Pride for All

Axiom for a new civilization

By Michael Giotis

It’s Pride Month y’all! Did I say that “queer” enough? I’m working on it; it’s still new to me. See, this was the year that I started talking openly about my own queer sexuality. But why?

Unsurprising for a white guy in his late 40s, coming out has been easy for me. Even though I present as a hetero-normative cis white male, there really haven’t been any consequences for bringing up that I’m queer. Instead, draw your attention to how difficult it can be for some young adults to speak openly about their sexuality. That in some places openly proclaiming that you are gay could have legal and even fatal repercussions. Today. Yesterday. Tomorrow.

In contrast, I have come to realize that the idea of Pride is one of the reasons I am not keeping all this private business to myself. It is about celebrating yourself in a loving community.

Over several generations, LGBTQIA+ communities have used the term to connote many things. These might include: 1) Take pride in who you are, and 2) Proudly bring your full self to whatever you do. That’s pretty cool. It could be an axiom for a new civilization.

Imagine a civilization which values all life, teaches its young to be proud of who they are and challenges them to grow and give. A government that organizes resources in support of these goals, gets those resources to homes, schools, communities in development. Comprehensive mental and medical service is not just available, but is a top priority of such a society.

Life is complicated, and being proud of who you are takes support and time. It takes work for you and the people around you. Value created by caretakers, massage therapists, artists, teachers, is the economy our civilization could be supporting, one that cares for and develops fully realized humans as a priority. And here we are caring for and developing oil.

In that imaginary but possible society, they would be there for you when you need it, and you would be there for them. That’s gay as f***.

Michael Giotis is a writer and poet, father and lover, based in Petaluma.

Open Mic – Sheriff Showdown

Candidate Dave Edmonds touts experience, resume

Past performance predicts future results. When you vote for Sonoma County sheriff, please remember that, and me.

Candidate Eddie Engram has far less experience, education and capacity… and the wrong intentions: Engram admitted that had Sheriff Mark Essick decided to run again, he would have endorsed him. In charge of our jail, Engram’s legacy is staff morale at all-time lows, job-caused disability claims and vacancies at all-time highs, and record mandatory overtime (currently 78 hours/month). As sheriff, things would only get worse.

Candidate Carl Tennenbaum has no notable leadership performance to compare. At the San Francisco Police Department, he could never achieve anything higher than the initial supervisor rank, sergeant. His two attempts to be promoted to the junior manager rank of lieutenant were failures. With scant leadership experience and absolutely no management experience, he hopes to take charge of a dysfunctional, massive, $210-million annual budget organization. You may like his ideas, but he’d be in a hopeless wilderness of mirrors. I agree with SFPD: he’s not ready.

I bring the strongest professional record, plus a 37-year history of Sonoma County civic-mindedness. Retiring in 2013, I served for 32 years at our Sheriff’s Office: nine years-patrol, four-homicide detective, eight-sergeant, three-lieutenant and six years at the command rank of captain; a SWAT member, training officer, interrogation specialist and more, with documented outstanding performance everywhere. I was a proven change agent, and I have former sheriff candidate John Mutz’s endorsement.

I have a master’s degree in organizational leadership (Gonzaga), was a police management professor for five years, and now I’m the editor of the nation’s largest law enforcement magazine, American Police Beat. I founded and direct two national police wellness nonprofits (lecf.org and 360armor.org). In the last 10 years alone, I’ve volunteered over 2000 hours to local nonprofits, including the boards of our homeless mission (12 years) and our police chaplaincy (20).

Married 35 years, we raised our family here—two Santa Rosa police officer sons, and our daughter will be teaching high school English in the fall. See my full resume and 20-point-plan at www.edmondsforsheriff.com.

I’m not just coming back to fix our Sheriff’s Office. I’m returning to remake it into a nationwide model. I ask for your vote.

Dave Edmonds

Sonoma County

We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Fire Preparations

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State wants insurers to reward homeowners for fireproofing homes

By Grace Gedye

When Ashley Raveche and her husband bought their home in Mill Valley, they thought they were doing everything right.

The 1,300 square foot house already had vents with screens that make it harder for embers to get in and a tar and gravel roof, top-rated for fire safety. They installed double-paned windows, which are less likely to explode under extreme heat. They cut down four trees within 10 feet of their house. They kept the gutter and roof clear, and the local fire marshal performed an annual inspection.

But their efforts—totaling more than $10,000, by Raveche’s estimation—weren’t enough to insure their home in Marin County. In February, their insurance company said it wouldn’t renew the policy because the “risk is unacceptable”

“I panicked,” she said. “I was just like, ‘This is too much; we are doing absolutely everything we possibly can.’” 

It was the second time an insurance company had declined to renew her home insurance coverage in five years, she said.

In response to wildfires that have blazed across the North Bay and the rest of the state, some Californians have spent thousands of dollars trying to fireproof their homes—often at the urging of state and local officials—to reduce their risk of burning. But some have confronted an unpleasant reality: Taking those steps doesn’t prevent their premiums from ballooning, or keeping[1]  them from being dropped by their insurance company.

Now the California Department of Insurance has proposed new rules that would require insurance companies to take homeowners’ preventative steps into account when setting premiums. The rules would also require companies to be more transparent about how they gauge a home’s wildfire risk.

But some consumer groups are ringing alarms about what they see as loopholes that would leave homeowners stuck, like Raveche, with a fire-hardened home and a non-renewal letter. Insurance industry trade groups, on the other hand, worry that the rules are getting ahead of science, and that transparency requirements would expose intellectual property.

The agency plans to have the rules finalized this summer.

New fire insurance guidelines

The proposed rules, rolled out in February, require insurance companies to do several things, including:

  • Make the models or tools they use to assess wildfire risk public, and require that companies send individual policyholders their wildfire risk scores on a regular basis.
  • Explain to policyholders what specific factors influenced each consumer’s score, what they could do to lower their score, and how much they can expect to see their premium go down if they take the actions outlined by the insurance company.
  • When setting prices, insurers would have to take into account whether a homeowner or commercial property owner has reduced a property’s wildfire risk by taking specified steps, including clearing vegetation from under decks and installing fire-resistant vents.
  • When setting prices, insurers would have to take into account whether a home is in one of three types of fire risk-reduction communities, such as Firewise.

The state Department of Insurance also proposed giving policyholders the right to appeal their wildfire risk scores.

Part of the goal is to provide incentives to more people to protect their properties from wildfires.

“Money is tight for most people,” said Amy Bach, executive director of United Policyholders, a consumer group. “If I have a choice between spending money on taking out my favorite tree, and, like, buying a new flatscreen, I’m going to buy a new flatscreen, right?” There has to be a compelling reason for people to do things they don’t want to do, she said.

“Home hardening” is aimed at reducing a house’s risk of burning during a blaze. There’s evidence to suggest it works, too: A 2020 study from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners found that “structural modifications can reduce wildfire risk up to 40%, and structural and vegetation modifications combined can reduce wildfire risk up to 75%.”

California already regulates insurance more than a lot of other products. Insurers, for example, can’t just increase their prices whenever they want to—they have to submit their pricing plans to the insurance department for approval. But, says Bach, that’s in part because they have an advantage most industries don’t: People must buy their product in order to get a mortgage.

“They sell economic security,” said Bach. “They have a special obligation.”

That’s why it’s stressful for homeowners when an insurance company decides it will no longer cover them.

When homeowners can’t find a private company to cover them, they can turn to the state-created FAIR Plan, which offers bare bones coverage, often at higher cost. Coverage through the FAIR Plan is intended as “a temporary safety net” until a homeowner can find other coverage.

“A loophole that can swallow the rule”

The number of Californians who are not renewed by their insurance companies each year increased in 2019, according to insurance department data, after especially damaging wildfires in 2017 and 2018. It’s a small share of policyholders: less than 3%, according to the department. The numbers are higher in areas with greater fire risk. Temporary bans on non-renewals in areas hit by wildfires, imposed by Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara, have helped, although the issue is still a key part of the election race for insurance commissioner.

It’s far from certain the numbers will stay low. The number of California properties facing severe wildfire risk will grow sixfold over the next 30 years, according to projections from First Street Foundation, a nonprofit.

Three consumer groups—Consumer Watchdog, Consumer Federation of America and Consumer Federation of California—sent feedback to the insurance department, pointing to what they see as a loophole: The rules require insurers to take home-hardening efforts into account when setting prices, but not when deciding whether to cover someone or renew a policy.

“A homeowner could literally rebuild their home in concrete, in the middle of a concrete field, and still be non-renewed by an insurance company,” said Carmen Balber, executive director of Consumer Watchdog.

“It is a loophole that can swallow the rule,” she said.

Insurance department spokesperson Michael Soller rejected the term “loophole.” He pointed to the department’s initial reasoning for the rules and expected benefits, which says insurance companies “may become more comfortable writing and retaining policies for properties with completed mitigation actions, even if the property is located in an area with a higher overall risk of wildfire.”

Not wading into coverage decisions may also have been a pragmatic decision for the department. Insurers would be more likely to sue over rules that mandate coverage, since the department’s authority to regulate coverage decisions is not clear cut, said Michael Wara, a lawyer and climate scholar at Stanford Law School. A suit could keep the rules from going into effect for years.

“This may be a situation where you kind of have to choose between doing something that’s sort of pretty good—maybe even really good—but not perfect,” said Wara.

Insurers want to protect their risk tools

Consumer groups aren’t the only ones pushing back against the proposal. Trade organizations representing insurers have their own set of concerns.

One is that the science on wildfire mitigation is still developing, said Mark Sektnan, vice president for state government relations for American Property Casualty Insurance Association, a trade group. That means there may not be good data on exactly how much one strategy—or several—reduces a homeowner’s fire risk, and insurers need data to decide how much of a discount to offer.

The proposed rules, for example, would require companies to take into account whether a home is in a “Fire Risk Reduction Community,” a new certification created by the state Board of Forestry and Fire Protection. The criteria for the certification was finalized last month, according to Edith Hannigan, the board’s executive officer, and the list of the communities that meet the requirements is yet to be released. There hasn’t been any significant analysis on how much safer certified communities are, since it’s brand new, Hannigan said.

That’s problematic, said Seren Taylor, senior legislative advocate for Personal Insurance Federation of California, another insurance industry trade group,  because everything in insurance “is about understanding risk and having data.”

The new program was “established with the expertise of the Board of Forestry, with consideration of community programs like Firewise,” said Soller, the Department of Insurance spokesperson. 

Another concern Taylor cited has to do with intellectual property. Many insurers rely on models, often provided by separate companies, to assess the risk of wildfire to a particular home or area, taking into account factors like the slope a home is on, or the kind of roof it has. The rules require insurers to make those models public.

“These companies spend tens of millions of dollars building complex computer models,” said Taylor, and they want to create models that are more accurate than their competitors.

Still, he said, the federation completely agrees with the goals of the proposed rules—they point in the direction some insurers are already heading.

Currently 20 insurance companies voluntarily give homeowners some kind of discount for reducing their wildfire risk, according to the insurance department.

This story was originally published by CalMatters.


This said keep.

Fabric Look

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Felt fabric-making workshop in The Barlow

By Jane Vick

Good morning all! Happy Wednesday! How has everyone been? Quite the heat wave we’ve been experiencing. I spent most of my working hours last week poolside—ah, the luxurious freedom of being a writer. Pounding the keys to the dulcet tones of water splashing and cocktail shakers is more than alright with me. The word count is high, the tan coming right along!

I missed everyone last week, but am glad to be back and excited to share this week’s Look, which is interactive! Get ready for The Little Wool Workshop, hosted by local artisanal textile mill JG Switzer. Located in The Barlow in Sebastopol, JG Switzer produces handcrafted blankets from wool sourced from one of the oldest operating mills in England—a farm that also carries a Royal Warrant for supplying interior fabrics to Windsor Castle! Much of their wool is milled in their Barlow workshop, and all their products are designed, cut and sewn by hand onsite.

Cool fact about wool: This ancient natural fiber is closely linked with humans throughout history. The earliest wool clothing found has been dated to between 4000-3000 BCE, and small statues found in Iran depicting sheep, dated to around 6000 BCE, suggest that it was around this time that sheep began to be bred by Persians for their wool. Its receptivity to dye, springy durability and soft texture make it an ideal fabric.

Learning to felt wool—the process of turning raw sheep’s wool into fabric—is an awesome way to dial in to the history of textile and reconnect with a slower process of fabric-making! The Little Wool Workshop entails a 30 minute tour and hands-on discussion of wool, and a 30 minute fabric-making session. While waiting for fabric to be ready, I highly recommend lunch, at either Blue Ridge Kitchen or Fern Bar. Fabric can be picked up about an hour after the session, and used in a variety of different ways, including pillow cases, dog or cat mats, washcloths and more.

Take this felt fabric-making workshop in The Barlow Friday, June 10 from 11-12pm. $60 per person, visit www.jgswitzer.com to register!

Looking phenomenal, everyone.

See you next week!

Love,

Jane

 
Jane Vick is an artist and writer currently based in Oakland. She splits her time between Europe, New York and New Mexico. View her work and contact her at janevick.com.

Letters

Aminzadeh Endorsement

I’m supporting Sara Aminzadeh for Assembly District 12.

Sara is a bold leader with fresh ideas with a track record of accomplishments in state government. Sara will hit the ground running because she already has relationships with lawmakers through her years of climate and environmental work. Sara has developed a climate action plan and has established the networks in Sacramento to deliver on it.

She would be the first woman to represent us in this seat in 20 years, and she brings an entirely fresh set of eyes to the issues that are becoming more and more important to the residents of Sonoma and Marin counties: She will champion Healthy Aging legislation so that older adults can continue to live in their communities; as the daughter of immigrants, she has lived experience of what the challenges are that face many of the vulnerable in our communities; and, as a working mother of a four year old, she brings much needed diversity to our elected bodies, as well as an informed voice for so many of our families who know it takes an advocate who understands their needs.

Join me and give the people of Sonoma and Marin a real representative in the Assembly. Vote Sara Aminzadeh for Assembly District 12.

Teresa Barrett

Mayor of Petaluma

Wide-Eyed Thanks

My sincere gratitude to Peter Byrne. His latest investigation into MALT and the ranching community of West Marin, “Paradise Cost,” was eye opening. Mr. Byrne represents the best of our democracy by uncovering the corruption in our local politics. Thank you for opening my eyes even wider, Mr. Byrne.

Gayle Cerri

Novato

Sonoma County’s Queer high school students get their own prom

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June is Pride Month, and therefore the perfect time for Sonoma County queer high school students to gather for a fairytale-themed prom.

On Saturday, June 11, Sebastopol’s Barlow Market District will be transformed into a mystical, magical, totally inclusive fairytale forest in which queer teens may frolic freely. Presented by the West County High School Gender and Sexuality Alliance (GSA), Positive Images, LGBTQ Connection and the Sonoma County Library, SoCo Queer Prom 2022 is a queer-inclusive, neuro-senstive celebration of authenticity and fun, for those aged 14-18.

The idea manifested at the beginning of the school year in 2021, when Bobbi Rose, a Laguna High School outreach therapist and advisor to the West County District GSA, asked GSA students what their priorities were.

They asked for three things: an LGBTQIA+ education and inclusivity teacher and staff training session, one for Sonoma County parents and a queer prom. Then they set to work to make these goals a reality, both in their weekly meetings and outside of school, including fundraising at the Sebastopol and Occidental farmers markets. The GSA successfully lobbied for and was granted permission to hold their requested trainings—and Soco Queer Prom is the cherry on top of their sundae of initiatives.

It wasn’t easy. In a conversation with Rose last week, I learned just how hard these kids and their supporting allies still have to push, even in 2022, even in West County.

“This is a small minority of the high school population, so having a prom specifically for their community is extremely meaningful,” said Rose. “They don’t feel represented in this school, and they’ve faced a lot of discrimination.”

Rose told me about an instance during Valentine’s Day, in which a GSA student’s Progress Pride flag was found the next day in the urinal.

“Our signs are defaced, torn down. Swastikas are drawn on our flyers. It’s tough,” Rose said.

I was shocked to hear this, but Rose is all too familiar with bigotry and descrimination going on in real-time.

“It’s so easy to think that descrimination isn’t happening, but the stories I could tell you of what kind of descrimination happens in our high school [are] heartbreaking. The issue is that adults who don’t identify as LGBTQIA+ don’t see what I see or hear what I hear on a daily basis, because our queer students don’t feel safe talking to them.” said Rose.

Even the teacher training took months of moving mountains. Originally requested in January, the workshop—a two hour event—wasn’t approved until April, and the students are still pushing for a curriculum reform with more queer history and representation.

The sense of marginalization is what the queer students in West County High’s GSA are done experiencing. Feeling like they have to move in groups to feel safe, feeling afraid to fully express themselves, or attend prom—West County High has already had its official prom—with their partner without backlash… this kind of anxiety pushes people into the margins, where they draw less attention to themselves and run less risk of negative interaction. No high school student, no human in general, should be made to feel that the way they express themselves is cause for hateful retaliation.

To this end, Queer Prom is for queer students, and though Allies will be there—siblings, chaperones and staff—the event is for and about the LGBTQIA+ population.

“For two years, these students, who are already dealing with being different and searching for their identities, have been isolated and unable to connect with each other. This event is a space for them to reconnect in a joyful way without even the thought of hostility, or the cishet [cisgender heteronormative] population inadvertently taking up too much space,” said Rose.

It’s their prom, and it’s going to be a fairytale. Literally.

SoCo Queer Prom includes an entire mystical fairytale forest, a fairytale-themed photobooth and two local DJ’s—DJ Dyops and DJ Reckless. For those with neuro-divergences who find loud music or flashing lights stressful, Sonoma County Library‘s Queer Committee of Librarians are creating an outdoor chill space complete with books, comfy chairs and silent anime films playing.

Positive Images, a local nonprofit that has been throwing queer proms for decades, is beyond excited, according to Jessica Carroll, director of programs.

The partnership with West County GSA, LGBTQ Connection and the Sonoma County Library makes this the biggest queer prom event they’ve ever done. For months, the groups have been planning everything, from funding and donations to volunteers and entertainment. For Carroll, one of the best parts of the process has been visiting West County and other GSAs in person to build excitement and energy in the queer youth.

“We’ve assembled an amazing group of volunteers, many of whom are our friends and families. Everyone is committed to creating a beautiful space for our queer youth to have a truly incredible experience,”Carroll said.

Carroll and many other adults participating know the value of this prom firsthand, as it’s the one they didn’t get in their youth.

“As someone who grew up in Sonoma County and was not able to go to prom with who I truly wanted, being able to give the young people we work with the space and opportunity to be their authentic and beautiful selves at prom is everything.”

Drew Crawford, a  program coordinator at Positive Images, wowed me further, quoting the capacity max for SoCo Queer Prom at 400 people.

“We’ve been doing proms for a while, but obviously the pandemic has pushed that. And honestly the mental health of our youth has majorly declined during these last two years—they haven’t had a chance to see themselves as queer people in the world. And this is a chance for them to come together and celebrate each other and themselves. And for those students who don’t feel safe being at a regular prom, this is their place,” Crawford told me.

It’s exceptional to see the outpouring of support for the queer youth of West County, and equally moving to see the courage, fortitude and power of the youth themselves. Though this event wouldn’t be possible without Positive Images, LGBTQ Connection and the Sonoma County Library, it sprang from the hearts and minds of the high schoolers unwilling to miss out on the unparalleled joy of a great party, and unwilling to compromise an inch of their identities to experience that joy. This prom glitters with the mystical, inimitable sparkle that comes when courage, love and authenticity come together. Magic has been made, the spells have been cast and June 11, it’s their fairytale. 

All students aged 14-18 may attend SoCo Queer Prom. Purchase a ticket at https://bit.ly/socoqueerprom. To support the event, make donations at www.gofundme.com.

OTHER PRIDE EVENTS THIS MONTH

SONOMA COUNTY PRIDE CELEBRATION
Saturday, June 4, 11am–12pm
Fourth Street & Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa

The 36th annual Sonoma County Pride Celebration returns to downtown Santa Rosa after a two-year pandemic-induced hiatus. This year’s theme: We Are Family! It’s about coming back together after way too much time apart, to celebrate each other and have a loving, lovely time.

GAYDAR’S REUNION–A QUEER DANCE PARTY
Saturday June 4, 9pm–1am
La Rosa, 500 4th St, Santa Rosa
GayDar Annual Celebrations are back! Come join the reunion for a night of dancing and drag with DJ Ron Reeser and drag host Lola Hernandez and her drag sisters Maria Twampson & Shania Twampson from Reno. This is family! Come prepared to dance the night away.
WIGS AND WAFFLES DRAG BRUNCH
Sunday June 5, 9:30am
Graton Resort and Casino, 288 Golf Course Dr W, Rohnert Park

Sonoma County Pride would like to welcome brunch host & DJ Juanita MORE! and her drag daughters, Rahni Nothingmore, Mary Vice and Sonoma County native Mrs. Princess Panocha, for a syrupy dazzling drag performance at Wigs & Waffles! This is the necessary brunch after a night spent dancing at GayDar.

PRIDE AT MCEVOY RANCH
Saturday, June 12, 1pm-4pm
5935 Red Hill Rd, Petaluma

Join McEvoy Ranch for live music, olive oil tastings and wine at the Ranch Milk Barn, overlooking rolling hills of olive orchards. Enjoy storytelling experiences, with special guests who will be sharing their experiences in the LGBTQ+ community, and share a story at open mic! The theme for the storytelling event is “Out On The Ranch,” celebrating coming out stories.

A portion of proceeds will be donated to Sonoma County Pride, of which McEvoy Ranch is a proud sponsor.

 

Culture Crush

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Penngrove

Honkytonk Revival

Get ready to shed a tear into a pint of beer at Twin Oaks Roadhouse with Crying Time. A honkytonk revivalist band out of Oakland, Crying Time plays straight-up country and western music, from the likes of Bob Wills to Glen Campbell, and interweaves their own compositions into the mix, with sounds so classic it’s hard to tell the two apart. Lead singer Jill Rogers brings a ’70s voice full of story and emotion, Myles Boisen pulls heartstrings on a lap steel guitar and a six string, and Tony Marcus—a veteran of the Bay Area music scene—rounds it out on the fiddle, foot stomping included. Tim Rowe on drums and Smilin’ Pete Garellick on bass make this a group for the ages. Come get in the Hank Williams spirit of the thing! Crying Time plays Saturday, June 4, at Twin Oaks Roadhouse, 5475 Old Redwood Highway, Penngrove. Show starts at 8pm. www.hopmonk.com

Petaluma

Dada and Dancing

This Saturday, get ready for the hybrid literary salon/dance party we all didn’t know we needed, Da Salon #7! Hosted at Vibe Gallery, join a Dada-esque literary arts salon group for their seventh salon, including readings from local writers and poets including Michael Giotis, Shugri Salh reading from her book The Last Nomad, Alia Curchack-Beeton—who will co-MC the event along with our very own Pacific Sun and North Bay Bohemian editor Daedalus Howell, and share a story of the worst massage of her life—and Jessica Jacobsen reading from her memoir/cookbook, and Kary Hess reads from her new book 1912. The night promises libation, liberation and lots of fun. There will be art on display, curios for sale and a dance party to physically express the inspiration of the evening. Think contemporary Andre Breton, Dorothea Tanning and Max Ernst. We are living in the ’20s after all. Da Salon is Saturday, June 4 at Vibe Gallery, 1 Petaluma Boulevard North, Petaluma. 6pm-8:30pm. Tickets $25. www.eventbrite.com

Santa Rosa

Lavender Daze

It’s lavender season—the nose knows—and Bees N Blooms organic farm in Santa Rosa is hosting weekend open farm days for the whole family! Bees N Blooms is an 11-acre organic farm that produces lavender and a variety of lavender products including honey and wax from 19 colonies of honey bees. Lavender Daze includes live music, food trucks and one acre of fresh, blooming lavender through which to wander. The next Lavender Daze is this Sunday, featuring Dino’s Greek Food Truck, and Mike Z on guitar and vocals. Mike Z was born and raised in San Francisco and has backed such bands as The Whispers, The Pointer Sisters and Johnny Taylor. Enjoy sun, smells and the sweetness of lavender! Lavender Daze, Sunday, June 5 from 10am-4pm at Bees N Blooms, 3883 Petaluma Hill Rd, Santa Rosa. Tickets $20. www.beesnblooms.com

Novato

Family Arts

If arts are of interest, spend Sunday at MarinMOCA for Free Family Day! This Sunday’s activities are inspired by internationally-renowned sculptor and artist Masako Miki, who along with having work in MarinMOCA’s current exhibition, The Potential of Objects, has monumental outdoor installations on view at Uber headquarters in San Francisco and OH Bay cultural coastal park in Shenzhen, China. Come learn some of Miki’s techniques and favorite fabrics, and create a Yōkai, an object which will come to life after 100 years! All materials and instruction will be provided. Each workshop is an hour long, and all participating families receive free admission to the museum. Free Family Day is held at MarinMOCA, 500 Palm Dr, Novato. 11am-4pm. Reservations are required. www.marinmoca.org

—Jane Vick

Astrology Week of June 1st, 2022

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Who loves the truth better than you Aries people? Who has the greatest potential to speak the real story in every situation, even when it requires extra courage? Who has more fun than you in discovering, defining and expressing the raw facts? In my Book of Life, you Rams are radiant beacons of candor—the people I go to when I need accuracy and honesty. And all I’m saying here will be especially crucial in the coming weeks. The whole world needs concentrated doses of your authenticity. Now read this pep talk from Aries philosopher St. Catherine of Siena: “Let the truth be your delight; let it always be in your mouth, and proclaim it when it is needed. Proclaim it lovingly and to everyone, especially those you love with a special love—but with a certain congeniality.”

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Before the 20th century, you couldn’t buy a loaf of bread that was already sliced into thin pieces. Then in 1912, the American inventor Otto Frederick Rohwedder developed a slicing machine. But all his work, including the blueprints and the machine prototypes, was destroyed in a fire. He had to seek new funding and begin again. Sixteen years later, his innovation was finally ready for broad public use. Within five years, most of the bread in the U.S. was sold sliced. What does this have to do with you? I am picking up an Otto Frederick Rohwedder vibe when I turn my visions to you, Taurus. I suspect that in the coming months, you, too, will fulfill a postponed dream.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): A blogger named Sweetlikeacherry reminds us, “Some epiphanies are only possible when you put away your phone and go completely offline for a while.” She adds that sometimes you also need to at least partially avoid your phone and the internet if you hope to incubate new visions of the future, unlock important discoveries in your creative work and summon your untamed genius. According to my astrological analysis, all these possibilities are especially likely and necessary for you in the coming weeks. I trust you will carry out the necessary liberations to take full advantage.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Poet Carolyn Kizer (1925–2014) won a Pulitzer Prize for her poetry. She was smart! But when she was young and still studying her craft in college, a professor objected to one of her poems. He said, “You have pigs in this poem; pigs are not poetic.” Kizer was incensed at such ignorance. She testified, “I got up and walked out of that class and never went back.” Judging from the astrological omens, I suspect you may have comparable showdowns headed your way. I advise you to be like Kizer. You are the only one who truly knows the proper subjects of your quest. No one else has the right or the insight to tell you what your work (or play) should be about.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Leo author James Baldwin said it wasn’t often “that two people can laugh and make love, too—make love because they are laughing and laugh because they’re making love. The love and the laughter come from the same place: but not many people go there.” Your assignment, Leo, is to be the exception to Baldwin’s rule during the coming weeks. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, there’s a high possibility that interesting eros can converge with humorous fun in a glorious synergy. You will have a knack for conjuring up ribald encounters and jovial orgasms. Your intuition will guide you to shed the solemnity from your bliss and replace it with sunny, carefree cheer.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): I’m worried you will over-indulge in your pursuit of perfection during the coming weeks. It’s fine to be exquisitely skillful and masterful; I hope you do that. But if you get obsessed with flawlessness, you will risk undoing your good intentions. As an antidote, I offer you two pieces of advice. The first is from actor and activist Jane Fonda. She said, “We are not meant to be perfect; we are meant to be whole.” The second counsel is from philosopher and psychologist William James, who wrote, “Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection, we can catch excellence.”

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Author Mustafa Mahmoud described the signs of love between two people: 1. feeling a comfortable familiarity; 2. having no urge or need to lie; 3. being natural, not trying to be different from whom one is; 4. having little or no possibility of being embarrassed in front of the other person; 5. experiencing silence as delicious, not alienating; 6. enjoying the act of listening to the other person. I bring these pointers to your attention, Libra, because the coming months will be a favorable time to define and redefine your understanding about the signs of love. How do you feel about Mahmoud’s ideas? Are there any more you would like to add?

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “We do not love each other without changing each other,” wrote author Madeleine L’Engle. Meditate on that gem, Scorpio. Now is a perfect time for you and your loved ones to acknowledge, honor and celebrate the ways your love has changed each other. It may be true that some transformations have been less than ideal. If that’s the case, the coming weeks will be a favorable time to correct those trends. As for the positive changes that you and your allies have stimulated in each other: I hope you will name them and pledge to keep doing more of that good work.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “I always deserve the best treatment, because I never put up with any other,” wrote Sagittarian novelist Jane Austen. Sagittarian politician Stacey Abrams said, “From the moment I enter a room, I am clear about how I intend to be treated and how I intend to engage.” You’ll be wise to cultivate those attitudes in the next seven weeks, Sagittarius. It’s high time for you to raise your self-respect in ways that inspire others to elevate their appreciation and regard for you.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In 1963, Jim Munro and Alice Munro founded Munro’s Books, a store in Victoria, British Columbia. After being on the job for a few months, Alice found she was not impressed with many of the products they sold. “I can write better books than this,” she told Jim. Five years later, she published her first collection of short stories, Dance of the Happy Shades. Fourteen books later, she won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Will the coming months bring your equivalent of Alice Munro’s pivotal resolution? I suspect they could.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “True love for whatever you are doing is the answer to everything,” proclaimed performance artist Marina Abramovic. Amen to that righteous attitude! I hope you will embrace it in the coming weeks. I hope your heart and imagination will reveal all you need to know to bring tender fresh streams of true love to the essential activities of your life. Now is an excellent time to redefine the meaning of the word “love” so it applies to all your relationships and pursuits.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A homeless woman in a wheelchair stopped where I was sitting outside a café. She was pushing her belongings in a small shopping cart. “Would you like to go dancing?” she asked me. “There’s a nearby park that has a great grassy dance floor.” “Maybe another day,” I told her. “My energy is low. I’ve had a lot of personal challenges lately.” I’m sure the expression on my face was less-than-ebullient. “Cheer up, mister,” she told me. “I’m psychic, and I can tell you for sure that you will live a long life and have many more fine adventures. I’ll be in the park if you change your mind.” My mood instantly brightened. “Thanks!” I yelled toward her as she rolled away. Now I predict that you, Pisces, will have comparable experiences in the coming days. Are you willing to welcome uplifting surprises?

Sentinels: Tree Sitters Star in Local Director’s New Film

Longtime northern California residents will remember the “Redwood Wars,” but younger readers may not.

The decades-long effort by environmental activists to slow or stop the mass-felling of some of the country’s oldest, most awe-inspiring trees, arguably reached its peak around 1990, the year of the Redwood Summer. That year, activists staged a series of demonstrations and sometimes escalating conflicts with their corporate opponents, in turn drawing media attention.

Over 30 years later, the world still consumes trees while some environmentalists, frustrated with the lack of response from elected officials, continue to scale towering Redwoods in protest. However, the ongoing conflict doesn’t generate news coverage like in the past.

A new documentary, Sentinels, co-directed by Derek Knowles and Lawrence Lerew, is an exception to this. The short “immersive observational film” takes viewers from the forest floor, into an activist’s tent on a platform 100 feet above the ground, and back down again several times as supporters arrive every so often with supplies and gifts.

Sentinels primarily follows Lupine, one of two full-time activists engaged in a years-long tree-sit protest intended to save the last 18.5 acres of a 100-acre tract Humboldt County forest from the extraction plans of the Green Diamond Resource Company. The area Lupine and their colleagues are defending is predominantly second-growth. In 2014, Green Diamond owned and managed nearly 380,000 acres of land in Humboldt and Del Norte counties, according to a forest management report from that year.

Knowles, a part-time Sonoma County resident, says that his focus was bringing the public’s attention back to the often-unseen costs of making some of the the products American consumers take for granted every day.

“We wanted to create an immersive experience for viewers, much like we had ourselves in the forest, and force us to confront the consequences of our decadent and destructive lifestyles,” Knowles says.

Unlike a fleeting newspaper headline, the documentary allows viewers to be temporarily absorbed in the grandeur of Humboldt County’s forests and then soak in the brutal scene created by a harvesting operation.

“Butchering forests might have built this country, but it’s also pushing us to the edge of an unlivable climate with less than three percent of American old-growth forests still standing. These are some of our best defenses against a rapidly warming planet, with coastal redwoods storing more than seven times more carbon than Amazon forests. And when you see our tallest living trees and the ecosystems they support—understories of ferns, huckleberries and alders; flying squirrels; stellar jays; and foxes—undone in seconds with cold, mechanical precision, it hits you on a level that goes beyond the rational and scientific,” Knowles says.

When Knowles and Lerew started filming Sentinels in 2020, the tree-sit they were following was the only active protest of its kind in the western United States. Now, according to the filmmakers, “more than a half-dozen other tree-sits have emerged, mostly youth-led campaigns in timber parcels across the Pacific Northwest.”

So, with the world spiraling out of control and meaningful climate change action by the government still as distant as ever, it seems that some young people are going back to basics: connecting with and endeavoring to protect the only Earth we’ll ever have.

“I suppose when you have this emotional connection with living things, and see that our conventional systems—writing letters to elected officials, publicly commenting on timber harvest plans—do little to prevent their destruction, the appeal of non-violent direct action, of sitting in a tree, becomes appealing,” Knowles says.

‘Sentinels’ will be shown at 4:15pm on Saturday, June 4 at San Francisco’s Roxie Theater as part of this year’s San Francisco Doc Fest. Find more information about showtimes and streaming options at www.sfdocfest2022.eventive.org.

It also streaming on the Los Angeles Times’ website here.

Outside Candidate

0

Tennenbaum promises reforms if elected sheriff

The election for Sonoma County sheriff provides voters with the power to bring meaningful and long overdue change to our sheriff’s office.

Listening to people in every corner of our diverse county, I’ve heard your concerns: Stopping excessive force incidents involving the deputies; maintaining full staffing for adequate public safety; and arresting and prosecuting people who prey on seniors, commit thefts, and who stage dangerous “sideshows” on our streets.  We must also be prepared to deal with critical incidents like wildfires, floods and earthquakes.

Gatekeepers of the status quo think the embattled current sheriff’s chosen successor will address the historic problems in the county’s largest law enforcement agency. I disagree.

Assistant Sheriff Eddie Engram claims he’s the only candidate with the “management experience” to take on the top job. His “management experience” includes being the direct commander of Charles Blount, a deputy with a history of excessive force, whose brutal tactics led to the death of David Ward in 2019.  

Engram has been Sheriff Essick’s point man in the ongoing obstruction of public oversight. When confronted about his failure to comply with the Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach’s (IOLERO) Community Advisory Council, Engram replied that he was “just doing what he was told to do.” 

Currently, Engram “manages” our jails, which have seen fatal drug overdoses, suicides, suspicious deaths, missing video evidence and deputy misconduct resulting in millions of dollars in settlements and skyrocketing insurance premiums.

My opponents have over 50 years combined as department insiders, yet their lackluster law enforcement careers show no effort to implement new or creative policies and programs. Engram is supported by the Deputy Sheriff’s Association, who want to continue “business as usual” and not be held accountable or make the changes necessary to repair the broken trust between the sheriff’s office and the community. 

We need new leadership with a fresh perspective, someone who will effectively create a more diverse, community oriented sheriff’s office. I will conduct a full audit of the jails, and immediately address problems with staffing, policies and training.

As the outsider, I’m asking for your vote for change.

Carl Tennenbaum

Sonoma County

We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

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Sentinels: Tree Sitters Star in Local Director’s New Film

Derek Knowles CLEAR CUT A still image from a new documentary shows the aftermath of a company’s timber harvesting techniques.
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Outside Candidate

Tennenbaum promises reforms if elected sheriff The election for Sonoma County sheriff provides voters with the power to bring meaningful and long overdue change to our sheriff’s office. Listening to people in every corner of our diverse county, I’ve heard your concerns: Stopping excessive force incidents involving the deputies; maintaining full staffing for adequate public safety; and arresting and prosecuting people who...
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