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Scotts Valley
March 17, 2026

Days of Yore – at Erik’s Deli

Last Friday morning, June 19th the SV chamber and owners ofĀ Erik's DeliCafe, re-created the days of 1973, when Erik opened his first Deli in Scotts Valley! We were able to get some new friends from Aptos to bring their beautiful horse and pony with old school trotting cart and help us re-imagine those days.

4th of July, Pandemic Style

Most of us had hoped that the COVID-19 pandemic would be slightly diminished by now so that we could resume our regularly scheduled summer plans of days at the beach, evenings around the fire pit and weekends with friends and families. We had vacations planned, tires rotated in preparation, and road trips mapped out with a beeline away from the reality of coronavirus.Ā I dare say a lot of us are damned disappointed right now. Coronavirus cases are surging, not plummeting, across the United States, and California is looking the pandemic square in the eye as the numbers of infected continue to rise in the wake of canceled plans and stymied getaways.Ā The 4th of July celebrations in our towns have been scrapped due to the pandemic, and that leaves local leaders looking for innovative ways to celebrate the red, white and blue while remaining socially distant and observing statewide regulations to minimize the spread. Luckily, we’re blessed with some whip-smart community folks who are thinking outside the box and endeavoring to make the best out of a less-than celebratory situation. Here’s what to look for when it comes to marking Independence Day in the valleys.Ā Scotts Valley: Tune in for a virtual 4th of July parade and watch family, friends, sports teams, local businesses and the partially inebriated deck out their rides, horses, wagons and relatives in epic fashion. View the event online at myscottsvalley.com and the city’s social media sites including the following Facebook pages (you can quit FB after the 4th): City of Scotts Valley 4th of July, the Scotts Valley Chamber and the Press Banner. The parade will be archived for on-demand viewing throughout the entire month of July! Be sure to step outside on the 4th to watch the flyoverĀ in town from 2-3pm.Ā Boulder Creek: The Boulder Creek Business Association has wrested the town’s plans to celebrate the 4th from the grips of the virus, and is planning to stream the Virtual 4th of July Parade and Concert on their Facebook page beginning at 10am. Contributors were asked to submit videos that panned from left to right as they will be set to a pre-planned soundtrack of spirit. Entertainment will also include music by Mira Goto, The Four Stringers, Brad Martin, Aki Kumar Band, Wildcat Mountain Ramblers and Chas Crowder. And as for a tradition that dates over 100 years? BCBA President Justin Acton is hoping to create some memories. ā€œOur town has been doing this for so long, and I’m inspired that some important dignitaries have submitted videos, pictures and messages for our residents. We’ll have the Boulder Creek Museum submitting some great historical information, our world-famous Jazzercise dancers have a great routine planned, and the whole event will be hosted by KBCZ’s station manager Tina Davey. ā€œThe 4th of July is always such a huge community event in town—I’m looking forward to seeing how we capture that spirit.ā€Ā Ā Other parades and events such as the World’s Shortest Parade in Aptos, the fireworks over Skypark and the pancake breakfasts hosted by Boulder Creek Fire and Ben Lomond Fire have all been scuttled by the virus. The pancake breakfasts are not only community events, but also fundraisers for the volunteer departments, and these cancellations negatively impact their bottom line.Ā If you’d like to show your support, donations for the Boulder Creek Fire Department can be sent to 13230 Central Avenue, Boulder Creek, 95006. To help fillĀ Ben Lomond’s coffers, donations can be mailed to 9430 Highway 9, Ben Lomond, 95005.Ā Keep your mask on and your sparklers away from the cats, and we will see you online.Ā 

Policing in America

Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā The recent media coverage of racial injustice sparked debate on the effectiveness of policing methods in the United States. Protests both internationally and locally raise awareness about the everyday challenges that people of color face, as well as next steps we can take to make law enforcement increasingly more fair. Several students from Scotts Valley High give their opinions about police reform.

Scotts Valley’s Future on Display

Taking a spin down Scotts Valley Drive, may have noticed new friendly faces in passing.Ā  While the seniors of Scotts Valley High School haven’t gathered altogether in person since March, their yearbook photos are currently chumming it up with fellow passerby thanks to the Scotts Valley High School Parent Club. Two instrumental members of the installation, Jane McElrone, Club President, and Carolyn Auman, member, had much to say and more to thank regarding the congratulatory banners.

Mr. Boynton’s Neighborhood

Ā  It’s the little things that count… For Mr. Rogers it was the little children of all nationalities, tall ones, short ones, children who were born without blemish and those who were born with disabilities of all kinds.Ā  These are the children that were important to Fred Rogers.Ā 

Black Lives Matter Protest Reaches Scotts Valley

A few weeks ago, a small, majority-white city with no tradition of protest may have seemed an unlikely venue for a homegrown Black Lives Matter demonstration. In a pattern that has repeated across the country, young people here chose to organize within their own community, rather than remain silent or commute to a larger city where they might protest anonymously. More than 300 protesters marched down Scotts Valley Drive last Wednesday, in what Police Chief Steve Walpole described as the city's first protest in history.

Sergeant Gutzwiller: A community Mourns Part II

On the morning of June 17th, thousands gathered under the summer sun at Cabrillo College to honor the life and celebrate the stories of Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Sergeant Damon Gutziller. The ceremony, led by Twin Lakes Church pastor RenĆ© Schlaepfer, opened the Lord’s Prayer. ā€œMay his family sense our collective love for Damon, and our support and love for them,ā€ he implored. ā€œWe pray for all uniformed personnel. Let them sense the gratitude of our community today. We pray that our community may be filled with faith, hope and love.ā€

Viral Regulations Affect Local Real Estate and Mortgages

Our country contemplates late Spring with a hundred thousand of us turning to leaves of grass.Ā  In the San Lorenzo and Scotts Valleys, the lady in ACE pleads for patience with COVID waiting lines; Americans tolerate one-way signs in store aisles; Felton rental truck employees refuse good work; and the Boulder Creek hair stylist sues the state to reopen.Ā Ā  Labor Day celebrations and protests in crowds show massive impatience—but haven’t led to mass outbreaks of disease.Ā  High unemployment payments, food stamps, and closed schools discourage the work most want even when workplaces and Chambers can open.Ā  Viral regulations to disperse crowds make business inefficient when operational: distancing and extra cleanup reduce store capacities.Ā  Short unexpected contagion, Americans must return to work before government follows business to bankruptcy.Ā  Republicans play cards for chance while Democrats play for caution; both reward special interests as they gamble elections on life and death.Ā 

Black Lives Matter – Why the Movement is so Important

Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā Ā As protests spread across the world against police brutality, systemic racism, and injustice, this is a great time for our community to reflect on what we can do to empower Black lives and all people of color within our communities and within our world. In order to accomplish this, we must be more than ā€œnot racist;ā€ everyone must fight to be actively anti-racist.

Violence Is Not the Answer

On a fine Saturday, in our valley of less than 20,000 residents, one single man let loose a tirade of hate and violence that none of us will ever forget.June 6, 2020. Coronavirus had ravaged our world for weeks already. George Floyd had been senselessly murdered at the hands (knee) of a wicked cop in Minneapolis. And the country was outraged. Rightly so. A human life had been unjustly taken.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  But the outrage that should’ve been irenic (driven by justice tempered with love and grace) became ironic (driven by the same mindless hate to which it was reacting). And so in protest of an injustice, myriad injustices have been perpetrated.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  One of them here, in the lazy woods of the San Lorenzo Valley. Steven Carillo, imbibing the misguided spirit of this age and driven by untold demons, took all of his angst out on a group which he misperceived to embody the problem. And when he did, Sgt Damon Gutzwiller and his colleague Alex Spencer were caught in the crosshairs.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  Responding to a call-in fulfillment of their oaths to keep the peace, Gutzwiller and Spencer walked into an ambush driven by the anger and hatred of a vocal and violent minority. Spencer would spend a week in the hospital, recovering from wounds inflicted by a man who could not resolve his personal angst in a way that produced peace. Gutzwiller died that day, leaving a young child and a wife expecting their next to forever endure the consequences of a worldview gone horribly wrong.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  Damon Gutzwiller and Alex Spender epitomized the best in us all, as those who are created in the image of God in this sin-cursed world. They sought to protect and to serve, counting the cost to themselves, even when that cost amounted to their lives.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  The SLV residents who put their own lives on the line to apprehend Carillo before he could do more harm to our community also reflected the image of God in whom they are created. Loving. Selfless. Sacrificial.In the calculus of the brief (but devastating) events of our little San Lorenzo Valley on June 6, 2020, I see a microcosm of our society, and a lesson from which we must all learn.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  Carillo was a single, sinful, misguided man in a community of 20,000. His hatred and violence was outnumbered 2-1 by the two deputies who laid everything down to protect us all. 4-1 by the lives of the SLV residents who also counted the cost to apprehend him. 5,000-1 by the LEO community who all manifested the righteousness and justice of God in coming together, without hesitation, to help each other and us all. 20,000-1 by the overall population of the SLV. 100,000-1 by the multitude of supporters who rallied to give thanks to the Law Enforcement community that responded and helped our county in this time of need.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  In the current culture war, please don’t join forces with the minority of hatred and destruction. Recognize that the hatred is not endemic to our Police or society in general. Recognize that we all have gone astray from God and His will, and desperately need His grace. Recognize the superiority of love and grace, and that these are universal truths that God has created for all men to abide in.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  If God does not exist, then there is no basis for the morality and justice which have become such palpable cravings these recent weeks. If truth and justice are binding for us all (as most of us have felt these past weeks), then it is only because we are made in the image of God who defines truth and justice. What our world needs is to be reconciled to Him, and to consistently abide in the life-ethic of His holiness, justice, truth, and love as the universally governing compass of our lives and society.The hate is strong in this world. But it is the voice of the vocal and violent minority. It is no match for the love, grace, and peace of God, which all who are made in His image must sacrificially shine into this world in the darkness of these days.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  Violence and destruction are not the answer. It is the kindness of God in the Gospel which we all need that leads to repentance (Romans 2:4).Now is the time to come to Him, confessing our own failures and sins, and joining together in faith to let His Love overwhelm the hatred of this world.Ā Ā Steve Watkins has served as an Elder at Trinity Bible Church since 2001. Steve graduated with a BS in Biblical Studies from the Master’s College in 1997, and with an MA in Historical Theology from Westminster Seminary in California in 2001. He is a full-time pastor at TBC, focused on preaching, biblical counseling, and discipleship. He and Wendy have been married since 1996, and have 3 boys - Justin, Travis, and Spencer. www.tb-church.org

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