Lifetime Achievement Citizen of the Year Don Gunderson is pictured with his wife Ruthie to his right.
Lifetime Achievement Citizen of the Year Don Gunderson is pictured with his wife Ruthie to his right.
Enlarge Photo

Don has long served his country and the community of Fillmore. This will detail just some of his contributions.
Don was born and raised in Fargo, North Dakota. After graduating from Fargo Central High School, he was awarded a Navy ROTC scholarship. He then attended the University of Wisconsin, Madison as a Midshipman, U.S. Naval Reserve. He graduated with Bachelors of Business Administration degree and was commissioned an Ensign in the U.S. Navy in June 1957.

His service in the Navy and to the USA took him to many places around the country and world including Norfork, Virginia; Panama City, Florida; Hawaii; three deployments in Viet Nam; Washington DC; Norfork again; Mediterranean; Command at Sea – based in Charleston, SC; trip around South America; Port Hueneme; and the Pentagon.

In 1972, Don was awarded the Air Medal and Bronze Star Medal with combat “V”. He retired as a Navy Commander on February 1st, 1985 after his first wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. They moved to Fillmore in March 1985. Sadly, Don’s first wife passed away in February 1986.

This lady from Fillmore, “Ruthie” came into Don’s life and they married in 1987. In 1990 when two members of the City Council announced they would not run for reelection, Don took this opportunity to give something back to the community where he lived. This was not something he could easily do during his Navy career. Ruth agreed to help with the campaign and Don soon learned how deep Ruthie’s roots were in the City. The guy who “married Ruthie” rustled up enough votes to win a seat on the City Council. Don served on the Council for 12 years including a stint as mayor. The 1994 earthquake was probably one of the most challenging times for the City but Fillmore came out strong with hard work by Don, the other Council members, City staff, and City residents.

In April 1993, Don joined the Rotary Club of Fillmore Sunrisers and remains an active member of the merged Rotary Club of Fillmore. Don served the club as President (1997-98), secretary/treasurer & Foundation Chair to name a few. Being a Rotarian has provided Don with opportunities to do many projects both in Fillmore an even in international projects. Among Don’s favorite projects has been the provision of Student dictionaries to all third grade students in the Fillmore and Piru schools. Through the years Rotary has given out more than 4,000 dictionaries.

After leaving the City Council in 2002, Don became a member of the Board of Directors of the Fillmore Piru Veterans Memorial District in 2003. He served many years and helped the District obtain several grants enabling the District to pay for a number of repairs and improvements.

Don and Ruth continue to service the community through Rotary and Faith Community Church of which they were part of the funding group.

Don Gunderson is well deserving of Lifetime Achievement Citizen for his many, many, years of service to Fillmore and our country.

 


 
David Cadena
David Cadena

David Cadena is a senior at Fillmore High School. He is a student of excellent academic standing, the recipient of the Renaissance Award of achieving a 4.0 GPA or higher in two consecutive semesters. Enrolled in every AP class starting at Fillmore as a freshman, David is a student who seeks challenge.

David is an extraordinary student who possesses strong qualities to fulfill any leadership role. As an elected member of the Student Council, David demonstrates leadership on campus by developing and participating in school sponsored events that enhance the school climate and student body of Fillmore High School. He is reliable, honest, dedicated in his undertakings, well-spoken, generous with his time in helping others, competent in setting examples and a positive role model for others. Indeed, David is the vice-chairperson of the School Site Council; President and founding member of the Leo’s Club. In 2013-14, David received the Leo of the Year award. David is also a member of the Hall of Fame club.

In this capacity he reflects a positive image of the school as evidenced by what the students say and do, and by what people read and hear about FHS. His communication skills create goodwill among and throughout the school and community.

David has a natural talent in developing and building friendly relations with students, faculty, administration, and the community. He is a member of FLASHES.

Excellence in academics, community service and public relations, David also demonstrates effort and commitment to his sports (golf for four years, football for one year), earning recognition and standing including but not limited to: Captain of the Wrestling team for 3 years; on the varsity team for four years. His awards include: TRI-VALLEY LEAGUE CHAMPION, 106 lbs., Varsity Wrestling 2013-14, MVP – LOWER WEIGHT DIVISION Varsity Wrestling 2012-13, MOST IMPROVED JV Wrestling 201-12.

David sets high standards for himself, fosters conflict resolution when the need arises, handles difficult situations with confidence and ease. He is not afraid to ask for help when pressing for results. He is a team player, always willing to learn.

David Cadena is a superstar!

 


 
Alfonso Martinez
Alfonso Martinez

Mr. Martinez has been employed by FUSD for nine years. He has worked at San Cayetano and currently works at Fillmore Middle School. He is a Fillmore High School gaduate, coaches soccer at and has been involved in AYSO for many years. He is married with two children and his wife works at Sierra High School.

Affonso has provided inspired service as a custodian and works daily to create a positive environment for students and staff. He is respected by his peers and has excellent repport with students. Alfonso makes a positive impact on his school community and is an asset to our district.

Congratulations Alfonso.

 
Mary-Allyn Garcia
Mary-Allyn Garcia

Mary Allyn Garcia has been a teacher for ten years in the Fillmore Unified School District and is currently a fifth grade teacher at Rio Vista Elementary School. Mrs. Garcia has previously taught at Sespe, Mountain Vista, and San Cayetano Elementary schools.

From an early age, Mary.Allyn had a calling toward teaching and service. She grew up in a military family and moved frequently as a child. Fillmore was a quaint town and community and Mary-Allyn loved the idea of living and raising her family in a small, close-knit town. Mrs. Garcia is married to Randy, who is also a teacher, and they have four children who all have attended Fillmore schools, two of which graduated form Fillmore High School and have attended California State Universities. She prides herself in representing Fillmore where she has the pleasure to live and educate her neighbors.

Mrs. Garcia has a Masters Degree and Preliminary Administrative Credential in Educational Leadership from Azusa Pacific University and services as an administrative designee, grade level lead, and ASB advisor at Rio Vista Elementary. Furthermore, she is a part of the district curriculum committee where she has been actively involved with the creation of the units for the district. In addition, Mrs. Garcia currently participates in an Educational Leadership Cohort through the Ventura County Officer of Education to help enhance her leadership skills.

 
Fillmore Unified School District
Fillmore Unified School District

Diana Vides was born on November 15, 1970 in Kingsburg, CA. and is the eldest of five children born to an immigrant from Abasolo, Guanajuato, and a Texan father. She was raised in Orosi, California, a small rural community between Dinuba and Visalia, California. Orosi is an agricultural town that cultivates a myriad of crops including grapes, oranges, and peaches.

As a child she has very fond memories of working alongside her parents in the fields. Most memorable of these is picking olives in October right before the Fresno Fair and wrapping up her summers by picking table grapes, or better know as "la tabla". She worked in the packing house in high school and cleaned apartments in college. Working difficult jobs has molded her into the person she has become. She knows the value of hard work and understands the struggles that it takes to get ahead.

Coupled with these valuable lessons was the privilege she had to count on nurturing parents that showered her with love and support. She was always given an opportunity to focus on education. She enjoyed competing with other students in high school and thrived on receiving report cards with straight A's. Consequently, she finished as salutatorian in her graduating high school class.

A graduate of UC Davis with a Bachelors in Spanish, she relocated to Los Angeles in 1993 to enter the credential program at CSUN. She worked as a bilingual teacher in an LA Unified school and taught for 7 years. She has been an intervention teacher, ELL/ Title I coordinator, literacy coach, LEAD intern and assistant principal.

She has the honor of being the principal at Piru Elementary school, her little paradise. She is extremely honored to be the recipient of the ConnectED Apple award. This grant will give equity and access to her community at large and create a change in teaching and learning through the use of devices. Every Piru student will receive an iPad and every credentialed teacher will receive a MacBook. She is ecstatic at the possibilities it presents her students and the prospects that it gives her create an institution that embraces technology through transformational learning.

Fillmore also presented her with the honor of becoming the coordinator for the migrant program. This program supported her as I a child and now supports children that travel the same path she once followed. Every day she has the opportunity to give back to the community all the support and resources that were given to her. She is an example of how hard work, motivation and determination can get you anywhere you want to go in life.

 

March 17, 2015 - The American Red Cross encourages eligible donors to give blood during National Volunteer Month this April and make a difference in the lives of patients in need.

The Red Cross salutes the hundreds of thousands of volunteers who help fulfill its lifesaving mission and encourages others to join their ranks as volunteer blood donors. Volunteer donors are the only source of blood products for those in need of transfusions.

Donors of all blood types - especially those with types O negative, A negative and B negative - are needed to help ensure blood is available for patients this spring. Those who are unable to give blood can support blood donations and invite others to make a lifesaving donation by creating a SleevesUp virtual blood drive at redcrossblood.org/SleevesUp.

To make an appointment to give blood, download the Red Cross Blood Donor App, visit redcrossblood.org or call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767).

American Red Cross Blood Donation Center

American Red Cross Woodland Hills Donation Center
6338 Variel Ave.
Woodland Hills, Calif. 91367

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday: 12:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
Thursday: 10:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Friday: 7:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday: 7:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.

Upcoming blood donation opportunities

Thousand Oaks
4/1/2015: 1 p.m. - 7:15 p.m., Thousand Oaks Inn, 75 W Thousand Oaks Blvd
4/6/2015: 1 p.m. - 7:15 p.m., Thousand Oaks Inn, 75 W Thousand Oaks Blvd
4/8/2015: 1 p.m. - 7:15 p.m., Thousand Oaks Inn, 75 W Thousand Oaks Blvd

How to donate blood
Simply download the American Red Cross Blood Donor App, visit redcrossblood.org or call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767) to make an appointment or for more information. All blood types are needed to ensure a reliable supply for patients. A blood donor card or driver's license or two other forms of identification are required at check-in. Individuals who are 17 years of age (16 with parental consent in some states), weigh at least 110 pounds and are in generally good health may be eligible 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
The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies about 40 percent of the nation's blood; teaches skills that save lives; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a not-for-profit organization that depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information, please visit redcross.org or visit us on Twitter at @RedCross.

 
Selected as Teacher of the Year is Mary-Allyn Garcia, center. A full bio will be presented in next week’s Gazette. Friday night’s Annual Community Awards & Installation Dinner was well attended by the community of Fillmore and dignitaries alike. Representing Congresswoman Julia Brownley was Brad Hudson; representing District Assembly Memmber Das Williams was Maggy Flsousou; District State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson; Third District Supervisor Kathy Long; Fillmore City Council/Mayor Doug Tucker; and Ventura County Sheriff Geoff Dean. Featured in past Gazette issues were Explorer of the Year Adrian Mejia, Offier of the Year Tom Brown, and Firefighter of the Year Chad Panke. Also Citizen of the
Year Al Huerta, Non-Profit of the Year One Step a la Vez, and New Outstanding Business of the Year American Dream Realty. To be featured in next week’s Gazette is Diana Vides, School District Administrator of the Year, who was unable to attend the awards dinner. Teacher, Student and Classified staff will also be reported next week. Bill Herrera was Master of Ceremonies. Photos courtesy KSSP Photography Studio.
Selected as Teacher of the Year is Mary-Allyn Garcia, center. A full bio will be presented in next week’s Gazette. Friday night’s Annual Community Awards & Installation Dinner was well attended by the community of Fillmore and dignitaries alike. Representing Congresswoman Julia Brownley was Brad Hudson; representing District Assembly Memmber Das Williams was Maggy Flsousou; District State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson; Third District Supervisor Kathy Long; Fillmore City Council/Mayor Doug Tucker; and Ventura County Sheriff Geoff Dean. Featured in past Gazette issues were Explorer of the Year Adrian Mejia, Offier of the Year Tom Brown, and Firefighter of the Year Chad Panke. Also Citizen of the Year Al Huerta, Non-Profit of the Year One Step a la Vez, and New Outstanding Business of the Year American Dream Realty. To be featured in next week’s Gazette is Diana Vides, School District Administrator of the Year, who was unable to attend the awards dinner. Teacher, Student and Classified staff will also be reported next week. Bill Herrera was Master of Ceremonies. Photos courtesy KSSP Photography Studio.
Enlarge Photo
Alfonso Martinez, center, was selected as Classified Staff of the Year. See full bio in next week’s Gazette.
Alfonso Martinez, center, was selected as Classified Staff of the Year. See full bio in next week’s Gazette.
Enlarge Photo
Student of the Year David Cadena is pictured center. A full bio will be presented in next week’s Gazette.
Student of the Year David Cadena is pictured center. A full bio will be presented in next week’s Gazette.
Enlarge Photo
Captain Don Gunderson, center, was honored as Lifetime Achievement Citizen at Friday’s award presentation. See full bio in next week’s Fillmore Gazette.
Captain Don Gunderson, center, was honored as Lifetime Achievement Citizen at Friday’s award presentation. See full bio in next week’s Fillmore Gazette.
Enlarge Photo
Sandra Cummings of Luv 2 Dance was honored for Youth Sports Group of the Year.
Sandra Cummings of Luv 2 Dance was honored for Youth Sports Group of the Year.
Enlarge Photo
 

I have attached a Scam warning that was attempted to one of our residents in Fillmore. They provided the call back number to me and I called people representing the Department of Treasury. They hung up on me twice when I represented myself as law enforcement. I then went on-line and found this warning by the IRS of this exact scam. This represents exactly what occurred. Be suspicious of anyone attempting to represent themselves as a government agency that demands money over the phone.
Captain David R. Wareham
Fillmore Police Chief

Complaint Review: IRS: Department of Legal Affairs

I was contacted multiple times on my home phone with (recorded) messages from a woman with a heavy Indian accent claiming to be Alicia Rodriguez. She stated her name and that I needed to immediately call her back as strong legal action was being taken against me by the US Department of Treasury.

Upon calling the number back, a man with a thick Indian accent picked up. I asked to speak to Alicia Rosario and was told she was not available. He identified himself as Russel Reid and asked for my home, work, and cell numbers. I asked what this was regarding and he said that he needed my information first. I started to get suspicious and said I wanted to know what this was about. He became rude and told me he couldn't tell me anything until I gave him my information. This went back and forth until he told me this was just an incorrect call to a wrong number and then promptly hung up.

Upon calling again, a man with a thick Indian accent named Robert Marcus picked up the phone and spoke to me, I informed me that this was all a mistake and that it was a call to the wrong phone number. I asked how that could be when they contact me specifically and used my name by which he kept repeating that it was a wrong number and then hung up. I called back and told him I wanted to speak to his manager/supervisor. He then told me that no one was available. I asked him how no one else was in his office for me to speak to and he hung up again.

I called again several times and was hung up on. Finally, another man with a thick Indian accent picked up who identified himself as Robert's manager Samuel. I asked him his last name and, after a suspiciously long pause, he told me that his last name was Hernandez (Samuel Hernandez). I asked what was going on and he said that I was in legal trouble. I told him to identify himself and the address of his location. He informed me that he was part of the IRS, Department of Legal Affairs: US Treasury and said that he was located at 300 North LA Street in Los Angeles, CA 90027. Upon further questioning, he too hung up.

After calling back (yes, I am persistent), I only received voicemails to what appeared to be a cell phone for Russel Reid who identified himself and which gave his employee ID as 11738.

I gave out my cell number and home number (which they already had) but did not give out my work number. I suggest anyone reading this does not give out any information whatsoever.

 
Jesus “Chuy” Ortiz was born in the small town of Degollado, Jalisco in 1954. Chuy is the third of seventeen sons born to Carlos and Isidra Ortiz. In 1972, he came to the United States looking for the “American Dream” and after struggling for so many years, he found it! Together with his wife and three children, he opened the doors to El Pescador #12, Fillmore in 2006. His biggest mission is to provide his customers with that warm feeling of eating at grandma’s house, and at his grandma’s house there was always a surplus of TEQUILA! Chuy spends most of his time working and pouring tequila shots, but when he’s not, he loves to babysit his two granddaughters (Emma and Xaila) and two grandsons (Fernando and Isaac).
Jesus “Chuy” Ortiz was born in the small town of Degollado, Jalisco in 1954. Chuy is the third of seventeen sons born to Carlos and Isidra Ortiz. In 1972, he came to the United States looking for the “American Dream” and after struggling for so many years, he found it! Together with his wife and three children, he opened the doors to El Pescador #12, Fillmore in 2006. His biggest mission is to provide his customers with that warm feeling of eating at grandma’s house, and at his grandma’s house there was always a surplus of TEQUILA! Chuy spends most of his time working and pouring tequila shots, but when he’s not, he loves to babysit his two granddaughters (Emma and Xaila) and two grandsons (Fernando and Isaac).
Enlarge Photo
 
Francisco Vazquez, owner of FV Drafting Services is pictured with Chamber of Commerce members Irma Magana, his wife Linda Vazquez, Ranea Stovesand-Martel, and Maura Gomez.
Francisco Vazquez, owner of FV Drafting Services is pictured with Chamber of Commerce members Irma Magana, his wife Linda Vazquez, Ranea Stovesand-Martel, and Maura Gomez.
Enlarge Photo

Franciso Vazquez, owner of FV Drafting Services is the son of Francisco and Esther Vazquez. He was born in Jalisco, Mexico. At the age of 7 his parents and siblings migrated to US and grew up in Canoga Park, Ca. There he attended Canoga Park High School and got his AA in Architectural Technology from Pierce College.

While at Pierce College he started working for J.M. Nolan Architects and then with JituMetha Engineering. After finishing College and while still working for this firm he started doing work for friends and found that drafting was his passion and in 1987 started his own business FV Drafting Services.

Francisco was introduced to drafting while in the 10th grade in high school when he took a drafting class without really knowing what drafting was at the time. Little did he know that drafting and design would be his passion.

In 1993, Francisco moved to Fillmore after marrying his wife Linda who grew up in Fillmore and they have three sons Juan, Alejandro and Adrian. With Francisco moving to Fillmore he moved his business. Shortly after the majority of his clients were and have been from Ventura County. The dedication he has with his business, clients and community is admirable shows with the majority of Francisco’s business coming from client referrals.