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    America Defeats the International Criminal Court with an Elegant Gesture

     

     

    By Sigrid Weidenweber

    The International Criminal Court at its inception was the brainchild of lawyers, mostly of the European Union and the United Nations. The notion of an overarching judicial body to adjudge the world’s most heinous crimes seemed an attractive, logical solution to crimes so enormous, to be deemed crimes against all of humanity.

    The court, (ICC) was instituted in March 2019 and began functioning on 1 July 2002. It is based on the Roman Statute and has 124 Member States associated with its mandate.

    Soon after its inception certain infringements on other countries judicial sovereignty became obvious, and the United States, China and a few African countries broke from the court’s mandate, while other nations are inactive members.

    The U. S. soon found that the (ICC) was bent, using its mandate to declare American soldiers fighting in Afghanistan to be war criminals, even though the U.S. has a well-functioning justice system and courts that adjudicate any crimes committed by Americans.

    In my, I must admit, cursory research on the Internet, I found many details about the courts objectives to bring international criminals to justice, many statements about its governing administrative body, and details of its functions—however, I could not find one detail about the election of the judges to the court, nor any mention of why and who got elected to the offices of judges. Only one mention was made that positions are filled internally through votes acquired from colleagues.

    This seems to be a very arbitrary system. As we, the public, know so little about the international almighty judges, I question many things, among them, their political and cultural background, their education, home-life, mental health and system of logical thinking. In America we insist that even our jurors should be chosen from a group of our peers, so how can one expect a judge from a totally different cultural, religious and educational background sitting in judgement of, or understand the split-second reasoning of a highly trained American, or other soldier, in a battle situation?

    Fortunately, three American presidents, resisted the International courts inquiry into our army’s business. The Bush, Obama and Trump administrations, more vigorously by some than others, curtailed the ICC’s prosecution of U.S. nationals.

    “But only the Trump administration took active steps to prevent an investigation or prosecution from happening.” I am quoting Eugene Kontorovich in the Wall Street Journal, April 19, 2019. Kontorovich states further that the Trump administration’s foreign policy team scored a big victory in the The Hague last Friday that will protect American soldiers from illegitimate and unaccountable foreign prosecution.

    The International Criminal Court finally dropped a more than a decade-long inquiry into alleged crimes by U. S.

    Soldiers in Afghanistan.

    So, why after all this time did the court change its mind?

    Because Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that the U. S. would deny a visa to the court’s prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda and, perhaps, other court officials.

    The United States and most other non-European military powers had never accepted the courts jurisdiction. A wise decision, considering that the court, neglecting real crimes in undemocratic countries, jumped instantly into a witch-hunt of American personnel. That, despite the court’s own statute, stating that the ICC can only prosecute when “a country is unwilling or unable” to prosecute its own citizens, who are accused of war crimes.

    The value of this court has been thrown into doubt. Despite massive amounts of funding, only four people of mass-atrocity crimes have been convicted. Many high-profile cases led to nothing. The former prosecutor of the ICC, Louis Moreno Ocampo had been enmeshed in scandal. Other criticisms from countries and states, stem from objections to its jurisdiction, its obvious bias, lacking in fairness, its case selection, trial procedures and doubt about its effectiveness.


     Sigrid Weidenweber grew up in communist East Berlin, escaping it using a French passport. Ms. Weidenweber holds a degree in medical technology as well as psychology and has course work in Anthropology.  She is co-founder of Aid for Afghans.  Weidenweber has traveled the world and lived with Pakistani Muslims, learning about the culture and religion. She is a published author and lecturer. You can find her books on Amazon.com


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    ‘Unfit To Print’ Episode 4: Trump Accused Of Racism For Response To Sri Lanka Attack

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    Amber Athey | White House Correspondent

     

    In the fourth episode of the “Unfit to Print” podcast, host Amber Athey runs down the media’s worst responses to the terror attack against Christians in Sri Lanka.

    In addition to accusing the president of racism, one so-called journalist claimed the victims don’t deserve prayers because he saw Christians in Sri Lanka trying to convert Buddhist children after a natural disaster.

    Tragedies should be a time for people to unite, but the media used this one as an excuse to sow more division(RELATED: One Word Noticeably Absent As Democrats Respond To Sri Lanka Attack)

    WATCH:

    Meanwhile, the media is still dealing with the fallout from special counsel Robert Mueller’s report. The Washington Post, in particular, has gotten so deranged that they believe the media did a good job covering the investigation into Russian collusion.

    LISTEN: 

    https://soundcloud.com/user-329976832/episode-4-trump-accused-of-racism-for-response-to-sri-lanka-attack

    In response to WaPo’s nonsense, Athey points out a number of stories that were explicitly disproven when the Mueller report dropped. (RELATED: Mueller Report Exposes String Of Anonymously Sources Stories That Got It Wrong)

    LISTEN: 

    Check out the previous episodes of “Unfit to Print”:

    ‘UNFIT TO PRINT’ EPISODE 1: RACHEL MADDOW’S RATINGS PLUMMET AND CNN HAS SKETCHY TIES TO QATAR

    ‘UNFIT TO PRINT’ EPISODE 2: MEDIA FALLS FOR OLD TRUMP CLIP AND ‘SPYING’ ISN’T SPYING

    ‘UNFIT TO PRINT’ EPISODE 3: MEDIA ACCUSES TRUMP OF INCITING VIOLENCE

     Follow Amber on Twitter


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    Can Gov. Newsom ‘lead from behind’ on wildfire legislation?

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    By Chris Reed

    Gov. Gavin Newsom and his wildfire “strike force” surprised some with the vagueness of its most important recommendation: That it’s time to revise the “inverse condemnation” state law that holds energy utilities can be held fully responsible for fires that were caused by their equipment even if the equipment was properly maintained. The law appears to be an existential threat to Pacific Gas & Electric, the state’s largest investor-owned utility, which filed for bankruptcy protection in January after being blamed for fires that resulted in $30 billion in damages.

    Newsom’s pointed deference to state lawmakers – saying he hoped they could hash out a plan by mid-July – is an example of the “leading from behind” management gambit, which has a mixed history. Just as the Obama administration did with aspects of its foreign policy, the Newsom administration is expecting its allies to take the helm. The governor said he believes progress is more likely with him in the background.

    “I’m purposely not including my personal opinions because I actually want to accomplish something. And I believe it’s incumbent upon me to create the conditions where we can actually get something done, versus to assert a political frame,” Newsom told Capitol reporters.

    The governor may also perceive political risk if he puts out his own specific blueprint for how PG&E, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric can survive in a hot, dry era in which massive wildfires are common annual events.

    Tactic seen as best for long-range causes

    Leadership experts, however, think the “lead from behind” gambit works better for issues with low stakes or for long-term causes – for the most famous example, Nelson Mandela’s decades-long effort to end apartheid in South Africa – and isn’t necessarily right for addressing pressing problems.

    Jack Dunigan, a longtime management consultant who runs The Practical Leader website, believes that “it works best in times and places of non-crisis. If a child is running into the street and into traffic, it is not the time to convene a focus group to discuss the threats of playing in the street. It is the time for action. Leading from behind, as [Harvard business professor Linda] Hill describes it, works best in non-threatening, non-urgent conditions.”

    Given that PG&E emerged in 2004 after three years in bankruptcy and returned to regular operations, that may suggest that there is no urgent reason for Newsom to take a bolder approach. But the idea that the Legislature will be able to come up with a plan in three months or less is difficult to square with its recent history – and the intense dislike that many state lawmakers and Northern California residents have for scandal-scarred PG&E.

    In January, after PG&E’s bankruptcy filing, state Sen. Bob Hertzberg told a Sacramento TV station, “Nobody in the Capitol wants to bail out PG&E, period, exclamation mark, end of story, full stop. They just don’t.”

    While lawmakers don’t hold Southern California Edison and SDG&E in such contempt, any attempt to help them deal with wildfire liabilities that also protects PG&E would face tough sledding.

    This background is why Newsom’s predecessor, Jerry Brown, got nowhere last year with his proposal to give state judges the flexibility to limit the amount of liability a utility has for wildfire damages based on circumstances – including consideration of the importance of a utility being able to continue to provide power to millions of customers.

    Further complicating the prospects for relatively quick approval is that “inverse condemnation” is written into the California Constitution. Changing it would appear to require a vote of the public as well as two-thirds approval of both the state Assembly and Senate.

     

    Republished with Permission from CalWatchDog.org


    Chris Reed

    Chris Reed is a regular contributor to Cal Watchdog. Reed is an editorial writer for U-T San Diego. Before joining the U-T in July 2005, he was the opinion-page columns editor and wrote the featured weekly Unspin column for The Orange County Register. Reed was on the national board of the Association of Opinion Page Editors from 2003-2005. From 2000 to 2005, Reed made more than 100 appearances as a featured news analyst on Los Angeles-area National Public Radio affiliate KPCC-FM. From 1990 to 1998, Reed was an editor, metro columnist and film critic at the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin in Ontario. Reed has a political science degree from the University of Hawaii (Hilo campus), where he edited the student newspaper, the Vulcan News, his senior year. He is on Twitter: @chrisreed99.


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    Knitters in Camarillo Have Those in Need ‘Covered’ with Handmade Prayer Shawls

    Millie Bewley has been a knitter for more than three decades. Now in her 80s, she’s found a way to give back to the greater community with her skills, and she’s inviting a few of her AlmaVia of Camarillo neighbors to help. The group is called the Nifty Knitters. Together, they make prayer shawls for local hospice patients.

    Every Saturday, the ladies – all in their 80s and 90s – grab some yarn and start knitting in the library of the assisted living community they call home. They laugh and chat about their grand-kids and great-grandkids. It’s a time for each of them to share stories with one another.

    Research shows groups like the Nifty Knitters are beneficial to seniors, as this type of interaction fosters socialization, keeps them active and gives them a sense of purpose. Recently, the group donated more than a dozen of these shawls to an area hospice program. They plan to donate even more in the coming months. 

    April is National Volunteer Month, and the Nifty Knitters would make for a great story about giving back, no matter your age. Would you be interested in doing story on the Nifty Knitters? If so, contact me, Chelsea Wilson, at 913-317-2225 or [email protected].


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    Man And His Friends Invite Elderly Woman To Eat Dinner With Them After Seeing Her Eat Alone

     

    A man in Alabama shared a heartwarming dinner with an elderly woman and his friends after noticing she was sitting alone.

    Jamario Howard says the trio of friends were waiting on their food at Brad’s in Oxford when they noticed the elderly woman sitting by herself, according to a report published Monday by WBRZ 2. Howard approached the woman and asked if he could sit with her.

    The woman allowed him to sit and they chatted for a while and she revealed that she was widowed. (RELATED: Man Goes Viral On Twitter After Saving 2 Young Children On Sledding Hill)

    “…After a while of talking she told me she lost her husband and that tomorrow would have been their 60th anniversary. I instantly gave my condolences and asked her to come eat with us, which she was excited to do,” Howard shared. 

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=114051846455477&set=a.103528097507852&type=3&theater

     

    Howard shared a photo of the group at dinner and wrote a description of what occurred. The post had received 34,000 shares at the time this post was published.

    “The point in this is always be kind and be nice to people. You never know what they are going through,” Howard wrote. “This woman changed my outlook on life and how i look at other people. Everyone has a story so do not judge!”


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    The Mueller Aftermath

    2

    by Phil Erwin

    The infamous, long-awaited, supposed-to-be game-changing “Mueller Report” is finally out. And the Democrats, who for more than 2 years screamed “Collusion!” are flummoxed. They had prayed incessantly to Mueller in the fervent hope that his report would be Trump’s undoing.

    But Mueller’s report says: “No Collusion!”

    Of course, we had many weeks’ advance signals that such would be the case. So the Democrats had already moved on to “Obstruction!” as their new Get-Trump mantra.

    But Mueller’s report doesn’t charge that, either.

    In fact, what it really tells us is this: That Trump knew he was innocent of any “collusion” or other treasonous acts with Russia; that he hated being questioned and investigated unreasonably; that he (rightly) believed it was interfering with his ability to govern, and therefore was hurting the nation; and accordingly, he tried – unsuccessfully! – to find some way to put a swift – and just! – end to the Mueller “witch hunt.”

    Mueller took pains to suggest those efforts might represent some form of “obstruction of justice” – which would be an impeachable crime, if it did occur.

    Here’s the problem with that: Since there was no underlying crime to be investigated, and Trump knew ithis efforts to bring a swift end to the “investigation” were reasonable, warranted, and in the best interests of the nation!

    After all: How can you be obstructing justice by interfering with a misguided, unfair, illegally-spawned investigation into a non-crime?

    If Trump tried to obstruct anything, it was an unjust, nation-damaging, sham “investigation,” a.k.a.: Witch hunt.

    And don’t forget: In the final analysis, thanks to the better angels Trump had working for him, nothing was obstructed!

    If you’re wondering why Mueller declined to conclude that obstruction had occurred, there’s your best, simplest and most reasonable answer. Mueller knew the charge would never stand, and in fact might wind up improving Trump’s image. Which of course, Mueller did not want to do.

    So instead, he wrote what one Democrat Congressman called a “roadmap to impeachment.”

    Nice job, Bob. Way to discharge your professional responsibilities.

    You Deep State hack.

    Now, Republicans are all singing, “No Collusion, No Obstruction!” in triumphant voice, ecstatic in their belief that Mueller’s report completely exonerated the President from all such legal entanglements. Meanwhile, Democrats are grasping at the one straw in the report that might provide them some lever to yank on while wearing those Impeach Him! hats they ordered the morning after Trump’s election, and have been dying to sport in public ever since.

    Be clear on this: Mueller’s report doesn’t say that Trump didn’t obstruct justice. It says there was insufficient evidence to support an indictment of him for that charge.

    So you can’t prove he obstructed justice in a court of law. But the Democrats can sure try to prove it in the court of public opinion.

    Get your ears set. After two years of Collusion!!, we’re now on the hook for two more years of Obstruction!!

    Egad, aren’t we all sick of this?

    What can we really take away from this unending political strife? Is there anything useful that we can learn from the political “witch hunt” that we paid millions to collectively endure?

    Yes. There is:

    1. The Russians did, indeed, strive to interfere with our electoral processes. In fact, they tried to “collude” (or “interfere”) with both candidacies. Their intent was not, as Hillary supporters are convinced, to elevate Trump and drag her down. What they wanted was to sow discord among the American populace. I’d say they succeeded, big-time. All it cost them was a few hundred thousand dollars. But it cost us $30 million or so, and a never-ending public squabble that drowned out any real political discourse. Therefore: Anyone continuing the squabble is playing right into Putin’s hands! (That renders the Democrats Putin’s “useful idiots” – not Trump!)

    2. The reality that the Collusion!! nonsense was just a politically-motivated witch hunt has been obvious to any and all who bothered to look (with an open mind!) for almost the entire two years of Trump’s Presidency. We have known, for at least 18 months, that the whole thing was cooked up by a small cadre of political and law-enforcement players in the very heart of the Obama administration. Indeed, we’ve suspected this since the day that Congressman Devin Nunes stormed over to the White House after viewing classified documents that laid the whole scheme bare for him, and then stood before the press microphones and angrily warned that people were illegally leaking classified information and illegally “unmasking” names from classified documents. Those people had to be in the Obama administration.

    3. We’ve learned that the Democrat Party as a whole is fundamentally incapable of setting aside partisanship in order to govern; that elected Democrats are utterly incapable of seeing past their collective hatred of Donald Trump and just getting on with their actual legislative jobs.

    4. And we’ve learned that the so-called “mainstream” Media, including CNN, MSNBC, NBC, ABC, CBS and most print news outlets, are absolutely indistinguishable from the Democrat Party. That is why more than 90% of all news stories dealing with Trump and his administration are negative stories. (And it is also well-documented that about 90% of “journalists” in the “mainstream” media are, in fact, Democrats. See any pattern there?)

    Imagine: 90% of your “news” reviews are negative, even though you’ve done more to improve the nation’s economic lot than the past 3 Presidents combined!

    I think that would make anyone fire off a Twitter storm.

    Seen in that light, you might even call Trump’s Twitter tirades “tame.” He’s only used the “BS” label a couple times (and twice more in rallies.)

    I think he could rightly have used it every hour of every day since Mueller was first appointed.

    And BS is pretty much all we could expect from Mueller, a so-called “lifelong Republican” who, in preparing to “investigate” (really, to railroad) the President, hires more than 17 Trump-hating Democrats, including one who had worked for both Hillary Clinton and Eric Holder, two involved in white-washing Hillary’s e-mail “missteps,” and one whose overzealous, abusive investigative tactics have resulted in the courts overturning his biggest cases.

    How much more obvious could it be that the Fix was IN?

    And yet: NO COLLUSION!!!   And again: NO CHARGEABLE OBSTRUCTION!!!

    Get it?

    It was all a fabrication!

    As Peter Strzok (the now-disgraced/fired FBI Counterintellingence agent who apparently engineered the FISA warrant to spy on Trump’s team) himself admitted: There never was any There there!

    If Trump was angry, he had really, really good reasons to be!

    And we should all, in retrospect, share in his anger.

    Because we were all duped!  By the Deep State and the Democrats!

    Same Damn thing.

     

    Phil Erwin is an author, IT administrator and registered Independent living in Newbury Park. He would like to support some Democrat ideals, but he has a visceral hatred for Lies and Damn Lies (and is highly suspicious of Statistics.) That pretty much eliminates supporting most Democrats, and a bunch of Republicans to boot.


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    Mighty Cash Cats at The Lookout in Oxnard

     The Lookout

    2800 Harbor Blvd, Channel Islands Harbor, Oxnard, CA 93035

    Friday, April 26, 8 pm

     

    On Friday, April 26, 8 pm, the Mighty Cash Cats, who just returned from doing shows in Las Vegas, will make their debut appearance at The Lookout, 2800 Harbor Blvd, Oxnard, CA 93035, Located in a spectacular setting on Channel Islands Harbor. The Lookout features excellent food and drink, and an amazing harbor view.

    In addition to their Johnny Cash Tribute, the Mighty Cash Cats will play some classic Rock, country music, and blues. Bill Locey wrote in the Ventura Star:

    “The Mighty Cash Cats’ are an excellent band. Rockers and rednecks, white wine and Jim Beam drinkers, country fans and punk rockers and whatever’s in between–this band is for you.”

    Mighty Cash Cats


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    Reminder | Simi Valley Police Department Hosts Drug Drop Off Event This Saturday, April 27, 2019

    REMINDER-The Simi Valley Police Department’s 8th Prescription Drug Take-Back Day is this Saturday, April 27, 2019, from 10:00 a.m. until 2:00 p.m., in the front parking lot of the Simi Valley Police Station at 3901 Alamo Street. 

    SVPD in conjunction with the community has worked in a collaborative effort with the public and removed over 8,600 pounds of unwanted medications from residences to avoid falling into the hands of people who could possibly abuse them.

    In an effort to continue to provide a safe and ecologically friendly way for residents to dispose of old and unwanted medications please call the Property Room at (805) 583-6964 to arrange for an appointment or use the Property Window telephone located in the lobby. Do not dispose of waste medication down drains or toilets or in the trash. 

    The Simi Valley Police Department allows the community to bring illegal drugs to the Police Station and turn them in with no questions asked. 

    How to dispose of unwanted medications: 

    • CHEMO DRUGS WILL BE ACCEPTED AT THIS EVENT ONLY 
    • Empty the contents of pill bottles into a Ziploc bag (please recycle your pill bottles at home and remember to scratch out all personal identification information). 
    • Leave liquids, gels, or creams in their original containers and place them in a Ziploc bag. 
    • Sharps such as needles, syringes and any other items used for diabetic tests will not be accepted. Sharps disposal containers are available for free from Sierra Vista Family Medical Clinic at 1227 E. Los Angeles Avenue, Simi Valley, 805-582-4000 

    If you have any questions please contact the Crime Analysis & Prevention Unit’s, Crime Prevention Coordinator, Jean-Marie Maroshek, at (805) 583-6276 or [email protected]


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    Judicial Watch: Supreme Court Moves to Overturn Conviction of Veteran Fined and Jailed for Digging Ponds on his Rural Montana Property

    (Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch announced on Monday that the Supreme Court of the United States has overturned a lower court decision affirming the conviction of Joseph Robertson, a 78-year-old veteran now deceased who was sentenced to prison for digging ditches on his rural Montana property to protect the area surrounding his home from wildfires. Judicial Watch had filed an amicus curiae brief jointly with the Allied Educational Foundation supporting Robertson and urging Supreme Court review and reversal of the lower court decision. Robertson served 18 months in prison and died while serving probation. He was also fined $130,000, a liability inherited by his estate.

    The Supreme Court also remanded Robertson’s conviction to the lower court so the indictment can be dismissed and the lien can be cancelled.

    Judicial Watch and the AEF had asked the Supreme Court to review the ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit that upheld Robertson’s conviction, because that decision “affirmed illegal agency actions in prosecuting Joseph Robertson based on a misreading of federal law. The Court should take this opportunity to correct the confusion in overbroad interpretations of the Clear Water Act, which have led to unjust prosecutions and federal intrusions into both state authority and individual liberty.”

    The brief was filed in the case of Robertson v. United States, Case No. 18-609, 587 U.S. __ (2019). This was an appeal of the Ninth Circuit decision in United States v. Robertson, 875 F.3d 1281, 1285 (9th Cir. 2017). (click here to read the full article.)


    Judicial Watch is an American conservative activist group and self-styled watchdog group that files Freedom of Information Act lawsuits to investigate claimed misconduct by government officials. Judicial Watch is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Contributions are received from individuals, foundations, and corporations and are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.


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    Thousand Oaks | Passionate Protest of 5G – Council authorizes $10,000 seed money for local homeless agency

    By Michael Hernandez

    Thousand Oaks residents show up at City Council to passionately protest 5G

    THOUSAND OAKS—City Council members heard more than one hour of testimony from residents passionately protesting the installation of 5G towers in the city (17 opposing and only one; a Moorpark Community College student in favor).  Residents complained about potential harm particularly to young children and seniors (citing scientific studies) as well as the devaluation of property values.  They sought amendments for higher towers and did not want usage or placement of towers in residential areas and at least 3,000 feet apart.  Public speakers spoke on how other cities were dealing with 5G with some citizens resorting to court rulings on the issue.  Many expressed disappointment in the City Council for not listening to them as their elected representatives and said that the city would be facing citizen lawsuits if 5G went forward.

    A protesters flyer gave the following website for more information:  http://mystreetmychoice.com/venturacounty.html with non-telecom sponsored information from: SaferEMER.com and EHTrust.org.  Other websites from those opposed to 5G included:  Physicians For Safe Technology (https://www.mdsafetech.org); and the BioInitiative Report (https://bioinitiative.org/.

    City Manager Andrew Powers said he understood how the public was “frustrated on this emotionally charged issue.”   However, he claimed that Thousand Oaks were responding “to federal law” and “not a city initiative.  We are being forced to respond by the federal government to take action on this FCC matter of 5G. Municipalities are governed by laws and we can’t decide what laws we follow and which ones we violate.   Any actions in conflict with federal laws put cities in legal jeopardy.  Our attorney provides guidance to the city based on the best interest of the city.   In February, new laws were enacted that effect every city in the United States and we cannot consider health impacts in regards to wiring.

    “Telecommunication companies went directly to the Federal Communications Commission and were successful in getting laws passed.    I suggest you seek a federal response.  There are two ways to fix this issue:  through the courts or through federal legislation.”

    Assistant City Attorney Patrick Hehir said, “The ability to file an injunction is gone.  FCC 18133 is a valid regulation.”  City officials said they would post on the city web page the differences of various cities as they addressed 5G issues.

    The City Council approved a $10,000 seed grant for Harbor House—a homeless case management and support service agency—assisting 50 of the 103 homeless residents of Thousand Oaks.  The work of Harbor House and Lutheran Social Services (which housed 66 homeless this past fiscal year) was part of an update by Assistant City Manager Ingrid Hardy on the Thousand Oaks Ad Hoc City Council Homelessness Committee (which meets monthly).  Council members were also given a report on the 2019 Ventura County Point in Time Homeless Count and an update by Tara Carruth of the Ventura County Continuum of Care—a regional coalition that deals with homelessness in the county.

    Council authorizes $10,000 seed money for local homeless agency

    The 103 homeless residents in Thousand Oaks (most are long-time residents of the city) represents a 28 percent increase from the 80 homeless reported last year—giving Thousand Oaks the sixth highest rate of homelessness  in the county.   Some 43 percent of the Thousand Oaks homeless were first-time homeless,  42 percen had mental health issues and 41 percent had substance abuse issues.  Some 25 percent of Thousand Oaks homeless live in encampments while 20 percent are living in their vehicles.

    Meanwhile, the homeless count in Ventura County also has gone up from 1,299 last year to 1,669 this year.  The average length of homelessness is 141 days.  Some causes of homelessness include: mental illness, substance abuse, minimum wage, cost of affordable housing, transition from foster care, domestic violence, and lack of employment opportunities.

    According to city employee Ashley Humes, the Ad Hoc Homeless Committee’s education and outreach campaign is geared to educate, motivate, and activate.  The campaign goal is “to build a shared understanding of homelessness as an issue that touches all of us, to spotlight existing efforts and amplify strategies that drive positive change.”  Thousand Oaks has developed a web page entitled:  www.toaks.org/homeless.  “We have met with faith communities, have built a web presence, designed and printed outreach collateral materials, have collected stories, leverage the existing platforms, identified opportunities and gaps, and have been working with community champions,” said Humes.

    Mayor Rob McCoy and City Council member Claudia Bill-de la Pena are members of the Ad Hoc Homeless Committee.  

    Mayor McCoy spoke on how the interfaith clergy council and evangelical faith clergy have met recently to hear about the homeless situation in Thousand Oaks.   McCoy said:  “There are many misconceptions in regards to our city’s homeless population.  Many think the homeless come from outside the city while most homeless have been living locally (for years).”

    “I am really encouraged with the progress we have made,” said Bill-de la Pena.  “I am also excited about addressing solutions.  (The direction) with the faith-based community could become a national model.  Few cities have managed to get the entire faith-based community to sit at the same table.  Congratulations Mayor McCoy.”

    Thousand Oaks Police Chief Tim Hagel said the department has two officers that work with “vulnerable” populations who regularly get assistance from Denise Cortes of Harbor House.  City Manager Andrew Powers said, “Homelessness impacts our business community.  We are looking for solutions and are talking to all our stakeholders”

    Thousand Oaks does not have a homeless shelter in the city.

    City Council approves citywide traffic fees

    Transportation Planner Kathy Naoum reported to the city council that 16 intersections in the city required improvements with the worse freeway offramp was the 22 at Olson Road.  Not included is the Hampshire interchange that costs $60 million (to widen the bridge) and will be dependent on grant funding. The total cost for 24 improvements identified is an estimated $26 million.   Fees are raised by charging property developers.  Most of the city’s intersections are operating at top levels or “as good as they should be.”   The motion for the citywide traffic fees passed 5-0.

    City Council approves citywide user fees

    City Council approves 2019 user fees, fines, penalties, rates and assessments (user fees) with non-compliance fees by a 5-0 consent vote.  A distinction was made between city taxes and fees.  A local tax is any levy, charge or extraction of any kind imposed by a local government while a fee or rate charge is to an individual or group that receives a private benefit from services provided by the city. 

    Special Presentations and Announcements

    The City of Thousand Oaks declared May as Older Americans Month with a proclamation and photo taken at the start of the city council meeting.  Council members heard how seven adults turned 65 every minute.

    Stephanie Wilson, Director of Development for New West Symphony made a presentation of the June 22 (Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with festival doors opening at 5 p.m.) performance of Titanic Live at Cal Lutheran University’s William Rolland Stadium in partnership with California State University Northridge/The Soraya and California Lutheran University.  Ticket prices range from $25 to $73 and can be purchased through Ticket Master.

    Thousand Oaks employee Mike Newman received the Employee of the Year commendation.  He has worked for the city for 36 years.

    The Greater Conejo Valley Chamber of Commerce will host its largest mixer (Mega-Mixer & Business Expo) of the year on Wednesday, May 15 from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at Los Robles Greens with 60 exhibitors and 250 attendees expected.  Cost for chamber members is $5 and for non-chamber attendees is $15.

     

    Michael Hernandez, Co-Founder of the Citizens Journal—Ventura County’s online news service, founder of History Makers International—a community nonprofit serving youth and families in Ventura County, is a former Southern California daily newspaper journalist and religion and news editor.  He has worked 24 years as a middle school teacher.   Mr. Hernandez can be contacted by email at [email protected].


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