Santa Barbara County News and Events

Low Number of Monarch Butterflies Recored for Second Straight Year in Pismo Beach

Kraig Pakulski 0 87 Article rating: No rating
Monarch Butterfly
Dave Alley/KEYT

PISMO BEACH, Calif. (KEYT) - For a second straight year, a low number of monarch butterflies have been counted at the popular Pismo State Beach Butterfly Grove.

"Unfortunately, we're looking at another low year for our populations for this western monarch butterfly," said Danielle Bronson, Pismo State Beach Interpretive and Cultural Program Manager. "We had the most recent count was yesterday, and that was a 400. Our peak count for this season was around 480. It's another low year."

While the butterfly count remains at a low number for a second consecutive year, Bronson pointed out it is better than was seen five years ago in 2020.

"It is not our lowest year," said Bronson. "During Covid, that was our lowest year when we had just shy of 200, but we are seeing these low numbers, not just here at Pismo State Beach, but throughout the entire Western monarch population counts that are done by Xerces Society."

Following the record low in 2020, the monarch population bounced back in a big way the the next three years with 21,000 monarchs recorded in 2021, 24,000 in 2022, and 16,000 in 2023.

"Having that fluctuation is not uncommon with insects," said Bronson. "We're just seeing traditional low population numbers when we are tracking them and we really want to see those numbers increase, so running yourself with education, planting native nectarine flowers is wonderful way for the public to help out at home. You can go on to the websites of Xerces Society or Monarch Joint Health. Those are organizations that can provide the public with different educational opportunities on how they can help the species."

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Human Trafficking Awareness Forum Returns To Santa Maria in January

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SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) - Thinking ahead to next month, the Santa Maria Rotary Club is spreading the word about the next forum raising awareness of human trafficking happening locally.

Members of the 12-year-running Human Trafficking Task Force say that while the forum is a ways away, the issue itself is ever-present.

A survivor of human trafficking, Alia Azariah who now works as the Safe House Project’s aftercare director, says the northern part of Santa Barbara county including the Santa Maria Valley is significantly impacted by human trafficking.

Azariah says online trafficking activities saw a sharp increase during the COVID-19 pandemic and have remained high, since kids had no choice but to seek connection via social media.

Data for Santa Barbara County shows nearly 300 human trafficking investigations overall in the last decade.

Organizers hope to continue increasing the turnout for the annual awareness and training forum, and the community is urged to mark their calendars for late January.

Azariah says that January may be Human Trafficking Awareness Month, but it’s good to treat every month the same way.

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Uber driver Simranjit Singh Sekhon charged with sexual assault of unconscious Camarillo woman

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VENTURA COUNTY, Calif. (KEYT) – Simranjit Singh Sekhon of Bakersfield has been charged with the rape of an unconscious woman he was driving home while working as an Uber driver.

Sekhon is also facing the aggravating factor that the survivor was particularly vulnerable and he made his first court appearance Wednesday where he pled not guilty stated the Ventura County District Attorney's Office.

On Nov. 27, around 1 a.m., Sekhon picked up a 21-year-old woman outside a bar in Thousand Oaks while working as an Uber driver with the destination of the woman's home in Camarillo shared the Ventura County Sheriff's Office.

The woman was intoxicated and fell asleep during the ride noted the Ventura County District Attorney's Office.

According to the Ventura County District Attorney's Office, after the trip should have ended, Sekhon continued to drive the unconscious woman around Camarillo and sexually assaulted her.

Following an investigation into the allegations by the Sheriff's Office, Sekhon was arrested in Los Angeles County on Dec. 15 added the Ventura County District Attorney's Office.

Sekhon is next scheduled to appear in Ventura County Superior Court on Dec. 29, 2025, for an early disposition conference and he remains in custody with bail set at $500,000 detailed the Ventura County District Attorney's Office.

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Trump repurposing money earmarked for troop housing for ‘warrior dividend’ bonuses

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US Army soldiers lineup in formation as they conduct drills ahead of tomorrow's 250th anniversary parade in Washington

By Haley Britzky, CNN

(CNN) — The one-time bonuses President Donald Trump said Wednesday will be paid out to over a million US service members will be pulled from funds already approved by Congress to cover housing and other household costs for troops as part of a military stipend program.

President Trump announced the $1,776 bonuses in an address to the nation, dubbing them a “warrior dividend.”

“Nobody deserves it more than our military, and I say congratulations to everybody,” Trump said, crediting his domestic policy bill which was passed earlier this year and tariffs, which he said made the US “a lot more money than anybody thought.”

However, a senior administration official said the $2.6 billion cost of the bonuses was being taken from $2.9 billion in extra funding for basic allowance for housing, or BAH, payments appropriated by Congress in July, CNN reported.

The supplemental funds were marked for “improving the quality of life for military personnel” within what Trump labeled the “Big Beautiful Bill.”

BAH is an additional form of payment to many troops that is intended to cover living expenses for military families. The stipends vary based on rank, geography and whether the service member has dependents, with military family advocates arguing that the payments often do not fully cover expenses for those living in higher-cost areas.

It’s unclear if the supplemental funds approved by Congress had been intended for anything specific, such as offsetting housing costs in those more expensive areas. Congress had previously approved base funding for the stipend, and though it signed off on the extra funding, it had given the Pentagon broad discretion on how to use the money to help troops with the cost of living.

A report last year from the Government Accountability Office found that the Pentagon “does not routinely assess the negative financial and quality-of-life effects that limited supply or unaffordable housing has on affected service members.”

“During GAO visits to selected DoD sites, some service members reported having to take on debt or commute long distances to afford quality housing,” the report said.

The bonuses will go to active-duty members at the rank of O-6 — officers at the rank of colonel in the Army, Air Force, and Marine Corps, and Captain in the Navy — and below, as well as reserve component members on active-duty orders for 31 or more days as of November 30, according to a White House social media post. That would mean some troops who don’t currently receive BAH stipends, such as junior troops living in barracks, might still get the bonuses.

“This warrior dividend serves as yet another example of how the War Department is working to improve the quality of life for our military personnel and their families,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said in a video posted to social media on Thursday, referring to the Defense Department’s secondary name of War Department. “I can think of no better Americans to receive this check right before Christmas. Whether it’s for pay, housing, faith support, all elements of what we’re doing are to rebuild our military.”

It’s unclear what impact if any pulling funds from the supplemental BAH funds will have. The Pentagon regularly increases the BAH rate for service members, and earlier this month announced a 4.2% increase to the stipend for next year.

The benefit of pulling th

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