Jan 28 – Feb 4, 2016

Jan 28 - Feb 4, 2016 / Vol. 30 / No. 27

Cover Story

Bingeable: River

When? 2015  |  Where? BBC One; now streaming What makes a great detective? How does the stress of the job manifest itself? What coping mechanisms keep an investigator from slipping into depression? These are the sorts of questions River is interested in. The six-episode BBC One series focuses on John River (Stellan Skarsgård), a brilliant…

Learn by moving: Cal Poly’s Orchesis presents 46th annual dance show

View a slideshow of the rehearsal for Transcend. To transcend is to be so absorbed that you go beyond the present moment or movement, going above the previously set limits. It’s a fitting theme for Cal Poly’s student dance company Orchesis’ 46th annual concert, Transcend, which features a smattering of pieces that go outside the…

Atascadero’s First Annual Tamale Festival attracts huge crowd

View a slideshow of the Tamale Festival. It’s almost 2 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 23, as I approach Atascadero’s first annual Tamale Festival at Pavilion on the Lake, and it appears that the star of the show is already missing. “I can’t find any tamales,” Joey Morrow, of San Miguel, says. “They’re getting more, but…

Paso Planning Commission approves assisted living facility

The Paso Robles Planning Commission approved the revised plans for a three-story assisted living facility on South River Road in a 4-3 vote on Jan. 26. The commission’s approval included a condition that the width of the top floor of the building’s south section be reduced by 70 linear feet, along with some other minor…

What is the secret to good health?

Debra Fogg store owner “Waking up happy every day.” Skyler Hunt server “Having a wholehearted intention to be healthy.” Matthew Gussenhoven delivery services “Perseverance. Gotta keep going no matter how much it hurts.” Whitney O’Leary hair stylist “Understanding the connections between physical, emotional, and spiritual health.”

Cougars & Mustangs

There is an unfair amount of unspoken stigma attached to community college, particularly in a town boasting as notable an institution as Cal Poly. It is easy to be convinced that you just didn’t try hard enough in high school, or just aren’t smart enough for a four-year institution.  It is the hope of this…

More letters fly between Arroyo Grande officials and insurance carrier

Letters and emails continue back and forth after the city of Arroyo Grande’s liability insurance carrier raised concerns that comments made by unnamed elected officials about city staff could lead to possible legal action. The original letter, sent to the city from the California Joint Powers Insurance Authority (CJPIA) on Dec. 16, stated that the…

Arroyo Grande and Morro Bay ban expanded polystyrene foam

Both Arroyo Grande and Morro Bay recently took the first step to ban the use of expanded polystyrene foam in their cities. They considered the new ordinances on Jan. 26 as part of a packaged proposal from local environmental groups that advocate against the use of expanded polystyrene foam, often called EPS or “Styrofoam” after…

Caltrans cleans up a salty mess on Hwy. 101 from Cuesta Grade to Avila

If you’re one of the many Californians convinced that anything Caltrans does takes longer than it needs to, think again. In the early morning hours of Jan. 22, a California Department of Transportation highway maintenance crew cleaned up a long, thick trail of rock salt that neatly peppered the side of the highway for miles.…

SLO County staff recommends denial of Phillips 66 rail spur

Phillips 66’s controversial plans to build a rail spur and increase the number of oil hauling trains moving through Central Coast cities could be derailed due to a recent report released by SLO County planning staff. Staff released the report to the SLO County Planning Commission and recommended that commissioners deny the project at an…

Fluoride’s got to go

In response to the New Times cover story “Drop By Drop” (Jan. 21), I’d like to propose that SLO citizens concerned about our water also take the necessary steps to ban fluoridation of the city’s water supply. To borrow a statement from the commentary piece also in that issue, “Affordable Housing”: “Our city, like the…

Debbie Arnold should stay out of Paso basin business

It has often been repeated in public meetings by the San Luis Obispo County Board of Supervisors that county staff and the board would not advocate for or against the proposed Paso Robles Basin Water District. Staff and those supervisors who support the formation of the locally controlled and managed public water district have honorably…

Get rid of bullet train, get rid of new taxes

According to an article I read this morning, Gov. Jerry Brown wants our state lawmakers to “bite the bullet and enact new fees and taxes” to pay for repairs to California’s crumbling highways. Really? I don’t think there is anyone in the United States who doesn’t know that we pay more gas taxes than most…

Some Cal Poly queer history

Under President Dr. Robert E. Kennedy (between 1967 and 1978), Cal Poly was the only public campus West of the Mississippi that forced the Gay Student Union (GSU) to sue to become a recognized campus organization; a study by Helen Goo showed that more than 30 percent of Cal Poly varsity players given an attitude…

Shame on cronyism in South County

After years of struggle between right and might, the Knudson Audit Report presented Wednesday, Jan. 20, at the South County Sanitation District Board Meeting in Arroyo Grande proved that something has stunk in sewer district management practices for more than a decade. The report will now be sent to District Attorney Dan Dow. As a…

Balancing act

Like most Californians I cherish our long, beautiful coastline. Whether we’re riding waves or roads, walking beaches or bluffs, or watching the sun set into the sea from inland or right on the continent’s edge, the coastal realm connects us to each other and to the place we call home. It belongs to us all.…

False advertising

Telling the truth is way overrated. I mean, it’s so much easier—not to mention fun—to misrepresent yourself to get the desired effect you want. Take Phillips 66 and their rail spur project for instance. They’re acting like New Times and the Arroyo Grande Times-Press-Recorder have both endorsed their project, which opponents argue will endanger the…

Nurture the Moon offers massage therapy with focus on women’s health

The human experience can be chock-full of tensions and stresses, fears and apprehensions, and traumas and illnesses that try to bring our spirit down.  A vital question for healing from those experiences and patterns is, where in our bodies do those disturbances manifest? Local massage therapist Miya Tischler says they like to hide in the…

For your health

Seeds have sprouted! Seeds Smoothie and Juice Bar is now open for breakfast, brunch, and any time you want a healthy pick-me-up in downtown SLO. You can even build your own Greek yogurt parfait with virtuous add-ons like chia and pumpkin seeds, cocoa, and even bee pollen, which I hear is very good for the…

Clubs 1/28/16 – 2/4/16

Goin’ South THE CLIFFS RESORT: 2757 Shell Beach Rd., Shell Beach, 773-5000, cliffsresort.com. F. MCLINTOCKS SALOON: Two locations: 750 Mattie Rd. in Pismo Beach and 133 Bridge St. in Arroyo Grande. 773-1892 or mclintocks.com. Live music at the Pismo Beach location every Fri. and Sat. from 6-9pm. Tennessee Jimmy Harrell and Doc Stoltey play on…

ARTS Obispo’s Poetry Out Loud celebrates 10th year

If you can’t be a poet, memorizing some of the greatest poets’ eternal words might just be the next best thing. The San Luis Obispo County Poetry Out Loud Competition is presented by ARTS Obispo and will celebrate its 10th year on Feb. 19  from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in…

Glass sculptures of Claudia Ariss on display at Big Sky Cafe

There’s beauty in the contrasting dynamic of strength and vulnerability. Glass, which embodies both these characteristics, is the medium of choice for Arroyo Grande artist Claudia Ariss. A collection of her glass sculptures, titled Rock, Sand & Fire: Beyond Traditional Glass, is currently on display at Big Sky Café in downtown San Luis Obispo. These…

Only here for the music: SLO Symphony hosts first female conductor

Caught up as she was in the magic of the different sounds of all the instruments in the orchestra, time and time again the violinist missed her own entrance, until one day, when she decided to be the person leading everyone in perfect harmony. Laura Jackson has worked as a conductor for orchestras for more…


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