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    Social Media Companies “Struggle” to Help Censors Keep us in the Dark

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    by Thomas L. Knapp

    According to CNN Business, “Facebook, YouTube and Twitter struggle to deal with New Zealand shooting video.”

    “Deal with” is code for “censor on demand by governments and activist organizations who oppose public access to information that hasn’t first been thoroughly vetted for conformity to their preferred narrative.”

    Do you really need to see first-person video footage of an attacker murdering 49 worshipers at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand?

    Maybe not. Chances are pretty good you didn’t even want to. I suspect that many of us who did (I viewed what appeared to be a partial copy before YouTube deleted it) would rather we could un-see it.

    But whether or not we watch it should be up to us, not those governments and activists. Social media companies should enable our choices, not suppress our choices at the censors’ every whim.

    If Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube had been primary news sources in 1915, would they have permitted us to view footage  (rare, as film was in its early days)  of New Zealanders’ desperate fight at Gallipoli?

    How about the attack on Pearl Harbor?

    The assassination of president John F. Kennedy?

    The second plane hitting the World Trade Center?

    Lucinda Creighton of the Counter Extremism Project complains to CNN that the big social media firms aren’t really “cooperating and acting in the best interest of citizens to remove this content.”

    The CEP claims that it “counter[s] the narrative of extremists” and  works to “reveal the extremist threat.”  How does demanding that something be kept hidden “counter” or “reveal” it? How is it in “the best of interest of citizens” to only let those citizens see what Lucinda Creighton thinks they should be allowed to see?

    CNN analyst Steve Moore warns that the video could “inspire copycats.” “Do you want to help terrorists? Because if you do, sharing this video is exactly how you do it.”

    Moore has it backward. Terrorists don’t need video to “inspire” them. Like mold, evil grows best in darkness and struggles in sunlight. If you want to help terrorists, hiding the ugliness of their actions from the public they hope to mobilize in support of those actions is exactly how you do it.

    Contrary to their claims of supporting “democracy” versus “extremism,” the social media companies and the censors they “struggle” to assist seem to side with terror and to lack any trust in the good judgment of “the people.”


    Thomas L. Knapp (Twitter: @thomaslknapp) is director and senior news analyst at the William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertarian Advocacy Journalism (thegarrisoncenter.org). He lives and works in north central Florida.

     

     


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    Port Hueneme Police Department Joins Neighbors by RING

    Port Hueneme, CA — The Port Hueneme Police Department is joining the Neighbors app by Ring (available via iOS/Android here: https://shop.ring.com/pages/neighbors to provide the Port Hueneme community with real-time, local crime and safety information. The Neighbors network already has millions of users and has been instrumental in catching package thieves, stopping burglaries, and keeping neighborhoods safe.

    Residents can download the free Neighbors app, join their neighborhood, and use the app to: monitor neighborhood activity; share crime and safety-related videos, photos and text-based posts; and receive real-time safety alerts from their neighbors, local law enforcement and the Ring team.

    Chief Salinas said, “This is definitely a community crime fighting tool we can use to help reduce crime in our neighborhoods. We want to get our residents involved and this easy to use platform will allow the police and our neighborhoods to get up-to-date information which is critical when trying to apprehend criminals. The City of Port Hueneme continues to be hampered by theft in our city including package theft, mail theft, and theft from vehicles. This new program will help us address these issues by giving us the ability to identify thieves and by getting real time updates and information from our Neighbors.”

    Jamie Siminoff, Chief Inventor and Founder of Ring, said: “Over the past few years we have learned that, when neighbors, the Ring team and law enforcement all work together, we can create safer communities.

    We’re excited to have the Port Hueneme Police Department join Neighbors and applaud their leadership in utilizing this free and effective tool to engage residents with up-to-date local crime and safety information while maintaining neighbor privacy first and foremost.”

    How It Works
    ● Download the Neighbors app on iOS and Android here: https://shop.ring.com/pages/neighbors or by texting ‘PortHuenemePD’ to 555888 from your smartphone.
    ● Opt-in to join your neighborhood.
    ● Customize the geographic area you want to receive notifications for (users must verify where they are located and cannot participate in other neighborhoods).
    ● Receive real-time alerts from your neighbors, local law enforcement and the Ring team that inform of crime and safety alerts as they happen.
    ● View local crime and safety posts via a live feed or interactive map.
    ● Share text updates, photos and videos taken on any device, including Ring’s home security devices.
    ● Work with your community to make neighborhoods safer.

    About Neighbors
    Neighbors is a neighborhood watch app that provides real-time, local crime and safety information. Download the free Neighbors app (iOS/Android), join your neighborhood, and use the app to: monitor neighborhood activity; share crime and safety-related videos, photos and text-based posts; and receive real-time safety alerts from your neighbors, local law enforcement and the Ring team. Download Neighbors (iOS/Android) today to join your digital neighborhood watch. For more information visit www.ring.com/neighbors.

    About Ring
    Ring’s mission is to reduce crime in neighborhoods by creating a Ring of Security around homes and communities. Ring is an Amazon company. The Ring product line, along with Neighbors by Ring, enable Ring to offer affordable, whole-home and neighborhood security devices and services. In fact, one Los Angeles neighborhood saw a 55 percent decrease in home break-ins after Ring Doorbells were installed on just ten percent of homes. For more information, visit www.ring.com. With Ring, you’re always home.

    Contest
    To celebrate our partnership with Ring, we are giving away Ring Doorbells to TWO Port Huenemeb residents (see below for other requirements). To enter, simply download the Ring Neighbors App at download.ring.com and then comment on our Facebook Page that you downloaded the App. We will draw our two winners live at our City Council Meeting on April 15, 2019. Deadline to enter will be April 14th at midnight.

    Winners must:
    -Follow Port Hueneme Police Department on Facebook
    -Live in Port Hueneme
    -Provide proof of residency when they pick up their prize at our station

    Winners will be responsible for installing and maintaining the Ring doorbell and all fees associated. Port Hueneme Police Department will not be able to directly access your device without your permission. Good Luck and thank you for help making our “Friendly City by the Sea” a safer place to live.

    Port Hueneme Police Department


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    Writing About the Lives of Women

    WOMEN’S FICTION & NONFICTION WORKSHOP IN STUDIO CITY
     

    WHO: Toni Lopopolo, Literary Agent, Editor, former New York Executive Editor at Macmillan and St. Martin’s Press
    WHAT: Women’s Fiction & Nonfiction Workshop
    WHERE: Private home in Studio City
    WHEN: Saturdays @ 1:00 pm April 6, 13, 27 & May 4
    Do you have a novel with a strong female character?
    Do you have a true story you want to write?
    All genres welcome!
    Publishing industry research tells us women read more than men, and women buy more books than men. These conclusions support the theory that women’s lives play a significant role in today’s literature.

    Women readers buy more books concerning the lives of ordinary (on the outside) as well as extraordinary women.  

    With small, interactive workshops, Agent/Editor, Toni Lopopolo, is able to give personal attention to each writer, working to strengthen writing skills and sharpen important writing techniques. With over thirty years of book publishing experience, Toni developed a workshop format limited to no more than six attendees. Students receive personalized instruction and editing. You’ll learn the all-important skill of self-editing plus how to revise, develop, and structure novels, or nonfiction stories, that tell engrossing dramas which today’s readers welcome.

    Ms. Lopopolo, a former executive editor at Macmillan and St Martin’s Press, has worked with bestselling authors for years. She’ll help you find your voice, and very different, the voice(s) of your main character(s) to create a winning story. Over the last 17 years, Toni has offered writing workshops that helped scores of writers improve their skills to today’s competitive levels and finally, complete their novels or memoirs.

    Unlike college courses, or conference classes, in four sessions per workshop, Toni will show you how to craft your story, create the best structure through the BEATS necessary to carry your plot to a resonating finish. Come to this workshop prepared to work.

    Toni will help you:

    • Find which genre dovetails with your own strengths and writing style
    • Create REAL main characters who ring true on the page
    • Develop a unique VOICE for each of the main characters
    • EVOKE rather than describe
    • NEVER violate the all-important point-of-view
    • Write CHARGED dialog that’s NEVER conversation
    • Develop unique CONFLICT that creates ongoing tension
    • Become aware of your “habit” words
    • “Listen” to your own writing

    Plus so much more including the all-important reading list of books needed. Make your story rise to the standard today’s agents, publishers, and readers, demand.

    Each workshop limited to six writers who must submit the first five pages of their first chapter before acceptance.

    If these dates or location don’t work for you, please contact Toni for other options.

    Four consecutive sessions: $265
    April 6, 13, 27 & May 4 
    For more information
    Email [email protected]
    Phone (215) 353-1151
    Note: Once a writer’s place is reserved, the workshop fee is nonrefundable. Missed workshops or single sessions may be made up within 30 days of the original date.

    Testimonials from past students of Toni Lopopolo:

    “Weekly sessions with Toni and a small group of emerging writers provide the motivation to keep my writing moving forward and the professional guidance to improve my writing skills. My first-draft novel gained new life through Toni’s rigorous editing, vigorous discussions, and great feedback always.” – Anita Perez Ferguson, Santa Barbara, CA

    “Tea with Toni is book bootcamp. If you dream of making your novel publish-worthy, Toni’s the one to whip your book and you into shape. She’ll murder your adverbs, pump up your tension and help you flex your writing muscles, all over a lovely cup of tea.” – Toni Guy, Ventura, CA

    “I learned plenty from editing my own work along with the work of others, receiving input from the group. Understood the weaknesses not only in those couple of pages of my story but how I can spot the same issues throughout the rest of my work–voice, evoke. I felt the time spent in Toni Lopopolo’s workshop invaluable.” -Eva


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    Boys & Girls Club receives Health Champion Award from Ventura County Board of Supervisors

    OXNARD, Calif.—The Ventura County Board of Supervisors honored the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Oxnard and Port Hueneme with the Partnership for a Healthy Ventura County’s Health Champion Award. The award is presented each year to a community partner who excels in one of four committee focus areas. The board is presenting this award in honor of “National Nutrition Month,” which is celebrated in March.

    “The Club provides programs in three priority outcome areas – academic success, good character and citizenship and healthy lifestyles – in order to help our 10,400+ youth and teens become successful individuals. We offer more than a dozen programs focused solely on healthy lifestyles,” said Club CEO Erin Antrim. “To be recognized as Health Champions is a wonderful accomplishment. We strive hard every day to provide our youth with positive behaviors that will keep them mentally and physically healthy.”

    The members of the Healthy in our Community committee recognized the Club’s leadership in serving more than 2,000 youth daily, and its focus on character development and healthy lifestyles. The committee also looked at the Club’s graduation rate of 96 percent, the innovative STEM programs it offers, as well as its cultural, arts, technology and career-related programming aimed at helping youth members excel at life.

    “Our Healthy Lifestyle programs are designed to improve social skills and provide tools for stress management” said Omar Zapata, program director. “Whether the kids are playing football, basketball or sitting down to prepare a hand-made healthy meal with instructors from Memorial Health Systems, they are learning to nurture their own well-being, set personal goals and to make positive personal choices that will help them to become self-sufficient adults.”

    Rigo Vargas, public health director presents Health Champion Award to
    Omar Zapata, BGCOP program director and Erin Antrim, BGCOP CEO

    The Boys & Girls Club has served the youth of Oxnard and Port Hueneme for over 60 years. With three full-service clubs and 17 school program sites, the organization is one of the largest of its kind in California. The Club provides programs for more than 10,400 youth and teens in three priority outcome areas: Academic Success, Good Character and Citizenship, and Healthy Lifestyles. For more information please visit www.BGCOP.org.


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    New Yarrow Family YMCA Hiring 150 Staff Members As Grand Opening Nears

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    Westlake Village, Calif.—The Yarrow Family YMCA in Westlake Village is gearing up for its opening in April by hiring 150 full-time and part-time staff members to work in the new 60,000 sq. ft. facility.

    Available jobs include lifeguards, personal trainers, membership services personnel, dance instructors, front desk staff, youth instructors and swim team coaches. Certification training is provided for some jobs. The Y offers continuing education scholarships for tuition reimbursement.

    To find out more about the available job openings, go to http://yarrowymca.org and click on “Employment.”

    The Southeast Ventura County YMCA is a nonprofit organization dedicated to building positive relationships, impacting lives and strengthening the community through youth development, healthy living programs and social responsibility. It serves the Conejo Valley, Simi Valley, Westlake Village, Oak Park, Agoura Hills and Moorpark through its three branches. www.sevymca.org


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    Simi Valley Police Dept. Seeks Public’s Assistance Solving Series of Residential Burglaries

    Simi Valley Police Department – Incident Press Release

    Most of these burglaries have occurred during the daytime hours, primarily on weekdays, however some have occurred during later hours and on weekends. The suspects appear to target residences that back up to open spaces and trails, have no vehicles parked in the driveway and give the outward appearance of no one being home. Entry has been gained by smashing glass doors or windows located in the rear of the residences. Suspects caught on camera were described as young males, light skinned, wearing dark clothing and hoodies. 

    Other jurisdictions in Ventura and Los Angeles Counties have experienced similar crimes. 

    The Simi Valley Police Department would like to remind residents of the following tips to prevent thieves from breaking into your homes: 

    • Alarm systems and security cameras need to be turned on and properly working and provide 24/7 monitoring are usually good deterrents to these types of crimes. 

    • Exterior lights are important, especially near doors and in the rear of the house, where intruders do most of their work. All sides of your home should be protected by security lighting that is located high out of reach and is vandal resistant. 

    • Leave lights on and turn on a TV or radio when you go out. If you will be gone for a few days, use timers on your lights for them to mimic your normal activity at home. 

    • Look into safety-coating the most vulnerable windows. Safety coating is adhesive plastic sheeting that makes breaking out windows difficult. 

    • Install additional locking devices on all sliding glass doors and windows. 

    • Plant bushes with thorns or prickly leaves near windows and along fences. 

    • Trim trees so that limbs don’t provide privacy for the crooks or give them access to roofs, second stories, etc. 

    • Attach Neighborhood Watch and/or Alarm Company stickers on or near all entry doors and windows. 

    • Don’t allow daily deliveries of mail, newspapers or flyers to build up while you are away. Arrange with the Post Office to hold your mail, or arrange for a friend or neighbor to take them regularly. 

    • Residents should report any suspicious activity that is observed in open spaces areas or hiking trails near residential neighborhoods to the police. 

    Residents are being asked to be vigilant in securing their residences and keeping a watchful eye on any suspicious activity in their neighborhood. While these incidents have been occurring primarily in the southwest portion of the city, all residents are being asked to remain attentive to this crime series in the event the suspects begin targeting other neighborhoods in the city. If you see something, report it! 

    Additional tips on Crime Prevention and residential burglaries can be obtained from Simi Valley Police Department’s Crime Analysis & Prevention Unit’s Crime Prevention Coordinator Jean-Marie Maroshek at (805) 583-6276. 

     


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    Los Angeles Man Pled Guilty in Business Email Compromise Fraud Case

    VENTURA, California – District Attorney Gregory D. Totten announced today that Los Angeles County resident Robert T. Gilleran (DOB 6/1/1946) pled guilty to felony grand theft as a result of a Business Email Compromise (BEC) fraud prosecution. The conviction was the result of an investigation conducted by the District Attorney’s High-Tech Task Force.

    Nationwide, BEC scams accounted for over $9 billion in losses in 2018. In a typical BEC, an employee of a company receives what appears to be an email from an employer or other authorized person, directing that employee to wire money to a bank account, ostensibly for a legitimate business transaction. The email is not actually from an authorized person, but is, instead, from a suspect masquerading as a professional involved in the transaction. The employee wires the money as directed and the money is then received into an unauthorized account under the control of the suspect.

    Often, intermediaries (also known as “money mules”) allow their bank accounts to be used to launder stolen funds in exchange for a percentage of stolen money. Gilleran acted as an intermediary in a BEC scam. Gilleran wired money around the world from three bank accounts he established in Camarillo, California.

    Gilleran faces up to three years in the Ventura County jail. Gilleran is scheduled to be sentenced on April 18, 2019, at 9:00 a.m., in courtroom 12 of the Ventura Superior Court, County of Ventura.

     

    The Ventura County District Attorney’s Office is the public prosecutor for the county’s 850,000 residents. The office employs approximately 280 employees including attorneys, investigators, victim advocates, and other professional support staff who strive to seek justice, ensure public safety, and protect the rights of crime victims.

    Follow the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office on Twitter @VenturaDAOffice


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    NASA Mission Reveals Asteroid Has Big Surprises

    A NASA spacecraft that will return a sample of a near-Earth asteroid named Bennu to Earth in 2023 made the first-ever close-up observations of particle plumes erupting from an asteroid’s surface. Bennu also revealed itself to be more rugged than expected, challenging the mission team to alter its flight and sample collection plans, due to the rough terrain. 

    Bennu is the target of NASA’s Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security-Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx) mission, which began orbiting the asteroid on Dec. 31. Bennu, which is only slightly wider than the height of the Empire State Building, may contain unaltered material from the very beginning of our solar system.

    “The discovery of plumes is one of the biggest surprises of my scientific career,” said Dante Lauretta, OSIRIS-REx principal investigator at the University of Arizona, Tucson. “And the rugged terrain went against all of our predictions. Bennu is already surprising us, and our exciting journey there is just getting started.”

    Shortly after the discovery of the particle plumes on Jan. 6, the mission science team increased the frequency of observations, and subsequently detected additional particle plumes during the following two months. Although many of the particles were ejected clear of Bennu, the team tracked some particles that orbited Bennu as satellites before returning to the asteroid’s surface.

    The OSIRIS-REx team initially spotted the particle plumes in images while the spacecraft was orbiting Bennu at a distance of about one mile (1.61 kilometers). Following a safety assessment, the mission team concluded the particles did not pose a risk to the spacecraft. The team continues to analyze the particle plumes and their possible causes.

    “The first three months of OSIRIS-REx’s up-close investigation of Bennu have reminded us what discovery is all about — surprises, quick thinking, and flexibility,” said Lori Glaze, acting director of the Planetary Science Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “We study asteroids like Bennu to learn about the origin of the solar system. OSIRIS-REx’s sample will help us answer some of the biggest questions about where we come from.”

    OSIRIS-REx launched in 2016 to explore Bennu, which is the smallest body ever orbited by spacecraft. Studying Bennu will allow researchers to learn more about the origins of our solar system, the sources of water and organic molecules on Earth, the resources in near-Earth space, as well as improve our understanding of asteroids that could impact Earth.

    The OSIRIS-REx team also didn’t anticipate the number and size of boulders on Bennu’s surface. From Earth-based observations, the team expected a generally smooth surface with a few large boulders. Instead, it discovered Bennu’s entire surface is rough and dense with boulders. 

    The higher-than-expected density of boulders means that the mission’s plans for sample collection, also known as Touch-and-Go (TAG), need to be adjusted. The original mission design was based on a sample site that is hazard-free, with an 82-foot (25-meter) radius. However, because of the unexpectedly rugged terrain, the team hasn’t been able to identify a site of that size on Bennu. Instead, it has begun to identify candidate sites that are much smaller in radius.

    The smaller sample site footprint and the greater number of boulders will demand more accurate performance from the spacecraft during its descent to the surface than originally planned. The mission team is developing an updated approach, called Bullseye TAG, to accurately target smaller sample sites.

    “Throughout OSIRIS-REx’s operations near Bennu, our spacecraft and operations team have demonstrated that we can achieve system performance that beats design requirements,” said Rich Burns, the project manager of OSIRIS-REx at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “Bennu has issued us a challenge to deal with its rugged terrain, and we are confident that OSIRIS-REx is up to the task.” 

    The original, low-boulder estimate was derived both from Earth-based observations of Bennu’s thermal inertia — or its ability to conduct and store heat — and from radar measurements of its surface roughness. Now that OSIRIS-REx has revealed Bennu’s surface up close, those expectations of a smoother surface have been proven wrong. This suggests the computer models used to interpret previous data do not adequately predict the nature of small, rocky, asteroid surfaces. The team is revising these models with the data from Bennu. 

    The OSIRIS-REx science team has made many other discoveries about Bennu in the three months since the spacecraft arrived at the asteroid, some of which were presented Tuesday at the 50th Lunar and Planetary Conference in Houston and in a special collection of papers issued by the journal Nature. 

    The team has directly observed a change in the spin rate of Bennu as a result of what is known as the Yarkovsky-O’Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack (YORP) effect. The uneven heating and cooling of Bennu as it rotates in sunlight is causing the asteroid to increase its rotation speed. As a result, Bennu’s rotation period is decreasing by about one second every 100 years. Separately, two of the spacecraft’s instruments, the MapCam color imager and the OSIRIS-REx Thermal Emission Spectrometer (OTES), have made detections of magnetite on Bennu’s surface, which bolsters earlier findings indicating the interaction of rock with liquid water on Bennu’s parent body. 

    Goddard provides overall mission management, systems engineering, and the safety and mission assurance for OSIRIS-REx. Dante Lauretta of the University of Arizona, Tucson, is the principal investigator, and the University of Arizona also leads the science team and the mission’s science observation planning and data processing. Lockheed Martin Space in Denver built the spacecraft and is providing flight operations. Goddard and KinetX Aerospace are responsible for navigating the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. OSIRIS-REx is the third mission in NASA’s New Frontiers Program, which is managed by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for the agency’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington.

    To find out more about the OSIRIS-REx mission, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/osiris-rex

    This view of asteroid Bennu ejecting particles from its surface on January 19 was created by combining two images taken on board NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. Other image processing techniques were also applied, such as cropping and adjusting the brightness and contrast of each image.
    Credits: NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona/Lockheed Martin

     


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    Oxnard Union High School Exhibit at the Channel Islands Maritime Museum

    Oxnard, CA – Continuing a tradition that is now in its 29th year, the Channel Islands Maritime Museum is proud to celebrate its long history hosting The Oxnard Union High School District Art Exhibit. Celebrate the creative talent on display, original works in all media—from painting and drawing to photography, ceramics, three-dimensional assemblage, and digital art—will all be on view. Participating high schools include: Adolfo Camarillo, Channel Islands, Condor, Hueneme, Oxnard, Pacifica, Rio Mesa and Rancho Campana. Running April 1-29, 2019, please join us as we announce this year’s winners and vote for People’s Choice on Tuesday, April 9, from 5:30PM – 7:30PM.

    Nestled on the coast of Southern California, in Ventura County, supported by a vibrant community of art aficionados, a steady, year-round influx of art seekers from the area, and tourists from around the world, Channel Islands Maritime Museum is perfectly poised to bring vibrant and innovative art to the forefront of the local art scene. Located at Oxnard’s beautiful harbor on California’s Gold Coast, 3900 Bluefin Circle, Oxnard, CA 93035. Rotating contemporary exhibits and displays enhance the permanent collection. 

    ​The Channel Islands Maritime Museum is open M/Th-Sat 10-4pm, Sun 12-4PM and closed Tues and Wed for group tours and private member events, also, closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day. Located in Oxnard’s Channel Islands Harbor at 3900 Bluefin Circle. Explore galleries full of rare and beautiful maritime paintings dating back to the 1600’s, more than sixty world-class models of historic ships, rotating thematic fine arts exhibitions, and interactive exhibits that encourage visitors to expand their horizons about everything maritime. Museum entry is free for members and children under 6, $7 adults, $5 seniors/military, $3 children (ages 6-17), and free on the third Thursday of the month. Info: cimmvc.org or (805) 984-6260.           

     

    ​The Channel Islands Maritime Museum


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    Become a Sponsor! A challenge hike for veterans, wheelchair users, and volunteer pushers!

    A major focus for this event is serving military Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, and their families. Other participants are adults and children living with illnesses, or past accident patients who are living with physical disabilities. Some groups include residents of the United Cerebral Palsy, Los Angeles, Hill Crest House, W. LA CalVet Home and participants from Long Beach VA.

    www.WildernessInstitute.com
    www.Meetup.com/Wilderness-Adventures/ (Event photos and registration)
    Become a Fan! Check out our Facebook page.

    For our whole existence we have been providing special outdoor programs that reach out to create an exceptional nature experience for people with physical disabilities. This event allows participants to benefit from volunteer support to traverse the mountain trails to the sea. With our current focus of reaching out to more veterans and their families the event is serving even more in need. The event management, promotion, insurance, and logistics, bus transportation, food, water, and naturalist program are all provided FREE of charge twice a year for both participants (wheelchair users) and volunteers.

    However, even with the partnership and committed in-kind support of Natural Path Network, the California State Parks, Kiwanis Clubs of Thousand Oaks, the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority we run far short of financial support for the true cost of putting on this event.

    We need your help to cover the additional operational expenses this year and to reach out to new users who can really benefit from the many outcomes that this program provides, to those who need them the most. From the fresh air and physical movement health benefits, to nature encounters such as wildlife sightings and wildflowers, and, most importantly, to the camaraderie of this social activity and self-respect enhancing outcomes of meeting the hiking challenge!

    Thanks for your support and involvement in this exciting event. If we all pull together we can take this event to another level of service and success for all! Please contact me directly if you can help in any of these areas or have additional ideas or resources to contribute.

    May this year be a special one for us all as we each meet our own challenges and reach out to help others and, in doing so, we build new friendships while creating opportunities for our own growth, meaning and purpose in our lives.

    [email protected] | 818-483-6570 | www.WildernessInstitute.com

    How You Can Help

    1. Individual Sponsor of a Wheelchair:
    a. Gold Sponsor: $100
    b. Silver Sponsor: $75
    c. Bronze Sponsor: $50

    2. Business or Organizational Financial Sponsor:
    a. Gold Sponsor: $750
    b. Silver Sponsor: $500
    c. Bronze Sponsor: $250

    3. Merchant Business Sponsor:
    Display a Poster and Donation Collection Box to generate customer contributions
    and to promote the event to more participants.

    Goals and Needs:
    1. Accessible Bus Transportation
    2. All Terrain Wheelchairs for the event
    3. Reusable water bottles (Sustainability)
    4. Event T-Shirts
    5. Event Hats
    6. Wheelchair user gloves
    7. Award Medallions
    8. Web Site Development and Maintenance Support/Sponsors


    The Wilderness Institute brings over 35 years of experience providing customized outdoor education, team-building and leadership programs. They specialize in adventure-based team-building programs for corporate teams, schools, and other organizations. Their outdoor recreation programs, activities and experiential events include eco-tourism, adventure seminars, wilderness skills, guided hikes, archery Pioneer Living, rock climbing and ropes courses for the public and special groups (including people with disabilities, military veterans and youth-at-risk) as well as tree climbing and Mobile Rock Climbing Wall events.


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