By Anonymous — Thursday, August 25th, 2011
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By Anonymous — Wednesday, August 24th, 2011
Publisherâs note: Due to the absence of our city hall correspondent this week we regret that we have no story |
By Kimberly Rivers — Wednesday, August 24th, 2011
Pictured above is the new principal at Sespe School, Scott Carroll. Carrroll was previously the assistant principal at Fillmore Middle School. A picture of Piruâs new principal Diana Vides was unavailable. Enlarge Photo When school starts on Tuesday, August 16, 2011 students at Piru and Sespe Elementary Schools will be meeting new principals. Scott Carroll, previously the assistant principal at Fillmore Middle School will be taking the top administrative position at Sespe, and Diana Vides, new to Fillmore Unified School District (FUSD) will be principal at Piru. FUSD Director of Human Resources Todd Schieferle commented that in filling these positions the District was âlooking for experience in working with diverse populations, administrative experience, and a clear understanding of the process for improving achievement for all students.â The vacancy filled by Carroll was created when the District noticed Rosemarie Hibler near the end of last year that she would no longer have a position within FUSD. When asked why Hibler received a notice, the only principal to receive one, Schieferle responded âOther than budget reductions, I am unable to discuss personnel issues.â During Board meetings late last school year several parents spoke in support of Hibler asking the Board to reconsider letting her go. In explaining why Carroll is a good fit for Sespe, Schieferle reported that Carroll has served as a sixth grade teacher, sixth grade department chair, AVID coordinator and Response to Intervention (RTI) Coordinator in addition to an âadministratorâ in the District. âScott Carroll has a strong background in teaching⊠he is very familiar with the student population and community of Fillmore. Scott has a great reputation with students he encounters and has been highly respected by parents and staff.â Responding to questions about why there was a vacancy at Piru, Schieferle replied â[Mrs. Godfrey] requested a reassignment.â Godfrey replaced Leticia Ramos, both of whom served as principal for just one year at Piru. Prior to being Principal at Piru, Godfrey was Assistant Principal at Fillmore Middle School. Schieferle confirmed that Godfrey will be working in the Independent Studies program at Sierra High School. Vides will be the fourth principal in as many years at Piru and comes to FUSD from Los Angeles Unified School District. Her most recent position was as Coordinator for Categorical Programs at Alta California Elementary School (previously called Valley Region Elementary School #6) in Panorama City, a new school that opened last year (2010-11) serving 734 students, grade K â 5, with 95% of the student population of Hispanic/Latino descent. Generally a Coordinator of Categorical Programs oversees and administers programs for English learners, students from migrant families and special education. FUSD Interim Superintendent Dr. Alan Nishino reported that Vides herself comes from a migrant farm-worker background bringing a unique and important perspective to her job. Piru parent and a member of last years School Site Council Fred Galan commented that â[we are looking forward] to working with the new principal [to benefit the students].â |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, August 24th, 2011
Sam Bennett Sr., owner of SRB Construction in Fillmore is finishing ground compaction work for the soon-to-be Taco Bell and Pizza Hut on Highway 126. It is hoped that the facility will be open for business by November. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, August 24th, 2011
BJ Norris is the new Steel Challenge World Speed Shooting Champ, held August 18-21 in Piru. The competition has grown to one of the largest professional pistol competitions in America. The Steel Challenge is a speed shooting championship and governed by the Steel Challenge Shooting Association (SCSA). The competition was founded by Mike Dalton and Mike Fichman. The targets, made of steel, range in size from 10" round plates to 18"x24" square plates. The match is held every year in Piru, California and draws shooters from around the world. Competitors are scored based solely on the time it takes them to shoot each stage. The last target that is shot is known as the "stop plate", which stops the timer. All primary target hits made after the stop plate has been struck, will be scored with a 3 second penalty each. The maximum time permitted for a run is 30 seconds and a competitor will be stopped and asked to reload if they reach the 30 second limit. Each competitor shoots each stage five times, with their slowest run dropped, excluding the stage Outer Limits where only four runs are shot and the top three counted. The competitor's best four out of five runs are totaled for their stage score and the eight stage scores are added together to establish the competitor's match score. The winner is the competitor with the lowest overall time. Seventy shooters competed in the first Steel Challenge in 1981. John Shaw claimed the first âWorldâs Fastest Shooterâ title along with his share of the $20,000 in cash and prizes. In the winter of 2007, Dalton and Fichman sold the Steel Challenge to the United States Practical Shooting Association (USPSA) which is the US sanctioning body of IPSC. |
By Martin Farrell — Thursday, August 18th, 2011
I wish to express my profound apologies to the Fillmore Chapter of the Veterans of Foreign Wars for the wrongly identified photo of Eagle Scout Sean Chandler receiving an award plaque for constructing his Walk of Honor at Bardsdale Cemetery. The caption reads âChandler receives Lions Club honor". This was an award issued by the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Again, my apologies to our VFW for this inexplicable mistake. Maybe itâs time for me to retire â it is, after all, the Gazetteâs twenty second anniversary. Also... The Gazette has learned, by an irate citizen, that an Aztec-like picture was recently placed on the rear alley (east) wall of the old bank building (Main Street near Central Ave.). We later learned that this was allegedly approved by the owner of the building. We don't know if the city was aware of it. It is, therefore, not a gang related picture. The police department has verified that it was painted with permission, and has no gang connection. It is difficult to understand what relevance such a public display has in the middle of Fillmoreâs tourist center. This picture can be seen from two blocks away. A reasonable person, especially a tourist, would question the meaning of this work at this location. No matter how well done, a talented work in the wrong place (next to the Fillmore Tourism Bureau), giving a mistaken impression of criminal activity, unrelated to our downtown tourist efforts, is in my opinion, a mistake. It should be removed. THIS JUST IN: We have learned that this was a paid commercial. It was painted on Ventura County Historical Landmark No. 47 with permission as stated. No one bothered to tell the citizens of Fillmore. It is ironic that it was painted directly across from a newly sprayed bicycle storage container on Main Street, which is a criminal offense. |
Macie Wokal 14, Fillmore FFA, stands with her replacement Heifer âLittle Bo Peepâ. Wokalâs And Macieâs heifer was awarded FFA Grand Champion Replacement Heifer. Enlarge Photo By Bob Crum — Wednesday, August 17th, 2011
Alexus Galassi,16, Vice Presidentof Fillmore FFA is pictured with her heifer Talula and the baby Kaliapi who was born at the fair this past week. Enlarge Photo Marc Zavala, 17, Fillmore FFA, stands with âZeusâ a pig who won Reserve Grand Champion at the fair. Enlarge Photo Micah Chumley, 16, Fillmore FFA, stands with âKevinâ replacement heifer who also won Reserve Grand Champion at the Ventura County Fair. Several Fillmore kids participated in this yearâs auction. Enlarge Photo Story and photos by Bob Crum Little Bo Peep, Zeus and Kevin, outstanding specimens all, were bestowed top honors at the Ventura County Fair. Accordingly, their caretakers â Macie, Micah and Marc â relished reaping the rewards for their time and efforts. Macie Wokal, 14, Fillmore FFA, raised a replacement heifer named Little Bo Peep. However, weighing in at a hefty 1,082 pounds, there's very little that's little about Little Bo Peep. Her status is even bigger than life. Little Bo Peep was awarded the FFA Grand Champion Replacement Heifer award. Sweet! Macie is no stranger to the award circle. Though her entry last year didn't win an award, her entry in 2009 was awarded Grand Champion Replacement Heifer. Not an easy achievement considering that the odds might not be much better than winning the lottery every other year. What was it like raising Little Bo Peep? âWhen I first saw herâ, said Macie, âshe was crazy and later, when I would walk her, she made dinosaur noises as if she was making fun of a cow. That was pretty funnyâ, Macie said. Proof that one can never predict what a cow will say. What was the biggest problem raising Little Bo Peep? âTrying to get her halter onâ Macie immediately replied. âShe was stubborn and wouldn't cooperate very often so it was a lot of work.â OK... but once the halter was in place, how was she to take for a walk? âCrazyâ, Macie said. Why? âBecauseâ, said Macie, âshe was barely halter trained when I got her so she was on the wild side... I guess you can say.â Somehow Macie tamed wild and crazy Little Bo Peep because the heifer appeared to be on her best behavior at the Fair. Based on Little Bo Peep's enormous size, what did her diet consist of I asked. âShe eats a bag a day of grains and alfalfa and a bag costs about $14.00.â Oh my! Perhaps taking Little Bo Peep to a Chick-fil-A restaurant would be cheaper? At the auction, the high bidder won Little Bo Peep for $3,400. Plans for the heifer include munching scrumptious Piru pasture grass and motherhood. And Macie's money? âIt goes into my savings account for collegeâ, said Macie. Upon graduating high school, Macie is planning to attend California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. Having been raised in a farming/ranching lifestyle... Macie's aspirations are to become an agriculture teacher. No doubt Macie will excel! Micah Chumley, 16, Fillmore FFA, also raised a superb replacement heifer. So superb is Micah's heifer, Kevin, she won FFA Reserve Grand Champion. Umm... Kevin... a boys name? âI named her Kevin because of the movie Upâ, explained Micah... adding... âthe flightless bird was named Kevin who was thought to be a boy but turned out to be a girl... oh Kevin's a girl!... so that kind of stuck for my heifer.â Makes perfect sense. Kevin is not Micah's first heifer. He raised a heifer four years ago. Last year he entered a steer that was not bestowed an award. So... this year he went back to raising a heifer and was rewarded with a championship. Was it fun raising Kevin? âThe most CONTINUED » |
By Bob Crum — Wednesday, August 17th, 2011
by Bob Crum
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By Jean McLeod — Wednesday, August 17th, 2011
There were some new faces at the first 2011-2012 Fillmore Unified School District Board Meeting (FUSD). Dr. Alan Nishino was introduced as the Interim Fillmore Superintendent along with Michael Johnson as a new Assistant Superintendent. Also introduced was Scott Carroll new position as Principal of Sespe Elementary School and Sammy Martinez the new Associated Student Board (ASB) representative. Nishino brings years of experience having worked at Morgan Hill, Castaic, Alameda, and Hueneme High Schools. When discussing his goals Nishino highlighted studentsâ need to be productive citizens âdriven to be the bestâ going forward. Johnson discussed the many years he has worked under Nishino and spoke of his confidence in Nishinoâs leadership as the reason he came to work at FUSD. He addressed the needs of Fillmoreâs large migrant population with over five hundred migrant students in school and a goal of speaking to every family. Johnson is also planning a newsletter to be sent to the studentsâ families to keep them informed of meetings and events associated with their children. Martinez, who grew up in Fillmore, is a junior at Fillmore High School and was an ASB member while attending Fillmore Middle School. Martinez is known as âSpeaker of the Houseâ made his first official presentation to the School Board Martinez presenting the studentsâ new campaign âMake Every Minute Count-63,197 Minutes in a School Year.â |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, August 17th, 2011
Piru August 18-21
The Steel Challenge Shooting Association (SCSA), the national governing body for the sport of speed shooting, announced that Smith & Wesson, the 159-year-old iconic firearms maker, is expanding its support for the organization with its platinum level sponsorship of the Steel Challenge World Speed Shooting Championships. âFor well over a century Smith & Wesson has played an active roll in promoting the shooting sports in America and around the world. Not only are they a platinum sponsor for this yearâs Steel Challenge World Speed Shooting Championships, but they continue to work closely with SCSA to grow speed shooting through the Scholastic Steel Challenge program for youth and collegiate shooters,â said Scott Moore, Steel Challenge sponsor relations. Since the first Steel Challenge in 1981 Smith & Wesson has been a proud sponsor, helping the World Speed Shooting Championships grow into what is today the worldâs premier exhibition of speed shooting. Year after year the match routinely draws the fastest shooters from around the globe, including several from Team Smith & Wesson. In 2010 members of the Smith & Wesson factory team collected nine titles at the Steel Challenge â more than any other industry team â and many of those shooters are expected to return this year to defend their titles. |