard chickens.
At 2:45 p.m. Jim Magill will talk about
the importance and ease of water
conservation.
Farm Supply has proudly served
the Central Coast community for over
65 years. Visit one of our locations in
Buellton, Santa Maria, Arroyo Grande,
San Luis Obispo and Paso Robles
today! You can also visit us online at
farmsupplycompany.com, become a
fan on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Farm Supply is a locally owned
cooperative. That means, when you
shop at Farm Supply, you’re supporting
our community’s farmers and ranchers.
At Farm Supply, we have everything
you need for the farmer in you.
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Feb. 27-Mar. 31
Tolosa Press Special Publication •
Februay 19 - March 4, 2015 •
27
Talley Farms Recipe
SARAH’S NAPPA CHINESE CABBAGE SALAD
Salad:
SPECIAL REPORT
HOME AIR-FLOW REPORTS
Visit us at
the Home
Expo for your
FREE Special
Report
Dressing:
1 head napa cabbage, sliced
1 cup vegetable oil (not olive oil)
1 bunch green onions, chopped
4 tablespoons sugar
Shredded carrots (optional)
6 tablespoons seasoned
rice vinegar
¾ lb. fresh, shelled English Peas
(optional)
3 Things You Should Know
About Your Furnace:
1 teaspoon salt
¾ lb. snap peas (optional)
1 teaspoon pepper
Sliced purple radishes (optional)
1 teaspoon “Better Than Bouillon”
seasoning, any flavor
¼ cup or more chopped cilantro
1
2
1 cup slivered almonds, toasted
1-2 packs oriental noodles, uncooked (Philippine-style but any
kind will do)
1 teaspoon “Better Than Bouillon”
seasoning, any flavor
}
Instructions
Whisk dressing ingredients and pour over salad at least ½
hour before serving.
Pour slivered almonds on top. Refrigerate.
}
3
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A cracked heat exchanger is a real threat to
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constantly expanding and contracting, it is
subject to cracking, or metal fatigue. When
this occurs, the unburned gases escape out
the cracks and holes and are toxic to your
family.
What kind of tests can be run to see if my
heat exchanger is cracked? There is a device
called an “electronic gas sniffer.” But these
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there is a crack is to physically look at and
identify the crack. Then you know.
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Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
29
805 Sound
Lady Swings the Blues: Linda Martin and Back Bay Betty
The Goddess of Groove
By Mad Royal
T
he
music
business,
in this area,
at least, is about
ninety percent men.
Why that is, I don’t
know;
musical
talent certainly isn’t
gender-specific. I do
know that it takes a
lot of perseverance,
patience, and a bit of
a thick skin to make
it in this business,
especially if you’re
female.
Linda
Martin
of Back Bay Betty laughingly defines
herself as a “good girl gone bad”. To
some narrow-minded people, that
might be true, but the fact is that you’d
be hard pressed to find a kinder, more
generous person than Linda. When she
walks in a room, people light up. When
she starts to sing, well, that’s something
really special.
Linda grew up in the Southern
Baptist tradition in Los Osos. Her
family went to church three days a
week. She sang in the choir and played
the piano and organ. When she was
eight, she sang alto in a gospel group
with her siblings called Sisters Four.
Impressed with her musical talent,
the folks at her church gave her a
scholarship to Azusa Pacific University,
where she majored in Nursing and
minored in Music and played piano
(her “day job” is still nursing). After her
first year, she came home and “lived in
sin” with her boyfriend. Eventually she
married and had children. When they
were old enough to attend church, she
took them to the Nazarene church, and
was the pianist there. She was involved
with the children’s drama and music
programs.
Around 2004, Linda stepped out
of church and into the bar scene
musically, joining the Bluz Dogz,
playing keyboards and singing with
the group. Other members were Dr.
Hal Seagal, Buddy McCabe, and Mike
Brown. Eventually, Linda brought in
her boyfriend, Johnny Johnson, to play
blues harp and sing.
Johnny Johnson grew up in Ventura
in a musical family, listening to big
band, and jazz. His mother sang in the
church choir. Johnny played trombone
in fourth grade through junior high,
when his interest moved to surfing.
Like many young people of that time, he
listened to the Beatles, Rolling Stones,
and the Beach Boys. When he was 14,
he heard Chicago blues for the first time
in the music of Paul Butterfield and
Muddy Waters, and it struck a chord
in him. He mostly lived vicariously
through his musical friends, and didn’t
pursue his own musicality until he was
in his forties, when he started picking at
the guitar, mostly jazz. When he turned
50, he picked up the harmonica.
Eight years ago, Johnny moved to
Morro Bay after his marriage ended.
As long as he was making big changes
in his life, he decided to move to the
place he’d always considered ideal. He
spent about six months freelancing as
a graphic artist before he landed a job
at Arabian Horse World in Templeton,
one of the most prestigious horse
publications on the planet. In 2009, he
met Linda outside of music. One day,
he took her out back to the garage, and
opened the door to show her his “cute
vintage amp” and harmonicas. Linda
was very happy after she heard him
play, and she convinced him to join the
Bluz Dogz, which was his first ensemble
experience.
Two and a half years ago, Linda
decided she wanted more of a central
role, and she and Johnny left the Bluz
Dogz to form Back Bay Betty. The group
became popular very quickly, due to in
part to lots of dedication to promoting
and visiting prospective venues. Linda
has a tremendous voice and personality
which lights up the stage. Johnny has a
warm singing voice and plays the blues
harp with skill. He also has a warm
presence which can be felt by audience
members. Other members are Casey
Rodgers on lead guitar and vocals.
Casey is the chief song writer in the
group, and is responsible for much of
its rock influence. Carl Dybowski, who
hails from Chicago, is their drummer,
and also sings. He loves jazz and is
very intuitive, and Linda and Johnny
say he is easy-going and pleasant to
be around. Linda also says he gets the
award for “most improved” drummer.
The newest member of Back Bay Betty
is bassist Mark Notzka, who also plays
in Rasdanny. In fact, he’s brand new to
the band, and only officially joined in
January. Bud McCabe occasionally fills
in on bass if needed.
Back Bay Betty’s music is designed
for dancing. Their motto is “Funky
Blues for Your Dancing Shoes.” If
you’re not dancing, they’re not happy,
and they’re always happy! The music is
a blend of blues, jazz, and rock’n’roll.
Although they do perform in bars and
cafes, their main focus is to perform at
the local wineries and summer concert
series. They are very much a hometown
band, and have no aspirations for the
“bigtime”. The band practices at Linda’s
home after she cooks them dinner,
largely with produce from her organic
garden. They are very much a family.
Back Bay Betty’s playlist has moved
more and more to original tunes, in
attempt to keep things creative, new
and fresh, so that each Back Bay Betty
show is a little different. When you hear
them, they like to hear from audience
members that the music was “funky
and tight”, that their feet are sore from
dancing, and that their faces are sore
from smiling. Check them out. I think
you’ll find that Back Bay Betty delivers
on all counts.
Your next opportunity to hear and
see Back Bay Betty perform is on
Saturday, February 21 at the Shell
Café in Pismo Beach, from 7 p.m.-10
p.m. Check out their very fun website
at www.backbaybetty.com for more
information. Remember to wear your
dancing shoes!
BUZZ + CUT
Strawberry Wheat
Dirty Reapin’ Blonde
Fear the Reaper–AMBER
Oblivion–IPA
Apocalyptic–DIPA
Double Damn
Offering Our Deluxe Cut
30 Minute Haircut | Hot Towel | Razor Neck Shave
–CHOCOLATE LAVENDER STOUT
Sabotage
Comfortable & Welcoming
Flat Screen TVs | Leather Couches | Beer
Wood-Fired Pizza Daily
Live Music Every Friday Night
Walk-Ins Welcome or Visit us online for a full
list of services and convenient booking
MODERN HAIRCUTS FOR MEN & WOmen
www.clippersbarber.com | 805-783-CUTS (2887) | 1351 Monterey, SLO
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7 El Camino Real
750
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uite
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30
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Clubs & Nightlife
Sout h County
THE CLIFFS RESORT: 2757 Shell Beach Road,
773-5000 or cliffsresort.com.
F. MCLINTOCKS SALOON: Two locations: 750
Mattie Road in Pismo Beach and 133 Bridge St.
in Arroyo Grande. 773-1892 or mclintocks.com.
Live music at the Pismo Beach location every Fri.
and Sat. from 6-9pm. Tennessee Jimmy Harrell
and Doc Stoltey play on alternating weekends.
HARRY’S NIGHT CLUB AND BEACH BAR:
Cypress and Pomeroy, downtown Pismo Beach,
773-1010. Every Thu. Front Row Karaoke.
LAETITIA WINERY: 453 Laetitia Vineyard
Drive, Arroyo Grande, 805-481-1772. www.
laetitiawine.
com. Live Music
Saturdays and
Sundays 1-4pm.
L
I
D
O
RESTAURANT
AT
DOLPHIN
BAY: 2727 Shell Beach Road, Shell Beach, 7734300 or thedolphinbay.com. Join Three-Martini
Lunch every Thurs. and Fri. from 6-9pm. Live
Music Every Tues. from 5:30-6:30 and Thursdays
and Fridays 6-9
MANROCK BREWING CO. TASTING ROOM:
1750 El Camino Real ste A, Grover Beach, CA
93433. Tasting room M-Th 4pm-10pm, Fri 3pm12am, Sat noon-12am, Sun noon-7pm
MONGO’S SALOON: 359 W. Grand Ave.,
Grover Beach, 489-3639. Karaoke Tuesday and
Wednesday 9pm. Live Music and dancing every
Friday and Saturday at 9pm.
MR. RICK’S: 404 Front St., Avila Beach, 805595-7425 www.mrricks.com Happy Hour
Monday-Thursday 4-7pm 2/20 Matt Cross and
The One Night Band 8pm 2/22 Lenny Blue 1pm
2/27 Legends 8pm 2/28 Soul Sauce 8pm
SEA VENTURE: 100 Ocean View, Pismo Beach,
773-4994. www.seaventure.com Live music every
Wednesday from 6-9pm in the Fireplace room.
Acoustic Sundays from 3-6pm on the Deck.
8 0 5 sound
find your beat
SHELL CAFÉ: 1351 Price St.,
Pismo Beach, 805-773-8300
www.shellcafepismo.com
2/19 Songwriters at Play 6:30
2/20 CloudShip 7pm 2/21
Louie Ortega 11am Back Bay
Betty 7pm
TALLEY VINEYARDS: 3031
Lopez Dr., Arroyo Grande,
489-0446, talleyvineyards.com
all day, Live music-TBA
VENTANA GRILL: 2575 Price St. Pismo Beach,
773-0000, or ventanagrill.com. Matt Cross plays
on Mon and Wed. evenings.
PAPPY MCGREGOR’S: pappymcgregors.com or
543-KILT (5458), 1865 Monterey St. Live music
is Wed./Thurs./Fri. from 6-9pm. Old Time Fiddle
& Banjo Show every Wed. from 6-9pm.
VINO VERSATO: 781 Price St., Pismo Beach,
773-6563 or vinoversato.com. Every Tuesday:
Side Effects
CREATIVE JUICES LOUNGE 874 Guadalupe
Street, Guadalupe, CA 93434, 805-219-0518
www.creativejuicelounge.com
San Luis Obispo
BON TEMPS CREOLE CAFE: 1000 Olive St.,
544-2100. Zydeco music, live blues, and jazz on
Monday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings.
CREEKY TIKI: 782 Higuera St., 903-2591.
EVERY FRIDAY Live Music Directly Following
Concerts in the Plaza
FROG & PEACH PUB: 728 Higuera St. (805)
595-3764. Pint Nite EVERY Tuesday
THE GRADUATE: 990 Industrial Way, 541-0969
or slograd.com. Every Thu. Is Country Night
8pm 18+, Every Fri “Noche Caliente” or “Hot
Latin Nights” 18+, Every Sat “Big Chill” hits from
the 70’s 80’s 90’s 21+ & Every Sunday is Minor
Madness 8pm-11:45pm
LINNAEA’S CAFE: 1110 Garden St., 541-5888
www.linnaes.com
LUNA RED: 1023 Chorro St., 540-5243 www.
lunaredslo.com Every Thurday $5 Happy Hour
SLO BREWING CO.: 1119 Garden St., 543-1843
or slobrewingco.com Cursive 2/20 Night Riots
2/21 Gregory Alan Isakov 2/22 Ozomatli 2/25
ALO (animal Liberation Orchestra)
North Coast
10TH STREET GRILL: 2011 10th St., Los Osos,
528-2011 or 10thstreetgrill.com.
CAMBRIA PINES LODGE: 2905 Burton Drive,
Cambria, 927-4200 or cambriapineslodge.com.
Entertainment every night in the Fireside Lounge.
FUEL DOCK SALOON: 900 Main St., Morro Bay,
772-8478
MOZZI’S SALOON: 2262 Main St. in Cambria,
927-4767. Friday Night: Karaoke, Saturday
Night: Live Music
OLD CAYUCOS TAVERN: 130 N. Ocean Ave.,
Cayucos, 995-3209. Fri.-Sat.: Live music.
OTTER ROCK CAFE: 885 Embarcadero, Morro
Bay, 805-772-1420. www.otterrockcafe.com
Every Wed.: Karaoke, 8pm. Every Thu.: Thursday
Night Spotlight, 8pm. *Closed every Tuesday
2/19 The Nathaniel Johnstone Band 2/22 Mud
on the Tire 2/23 Billy Fobbiano 2/25 Karaoke w/
Bobby SantaCruz 2/26 Mud on The Tire 2/27 The
Jammies 2/28 Soundhouse
THE SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY CATTLEMEN’S
ASSOCIATION PRESENTS THE 25TH ANNUAL
Cattlemen’s
Western
ART SHOW & SALE
{ MARCH 27-29{
Paso Robles Event Center
ARTIST RECEPTION
Friday, March 27 (5-9pm)
‹ SOAR OVER VINEYARDS ON FIVE DIFFERENT ZIPLINES
SPANNING MORE THAN 4500 COMBINED FEET
‹EXPERIENCE CALIFORNIA HISTORY WITH A NATURE
TOUR THROUGH SANTA MARGARITA RANCH
Tickets for the reception will be available
at the door for $20. The show continues
Saturday 10-5 and Sunday 10-3, no admission
charge, open to the public, and features a
cattlemen’s BBQ Lunch for $10, from 11:30
am to 1:30pm.
‹AN UNFORGETTABLE ADVENTURE FOR ALL AGES
CALL (805) 438-3120
OR BOOK WITH US ONLINE AT
WWW.MARGARITA-ADVENTURES.COM
FIND US JUST ONE MINUTE FROM HIGHWAY 101 AT
22719 EL CAMINO REAL, SANTA MARGARITA, CA 934534
For more information visit
cattlemenswesternartshow.com
or contact Dee Pellandini 805-423-1319
or Jo Ann Switzer 805-462-2810.
Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
SKIPPERS RESTAURANT:
Cayucos, 995-1122.
113
N
•
31
Ocean,
SWEET SPRINGS SALOON: 990 Los Osos Valley
Road, Los Osos, 528-3764, sweetspringssaloon.
com. Friday and Saturday: Live music from 9pm
to 2am.
TOGNAZZINI’S DOCKSIDE: 1245 Embarcadero,
Morro Bay, 772-8100.
WINDOWS ON THE WATER: 699 Embarcadero,
Suite 7, Morro Bay, 772-0677. Live music every
Monday and Friday evening.
Purchase the book locally at
Coalesce Bookstore, Morro
Bay and Parable Bookstore
or online at: Amazon.com or
BarnesandNoble.com
Nor t h County
ASUNCION RIDGE: 725 12th St., Paso Robles,
237-1425 Live music Saturdays from 5-8pm
AVION & CLAW: 6155 El Camino Real,
Atascadero, 461-9463 or avionandclaw.com. Live
music Thurs.-Sat. from 7-10pm.
Info on bullies or for counseling contact:
Susan K Boyd
MS, MFT
Licensed Marriage
& Family Therapist
BROKEN EARTH WINERY: 5625 Highway 46E,
Paso Robles, 239-2562.
BRU COFFEEHOUSE: 576 El Camino Real,
Atascadero, 464-5007. www.brucoffeehouse.
com Live music every Friday from 7-9pm. 2/20
The Simple Parade 2/27 Tylor Bundy
805-782-9800
susankboydmft.com
CAMOZZI’S: 5855 El Camino Real, Atascadero,
466-1880.
D’ANBINO VINEYARDS AND CELLARS: 710
Pine St., Paso Robles, 227-6800 or danbino.
com. Every Saturday 2-4:30 pm wine and music
events.
LA BELLASERA HOTEL AND SUITES: 206
Alexa Ct., Paso Robles, 238-2834, www.
labellasera.com. Guitar/Vocal duo, Adam Levine
and Judy Philbin play every Thurs. from 7-9pm,
in the dining room/bar
LAST STAGE WEST: Halfway Station on
Highway 41 (15050 Morro Road at Toro Creek),
461-1393 or laststagewest.net. Most shows start
at 6pm. 2/19 Tanner Scott 2/24 The Banjer Dan
Show 2/25 Bluegras Jam Night 2/26 Tanner
Scott 2/27 Surtsey & Co. 2/28 Susan Tognazzini
Benefit Concert
James A. Forester, DDS
Diplomate of the American Board of Pediatric Dentistry
Healthy smiles,
happy kids!
PAPPY MCGREGOR’S: pappymcgregors.com or
238-7070, 1122 Pine St. in Paso Robles.
PASO ROBLES INN CATTLEMAN’S LOUNGE:
1103 Spring St., 238-2660. Live entertainment
Friday and Saturday at 9:30pm.
PINE STREET SALOON: 1234 Pine St., Paso
Robles. www.pinestreetsaloon.com 805-2381114. Every Monday Open Mic. 9pm. Every
Tuesday/ Friday/ Sunday Marilyn’s Karaoke
9pm. Every Thursday North County Line Up Live
Music 9pm.
THE PONY CLUB AT HOTEL CHEVAL: 1021
Pine St., Paso Robles. www.hotelcheval.com
805-226-9995. *Most shows 7-10pm unless
stated otherwise 2/19 August Ridge Release
Party 2/20 Dorian Michael & Kenny Blackwell
2/21 Luke Bryon 2/26 Paiz Sur Terre 2/27 Kenny
Taylor 2/28 Lance Robinson
full bar | 12 beers on tap
family-friendly menu
200 E. Branch Street, Arroyo Grande
www.roostercreektavern.com
805.489.2509
open daily from 11:30 – 10:00
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$PBTUBM1FEJBUSJD%FOUJTUSZGBNJMZ
Because every child should love
going to the dentist!
The Ranch: 1285 Mission St. in San Miguel, www.
liveattheranch.com or 467-5047. 11/29 Chris and
Nick’s “Rave Circus” 18+
SCULPTERRA WINERY: 5015 Linne Road,
Paso Robles, 226-8881. Steve Key presents
“Songwriters at Play” Sundays from 1-4pm www.
sculpterra.com
VINA ROBLES AMPHITHEATRE: 3800 Mill
Rd., Paso Robles, 286-3680. Check out Vina
Robles Amphitheatre online for tickets, times,
and pricing www.vinarobles.com.
$BMJGPSOJB#MWE4VJUF(
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32
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Framed
Story and Photo By www.PhotoByVivian.com
O
n Feb. 12 groundbreaking
ceremonies were held at the
historic Long-Street Farm - (F.
Bonetti) property that sits at the corner
of Tank Farm Road and S. Higuera Street
in San Luis Obispo. Before Tank Farm
Road existed, the streets surrounding
the land were Pismo Road, Ocean Blvd.,
Avila Road, Hwy. 101 and now, South
Higuera Street. The buildings on the
property which are on the city’s list of
historic places including a farm house,
barn, granary and water tower, will be
incorporated into a Marketplace that
will have a brewery, restaurant, farm
and agricultural store, and various retail
stores on a little more than 4 acres. The
property was once a sprawling 80- acre
farm that grew field crops, sugar beets,
barley, flowers, grains and beans. A brass
plaque dedicated in 1998 on the property
recognizes the agricultural heritage of
the farmland and reads, pioneers to these
ranchlands include John Harford (think
Harford Pier in Avila Beach), Frank
McGolphur, Joseph D. Grant, George
and Mary Long and the Florino Bonetti
Family. Joseph D. Grant of San Francisco
purchased the land from John Harford
in 1880. City records show George W.
Long had leased the property and lived
in the farmhouse and then purchased it
in 1908. In 1923 the property was sold to
Florino Bonetti. The Bonetti Family sold
The premier performing arts academy on the central coast.
the property in 1978. Up until just about
a year ago the farmhouse was a rental and
blackberries grew freely on the property.
www.PhotoByVivian.com
Trust Your Honda to the People Who Know Honda Best.
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This year we’re going to...dance!
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www.coastaldanceandmusicacademy.com
1030 Huston Street, Suite C | Grover Beach | 805.489.5678
805-544-9500
12250 Los Osos Valley Road
San Luis Obispo
www.sunsethonda.com
Sales: Mon-Fri 7:30am-5:30pm
Sat 9am-6pm, Sun 11am-4pm
Service & Parts: Mon-Fri 7am-8pm
Sat 8am-4pm
FOR OUR NORTH COUNTY FRIENDS:
Visit our Sunset Service Center, 4850 El Camino Real, Atascadero.
Open Mon-Fri 8:00am-5:00pm. Please call for an appointment: 805-462-8199.
N O W O P E N S A T U R D AY S 8 : 0 0 A M - 4 : 0 0 P M I N S L O !
Tolosa Press • DATE, 2015
Los Osos dance band, Back Bay Betty,
will debut some new original tunes in a
show at the Shell Café in Pismo Beach.
The show is set for 7-10 p.m. Saturday,
Feb. 21. Shell Café, located at 1351 Price
St., is quickly becoming a showcase for
local live music and offers a great menu
at reasonable prices. A short walk to
the beach, too. See: www.backbaybetty.
com or on Facebook for more on the
band.
The San Luis Obispo County High
School Jazz Ensemble, with the best
high school jazz musicians in SLO
County and Santa Maria, will perform
its annual concert at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 28 at the Cuesta College
Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $7
for students, seniors, and SLO Jazz Fed
members, and $12 general admission.
Buy tickets online at: www.cpactickets.
cuesta.edu. The Cuesta Jazz Ensemble
will also perform. The high school
ensemble is put together every year to
give the kids advanced training and to
perform this annual concert.
The 2nd Annual, 87th Oscar VIP
Party Fundraiser is set for Oscars
Night, Saturday, Feb. 21 at the Cayucos
Vet’s Hall and will honor a legendary
celebrity photog to the stars.
Charles Poalillo, this year’s honoree,
spent nine years as a staff photographer
at the Los Angeles Daily News and the
L.A. Times before starting a commercial
photography studio in Hollywood.
Familiar with press agents who
came to submit press releases, he hit
the ground running, as he would be
doing journalism photography, but for
commercial clients, many of who were
Fortune 500 companies.
Poalillo was hired by many of his
clients to do photography at The
Academy Awards and his first shoot was
for a small Latin magazine, followed by
various companies. What followed was
a 5-year contract to do photography
for the Academy of Motion Pictures
Arts and Sciences at the Oscars. He
photographed the Oscars for 24 years.
Poalillo, now a Paso Robles resident,
will show slides of his Oscars work
including public debuts of vintage
celebrity photos that have never been
shown before.
Profits from the Vet’s Hall show and
party benefit the Cayucos Elementary
Education Foundation. For more
information and tickets call Moree
Productions at (805) 900-5282.
Afro-Americana
music
fusion
band, Mamajowali, will perform at 7
p.m. Friday, Feb. 20 at St. Benedict’s
Church in Los Osos. Tickets are $20
a person and available online at
Afro-Americana music fusion band, Mamajowali, will
perform at St. Benedict’s Church in Los Osos
brownpapertickets.com or at the door.
Mamajowali is Joe Craven, Mamadou
Sidibe, and Walter Strauss playing a
blend of instruments — kamale ngoni
(the hunter’s harp) with six string
guitar, percussion, fiddle, mandolin
and voice — uncommon and familiar,
traditional and innovative all at the
same time. The show is co-sponsored
by KCBX Public Radio and the Live Oak
Music Festival. St. Benedict’s is at 2220
Snowy Egret Ln., Los Osos (across
LOVR form the cemetery). Call (707)
678-1351 for more information.
The Cal Poly Ballroom Dance Club
will host its eighth annual “Mustang
Ball” Ballroom and Latin DanceSport
Competition from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 28, in the university’s
Chumash Auditorium. More than
150 dancers from across California,
Arizona and Nevada have registered to
compete at the event, one of the largest
annual dance competitions in San Luis
Obispo County. Amateur dancers of all
levels and ages are invited to sign up
and compete. Dancers will compete
in six levels of competitions — from
newcomer to the highest “openlevel” events — in the international and
American style ballroom dances. Events
also include nightclub dances such as
the salsa, hustle, Argentine tango, and
lindy hop swing; a formation team
competition; collegiate team match;
and other special performances. A
highlight of the event will be a showcase
of five dances by competitors Iaroslav
Bieliei and Olga Tsikalyuk, the current
U.S. Professional Rising Star Ballroom
Champions. Last year’s competition
drew more than 500 spectators and a
record 1,044 entries from Cal Poly and
other universities competing in 106
different events. The event provides
the public an opportunity to experience
the ballroom dancing firsthand.
Admission is $7 in advance and $10 at
the door. There is no cost for Cal Poly
students with a valid I.D. For more
information and to buy a ticket, visit
http://mustangball.com/ or call 805242-3262. Donations to help support
this nonprofit event are appreciated.
Award-winning songwriter Loren
Radis will be featured during
Songwriters at Play Shell Café on Feb.
26 running from 6:30-9:30 p.m. In
2009 his song ‘If You’ll Be Mine’ was
one of the winners at the inaugural
New Times Music Awards. He was a
winner the next year with ‘Homesick,’
and the next, with ‘(May I) Walk You
Home?’ This year his winning track,
‘Young Man’s Song,’ again made the
finals. Loren is a Central Coast native
who has loved writing and performing
music since he first heard the Beatles
at age 10. His blend of acoustic/rock
music has been compared to artists
like Simon & Garfunkel, Iron & Wine,
and Damien Rice. Songwriters At Play
is held Thursdays 6:30-9:30pm at the
Shell Cafe, 1351 Price Street, Pismo
Beach, (805) 773-8300. The showcase
includes one featured act and others
playing 4-song sets. No cover charge,
but a tip bucket is passed during the
featured artist’s set. Our Thursday
showcase is a co-production with
Madeline Royal of Love Live Music.
For more information, visit www.
songwritersatplay.com.
SLOFolks will bring traditional Irish
music band, Goitse, for two shows at
Coalesce Bookstore Chapel in Morro
Bay and Castoro Cellars Winery in
Templeton, set for Friday-Saturday
Feb. 27-28. Tickets are $20 a person and
available at the venues, 845 Main St.,
for Coalesce, call 772-2880 and 1315 N.
Bethel Rd., Templeton, call 238-0725
to reserve tickets. Also available at Boo
Boo Records, 978 Monterey St., SLO.
Hailing from Limerick, Ireland, Goitse
is fast becoming one of the most sought-
•
33
34
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Entertainment
after bands among connoisseurs of
Irish Traditional music. Led by Aine
McGeeney on vocals fiddle, and upand-coming stars, Colm Phelan, Conal
O’Kane, James Harvey, and Tadhg
O’Meachair. See: www.slofolks.org for
information on upcoming shows.
The Basin Street Regulars are hosting
a Mardi Gras Party featuring the Mud
Skippers Band, set for 3:15-4:30 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 22 at the Pismo Beach
Veteran’s Hall, 680 Bello St. Tickets
are $5 for Basin Street members and
$10 for non members at the door.
Enjoy New Orleans jazz, Dixieland, big
band swing, Cajun and more. As this is
a Mardi Gras party, feel free to come in
costume and wear your beads. Call 7733750 for more information.
Collective Project,” ge said,
“while we document the
events, the people we meet,
the trials and challenges of
even a small trip, while taking
in the lifestyle and wonders
of the Coastal Northwest. The
scenery couldn’t be any more
inspirational.” See: facebook.
com/surtseyco or surtsey.
bandcamp.com to listen to
their music.
Cal Poly alumna and
acclaimed soprano,
Kathleen
Magee
“Surtsey & Co” and embarking on a West
Querec, returns to
Coast Tour following Hwy 1 and will be
her alma mater for
swinging
through San Luis Obispo County
the Cal Poly Choirs’
Winter
Concert
at 8 p.m. Saturday, March 7 in the March 11. Tickets run from $60-$90
Performing Arts Center on campus. and there is a free, pre-show lecture
Tickets are $12 and $14 for the public with Opera SLO’s Brian Asher Alhadeff
and $9 and $12 for senior citizens and in the PAC Pavilion at 6:30. See
St. Louis rocker, Ben Martsolf, is
students. Cost includes all PAC fees extravagant dance numbers, glittering
teaming up with his friend, Joseph
and parking. Get tickets at the Cal Poly costumes and an unlikely love story
Bassa from Keflavik, Iceland, in a band
Box Office between noon and 6 p.m. between a wealthy playboy and a rough
called “Surtsey & Co” and embarking
Tuesdays-Saturdays. Order by phone and tumble lady bootlegger. The story
on a West Coast Tour following Hwy 1
at 756-4849. Titled “Romance and the is set to classic Gershwin hits like “Let’s
and will be swinging through San Luis
Romantics,” the concert will feature Call the Whole Thing
Obispo County at the end of February.
works on the theme of love by composers Off,” “Someone to
The Cal Poly Symphony’s Winter Concert
The duo will perform a free show from the Romantic period of the 19th Watch Over Me”
will be at the Performing Arts Center
“Fascinating
at Last Stage West, located on Hwy Century and the modern era. Groups and
41 half way between Morro Bay and slated to perform are PolyPhonics Rhythm.”
Diaz, Troy Hanson, and Wicky Woo.
Atascadero. Martsolf said another good with Brahms; the University Singers
Vocalists are Leah Ginsky, Shaina
friend, film director Nigel Walsh, “will performing Schubert and the combined
Levin and Alexis Rubell. All students
be creating a short documentary about choirs will join Querec performing
are music majors except Woo, who
life and culture of the touring musician Mendelssohn and Mozart and close
Then at 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 16, is an industrial engineering major.
in the United States, stringing together with Strauss. Music department staff “Rain: A Tribute to the Beatles,” takes Music Prof. David Arrivée will conduct.
a run of shows ranging the entire members Susan Azaret Davies and Paul the stage. Tickets run from $48-$80. Theatre and Dance Department
California Coast in a span of two Woodring will accompany.
The acclaimed Beatles homage is hailed faculty members Diana Stanton,
weeks,” Martsolf said.
as clear and above the biggest and best Michelle Walter and Christy McNeil
Beatles tribute touring today. Rain is choreographed the dances.
a live, multi-media spectacular that
Cal Poly Arts will bring two Broadway takes you on a musical journey through
A member of St. Louis rock band, musicals to town in March. The the life and times of the world’s most
Blackwater ‘64, Martsolfsaid they plan 1920s-era feel-good musical, “Nice celebrated band. See: www.raintribute.
Cal Poly’s Winter Band Concert
to play small concerts during the tour Work if you can Get It,” will take com for videos and more on the show. featuring the 65-member Wind
playing original music as an “Artist the stage at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Tickets are available at the PAC Box Ensemble
and
70-piece
Wind
Office from, noon-6 p.m. TuesdaysOrchestra
is
set
for
8
p.m.
Saturday,
Saturdays. Call 756-4849 or order
Feb. 28 at the Performing Arts Center
online at: www.calpolyarts.org.
at Cal Poly. Tickets are $12 and $14
Rain: A Tribute to the Beatles, takes stage in March
for the public and $9 and $12 for
senior citizens and students. Pricing
includes all fees, and parking. Tickets
The Cal Poly Symphony’s Winter are sold at the PAC Box Office from
Concert is set for 3 p.m. Sunday, March noon to 6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays.
8 at the Performing Arts Center at Cal To order by phone, call 756-4849. The
Poly. Tickets are $12 and $14 for the bands will present their biennial “pops
public and $9 and $12 for seniors and concert,” featuring entertaining works
students. Includes all fees, and parking. from all areas of pop culture written
Get tickets at the PAC Box Office from and arranged for the modern concert
noon-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Order band. The concert features guest artist
by phone at 756-4849. The Winter and 2012 music alumnus, Jonathan
Concert will be a collaborative show Withem, who will perform a work by
celebrating the student soloists and composer John Mackey titled, “Strange
members of the university’s Orchesis Humors” with the Wind Ensemble on
Dance Company. The Student Soloist the djembe, a rope-tuned skin-covered
Showcase will include performances by goblet hand drum originally from
five instrumentalists and three vocalists West Africa. Cal Poly director of bands
who won the Music Department’s Solo Andrew McMahan and Christopher J.
Competition. Instrumentalists are Rose Woodruff, associate director of bands,
Doylemason, Leah Anderson, Daniel will conduct the concert.
Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
35
Dinner & A Movie
Eureka! Comfort Food and Much More
By Teri Bayus
“I
n wine there is wisdom, beer
there is freedom and water
there is bacteria” stated wisely
by Benjamin Franklin and used with
other bits of wisdom at Eureka Burger
in San Luis Obispo.
Following their mantra of “Eureka,”
used as an exclamation of triumph at
a discovery, I agree. I had avoided this
place because of the long waits and
burger centric meals, but I became a
fan on the first night, a convert on the
second meal.
There is a talent to creating a menu
that will sustain and intrigue the college
crowd, yet make the locals and the
grownups come back again and again.
Eureka has accomplished this with full
and unique drink items and delectable
food staples. Those like me that truly
appreciate great food, craft beer and
artisan liquor are discovering a better
restaurant experience at Eureka in
Downtown San Luis Obispo.
Our first night there we sat at the bar
and received some of the best service
I have had at a casual restaurant. The
bartender made Mr. Bayus an old
fashioned that loosened his retrieve
and made him swear to come here
a every night. They he presented him
with the butterscotch rum pudding that
was pronounced “Green Mile” worthy,
a first for a dessert, and this one was
topped with homemade
whipped cream, caramel
sauce and flaky sea salt. He
inhaled it and I didn’t get to
try even a bite. He has since returned
over 10 times for this after-work treat
of liquor and pudding.
I started with the fried chicken
sliders that surprised and delighted me.
The perfectly fried chicken was shaped
into a small patty then put on a biscuit
slathered with tomato jam, a crisp and
delicious housemaid pickles and served
with signature hand cut fries.
The biscuit/bun had me puzzled, as
it was familiar and yet not something
you get in a restaurant. When I asked
the manager about it, he sneakily
whispered that they were Pillsbury
biscuits. Brilliant! — comfort food,
wrapped in comfort food.
Then there were those fries. I am
usually not a fan, but these were so
good, I ate them all and ordered more
for dessert. I chose
the buffalo dipping
sauce as a fantastic
alternative to ketchup.
It was our first time
there and I had to tell
the server about how
please and surprised
I was. He instantly
bought us another
dessert, the chocolate
espresso soufflé coffee
cupcake that was a
dark chocolate soufflé
with homemade whipped cream and a
vanilla bean ice cream.
Next we came back for Happy Hour
and I was delighted at all the offerings.
Shishito peppers were grilled and
topped with tobiko (fish eggs) and fresh
lemon juice. The Pacific white fish tacos
were blackened and sautéed tilapia
with cabbage, avocado aioli, mango
salsa, and cilantro and served in two
corn tortillas. It was fantastic.
The lollipop corn dogs made Gary
happy with his rare IPA beer. They
consisted of a Polish sausage saturated
in a sweet corn batter and fired. They
are dipped into spicy porter mustard,
homemade ketchup or ranch dressing.
He proclaimed it the top “Men Food” as
he grunted and watched sports on the
big screen TVs.
I finished it off with watermelon
salad that was crisp and refreshing.
It consisted of arugula, kale, lemon
vinaigrette,
homemade
quinoa,
watermelon, feta, toasted walnuts and
a balsamic glaze.
Eureka exudes the benefits of
handmade food, locally sourced
produce and fresh baked breads found
throughout the menu. You’ll find an
authentic, one-of-a-kind experience
serving a wide selection of all natural
beef burgers, signature hand cut fries,
gourmet salads, delectable sandwiches
and delicious desserts. They strive
to treat each guest as an important
individual and prepare each plate with
the pursuit of perfection in mind.
Eureka is located at 1141 Chorro St.;
open daily for lunch and dinner.
t
Fifty Shades of Lousy
By Teri Bayus
T
his week’s movie is “50 Shades of
t
Grey” (Yes, I am going there). I
d
read the book, although everyone
d
told me it would just make me mad,
rwhich it accomplished in spades. With
ridiculous
grammar
pontificating
rabout how a man that tells you to eat,
gthen ties you up, is the thing best for a
young girl.
I cringed and yelled through all
three books. Many people liked it and
eI had hopes for a better movie than the
prose, so I thought it would be smart
to go with 200 strangers to watch a sex
show in the dark (I did bring wine).
t I went with an open mind, but when
tthe last elevator door closed after what
felt like four hours and the guy behind
yme blurted out, “Please let this be the
end,” I laughed at the great cosmic joke
Universal Pictures had just played on
d
all of us.
Don’t’ get me wrong, the sex is neat,
but a total disservice to true erotica and
bondage. It was as if it was a 2-hour
commercial telling you what not to do
in order to have a healthy relationship.
I cannot believe
this was only an
R rating. The sex
scenes are intense
and very personal.
There’s
only
so much you can
put into a movie
especially if the
source material is as
sordid and insipid
as this, but Sam
Taylor-Johnson
doesn’t disappoint
when showing you the savage sexual
nature of the infamous Christian Grey.
These sex scenes push the boundaries
of its R rating and fans of the book will
be happy to hear that they can finally
visualize some of the titillating details
E.L. James seems to love to describe in
her books.
But that is all. The screenplay for this
is a muddled piece of writing that lazily
skates through its near 2-hour runtime
with long ridiculous looks from Grey to
Ana and no real dialog that is clever or
well done. The sets and art direction
are excellent and create the perfect
ambiance. The music excelled in
terms of theme and pacing. This was
the first time I have ever seen “BDSM
consultant” in credits, who gets that
job?
If you are young, this will confuse
you as to what erotic love can be and if
you are well seasoned like me, it is just
drivel. I really do not see any reason to
see this movie.
even remotely interesting.
The chemistry with the leads was
powerful, but you spend that much time
naked with another person and it will
always be persuasive. Jamie Dorman
(Christian Grey) and Dakota Johnson
(Anastasia Steel) definitely took their
jobs seriously here both physically and
mentally. Dakota is the daughter of
Don Johnson and Melanie Griffith, so
she has acting chops, too bad she spent
most of the film naked and tied up.
The lightening and score were
Teri Bayus can be reached at:
[email protected] or follow her
writings and ramblings at: www.
teribayus.com. Teri is also the host of
Taste Buds, a moving picture rendition
of her reviews shown on Charter Cable
Ch. 10.
Editor’s note: In the review of
American Sniper in the Feb. 5 issue, the
wrong actress was given as playing the
wife of Chris Kyle. Sienna Miller and
not Elise Robertson played that role.
36
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Community
-'( %&# )* .) #('.
Falling In Love - Staying In Love
By Susan K. Boyd MS, MFT
V
alentines day is over but not
the relationship that you
were celebrating. You might
have received chocolates or flowers
or given them to that very special
person in your life. I love getting
them and giving them!
Falling in love is easy but
staying in love is not. It
takes more than chocolates,
flowers, and a card to keep
that passionate, flame burning
through the years. What is the
secret to being in love and
staying that way? Researchers
tell us that when the initial
fantasy and dreaminess goes
away other factors predict the
likelihood that a couple will
stay together. Here are a few.
Couples that wait well into
their twenties or older to
marry have a better chance
of staying together. The
maturity that comes with age
as the more self-centered,
teen years fall farther back,
puts the statistics in the
older couple’s favor. People
who are well educated and
earn more money appear to
handle stresses of marriage,
or perhaps, have less stress
in marriage than those who are
struggling, financially.
Those that were raised in a
home with parents who stayed
together have a higher likelihood
of not divorcing. That is especially
true if both spouses had parents
that stayed together. This may be
because they witnessed problem
solving and long-term commitment
by their parents. Couples that
did not live together prior to
marriage, statistically fair better in
relationship longevity, than those
that cohabitated. This may also
FOLLOW
US!
@
@TolosaPress
have something to do with perceived
commitment levels. Finally, couples
that have a religious affiliation,
especially the same religious beliefs,
are more likely to have a long-term
relationship, and are less likely to
divorce.
about finding the perfect person.
Continuing to keep faith with the
one you started out with can deepen
love and build trust. Being able
to recharge the fun in marriage,
well, that was what Valentine’s
Day was all about! So let’s keep the
“My hand and neck pain has
decreased considerably. The exercises
in therapy and practiced at home are
helping me improve my posture and
body mechanics. ‘Hands-on’ therapy
and low level lasers are very helpful.”
–Barbara, SLO
##*&$".&+(
''& %*$%*%&,
Having
counseled
many
marriages for over twenty years
and having been married for 46
years to the same great guy, I notice
certain traits that make people who
fall in love, stay in love. They think
long term so that the momentary
or daily problems do not become
reasons to exit the relationship.
They experience kindness and open
communication in their marriages.
And they help each other feel secure
and supported.
Falling in love is fun but staying in
love involves lots of work. It is not
chocolates, flowers and nights on
the town coming all year! It might
just spice things up at home, and
not only help us fall in love, but stay
in love.
Susan K. Boyd is a Licensed
Marriage & Family Therapist
in private practice in SLO. She
can be reached for counseling
at (805) 782-9800 or by email:
[email protected]. Also see www.
susankboydmft.com
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News
Bay News • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
37
Moree Productions in association with Dick Mellinger Presents
87th Oscar V.I.P. Party
2nd Annual
City-State to Burn Brush in
MB State Park
F
olks in south Morro Bay get ready
to hold your breath, State Parks
and the City again plan to burn
piles of leaf litter and debris in Morro
Bay State Park.
State Parks in cooperation with the
Morro Bay Fire Department and the
County Air Pollution Control District,
announce plans to conduct prescribed
pile burns of diseased, dead and
downed Monterey pines in the Black
Hill area of Morro Bay State Park.
The burns will occur when weather
conditions permit between March 3
and April 30. Preparation of the burn
piles is taking place now.
This burn is part of State Parks’
“Hazard Fuel Reduction and Prescribed
Fire
Program”
for
vegetation
management, fuel load reduction and
structure protection to numerous
residences and businesses in Morro
Bay, reads a press release from the City.
“Monterey pines are experiencing
major die-offs due to pine pitch
canker disease and prolonged years
of drought,” the release reads. “Burn
pile operations will be conducted to
maintain defensible space on areas
adjacent to neighborhoods and park
facilities per Morro Bay Fire Department
permit conditions. This treatment
will greatly reduce dead, downed
and diseased fuels in the wildlandurban interface, decrease potential for
wildfires, enhance the health of the
native plant communities, encourage
increased species composition, restore
essential nutrients to the soil, and aid
in the control of pine pitch canker.”
The burns are always run past the
APCD and the state Air Resources
Board to try and minimize the impacts
from the smoke on nearby residents.
The burn is held when weather and
air quality conditions are favorable
for smoke dispersal but not too windy,
lest the embers from the fires get out
of hand. If the conditions are not as
desired, the burns will be rescheduled.
State Parks will issue a Media
Advisory 12-24 hours ahead of the actual
burn date and the fire department will
post updated information on Facebook
and Twitter, post flyers in the affected
neighborhoods, and place reverse 911
calls to notify nearby residents. And the
APCD will monitor the air quality and
give alerts on its website, as well. See:
www.slocleanair.org or call 781-4390.
Board Seats Filled, Almost
T
he new members of Morro Bay’s
boards and commissions have
been set, but a few seats on two
boards were unable to be filled.
Two seats on the Tourism Business
Improvement District were unable to
be filled, according to the city clerk.
The TBID had four seats open and Jack
Smith and Taylor Newton filled two
member at-large seats. A seat reserved
for a motel with 22 or less rooms and
a hotelier at large remain empty.
Chairwoman Michele Jacquez was
reappointed, along with members Joan
Solu, and Amit Patel (representing
motels of 50-less).
The Measure Q Citizens Oversight
Committee
has
two
remaining
vacancies. Continuing members are
Kathryn Thomas, Elaine Giannini and
Barbara Spagnola. This committee
reviews expenditures of the Measure Q
sales tax monies.
The Planning Commission finally is
whole again with the appointment of
Katherine Sorenson. She joins Richard
Sadowski and Gerald Luhr who were
reappointed to 4-year terms. Michael
Lucas and Robert Tefft continue on the
commission.
In the Harbor Advisory Board, former
chairman Jeff Eckles is out, replaced by
Neal Maloney representing waterfront
leaseholders. Eckles used to have a
sublease for his House of Jerky store,
but late last year, he moved the store
to a privately owned building on Front
Street (by the kite shop). Maloney, who
farms oysters in the bay, recently took
over the former M&M Refrigeration
lease site.
Eckles tried to get a reappointment
as the boaters’ rep but was turned
down. Others on the HAB are Gene
Doughty (representing Los Osos), Dana
McLish (recreational boaters), Bill
Luffee (marine oriented businesses),
Ron Reisner and Judith Meissen (at
large members), with the commercial
fishermen’s seat shared by Tom Hafer,
Alan Alward, and Joseph Conchelos.
Stewart Skiff and Chris Parker were
added to the Public Works Advisory
Board joining Marlys McPherson,
Stephen Shively, Deborah Owen, Janith
Goldman and David Sozinho.
No changes were made to the
Recreation and Parks Commission.
Members are John Bates, Drew
Sedaris, Alfonso Romero, Aaron Ochs,
Tom Coxwel, Robert Swain and Karen
Crowley.
And the water reclamation facility
citizen advisory committee remains
unchanged as well. Members are John
Diodati, Paul Donnelly, Ginny Guerra,
Valerie Levulett, Sadowski, Shively,
Spagnola and Bill Woodson.
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38
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Bay News
News
Old Truck is Gone; New One Coming in March
By Neil Farrell
T
he Morro Bay Fire Department
recently said “Adios,” to its old,
broken ladder truck, sending
it off to auction for whatever they
can get for it.
Fire Chief Steve Knuckles said
they turned the aged truck over to
Ken Porter Auctions of Los Angeles.
Since the ladder’s bull pinion gear,
which supports the hoisted ladder
and allows it to pivot, is broken, it
isn’t worth much for an accredited
fire agency.
“No municipal agency will buy
it,” he said. “It’s broken. And it’s a
32-year-old truck. No one will want
to spend the $350,000 it would
cost to replace the ladder, and that
estimate was from five years ago.”
To fix it would have required
tearing down the truck to the
frame, which is the ladder’s support
system. With ladder trucks, the
framework of the ladder is built
first then the truck — engine, cab,
body, chassis, and pumps — are
built around it.
Chief Knuckles said a likely
buyer might be a farmer or private
company for the pumps and holding
tank to transport water, or “any type
of non-life-safety operations.”
He anticipates getting about
$30,000 for it. Another reason for
it to be sold now is to make room for
the department’s new ladder truck
that should be here in early March.
“We’ve done the final inspections,”
Knuckles said. “If it survives the
drive out here, we should get
it around March 30.” They will
take about 30 days outfitting and
equipping the ladder truck and it
should be put into service around
April 1. Pierce Manufacturing of
Appleton, Wis., is building it.
The $775,000, 80-foot ladder
truck is not costing Morro Bay
residents anything.
The department was bequeathed
$1 million from the estate of Bertha
Shultz, a former Morro Bay resident,
who last year also left $1 million to
the Atascadero Fire Department and
gave $100,000 to the Friends of the
Morro Bay Library for its remodel
project, among other causes that she
left money to. The fire department
also plans to buy $250,000 worth of
self-contained breathing apparatus
with the remaining money.
Suspected Drug Lab Explodes
A
suspected clandestine drug
lab gave itself away when the
home kitchen it was set up in
exploded, sending the alleged drug
cooker to the hospital suffering
from burns and an innocent elderly
man who also lives there, went to
the hospital with heart troubles.
According to the Sheriff’s
Department, at about 4:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 3 the Sheriff’s
Narcotics Unit responded to an
apartment at 1351 Los Olivos
Ave., Los Osos, for a report of an
explosion.
“Initial reports said a toaster
caught fire in the kitchen area
and then spread to the cabinets,”
Sheriff’s spokesman Tony Cipolla
said in a news release. “A man
inside the apartment used a fire
extinguisher to put out the fire
and then drove himself to a local
hospital with burns to his face
and arms.” The man, identified as
Matthew David Culver, 32 of Los
Osos, was transfered to the Fresno
Burn Center for treatment.
“However,” Cipolla said, “when
investigators arrived on scene, they
found evidence of a butane honey
oil conversion lab, which converts
marijuana into hash oil or ‘honey
oil.’
“The extraction process uses parts
of the marijuana plant and converts
them to a more concentrated oil
using butane gas in the process.
This process is highly dangerous
and can result in explosions like
this one.”
Also, an elderly man who leases
the apartment was inside when
the place blew up. While he was
not injured in the explosion, he
was taken to the hospital for “heart
related issues. He is not considered
a suspect in this case,” Cipolla said.
Culver’s
troubles
are
not
over. “Once Culver is released
from the hospital,” Cipolla said,
“investigators plan to charge him
with [suspicion of] manufacture of
a controlled substance and elder
abuse.”
Information on the extent of the
damage done to the apartment
was not available immediately, as
questions posed to the Cal Fire Sta.
15 in Los Osos and headquarters
in SLO, were directed back at the
Sheriff’s Office, which didn’t have
the information, yet.
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Bay News • February 19 - March 4, 2015
Community
•
39
Senior Apartment Complex Breaks Ground
By Neil Farrell
I
n a scene many people thought
they’d never see, ground was
officially broken on a small,
senior citizen’s apartment complex in
Downtown Morro Bay.
Robert
Laing,
president
and
executive director of Pacific Southwest
Community Development Corp., out of
San Diego, explained that the Morro
Del Mar Senior Apartments, 555 Main
St., will have 20, one and two bedroom
units plus a manager’s apartment (total
of 21).
There will be an outdoor community
space, a common room, and a computer
lab.
The development has taken about 2
years to pull the funding together. “It’s
often said the difference with financing
is inverse proportionally to the size
of the project,” Laing, who hails from
Britain, quipped. Four banks, and
agencies on the local, county, state and
federal levels — 11 funding sources in
all — were tapped. “And all represented
by a lawyer,” he laughed.
He
commented
that
they’ve
completed projects with 800, 1,500
units and more, and none compared to
the complexity for this little project in
Morro Bay.
“With the Baby Boom generation
nearing
retirement
age,”
Laing
said,
“there’s been a huge
spike in demand for
senior housing, which
is what we’re doing
here.”
Mayor Pro Tem,
Noah
Smukler,
represented the City
at the ceremony held
Feb. 4. He praised
the developers for
recognizing a need in
Morro Bay for both
affordable and senior Councilman Noah Smukler, with shovel, and Robert
housing. He also noted
Laing, president and executive director of Pacific
that this will be the first
Southwest Community Development Corp., break
fully LEED certified
ground Feb. 4 on a new 20-unit senior apartment
building in Morro Bay.
house in Morro Bay. Photo by Neil Farrell
LEED
stands
for “Leadership in
Energy & Environmental Design” and added that the energy efficiency design
represents a movement towards energy is one way to ensure these remain
efficiency and environmental-friendly affordable, through lower utility bills.
designs, materials and construction
Smukler also noted that the City of
methods.
Morro Bay granted some $600,000
Smukler noted that the last affordable out of its housing in-lieu monies to the
housing built in Morro Bay was in the project. When developers are required
mid-90s and that forming partnerships to either sell or lease housing units at
with companies like Pacific Southwest affordable rates, they can either do so
“is how we’re going to get there.” He or pay a fee and that money had built
Town Center
over time.
The contractor on the project is
Carroll Building Co., of San Luis
Obispo. Owner Steve Carroll is a Morro
Bay native and the family owned
company includes wife Rosie and son
David. His dad, Robert Carroll was a
long-time builder in Morro Bay and is
now retired.
Laing said the 1-bedroom units
would rent for between $398 and $821
a month, and the 2-bedroom units
would be $467-$890. He said they’ve
done zero advertising and already 11
people have contacted them expressing
interest. The apartments are reserved
for people 62-over who do not require
special care, as no medical assistance
will be available through the company.
It will however, have social and
educational
programs,
including
computer literacy classes, and activities
provided by the company. This is for
active seniors and not a care facility.
According to a sign posted on the site,
those interested in leasing a unit should
call 1-800-801-8440, Ext. 7102.
They are shooting for a completion
date sometime in September or
October, depending of course on the
weather.
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40
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Bay News
Sports
Sports Shorts
Colin
Cowherd
Jim
Rome
Dan
Patrick
By Michael Elliott
AMERICA’S
“Gonna
Be
A
Showdown”- And there
was. At Mission Prep. Just
as the preceding musical
line from the Electric Light
Orchestra song states. (Um,
dating oneself here but more
on that later). MP exacted
sweet revenge on Righetti
High School by pounding
out a 58-52 victory in front
of a standing-room-only
fervent following. During warmups
an independent observer would have
sworn that the Royals were going to
get their goose cooked as Righetti
trotted out one of the most formidable
collections of prep basketball height
one could imagine! But the eye of this
beholder came to envision the beauty
with which Mission Prep dispensed of
the Warriors. The Royals’ penchant
for unselfish play on the night and
for buying into Coach Terrance
Harris’ team concept was refreshing
to observe. As Righetti keyed on
Columbia University-bound Quinton
Adlesh, his running mate at the guard
position, Brandon Jones, enacted his
own backup plan and tossed in a gritty,
team-best 19 points. A perplexing
aspect of the game was that Righetti
chose to station their three 6’4” plus
front court players up top and out on
the wings defensively. Mission was
able to break those defensive sets down
to their advantage and come away with
the important win. Good teams. Good
battle. See you both in the playoffs.
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Tark Goes Dark- Jerry Tarkanian,
college basketball’s former rebel with
a cause, who guided his University of
Nevada Las Vegas Runnin’ Rebels to the
1990 NCAA Basketball Championship,
has entered into the nether world.
Tark the Shark had a monumental
coaching career which included stints
at Long Beach State, UNLV and Fresno
State, among others. In order to get
an edge on his rivals Tarkanian would
recruit junior college malcontents and
players of dubious character and mold
them into fascinating teams prone to
full-court pressure defense and runand-gun offensive flair. They might
not have graduated, but
they sure could play ball!
Other coaches snubbed
his style, and the NCAA
infractions
committees
were
always
sniffing
around Tark’s programs
in search of wrongdoing.
They were on his case his
entire career.
He once
stated, “They’ve been my
tormentors my whole life.”
Playing baseball at Long Beach State in
the early ‘70’s afforded this columnist
the luxury of watching Tarkanian work
his on-court magic firsthand. He had a
conference record of 40-4 while at The
Beach. Our 1970-71 team took UCLA
to the brink in the NCAA Western
Regional Final before falling by a
bucket. His UNLV teams made it to
four Final Fours. Rest well coach. The
NCAA can’t touch you now.
Heaven
On
Earth- There’s
nothing quite like hanging out on the
Monterey Peninsula when the weather
is accommodating. Placid mornings
and pristine afternoons greeted the
professional and amateur golfers this
past weekend in the Monterey area as
the AT&T Pebble Beach National ProAm was contested. The weather was the
talk of the tournament as there wasn’t
a cloud in sight and nary a rippling of
the flags as Brandt Snedeker collected
his second AT&T title in three years.
One of the really cool aspects of this
tournament is the sprinkling of movie,
music and sports stars amongst the
professional golfers in order to give the
tourney a unique flair of its own. Buster
Posey, Bill Murray, Wayne Gretzky,
Huey Lewis, Ray Romano, Clay Walker
and Alex Smith were but a few of the
notables who attended. It’s a kick to
traverse the links at Pebble Beach,
watching the golfers and soaking in the
history of the event, as well as the sun.
Great getaway.
Perplexing- Isn’t it difficult to date
oneself?
And Finally- Russell: “Pete, why’d
ya call a pass play?” Pete: “Why’d ya
throw an interception?” Marshawn.
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Bay News • February 19 - March 4, 2015
Community
•
41
State Lets Transportation Monies
A
troublesome stretch of Hwy 1
will finally have the money to get
moved inland after the California
Transportation Commission allocated
$174.8 million to 85 transportation
projects statewide to repair aging roads
and bridges, alleviate traffic delays and
support job growth, the CTC announced
last week.
These allocations included nearly $19
million from the Active Transportation
Program that will go towards 50 bike
and pedestrian projects throughout
the state, though none are in San Luis
Obispo County.
“Preserving,
rebuilding
and
expanding the state’s transportation
infrastructure is key to improving the
state’s mobility for decades to come,”
said Caltrans Director, Malcolm
Dougherty. “Not only is it critical to
California’s economy, but investments
like these mean a better future for all
Californians.”
The newly allocated funding includes
$124 million from the State Highway
Operation and Protection Program for
24 projects that will preserve and protect
the state highway system. These capital
improvements include transportation
safety projects, pavement repair and
preservation work and upgrades to
bridges throughout the state.
Among the approved projects was
$20.7 million to realign 2.8 miles
of Hwy 1 from north of the Piedras
Blancas Lighthouse to the Arroyo De
La Cruz Bridge in SLO County.
“This realignment will move the
highway 475 feet inland away from
the eroding shoreline and will include
the construction of three bridges to
maintain the structural integrity of the
highway,” CTC said.
That stretch of roadway sits
precariously close to the shoreline and
during strong storms or high winds
splashes onto the roadway, flooding at
times during strong storms.
With predicted sea level rise due to
climate change, it was anticipated to
eventually be washed over on a regular
basis. Caltrans has spent millions
shoring up the roadway with rip-rap
and a seawall but the ultimate solution
has always been to move the roadway.
“At Caltrans, we have a ‘fix-it-first’
mentality, and are continually working
to ensure California’s taxpayers are
getting the most bang for their buck by
targeting dollars where they are most
effective — preventative maintenance,”
said Dougherty. “For example, every
$1 spent on preventative pavement
maintenance
saves
Californians
approximately $10 that would have
been spent on expensive pavement
repairs.”
The allocations include $27.1 million
from Proposition 1B, a transportation
bond approved by voters in 2006.
To date more than $18 billion in
Prop. 1B funds have been spent for
transportation projects. The remaining
$4.5 million in allocations came from
assorted
transportation
accounts
funded by State and Federal tax dollars.
FIND YOUR WAY WITH THE NEW FRENCH APP
French Hospital Medical Center is pleased to announce the launch of the first
hospital way-finding mobile application in San Luis Obispo County, FrenchWay
The FrenchWay app is available for free
on both iPhone and Android devices.
Dignity Health
DOWNLOAD IT TODAY BY SCANNING THE QR CODE OR
VISITING THE WEBSITE FOR YOUR RESPECTIVE DEVICE.
Android
bit.ly/dh-android
iPhone
bit.ly/dh-ios
This new app is critically designed to help patients, employees, physicians, volunteers, and the community better
navigate through our hospital facilities and connect to a network of information via one-click wifi access.
Instant directions from a
patient’s home to the hospital
Navigational tools including
an indoor GPS to guide
patients within our building
Information on French
Hospital physicians and
department services
Find one of our
expert physicians
Connection to the Patient
Portal to check appointments
and medical history
Other app
features include:
•
•
•
Up-to-date news feed
Event and
promotion alerts
Construction and
modernization
updates
This new app along with the recently installed touch screen information kiosks located throughout French
Hospital will simplify visits for guests and patients by providing them with immediate information and directions.
1911 Johnson Avenue
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
805.543.5353
www.frenchmedicalcenter.org
42
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
Endless Shades of Gray
Only Human
By Betsey Nash, SPHR
I
just thought of a great title for
a book about the exploits of
a human resources manager,
“Fifty Shades of Gray” (or, for
smaller employers I could issue a
revised version, “Under Ten Shades
of Gray”).
Just like the original, my tome
would be full of ecstasy and pain,
freedom and bondage, as it tracks
the escapades of a recent human
resources graduate drunkenly
careening into a job with a rich,
handsome, eccentric entrepreneur.
He has her sign a non-disclosure
agreement before they can work
together and she naively thinks it’s
about company trade secrets.
My version too, would be all
about
dominant/submissive
relationships. ‘Cuz isn’t that what
the workplace is all about? Heck,
the original title for the real “Shades
of Grey” trilogy was “Master of the
Universe.” Doesn’t that sound like
your boss?
This is not to say that the boss
doesn’t still need to be in charge, but
the days of a workplace built around
a dominant boss and submissive
employees are mostly a thing of the
past, felled by the realization that
collaboration between people of
complementary skills and talents
more often breeds success.
Nevertheless, I received an email
from a reader who hinted that the
old reality exists at his workplace
and he wondered what roll the HR
manager should play in it all? The
email asked if there were a rule or
law in California ensuring that HR
managers enforce the rights of the
employer and employee equally.
“It seems like some of the HR
folks out there tend to always
default to protecting the employer,
at nearly any cost, [ignoring] strong
indications the employee is not
being treated fairly,” he wrote.
This is a great question. The
simple answer is “No,” there is no
law or rule. But, as well all know,
Dining
that’s not enough of an answer. And
here comes the gray.
Employers are bound by law to
treat their employees “in good faith;”
that is, honestly, with the intention
to be fair. We in human resources
are bound by professional ethics
to be the gatekeepers of the border
between fair and unfair; to look out
for the rights of the employee as the
employer runs their business.
But how far do you go in serving
the employees before you do so at
the expense of the business? At
one end of the spectrum was my
Home Depot store manager, who
told me that my job was to keep
him out of jail, and at the other, the
employer who lets his employees
take advantage of him all day long
because he is afraid of being sued.
Rather than referee an endless
game of Us vs. Them, I see the
HR pro’s job as identifying the
employer and employees’ mutual
best interests, and to help the
employer build their relationships
and the business on them.
It cannot be news by now that
happy employees produce more
Retail
Services
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Old San Luis BBQ
BBQ
The Sports Forum
SPORTS
The Pita Pit
PITA
Smoobage
SMOOBAGE
Top Dog
TOP
Tea Berry
TEABERRY
Bliss Cafe
BLISSCAFE
Thai Thalay
THAI
SLO Good
Garden & Gifts
SLOGOOD
Willow Market
WILLOW
Apropos
Women’s Boutique
APROPOS
CC Surfboards
CCS
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Clippers
Barbershop
CLIPPERS
Froggie’s Café
FROGGIES
Chipwrecked
CHIP
The Giant Grinder
Shop
GIANT
Ecobambino
ECOBAM
The Nautical Bean
NAUTICAL
Rocky Mountain
Chocolate Factory
ROCKY
Grandmas
Yogurt & Waffle
Grandmas
visit 805loyal.com
and click on “advertise with us”
and stay longer than unhappy ones.
So it behooves an employer to do all
they can to support their employees’
pursuit of the business goals in ways
that serve the employees’ needs.
Those needs are well documented
— purpose, mastery, recognition,
growth, and to know that they are
cared about.
There are no workplace laws
regarding fairness in general,
although Lord knows, there are
plenty of laws. An employee takes
his chances that his boss is not a jerk
and that their HR manager knows
that HR’s job is more than letting
the boss do whatever he wants.
HR’s job description may include
endless shades of gray but this much
is pretty black and white.
Betsey Nash, SPHR, with more
than 20 years in the business
reminds everyone that HR is not
for weaklings. She can be reached
at: [email protected]. Only
Human is a regular feature of
Tolosa Press.
Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
43
What’s the Mystery to Innovation?
Bottom Line
By Michael Gunther
I
had the fortunate opportunity to
visit Apple’s headquarters last
month with a group of 40 business
leaders through a trip planned by our
local chamber of commerce.
I must admit I have been late to the
game in reference to being an Apple
convert. It wasn’t until I got my first
iPhone about four years ago that I
quickly became a loyal fan leading
to both iPad and Mac Air laptop
acquisitions.
Is it Apple’s “cool”
product design/image
age
that I am attracted
to or the easy user
interfaces
that
has transformed
how
I
use
technology in
my personal and
professional
life?
This trip to
Apple
actually
provided me a
whole new level of
appreciation for thee
gn
innovation,
design
of
and
“coolness”
their products and how an intentional
focus on innovation has transformed
their culture, making Apple the most
successful firm in history.
As many of you know, Apple Founder,
Steve Jobs, was about challenging
the status quo with a goal of using
technology to give people access
to information and tools to foster
innovation as well as creativity.
This innovation philosophy was
evident as each speaker told about
their experience working at Apple,
while they shared their
inner workings of their
respect
respective
areas of
respons
responsibility.
The
consistent
thread tthroughout the
day was the belief
that only when
one can truly
understand
the issues or
challenges you
ar
are
attempting
to resolve can you
eve change the
ever
st
status
quo with
innovation.
Apple has
integrated
a relentless
learning
philosophy
within
its
cu
culture,
ranging
Need Support for DEPRESSION?
You’re Welcome Here...
from studying historical references of
individuals that challenged the status
quo to questioning the foundation of
your current knowledge, assumptions
and beliefs.
The company’s credence is through
understanding that you can challenge,
which then leads to innovation. Even the
organizational structure is innovative
and goes against the traditional
model. Many in the academic realm
are scratching their heads on how
Apple’s unorthodox model can work.
It does work, because of the pervasive,
intentional focus on the user experience
and innovation.
This experience had me wondering
if innovation can just be a project or
process? It needs to be part of the
culture and everything within the
organization aids the drive to innovate.
Imagine if everyone on your team was
focused on innovation. At the same time,
the culture of your organization helped
support the successes and failures
that came from their new innovative
ideas. The intent would be to improve
processes, products or customer
experiences with a focus on knowledge
disruption, while challenging the status
quo with the underlining belief. There
is a better way.
11245 Los Osos Valley Rd, San Luis Obispo
Call Tyler Szablowski at 540-4111
This is another article in a series on
Michael Gunther’s entrepreneurial
story and how being raised in a large
family and his belief in creating a
growth company with a work-to-live
mentality has influenced his career. To
read the previous articles in this series,
see his blog at: www.Collaboration-llc.
com.
Michael Gunther is founder and
president of Collaboration, LLC,
a team of highly skilled business
professionals who are dedicated to
assisting proactive business owners to
build profitable, sustainable businesses
through results-oriented education
and consulting services. Learn more
at:
www.Collaboration-llc.com.
Michael Gunther’s column is a regular
feature of The Bay News.
Bottom Line
Challenge the status quo within your
business both internally and externally.
Innovation takes more than a great
Thursdays at 7 pm
idea or invention. It takes discipline,
constant evaluation of what you know
to be true, healthy debate and, most
importantly, implementation.
On a side note: We had the
opportunity to visit the new, Apple
Campus 2, which is opening in the Fall
of 2016. All I can say is the innovation
in design of Apple’s new headquarters
will certainly go down in history as one
that challenges the status quo.
44
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Bay News
A
mnesty from penalties for past-due
Morro Bay business license taxes
expires on March 13 — just over
three short weeks away. That means an
entity that has been conducting business
in Morro Bay for the past four years
without a business license has only three
weeks to “get healthy” and save what
could easily be over $500 in penalties.
Amnesty and Low-Cost Licenses
Morro Bay is in the early stages of
a 3-year compliance audit of business
licenses. Last October, the City Council
enacted two ordinances to mitigate the
initial effect of the audit.
One mitigation approved a limitedtime suspension of the 100-percent
penalty (after 10 months) Morro Bay
charges for failure to pay business license
taxes. The City has already refunded over
$30,000 of penalties previously collected
and has processed over 200 amnesty
applications, saving delinquent taxpayers
around $40,000.
After the amnesty period ends on
March 13, businesses will be liable for all
back taxes, plus penalties.
Business License Amnesty Nearing End
A View From Harbor Street
By David Buckingham, Morro Bay City Manager
We strongly urge anyone who believes
they may have conducted business in
Morro Bay in the past four years —
without a business license — to take
advantage of this limited-time amnesty.
As a further benefit to those hardest
hit, the other mitigation the City Council
enacted reduced the cost of a business
license for “low-revenue businesses.” Any
business that demonstrates gross receipts
of under $12,000 a year is eligible for a
license that is about $100 less than the
full-rate business license tax.
We are hopeful this will further
encourage all entities conducting
business in Morro Bay to come in and
“get healthy.”
Who Needs a Business License?
The City and local business community
are working together to refine our
business license codes to be as clear
and simple as possible and we expect
the changes to be enacted this summer.
In the meantime, who needs a business
license in Morro Bay under our current
code?
Like almost all other cities, any entity
conducting business in Morro Bay
requires a valid license — and “conducting
business” is a very, very broad term.
While most “brick and mortar” stores are
aware they must have a business license,
as do licensed contractors, here are a few
categories of folks who may not be aware
they require a full business license, and
who should come in to City Hall ASAP to
ensure they qualify for the amnesty:
• Real Estate Brokers and Agents. Any
broker or agent, whether their office is in
Morro Bay, SLO, Pismo or Fresno, who
sells or offers for sale, or buys or offers
to buy, any real estate in Morro Bay must
have a current year business license at the
time of the offer or transaction.
This includes leases and rentals and is
consistent with every other city in SLO
County.
• Independent Contractors. Any
independent contractor, even if he or
she works under the roof of an otherwise
licensed business, requires a full business
license.
This specifically applies to barbers, hair
stylists, massage therapists, manicurists,
tattoo artists, fitness instructors and
teachers of classes. This requirement is
also consistent with other cities in SLO
County.
While this is one area that may be
modified in the future, our current code
requires all independent contractors
to have a current business license and
any unlicensed independent contractors
should come to City Hall now to get
a current license before the amnesty
expires.
The City of Morro Bay is working hard
to get this information out and to help
all businesses understand and comply
with our code. There is excellent, easy-toread information at the Business License
Update link under Hot Topics on the City
website home page, see: www.morro-bay.
ca.us.
And we encourage all entities that may
have conducted business in Morro Bay
in the past four years to read the two
important documents at that link. Those
documents, and individual service, are
available at City Hall.
Please visit us at 595 Harbor St.; send
an email to: [email protected];
or call Jamie Boucher at 772-6294.
David Buckingham is the Morro Bay
city manager. A View from Harbor Street
is a regular feature of The Bay News.
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Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
45
Doctor in Your House
Story by Gareth Kelly
Photos courtesy Pre – R
W
ay back in the good old
days, things were very
different. If Maribel got
kicked by the family cow when she
was milking it or little Tommy fell
out of a tree while playing, chances
were you would call or summon
someone not too dissimilar from
Dr. Quinn Medicine woman, who
would appear at your home and,
using her black doctor’s bag, would
fix, heal and mend all sorts of
medical ailments right there in the
comfort of your own home.
How things have changed. I’m
sure many of us would love Jane
Seymour to come and nurse us back
to health, however, unless having a
heart attack or profuse bleeding,
most of us get ourselves or our
loved ones to the ER, our primary
care physician or a Med Stop, where
we fork over thousands of dollars or
use our insurance to be told to take
some ibuprofen.
Luckily, a new service has
appeared on the streets of San
Luis Obispo that harkens back
to those good old days. Dr. Sam
Slishman and his wife, Vanessa,
recently started what they describe
as “a social experiment,” with their
new business venture “Pre – R,” a
medical house-calls service.
“I am board certified in emergency
medicine and work part time at
Sierra Vista as well as having worked
in ERs in Mexico and throughput the
United States,” said Dr. Sam. “Years
ago I started to think that perhaps
I could provide medical services
for a small, sliver of the existing
industry.
Not
every
problem
really needs to
come into the ER
and many times
people, especially
with
children
or the elderly,
struggle to find
the time to come
to the ER.
“With Pre –
R, I can start
by talking to a
patient over the
phone to see if
I can help. If I
can’t
diagnose
the problem over
the phone then I
can make a house
call,”
There are many places people can
go to for medical help these days.
From Web MD to health concierge
services and local free clinics, but
Dr. Sam has a different outlook
than what they offer.
“We are not a membership based
concierge service nor do we take
insurance,” he said. “We are simply
offering a more flexible service
designed to help those with non life
threatening problems that perhaps
are scared to go to the ER or don’t
have insurance. We have no set fees.
After we’ve diagnosed you, helped
you and when you’re feeling better,
then we can discuss payment. All we
ask is that you pay what you think
your treatment was worth; we won’t
be sending round any collections
guys and we are confident we can
beat most deductibles.”
With tele-medicine hours from 5
p.m. to 7 p.m. daily either over the
phone or via Skype, Dr.
Slishman believes he can
fill a gap in the market and
help many people from all
walks of life.
“Sometimes
a
new
mom will be wondering
how much medicine to give her
new baby, or maybe a girlfriend is
concerned her college boyfriend
may have alcohol poisoning,” he
said. “These are the types of simple
things I can be called for that doesn’t
always require a trip to the ER. In
an ER I have numerous patients all
wanting attention. With Pre – R, I
can focus on the one patient in the
comfort of his or her own home. I
can’t fix everything and can’t do
things like x-rays but I believe I can
save people time and money if they
can be helped at home.”
Having just launched on Feb.
1, Pre – R will be hosting an open
house from 6-8 p.m. Thursday, Feb.
19 at 387 Lincoln St., in San Luis
Obispo. Currently, they are focusing
on the City of SLO but should the
venture grow, they hope to expand.
To find out more about all their
services and perhaps save yourself
a costly trip to the ER, visit them
online at: www.pre-r.com or call
(570) 507- 7737.
Good medical makes for good
daredevils. Do you have a devilishly
daring business? Gareth would
love to hear about it so email him
at: [email protected].
46
•
February 19 - March 4, 2015 • Tolosa Press
We’re Your
LARGE DIAMOND Specialists...
Biz Briefs
Business News and Announcements
Compiled by Camas Frank
We Buy GOLD
and DIAMONDS...
We Do EVERYTHING JEWELRY....
We Also Carry PREMIUM CANES...
Student accountants with the
Education and Outreach Committee
for the Low Income Taxpayer
Clinic at Cal Poly are offering free
representation for low-income
taxpayers involved in disputes with
the IRS and California Franchise
Tax Board. They handle disputes,
such as bank account levies, or
guidance as to the meaning of tax
notices from the IRS. They will also
provide educational resources on
the rights and responsibilities of
U.S. taxpayers. The program is a
resource for current and past clients
and they can be reached at (877)
318-6772.
So You Can Walk in STYLE.
IT’S NOT CHIC TO PAY MORE!–J.P.
805.473.1360
857 Oak Park Blvd, Pismo Beach
Pismo
Beach
Chamber
of
Commerce ambassadors and staff
welcomed a new member, DG
Adventures, located on Pike Lane
in Oceano, with a ribbon cutting in
January. DG offers three-wheeled
“CAN-AM Spyders,” motorcycles,
marketed as an exciting way to
Human Resources Association of the Central Coast
discover the Central Coast. CoCo’s
Restaurant was also welcomed with
a ribbon cutting in January, located
on 5-Cities Drive in
Pismo Beach they’re
open from 7 a.m.
daily for breakfast,
lunch, and dinner.
Prices Are Born Here
And Raised Elsewhere
The Gold Concept Jewelry and Design
recently donated over $1,000
The
SLO
Wine
Country
Association
will
be celebrating its
25th
anniversary
this year, with “Roll
Out The Barrels,”
a month-long set
of adventures at
various
wineries
throughout April.
“This is a time to
not only celebrate
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our roots, but also to change things
up and build upon our momentum
as an up-and-coming wine region,”
said Heather Muran, executive
director of SLO Wine Country.
Roll Out The Barrels runs from the
week of April 1 through May 3. The
entire month will offer a variety of
wine-themed activities with weekly
themes such as, “Taste The Coast,”
“Farm to Fork” and “Sustainability
& Heritage.” See: www.slowine.com
for event information and tickets.
Each month, the Human
Resources Association of the
Central Coast holds professional
development meetings to discuss
labor relations, legislation, cutting
edge strategic planning options,
and employer resources. To start off
2015, they’ve selected a new board
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Tolosa Press • February 19 - March 4, 2015
•
47
MZR Fitness in SLO celebrated its
5-year anniversary Jan. 18. Over the
years, MZR Fitness has maintained
a retention rate of 92 percent, while
seeing a steady annual growth rate
of over 60%. Located in the Pacific
Coast Center in SLO (intersection
of Higuera Street and Madonna
Road) recently expanded by
1,200 square feet. They will host
a belated anniversary party from
10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, March
14 featuring music, food, raffles, a
slide show, and a speech from Mike
Z. Robinson (the boss). For more
information, call 543-9800 or see:
www.mzrfitness.com.
of directors. Pictured are: secretary
Shannon Sarver, PHR; vice
president communications Kim
Whittington, PHR; VP community
outreach Rhonda Hunter; VP
community
outreach
Louise
Matheny, SPHR; VP operations
Donna Moon, PHR; hospitality
chairman Thomas Wood; VP
professional development Sara
Kennedy; treasurer David K.
Mulder; president Erica A. Stewart,
PHR; membership chairwoman
Lisa Elliott; and not pictured,
reservations chairwoman Gail
Kissinger. See: www.hrcentralcoast.
org for information.
DG Adventures, located on Pike Lane in Oceano
Coast Hills, a not-for-profit credit
union with 58,000 members, has
announced a roster of promotions
and
reassignments.
Rob
Covarrubias has been promoted
to vice president of commercial
lending. He has been with Coast
Hills for three years, and was
previously assistant VP of business
services. Kevin Johns has been
promoted to VP of retail sales. He
was regional manager for Coast
Hills’ Paso Robles, Atascadero,
San Luis Obispo and Five Cities
branches. Ryun McCrory is the
new Coast Hills Atascadero branch
manager. James Thomas, former
vice president/branch manager
for Union Bank and Santa Barbara
Bank and Trust, is now manager
at the Coast Hills Santa Maria and
Nipomo branches. Rebecca Alarcio,
long-time director of public affairs
at Allan Hancock College, has
been hired as the credit union’s
community foundation director.
organization based in SLO that
annually places over 1,000 dogs
and cats. See: www.woodshumane.
org for information.
The Woods Humane Society
Board of Directors announced that
Jill Tucker will join the organization
as its new executive director on Feb.
16. Board President Lenny Jones
said, “We did a national search
and had dozens of highly qualified
candidates from all over the
country. But in the end it turned out
our top candidate and unanimous
first choice was right in our own
backyard.” Tucker comes to Woods
Humane Society from Santa Maria
where she has been executive
director of the Santa Maria Valley
Humane Society since 2009. Woods
is an animal sheltering and welfare
The Community Foundation San
Luis Obispo County is accepting
nominations for the 2014 Paul
Wolff
Accessibility
Advocacy
Awards. Every year, individuals,
organizations,
and
businesses
are considered for the award
based on their contributions
toward “breaking down physical,
attitudinal,
and
informational
barriers for those with disabilities.”
Nomination forms are available
online at: www.cfsloco.org. The
deadline for nominations is 5 p.m.
March 31. For more information see
the website or call 543-2323
Dining
Retail
Services
LOYALTY SHOULD BE REWARDED
Text In To Receive Amazing Rewards From Your Favorite Local Brands Listed Below!
Text The RED Key Word To 56955 Or Visit 805Loyal.Com
Old San Luis BBQ
BBQ
The Sports Forum
SPORTS
The Pita Pit
PITA
Smoobage
SMOOBAGE
Top Dog
TOP
Tea Berry
TEABERRY
Bliss Cafe
BLISSCAFE
Thai Thalay
THAI
SLO Good
Garden & Gifts
SLOGOOD
Willow Market
WILLOW
Apropos
Women’s Boutique
APROPOS
CC Surfboards
CCS
BECOME A CUSTOMER OF 805 LOYAL
Clippers
Barbershop
CLIPPERS
Froggie’s Café
FROGGIES
Chipwrecked
CHIP
The Giant Grinder
Shop
GIANT
Ecobambino
ECOBAM
The Nautical Bean
NAUTICAL
Rocky Mountain
Chocolate Factory
ROCKY
Grandmas
Yogurt & Waffle
Grandmas
visit 805loyal.com
and click on “advertise with us”
The Gold Concept Jewelry and
Design recently donated over
$1,000 to Court Appointed Special
Advocates (CASA) of San Luis
Obispo County. Owners Aaron
and Devin Gomez partnered with
jewelry company, Estenza, to give a
percentage of every Estenza purchase
to CASA. The Gold Concept’s aim is
to provide beautiful jewelry through
sustainable business practices.
They’ve supported CASA for
years by designing and donating
jewelry for CASA fundraisers. In
the photograph, CASA Grants
Coordinator Susan Graves presents
store owner, Aaron Gomez, with a
Certificate of Appreciation.
Send biz briefs for consideration
to: [email protected].
WINTER HOME SA LE
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FEBRUARY 25TH
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