Fillmore Reads is a community book club sponsored by Soroptimists International of Fillmore and Fillmore Friends of the Library. Community members are welcome to meet at the Fillmore Library, 502 Second Street. They normally meet the last Thursday of the month at 6 pm. Their selected title for January was Floodpath –The Deadliest Man-made Disaster of the 20th Century America and the Making of Modern Los Angeles by Jon Wilkman. Mr.Wilkman will be giving a presentation and book signing in honor of the Fillmore 90th Anniversary Commemoration of the St. Francis Dam Disaster on March 17, 2018 from 10:00 am – 11:00 am at the Fillmore City Hall. For more information regarding the book club, please contact Cathy Krushell at 524 - 3355.
Fillmore Reads is a community book club sponsored by Soroptimists International of Fillmore and Fillmore Friends of the Library. Community members are welcome to meet at the Fillmore Library, 502 Second Street. They normally meet the last Thursday of the month at 6 pm. Their selected title for January was Floodpath –The Deadliest Man-made Disaster of the 20th Century America and the Making of Modern Los Angeles by Jon Wilkman. Mr.Wilkman will be giving a presentation and book signing in honor of the Fillmore 90th Anniversary Commemoration of the St. Francis Dam Disaster on March 17, 2018 from 10:00 am – 11:00 am at the Fillmore City Hall. For more information regarding the book club, please contact Cathy Krushell at 524 - 3355.
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(l-r) Rotary Club members Jerry Peterson and Ari Larson with Sue Zeider and Martha Gentry. Sue and Martha will be speaking at the St. Francis Dam 90th Anniversary this coming March. Photo courtesy Ari Larson.
(l-r) Rotary Club members Jerry Peterson and Ari Larson with Sue Zeider and Martha Gentry. Sue and Martha will be speaking at the St. Francis Dam 90th Anniversary this coming March. Photo courtesy Ari Larson.
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Martha Gentry and Sue Zeider from the Fillmore Historical Museum gave a presentation to the Rotary Club of Fillmore on the upcoming 90th Anniversary of the St. Francis Dam Disaster. They invite the public to attend the commemoration in Fillmore on Sat. March 17th. An opening ceremony and dedication of a plaque will start the day at 9:00 am in front of Fillmore City Hall. There will be a guided bus tour to the site of where the dam was located, leaving from Fillmore at 12:30 pm and return at 5:30 pm. Speaker Jon Wilkman, author of Floodpath: The Deadliest Man-Made Disaster of the 20th Century and the Making of Modern Los Angeles will be speaking at 10:00 am. Exhibits will be on display at the Fillmore Historical Museum. Seating is limited on the bus tour so the public is encouraged to RSVP ($30 per person) as soon as possible. For tickets call The Fillmore Historical Museum 805.524.0948 or for information on other commemoration activities in the Santa Clara River Valley, go to www.saintfrancisdam.com

 


 

Fillmore Wellness Center is Scheduled to Re-Open newly branded as "ReGEN Yoga and Movement Studio" on February 3rd from 1pm - 5pm. They will be hosting an open house for the community to see the facility, meet the instructors, and will offer sign ups for memberships if interested. We have over 25 classes schedule per week with several free classes. First class is complimentary! Visit their website fro more information regenyoga.com

 
Fillmore Rotary Club President Dave Warham (left) presented Fillmore Building Inspector Michael Koroknay with a Rotary mug after his presentation about the Earthquake Brace & Bolt program. He discussed home foundations and what could happen during an earthquake. He informed the Club that homeowners can receive up to $3,000 toward an earthquake retrofit. The program is Earthquake Brace & Bolt and the timeline to apply is January 23-Feburay 23, 2018. Photo courtesy Martha Richardson.
Fillmore Rotary Club President Dave Warham (left) presented Fillmore Building Inspector Michael Koroknay with a Rotary mug after his presentation about the Earthquake Brace & Bolt program. He discussed home foundations and what could happen during an earthquake. He informed the Club that homeowners can receive up to $3,000 toward an earthquake retrofit. The program is Earthquake Brace & Bolt and the timeline to apply is January 23-Feburay 23, 2018. Photo courtesy Martha Richardson.
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Above is a view of the Sespe Creek looking from Grand Avenue after a full night of rainfall from this past week’s storm.
Above is a view of the Sespe Creek looking from Grand Avenue after a full night of rainfall from this past week’s storm.
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Pictured (l-r) are Fillmore Rotary Club members Martha Richardson, Ari Larson, and Cindy Blatt who were in charge of decorating this year’s Rotary Christmas Tree on Central Avenue. Photo courtesy Martha Richardson.
Pictured (l-r) are Fillmore Rotary Club members Martha Richardson, Ari Larson, and Cindy Blatt who were in charge of decorating this year’s Rotary Christmas Tree on Central Avenue. Photo courtesy Martha Richardson.
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On Thursday, December 21st carolers from the Fillmore Boys and Girls Club stopped by the Fillmore Gazette and sang some Christmas Carols to the staff. The group walked up and down the main streets of Fillmore visiting local businesses and singing Christmas Carols to spread the Christmas spirit.
On Thursday, December 21st carolers from the Fillmore Boys and Girls Club stopped by the Fillmore Gazette and sang some Christmas Carols to the staff. The group walked up and down the main streets of Fillmore visiting local businesses and singing Christmas Carols to spread the Christmas spirit.
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Thanks to the mini grant we received from the 100 Women who care about Ventura County, the Santa Clara Valley was able to donate 8 blankets and handmade quilts to seniors attending the event! Attendees had a lot of fun listening to the music of the
Thanks to the mini grant we received from the 100 Women who care about Ventura County, the Santa Clara Valley was able to donate 8 blankets and handmade quilts to seniors attending the event! Attendees had a lot of fun listening to the music of the "Unkle Monkey" band and enjoying delicious tamales, rice, beans, salad and desert! In attendance from the Santa Clara Valley Hospice was Martha Navarrete, Director, Ari Larson, Board Member from Fillmore, and Case Worker Ramona Golson also resident of Fillmore. Marie(please check name), Manager of the Senior programs was very grateful for the blankets and for their assistance conducting the raffles of tens bags containing food and other wonderful gifts. Photos taken by Martha A. Navarrete.
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Lisa Mahony won first place for her entry “The First Time.”
Lisa Mahony won first place for her entry “The First Time.”
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Tom Sommers, who also won, placed first place for “Nude Blank Document,” second place for “A Cold Beach Cascade,” and honorable mention for “News of Harold’s Passing.”
Tom Sommers, who also won, placed first place for “Nude Blank Document,” second place for “A Cold Beach Cascade,” and honorable mention for “News of Harold’s Passing.”
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The First Time Poetry Contest, sponsored by the Ventura County Arts Council and the Fillmore Library, is pleased to announce two first place winners! Congratulations to Lisa Mahony for her entry, The First Time. Congratulations to Tom Sommers who won in three categories. He received first place for Nude Blank Document, second place for A Cold Beach Cascade, and honorable mention for News of Harold’s Passing. Samantha Mostad also received an honorable mention for her poem, King of the Night. There was a good response from the community of Fillmore. The judges were impressed with the quality of writing submitted.
The winners have been invited to read their works at a special poetry event to be held in January at the E.P. Foster Library in Ventura.

 
Recovery services ongoing for families who lost homes due to Thomas Fire

In conjunction with in Ventura County, the American Red Cross intends to close the evacuation shelter at the Ventura Fairgrounds Friday, Dec. 22 at 3:00 p.m.

The shelter opened on Dec. 4 for residents who were evacuating the Thomas Fire. Red Cross workers will continue assisting those affected by the fire. The Red Cross opens and closes shelters at the request of local officials.

The Red Cross plays a critical role in helping families and communities get back on their feet in the weeks and months after a disaster. Trained Red Cross caseworkers connect one-on-one with people to help them navigate what often can be a confusing, complicated and time-consuming world of disaster recovery.

All American Red Cross disaster assistance is provided free of charge and is made possible by the voluntary donations of time and money from caring individuals and corporate partners.

HOW TO GET HELP
The Red Cross has a Client Assistance Center open in Ventura for anyone who has suffered damage due to the wildfires. The Client Assistance Center is located inside the Ventura County Credit Union at 6026 Telephone Dr., Ventura from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. The facility will be closed Dec. 24 and 25 and will reopen Tuesday, Dec. 26. A pop-up Client Assistance Center will be open Friday, Dec. 22 at the Ojai Public Library located at 111 E Ojai Ave, Ojai, CA from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

Red Cross workers will be conducting client casework and distributing cleaning supplies. Residents seeking assistance are asked to bring proof of residency, and if possible, a photo ID. It is not mandatory, but it will help speed up the process.

For more information, contact the Red Cross client casework line at (512) 745-2920.

HOW TO HELP
You can help people affected by disasters such as floods, fires, tornadoes and hurricanes by making a donation to support American Red Cross Disaster Relief. For more information, visit redcross.org/donate.

HOW TO VOLUNTEER
Regardless of where disaster strikes, the local Red Cross is already in place, ready to
respond immediately. Aid is routed and distributed by local Red Cross volunteers with
intimate knowledge of the area and needs. Learn more about becoming a Red Cross volunteer or sign up today at redcross.org/volunteer.

About the American Red Cross:
The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies about 40 percent of the nation's blood; teaches skills that save lives; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a not-for-profit organization that depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information, please visit redcross.org or cruzrojaamericana.org, or visit us on Twitter at @RedCross.

 

After serving for two weeks as a one-stop center for fire recovery information and assistance, the Local Assistance Center that was jointly run by the County and the City of Ventura will close its doors on Saturday, Dec. 23, at 5 p.m. Residents still seeking services are encouraged to visit the Center by Saturday, or may obtain services after Saturday at existing local County and City offices.

The County of Ventura and the City of Ventura opened the Center on Dec. 13 at the Poinsettia Pavilion in Ventura to assist residents from all areas affected by the Thomas Fire. It has been staffed by a wide array of County, City, State and Federal agencies, as well as a number of non-profit organizations.

“The Local Assistance Center, which has helped 1,968 households to date, has served as a great example of how County and City government can work together to aid our residents across jurisdictions,” said County Executive Officer Mike Powers.

Residents have used the Local Assistance Center to start their recovery from the fire. Information is available on debris removal, permits, housing, rental assistance, vital records, property assessments, public assistance, crisis intervention and stress management, and even services such as replacing driver’s licenses. Health care resources are available on site to provide assistance, education, and connections to other health services in the community.

“The assistance center provided a very useful service as the County and the City and our partners responded to the substantial needs of our community and those most directly affected. While the use of the center has decreased significantly over the last few days, the City will continue to offer a full array of direct services and assistance to folks at City Hall. Those that still need help can contact us at City Hall or come to City Hall where we have a fire related service counter established”, said Dan Paranick, Assistant Ventura City Manager.

The Local Assistance Center will remain open on Thursday, December 21st and Friday, December 22nd 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., and on Saturday, December 23rd, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The County has also opened Recovery Information Center trailers in Ojai and Santa Paula which will operate from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. until Friday, Dec. 22. These two locations offer debris removal and permitting information, public assistance and housing/rental assistance, and connections to Health education, resources and counseling.

“We can continue to serve people effectively and efficiently through our regular channels,” said Barry Zimmerman, Director of the County Human Services Agency, which oversees the Center. Contact information for agencies that have been present at the Local Assistance Center is attached.

To further aid fire victims, Ventura County Recovers (venturacountyrecovers.org) continues to offer a registration feature that allows residents to register their contact information to receive information on specific topics. They can also register the address of their damaged or destroyed property so that officials can proactively provide them with information and official notices related to the rebuilding process.

 
Lisa Hammond (left) and a friend were seen on Central Avenue decorating one of the many Christmas trees that lined Central Avenue downtown. Each tree is decorated in it’s own way to represent the club or organization. These ladies were decorating their tree for the Fillmore Citizens Patrol.
Lisa Hammond (left) and a friend were seen on Central Avenue decorating one of the many Christmas trees that lined Central Avenue downtown. Each tree is decorated in it’s own way to represent the club or organization. These ladies were decorating their tree for the Fillmore Citizens Patrol.
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Fillmore Assistant Fire Chief Bill Herrera standing with Jane David who dropped off toys that the International Soroptimist of Fillmore collected from their Annual Fashion Show, Saturday, December 9th. Read more in Letters to the Editor on page 2. Photo courtesy Fillmore Soroptimist Club. Photo courtesy Jane David.
Fillmore Assistant Fire Chief Bill Herrera standing with Jane David who dropped off toys that the International Soroptimist of Fillmore collected from their Annual Fashion Show, Saturday, December 9th. Read more in Letters to the Editor on page 2. Photo courtesy Fillmore Soroptimist Club. Photo courtesy Jane David.
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Written By Heather Furness, Grade 4, Gazette Cub Reporter

Merry Christmas everyone! I hope you’re ready for Christmas because it’s one week away!

If you feel you don’t have enough decorations, follow these D.I.Y. steps in order.

1. Get brown, red, white, black, and pink paper.

2. Cut the brown paper to get a round head (It can be an oval, too.)

3. Cut the red paper into a small circle and glue it to the middle of the brown circle.

4. Cut the white paper the same size as the red circle. (Cut two white circles.)

5. Cut the black paper that’s a smaller circle then the white circles. (Two circles for black, too.)

6. Glue the white circles on the head and glue the black circles on the white circles.

7. Cut little ovals for the ears and the same for pink but smaller.

8. Glue the brown ears to the head and the pink inside the ears.

If you followed these steps, you should’ve gotten a Rudolph! Anyways, hopefully you have a Merry Christmas with your friends and family!

 

I OD’ed over the weekend. But not on the usual pharmaceutical or distilled devices. And not on eggnog, or marshmallow Santa’s or snowman cookies—yet. No, I overdosed on Hallmark Christmas movies. This wasn’t an accidental overdose; I planned it, with weeks of pre-recording maneuvers.

I watched approximately 30 movies, good, bad, ugly and uglier. For comparison I threw in a few Hallmark-wannabes on Lifetime. But Hallmark has the secret formula for success, which I am about to bore you with. Here it is…

*Every female wears bright red lipstick and is underfed. They also have large teeth, think Men In Black.

*Often featured are two college sweethearts who were madly in love until one decided to leave town for a career opportunity and promised to come back in six months to a year but never did. The end. This promise is always made in the airport with TSA officers nowhere in sight. One of them could scream BOMB and they would still be able to board.

*Ten Years Later—that’s usually when they meet up again, past their prime and bitter, and feigning indifference when they—surprise!—reunite over a project they are forced to work on together. There’s a lot of stuttering and huffing followed by long-glances.

*Nobody seems able to clear up a simple misunderstanding immediately. They all go mute, unless one is leaving and the plane is just about to take off, then they won’t shut up.

*They can’t sleep and make cookies at 2am.

*Unemployment must be unusually high in Hallmarkland. People are always heading for job interviews when they run into, literally, a stranger who spills hot cocoa on them. There is a connection between stained clothing and love.

*Speaking of hot cocoa, everyone drinks it with homemade marshmallows and whipped cream, stirred with a candy cane in their favorite Christmas mug that their father/mother/Aunt Mary gave them moments before they died. They probably choked on a marshmallow. I can’t figure out why they are so picky about their hot cocoa—these are the same people who eat takeout Thai for Christmas dinner because their dog died on Christmas Day 28 years earlier and they are still pissed at the world.

*They are always ambushing each other with snowball fights. It’s a little unnerving.

*Sometimes they are single parents. They use their children as an emotional shield. “I’m just worried about little Tommy getting hurt.” If there’s a sidekick nearby they will respond, “Just Tommy?” Fade to commercial.

*All children with single parents are ticklish. This has a bit of a sadistic feel to it, like the snowballs.

*Grown men don’t seem to mind playing Twister or making gingerbread houses with an 8-year old they met just two days earlier after running into mom and spilling hot cocoa on her white blouse while she was on her way to a job interview.

*Snowflakes are miracles, magical and an excuse to kiss. But… the kiss is always interrupted by the 8-year old kid. The only thing that interrupts the moment more than a kid is a cellphone. Turn the damn thing off!

*Every woman is named Holly, Merry, Laurel, Ginger or Poppy. Evidently there was a blackout nine months before they were all born in December.

*There is Mistletoe everywhere but the bathroom.

*The women are clumsy. They fall off ladders a lot while placing their grandmother’s angel on top of the Christmas tree they hated half an hour earlier. The ex who ran off 10 years ago catches them, under the mistletoe, and the cell phone rings. Then they drink hot cocoa.

*The special 108-year old Christmas ornament Grandpa saved from the Nazis always gets broken. This too seems to spark romance.

And there you have 60-plus hours of wasted time compressed into one simple article. Now that I have fulfilled my Hallmark Christmas movie binge, I am going to detox with Law & Order.

 
Bob Crum, our local photographer, presented the program last week. He began his photography career in the Air Force and later became a photo journalist for a magazine in Florida. He does all his own printing and feels he can control the look he wants in each photo. His passion is landscape photography and his pictures certainly reveal that. Photo courtesy Martha Richardson.
Bob Crum, our local photographer, presented the program last week. He began his photography career in the Air Force and later became a photo journalist for a magazine in Florida. He does all his own printing and feels he can control the look he wants in each photo. His passion is landscape photography and his pictures certainly reveal that. Photo courtesy Martha Richardson.
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Alicia Hicks and Cindy Blatt presented a new Rotary Literacy project called “Josh The Otter.” It is a water safety program which will be presented to Preschoolers and Kindergarteners. Photo Courtesy Martha Richardson.
Alicia Hicks and Cindy Blatt presented a new Rotary Literacy project called “Josh The Otter.” It is a water safety program which will be presented to Preschoolers and Kindergarteners. Photo Courtesy Martha Richardson.
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The Santa Clara Valley Hospice as they accept their $4,500 donation towards their 100 Women’s group. From left to right, Ari Larson, Barbara Vogel, Michele Morony, Martha A. Navarrete, Rachel Bustillos, Joan Toston, Jeanice Lambert, Bob Russell and Melissa Mabry. Photo courtesy Santa Clara Valley Hospice.
The Santa Clara Valley Hospice as they accept their $4,500 donation towards their 100 Women’s group. From left to right, Ari Larson, Barbara Vogel, Michele Morony, Martha A. Navarrete, Rachel Bustillos, Joan Toston, Jeanice Lambert, Bob Russell and Melissa Mabry. Photo courtesy Santa Clara Valley Hospice.
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The Santa Clara Valley Hospice / Home Support Group is grateful to be the recipient of $4,500 donation from 100 Women who care about Ventura County.

Checks and cash totaling $4,500 were presented to President Rachel Bustillos and other Board Members by Michele Morony and Melissa Mabry representing the generous group.

The 100 Women’s group was founded to meet unmet needs in Ventura County communities through the work of valuable nonprofit organizations. The grant comes in a timely manner considering the state of our community due to the fires. Santa Clara Valley Hospice received and made many phone calls to seniors to verify their safety and well being. The Board of Directors will use these funds to stock their supplies of 4 wheel walkers, wheelchairs, and other medical supplies to better serve the community. “This donation will give the agency a good start for 2018”, said Martha Navarrete, Director.

Rachel Bustillos, Board President, stated “We are so fortunate being in the conditions that our community is due to the fire that these ladies thought about our seniors. We are thankful for their generosity. We take pride that our organization gives 100% of what we receive back to people in the communities we serve”.

Michele Morony stated, “We are grateful to partner with the Santa Clara Valley Hospice and for the invaluable work they do”.

The SCV Hospice is a community volunteer nonmedical hospice serving the communities of Saticoy, Somis, Santa Paula, Fillmore, and Piru. If you have any questions about the services or to make a donation, call 805.525.1333. They are a 501(c) 3 nonprofit organization and all donations received are tax deductible.

 
On Thursday, November 30th as part of Union Bank’s Investment in the community, they presented Presley McLain with a check for $1,000 in support of the Fillmore/Piru Relay for Life. Presley McLain was selected from nominations all over the state as the 2016 California Division Statewide Recognizing Excellence Special Recognition Youth Engagement Recipient. Pictured (l-r) Francisco Pesantez, Sandra Ambriz, Berta Vassaur, Presley McLain, Brian Gilpatrick, and Noco Vargas.
On Thursday, November 30th as part of Union Bank’s Investment in the community, they presented Presley McLain with a check for $1,000 in support of the Fillmore/Piru Relay for Life. Presley McLain was selected from nominations all over the state as the 2016 California Division Statewide Recognizing Excellence Special Recognition Youth Engagement Recipient. Pictured (l-r) Francisco Pesantez, Sandra Ambriz, Berta Vassaur, Presley McLain, Brian Gilpatrick, and Noco Vargas.
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