DP boys lacrosse holds off Huntington Beach to advance to second straight CIF-SS semifinal

Mike Klan

GOLETA, Calif. – A balanced attack, strong goalie play and playoff experience helped Dos Pueblos hang on to beat Huntington Beach 11-8 in a CIF-Southern Section Division 2 home quarterfinal game.

DP will host Oaks Christian in a semifinal on Saturday in a time yet to be announced.

The Chargers led 10-5 early in the fourth quarter on a goal by Orion Prewarski.

But the visiting Oilers scored three quick goals to pull within 10-8 with more than seven minutes left in the game.

But Chargers goalie Danny Perez made a couple of his 11 saves in the game to keep it a two-goal lead.

DP added a big goal with under 2:30 left as Parker Bentley raced by his defender and scored from point-blank range for the final score of the game.

Jack Finneran scored all of his team-leading 3 goals in the first half as the Chargers built up a 6-2 lead at the break.

Dan Finneran, Gus Miller, Bentley and Prewarski all added two goals for a Chargers team that improved to 20-0 on the season.

The Chargers lost in last year’s semifinal and this year’s group led by 17 seniors are determine to finish the job in 2025.

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Gauchos softball stays alive at Big West Championships

Mike Klan

FULLERTON, Calif. – After dropping their first game of The Big West Championships the UC Santa Barbara Softball team (29-24, 17-10 Big West) bounced back in a big way. The Gauchos plated eight runs on a season-high 15 hits to advance in the elimination bracket of the championships.

GAME ONE: GAUCHOS 4, TRITONS 6Both teams worked a clean first inning to start the game, and Malaya Johnson stranded a leadoff double in the top of the second. After a great diving catch from UC San Diego’s center fielder, the Gauchos then left the bases loaded, keeping the game scoreless through two.

In the third, three singles gave UC San Diego a 1-0 lead. With two outs and nobody on in the fourth, an unsuccessfully-challenged hit by pitch and walk extended the inning for an RBI single that doubled the Tritons’ lead.

The Tritons continued to add to their lead in the fifth. A leadoff double, sacrifice bunt, and sacrifice fly pushed across their third run. Johnson then earned a strikeout, but the inning continued due to a wild pitch dropped third strike. Another double, followed by a single, added two more runs, and suddenly it was 5-0 San Diego.

The game was not over, though. The Gauchos took advantage of a leadoff walk and error in the bottom of the sixth, when Alexa Sams’ RBI single ended the shutout. After the second out, Delaina Ma’ae drilled a clutch three-run homer to left center, making it a 5-4 game.

To begin the seventh, the Tritons tacked on an insurance run via a single, walk, and run-scoring error on a sacrifice bunt attempt. However, despite there being runners on second and third and nobody out, Sam Stoll got out of the inning without any further damage, and the Gauchos were chasing two—down 6-4—into their final frame. Unfortunately for Santa Barbara, they went three up, three down to end the game.

GAME TWO: GAUCHOS 8, BEACH 0 (6 INN.)UC Santa Barbara took an early lead against the Beach, opening the first inning with two runs. Jazzy Santos singled and was eventually driven in by Bella Fuentes’s double, while Alexa Sams’ single brought Fuentes home, putting UC Santa Barbara ahead 2–0 after the first inning.

In the second inning, UC Santa Barbara extended their advantage with another two runs. Elicia Acosta tripled and, after a double play, Mendoza singled and was brought home by Santos’ two-run homer. This gave UC Santa Barbara a 4–0 lead.

The fourth inning saw UC Santa Barbara adding two more runs to their tally. Delaina Ma’ae’s double followed by Santos’ RBI single brought in one run, and Tehya Banks’s single drove in another, increasing the lead to 6–0.

UC Santa Barbara continued their scoring in the sixth inning with two additional runs. Santos and Giselle Mejia both got hits to start the inning, and after a couple of outs, Sams singled to bring home both runners, solidifying an 8–0 lead and ending the game via run-rule.

UP NEXTThe Gauchos will play in another elimination game tomorrow at 7 p.m. and await the loser of game one on the day between the No. 1 seed Cal State Fullerton and No. 5 seed Hawai’i.

(Article courtesy of UCSB Athletics).

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I-Team: Planning for a disaster – How several local cities are updating their plans to keep you safe

Jeff Stahl

From wildfires to earthquakes and even a tropical storm hitting the Coachella Valley, disasters can strike unexpectedly.

I-Team investigator Jeff Stahl is digging deep into Emergency Operation Plans and finding that there is a lot of work to do. 

Nine cities have nine unique plans.

The I-Team has been requesting and combing through the documents. 

Palm Desert and La Quinta approved their latest plans in 2010, and Palm Springs in 2012, but you’ll find most cities are updating their plans right now.

What could this all mean during our next widespread emergency? 

Disasters come in many forms, Coachella Valley residents can all relate to, from Tropical Storm Hilary’s rain and widespread flooding, to lockdowns during the COVID-19 Pandemic, and the Los Angeles wind-driven wildfires to our west. 

In Palm Springs, Emergency Planning documents show the city’s top disaster concerns include a major earthquake, fire, flooding, dam failure, hazardous materials spills, severe heat– even civil unrest and terrorism.

Palm Springs Emergency Management Coordinator  Daniel DeSelms confirmed with News Channel 3, “Those are our major ones.”  

Like others we examined, the city’s plan presents an organizational chart for the police, fire, and all other department operation centers to work together and with outside districts, state, and federal agencies during high-stress times.

DeSelms said, “When two more of those are activated on a single incident, the Emergency Operations Center gets kicked into gear.” 

He says the city’s new plan will be more streamlined, closer to a hundred pages from the current 600. It will list important crisis job requirements and remove many redundancies to make the new document more readable. DeSelms has been working on it for several years now.

“What any community member can take from this,” DeSelms said, “is knowing that the city is planning for protecting the community. That is our number one priority.”  

Cathedral City is like most others in the Coachella Valley with these Emergency Operations Plans. They run several hundred pages. This is just a fraction of Cathedral City’s and was produced in 2022. They are working on a new version of this plan and hope to have it completed by June.”

“Now, for us, we were already in the process of planning it out when we had Hurricane Hilary,” Fire Chief Michael Contreras said, adding, “While I think we did everything we could, what can we do better?

Contreras says the pandemic and especially Tropical Storm Hilary highlighted the need for updates including the types of services the fire department should be involved with that previously it had not been.

“Depending on jurisdiction, because a lot of it was run by the county,” Contreras said, adding, “but in a lot of places, the fire department ran the vaccination clinics, because that’s one thing we do pretty well.”   

As for those updates. Who can forget the images of a neighborhood flooded with gooey mud– a derailed freight train– or those senior citizens rescued from a flooded care home in a tractor’s scoop? Here is exactly what Contreras hopes the new plan solves.

The city is streamlining its emergency plan by making it shorter and easier to read, and with more specific information on all of the potential resources available to help when disaster strikes. 

Contreras says the city secured the heavy equipment to rescue those stranded seniors from the mud that came from the Edom Hill Landfill, which is not a traditional equipment supplier. Now, the new plan will also list that and other non-traditional potential sources for potentially needed resources. 

Yet questions remain.

“Now, for us, we were already in the process of planning it out when we had Hurricane Hilary,” Contreras said, adding, “While I think we did everything we could, what can we do better?

DeSelms said, “Things like Ebola and other pandemics have occurred that really changed the thinking of, ‘What is a public health crisis?'”

Agencies we spoke to say they’re already prepared for wildfires so January’s Los Angeles fires in January have not required any changes for an already well-defined command structure.

The new Palm Springs plan is set to be approved by the city council this month. Rancho Mirage tells us its plan is still current, but it will be updated next year. 

ey’re already prepared for wildfires– so January’s LA fires have not required any changes for an already well-defined command structure.

The plans are intended to facilitate multi-agency and multi-jurisdictional coordination, particularly between the cities and Riverside County, special districts, and state agencies, in emergency operations.

The new Palm Springs plan is set to go before the city council for approval this month. Rancho Mirage tells us their plan is still current, but they are set to update it next year.

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Local CIF-SS playoff scores for lacrosse, volleyball and tennis

Mike Klan

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. –

CIF-SS Boys Lacrosse Quarterfinal:

Division 2:

Dos Pueblos 11, Huntington Beach 8

Oaks Christian 11, Village Christian 9

(OC at DP on Saturday TBA in semifinal)

CIF-SS Boys Volleyball Quarterfinal:

Division 4:

Santa Barbara 3, Notre Dame/SO

Santiago Corona 3, Westlake 2

(SB at Corona Santiago on Saturday in semifinal)

Crean Lutheran 3, Dos Pueblos 1

Division 6:

Laguna Blanca 3, Pacifica Christian/OC 1 (LB at El Toro on Saturday in semifinal)

Division 8:

Desert Christian/L 3, Carpinteria 1

Wildwood 3, Channel Islands 1

CIF-SS Boys Tennis First Round:

Division 2:

Palm Desert 10, Santa Barbara 8

Crean Lutheran 13, Camarillo 5

Oaks Christian 10, Walnut 8

Division 3:

Cate 12, Burroughs/B 6

Agoura 13, La Serna 5

La Canada 11, Newbury Park 7

San Marcos 18, Fairmont Prep 0 (forfeit)

Division 4:

Dos Pueblos 12, Golden Valley 6

Oakwood 9, Simi Valley 9 (Oakwood advances on games)

Foothill Tech 12, Quartz Hill 6

Division 5:

Thacher 16, Kaiser 2

Laguna Blanca 9, Liberty 9 (Laguna advances on games)

Division 6:

Carpinteria 11, Jarupa Valley 7

Ventura 12, Indio 6

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Coachella Valley Power Agency-Joint Powers Authority now official energy agency

Cynthia White

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – With unanimous approval by the Indio City Council on Wednesday to enter an agreement with the agency, the Coachella Valley Power Agency-Joint Powers Authority (CVPA-JPA) is now official.

The goal of the new governing authority is to give Coachella Valley residents more control over their electricity.

The City of Indio joins La Quinta and Riverside County as the first three members of the JPA though the agency provides the ability for additional members, including tribal nations and more cities, to join in the future.

Once the JPA is formed, representatives from all participating entities will be chosen to form a board, weighing concerns for local power governance and infrastructure. The board will then work with Imperial Irrigation District to address their issues.

News Channel 3’s Shay Lawson earlier reported on some of the details of the CVPA-JPA.

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The Coronado girls soccer team advances in the Class 4A playoffs

Rob Namnoum

The Coronado girls soccer team beat Adams City 3-1 on Wednesday night. As they advance in the Class 4A playoffs. The Cougars will play Windsor on Saturday.

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The Lewis Palmer boys lacrosse team in Class 5A playoff action

Rob Namnoum

The Lewis Palmer boys lacrosse team lost a heartbreaker on Wednesday night. As they fell to Rock Canyon 8-7 in overtime.

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Pueblo County vs. Rampart

Rob Namnoum

The Rampart girls soccer team shutout Pueblo County on Wednesday night 3-0.

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Pueblo West vs. Air Academy

Rob Namnoum

The Air Academy girls soccer team defeated Pueblo West 4-1 on Wednesday night. As the Kadets advance in the Class 4A playoffs.

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JFK Memorial Hospital receives advanced certification for excellent perinatal care

Cynthia White

INDIO, Calif. (KESQ) – JFK Memorial Hospital held a celebration on Wednesday for achieving an advance certification in perinatal care.

Peri-natal care is care offered to pregnant mothers beginning at conception and extending to a time after the baby is born.

The certification comes from the Joint Commission and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. It is awarded to hospitals that demonstrate excellence in providing comprehensive, coordinated care for expectant mothers and their infants.

JFK Director of Maternal Child Services Geraldine Samaniego, RN says, “Our team at JFK Memorial Hospital is dedicated to providing the highest quality level of care for expectant mothers and their newborns. Receiving the Advanced Certification in Perinatal Care is a reflection of the hard work and dedication of our entire staff.”

JFK CEO Karen Faulis adds, “We are thrilled to have earned this certification and look forward to continuing to serve our community with exceptional perinatal care.”

JFK Memorial is the second hospital in the Coachella Valley and one of only 15 in California to achieve advanced certification in perinatal care. Last year, Desert Regional Medical Center became the first hospital in the Inland Empire to achieve the new certification.

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