Category Archives: This ‘n’ That

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ventura County

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ventura County (BBSVC) is celebrating 50 years of service through youth mentoring in 2020! The organization serves all of Ventura County and because of that there are nearly 100 youth waiting for a mentor. BBSVC is asking the community to imagine the impact they can make as a friend and role model.

Even now during the COVID-19 shelter-at-home restrictions, BBSVC is still making and supporting matches virtually. With so many youth feeling isolated at home, now is the perfect time for positive role models to come forward. When a “Big” is matched with a mentee, it’s not about changing their schedule, it’s about sharing who they are; But mentors usually find that their life – and the life of their “Little” – is also changed for the better along the way.

BBSVC is looking for volunteers who are interested in getting started as a Big and continuing as a mentor for at least one year. “I finally decided that if I wanted to really make a difference, I needed to just take the leap and do it,” says Greg, a Big/mentor with BBSVC, in describing his decision to volunteer.

All of the youth who are waiting to be matched with a mentor are primarily from single-parent homes, foster or kinship care, or a home that lacks two positive role models. Over 70% of the youth on the BBSVC waitlist identify as boys. Mentors of all ages, races, genders, and life experiences are needed to step up and be the kind of role model who made a positive impact in their own lives when they were young . All of the children on the BBSVC waitlist have the need for a mentor to step in as a friend and role model at this time in their lives, and are looking forward to being a part of the program. BBSVC invites all role models in Ventura County who want to make a difference in 2020 (and beyond) to apply to be a BIG today!

Anyone interested in learning more or who is ready to become a mentor may visit www.BBSVC.org, or may contact Catherine Hoefflin at [email protected] or 805.484.2282 ext 113.

County of Ventura agencies recognized for excellence in communications

Agencies from across the County of Ventura have been recognized by the California Association of Public Information Officers (CAPIO) with Excellence in Public Information and Communications (EPIC) Awards. The County Executive Office, Ventura County Area Agency on Aging, and the Ventura County Fire Department received awards recognizing outstanding communications publications and campaigns.  The County of Ventura publications and communications initiatives were chosen from among 275 award entries from across the state of California.

“It’s an honor for so many of our County agencies to be recognized by CAPIO,” said Mike Powers, County Executive Officer. “Our Board and County is committed to providing timely, transparent, and multilingual communications to ensure that our residents are informed about the programs and services available. This has been especially crucial as we have responded to local emergencies and, most recently, with COVID-19 response efforts.”

The agencies were recognized by CAPIO with the following awards:

County Executive Office

EPIC Award, 2018 State of the County / Estado del Condado – Annual Report

Ventura County Area Agency on Aging

Award of Distinction, ‘LIVEWell’ Resource Guide – Newsletter or Magazine

Ventura County Fire Department

EPIC Award, Maria Fire – Crisis Communications

Award of Distinction, ‘Everyday Heroes Fair Exhibit’ – Special or Community Event, Recurring

Award of Distinction, Public Safety Power Shutoffs – Communication and Marketing Process

While County agencies have been recognized in the past, this is the first year that multiple agencies have been recognized in the same year for achievements and excellence in public information. Past County recipients include the Ventura County Harbor Department, Ventura County Fire Department, and Ventura County Sheriff’s Office.

Founded in 1971, the California Association of Public Information Officials is the leading statewide organization dedicated to advancing public sector communicators across all levels of government. CAPIO provides education and networking that helps its members and their agencies develop and advance.

Chris Butler appointed new Associate Artistic Director at Rubicon

Butler will also be responsible for new play development.

The Board of Directors of Rubicon Theatre of Ventura has appointed Ovation, NAACP and Garland Award-Winner Chris Butler as the company’s new Associate Artistic Director.

Butler returns to Rubicon having previously received acclaim for his portrayals of Caesar Wilkes in August Wilson’s Gem of the Ocean and Randle P. McMurphy in Dale Wasserman’s adaptation of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Most recently, he helped narrate and performed in the company’s livestream presentation of “Voices of America: Songs and Stories of Conflict, Crisis, Hope and Healing.”

Born and raised in Charlotte, North Carolina, Butler received his B.A. in Dramatic Arts from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his M.F.A. in Acting from the University of California, San Diego.

Upon graduation, Butler move to Los Angeles where he began working as an actor in television, film and theatre. He has appeared in nearly 50 films and television series. He had a recurring role on all seven seasons of CBS’s “The Good Wife” as well as its spin off “The Good Fight,” “Designated Survivor,” “True Blood,” “Major Crimes” and “24.” He has also been a series regular on TNT’s “King and Maxwell” and several pilots. Butler has guest-starred recently on “Law & Order SVU,” “NCIS Los Angeles” and “Modern Family.”

On Broadway, Butler played Noah in the Tony nominated production of 110 in the Shade starring Audra McDonald. He won Ovation, NAACP and Garland Awards in Los Angeles for his work in Yellowman at The Fountain Theatre and Stick Fly at the Matrix Theatre. Butler spent four seasons with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival where he played the title role in Othello and Walter Lee in A Raisin in the Sun, among many others.

In addition to Associate Artistic Director duties in the areas of play selection, casting, production oversight, acting, directing and community relations, Butler will also be responsible for new play development and guiding the company’s renewed and expanded commitment to equity, diversity and inclusion.

Says Butler, “Over the years I have admired Rubicon’s dedication to sharing diverse stories and making thought-provoking program choices. And I have experienced, first-hand, the company’s expansive casting practices.”

According to Producing Artistic Director Karyl Lynn Burns, “Our very first statement of vision and goals more than 20 years ago expressed the founding board’s commitment to artists of different cultures, backgrounds, beliefs and abilities; and to producing works by underrepresented playwrights. The intent was conveyed through reinvented, reimagined productions of classics that address current issues; 20th century plays such as Gem of the Ocean, Driving Miss Daisy and Master Harold…and the Boys;” and premieres like The Baby Dance: Mixed, La Razón Blindada, eXtras, and Women Beyond Borders.”

“We know these productions have engendered meaningful dialogue and have helped create greater understanding and compassion in our region,” continues Burns. “But in these troubled and tumultuous times, we know, too, that we can and mustdo more – to actively fight racism and to inspire change – in ourselves, our community, and our world.”

“Change starts with leadership,” says Burns, “and Chris is a person of great strength and integrity. We are incredibly fortunate to have him at the helm of this effort.”

Says Butler, “I look forward to interfacing between artists, audiences, donors and board members to build and implement a plan and hope to take the organization to new and exciting places.”

 

County residents asked to turn in seed shipments from China to Agricultural Commissioner’s Office

Residents across the country have been receiving unsolicited and mysterious seeds shipped from China. The seeds are arriving in small mailer envelopes labeled with descriptions such as “stud earrings”, “jewelry”, “handmade flowers”, and “wire connectors”. Since it is illegal to ship seeds unless they meet the import requirements of the United States – including proper labeling with the name of the shipper, the type of seed, and certification where required – the small packets are sent mislabeled in order to pass through Customs undetected.

“There is concern that these seeds may be invasive species or can carry plant diseases,” said Ed Williams, Agricultural Commissioner. “We have already been contacted by a number of residents who have turned in the seeds they received to our office. We want to work with the community to ensure that none of these seeds present a problem for our native plants and agriculture and we thank everyone in advance for their cooperation.”

Any Ventura County residents who may have received packets such as these are asked to hold on to them and contact the Ventura County Agricultural Commissioner’s Office at (805) 388-4222 in Camarillo, or (805) 933-2926 in Santa Paula. Residents should not dispose of the seeds in the trash due to the risk of the seeds sprouting in the landfill. Staff with the Agricultural Commissioner’s Office will arrange for the seeds to either be picked up or will provide drop-off instructions.

For community members who may have already planted the seeds they received, the Agricultural Commissioner is also asking that they contact the office. Arrangements can be made to remove the seeds that were planted.

Candalaria; a Statue for Ventura?

Later in her life Candalaria Valenzula was still helping people.

by Richard Senate

Will the removal of Fr. Junipero Serra from the pedestal in front of City Hall the debate is now who or what should replace him. It should be someone with links to our city, someone who deserves the recognition of a statue. I would like to suggest a Native American woman, a leader of her people. Her name was Candalaria Valenzula. No one knows exactly when she was born, it is estimated it was sometime around 1838 in the Sespi district of Ventura County. We know she spent much of her life in and around the village of Saticoy, just east of Ventura. She was a mission neophyte and a life-long Roman Catholic, like many of her people. She lived, in her long life to see California pass from Imperial Spain to Mexico and then become part of the United States.

Her grave was believed lost but rediscovered and is now marked, a simple plaque that proclaims her as a Chumash Native American. Candalaria is perhaps the best known of all of the Chumash People. She was a major informant to Smithsonian ethnographer John Harrington with her accounts of Chumash life and beliefs. Much of what we know about the tribe and its customs comes from her interviews.

She was born in the Sespe region of Ventura County and grew up at the Mission San Buenaventura. She was part of the household of Chumash leader Captain Luis Francisco who operated a restaurant/saloon in Saticoy. He did all he could to keep alive Native American traditions and customs. She was known for her fine baskets, and her knowledge of herbs. Candalaria was, by all accounts, a very beautiful woman in her youth.

She was married three times. She was married to Jose del Rios and this union produced a son named Teen. By the 1870s she was working as a cook at the home of the Olivas Family and here she had a long term relationship with Jose Delores Olivas that produced two children. When Jose married a “respectable” woman she left the rancho and left behind the two children who were recognized as members of the Olivas Family. They were taken in and given a good education.

After the family lost their wealth in the 1890s, Candalaria returned to help the Olivas Family. She took care of the sick and elderly mother Teodora and helped to raise Rebecca Olivas DeLa Riva’s children. Years afterward the children remembered her making dolls for them out of scraps and her huge tortillas so large they filled the whole top of the wood stove. She only moved on after the death of Teodora Olivas, and the family sold the two-story adobe home. She then married Jose Valenzuela of Sonora, Mexico.

She was working as a cook on a ranch where Lake Casitas is today. In 1917 she was badly burned when a gasoline stove she was using exploded. She died of her injuries in Ventura. She was, it is believed, 81 years old. She witnessed many changes in her long life from the days of the Missions to Ventura becoming a modern city.

She should be honored for all she did with a statue in Ventura. Before her death she told Mr. Harrington about the beliefs of her people and even recorded her voice singing the ancient songs in the Chumash Language onto wax cylinders. These crude recording still exist and are preserved and transferred to modern recording systems. Her voice is a time machine back to the days when the Chumash. She would be a perfect statue to represent Ventura.

United Way achieves Amgen Foundation Challenge Grant

United Way of Ventura County has successfully met the Amgen Foundation $100,000 challenge grant to launch a Landlord Engagement Program thanks to the generosity of six founding local funders. The goal of the program is to increase housing stock and utilize existing housing vouchers and housing subsidies provided by local jurisdictions and community partners to prevent and end homelessness. The challenge grant provided the foundation for a new funding mechanism designed to generate permanent supportive housing for chronic homeless individuals through a streamlined, one-stop funding collaborative comprised of public and private funders dedicated to ending homelessness.

“Homelessness continues to plague so many communities around the nation, including our own. It is inspiring to see how Ventura County has come together to support the Landlord Engagement Program,” said Eduardo Cetlin, president, Amgen Foundation. “Our fellow funders have recognized the tangible impact this program is having, and we are proud to stand with them to help end homelessness in Ventura County.”

The funds will further leverage public support provided by a Homeless Emergency Aid Program (HEAP) grant in the amount of $200,000 by the Ventura County Continuum of Care for United Way’s Landlord Engagement Program.

Since United Way launched the Landlord Engagement Program in December 2019, 18 unsheltered homeless households including seniors, veterans, individuals, and families have been permanently housed. As a rapid response to the COVID-19 pandemic in mid-March, United Way has helped 29 unsheltered veterans and family members by securing temporary housing in a motel and providing daily food service. Through a partnership with Salvation Army’s Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF), the program will be extended through July 2020 as United Way seeks permanent housing solutions for those veterans and their families. Additionally, United Way provided 2,000 Rapid Response Homeless Care Kits which were distributed by the Ventura County Healthcare for the Homeless Backpack Medicine team.

“We are grateful to the Amgen Foundation for leading the way with this generous challenge grant and the six founding funders who have joined the cause to bring an end to homelessness in Ventura County,” said Eric Harrison, president and CEO. “Permanent supportive housing enables Ventura County’s most vulnerable individuals, families, and veterans to thrive at a much higher rate than short term shelters and we are encouraged by our success rate to date with this program.”

To become a member of the funding collaborative, please email [email protected]. Landlords interested in becoming a member of the program, please email [email protected].

To make a donation, visit http://igfn.us/form/hEGFmg

The Amgen Foundation seeks to advance excellence in science education to inspire the next generation of innovators, and invest in strengthening communities where Amgen staff members live and work. To date, the Foundation has donated more than $325 million to local, regional, and international non-profit organizations that impact society in inspiring and innovative ways. The Amgen Foundation brings the excitement of discovery to the scientists of tomorrow through several signature programs, including Amgen Scholars, Amgen Biotech Experience, and LabXchange. For more information, visit www.amgeninspires.com and follow us on Twitter @AmgenFoundation.

Since 1945, United Way of Ventura County has advanced the common good by creating opportunities for a better life for all. United Way identifies the root causes of poverty and works strategically to solve them by building alliances across all sectors, funding targeted programs and advocating for change. When we work together in common purpose, we LIVE UNITED. For more information about United Way of Ventura County, visit www.vcunitedway.org.

Social Justice Column

by M. Scott

Racism: Defined by Mirriam-Webster:

1: a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race

2a: a doctrine or political program based on the assumption of racism and designed to execute its principles
b: a political or social system founded on racism

3: racial prejudice or discrimination

The History and Dictionary Meaning of Racism

Racism appears to be a word of recent origin, with no citations currently known that would suggest the word was in use prior to the early 20th century. But the fact that the word is fairly new does not prove that the concept of racism did not exist in the distant past. Things may have words to describe them before they exist (spaceship, for instance, has been in use since the 19th century, well before the rocket-fired vessels were invented), and things may exist for a considerable time before they are given names (t-shirt does not appear in print until the 20th century, although the article of clothing existed prior to 1900).

Race/Ethnicity/Humility (ESPN):

“……….In a nutshell, what’s happened to Newton and his contract is unprecedented in recent NFL history. And there’s no explanation for such a small contract for a once transcendent talent other than a league of mostly white executives viewing Newton as not worth the headache, a reputation Newton has not earned.

Regardless, since his breakout season at Auburn in 2010, Newton has been viewed as a problem in need of humility. He is too arrogant, his celebrations are too … celebratory, he pouts when he loses. Never mind that those same characteristics could describe any white quarterback, particularly the one Newton is replacing in New England.
But in the history of American sports, most notably football, Black athletes are expected to be absent of charisma or anger or hubris. Black wide receivers of the previous decade were “divas.” Every season there’s a new boisterous cornerback who elicits media attention and scrutiny: Richard Sherman to Norman to Jalen Ramsey. For Black quarterbacks, if they aren’t viewed as docile or bashful in the vein of Russell Wilson or Patrick Mahomes, they’re problematic. Michael Vick rubbed white America the wrong way long before Bad Newz Kennels.

Sociologists found a link between race/ethnicity and humility, which included the personality traits of “conscientiousness, agreeableness, emotional awareness, the absence of narcissism, low self-esteem.” African Americans (and Arab Americans) showed more characteristics that lined up with humility than white Americans. In short, there’s an expectation for Black people to be humble, but not for white Americans.

NFL’s Redskins renamed as Washington Football Team for 2020 season

The NFL team formerly known as the Redskins will go by the Washington Football Team for at least the 2020 season, giving the organization time to choose a new, full-time name. The team has been known as the Redskins since 1933. Gone are the head logo and the name Native American advocates have called a dictionary-defined racial slur.

Is Black Lives Matter a Marxist movement?

From Tom Kertscher (PolitiFact)

Backlash against Black Lives Matter includes branding it as Marxist. The attack has been made in recent weeks by Rudy Giuliani, President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer; Ben Carson, Trump’s secretary of Housing and Urban Development; conservative talk show host Mark Levin; and PragerU, which has more than 4 million Facebook followers.

Marxism was developed by 19th century German philosopher Karl Marx and is the basis for the theory of communism and socialism. “Marxism envisioned the revolutionary overthrow of capitalism by the proletariat (working class people) and eventually a classless communist society,” Encyclopedia Britannica and Oxford Reference say.
These days, Marxism usually means analyzing social change through an economic lens, with the assumption that the rich and the poor should become more equal.

In a recently surfaced 2015 interview, one of the three Black Lives Matter co-founders declared that she and another co-founder “are trained Marxists.”

But the movement has grown and broadened dramatically. Many Americans, few of whom would identify as Marxists, support Black Lives Matter, drawn to its message of anti-racism.

“Regardless of whatever the professed politics of people may be who are prominent in the movement, they don’t represent its breadth,” said Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Princeton University African American Studies professor and author of “From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation.”

“There are definitely socialists within the movement, as there have been in every single social movement in 20th century American history and today. But that does not make those socialist movements, it makes them mass movements,” she said.

NY Times (Roger Cohen)

“….no people has found the American lurch toward authoritarianism under President Trump more alarming than the Germans. For postwar Germany, the United States was savior, protector and liberal democratic model. Now, Germans, in shock, speak of the American catastrophe.

Michael Steinberg, a professor of history at Brown University and the former president of the American Academy in Berlin, wrote to me this week:

“…..the events in Portland have particularly alarmed me as a kind of strategic experiment for fascism. The playbook from the German fall of democracy in 1933 seems well in place including rogue military factions, the destabilization of cities, etc. The basic comparison involves racism as a political strategy; a racist imaginary of a pure homeland, with cities demonized as places of decadence.

Black Voices in History

Call out Quote: ”Get in good trouble, necessary trouble, and redeem the soul of America.”
The Honorable John Robert Lewis
(February 21, 1940 – July 17, 2020)

John Robert Lewis was an American politician and civil-rights leader who served in the United States House of Representatives for Georgia’s 5th congressional district from 1987 until his death in 2020.

Lewis was one of the “Big Six” leaders of groups who organized the 1963 March on Washington. He fulfilled many key roles in the civil rights movement and its actions to end legalized racial segregation in the United States. In 1965, Lewis led the Selma to Montgomery marches across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. In an incident which became known as Bloody Sunday, armed Alabama police attacked unarmed civil rights demonstrators, including Lewis, Hosea Williams, and Amelia Boynton.

Our Ventura TV surpasses 1,000,000 views

Juan Mancera, George Alger, Michelle Hoover and May Christine Ballestero have helped pass one million.

Our Ventura TV recently surpassed a million online views, all in addition to multiple millions of television views on Ventura cable channel 6 TV.

Our Ventura TV is an award-winning weekly talk-show television series broadcast on Ventura cable channel 6 TV and also published on OurVentura.com as well as on social media networks. The programs are primarily about individuals, nonprofits, community advocates, leaders, artists and organizations who contribute in some way to the Ventura County community.

Since the series began in 2008, the theme for the TV series has been “People doing good things in Ventura County” and the surrounding area. The majority of programs are talk shows featuring guests who are interviewed about their community activities. Additionally, there are music and other creative productions.

The series is produced by George Alger and directed by Michelle Hoover. Several of the most active hosts include Sandra Siepak, MB Hanrahan and Monique Nowlin, as well as George Alger. Some of the key crew include Mary Christine Ballestero and Juan Mancera.

As a result of the pandemic the series expanded to integrate video conferencing so that guests can get their message out from their own home or office.

Producer George Alger said: “We’ve been honored to broadcast many individuals and organizations over the years and we wish to include your message, as well.”

If you’d like to be a guest on Our Ventura TV, just visit OurVentura.com and click “Contact” to get scheduled. There’s no cost for non-commercial messages.

Note: Breeze publisher Sheldon Brown and Staci Brown have been featured on the show.

A New Sculpture for Ventura City Hall

A replica of the Tomol, might grace the front of our City Hall.

Text and photo ©Robert Chianese [email protected]

Native Chumash representatives, the City of San Buenaventura, and the Ventura Mission Church have reached agreement to move the large statue of Father Junipero Serra that fronts the Ventura City Hall to the nearby Mission grounds. This may end the fight over where to site the statue of this iconic figure, a saint to some, to others an enslaver and cruel master to Native Californians up and down the state.

People’s heightened awareness of America’s real history enables its shameful legacy of enslavement, dominance of indigenous peoples, and oppression of minorities to take center stage. That grows out of the Black Lives Matter protests against police brutality this spring, and makes Serra’s central public place in Ventura’s community untenable for many. He should exit his pedestal, a santo obscando. The chain link cage around him protects him from being defaced or torn down before he can be moved, with bouquets and votive offerings signaling support of others.

Who or what to put in his place?

I propose that we Venturans commemorate the original founders of Buenaventura– the Chumash who established a village here called Shishalop. (Earlier residents, the Oak Grove Peoples, are obscured in the veils of pre-history.)

Specifically, a bronze replica of their fantastic ocean-going canoe, the Tomol, might grace the front of our City Hall. As a city monument, the Tomol would honor the Chumash’s look to the ocean and mastery of seagoing life and wise selection of a magnificent site to settle in, as we have done today. Placed on top the Padre pedestal, it would look out to the sea with ancient longing, but also with the heroic energy and ingenuity that these native peoples put to the complex engineering task of building these ocean-going watercraft that enabled strong, kneeling paddlers to cross to the Channel Islands.

A tomol at the Ventura Albinger Archaeological Museum, made by modern Chumash, clearly shows the deep-V curvilinear shape for speed and breaking through waves and planing on top of the water with a high bow and stern. The planking, binding and decorative details show the attention to their engineering artistry. A replica could proudly front our Ventura City Hall.

We already have a sculptural replica of the tomol. It graces the side of the downtown parking structure, vertically aligned with the building, its paddles forming an abstract pattern when the shadows are right. However, it’s more artistry than history and somewhat hidden from view.

A separate tomol sculpture in front of City Hall would bring to civic consciousness Native history and artistry, the painful ravages of racism, and the city’s modern commitment to the accurate portrayal of the past through an object worthy of public excitement and even veneration.

CAPS Media crews producing coronavirus updates for City and County

CAPS Media crews are working closely with Ventura City and County officials to provide accurate and updated information on the coronavirus emergency. For the City, CAPS produces weekly videos with City officials in the CAPS studio and out in the community. Recent videos include an update with Estelle Bussa, the city’s economic development manager in which Estelle shared important information for Ventura businesses regarding current safety protocols for dining, shopping and social distancing in Ventura.

For the County, CAPS Crews are covering all of the weekly COVID-19 County updates at the government center and in the community including the most recent location productions at Limoneira and at the Ventura County Public Health Department in Oxnard. CAPS facilitates the live streaming of the press conferences by the County and posts the media, including Spanish language translations of the messages at vcemergency.com/videos and vcemergency.com/covid19-sp/videos-sp.

All of the City and County informational videos are being distributed on multiple platforms including City and County websites, CAPS Media, Facebook, Instagram and other social media sites. Rest assured, CAPS Crew members are taking every precaution to stay safe during these productions.

At the same time, the COVID-19 crisis has not deterred the talented DJs and producers at CAPS Radio at 104.1fm from continuing to produce programs. CAPS Media Radio Station Director Elizabeth Rodeno is also directing a campaign to have listeners, DJs and producers record brief audio diaries about what their lives are like during this extremely unique and challenging time. Broadcasters from Australia to Ventura submitted audio shorts about local community organizations and activities. Kat Merrick, Pam Baumgardner, Kathy Good, Nadine Piche and other KPPQ DJs are providing personal insights, public service information, fitness and health tips and more.

If you have a message to share on KPPQ, Ventura’s public access radio station, record your 30 to 60 second daily entry and email it to [email protected]. Tune into 104.1fm to hear the latest updates from the city and county. Special thanks to everyone who submitted videos for CAPS.

CAPS Media is also producing a brief History of the Ventura Pier video for Pier Into The Future, the nonprofit organization that supports the landmark with fund raising events throughout the year. The local nonprofit is a long-standing supporter and organizational member of CAPS Media. The history of the pier video will premiere on Friday, July 31, in support of the Pier Sunset Dinner which is modified from the annual sit-down event to a drive-by, pick-up meal at the pier with food provided by local restaurants and caterers. For more information go to pierintothefuture.org. The video will be streamed and aired on all CAPS media outlets.

Due to the Coronavirus emergency the CAPS Media Center is closed to Members and the public until further notice. CAPS Member/Producers can submit programming via the online portal at capsmedia.org for broadcast and streaming on CAPS public access television Channel 6 and on CAPS Radio KPPQ 104.1FM. All of us at CAPS Media hope everyone is Staying Safe and Healthy during this challenging time.