Ostrich killers may have been found


By on Tue, November 7, 2006

The killers of Gaylord the Ostrich may have been found, reports the Daily Journal:

Schmidt, however, was determined to find out who shot a killed Gaylord, who she inherited about a year ago as a rescue animal. On Sunday, Schmidt posted reward fliers at coastside businesses — the local liquor store, hardware store and post office. Within a few hours of posting the flier, Schmidt received a call from the owner of the El Granada liquor store who reported that someone ripped down the flier. Schmidt called the other stores and heard the same story.

By Sunday night, Schmidt had a description of the culprit and the company car he was driving. She paid a visit to the Princeton company and determined the business owner’s son was driving the car on Sunday. Within an hour, she was sitting down with father, his son and the son’s friend. The young men immediately apologized and volunteered to do anything to rectify the situation — including buying a new ostrich, Schmidt said.

They were drunk and had climbed into the ostrich’s enclosure. They claim they shot the ostrich in self defense, when it attacked them, breaking two ribs on one man.

 

Ritz-Carlton has a good quarter


By on Tue, November 7, 2006

The Ritz-Carlton in Half Moon Bay increased its revenues 11% for the third quarter of 2006, relative to the same quarter last year.  Not bad, considering that for two-thirds of the quarter, Devil’s Slide was out.  The hotel’s occupancy rate and revenue per room have also increased and exceeded the US average for its owner Strategic Hotels & Resorts [Yahoo Finance].

DON’T FORGET TO VOTE!


By on Tue, November 7, 2006

We'll be posting election results tonight. In the meantime, enjoy these photos of Coastsiders doing the right thing.

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Diana Kalos votes the "old fashioned" way
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Cheri Parr
Precinct 3306 Farallone View team: Deb Kessler, Marta Jacobsen, Stephen Bradley, Rose Angelo(L to R)
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Cheri Parr
Nancy Dare, Chelsey Silveria, Roy Salume (L to R)

Letter: The straight facts about fire protection and the CDF

Letter to the editor

By on Mon, November 6, 2006

by Bruce MacKimmie

Bruce MacKimmie is a Point Montara Fire Protection District director.

The debate about Coastside fire protection has gotten more than a little out of hand. The knives are out, literally – after one public meeting, the acting fire chief had two of his tires slashed. It’s time for some calm perspective on the decisions we’re making about fire services in our remarkably safe community.

You’ve elected eight of your neighbors to represent you on the Boards of the Half Moon Bay Fire Protection District and the Point Montara Fire Protection District. This is a disparate group of people with widely varying views on just about everything – you’d have a tough time getting a majority vote from this group on whether the sky is blue.

But six of these eight elected directors have, after examining all the legal, financial and managerial issues, reached the same painful conclusion – that the HMBFPD is no longer a viable alternative for delivering fire protection to the Coastside. We’ve voted to bring in the California Department of Forestry to manage our fire protection. (We chose CDF over a competing bid from the City of San Mateo Fire Department because the CDF bid was dramatically lower.)

Opinion: School parcel taxes are bad public policy

California School Funding
California school districts are primarily funded by the state, through a complicated formula that needn’t concern us here. As a consequence of Proposition 13 (1978), school districts are limited to parcel taxes to raise money locally for operating expenses. In California, parcel taxes differ from ad valorem property taxes in that they’re assessed at a flat rate per parcel. Amounts vary; my local district’s requests have varied from $75 to $250 per year, generally for a period of five years. This 1997 report from the Little Hoover Commission is nearly ten years old, but it’s still the best treatment of K-12 funding in California that I’ve ever seen.
Opinion

By on Sat, November 4, 2006

This piece originally appeared on Jonathan Lundell’s blog Pragmatos.


Last June, a parcel tax proposal by CUSD failed, for the fifth time in recent memory. On Tuesday, Californians will vote on Proposition 88, an initiative that seeks a perpetual statewide $50/year parcel tax. Reliance on local parcel taxes to supplement public education funding is bad public policy, for two main reasons.

Parcel taxes are regressive

First, parcel taxes are regressive. Whether you live in a 10,000 square foot McMansion in Beverly Hills or in a shotgun shack on a postage-stamp lot, your parcel tax assessment is the same (if you’re only renting the shack, the parcel tax will almost certainly show up as a rent increase).

Parcel taxes are inequitable

Second, affluent school districts are much more likely than poor districts to be able to pass substantial parcel taxes, and so supplement California’s rather low level of state funding for education, leaving poorer districts stuck at the bottom. This flies in the face of the state supreme court’s Serrano decisions in 1971 and 1976 that basing school funding primarily on local property taxes is unconstitutionally inequitable.

Maybe in an emergency…

There is some merit in the argument that, during an acute budget emergency, a short-term parcel tax may be justified on the grounds that it’s the only recourse available to the district (or at any rate the least bad recourse). I accepted that argument, for example (and made it myself) in 2003, though not in 2006.

55%: even worse

Various people have advocated lowering the election threshold for a parcel tax to 55%, from the current Prop 13-mandated 2/3, as was done some years back for facilities bonds. That’s a bad idea, and more than a little disingenuous. Lowering the threshold for parcel tax measures requires a constitutional amendment. But once we’re amending the constitution, we’re no longer bound by the strictures of Proposition 13, and are free to restructure public school funding equitably. That is, if we’re going to pass a constitutional amendment, why not fix school funding right? Fix it right. K-12 funding in California is broken and needs to be fixed, and one way or another that will require higher taxes. But parcel taxes, whether local or statewide, are the wrong way to do it.

What about California Proposition 88?

A statewide parcel tax, as proposed by Proposition 88, largely avoids my second criticism; it will be collected (and presumably distributed) more or less uniformly across the state. On the other hand, it does nothing to address existing inter-district inequity. Proposition 88 introduces a variation not found in local parcel tax proposals: no time limit. Local parcel taxes run for a few years, often five, and generally in the range of three to seven. But the statewide parcel tax proposed by Proposition 88 has no time limit at all. It would become a permanent part of California public school financing, embedded in the state constitution. Because Proposition 88 includes a constitutional amendment, it could have implemented a more progressive revenue source (such as income taxes) instead of relying on regressive parcel taxes. It’s a bad measure, and should be defeated.

Saturday is cabaret night at Caffé Lucca

Press release

By on Sat, November 4, 2006

Tonight is cabaret night at Caffé Lucca in Montara.  The fun begins at 7pm with Alex Eulenberg at the keyboard, Jessica Raaum will be singing show tunes, and Michael Slack and Tessie Chua will make you laugh while you have a beer or sip some wine on the  heated patio overlooking the ocean on Highway One in Montara.  More information 650.728.5229 Tickets at the door $10.00

Caffé Lucca will also host an art show and sale Sunday, November 5, from noon to 5pm.

Letter: Who killed Gaylord?

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Letter to the editor

By on Fri, November 3, 2006

At 1:45am, during the dark early morning hours of October 31st, seven successive gun shots rang out to which ultimately lead to the cold blooded killing of a 300lb male ostrich named Gaylord.  Gaylord was one of three ostriches, one male and two females, which I have been taking care of for approximately a year.  Their owner had fallen ill and I volunteered to take on his ostriches.  On this morning, one or more suspects gained entry into the locked fence and trespassed into the pasture where the ostrich were sleeping.  The suspect(s) were armed with two separate guns.  At some point, Gaylord and the intruder(s) crossed paths.  Four thirty caliber rifle rounds and three twelve gauge shot gun cartridges where unloaded from eight feet away into the helpless bird. 

Gaylord was dead surrounded by shell casings.  The gunshots were heard by a neighbor, but the true horror of the situation was not realized until the next morning when Gaylord’s badly damaged body was discovered laying a few yards from the locked fence.  The person/s who committed this heartless crime must be brought to justice.  Gaylord was a real character, loaded with personality and vigor.  He will be greatly missed.  If you have any information in regards to the murder of Gaylord the ostrich please contact:

Karen Schmidt (Rainbowstreamers/at/comcast/dot/net) at 650-346-4819 or call the San Mateo Country Sheriff’s department at 650-363-4911.  A reward of over $1,000 is being offered for information that leads to the arrest/s of Gaylord’s violent killing.

The aftermath of Gaylord’s killing can be viewed by clicking the links on the next page.  Warning: These pictures are graphic.

Photos: Jr Midget Cheerleaders take first


By on Fri, November 3, 2006

The Raiders Jr Midget Cheerleaders took first place in the championships for novice division this last weekend. They looked great taking the floor with the confidence of champions. They will be competing in the Regional Championships the day after Thanksgiving. Fundraising will soon be starting. Please support our Coastside girls if you see them. Any support is appreciated. -- Sherri Ballew, Coastside Cheer

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Tom Vivian, Hollister Youth Football & Cheer
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Tom Vivian, Hollister Youth Football & Cheer

Supervisors to hold final LCP hearing Tuesday


By on Fri, November 3, 2006

The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors will hold their final hearing on the update to the Midcoast Local Coastal Program (LCP) on Tuesday, Nov 14 at 9:30am.  The public hearing has been closed, so no additional public testimony will be taken.  The meeting will be held at the supervisors’ chambers, Hall of Justice and Records, 400 County Center, Redwood City [Google Map].

Workshop will highlight changes to marine sanctuary

Press release

By on Fri, November 3, 2006

Coastsiders will get a chance to hear from experts on a range of coastal and ocean issues, as well as learn about the regulatory changes for the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary at a community workshop in Montara on Tuesday, Nov 14 from 7 to 9pm.

The event, at the Pt. Montara Lighthouse Hostel, 16th St at Highway 1, will highlight topics specific to the San Mateo County coastside community including wildlife disturbance, beach contamination and water quality presented by conservation experts:

     

  • James Alamillo, Urban Programs Manager for Heal the Bay
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  • Tim Eichenberg, director of the Pacific regional office of The Ocean Conservancy, and adjunct professor of law at the Vermont Law School Environmental Law Center
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  • Bob Breen, vice chair of the Gulf of Farallones National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council, marine biology teacher at Half Moon Bay High School and recently-retired longtime naturalist/ranger for Fitzgerald Marine Reserve

Admission is free. Seating is limited. Click below for more information on the program.

 

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