Fillmore High School Swim Team Coach Cindy Blatt expressed her frustration over the fact that her team could not yet access the new swimming pool. With meets scheduled only days away, the team must continue to use the Santa Paula pool because the pool heater and two other minor problems prevent County approval of the facility.
Fillmore High School Swim Team Coach Cindy Blatt expressed her frustration over the fact that her team could not yet access the new swimming pool. With meets scheduled only days away, the team must continue to use the Santa Paula pool because the pool heater and two other minor problems prevent County approval of the facility.
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Fillmore City Council met at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, February 24, 2009 at City Hall to cover a brief agenda. Mayor Pro-tem Gayle Washburn was absent. The Council heard public comments, allocated grant money to non-profits, moved toward regulating push-cart vendors, discussed paving Central Ave., waived fees for the Relay for Life, and thanked Deputy City Clerk Steve McClary for his services.

The Council heard the first reading of a proposed ordinance regulating push-cart vendors and door-to-door solicitation. Council Member Jamey Brooks voted against the ordinance, because he considers it too much government. In response to various fundraisers' concerns, Council Member Steve Conaway reported that Police Sergeant Dave Wareham has said that the spirit of the ordinance would be enforced if the ordinance passes. Both the Council and School Board have for months desired an ordinance regulating push-cart vendors in order to keep students safely out of the path of traffic after school.

After hearing representatives from FOOD Share, Women's Economic Ventures (WEV), and the Long Term Care Ombudsman Program, the Council allocated the $170,500 2009-2010 Community Development Block Grant provided by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The previous meeting's staff report had mistakenly listed the Ombudsman Program's desired funds as $1000, although $4000 was requested. The Council decided that the limited amount of money should remain allocated as decided at the previous meeting. It allocated: $13,075 to the Boys and Girls Club of Santa Clara Valley—Fillmore Unit; $4000 to El Concilio del Condado de Ventura; $3000 to FOOD Share, Inc.; $1000 to the Long Term Care Ombudsman Program; $2500 to One Step Center and the Fillmore Piru Mentor Program; $1000 to RAIN for transportation services; $1000 for Turning Point. $79,234 to the City of Fillmore Community Park Project; $50,000 to the Fillmore-Piru Veterans Memorial District; and $7,500 to WEV. The remaining money was needed for administration costs. CONTINUED »

 


 

“It’s raining, it’s pouring” and it is a blessing, especially since Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger officially declared California in a drought last June, precipitated by more than two years of well below rainfall and the driest spring in eighty-eighty years. The Fillmore Lions Club considered the situation important enough to make it the subject of its 72nd Student Speaker Contest on February 2. Impressive presentations were heard from all participants. Seventeen-year old Fillmore HS senior, Natalie Garnica walked away the winner, and 17-year old FHS senior, Rachel Kamradt, along with 14-year old Jeremy Brooks, 9th grader at El Camino HS at Ventura College were runners-up as reported in this newspaper. Nevertheless, there is much more to the story. Backed by substantial governmental data, our state is facing its most significant water crisis in its history. The state is running dry with not enough relief in sight.

How could a potentially devastating drought happen in our technically modern world? The answers are numerous and complex as reported by the contest’s winners, Garnica, Kamradt, and Brooks. Natural phenomenon include Southern California’s desert topography; severely affected waterways from consecutive years without substantial precipitation across the state; and the drastic reduction of the Sierra Snowpack (61% of normal), the thick layer of snow that typically covers 400 miles of the Sierra Nevada range, the major source of the state’s water supply. CONTINUED »

 


 
Ventura County Sheriff's Department
Ventura County Sheriff's Department

Between the late evening hours of 02/17/09 and early morning hours of 02/18/09, unknown suspect(s) forced entry into the Valley Tractor business on Ventura St. in Fillmore. The suspect(s) stole at least 34 Stihl brand power tools that included 21 chain saws, 8 string trimmers, 1 leaf blower, 1 backpack sprayer, 1 pole saw, 1 hedge trimmer and 1 cut-off saw.

The stolen string trimmers and chain saws include different models: String Trimmers: Models FS110, FS80 and FS250. Chain Saws: Models MS260, MS310, MS390, MS361, MS192T, MS250, MS17O, MS460, MS290 AND MS180. Serial numbers for all items have been entered as stolen into CLETS.

Contact detectives Taurino Almazan or Gus Macias at (805) 524-2233 or (805) 947-8097 or (805) 947-8070 with any information. Courtesy VC Sheriff’s Crime Analysis Unit.

 
Fire consumed a home on the 200 block of Waterford Lane, Sunday morning. Owners, Evaristo and Gigi Barajas have lived in the home for over 23 years. No one was injured in the blaze.
Fire consumed a home on the 200 block of Waterford Lane, Sunday morning. Owners, Evaristo and Gigi Barajas have lived in the home for over 23 years. No one was injured in the blaze.
Photo by Sebastian Ramirez
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Photo by Sebastian Ramirez
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Photo by Sebastian Ramirez
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Photo by Sebastian Ramirez
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A two-story Fillmore home was engulfed in flames Sunday morning, February 15, at 7:30 a.m., despite efforts by multiple engine companies including Fillmore, Oxnard and Santa Paula. The owner, former Fillmore Mayor Evaristo Barajas, was not at home at the time. Owner Guillermina “Gigi” Barajas was home, along with their daughter, Alani, 17, and a friend. Gigi had returned from her nursing duties at Santa Paula Hospital and dozed off on a couch in the living room. She awoke to a smoke-filled room and the sound of smoke detectors.

The blaze did not impact neighboring homes in the200 block of Waterford Lane.

The family’s pet dog, Starlight, 15, was killed in the fire, along with a Gecko and freshwater fish. Chuy Ortiz, owner of El Pescador, located one block over from Waterford Lane, was one of the first on the scene. He said Alani wanted to go back into the blazing house for Starlight, a Pomeranian, but was restrained by others. The Barajas family had lived in the home for over 23 years.

The Red Cross offered financial assistance to the family so they could purchase much needed supplies, bedding and linens prior to occupying a home generously made available by one of their neighbors.

An electrical short in the living room may have started the blaze.

 

A Fillmore boy drowned Sunday, February 15, at Lake Casitas, while on a family outing.
Mason Dollar, 4, son of Chris and Kristen Dollar, was last seen feeding ducks on the lake’s dock.
Mason was missing for about an hour before a rescue diver discovered his body under the dock at approximately 5:00 p.m.
An ambulance took the boy to Ojai Valley Community Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 6:38 p.m. Mason left behind his parents, sister Hayley and brother Garrett. See Mason’s obituary in the obituary section of this website. Our prayers are with the Dollar family.

 
Ventura County Sheriff's Department
Ventura County Sheriff's Department

On February 17, 2009 at approximately 5:15 a.m., a fatal traffic involving two vehicles occurred on SR-126, west of Atmore Road. The collision killed the driver of one vehicle, and injured the driver and passenger of the second vehicle.
Lonnie Paul Gabriel, twenty years of age from Taft California, was driving his BMW eastbound on SR-126 at an unknown speed, west of Atmore Road. Bryon Cruz, 21 years of age and his passenger, Erik Chavez, 25 years old (both from Fillmore, CA) were traveling westbound on SR-126 in a Ford Explorer and were approaching from the opposite direction. For unknown reasons, Gabriel’s BMW swerved out of control through the center median. His car then traveled into the westbound lanes, directly in front of Cruz’s vehicle. Cruz had no time to react and the front of his vehicle broadsided the right side of the BMW, causing major damage to both vehicles. Emergency crews from the Ventura County Fire Department, the California Highway Patrol, and American Medical Response (AMR) responded to the scene. The collision forced the partial closure of SR-126 while emergency crews worked at the scene.
Lonnie Gabriel suffered fatal injuries and was pronounced deceased at the scene by ambulance personnel. Bryon Cruz and Erik Chavez were both transported to the Ventura County Medical Center. Mr. Cruz suffered serious injuries including a broken right leg, while Chavez suffered injuries to his head and chest. The cause of the collision is still under investigation by the California Highway Patrol.

 
Chris Godfrey
Chris Godfrey

Chief Deputy Chris Godfrey has been a member of the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department for 30 years and worked varying assignments in all four divisions during that time. As a part of the Sheriff’s management team for the last 13 years, Godfrey has managed the Todd Road Jail, the Regional Training Center, the Fillmore Police Department, acting as Chief of Police for that city, Patrol’s East County Bureau with oversight responsibility for the City of Moorpark and the unincorporated areas of East County Patrol, and Commander of the Professional Standards Bureau encompassing the Regional Training Center, Internal Affairs, and the Internal Audits Units.

Currently, Godfrey was assigned to the Support Services Division where he had oversight of the department’s budget as well as two bureaus, Professional Standards and Human Resources. Chief Godfrey has a Masters Degree in Public Administration from California State University, Northridge.

Chief Godfrey retired from the department on Friday, February 6, 2009 and was honored by approximately two hundred family, friends, and coworkers in attendance to enjoy a pictorial review of his career and an evening of dinning and friendship. CONTINUED »

 
Shown are some of Brandi Walker’s 4th grade students working with robotics. The students need to use various math skills including reasoning and deduction in order to program the computer to make the robots move certain directions and pick up items. Upper grade teachers rotate teaching their students in the robotics lab. The robotics were purchased with NASA funds.
Shown are some of Brandi Walker’s 4th grade students working with robotics. The students need to use various math skills including reasoning and deduction in order to program the computer to make the robots move certain directions and pick up items. Upper grade teachers rotate teaching their students in the robotics lab. The robotics were purchased with NASA funds.
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Story Courtesy Celebrating Fillmore, The Official Publication of the FUSD

At San Cayetano Elementary School, Students are reaching for the stars –and remote control devices.
Last year, San Cayetano was one of 50 schools nationwide that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration selected as a NAS Explorer School. The innovative program is designed to bring NASA’s engaging math, science and technology lessons to teachers and students. Robotics is an important component of the curriculum.

Last summer, San Cayetano teachers Brandi Walker and Melanie Schrock attend a week-long workshop at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena to become proficient in teaching robotics. After sharing what they earned with other upper-grad teachers as the staff created a schedule that allows most fourth- and fifth-graders 13 one-hour sessions to learn robotics.

Teachers assembled the robots; the students added enhancements and completed all the computer programming to manipulate their movements.

“This is truly a combination of hands=on math and science,” said San Cayetano Principal Jan Marholin. “How will a student ever forget the first time he or she has programmed a computer using math skills and reasoning?”
Most students are already technologically savvy, having been exposed to computers all their live, so they are fast learners, said Marholin. “They get it, they love it, and it’s an amazing thing to watch.”

San Cayetano has entered JPL’s annual robotics competition this spring to see how the students’ skills stack up against teams from other NASA Explorer schools. In the competition, which JPL will broadcast live on its web site, students pre-program their robots to navigate an obstacle course and perform tasks such as retrieving simulated planetary mineral formations – all within two minutes.

 
Press the play button for a Fillmore political cartoon
The City of Fillmore's "Spooky" Hall

 
Judy Dressler received a commendation for her six years of service as Chair of the Vision 2020 Civic Pride Committee. Dressler was one of the founding members of the Committee. Mayor Patti Walker thanked Ray Dressler (shown) and the Committee for their support and hard work.
Judy Dressler received a commendation for her six years of service as Chair of the Vision 2020 Civic Pride Committee. Dressler was one of the founding members of the Committee. Mayor Patti Walker thanked Ray Dressler (shown) and the Committee for their support and hard work.

Fillmore City Council met at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, February 10, 2009 at City Hall. The Council heard presentations from local service organizations, honored Judy Dressler, and discussed construction projects.

Council Member Jamey Brooks had corrections for the minutes of three past meetings, and the Council discussed whether the January 13th minutes should contain direct quotes regarding City Clerk Clay Westling's presentation.
Mayor Patti Walker, on behalf of the Council, presented Judy Dressler with a commendation for her six years of service as Chair of the Vision 2020 Civic Pride Committee. Dressler was one of the founding members of the Committee, and served many years as Secretary before becoming Chair. She thanked Ray Dressler and the Committee for their support and hard work. The Committee supports the annual Art Walk, yard of the month, business of the month, street fairs, and the Spring 2009 flower show.

The Council appointed Tom Fennell and Vance Johnson to the Planning Commission.

The Council discussed allocation of the 2009-2010 Community Development Block Grant provided by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The City has $25,575 available for public service programs, and it has $136,734 available for public improvement projects. CONTINUED »