County Seeks First Youth Poet Laureate

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Sonoma County students between ages 13 and 19 who have a passion for writing poetry are encouraged to apply to be recognized as the inaugural Sonoma County Youth Poet Laureate.

Following in the footsteps of national youth poet laureate programs, California Poets in the Schools is on the hunt for a Sonoma County student who has shown a commitment to the arts through writing and engagement in clubs or afterschool activities.

Interested students can apply online by March 13, and the youth poet laureate will win $500 and have a chapbook of their poetry published as well as participate in several public functions.

With the application, three of the student’s poems must be submitted, totaling no more than 10 pages. A committee of respected local poets will review applications and choose finalists, who will need an adult sponsor and who will be asked to attend a judging session.

The winner will be announced in late April, and the inauguration will take place on May 2, at the Santa Rosa Central Library, in conjunction with a countywide youth poetry reading event.

State Delivers Trailers to Shelter Homeless

On Thursday, Feb. 27, CalTrans towed 10 FEMA-owned travel trailers from Chico to Sonoma County’s administrative campus in Santa Rosa to help temporarily house some of the thousands of people estimated to lack access to formal housing in the county.

As of press time, details about how many people the trailers will shelter—and for how long —remained unclear.

According to the Press Democrat, Sonoma County Board of Supervisors Chair Susan Gorin significantly reduced her estimate for how many people the trailers could each hold after seeing them in person. All told, they will shelter between 20 and 30 people, Gorin told a reporter.

The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors is expected to discuss possible locations and uses for the trailers at their Tuesday, March 10 meeting.

Sheriff’s Deputy Blount Retires

A Sonoma County Sheriff’s Deputy involved in the incident leading to the death of a Petaluma man last November, retired from the department last week.

David Ward died shortly after an interaction with officers from the Sheriff’s Office and Sebastopol Police Department.

The Marin Coroner’s Office has not yet released a cause of death, but a video of the interaction shows that Charles Blount, a longtime Sonoma County Sheriff’s Deputy, attempted a controversial neck hold through Ward’s car window and slammed Ward’s head against the car door during the interaction.

In a statement released in December, Sheriff Mark Essick called Blount’s conduct captured in the video “extremely troubling.” Essick announced in the same statement that he had begun the process of firing Blount.

Blount initially hired a lawyer and appealed the termination proceeding. However, on Feb. 7, he retired.

The Santa Rosa Police Department’s criminal investigation and the Sheriff’s Office’s administrative investigations into Ward’s death will continue.

Reading Room

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Nestled among majestic redwoods and within walking distance of Sonoma State University, the Sitting Room, a community library focused on books by and about women, is a welcome place of respite for study, focus and quietude.

“Its focus is on women, but it is open to all, free and always growing,” says Karen Petersen, cofounder of the Sitting Room and Librarian at the Herold Mahoney Library on Santa Rosa Junior College’s Petaluma campus.

Peterson and J.J. Wilson, Professor Emerita, Sonoma State University cofounded the Sitting Room in 1983, along with an enthusiastic group of book lovers who “donated books, held salons and celebrated the cultural contributions of women artists and writers,” says Petersen. “People just brought books, it was very touching. It started out very small and then it grew.”

Inspired by the Morrison Reading Room at the UC Berkeley University Library where Petersen and Wilson were students, they conceived the Sitting Room as a retreat and quiet space for anyone to come read and study.

Today the unique, nonprofit community organization houses over 7,000 books, including a small lending library and exceptional literary collections devoted to Virginia Woolf, poetry, art and fiction. It is also a place for writers to work, learn and share.

While visiting and browsing the library is a special experience, its titles are fully searchable at the Sappho archive online (librarycat.org/lib/Sitting_Room).

“From its beginnings in a Cotati storefront, the Sitting Room has always made a special place for local writers and of course students,” says Petersen. “Our workshops, book groups and programs featuring regional poets and novelists shine an important and valued light on the rich literary culture of our region.”

Petersen remembers the recently deceased local writer Susan Swartz.

“The late Susan Swartz was a beloved member of the Sitting Room family and we were looking forward to hearing her read from her new novel, Laughing in the Dark, on March 15,” Petersen says. “We will still host a reading on that date with local author Barbara Baer and a chance to remember Susan and her inspiring, funny, tragic writing.”

The Sitting Room’s Writer in Residence program introduces the public to various featured writers, workshops, readings and performances. Current writers include Patti Trimble, a spoken-word artist performing her work Penelope at the Sitting Room on June 6, and Sonoma County Poet Laureate Maya Khosla and her fire-inspired Local Legacy Project.

“Cofounder J.J. Wilson has begun a special series devoted to rediscovering lesser-known women writers such as Dorothy Bryant, Rumer Godden and currently Rebecca West,” Peterson says.

Indeed, a shelf of West’s work is visible as you enter the Sitting Room.

This treasured community library has inspired and supported, many local writers in their work for nearly 40 years, by literally providing them the simplest of things—a room of their own.

Close-up on Israel

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Back for its fifth year, the annual Sonoma County Israeli Film Festival runs March 3–31 at the Rialto Cinemas in Sebastopol. Featuring four films, this year’s fest focuses on a bevy of themes including gender identity, love and aging as well as the ongoing Israeli–Palestinian conflict.

Iréne (pronounced eh-REN)

Hodes is director of the Israeli Film Festival, which is an offshoot of the Jewish Film Festival of Sonoma County (for which she also programs films), now in its 25th year. Hodes explains the Israeli Film Festival came to be because the Jewish Film Festival received submissions from Israel’s vibrant film scene that weren’t necessarily steeped in Judaism but needed a place to be shown.

“We have a very robust film program at the Jewish Community Center of Sonoma County, but we found that there were so many submissions of Israeli films over the years, we wanted to give them a chance to shine and have their own festival,” Hodes says. “So now we have the Jewish Film Festival in October and the Israeli Film Festival each spring.”

Hodes goes on to explain that many people, particularly in this area, don’t really grasp the depth of the Israeli film industry as a whole.

“People may have preconceived notions of say, Israel as a country but aside from that, there’s a high-quality film industry in general with hundreds of films every year, wonderful film schools, a lot of student films,” she says. “And just like any country with so many films, a lot of these won’t be screened internationally.”

Still in its formative years, the Israeli Film Festival features four films spread out over the month of March showing twice daily on Tuesdays. It kicked off last Tuesday, March 3, with the Bay Area premiere of Flawless, written and directed by Tal Granit and Sharon Maymon. The film won four Ophir Awards (the equivalent of the Israeli Oscars).

Hodes passionately speaks to the smaller, more independently made Israeli films.

“The Jewish Community Center wants to give those films a place to be shown,” she says. “The curatorial work that I do is to try and create a balanced selection. So, they are not all political, they are not all religious or documentary, they’re not all, say, Holocaust specific or Palestinian/Israeli crisis specific. I try to create a very balanced selection in terms of comedy, drama, documentaries and try to show a balanced view of what’s happening in that country.”

Sameh Zoabi’s romantic-comedy Tel Aviv on Fire screens twice on Tuesday, March 17, with a 1pm matinee and a 7pm showing. The film had a very successful film-festival run and won numerous awards including an Ophir Award for Best Screenplay and the Best Picture Interfilm Award, both at the 2018 Venice Film Festival. Lead actor Kais Nashif also won the Venice Horizon’s Award for Best Actor.

The film is a satire of the Israel/Palestine conflict wherein a young Palestinian man is given the opportunity to serve as an assistant on a popular soap opera, yet this work requires him to travel between the Israeli and Palestinian border. Sure enough, on his way to work an Israeli border patrol stops him, and confusion and hilarity ensue before the two find common ground.

When discussing the program at large, Hodes seems most excited about Tel Aviv on Fire as she describes the way it takes on a serious topic yet is still very much a comedy. Hodes says the film “really hits so many key topics and does it skillfully in a way we can laugh at at the same time.”

Hodes goes on to note the film is a bit tricky on a few levels, language-wise (“pay attention to which character speaks which language” she states more than once) and she will be on hand to provide an intro to the film. To clarify a bit more without providing spoilers, Hodes concedes Tel Aviv on Fire is “all in a foreign language but it’s 70 percent in Arabic and only 30 percent in Hebrew so, this is very much a Palestinian-based film.”

Hodes also points out that Tel Aviv on Fire shows deep, honest perspectives from people trying to travel between borders. She says viewers will “see the border wall, they will see the travel between Jerusalem and Ramallah, back and forth and back and forth and what that really means in terms of the reality of what crossing the border wall is like.”

The following week, Tuesday, March 24, also with 1pm and 7pm showings, is The Other Story. This film is directed by Avi Nesher, who also shares co-writing credits with Noam Shpancer. Nesher has made films in Israel since the early ’80s and is widely credited as playing a major role in Israel’s prominent rise in International Cinema over the past decade.

Hodes says Nesher is “sort of the Steven Spielberg of Israel” which, seeing as he’s relatively unknown stateside, speaks clearly to Hodes’ aforementioned goal of bringing excellent yet perhaps not well-known Israeli cinema to Sonoma County.

Based on true events, The Other Story deals with secular Israelis, orthodox Jews and progressive pagans—all wrapped up in a coming-of-age story. The film centers on a rebellious young woman who escapes the chaos of her secular upbringing, hoping to find comfort in the more disciplined Hassidic life. Themes of female empowerment are found throughout the film, and Los Angeles Times critic Kenneth Turan says the film is “filled to the brim with intense emotions and proud of it” before going on to echo Hodes’ sentiment about the struggle for smaller foreign films to be seen on American screens. To this point, Turan says the film’s ability to cross borders and sell tickets in America makes The Other Story an “outlier among foreign-language films.”

Rounding out the Israeli Film Festival is rom-com Love in Suspenders, directed by Yohanan Weller and written by Elisa Dor. The film, which plays at 1pm and 7pm on Tuesday, March 31, is a play on the classic “opposites attract” paradigm, yet this film focuses on two senior citizens who are both grieving the recent loss of their significant other while navigating new relationships.

Hodes calls Love in Suspenders “an incredibly lovely comedy” that she is “happy to end [the festival with] on such a light note.” Hodes says that the festival has a sizable older audience and thinks the film will resonate because it “focuses on age and the right to be loved no matter how old you are and what that means in terms of getting older and having a quality of life that you deserve.”

In terms of the films lined up for this year’s Israeli Film Festival, which is also Hodes’ maiden voyage as programmer, she says it’s “very much along the lines of what we’ve done but focuses on more modern themes. We have transgender issues, LGBTQ, we have the Israeli-Palestinian conflict issue. Last year, they did sort of the Israeli experience of international culture.”

Asked what makes this year unique, Hodes says, “In my heart of hearts, I would like to see the Israeli film-festival audience-base expand to outside of the Jewish community which, I think it already has in that we have a lot more interest every time we have a festival.”

When the Party’s Over

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By Cliff Zyskowski

When the party’s over

black water oozes forth from tepid taps

in lesser towns across the land

as I pair my pinot with cherry-glazed roast pork

on a cedar plank.

When the party’s over

kids separated from their parents at the border

are left alone to defend their right to survival

as my son mulls over college apps and we hover over

the arrival of the latest 9er’s gear from amazon prime.

Drug-ridden rat-infested horrified homeless

light fires to their waste

in protest of 60-day tiny home referrals

with a lease option to enter rehab, therapy or worse:

To be blinded by the light searing the deep end

of rising tidal waters,

our planet a supernova filled with debris and malice

two degrees away from the King Midas touch of self-destruction.

My party still hangs on

as I adjust the hot tub’s jets

to chill the anger boiling over

a thousand creature comforts caressing my cloistered quietude.

My party still hangs on

as broken chips await the last of the guacamole,

401K up 7% since the last election,

cupboards stocked and belly full.

Yeah, I have solar panels,

I mentor a youth,

I docent at the garden.

It’s no longer enough

This land was made for you and me.

Look around, there’s room at the top for us all.

This land of the free, this home of the brave,

this time to rise up and take a stand for what’s right.

Will we march together, demanding

quality of life, liberty for all, flags waving high?

…the party carries on

Cliff Zyskowski is a Sonoma resident and retired psychiatric technician. We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write [email protected].

Compost It

Compost It

A long and painstaking process by the City of Santa Rosa, involving extensive public input, determined that the most appropriate location for a much-needed local composting facility is the Laguna Wastewater Treatment Plant on Llano Road. That determination is now being challenged by local residents. A public hearing is scheduled for Thursday, March 5, at 1:30pm at the Santa Rosa City Council Chamber.

Since Renewable Sonoma’s composting operation was shut down at Mecham Road in 2015, our county has been exporting green waste and importing compost to and from Vacaville and Ukiah at a terrific carbon footprint and financial expense. This is one of those cases in which the benefit of carbon sequestration and carbon footprint reduction should prevail over personal interests.

Sebastopol

More Compost

I am writing in support of the reopening of our composting facility in Sonoma County. It is the right environmental move for our county, in taking action, to stop the out-hauling of our food scraps and valuable green material and provide local, high-quality compost here again.

It does not make sense to be sending our high-quality soil amendments outside of our county, creating increased carbon footprint and reducing the amount of high-quality soil amendments here, in our own county. Not to mention the price of out-hauling then shipping an inferior product back for resale.

Sonoma Compost, key partner in Renewable Sonoma, has a track record of producing high-quality composts and mulch that totally enhances plant growth, improves our soil health, saves water and sequesters carbon that is crucial to our county.

I have a dynamic garden at my home called “Miss Daisy’s Magical Wonderland” here in Sebastopol. For me to offer the most delightful experience, I depend on this soil enhancement.

As we are awakening and aware how important it is to be in action of climate change improvements, I am in support of going forward with plans to open Renewable Sonoma and bring Sonoma Compost back to Sonoma County where it belongs, please.

Sebastopol

Bad Taste

This is an excellent production and since the reviewer gave it a 4 out of 5, it seems like he actually enjoyed the play (“Talk of the Town,” Feb. 19). But the first and last paragraphs put such a “bad taste” in one’s mouth about it and hardly feel like an invite to go and enjoy the show (Urinetown at Spreckels).

I am disappointed that Harry felt he had to begin and end the review this way and that the rest of the review seemed lukewarm. This cast is excellent, the story prescient and relevant to today, and the review did not do justice to this show.

Via bohemian.com

Looks like Harry had fun writing this review!

Via bohemian.com

Write to us at [email protected].

Reading Room: The Sitting Room Community Library

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Nestled among majestic redwoods and within walking distance of Sonoma State University, the Sitting Room, a community library focused on books by and about women, is a welcome place of respite for study, focus and quietude.

“Its focus is on women, but it is open to all, free and always growing,” says Karen Petersen, cofounder of the Sitting Room and Librarian at the Herold Mahoney Library on Santa Rosa Junior College’s Petaluma campus.

Peterson and J.J. Wilson, Professor Emerita, Sonoma State University cofounded the Sitting Room in 1983, along with an enthusiastic group of book lovers who “donated books, held salons and celebrated the cultural contributions of women artists and writers,” says Petersen. “People just brought books, it was very touching. It started out very small and then it grew.”

Inspired by the Morrison Reading Room at the UC Berkeley University Library where Petersen and Wilson were students, they conceived the Sitting Room as a retreat and quiet space for anyone to come read and study.

Today the unique, nonprofit community organization houses over 7,000 books, including a small lending library and exceptional literary collections devoted to Virginia Woolf, poetry, art and fiction. It is also a place for writers to work, learn and share.

While visiting and browsing the library is a special experience, its titles are fully searchable at the Sappho archive online (librarycat.org/lib/Sitting_Room).

“From its beginnings in a Cotati storefront, the Sitting Room has always made a special place for local writers and of course students,” says Petersen. “Our workshops, book groups and programs featuring regional poets and novelists shine an important and valued light on the rich literary culture of our region.”

Petersen remembers the recently deceased local writer Susan Swartz.

“The late Susan Swartz was a beloved member of the Sitting Room family and we were looking forward to hearing her read from her new novel, Laughing in the Dark, on March 15,” Petersen says. “We will still host a reading on that date with local author Barbara Baer and a chance to remember Susan and her inspiring, funny, tragic writing.”

The Sitting Room’s Writer in Residence program introduces the public to various featured writers, workshops, readings and performances. Current writers include Patti Trimble, a spoken-word artist performing her work Penelope at the Sitting Room on June 6, and Sonoma County Poet Laureate Maya Khosla and her fire-inspired Local Legacy Project.

“Cofounder J.J. Wilson has begun a special series devoted to rediscovering lesser-known women writers such as Dorothy Bryant, Rumer Godden and currently Rebecca West,” Peterson says.

Indeed, a shelf of West’s work is visible as you enter the Sitting Room.

This treasured community library has inspired and supported, many local writers in their work for nearly 40 years, by literally providing them the simplest of things—a room of their own.

The Sitting Room: A Community Library is open Mondays—Saturdays, 9am to 5pm and by appointment, at 2025 Curtis Drive, Penngrove. All special events are free and open to everyone in the community (no memberships needed or gender excluded). 707.795.9028. Sittingroom.org

“Calistogans” Photo Exhibit Opens at Sofie Contemporary Arts

Since moving to Calistoga in 2015, editorial photographer Clark James Mishler has taken hundreds of photo portraits as part of an ongoing “portrait a day” project that appears in the Calistoga Tribune. Now, Mishler collects many of those shots in the new exhibit, “Calistogans,” that captures locals in all facets of their everyday life. Some of the photos are funny, some are poignant, and all are uniquely Calistogan. The exhibit opens with a reception on Sunday, March 8, at Sofie Contemporary Arts, 1407 Lincoln Ave., Calistoga. 3pm. Free. 707.942.4231.

Sonoma County Seeks First Youth Poet Laureate

Sonoma County students between ages 13 and 19 who have a passion for writing poetry are encouraged to apply to be recognized as the inaugural Sonoma County Youth Poet Laureate.

Following in the footsteps of national youth poet laureate programs, California Poets in the Schools is on the hunt for a Sonoma County student who has shown commitment to the arts through writing and engagement in clubs or afterschool activities.

Interested students can apply online by March 13, and the youth poet laureate will win $500 and have a chapbook of their poetry published as well as participate in several public functions.

With the application, three of the student’s poems must be submitted, totaling no more than ten pages. A committee of respected local poets will review applications and choose finalists, who will need an adult sponsor and who will be asked to attend a judging session.

The winner will be announced in late April, and the inauguration will take place on May 2,  at the Santa Rosa Central Library, in conjunction with a countywide youth poetry reading event. 

Vital Vinyl

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It’s early afternoon on a Tuesday and Kirk Heydt, proprietor of 2-year-old, Petaluma-based Spin Records (1020 Petaluma Blvd. N.), is gently placing a record needle to vinyl while he explains to a customer that, “in the beginning of this ballad by the Ohio Players, the drummer just breaks into a drum solo. In a ballad! You never hear that and it actually got airplay!”

It’s the kind of infectious, in-person enthusiasm that all but disappeared with the advent of illegal music downloading, which rebranded to corporate “streaming services” which, for the most part, killed record (and video) stores while also managing to devalue the very thing corporations were trying to exploit for money: music.

Yet record stores aren’t down for the count quite yet.

“I make enough to stay here and where I am; there’s no foot traffic, so it’s a destination,” Heydt says. “I have really loyal customers who are into all the way-obscure stuff—some very ‘not cheap’ records—and they really keep me going. It seems like a lot of people are getting more into records, too, which is cool.”

Spin Records, which formerly shared space with a scooter-repair shop that since moved next door, feels a bit like a stall one might find at a flea market, combined with a record store. Vintage posters and records grace the walls, and one could easily get lost in the rows of records Heydt curates from his own collection as well as from hitting up garage sales and thrift stores. He also does trade-ins, which typically garner a customer a better rate than a straight sale. His clientele varies.

“I get older people; teens come in with their moms,” he says. “Collectors come down from all over.”

Collectors obviously know all the local hot-spots for vinyl but, if one’s looking to get into vinyl, it can be daunting. Where does one begin in a store with so much vinyl, like Spin? How does one even choose which record store to shop in, given all the North Bay options?

We asked Jason “Scone Bone” Scogna, who loves vinyl so much, he’s added a monthly addition to his “Scone Bone” radio show Monday nights from 7–9pm on Petaluma’s KPCA (103.3 FM and KPCA.fm online) in which fellow vinyl lovers play staples from their own collections on the air. Scogna says that, like many people, he began collecting vinyl with hand-me-downs from his parents.

“I got things from them—Beatles, the Doors,” he says. “Then I actively started collecting in 2006.”

Scogna explains that even though he was living in San Francisco at the time, he frequently made the trip to the Last Record Store in Santa Rosa (1899 Mendocino Ave.).

“I’d say half of my collection is from there,” he says over coffee in downtown Petaluma. When asked why he didn’t shop exclusively in San Francisco, he says, “There’s a lot of record collectors in the city and they’re very active, so when you get to the new-arrival bins, nothing’s left that you want.”

Doug Jayne owns the Last Record Store, undoubtedly the premiere record store in Sonoma County. Hoyt Wilhelm, his trusty, bearded sidekick, frequently runs the register. The store features an excellent selection and knowledgeable, friendly service.

When asked if the name of the store was some kind of prophecy, Jayne laughs. “No, not at all,” he says. “We named it after a Little Feet album titled The Last Record Album.”

Still, Jayne says that when he had to move the store from its downtown Santa Rosa location in 2003, they weren’t sure it would survive. It was “Record Store Day” in 2008 that really brought attention back to vinyl. Each April the annual event features special vinyl releases from a wide variety of artists, all to encourage music lovers to shop at locally-owned record stores.

“Now once a year, we’re like Russian River Brewing Company when they release Pliny the Younger; we have a line around the block,” Jayne says.

Scogna also recommends Watts Music (1211 Grant Ave.) in Novato because, “to them, it’s not about making a sale, it’s about creating a customer.” Which is something he not only respects, but sees as a smart move—because everyone in the record-collecting community talks and shares stories, good and bad.

“You know, take an album like Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers’ live, last show at Max’s in Kansas City,” Scogna says, by way of example. “Maybe a $10 record; Watts had it for $7. So, totally worth it.”

Indeed, a stop at Watt’s immediately reveals the long-forgotten smell of the record store. Used and new vinyl is neatly organized among that truly dead form of physical media: the CD. The gentleman working the counter is friendly and doesn’t bombard customers with his musical taste or the dreaded question, “Is there something specific you’re looking for?”

Friendly service matters because, honestly, shopping for vinyl can be intimidating. No one wants to come off like a newbie, and many record-store owners are clichés of John Cusack’s High Fidelity Rob Gordon character, with his menagerie of know-it-all pseudo-employees who’d prefer you shop elsewhere even though they’re ostensibly trying to make a living through record sales.

Scogna admits that sometimes record-store owners can be “aloof”, and a simple Yelp search of Red Devil Records (894 4th St. in San Rafael) shows this can be the case. A kinder review states the store “reeks of baby boomer record snobbery.”

Yet Yelp shouldn’t be completely trusted. On a short visit to the quaint downtown shop one Saturday afternoon, the mood was light and owner Barry Lazarus was chill as jazz saxophone crooned out from the store hi-fi. Red Devil has a terrific selection, particularly of jazz which, much like country music, just sounds better on vinyl. And hey, why not go for the full record-store experience if you’re just starting out?

Many North Bay shops and stores, such as Sonoma’s Jack’s Filling Station (899 Broadway), also feature vinyl in addition to other fare. Inside Jack’s, worlds collide, with masses of old-school toys and knick-knacks sitting side-by-side with a great beer-and-wine selection. There’s also a nice record rack in the old car-repair garage area.

Petaluma’s retro video-game store, Nostalgia Alley (36 Petaluma Blvd. N.), has about 100 vinyl records in stock, and those interested in starting up the vinyl habit should also consider looking in thrift stores and used bookstores, or simply asking around.

“I think the thing about being into records and going to record shops is that tactile feel,” Scognia says. “Older records have a smell, too, and the pop and hiss when they play. There’s the cover art, which is a large piece, and then on the back or inside, there’s liner notes about the band. It’s like a Wikipedia right there, and you’re reading it as the record plays.”

Governor Sets Aside Properties For Homeless

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Following his State of the State speech last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s staff released a list of 286 state properties that he will allow local government agencies to use for free to shelter the growing number of people struggling to find housing in the state.

Newsom selected the properties, many of which belong to CalTrans, the state agency in charge of constructing and maintaining much of the state’s transportation infrastructure, last month when he signed Executive Order N-23-20.

Also included are the Sonoma Developmental Center, a former state mental hospital surrounded by 1,670 acres of land. The Napa State Hospital, another state-run facility with a 138-acre campus, is also listed as a possibility.

In his address, Newsom reportedly said it is “a disgrace, that the richest state in the richest nation … is falling so far behind to properly house, heal and humanely treat so many of its own people.”

Black Success Panel and Event at SRJC

The Santa Rosa Junior College Black Student Union presents “Perception vs. Reality: Black Success Panel” from 6–9pm, Thursday, Feb. 27, at the Student Activity Center on the Santa Rosa Junior College campus, 1501 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa.

Among the participants and panelists are Emmy Award–winning musician Tony Saunders, actor Willie Hen (The Last Black Man of San Francisco), Faith Ross, cofounder of Petaluma Blacks for Community Development, Ted Keys of 100 Black Men of Sonoma County and D’Mitra Smith, vice-chair on the Sonoma County Commission for Human Rights. Ben Edwards, Evette Minor and Dianna Grayer are also participating, as are the North Bay Black Chamber of Commerce and the Sonoma County Black Forum.

“We want our community and students to walk out knowing that it doesn’t matter what perception is placed on them,” says organizer Delashay Benson. “The reality is that you can become anything that your heart desires.”

ICE Arrests
Spark Outrage

News that agents from a federal immigration agency showed up at the Sonoma County Superior Courthouse on Tuesday, Feb. 18, despite a lack of cooperation from local officials, sparked outrage among Sonoma County officials and immigration activists last week.

Agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) reportedly arrested at least two people at the courthouse in Santa Rosa.

In a joint statement released on the day of the arrests, Sonoma County District Attorney Jill Ravitch, Public Defender Kathleen Pozzi and County Counsel Bruce Goldstein all condemned the federal agency’s operation. In the same statement, Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick said that his agency had not coordinated with ICE officials.

In response, local activists organized a protest of the federal agency at the courthouse on the morning of Tuesday, Feb. 25.

“Our community will not tolerate these ICE raids, which terrorize and separate our families, especially when they happen at public service buildings like schools and court houses,” an unnamed immigrant’s rights leader said, according to a Graton Day Labor Center press release announcing the protest.

County Seeks First Youth Poet Laureate

Sonoma County students between ages 13 and 19 who have a passion for writing poetry are encouraged to apply to be recognized as the inaugural Sonoma County Youth Poet Laureate. Following in the footsteps of national youth poet laureate programs, California Poets in the Schools is on the hunt for a Sonoma County student who has shown a commitment to...

Reading Room

Nestled among majestic redwoods and within walking distance of Sonoma State University, the Sitting Room, a community library focused on books by and about women, is a welcome place of respite for study, focus and quietude. "Its focus is on women, but it is open to all, free and always growing," says Karen Petersen, cofounder of the Sitting Room and...

Close-up on Israel

Back for its fifth year, the annual Sonoma County Israeli Film Festival runs March 3–31 at the Rialto Cinemas in Sebastopol. Featuring four films, this year's fest focuses on a bevy of themes including gender identity, love and aging as well as the ongoing Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Iréne (pronounced eh-REN) Hodes is director of the Israeli Film Festival, which is an offshoot...

When the Party’s Over

By Cliff Zyskowski When the party's over black water oozes forth from tepid taps in lesser towns across the land as I pair my pinot with cherry-glazed roast pork on a cedar plank. When the party's over kids separated from their parents at the border are left alone to defend their right to survival as my son mulls over college apps and we hover over the arrival of the...

Compost It

Compost It A long and painstaking process by the City of Santa Rosa, involving extensive public input, determined that the most appropriate location for a much-needed local composting facility is the Laguna Wastewater Treatment Plant on Llano Road. That determination is now being challenged by local residents. A public hearing is scheduled for Thursday, March 5, at 1:30pm at the...

Reading Room: The Sitting Room Community Library

Nestled among majestic redwoods and within walking distance of Sonoma State University, the Sitting Room, a community library focused on books by and about women, is a welcome place of respite for study, focus and quietude. “Its focus is on women, but it is open to all, free and always growing,” says Karen Petersen, cofounder of the Sitting Room...

“Calistogans” Photo Exhibit Opens at Sofie Contemporary Arts

Photographer Clark James Mishler is on hand for the March 8 reception.

Sonoma County Seeks First Youth Poet Laureate

Online applications are open until March 13

Vital Vinyl

It's early afternoon on a Tuesday and Kirk Heydt, proprietor of 2-year-old, Petaluma-based Spin Records (1020 Petaluma Blvd. N.), is gently placing a record needle to vinyl while he explains to a customer that, "in the beginning of this ballad by the Ohio Players, the drummer just breaks into a drum solo. In a ballad! You never hear that...

Governor Sets Aside Properties For Homeless

Following his State of the State speech last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom's staff released a list of 286 state properties that he will allow local government agencies to use for free to shelter the growing number of people struggling to find housing in the state. Newsom selected the properties, many of which belong to CalTrans, the state agency in charge...
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