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Something new and exciting brewing at Blackboard Gallery

Something new and exciting is brewing at the Blackboard Gallery at Studio Channel Islands in Camarillo.  For one night only there will be an exhibit like never before, a pop-up spectacle for only the bravest artists and their victims.  This is an exhibit so intense it will only be on display for one dreadful, fun night, October 29th from 7-9pm! Don your costumes or come as you are but join in for a frightfully good time. Don’t be afraid; just turn off the lights. This exhibit is free to the public. One complimentary bar drink for costumed attendees. This event is costume optional.2222 Ventura Blvd.

Retired business executive

city-grauby Dave Grau for City Council

I’m a veteran, a retired business executive with a degree in accounting, and a taxpayer advocate. I think it’s time for a change in City Government. It’s time to get back to common sense: making sure the city is fiscally responsible, small business friendly, and tough on crime.

After serving in the U.S. military, I had a successful career in manufacturing, aerospace and agriculture. I’ve been active in non-profits helping veterans and the homeless.  I serve on the board of directors of the Ventura County Taxpayers Association, an organization that supports reforms that bring greater efficiency and taxpayer savings to local government.  I also spent two years serving on the Grand Jury.

I’m not a career politician, but we don’t need career politicians right now, we need common-sense people with real life experience.  We need new ideas, new energy, and new people who are not tied to the same business as usual way of running city government.

I believe we can improve public safety and fund infrastructure improvements without hurting our local businesses by increasing sales taxes. I’m running on these issues:

  • Taxes: No on Measure “O” (Sales Tax increase) There are times when raising taxes is an absolute necessity.  This is not one of those times.
  • Public Safety: The #1 responsibility of government is to keep its citizens safe. We need to make sure law enforcement is provided full and consistent funding.
  • Economic Vitality: I support making Ventura a place that attracts good paying jobs again. We need to make it easier to start and expand a business, hire more people, or re-locate a business here. Economic vitality is not achieved when misguided elected officials give “preferential treatment” to Brooks, costing taxpayers millions.
  • Water: The city’s water policy is failing our residents. City policy relies largely on reducing demand by constantly raising rates (Ventura has the highest water/wastewater rate in the county) while ignoring opportunities to increase supply.   For example, while eight cities in Ventura County rely on state water for some or all of their water, Ventura receives none.  And every year City Council pays $2 million of taxpayer money to the State for the “right” to water – water Ventura never receives.

I want to be your city council-member to bring back common sense to our city.  It’s time for a fresh face, someone with real life experience and who understands business.

To learn more, please visit my website at:  www.grauforventura.com

 

Ventura County Potters’ Guild Gallery

art-potters-guildThe Ventura County Potters’ Guild Gallery consists of 20 juried Guild members. They are currently featuring an Eclectic Collection of works by VCPG President Genie Thomsen, Kim Myhre Clarke, Judy Winard Hirsty, Roe Estep, Arnie Kubelun, Dane Venaas, luster vessels by Bill Metcalf (Ventura College Ceramics technician) and Ellen Williams… all talented local artists for the month of October. Open 11 – 6 pm every day.

Ventura County Potters’ Guild Gallery
Ventura Harbor Village
1567 Spinnaker Drive Suite 105
644-6800

I have a unique background and set of skills

Version 2by Jeannette Sanchez-Palacios for City Council

I’m Jeannette Sanchez-Palacios. I’m running for city council because I have a unique background and set of skills that would be valuable on the city council. I am a Latina with a desire to bring a multi-faceted perspective to our council.

Serving constituents in Ventura for more than a decade has given me firsthand understanding of our community’s needs. It has also allowed me to cultivate strong working relationships with different levels of government. Because of those relationships City Mayor Erik Nasarenko, County Supervisor Steve Bennett, Assembly members Das Williams and Jacqui Irwin, State Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson, and other community leaders are supporting me.

In addition to serving in leadership roles with organizations like Ventura County Women’s Political Council, El Concilio, and working with Youth Groups, my experience in the California State Assembly gives me insight on how to solve problems through local government. Councilmembers or mayors themselves have reached out to me to help navigate the system.

Considering some of your most pressing issues, here are my thoughts:

The Drought: We need to look at long-term solutions, such as recycled water and drought-tolerant landscaping. Connecting to State water is not a permanent solution. Instead, investing on efficiency and recycling is more reliable and cost effective in the long run.

Workforce Housing: Droughts don’t change the need for housing. I strongly support redeveloping existing projects to include more workforce housing so people who work here can also live here. Projects with business units that can add housing units allow more needs to be met. Creating vibrant communities and resulting in more housing units getting into the market sooner.

Older population: We are living longer and it is estimated that by 2050, older adults will have outnumbered all children under the age of 14 for the first time in human history. With this in mind we have to look at Initiatives that focus on areas such as having a reliable transportation system to get around, ensuring our streets and sidewalks are walkable and encouraging social inclusion between our younger and our older populations.

Economic Development & Our Youth: Technology is one of the largest growing sectors and a key component to our future. I support collaborative work among the City and local networks, like VC STEM – a network of companies, universities, and government agencies, aimed at developing ways to enhance STEM education for students from pre-school through college with input from all cooperating agencies. If Ventura wants to keep thriving and have businesses stay, move or start here, we need to keep our talented youth in our community. Let’s help prepare them to be the workforce that’s needed to support a strong economic force in our community.

The council determines our quality of life now and later; and it dictates the future. I hope to, in collaboration with the entire council, bring positive changes and continue enhancing Ventura’s quality of life for our population as a whole.

 

Focus on the Masters (FOTM) presents “A Conversation with Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo” Oct. 26

art-wongmoFocus on the Masters (FOTM) will present a film screening of “A Conversation with Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo” on Wednesday, October 26 at Ventura College.  The program will begin at 7:00 p.m. at the Applied Science Center.

Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo is a Ventura County textile artist and caretaker of a sacred Tibetan tradition: silk appliqué thangka. Creating thangkas (sounds like Tonka) is more than an art form, it is an ancient practice Leslie learned while living in Dharamsala, India, home to His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan government-in-exile. Leslie is one of only a few women who have mastered this highly specialized craft.

A Conversation with Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo is the edited version of her FOTM Artist Spotlight interview that took place on March 28, 2015, hosted by FOTM founder Donna Granata as part of Leslie’s formal documentation for the FOTM Archive & Library.

For additional information, you may call Focus on the Masters at 653.2501.  To learn more about Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo, go to www.ThreadsOfAwakening.com.

I want to be the change I want to see in my city

city-gravesby Michael Graves for City Council

Michael Graves was inspired to run for City Council after volunteering for Bernie Sanders and campaigning to be a DNC Delegate. “I want to be the change I want to see in my city. I want to ensure the decisions of the City Council are truly representative of the various and diverse communities in Ventura.” Graves said. “I was shocked to learn that in a city that is 30% Latino, there has never been a Latino on the council.” Graves, who is Mexican, Spanish and Cherokee lives in Midtown with his wife, daughter, and their rescue cat, Hercules. As a Special Needs Attendant, he works with adults with disabilities to help them reach their personal goals.

Graves understands the struggles of Ventura’s working middle-class families, and the impoverished. For part of his childhood, his family was forced to live in a homeless shelter due to his father’s “poor priorities.” After a while, they settled into San Diego’s barrio, Logan Heights. This experience built a strong sense of compassion towards individuals who are often overlooked in our society, be they disabled, homeless, or living with mental illness. “Homelessness is an economic issue, not a criminal one,” said Graves. He feels the same about people struggling with drugs and alcohol. “Labels like ‘addict’ or ‘chronically vagrant’ only strengthens the concept of ‘Us vs Them’. These are people that need our help, not our judgment.”

That sense of compassion is the reason he is a very vocal supporter of Prop 64, the Adult Use of Marijuana Act. “My grandfather is in the late stages of prostate cancer. He was wasting away… in so much pain. Medical cannabis brought him back from the brink.” Graves mentions his friend, an Iraq Veteran, who returned home with a severe neck injury and a few less vertebrae. “He used to live in constant pain, even while using highly addictive opioids. Cannabis relieves his pain without doping him up. Now he can earn a living and has a great quality of life.” This is why giving people options such as ordering marijuana online from companies like budbuddies or visiting a dispensary is important. There are some people who can’t leave the house and would prefer to get their products delivered straight to their door. And there are some people who don’t mind pre-ordering their request online and collecting it at a local dispensary. Read more about this option if this sounds like something that would be more convenient for you.

Going further, Graves wants Ventura to roll back the bans on Medical Marijuana Dispensaries. “I have clients whom are disabled, who can’t drive. They shouldn’t have to rely on a stranger coming into their house just to get their medication.” While other council members fear marijuana stores would increase crime, Graves cites government statics that show otherwise. Apparently, providing legitimate dispensary packaging to differentiate it from what some would currently call “street cannabis” has contributed to reducing crime. This is because of the improved decriminalization of cannabis. If you’re like Graves and wants to see the legalisation of medical marijuana in Ventura, when the day comes for the rules to change, maybe looking to open a dispensary may be something worth considering. As there are many rules and regulations surrounding this industry, it is best to do your research beforehand. Plus, with the help of a dispensary supplies company, opening a store that is suitable for this field may not be as difficult as you first though!

“Local delivery drivers are being robbed of cash and product, yet Colorado has seen a decrease in crime and DUI’s.” Removing the ban would also increase tax revenue for the City’s law enforcement, youth programs and environmental restoration.

Graves also supports Prop 59 to overturn Citizen’s United, Prop 61 to keep medications affordable, and SOAR.

“I find it offensive that the people of Ventura are being asked to pay more taxes, while at the same time council members want to double their own income. I’m doing this for the people, not for the money.”

Chamber of Commerce ribbon cutting at Island Creations

business-island-creationsAn official Chamber of Commerce ribbon cutting ceremony was recently held at Island Creations in the Ventura Harbor Village. Owners  Jo Hawthorne and Alioune Diouck cut the ribbon as Chamber members, City Councilmember Christy Weir, Harbor merchants welcomed them to Ventura.  Island Creations is a laid-back seaside boutique offering a collection of stylish, hard to find Tropical and Afro-Caribbean clothing and accessories. 1591 Spinnaker Dr. #113 www.IslandCreationsVHV.com.

Photo by Richard Lieberman

Enter The Trade Desk

Setting up a lemonade stand in the front yard is not what it used to be.  Not only does it take passion and tenacity, today’s entrepreneurs know that it takes visionary genius, a superior product and social, mobile, and video advertising.

Enter The Trade Desk.  The Trade Desk started out in 2009—quite literally at one desk—in the Ventura Ventures Technology Center, the City of Ventura’s business incubator, located behind City Hall. Before long, they moved on to occupy several desks, then, an office suite, an entire floor, and on to offices all over the world.

“The Trade Desk powers the most sophisticated buyers in advertising technology. Founded by the pioneers of real-time bidding, The Trade Desk has become the fastest growing demand-side platform in the industry by offering agencies, aggregators, and their advertisers best-in-class technology to manage display, social, mobile, and video advertising campaigns,” according to their website.

The Trade Desk recently started trading on the NASDAQ.  Shares were expected to be priced at $14 – $16 per share.  However, they opened at $28.75 per share because of strong investor interest.  By the end of day one, their stock had jumped 67% and the company’s value had risen to over a billion dollars.

Their list of awards reads like a millennial’s career bucket list….Entrepreneur’s Top 25 Company Cultures, Deloitte’s Fast 500, Forbes Magazine’s America’s Most Promising Companies, Outside Magazine’s Best Places to Work, just to name a few. In seven years, the company has grown to more than 387 employees and has offices in major US cities such as L.A., San Francisco, Boulder, Chicago, and New York and international offices in London, Hamburg, Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, Tokyo, and Sydney. But their headquarters remain in Ventura and the Ventura Ventures Technology Center was the catalyst that helped make this happen here instead of somewhere else.

Other companies that were launched in the City’s incubator have also gone on to be successful, such as Connexity and MomentFeed.  However, after these companies “graduated” from the incubator, they established their headquarters in other cities.   Incubators can be effective at helping to launch companies but there is no guarantee that when their business gets off the ground, they will choose to stay where they hatched.

And that is what makes The Trade Desk one of the City’s economic success stories and an asset to our diverse business community.  “As a growing global company, they could choose to locate anywhere.  The fact that they stayed loyal to Ventura, and have chosen to remain here — less than two blocks from City Hall — where it all began is a testament to the fact that Ventura is a great place to do business,” said City of Ventura Economic Development Manager Leigh Eisen.

The Ventura City Council had the foresight and vision to launch the incubator that helped accelerate their progress.  The Council will honor The Trade Desk and host a brief reception to celebrate this milestone at an upcoming council meeting.  There will be lemonade.