Alana Frieberg and her daughter Anna have been found after going missing on August 3, and the mother has been arrested for child abduction. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Office said they received a call of a woman and a young girl parked in a car on an East Los Angeles street. The information received was that the two looked homeless and dirty and the caller expressed concern for their welfare.
The daughter is in protective custody pending return to her father.
Coastsider will be at the Chili and Chowder Cook-Off on September 12, serving up Grandma Craner’s Long Island Clam Chowder. This also be Coastsider’s first public event, after a summer of promoting the site by word of mouth.
The Chili and Chowder Cook-Off is a fundraiser for Coastside Family Medical Center. CFMC treats insured, underinsured and uninsured patients up and down the Coastside.
This year, the cookoff is being held in conjunction with the Coastside Infant Toddler Center’s Half Marathon and 3K Fun Run. As I’ve mentioned here before, our daughter attends CITC and it’s a cause I strongly support. The half marathon and the 3K Fun Run start at the American Legion in Princeton Harbor and follow the Coastal Trail along the ocean in Half Moon Bay.
The Chili and Chowder Cook-Off will be 11am to 5pm at Pillar Point Harbor. In addition to the competitive cook-off, CFMC will host a Music Festival featuring newgrass greats, The Waybacks, country rock artists and local favorites California Cowboys, The Cowlicks and Lane & The Badass Chickenbones plus additional live entertainment, kid’s activities and more. There will be plenty of great non-chili-or-chowder food. Admission is $10.00, kids 12 and under free. Parking is free.
The CITC Half Marathon and 3K Fun Run start at the American Legion in Princeton Harbor at 8am and follow the beautiful Coastal Trail along the ocean in Half Moon Bay. Half Marathon is $30. Fun Run is $15.
Another motorcyclist, the fourth since April, was killed on Highway 84 Sunday, when two motorcyclists collided with a truck attempting to turn across the highway. The second cyclist suffered major injuries and the driver of the pickup was taken to the hospital. This year there have already been 20 motorcycle accidents, three of them fatal, in and near the small town of La Honda – one of the most popular motorcycle areas in the Bay area.
This happened just one week before an event planned to reduce motorcycling accidents. There will be a motorcycle skills and safety event Sunday, August 29, from 10am to 4pm, at the junction of Highway 35 and Highway 84 (Skyline Blvd. and La Honda Road). Motorcycle experts, firefighters and paramedics will be making presentations on riding skills, safety equipment and what to do when things go wrong.
Over the last three years, hundreds of motorcycle riders from all over the Bay Area have stopped to get their bikes safety-checked and to listen to outdoor workshops by experts on motorcycle riding. This year will be the same type of program designed for bikers who want to stop for an hour or two then continue with their ride.
The Peninsula Open Space Trust has bought the 119 acres of Pillar Point Bluff on Monday. It’s located immediately north of Pillar Point and across from the Half Moon Bay Airport, just south of the Fitzgerald Marine Reserve, and features view of of tidal pools, seals, and Mavericks. It used to be the site of a dairy farm and was clearly a prime spot for development. The Trust paid $2.7 million. POST said the appraised value is $3.8 million. The Coastal Conservancy contributed $1 million to the purchase.
The land will eventually become part of the California Coastal Trail. The Coastal Conservancy is contributing $85,000 to the planning and design of a nearly 1-mile section of the trail on the site. Ultimately, POST hopes to transfer the property to the San Mateo County
Parks system.
Smart Growth America
|
|
As the amount of sprawl increases, so does the weight of people who live in it.
|
People who live in high-sprawl communities weigh more, according to a new study by Smart Growth America.
People who live in sprawling counties walk less and bike less. They have higher weights and are more likely to suffer from high blood pressure. These results are true after controlling for factors such as age, education, gender, and race and ethnicity.
The study defines sprawling counties as “spread-out areas where homes are far from any other destination, and often the only route between the two may be on a busy high-speed arterial road that is unpleasant or even unsafe for biking or walking. People who live in these areas may find that driving is the most convenient way to get everything done, and they are less likely to have easy opportunities to walk, bicycle, or take transit as part of their daily routine.”
Among other issues, the study notes that 18% of children walk or bike to school, versus 71% of adults who walked or biked to school. Now, think about the impact of moving the middle school from the middle of town to a development on the edge of town.
San Mateo County Sheriff
|
|
Alana Cheryl Freiberg
|
San Mateo County Sheriff
|
|
Anna Margueritte Freiberg
|
Sheriff’s Deputies have been searching for Alana Freiberg, 57, and her 11-year-old daughter Anna for two weeks. Read the SM Times story for the odd and confusing details of this story. According to the Times:
Alana Freiberg is white, 5 feet 7 inches tall and 220 pounds with blonde hair and brown eyes. Anna Freiberg is white, 4 feet 9 inches tall and 70 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes.
The mother and daughter may be traveling in a green 2000 Honda Civic with a roof rack and the California license plate number 4SLL018.
Anyone with information about Alana and Anna Freiberg’s whereabouts is asked to call Detective Bob Arnaudo at 363-7823, Detective Michele Flores at 363-4066 or the Anonymous Tip Line at (800) 547-2700.
Freiberg’s husband woke up on August 4 to find the mother and daughter were gone. He reported them missing August 10. The Sheriff says the departure appears voluntary, but they left without clothes, ID, or credit cards.
The state has released results on the California Standardized Testing and Reporting (STAR) Test, and Cabrillo Unified’s results are unimpressive and unimproving. Taken as a whole, less than half the students in the district are performing at the proficient or advanced level, and there has been little improvement in the last two or three years.
There’s a lot of variability in the data, so it’s hard to read. In 2004, the average proficiency in English across grades was 45%. The average percentage improvement since 2001 was about 3 percentage points. But there are huge differences among the classes and the numbers sometimes jump up one year and then down the next.
So, while there are bright spots, the overall picture is lackluster. The CAT/6 scores show that CUSD students are doing better than about half the students statewide.
According to the LA Times, this result is consistent with statewide performance on the test:
Overall, results were mixed. The percentage of students scoring “proficient” or “advanced” increased one point in English-language arts. There was no change in math. Some grade levels advanced, but others declined in both subjects.
I think this raises the bigger question of whether we’re going to be able to improve test scores at all without significantly changing education in California, and whether any district can realistically be expected to do any more than hold its own.
I’m linking to the tables at the Los Angeles Times, since they do the best job of organizing the data, but you can get more detailed results, including results by subgroup, from the California Department of Education. The state’s reporting page for these results is very impressive and if you’re interested in exploring the data, I strongly recommend it.
Cabrillo Unified School District
La Honda-Pescadero Unified School District
Jet Propulsion Lab
|
|
Warming in the central Pacific (in red), could mean that El Niño is coming this year.
|
Last Friday, Scientists at the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center declared that warming water in the central equatorial Pacific last month may indicate a 50% chance there could be an El Niño this year.
While coastsiders wouldn’t welcome El Niño, which brings prospects of outages on Devil’s Slide, newspapers in Texas and San Diego are hoping for rainier winter and Southeast Asia worries about a drought.
The National Climate Center in Australia played down the possibility, putting the probability at 30 to 40 percent, while stating that such percentages were a pretty subjective way to think about the possibility.
I’m going to make sure our roof is repaired.
Joe Cotchett is a weathy trial lawyer, inner-circle Democrat, and the man who purchased and preserved seven historic buildings on Main Street in Half Moon Bay and he’s profiled in the Daily Journal.
The La Honda Fire Brigade has received a grant of $237,000 for a new fire engine —from the Department of Homeland Security. The grant comes from the 2004 Assistance to Firefighters program that is administered by the DHS.
The engine purchased with this grant will be specially designed to meet the specific needs of the rugged and rural San Mateo County Southcoast. Some unique features of this engine include four-wheel drive operation for wildland firefighting, a short wheel base for maximum maneuverability, and an advanced foam system that reduces water use.
The La Honda Fire Brigade, one of the county’s last all-volunteer fire departments, was founded in 1953. It provides fire protection, along with the CDF/San Mateo County Fire Department, to over 138 square miles of the San Mateo County Southcoast.
Mountain lion sighted at Ocean and Bernal in Moss Beach, Nov 22 7:28pm, Kevin J. Lansing — Actually ,I think the proper name is "Serramonte del Boca Harbor Vista."
Coastal Commission approves MWSD public works plan, Nov 22 9:43am, Ken King — Leonard, if you understand irony, my comment nets out to your position, albeit redundantly stated.
Mountain lion sighted at Ocean and Bernal in Moss Beach, Nov 21 10:42pm, Kevin Barron — b) loss of habitat (human encroachment). Given the flurry of mass development here on the coast, the Serramonte del Moss…
Coastal Commission approves MWSD public works plan, Nov 21 10:19pm, Kevin J. Lansing — Fresh off his recent school board election victory, CUSD trustee Gardner resumes his meddling in areas that have nothing to…
Coastal Commission approves MWSD public works plan, Nov 20 5:07pm, Leonard Woren — Ken, you are comparing tangerines with rotten apples. A private industry company in a government-enforced monopoly position cannot be compared…
Coastal Commission approves MWSD public works plan, Nov 20 3:37pm, Carl May — Mr. Gardner, Did you bother to read the information sent to ratepayers about these system improvements? Your answer is in…
Coastal Commission approves MWSD public works plan, Nov 20 8:59am, Charlie Gardner — Paul, Can you explain why one of the conditions of approval was that it would not allow lifting of the…
Recommendations for Housecleaning Service?, post 3, Nov 19 1:30pm, Anneliese Agren — Thank you Gael!
History of Cunha Intermediate School, post 5, Nov 17 7:49am, Ken Johnson — Katharine Weber, If this morning at work, you walk over to the Kelly and Church Street entrance of the original…
Proposition 8, post 3, Nov 6 10:20am, Kevin Stokes — Seems most of the signs have been collected, thank you everyone.
Advanced technology ride sharing using the HMB purchased park lands on Highway 92, post 4, Nov 1 2:58pm, Terri Schoenrock Reece — What an interesting idea! Sort of a match.com, without the speed dating. Sounds like a great project for a budding…
What's happening to Coastside real estate prices?, post 41, Oct 20 5:51pm, Kevin Barron — Some random thoughts/points: - Let’s just hope LIBOR stays in check, otherwise the impact from ARMs..... would be like Hurricane…
Today: Sunny, with a temperature falling to around 54 by 5pm. Calm wind.
Tonight: Patchy fog after 10pm. Otherwise, increasing clouds, with a low around 48. WSW wind at 5 mph becoming SE.
Monday: Patchy fog before 10am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 58. South wind between 7 and 13 mph.
Monday Night: A 30% chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 51. SSE wind around 10 mph.
Tuesday: A 50% chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 58. ESE wind around 11 mph.
Tuesday Night: Rain likely. Cloudy, with a low around 49. Chance of precipitation is 60%.
Wednesday: A 40% chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 57.
Wednesday Night: A slight chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 48.
Thanksgiving Day: A slight chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 57.
Thursday Night: A slight chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 48.
Friday: A slight chance of showers. Partly cloudy, with a high near 58.
Friday Night: A slight chance of showers. Partly cloudy, with a low around 46.
Saturday: A slight chance of showers. Partly cloudy, with a high near 60.
PFC: 6:13am; AFD: 9:00am