The Farce Awakens

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‘Lend Me a Tenor’ in Sonoma

Ken Ludwig’s Lend Me a Tenor, directed by Larry Williams and now playing at Sonoma Arts Live through June 16, is a classic farce where the comedy relies heavily on people opening, closing and passing through doors with laser-like precision while still portraying bumbling silliness.

This production of Tenor (featuring the revised 2019 script that cuts the problematic references to blackface) has eight actors and six doors. On top of all the literal moving parts, this is a Ken Ludwig play. Like all his work, the dialogue is funny, snappy and ruthless in its need for breakneck pacing. Even the premise is wackily over the top.

Renowned tenor Tito Morelli (Michael Coury Murdock) is making his American debut at the Cleveland Opera. Waiting for him at the hotel is Max (Robert Nelson), the wannabe singer and hapless right-hand-man of opera producer Saunders (John Browning). To complicate matters, Max is in love with his boss’ daughter, Maggie (Katie Kelley), who wants to experience a fling (hopefully with Tito). Unknown to Max and Saunders, Tito brings his wife, Maria (Tika Moon).

Maria is rightfully jealous of Tito’s female admirers and threatens to leave if one more upset occurs. Having her leave would be disastrous for Tito, who cannot live without her singing him to sleep every night. Adding to this already volatile mix is an opera-loving wisecracking bellhop (Kevin Allen), stubborn opera executive Julia (Kim Williams), hyper-sexed star soprano Diana (Tara Roberts), phenobarbital and (fortuitously) two identical Pagliaccio costumes.

If you haven’t guessed where the plot goes from there, I won’t ruin it for you. To be fair, the plot is so convoluted that I couldn’t explain it in this space. Happily, Williams has assembled a seasoned cast of actors who work well as an ensemble and handle the demanding physicality, operatic singing and witty lines with relative ease.

The real stars, however, are the costumes. Allison Sutherland has costumed a diverse cast of body types in period clothing from the 1930s, allowing the actors to perform broad physical comedy while still managing to make everyone look amazing.

While there are some pacing issues, an awkward first couple of scenes and a completely unnecessary panto at the end of the production (which confused an audience that was ready to applaud and head home), overall, this is a solid production that’s well worth the drive to Sonoma.

Sonoma Arts Live presents ‘Lend Me a Tenor’ through June 16 on the Rotary Stage at Andrews Hall in the Sonoma Community Center, 276 E. Napa St., Sonoma. Thurs-Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm. $25 -$42. 707-484-4874. sonomaartslive.org.

Todd Rundgren (Art) Rocks the Uptown

In the annals of popular music, one would be hard-pressed to find an artist as eclectic and prolific as Todd Rundgren. To call him creatively restless is like calling The Beatles a quaint pop band.

As a solo artist, Rundgren has notched 27 releases (with the most recent being 2022’s Space Force). And that doesn’t include projects he’s recorded as a member of The Nazz, Utopia and the New Cars.

If that’s not enough, the Pennsylvania native has an equally impressive résumé as a producer, having worked on albums for a number of seminal artists ranging from Badfinger (Straight Up), the New York Dolls (self-titled, Cause I Sez So) and Meat Loaf (Bat Out of Hell) to Grand Funk Railroad (We’re An American Band, Shinin’ On), XTC (Skylarking) and the Psychedelic Furs (Forever Now).

But for the man who once released an album called The Ever Popular Tortured Artist Effect, performing live does just as much as studio work to satiate his creative urges, with the most recent road jaunt being the Me/We Tour. And while recent live outings have found him going from performing 25 virtual shows from Chicago in the immediate aftermath of the pandemic to opening for fellow Keystone stater Daryl Hall, this current string of dates finds Rundgren wanting to do something specifically for his devotees.

“I figured when it was time for me to get to doing my tour, I want to give the fans something special and figure out some sort of sustainable production that can travel, but it’s still a show that’s worth coming out for,” he said.

“One of the things that I may not have done recently is a real deep dive of a lot of the stuff that rarely gets played or has never been played. A lot of it is fan favorites, but sometimes I can’t figure out how it will fit into what I’m doing. I think it’s going to be a very enjoyable evening for the fans despite the fact that for at least some segment of them, a lot of the material might be unfamiliar,” Rundgren continued.

While a quick peek at his set list from some recent overseas gigs reveals that he’s been trotting out well-known gems like “Hello It’s Me,” “I Saw the Light” and “Can We Still Be Friends,” the former “Hermit of Mink Hollow” promises to dust off a number of more obscure nuggets.

“I had never played the song ‘Afterlife’ before. It’s from the album called Liars, but it didn’t work in the context of the show, so we never performed it during the ‘Liars’ show,” he explained. “I just did a brief [swing through] Australia, and we worked it up for that tour, and it really sounded great. It sounded really good, and the audience liked it. ‘Liars’ was a pretty popular album among my fans. To find a song that hadn’t been played off of that was a little special.”

So where does Rundgren’s insatiable need to embrace the various aspects of the recording studio and any sort of emerging technology as a means of helping realize his artistic visions come from? Part of it starts with a childhood growing up in Upper Darby Township, PA, where early on, the budding creative genius started out being enraptured by his parents’ singles collection.

“The earliest musical memories I have are of a little RCA 45 player that my parents got. I remember it to this day,” he recalled. “It was a brown Bakelite with a little round grill on the front and a spindle with the red top on it. And you would stack singles on the spindle, and they would automatically play one after another.

“My parents had collected a lot of Boston Pops light classical performances like ‘Chicken Reel’ and ‘Skaters Waltz’ and that sort of thing. They were pressed on colored vinyl—red, green, blue and yellow. For me, listening to the music on that little player and staring through the red, blue and green record or putting one on top of the other—it was [my first] multimedia experience,” Rundgren explained.

While the young Rundgren spent time dabbling with various instruments, including flute, clarinet and his grandmother’s stand-up piano (…“it’s where I learned how to pick out melodies, which I actually turned out to be pretty good at…”), it was a specific instrumental that led to his parents purchasing their budding musician son an instrument when he was seven years old.

“Once I heard ‘Walk, Don’t Run’ by The Ventures, it was all about the guitar,” Rundgren remembered. “That was the future, and I knew I had to learn how to play. My parents realized that I wanted to do it badly enough and that I was serious that they bought a guitar, but they had to buy lessons along with it, which I hated.”

Within a year of graduating high school, he went from his first band, Money, to playing with the Paul Butterfield Blues Band-influenced Woody’s Truck Stop and eventually landing with rock band Nazz. Looking to record material more along the lines of The Who and The Beatles, Rundgren and his crew were signed by Atlantic Records subsidiary Screen Gems Columbia (SGC).

Assigned jazz musician Bill Traut as a producer for the 1968 self-titled debut album (“…he [Traut] essentially spent most of his time reading the trades in the [recording] booth”), Rundgren soon took it upon himself to remix the album himself because “…we didn’t get what we wanted out of this guy, even though we paid for him.”

Rundgren’s first turn at a console was the beginning of a storied production career that while he was technically proficient at, wasn’t level with his interactions with some of the artists whose projects he oversaw, most notably XTC.

“I knew how to make records and how to make them sound a certain way, but as time went on, there were a lot of painful moments between me and whoever I was working with because I was either incognizant or didn’t care about the personality part,” he admitted.

With so much life experience under his belt, the 75-year-old Rundgren shows no signs of slowing down. And much of it has to do with his willingness to follow his own muse.

“I think what I’ve learned is, and it seems especially applicable these days, is that you don’t measure your success by others’ estimation, and you have to be patient,” he said. “Sometimes what you do doesn’t fit with the zeitgeist of what’s going on.

“They say art is brief and history is long. The point is that you don’t do your art for this time. Do it in a way that it doesn’t matter when somebody discovers it. That way, maybe you’ll have a longer life as an artist,” Rundgren noted. “A lot of artists feel like if they don’t make it now, they’re never going to make it. It’s still an interesting experience for me. I don’t feel like I would run out of musical ideas. At least not in a reasonable human lifetime.”

Todd Rundgren performs at 8pm, Friday, June 28 at the Uptown Theatre, 1350 3rd St., Napa. For more information and tickets, visit uptowntheatrenapa.com.

The Heat Is On

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State needs climate bond measure on November’s ballot

In a stirring display of unity, a formidable coalition of 170 groups converged on Sacramento last May to urge lawmakers to place a climate bond measure on California’s November ballot.

This bond measure, if approved, would permit the state to borrow $10 billion for initiatives designed to mitigate the impacts of climate change.

Consider this: California has endured 46 extreme weather events since 1980, each causing at least $1 billion in damages. The proposed bond is seen as a vital step toward addressing these increasingly frequent and costly disasters.

Opponents of the measure point to concerns about adding to the state’s debt, particularly during a period marked by budget deficits. However, supporters argue that the bond measure is essential for securing dedicated funding for climate initiatives, especially during lean budget years. They emphasize that without this bond, critical climate projects could be sidelined due to financial constraints.

The state legislature is currently considering two bills that would place the bond measure on the ballot. Should it pass, the bond would represent the largest voter-approved climate investment in U.S. history, with at least 40% of the funds directed toward the most vulnerable communities. This commitment ensures that those who are most affected by climate change receive the support they need to adapt and thrive.

The bond would finance a wide range of projects, including improving access to safe drinking water, promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles, restoring wetlands, aiding farmers in water conservation, enhancing flood protection, boosting wildfire and coastal resilience, and improving air quality.

These initiatives are not just about protecting the environment; they are about safeguarding the health, safety and economic well-being of Californians.

With a deadline of June 27 for the Legislature to pass a bill to qualify the bond measure for the ballot, time is of the essence.

This climate bond represents a critical opportunity for California to take decisive action against climate change, ensuring a safer, more sustainable future for all its residents.

Lawmakers must heed the call of the coalition and the broader public, placing this crucial measure on the ballot and allowing voters to decide the state’s climate future. Give us the choice.

Your Letters, June 12

Trumpian Twist

That so many congressional Republicans showed up at the New York courthouse to show their unified support for the convicted felon and head of their party makes clear that Republicans are still the party of law and order—albeit with a Trumpian twist: Break the law 34 times and sow disorder.

Martin Blinder, MD

San Anselmo

Get Your House in Order

On June 4, the House voted to sanction International Criminal Court officials—House Republicans’ response to the news that the court is seeking an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

HOW is this U.S. business? This is between Israel and the ICC. If the U.S. wants to file an amicus curiae (friendly) brief, go ahead, but stop meddling in business in which the U.S. is NOT a signatory. Congress should tend to its business.

Gary Sciford

Santa Rosa

Power Pig

In response to Gary Sciford’s excellent and informative letter published May 15, 2024:

Piggy (PG&E) rises to the highest form of Orwellian doublespeak: The private utility company that has destroyed town, forests, people and animals in California through neglect, while paying bonuses to their criminal officers,

claims that adding a standard extra fixed charge will reduce our bills!!!

Barry Barnett

Santa Rosa

Keep in touch—email your letters to the editor to le*****@********un.com and le*****@******an.com.

‘Clue’ in the Cue

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Fulton

Taste of Sonoma

The Taste of Sonoma—a day that promises a deep dive into the region’s vinous treasures, hosted at the Kendall-Jackson Wine Estate & Gardens—features over 100 wineries, complimentary food trucks and themed lounges (spanning everything from a Cadillac Luxury Automotive Lounge to GlassTats—temporary tattoos for a wine glass… Gotta love wine country). Among the highlights is the Bohemian’s fave sommelier, Christopher Sawyer, who will lead one of several add-on “Insider Wine Tours,” guiding attendees through a 30-minute tasting journey, “From Wind to Wine in Petaluma Gap.” The Taste of Sonoma, organized by Sonoma County Vintners, provides a comprehensive experience of the county’s diverse wine offerings. With access to over 60 varietals and 19 unique growing areas, the event showcases the craftsmanship of local winemakers. The event commences on Saturday, June 22, at Kendall-Jackson Wine Estate & Gardens, 5007 Fulton Rd., Fulton. For information and tickets, visit tasteofsonoma.com.

Santa Rosa

Music Manse

Santa Rosa-based summer concert series, Fridays in the Hood, continues (you guessed it!) this Friday, June 14, with Onye & The Messengers, a seven-piece Afrobeat and Global Groove dance band led by Nigerian percussionist and songwriter Onye Onyemaechi. Advance tickets are $15, and $20 the day of the show. The following Friday, June 21, the latest (and longest-running) iteration of ’60s rock stalwarts Big Brother & The Holding Company, will break another little bit of your heart, now. Advance tickets fare $20, and $25 the day of the show. Doors for both shows open at 6pm, and the bands play from 7 to 9pm at Hood Mansion, 389 Casa Manana Way, Santa Rosa. Food trucks, beer, wine, sodas and more are available.

For a complete list of performers and tickets, visit fridaysatthehood.com.

Mill Valley

Get a ‘Clue’

Complementing its Adult Summer Reading program, themed “The Game is Afoot,” the Mill Valley Public Library adds a little more mystery for seasoned sleuths and the casually curious alike with a series of “fully interactive” movie screenings, starting with the 1985 hit, Clue, inspired by the original Parker Brothers board game. “Don your best Mrs. Peacock or Colonel Mustard costume, grab a bag of goodies from our ‘concession stand’ and enjoy an evening of madness and murder,” entices the library. ‘Clue’ plays at 6pm, Tuesday, June 25, at the Mill Valley Public Library, 375 Throckmorton Ave. Reserve a seat at millvalleylibrary.org/293/Attend.

Novato

Radio Days

The Marin Amateur Radio Society (MARS) will demonstrate how radio operators become a lifeline, connecting communities and relaying vital information, during the nationwide Field Day competition beginning at 11am, both Saturday and Sunday, June 22 and 23, at Stafford Lake Park, 3549 Novato Blvd., Novato. “Ham radio functions completely independently of the internet and landline phone systems, and a station can be set up almost anywhere in minutes,” says Steve Toquinto of MARS. Founded in 1933, MARS operates in coordination with the Marin County Sheriff’s Office of Emergency Services (OES) to provide independent radio communications during emergencies. Experienced operators will demonstrate how this network springs to life during Bay Area disasters. The event is sponsored by the National Association for Amateur Radio. For more information, visit w6sg.net/site/contact.

Getaway: The Lodge at Bodega Bay

Family lore has it that I was conceived on a Bodega Bay beach. Thus, any visit to our particular part of the Sonoma Coast is a look at where it all began—at least for me.

That was slightly over half a century ago. And the experience of Bodega Bay is still as romantic and relaxing as ever. Case in point, The Lodge at Bodega Bay.

Initially launched as a quaint seaside motor lodge in 1972—my birth year, incidentally—it has since blossomed into an 83-room Xanadu poised atop a tranquil bluff along the iconic Highway 1.

The serene eight-acre escape is a creative retreat and a place to recharge physically and spiritually. In short, plug in a car (yes, they’re EV-friendly), and unplug from life.

Rooms are tastefully appointed—sort of a contemporary nod to Arts & Crafts with understated-nautical notes, and contain all the accouterments one would expect from a lodge, like a hearty stone fireplace. But as comfy and aesthetically-pleasing as the rooms are, the oceanside views prove a formidable rival for one’s attention.

The Lodge at Bodega Bay has the benefit of being a gateway to numerous outdoor activities. Mere steps from Doran Beach, one of Sonoma Coast’s most popular destinations, the coastal enclave is just a quick stroll or quicker drive away (Pro tip: Borrow a complimentary beach parking pass from the front desk and save $7). Hiking and biking trails are everywhere—I even spied some equestrians moseying along, though I suspect this was a BYOH (bring your own horse) situation.

For bird enthusiasts, Bodega Bay’s diverse bird habitat, recognized by the Audubon Society as a premier birding destination, offers a unique opportunity to spot various species. And lest we forget, director Alfred Hitchcock filmed The Birds around these parts.

A walk around a marsh near the Lodge’s verdant grounds is inherently therapeutic; however, those interested in a more directed exercise can join in on a mindful movement class such as Pilates, yoga and guided meditation. There is also an infinity-edge hot tub as well as a heated swimming pool (I always find pools near the ocean deliciously decadent if not ironic), and outdoor fire pits to lounge around.

The Lodge also serves as a basecamp for numerous area adventures from the beach to Bodega’s picturesque fishing village and nearby towns like tourist-friendly Petaluma and world-class wine country adventures. Speaking of wine, the Lodge itself hosts informal wine receptions with visiting wine pros.

Additional delights await at Drakes Sonoma Coast—the on premises restaurant— where new executive chef, Christopher Lemerand, creates sumptuous locally sourced coastal cuisine.

Start with the handsome charcuterie board or chilled local oysters on the halfshell and graduate to the Whole Roasted Rainbow Trout with potatoes, fennel, saffron, sauce gribiche and smoked trout roe. If one is feeling more turf than surf, consider the Berkshire-Duroc Pork Chop (so named for a heritage pig breed) with stone fruit and bird’s eye chili glaze, king oyster mushroom bread pudding, green beans and bacon. One simply cannot go wrong with Lemerand’s menu and culinary artistry.

The Lodge at Bodega Bay is the very definition of a quick summer weekend getaway. It’s a place where relaxation meets inspiration—who knows, guests could start something big…like my parents did.

Learn more at lodgeatbodegabay.com.

Free Will Astrology: Week of June 12

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): The term “maze” has various meanings. Most commonly, it signifies a puzzling cluster of choices that lead nowhere and bode frustration. But there are more positive meanings of the word. In ancient myths, a maze was where heroes underwent ritual tests. There they might summon ingenuity to win access to a hidden treasure. In modern psychology labs, the maze is a structure used to stimulate learning in rats. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, the maze you are now in is metaphorically akin to the second two meanings, not the first.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): There is an abundance of good news, Taurus. In the coming weeks, your conversations could awaken realizations that will augment your wealth—both the financial and emotional kind. So be eager to commune with vigorous souls who inspire your power to attract resources and goodies. Furthermore, you could generate enriching benefits for yourself by engaging with unfamiliar influences that are outside your web of expectations. Don’t be too sure you already know everything you need. Helpful surprises could arrive if you’re extra open-minded.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Though 2024 isn’t even half over, you have already earned the title “Least Boring Zodiac Sign of the Year.” Or maybe a more positive way to frame it would be to award you the title “Most Scintillating, Interesting, and Stimulating Zodiac Sign of the Year.” Please keep doing what you have been doing, Gemini. Entertain us with your unruly escapades and gossip-worthy breakthroughs. Encourage us to question our dull certainties and dare us to be more fun. If we seem nervous to be in your stirring presence, disarm our worries with your humor.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Your subconscious mind is full of marvelous capacities and magic potencies. But it also contains old habits of feeling and thinking that influence you to respond to life in ways that are out of sync with what’s actually happening. These habits may sabotage or undermine your conscious intentions. Now here’s the good news: In the next nine months, there’s a lot you can do to dissolve the outmoded imprints. You will have more power than ever before to perform this wizardry. So get started! How? Ask your subconscious mind to send you intuitions about how to proceed.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The fairy tale Jack and the Beanstalk will serve as a prime metaphor for you in the coming weeks. Ruminate on its themes as being applicable to your life. I’ll refresh you with the main points of the story. Young Jack and his mother need money, so she decides to take drastic measures. She bids him to sell the family cow at the marketplace a few miles away. But on the way into town, Jack meets a man who coaxes him to sell the cow in exchange for magic beans—not money. When Jack returns home, his mother is angry at his foolishness. In disgust, she flings the beans out the window into the dirt. Later, though, the beans live up to their promise. They grow into a giant beanstalk that Jack climbs to reach the lair of a giant who lives in the clouds. There Jack retrieves three of his family’s lost treasures, which had been stolen by the giant long ago.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Before the reign of Emperor Qin Shi Huang in the third century B.C.E., Chinese people had built many local walls designed to keep out invaders. Qin Shi Huang initiated a great public works project to connect all of these fragments into what’s now known as the Great Wall of China. He also erected a vast system of roads and a city-sized mausoleum filled with the Terracotta Army: sculptures of 8,000 soldiers with their chariots and horses. Qin Shi Huang was a big thinker who was also highly organized! In accordance with astrological omens, I invite you to glide into your very own Qin Shi Huang phase. What long-lasting structures do you want to build in the next 11 months?

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Psychologist Carl Jung believed we could accomplish profound self-transformation by working hard on our psyches’ unripe and wounded aspects. That might entail honest self-examination, objective observation of how we affect others, and a willingness to recognize and forgive our mistakes. Jung also recommended another way to heal our neuroses: through the power of numinous experiences. By “numinous,” he meant mystical, sublime or awe-inspiring. Jung said that such visitations could radically diminish our painful habits of mind and feeling. They might arrive through grace, thanks to life’s surprising interventions. They may also be coaxed to appear through meditation, dreamwork, communing with myth and fairy tales, and spiritual practices. I foresee a wealth of numinous events in your life during the coming months, Libra. May they bring you a steady stream of healing.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In a moment, I will list events I foresee as being possible for you during the next 11 months. They are cosmic tendencies but not cosmic mandates. Whether or not they actually occur will depend on how you wield your willpower—which, by the way, could be freer and more muscular than it has been in a long time. Now here are the potential developments. 1. An offer to create one of the most symbiotic unions or robust collaborations ever. 2. Great chances for you to capitalize on the success of others. 3. Alterations in the family configuration. 4. Major shifts in loyalty and affinity. 5. A raise in rank. 6. Revelations of secrets you can use to your advantage.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Have you been metaphysically itchy and psychologically ticklish? Are you unsure whether those tingling sensations you’re feeling are worrisome symptoms or signs of healing and awakening? I believe they are signs of healing and awakening. They suggest you are doing the metaphorical equivalent of what a snake does when it sheds its skin. Expect imminent redemption, Sagittarius! Reframe the discomfort as a herald of relief and release.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): It’s time for Super Mom to make an appearance. Some circumstances in your life could benefit from healing tweaks best initiated by her. And when I say “Super Mom,” I’m not necessarily referring to your actual mother. I’m envisioning a wise older woman who sees you as you really are and who can assist you in living your destiny according to your own inner necessity, no one else’s. If you have no Super Mom in your world, see if you can locate one, even hire one. I also recommend creating an inner Super Mom in your imagination. You need and deserve sympathetic input from the archetype of the sage crone.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I suspect that later in 2024, I will authorize you to commune with boisterous adventures and tricky risks. But right now, I advise you to flirt with modest adventures and sensible risks. Can you contain your burning, churning yearnings for a while? Are you willing to coax your crazy wild heart into enjoying some mild pleasures? By early autumn, I’m guessing you will have done the necessary preparations to successfully roam through the experimental frontiers. Until then, you are most likely to corral X-factors on your behalf if you pace yourself and bide your time.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “Oh God, if there is a God, save my soul, if I have a soul.” That prayer was the handiwork of Piscean philosopher Joseph Ernest Renan. If his ironic minimalism is the only spiritual aspiration you can manage right now, so be it. But I hope you will strive for a more intimate, expansive and personal connection with the Divine Intelligence. The coming weeks will be an extra favorable time for you to speak and listen to mysterious powers beyond your rational comprehension. Please take advantage! Go in quest of the sweet, deep lowdown directly from the Sublime Source!

Homework: Try letting go of a burden that’s not necessary to bear any longer. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

PG&E Gets Too Good at Power Shutoff for Fire Safety

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PG&E, a company that’s taken a ton of flak from North Bay residents and lawmakers in this age of high wildfire, has found a new way to piss off residents in the lower Russian River area — this time, with overly sensitive fire prevention tech that’s been tripping up and triggering long power outages. It reportedly happened a bunch during the 2023 fire season, too, but PG&E officials promised last fall that they had “retooled the wildfire prevention system’s sensitivity for the 2024 season, which should lead to fewer unnecessary outages,” according to the Press Democrat. More from the PD: “A PG&E program intended to prevent fire as a result of downed power lines is causing headaches in Guerneville and lower Russian River communities. Known as Enhanced Powerline Safety Settings (EPSS), the program automatically shuts off power lines within one-tenth of a second in case of a hazard, such as a felled tree or an animal hitting a power line. The system relies on a fault detection algorithm that shuts down the power line like a breaker trips in a home, said Dave Canny, vice president of PG&E’s North Coast Division. ‘It protects the rest of the system and mitigates ignition, arcing or sparking,’ he said. But Guerneville residents are growing weary of the program. Large portions of the Russian River town were without power Friday, May 31, and Saturday, June 1, because the EPSS system had been triggered. Those power shutdowns began around 10 a.m. and lasted until 12:48 p.m. Megan McFarland, PG&E marketing and communication specialist, said the company noticed the settings on the line servicing Guerneville were too sensitive and have since adjusted the levels. ‘PG&E should send out a mailer every May that they are turning up the sensitivity on the EPSS lines and tell people what they should expect,’ said Joshua Leone, a reporter for Watch Duty, a nonprofit organization that alerts and informs residents electronically during wildfires. The wildfire prevention system was piloted in July 2021 on the heels of the Dixie Fire and officially rolled out in 2022. The system turns on every May and typically remains on through November. … EPSS outages can last minutes to hours, depending on how long it takes for PG&E repairmen to find the cause of the outage. The lines can’t be re-energized until a PG&E team patrols every mile of line, by foot, car or helicopter, to clear hazards. Canny said at least one outage prevented a fire in 2023, but admitted that 60% of the outages were tripped by undetermined causes. That rate of ‘nuisance tripping’ was unusually high, he said.” (Source: Press Democrat)

Home Insurance Hell in Wildfire Country

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One aspect of life in the wine country decidedly not thriving after a decade of gnarly wildfires is home insurance. After paying out billions for homes lost in California fires, all the major insurers have pulled back, either refusing to ensure homes in high-risk areas or charging an arm and a leg. (And really, we’re one big high-risk area at this point. Check out this crazy map of all the burn scars that have accumulated since 2015 — it’s like a goddamn patchwork quilt.) The only real guaranteed backup option for all of us to ensure our homes is the state government’s “FAIR plan,” which is generally even more expensive for even shoddier coverage. Another crazy map created by the San Francisco Chronicle shows Sonoma and Napa county residents are now paying anywhere from $1,500 to $4,500-plus per year for home insurance. State Farm, the biggest player on the private market, “hasn’t offered new home policies since May 2023,” the paper reports. More from the Chron: “The company said wildfire risk, construction costs and pricey premiums for reinsurance (insurance for insurers, which cannot be factored into rates in California) motivated the decision. The company has continued to renew most, but not all, of its existing policies, though prices are rising. In March, State Farm rates rose an average of 20% across the state. Shortly after the rate increase took effect, State Farm announced it would not renew 72,000 policies — 30,000 homeowner and other personal property policies and 42,000 commercial property policies.” Many of the homes getting dropped are in Sonoma County; in particular, homes along the Tubbs Fire scar. Other private insurers like Allstate and Farmers have also reportedly decided to either pull back coverage or leave the state altogether. California politicians are calling this an obvious “crisis” that needs immediate attention. The latest fix-it proposal from Gov. Gavin Newsom is to let insurance companies actually raise their rates quicker, with less review from state officials — seeing as “experts say the slow approval times are a key reason why many insurers have limited their business in the state, such as not writing new policies or dropping thousands of customers at a time,” according to the San Francisco Chronicle. Basically, “the pullbacks have pushed policymakers toward a hard choice: Let more of their constituents lose coverage, or create reforms that will allow insurance companies to raise rates faster.” Other state politicians are asking why, if fire departments and residents across California are getting so much better at mitigating fire risk and preventing large, destructive wildfires — and the government is pumping billions of dollars into these efforts — insurance companies aren’t changing their risk assessments, according to recent reports from Bloomberg and CalMatters report. “Carriers are being ultra picky,” one expert says. “They’re looking for any way to not take the risks.” So now there are a couple of bills making their way through the legislature that will try and sway insurance companies on this point. We’ll see if state officials can make any headway there. To take us out, here are some bittersweet market predictions from North Bay Biz magazine: “It will take years for insurance premiums to slow their growth and for the chaos to subside, and that assumes we have stable fire seasons, no major earthquakes or storm seasons. Climate change will not help the long-term outlook either. Financial markets are already looking at rising interest rates over time as risks due to climate change come to fruition in real estate markets and beyond. For many homeowners in the North Bay, the next three to four years is likely a time when the costs of home insurance may lead some homes to come on the market prematurely due to rising insurance costs. Economics suggest (as a point of positivity) there may also be entrepreneurship in a market that has learned lessons from the past and is preparing for a riskier future.” (Source: Napa Valley Register & North Bay Business Journal & Bakersfield Now & SF Chronicle & SF Chronicle & SF Chronicle & SF Chronicle & North Bay Biz & CalMatters & Bloomberg & Mad River Union)

Mark West Area Renaissance

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The Mark West-Larkfield-Wikiup area between Windsor and Santa Rosa, located in a big local burn scar, seems to be having a bit of a renaissance this year. It was ravaged by the Tubbs Fire in 2017, then grazed again by the Kincade Fire two summers later. James Gore, the Sonoma County supervisor for that zone, says he told residents back then that “we were not just going to rebuild, but rebuild better.” Many of those efforts are now coming to fruition — including new roads, a new community park and a large nature preserve geared toward “habitat preservation, fire risk management and low-impact recreation.” Here are some details on the new roads and park, from the county: “On May 11, Supervisor Gore and Mark West residents celebrated the completion of a County project to improve Mark West Springs Road between Old Redwood Highway and Ursuline Road. The Department of Public Infrastructure repaved and striped the road while installing new bike lanes, sidewalks, curbs and storm drain culverts. The sidewalks feature ‘sparkle grain’ in the design of a flowing river that shimmers in the sunlight, just as Mark West Springs Road flows through the community connecting people. At the intersections are three landmark plinths bearing key words — renewal, unity and resilience — that embody the way neighbors came together to support each other after the fires. Following a ceremony to officially open the new sidewalks, residents walked down the street and celebrated the recent acquisition of a one-acre vacant lot that will become a community park. The property, located off Old Redwood Highway, was the site of a preschool that burned to the ground during the 2017 wildfires.” They held a big party that afternoon at the park site. Plans include a gazebo, play structure, “cutting-edge” water fountain and drought-tolerant butterfly garden, according to the Press Democrat — representing a community “rebirth” in the years since the fire. Community members raised the millions they needed to buy the 1-acre property and build it out through a nonprofit they started called the Mark West Area Community Fund. They’ve also had help from the county’s Ag + Open Space department and the Sonoma Land Trust org, which usually manages larger wildlands. Land Trust leaders tell the PD they’re stoked on the opportunity to move away from the “siloed approach that you have wild spaces over here and agriculture here and cities here,” instead exploring more “interconnected” urban green space. The Mark West comeback does involve some full-on wildlands as well, though. Just outside town, near the Safari West animal park, the county’s parks department is getting ready to open the 1,200-acre Mark West Creek Regional Park and Open Space Preserve to the public later this year. “Gentle canyons of oak woodlands and evergreen forests bisect the preserve, with open meadows providing views of the Mayacamas and Mount St. Helena to the north,” the Healdsburg Tribune reports. “The creeks are salmon habitat, the woods a songbird’s home; wildlife from vole to cougar can be found.” The county’s Ag + Open Space arm also just purchased another 30-acre plot of nature next door from the Jackson wine family, which they’re calling the Mark West Wikiup Preserve. “Home to half-a-mile of Mark West Creek, oaks, riparian habitat, and grassy open space in a residential neighborhood, conservation of this property will enable Sonoma Water to offer public access to the preserve,” the county says. Last thing to mention: Just a few miles south, at the Nagasawa Community Park in the Fountaingrove neighborhood of Santa Rosa — likewise wiped out by Tubbs scar — the county is “seeking proposals from qualified artists or artist teams to design, create and install artwork honoring the victims of the devastating 2017 wildfires and commemorating the community’s resilience.” This memorial is meant to “serve as a lasting tribute to those who lost their lives, a testament to the enduring spirit of our community, and a space for reflection and healing,” in the words of another county supervisor. Submit your proposals here through July 19 to join the renaissance. (Source: Press Democrat & Press Democrat & County of Sonoma via Facebook & Sonoma County Ag + Open Space & Sonoma County Parks & Sonoma Economic Development Board & Mark West Area Community Fund & Healdsburg Tribune)

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Mark West Area Renaissance

The Mark West-Larkfield-Wikiup area between Windsor and Santa Rosa, located in a big local burn scar, seems to be having a bit of a renaissance this year. It was ravaged by the Tubbs Fire in 2017, then grazed again by the Kincade Fire two summers later. James Gore, the Sonoma County supervisor for that zone, says he told residents...
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