Santa Barbara County News and Events

Santa Barbara City Council passes more than a dozen motions giving staff direction to formulate a Rent Stabilization Ordinance

Kraig Pakulski 0 22 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) Santa Barbara City Council Members passed a number of motions directing  staff to create a rent stabilization ordinance 

The first motion passed 4-to-3 that would limit rent increases to one time in a 12 month period, based on 60 percent of the consumer percentage index with a maximum of 3 percent or whichever is lower.

Wendy Santamaria made the motion that is considered a low rent cap formula.

Another motion passed 4 to 3 that applies exemptions only when mandated by state law. 

During a majority of the motions Eric Friedman, Mayor Randy Rowse and Mike Jordan abstained rather than voting no because the initial no vote prevented them from voting on other items linked to the first votes.

And another motion that passed addresses capitol improvements limiting them to habitability and tenant protections.

All of the motions were inspired by the consultants presentation of RSO components.

Santamaria also made a motion that Kristen Sneddon seconded to have an independent officer involved in appeals.

Kristen Sneddon said it has taken 9 years to get these votes.

When the meeting started at 5p.m. the council chamber was packed to comment.

They also heard consultants, hired by the city, update the council on more than a dozen rent stabilization options.

The marathon meeting happened one day after Santa Barbara landlords filed a lawsuit challenging a temporary rent freeze.

Attorney Barry Cappello of Cappello & Noel is representing property owners in the lawsuit.

During public comments, Cappello said he used to be the city's attorney and suggested the city listen to their attorney and hire another to avoid more lawsuits.

Cappello said without an exception mechanism the temporary rent freeze is unconstitutional.

If the city of Santa Barbara sets the temporary rent freeze aside Cappello said they would happily drop the suit.

Before motions were made dozens of renters shared their experiences and pleaded with the county to address affordability.

Mom & Pop landlords spoke out, too.

Landlord Nick Gonzales said blanket ordinances can have unintended consequences.

"Lets focus where we need to focus and that is in the lower and moderate income households and not give a policy that may give people with very high incomes a subsidy from someone with a very low income because that is the reality with a lot of the mom and pops," said Gonzales.

Tenant Rick Morse believes people can meet in the middle.

"I would like to see the city of Santa Barbara establish a registry that would create incentives for landlords to create long term tenancies, so they won't raise the rent or raise it at a nominal rate and be compensated in some way," said Morse.

The council meeting wrapped up around 10:30 p.m.

Mayor Rowse called it a very long meeting with a lot of public input.

"Clearly, I am not in favor of the result as was true of my colleagues Jordan and Friedman, I believe we have made things really complicated in town and I think we really doubled down on that tonight so we will see how it comes out," said Rowse, " We had to abstain from a lot of votes because the first vote precluded us from participating in the rest of the item."

The staff has plenty of work to do before bringing a plan back.

WendySanta Maria said the council will likely see the results of the votes in late June or July.

"Today, I am feeling great about seeing the community come together we saw tenants good faith property owners, faith leaders, service workers, we saw al

Los Ángeles Azules y Ximena Sariñana acompañarán a Andrea Bocelli en concierto gratuito en México

Kraig Pakulski 0 16 Article rating: No rating

Por Erick E. Beltran, CNN en Español

Los Ángeles Azules y Ximena Sariñana acompañarán a Andrea Bocelli durante el próximo concierto gratuito que el artista italiano ofrecerá el sábado 18 de abril en el Zócalo de la Ciudad de México.

A través de un comunicado, Banco Plata, patrocinador del evento, confirmó la participación de ambos artistas. Asimismo, mediante una publicación en redes sociales, se informó que la cantante mexicana y la agrupación originaria de Iztapalapa subirán al escenario junto a Bocelli. También se confirmó la participación de la Orquesta Sinfónica de Minería durante la velada.

La entrada al concierto será completamente gratuita y el evento se llevará a cabo a las 19:00 horas (horario de Ciudad de México). Para esa noche, se instalarán 7.000 sillas de acceso libre para los primeros asistentes en llegar, en un espectáculo que combinará la ópera con la cumbia.

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Los Ángeles Azules y Ximena Sariñana acompañarán a Andrea Bocelli en concierto gratuito en México

Kraig Pakulski 0 14 Article rating: No rating

Por Erick E. Beltran, CNN en Español

Los Ángeles Azules y Ximena Sariñana acompañarán a Andrea Bocelli durante el próximo concierto gratuito que el artista italiano ofrecerá el sábado 18 de abril en el Zócalo de la Ciudad de México.

A través de un comunicado, Banco Plata, patrocinador del evento, confirmó la participación de ambos artistas. Asimismo, mediante una publicación en redes sociales, se informó que la cantante mexicana y la agrupación originaria de Iztapalapa subirán al escenario junto a Bocelli. También se confirmó la participación de la Orquesta Sinfónica de Minería durante la velada.

La entrada al concierto será completamente gratuita y el evento se llevará a cabo a las 19:00 horas (horario de Ciudad de México). Para esa noche, se instalarán 7.000 sillas de acceso libre para los primeros asistentes en llegar, en un espectáculo que combinará la ópera con la cumbia.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post Los Ángeles Azules y Ximena Sariñana acompañarán a Andrea Bocelli en concierto gratuito en México appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Three multi-car crashes send nine people to hospital

Kraig Pakulski 0 19 Article rating: No rating

GOLETA, Calif. (KEYT) – Three multi-car crashes sent nine people to the hospital with minor to moderate injuries around 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, according to the Santa Barbara County Fire Department.

The first crash involved five cars on the southbound 101 freeway between Fairview and Patterson, while the second came in the same location, involving two cars, according to the SBCFD.

The third crash involved four cars between Patterson and Turnpike and injured two people, according to the SBCFD.

The first two crashes sent seven people to the hospital and the California Highway Patrol reduced the southbound 101 to just one lane, according to the SBCFD.

The post Three multi-car crashes send nine people to hospital appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Historians and oversight group challenge Justice Department’s rewriting of federal preservation law

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating

WASHINGTON D.C. (KEYT) – The American Historical Association filed a lawsuit challenging the Trump Administration's recent assertion that it would not need to retain records in accordance with federal law.

"Since its founding in 1884, the American Historical Association has advocated for the preservation of federal records," stated Dr. Sarah Weicksel, executive director of the American Historical Association. "The AHA's 1910 argument in support of establishing a National Archives remains true in this current fight for preservation: these records are 'materials which historians must use in order to ascertain the truth.' Presidential records are essential for transparency and accountability in our democracy; they are also essential sources for researching and understanding the American past. Those records and the history they tell belong not to any individual, but to the American people."

On April 1 of this year, the Department of Justice issued a slip opinion stating the Presidential Records Act of 1978 is unconstitutional because it exceeds Congress' Constitutional authority and improperly limits the independence of the executive branch.

"The PRA [Presidential Records Act] exceeds the oversight power because it serves no identifiable and valid legislative purpose," opened the slip opinion created by the Justice Department earlier this month. "It exceeds any preservation power because Congress cannot preserve presidential records merely for the sake of posterity. It exceeds Congress’s regulatory power over statutory agencies because it purports to regulate a constitutional office—the Presidency— that Congress did not create and that Congress cannot abolish. It exceeds the spending power, because that power allows Congress to incentivize outcomes with federal funding, not to directly regulate coordinate branches of government. And it exceeds Congress's power to assist in the execution of the powers vested in coordinate branches because it restricts rather than empowers the President."

The Department of Justice concluded, "the PRA is unconstitutional, and the President need not further
comply with its dictates."

In response to the preemptive interpretation of federal records law, the American Historical Association and American Oversight filed their suit Tuesday, April 7, in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

"The Executive Branch has declared the power to override the legal determinations of the U.S. Supreme Court, in order to override the laws passed by Congress to preserve and provide public access to official records of the President's activities. The Executive Branch has nullified the determinations of the other two branches of government so that the President may claim these official government records to be
his own," opened Tuesday's complaint and request for injunctive relief. "Days ago, the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) advised the White House that the President may disregard the Presidential Records Act—the longstanding federal law requiring the preservation of records reflecting the official activities of the President, the Vice President, and White House staff. As of this moment, the Administration believes that the President is legally free to destroy records of his official government conduct, or even spirit away the records for his own future personal use. In the Administration’s view, the records of the official activities of the President and nearly 1,000 White House employees—generated using taxpayer funds, on governmen

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