By Anonymous — Wednesday, April 8th, 2020
Thank you to Mikey and Clay for making sure the seniors and compromised health customers who shop at Vons Market have their time to shop, from 7am to 9am, Monday through Friday. Courtesy Jennafer Wiebelhaus-Ramirez Facebook page. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, April 8th, 2020
The City of Fillmore is prepared to ensure continuity of government during this pandemic. Based on the guidance from the California Department of Public Health and the California Governorâs Office to minimize the spread of the COVID-19 virus, the City Council meeting will be available online and broadcasted on Channel 10 and via the Cityâs website as described below. The Council Chambers will not be available to the public. On March 17th, Governor Newsom implemented Executive Order N-29-20, which excuses a legislative body, under the Brown Act, from providing a physical location (while social distancing requirements are mandated) for the public to observe and comment if certain conditions are met. A physical location does not need to be provided if the legislative body: 1. â[H]olds a meeting via teleconferencing and allows members of the public to observe and address the meeting telephonically or otherwise electronically;â 2. Implements a procedure for receiving and âswiftly resolvingâ requests for reasonable modification or accommodations from individuals with disabilities, consistent with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and resolving any doubt in favor of accessibility; 3. Gives advance notice of the public meeting and posts agendas according to the timeframes and procedures already prescribed by the Brown Act (i.e. 72 hours for regular meetings and 24 hours for special meetings); and 4. Gives notice of the means by which members of the public may observe the meeting and offer public comment, in each instance where notice or agendas are posted. If there is a change in the means by which the public may observe and comment, this requirement can be satisfied by advertising this change using âthe most rapid means of communication available at the timeâ within the meaning of Government Code section 54954(e). This includes posting the change to the bodyâs website. The City of Fillmore remains committed to continuing to employ social distancing, holding online meetings, and, as a result, is requiring the public to interact with us online or via mail and phone. Accordingly, to participate in our public process for Council and Planning Commission meetings, please review the guidelines below: 1. You are strongly encouraged to observe the live stream of the City Councilâs meeting by logging to our website and clicking on the link for the applicable meeting date. Please note that for streaming to take place, the meeting must be live. If you are unable to join us during the live streaming period, the recording of the video should be available the morning of the next business day on our website. 2. To make public comments, under the public comment portion of the agenda or on any agenda item, a new City Managerâs policy, the Temporary eComment Policy has been implemented. Please submit your comment to the Deputy City Clerk via email at eherrera@fillmoreca.gov . The comment period for each regular meeting agenda will begin at 4:30 p.m., the Friday before the Tuesday meeting. The comment period will close once the applicable section of the agenda has been completed at that meeting. Although eComments will be distributed to the City Council and read out loud during the âPublic Commentâ time of the Council meeting or at the applicable item for an item on the agenda, eComment users should not expect responses to their comments made under âPublic Commentâ time. 3. Personal information volunteered by the user in their eComment is treated as a public record and may be subject to public inspection and copying if not protected by federal or state law. 4. The City Managerâs Office will be responsible for the administration of eComment constituent submittals in accordance with the foregoing user policy requirements. As the Deputy City Clerk is undertaking several functions during the Council meeting, to endeavor to have your comments provided at the appropriate time, please format your eComment as follows before emailing the comment to eherrera@filmoreca.gov: ⢠Title of email message: Public Comment Meeting Date: XX-XX-XXXX (add date of the meeting) Agenda Item XXX (identify which item) If you have any questions, please contact Erika Herrera at 805-946-1712 or email at eherrera@fillmoreca.gov. Next City Council Meeting is Scheduled for April 14th, 2020. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, April 8th, 2020
Groundbreaking ceremony for the Fillmore Mononrail which took place July 7th 1927. Pictured is Clarence Arrasmith, City Manager, standing. Seated L to R: Dock Wyatt (Santa Paula); Mayor W. H. Price; P. S. Coombs, VP Sespe Development Company; J. O. Groves, head engineer, Sespe Development Company; Joseph McNab, chairman of the ceremony; David J. Reese, Ed Goodenough; reporters. Enlarge Photo Courtesy Fillmore Historical Museum 1927 was the high point of the Roaring 20s. Lindbergh flew the Atlantic, Ford brought out its new Model A and Fillmore was going to get a Monorail â well maybeâŚâŚ In May, 1927, Mr. P. S. Coombs came to town. He told city leaders he was formerly chief engineer for the city of Chicago and was now the vice-president of the Sespe Development Company, a Delaware corporation. The Sespe Development Company had determined that developing the Sespe Hot Springs area with a hotel and health spa would be a wonderful idea and to facilitate peopleâs travel to the hot springs, a monorail would be built. He even had a conceptual drawing of the monorail. The Chamber of Commerce agreed that this would be a wonderful idea. For many years local folks had enjoyed the hot springs and recently there had been people from Los Angeles traveling to the Sespe for âthe cure.â Wasnât there already the Hot Springs Hotel and a spa? This was a Fillmore joke, since the hotel was a shack without even an outhouse and the spa was some tarps hung on poles around one of the hot springs. Coombs was soon joined by Dr. Ernest Basher who said he represented a medical group from Los Angeles interested in developing the health spa, as well as Frank Buren, president of the Sespe Development Company and J. O. Groves, head engineer. A crew was brought in and a wagon road was blasted through to Grassy Flat where the main construction camp would be. While this was going on, W. E. Campbell, a well-known Fillmore real estate agent, was appointed to sell shares in the company to the public at $100 per share (about $1500 in todayâs money). The conceptual drawing now adorned the Chamber of Commerceâs letterhead with the slogan âHome of the Monorailâ. On July 16, 1927 a dedication ceremony was held chaired by John McNab. McNab was the founder of the Sespe Land and Water Company which had originally purchased the land Fillmore was on from the heirs of Thomas More. It was the Sespe Land and Water Company who had sold the land to the Southern Pacific for the depot, thus creating the town of Fillmore. P. S. Coombs gave a rousing speech about the plans for the monorail â why it might go as far as Bakersfield or even San Francisco. Those purchasing shares now would not regret it, think how much your shares in Ford would be if you had bought early! Eventually Mayor W. H. Price dug the first shovelful of dirt with a silver plated shovel and the project was officially started. Within a week, P. S. Coombs, Buren, Groves and Basher had all disappeared along with the silver plated shovel. In September, the Chamber of Commerce was reported as âwanting an inquiry as to what has become of the monorail project.â That was the last heard of the project. Fillmore had been suckered. When the old timers were asked bout the project didnât seem to want to talk about it. If anyone finds some monorail stock certificates among their family papers, they have no value, but the Museum would love to have one for our collection. For more on Fillmoreâs history, visit fillmorehistoricalmuseum.org. |
By Adrian Palazuelos — Wednesday, April 8th, 2020
Dear Fillmore Unified School District Families, General Information Meal Distribution Spring Recess Distance Learning Our teachers, principals, and other staff have been hard at work to prepare for providing instruction beyond our traditional schools and classrooms. We look forward with optimism to the opportunities for our teachers to work with your child through Distance Learning. As questions arise, we encourage you to reach out to your childâs teacher or principal. Together we will be able to navigate through the current challenges. Keep healthy and thank you in advance for your patience throughout this difficult time. Sincerely, |
Photo of the Week: "Gertrude, the Queen of the Harford pier, Port San Luis Harbor, Avila, CA" by Bob Crum. Photo data: Canon 7DMKII camera with Tamron 16-300mm lens @59mm. Exposure; ISO 800, aperture f/11, 1/125 second shutter speed. Enlarge Photo By Bob Crum — Wednesday, April 8th, 2020
Four days and three scary nights
I confess that this dastardly COVID-19 pandemic is troublesome. Being on the highly vulnerable list, worry is unavoidable. While I can't change the events, the circumstances are forcing me to reexamine some aspects of my life. But details are not fodder for this column. Instead, while confined to home, I'll admit that I've whiled away many hours reminiscing. Ah, the joy of nostalgia. Also thinking about how all of this might affect my photography future. But I digress. Back in PP (Pre-Pandemic) days, many of my 'phonetography' friends struggled to understand why I continue to carry around a heavy black object (camera) hung from my neck. Because it's complicated, I struggled mightily to summarize an answer in less than 3,000 words. I never get to finish my answer. I experienced the military in the U.S. Air Force stationed at Kadina Air Base, Okinawa. On leave in Tokyo, Japan, I bought my first camera. The first photos were of snow-capped Mt. Fujiyama (Fuji-san). On that day, photography became my middle name and has since added thousands of hours of excitement and enjoyment. Upon my honorable discharge, I entered the workforce (WTVJ-TV Miami) to earn a living to support a growing family. I didn't yet have sufficient photography experience to work in that field. Nevertheless, I had a new purpose for photography: Photographing the kids as they grew! Photography also gives me a reason to travel and explore new places. Like most people, there's a degree of pleasure from memorable experiences when going somewhere new. More importantly, I get to exercise and enjoy unlimited creativity. The majority of my adult life was in South Florida, where I unceasingly explored the terrain from Lake Okeechobee to Key West. The rest of the state also explored as time permitted. I would peruse outdoor magazines and look with awe at many of the fascinating places to visit. In one magazine, I saw exciting photos of the Okeefenokee Swamp. In the 1860s, the Lee family moved to Billy's Island in the heart of the Okeefenokee and lived off the land for decades. Though fire and the Civilian Conservation Corps removed most evidence of human activity on the island, the cemetery, rusty remnants of the logging camp, along with an Indian mound remained. I had to see (experience) this mysterious swamp. In my inflatable raft, I spent four exciting days exploring the waterscape and three scary nights camping on Billy's Island. A story for another time. Note that I survived buzzing skeeters, giant spiders, slithering water moccasins (cottonmouth snakes) and cantankerous alligators. And for all this fascinating wildlife, I had only three rolls of film and one bottle of Jack Daniels. Relocating to California after Hurricane Andrew, a camera in hand, the drive to explore the countryside continued. Why not? California has a plethora of rich, tantalizing photo ops ripe for photoing! There are some places I frequently visit because of the variety of photo ops in one tripâfor example, Gopher Glen farms in See Canyon. Gopher Glen farms grow a variety of scrumptious heritage apples, the kind you'll never find in a supermarket. Oh, don't get me started on their apple butter and apple cider. Soooo good. After my annual purchase of goodies, I usually visit the Woodstone Marketplace, a country-style, counter-serve restaurant offering delish deli eats at Avila. Afterward, on to the Harford pier, replete with wildlife, including mermaids. There's never something to photograph. From the archives, the photo of the week, showing me her better side, is blushing Gertrude, Queen of the Harford Pier at the Port San Luis Harbor. Send comments, suggestions or questions to: focusonphotography@earthlink.net |
By Anonymous — Friday, April 3rd, 2020
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By Ventura County Sheriff Department — Wednesday, April 1st, 2020
Sheriff Bill Ayub is proud to announce the appointment of Patrick Maynard as the Director of the Office of Emergency Services. Patrick is a 9-year member of the Ventura County Sheriffâs Office, who began his career in 2011 as the alert and warning coordinator in the Office of Emergency Services (OES). For the past seven years, Patrick has overseen the operations, training, and finance sections of OES. He has been the acting director of OES since the summer of 2019 when a nationwide recruitment was initiated to replace Kevin McGowan, who previously held the position. That recruitment effort culminated in the selection of Patrick as the OES director this week. He has taken the helm during a critical time when one of the greatest challenges confronts Ventura County residents: the Coronavirus pandemic. Patrick has extensive experience managing the countyâs response and recovery efforts to many disasters, including fires, mudslides, oil spills, and the Borderline mass shooting. âI am thrilled with Patrickâs appointment,â said Ventura County CEO Mike Powers. âI have had the pleasure of working closely with Patrick during our last few incredibly challenging years, and I have found him to be bright, strategic, collaborative and extremely hard-working - everything you want in an emergency manager and leader. With the partnerships he has established across our community and his âwhatever-it takes-to-get-it doneâ approach, we are fortunate to have him in this crucial role during this unprecedented health crisis.â Prepared by: Captain Eric Buschow |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, April 1st, 2020
Even the Fillmore Indian is taking COVID-19 protection seriously. Be safe for yourself and the community. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, April 1st, 2020
Thank you to Kay Wilson-Bolton and everyone who showed up early to help with the food bagging for food distribution at the SPIRIT of Santa Paula shelter. An extra big thank you to everyone who came out, including Adrianna Ocegueda, Brandy Lengning, Heather Merenda and her son Angelo. Thank you to the Fillmore people who committed to come and help. If you were unable to go, there will be opportunities in the future. The event was open to in-need households in the Santa Clara River Valley, including Fillmore and Piru. Food distribution started at 2:30 pm on March 21st at 1498 E Harvard Blvd, Santa Paula, Ca. Courtesy Fillmore City Council Member Manuel Minjares Facebook page. Enlarge Photo |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, April 1st, 2020
Vons is taking extra precautions, controlling how many are allowed to shop, sanitizing carts, marking floors for social distancing, and installing plexiglass sneeze guards at cashiersâ stations. Courtesy Nextdoor.com Enlarge Photo Vons has installed plexiglass sneeze guards at each cashiersâ station to help stop any spread of the COVID-19 virus. Enlarge Photo |