Category Archives: Featured News

Ventura, make your voice heard.  Your vote counts

by Antoinette Mann, Ventura City Clerk

Voting is one of the most fundamental rights of our democracy.  There is no greater right than the right to vote and no better way to participate in shaping the future of our city than by voting.

Ventura voters have four municipal measures on the November 8th ballot, Measures “N”, “O”, “P” and “Q.” In addition, there are three City Councilmember seats up for election.  Voters can learn more about these measures by visiting cityofventura.net/election.

Early voting has already begun, in fact 50% of the 62,170 registered voters in Ventura are designated Vote-by-Mail voters.  Increasing voter participation strengthens our democracy and ensures residents’ voices are heard.

In 2013, 27% of Ventura’s registered voters participated in the electoral process while in 2014, 48% participated.  The higher participation rate in 2014 was due to the election being held in conjunction with County, State, and Federal elections.

In November 2014, Ventura voters approved Measure D, amending the City Charter to provide regular elections in November of even-numbered years instead of odd-numbered years (aligning City elections with the elections of State and Federal legislators and officials) to increase voter turnout and decrease election costs.

This year, the City   is anticipating at least 50% of Ventura voters to exercise their democratic right on November 8.  Do your part, study the issues and complete your ballot .

Are you a Vote-by-Mail voter?  If so, you can drop off your completed Vote-by-Mail envelope at Ventura City Hall, in the City Clerk’s Office (501 Poli Street, Room 204) or at the County of Ventura’s 24-hour ballot box located in front of the Hall of Administration (800 S. Victoria Avenue).   Additionally, you can drop off your sealed ballot envelope at any polling place on November 8.

If you are mailing your ballot, ensure it is postmarked no later than November 8 and place the correct amount of postage on the envelope – two First Class stamps.  The last day to request your Vote-by-Mail ballot is November 1 for the November 8 election, so don’t delay.

Do you prefer to cast your ballot in person on Election Day?   Polling places are listed on the back of your sample ballot.  You can also visit the Ventura County Elections Division webpage to locate your polling place at venturavote.org.    Please note that polling locations are adjusted periodically.  Polls close at 8 p.m. but if you are in line and its 8p.m., the polling place will remain open so you can vote.

Once the voting period ends, you can view real-time election night results on the new official app from the Ventura County Elections Division.  In addition to providing election results you can verify your polling place and even check the status of your Vote-by-Mail ballot.  The easy to download app is available in both the Apple App Store and Google Play – search for Ventura County Elections.

If you have any questions or need assistance with voter information, please call the City of Ventura City Clerk’s Office at  658-4787 or the County’s Election Division at  654-2664.

Local food co-op sponsors discussion

Panel discussion about locally grown food held in Ventura.
Panel discussion about locally grown food held in Ventura.

by Sheli Ellsworth

October 5, Ventura Food Co-op hosted a panel discussion about locally grown food at MadeWest Brewing. Panel members included father and daughter, Jose and Maria Alcantar of Alcantar Organics; Phil McGrath of McGrath Family Farm; Sarah Nolan of the Abundant Table; and Alley Gialketis of Ventura Food Co-op.

What is a co-op? “A co-op is people coming together to meet a common need,” says Gialketis. In the case of the Ventura Food Co-op, it is a future grocery store where farmers can sell directly to customers.

stuff-local-co-op-insetVentura County farmers face a number of hurdles. After years of drought, water has become a huge problem. Strawberry production has been significantly reduced but, 50% of what local farmers grow are: strawberry , raspberry , lemon, and nursery crops. All of these are considered “luxury crops” that require a lot of resources but yield low nutrients. “Crop patterns will be changing. Drought tolerant options like cannabis need to be explored,” according to Phil McGrath. “Most farmers now only grow one crop, they will need to diversify.”

Mc Grath also says that high labor costs also hurt local farming. We get our food from countries that pay their laborers $10 a day. We pay ours $10 an hour.” Ventura County farm workers make about $23,000 a year. The average annual rent cost in the county is $18,000. “If we paid our workers a living wage, the price of food would be more than double.” Another problem is the worldwide food market. “Most of the food grown in Ventura County is shipped overseas and country wide. Less than 2% of the food grown here is eaten here. Americans are used to cheap food. “Ten to fifteen cents of every dollar is spent on food in this country.” In most countries, it is 25-35% of every dollar. Another problem with worldwide food distribution is that people don’t eat seasonally. Americans are used to a variety of foods all the time. “One way to cut down on food costs is to eat what is in season.”

Local farmers’ markets haven’t helped either. Nolan says, “Farmers’ markets are saturated with small scale farmers. Most of which are out-of-county farmers.”

The Abundant Table is a nonprofit organization located on the McGrath Farm that educates young adults about farming and nutrition. Nolan says that the Abundant Table’s mission is to “educate people about food because growing and sharing food builds communities and brings them together.” Both agree that better management of local farmers’ markets would help local farming. “Locals should be first at the markets, not out of county farmers. This reduces traffic, making local farming more sustainable.

Locally grown food has its dissenters. Economist Jared Barton objects to local farming in Ventura because it requires the use of water, a resource that is in short supply. Environmentalists claim that farming in arid regions adds salt to the ground ruining it for plants and animals. The amount of resources used to ship locally grown foods also causes pollution. According to environmentalist Winthrop staples, there is no such thing as “sustainable farming” because all farming robs something from the environment. “The best the environmentalist and economist can hope for (if they like to eat), is local regions feeding local communities. Hopefully organic farming being the baseline, says McGrath.”

 

 

Museum of Ventura County invites families to its Annual Day of the Dead Celebration

Ballet Folklórico Mestizo of Oxnard College to appear at Museum
Ballet Folklórico Mestizo of Oxnard College to appear at Museum

On Sunday, November 6, the Museum of Ventura County hosts a free community celebration of music, dance, and crafts from 11am – 4pm for the whole family. Visitors can see the artist-created altars, called ofrendas, on display throughout the museum, enjoy cultural dance performances by local groups, create art projects to take home and have their faces painted calaveras–style. This annual celebration has become very popular at the Museum, highlighting the local traditions of Day of the Dead/Dia de los Muertos.

Sunday’s entertainment includes performances by Ballet Folklórico Mestizo of Oxnard College, Ballet Folklórico de Bell Arts, and Danza Mexica Cuautemoc, and DATA (DeAnza Academy of Technology and the Arts) Mariachi.

Traditional craft-making is available for all ages, which includes making paper flowers, masks, and paper skeletons. Refreshments are available for sale.

Day of the Dead (Dia de los Muertos) is observed in many part of Mexico and Latin America, and includes altars to welcome and honor the departed who are said to come back to walk among the living on November 1st. It is now popular in the United States among Latinos and non-Latinos alike. Humorous skulls (Calaveras) and skeletons are the dominant symbols of the celebration, which has roots in pre-Columbian as well as Spanish religious beliefs.

 

Ventura Park Ambassadors provide safety and security

Is there a noticeable positive improvement on the Promenade? Photo by George Robertson.

by City staff and the Downtown Ventura Partners

There’s a noticeable positive improvement in our parks downtown — an uptick in visitors and programs that show we value public places and desire to make them safe for all to enjoy. One of the best ways to keep our parks safe and friendly is to use them frequently. Committed to this goal, the City of Ventura, in collaboration with Downtown Ventura Partners (DVP), maintains Park Security Ambassadors six days a week to help deter and report unwanted behaviors while ensuring a safe, clean and welcoming environment.

The program is gaining momentum with results, so much so that the City recently expanded the Ambassador program by increasing service hours and expanding the coverage area to the Promenade. The results were immediate. Police officials reported that calls for service to the City’s dispatch center for issues on the Promenade dropped in half – from 144 calls in May to 74 calls in August – in the program’s first full month on the scene.

First introduced in March 2015, the positive effect can be seen in both Plaza Park and Mission Park, and along Main Street and now the Promenade . Park Ambassadors average more than 500 contacts a week with park visitors, businesses, and transients and report issues to the City and others.

The program’s success has led to improvements in cleanliness and safety, reduced public safety calls for service, reduced vandalism in public restrooms and park areas, increases in access to care for homeless individuals, and opportunities to identify long-term solutions for homelessness. Among the bright spots, the team of Park Ambassadors have built relationships with various needy individuals, some on the streets for years, and have used the DVP’s Family Reconnection Program to reconnect over 40 individuals with relatives, loved ones or into service centers.

With the enhanced sense of safety, Mission Park has been activated to promote the health of students from a local school with a new pilot program.  Students now recreate on the grass through a use agreement with the City’s Parks Department, and a consistent presence provided by the Ambassadors before and after the school children arrive. The park is activated two days a week enabling students to participate in physical activity during recess. Mission Park provides the perfect opportunity for students to be involved in vigorous play which also helps to improve concentration skills in the classroom.

Ambassadors also are doing their part to remove litter and trash, removing on average 50 pounds of trash weekly between the two parks. They handle or report all graffiti removals, access to the restrooms and help maintain the general cleanliness of the parks.

The Ambassadors work hand-in-hand with the members of the Ventura Police’s Patrol Task Force, county behavioral health staff and other social services outreach efforts to track progress of homeless contacts. They also act as the community’s eyes and ears, reporting incidents of criminal activity, ordinance or code violations to ensure a safe environment in our parks, downtown businesses and beachfront.

The program is paid partially by DVP and from the City’s General Fund, which is the same fund that pays for police, fire, parks, programs for seniors and youth, and other critical services. With additional funding, this important program could be expanded and become permanent.

Ventura values our parks, historically and culturally significant places, and having space to simply enjoy the outdoors. Park Security Ambassadors help protect what makes Ventura an attractive visitor destination and a desirable place to live.

Are you ready for elections?  Will anyone be?

In November we will be inundated with many things to consider and to vote on. So that you can start thinking about Ventura’s ballot issues here they are.

MEASURE “N” – ELECTIONS ISSUES – CHARTER AMENDMENT – Shall the proposed amendments to Sections 505, 703, and Article XI of the City Charter, to have the selection process for the City Council determined by Ordinance, have the selection of the Mayor and Deputy Mayor occur in even-number years following regular City Council elections, and eliminate the Ventura Unified School District’s election process from the City Charter, thus making them subject to state law, be approved?

MEASURE “O” – CITY CLEAN WATER/ BEACHES/ STREET REPAIRS/ SAFETY MEASURE – To help protect local water supplies, rivers, beaches from pollution; maintain City services, including: fire, paramedic, police emergency response; keep all fire stations open; repair streets; earthquake retrofit bridges; address homelessness; maintain after-school programs, services for seniors, veterans, youth; shall the City establish a ½ cent sales tax for 25 years, providing approximately $10,800,000 annually, require independent audits, citizens oversight, and all funds used locally?

MEASURE “P” – INITIATIVE ORDINANCE EXTENDING OPEN SPACE, AGRICULTURE, AND HILLSIDE LAND — USE CHANGES BY VOTER APPROVAL TO 2050 – Shall the initiative ordinance extending open-space, agriculture, and hillside land use changes by voter approval to 2050 be approved?

MEASURE “Q” – TERM LIMITS FOR CITY COUNCIL – CHARTER AMENDMENT – Shall the proposed amendment to Section 507 of the City Charter, to include term-limits for City Councilmembers to require that after serving three full four-year terms, a City Councilmember is not eligible to run for the City Council or to be appointed to a vacancy unless a period of four years has elapsed since their last service on the City Council, be approved?

Fainer/Tauber, MD Awards

Leo Tauber, MD and his family at the David Fainer, MD Awards Dinner

In 1992, the Ventura County Medical Resource Foundation (VCMRF) presented the First Annual Fainer Awards and the health care community came together to commemorate the life of the late David Fainer, MD who served as role model and mentor for many in the medical community. An exemplary and empathetic professional, Dr. Fainer was known for his motto: “The secret of the care of the patient is in caring for the patient.”

At the First Annual David Fainer, MD Awards Dinner the Foundation honored physician Emeritus of the Year, William J. James, MD who was Ventura County’s First Neurosurgeon. The second year, Leo Tauber, MD was honored as the Ventura County Internist, and in 2004, Dr. Fred Gunn, Jr. was honored as the Physician of the Year.

At the Fourth Annual event the community honored a Physician Emeritus, Physician of the Year and Nursing Award and the following years more worthy professions in the health care arena were recognized for their contributions to the community.

In 2013, The Board of Directors added Dr. Leo Tauber’s name to the event. Dr. Tauber, along with four other fellow physicians founded the Buenaventura Medical Clinic in 1950 and formed the Medical Research Foundation – today known as the Ventura County Medical Resource Foundation.

On Thursday, August 18 at the historic Lloyd-Butler Estate, VCMRF held the 23rd Annual David Fainer, MD & Leo Tauber, MD Awards Dinner. The Masters of Ceremony were Lucas Johnston, VCMRF Board Chair and Vice President & Regional Relationship Manager of Pacific Western Bank; Mary Jarvis, VCMRF Board member and Public Affairs Director of Kaiser Permanente, and Gary Wilde, President/CEO of Community Memorial Health System, and the event Live Auctioneers were Bonnie and Richard Atmore.

These awards recognize outstanding community contributions by those directly involved in the delivery of health care in Ventura County who, through professional, charitable and public service activities, has demonstrated they exemplify Dr. Fainer and Dr.Tauber’s ideals of generosity, excellence and integrity. At the event this year, VCMRF also celebrated its 60th anniversary, as well as Dr. Tauber’s 100th birthday.

stuff-fainer-inset
100th birthday cake created and donated by A Gift of Taste

The 2016 award winners include: Hospital Physician, Gail Simpson, MD; Community Physician, John Walters, MD; Hospital Nurse, Diana Jaquez, RN, MSN, OCN, ACHPN; Community Nurse, Rosemary Libman, RN; Oral Health Specialist, Scott Packham, DDS; Vision Care Specialist, Paul J. Dougherty, MD; Behavioral/ Mental Health Professional, Deborah Thurber, MD; Allied Health Professional, Camarillo Health Care District, and Trailblazer Award, Assisted Home Health & Hospice – Elaine Donley.

Since, 1956, VCMRF’s mission is to improve, in partnership with others, access to needed health care for the most vulnerable and underserved residents in Ventura County. VCMRF provides oral health, vision care and mental health care services to low-income children through our Children’s Resource Program and survivorship wellness retreats for underserved women undergoing cancer treatment at Ventura County hospitals.

Ventura Botanical Gardens announces Fall Trail Festival

Naturalists will host interactive education stations at the Fall Trail Festival.

Join the Ventura Botanical Gardens on Saturday, October 22 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. for the first ever Fall Trail Festival—a family-friendly opportunity to enjoy the outdoors, learn about nature and celebrate the fall season in ghostly style.

Naturalists will host interactive education stations to teach visitors about wildlife, geology and local culture. A bird-watching station will be open to lovers of our fine-feathered friends. Guided trail tours, wildflower seed sowing, and other hands-on activities will also be available. Guests will have a chance to enter an opportunity drawing for a possibility to win memberships to the Gardens among other prizes provided by Patagonia, Real Cheap Sports, and Islands Packers.

A festive Canine Costume Contest is planned giving visitors a chance to unleash their hound’s inner werewolf, ballerina, clown, wizard, vampire or ghoul! The first twenty-five dogs to register will receive goody bags and the first, second and third place winners will receive prizes courtesy of Ventura Pet Barn.

“We’re thrilled to celebrate this first ever Fall Trail Festival,” said Joe Cahill, Executive Director for the Ventura Botanical Gardens. “The trails are so popular and we’ve had a number of requests to develop more events on the site. The tremendous support we receive from the community allows us to develop more community-focused events like this.”

Admission to the Fall Trail Festival is free and both local residents and visitors are encouraged to attend. For more information, please visit www.VenturaBotanicalGardens.com. Follow Ventura Botanical Gardens on Facebook.com/venturabotanicalgardens for upcoming events.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Crews respond to Saticoy Water Conditioning Facility discharge at Telephone Road and Wells Road intersection

Ventura Water, Ventura Police Department, Ventura City Fire and allied agencies responded to a non-hazardous chemical discharge from the Saticoy Water Conditioning Facility today.  The substance has been identified as Phosphate (commonly used to prevent corrosion in water system pipes) and the quantity released (400 gallons) does not pose a health concern to the community.

At 9:30 a.m., on Sept.28  Ventura Water staff conducting a daily routine inspection observed and reported a failure at the outlet pipe. The staff member immediately activated the incident response procedure.

Location:  Telephone Road and Wells Road intersection, released from the Saticoy Water facility, traveled ¼ mile from the facility into the adjacent barranca. Crews established a dirt berm to successfully contain the release and prevent additional flows.

Cleanup:  Ventura Water is working with Ventura County Environmental Health to assess any possible environmental impacts and determine cleanup requirements.  Patriot Environmental Services began skimming the residual Phosphate today from the barranca in order to minimize the flushing that will begin tomorrow.

No road closures:  After a brief road closure the roads have re-opened and traffic in the area is flowing normally.

If customers have any questions or need additional information, please contact Ventura Water Customer Care at (805) 667-6500 or [email protected].