Signal on Del Dios Highway gets its rhythm back.
May 3, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
THE PROBLEM: Rancho Drive is a sleepy side street off busy Del Dios Highway leading to a restaurant, a horse facility and a dozen or so short residential streets. Even at midday it gets little, if any, traffic.
So Gordon Larsen wondered why a signal at the T intersection would need to stop traffic on Del Dios as often as twice a minute, with no one waiting or even approaching from Rancho Drive.
The constant stops, acceleration and deceleration on the main road, which connects Escondido and Rancho Santa Fe along the west side of Lake Hodges, must waste “a tremendous amount of gas,” said Larsen, who drives through at least twice daily. Larsen said the signal had been acting strangely for a few weeks before he called Just Fix it on April 26.
A spot check Tuesday confirmed Larsen’s observations. The signal went red again and again without any vehicles on Rancho Drive, rarely keeping traffic moving for more than a minute and sometimes staying green for as little as five seconds. There was no apparent pattern to the signal, which turned red a few times without traffic on either road.
STATUS: It’s fixed. A call to the county Transportation Division on Tuesday got a repair crew sent out Wednesday morning.
Michael Robinson , head of the division, said there was a malfunction with the intersection’s video equipment, designed to detect the approach of vehicles on Rancho Drive. So a default mode kicked in, switching to an automatic red/green cycle so that any vehicles venturing up Rancho Drive would have a protected turn.
WHO’S RESPONSIBLE: Michael Robinson. For county-maintained roads, report traffic light outages and other signal problems at (858) 874-4040 or go online to sdcounty.ca.gov/dpw/roads/lightsout.html, which has a service request form and links to city websites with similar information.
NEED A PROBLEM SOLVED: Is there a problem government hasn’t taken care of despite your complaints? Whether it’s a broken stairway or rusted park equipment anywhere in San Diego County, Just Fix It might be able to help.
Call (800) 820-8714 or send e-mail to justfixit@uniontrib.com to describe your problem.
For tips on taking direct action, our “Guide to Getting Things Done” — a list of government phone numbers to use for complaints on such things as burned-out lights and bumpy streets — is at signonsandiego.com/news/justfixit/gettingitdone/
Rancho Santa Fe Homeowner turns yard work into Artwork.
April 12, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Homeowner turns his property into a truly unique landscape
Charlie Neuman
Art work at the home of Chuck and Pilar Bahde of Rancho Santa Fe
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Photo by Charlie Neuman
An untitled sculpture (left) pointed across a walkway at the home of Chuck and Pilar Bahde of Rancho Santa Fe. “My sculptures are unusual. Some say I’m a little weird,” said Chuck Bahde (below), strolling past another of his sculptures, this one twisting skyward.
RANCHO SANTA FE — When Chuck Bahde bought the rambling wooden house in Rancho Santa Fe, the 5-acre spread already had plenty of grass and gardens. But that wasn’t to his liking. Besides, it seemed such a waste of water to keep the lawn green. So Bahde set out to create a new landscape, filled with meandering streams, pools and waterfalls — all created with blue and green glass, hand-painted rocks and plastic.
Today dozens of artworks adorn Bahde’s expansive property, in addition to the waterless pools and rivers. Every last piece is made from recycled or found materials. Pebbles, broken bottles, computer chips, seashells, beads, railroad ties, old-fashioned glass doorknobs and even an old, 5-cent parking meter have been turned into artwork in his hands.
A solar panel from a defunct pool-heating system is now the basis for a towering sculpture called “The Wave.” Plastic CDs are put to use as sun-catchers, and warped, time-faded, wooden tennis rackets and a tiny gold trophy add to the décor surrounding the tennis courts. Every rock lining the numerous pathways was found on the property, he said.
Bahde, 84, was an industrial architect by trade and a graduate of the Institute of Design In Chicago . Over the years he enjoyed a wide-ranging career that included everything from designing and building custom homes in the Midwest to practicing public relations in Europe , where he met his wife, Pilar, who is Swiss and Spanish.
“I was more or less a job-jumper, because I was curious,” he said.
Though he started creating art while in school, and design work was often part of his job, Bahde was never a professional artist. “My sculptures are unusual. Some say I’m a little weird,” he said with a laugh.
But few aside from family members and friends have seen his sculptures and unique landscape of art. “I just do things for myself,” he said.
A vacation in San Diego and a subsequent job offer from Convair, where Bahde worked designing airliner interiors, led the couple to settle in San Diego to raise their two children. After many years living in Point Loma and actively participating in the planning group and other community efforts, the Bahdes bought the Rancho Santa Fe property in 1974. He has been remodeling the house, and the yard, ever since.
Bahde’s landscape is ever-changing, as he continues to add to it and create newer pieces. Even more sculptures fill several garages that once housed a car collection; Bahde plans to put them on exhibit at a gallery someday.
But he is most proud of the fact that his intricate and eye-catching landscape takes very little water to maintain, other than what is needed for the macadamia trees, two coral trees and a small rose garden that were already on the property when he bought it.
In fact, the recent rains kept Bahde busy drying out the “pools,” since standing water could loosen the glue holding the mosaic-like surface together.
Bahde credits a school coach, in part, with some of the modesty that has kept him from making his artwork public. “My first football coach told me: ‘As good as you all are, I don’t want to see you bragging. Just show people what you can do.’ ”
Leslie Wolf Branscomb is a freelance writer in San Diego.
Is California Real Estate Turning a Corner?
April 8, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
While California home prices are still far below the peak levels of 2006, some economists think California is on its way out of the woods. “Now we’re seeing the interior [of the state] has stabilized – because prices have fallen by 50% to 60% already,” says Stuart Gabriel, director of UCLA’s Ziman Center for Real Estate. The combination of cuts in price, reductions in mortgage rates and all sorts of state and federal programs to incentivize buying activity have brought stability. “Prices are increasing only modestly, but for all intents and purposes, they’ve stopped falling,” Gabriel says.
Tennis Options in Rancho Santa Fe, CA
March 11, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Many tennis enthusiasts, novice and pro, seek out to make Rancho Santa Fe their place of residence. And why not when you have near – perfect year round climate and multiple choices of either private or public tennis courts?
100′s of homes located within The Covenant of Rancho Santa Fe have their own private tennis courts. If not, there is the Rancho Santa Fe Tennis Club ( WWW.RSFTENNIS.COM ) that offers 12 championship courts and overlooks the golf club. Membership is an amenity for Covenant residents only.
The Rancho Valencia Resort was voted by Tennis Magazine as the #1 Resort in the US. They provide match arranging, daily clinics, private and group instruction and a pro shop. WWW.RANCHOVALENCIA.COM. Rancho Valencia is located on the South side of Rancho Santa Fe and open to anyone who wishes to join.
Many of the gated communities in Rancho Santa Fe also offer tennis courts to their residents as well including Fairbanks Ranch, RSF Lakes, The Crosby, Santaluz , Morgan Run and Del Mar Country Club to name a few.
One of our listings locate in the prestigious community of Spyglass Estates offers a fantastic court and would be ideal for you Jalena if your building does not go according to plan ….AND a very large Master Suite and an 8 car garage capacity! See link for details and photos.
We're sorry, but we couldn't find MLS # 090051664 in our database. This property may be a new listing or possibly taken off the market. Please check back again.
Federal Regulators Close La Jolla Bank
February 20, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment
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FDIC Information for La Jolla Bank, FSB, La Jolla, CA |
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| On Friday, February 19, 2010, La Jolla Bank, FSB, La Jolla, CA was closed by the Office of Thrift Supervision. Subsequently, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was named Receiver. No advance notice is given to the public when a financial institution is closed.
All deposit accounts have been transferred to OneWest Bank, FSB, Pasadena, CA. For more information on OneWest Bank, visit us at www.owb.com. The FDIC has assembled useful information regarding your relationship with La Jolla Bank, FSB. Besides a checking account, you may have Certificates of Deposit, a business checking account, a Social Security direct deposit, and other relationships with the institution. Please select the link below to read more about this event: FDIC Bank Closing Information for La Jolla Bank, FSB Online service will remain available. |
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Federal regulators close La Jolla Bank
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Beautiful new listing in Rancho Santa Fe Lakes — Ideal Family Home!
January 15, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment
This is one of the best lots in RSF Lakes. Very private, beautiful views and a long estate drive way.✐ School Information:
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Solana Santa Fe Elementary Earl Warren Middle Torrey Pines High School, San Dieguito Academy, and Canyon Crest Academy

Start of PGA Tour season gives us something to talk about besides you-know-who. Even tho our own Rancho Santa Fe pro, Phil Mickelson, Will Not Be There.
January 7, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
G.O. time at Kapalua
For the first time in a long time, there is actual golf to talk about this week.Not much golf, but golf nonetheless.
Defending champion Geoff Ogilvy will lead a field of 28 pros at the season-opening, 2009- winners-only SBS Championship at hilly Kapalua — once a pineapple plantation, now a par-73. Steve Stricker, who lost to Daniel Chopra here in sudden-death in 2008, is the highest-ranked player in the field at No. 3, but Ogilvy, 14th, will be the only past champion.
This year’s field will tie the 2006 record for the smallest ever at this event, thanks to the multitude of multiple tournament winners in 2009, including Brian Gay, Zach Johnson, Ogilvy, Kenny Perry, Stricker and Y.E. Yang.
Players champion Henrik Stenson opted not to play, as did Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods, as usual. (Hawaiians Tadd Fujikawa and Parker McLachlin were scheduled to help the SBS fill out its pro-am Wednesday. What, no Barack Obama?)
Speaking of Phil, a member of Mickelson’s camp reports the lefthander has been hitting the gym in his Rancho Santa Fe, Calif., home, and looks fit to begin the season at San Diego’s still sponsorless event at Torrey Pines, Jan. 28-31.
Among the mini-dramas within the SBS will be whether seventh-ranked Paul Casey can actually go all four rounds. He hasn’t been able to do so in an official tournament since straining a rib muscle last July.
Nothing, of course, compares to the DEFCON 1 Tiger story, well into its second month. Woods remains in hiding, and tabloid “sightings” have been so all over the map as to recall Robert De Niro in the 1988 film Midnight Run: “Where am I? I’m in Boise, Idaho; no, no, no, wait a minute: I’m in Anchorage, Alaska. No, no, wait: I’m in Casper, Wyoming; I’m in the lobby of a Howard Johnson’s and I’m wearing a pink carnation.”
The absence of Woods has led to speculation not only about his whereabouts but also about something that was previously unthinkable: a changing of the guard at the top.
“I think it’s an interesting time, obviously,” Ogilvy said. “Number one in the world might be up for realistic grabs this year” depending on when/if Woods returns.
At the very least, Ogilvy has a clear path toward a repeat victory at Kapalua. Three-time champion Stuart Appleby went winless in 2009 and didn’t make it to Maui. Nor did Anthony Kim and Davis Love III, who finished T2 at Kapalua last year, six shots behind Ogilvy.
Love, an avid snowboarder, is enjoying the last of his family vacation in Sun Valley, Idaho, this week. He plans to make his 2010 debut at the next week’s Sony Open.
Kim is again trying to bounce back from a year in which he admittedly lost focus and struggled with injuries.
News and Notes
• This is the first week players will compete with V-grooved wedges as opposed to their preferred U-grooves, in compliance with a rules change that may be much ado about nothing but is sure to dominate the Golf Channel’s telecast whenever a player is shown chipping around the green.
• There are seven Kapalua newcomers this week, including Casey, Yang, Nathan Green, Martin Laird, Ryan Moore, Pat Perez and Bo Van Pelt.
• Although the SBS sponsorship announced last May runs through 2019, PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem said earlier this week that Kapalua is contractually set to host the event only through 2011. After that the SBS could find itself elsewhere.
• Danny Lee, 19, headlines the Africa Open, which will be without its defending champion Retief Goosen, who is in the field at Kapalua. This will be the Africa Open’s first year as an official event on the European Tour.
Others in the field include former Ryder Cup stars Thomas Bjorn, Darren Clarke and Paul McGinley.
Lee, the Korean who moved to New Zealand at age 8, flamed out of Q-School last fall and has no status on the PGA Tour. But he has full privileges in Europe after winning the 2009 Johnny Walker Classic as an amateur, becoming the Euro circuit’s youngest ever winner.
• The Champions Tour’s season-opening Mitsubishi Electric Championship, Jan. 22-24, will feature “rookies” Fred Couples and 2010 U.S. Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin. The newly minted 50-year-olds were given sponsors exemptions and will make their Champions debuts at Hualalai, in Hawaii, the Tour announced Wednesday.
• The Nationwide Tour will begin its season in Panama, Feb. 5-8, and also will visit Australia, New Zealand (two tournaments) and Mexico in 2010.
• The LPGA will open in Thailand on Feb. 18, further highlighting golf’s global expansion. The sport won inclusion last fall into the 2016 Olympics.
Here is to our Hometown hero! Go Phil!
Posted via web from slcorp’s posterous
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Fairbanks Ranch Country Club Lease
January 6, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Leave a Comment
Lease critics protest Fairbanks Ranch Country Club’s ‘sweetheart deal’ with city
•Club to begin paying rent Jan. 1, 2010
By Joe Tash
The Fairbanks Ranch Country Club is located on San Dieguito Road. Photo/Jon Clark The Fairbanks Ranch Country Club, according to its Web site, is a “distinctly private, member-owned Club consisting of the most prominent business, professional and social personalities of the community.”
While the club itself may be private, its 27-hole golf course, opulent clubhouse and other facilities sit on public land, owned by the city of San Diego. The club and the original developer of the property have leased about 400 acres of land in one of San Diego County’s most exclusive and pricey ZIP codes since 1983, a 61-year agreement that runs through 2044.
On Jan. 1, 2010, for the first time since the lease began, the club is scheduled to begin paying rent.
Over the years, critics of the lease have called it a “sweetheart deal,” since under its terms, the club was required to pay only $3,000 in rent for the first 25 years of its tenancy. Adding insult to injury, say those critics, is the club’s refusal to pay $169,000 — unrelated to the rent payments starting next year — that city officials claim is owed under a provision of the lease tied to club membership sales.
Earlier this month, the San Diego City Council voted to cut $179 million from its budget over the next 18 months, including the city’s $369,000 share of the operating budget for the San Dieguito River Park, a 55-mile-long open space corridor — with public trails and recreation areas — that runs from Julian to Del Mar.
Members of the public and elected officials such as First District Councilwoman Sherri Lightner have asked whether lease payments from the country club can be used to make up some or all of the funding cuts to the river park, since the country club sits in the San Dieguito River Valley.
“We just see the connection. The country club sits there without paying anything and the river park … is losing the city’s contribution,” said Ann Gardner, vice president of the Friends of the San Dieguito River Valley, an environmental advocacy group.
“In that context, you’d think the country club would step up and recognize what a great deal it has and pay its fair share,” Gardner said.
In April, the Friends group wrote to San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders, urging him to refer the disputed lease payment to the city’s delinquent bill collection unit, or consider terminating the club’s lease. But Gardner said Sanders never replied, and her group is frustrated by the city’s apparent lack of action in collecting the debt.
“I really don’t understand it, it’s a total mystery to me,” said Margaret Schlesinger of the San Diego County League of Women Voters, and the league’s representative on the river park’s citizens advisory committee. “How they could get a fantastic sweetheart deal to begin with and operate as an exclusive country club for 25 years on public land and not do what they should be doing, which is paying on their lease now? And I don’t understand why the city lets them get away with it.”
The club and city officials have been at odds for years over the membership provision of the lease, which states that during the first 25 years of the agreement, once the value of memberships sold by the club exceeds $25 million, the club will pay the city 3 percent of subsequent membership sales.
According to city auditors, the $25 million threshold was reached in 2003 and at that point, the club owed the city $60,000. Three years later, at the end of 2006, the city again audited the club’s finances and determined that the club owed the city $169,000.
The city wrote to the club in May 2007, requesting payment of the debt, but the club’s attorney wrote back in November, disputing the city’s interpretation of the lease. Attorney Dennis O’Dorisio wrote that the city improperly included in its calculations the proceeds from the resale of memberships from one member to another.
“The position is, the attorneys that we consulted with believe that the invoice (from the city) is not consistent with the language of the lease,” said Steve Wittert, the club’s general manager and chief operating officer, in an interview.
“We are continuing to look at ways to resolve the dispute with respect to the language of the lease,” Wittert said.
In the meantime, Wittert said, the club does not dispute the rent owed beginning in 2010, and plans to make those payments. The lease calls for the club, beginning in 2010, to pay the city 4 percent of food receipts, 6 percent of beverage receipts and 10 percent of other revenue. In 2010, those payments will total about $900,000, said Wittert.
The club operates as a tax-exempt 501 (c) (7) organization under IRS rules regarding social clubs. Its total revenue for 2008 was $12,632,287, according to the club’s IRS filing.
A review of city records did not indicate whether the amount owed to the city under the lease’s membership provision has increased since the last audit was conducted at the end of 2006. Gardner, of the Friends of the River Valley, said the city has conducted audits of the club every three years, so the next audit should be due at the end of 2009. However, an official with the city’s real estate assets division was unsure when the next audit would be conducted.
City officials did not respond to numerous interview requests regarding the lease. Spokespersons for Sanders did not return phone messages, and Lightner declined through a staff member to be interviewed. Lighter did say the matter has been referred to the city attorney’s office.
At a Dec. 9 City Council meeting, under questioning from Lightner, James Barwick, director of the city’s Real Estate Assets Division, said, “We recently were in a mediation with the Fairbanks Ranch people. We were not able to resolve the issue with them through the mediation process and we’re going to be meeting this week to determine what our course of action will be with regard to future action with the Fairbanks Ranch folks.”
Barwick also did not return phone messages left by a reporter, while City Attorney Jan Goldsmith declined through a spokeswoman to clarify what action his office is considering.
“We cannot publicly discuss this matter due to the attorney-client confidentiality requirement. Under our City Charter, the City Treasurer is authorized to instruct our office to file a collection action,” wrote Goldsmith staffer Gina Coburn in an email.
The lease has been controversial since a divided San Diego City Council approved it in the early 1980s. The decision came after the council had already approved a zoning change allowing Watt Industries, the developer of Fairbanks Ranch, to build 341 homes in the gated community near Rancho Santa Fe. The original zoning allowed only 128 homes.
According to Gardner, when Watt Industries deeded 616 acres of land in the river valley to the city, the agreement was that the land would be used as public open space. The city later decided to lease a large chunk of the land back to Watt Industries for the country club.
City officials justified the lease by pointing out that the country club’s members would pay for building the golf course and club facilities at an estimated cost of $25 million, and that the entire parcel will revert to city ownership at the end of the lease in 2044.
Over the years, the club has made several offers to buy the land or renegotiate the lease, and also attempted to get out of a requirement to expand the original 18-hole golf course to 27 holes, although the expansion was later completed.
A lease evaluation commissioned by the city in 2001 determined that the city had lost $23.5 million over the first 25 years of the lease by failing to negotiate the payment of market rent by the club.
In 2001, turning down an offer to renegotiate the lease that he called “insulting,” deputy real estate assets director Tim Rothans wrote, “The FRCC (Fairbanks Ranch Country Club) entered freely into this lease that provides FRCC significant economic benefits for the full term of the lease with no rent payments to the City for the first 25 years with rents that are significantly below fair market value for the remaining 36 years of the term.”
Wittert, the club’s general manager, said the club currently has no offer on the table to either buy the land or renegotiate the lease. But maintained the lease terms are fair.
“When the property was conveyed initially by Ray Watt to the city, the rent that was agreed upon over the first 25 years took into account the amortization of the investment in the facility by the (club’s) members of over $25 million, which at the end of the lease term would accrue to the benefit of the city. That always seems to be the other half that gets left out,” Wittert said.
I found this article very interesting. Although politically charged I can truly see both sides of the argument. What I am not sure I understand is how the club has managed to avoid paying 3% percent of the membership fees after the agreed upon number was met. What are your thoughts on this article, the club, the city?







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