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Letter to the Editor: Concerns regarding alleged Brown Act violations by Malibu City Councilmembers

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Dear Editor,

I am writing to express my concerns about the recent actions of Malibu City Councilmember Bruce Silverstein, who has reportedly reported his fellow City Councilmembers for alleged violations of the Brown Act. The Brown Act is a crucial California law designed to ensure transparency in government by mandating that deliberations by legislative bodies be conducted in public.
According to recent reports, Councilmember Silverstein has sent a letter to the Public Integrity Division of the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office, detailing an alleged violation involving a majority of councilmembers meeting in private to discuss a threatened lawsuit by luxury property developer Scott Gillen. The lawsuit is related to a permanent Malibu skatepark, a project that has been in the works for more than a decade.
While I understand the importance of upholding the principles of the Brown Act to maintain transparency and public trust, it is disheartening to see internal conflicts within the City Council escalate to the point of legal action. The citizens of Malibu rely on their elected representatives to work collaboratively and ethically on matters that impact the community.
It is crucial for the City Council to address any concerns related to the alleged Brown Act violations promptly and transparently. A thorough investigation into these allegations will help ensure accountability and demonstrate the commitment of the City Council to abide by the laws that govern their actions.
I urge the City Council to prioritize open communication, accountability, and the best interests of the Malibu community. It is my hope that this incident will serve as an opportunity for reflection and improvement, fostering a more collaborative and transparent decision-making process in the future.

Donna Windsor, Malibu

Unmentioned and undiscussed crimes in Malibu are concerning and dangerous

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Malibu/lost Hills Sheriffs and County of Los Angeles Homicide Bureau are on scene at Malibu Lagoon. Photo by Samantha Bravo/TMT.

By Barbara Burke

Special to The Malibu Times

As readers wade through countless information sources daily, it is sometimes surprising to discover that some crimes committed locally have not been specifically revealed to, or discussed by, Malibuites.

The most recent significant one concerns Chenguang Gong, a 57-year-old man from San Jose, with a temporary residence in Thousand Oaks, who had ties to the Chinese government. 

According to a Feb. 7 press release titled “Justice Department Announces Charges and Arrests in Two Separate Illicit Technology Transfer Schemes to Benefit Governments of China and Iran,” Gong, who is a native of China and became a United States citizen in 2011, was arrested in early February in California and charged with stealing trade secrets from a Malibu-based defense contractor, including stealing blueprints for technologies to detect nuclear missile launches and to track ballistic and hypersonic missiles. The press release stated that Gong was charged in a criminal complaint with theft of trade secrets in federal district court. View the full criminal complaint here: 

www.justice.gov/opa/media/1337756/dl?inline.

Gong’s alleged offenses — committed right in our town — involved him allegedly transferring more than 3,600 files from the Malibu-based research and development company where he worked — identified in court documents as the victim company — to his own personal storage devices during his brief employment with the company late last year. The press release states the the files Gong allegedly transferred include blueprints for sophisticated infrared sensors designed for use in space-based systems to detect missile launches and track ballistic and hypersonic missiles and blueprints for sensors designed to enable U.S. military aircraft to detect incoming heat-sinking missiles and take countermeasures, including by jamming the missiles’ infrared tracking ability. 

The affidavit supporting the criminal complaint states that if the technology were obtained by the Malibu-based company’s competitors, it would be “extremely damaging economically” to the victim company, and it would be “dangerous to U.S. national security if obtained by international actors.”

The press release, which was issued by the DOJ’s year-old Disruptive Technology Strike Force, informs that some of the files Gong stole were later found on storage devices seized from his temporary residence in Thousand Oaks, according to an affidavit supporting the criminal complaint.

Those crimes allegedly occurred right here in Malibu.  

As to Gong’s charges, there is precious little, if anything, that residents could do to detect or thwart him committing those crimes or to even discover the commission of the crimes so as to report them. Nevertheless, Malibu readers should be aware of the federal criminal complaint being filed.

However, residents can be very vigilant when crimes are committed that can be observed, as was the case when Zuma Jay’s Surf Shop and High Tide Collective were burgled three months ago. This reporter only found out that those crimes occurred when I interviewed Zuma Jay concerning his helping Tracy Park when her gallery was vandalized. See related article on A1.

A reader may wonder, “what’s this author’s point in this column?” It is simple. We all need to be vigilant and should report any suspicious activity to authorities, and we all need to be informed when crimes are committed in our community.

Malibu Canyon now open after weekend closure

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Malibu Canyon has reopened as of 6 a.m., after the weekend closure. LA Public Works closed the road due to concerns for landslides. Take precaution while driving, roads may be slippery.

https://x.com/citymalibu/status/1774801982907208107?s=46&t=-k8PlTpup-Zp0KliDIUSww

Topanga Canyon is still closed due to unstable hillside.

Burt’s Eye View: Butcher

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Burt Ross

By Burt Ross

You, my reader, are trying to figure out what this column is about, and once again, if you try to get ahead of the story, you more than likely will be mistaken. This column has absolutely nothing to do with any kind of meat. The word “butcher” can be a verb as well as a noun, and in this case, it refers to my propensity to butcher expressions.

I have little difficulty mastering one word at a time, but when I have to deal with a string of words, especially an expression, proverb, or idiom, for reasons I cannot fathom, I butcher the English language mercilessly.
Once upon a time, we had a vice president named Dan Quayle. He, too, had serious trouble with his native tongue and actually thought the word “potato” ended with an “e,” much to the consternation of every English teacher throughout our land. Quayle had so much difficulty with expressions that he quickly became a comedy writer’s dream.

For instance, in attempting to quote the United Negro College Fund’s famous slogan, “A mind is a terrible thing to waste,” the vice president said: “What a waste it is to lose one’s mind. Or not to have a mind is being very wasteful. How true that is.” I’m not making this up. If you don’t believe me, simply Google “Dan Quayle quotes.”
I joined the multitudes in laughing at poor Dan until I realized that I was no better; in fact, possibly worse. I was in no position to throw stones when I lived in the proverbial glass house. While addressing a crowd during my political days, I tried to equate two things of equal value. This is the pearl of wisdom that came out of my mouth, “It’s simply six of one, a dozen of another.” My math teachers just turned in their graves.

On another occasion, I actually said, “No good deed goes punished.” It was a noble, aspirational thought, but not the popular expression which means the complete opposite. The other day I said, “Far and few between” which is close but not quite there.

I once even delved into a Biblical expression and out came something like this, “A camel has trouble going through the eye of a needle.” Now in all fairness to myself, what I spoke was the truth, but not exactly what Jesus said when talking about a rich person’s chance of getting into heaven.

And most recently I actually told my wife and daughter much to their amazement and amusement, “Father is the necessity of invention.”

When I talk, common expressions frequently come to mind, but before I can censor myself, they unfortunately escape. I once pronounced, “The apple doesn’t grow far from the oak tree,” which is true if there is an oak tree right next to the apple tree.

I now wish to apologize profusely for ever having ridiculed Dan Quayle. As for me, I will make every effort to avoid idioms and stick to the basics.

PEOPLE: Flying Boat, Floating PianoColumn:

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Dirk Braun is shown inside his namesake gallery on Malibu Road. Contributed Photo

The ‘Storm Blüthner’ piano will be on display at DIRK BRAUN Gallery starting March 6

By Benjamin Marcus

The DIRK BRAUN gallery is a wonderful, well-lighted place tucked away on Malibu Road between Spic n’ Span Cleaners and LACO Fire Station 88. There on Malibu Road, DIRK BRAUN gallery is situated in a quiet coastal town with a lot of stately homes with a lot of wall space that needs filling. The DIRK BRAUN gallery fills those walls with limited-edition, large-scale framed photographs. Dirk Braun likes to throw the occasional cocktail party and this Wednesday, the 7th, he will have a party featuring a 19th-century piano nearly drowned by a 21st-century atmospheric river.

When and how did you become infatuated with the Grumman Albatross? 

The best design is most beautiful, and I believe the Albatross reigns supreme. With the ability of taking off and landing on land, open ocean, snow, and ice, and a range capable of crossing oceans, this aircraft inspires dreams and speaks to fantasy. A friend of mine introduced me to this aircraft when I was 18 and it was something that stuck with me and I dreamed about making a film about them.

Google says the flying boat era was the ’20s and ’30s. I’m thinking of those vintage posters of travel to Hawaii — where the plane figured as prominently as Diamond Head and palm trees and hula dancers.

The flying boat era was short-lived but was most adventurous and romantic. Before there was a network of runways, flying boats ruled the skies. There were hundreds of different models, and were the first aircraft to pioneer long-distance air travel, which beforehand was only done by cruise ships. 

People would gather and watch these flying boats as they would take off and land at places like the LaGuardia Marine Air Terminal and Dinner Key in Miami. These beautiful aircraft would be coming from or going to far-flung exotic locations around the world.  

Wasn’t Howard Hughes flying one in “The Aviator”? Landed it somewhere in Malibu?

Howard Hughes famously built the largest flying boat, H-4 Hercules, which is featured in my film. In the movie “The Aviator,” Leonardo DiCaprio (playing Howard Hughes) flies a Sikorsky S-38 flying boat (featured in my 21-minute extras film too). This aircraft was also used by Charles Lindbergh to initiate air mail service between the U.S. and the Panama Canal and for airborne African photography and filming missions in the 1930s. During WWII, a network of runways were made, and the flying boat was phased out of service.

Makes sense. World War II changed everything, including the need for flying boats. A shame. They’re a beautiful animal.

The second wave of flying boats was in the late 1940s, 1950s and ’60s. The Grumman Albatross is a large twin-radial engine amphibious seaplane used by the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy and U.S. Coast Guard primarily for open ocean search and rescue missions. It is very rugged with the ability to take off and land in high seas and has long-distance range.  

Google says 2,850 miles for range. That’s plenty for cross country and cross the ocean. 

With the addition of drop tanks, they could go even longer distances and fly for up to 20 hours without having to refuel. They were the last passenger transport flying boat used by the famed Pan American Airlines and have been used for countless other explorations and research missions. In the 1990s, Billabong outfitted a Grumman Albatross and went on surf missions in secret spots around the world.

Where are these planes now? 

Most of these aircraft were sent to the boneyard, a vast area in Tucson, Arizona, where 4,000-plus aircraft lie in permanent storage, wasting away. The last remaining examples of these fabled machines were brought back to airworthiness after being in all stages of condition by a few mechanics and pilots and are now used for their own unique ambitions and aspirations. These people are featured in my film “Flying Boat.”

Do you own an Albatross? You could do well giving rides off the Malibu Pier, up and down the 21 Miles of Scenic Beauty and out to Catalina. That would be swell!

I am involved with a company called Amphibian Aerospace Industries that is remanufacturing this aircraft, now with a modern cockpit and turboprop engines. It can be outfitted for utilitarian purposes or for those interested in the most adventurous experience possible: a custom luxuriously-appointed interior which can include a galley and beds and custom surf and scuba racks. 

I ask this question of all pilots: If you could fly any five aircraft — Past, present or future — what aircraft would they be? Mine are: 1. The P51 Mustang. 2. The A10 Warthog. 3. F22 Raptor. 4. P38 Lightning. 5. A jet pack untethered from the ISIS.

Nice choices. Mine would be:

Amphibian Aerospace Industries Albatross 2.0

Lockheed Super Constellation

Sikorsky S-38

Morane-Saulnier MS.760 Paris jet

Korabl Maket (Caspian Sea Monster)

Tell us about the DIRK BRAUN gallery: When did you open? How has the reception been? 

We opened in August 2022 and are looking forward to hosting more events and exhibitions.

I specialize in limited edition, large-scale framed photographs. Some of my pieces are as large as 100 inches framed and compliment the walls of large contemporary homes.  

At Zinque this morning, you spoke about displaying a piano that survived a mudslide in Beverly Glen during the Atmospheric River. 

The piano is an 1875 Blüthner that once belonged to Academy Award-nominated opera singer Miliza Korjus. She was well known for her first role in the 1938 film, “The Great Waltz.” After record-breaking rainfall a few weeks ago during a winter storm that slammed Southern California, this piano was ejected from a vacant home in Beverly Glen that was dislodged from its foundation and washed down the street during a mudslide.  

Yikes. The atmospheric river claims another. Los Angeles just goes to shinola when it rains.

The neighbors discovered the piano upside down, in the street, covered in mud and wanted to save it from being thrown away. The Kasimoffs saw the piano on the front page of The LA Times and could instantly recognize that it was a Blüthner. They connected the neighbors with movers and the piano was hoisted onto a truck and brought to the store where it is now on display in the front window. The Kasimoffs have named the piano “The Storm Blüthner.” Kyrill Kasimoff and his 92-year old mother Helga have been running the store since 1963.

And now it is here, safe and sound, high and dry in Malibu.

From March 6 and ongoing after the Academy Awards this “Storm Blüthner” piano will be on display at the gallery. There will be a cocktail party on March 7 from 4 to 7 p.m. with a live piano performance.

Is it playable? I know a jazz pianist in Malibu who might want to have a go.

It isn’t playable but it’s remarkable that after being thrashed and bashed, not one string on it was broken! It’s a unique, irreplaceable art piece and will be on display at the gallery starting on Wednesday, March 6. We’ll also have another piano there for the live performance on Thursday, March 7.  

To RSVP please email gilles@dirkbraungallery.com

Women’s History Month: Malibu Style

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May Rindge visits the Adamson House, 1930s. The house was built in 1929 for her daughter, Rhoda Rindge Adamson and her husband. It’s been called the “Taj Mahal of Tile,” due to its extensive use of ceramic tiles created by Rufus Keeler of Malibu Potteries. It was designated a California Historical Landmark and is still standing today. Photo courtesy of Adamson House Archives.

A few of Malibu’s visionaries, trailblazers, environmentalists, proud civic leaders, and trendsetters 

By Barbara Burke 

Special to The Malibu Times

For several years now, March has been Women’s History Month. Malibu’s women’s history is replete with visionaries, trailblazers, environmentalists, proud civic leaders, and trendsetters.  

We should begin such a discussion by noting that Chumash history instructs that in Malibu, where part of the Coastal Band of the Chumash nation resided — as with all branches of the seven Chumash nations — women were integral to the indigenous culture, served as chiefs and priests, and were involved tribal members practicing responsible stewardship of their ancestral lands.

Next, there is the doggedly determined, indefatigable, but ultimately unsuccessful, Rhoda “May” Knight Rindge, whom historians have dubbed “The Queen of Malibu,” and “the Founding Mother of Malibu,”  as well as L.A.’s first high-profile female environmentalist, according to a 1998 article in the Los Angeles Times entitled, “Defenders of Malibu’s Beauty.”  Rindge and her husband, Frederick, purchased the Malibu Rancho as the final Spanish land grant owner of the property and established a cattle ranch.

After Frederick passed away in 1905, May Rindge founded Marblehead Land Company in 1921 and Malibu’s first business, Malibu Potteries, in 1926. May founded the Malibu Movie Colony, ultimately selling cottages to movie stars such as Mary Pickford and Bing Crosby.  She fought to preserve her family’s rancho — the Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit — which extended from Los Flores Canyon to Ventura County.

She constructed some amazing structures, to wit, the Franciscan Order’s Serra Retreat (now known as The Adamson House), Rindge Dam, and the Malibu Pier. She won some of her battles. When the Southern Pacific Railroad wanted to connect its Santa Barbara terminus with Santa Monica, Rindge started her own railroad, taking advantage of a law that stated that if one railway ran through a property, no other railway could do so. She also drilled for oil on Pt. Dume, but found none.

Rindge was determined to preserve the beauty and topography of the Pacific Coast. However, she lost a 16-year Herculean battle, first to keep out county roads that homesteaders wanted for access to the coast and then to preclude a federal highway from being built. She lost both cases. As for the highway, she lost before the United States Supreme Court. Ultimately, the Roosevelt Highway, now the Pacific Coast Highway, was constructed, creating a highway from the Mexican border all the way to the Canadian border, and changing Malibu forever.

Rindge died in 1941 and some of her descendants still live in Malibu and nearby.

Mildred Mae Meek Lewis Mandeville Decker, affectionately known as Millie Decker, was the daughter of one of the Santa Monica Mountains’ original homesteaders in the 1860s. Decker died peacefully in her sleep on Christmas Eve 2018, just weeks after surviving the Woolsey Fire. She was 98 years old. 

Those celebrating Decker’s life lovingly posted on social media with Sam Haskell saying, “5 feet tall, horse lover, bull rider, dynamite detonator! Long before Malibu became known for surf and celebs, Millie was mixing it up in the hills high above the Pacific Ocean. She had the energy of a teenager, truly one of a kind — What a wonderful life!”

“We just lost a giant. Sara Wan, fierce environmentalist and coastal defender, dies at 83,” Steve Lopez of the Los Angeles Times announced on Sept. 7, 2022, quoting Jack Ainsworth, then executive director of the Coastal Commission.  The obituary noted that Wan served longer on the Coastal Commission than anyone and was an environmental crusader for four decades. 

“When I needed to know the history of an ongoing coastal dustup over the years, Wan was able to break it down with historical perspective and encyclopedic precision,” the obituary quoted Susan Jordan of the California Coastal Protection Network as saying. Wan’s effort to preserve one of the last undeveloped canyons in Malibu resulted in the space being named the Corral Canyon Park Sara Wan Trailhead.

“The homeless come in every description: addicts, young, old, families, single women, men, people down on their luck, etc. The stigma is the hardest thing for them to bear. Perhaps we can restore some dignity and receive a little suffering.” That was part of a note that Malibu’s Carol Moss wrote when asked to convey her message about the homeless, according to her obituary written in The Malibu Times on April 28, 2021.  Moss died at the age of 91.

Moss, a resident of Malibu Colony since 1964, was, the obituary aptly said, “a force to be reckoned with throughout the 55 years she lived here.” The piece noted  that her activism was ceaseless, well into her 80s. In 2015, Moss co-founded CART (Community Assistance Resource Team), a local grassroots organization to help the homeless.  

Since Moss’s passing, Kay Gabbard, Terry Davis, and others continue to honor her legacy by leading efforts to help the homeless. 

Lucile Keller, wife of the late Walt Keller, Malibu’s first mayor, needs no introduction to long-time Malibuites.  The City of Malibu is in the process of naming Charmlee Nature Center in favor of Lucile and Walt. Dedicated environmentalists, the couple were involved in all things Malibu for decades.

“Lucile is a community treasure,” states the Malibu Township Council webpage, adding. “She was a driving force in founding the City of Malibu and has been stalwart in her continued support, and defense and promotion of Malibu’s Vision and Mission Statements. Lucile is one of Malibu’s matriarchs who has steadfastly served as a custodian of the area’s unaltered natural resources for present and future generations.” 

Although not a civic leader, philanthropist, or environmentalist, one lady also changed Malibu forever

If one visits Duke’s Malibu for lunch on a Friday or for Sunday brunch, they might just see a petite, smiling lady with a tropical flower in her hair, usually surrounded by curious children as she explains how surfing culture became so famous in Malibu and burgeoned worldwide. 

Kathy Kohner, aka Gidget, was a woman leader of a different sort in Malibu. The name Gidget is a portmanteau of “girl” and “midget,” and the 1957 book, “Gidget, the Little Girl with Big Ideas,” written by Kathy’s father, Frederick Kohner, recounts the surfing adventures of his daughter and her surfing friends on what is now first point on Surfrider Beach in Malibu.

Simply stated, everything changed in Malibu due to that book and the Gidget character appearing in several films, television shows, and a stage play.  

Although Kohner was not a civic leader, not an environmentalist, and never held public office in Malibu, her life was instrumental in charting Malibu’s course as the epicenter of surfing.

As we celebrate Women’s History month, we honor the fact that Malibu is replete with ladies who make history every day, and in doing so, make Malibu a better place to live and enjoy.

Community Shoutout: Sgt. James Arens celebrates 15 years of dedicated service

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Deputy James Arens was presented his 15 year pin by his brother Sgt. Arens. Congratulations and thank you for 15 years of dedicated service to the residents of Los Angeles County. #oneyearclosertoretirement Photo courtesy Lost Hills Sherrifs Station Facebook.

Letter to the Editor: Support Malibu Marlins

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Dear Editor,

A few decades ago, I joined the Malibu Masters swimming program at the pool. My husband started coming with me, and we’ve been doing it together for many years — we love it.

After our house burned down in the Woolsey Fire, we had to drop out of Masters for awhile. We were living in a trailer on our property while we rebuilt our house. We would come to the pool for lap swim whenever we could. We often came when the swim workouts were going on for the swim team. We started noticing the coach and the way he ran the program and dealt with the kids. I’m a retired teacher. I taught elementary school for over 20 years, mostly in Malibu. Our four children participated in the Junior Lifeguard Program for many summers and they all played soccer at the highest level. Needless to say, we’ve observed the best and the worst in coaches and teachers and everything in between.

It’s important to know the subject or skill you are teaching; it’s important to have personal experience in what you are teaching; its important to be able to work with kids; but it’s most important to have good character, because we teach who we are. And, of course, we all want the best people teaching and coaching our children. It’s very rare to find someone with all of these qualities and when we do, we try with all our might to hang on to them.

After our house was finished, our good friend, Kevin Webb encouraged us to rejoin Malibu Masters. We’ve been swimming with Erik Ran for over a year now and it’s great to be back.

I’m sending this letter for two reasons. One, because, selfishly I love having Erik as a Masters coach.
Second, and most important, I want to support the kids and families. I don’t have any of my own kids in this program right now, but after teaching hundreds of kids in Malibu, I feel like our community’s kids are my kids too. And, as we get older, I’m sure you’d agree with me that our greatest legacy, the only legacy that really matters, is our children.

In fifth grade I was in a terrible car accident. I recovered, and in sixth grade, I learned how to swim. I will always be grateful for my first coach. A good teacher or coach can make a huge difference in a child’s life. When I learned how to swim, my life changed.

I want the children in our community to have the same gift I got as a child. Let’s do this for them. It’s not hard. We already have a coach that checks all the boxes and is supported by the majority of this swim community and now we have an organization that will function the way that majority wants it to. What are we waiting for? What more does the city need? Right now, the kids who want to swim with their coach, Erik, are being forced to swim at 6:30 in the morning before school. Many who want to can’t swim at that time. These children and families are being held hostage by a stubborn bureaucratic system that is hiding behind rules and regulations. Too much precious time has already passed. Can we please get these kids some lanes at a decent time to swim with their coach? Go Marlins!

Patti Mehring, Malibu

Malibu High School community comes together for topping-out ceremony

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On Thursday, March 21, Malibu High School staff, students and members of the Malibu community attended the last steel topping-out ceremony for the new Malibu High School. Photos by Samantha Bravo/TMT

The highest beam on the new facility is put in place before an appreciative crowd 

A significant milestone was celebrated at the construction site of the new Malibu High School. A topping-out ceremony was held as part of a construction tradition that dates back to ancient Scandinavian times. The topping-out ceremony celebrates the uppermost steel beam being placed at its highest point in a structure. 

Just five months after initial groundbreaking the topping-out ceremony was held last Thursday before the Malibu High School community and supporters who signed the steel beam before it was hoisted by crane to its loftiest spot at the new Malibu High School.

As is tradition, an evergreen tree, once used to appease spirits and to signal to builders when the wood frame was dried and cured, as well as an American flag, were attached to the beam on its ascent.

Students, teachers, parents, Malibu officials, and school district representatives came to the ceremony to witness the progress at the building site of the new campus. It will include 70,000 square feet of general, art, and special education classrooms; science, technology, engineering, and math classrooms; campus food services, including the kitchen and high school eating area; and a library and space for high school administrators. The campus plan envisions a student eating area that will take advantage of Pacific Ocean views under double-height commons and a flexible and inclusive space that flows to the outside.

Malibu Middle School will be a completely separate campus next door upon completion which officials hope will be for the 2025-26 school year if all goes smoothly.

Carey Upton, Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District’s Chief Operations Officer oversees buildings.

“This is such a great milestone. We’ve been waiting so long for this building and what we can do with the Malibu campus,” Upton said. “Building a new space that’s uniquely for this population of students will provide them with a great, comprehensive high school. 

“Many may remember originally the campus was a middle school and we added the high school students. They used to go to Santa Monica High. This is the first building being built specifically to teach high school. This is a state-of-the-art building for educational purposes. Not only in its structure and in its look, but in the educational program it delivers. We wanted to make sure it fits in its environment.”  

Upton touted the building’s use of solar panels and a special water system. 

“It’s a really special day to get the beam on and have the community together again,” SMMUSD School Board member Stacy Rouse commented. “We haven’t been together like this since the dedication a few months ago.”

One special attendee was Dr. Mike Matthews, MHS’s first and longest-tenured principal, who served from 1993 to 2004. 

“We built a lot of new buildings when I was here, the pool and the gym, but we always knew newer facilities were needed,” he said. “To watch this new high school building going up is a fantastic feeling.” Matthews described his time leading MHS as “magical.” 

Matthews is now retired after serving as superintendent of schools in Manhattan Beach and then in Orange County, but called MHS “my home forever. I love this place.”

Malibu parent and former school board member Craig Foster said, “It’s amazing to see all this hard work and so many people coming together. I can’t wait to see the kids in the actual space. That’s really going to be wonderful.”

SMMUSD Superintendent Dr. Antonio Shelton commented, “This is an historic moment for the Malibu community because we are doing probably what should have been done a long time ago, prioritizing our community here in Malibu. I think the voters said what they wanted and we are producing that, a high school that’s state-of-the-art that will allow our students and teachers to have the instructional space that’s necessary for them to be productive. The building just facilitates that.” 

Seventeen-year-old MHS senior and ASB President Felix de Raspide Ross was enthusiastic about the new campus even though he said, “I won’t be able to enjoy it, but it’s worth celebrating. A building is just a building. More concrete, more classrooms will not bring to that building more value. It may bring more monetary value, but it will not bring it more value because a place is only a place until people step foot on it. It’s the people, the culture, the energy, the laughter, that will bring this building value. It’s by loving our school today that students will love it tomorrow.”

Malibu Chamber of Commerce hosts Women’s Leadership Awards Ceremony Luncheon

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(From left): Heidi Bernard, Deborah Crown, Alice Meyering, Ingrid Steinberg, Ani Dermenjian, Bridget Thomas, Diane Kale, Barbara Bruderlin, and Erica Segel pose for a photo at the Women's Leadership Awards Ceremony Luncheon, hosted by the Malibu Chamber of Commerce. Photo by Samantha Bravo/TMT.

A panel discussion, moderated by Malibu Times publisher Hayley Mattson, was held the following day

By Barbara Burke

Special to The Malibu Times

“My favorite role has always been that of a cheerleader — empowering and encouraging other women to reach their highest potential, because I believe that we are so much stronger together,” Ani Dermenjian said as she accepted the Lifetime Legacy Award at the Malibu Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce’s 4th annual Women’s Leadership Awards on March 21. 

The well-attended event, held at Duke’s Restaurant, celebrated local women who have distinguished themselves in their careers in the public and private sectors and in philanthropy.  

Keynote speaker Dr. Deborah Crown, dean of the Pepperdine Graziadio Business School, brilliantly set the tone for the event as she focused on leading with kindness. 

“Female leadership is essential and when women are respected and empowered to lead, everyone benefits.” Crown said. “A dimension of leadership is kindness — often in the business world, kindness is viewed as a weakness and a luxury we cannot afford. However, studies concerning transformational leadership theory have established that effective leadership involves inspiring and empowering others to reach the pinnacle of their careers. Consider the leadership styles of leaders such as Angela Merkel, Mother Theresa, Oprah Winfrey and Condoleeza Rice — those distinguished women demonstrated leadership with unwavering kindness and empathy — kindness is not tantamount to indecisiveness, rather it is a leadership strength.” 

Presenting sponsor Aaron T. Jones of International Protective Services summed up his reaction when asked to support the annual gathering. 

“As the proud dad of three daughters, when the Chamber approached me to support this event, I was all in!” he said. “I’m honored to celebrate women and their accomplishments.” 

The ceremony recognized five local women at various stages in their successful careers in various economic sectors.  

Accepting the Women in Philanthropy award was Ingrid Steinberg, co-founder and board president of Resilient Palisades, a climate-focused, neighbor-led nonprofit organization dedicated to responding to climate crises and protecting the environment. Steinberg embodies the power of women leading in the philanthropic sector, stated Pepperdine’s Heidi Bernard, who introduced her.  

Steinberg explained that the organization utilizes volunteer teams to address solar power, concerns relating to waste and composting, and taking a water census. 

“We hope to form a microgrid and we encourage gardeners using electric leaf blowers and to facilitate segueing away from toxic gas blowers,” she said. “We don’t shout at our neighbors — that never works. Rather, we are here to help and we firmly believe that when people in neighborhoods take action, we can do great things.”

The extremely honored Bridget Thomas, a Pepperdine student, received the Emerging Leader Award in recognition of her tireless advocacy for improving Pacific Coast Highway safety after the unfathomably tragic loss of her four friends who lost their lives on the highway last October. Thomas addressed her parents modeling leadership skills.

“My mom has taught me to be a strong leader with resilience and strength,” Thomas said. “My Dad taught me to always lead from the heart.”

Chamber member Cinda Roffman, a trained hypnotherapist and counselor, who specializes in helping others realize their full potential, warmly complemented the next awardee — Diane Kale, a certified health coach who was honored with the Women’s Leadership Committee Member of the Year Award.

“Diane brings people together with positivity,” Roffman said. “She is a ray of light.”

Accepting the award, Kale discussed the importance of belonging to the Chamber and how members of the organization show up for one another, which is pivotal to supporting one another’s successes and career growth.

“My husband Paul once told me long ago that, ‘Half of life is showing up and the other half is what you do when you get there!’” Kale said and, in so doing, she encapsulated what the Chamber of Commerce is all about — showing up and supporting others in their business and philanthropic pursuits.

The Woman of the Year Award was bestowed on Alice Meyering, associate dean of Santa Monica College’s Malibu Campus, who has been a driving force in bringing the campus to scale.

Expressing how honored she is to be recognized by the Chamber, Meyering noted that the support of Barbara Bruderlin, CEO of the Chamber, and Erica Segal, chair of the Chamber’s Women’s Leadership Committee, was instrumental in strengthening the ties between Malibu and SMC.

Women leaders reflect on how they succeeded and how they mentor others

On March 22, the honorees and guests attended a panel discussion hosted by the Chamber, featuring five local leaders and moderated by Malibu Times publisher Hayley Mattson.

Assemblywoman Jacqui Irwin; Los Angeles County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath, the youngest elected woman to serve on that currently all-female board; Karen  Jackson, executive director of recruitment at Pepperdine’s Graziadio Business School; and Malibu City Councilperson Marianne Riggins, the only woman serving on the council, gathered to discuss how they became leaders and how they support and mentor younger women.

The non-political discussion focused on lessons learned by the leaders and their experiences. When asked, “What does leadership mean to you?” two of the panelists, Riggins and Horvath, concurred that a good leader is a good listener who shows up. When asked how they honed their leadership skills, the panelists shared various stories, with Irwin noting that if there were no opportunities, she had to press for them to be created, including insisting on having a women’s swim team in high school even after Title IX was enacted.

“If you don’t keep pressing forward,” Irwin said, sometimes, “they’ll try to push you back.”

Jackson shared that for her, leadership was exemplified by her mother and father, whom she characterized as leaders in their respective businesses, in their community and in their home. 

“I started to work when I was 7 years old,” Jackson said. “I would roll pennies for my Dad and I observed that he led by example — if there was no one else available to do whatever needed to be done to run the business, he’d do it himself.” 

Addressing how she mentors, Horvath noted how important it is to let younger women know they’re not alone as they learn how to balance work and life and business and social activities.

“When I was first appointed to City Council, I was only 26 years old,” Horvath said. “Then, I was the youngest mayor in Los Angeles County, and recently, I was the youngest to be elected to the Board of Supervisors. Now, I’m the youngest in that body to serve as chair — it was pivotal that as I ascended to various positions, I remained mindful of bringing in young women and giving them an opportunity to replace me.”

Nodding her head in agreement, Irwin phrased that strategy as “having a bench of young women set up to take over,” as she moved on in her career.

Celebrating women and their accomplishments, their mentoring of younger women, and their realizing both their potential and the potential they have to serve and change communities — that’s why the Chamber sponsored both the Women’s Leadership Awards and the panel discussion.  Summing up the success of the two gatherings, Pepperdine’s Heidi Bernard, who has served both the university and the Chamber for decades, correctly captured the sentiments of the attendees, “We are all energized when we spend time together celebrating women leaders.”