By Anonymous — Wednesday, March 20th, 2019
Two severely injured animals, a cat called “William” and a Chihuahua named “Viola” arrived at Santa Paula Animal Rescue Center, (SPARC) this week after being hit by cars. Both were sent by SPARC to VMSG Animal Hospital for emergency care. Due to Sparc’s Facebook page being down all day on Wednesday, not enough funds were raised to cover costs of their medical care. Tabby cat, William’s, eye was dislodged from the socket and he has a broken pelvis and several other fractured bones. Viola, a chihuahua, has severe bruising of her abdomen and kidney and liver issues, in addition to pneumonia. SPARC’s executive director, Nicky Gore-Jones says, “Raising the necessary medical funds to care for sick or injured animals arriving at SPARC, weekly, is an ongoing challenge, as medical costs are over $300K annually.” In addition to saving lives, community education plays a large role in SPARC’s mission. Sharing information about the care of animals to students in kindergarten through high school is important to build a better future for animals by raising awareness at an early age. It also allows children the chance to give back to their community. Gore-Jones says, “We urgently need the support of the wider community of Ventura County to help us continue our no kill mission. People who would like to volunteer, donate, adopt and foster are all super important to our continued success,” Donations for animals’ medical care can be made on the shelter’s website at http://www.santapaulaarc.org/donate.html, or called in to SPARC’s main number at 805-525-8609. SPARC is a 501C3, no kill, city shelter in Santa Paula, Ventura County, whose mission is to give every animal arriving healthy, sick or injured, a second chance at life. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, March 20th, 2019
The California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) has notified seller’s permit holders that new sales and use tax rates will take effect beginning April 1, 2019. The new rates are the result of voter-approved initiatives. To find the correct rate for your home or business location, visit www.cdtfa.ca.gov and click the Tax & Fee Rates button. Please note that the new rates will not be available online until April 1, 2019, when they take effect. The California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) administers California’s sales and use, fuel, tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis taxes, as well as a variety of other taxes and fees that fund specific state programs. CDTFA-administered programs account for over 25 percent of all state revenue. California’s essential services, such as public safety, transportation, health, libraries, schools, social services, and natural resource management programs, are directly supported by these taxes and fees. Note: This news release may discuss complex tax laws and concepts. It may not address every situation, and is not considered written advice under Revenue and Taxation Code sections 6596 and 55045. Changes in law or regulations may have occurred since the time this news release was written. If there is a conflict between the text of this news release and the law, decisions will be based upon the law and not this news release. For specific help, please contact the CDTFA at 1-800-400-7115. |
By Anonymous — Tuesday, March 19th, 2019
Donors strongly urged to give blood as soon as possible
As severe weather continues to beat up much of the country, U.S. blood centers are struggling to maintain adequate supplies. Wednesday’s historic bomb cyclone in Colorado, which reached as far south as New Mexico and Texas, caused sustained hurricane-force winds and blizzard conditions. Vitalant closed multiple donation centers and canceled blood drives in Colorado, Wyoming and South Dakota resulting in a loss of nearly 1,000 blood donations. Additional Vitalant locations were unable to transport blood samples to our laboratory for testing, delaying the release of units to hospitals, due to extreme high winds and canceled flights. Other parts of the country are now experiencing or bracing for dangerous conditions from Winter Storm Ulmer—tornadoes, snow, flooding and impassable roads are impacting an estimated 105 million people. Donors are strongly encouraged to give blood today through next week to immediately rebuild the community blood supply. To schedule an appointment to give blood, go to vitalant.org or call 877-258-4825. Walk-in donors are always welcome. “We’re strongly urging our donors here in the Central Coast to give blood now in support of those areas severely impacted by this storm and to rebuild the blood supply,” said Susan Noone, Regional Director at Vitalant. “The severity of this issue has the potential to negatively impact patient care. It’s imperative that every person who feels healthy and is eligible gives blood now.” There is a critical need for all blood types. Locally, Vitalant needs to collect approximately 1,225 donations of all types per week to replenish the supply and meet the needs of area patients. Our team can assist you in determining the most optimal donation based on your blood type and other factors. Volunteer blood donors must be at least 16 years old, weigh at least 110 pounds and be in general good health. Additional height/weight requirements apply to donors 22 and younger, and donors who are 16 and 17 must have signed permission from a parent or guardian. About Vitalant |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, March 13th, 2019
On Wednesday, March 6th at 11:16 a.m., Fillmore Fire crews responded to a structure fire in the 100 block of Santa Clara Street. Once on scene they found a stack of tires had caught fire. They were able to quickly extinguish the flames. The cause of the fire is still under investigation. Enlarge Photo |
By Ventura County Sheriff Department — Wednesday, March 13th, 2019
On May 9, 2019, the Fillmore Police Department will begin its Public Safety Academy, tailored toward the Latino community, by offering a ten week course in Spanish. The Ventura County Sheriff’s Office has long recognized the importance of building relationships in all of our communities. By providing a Public Safety Academy instructed in Spanish, the Sheriff’s Office hopes to continue to create trust and foster positive and lasting relationships. The course is designed to give participants an overview of the Police Department’s function and operational procedures. There will be presentations by Ventura court representatives, narcotic and gang officers, demonstrations by SWAT and the Bomb Squad, and many others. There will also be tours of the Fillmore Police Station, the Pre-Trial Detention Facility (Main Jail), the Communications Center and the Sheriff’s Heliport. Participants will also have the opportunity to go on a Ride-Along with a patrol deputy. The sessions will be instructed by Spanish speaking veteran deputies. Anyone interested in attending, may get an application at the Fillmore Police Station or Fillmore’s City Hall. Potential candidates must be at least 18 years of age, live or work in Fillmore or the surrounding unincorporated areas, have no felony arrests or convictions, no misdemeanor convictions within one year of applying, and be Spanish or a limited English speaker. The sessions will meet on Thursday evenings beginning May 9th, 2019, from 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm for ten weeks, at the Fillmore Active Adult Center, 533 Santa Clara Avenue, Fillmore. For additional information, contact Senior Deputy Javier Chavez via e-mail, javier.chavez@ventura.org, or by telephone at 805-524-2233 (Monday – Friday 8am – 4pm). Prepared by: Senior Deputy Javier Chavez |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, March 13th, 2019
On Friday, March 8th at 4:18 p.m., a white Ford SUV and a Ram 3500 truck collided at the corner of River & A Streets. Fillmore Police and Fire quickly blocked off the streets and redirected traffic while crews cleared the accident. No reported injuries at the time of the accident; cause is still under investigation. Enlarge Photo |
Pictured is the new PEO (Philanthropic Education Organization) Fillmore Chapter GY officers (l-r) is Susan Cuttriss, Jan Lee, Mary Ford, Martha Gentry, Susan Hopkins, Bethany Carpenter, Barbara Peterson, and Carmen Zermeño. Photo courtesy Sue Zeider. Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, March 13th, 2019
By Sue Zeider On Monday, March 11, PEO (Philanthropic Education Organization) Fillmore Chapter GY installed their new officers for the 2019-2020 year in the Depot at the Fillmore Historical Museum. Installed were: Jan Lee, President; Mary Ford, Vice President; Carmen Zermeño, Recording Secretary; Susan Hopkins and Susan Cuttriss, co-Corresponding Secretaries; Martha Gentry, Treasurer; Barbara Peterson, Guard; and Bethany Carpenter, Chaplain. |
Pictured above are some of the Civic Pride members helping set up for last year’s flower show which was held at the Fillmore Active Adult Center. Photos courtesy Jan Lee. Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, March 13th, 2019
Written by Jan lee This year, it will be 100 years since the Fillmore Flower Show began. However, there have not been 100 Flower Shows. There were a few years the show did not go on because of war. Another few years, there just weren’t enough workers to put the flower show together. Linda Nunez shared the following information about how the Flower Show came back to life after a few years’ hiatus. “In 2008, members of Vision 2020, Civic Pride Committee began to talk about the Fillmore Flower Show which began around 1919 just after WWI had ended in November, 1918. Some members knew that this long standing annual event had continued into the late 1990’s under the sponsorship of the Fillmore Garden Club, until leadership waned and expenses climbed. The committee searched for people who had been involved, records and albums that would describe all the planning necessary, as well as props, banners and bottles for the cut flowers that were supposedly stored in local barns. We discovered a treasure of information in the meticulously kept scrapbook belonging to Conway Spitler, who had been a chairman of the event, working years with his wife Tillie, to produce this valued community event with the Garden Club members. We learned that the event was so well thought of, that Sunset Magazine even sent a photographer and writer to gather information for an article that was published in their magazine. And we fostered a new “friendship” and enthusiasm with another former flower show chairman and former president of the Garden Club, Joanne King. She had a beautiful scrapbook and left over ribbons and props in her barn! As the word spread, we had many others contact us with vases in their barns and a desire to help bring back this well loved event! This gathering enthusiasm enabled us to collect bottles (thanks Cindy Klittich and the Boy Scouts who washed them), to obtain judges’ commitments, to create brochures which Patrick Maynard formatted, to secure the Senior Center (Active Adult Center) and to line up helpers for all the many tasks from publicity, to set up, and clean up. Otto & Sons Nursery provided rose bushes for decoration and for sale which gave us a donation for each sale. Asher Smith, a local student, added ambiance with lovely melodies on the violin and mandolin for the 2009 & 2010 shows. Through these last years, hundreds of gardening enthusiasts, young and old, have enjoyed displaying the “fruit” of their labor and creative skills in arranging displays, bouquets, and carefully groomed single stem cut flowers at the flower show. Live music continues to add ambiance. Vision 2020, Civic Pride Committee is proud to have revived this tradition that helps people learn the pleasures of gardening, the pride of entering a show and the sustaining power of valuing the beauty around us.“ As you walk around the Flower Show this year, notice everything that is in the room. There is a dedicated group of volunteers who store, clean, haul, set up, take down and just generally work to make sure everything is ready for people to bring their flowers, plants and other creations to share with the public. It is truly a labor of love. And it is not just the Flower Show. The Civic Pride Committee also makes sure the planters around town have plants. They try to coordinate with the City if there are areas that needs to be “spruced up”. Fillmore is a beautiful city for many reasons. We hope many of you will join your neighbors at the Fillmore Flower Show, April 13 and 14, 2019 at the Active Adult Center on Santa Clara Street. Go to fillmoreflowershow.org for rules, times, divisions and photos. |
Photo of the Week "The mystery tree" by Bob Crum. Photo detail: Canon 7DMKII camera, manual mode, Tamron 16-300mm lens @35mm. Exposure; ISO 640, aperture f/7.1, shutter speed 1/60th a second. Enlarge Photo By Bob Crum — Wednesday, March 13th, 2019
Mindfulness & a Contest
After camera talk, time to delve into the idyllic delectation of philosophy. Fear not; it's much better than fruitcake! I recently ventured to a secret destination on the coast. The Fillmore sky looked promising for a glorious sunset. Off I go camera in tow. Phooey! Excessive cloud cover on the horizon prevented the sun from lighting up the sky. Another conspiracy! Though a glorious sunset was not in the offering, I nevertheless made a few hundred photos. Like always, to the story there's more so let's explore. Regardless of the destination, a mindfulness phenomenon is unavoidable. Mindfulness is the practice of maintaining a nonjudgmental state of heightened or complete awareness of the surroundings on a moment-to-moment basis. Said otherwise, mindfulness is awareness while resisting the adverse instinctive normalcy of conceptualizing. John Suler presents his interpretation in his essay ~Photographic Psychology: Image and Psyche. “Even though they may not specifically use the word “mindfulness,” many of the great masters talk about photography as awareness of the present moment in which we forget ourselves. We let go of the goals, desires, expectations, techniques, and anxieties that make up who we are in order to immerse ourselves into the experience of seeing more fully. We open up our receptive awareness to what the world offers us. Rather than being some objective observer trying to capture something, we become the being that is in communion with the environment, that is IN the world. We’re not looking for anything in particular. We’re not going anywhere in particular. We’re not expecting or trying to control anything in particular. Instead, we’re wandering, perhaps rather aimlessly, without a goal or purpose. We’re fully and naively open to the possibility of the unexpected, the unique, the moment when things come together… to the flow of life. Under these conditions, when we let go of the self, “it” appears to us. We don’t find and take the picture. The photograph finds us. It takes itself. We unite with the scene not so we can see a shot we want, but rather what the scene offers. The experience comes to us, and the photograph is simply the icing on the cake.” That's what I experience, and enjoy, when I'm engaged in recreational photography. I don't flirt with superfluous goals. I prefer to be open to the exciting possibility of the unexpected because the unexpected always happens anyway. (Think weather!) Communion with the environment (sans gnats) is ecstasy! Easier to understand once experienced. With patience, awareness and serendipity, photos inevitably find me. (The hawk!) I need only show up! The only mental interloper allowed is the intellect required to program the camera. Enough for now. Watch this space for more on this exciting topic. The feature photo is another example of 'seeing' with a photographer's eye. The instant I saw it, I immediately recognized a photo op. I made this photo on a recent outing right here in Fillmore. It took several positional changes to get the right perspective. Care to guess how I made this photo? Contest! The first email I receive with the correct information about how I shot the photo or correctly describes the photo wins a single-scoop of Baskin Robbins ice cream. Clue: Think perspective! Hurry! I'll be watching my inbox! Happy photoing. Sent questions, suggestions or comments to: focusonphotography@earthlink.net |