By Anonymous — Wednesday, November 4th, 2020
The Santa Clara River Conservancy, together with UCSB and Stillwater Sciences, has just released its planning design for the restoration of the 278 acres site in back of the Fillmore Fish Hatchery. Once a watercress farm, this document outlines the plan to restore this site to native habitat, including public access hiking trails down to the river. This Sespe-Cienega site is very special in a number of ways. In addition to being part of the Santa Clara River, one of the longest still natural process rivers in the state, this Sespe-Cienega site is a location with a unique water flow of artesian springs, bringing water right to the surface. In fact, that is why the Fillmore Fish Hatchery was originally built here. This makes it a key location for wildlife in the area. Access the entire planning document at www.santaclarariver.org |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, November 4th, 2020
Boys & Girls Club of Fillmore gave away goodie bags filled with school supplies to the first 75 youngsters who stopped by between 3-5pm on Halloween. Courtesy Boys & Girls Club of Santa Clara Valley Facebook Page. Enlarge Photo |
(l-r) Tim Holmgren, Ari Larson, Mark Austin, Christina Reyes-Villaseñor, Esther (Sivakami) Taylor Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 28th, 2020
City Council Candidate Tim Holmgren: *** City Council Candidate Mark Austin: *** City Council Candidate Ari Larson: *** City Council Candidate Christina Reyes Villaseñor: *** City Council Candidate Esther (Sivakami) Taylor: |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 28th, 2020
On Thursday, October 22nd, Fillmore Chief of Police Garo Kuredjian presented Jan Marholin, CEO of Boys & Girls Club of SCV, with a check for $10,000 from the Ventura County Sheriff ’s Department to support its Learning Loss Programs due to Covid-19. The clubs are connecting with youth, not only onsite but also using a virtual club which can be accessed at www.bgclubscv.org. Courtesy Boys & Girls Club of Santa Clara Valley. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 28th, 2020
On Tuesday, October 27th at 5:45am, California Highway Patrol closed off westbound lanes of Highway 126 at Main Street to investigate the death of a bicyclist who died after a collision with a white four-door sedan. Traffic was diverted through one of the eastbound lanes while CHP investigated the scene. The driver of the sedan stayed to contribute to the investigation. No arrests were made at the time of the incident which is still under investigation. |
From May to October of this year the multiple VC Sheriff units worked together to complete 18 illegal marijuana cultivation investigations on public or private land in and around the Los Padres National Forest in Northern Ventura County. Photos courtesy Ventura County Sheriff ’s Department. Enlarge Photo By Ventura County Sheriff Department — Wednesday, October 28th, 2020
The Ventura County Sheriff’s Narcotics Bureau, in partnership with the Sheriff’s SWAT Team and the Sheriff’s Aviation Unit, has completed 18 illegal marijuana cultivation investigations on public or private land in and around the Los Padres National Forest in Northern Ventura County. Those investigations yielded 74,600 marijuana plants and 1,500 pounds of harvested marijuana. Eleven suspects were arrested, and 84 firearms were seized at the grow sites. This is a significant increase in plants, processed marijuana, firearms, and arrest from previous years. The Sheriff’s Office has worked consistently with the United States Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, California National Guard Counter Drug Task Force, Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting program in the eradication of illicit marijuana cultivations on public lands. The Sheriff’s Office receives grant funding from the Forest Service and the Drug Enforcement Administration to locate, investigate, and eradicate illegal marijuana cultivation sites in the Los Padres National Forest. These marijuana cultivation sites are littered with legal and illegal pesticides and herbicides as well as trash. The natural vegetation is removed and the land is terraced which causes erosion. Water is diverted from streams for irrigation and becomes contaminated with poisons that eventually runoff into Ventura County watersheds. Many cultivation sites are located miles from roadways or trails. Helicopters are utilized to transport law enforcement personnel in and haul marijuana, trash and supplies out of the grow sites. Thousands of pounds of marijuana and trash are taken to a refuge disposal site and buried. The marijuana produced from these illegal cultivation sites are sold on black market, with very little overhead costs, making the illicit marijuana business very profitable. The impact on public lands continues to increase with the amount of trash, growing supplies and chemicals left behind after a marijuana cultivation is completed. It is not uncommon for investigators to locate carbofuran, a pesticide, in the grow sites and applied to the plants. The Environmental Protection Agency banned carbofuran in the United States in 2010 because the pesticide is extremely toxic to animals and humans. According to the labels, the carbofuran that is being found in the grow sites have been imported into the United States from Mexico or China. Other illegal activities are also occurring at marijuana cultivation sites. Human trafficking, labor trafficking, illegal firearms, other drugs like methamphetamine, heroin and cocaine are found along with butane honey oil labs, which place a significant risk to the public. The Sheriff’s Office, in conjunction with local, state and federal agencies, will continue to enforce local and state marijuana cultivation laws. Anyone with information about illegal marijuana cultivation or related criminal activity is encouraged to call the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Unit at 805-383-8700 or the Ventura County Crime Stoppers Tip Line 800-222-8477. Ventura County Crime Stoppers will pay up to $1,000 reward for information, which leads to the arrest and criminal complaint against the person(s) responsible for this crime. The caller may remain anonymous. The call is not recorded. Call Crime Stoppers at 800-222-TIPS (8477). |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 28th, 2020
Last week a traffic collision occurred on Citrus View in Piru. Once on scene crews found a black car overturned on its topside. Cause of the crash is still under investigation. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 28th, 2020
Courtesy Fillmore Historical Museum By the 1870s more and more settlers were arriving and claiming land along the Santa Clara and Sespe rivers. These were families who had come from all over the United States looking for a new place to call home, settle down and raise their families. In 1871, the Frederic Sprague family arrived at the Sespe from Placer County. The family included his wife, Clare, a son, Hartley, who drove one of the wagons, and daughters, Iva and her twin, Inez, and younger sister Nellie. They came by way of Santa Barbara and had to cross the sandy beach north of Ventura. They lost one of their two wagons in the sand that day and had to wait until the next low tide to retrieve it. Sprague had filed a homestead preemption claim on 160 acres of the disputed Rancho Sespe owned by Thomas More. (He and More had an ongoing argument about Sprague’s claim and he will always be connected to the 1877 More murder. But that’s another story.) Once settled in the Sespe, the Spragues farmed and operated a small grocery store close to Atmore Road where stage drivers could stop and change horses. Within the first year, Iva’s twin sister, Inez and her sister, Nellie, died of typhoid fever. Education was important to the settlers so in 1874 Frederic and his 13 year old daughter, Iva, and 14 year old son, Hartley, traveled by wagon to Ventura to purchase wood for the building of a school. The school he built was located on the north side of the Santa Clara River near the current north approach of the Bardsdale Bridge. It was 20’ X 30’ and, depending on teacher’s estimates, either 11’, 12’, or 16’ high. Like all schools of the period it was one room with the teacher’s desk on a platform on one end very similar to the 1873 Cienega School. According to Clara Smith, a teacher in the district in 1886-1887, “a water bucket and tin dipper stood just inside the door…There was a bookcase on the left side of the door with 150 volumes many of which are above the ability of the children to read…The children sit in rows facing the teacher, whose chair and desk occupy a place on the platform at the other end of the room. To the right of the teacher stands a manikin which shows the relative position of the different organs of the human body. This is the nearest approach to the instruction in hygiene which the children will receive.” In 1879 the little school was moved to the east bank of the Sespe just a little north of today’s railroad bridge where it served as both church and school. The old school building was moved once again in late 1888 from the east bank of the Sespe to a location two lots south of Sespe St. on the east side of Central Ave where it served the Fillmore School District as an office. By early 1889, the school district served enough children to split into 3 districts. They were the Sespe, San Cayetano, and Fillmore School Districts. The Sespe and San Cayetano districts built new buildings immediately, but the Fillmore district had to wait a bit for their new building. With their old school moved to town and their new school being built, students attended the Cactus Flat School. Their parents loaned the boards for the temporary building but wanted them back uncut. So each board was numbered and eventually returned to the owner. The photo shows how irregular the building was. This little school was on the east bank of the Sespe north of Fifth Street and West of Goodenough Road, about where Candelaria and Catalano Streets are now in 2020. In 1890, the children who lived on the east side of the Sespe moved to a brand new school located on the northwest corner of Sespe and Mountain View. It was used until 1909 when the larger Mountain View School was built on the east side of Mountain View between Main St. and Sespe. In 1890, Dr. John Hinckley bought the old school building that Sprague built and moved it across Central Ave. to a lot on the northwest corner of Sespe and Central. He remodeled it, added a room, and used it as his office and Fillmore’s first drug store. He later sold the building to Owen Miller who turned it into a restaurant. Dr. Hinckley moved his office and home on the corner of Ventura St., now Hwy 23, and Central Ave. Herky Villaseñor used the old school building briefly in the 1930s until he moved his tamale factory to Main and Clay St. In 1936, Mr. O.M Topley took over the restaurant intending to open a beer parlor but in May, 1936 the building was destroyed by fire. This building represented 40 years of Fillmore’s pioneer history from its beginnings as an unnamed dusty spot in the road to a thriving farming community. By 1936 the community was well established with schools, churches, businesses and about 2,800 residents. Within two weeks of the fire, Clara Ida Sprague Sheldon, who had told the story of the old school to the newspaper, had died. Two years later in 1938, Hartley Sprague who rode to Ventura with his father to buy wood for the first school, also died. The pioneer period was ending. |
By Ventura County Sheriff Department — Wednesday, October 21st, 2020
The Fillmore Investigative Bureau concluded an investigation into a Piru resident that lead to charges related to stalking, trespassing and theft. The suspect, Reynaldo Hernandez, was involved in targeting a woman who lives in Fillmore. During the month of September 2020, investigators received information that Hernandez was involved in trespassing on a property in the 800 block of Blaine Ave. Hernandez had been caught by the homeowners on their property and had been asked to leave. A subsequent investigation by detectives revealed Hernandez had trespassed onto the victim’s property and took woman’s underwear that were in an outside laundry area. Detectives conducted a search of Hernandez’ residence and located evidence belonging to the victim. In addition, investigators located other woman’s underwear in his possession. Detectives also learned Hernandez had repeatedly unlawfully entered the victim’s property over the past few months. The investigation led to Hernandez’ arrest for charges of 602.5 PC- Trespassing, and 646.9 (a) PC- Stalking. Hernandez remains in custody pending $200,000.00 bail. The investigation is ongoing. Detectives believe Hernandez might have targeted other victims in the region. The Fillmore Investigative Bureau is requesting the public’s assistance for information related to the theft of woman’s undergarments or other related items. Please call one of the investigators listed below for information. Prepared by: Sergeant Vince Alvarez Ventura County Crime Stoppers will pay up to $1,000 reward for information, which leads to the arrest and criminal complaint against the person(s) responsible for this crime. The caller may remain anonymous. The call is not recorded. Call Crime Stoppers at 800-222-TIPS (8477). |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 21st, 2020
On October 15th at 3pm a semi-trailer truck transporting lemons overturned on Highway 126 west of O’Reilly Auto Parts in Fillmore, spilling lemons along the highway. Crews redirected traffic while a tractor scooped up the lemons blocking the road. Cause of the accident is still under investigation. Enlarge Photo |