Has the rain really stopped?

Spring forward today.
Think that might spring some city workers to take down the Xmas lights that still light up well into March?

“Hemp! Why do you think they call it rope?” Snick Farkas

A Monterey medical marijuana dispensary has been ordered by the court to close immediately, city officials said Friday.
Superior Court Judge Robert O’Farrell issued a preliminary injunction in favor of the city, requiring MyCaregiver Inc. at 554 Lighthouse Ave. to shut down, said Assistant Monterey City Attorney Christine Davi.
Orgasms when he screws the Farmers Market out of it’s downtown Monday location.

“We all had orgasms! It was heavenly,” P.G. Chamber of Commerce Moe Ammar jokes. “Like, ‘I can’t believe that this problem is solved.’”
Everyone’s Harvest director Iris Peppard initiated the March 2 get-together with hopes of heading off controversy at the March 3 City Council meeting. Peppard and an Everyone’s Harvest board member squared off with Ammar and two members of the Downtown Business Improvement District, who’d been complaining the market hurt their Monday night sales. They all agreed on moving the market to a city-owned parking lot south of Lighthouse Avenue on Saturday mornings.
Tough to imagine that there are still any unmolested homes in the retreat area that have not been torn down and replaced by re-creations by the likes of Juan The Builder.
Pacific Grove residents living in the town’s aging Victorian and Edwardian treasures who can’t afford to fix leaking plumbing, sparking electric wires and termite damage can get help from City Hall.
Pacific Grove has received federal Community Development Block Grant and state home improvement grant funding that it can draw from to help homeowners who qualify, said Laurel O’Halloran, housing program assistant for the city.
“We have some money to spend,” she said, and it must be used up during the next 18 months.
Juan the Builder’s Victorian House Flipping Before:

After:

Cops to use modern forensics – finally.

New technology incorporated in the national forensic database has given renewed hope to Pacific Grove police that they will finally close the murder case.
“We have not forgotten about this,” Police Chief Darius Engles said. “It’s an active and open case.”
He (said investigators collected sufficient evidence, so new forensic techniques for identifying palm prints and DNA will catch up with the killer.
That evidence, he said, was submitted in July to the national DNA database. The process takes months, Engles said, but police expect results.
After turning down a settlement of $40,000 she finds that twice that amount is sufficient. But she still does not get what she originally wanted, to kill the other dog. Lighthouseavenue.com post, 11/9/07:
But Olga Ospina wanted a different result. “Please help me, put this dog down” she said at the hearing Aug. 16.

A Superior Court jury awarded $87,000 Tuesday to local television anchorwoman Olga Ospina, whose dog was fatally mauled in a Pacific Grove attack three years ago.
Ospina testified the incident was emotionally draining. In 2007, the city determined the Labrador was not vicious and required the dog to undergo behavioral training.
“Historian” says Feast Of Lanterns being multicultural is egg-foo-young in the face. Feast of Lanterns does an about face and plays down the whole multicultural thing.
They fished for squid using lighted boats on moonless nights, Lydon said. The lights of the boats on the bay were a tourist attraction, “like Christmas decorations on the ocean.”
Those lighted boats may well have inspired Pacific Grove’s annual Feast of Lanterns at Lovers Point, where an ersatz Chinese pageant is re-enacted.
Hear-old fails to mention that persons under 21 are considered impaired with any blood-alcohol level.
Police are seeking the driver, Aaron Corn, 18, of Pacific Grove, to be charged with driving under the influence and driving under the influence resulting in injury while having a blood-alcohol level of 0.08 percent or more. People over the age of 21 are considered impaired with a blood-alcohol level of 0.08 or more.
The Hear-Old article tries to catch Miller up with the other two Sheriff candidates’ tabloid fodder.

While serving as Pacific Grove’s police chief, he says he refused to bow to pressure from City Council members who wanted friends promoted and traffic tickets forgiven, and that he did the right thing in firing parking enforcement officer Rhonda Ramey, whom he suspected of wrongfully ticketing cars so she could obtain title to them.