Santa Barbara County News and Events

Elon Musk gets his $139 billion pay package from 2018 restored after a yearslong battle with a Delaware judge

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By Chris Isidore, CNN

(CNN) — The Delaware Supreme Court has restored a massive pay package awarded to Tesla CEO Elon Musk in 2018 that had twice been voided by a lower court judge.

The package awarded Musk the option to purchase 303 million split-adjusted shares, a package worth $139 billion at Friday’s closing share price. Delaware Chancery Court Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick, who oversaw the bench, had found that even though Tesla shareholders twice approved the compensation plan, the size of the package was unfair to shareholders.

She wrote that the Tesla board “bore the burden of proving that the compensation plan was fair, and they failed to meet their burden.”

But the Supreme Court ruled Friday that the lower court erred in its opinion and that tossing out the 2018 pay package was “inequitable” and that doing so “leaves Musk uncompensated for his time and efforts over a period of six years.”

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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Ancient Pompeii construction site reveals the process for creating Roman concrete

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By Taylor Nicioli, CNN

(CNN) — Along with its many other innovations, the Roman Empire revolutionized architecture with never-before-seen features, such as large-scale arches and dome roofs. And many of these structures still stand today despite being more than 2,000 years old.

None of it would have been possible without the Romans’ infallible building material: self-healing concrete. Now, an ancient construction site has revealed the recipe for creating this sturdy foundation.

At the time Mount Vesuvius erupted in AD 79, covering Pompeii in as much as 6 meters (19.7 feet) of volcanic ash, construction workers were in the process of repairing and renovating a house. International researchers excavated the site in 2023, revealing some completed walls and others that were half-built, as well as raw materials and tools.

“When I entered this archaeological site in Pompeii, everything was so vivid and also kind of perfectly preserved, to be able to just reconstruct clearly what was going on there,” said Admir Masic, an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and lead author of a new study documenting the discovery. “They’re frozen in time. It’s literally a time capsule.”

The findings, which were published December 9 in the journal Nature Communications, are the clearest evidence of mixing processes that the ancient Romans used to create concrete, according to a release from MIT — and they allow researchers to “make conclusions that we were not able to make, or at least not with this certainty about the Roman technology,” Masic told CNN.

Uncovering an active construction site

About one-third of Pompeii remains to be excavated, enabling scientists to continue making new discoveries about the ancient Roman way of life. The active construction site described in the new study was first investigated in the late 1880s, but excavations were halted and did not begin again until 2023. It was then that Masic’s team realized the magnitude of its discovery.

“This is typical for Pompeii. Archaeologists are just slowly but surely, you know, uncovering parts,” Masic said. “I think there is this kind of standard, very cautious way of excavating, because once excavated, you actually break that time capsule and things start to degrade. … You basically remove that protection that ensures that everything is perfectly preserved.”

After excavations, the study authors performed analysis on evidence found at the site, including piles of mixed dry materials that builders had been using to create the concrete, a wall that was in the process of being built and other structural walls that were already completed.

But this discovery was not the first that Masic made on the recipe for Roman concrete. A paper he authored in 2023 had analyzed samples from a 2,000-year-old city wall in the archaeological site of Privernum in central Italy. In that article, he identified lime clasts in the wall — small, white mineral chunks that give the concrete a self-healing ability. When cracks formed, water or rainfall could be added, which would dissolve the lime, allowing the mineral to fill and seal the fractures as it dried and recrystallized.

Differing recipes

Masic and his team determined that these minerals were added through a process known as “hot-mixing” in which the lime fragments were combined with dry ingredients such as volcanic ash. Water was then

Santa Barbara City College Issues Statement on Recent Law Enforcement Activities on Campus

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Santa Barbara City College would like to take a moment to acknowledge the fear, stress, and anxiety experienced by the Santa Barbara and SBCC communities including students and employees (faculty […]

The post Santa Barbara City College Issues Statement on Recent Law Enforcement Activities on Campus appeared first on edhat.

Victor Manuel VillaMedina of Nipomo arrested in connection with years-long abuse of two children

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NIPOMO, Calif. (KEYT) – Victor Manuel VillaMedina, 67, of Nipomo was arrested Wednesday of this week for the alleged multi-year abuse of at least two children.

On Dec. 15, a report of child sexual abuse was received and detectives started an investigation into the allegations stated a press release from the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office.

During the investigation, two children under the age of 14 were identified and the alleged abuse started several years ago detailed the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office.

Also identified during the investigation was the alleged perpetrator, 67-year-old Victor Manuel VillaMedina of Nipomo, and, "[i]t was determined VillaMedina committed various sexual acts with both victims over the course of the past few years" added the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office.

VillaMedina was arrested on Dec. 17, 2025, and booked on multiple counts of lewd acts on a child under the age of 14, sexual penetration with force with a victim ten years or younger, sexual penetration of a victim ten years or younger, and aggravated sexual assault of a minor by force noted the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office.

The investigation into VillaMedina is ongoing and anyone with additional information or know more survivors is asked to contact the Sheriff's Detective Division at 805-781-4500.

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Carbajal Bill Included in Senator Alex Padilla’s Sweeping Public Lands Package

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Legislation authored by U.S. Representative Salud Carbajal (D-CA-24), the Central Coast Heritage Protection Act, was included in U.S. Senator Alex Padilla’s (D-CA) Protecting Unique and Beautiful Landscapes by Investing in California (PUBLIC) Lands […]

The post Carbajal Bill Included in Senator Alex Padilla’s Sweeping Public Lands Package appeared first on edhat.

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