Coastside Comedy Improv Friday at Enso

Press release

By on Wed, October 31, 2007

Blue Blanket Improv‘s Coastside Comedy: Everyone leaves laughing, we guarantee it!*  Presenting an all new, creative, high energy, affordable, fun for the whole family comedy theatre experience!  Come out and be part of a BRAD NEW Improv performance venue in Half Moon Bay.  Each show is created on the spot, based entirely on audience suggestions.  It’s ever the same show twice! (*Not a guarantee)

November 2
8:00 pm (Doors open at 7:30pm)
Enso
131 Kelly Avenue, Half Moon Bay
Phone: (650) 726-1409
$10 (Kids 13 & under are half price)

Video: The Witch’s House, parts 2 & 3

Video by Darin Boville, used with permission of Montara Fog.
 width= Part 2: Pumpkin Patterns | Quicktime | Flash |
Video by Darin Boville, used with permission of Montara Fog.
 width= Part 3: Follow the Pumpkins | Quicktime | Flash |

By on Tue, October 30, 2007

Coastsider endorses Donovan, Taborski, and Silva for HMB Fire and Williams for Pt Montara

Editorial

By on Tue, October 30, 2007

Contracting of fire services is the only real issue in the 2007 elections for the Coastside fire boards. It is essential for Coastsiders to turn out in this election to vote for the three candidates in Half Moon Bay who support contracting:

     

  • Jerry Donovan
  •  

  • Ron Taborski
  •  

  • Bert Silva

...and the one candidate in Point Montara who supports the contract:

 

     

  • Vince Williams

The Half Moon Bay Fire Protection District and the Point Montara district have merged as of October 1, so this is the last election for separate boards. The new Coastside Fire Protection District board will inherit a department in crisis. The good news is that the combined boards have agreed to the one solution left to us: contracting out services to Cal Fire.

This crisis has been building for years.  Eighteen months ago, interim Fire Chief Peter Bonano wrote a blistering assessment of the state of the department in Half Moon Bay following years of unrest.

I’m very concerned with the Department’s ability to provide a level of service consistent with the Mission of the Fire Service," he says, and goes on to cite problems with the Fire Prevention program and say that the San Mateo City Fire Marshal has provided him with a five-page list of deficiencies.

As if this were not enough, "Morale is low, resulting in a culture of lawsuits, grievances and excessive sick leave use. ... While there are many shining stars in the workforce, we have our share of firefighters who are unmotivated, disgruntled and well versed in throwing up roadblocks."

On July 10, 2006, following Chief Bonano’s evaluation,  The San Mateo County Grand Jury recommended contracting for services. The Montara station has been successfully staffed by Cal Fire since Mid-September, 2007

In the year and a half since Chief Bonano’s report, continued turnover has greatly increased the department’s costs and affected its readiness.

Poor morale in the firehouse has been the heart of the matter for years. It has persisted through multiple boards and fire chiefs and years of turnover among the rank-and-file personnel in the department. In the last year, it has resulted in acts of vandalism and harassment against members of the board and their Fire Chiefs for supporting the contract with Cal Fire.

No one in particular—the boards, their management, or the firefighters—is responsible for the crisis. But it’s time to end it, and both fire boards agreed to a solution: contracting out services to Cal Fire. The union-backed candidates in this election are attempting to derail the only solution we have.

It would be a different matter if the firefighters or their union had offered some solution to the chaos in the department in the last year.  They have offered salary concessions, but they have offered no alternative to contracting other than business-as-usual backed with appeals to our emotions and fears. No firefighters will lose their jobs due to contracting, and they will continue to be represented by a union.

This is not a happy solution.  I strongly support small, local government, but this chaos has gone on too long. This is no endorsement of the boards themselves. The fire boards have pretty much shown they can’t manage the firehouse. They should be able to manage a contract with a professional firefighting organization.

 

Video: The Witch’s House, part 1

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Video by Darin Boville, used with permission of Montara Fog
 width= The Witch's House: Bags of Candy | Quicktime | Flash |

By on Mon, October 29, 2007

Somewhere down along the coast (I can’t tell you what coast), in a small town near the ocean (but I can’t tell you what town), on a street just up aways (I can’t say the street), round the corner and to the gate (never mind the gate), stands a house.

It’s a very special house. It is a Witch’s House.

You know the house I mean but…..shhhhh. We don’t want the world to know.

As Halloween approaches, Jennifer Merrilees and I thought it would be fun to share with you an inside, behind-the-scenes view of….The Witch’s House. (Actually, there’s two witches. It gets complicated.)

Behold, the first episode, "Bags of Candy"...

Coastal Rep plans two special Secret Garden events, Sunday Nov 4

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Press release

By on Sun, October 28, 2007

The Secret Garden is coming soon, and the Coastal Repertory Theater would like to invite you to join us (and support the production!) at one (or both!) of the following special events:

The Secret Garden Tea Party

What better way to celebrate the start of the holiday season than a festive tea party?  Children and adults alike will delight in a fun-filled afternoon learning to make delicious finger sandwiches, a decadent trifle, and decorating a delicate tea cup, to name just a few!  We’ll save the best for last as we sit down to enjoy our repast!

Coastal Repertory Theatre
Sunday, November 4th 2007
1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Tickets, $50 each

Make reservations with Lene at:  [email protected]

The Secret Garden Sneak Peek

Just as Mary’s journey to the Secret Garden began in India, our journey to the garden will begin with an evening inspired by the middle east.  From turbans to roses, and from curries to fine ports, our evening will be filled with fine food, exotic beauty, and a few sneak peeks of the marvelous cast from The Secret Garden.

Coastal Repertory Theatre
Sunday, November 4th 2007 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Tickets, $100 each.

Make reservations with Lene at:  [email protected]

Strange garbage at annual beach clean-up

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Dana Kimsey, Deborah Lardie, Leonard Woren

By on Sat, October 27, 2007

The Coastside has a huge swell of people every year during the pumpkin season and festival - and the beaches and highways pay for it, with trash littering the coast.
 
At the second annual Post Pumpkin Festival Beach Clean-up last Saturday, more than 40 volunteers spent the early hours cleaning up Montara State Beach.  The event was sponsored by the League for Coastside Protection.  The crowd of volunteers included two candidates for the Midcoast Community Council, Leonard Woren and Deborah Lardie.
 
The usual detritus of cigarette butts and Styrofoam was picked up, along with a few unusual,

  • a surfboard, broken in pieces,
  • three shoes,none of them matching
  • a set of car keys, worn by the sea into something resembling metal sea glass
  • a taped-up, used (of course) diaper
  • a live, large antlered deer, which was hunkered down in one remote part of the beach.

 The male deer was the only stray thing not put in recycling or garbage bags.  The state park rangers picked up the trash bags during their usual routine.  The League thanks everyone who suited up, showed up and gave back to the community.

MWSD celebrates its new well


By on Sat, October 27, 2007

On Tuesday morning, the Montara Water and Sanitary District commissioned its latest water source, the Alta Vista well, reports Julia Scott in the County Times.

The Alta Vista well is located in the foothills of Montara Mountain, five miles and several valleys east of Devil’s Slide. At its peak level of service, the Montara Water and Sanitary District is confident it can provide 6.5 million gallons of water a month to customers.

That will almost meet the basic legal standards the district must achieve to both recover from its deficit and supply enough water for the fire district in case of emergencies, said district Board President Bob Ptacek.
...
"I’m assuming we’re going to have enough to serve the ones who are on the wells and the ones who develop," he said.

The new well will also enable the district to reduce the amount of water they extract from three other wells its customers rely on, situated under the Half Moon Bay Airport. The county owns the airport and charges the district $50,000 in extraction fees every year, according to Ptacek.
...
Ptacek says the district now hopes to make up the rest of its water deficit by drilling some wells along a Caltrans-owned strip of land southeast of Montara Mountain. State Assemblyman Gene Mullin will re-submit a bill he introduced last year to get the district permission to explore the area.

There are two videos (Ribbon Cutting and Water Flowing) of the new well’s opening on Montara Fog.

Video: MWSD candidates debate

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Video by Darin Boville, used with permission of Montara Fog

By on Fri, October 26, 2007

The Montara Water and Sanitary race has turned into the roughest, down and dirty contest on the Coastside this year. One candidate, framing himself and his campaign around issues of wise financial management was discovered (via anonymous tipster) not to have paid his taxes—including the portion that goes to MWSD—for two and a half years. Then, in apparent payback, a rival candidate was found (via anonymous tipster) to be a few weeks late on taxes on her second primary residence. I still don’t know what "second primary residence" means but it is legal, it seems.

But wait! That’s all about the horse race and nothing about the course. That’s what the old, traditional news sources do—put the excitement of campaigning up front and center and sort of forget to cover the very issues that are motivating people to fight so hard over a seemingly boring topic such as water.

Here we present each of the three candidates at the recent debate, hosted by the Midcoast Community Council. You’ll notice it is all about issues and nothing about scandal. That’s a good thing.

 WIDTH=Opening Statements Quicktime | Flash |

 WIDTH=We have now owned our water sanitary district for over four years. We do not have more water, more water storage, better taste, or better quality. What will you do to remedy this in the next one year? Quicktime | Flash |

 WIDTH=In November, 2003, at the community meeting, the water district stated, "a water deficiency of 400,000 gallons per day." What would you do to solve this? Quicktime | Flash |

 WIDTH=Do you strongly support sewer authority’s midcoast recycling program? Why or why not? Quicktime | Flash |

 WIDTH=Would you commit yourself that, if elected, you will do everything within your ability to relieve the water moratorium within the next four years? Would you please consider the Alta-Vista well and county permits for wells in your response? Quicktime | Flash |

 WIDTH=Closing Statements Quicktime | Flash |

Farallone View student wins teddy bear coloring contest

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Alden McGregor, who is in Ms. Donahoe's 3rd grade class at Farallone View Elementary, was the grand prize winner of Seton Coastside's Teddy Bear Clinic coloring contest. He is pictured here with Farallone View Elementary School's Principal, Catherine Werdel. Heidi Kuiper from State Farm Insurance donated the "Good Neigh Bear" prize.

By on Fri, October 26, 2007

Coastside fencers win five Bay Cup medals

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Clarissa Perez and Elizabeth Jug

By on Fri, October 26, 2007

By Sue Lockyer

Fencers from as far away as Sonoma and Sacramento came to Half Moon Bay for the Bay Cup Fencing competition. Fencers participated in Junior mens, Y14 girls, and Y10 mixed sabre events on Saturday, and D and higher, and D and lower events on Sunday in San Francisco. As expected, local fencers took home a fair share of medals, including gold in the women’s Y14 sabre category for Elizabeth Jug.
Other medalists in that category included Clarissa Perez who tied with Carrie Gilchrist for the bronze. Miranda Guerrerro, Jenna Fontaine and Julia Garcia placed 6th, 7th and 14th respectively in a field of twenty one competitors.
In a younger category, Y10 womens sabre, Stirling Johnson took home the bronze medal. Brian Austria placed fifth after winning all of his pool bouts, and Lotus Lum placed 10th out of eighteen fencers.
The Junior Mens Sabre category saw Bennett Smooker win the gold, with Tomi Weissenberger taking fifth. Weissenberger also earned his "C" classification this weekend.
The Bay Cup organizes tournaments for clubs and fencers in the San Francisco Bay Area from as far north as Sonoma, south to San Jose and east as far as Sacramento.  These are the local training grounds for fencers of all ages, including many who compete nationally.
If you are interested in learning more about the Coastside Academy of Fencing contact Maestro Anthony Joslin at 650-219-5335 or email [email protected]

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