March 12 – March 19, 2026

Mar 12-Mar 19, 2026 / Vol. 27 / No. 3
In 1988, Santa Maria resident Ofelia Sandoval was strangled and left on the floor, discovered under a blanket by her housemate. In 2024, a former San Maria Police Department investigator headed to Georgia with Sandoval’s photo and evidence that could finally put the 36-year-old cold case to bed. Earlier this year, Santa Barbara County prosecuted […]

Cover Story

Solvang Passport mobile app raises City Council conflict concerns

A new smartphone app with local ties invites those who download it to make Solvang their own personal “playground.” Created by Mayor David Brown, Solvang Passport highlights dozens of businesses across the city while promoting “stamps” (QR codes) at each location for app users to seek out and scan.  The more stamps users collect through…

Lompoc to petition state for exemption from solar mandate

Lompoc wants the California Energy Commission to exempt the city from the state’s renewable energy mandates for new homes.  The Energy Commission’s 2025 code for new construction requires photovoltaic solar and battery storage systems on homes to reduce wasteful and expensive energy use. However, under the state’s economic model, Lompoc residents wouldn’t be saving as…

Political Watch: March 12, 2026

•On March 9, U.S. Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-Santa Barbara) announced that he secured new federal funding for two infrastructure projects in San Luis Obispo County. These two projects are related to improving the Shell Beach Road shared use path and Morro Bay’s city stormwater system, respectively. In order to extend the local shared use path,…

TMHA’s Bowl-A-Thon raises money for Central Coast mental health resources

Since the 1970s, Transitions-Mental Health Association (TMHA) has held an annual bowl-a-thon. The nonprofit serves San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties with the aim of reducing stigma around mental health and promoting recovery and wellness for people with mental illness.  “I think the idea was that it was unique,” TMHA Executive Director Jill Bolster-White…

Surprise, surprise

The Santa Maria City Council had at least one surprise during its March 3 meeting—and no, it’s not that the council isn’t forming an ad hoc immigration committee.  One of the council members resigned 11 minutes into the meeting.  Why? Well, Carlos Escobedo said he’s moving out of his district and didn’t feel right sticking…

We have power over fossil fuels despite the administration’s rollbacks

For those of us who dream of a future where fossil fuels are something only our grandparents can remember, the administration’s recent climate rollbacks have been disappointing, to put it mildly. Overturning the EPA’s endangerment finding was only the latest blow to protecting the climate for our children. But regardless of what happens in Washington,…

Indivisible Lompoc members use arts, crafts to stand up for their beliefs

Artistry has been intertwined with social justice activism for hundreds of years. Quilt patterns gave signals to slaves escaping through the Underground Railroad, one Lompoc resident said. Red knit caps symbolized resistance in Norway during Nazi occupation, another told the Sun.  Calls for actionFor more information about joining Indivisible Lompoc’s events, visit indivisiblelompoc.org or follow…

Indah Gallery presents a site-specific multimedia exhibit

Roy Vessil’s art will be up at the Indah Gallery in Santa Ynez through April 5. There’s an opening reception for the show, titled Galls and The Secrets of the Universe, on March 13 from 5 to 7 p.m. The show is “an absurd mythos theory of the humble oak gall,” Vessil described in press…

Everyone’s welcome to a family dance in Santa Maria

Gather the whole family for some two-stepping and disco moves at the Japanese Community Center on March 28. The theme for this year’s dance is Under the Sea. “Families are invited to dance, play, and connect at this ocean-themed, family-friendly rave,” according to the city. “Enjoy high-energy music, interactive fun, and dazzling lights in a…

The Bride! is a guttural yawp into the patriarchal void

Writer-director Maggie Gyllenhaal helms this updating of the Bride of Frankenstein story. Set in 1930s Chicago and up the Eastern seaboard, the story follows Frankenstein’s monster (Christian Bale), who’s referred to as Frank, as he asks Dr. Euphronius (Annette Bening) to create him a companion to help cure his deep loneliness. They resurrect a dead…

Dawson’s Creek is pure late-’90s and early-2000s nostalgia

Dawson’s CreekWhat’s it rated? TV-14 When? 1998 to 2003 Where’s it showing? Netflix, Hulu, Disney+ After the recent and untimely death of James Van Der Beek at age 48 due to colorectal cancer, I—and probably a lot of women my age—was sent into a nostalgic tailspin. It seems just yesterday that the weekly show rotation…


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