Letters to the Editor, Week of June 7

Disqualified

After reading both Miriam Ginden’s Open Mic column (May 10) and Barry Barnett’s letter to the editor (May 31), I became intrigued by the possibility of barring from elected office anyone who participated in, encouraged or supported the riot at the U.S. Capitol on January 6th, 2021.

Upon researching the Disqualification Clause, I found that the clause makes no mention of requiring a vote of Congress to enforce it, but it does allow Congress to exempt insurrectionists from being subject to the clause if two-thirds vote to do so.

However, enforcing the Disqualification Clause and applying it to current or prospective elected officials does not require a vote of Congress. Those accused of insurrection, including current members of Congress, can be tried in a court of law, and if found guilty, would automatically become ineligible to hold office, unless two-thirds of Congress votes to overturn the court’s decision.

It is my opinion that the Disqualification Clause of the 14th Amendment amends Article I, Section 5 of the U.S. Constitution to make expulsion for insurrection automatic, rather than subject to a vote of Congress.

Chris Wenmoth

Santa Rosa

Sonoma-Marin ag report calls for collaboration, amid weather warnings

This winter’s heavy rain storms offered the North Bay a respite from a three-year drought, but a report released in late May warns that local water users should remain vigilant.

The publication, titled “Agricultural Resilience in the Face of Extreme Dry Conditions,” was prepared by a variety of public agencies, nonprofits and ag industry groups. It offers lessons learned from the 2019-2022 drought, when rainfall in Marin and Sonoma counties ranged from 17 to 68% of normal levels.

First and foremost: Continue to think about water use even if the hills are green now, because extreme weather (characterized by wilder fluctuations between dry and wet years) is now the norm.

In a statement announcing the release of the report, David Lewis, the director of Marin County’s University of California Cooperative Extension, said: “Our focus should be on building community resilience to the [climate change-fueled weather] fluctuations. That will come from us talking about the adaptations and responses needed across those swings. Concepts like drought and flood need to be replaced with water resource planning for extreme conditions.”

Although drought is a community-wide issue, it’s not surprising this report came from—and focuses on—the agricultural industry. Afterall, ag uses a lot of water—and there’s money on the line. In 2021, agriculture production value from Sonoma and Marin counties totaled nearly $900 million, with $540 million of the total coming from wine grapes.

In reviewing the 2019-2022 drought years, the report credits regional policy makers and private groups with moving quickly to plan a response in the winter of 2019. Actions ranged from local water districts allowing trucks to deliver water to drought-stricken ranches and other agricultural interests, and state water officials allowing Sonoma Water to temporarily reduce the flow of water in the Russian River and Dry Creek.

Moving forward, the report calls for ongoing collaboration on drought issues. In that vein, it leads with a quote from a May 1978 state report on the just-passed 1976-77 drought: “We must take the opportunity now, while events are still fresh in mind, and we have the breathing spell provided by the 1978 rains, to plan for coping with the next dry period. There is no assurance that the next drought is not just beyond the horizon. We can be assured, however, that drought will return, and, considering the greater needs of that future time, its impact, unless prepared for, will be much greater.”

According to climate scientists’ recent studies, that dire drought may be unfolding already.

“Severe, extreme, and exceptional droughts in California and many western states have become more frequent, intense, unpredictable, and damaging over the past two decades as climate change impacts have intensified,” the Sonoma-Marin report states. “This most recent drought that began in the fall of 2019 and has continued through 2022, is one of the most severe droughts California has faced.”

The problem certainly isn’t limited to the North Bay. In February 2022, the journal Nature Climate Change found that the Western U.S. and northern Mexico had been experiencing their driest period in at least 1,200 years. “Climatologists have reported that the last multi-decade megadrought, comparable to this dry period, occurred in the 1500s,” the Sonoma-Marin agriculture report states.

State lawmaker proposes security deposit cap

Most renters know securing housing isn’t as simple as finding the perfect place.

California’s renters must save up thousands of dollars to provide security deposits that can legally be as much as two months’ rent, or three months’ rent for furnished units.

Add in the requirement that renters put up the first month’s rent before they can move in and low-income families are most likely to give up hope of finding a home.

The state Assembly on May 22 passed a proposal that could change that.

Assembly Bill 12 would limit security deposits to one month’s rent, regardless of whether a unit is furnished or not. If the bill passes and gets Gov. Gavin Newsom’s signature, California could become the 12th state to limit security deposits.

“Security deposits present barriers for people to move into apartments, which can lead them to stay in apartments (and) in homes that are too small, crowded or even unsafe,” said Matt Haney, the assemblymember from San Francisco who authored the bill. “In other cases, people take on debt or financial burden that leaves them unable to afford other necessities.”

Haney said the bill has attracted widespread support in the Assembly, including from lawmakers who are landlords, as well as from labor organizations representing teachers, nurses and grocery store workers.

Assemblymember Diane Dixon, from Newport Beach, was among the Nos in the 53-14 vote. She cited concern about the bill’s potential to reduce the housing supply.

“The more we over-regulate people’s ability to offer a successful product, the scarcer it will become,” she said in a statement. “Landlords charge security deposits to cover potential damages and any unused funds are returned to the renter.”

Haney said the issue caught his attention when a janitor in his district described living with his wife and three children in a one-bedroom apartment.

“He wanted to move into a larger unit so his kids didn’t have to sleep in the same room as him and his wife,” Haney said. “He said he could afford the rent, but he couldn’t afford the deposit and first month’s rent to move in. Unfortunately that’s not an uncommon situation.”

In California, the median rent for a two-bedroom apartment is $2,538 and for a three-bedroom home is $3,795, according to Zillow. For a $3,000-a-month unfurnished unit, a landlord can charge as much as $9,000 for a security deposit and the first month’s rent.

“People are being asked to pay the equivalent of the down payment of a home in many parts of the country just to move in,” Haney said. “It’s really untenable.”

Culture Crush, Week of June 7

Petaluma

Home at the Mystic

Sean Hayes returns to the Mystic for the first time since he has really settled into his adopted hometown, where he is a much loved member of the community. Opening for the show is Sean Carscadden. Says Hayes about his opener, “He’s kind of like this unknown jewel of the North Bay,” calling him “probably one of the best guitar players I’ve seen around here.” Hayes is thrilled to be playing with “a little group of some local heavy hitter musicians backing me up,” and hoping for a guitar battle between Carscadden and his guitarist for the night, John Courage—guitarists on notice, the gauntlet has been thrown! “For the first time, I really feel like it’s a hometown show,” says Hayes. 7pm, Friday, June 9, 23 Petaluma Blvd. N, Petaluma. Tickets at the door and online at mystictheatre.com.

Santa Rosa

Public Spectacle

The seventh annual Railroad Square Music Festival returns for one day of multi-genre music in the heart of Santa Rosa. Turning an eye toward equity and a hope to inspire local creatives to feel appreciated and celebrated, this year the festival features local favorites from Banda La Congora to Brazilian reggae artist Ben Roots to Ableton Live aficionado Parson Jones. Besides

multiple stages of music, there will be local food, libations, vendors and a kid friendly family area. 12-7:30pm, Sunday, June 11, Railroad Square, Santa Rosa. All ages and free.

Larkspur

Big Screen Theatre

The Lark Theater in Larkspur hosts a special cinema event with the upcoming showings of T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets, A Film of the Original Stage Production. Ralph Fiennes’ exquisite performance of T. S. Eliot’s poetic masterpiece is dynamically translated from stage to screen by director Sophie Fiennes. Written by Nobel Prize winner Eliot in the shadow of the Second World War, the poem is a celebrated meditation on human experience, time and the divine. It is a work that bears a powerful relevance to the present day. 1pm, Sunday, June 11, and 7pm, Wednesday, June 14. Student tickets are $10, general admission $15.

Petaluma

Live Your Place

A new monthly series, Life by Design, begins this month, with speakers all summer. “Come for the conversation, stay for a cocktail and return for human connection,” suggests Place Matters, the organizer of the event. Talks over the summer will explore form and function, with local designers from all walks of life. Next up: Alfie Turnshek and Cinda Gilliland speak on “Mise en Place: Efficiency over Speed in Bar Design and Design in Public Spaces: Why It Matters.” 7-8:30pm, Tuesday, June 13, and every second Tuesday, at Griffo Distillery, 1320 Scott St., Suite A, Petaluma. Tickets $20 cash at the door, or purchase in advance at placematters-sonoma.com/events.

Free Will Astrology, Week of June 7

ARIES (March 21-April 19): “Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves,” said psychologist Carl Jung. What was he implying? That we may sometimes engage in the same behavior that bothers us about others? And we should examine whether we are similarly annoying? That’s one possible explanation, and I encourage you to meditate on it. Here’s a second theory: When people irritate us, it may signify that we are at risk of being hurt or violated by them—and we should take measures to protect ourselves. Maybe there are other theories you could come up with, as well, Aries. Now here’s your assignment: Identify two people who irritate you. What lessons or blessings could you garner from your relationships with them?

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In 1886, a wealthy woman named Sarah Winchester moved into a two-story, eight-room farmhouse in San Jose. She was an amateur architect. During the next 20 years, she oversaw continuous reconstruction of her property, adding new elements and revising existing structures. At one point, the house had 500 rooms. Her workers built and then tore down a seven-story tower on 16 occasions. When she died at age 83, her beloved domicile had 2,000 doors, 10,000 windows, 47 stairways and six kitchens. While Sarah Winchester was extreme in her devotion to endless transformation, I do recommend a more measured version of her strategy for you—especially in the coming months. Continual creative growth and rearrangement will be healthy and fun!

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “All the things I wanted to do and didn’t do took so long. It was years of not doing.” So writes Gemini poet Lee Upton in her book, Undid in the Land of Undone. Most of us could make a similar statement. But I have good news for you, Gemini. I suspect that during the rest of 2023, you will find the willpower and the means to finally accomplish intentions that have been long postponed or unfeasible. I’m excited for you! To prepare the way, decide which two undone things you would most love to dive into and complete.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian author Denis Johnson had a rough life in his 20s. He was addicted to drugs and alcohol. Years later, he wrote a poem expressing gratitude to the people who didn’t abandon him. “You saw me when I was invisible,” he wrote, “you spoke to me when I was deaf, you thanked me when I was a secret.” Now would be an excellent time for you to deliver similar appreciation to those who have steadfastly beheld and supported your beauty when you were going through hard times.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don’t make a wish upon a star. Instead, make a wish upon a scar. By that I mean, visualize in vivid detail how you might summon dormant reserves of ingenuity to heal one of your wounds. Come up with a brilliant plan to at least partially heal the wound. And then use that same creative energy to launch a new dream or relaunch a stalled old dream. In other words, Leo, figure out how to turn a liability into an asset. Capitalize on a loss to engender a gain. Convert sadness into power and disappointment into joy.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): At age nine, I was distraught when my parents told me we were moving away from the small town in Michigan where I had grown up. I felt devastated to lose the wonderful friends I had made and leave the land I loved. But in retrospect, I am glad I got uprooted. It was the beginning of a new destiny that taught me how to thrive on change. It was my introduction to the pleasures of knowing a wide variety of people from many different backgrounds. I bring this to your attention, Virgo, because I think the next 12 months will be full of comparable opportunities for you. You don’t have to relocate to take advantage, of course. There are numerous ways to expand and diversify your world. Your homework right now is to identify three.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Most of us continuously absorb information that is of little or questionable value. We are awash in an endless tsunami of trivia and babble. But in accordance with current astrological omens, I invite you to remove yourself from this blather as much as possible during the next three weeks. Focus on exposing yourself to fine thinkers, deep feelers, and exquisite art and music. Nurture yourself with the wit and wisdom of compassionate geniuses and brilliant servants of the greater good. Treat yourself to a break from the blah-blah-blah and immerse yourself in the smartest joie de vivre you can find.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Over 25 countries have created coats of arms that feature an eagle. Why is that? Maybe it’s because the Roman Empire, the foundation of so much culture in the Western world, regarded the eagle as the ruler of the skies. It’s a symbol of courage, strength and alertness. When associated with people, it also denotes high spirits, ingenuity and sharp wits. In astrology, the eagle is the emblem of the ripe Scorpio: someone who bravely transmutes suffering and strives to develop a sublimely soulful perspective. With these thoughts in mind, and in accordance with current astrological omens, I invite you Scorpios to draw extra intense influence from your eagle-like aspects in the coming weeks.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “When I paint, my goal is to show what I found, not what I was looking for.” So said artist Pablo Picasso. I recommend you adopt some version of that as your motto in the coming weeks. Yours could be, “When I make love, my goal is to rejoice in what I find, not what I am looking for.” Or perhaps, “When I do the work I care about, my goal is to celebrate what I find, not what I am looking for.” Or maybe, “When I decide to transform myself, my goal is to be alert for what I find, not what I am looking for.”

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Vincent van Gogh painted Wheatfield with a Reaper, showing a man harvesting lush yellow grain under a glowing sun. Van Gogh said the figure was “fighting like the devil in the midst of the heat to get to the end of his task.” And yet, this was also true: “The sun was flooding everything with a light of pure gold.” I see your life in the coming weeks as resonating with this scene, Capricorn. Though you may grapple with challenging tasks, you will be surrounded by beauty and vitality.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I suspect that your homing signals will be extra strong and clear during the next 12 months. Everywhere you go, in everything you do, you will receive clues about where you truly belong and how to fully inhabit the situations where you truly belong. From all directions, life will offer you revelations about how to love yourself for who you are and be at peace with your destiny. Start tuning in immediately, dear Aquarius. The hints are already trickling in.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): The renowned Mexican painter Diego Rivera (1886–1957) told this story about himself: When he was born, he was so frail and ill that the midwife gave up on him, casting him into a bucket of dung. Rivera’s grandmother would not accept the situation so easily, however. She caught and killed some pigeons and wrapped her newborn grandson in the birds’ guts. The seemingly crazy fix worked. Rivera survived and lived for many decades, creating an epic body of artistic work. I bring this wild tale to your attention, Pisces, with the hope that it will inspire you to keep going and be persistent in the face of a problematic beginning or challenging birth pang. Don’t give up!

Loneliness v. Love: ‘Chapatti’ plays in Healdsburg

The 222 is a non-profit, member-supported arts, culture and entertainment venue that’s housed in the Paul Mahder Gallery in Healdsburg. Open since 2021, to date it’s presented musical programs, literary readings, film showings and other community events.

Professional theater now enters that mix with a series of productions programmed by well-known Bay Area theater artist and educator Aldo Billingslea. Their inaugural presentation is the two-hander, Chapatti, by Irish playwright Christian O’Reilly, which runs through June 11.

The show’s title happens to be the name of an unseen dog at the end of an unseen leash being held by Dan (Michael Elich). We learn that Dan is in mourning for the loss of a 30-year love and struggling with facing life alone. His path crosses with Betty (Robin Goodrin Nordli), an elder caregiver who, after the failure of a childless, loveless marriage, has taken solace in the company of cats—19 of them.

And so, the dance begins for 90 intermission-less minutes as two lonely people with nothing visibly in common take the first often-amusing steps in sharing just a bit of their love for their animals with another human being.

Elich and Goodrin Nordli are quite effective in their roles. The script also requires them to give voice to multiple other characters, mime their interactions with their pets and facilitate one on-stage costume change that they both handle with aplomb.

The show is minimally staged on a raised platform surrounded by artwork in the center of the gallery. Its set is basically two chairs, two stools, a box and a couple of trash bags. Fifteen tables seating four guests each comprise the audience area. The tables are nicely spaced so sightlines are rarely a problem. There is minimal lighting, and no voice amplification as the modified double Quonset retains and distributes the sound well, albeit with a persistent hollowness/echo.

This production of Chapatti was originally produced last year by the Rogue Theater Company in Ashland, Oregon, and is essentially a traveling version of that show. The performers, the director (Robynn Rodriguez) and the stage manager (Kimberley Jean Barry) are all members of that company, as well as decades-long veterans of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.

Playwright O’Reilly, who allowed the artistic team to modify his script for an American audience, breaks no new ground with his tale of the search for human connections, but Chapatti tells the tale well.

‘Chapatti’ runs through June 11 at The 222, 222 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. Friday, 6pm; Saturday, 7:30pm; Sunday, 2pm. $45-$85. Students free with ID. 707.473.9152. the222.org.

Matter(s) at Hand: An ontological split

The perennial wisdom, which discloses the same knowledge in different times and places, teaches that ultimate reality consists of the meeting of spirit and matter.

Think of the physical universe as deriving from a lump of clay and you’ve got matter. But before anything could be made from this unformed clay, an idea had to exist in the mind of an intelligent force that imposed its vision upon the primordial substance.

The oldest and simplest symbol for this act of creation-upon-clay is two intersection lines, commonly called a cross. The horizontal line stands for the realm of Becoming, of matter, life and death, and constant change. The vertical line stands for spirit or Being, and is a DNA-like spiral staircase up to ever higher and unified expressions of creative power and divine intelligence.

Human beings are living creatures who play out their lives in the cosmic drama at the intersection of the cross, made of biological matter but capable of understanding the One And All from which they sprung.

The wisdom tradition also teaches that while matter is necessary for us to face the trial of human life, spirit is the supreme reality. Material values—those based on matter—are contingent and impermanent, with some traditions going so far as to call them illusions. In contrast, spiritual values are the opposite of matter, which is why they are invisible.

Ontological refers to the nature of being, and is a crucial word to learn right now, as the moment of history you’re living through is a great ontological rupture in which the final contact with the vertical line of the cross is being severed.

Mankind is at the edge of a precipice, staring into a leaden pit of matter. Not the divinely created world of nature, the arena in which mankind was placed by the creator, but the manmade matter of computer code. Human beings no longer look to the sky and intuitively feel themselves part of an ordered cosmos, and instead stare downward into their device, which swallows their soul in a virtual reality of artificial intelligence.

Many will unwittingly follow this diabolical intelligent matter to the pit of hell, to anti-life, to the immense Void of Nothingness that feeds upon human consciousness like a carnivorous cancer. But others will stop at the edge and behold the beckoning abyss, which will shake them awake suddenly as if from a bad dream, and they will commence the long journey back towards the spirit.

Radio Daze: Steve Jaxon, ‘The Drive’ plan next moves

Avid listeners of KSRO will notice an unfamiliar sound coming through the drive-time airwaves this week.

As was announced last week and echoed in sundry local media outlets, the long-running radio show, The Drive with Steve Jaxon, has been unexpectedly discontinued by the station’s management. As of this writing, it’s unclear what will replace the show, but whatever it is, it won’t sound like Jaxon.

Jaxon and his longtime business partner, Cathy Ratto, have produced the show for the past 15 years. Last Friday’s 3 to 6pm slot was its final airing on KSRO. The team is currently in talks with another local broadcaster to continue delivering the show to its intensely loyal audience.

With many a misty eye among the dozen or more guests who dropped by during the farewell broadcast (some bearing bottles of chardonnay—Jaxon’s favorite wine varietal), the mood was emotional, especially as tributes to Jaxon and his on-air cohorts (including co-host Harry Duke, the theater critic for the Bohemian and Pacific Sun) began to pour in.

Among them was a heartfelt pre-recorded message from Jaxon’s former producer, Mike DeWald.

“I have to say, if you told me Steve Jaxon was being canceled in 2023, I would’ve thought something very different,” observed DeWald, who is now a reporter at KCBS. “The Drive is a Sonoma County institution, a one of a kind place for the community to gather on the radio. It’s something that never should have worked. It’s an insane idea. A late night show on the radio, news makers, comedians, live music, pop culture, a slice of life of what it means to live in Sonoma County, and yet it did. It worked because of the listeners. It worked because of the crew. It worked because of the guests. It worked because of Steve’s ability to be the glue that holds the whole thing together.”

Indeed, The Drive wasn’t just a local institution but an on-ramp to a slew of adventures across the nation. In his statement, DeWald cited time in the “kitchen with Jon Stewart,” visiting Chris Rock at the Comedy Cellar, the corner office of Lanny Davis and the Democratic National Convention among other highlights.

This is not the first attempt to take Jaxon and The Drive off air. In June 2010, when then station owner Maverick Media unceremoniously laid off Jaxon for three weeks, popular uproar led to his reinstatement and the rebirth of the show in the incarnation that endured until last Friday.

As former Bohemian editor Gabe Meline remarked at the time, “Jaxon just has a certain magnetism, a cool detachment which inspires guests to loosen up and talk freely.”

Among these guests, hailing from Jaxon’s extensive network of contacts who he referred to as “The Drive Hall-of-Famers,” is yours truly, who, with various Bohemian contributors, appeared in a weekly segment called “Boho Buzz.”

The Bohemian has had a fruitful relationship with The Drive and even once recognized Jaxon with a cheeky accolade: Best Damn Media Personality.

“And so it is, as both fan and friend, that I declare Steve Jaxon, the host of The Drive… the Best Damn Media Personality of the North Bay,” I wrote in March of 2021. “With both the personality and pipes—the best in the biz—Jaxon fills not just the ears of the North Bay, but also its hearts.”

Still true.

Haus Party: BROT is wunderbar

Life is full of odd little coincidences. The longer one lives, the more they seem less like coincidences and more like a glitch in the Matrix.

For example, for reasons known only to the vicissitudes of local advertising agendas, our burger and beer edition happens to also be our Pride edition. And since I can’t think about writing without first driving aimlessly for hours, I had made it as far as Guerneville before my car needed a charge.

I plugged in, strolled into Books & Letters, bought Berlin by Bea Setton, then asked my phone to find me a place to eat. It did, and an AI chatbot called a restaurant on my behalf before I could stop it. Fortunately, the restaurant in question hung up on the robo-call, which I applaud (I mean, why hasten the AI uprising?). Welcome to BROT, which proffers a “modern German concept serving delicious classics in a warm Bavarian atmosphere.”

To be clear, by “modern” we mean contemporary, not a glimpse of the future, which, as anyone who’s visited rural Guerneville knows, only arrives in the rivertown in carefully curated drips (i.e., the car charger). That said, it was there that I tasted the future of hamburgers, a.k.a. the BROT Burger.

Whereas, hamburgers served elsewhere in Sonoma and Napa adhere to the cultural hegemony of the American burger (American cheese, lettuce, pickles, ketchup), BROT makes an assured pivot. Sure they offer the American-style burger (ditto an Alpine-themed variation with Swiss cheese, grilled mushrooms and an aioli), but, as my affable waiter astutely observed when I hesitated, versions of the other burgers are available everywhere—but a BROT Burger is unique to BROT.

With Emmentaler cheese, two types of cabbage (in both sauerkraut and fresh iterations that glow like neon) and a special “haus” sauce, the burger is elegant in its simplicity and complex and powerful on the palate ($20). Served with fries, it pairs well with, frankly, any selection from BROT’s impressive “bier” menu.

I recommend having a liter or two of the Schneider Weisse, original style—a wheat beer that boasts a centuries-old beermaking pedigree, redolent of baked goods, nutmeg and clove.

It was during my second beer that I realized I was reading Berlin, drinking a Bavarian brew and enjoying my BROT Burger, on the eve of Pride in a town dubbed by Insider as a “unique, queer version of rural America.” Right place, right time, in just the right way—I’m definitely living in a simulation.

SoCo Pride: Local LGBTQ Event Comes of Age

Contingents representing towns, politicians, nonprofits, places of worship, hospitals and tech companies—along with children, dogs, people pushing wheelchairs and walkers, and even those blowing bubbles—all marched, danced, sang, performed gymnastics and waved rainbow flags, before a crowd of thousands at the June 3 Sonoma County Pride Parade.

Witnessing this exuberant event, and the crowd that it brings to downtown Santa Rosa each year, it is hard to believe that it all started 36 years ago with a simple potluck picnic at Spring Lake, organized by an intrepid little group of gays and lesbians—the LGBTQ terminology was to come later—that called itself Forward Together.

That’s when the newly formed organization decided its first campaign would be to ask the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors to declare a Gay Pride Week. Why not? It wouldn’t cost the county a penny, as one Forward Together founder, Magi Fedorka, recently pointed out. At the time, the county was already celebrating more frivolous things, like National Pickle Week.

But the supervisors refused to put a Pride Week on their agenda, so Forward Together declared its own Pride Week and threw itself a celebration. The group chose the concept of “pride” because it was non-threatening, unlike San Francisco’s Gay Freedom Day, and it also countered the stigma that gay men were experiencing during the HIV/AIDS epidemic of the 1980s.

So, people from various sectors of the gay and lesbian community brought their pride, their favorite dishes, their children and their dogs, to Jack Rabbit Meadows that happy day in June. Veterans Care, a gay veterans group, barbecued hot dogs and hamburgers, and people partied down, thumbing their noses at the county establishment that thought recognizing gays and lesbians was just going way too far.

Four years later, the Lesbian Voters Action Caucus brought the celebration to the streets of Santa Rosa. Without a permit, which required confining participants to the sidewalk, they held the county’s first ever Lesbian and Gay Pride March.

Finally, in 1992, a Pride Week resolution garnered the needed four-vote majority, and it became an official county celebration. But this was only the beginning of what has turned into two weeks of festivities that attract tens of thousands of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer/questioning (LGBTQ) locals and their friends, as well as tourists and travel writers. Interestingly, the former Forward Together movers and shakers have mixed emotions about how the celebration of Pride Week has evolved over the years into this much bigger, and corporate-funded, experience.

“The sense of community is gone,” said Tina Dugan, who has put together a timeline of LGBTQ activism in Sonoma County, and hosts a class about LGBTQ history through Sonoma County Junior College.

“It seemed more robust earlier on,” is how Janet Zagoria put it. As a photographer, she has chronicled the flow of Sonoma County LGBTQ activism over the years.

While bemoaning that Pride is no longer the political statement that it was in the “old days,” Fedorka admitted that, “There’s an inclusivity in today’s Pride.”

And that is the game changer that a younger generation of activists sees as a new approach to bringing its community into the mainstream of Sonoma County, while also honoring the lives of people who are a little different than the heterosexual and cisgender majority. Cisgender refers to identifying as the same gender a person is biologically, but has nothing to do with sexual orientation.

From this new perspective, Pride made a giant leap forward this year when the Latino organization, Los Cien, co-sponsored Fiesta al Cien, with the local organization Trans Life. The main organizers of the event, Ramon Meraz and Chase Overholt, are both gay men and members of the Los Cien board of directors. They beamed with joy as they described how bringing the LGBTQ community together with the larger Latino community is a dream come true.

“When I went to the state of the Latino community address eight or nine years ago,” Meraz said, “there was no data about LGBTQ people within the Latino community. They didn’t realize that the LGBTQ community is invisible within the Latino community, and the trans community is doubly invisible.”

So this year, under the new leadership of Herman G. Hernandez, a young Latino activist who grew up in Guerneville, the Los Cien board took the courageous step, not only of acknowledging its own LGBTQ people, but also embracing the larger LGBTQ community.

“Herman is so committed to diversity and social justice,” Meraz said.

“It’s a new era,” said Overholt, joking that he has made a pink suit for Hernandez, a straight-but-not-narrow guy, to wear as co-emcee of the event.

While the Santa Rosa celebrations have come and gone, there is still another opportunity to enjoy a Pride event this coming Saturday, June 10, in Windsor. Oh my God, Windsor, a bastion of mom-and-pop, two-kids-and-a-dog families, or so thought Spencer Blank when he moved there a couple of years ago during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I knew Windsor was family-oriented,” said Blank, “but I have never felt discriminated against here. So, I wanted to throw a party that would embrace the whole community. I wanted to come out of the pandemic better than when I came in.”

Blank describes Windsor Pride as the “next generation of Pride festivals… a celebration of identity for all.” And the definition seems to fit because the week of activities, which will culminate June 10 with a celebration in Windsor’s town green, definitely attracts more than the LGBTQ community. Last year, which was the first time for Windsor Pride, it actually drew more allies than LGBTQ folks, Blank said. To make the inclusivity of the event clear to everyone, the Windsor Pride committee calls it “Love Wins in Windsor.”

Nico Reilly Turner, the 16-year-old president of Windsor High School’s Gender and Sexuality Alliance, agrees that love is abundant there. Turner has identified as non-binary since eighth grade. Non-binary means the person does not identify exclusively as male or female.

“A lot of my straight and cis friends come (to Windsor Pride) to have fun with me,” Turner said. “It feels nice that you don’t have to be part of the LGBTQ community to go to one of these events. We love and respect each other, and I’m glad we can all be together.”

Last year, a very special young lady was the junior grand marshal for Windsor Pride. According to her mother, Andrea, Dina Nofi realized at the age of three and a half that she is a girl and not the boy she was born as biologically.

“She came into the room and asked us, ‘When am I going to become a girl?’ We knew it was time for us to start educating ourselves,” said Andrea Nofi.

Dina Nofi and her mother marched last year in the Santa Rosa parade, as part of the Windsor contingent. And Saturday she can be found at her Girl Scout troop’s Windsor Pride booth, where her mom will be offering mom hugs, especially for LGBTQ children who might not get that kind of acceptance in their own homes. Dina Nofi is a member of a Girl Scout troop for LGBTQ, special needs and medically fragile girls.

How did Dina Nofi feel about being a seven-year-old openly transgender girl at the Windsor festival last year?

“Happy,” she said, to be honored for being her true self, and for the fun of wearing her crown and holding her flowers.

Letters to the Editor, Week of June 7

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Disqualified After reading both Miriam Ginden's Open Mic column (May 10) and Barry Barnett's letter to the editor (May 31), I became intrigued by the possibility of barring from elected office anyone who participated in, encouraged or supported the riot at the U.S. Capitol on January 6th, 2021. Upon researching the Disqualification Clause, I found that the clause makes no mention...

Sonoma-Marin ag report calls for collaboration, amid weather warnings

Photo by Matt Dolkas
This winter’s heavy rain storms offered the North Bay a respite from a three-year drought, but a report released in late May warns that local water users should remain vigilant. The publication, titled “Agricultural Resilience in the Face of Extreme Dry Conditions,” was prepared by a variety of public agencies, nonprofits and ag industry groups. It offers lessons learned from...

State lawmaker proposes security deposit cap

Photo by Igal Ness/Unsplash
Most renters know securing housing isn't as simple as finding the perfect place. California's renters must save up thousands of dollars to provide security deposits that can legally be as much as two months' rent, or three months' rent for furnished units. Add in the requirement that renters put up the first month's rent before they can move in and low-income...

Culture Crush, Week of June 7

Sean Hayes - Photo by Bethany Johanna Weiss
Petaluma Home at the Mystic Sean Hayes returns to the Mystic for the first time since he has really settled into his adopted hometown, where he is a much loved member of the community. Opening for the show is Sean Carscadden. Says Hayes about his opener, “He's kind of like this unknown jewel of the North Bay,” calling him “probably one...

Free Will Astrology, Week of June 7

ARIES (March 21-April 19): "Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves," said psychologist Carl Jung. What was he implying? That we may sometimes engage in the same behavior that bothers us about others? And we should examine whether we are similarly annoying? That’s one possible explanation, and I encourage you to meditate...

Loneliness v. Love: ‘Chapatti’ plays in Healdsburg

Photo by Jonathan Wind
The 222 is a non-profit, member-supported arts, culture and entertainment venue that’s housed in the Paul Mahder Gallery in Healdsburg. Open since 2021, to date it’s presented musical programs, literary readings, film showings and other community events. Professional theater now enters that mix with a series of productions programmed by well-known Bay Area theater artist and educator Aldo Billingslea. Their...

Matter(s) at Hand: An ontological split

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The perennial wisdom, which discloses the same knowledge in different times and places, teaches that ultimate reality consists of the meeting of spirit and matter. Think of the physical universe as deriving from a lump of clay and you’ve got matter. But before anything could be made from this unformed clay, an idea had to exist in the mind of...

Radio Daze: Steve Jaxon, ‘The Drive’ plan next moves

Steve Jaxon - Photo by Daedalus Howell
Avid listeners of KSRO will notice an unfamiliar sound coming through the drive-time airwaves this week. As was announced last week and echoed in sundry local media outlets, the long-running radio show, The Drive with Steve Jaxon, has been unexpectedly discontinued by the station's management. As of this writing, it's unclear what will replace the show, but whatever it is,...

Haus Party: BROT is wunderbar

Photo courtesy of BROT
Life is full of odd little coincidences. The longer one lives, the more they seem less like coincidences and more like a glitch in the Matrix. For example, for reasons known only to the vicissitudes of local advertising agendas, our burger and beer edition happens to also be our Pride edition. And since I can't think about writing without first...

SoCo Pride: Local LGBTQ Event Comes of Age

Sonoma County Pride 2023
Contingents representing towns, politicians, nonprofits, places of worship, hospitals and tech companies—along with children, dogs, people pushing wheelchairs and walkers, and even those blowing bubbles—all marched, danced, sang, performed gymnastics and waved rainbow flags, before a crowd of thousands at the June 3 Sonoma County Pride Parade. Witnessing this exuberant event, and the crowd that it brings to downtown Santa...
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