Pismo Beach Sand Dunes, Central California Coast, 2022
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Benefits of Workers Compensation Insurance for Employers and Employees in Nipomo and Pismo Beach California
Workers' compensation insurance is necessary for organizations operating in Nipomo and Pismo Beach, California. This insurance safeguards employers and employees by providing coverage for annual medical wage replacement in case a worker gets hurt. California adopts this program - making it mandatory in a working environment - and ensures employees stay satisfied without facing legal problems.
Protection and Compliance
Every business in California has to have workers' compensation insurance to protect its employees and operations, irrespective of the business scale. There's no exception when it comes to Nipomo and Pismo, CA. If such does not occur, there are likely to be consequences in the form of penalties and fines, and it is not rare to see lawsuits being filed. Consequently, workers' compensation insurance in Nipomo and Pismo, California, reduces these legal risks. It also protects business forms from expensive damages from employee claims because employees lose their right to claim negligence against employers as long as they have workers' compensation insurance.
Medical Coverage of Workplace Injuries
One of the prominent advantages that workers' compensation insurance provides in Nipomo and Pismo Beach, CA, is medical expense coverage. When an employee sustains an injury while performing work-related duties, this insurance provides for medical treatment that includes doctors, hospitals, surgery, and rehabilitation services. Students can avail of the services without needing to pay for them; this makes it possible for them to heal faster and return to work.
Replacement of Lost Wages for Injured Employed
However, workers' compensation insurance replaces the lost income whenever an employee gets hurt working and cannot return to work to do their duties. This component of the policy helps employees remain stable while in recovery. Generally, workers are earning a certain percentage of their average wages that they lost, mainly due to an injury or illness. It would also be more favorable to companies in Nipomo and Pismo Beach, CA, as it provides assurance that their employees would be cared for, which helps to ensure a faithful and effective workforce.
Permanent Disability Benefits
Where an employee is disabled entirely due to a work-related injury, tasks such as injury management programs help ease the strain of returning or working. These programs allow those people who, because of their disability, cannot continue working in the same position before an injury was sustained. No matter whether the index is total or partial, workers' compensation Nipomo and Pismo Beach, California, is here to assist people in need and make sure that people are taken care of for the rest of their lives.
Protection from Employee Lawsuits
Many businesses do not operate without workers' compensation coverage to avoid risks of lawsuits raging from employees who may have suffered from injuries while in the course of duty; otherwise, employment may be terminated. Conversely, when there is a lack of appropriate insurance, employees come up with various claims, such as suing the employer. Such a response is also a threat to business activities in Nipomo and Pismo Beach, CA, because it limits the focus of the business to operation rather than the means of getting sued for ugly clerk time and money.
Improving Employee Health and Retention
When employers provide workers' compensation insurance, it also boosts employee morale. Employees in Nipomo and Pismo Beach, CA, take comfort in the knowledge that their medical bills and even lost incomes are catered for in case of an injury while at work. This feeling of security helps build career satisfaction, commitment, and even retention levels, benefiting the company's operations in the long run.
Integrating Other Insurance Policies with Workers Compensation Insurance
Knowing that workers' compensation insurance covers injuries sustained within the line of duty, Nipomo and Pismo Beach, CA employees may reconsider this policy by incorporating other policies, such as home insurance in Atascadero and Santa Maria, California. This bundling ensures that risks associated with work and those occurring at home are adequately handled, fostering a safer environment.
Many businesses and employees stand to benefit from this workers' compensation insurance in Nipomo and Pismo Beach, California. It assures that plenty of medical services will be paid, earned incomes will be substituted, disability payments will be made, and legal action risks will be mitigated. California law requires that companies offer this type of coverage, and such practices encourage safer content and employee retention, which protects businesses from liability and other financial risks.
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765 Price Canyon Rd, Pismo Beach, CA 93449
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I can't believe that this 1966 property didn't sell. It's in Pismo Beach, CA and listed for $2.995M. It's a vacation spot w/RV hookups, but it doesn't have to be, it can be a residence a compound, whatever.
It has some erratic sales history. It was bought in 2003 for $995K; sold in 2005, at a loss, for $500K; in 2022, listed for a jump of a whopping $3.8M; removed from market in 2023; returned to market in 2023 reduced to $3.4; still for sale in 2024, but reduced to $2.995M.
So, the owner bought this property for $500K, and the previous owner took a loss of $495K. The current owners, after 17yrs., want to make a profit of $3.3M and is now down to $2.495M. Wow. But, it doesn't look like he's going to get it.
Anyway, this is the "tree" house, b/c it was built around a huge tree that goes right thru it, so it's actually on the ground. Here we are in the kitchen and you can already see the tree.
The kitchen is cute and has a walk-out to a deck.
You can see how large the tree is. They built a table and stairs around it.
Here, it's going thru a wall.
I don't know why they built that platform in the floor.
Here, the tree branches go up to the 2nd level and one branch exits the house thru outer walls.
The 2nd floor is cozier. It has a door to a covered terrace and it looks like they put a bench seat on one of the branches.
The terrace is lovely, isn't it?
There's a small 3pc bath up here.
Now, we go to this building, called "Good Old Days."
There's kitchen and a dining area.
Nice living room area.
The bedroom has a nice big vintage bath.
Long covered patio in the back of the house.
Next come the larger homes on the property.
It doesn't look like it's being used as a vacation short term rental. Looks like people live here, doesn't it?
Another house. Looks like everything is built around trees and rocks and stuff.
This one's nice. Beautiful stone fireplace.
These are definitely long term rentals.
There are 2 more large homes and this little guest cabin. No kitchen, that must be a pull-out couch, and there's a bathroom.
And, lastly, there's also a Flintstone's cave residence.
The drone couldn't even photograph all of the buildings, but this shot gets most of them on the 6.69 acre property. The listing says it's "Turn Key," but there are long term tenants here.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/765-Price-Canyon-Rd-Pismo-Beach-CA-93449/15391520_zpid/
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Shannen's Native American Descent
We all know Shannen Doherty was of Irish descent through the paternal side of her family.
The Doherty / O’Doherty family is an Irish clan based in County Donegal. The O’Dohertys are named after Dochartach (c. 10th century), a member of the Cenél Conaill dynasty which in medieval Irish genealogy traced itself to Niall of the Nine Hostages. The O’Doherty clan and family name is one of the most ancient in Europe. The clan traces its pedigree through history, pre-history, and mythology to 2BC. (Source)
Shannen and her dad, John Thomas Doherty, in Ireland ca. 1996/97.
Shannen was also from English and Scottish descent through her mother Rosa Elizabeth née Wright. The red-haired Southern belle also has Native American ancestry, most concretley the Chumash people (Source), and thus has Shannen (Source).
Shannen and her mum spending time in nature, ca.2024.
Shannen explained that she wasn't able to be with her dad when he passed away on the 4th of November of 2010. Her best friend Chris Cortazzo told her to spend some quality time with her mother and him at his ranch in Tennesse, which is surrounded by Native American ground. When she was there suddenly the wind shaked the plants and trees and she felt her father’s arms go around her and say “It’s ok baby, I love you. I’m here" (Source) (Source).
Her mother Rosa said that one of her great-great-grandmothers (she doesn't know the grade) was forced to move in the called "Trail of Tears", the forced displacement of approximately 60,000 people of the "Five Civilized Tribes" [Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee (Creek), and Seminoles] between 1830 and 1850, and the additional thousands of Native Americans within that were ethnically cleansed by the United States government (Wiki). Furthermore, she said her ancestor was from the Chumash people and was forced to move from Mississipi to Oklahoma (Source).
Rosa also said about Shannen's Native American's heritage:
"The whole Indian heritage to Shannen was very, very important ... Shannen swore when she bought this property [a ranch in Malibu to live with her mum, her friends, and to do a shelter for horses]… she says, I just feel it. She says, I know that this is where I'm supposed to be. And she just felt that whole Indian."
Also she was proud of having directed "Charmed"'s episode "The Good, The Bad and The Cursed" that features a storyline involving American's First Nations people's and Native actors Kimberly Guerrero (from Colville and Salish-Kootenai native peoples from Alaska) and Michael Greyeyes (Nêhiyaw (Plains Cree) from Muskeg Lake Cree Nation in Saskatchewan, Canada).
Shannen Doherty (R) with First Nations' actors Kimberley Guerrero and Michael Greyeyes.
The Chumash are a Native American people of the central and southern coastal regions of California (Wiki), in portions of what is now Kern, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Ventura and Los Angeles counties, extending from Morro Bay in the north to Malibu in the south to Mt Pinos in the east. Their territory includes three of the Channel Islands: Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa, and San Miguel; the smaller island of Anacapa was likely inhabited seasonally due to the lack of a consistent water source.
Modern place names with Chumash origins include Malibu, Nipomo, Lompoc, Ojai, Pismo Beach, Point Mugu, Port Hueneme, Piru, Lake Castaic, Saticoy, Simi Valley and Somis. Archaeological research demonstrates that the Chumash people have deep roots in the Santa Barbara Channel area and lived along the southern California coast for millennia.
The Chumash lived in over 150 independent villages, speaking variations of the same language. Much of their culture consisted of basketry, bead manufacturing and trading, cuisine of local abalone and clam, herbalism which consisted of using local herbs to produce teas and medical reliefs, rock art, and the scorpion tree. The scorpion tree was significant to the Chumash as shown in its arborglyph: a carving depicting a six-legged creature with a headdress including a crown and two spheres. The shamans participated in the carving which was used in observations of the stars and in part of the Chumash calendar. The Chumash resided between the Santa Ynez Mountains and the California coasts where a bounty of resources could be found. The tribe lived in an area of three environments: the interior, the coast, and the Northern Channel Islands. Some researchers believe that the Chumash may have been visited by Polynesians between AD 400 and 800, nearly 1,000 years before Christopher Columbus reached the Americas.
Chumash Family by American sculptor George S. Stuart
The maritime explorer Juan Cabrillo was the first European to make contact with the coastal Alta Californian tribes in the year 1542. Spain claimed what is now California from that time forward, but did not return to settle until 1769, when the first Spanish soldiers and missionaries arrived with the double purpose of Christianizing the Native Americans and facilitating Spanish colonization. The Chumash people moved from their villages to the Franciscan missions between 1772 and 1817.
Mexico seized control of the missions in 1834. Tribespeople either fled into the interior, attempted farming for themselves and were driven off the land, or were enslaved by the new administrators. After 1849 most Chumash land was lost due to theft by Americans and a declining population, due to the effects of violence and disease. The remaining Chumash began to lose their cohesive identity. In 1855, a small piece of land (120 acres) was set aside for just over 100 remaining Chumash Indians near Santa Ynez mission. This land ultimately became the only Chumash reservation, although Chumash individuals and families also continued to live throughout their former territory in southern California.
No native Chumash speak their own language since Mary Yee, the last Barbareño speaker, died in 1965. Today, the Chumash are estimated to have a population of 5,000 members.
Map of the Trail of Tears
Chumash worldview is centered on the belief "that considers all things to be, in varying measure, alive, intelligent, dangerous, and sacred." "They assume that the universe with its three, or in some versions five, layers has always been here."
Human beings occupy the Middle Region, which rests upon two giant snakes. Chronological time is unimportant, though the past is divided into two sections: the universal flood that caused the First People to become the natural world and, thereafter the creation of human beings, the arrival of the Europeans, and the devastating consequences that followed."
The middle region (sometimes referred to as 'antap), where humans and spirits of this world live and where shamans could travel in vision quests, is interconnected with the lower world (C'oyinahsup) through the springs and marsh areas and is connected to the upper world through the mountains. In the lower world live snakes, frogs, salamanders. The world trembles or has earthquakes when the snakes which support the world writhe.
Water creatures are also in contact with the powers of the lower world and "were often depicted in rock art perhaps to bring more water to the Chumash or to appease underworld spirits' at times of hunger or disease." Itiashap is the home of the First People. Alapay is the upper world in Chumash cosmology where the "sky people" lived, who play an important role in the health of the people. Principle figures of the sky world include the Sun, the Moon, Lizard, Sky Coyote, and Eagle. The Sun is the source of life and is also "a source of disease and death." The Sky Coyote, also known as the Great Coyote of the Sky or Shnilemun, is considered to be a protector and according to Inseño Chumash lore, “looks out for the welfare of all in the world below him”. During the creation of mankind, the Sky Coyote was present among the other important cosmological figures. The Eagle, also known as Slo’w, is the force that maintains momentum and order among the other stars so that they do not fall down on and destroy earth.
Chumash pictographs.
The Chumash cosmology is also centered around astronomy. Rock art and arborglyphs that have been found within Chumash sites are thought to have depicted Polaris (the North Star) and Ursa Major (the Big Dipper). These two astrological entities were paramount to the Chumash belief system as well as their perception of time. It is believed that the Chumash used these constellations to determine what time of the year it was depending on the position of Ursa Major around Polaris.
***
I love that Shannen showed her respect to her ancestry in some "Charmed" episodes, like in 2x10 "Heartbreak City" (click to see if bigger):
Charmed 3x01 "The Honeymoon is Over" (click to see bigger):
And the already mentioned 3x14 "The Good, The Bad and The Cursed" (click to see bigger). Her love for horses also comes from that connection:
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THE RACE OF GENTLEMEN PISMO BEACH, 2016 | THE PHOTOGRAPHY OF PIERRE ROBICHAUD
Bummed that TSY could not make it to TROG West out at Pismo Beach, CA. Stoked though that our photographer friend Pierre Robichaud shot these amazing images for us to share with y’all. I can’t imagine The Race of Gentlemen without the colorful (in more ways than one…) backdrop of Wildwood, NJ… but damn if Pierre’s photography and words don’t make me even more sorry that we weren’t…
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765 Price Canyon Rd, Pismo Beach, CA 93449
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765 Price Canyon Rd, Pismo Beach, CA 93449
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Sand Dunes at Pismo Beach, CA - [OC] [5472x3078]
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Pismo Beach, CA - July 2023
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Monarch butterflies at Pismo Beach, California
© Mimi Ditchie/Getty Images
Today on Bing- February 5, 2023
Monarch butterflies
What are these colourful insects? | EN-CA, EN-GB
Migration of the monarchs | EN-US
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https://www.arnoldussenins.com/business-insurance/
With a focus on personalized service and expert advice, Arnoldussen & Associates Insurance Services Inc. offers a wide range of insurance products including personal, commercial, and specialty policies. Our experienced team is dedicated to helping you find the right coverage to protect your assets and achieve peace of mind.
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765 Price Canyon Rd, Pismo Beach, CA 93449
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The Cutest Little Lunch Spot by the Beach in Santa Barbara
On our three and a half hour drive from LA to Pismo Beach, we stopped halfway to eat lunch at the cutest little cafe that was RIGHT ON the beach.
The Shoreline Cafe came highly recommended by the Visit California team, and we’re so glad we took their suggestion. The entire place felt like a breath of fresh air, and we couldn’t believe we would be having lunch this close to the ocean. California really is a dreamy place, isn’t it?
The Visit CA team described The Shoreline Cafe as an “Eco-minded eatery serving Mexican & seafood dishes, with beachfront tables right in the sand.”
Nailed it!
Unfortunately, when we got there, the tables by the beach were filled up, so we ate under the tent on the patio, which actually turned out to be just fine. We had a great view of the ocean in the background and were kept warm from the heaters underneath the benches. It was a chilly, windy day!
And the food! I got a burger with the best fries, PJ got fish tacos (SO GOOD), and the kids got burgers and quesadillas and fish and chips (Riah’s favorite right now). Everything tasted fresh and delicious, and we all left feeling full and satisfied.
Directly next to the restaurant is the perfect picture spot. Highly recommend finishing your meal with a snap by the beach!!
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Thanks to Butteryyy who sent this unique 1966 property located in Pismo Beach, California. It looked familiar b/c I'd once posted it when it was an Airbnb, but now it's for sale. There's a total of 9bds, 7.5ba, and they're asking $3.4M.
The property consists of several buildings. The first house is this green 2 story. Take special note of the tree. I would make this my residence, it's too cool to rent out.
Hello! Ain't that some big tree in the living room? Talk about bringing the outdoors in.
Was it necessary to put that raised platform there? (Watch you head coming in the front door.)
May I suggest that if something is boiling over in the kitchen, instead of climbing on that platform and jumping over this trunk, it would be safer and faster to just run out the living room door and come in thru the kitchen.
The kitchen's cute, but needs a dishwasher, and the whole house needs some cool themed decor.
The 2nd level is open, airy, and could probably be broken up into either 2 bds or a bd and a den or something. It also has this wonderful big porch.
Plus, a decent sized bath.
Now, let's look at the bigger house.
I would probably rent this house out.
Wow, there's a lot of income-producing homes on this property.
It would make some cool compound. Bring everyone.
Cute little guest cottage.
This is a yoga platform.
Why didn't they show the interior of the Flintstone house? Maybe it's not livable, there's no glass in the window. Super cool, nevertheless.
There are plenty RV hookups on the property, too.
The whole place is 6.69 acres. .
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