Pass Paid Sick Leave for All

Santa Rosa and the County of Sonoma are now considering mandating 10 working days emergency paid sick leave for any worker, employed at least two hours a week inside city limits or in the unincorporated areas of the county, who is affected by Covid-19.

The purpose of the legislation proposed by labor and community organizations is to close the loophole in the federal “Family First Coronavirus Response Act” that provides 10 days of paid sick leave but exempts firms with more than 500 employees. Employers receive a payroll tax credit to offset the cost of paid sick leave.

Only one in four workers employed by some of the nation’s largest employers such as Holiday Inn, Pizza Hut, Wendy’s, Burger King, Old Navy, Appleby’s and Family Dollar receive paid sick leave, according to a study by the UC Berkeley Shift Project.

Emergency paid sick leave is necessary for the public health strategy to successfully curb the coronavirus. All California workers are entitled to at least three days accrued paid sick leave annually. However, according to the Pew Charitable Trust, 90 percent of the highest-paid private-sector workers (earning above $32 an hour) have access to employer-provided paid sick leave beyond the state minimum, but only 30 percent of the lowest-paid workers (earning less than $12 an hour) receive any paid sick leave at all from their employer.

Most low-wage workers cannot work from home, and most cannot afford to forego a day’s pay by staying home when ill. If an employee of a company providing essential services (such as grocery, pharmacy, food delivery, retail, home care, child care and health care) reports to work while sick, they may infect customers, patients, clients or their fellow workers. A Center for Disease Control and Prevention survey found that 60 percent of restaurant and foodservice workers reported working when sick, and half claimed they did so because they lacked paid sick leave.

The cities of Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose and the County of Los Angeles have all approved 10 days paid emergency sick leave. Santa Rosa and the County should, too.

No worker should have to choose between working when sick or taking unpaid sick days!

Please sign the change.org petition: “Sonoma County 14 days Emergency Paid Sick Leave.”

Martin J. Bennett is Instructor Emeritus of History at Santa Rosa Junior College and a member of North Bay Jobs With Justice.

Candlelight Vigil Opens Second Week of Sonoma County Protests

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Fourteen days ago, Monday, May 25, will go down as one of the major tipping points in American history. That is the day that George Floyd died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes. The event was captured on video and shared around the world, and since then, communities in Minneapolis and across the entire country have come out to denounce police brutality and to call for major reforms.

Santa Rosa, the North Bay’s epicenter of protests, saw an estimated 2,000 participants gather on the lawn at the Santa Rosa Junior College this past Saturday, June 6. Petaluma, Sonoma and Healdsburg have also each seen marches and protest events, each drawing hundreds of people with signs and slogans supporting the national movement.

After more than a week, the protests are still going strong. This second week of demonstrations includes several more peaceful protests scheduled from June 8–13 to honor the lives lost to police violence and to demand police accountability.

Today, June 8, kicks off the week of demonstrations with a youth-led protest in Santa Rosa’s Old Courthouse Square at 4:30pm. The event—to be held in memory of George Floyd and others who’ve lost their lives to the police—will transition into a candlelight vigil at 7:30pm. Visit grassroots group Love & Light 707 on Facebook for more details.

The vigil will include an 8-minute and 46-second moment of silence, the same amount of time that Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin kept his knee on George Floyd’s neck.

Several downtown Santa Rosa shops and businesses remain boarded up after isolated outbursts of vandalism during the first days of protests that led Santa Rosa police to enact a citywide curfew from Monday, June 1, to Thursday, June 4, nightly from 8pm to 5am. During that curfew, more than 100 people were arrested over three nights in protest-related incidents. Since the curfew was lifted, the events have stayed largely peaceful, and tonight’s youth-led protest and candlelight vigil is expected to be the same.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, June 9 and 10, Petaluma’s protests will take place in Walnut Park at Petaluma Blvd. South and D Street. These protests start at noon on both days, and the events will specifically address the Petaluma Police Department’s recent request to purchase more than 50 new semi-automatic rifles, a request that the Petaluma City Council voted 5–2 to approve in early May. Petaluma Police Chief Ken Savano has said the nearly $800,000 purchase of 54 Sig Sauer M400s—which are similar to the AR-15 in style—is needed to replace the department’s current 16 patrol rifles.

On Thursday, June 11, a march is scheduled to take place in Sebastopol at 1pm, beginning at the Town Square at McKinley Street and Petaluma Avenue, and marching through downtown Sebastopol. That same day, a gathering in Healdsburg Plaza at Healdsburg Avenue and Plaza Street starts at 6pm.

On Saturday, June 13, the Rohnert Park Peaceful March for Justice will begin at the Community Center at 5401 Snyder Lane at 10am and proceed through town to the Rohnert Park Police Department at 500 City Center Drive. The family-friendly, peaceful march encourages participants to bring signs or decorate their cars to walk or roll the one-and-a-half-mile route.

Also on Saturday, June 13, a protest once again takes place on the Santa Rosa Junior College’s lawn on Mendocino Avenue at Elliott Avenue. The afternoon event, starting at 1pm and billed as “The Silent March,” will honor the Silent Parade held in 1917, in which 10,000 African Americans silently walked along New York City’s Fifth Avenue to protest racist violence.

Local grassroots group Racial Justice Allies of Sonoma County is also hosting a weeklong phone campaign to “Demand Justice And Accountability Against SRPD” that encourages the public to call the Sonoma County District Attorney and the elected officials of Santa Rosa and demand they address the recent violence done by Santa Rosa police against protesters this last week, including the incident in which an unknown law-enforcement officer shot a plastic grenade at a protester less than 15 feet away, severely injuring the man. People are invited to call these elected officials to demand they speak out against the violence and investigate the incidents.

All these events ask that protesters wear face coverings and practice social distancing due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. Be sure to visit these events’ Facebook pages or websites for updates throughout the week.

Join the Conversation With These Timely Online Discussions

It seems that everywhere one looks in America today, there is unrest.

Police brutality has been on full display for over a week, with videos, photos and reports of peaceful protesters being met with batons and tear gas from police forces across the country. Those reports include Santa Rosa—where an unknown law-enforcement officer reportedly shot a plastic grenade at a protester less than 15 feet away on Sunday, May 31, fracturing the protester’s jaw, splitting his lip and knocking out four teeth—as well as a young man who was shot and killed by Vallejo police early on Tuesday, June 2.

Covid-19 had already created a tense situation before this week’s nationwide protests against police, having kept people isolated since March and causing massive spikes in unemployment as businesses across the Bay Area closed their doors due to the pandemic.

Add all of that to a country that has already endured three years of unprecedented presidential lying and social division from a former reality-TV star, and it’s a no-brainer that Americans’ mental stresses are at never-before-seen levels.

This week, several organizations are taking to the web to help those dealing with mental, social and health problems through online lectures, conversations and discussions that are sure to go a long way in opening up meaningful dialogue and affecting social change that benefits us all.

Today, Friday June 5, the Mental Health Association of San Francisco hosts a virtual event, “Real Talk: A Discussion About Police Brutality and Racism,” at 5pm via Zoom.

MHASF originally planned to facilitate a discussion with mental-health activist and writer Leah Harris on Friday, but due to current circumstances, they are instead facilitating this new discussion with the hosts of its ongoing “People of Color Support Group,” Dewonna Howard and CW Johnson. The support group regularly meets to discuss issues, coping strategies and resources relevant to people of color in the local community.

“This will be a safe space for anyone and everyone—especially our Black community members—to speak up, vent and talk through their feelings, thoughts and emotions surrounding the suffering and destruction taking place in our country,” wrote MHASF in an email sent out June 4.

Also today, June 5, the Bay Area Book Festival is rearranging its schedule of online events to present a timely discussion, “The Beautiful Witness We Bear,” at 7pm as part of the festival’s #UNBOUND virtual program.

The thought-provoking conversation will feature two acclaimed poets, Pulitzer Prize–winner Jericho Brown (The Tradition) and National Book Award–winner Nikky Finney (Love Child’s Hotbed of Occasional Poetry). Twenty years ago, Brown was Finney’s student, and while much has changed since those days, their mutual dedication to bearing witness to hard truths through art remains ever-present.

In this conversation, the poets will share their own responses to the murders of George Floyd and other Black Americans, and they will discuss the protests against police brutality and the power of poetry to capture these human experiences. The conversation will be moderated by Ismail Muhammad, reviews editor for The Believer, board member at the National Book Critics Circle and Program Committee member at the Bay Area Book Festival.

Tomorrow, June 6, Book Passage hosts an enlightening conversation on women and politics with New York Times reporter and author Jennifer Steinhauer and New York Times Pentagon correspondent Helene Cooper, presented online at 4pm.

Steinhauer’s latest work, The Firsts, begins at the November 2018 midterms, in which the greatest number of women in history was elected to Congress. The book then chronicles the first-year experiences of those women, detailing their transitions from running campaigns to their daily work of governance.

Looking ahead, Point Reyes nonprofit group Black Mountain Circle hosts a Zoom Virtual event on mental health and well-being featuring Florence Williams, journalist and the author of The Nature Fix. The event, happening on Thursday, June 11 at noon, will make the connection between spending time in nature and our health, especially in the wake of a two-month stay-at-home order that’s kept many people in isolation. Now that some parks and beaches are reopening, Williams will discuss the role nature plays in making us happier, healthier and more creative.

Anna O’Malley and Donna Faure will join Williams on June 11 for this virtual discussion. O’Malley is executive director of Natura Institute for Ecology and Medicine in West Marin, and Faure is the executive director of Point Reyes National Seashore Association. The event is co-presented by Point Reyes National Seashore Association, Mesa Refuge, Natura Institute for Ecology and Medicine, and Point Reyes Books.

More North Bay Summer Camps Are Going Online

Summer has started for thousands of students in the North Bay, but many families are struggling to figure out how to spend the season, as the usual array of kids’ camps and outings is largely canceled due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.

Last month, several Sonoma County arts and education organizations such as the Alexander Valley Film Society, Luther Burbank Center for the Arts and Transcendence Theatre Company announced their plans for offering virtual summer arts camps in lieu of in-person programs.

Now, many other North Bay groups are jumping in the digital pool to provide their own virtual art experiences for kids in Sonoma, Marin and Napa County.

Healdsburg Center for the Arts is one of many nonprofit arts hubs that are temporarily shut during the stay-at-home orders related to the Covid-19 pandemic. The Center also cancelled many fundraising events in the wake of the pandemic, including the beloved Healdsburg Earth Festival, the Healdsburg Art Festival and a number of popular art classes for adults and children.

“The past ten weeks have given us an opportunity to reflect on the benefits a community art center provides and we’ve had the opportunity to re-think about the future of the organization”, said Diana Jameson, Healdsburg Center for the Arts Board Member, in a statement. “We have discovered there is great interest and enthusiasm in the community for Healdsburg Center for the Arts to continue its creative endeavors, even during this public health crisis.”

To that end, the center is now offering online Bookmaking Summer Camps through a partnership with Book Arts Roadshow, co-founded by award-winning artist and former HCA board member C.K. Itamura. The camps are run over Zoom and offer the opportunity to explore the art and craft of making books while at home. The online sessions run select dates, June 27 to July 26, with sessions for ages 5–7, 8–12, 13–18, and even adults.

Bookmaking materials for the online sessions are provided by a grant from the Bill Graham Foundation. Packages of bookmaking materials will be mailed to registered participants ahead of the workshops.

“An online Bookmaking Summer Camp series for adults is included,” Itamura said in a statement. “Because bookmaking can be stress-free and fun and we’re pretty certain most adults can use a dose of that right about now.”

In addition to the Bookmaking Camp, local artist Jean Warren reformatted her popular Watercolor & Journaling workshop to make use of Zoom. Warren will guide students through watercolor painting lessons via video and email at a to-be-determined date. Register for camps and get more information at Healdsburgcenterforthearts.org.

When most people think “summer camp,” they think of the great outdoors, and usually the North Bay is a haven for kids to backpack, hike and explore in natural sites like the Laguna de Santa Rosa.

This summer, the Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation knows that gathering, even in nature, is problematic in the face of a pandemic, so the group is inviting kids to join the Laguna Explorers @ Home program to explore the wonder of nature in their own backyards.

Aimed at kids ages 6–11, Laguna Explorers @ Home includes at-home activities that engage the senses, ignite curiosity and increase environmental literacy. The activities are designed for children to do on their own without much need for parent’s interference. The program also incorporates online meetings and circle time for discussion, play, and sharing with other children and Laguna camp staff.

Environmental explorations will run July 6–10 and July 13–17. Each Monday, explorers will pick up a pack at the Laguna Environmental Center, the pack comes with the materials needed for the week, including custom field journals, nature craft supplies, activity instructions, naturalist tools, game cards and more.

A Parent Pack will also be provided with instructions, website links and supplementary materials including “rewards” for participation that parents can give their child each day. Get more details and register for Laguna Explorers @ Home at Lagunafoundation.org.

Now in its 15th year of operation, the Napa School of Music has provided thousands of lessons to families in Napa, Solano and Sonoma Counties, with approximately 400 students taking lessons every week from 16 top-notch teachers. In addition to private and group lessons, the school engages budding musicians in Music Camps, which are going virtual this year.

Beginning June 8–12, and running several subsequent weeks through August, the Napa School of Music’s camp schedule is packed with small-group sessions in guitar, ukulele, music recording and other classes that are designed for all ages and all skill levels, with instrument rentals available.

Beginner guitar, bass guitar and ukulele virtual camps will start aspiring musicians on the right foot with instructions in fundamentals and exposure to a repertoire of songs they can play with minimal skill.

Advanced virtual camps, designed for older tweens and teens, take the basic concepts of guitar, bass and ukulele to another level with new strumming concepts, advanced arrangements of popular melodies to learn and more. Other virtual camps include Musical Theater Camp and Songwriting Camp. Get details and sign up at Napaschoolofmusic.com.

In Mill Valley, the Marin Theatre Company is renowned not only for their stage productions, but for their commitment to community engagement. That includes the company’s Drama Conservatory, which provides classes, camps, workshops and performance opportunities for Bay Area children and teens. Approximately 8,5000 students participate in the company’s programs each year, and while the MTC’s doors closed in March due to Covid-19, they continued to engage with young actors and playwrights remotely in online classes through the Spring.

Now, MTC is introducing a new concept, Summer Camp in a Box, which was created as a way to bring summer camp activities directly to younger students so they can participate from the safety of home. The format is literally a box of theatrical supplies that can be picked up or dropped off. Boxes range from $50-$75, and scholarships are available.

Each box is themed and targeted at Kindergarteners-through fifth graders, and each box includes instructions and materials needed to complete drama activities, arts and crafts, games, recipes and more.

Themes range from “Living Literature,” which lets young ones act out classic kids books like The Magic School Bus, The Very Hungry Caterpillar or Dr. Seuss stories, to boxes based on Disney movies like The Secret Life of Pets and Frozen that let kids run wild with their imagination.

In addition to the Summer Camps in a Box for the young ones, theater kids in middle and high school can sign up for summer camps conducted virtually through Zoom, with an emphasis on acting and improvisation. All virtual camps for tween and teens are $100 and, again, scholarships are available. Register for MTC’s summer camps and boxes at Marintheatre.org.

Virtual art show examines appeal of the West Coast

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Four years ago, while vacationing in Europe, a man in a Copenhagen train station asked me where I was traveling from.

“California,” I said.

“California!” exclaimed the man, who then broke out in a chorus of “L.A. Woman” by the Doors.

Such is the appeal of the Golden State, and by extension, the entirety of the West Coast. From the Wild West days to “Portlandia,” the western states have long held a fascination for travelers, free spirits, music lovers and artists from around the world.

Now, Novato’s acclaimed Marin Museum of Contemporary Art invites the public to regionally inspired art in the new virtual exhibit, “Left Coast.”

The exhibit includes paintings by 46 artists from across the country, juried by gallery-owner and curator Ken Harmon Hashimoto. Bay Area art lovers know Hashimoto’s San Francisco gallery space, Hashimoto Contemporary. Recently, he expanded with a second location in New York City’s Lower East Side.  

For this online exhibit, Hashimoto took inspiration from newspaperman Horace Greeley, who is credited with the phrase, “Go West, young man,” in a 19th-century editorial that encouraged American Civil War veterans to take advantage of the Homestead Act and colonize the public lands in the western U.S. territories.

That statement has been used to define the excitement with which American settlers traveled to the region, and during the last 200 years, the West Coast’s allure has morphed and taken on mythological status for a multitude of reasons. Today, people continue to flock to cities from Los Angeles to Seattle to find fortune and fame, whether as Hollywood movie stars or Microsoft tech innovators.

The artistic inspirations for MarinMOCA’s “Left Coast” exhibit are as varied as the art itself. Pieces include paintings, photography and sculpture that reflect the magnetic draw of the region, with palm trees, avocados and In-n-Out Burger signs all featured as subjects. At the same time, many pieces in the online exhibit capture contemporary troubles, with works that directly address topics like the North Bay’s 2017 Tubbs and 2019 Kincade fires as well as homelessness and pollution.

“This exhibition explores the appeal of the West Coast through the optics of contemporary art,” Hashimoto says, in a statement. “From painting to drawing to photography to sculpture, the Left Coast has inspired as many artistic mediums and styles as it has historic movements and migrations. It is my hope that this exhibition will inspire viewers, as much as the Best Coast has inspired the many artists, poets, filmmakers, farmers, miners and workers throughout history.”

While the Marin Museum of Contemporary Art in Novato remains closed to the public due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the “Left Coast” exhibit is available to view online now, and a virtual “walk and talk” video featuring the art in the gallery will be available online in mid-June.

Marinmoca.org.

Star-Crossed

For many months I’ve wondered about the inclusion of astrology in the Pacific Sun. What? You could be having a column on Zoroastrianism, for all the ways there are of coping with life on Earth. Or a humor column. That would be great! We need one now more than ever. Whatever happened to Stan Sinberg? In all the column-inches that you devote to the pseudo-knowledge of astrology, you could be putting out real facts about the real happenings of the day. Oh!? It’s entertainment? Excuuuuse me!

Tenney Ford

San Rafael

Diseased

Friends, let us talk about herd immunity. Covid-19 is ugly. It is a virus. It will make a large number of us sick. It will kill some of us. Those who don’t die will most likely develop some sort of immunity. This disease will steal lives. But here’s what it can’t do; it can’t steal souls. It is another disease altogether that is doing that.

I ask you, what kind of disease makes men chase a young jogger, or go into a person’s house and shoot them then say “Oops, wrong address?” What God-Forsaken disease makes a man so sick that he believes, forgive me for saying this, that he can taunt a man in handcuffs as he kneels on his neck? What kind of disease is this that takes the soul of one man and then the body of another? 

I ask you as Americans, how many have to die before we declare this a state of emergency and quarantine those infected? How long until we have gotten sick enough of racism that we develop a herd immunity?

I fear, my friends, that we are a long way off. And for this more than anything, I am incredibly sorry.

Jolene Cox

San Rafael

‘Them Belly Full’

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“Them belly full, but we hungry / A hungry mob is an angry mob”

Those opening lines are from a 1974 song by reggae musician, Bob Marley, in describing the reaction of people to their plight against hunger brought on by the “system.” Marley, born in “British” Jamaica, knew something about oppression, reflected by his song lyrics.

However, this anthem could easily be sung by people hungry not only for food, but for justice. In American Society, where for centuries, African Americans continue to be treated as second-class citizens—“them belly full,” all right! It’s not that black lives don’t matter, it’s that they don’t matter enough!

I am old enough to remember, 55 years ago, the Watts “riots” while living in Los Angeles. The subsequent summers of the late 1960’s saw many urban ghettos aflame, throughout our country. The lethal combustion of summer heat and years of collective internal frustration and anger in those communities that were denied the equality of opportunity to provide for themselves and their families produced toxic consequences and further despair. All it took was “one incident,” usually involving an infraction of the law—and human rage scorched the landscape—city blocks were reminiscent of war zones. Investigations would be carried out and commissions formed to seek the causes of the “unrest,” with remedies promised but rarely fulfilled.

“To Protect and Serve” is understood to be the underlying coda by which law enforcement operates on the streets. Unfortunately, too often in our still racially segregated communities, the police force is looked upon, as it was many decades ago, as an occupying force.

The latest victims’ names now yelled out and seen written on the placards among the demonstrators may change as the years go on. The issues don’t! It’s not rocket surgery! The answers are within our reach.

The question we must ask ourselves is—are we, as Americans, “Belly full”; and hungry and angry enough to change?

E.G.Singer lives in Santa Rosa.

Santa Rosa Protests Turn to Grief Vigil Tonight

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For the past three nights, Santa Rosa has seen the North Bay’s largest gatherings of protest against police brutality, part of a nationwide movement that began in the wake of George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police on May 25.

These local protests, centered in downtown Santa Rosa’s Old Courthouse Square, have been marked by peaceful, but determined, demonstrators holding signs and chanting slogans like “Black Lives Matter” and “I Can’t Breathe,” Floyd’s last words.

Some isolated outbursts of vandalism led Santa Rosa Police to enact a citywide curfew starting Monday, June 1, and running until Thursday, June 4, from 8pm to 5am each night. Police allowed protesters to continue well past that 8pm time last night as they marched through downtown, though 27 arrests were made and there are reports that police used tear gas and rubber bullets to finally dispel the crowd around 11pm.

Tonight, June 2, will look very different from the last three nights, as a Grief Vigil to End Brutality and Honor Life is planned to take place in Santa Rosa’s Roseland neighborhood, specifically at the Dollar Tree Plaza at 777 Sebastopol Road, beginning at 5pm and running officially until 7pm.

The vigil is in honor of Andy Lopez, who was killed by a Sonoma County Sheriff Deputy in 2013. Today, June 2, would have been Andy’s 20th birthday.

The Police Brutality Coalition of Sonoma County is organizing the grief vigil. The event is also a vigil for George Floyd and other Black Americans who have been killed by police, and the coalition hopes to honor victims of police violence locally and nationally at the event.

Yet, unlike the recent protests, the coalition states that there will be no marching tonight, nor is there a program of featured speakers. Instead, the vigil is being planned as a gathering to grieve and remember. Signs are welcome, face coverings and social distancing is required, and water is recommended. The forecast calls for 90-degree heat at 5pm.

On the Facebook event page, the coalition writes, “There is much to grieve at this time, here in Sonoma County, across this country and around the world. Though the impacts vary considerably from person to person, we are all grieving; many of us for much of our lives. Whatever your grief, come grieve together, if you feel safe enough doing so.”

While Santa Rosa has been the center of the recent protests in the North Bay, there is a planned youth-organized event on Wednesday, June 3, at the Sonoma Plaza in downtown Sonoma. “Sonoma Stadning with Black Lives” will be a peacefull gathering at 1pm on the plaza for a show of solidarity with Black Americans.

On the “Sonoma Standing with Black Lives” Facebook event page, the organizers state, “Because of the current events, Sonoma’s youth has decided to organize a peaceful protest to help amplify the words of our black brothers and sisters, to support them in this fight they are facing. This protest will be peaceful, and we will not be standing in the street or inciting violence with police at the event. We want our voices heard.”

Music Industry Goes Silent for Blackout Tuesday

Tuesday, June 2, is going to be a quiet day meant to send a loud message from those in the music industry. On this day several major record companies and artists join a national media movement, Blackout Tuesday, that intends to shine a light on the “long-standing racism and inequality” in the music business and American society in general.

With participants ranging from producer Quincy Jones to MTV, Blackout Tuesday is a daylong planned media blackout led by The Show Must Be Paused, an initiative created by black music executives Jamila Thomas and Brianna Agyemang in response to the killings of George Floyd and other black Americans at the hands of police.

For the last four days, Black Lives Matter protests have erupted around the country, beginning in Minneapolis where George Floyd, an African American, was killed in police custody on May 25. The day after Floyd’s death, the Minneapolis Police Department fired all four of the officers involved in the incident, and Hennepin County announced murder and manslaughter charges against Derek Chauvin, the officer who was filmed pinning Floyd to the ground by pressing his knee down on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes.

Joining those Black Lives Matter protests, The Show Must Be Paused selected Tuesday, June 2, as Blackout Tuesday specifically to interrupt the work week for a day of reflection and conversation about “what actions we need to collectively take to support the Black community.”

In addition, The Show Must Be Paused notes that the billion-dollar music industry has “profited predominantly from Black art,” and they want to hold the industry accountable for supporting those Black artists whose work has benefited others, writing “To that end, it is the obligation of these entities to protect and empower the Black communities that have made them disproportionately wealthy in ways that are measurable and transparent.”

Thomas and Agyemang note that Blackout Tuesday is not just a 24-hour event, adding that a larger plan of action will soon be announced. “In the meantime,” they write, “to our Black friends and family: please take the time for you and your mental health. To our allies, the time is now to have difficult conversations with family, friends and colleagues.”

Announced this last weekend, Blackout Tuesday has already gained major industry allies. On Instagram, producer Quincy Jones joined the movement, writing “It’s hard to know what to say because I’ve been dealing with racism my entire life. That said, it’s rearing its ugly head right now & by God it’s time to deal with it once & for all. My team & I stand for justice. Conversations will be had & action will be taken.”

Other high-profile musicians and companies participating in the June 2 initiative include Peter Gabriel, Billy Bragg, Mumford & Sons, Def Jam Recordings, Interscope, Sony Music and Columbia Records.

In the North Bay, where Black Lives Matter protests are entering their fourth day in cities including Santa Rosa and Napa, BottleRock Napa Valley announced on Twitter that it was joining Blackout Tuesday “for a day of reflection,” adding that it will not be airing “(re)LIVE BottleRock” online this Friday as scheduled.

Music-industry meetup group Balanced Breakfast, which began in the Bay Area and features Santa Rosa and Napa networking meetings for musicians and promoters, is also joining the blackout, posting on its Facebook page, “Due to recent events, please join us as we take an urgent step of action to provoke accountability and change. As gatekeepers of the culture, it’s our responsibility to not only come together to celebrate the wins, but also hold each other up during a loss.”

The Show Must Be Paused website urges those directly impacted by police violence in recent days to take a break for Blackout Tuesday, writing “there is a lot going on and sometimes we all just need a minute. Take that minute.”

The website also directs visitors to links to help George Floyd’s family and others, and provides information on ways to donate to community bail funds for jailed protesters and additional anti-racism resources.

Redwood Empire Food Bank Offers Free COVID-friendly Kids “Summer Lunch”

From June 1 through August 7, the Redwood Empire Food Bank will offer free and healthy breakfast and lunch to children 18 and under across Sonoma County.

Nearly 1,000 Sonoma County children risk experiencing hunger over the summer months. Without enough food or proper nutrition, children face a variety of setbacks. The Summer Lunch Program sites give children a structured source of food to recharge body and mind during this critical time.

“While schools are closed, The Redwood Empire Food Bank is partnering with school kitchens to provide meals for students at varying sites across the county,” says Itzul Gutierrez, Hunger Relief Worker at the Redwood Empire Food Bank, which is the largest hunger-relief organization serving north coastal California from Sonoma County to the Oregon border.

“Families with children ages 0-18 can pick up meals from any of the schools, even if the child doesn’t attend that school,” says Gutierrez.

With the threat of coronavirus infection, this year’s Summer Lunch Program will have varying operations with some sites offering grab-and-go breakfast, lunch and care packages of groceries for the family that can be taken home to prepare and eat.

To find the nearest location, visit refb.org/summer-lunch-2020, or call 2-1-1. For immediate assistance or more information about the Summer Lunch Program. The Redwood Empire Food Bank can be reached directly at (707) 523-7900.

Pass Paid Sick Leave for All

Santa Rosa and the County of Sonoma are now considering mandating 10 working days emergency paid sick leave for any worker, employed at least two hours a week inside city limits or in the unincorporated areas of the county, who is affected by...

Candlelight Vigil Opens Second Week of Sonoma County Protests

Events scheduled in Sebastopol, Petaluma and Santa Rosa

Join the Conversation With These Timely Online Discussions

Talks on mental health, racial justice and more come to your computer.

More North Bay Summer Camps Are Going Online

Kids can explore nature and art from home with these virtual offerings.

Virtual art show examines appeal of the West Coast

Four years ago, while vacationing in Europe, a man in a Copenhagen train station asked me where I was traveling from. “California,” I said. “California!” exclaimed the man, who then broke out in a chorus of “L.A. Woman” by the Doors. Such is the appeal of the Golden State, and by extension, the entirety of the West Coast. From the Wild West...

Star-Crossed

For many months I’ve wondered about the inclusion of astrology in the Pacific Sun. What? You could be having a column on Zoroastrianism, for all the ways there are of coping with life on Earth. Or a humor column. That would be great! We need one now more than ever. Whatever happened to Stan Sinberg? In all the column-inches...

‘Them Belly Full’

“Them belly full, but we hungry / A hungry mob is an angry mob” Those opening lines are from a 1974 song by reggae musician, Bob Marley, in describing the reaction of people to their plight against hunger brought on by the “system.” Marley, born in “British” Jamaica, knew something about oppression, reflected by his song lyrics. However, this anthem could...

Santa Rosa Protests Turn to Grief Vigil Tonight

For the past three nights, Santa Rosa has seen the North Bay's largest gatherings of protest against police brutality, part of a nationwide movement that began in the wake of George Floyd's death at the hands of Minneapolis police on May 25. These local protests, centered in downtown Santa Rosa's Old Courthouse Square, have been marked by peaceful, but determined,...

Music Industry Goes Silent for Blackout Tuesday

Day of reflection happening in conjunction with Black Lives Matter movement.

Redwood Empire Food Bank Offers Free COVID-friendly Kids “Summer Lunch”

From June 1 through August 7, the Redwood Empire Food Bank will offer free and healthy breakfast and lunch to children 18 and under across Sonoma County. Nearly 1,000 Sonoma County children risk experiencing hunger over the summer months. Without enough food or proper nutrition, children face a variety of setbacks. The Summer Lunch Program sites give children a structured...
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