The city of Santa Maria is looking for someone to fill an unexpired term on the Santa Maria Block Grants Advisory Committee, ending in July 2010. Applications will be accepted until 2 p.m. on Sept. 25. Members of the Block Grants Advisory Committee assess the community’s needs, conduct public workshops and hearings, review applications for […]
Santa Maria needs a Block Grants Advisory Committee member
New Lompoc Valley Senior and Community Center project is finally online
Staffers and volunteers at the Lompoc Valley Senior and Community Center can start packing up their boxes. On Sept. 3, the Lompoc City Council voted 4-0, with councilman Will Schuyler absent, to allocate more than $300,000 in funding to begin designing a new center at a new location on West Ocean Avenue in Lompoc. The […]
Government officials question the safety of artificial turf in California
The artificial turf played on by children, teens, and professional athletes in California might be getting a government-mandated makeover, thanks to a recent lawsuit filed by the California Attorney General’s Office. The lawsuit alleges that three major producers of artificial grass—FieldTurf Tarkett, Astro Turf, and Beaulieu Group—“have knowingly and intentionally exposed individuals within the State […]
U.S. Department of Transportation halts funds to all states
On Sept. 5, the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) announced that, effective Sept. 8, the Federal Highway Administration will delay financial reimbursements from the Federal Highway Trust Fund to all states. In the past, DOT had estimated it would remain solvent until summer 2009. However, tax receipts have been dropping sharply in recent months due […]
Better late than never
The launch of the Delta II rocket carrying a GeoEye 1 satellite was rescheduled for Sept. 6 due to Hurricane Hanna affecting the availability of key launch personnel at Cape Canaveral, according to a press release from Vandenberg Air Force Base. The rocket lifted off from Space Launch Complex 2 around noon that day. The […]
Schools are waiting on the budget, but doing okay
The budget for the state of California is usually enacted in the beginning of July. That was two months ago. Now, things are getting a little sticky for government agencies across the county, for agencies that are counting on that money. Imagine working hard and then not getting paid for two months in a row. […]
Counties court Paso for facility approval
On Sept. 18, officials from Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and San Benito counties will go before a review panel of employees from the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR). Their joint mission: to convince the state to fund the construction of a tri-counties prisoner re-entry facility in Paso Robles. In exchange for bringing […]
Arts Briefs
A Hancock student wins big for his take on student life Dustin Peterson, an Allan Hancock College photography student, beat out 340 contestants to take grand prize in the Foundation for California Community Colleges contest, College Seen II. The photo contest was sponsored by Adobe and challenged entrants to depict the life of a community […]
It’s independence time!
The United States celebrates its independence on July 4 with fireworks, and the beginning of the school year in September with a sigh of relief. For many Latin countries, however, September is the time for celebrating independence. Las Fiestas Patrias is the national celebration of two holidays, Cinco de Mayo (which technically happens in May) […]
The active artist
In an artists’ world, nothing is really ever complete. Everything can be improved upon or changed. The smallest details can be an artist’s harshest enemy and most difficult challenge. Such is the case with Santa Maria artist Hattie Stoddard. Sitting in her dining room, sipping Crystal Light, Stoddard reflected on her mural work at the […]
Poor delivery service aided newspapers’ decline
Daily newspapers have only themselves to blame for their demise. The publishers have missed one of the most important reasons why subscriptions have gone down: deterioration in delivery service. And now with the Internet in almost every household, it is probably too late to change. When we began a home in ’51, the morning and […]
Be kind to Mother Nature
When the paved asphalt ends, so does the road. Why do trucks continue into areas where children make sand castles and people happily run their dogs and enjoy a peaceful hike? The Nipomo Dunes are such a unique display of Mother Nature’s genius that the roar of trucks, ATVs, and the RV city really does […]

