Ed Board Debates Fate of Santa Cruz Charter School

PCS's facility, the old Natural Bridges Elementary, is at the center of the debate.

The Santa Cruz County Board of Education held a heated meeting on Thursday as it prepared to decide whether to extend the charter of the Pacific Collegiate School for another five years. The problem isn’t the quality of education at the award-winning school, ranked the #1 charter school in the country. What was in question was a legal opinion that the school, which is now open to students throughout the county, should give preference to students living in the Santa Cruz City Schools district.

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The Wine Dinner, Soquel Style

Hunter Hill's wine dinners are like the wedding feast you'd have had if you were Italian. Photo by Denise Addesso.

Vines swollen with grapes rose like emerald waves on the slopes above the winery. The lawns and patio were set with chairs, the barbeque was at full blaze and guests had begun mingling by the time we arrived for last month’s wine dinner at Hunter Hill. Chef Michael Clark had brought his Michael’s on Main team to help serve the 50 or so wine club members, all of them mixing and schmoozing like lifelong friends, to help celebrate midsummer and a suite of wines made by Vann Slatter. With wife Christine as hostess, Vann made the rounds—“We’re all about casual here”—and explained the status of ripening syrah and pinot grapes while making sure that glasses never went empty.

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Plug-in Stations Coming to Santa Cruz

Dear Portland: We think you're the coolest! Love, Santa Cruz.

The Prius is a hybrid that runs on gas as well as electricity. The new generation of electric vehicles, expected to hit California in the coming months, includes many cars that are completely electric and cannot depend on gasoline when they run out of juice. To deal with this, a group of public and private stakeholders has begun to lay the groundwork for a network of electric charging stations across the Monterey Bay area.

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Go Nuts At The Testicle Festival

Stone delicious.

Some people compare them to a shucked oyster. Others say they’re like chicken nuggets. What everyone agrees on is that they’re delicious! Fried, stewed, baked or broiled, balls are a hit, and not just for opponents of Proposition 8. That’s why the Santa Cruz County Farm Bureau and Agri-Culture groups are holding their prairie oyster “testival” in Watsonville on Aug. 28. Last year, they had 50 pounds of swinging sirloin and ran out in an hour. This year they’re counting on 120 pounds of huevos del toro to satisfy a hungry crowd with the USDA-approved mouth poppers.

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Council Candidates Start Staking Out Positions

Animal hospital owner and council candidate Hilary Bryant. Photo by Curtis Cartier.

The first public showcase of this year’s crop of candidates for the Santa Cruz City Council featured seven hopefuls, multiple declarations of love for city services and not much in terms of hard choices on budget cuts. The forum, hosted by Operating Engineers Local 3 in City Hall’s council chambers, saw questions that touched on the city’s deficit, two-tier pension reform, the Measure H utility tax hike, union support, the camping ban, sanctuary city status and the UCSC long-term growth agreement. With slide show.

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Berries Are Good Business in Santa Cruz

The aggregate value of crops in Santa Cruz was $491.64 million in 2009, $6.3 million more than in 2008. Among the top crops was strawberries, which brought in $172.58 million, over $12 million more than the $160.38 million they earned in 2008. Though the value of the raspberry crop dropped by about $1.5 million to $104.27, other berries, including blueberries, olallieberries and currants, climbed from $21.08 million to $29.34 million.

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Nightly Arrests at Homeless Demonstration Nab Child Molester

Every night since the homeless protest moved to the front of City Hall, SCPD officers have been visiting the site, ticketing some participants and arresting others. Among those ticketed Monday night was Mark Greer, a 29-year-old convicted child molester. The following morning Officer Ron Inoyue noticed that Greer was at the protest, so he had him arrested. Greer was booked in the County Jail under a false name, but when he was fingerprinted, his identity became apparent. He is a registered sex offender from San Luis Obispo, who is supposed to register with the police each month, but has failed to do so since June. He has five warrants for his arrest in San Luis Obispo.

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Blakeslee Takes Maldonado’s Seat

The Republican Party maintained its strength in the state legislature in yesterday’s election, with Sam Blakeslee defeating Democrat John Laird for the District 15 Senate seat held by Abel Maldonado. Democrats had counted on a Laird victory bringing them one seat short of the two-thirds majority needed to pass budget legislation. Although Democrats are a majority in the district, accounting for 41 percent of registered voters, the seat has been held by the minority Republicans since 1996. With 99 percent of precincts reporting, Blakeslee received 48.8 percent of the vote, while Laird’s received 44.1 percent.

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