By Jean McLeod — Wednesday, February 4th, 2015
The February 3, 2015 Fillmore Unified School District (FUSD) Board Meeting began with two Recognition of Achievement Awards presented to the Sheriff's Department Fillmore Explorers and to those participating in the River Restoration Project. There were also two agenda items and an emergency item. FUSD continues to move forward with upgrading its infrastructure. One important upgrade with a huge price tag is Internet Technology (IT) which also includes wireless access. Eric Tilton founder of MJT Technologies gave a presentation explaining what upgrades FUSD needs to meet today's standards. At present FUSD is behind in meeting those standards. What FUSD is using is at the end-of-life stage; a Cisco Exchange 2003 system. According to Tilton, using it could create a "Critical communications systems such as email and phone systems are at risk of near term failure and must be updated....the server room at Fillmore High has many areas of vulnerability. The equipment is old and prone to failure, and the power backup system only supports keeping the equipment running for maybe 20 minutes during a power outage" adding there is an increasing chance that they will crash and never come back online again. Superintendent Dr. Adrian Palazuelos anticipates a $500,000 grant from E-rate Federal funding to help with the costs of upgrading to Office 365 and moving to a Cloud server. The move will improve such things as email, instant messaging, video conferencing and file storage. Another upgrade will be wireless connection at all FUSD schools. Today wireless access is available at Rio Vista, Sierra High School and only 2 or 3 rooms at Fillmore High School. Piru Elementary recently received the Apple ConnectED grant to upgrade their system. Presently FUSD has CONTINUED » |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, February 4th, 2015
On Friday, January 30th, a two-vehicle collision took place on Grimes Canyon Road at San Marino Oil Company Road at approximately 4:15pm. A motorcycle apparently clipped an oncoming car, causing the car to spin into a boulder. The driver of the car was injured and attended by Fillmore Fire Dept., above. The motorcyclist received moderate injuries. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, February 4th, 2015
The American Red Cross encourages eligible donors to help ensure a sufficient and diverse blood supply by giving blood this February. Since the beginning of the year, widespread flu and inclement winter weather in some parts of the country have prevented many regular donors from making or keeping their blood donation appointments. Healthy and diverse blood donors are needed to help maintain a sufficient blood supply. Diversity among blood donors is important because red blood cells carry markers that determine one's blood type, and certain blood types are unique to specific racial and ethnic groups. Blood must be matched very closely for those patients with rare blood types or for those who need repeated transfusions. Patients are less likely to have complications from blood donated by someone with a similar ethnicity. All blood types are needed, especially types O negative, A negative and B negative. To learn more about donating blood and to schedule an appointment, download the Red Cross Blood Donor App, visit redcrossblood.org or call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767). Upcoming blood donation opportunities Simi Valley Thousand Oaks Ventura How to donate blood High school students and other donors 18 years of age and younger also have to meet certain height and weight requirements. About the American Red Cross |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, February 4th, 2015
VENTURA COUNTY, CA - Since mid-December, the State of California has confirmed 92 cases of measles as of Monday, February 2nd. Ventura County has now reported 10 cases. Despite the increase in number of cases, most people have immunity to measles. âProbably 95% of the population is immune to measles because they had 2 MMRs, their childhood measles shots,â said Dr. Robert Levin, Health Officer for Ventura County. At this time, 91.6% of all children entering kindergarten in Ventura County have had 2 MMR shots and are thus immune to catching the disease. There are schools in the county with a particularly low rate of MMR immunization. One private school on the east end of the county has a measles immunization rate of 67%. Most public schools in Oxnard, on the other hand, have a measles immunization rate of 100%. Symptoms of measles include cough, runny nose, reddened eyes, fever, a rash and often, tiny sores in the mouth. A person with measles may only have a few of these symptoms. âMost people with measles feel quite sick, as sick as someone feels with the flu,â said Dr. Levin. Measles is a very contagious disease and entirely preventable. While not as deadly as Ebola, for instance, it is 5 to 15 times more contagious. People who contract measles are contagious for 4 days before they develop the rash and for 4 more days after they develop the rash. For information on a Public Health clinic near you if you are in need of immunizations, please call: 805-981-5221; for a Ventura County Health Care Agency Ambulatory Care clinic near you, please call: 805-677-5110. |
By Anonymous — Monday, February 2nd, 2015
SACRAMENTO â Dr. Gil Chavez, State Epidemiologist and Deputy Director, Center for Infectious Diseases, California Department of Public Health (CDPH) today confirmed that a patient admitted to Kaiser Permanente South Sacramento Medical Center on Wednesday evening who exhibited symptoms consistent with a viral illness including Ebola, and with a history of travel to an Ebola-affected country, has tested negative for the Ebola virus. âState and local health officials have been working hard with Californiaâs Ebola Treatment Centers to safely and effectively identify, isolate, diagnose and treat suspect Ebola patients. This recent case at Kaiser South illustrates that our hard work and partnership has paid off,â said Dr. Chavez. The test for Ebola conducted by the Sacramento County Public Health Laboratory came back negative early this afternoon. At this time, there have been no confirmed cases of Ebola in California and there is no threat to the general public. Ebola symptoms may appear anywhere between two to 21 days after exposure and include a fever, muscle pain, weakness, diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain and lack of appetite. Travelers from Africa may experience flu-like or GI symptoms due to malaria or other non-Ebola associated diseases. Whenever there is a person displaying symptoms that may be Ebola, who has recently traveled to Sierra Leone, Liberia or Guinea, certain precautions are taken including isolating the patient, ruling out other infectious diseases, and testing for Ebola if warranted. The California Department of Public Health, in coordination with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Sacramento County Public Health and Kaiser South Sacramento, worked together to ensure protocols were in place to protect the public health. For more information, visit http://cdph.ca.gov/programs/cder/Pages/Ebola.aspx. |
The Fillmore Firefighters Foundation donated $500.00 to the family of Benjamin Fernandez Herbert to help with funeral expenses. Ben was a Fire Department Cadet during his senior year at Fillmore High School and was well respected by everyone. Ben was part of the Fillmore Fire Department family and will be truly missed. Enlarge Photo By Norma PĂ©rez-Sandford — Wednesday, January 28th, 2015
Over the years, as a school counselor, I have been blessed to be in a position to work with many, many young students from kindergarten through beyond high school. Their beautiful faces and unique expressions come to my mind as I recall good, sad and life-changing experiences that will be forever in my heart. Not one young man or young woman has ever been alike in their life story, personality or challenges. Ben FernĂĄndez Herbert was a Fillmore High School Graduate of 2011. He lived in his beautiful Fillmore all his life. Ben tragically passed away in a car accident on Sunday, January 18, 2015. Ben was a handsome young man, physically, and from within; he had that special gift of being friendly, charismatic, having a happy demeanor with a megawatt smile that reminded you of what a decent young man and all that is good in the world was all about. Ben knew how to be a good, sincere friend and exuded a healthy outlook on life. He had such a positive influence on everyone he met. Those of us who knew Ben; his loving mother, Sara, lovely girlfriend Amanda, siblings, uncles and aunts, friends, co-workers and adults, whether for a moment or years, have felt the great loss and impact of his tragic passing. We also acknowledge how very blessed we all were to be touched by Ben. He had set many goals in his life, and was able to reach some pretty serious ones by his young age of 21. That was how he was; he set his goals and met them head-on, one by one. He valued higher education and knew that by acquiring knowledge, he would be able to have a solid foundation for his future life. He was a loving son. Benâs nickname for his precious mom was âPanchaâ, as he hugged and kissed her with great love. Ben would tease his sweet Grandmom âCucaâ MarĂa FernĂĄndez, who raised him alongside his mom, and make her laugh when he sang to her as he returned home from seeing his beautiful girlfriend Amanda. Mom Sara lovingly recalls how, as children, he and his nephew Derek loved to play with their Power Rangers and they used to switch and wear mismatched Power Rangers socks all the time. Ben would dress up in his Power Rangers suit and have a blast. Ben and Derek were 6 months apart, Ben being the eldest. Laughing, mom said that Ben loved his beloved pet gecko âLiloâ so much that once he desperately tore the house inside out until Lilo was found hidden behind the bathroom door. Mom said that Lilo would immediately come up to Benâs shoulder when he laid his hand out, but Lilo would hide and not come out for anyone else. Mom laughed as she said how much Ben loved BBQ pork ribs, piling up the BBQ sauce high on his plate! Mom recalls how much he ate and ate, but always remained slender. She remembered how he and his Derek signed up to play football when he was 8 years old. She loved watching him have fun and trying out new things. Mom added, he and Derek had made a pact to team up to start working on a professional dream to be rescue firefighters in the mountainous areas. This past January 12th Ben and Derek started the Spring Semester at Ventura College. Mom Sara and Grandmom Cuca would see them both go off with their backpacks, as they did when they were little boys. In remembering him, his older brother Jorge said, âBen was an excellent person who never gave up on his goals. Despite tough obstacles in his young life, he remained strong and remained optimistic because he believed that through his own hard work and effort he would, and always did, figure a way to meet the latest challenge. Benâs great love for his beautiful mother Sara, and his love, respect and fear for his loving God helped him in his struggles in life.â Mrs. Isela Larin, FHS Career Center Counselor, stated that Ben was a very dedicated, highly motivated, polite young man who came into her office asking about the process to serve as a FHS Fire Department Cadet. He was approved and served as a Fillmore Fire Cadet in his FHS Junior year, 2010. He successfully completed the program and was a great asset to the Fillmore Fire Department. Former Fillmore Starbucks Supervisor, Alberto Caceres, told me that Ben had recently been promoted as supervisor and had just opened the Santa Paula Starbucks store. His loving girlfriend Amanda Armstrong, hundreds of school and college friends, as well as Starbucks coworkers from the Fillmore and Santa Paula Starbucks, greatly miss him. Jorge said, âBen never accepted âI canâtâ as part of his vocabulary. Ben found God to be very present in his daily life, but also was very much aware of what God expected of him â no excuses! He had a lot of thoughts that he shared with many of his friends, words that gave life and encouragement to others dealing with hard moments in their lives. He was the kind of person that would share his time talking with friends and guide his friends and gave so much of his energy to serve others.â Pastor Ernie Rangel, of Promesa de JesĂșs Church, spoke of Ernie with great love, âBen, (and his mother, Sara) was a very active member of their church. Ben was in the youth group, church choir and band, playing his guitar for many years.â As I remember Ben FernĂĄndez Herbert, the young man who left us too early in life, I pray that his young friends who have been touched by this tragedy remember him as he was. Ben was an excellent role model for all and I have learned a lot from him to be a better person. I wish we could have duplicated him a million times, because the world would have been a much better place, less violence, less bullying, good hearts around. Mom Sara and Grandmom Cuca said they would always leave the outside light on for him, listening for his steps as he returned late at night. Mom said they still leave the light on, waiting for him to come home. Norma PĂ©rez-Sandford is a FUSD District K-12 Counselor |
Deputies Cesar Salas and Oren Ryerson put âTo Serve and Protectâ into action, helping a Fillmore family in need. Photo courtesy of Sebastian Ramirez. Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, January 28th, 2015
Earlier this month, Deputy Oren Ryerson, a patrol deputy for the city of Fillmore, arrested a young man and brought him back to the station. As they spoke, the young man became emotional and explained his mother recently lost her job and was unable to buy food for the family, which includes four younger siblings. Deputy Ryerson explained the situation to Senior Deputy Cesar Salas and the two worked it out to buy food for the family, which Senior Deputy Salas delivered that morning. Later, Deputy Ryerson spoke to Fillmore City Councilwoman Dianne McCall about the familyâs plight. Councilwoman McCall wanted to help by purchasing food for the family and finding work for the young man. Deputy Ryerson and Councilwoman McCall met at the family home the following day with food they had purchased. Councilwoman McCall told the mother that other members of the Fillmore community wanted to help as well. The Ventura County Sheriffâs Office is proud to work in communities with dedicated and caring people such as Councilwoman Dianne McCall, Deputy Ryerson, and Senior Deputy Salas. |
By Jean McLeod — Wednesday, January 28th, 2015
A Proclamation was presented by Mayor Douglas Tucker to Officer Michael Zabarsky for going the extra mile to help a Fillmore family living in substandard conditions. Enlarge Photo A Proclamation was presented to the Morris family for the Fillmore Area Transit Companyâs (FATCO) 40 years of service to the community along with the many non-profits and sports events the family has sponsored over the years. Pictured (l-r) are Council Member Rick Neal, Mayor Douglas Tucker, Chappy Morris, Wm âBillâ Morris, and Council Member Diane McCall. Enlarge Photo The Fillmore Bears Pee Wee Division Pacific Football League received a Proclamation from Mayor Douglas Tucker. The team was noted for superior sportsmanship. Enlarge Photo There were four items on Tuesday's Fillmore City Council Meeting along with three proclamations. The first agenda item was a contract for a City App, second was parking enforcement on Central, next was approval of a "In God We Trust" display, and last was giving Commissioners a stipend. The first proclamation went to Officer Michael Zabarsky for going the extra mile to help a family living in substandard conditions. Another proclamation went to the Fillmore Bears Pee Wee Division Pacific Football League for their superior sportsmanship. Also, honor's went to the Morris family for the Fillmore Area Transit Company's (FATCO) 40 years of service to the community along with the many non-profits and sports events the family has sponsored over the years. Chappy Morris responded, "Itâs been an honor to serve you." The Ventura County IT Services Mike Pettit and Kevin Coe, Deputy Chief Application Services, gave a presentation regarding the development of a City of Fillmore Mobile Application. With this new app residents with iPhones and Android Smartphones will have quick access to City services. Requests will automatically be routed to the correct department for proper handling regarding various things such as potholes, abandoned shopping carts, graffiti, code enforcement, VCAlert and more. The app will also provide a list of frequently called numbers, an events calendar and other important information and links. The bilingual app uses GPS coordinates to locate shopping carts (CartSnap), potholes, car accidents to can quickly respond. The cost is $8,000 ($4,000 iPhone App and $4,000 Android App) with annual maintenance cost anticipated to be $1,121. Other cities using such apps are Oxnard, Thousand Oaks and Simi Valley. The app is expected to be available in four weeks. The Council once again addressed the problem of parking on downtown Central Avenue. Parking is restricted on Central to two hour between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., Monday through Friday with unrestricted parking lots at the rear of the businesses on both the east and west sides of the street. Police Chief Dave Wareham addressed the Council stating, "Without a doubt, there's a parking problem....some are cooperating, but some are not." Downtown Central has 50 businesses and only 53 parking spaces. Wareham told the Council the problem is basically two specific people who are not complying. He said when addressing one of the two people, they responded, "It's my right to park here and I don't care about my neighbors." Wareham reported that some tenants and business owners move their cars every two hours, sometimes returning to the same space they were they had previously parked. The cost to the City to regulate the situation is not a simple or inexpensive fix, approximately $40,000 to $400,000 for added enforcement. The Council suggested patrolling Central Avenue more often and looking into changing the zoning which would require new business have restricted parking. The Council will continue monitoring the problem. In April 2014 the Council discussed displaying the national motto "In God We Trust" prominently in the council chamber. At the time it was not decided where or what type of plaque would be displayed. After discussing both the cost and location it was decided and agreed upon having the motto painted above the dais. The last agenda item was deciding whether to start compensating commission members with a stipend. This would be for the three commissions: Parks and Recreation Commission, Film Commission, and Planning Commission. A questionnaire was sent to Cities throughout California asking if they compensated their commissioners. Thirty-eight of the 55 that responded said they do compensate their commissioners. Some that did were here in Ventura County: Camarillo, Moorpark and Simi Valley. Compensations ranged from $10 to $543. Some were a monthly stipend and others per meeting attended. Council Member Diane McCall who was on the Planning Commission for seven years, stated that being on that commission taught me more about Fillmore than she could have achieved on her own and what prompted her to be on the Council adding, "How do you put a dollar amount on that?" There were also discussions about some being compensated more than others. They all agreed the Planning Commission goes through a great deal of documents but struggled with the problem of implying one personâs time is more valuable than another's. Mayor Douglas Tucker stated, "I was on the Planning Commission and it takes a great deal of your time. I feel time is valuable....I would like an educational allowance...with well educated commissioners to serve the community." He suggested talking to the people on the commissions for their opinion. Everyone agreed on the educational allowance, $50 per month for the Planning Commission and $25 per meeting for the Parks and Recreation, and Film Commissions' with a limit of two meetings per month. An item that was approved by a simple voice vote was a FY 2015-16 Budget Development Guidelines that Finance Director Gaylynn Brien presented the Council. The guidelines encompassed four main policies to be used going forward. (1) The City will adopt and maintain a balanced General Fund budget by ensuring that annual operating expenses are held to levels within annual operating revenues; (2) The City will maintain a prudent reserve in the General Fund balance to be used to respond to catastrophic events. This reserve amount as, a percentage of budgeted expenditures, will be established by the City Council as part of its action in adopting the budget; (3) The City's water and sewer enterprise funds shall be self-supporting such that fees for operating services will be maintained at a level adequate to cover all operating expenses and infrastructures needs; (4) One time revenues shall not be used to fund ongoing operating program expenses. Any such revenues shall be used to pay for one-time expenditures, if authorized by the City Council, or placed in the appropriate fund balance; (5) One-time expenditures that result in long-term cost savings, efficiencies, or both will be considered money well invested. The Council also passed and approved by a simple voice vote, a resolution showing their commitment to sustainable energy and declared their goal to conserve energy consumption and achieve Platinum Tier Level Status. The primary objective of this Energy Policy is to implement best energy management practices across all departments of the city and "lead-by-example" setting short, medium and long-term goals for reducing energy consumption, increase use of clean, renewable energy, and reduce annual electricity consumption by 20% (compared to 2006 use) by 2020. |
By Ventura County Sheriff Department — Tuesday, January 27th, 2015
Attempt to Locate Burglary Suspect
The Sheriffâs Office is requesting the publicâs help in identifying this suspect. Anyone who can help identify the suspect from the attached photographs is asked to call Det. Mulrooney at (805) 646-1414. Enlarge Photo The Sheriffâs Office is requesting the publicâs help in identifying this suspect. Anyone who can help identify the suspect from the attached photographs is asked to call Det. Mulrooney at (805) 646-1414. Enlarge Photo During the early morning hours of 12/01/2014, an unknown suspect entered two different self-serve laundry locations in the Ojai Valley. The suspect pried open numerous washing machine coin boxes and then stole the coins stored inside. Security video shows the suspect is a mid-twenties Hispanic male. During the investigation, Ojai detectives learned that a similar crime was committed in the City of Camarillo on November 5, 2014. A review of the Camarillo security tape revealed that the suspect in the Camarillo theft appears to be the same suspect as the Ojai thefts. The Sheriffâs Office is requesting the publicâs help in identifying this suspect. Anyone who can help identify the suspect from the attached photographs is asked to call Det. Mulrooney at (805) 646-1414. Nature of Incident: Attempt to Locate Burglary Suspect |
By Anonymous — Monday, January 26th, 2015
The California Highway Patrol (CHP) is warning the public of a recent series of phone scams in which the caller claims to be a member of the CHP and asks for payment for missed jury duty, outstanding fines, or an outstanding arrest warrant. The CHP said the callers typically instruct residents to purchase re-loadable cards and call them back with the numbers to the cards. Similar scams have been reported to other law enforcement agencies as well. âWe appreciate the public for bringing this issue to our attention, and we want to warn others to be vigilant and never give out personal information to someone you donât know,â said CHP Coastal Division Chief Reginald Chappelle. The CHP does not call community members seeking payment under any circumstances. In addition to never giving personal or financial information to an unsolicited caller, the following tips are recommended: |