Santa Barbara County News and Events

Mikaela Shiffrin’s disappointing start to 2026 Winter Games heightens the pressure on one of the greatest skiers of all time

Kraig Pakulski 0 32 Article rating: No rating

By Dana O’Neil, CNN

Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy (CNN) — Sitting to the side of the finish line area at Olympia delle Tofane, Jacqueline Wiles watched Mikaela Shiffrin step into the starting gate for the final slalom run of the women’s combined and thought to herself what everyone else at the mountain was thinking.

“We were asking for a miracle,’’ Wiles said.

Two days earlier, Wiles left the mountain in tears, finishing in the single worst place in an Olympic event – fourth. Now she and her partner, Paula Moltzan, sat third, but with the single greatest slalom skier about to attack the mountain, Wiles was staring at yet another bridesmaid finish.

What happened next is what makes the Olympics so unexpectedly compelling. Shiffrin, winner of 71 slalom World Cup victories and a gold medal in the event, started slowly and skied tentatively to finish 15th out of 18 skiers, her worst place since March 17, 2012. Her time – 1:36.59 – was so far behind that, even when tagged with Breezy Johnson’s first-place downhill run, the Americans slid to fourth.

Wiles and Moltzan held on to their bronze medal, celebrating their victory. At the same time, Shiffrin, shoulders slumped, accepted a comforting hug from Johnson. “It’s OK,’’ Johnson told her.

Is it? That now is the question that will dog Shiffrin. With Lindsey Vonn recuperating in an Italian hospital, the Olympic spotlight has turned squarely on Shiffrin. In the face of the glare in her first event, she blinked.

Nothing in the Olympics happens in a vacuum, and Shiffrin’s shocking finish cannot be considered without weighing what happened to her in Beijing four years ago. There, Shiffrin started her quest for six medals with back-to-back DNFs – that stands for did not finish – in the slalom and giant slalom, took ninth in the super-G, 18th in the downhill and skied out 10 seconds into the slalom portion of the individual combined, failing to take home a single medal.

She has just two more chances to grab a medal – in the giant slalom on Sunday and the slalom on February 18, no doubt heightening the pressure she already carried here to Italy.

To her credit, Shiffrin was gracious in defeat.

She joined in Team USA’s mosh pit celebration for Wiles and Moltzan as they circled around for pictures, chanted and did some dancing so effusive that someone’s arm snatched around the ribbon attached to Wiles’ medal, separating the hardware from its holder – yet another medal mishap in these Olympics.

“(Mikaela) is a beautiful winner and a beautiful, well,’’ Moltzan said, searching for a better word but unable to find one, “beautiful loser. That’s really hard to do. I haven’t talked to her yet, but I can only imagine the feelings she’s going through.’’

Earlier in the day, Shiffrin watched Johnson attack the mountain in the morning downhill and had every intention of matching her teammate’s approach. The two have been friends since they found themselves in the same race room at 11. Neither has had it easy. Johnson had to withdraw from Beijing one month before the Games after injuring her knee.

Shiffrin, of course, went to disastrous results.

It was Johnson, though, who coaxed Shiffrin into the team combined after Shiffrin suffered a near life-threatening puncture wound in Killington, Vermont, in November 2024. The wound missed her colon by five inches and left Shiffrin with understandable trauma. But Johnson talked Shiffrin into joining her in the team combined

Santa Barbara County Supports Humanitarian Services Before Voting On Jail Expansion Project

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating

SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) – The Board of Supervisors for Santa Barbara County is moving forward with a $10,000 donation to 805Undocufund.

Funded by discretionary funds held by District 2, these funds will increase appropriations for county support systems such as mental health and addiction recovery programs.

This donation is simultaneous with community push-back regarding the expansion project of the northern branch jail.

Much of the community is strongly advocating for more support services designed to help people with addictions or mental health challenges.

Community members say it would be better to help people stay out of jail, as opposed to increasing the capacity for prisoner population.

Supervisor Capps says she hopes the donation to 805Undocufund can be seen as an action step in that very direction.

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The post Santa Barbara County Supports Humanitarian Services Before Voting On Jail Expansion Project appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

SLO County Elections Office Details Several Changes for Upcoming 2026 Vote

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SLO County Elections Office
The San Luis Obispo County elections office begins the vote count ahead of tomorrow's deadline to certify the Nov. 8 election. (Dave Alley/KEYT)

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (KEYT) - With voters set to cast their ballots in two separate elections in 2026, the San Luis Obispo County Clerk-Recorder's Office is highlighting a number of changes set to take place this year.

The office held a special media day event on Tuesday to help begin the process of educating the public of what is in store for both the Primary Election on June 2, 2026 and the General Election on Nov. 3, 2026.

"We're already well into preparations for June," said Erin Clausen, San Luis Obispo County County Clerk-Recorder's Office Public Information Specialist. "The elections are coming fast and furious."

Held at the Elections Center in the Katcho Achadjian Government Building in downtown San Luis Obispo, San Luis Obispo County Clerk-Recorder Elaina Cano spent more than an hour with media members going logistics of the primary election, detailing changes in the two Elections Day and canvass processes, as well as cover key dates in the months ahead.

A significant change to the elections this year is a new state law that went into effect at the start of the year that will require election offices to process, tabulate and report the results of all Vote-by-Mail ballots within 13 days of the election.

According to the San Luis Obispo County Clerk-Recorder's Office, the new law means that during the upcoming June Primary election, while there will still be provisional ballots to research and signatures to cure (to fix or correct minor ballot errors) before those ballots can be counted, the bulk of counting will be complete by the end of the day on Monday, June 15.

"In SLO County about 95% of voters cast their ballot by mail," said Clausen. "That process for processing those vote by mail ballots takes a while. We can get anywhere from 30 to 50,000 vote by mail ballots on Election Day. People will drop them off at voting locations or mail them in so that they're coming in to us a couple of days after, and we have to process all of those by June 15th and have those reports and those results reported out."

One of the key elements to the event was the demonstration of the county's brand new Agilis Election Mail Sorting and Processing System.

The $500,000 state-of-the-art technology scans and captures voter information, interfaces with the vogter registration system provides automatic signature verification capabilities to supplement manual verification and sorts and opens envelopes for ballot processing.

"One of the reasons we're going to be able to make that (June 15th) deadline is because we just acquired the Angilis machine and that's a sorter and processor that we will run those vote by mail ballots through to capture the signatures to do first classification of which ones need high level signature check. said Clausen. "Then those go to the human signature checkers and then it come back to the Agilis to open, but that machine just they fly through there and with our small staff, our relatively small staff for the 182,000 voters we have in this county, so that capability will really help us meet that deadline of 13 days to process those vote by mail ballots."

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