Amazon Global Air Officially Identified As Sole Tenant At San Bernardino Airport’s Eastgate

Confirming what was widely and long expected or implied, San Bernardino International Airport last Friday announced that Amazon Air is to be the sole tenant at the Eastgate Air Cargo Logistics Center. The Eastgate facility was given clearance to proceed by the Federal Aviation Administration and the local airport authority in December.
The San Bernardino International Airport Authority, a joint powers agency consisting of the County of San Bernardino and the cities of San Bernardino, Highland, Loma Linda and Colton which oversees the conversion of the former Norton Air Force Base to civilian use, approved Hillwood Development’s proposal to construct a 660,000-square-foot sorting and two 25,000-square-foot support buildings on the airport grounds on December 27.
Hillwood Enterprises, headed by Ross Perot, Jr., is the contract developer at the airport. The project is entirely privately financed. Officials previously touted the Eastgate facility as one that would generate roughly $2.6 million in lease revenues annually.
That Amazon is the to be the tenant at that facility virtually guarantees that revenue stream for the airport, which had lain in large measure dormant for years until a renewed effort had been made to transform the aerodrome following the forced departure of Scot Spencer as the airport’s contract developer in 2013.
While it was widely rumored that Amazon was to be the tenant at Eastgate, there was no actual confirmation of that previously. Sarah Rhoads, the vice president of Amazon Global Air, last week gave indication that the project was intended for Amazon all along when she said, “The regional air hub is being built from the ground up to fit Amazon Air’s operational needs.”
San Bernardino International Airport Authority Executive Director Michael Burrows, who previously said the facility was being designed by Hillwood to be compatible with any of a number of large-scale cargo-moving operations, said of Amazon, “A project of this size takes a lot to entitle, design and permit. It took them a while to make their decision. They did, and we’re happy to have them.”
Amazon setting up its air hub in San Bernardino was not a fait accompli, Burrows insisted, even with the Federal Aviation Administration and the airport authority’s action at the close of 2019.
“It could have been any of several others,” Burrow said. “Obviously, Hillwood is responsible as our developer to find suitable tenants and I knew they were talking to a number of companies throughout the process. Amazon was one of them, and they fit the project. We have Federal Express and UPS at the airport, as well.”
While Rhoads said Amazon’s corporate timeline is that the facility be operational by Spring 2021, Burrows said, “Amazon will be going into operation quite rapidly,” and possibly early enough for flights ferrying merchandise intended for customers during the Christmas 2020 shopping season to arrive at the airport.
The facility will be an air-to-ground hub, with cargo arriving in large quantity by plane and then being distributed by truck to Amazon’s network of fulfillment centers throughout this portion of Southern California.
When the Eastgate project was being considered there was a considerable degree of protest with regard to the impact the project would have in terms of vehicular, in particular semi-truck, traffic and accompanying diesel exhaust, which those opposed to the project said would harm the environment and diminish the local quality of life. According to Rhoads, the facility is to utilize solar power and electric ground support equipment.
Burrows said, “At full operational capacity, Amazon will have 26 flights into the airport per day. Alongside our other partners, this new cargo facility is to be a benefit to local residents in terms of job creation and the Inland Empire region’s economic recovery.”

As Virus Cases Escalate, County Sustains Deadliest Week Of Ongoing Health Crisis

This week so far has proven the most deadly yet in the now nine-week running coronavirus crisis in San Bernardino County, with the San Bernardino County Public Health Department’s official figures showing that 39 people succumbed to the condition between 5 p.m. May 8 and 5 p.m. this evening, May 15.
During the same seven-day period, the number of known coronavirus cases countywide took its most phenomenal leap thus far, with 682 more people within the county’s 20,105 square-mile confines testing COVID-19 positive.
The overall toll for the county now stands at 3,311 confirmed cases of the virus and 150 deaths.
Officials cautioned, however, against misinterpreting the data to conclude that the pandemic is worsening locally based on the now available statistics, as those numbers could be a reflection of the upsurge in testing that has grown out of the availability of testing capability and its application. Two weeks ago, seven weeks into the crisis in earnest, there had been 20,598 tests administered to the county’s roughly 2.2 million population, equal to less than one percent. As of Wednesday this week, 33,287 county residents had been tested, roughly 1.513 percent of the population. In this way, in a span of 12 days, the county’s medical and public health professionals carried out half as many tests as it had in the course of the seven weeks prior to that, significantly increasing the statistical data it had achieved during the initial phase of the stepped-up response to the pandemic.
While an improvement, having achieved a testing level of 1.513 percent of the entire county population yet represents a woefully inadequate definition of the problem the medical community in San Bernardino County faces in grappling with the circumstance.
One consideration in this regard is the efficacy of knowing with certainty what percentage of the population and precisely who within that population is an active carrier of the disease, capable of spreading it to others, and who is not. While there is no current certainty within the scientific community as to whether those who have contracted the coronavirus and recovered from it develop a lasting immunity that thereafter obviates their status as a carrier of the disease, the modeling with other better known and defined viruses suggests that is the case. Thus, a comprehensive testing regime which would allow a determination as to the portion of the population that had been exposed to the disease and had recovered might conceivably allow those determined to no longer be carriers to resume normal activity, based on the assumption they could do so without putting themselves or others at risk. As it currently stands, there is persistent mystery with regard to the current coronavirus status of upwards of 98 percent of the county population. As a consequence, there is no reliable measure of who among the county’s population has been infected and is now safely recovered, such that 49 out of every 50 San Bernardino County residents are yet obliged to maintain social distancing and are in a large degree unable to reinitiate their normal activity and participation in the region’s economy, which is in a steady decline, one which financial prognosticators say is destining the county for a certain recession.
At both the national and state levels there has been widespread indication that the general population has grown impatient with the social and economic lockdown. This was reflected in Governor Gavin Newsom’s statement on May 4 that a gradual reopening of businesses could begin as early as this week. Newsom, however, specified that those reopenings would be measured and confined essentially to retail businesses in which a modicum of social distancing and other precautions could be maintained. This week, there was widespread violation of both the spirit and specified restrictions in the “measured” reopening throughout San Bernardino County. The most obvious departure from the governor’s intent was that the reopenings were not limited to retail businesses but included multiple personal service establishments such as barbershops and nail salons where social distancing is an impossibility.
Inaccuracy and unreliability of the county’s infection rate data, appears to stem not just from its incompleteness and the gaps in its coverage but, at least in some cases, from the deliberate withholding of information, which effectively skewered the data. It appears that officials hid results in the data survey for what was, perhaps, a venal purpose.
As the infection data was streaming in previously, 23 of San Bernardino County’s incorporated municipalities and no fewer than 18 of its unincorporated communities reported cases in their jurisdictions.  A month into the crisis, it was noted that Needles, San Bernardino County’s smallest city population-wise and its most remote given its location at the extreme eastern end of the county and state in the Mojave Desert adjacent to the Colorado River and the border with Arizona, was positively conspicuous by its absence of reported cases. This was mentioned in the Sentinel and elsewhere in the media.
Needle’s apparent avoidance of having been afflicted with the pandemic persisted, day after day and then week after week, as the San Bernardino County Department of Public Health displayed testing result data to show there were no verified cases of COVID-19 in Needles. This has persisted until this week, when there was wider media coverage of the city’s fortune, accompanied by a level of self congratulation and self-adulation on the part of Needles officials that offered incidental positive publicity for the river community.
In actuality, however, the Sentinel has learned, there were two residents of Needles who contracted the coronavirus in April, and whose cases should have been charted by authorities.
That case involved two men in their 30s whose work required that they regularly travel between Needles and Barstow, and who share a residence in Needles. One of those tested positive at a facility in Barstow. Subsequently, his roommate showed signs of the condition. Ultimately, the pair concluded that neither of their conditions were serious enough to require hospitalization.
They self-isolated and quarantined themselves, with their current status unknown.
-Mark Gutglueck

Distortions? Misquotes?

Two recent articles that appeared in the Sentinel have prompted protests by a current and a former elected official. One maintains that the Sentinel made a juxtaposition of language that had the effect of altering a quote, while the other contends the Sentinel, by relying on conversations from years past, misquoted him and credited him with statements he did not make.
On April 24 the Sentinel published an article about Assistant General Manager Jeremiah Brosowske’s departure from the West Valley Water District. Early in the article, the district’s board president, Channing Hawkins, was referenced as stating that during Brosowske’s time with the district he had provided “unqualified and incompetent management and services.” That statement was extracted from a longer quote from Hawkins, which was quoted further down in the article. That statement was: “There is still much more work to be done, but the days of unqualified and incompetent management and services are over. I’m proud to work alongside our water district’s board members to reevaluate, reorganize and hire highly-experienced and qualified professionals to do the job right. Over the next few weeks, we will continue to work together to improve accountability, transparency and fiscal responsibility for West Valley ratepayers.”
According to a district spokesperson, “The statement from President Hawkins, which we provided to you within the body of the email sent on April 23, referred to the general hiring practices of the West Valley Water District, which have been reassigned to the interim human resources manager. This statement, as written by you, would imply that President Hawkins violated Article 17 of the water district’s Human Resources Policies and Procedures Manual.” The Sentinel’s use of the excerpt from Hawkin’s quote in one of the article’s introductory paragraphs, the district maintains, “distort[ed]” what Hawkins had said.
Former Upland City Councilman Glenn Bozar this week indicated he wanted to distance himself from observations he had made in 2013 regarding the nature of public employment and in 2016 relating to employees in the public sector directly.
Bozar was quoted with regard to those issues in a Sentinel article relating to the impact drawdowns of tax revenue into local governments were having and will have on public sector workforces in San Bernardino County.
In asserting that the statements he was quoted as making should no longer be considered operative, Bozar told the Sentinel, “You have statements attributed to me that I never made. Those are your words, not mine. You are attempting to remember a conversation from four years ago, and including it in an unrelated article is absurd. You put me and my home in jeopardy.”

The Single-Leaf Piñon

The single-leaf piñon is a pine in the piñon pine group which grows in the San Bernardino Mountains, the San Gogonio Wilderness and the eastern San Gabriel Mountains in San Bernardino County. Known scientifically as Pinus monophylla, it is
native to the United States and northwest Baja California. Within California it is found in the Sierras, the Transverse Range, and Peninsular Range. It occurs at moderate altitudes from 3,900 feet to 7,500 feet, rarely as low as 3,100 feet and as high as 9,500 feet, in the most arid areas occupied by any pine in California. It is widespread and often abundant in this region, forming extensive open woodlands, often mixed with junipers. It is a small to medium size tree, reaching 32 to 65 feet tall tall and with a trunk diameter of up to 32 inches, rarely more. However, it is very slow growing, reaching only 3 feet in seven years.The bark is irregularly furrowed and scaly. It is the world’s only 1-needled pine as the leaves, or needles, are usually single, though trees with needles in pairs are found occasionally. An isolated population of single-leaf piñon trees in the Mojave Desert’s New York Mountains, which lie within the Mojave National Preserve, has needles mostly in pairs and was previously thought to be Colorado piñons. They have recently been shown to be a two-needled variant of single-leaf piñon based upon a genetic examination. The needles are stout, 1.6 inches to 2.4 inches long, and grey-green to strongly waxy pale blue-green, with pores or a slit over the whole needle surface, and on both inner and outer surfaces of paired needles. The cones are acute-globose, the largest of the true piñons, 1.8 inches to 3.2 inches long and broad when closed, green at first, ripening yellow-buff when 18-to-20 months old, with only a small number of very thick scales, typically 8-20 fertile scales. The cones open to 2.4 inches to 3.6 inches broad when mature, holding the seeds on the scales after opening. The seeds are 11-16 millimeter long, with a thin shell, a white endosperm, and a vestigial 1-2 millimeter wing; they are dispersed by the piñon jay, which plucks the seeds out of the open cones. The jay, which uses the seeds as a food resource, stores many of the seeds for later use by burying them. Some of these stored seeds are not used and are able to grow into new trees. Indeed, piñon seeds will rarely germinate in the wild unless they are cached by jays or other animals. The seeds, called pine nuts, are also harvested and eaten by people. Indians of the Great Basin region commonly ate them. The Shoshoni name for the plant is ai’-go-û-pi.
The butterflies likely hosted by the single-leaf pinon include the pine white butterfly, Neophasia menapial and the western pine elfin butterfly, Callophrys eryphonl. Moths hosted by the single-leaf pinon include the polyphemus moth, Antheraea polyphemus; the brown-lined looper moth, Neoalcis californiaria; the speckled green fruitworm moth Orthosia hibisci; the Red Girdle Moth, Caripeta aequaliarial; the brown woodling, Egira perlubens; the silver-spotted tiger moth, Lophocampa argentata; the manto tussock moth, Orgyia antiqua; the sulphur moth, Hesperumia sulphuraria; the western carpet, Melanolophia imitata; the mottled gray carpet, Cladara limitaria, the skunk moth, Polix coloradella, the common gray, Anavitrinella pampinaria; the gray swordgrass moth, Xylena cineritia; the birch angle, Macaria notata; the spruce coneworm, Dioryctria reniculelloides; the sequoia pitch moth, Synanthedon sequoiae; the Nantucket pine tip moth, Rhyacionia frustrana; the pine needle sheathminer, Zelleria haimbachi; the variable girdle moth; Enypia venata; the pale-marked angle, Macaria signaria; the sharp-lined yellow, Sicya macularia; the Florida pink scavanger caterpillar, Pyroderces badia; the ponderosa pineconeworm moth, Dioryctria auranticella; the reticulated decantha moth, Decantha boreasella; the ragweed borer, Epiblema strenuana; the mountain girdle moth, Enypia griseata; the pale beauty, Campaea perlata; Packard’s girdle moth, Enypia packardata; the white triangle tortrix, Clepsis persicana; the fall webworm; Hyphantria cunea; the pandora pinemoth, Coloradia pandora; the lodgepole pine needle-miner, Coleotechnites milleri; the orange tortrix moth, Argyrotaenia franciscana; the Zenophleps lignicolorata; the Sabulodes edwardsata;  the Phaeoura mexicanaria; Dyar’s looper moth, Gabriola dyari; the Spodolepis substriataria; the Glena nigricaria; the Eupithecia ornata; the false pinion moth, Litholomia napaea; the Euxoa auripennis; the Eupithecia longipalpata; the Macaria adonis; the Cochisea sonomensis; the Lophocampa ingens; the Hydriomena speciosata; the Nepytia umbrosaria; the tamarack looper; Eupithecia misturata; the Tetracis pallulata; the Stenoporpia pulmonaria; the Retinia picicolana; the Dioryctria muricativorella; the Hydriomena nevadae; the Gloveria arizonensis; the Tolype lowriei; the Stenoporpia excelsaria; the Panthea gigantea; the Chionodes retiniella; the Retinia sabiniana; the Decantha stonda; the Chionodes abella; the Lithophane ponderosa; the Thallophaga hyperborea; the Elatobia carbonella; Behr’s Pero Moth, Pero behrensaria; the Douglas fir pitch moth; Synanthedon novaroensis; the clandestine cart, Spaelotis clandestina; the Douglas fir tussock moth, Orgyia pseudotsugata; the larch pug, Eupithecia annulata; the Coloradia velda; the red-striped needleworm moth, Epinotia radicana; the western conifer looper, Syngrapha celsa; the ponderosa pine seedworm moth, Cydia piperana; the Chionodes sabinianae; the Lithophane atara; the Xestia mustelina; the Laetilia zamacrella; the sugar pine tortrix moth, Choristoneura lambertiana; the Holcocera iceryaeella; the Euxoa extranea; the furious varpet moth, Hydriomena irata; the Egira variabilis; the Epinotia hopkinsana; the Papestra quadrata; and the Dioryctria pentictonella.

From https://calscape.org, Wikipedia

May 15 Legal Notices

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE NO-20200003735
The following person(s) is(are) doing business as: Vanevenhoven Real Estate & Investments Group; The V-Team; The Vanevenhoven Team; The VTeam; Vanevenhoven Group; Vanevenhoven Investments Group, 8885 Haven Ave, Suite 200, Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730, Mailing Address: 8885 Haven Ave, Suite 200, Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730, RJ Realty Group, Inc., 8885 Haven Ave, Suite 200, Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730
Business is Conducted By: A Corporation
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
s/ Vance Vanevenhoven
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 3/31/20
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 11/01/16
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
4/24/20, 5/1/20, 5/8/20, 5/15/20

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
#20200003803
The following person(s) is(are) doing business as: PALO SOLO TRANS 7607 VIOLA CT FONTANA, CA 92336
ARNULFO PINON 7607 VIOLA CT FONTANA, CA 92336
Mailing Address: 7607 VIOLA CT FONTANA, CA 92336
Business is Conducted By: AN INDIVIDUAL
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ Anulfo Pinon
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 04/03/2020
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 09/12/2003
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
4/24/20, 5/1/20, 5/8/20, 5/15/20

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE NO-20200002642
The following person(s) is(are) doing business as: Addashield; Checkthedocs; Documinute; B. Compliant, 215 N 2nd Avenue Suite B, Upland, CA 91786, 154A West Foothill Blvd Suite 281, Upland, CA 91786, B. Compliant Inc, 215 N 2nd Ave. Ste B, Upland, CA 91786
Business is Conducted By: A Corporation
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
s/ Gregory A. Bushnell
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 2/27/20
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 1/1/2017
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
3/27/20, 4/3/20, 4/10/20, 4/17/20
Corrected on: 5/1/20, 5/8/20, 5/15/20, 5/22/20
FBN 2020000—-
The following person is doing business as: ARROWHEAD ACCOMMODATIONS 28051 STATE HIGHWAY 189/LAKES EDGE ROAD LAKE ARROWHEAD CA 92352
HERMINE MURRA-LEVINS P.O. BOX 128 LAKE ARROWHEAD, CALIFO 92352
Mailing Address: P.O. BOX 128 LAKE ARROWHEAD, CALIF 92352
This Business is Conducted By: AN INDIVIDUAL
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ HERMINE MURRA-LEVINS
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 05/ /2020
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 08/25/2017
County Clerk, Deputy
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on 05/08, 05/15, 05/20 & 05/29, 2020.
FBN 20200004323
The following person is doing business as: SIMPLE MORTGAGE 5603 GARIBALDI WAY FONTANA, CALIF 92336 SAFE INVESTMENT REALTY GROUP 5603 GARIBALDI WAY FONTANA, CALIFO 92336
This Business is Conducted By: A CORPORATION
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ AKXELEM TEJEDA PATZAN
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 05/06/2020
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 05/03/2020
County Clerk, Deputy
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on 05/08, 05/15, 05/20 & 05/29, 2020.

FBN 20200004241
The following person is doing business as: NOTARIZE DOCS 4 U [and] MOSLEY BUSINESS SOLUTIONS 721 N SAN ANTONIO AVENUE UPLAND, CALIF 91786
DOAQUIN MOSLEY 721 NORTH SAN ANTONIO AVENUE UPLAND, CA 91786
Mailing Address: 333 E ARROW HIGHWAY, #1107 UPLAND, CA 91785
This Business is Conducted By: AN INDIVIDUAL
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ DOAQUIN MOSLEY
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 04/14/2020
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 01/01/2020
County Clerk, Deputy
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on 5/01/20, 5/08/20, 5/15/20 & 5/22/20.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME

STATEMENT FILE NO-20200004162
The following person(s) is(are) doing business as: Lean & Greens, 7410 Citrus Ave, Fontana, CA 92336, Mailing Address: 7410 Citrus Ave, Fontana, CA 92336, Danny M. Cortines, 7410 Citrus Ave, Fontana, CA 92336
Business is Conducted By: An Individual
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
s/ Danny M Cortines
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 4/30/20
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: Jan 01, 2020
County Clerk, s/ V0956
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino county Sentinel on 5/8/20, 5/15/20, 5/22/20, 5/29/20
FBN 20200002823
The following person is doing business as: NEW ENGLAND DWELLING 711 S DATE AVE RIALTO, CA KADESHA P ENGLAND 711 S DATE AVE RIALTO, CA
This Business is Conducted By: AN INDIVIDUAL
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ Kadeshaa England
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 03/03/2020
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 03/01/2020
County Clerk, Deputy
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on 3/20/20, 3/27/20, 4/3/20, & 4/10/20
Corrected: 4/17/20, 4/24/20, 5/01/20 & 5/08/20
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF:
LEO ARAGON MEDRANO
NO. PROPS 2000222
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both of LEO ARAGON MEDRANO
A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been filed by LEO ARAGON MEDRANO, II in the Superior Court of California, County of SAN BERNARDINO.
THE PETITION FOR PROBATE requests that LEO ARAGON MEDRANO, II be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent.
THE PETITION requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court.
THE PETITION requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority.
A hearing on the petition will be held in Dept. No. S35 at 8:30 a.m. on June 15, 2020 at Superior Court of California, County of San Bernardino, 247 West Third Street, San Bernardino, CA 92415, San Bernardino District.
IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney.
IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under Section 9052 of the California Probate Code.
Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law.
YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk.
Attorney for the Petitioner: Jennifer M. Daniel, Esquire
220 Nordina St.
Redlands, CA 92373
Telephone No: (909) 792-9244 Fax No: (909) 235-4733
Email address: jennifer@lawofficeofjenniferdaniel.com
Attorney for Leo Aragon Medrano, II
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel
5/15, 5/22 & 5/29, 2020

FBN 20200004315
The following person is doing business as:
SUPERIOR HOME HEALTH CARE SERVICES, INC.   555 N BENSON AVE UPLAND, CA. 91786-5075
SUPERIOR HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS, INC.    555 N BENSON AVE UPLAND, CA. 91786-5075
This Business is Conducted By: A CORPORATION
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ INNA JOYCE AGUDA
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 5/06/2020
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 1/27/2020
SAN V0956 County Clerk, Deputy
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on 5/15, 5/22, 5/29 & 6/5, 2020

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT FILE NO-20200004251
The following person(s) is(are) doing business as: Disinfect CA; Disinfect-CA; SOCAL Disinfection, 8458 Bullhead Ct., Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91739, Monroe Diversified Companies Inc., 8458 Bullhead Ct., Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91739
Business is Conducted By: A Corporation
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
s/ Lester Monroe
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 5/5/20
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: Apr 27, 2020
County Clerk, s/ V0956
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
5/15/20, 5/22/20, 5/29/20, 6/5/20

FBN 20190014933
The following person is doing business as: JS HOBBIES 999 N. WATERMAN AVE, SAN BERNARDINO, CA 92410, JAMAL I. THOMAS, 999 N. WATERMAN AVE, SAN BERNARDINO, CA 92410
This Business is Conducted By: AN INDIVIDUAL
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ JAMAL THOMAS
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 12/27/2019
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 12/02/2004
County Clerk, Deputy
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on 1/24, 1/31, 2/7 & 2/14, 2020. Corrected on 4/3/20, 4/10/20, 4/17/20, 4/24/20, Corrected on 5/15/20, 5/22/20, 5/29/20, 6/5/20

FBN 20200004570
The following person is doing business as: PANTHEON COFFEE ROASTERS
4070 MISSION BOULEVARD MONTCLAIR, CA 91763 ARCHER CONSORTIA 4070 MISSION BOULEVARD MONTCLAIR, CA 91763
This Business is Conducted By: A CORPORATION
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ PAVAN MAKKER
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 05/14/2020
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 03/01/2020
County Clerk, Deputy
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on 05/15, 05/22, 05/29 & 06/05, 2020.
FBN 20200004569
The following person is doing business as: AVATAR COFFEE ROASTERS
4070 MISSION BOULEVARD MONTCLAIR, CA 91763 ARCHER CONSORTIA 4070 MISSION BOULEVARD MONTCLAIR, CA 91763
This Business is Conducted By: A CORPORATION
Signed: BY SIGNING BELOW, I DECLARE THAT ALL INFORMATION IN THIS STATEMENT IS TRUE AND CORRECT. A registrant who declares as true information, which he or she knows to be false, is guilty of a crime. (B&P Code 17913) I am also aware that all information on this statement becomes Public Record upon filing.
S/ PAVAN MAKKER
This statement was filed with the County Clerk of San Bernardino on: 05/14/2020
I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office.
Began Transacting Business: 03/01/2020
County Clerk, Deputy
NOTICE- This fictitious business name statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the county clerk. A new fictitious business name statement must be filed before that time. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see section 14400 et. Seq. Business & Professions Code).
Published in the San Bernardino County Sentinel on 05/15, 05/22, 05/29 & 06/05, 2020.

Dennis Hansberger, Tireless Politician, Influence Merchant & Reformer, Gone At 78

By Mark Gutglueck
Dennis Hansberger, a central figure within the Redlands political and financial establishment who served 20 years on the San Bernardino Board of Supervisors over the course of nearly four decades and adroitly used the political revolving door to capitalize on his insider knowledge in the role of a lobbyist once he was out of elected office, has died.
Dennis Hansberger

Dennis Hansberger

As must all mortals, Hansberger this week made his exit from this world, in his case peacefully and with members of his family near him. His last weeks, days, hours and minutes were spent in Redlands, the epicenter of the county’s old guard and old money, which, while Hansberger was yet one of its prime movers and most dynamic operators, gave way to the upstart Young Turks in Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga and Fontana who created an economic synergy that shifted the power balance to the west end of the county in the 1970s, 1980s 1990s and 2000s.
Hansberger came to social and political prominence within the context of the Redlands political machine, in no small part because of assistance from his father, Leroy, who had become a part of the East Valley Establishment in the generation prior to Dennis Hansberger’s rise to public life.
Despite having well-heeled and highly influential distant familial relations elsewhere in the country, Leroy Hansberger had as legitimate of a claim to being a self-made multimillionaire as anyone. Driven by an uncommon work ethic, he had come while he was still a child with his mother, Irma Lee Hansberger and stepfather Arthur Fagg, from Los Angeles where he was born in 1918, to Yuciapa, where his family worked a farm on Third Street. That farm initially consisted of a few cows, poultry and rabbits and mostly apple groves, which were eventually converted to peaches and plums and other crops when the coddling moth wreaked havoc on the farm’s apples.
From about the time he was 12, Leroy was functioning as the head of his family, doing a good half of the work on the farm. Even before he had graduated from Redlands High School in 1936, he had made a foray into the world of business outside the family farm, delivering groceries from Sawyer’s Market along with newspapers.
By the time he was 22, Leroy Hansberger owned his own trucking company, which had come about when he traded the car he was using to make deliveries for a truck. He used the proceeds from the trucking company to bootstrap himself up further, purchasing Tri-City Concrete and Tri-City Rock Company, located in Redlands. With the combined income from the trucking company, the rock company and the concrete company, he began purchasing property, at first an acre or two at a time, then larger and larger parcels. Among his purchases was the 240-acre El Dorado Ranch; the 140-acre Ford Apple Ranch in Yucaipa, which he bought from Fred Ford, along with another large spread Ford owned, the Snow-Line Orchards; and a substantial portion of the Martin Ranch in Yucaipa. Leroy Hansberger subdivided the latter property into the Rolling Hills Estates. Over the course of several decades, he owned over a thousand acres, much of which he developed either residentially or commercially. Other real estate holdings he had were spun off at a profit to others who developed them.
With his wife, Helen, Leroy Hansberger had four sons, all of whom were given names that started with the letter D: David, Dennis, Doug, and Don.
Hansberger Family
Dennis was born October 1, 1941 in Redlands. Seemingly determined to equal or surpass his father’s display of early initiative, while he was yet attending Redlands High School, from which he graduated in 1960, Dennis was working the night shift at Atlas RediMix Concrete Company in Colton. He remained employed with Atlas while he attended San Bernardino Valley College from 1960 to 1963. In 1964, he enrolled at the University of California at Riverside, studying geology, world literature and business administration. At that time he was employed with the Redlands School District, as a teacher’s assistance in a class for handicapped children at Crafton Elementary School.  Late in 1964, his father hired him as the financial manager of the Tri-City Concrete Company.
Four years later, convinced by his father of the convergence between politics, government and business, Dennis applied for a position of authority in government. At that point, such an opportunity had presented itself when Wesley Break, a Redlands establishment institution unto himself and friend of Leroy Hansberger, chose not to seek reelection as Third District San Bernardino County supervisor, retiring after his sixth term in office and endorsing another element of the Redlands establishment who was also a Leroy Hansberger associate, Don Beckord, to succeed him. Rather than begin at the bottom rung in government, the younger Hansberger relied upon his father’s connections and he bypassed a good seventeen steps up the county pecking order, applying to become and being accepted as Beckord’s executive assistant and lead field representative. Dennis Hansberger over the next four years made himself intimately familiar with the ins-and-outs of San Bernardino County governance. When Beckord opted out of seeking reelection after serving a single term, from December 1968 until December 1972, Hansberger vied to succeed him, winning that election. He was 31 years old, making him, after Norman Taylor in 1855, Minor Cobb Tuttle in 1862, Robert McCoy in 1861 and John C. Turner in 1893, what was then the fifth youngest member of the board of supervisors in San Bernardino County history.
After just two years in office, in December 1974 at the age of 33, he was selected by his supervisorial colleagues, to serve as board chairman, making him what was then celebrated as the youngest chairman of the 58 boards of county supervisors in California, and the second youngest, after John C. Turner in 1895, board chairman in San Bernardino County history.
In 1980, after serving eight years on the board, the latter four with then-Fifth District Supervisor Robert Hammock, one of the most corrupt politicians in San Bernardino County history, and the latter two with then-Second District Supervisor Cal McElwain, whose self-interested voting decisions and political and personal associations with disreputable and unscrupulous personages and business interests cast discredit upon San Bernardino County and its governmental structure, Hansberger declined to seek reelection.
In short order, he formed Hansberger and Associates, a lobbying firm in which he front-ended for a host of businesses and entities which had project proposals before or were seeking contracts or franchises from local governmental entities. One initial success that Hansberger and Associates scored was when four ambulance service providers – Steve Dickmeyer, Don Reed, Homer Aerts and Terry Russ – who up until that time were in a cut-throat competition with one another for ambulance routes and franchises within the most urbanized portions of lower San Bernardino County, merged to become Mercy Ambulance Service. With Hansberger as both its strategist and representative, the company carried out a campaign of ruthlessly acing out its competitors through a combination of hefty political donations to city council members and members of the board of supervisors, retaining as the company’s legal counsel members of the law firms that employed many of the city attorneys where Mercy was seeking an exclusive ambulance franchise, inducing city councils to adopt ambulance ordinances ostensibly written to protect the public but which locked in Mercy’s operating advantages, and thereupon buying out or forcing out of business other ambulance companies in the area. Ultimately, Mercy, functioning within the pay-to-play atmosphere that had become the norm in San Bernardino County at both the county and municipal levels, established what was, if not a technical monopoly, then absolute dominance over the provision of ambulance service in the most populated, and therefore most lucrative, districts within the county’s 20,105-square mile expanse.
In relatively short order, Hansberger had established his reputation as a political fixer, someone who in advance arranged, in the backroom or across the table at a restaurant or in some other type of private meeting, how things were going to play out publicly when a governmental decision-making panel made its vote in public. Skillfully, Hansberger was able to convert the goodwill and influence some of his clients were achieving and obtaining with their large-scale political donations to officeholders into carryover goodwill and influence for his other clients. While the companies that hired Hansberger and Associates to represent them were not the only successful applicants for project approvals or the only competitors for county or city contracts or franchises, few elected officials who were recipients of substantial political donations from Hansberger and Associates’ clients were willing to vote against or make decisions contrary to the interests of those represented by Hansberger. The message to politicians all over San Bernardino County was clear: Support Dennis Hansberger in whatever he is advocating and you will receive sufficient political donations to sustain yourself in office; vote against what he advocates, and your political opponent in the next election will be provided with enough monetary support to ensure your removal from office. More than three decades after Hansberger had perfected this formula, he conceded that it was “distasteful, but that’s the way things get done in politics.”
The way Hansberger was operating was not without controversy at the time, and on occasion, his advocacy for a particular applicant for governmental approval triggered very close and always unwanted scrutiny of the applicant and the applicant’s proposal by a member of the decision-making panel who was offended by the casual political influence-purchasing ethos that Hansberger embodied. Such episodes were relatively rare, however. The standard response that Hansberger had formulated when he was confronted in this manner was to state that he could not understand why his communicant was so angry.
In 1996, after 16 years in the private sector, as the political gravitas of San Bernardino County was shifting away from the old money Redlands-based political establishment toward the new money West San Bernadino County political forces in Rancho Cucamonga, Ontario, Chino and Fontana, Hansberger, in what might be interpreted as an effort for the traditionalists in power in Redlands to reassert themselves over the political sphere in San Bernardino County, again took up the political gauntlet, running to replace the retiring Barbara Cram Riordan, another member of the Redlands old money political establishment who had held the Third District position for 13 years after initially being appointed to the post when David McKenna, who had succeeded Hansberger in 1980, was appointed county public defender.
Hansberger was elected, largely on the strength of backing by the rapidly-aging-and-fading but yet far-reaching Redlands power elite. Once again in office, Hansberger encountered a world that had changed in many respects from when he had previously been on the board. Most evident was that the Redlands power block, which at one point was so pervasive in its reach that it outweighed, outranked and could outspend the other four-fifths of the county and its presence on the board of supervisors, no longer held the sway it once did. Hansberger encountered, and was encountered by, board colleagues who were very much his equals in terms of political control and influence. One of the few means of leverage he possessed was the Republican affiliation he shared with the majority of the board’s members, as the Republican Party remained a significant player in the way in which governance manifested in San Bernardino County.
Still, there was another presence on the board that Hansberger had to contend with in the personage of Jerry Eaves, a labor union-affiliated Democrat who was both a former mayor of Rialto and a member of the California Assembly before he had somewhat inexplicably departed pre-term limit Sacramento to successfully run for Fifth District San Bernardino County supervisor when Bob Hammock, unsuccessfully, had sought to vault into Congress in 1992. Eaves, who was only marginally less dishonest, self-serving and corrupt than his predecessor as Fifth District supervisor, represented a formidable political presence on the board. Whereas Eaves had been at most a medium-sized fish in the Sacramento Lake, he was a virtual whale in the San Bernardino County pond. One strength Eaves had was that he had done favors for a number of state, national  and international interests during his eight years in the California legislature, collecting chits along the way. Having returned to localized politics on a board where instead of lining up dozens of votes to achieve legislative goals he needed only two votes beyond his own to prevail, Eaves would call upon his donors from outside the Fifth District, outside San Bernardino County, indeed even outside of California or the United States to confer large donations on those he would designate to be the recipients of that largesse. In this way, Eaves was purchasing, when the stakes were high enough and he needed to, control over the board of supervisors to achieve his sometimes lofty and sometimes sordid, sometimes noble and sometimes ignominious, objectives.
As a consequence, Hansberger somewhat paradoxically given his 16-year role as an influence broker, found himself in the role of a political reformer, one of the minority members of the board of supervisors resisting special interests who were seeking to use their monetary reach to influence the county’s public policy in a way that would benefit a private interest to the detriment of the public at large. Ultimately, Hansberger would see his political stock rise when Eaves became enmeshed in a political corruption scandal and was forced from office upon being convicted.
While serving as supervisor, Hansberger served on a multitude of regional governmental adjunct and joint powers authorities and boards, and acceded to the presidency of the Southern California Association of Governments, the foremost regional planning authority in the southern part of the state, known by its acronym SCAG. He also received a gubernatorial appointment to serve on the California State Board of Mines and Geology.
Hansberger’s return to politics coincided with the break up of his first marriage. In 2000, Karen Gaio, an obstetrician-gynecologist who was 23 years Hansberger’s junior, had been elected to the Loma LInda City Council. Subsequently, her city council colleagues had appointed her mayor. Hansberger and Gaio encountered each other on governmental adjunct and joint powers authority boards in their capacities as supervisor and councilwoman/mayor. By 2001 they had entered into a personal relationship. In 2002, they married.
Hansberger’s role and reputation as a political reformer in the face of Eaves’ depredations carried across partisan lines when he stood up against the county being cozened into providing the flood control infrastructure for a massive development proposal on over 400 acres of what was considered undevelopable land in Upland which was crisscrossed with flood control easements and had traditionally been used for groundwater recharge. When Dan Richards, a prominent Republican who was a member of the new money Republican political faction on the county’s west side, sought to have the county defray a significant portion of the cost of supplying the Colonies at San Antonio residential and Colonies Crossroads commercial subdivisions’ drainage infrastructure, Hansberger consistently supported the county in administratively and legally opposing those requests. Ultimately, the county board of supervisors, over an opposing vote by Hansberger and Fifth District Supervisor Josie Gonzales, in November 2006, voted to settle litigation brought by Richards’ company, the Colonies Partners, over the county’s lack of cooperation in allowing the project to proceed. That settlement included a $102 million payout from the county to the Colonies Partners.
That was not the end of it, however, as Mike Ramos, himself a member of the Redlands Republican political establishment who had first been elected district attorney in 2002 with Hansberger’s support, had charges filed against Richards’ primary associate in the Colonies Partners, Jeff Burum, on charges that the Colonies Partners had used intimidation, extortion, blackmail and bribery to obtain the $102 million settlement. In addition to Burum, that prosecution extended to First District Supervisor Bill Postmus and Second District Supervisor Paul Biane, who voted in support of the settlement, as well as to Mark Kirk, the chief of staff to Fourth District Supervisor Gary Ovitt, who had likewise voted in favor of handing the $102 million in county money over to the Colonies Partners, and Jim Erwin, a one-time sheriff’s deputies union president who had assisted the Colonies Partners in its strategy to obtain the settlement. The prosecution of Postmus, who was convicted in the scheme, along with that of Burum, Biane, Kirk and Erwin, was undertaken in some measure on the strength of information provided by Hansberger to the district attorney’s office then under the authority of Ramos.
Well after Hansberger had left office following his second stint as supervisor, he was again in the public limelight when he was called as a witness in the case against Burum, Biane, Kirk and Erwin when it at last went to trial in 2017. Hansberger’s testimony was considered one of the key components to proving the case the prosecution had but together against the defendants, one which in significant measure hinged on the use of political influence – what the prosecution insisted was tantamount to bribery – in obtaining the $102 settlement. As it would turn out, however, the use of Hansberger as a witness in the case proved problematic. Hansberger’s own reputation as a political fixer who had arranged for the provision of large amounts of cash to politicians to gain their support for his clients’ projects, contracts and franchises undercut the prosecution’s case. Burum, Biane and Kirk were acquitted and the jury hearing the matter against Erwin was unable to reach a verdict.
A complicating issue during Hansberger’s second tenure as supervisor was the bark beetle infestation in the San Bernardino Mountains. In 1967, the Lake Arrowhead Corporation had merged with lumber giant Boise-Cascade, whose CEO, Robert Hansberger, was a distant relation to Dennis Hansberger. Boise-Cascade, after its Lake Arrowhead acquisition, had continued to clear forest property where it could for the purpose of subdividing properties and developing residential tracts. In 1971, Boise-Cascade had sold most of its Lake Arrowhead holdings to a consortium out of Chicago, but then reacquired the property as the result of a foreclosure. By the late 1970s, Boise-Cascade had divested itself of much or most of its Lake Arrowhead holdings. By the time of Dennis Hansberger’s second tour as third District supervisor, his father had acquired a good deal of property in the San Bernardino Mountains. Among a cross section of mountain residents, there was concern – rightly or wrongly – that from his position as a member of the board of supervisors, Dennis Hansberger was going to use the bark beetle infestation to engage in the wholesale destruction of swathes of the forest to allow the property there to be developed.
At certain points during his second round as supervisor, Hansberger was dogged by charges that his chief of staff, Jim Foster, was using his position of authority to enrich himself, as when he purchased a piece of what the county had deemed to be surplus property in Redlands. Foster was also suspected of steering business to his wife’s company, based upon his county influence. Eventually, Hansberger was obliged to shed Foster as his chief of staff.
In 2008, as Hansberger was nearing the completion of his third term in his second go-round on the board of supervisors and his fifth term overall, the political forces on the west side of the county, including those affiliated with the Colonies Partners, moved to derail his political career. Without major fanfare and doing so in a well-timed manner which essentially prevented Hansberger from knowing what was afoot until it was too late for him to effectively react to counter the intensive campaign against him, those focused on his removal vectored their support to then-San Bernardino City Councilman Neil Derry, who outpolled Hansberger in that year’s June primary, a head-to-head contest in which Derry prevailed by the relatively narrow margin of 22,567 votes or 51.89 percent to Hansberger’s 20,926 or 48.11 percent.
Hansberger’s political career was over, but he managed to have something of the last laugh, or perhaps, two last laughs. In April 2011, Hansberger was able to have Mike Ramos, the district attorney with whom he remained closely associated, charge Derry with one felony count of perjury, one felony count of filing a false document and one misdemeanor count of failing to report a campaign contribution properly, stemming from a $5,000 political contribution to Derry’s 2008 campaign that had originated as a $10,000 check from developer Arnold Stubblefield, but which was, according to Ramos, “laundered” through a political action committee controlled by Bill Postmus, who kept $5,000 of the money Stubblefield provided for himself. Ultimately, Derry pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor count in return for the two felonies being dismissed. Thereafter, Hansberger convinced James Ramos, the independently wealthy chairman of the San Manuel Indian Tribe, who reportedly netted $18,000 per day from the tribe’s casino operation, to run against Derry in the 2012 election. Hansberger crossed party lines to promote Ramos, a Democrat, over Derry, a Republican. To Hansberger’s immense satisfaction, Ramos defeated Derry.
In 2018, when James Ramos was elected to the California Assembly in the middle of his second term as Third District supervisor, necessitating that he resign to take the state legislative office, Hansberger was one of 48 applicants seeking the appointment to replace Ramos. He was one of 13 of the 48 chosen to be interviewed by the board of supervisors before a selection was made, which ultimately fell to former Yucca Valley Councilwoman Dawn Rowe.
Hansberger cited as his proudest accomplishments in public office the construction of the Seven Oaks Dam at the headwaters of the Santa Ana River in the foothills of the San Bernardino Mountains near Highland and Mentone; his contribution with regard to the establishment of the South Coast Air Quality Management District, of which he was a founding member and among its first directors; the completion of the San Timoteo Creek Project; the expansion of the San Bernardino County Museum; the expansion of the San Bernardino County Regional Park System, most particularly Yucaipa Regional Park; ongoing efforts against blight, and his role in securing federal funding for that effort; and the restoration of the public’s trust in the integrity of local government.
At the time of his death, he was on the board of the San Bernardino County Museum.
He died Wednesday, at the age of 78, less than a month after he was diagnosed as suffering from pancreatic cancer. A report held that his wife, Karen Gaio Hansberger, his sons Martin, Mark and Matthew, and his daughter Marshand were present at the time of his passage.
Assemblyman James Ramos said, “My family and I express our deepest condolences to the family of Chairperson Dennis Hansberger. Our thoughts and prayers are with them. Among my fondest memories of Dennis are the many times we spent talking about the history of San Bernardino County, often from my perspective as chairperson of the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians. Dennis was also a valued supporter who encouraged me to run for the county board of supervisors, and was proud when I became chairperson of the board. He will always serve as a model for me because of his integrity and service to constituents. Dennis carries a special place in my life.”
“Dennis was a kind and thoughtful leader who truly cared about improving the lives of the people he served,” said current Third District Supervisor Dawn Rowe. “The role he played in shaping the future of our county cannot be overstated. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his wife, Karen, and his entire family.”
Board of Supervisors Chairman Curt Hagman said, “Dennis is a legendary figure in the history of San Bernardino County. We will remember him as a fearless and vocal advocate for ethical, open and intelligent government who guided our county through some of its most challenging times.”
Supervisor Josie Gonzales characterized Hansberger as a “San Bernardino County icon who was always steadfast in his convictions and who valued the truth above his own popularity. He was a maverick… never afraid to say what needed to be said and bring up new ideas and fresh approaches. He was an honorable man.”

 

County Survey Of Homeless Shows Sharp Incline

San Bernardino County saw a significant increase in the number of obviously homeless individuals within its 20,105 square mile confines over those tallied last year as reflected in its official count of the destitute its officials conducted in January.
County officials were quick to point out that improvements in its means of surveying and information-collection very likely accounted to some degree for the larger number of registered homeless, and that the upsurge in those living on the streets in the county was not as pronounced as the numbers reflected.
Nevertheless, the Sentinel is knowledgeable with regard to elements of the homeless population that were overlooked in the count that was carried out on January 24.
The survey was conducted by the San Bernardino County Homeless Partnership, which consists of 211-United Way San Bernardino County, the American Round Table to Abolish Homelessness, Assemblywoman Eloise Gomez-Reyes’ office, the California Department of Transportation, California State University – San Bernardino, the Church for Whosoever in Apple Valley, the Church of Latter Day Saints in Redlands, the Town of Apple Valley, the City of Barstow, the City of Big Bear Lake, the City of Chino, the City of Chino Hills, the City of Colton, the City of Fontana, the City of Grand Terrace, the City of Highland, the City of Loma Linda, the City of Montclair, the City of Needles, the City of Ontario, the City of Rancho Cucamonga, the City of Redlands, the City of Rialto, the City of San Bernardino, the City of Twentynine Palms, the City of Upland, the City of Victorville, the City of Yucaipa, the Town of Yucca Valley, the Environmental Systems Research Institute, the Family Assistance Program, the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Yucaipa, Mercy House of Ontario, Morongo Basin Haven, the Mountain Homeless Coalition, New Hope Village of San Bernardino, the county administrative office of San Bernardino County, the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors, the San Bernardino County Council of Governments, the San Bernardino County Department of Behavioral Health, the San Bernardino County Child Support Services Department, the San Bernardino County Human Resources Department, the San Bernardino County Information Services Department, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department’s Homeless Outreach Proactive Enforcement Team, St. Richard’s Episcopal Church in Skyforest, Step Up on Second, the United States Veterans Administration Healthcare System of Loma Linda, and the Water of Life Community Church/CityLink Youth Hope Foundation.
For reasons that are not clear, the City of Adelanto was not credited with being a part of the partnership.
The results of the survey were compended into a 150-page report entitled the 2020 San Bernrdino County Homeless Count and Subpopulation Survey Final Report.
The executive summary of the report states, “There were 3,125 persons who were counted as homeless on Thursday, January 23, 2020. The previous homeless count and subpopulation survey was completed in 2019 when 2,607 persons were counted. A comparison of the last two counts reveals that 518 more persons were counted in 2020, which represents an increase of 19.9%; 470 more persons were counted as unsheltered in 2020 when compared to the unsheltered count in 2019, which represents an increase of 24.5%; and 48 more persons were counted as sheltered in 2020 when compared to the sheltered count in 2019, which represents an increase of 7.0%.”
A table in the executive summary shows that in the 2019 homeless count 687 people without homes in the county were sheltered, 1,920 were living without shelter, for a total homeless count of 2,607 in the county. In 2020, according to the table, there were 735 homeless living in shelters and 2,390 living on the streets, for a total count of 3,125.
The report provides a breakdown of the homeless in the county by jurisdiction.
In Adelanto, according to the report, there were no sheltered homeless, 13 people living in transitional housing, 11 unsheltered, for a total of 24; In Apple Valley, there were seven sheltered homeless, no one living in transitional housing, 24 unsheltered, for a total of 31; In Barstow, there were three sheltered homeless, 27 people living in transitional housing, 78 unsheltered, for a total of 108; in unicorporated Big Bear City/Sugarloaf there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 12 unsheltered, for a total of 12; in incorporated Big Bear Lake, there were two sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, none unsheltered, for a total of two; in Bloomington, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 19 unsheltered, for a total of 19.
According to the report there were no homeless in Cajon Canyon nor in West Cajon Canyon, whatsoever.
In Chino, according to the table in the report, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 31 unsheltered, for a total of 31; in Chino Hills, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, two unsheltered, for a total of two; in Colton there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 136 unsheltered, for a total of 136; in Crestline, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 22 unsheltered, for a total of 22; in Fontana, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 116 unsheltered, for a total of 116; in Grand Terrace,  there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, five unsheltered, for a total of five; in Hesperia, there were seven sheltered homeless, six people living in transitional housing, 19 unsheltered, for a total of 32; in Highland, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 78 unsheltered, for a total of 78; in Joshua Tree, there were no sheltered homeless, five people living in transitional housing, 54 unsheltered, for a total of 59; in Lake Arrowhead, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 11 unsheltered, for a total of 11; and in Landers, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, two unsheltered, for a total of two.
According to the report there were no homeless in Lenwood, no homeless in Lytle Creek and no homeless in Mentone/Crafton, whatsoever.
In Loma Linda, according to the report, there were no sheltered homeless, 24 living in transitional housing, 27 unsheltered, for a total of 51; in Montclair, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 54 unsheltered, for a total of 54; in Morongo Valley, there were no sheltered homeless, five people living in transitional housing, none unsheltered, for a total of five; in Muscoy, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 24 unsheltered, for a total of 24; in Needles, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 16 unsheltered, for a total of 16; in Ontario, there were 14 sheltered homeless, 14 people living in transitional housing, 74 unsheltered, for a total of 102; in Phelan/Pinon Hills, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 11 unsheltered, for a total of 24; in Rancho Cucamonga, there were three sheltered homeless, three people living in transitional housing, 48 unsheltered, for a total of 54; in Redlands, there were 45 sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 141 unsheltered, for a total of 186; in Rialto, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 115 unsheltered, for a total of 115; in Running Springs, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, one unsheltered, for a total of one; in San Bernardino, there were 183 sheltered homeless, 50 living in transitional housing, 823 unsheltered, for a total of 1,056; in Twentynine Palms, there were 17 sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 28 unsheltered, for a total of 45; in Upland, there were no sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 44 unsheltered, for a total of 44; and in Victorville, there were 132 sheltered homeless, 21 living in transitional housing, 298 unsheltered, for a total of 451.
According to the report, there are no homeless in Yermo, whatsoever.
In Yucaipa, according to the report, there were four sheltered homeless, none living in transitional housing, 13 unsheltered, for a total of 17; and in Yucca Valley, there were eight sheltered homeless, 19 people living in transitional housing, 44 unsheltered, for a total of 71.
Elsewhere around the county or actually residing in unknown locations are 112 sheltered homeless, 11 living in transitional housing and 18 unsheltered for a total of 141.
Holding the top five spots for the sheer number of homeless, according to the report, were San Bernardino with 1,056; Victorville with 451; Redlands with 186; Colton with 136; and Fontana, with 116.
The list of cities hosting the top five highest totals of homeless in the county this year was 40 percent different than the list tallied last year when San Bernardino was in the unenviable first position with 890 homeless; Victorville 333; followed by Redlands with 183, Rialto with 133, and Ontario with 128.
Of the 3,125 persons counted in 2020, 2,390 or more than three-fourths (76.5%) were unsheltered, which is defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development as “An individual or family who lacks a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence, meaning: (i) An individual or family with a primary nighttime residence that is a public or private place not designed for or ordinarily used as a regular sleeping accommodation for human beings.”
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development require local jurisdictions to compile data on their homeless populations.
Of the county’s 3,125 homeless, 2,390 are unsheltered, according to the report. Of those 2,390, 2,361 are adults, and there are 21 children living in homeless families and eight unaccompanied youth under the age of 18 who are homeless. Of the 2,361 adults, 1,688 or 71.5 percent are men, and 656 or 27.8 percent are women. Three, or 0.1 percent are transgender and 14 or 0.6 are classified as gender non-conforming.
Within the unsheltered homeless adult population, 718 are Latino or Hispanic and 1,643 are Non-Hispanic or Non-Latino. Seven of the children in families are Latino or Hispanic and five are non-Hispanic or Non-Latino. Three of the unaccompanied homeless minors are Hispanic or Latino and five of the unaccompanied homeless minors are non-Hispanic or Non-Latino.
Of the adult unhoused population in the county, 57 or 2.4 percent are American Indian or Alaska Native; 18 or 0.8 percent are Asian; 505 or 21.4 percent are Black or African-American; 17 or 0.7 percent are Hawaiian or Pacific Islander; 1,345 or 57 percent are white; and 419 or 17.7 percent are classified as other.
Among the homeless children living with a family, one is American Indian or Alaska Native; six are Black or African-American; 11 are while; and three are classified as other. Five of the unaccompanied homeless youth are white and three are classified as other.
According to the report, 691 or 29.3 percent of those counted this year are chronically homeless adults; 440 or 18.6 percent were identified as having mental health problems; 185 or 7.8 percent were veterans; 497 or 21.1 percent were labeled “substance users”; and 640 or 27.1 percent were unaccompanied women.
Another 88 or 5.8 percent claimed they were in a state of homelessness because they were “fleeing domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking.”
Known to the Sentinel is that there was some undercounting in the survey. While the report stated that there were no homeless in Cajon Canyon or West Cajon Canyon on January 24, in actuality there was a single homeless adult in Cajon Canyon in a tent and another single homeless adult, residing in a vehicle accompanied by his dog, in Cajon Canyon on January 24.
Mark Gutglueck