Culture Crush—Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker and More

Petaluma
Members Exhibition 

Join Petaluma Arts Center (PAC) for their annual Members Exhibition. A tradition since 2008, each year the PAC proudly showcases the work of their many local artist and maker members, realizing their central mission of building community through the arts. This year’s exhibition is curated by Jennifer Bethke and Vicky Kumpfer, and features a wide variety of media, from painting to sculpture to ceramics and beyond. Each work is an invitation to explore the artist’s approach to art making and artistic vision. Come marvel at the talent and creative passion the Petaluma community holds, and perhaps discover a newfound inspiration to create art. The Petaluma Members Exhibition runs Nov. 17-Dec. 17 at the Petaluma Arts Center, 230 Lakeville St. Opening reception Nov. 17. 5:30-7:30pm. Free. www.petalumaartscenter.org 

Ross
‘Gypsy: A Musical Fable’ 

Familiar with the famous burlesque singer Gypsy Rose Lee? This is a great chance to get acquainted! Join the community of Ross at the Barn Theater for Gypsy: A Musical Fable, with music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and book by Arthur Laurents. The musical is loosely based on Lee’s 1957 memoirs, and focuses on her mother, Rose, who is known familiarly as “the ultimate show business mother.” Following the dreams and efforts of Rose Lee to raise two daughters in show biz, the show shines an affectionate eye on the gritty demands of a life in the performance world. The musical contains many songs that became popular standards, including “Everything’s Coming Up Roses,” “Together (Wherever We Go),” “Small World,” “You Gotta Get a Gimmick,” “Let Me Entertain You,” “All I Need Is the Girl” and “Rose’s Turn.” Gypsy: A Musical Fable plays Nov. 11-Dec 18 at The Barn Theater, 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Ross. Times vary. Tickets $40. www.mountainplay.org 

Santa Rosa
‘Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker’ 

It’s a Christmas classic with a whole new swing! Join the Luther Burbank Performing Arts Center for Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker. Performed by the New World Ballet Junior and Senior Company dancers—New World Ballet is a BIPOC-led nonprofit organization that supports equal opportunity for high-quality dance education— along with professional dancers and the 16-piece Marcus Shelby Orchestra, this performance is one for the books. Act I features a jazzified 1920s Harlem-based performance with a diverse cast. Holiday classics like “Santa Baby” and “Winter Wonderland” (the disco version) are on the roster. The production is choreographed by New World Ballet’s artistic director, Victor Temple, of Dance Theater of Harlem, Oakland Ballet and Cirque du Soleil. Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker is Sunday, Dec. 4 at the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd., Santa Rosa. 3pm. Tickets $45 and $60. www.lutherburbankcenter.org 

Mill Valley
Will Bernard and Freelance Subversives 

Join Sweetwater Music Hall for a rocking night of music with Will Bernard and Freelance Subversives. Guitarist Bernard is a Berkeley native and Brooklyn, NY transplant who studied guitar and piano from a young age with such greats as Dave Creamer, Julian White and Art Lande. He received his degree in music from UC Berkeley and has been on a musical adventure ever since, recording and performing as a member of Peter Apfelbaum’s Hieroglyphics Ensemble, performing under projects led by producer Lee Townsend and becoming a bandleader himself in 1998 with the release of “Medicine Hat.” Bernard has performed at The Monterey, North Sea, SF Jazz, Jazz a Vienne, Bumbershoot, Be-Bop and Brew, Montreal, Vancouver, Caribbean Sea and The High Sierra festivals, as well as at clubs and festivals across the U.S., Europe and Canada. Will Bernard and Freelance Subversives play Thursday, Nov. 10 at Sweetwater Music Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. Doors 7pm, show 8pm. Tickets $24. www.sweetwatermusichall.com 

—Jane Vick 

Newsom falls far short of campaign pledge to build 3.5 million homes

It’s difficult for housing advocates to criticize Gov. Gavin Newsom because he has done more to boost production than any other governor in recent memory—but that’s mostly because the bar is so low. 

Measured against the goal he set for himself, Newsom’s record is less impressive. Just 13% of the 3.5 million homes he campaigned on building have been permitted, let alone built. He has walked back the goal many times, settling on a new target earlier this year: Cities need to have planned a combined 2.5 million homes by 2030. So, that means a million fewer homes planned for, not built, and over a longer time frame.

Newsom can point to some accomplishments: He signed bills that capped big rent hikes statewide, legalized duplexes and fourplexes on most developable land and unlocked millions of potential apartments on empty strip malls. He sheltered tens of thousands of people experiencing homelessness amid a generational pandemic and dedicated more dollars to housing and homelessness than ever before.

But as he finalizes his first term and coasts into the second, Newsom finds himself mired in an even deeper housing and homelessness crisis than the one he inherited.

Running for governor in 2017, then-Lt. Gov. Newsom pledged to spur a never-before-seen tsunami of homebuilding in California to bridge the gap between the growing population and shrinking stock of housing driving the affordability crisis.

“As governor, I will lead the effort to develop the 3.5 million new housing units we need by 2025 because our solutions must be as bold as the problem is big,” Newsom wrote on Medium.

The goal was true to character: big, hairy and audacious. It would have required building an average of 500,000 homes a year in a state that has only surpassed the 300,000 mark twice in more than 50 years

Newsom didn’t get even close. 

In the nearly four years since he took office, California cities are projected to have permitted a total of about 452,000 homes—less than he pledged he’d build in one year alone, according to local data collected by the Construction Industry Research Board.

When asked about his shortcomings at a recent press conference, Newsom wrote off his original goal as he has many times before, by paraphrasing Michelangelo.

“The biggest risk in life, however one defines risk, is not that we aim too high and miss it. It’s that we aim too low and reach it,” Newsom said. “It was always a stretch goal.”

Housing advocates acknowledge that policy change is by nature slow and incremental, and like many other proposals, long-term housing goals took a backseat to the COVID-19 pandemic. 

But the reality on the ground—that there aren’t enough houses for everyone and the ones that exist are hideously expensive—continues to exasperate Californians who repeatedly rank housing and homelessness among their top concerns

State Sen. Brian Dahle, who ran for governor this year, and other state Republicans have routinely attacked Newsom’s record on housing, including calling for a special session on homelessness.

“We need government to treat this the way we treat a natural disaster, because that’s how it’s impacting people’s lives,” said Chione Lucina Muñoz Flegal, executive director of Housing California, a housing advocacy organization. “And that’s not what we see happening.”

A Marshall Plan for Housing?

Housing policy advocates described Newsom’s stated goal of 3.5 million new homes in four years the same way he has: aspirational. They say that’s because the state doesn’t build housing in California—private developers do, with the approval of local governments. So what really grabbed advocates’ attention was the “Marshall Plan for affordable housing” Newsom pledged to launch during his inaugural speech, recalling the multi-billion dollar program to rebuild Western Europe following World War II.

“As much as the number was important, the idea of building a streamlined process of building, that was amazing, because that’s really the challenge of California,” said Dan Dunmoyer, president of the California Building Industry Association. Dunmoyer said that dream remains elusive.

California has some of the highest housing costs in the nation because of how little “marshaling” there is, Dunmoyer said. Land costs are prohibitive, and zoning rules limit much of what can be built. Housing must get approved at the local level, which has ample opportunity for community input. Those communities can then block unpopular projects, such as multi-family or affordable housing. Another culprit: impact fees cities charge to fund infrastructure that can exceed $150,000 a home, some of the highest in the nation.

The closest Newsom may have gotten to bulldozing those barriers is Project Homekey. After COVID-19 hit, the administration scrambled to turn 94 hotels and motels into more than 6,000 shelter units for people experiencing homelessness, which would later become permanent homes, within record-setting months. The projects bypassed local land use rules and a marquee environmental law often blamed for slowing or killing controversial projects. The state has since expanded the $800 million project with more than $2.75 billion in new funding.

Newsom signed more than a dozen bills allowing housing types that met certain conditions to skip lengthy approval processes at the local level. Two are expected to have the biggest impact: one which legalized duplexes and fourplexes on the two-thirds of developable land in California previously zoned for single-family homes, and another that allows apartments on land previously allotted for retail centers, parking lots and offices along arterial roads.

While a zoning change doesn’t build housing, it’s a first step to making it legal. Combined, the two laws could open up previously blocked space for more than 2 million housing units.

“The effect of legislation is often hard to prove, because it’s only one factor of many in the development process,” said Louis Mirante, vice president of public policy at the Bay Area Council. “To stop a project, you only need one red light. But to make a project go, you need at least 100 green lights. A lot of the legislation the governor has been signing has been those green lights.”

But yellow and red lights abound, including rising interest rates and prohibitive material costs. While it took political courage to sign a controversial measure like the one streamlining duplex and fourplex construction, Newsom remained largely quiet on those bills until they reached the finish line, and hasn’t championed a more sweeping production policy proposal on his own.

Moving the goalposts

While Newsom has repeatedly called the 3.5 million goal taken from a 2016 McKinsey study a moonshot, he has put his weight behind another number: 2.5 million. That’s how many homes the Legislature has mandated California cities to plan for by 2030, and Newsom’s team is making sure they do.

“Before we can reach our stretch goals, before you can reach the moon, you’ve got to get off the launch pad,” said Jason Elliott, Newsom’s senior counselor on housing and homelessness.

The planning law has been on the books for decades, but it wasn’t until 2017 that the state Legislature gave the process teeth by creating standards and penalties cities must abide by. The plans for the housing that those standards and penalties apply to weren’t even due for most cities until this year. And the deadlines are different for different regions. It’s a slow process. 

Cities now have to zone for more than double the housing they did in previous years, and it has to be on sites where housing could actually be built. And if they don’t do it, they risk losing affordable housing dollars or even forgoing housing approval decisions.

But having laws on the books—even if they feature new penalties—doesn’t mean anything unless someone is there to enforce them. 

To that end, Newsom staffed up a $4.65 million accountability and enforcement unit within the housing department, with reinforcements at the state’s Justice Department. Cities seem to be paying heed, but it’s all fun and games until actual homes get built.

“For many years in California, the Regional Housing Needs (Allocation) process was an afterthought at best,” Elliott said. “It was not taken seriously because there were largely no consequences for local governments failing to meet their responsibilities. And that’s not ancient history, but through a very concerted effort by this governor and the administration in partnership with the Legislature, RHNA is now very serious. And I think communities are taking it seriously.”

But planning isn’t building, and a recurring complaint about the process from cities is that while it requires a lot of affordable housing to be planned for—1 million of the 2.5 million units must be affordable to the lowest earners—the state doesn’t provide nearly enough tax credits and other subsidies to build it.

“We’re funding a quarter of that, at best,” said Paavo Monkkonen, associate professor of urban planning at UCLA’s Luskin School of Public Affairs. “So that’s an interesting conundrum, where their own goal is unattainable. And there’s not really a Manhattan Project to make that happen.”

With the Legislature, Newsom has dedicated unprecedented dollars to affordable housing, including $10.3 billion in 2021. Funding the current affordable housing need alone, however, would require nearly $18 billion a year over a decade, according to a recent estimate from Housing California and California Housing Partnership. And there is no long-term source of funding for housing in California. As budget projections for next year sour, affordable housing advocates worry those funds might dry up.

“In these years of good budget outlook, the administration has done a really good job,” said Marina Wiant, vice president of government affairs at the California Housing Consortium, a non-partisan housing advocacy organization. “It’s going to be interesting to see what they do when they have to make tough budget choices.”

Culture Crush—Marin Arts & Craft Fair, Emilia Clarke, and More

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Santa Rosa

Holiday Food Drive 

This holiday season, give back to the community with Operation End Hunger. Local veterans, in partnership with the Redwood Empire Food Bank and City Councilmember Natalie Rogers, are hosting this event, in which civilians and veterans alike are invited to collect food donations and bring them to Bridge Church to be distributed to those experiencing food insecurity. “Food drive food is the best quality food we receive because it is hand-picked by our community members for those in need,” said Erika Carstensen, supply chain manager at the Redwood Empire Food Bank. “When food is being donated from your pantry, at one point in time, that food was chosen to feed your family and is now being given to a family in need.” Each military branch will have their own donation bin, to see who collects the most donations. Operation End Hunger is accepting food donations Friday, Nov. 12 from 9am-12pm at Bridge Church, 301 Fulton Rd., Santa Rosa. Visit www.refb.org for a list of most needed foods. 

San Rafael

Marin Arts & Crafts Show 

It’s back! The annual Marin Arts & Crafts Show, inspired by the Arts & Crafts movement of the late 19th century, focuses on handcraft in all forms and is a one-stop-shop for holiday season gifts. It features over 200 artisan exhibits showcasing handcrafted wares, fine art, jewelry, ceramics, woodworks and antiquities, as well as specialty food and chocolate sampling, wine tasting and live music. There’s nothing dull about this gift-purchasing experience. Or, rather than buying something already made, take part in a series of interactive workshops such as plein air painting, decorative painting and mixed media, to bring home a one-of-a-kind gift. This craft show seeks to capture the romance of a bygone era and to showcase the brilliance of our local makers. Attend the Marin Arts & Craft Show Friday, Nov. 4-Sunday, Nov. 6 at the Marin Center Exhibit Hall, 10 Ave. of the Flags, San Rafael. 10am-6pm Friday and Saturday, 10am-5pm on Sunday. Free. www.MarinArtsAndCraftsShow.com 

Sonoma

Raymond Saunders Conversation 

Join Sonoma Valley Museum of Art (SVMA) for Raymond Saunders in Context: A Conversation about Black Artists and Art in America. This lively discussion on their current exhibition of the work of African American artist Raymond Saunders will be led by Cheryl Finley, Ph.D. inaugural director, Atlanta University Center for Art History and Curatorial Studies Collective, and distinguished visiting professor, Spelman College, also in Atlanta. Finley will be joined by Leigh Raiford, Ph.D., professor, African American studies department, University of California, Berkeley; Jacqueline Frances, Ph.D., chair, graduate visual and critical studies program, California College of the Arts, San Francisco; and Bay Area artist Demetri Broxton, senior director of education at Museum of the African Diaspora (MOAD), San Francisco. “Raymond Saunders in Context: A Conversation about Black Artists and Art in America” is Sunday, Nov. 6 at SVMA, 551 Broadway, Sonoma. 2pm. $10 for students, $20 members, $25 non-members. www.svma.org 

Larkspur

The Seagull

Join the Lark Theater for two theatrical cinema presentations of Anton Chekhov’s The Seagull, 

starring Game of Thrones actress Emilia Clarke, in her West End London debut! The Seagull, written in 1985 by Russian dramatist Chekhov, has been adapted to a modern version by Anya Reiss and is produced by the Jamie Lloyd Company. It follows four characters: the famous middlebrow story writer Boris Trigorin, the ingenue Nina (played by Clarke), the fading actress Irina Arkadina, and her son, the symbolist playwright Konstantin Treplev, through their relationships with romantic and artistic conflict. The show is part of The Lark’s National Theatre Live 2022-2023 season. See The Seagull Thursday, Nov. 10 and Sunday, Nov. 12 at the Lark Theater, 549 Magnolia Ave, Larkspur. Thursday 7pm, Sunday 1pm. Tickets $12-30. www.larktheater.net 

—Jane Vick 

Free Will Astrology

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): In the coming weeks, I encourage you to work as hard as you have ever worked. Work smart, too. Work with flair and aplomb and relish. You now have a surprisingly fertile opportunity to reinvent how you do your work and how you feel about your work. To take maximum advantage of this potential breakthrough, you should inspire yourself to give more of your heart and soul to your work than you have previously imagined possible. (PS: By “work,” I mean your job and any crucial activity that is both challenging and rewarding.)

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Here’s my weird suggestion, Taurus. Just for now, only for a week or two, experiment with dreaming about what you want but can’t have. And just for now, only for a week or two, go in pursuit of what you want but can’t have. I predict that these exercises in quixotic futility will generate an unexpected benefit. They will motivate you to dream true and strong and deep about what you do want and can have. They will intensify and focus you to pursue what you do want and can have. 

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your most successful times in life usually come when all your various selves are involved. During these interludes, none of them is neglected or shunted to the outskirts. In my astrological opinion, you will be wise to ensure this scenario is in full play during the coming weeks. In fact, I recommend you throw a big Unity Party and invite all your various sub-personalities to come as they are. Have outrageous fun acting out the festivities. Set out a placemat and nametag on a table for each participant. Move around from seat to seat and speak from the heart on behalf of each one. Later, discuss a project you could all participate in creating.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): A Cancerian reader named Joost Joring explained to me how he cultivates the art of being the best Cancerian he can be. He said, “I shape my psyche into a fortress, and I make people feel privileged when they are allowed inside. If I must sometimes instruct my allies to stay outside for a while, to camp out by the drawbridge as I work out my problems, I make sure they know they can still love me—and that I still love them.” I appreciate Joost’s perspective. As a Cancerian myself, I can attest to its value. But I will also note that in the coming weeks, you will reap some nice benefits from having less of a fortress mentality. In my astrological opinion, it’s PARTY TIME!

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Leo poet Antonio Machado wrote, “I thought my fire was out, and I stirred the ashes. I burnt my fingers.” I’m telling you this so you won’t make the same mistake, Leo. Your energy may be a bit less radiant and fervent than usual right now, but that’s only because you’re in a recharging phase. Your deep reserves of fertility and power are regenerating. That’s a good thing! Don’t make the error of thinking it’s a sign of reduced vitality. Don’t overreact with a flurry of worry.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo author Siegfried Sassoon became renowned for the poetry he wrote about being a soldier in World War I. Having witnessed carnage firsthand, he became adept at focusing on what was truly important. “As long as I can go on living a rich inner life,” he wrote, “I have no cause for complaint, and I welcome anything which helps me to simplify my life, which seems to be more and more a process of eliminating inessentials!” I suggest we make Sassoon your inspirational role model for the next three weeks. What inessentials can you eliminate? What could you do to enhance your appreciation for all the everyday miracles that life offers you?

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You Libras have a talent that I consider a superpower: You can remove yourself from the heart of the chaos and deliver astute insights about how to tame the chaos. I like that about you. I have personally benefited from it on numerous occasions. But for the next few weeks, I will ask you to try something different. I’ll encourage you to put an emphasis on practical action, however imperfect it might be, more than on in-depth analysis. This moment in the history of your universe requires a commitment to getting things done, even if they’re untidy and incomplete. Here’s your motto: “I improvise compromises in the midst of the interesting mess.”

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Fear is the raw material from which courage is manufactured,” said author Martha Beck. “Without it, we wouldn’t even know what it means to be brave.” I love that quote—and I especially love it as a guiding meditation for you Scorpios right now. We usually think of fear as an unambiguously bad thing, a drain of our precious life force. But I suspect that for you, it will turn out to be useful in the coming days. You’re going to find a way to transmute fear into boldness, bravery and even badassery.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): For decades, the Canadian city of Sudbury hosted a robust mining industry. Deposits of nickel sulfide ore spawned a booming business. But these riches also brought terrible pollution. Sudbury’s native vegetation was devastated. The land was stained with foul air produced by the smelting process. An effort to re-green the area began in the 1970s. Today, the air is among the cleanest in the province of Ontario. In the spirit of this transformation, I invite you to embark on a personal reclamation project. Now is a favorable time to detoxify and purify any parts of your life that have been spoiled or sullied.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The literal meaning of the ancient Greek word aigílips is “devoid of goats.” It refers to a place on the Earth that is so high and steep that not even sure-footed goats can climb it. There aren’t many of those places. Similarly, there are very few metaphorical peaks that a determined Capricorn can’t reach. One of your specialties is the power to master seemingly improbable and impassable heights. But here’s an unexpected twist in your destiny: In the coming months, your forte will be a talent for going very far down and in. Your agility at ascending, for a change, will be useful in descending—for exploring the depths. Now is a good time to get started!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Evolved Aquarians are often blessed with unprecedented friendships and free-spirited intimacy and innovative alliances. People who align themselves with you may enjoy experimental collaborations they never imagined before engaging with you. They might be surprised at the creative potentials unleashed in them because of their synergy with you. In the coming weeks and months, you will have even more power than usual to generate such liaisons and connections. You might want to make a copy of this horoscope and use it as your calling card or business card.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): I surveyed the history of literature to identify authors I consider highly intuitive. Pisces-born Anais Nin was my top choice. She used language with fluidity and lyricism. She lived a colorful, unpredictable life. No one better deserves the title of Intuition Champion. And yet she also had a discerning view of this faculty. She wrote, “I began to understand that there were times when I must question my intuition and separate it from my anxieties or fears. I must think, observe, question, seek facts and not trust blindly to my intuition.” I admire her caution. And I suspect it was one reason her intuition was so potent. Your assignment, Pisces, is to apply her approach to your relationship with your intuition. The coming months will be a time when you can supercharge this key aspect of your intelligence and make it work for you better than it ever has before.

Shrub Love: Tart and Smart

When I say that shrubs are my new obsession, I’m not talking about the garden variety shrub…

A shrub (of the drinking variety) is a concentrated syrup of sugar, fruit and vinegar that is most often based on apple cider vinegar. These delicious tart little syrups add brightness, sweetness and acidity to cocktails (traditional or non alcoholic) and therefore have become increasingly popular with bartenders. 

In Sonoma County and the North Bay in particular, shrubs have been embraced as a must-have behind the best bars—partially due to the prevalence of apples here. However, there are also a handful of small farms and businesses that make their own apple juice based products and have started crafting their own lines of flavored shrubs. 

Little Apple Treats, for example, a business started by local Sebastopol apple farmers, makes a line of insanely delicious naturally flavored apple cider shrubs with flavors ranging from Blood Orange-Meyer Lemon and Ginger-Hibiscus to Blackberry-Lemonade. Gold Ridge Farms also makes a yummy Gravenstein-Fuji apple cider vinegar shrub, made from their organically farmed apples. 

Griffo Distillery in Petaluma uses flavored apple cider vinegar shrubs from Little Apple Treats in some of their signature cocktails. The distillery also sells a selection of Little Apple Treats shrubs in their shop. Ellen Cavalli at Tilted Shed Cider makes her own shrubs with apple cider vinegar made from apples grown on her farm and serves low alcohol cider shrub spritzers at the cidery’s Windsor tasting room. 

The Fern Bar in Sebastopol makes their own flavored shrubs from local apple cider vinegars and keeps these behind the bar to use in cocktails. While over at The Barlow in Sebastopol, Golden State Cider serves up cider-apple brandy spritzers made with Little Apple Treats shrubs at their taproom, and Spiritworks serves shrub cocktails as well as includes Little Apple Treats shrubs in the cocktail kit that they sell there. 

Try a shrub spritzer or cocktail (though the beverages won’t typically be called shrub spritzers or cocktails on the menu—these spots use shrubs in some of their drinks) at local taprooms or bars including Fern Bar (Sebastopol), Griffo Distillery (Petaluma), Tilted Shed Cider (Windsor), and places that serve nonalcoholic or low ABV cocktails, including cider taprooms and tasting rooms such as Golden State Cider (which serves an apple brandy and shrub cocktail) and Tilted Shed Cider.

Or, mix up a refreshing shrub-ade at home, with this Shrub Refresher recipe from Little Apple Treats.

Shrub Refresher Recipe 

Ingredients:

3/4 cup fresh lemon juice (6-8 lemons)

1/2 cup Little Apple Treats shrub of your choice (I personally LOVE the Ginger Limeade and Hibiscus )

4 cups water

Simple syrup (above)

Extra slices of lemon for the pitcher

Mix the simple syrup, lemon juice, shrub, optional vodka and water together. Stir and taste, adding more lemon juice or shrub if it’s not tart enough for you. Add ice and sliced lemons. Stir one more time and serve.

Life Is Short(er): Thank Conservatives

By Lawrence S. Wittner 

Although, in recent decades, American conservatives have embraced what they call the “Right to Life,” they have certainly done a poor job of sustaining life in the United States. 

That’s the conclusion that can be drawn from a just-published scientific study, “U.S. state policy contexts and mortality of working-age adults.”

Funded by a grant from the U.S. National Institute on Aging and prepared by a group of U.S. and Canadian researchers, the study found a close relationship, in the period from 1999 to 2019, between the mortality rates of Americans between 20 and 64 years of age and the conservative or liberal control of their state governments. 

Specifically, the study concluded that a state’s liberal policies promoting gun safety, environmental protections, labor rights (e.g., minimum wage and paid leave), progressive taxation and tobacco control lowered mortality rates. By contrast, a state’s conservative policies in these areas increased a state’s death rate. Thus, in 2019, life expectancy in conservative Mississippi stood at 74.4 years; in liberal Hawaii, at 80.9 years. 

The authors estimated that if all states had had a maximum liberal orientation in the public policy areas studied, 171,030 working-age lives would have been saved in 2019 alone. On the other hand, if all states had had a maximum conservative orientation that year, an additional 217,635 working-age deaths would have occurred.

Especially strong associations were found between the absence of gun safety and suicide mortality among men, between the absence of labor rights and alcohol-induced mortality, and between the absence of tobacco taxes and economic taxes and cardiovascular mortality.

The association between conservative governance and rising death rates might also explain why, with the growth of rightwing Republican control of many states, the U.S. mortality rate, long on the wane, has been rising dramatically since 2009.

The result, as the authors of the recent scientific study observe, is that in 2019, Americans―who then had a life expectancy of 78.8 years―died 5.7 years earlier than the Japanese, 3.3 years earlier than Canadians and 2.5 years earlier than the British. In 2020, U.S. life expectancy dropped to 77.0 years. In 2021, it dropped to 76.1 years.

As Americans cast their votes this November, they might want to consider whether these kinds of conservative public policies have served them well in the past and will do so in the future.

Dr. Lawrence Wittner is professor of history emeritus at SUNY/Albany.

Hollywood & Vines

On This Week’s Cover: Beyond being a star in Jurassic Park, Star Wars VII, and snagging an Academy Award for Marriage Story, Laura Dern will be among the honorees at an upcoming Napa Valley Film Festival Showcase—editor Daedalus Howell reports. The film coverage continues with the Sonoma screening of Dear Zoe, the latest film from local producers Marc and Brenda Lhormer, starring Stranger Things breakout Sadie Sink. Meanwhile, news editor Will Carruthers reports on a lawsuit filed in Sebastopol that argues a new parking law was crafted to chase out people living in vehicles; and Harry Duke reviews Sweeney Todd in Napa.

‘Dear Zoe’ Screens in Sonoma

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With the uptick of local film development, dealmaking and production, you’d be forgiven if it suddenly seems that there’s a great migration from Hollywood to the North Bay. Nothing to fret—much of the local action is homemade. Case in point, the latest film from Sonoma-based filmmakers Marc and Brenda Lhormer.

Dear Zoe is an adaptation of the young adult novel of the same title by Philip Beard and stars Stranger Things breakout Sadie Sink. The film screens at Sonoma’s Sebastiani Theatre Nov. 4-13. 

Some will recognize the Lhormers as the creative team behind the wine country comedy Bottle Shock, about Napa’s vindicating viticultural victory at the Judgement of Paris, as well as the dynamic force behind Sonoma Valley Film Festival (from 2002 to 2008) and later the Napa Valley Film Festival (from 2010 to 2018).

In their new film, 15-year-old Tess DeNunzio (Sink) loses her sister, Zoe, in a hit-and-run accident on—of all days—Sept. 11, 2001. This epochal American moment understandably complicates how Tess processes her grief and shades her burgeoning relationship with the proverbial “boy-next-door” (who, at least in terms of his career dealings, is anything but). Her relationship with her divorced slacker dad (played by Sons of Anarchy and Luke Cage alumnus Theo Rossi) is also strained when she decamps to his rundown digs unannounced after an emotional flare-up with her mother.

It’s interesting to note that we’ve reached the point in our cultural timeline when those depicting the fall-out of relatively recent historical events were born after them. This factoid steals nothing from the 20-year-old Sink’s performance, which draws from her estimable talent under the direction of Gren Wells, an alumnus of Variety’s prestigious “10 Directors to Watch.”

Dear Zoe has scored honors at film festivals across the nation, and will be available to rent or buy on multiple video on-demand platforms beginning Nov. 4. That said, its producers encourage local audiences to catch it on the big screen, where they will be in attendance after some of the showings for Q&As.

“We are so excited to share our new feature film with our very own community, especially at one of the most special theaters in the country,” said producer Marc Lhormer, who co-wrote the screenplay. “We invite people who love character-driven, heartwarming movies to come out and see Dear Zoe the way it should be seen—on a very big screen in a movie theater!”

For screening days and time, tickets and more information about ‘Dear Zoe,’ visit  sebastianitheatre.com/blog/2022/10/2/dear-zoe.

Civil rights groups sue Sebastopol over parking law

A coalition of civil rights groups last week sued Sebastopol over a new parking law, which they argue was crafted to chase people living in vehicles out of the small city. 

ACLU Foundation of Northern California, Disability Rights Advocates, California Rural Legal Assistance and Legal Aid of Sonoma County filed the lawsuit on behalf of four current and former Sebastopol residents and a local nonprofit, Sonoma County Acts of Kindness, which serves people experiencing homelessness.

Among other things, the group argues that the law, whether it is enforced or just used as a threat, violates the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment. Sebastopol does not have an adequate affordable housing alternatives to offer unhoused people and, instead of creating more options, is using a new law to push “undesirable” people living in vehicles out, according to the lawsuit. 

“Sebastopol’s failure to provide adequate affordable housing for its residents has disproportionate risk for our clients and others like them, who are low-income people with disabilities, who have been forced into housing of last resort—their vehicles,” Thomas Zito, an attorney at Disability Rights Advocates, said in a press release announcing the lawsuit. “Living in an RV, car or trailer is often much safer for people with disabilities than congregate shelters or living in a tent. Sebastopol cannot solve its housing crisis by driving unhoused people with disabilities out of town.”

The city is defending the ordinance. In a statement sent to the press last week, Larry McLaughlin, the city attorney and city manager, said that the civil rights groups’ announcement of the lawsuit “mischaracterizes the nature and intent” of the parking ordinance. 

McLaughlin states that the ordinance was passed in response to health and safety concerns on Morris Street and is not intended to “drive out” unhoused people. The statement also highlights the city’s recent efforts on homelessness, including establishing the Horizon Shine Village, a safe parking site with space for 20 residential vehicles, and paying legal bills to defend the village from a lawsuit brought by angry neighbors. In an interview, McLaughlin said the city hopes to extend the life of the village for another two years despite the potential of further legal challenges.

During the first two years of the pandemic, numerous vehicles used as homes were parked on Morris Street, bordering The Barlow shopping center on the edge of the city. 

According to the lawsuit, in September 2021, police counted 32 vehicles parked on Morris Street. That December, they counted 43 vehicles being used for shelter around the city, more than twice the number of spaces available in Horizon Shine Village, which opened a few months later, in February.

But, facing mounting frustration from some city residents and business owners about the vehicles, the city took action early this year. 

A month after the village opened, the city council passed the Recreational Vehicle Parking Ordinance, which makes it illegal to park any vehicle “designed or altered for human habitation for recreational, emergency, or other human occupancy” in a residential area or park at any time, or in a commercial area from 7:30am to 10pm. Vehicles found in violation are subject to “citation, towing or both.”

The lawsuit argues that the wording of the ordinance and public discussions at council meetings indicate that the city intends to selectively enforce the new law.

“Although the ordinance prohibits parking any vehicle in which a person could sleep, the city has made it clear that they intend to enforce the ordinance only against people who are living in their vehicles or are otherwise considered ‘undesirable,’” the coalition’s Oct. 25 legal complaint  states. 

For instance, at a January meeting described in the complaint, a council member asked the city’s police chief whether the ordinance could be used against a homeowner with “a VW van that they park in front of their house.” Not to worry, the chief responded, enforcement would be “complaint driven by the neighbors.”

In an interview, city manager McLaughlin told the Bohemian that he is “not aware” of police citing anyone under the parking law, since it was passed this March. 

However, the lawsuit argues that the mere threat of using the ordinance, which allows the city to tow vehicles being used for shelter and storage of an individual’s personal property, was enough to make people move to other parts of the county. McLaughlin acknowledged that police had informed residents of the new law and that “theoretically” the remaining vehicles may have left because of the new punishments.

According to the lawsuit, Michael Deegan, one of the plaintiffs, moved his vehicle to Santa Rosa after Sebastopol passed the ordinance. Another plaintiff sold her vehicle because of the increased risk of towing.

“Instead of working with the homeless and providing a reasonable solution, Sebastopol came up with a draconian one, to ban homeless people living in their vehicles from the city,” Deegan said.

Long stereotyped as a hippy city, ahead of the pack on some environmental and progressive issues, Sebastopol is becoming increasingly out of reach for low- and moderate-income individuals. A recent report by the Sonoma County Economic Development Board found that the city’s 3,356 households have a median income of $101,911, paying an average of 35.9% of their income for housing. The median home price is nearly $1.1 million.

The county’s latest Point In Time Count, conducted this February, found that the number of unsheltered individuals in Sebastopol had dropped from 129 in February 2020, to just 40 in February 2022. 

‘Sweeney Todd’ is a Cut Above

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Within the last year, we’ve lost Angela Lansbury and Stephen Sondheim, and each passing brought to mind their most successful collaboration—Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street

Following years of pandemic-induced delays, Napa’s Lucky Penny Productions finally takes a stab at it—through Nov. 6.

After years in exile, Benjamin Barker (Ian Elliot) returns to London, having adopted the moniker of Sweeney Todd. Todd seeks revenge on the villainous Judge Turpin (David Murphy) and his enforcer Beadle Bamford (Sean O’Brien) for the loss of his wife and daughter. He enters into a pact with pie-shop owner Nellie Lovett (Taylor Bartolucci) to facilitate his revenge and provide the pie shop with a steady supply of fresh meat.

Director Staci Arriaga had her hands full with making a very large-scale musical work in the small Lucky Penny space. Priority was given to vocal talent and the show really scores there. The score was flawlessly delivered by musical director Craig Burdette (piano) with Wendy Seres (clarinet), Jay Benson (bassoon), Ruth Wilson (horn) and Ellen Blakey (cello).

Elliot’s strong stage presence matched his fine vocals as the tortured Todd. Lovett is a good role for Bartolucci, but her uneven Cockney accent made some of Sondheim’s lyrics indecipherable. Great supporting work is done by Jeremy Kreamer as rival barber Pirelli and Tuolumne Bunter as his assistant, Tobias. Romantic duties were well-handled both vocally and performance-wise by Ethan Thomas as Anthony and Kirstin Pieschke as Johanna.

While they delivered strong vocal work, there was a decided lack of malevolence in both Murphy’s Turpin and O’Brien’s Bamford. These characters are truly loathsome and need to be played exponentially and less-superficially darker.

While the tonsorial parlor customers’ “exits” were well handled, the placement of actors on audience-area platforms and in aisles led to some awkward sightlines and blocked views. Cast members occasionally towered over audience members. Spreading the musicians across the stage and on multiple levels was an interesting idea.

An ambitious production for this company, its successful elements make this Sweeney Todd a cut above your regular community theater fare.

‘Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street’ runs through Nov. 6 at the Lucky Penny Community Arts Center. 1758 Industrial Way, Napa. Thurs, 7pm; Fri–Sat, 8pm; Sun, 2pm. $32–$43. 707.266.6305. luckypennynapa.com

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Civil rights groups sue Sebastopol over parking law

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A coalition of civil rights groups last week sued Sebastopol over a new parking law, which they argue was crafted to chase people living in vehicles out of the small city.  ACLU Foundation of Northern California, Disability Rights Advocates, California Rural Legal Assistance and Legal Aid of Sonoma County filed the lawsuit on behalf of four current and former Sebastopol...

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Within the last year, we’ve lost Angela Lansbury and Stephen Sondheim, and each passing brought to mind their most successful collaboration—Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.  Following years of pandemic-induced delays, Napa’s Lucky Penny Productions finally takes a stab at it—through Nov. 6. After years in exile, Benjamin Barker (Ian Elliot) returns to London, having adopted the moniker of...
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