The Simulation

Gaming Fate

When the technology became sufficient, video game designers created open-ended worlds in which characters could roam freely. Obstacles were placed in each character’s way, and if characters overcame them their powers were upgraded. Each character’s “will” was controlled by a higher intelligence, namely the player holding the controls.

Now, where do you suppose the designers got this idea?

In our last column we examined how the universe repeats the same patterns at different levels of resolution. That is also the case with the virtual realities mankind creates. The life lessons offered by sophisticated video games mirror the hard-won wisdom of real life, such as if you encounter a situation that seems unsolvable, there’s probably some key detail you have not noticed. Find your blind spot, and solving the puzzle becomes easy.

Technology’s rise has led some to suggest that reality is a “simulation”; that the material world is designed like a game that ultimately isn’t “real.” The ancients had the same view; they just looked at things metaphysically rather than technologically, believing the world was created by a higher intelligence, and that godly or planetary powers were capable of being upgraded by those who played the game properly.

We moderns think of the world as being matter-based, with Platonic concepts of metaphysical reality belonging to a less-enlightened past. But according to traditional doctrines, the material world is just one plane of reality—the lowest—in a consciousness-based universe. Matter, in this sense, is simply a dense form of consciousness. Hence the saying, “Even a stone is God, it just doesn’t know it.”

This brings up the notion of fate. From the point of view of eternity, past, present and future all exist simultaneously. Ponder this scenario: Say you drop a potato chip in the path of a meandering ant. The ant doesn’t know there’s a chip in its future if it stays on course, but you do. You have a vaster vista of reality, a godlike point of view compared to the ant. Whether it finds the chip or veers on another course is irrelevant to the reality of the chip. Thus, at any moment all future scenarios exist.

You could have chosen not to read this, but you did. And now here you are with a new perspective, wondering what you might do next.

Culture Crush: Five North Bay Events Near You This Week

Napa 

After the last year of pandemic stress, a wellness weekend is just what the North Bay needs. Thankfully, that is exactly what the Meritage Resort and Spa, and its neighboring sister property, Vista Collina Resort, are planning for the first-ever Moondance Napa Wellness Weekend. Opening with a reception and drum circle on June 24, the four-day series of packages include yoga and other outdoor activities, spa treatments, meditation, a “Celebration of Spring” concert, healthy meals, artisan markets with wellness vendors and more. Sign up for individual packages, or the whole weekend, Thursday through Sunday, June 24–27, 875 Bordeaux Way, Napa. Meritagecollection.com.

St. Helena

Blue Note Napa and Another Planet continue to present headlining entertainment outside at the Charles Krug Winery, Napa Valley’s Oldest Wine Estate this summer. Normally, the groups present live music; this week, they welcome standup comedian and actor Fortune Feimster– whose first one-hour special, Sweet & Salty, is currently streaming on Netflix and was nominated for Best Comedy Special for the Critics’ Choice Awards–to the outdoor stage for two shows on Friday, June 25, at 2800 Main St., St. Helena. 5:30pm and 8:30pm. Bluenotenapa.com.

Novato

As part of Pride Month, Marin County nonprofit organization the Spahr Center—which serves the LGBTQ+ community and supports those affected by HIV—is holding an LGBTQ+ Pride Rally this weekend at Novato City Hall. The event is being held to thank City and Town Councils throughout Marin, as well as the Board of Supervisors, for flying the LGBTQ+ Pride Flag during the month of June, and to present the center’s LGBTQ+ agenda for Marin. Limited seating is available, and a pop-up tent will accommodate some rally goers. As with all events, masks and social distancing are encouraged for the rally on Saturday, June 26, at 901 Sherman Ave., Novato. Noon. Free. thespahrcenter.org.

Healdsburg

The weather is not the only thing heating up in Healdsburg. This week, recently-opened gallery Legion Projects opens “Heatwave,” a duo show featuring works by San Francisco-based artist Anoushka Mirchandani and Oakland-based artist Taylor Smalls. Mirchandani examines her experiences navigating a multiplicity of identities as an Indian, a woman and an artist in her work. Smalls centers her paintings around the kaleidoscopic range of Black and Brown skin through highly pigmented colors. “Heatwave” runs June 26–Aug. 6 and opens with a reception featuring complimentary wine and a food pop-up on Saturday, June 26, at Legion Projects, 711A Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. 1–5pm. Free. Legionsf.com.

Sebastopol

With in-person events making a comeback, local venues like HopMonk Tavern are welcoming bands back for much-needed live music. This weekend, Sonoma County five-piece party-starters Burnside are at HopMonk in Sebastopol and ready to make the crowd move with original tunes that incorporate soul, folk, indie-rock and Americana. Joining Burnside for the show is another popular local figure, singer-songwriter Caitlin Jemma, who will likely perform some songs off her upcoming record True Meaning, due out later this summer. Catch up with the music on Saturday, June 26, at HopMonk Tavern, 230 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol. 8pm. 21 and over. $18. Hopmonk.com/sebastopol.

Railroad Square Music Festival Captures Local Talent on New Album

Since the Railroad Square Music Festival is unable to bring the people to the music this summer due to the pandemic, they decided to bring the music to the people.

This month, organizers of Railroad Square Music Festival—which normally takes over the titular downtown district in Santa Rosa for a free day of live music in June—are instead dropping a new compilation, RSMF Records Vol 1: Live at Prairie Sun 2021, featuring 12 eclectic North Bay bands and artists and available online for streaming and as a digital album.

“Because of the pandemic, Mooka (Mark “Mooka” Rennick) and the other managers at Prairie Sun Studio wanted to bring some energy back to the music scene,” says RSMF co-founder Susy Dugan.

In addition to co-founding RSMF with Josh Windmiller, Dugan works as an audio engineer with Prairie Sun Live, the live events branch of Prairie Sun Recording Studios. Each June, Prairie Sun Live provides the audio for the RSMF. With the event canceled for the second summer in a row, the two groups joined forces for this new compilation record.

“This was a perfect collaboration to bring some people into the studio, but also give people a safe space and opportunity to be artists and to create again,” Dugan says.

RSMF Records Vol 1: Live at Prairie Sun 2021 features electro-jazz artist Eki Shola, funk ensemble Bronze Medal Hopefuls, hip-hop artist Kayatta, harmonizing rockers Heartwood Trio, soul star Simone Mosely, lo-fi act Coldest, norteño alternativos Pistoleros Famosos, surf pop-punkers the Happys, Highway Poets’ frontman Sebastian St. James, acoustic R&B duo Jaz and Crow, a new band by Gabe Katz called Bummer Peak and Windmiller’s band the Crux.

“We had four days of recording, and we had three or four bands per day,” Dugan says. “We ran it a lot like we would a live concert, where the bands load in, do a couple takes of their live performance and then we get ready for the next band.”

For some of the bands, this marked their debut at the famed recording studios in Cotati, and Dugan says many of the album tracks were written during the pandemic, so this is the first time audiences will get to hear those tunes.

“Being there for the recording was a moving experience, I had goosebumps the whole time,” Dugan says. “We’re so happy to be able to present local performers, and we’re grateful to Prairie Sun for the opportunity to shine a light on all of the incredible talent in the North Bay.”

The album is available online now, and Henhouse Brewing Company even has a custom From the Heart IPA featuring a QR code on the can to direct folks to the record. In addition to the album, RSMF is also continuing work on its RSMF TV series of videos and eyeing a return to live events in 2022.

“At the Railroad Square Music Festival, our entire focus is to bring more attention to the music community,” Dugan says. “The compilation accomplished that, and it helped me remember why we do this.”

railroadsquaremusicfestival.com/records

Letters to the Editor: News on the Cover and a Numbers Game

Prize Worthy

Please extend my congratulations to Eva Chrysanthe for her superb article, “Pushed Around” in the June 9–15 2021 issue of the Pacific Sun. It is well-researched, well-documented and well-written, and deals with a topic—homelessness—that has relevance on the local, state and national levels.

I think it is worthy of consideration for a Pulitzer Prize. Please submit it to the Pulitzer Prize committee for consideration. Again, my congratulations to Eva Chrysanthe for a beautifully written article on a difficult and complex subject.

Sara Godwin, Fairfax

Bad Blood

The article titled “Bad Blood” in the June 9–15, 2021 Bohemian is not referenced on the cover.  

The beauty of “Bad Blood” is its close focus on crimes, lawyers and the example it sets for the country in its detailed, concise and colorful presentation. Easy to miss. This is an issue whose front page features “Vinyl Destination,” “Culture Crush,” “Left Edge Returns” and “Trivia Cafe.”

“Bad Blood” is an exceptionally good article, and hard to find in the Bohemian’s feel-good layout.

Hugh Brady, Sonoma County

Numbers Game 

I’ve never before responded to an article, but I feel “compelled” to share my observation on 50 Up Magazine. Every decade seems to make most people feel “old.” After all, it’s the oldest they’ve ever been. My mother said the same thing in her 80s that I’m going to share here, at 68. Inside, we are still that young, somewhat-awkward person. When I say, “when will I grow up?” I realize this IS me grown up. Still enjoying cannabis 50+ years later, still loving the Beatles and reggae music and live concerts. Enjoying dancing. Wearing tie-dye. At almost sixty-freakin’-nine! I used to think it was just men who didn’t grow up. But I was wrong.

Phyllis Silverberg, Woodacre

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Petaluma River Cleanup Plan Approved

On May 10, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) quietly signed off on a plan meant to reduce pollution in the 146-square-mile Petaluma River Watershed.

That’s right. Although the problem is rarely discussed, the Petaluma River has been listed as “impaired” by excessive levels of bacteria since 1975.

The bureaucratic document approved by the EPA is known as a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL). It sets levels of acceptable waste discharge from various sources in an attempt to lower the levels of fecal bacteria found in the watershed until the water is deemed clean.

While preparing the TMDL, scientists from the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board tested water from throughout the watershed for Fecal Indicator Bacteria to determine the amount of waste from warm-blooded mammals that has seeped into the water. Although indicator bacteria themselves are not dangerous, scientists use the strains to detect potentially dangerous levels of contamination in the water.

In a report accompanying the TMDL, water board staff identified 12 sources of pollution, which they then lumped into three general categories: human waste, animal waste and municipal stormwater runoff. In tests conducted between 2015 and 2016, water board scientists found bacteria tied to humans, horses, cows and dogs throughout the Petaluma River and its tributaries.

When asked in late 2019 about the levels of E. coli discovered in the Petaluma River, Farhad Ghodrati, an environmental scientist with the San Francisco Bay board, said the test results showed “some of the highest concentrations we have seen in the region.”

At the same time, Dr. Celeste Philips, who then served as Sonoma County’s Health Officer, warned Petaluma River users against drinking the river water or using the water for cooking due to the levels of E. coli. “Adults and children should wash hands/shower and towel dry after swimming; rinse off pets after they come into contact with the water,” Philips added.

Although some of the various parties named in the report appear to be undertaking the work required of them by the TMDL, the clean-up process will likely stretch on for at least a decade, according to an implementation timeline.

However, if critics of the plan are correct, the process may stretch on much longer due to flaws in the TMDL. San Francisco Bay Keeper, a nonprofit focused on cleaning up Bay Area water sources, raised concerns throughout the approval process that the plan does not meet the legal requirements of a TMDL laid out in the Clean Water Act.

“Baykeeper has concerns about the strength and legality of the Petaluma River Bacteria and Nutrients TMDL because we believe the TMDL isn’t specific enough or strong enough to lead to meaningful improvements for the river,” Ben Eichenberg, a staff attorney with Bay Keeper, said in a statement. Among other weaknesses, Eichenberg says that the current TMDL fails to identify specific pollutant sources and “underestimates the scope and cost of what it will take to clean things up.”

The regional and State Water Quality Control Boards largely dismissed Bay Keepers’ concerns throughout the plan approval process, and the EPA appears to have signed off without making any changes.

Whether or not the current plan is strong or specific enough, the current TMDL and accompanying documents do offer some insight into the reason the watershed is polluted—and what should be done about it. Now, without further delay, let’s take a look at a few of the sources and suggested solutions.

Cattle and Horses

According to a 2020 staff report, the 17 cow dairies in the Petaluma River Watershed are home to an estimated 11,000 cows. Meanwhile, 32 horse farms house approximately 8,600 animals in the watershed.

Given the number of four-legged watershed residents, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that tests found that bacteria originating from cow and horse waste “were identified at very high rates throughout the watershed, in both dry and wet seasons.”

In order to comply with the TMDL, Confined Animal Facilities, the technical term for high-density commercial ag operations, must prove they comply with Water Board regulations “as soon as possible,” and monitor water quality as required by the Water Board moving forward.

Meanwhile, grazing operations in the watershed, which include less dense ag operations, must obtain a Grazing Order from the Water Board by September and follow Water Board regulations.

Sewer Systems

Sewer system overflows during heavy rainstorms appear to be another historically significant source of pollution in the watershed.

Between 2007 and 2017, the Petaluma and the Penngrove Sanitation Zone, a small district located north of Petaluma, reported 94 large overflows, spewing a total of 1.35 million gallons of sewage into the watershed.

Tests in 2016 and 2017 “detected fecal bacteria of human origin at many sites throughout the watershed, which could point to discharges from the sanitary sewer collection systems as a likely source,” the 2020 staff report notes.

The report tasks Petaluma and the Penngrove Sanitation Zone with preparing an updated Sewer System Management Plan identifying necessary repairs to the systems within a year. Once the plans are approved by the water board, the agencies will have 10 years to complete all of the required improvements. More pressing projects identified in the report must be completed within five years.

Homeless Encampments and Marinas

People living in informal shelters inside the watershed may also pose a risk to water quality.

In July 2017, there were an estimated 17 encampments along waterways within Petaluma city limits. If encampment residents are not disposing of their waste properly, it could make its way into the waterways.

As a result, the TMDL requires Petaluma and CalTrans, the state transportation agency, to create a plan to “prevent human waste discharges into storm sewer systems from homeless encampments on City of Petaluma and Caltrans properties within the Petaluma River watershed” by next May. The resulting plan must be implemented by the end of 2022.

The TMDL also requires marina owners and operators to increase “no dumping” education for boat owners by the end of 2021, and to create a plan review and install proper waste management equipment by next May. The marina owners must complete the improvements within five years.

More information about the Petaluma River Bacteria TMDL is available here.

How Pandemic Pets Eased the Loneliness of the Covid Lockdown

I’ve fallen hopelessly in love dozens of times over the past decade. Apparently, I’m just a girl who can’t say no, immediately opening my heart and home to every new sweetie who comes my way. Age, breeding and even gender never matter to me.

I’m addicted to caring for foster dogs.

The furry faces and soulful eyes of abandoned pups do me in every time. My first foray into fostering was with a black toy poodle named Alfie, who came from Muttville, the Bay Area’s senior dog rescue. Since then, I’ve cared for so many that I’ve lost count. Some stay only a few days, and others, like my current foster dog Jordan who had health issues, live with me for months.

Jordan, a four-year-old, 90-pound Alaskan Malamute/Siberian husky mix, was dumped at the Peninsula Humane Society & SPCA. The family he lived with since he was a puppy said they were moving, a common reason given for surrendering a dog. The notes on Jordan’s paperwork indicate he stayed outside on a balcony in Daly City for most of his life.

Unfortunately, Jordan, who started out as a friendly fellow, emotionally shut down in the shelter after being there for two months. He no longer wanted attention, became unresponsive and even growled at a staff member. With Jordan’s spirit broken, it was clearly time for him to leave the noisy, fast-paced shelter.

Shelters often work with rescues to help find homes for animals, particularly those with special needs. The Bay Area Siberian Husky Rescue, a small rescue focusing on Northern breeds, took Jordan into their foster program. I volunteered to foster the pooch, and brought him home to Sausalito.

Foster dogs and cats live in a home, and are treated as a member of the family, until they’re adopted. The foster parent gets to know the pet’s personality, and works with the animal on socializing and training. Sometimes, as with Jordan, the foster person nurses a pet back to health as they recover from medical conditions or surgeries. Mostly, the foster family provides love and stability.

“All dogs thrive better in a home,” said Sherri Franklin, founder and CEO of Muttville. “Even though we have a shelter, we stay foster based. It’s best for the dog and the adopter. We’re able to give an adopter a clearer picture of what sort of dog they’re bringing home. We can matchmake a dog with a person in a more confident way.”

Most shelters remained closed to the public during the pandemic, and relied on foster homes to care for their animals. The foster program was such a success for Marin Humane in Novato, they have decided to continue the model of keeping as many pets as possible in foster homes. In fact, they recently tripled the size of their foster program by partnering with Hopalong Animal Rescue.

Baxter was recently placed in a loving home by Marin Humane. Photo courtesy of Marin Humane.

“We found that we had less sickness among pets in foster homes,” said Lisa Bloch, director of marketing and communications at Marin Humane. “Especially with cats, because stress can often lead to upper respiratory infections.”

Kittens also benefit from staying in foster homes. Spring marked the start of kitten season, and shelters are now overflowing with the tiny felines.

“Our foster program is essential, because we bring in kittens from shelters across the state that have too many kittens to handle,” said Asher Belden, adoption program manager of the Humane Society of Sonoma County. “If we didn’t take the kittens, they might be euthanized.”

The agency has taken in 329 kittens this season, with 60 in foster care right now. People are flocking to their kitty adoption events.

During the pandemic lockdown, pets available for adoption were in high demand, an unusual and gratifying phenomenon, according to animal welfare groups. Some rescues and shelters are still seeing more adoption applicants than in pre-pandemic times.

“It was an explosive year,” said Hannah Houston, director of foster and adoption at Dogwood Animal Rescue, based in Sonoma County. “It became abundantly clear during Covid that people were suffering from loneliness and isolation. They didn’t just want a dog, they needed a dog.”

Dogwood Animal Rescue adopted out 750 dogs and cats in 2020, close to double the amount of a typical year. Each dog had at least 25 applicants, and 60 people were on the kitten waiting list.

Adoption applications during the pandemic increased by 400% at Muttville, the senior dog rescue. Even dogs that are typically harder to place, such as blind or diabetic dogs, were adopted quickly.

Popcorn, an eight-year-old Parson Russell terrier, is awaiting adoption. Photo courtesy of Muttville.

With last week officially marking the end of the lockdown in the Bay Area, many pet parents are heading back to the office for the first time in more than a year. There have been dire headlines in the media about people giving up their newly adopted companions now that we’re on the move again.

“The pandemic brought about a pet adoption boom—but now, U.S. shelters are struggling to take in growing numbers of cats and dogs,” the BBC reported last month.

Not so, according to Bay Area shelters and rescues. The agencies say the extra time and effort they invested to prepare adopters for the inevitable return to normalcy was well worth it.

“We’re not seeing returns at Muttville as people go back to work,” Franklin said. “Most of us in the adoption world talked to the adopters about their expectations and their plans for when they go back to work. We made sure people thought this through, because it’s a commitment. Having these conversations during the adoption process really helped.”

Discussions with pet owners have now shifted to how to leave their dogs and cats at home alone. It’s not just the animals suffering from separation anxiety—humans are having a hard time adjusting, too.

Experts recommend initially leaving your pet for a few minutes, exiting and returning without fanfare. Come and go frequently, gradually extending the amount of time you’re away.

“It’s also helpful to increase their exercise,” Bloch, of Marin Humane, said. “Take your dog on an extra-long walk or jog. Play with your cats as well. Leave toys at home that provide mental stimulation.”

Although we managed to foster and adopt in record numbers during the pandemic, the never-ending flow of stray and abandoned animals entering shelters and rescues continues. Fostering and adopting remain just as important in our post-pandemic world.

When I picked up my foster dog Jordan from the shelter, I didn’t think he’d be with me for seven months and counting, far longer than any of my other fosters. It will be bittersweet when Jordan goes to his forever home, but I’ll dry my tears quickly and make room for the next foster dog who will, no doubt, steal my heart again.

Iconic Flamingo Resort Debuts Multimillion-Dollar Redesign

A neon icon in Santa Rosa for over 60 years, The Flamingo Resort is known for its pink tower and mid-century aesthetic courtesy of master architect Homer A. Rissman.

This summer, the Flamingo Resort–currently operated by Santa Rosa-based hotel management company Point Group’s SPOKEN Brand–unveils a multimillion-dollar reimagination and new immersive wellbeing experiences set across its 10-acre campus.

Taking a cue from Rissman’s design, Weddle Gilmore Architects and BAR Architects have transformed the mid-century hotel into a modern wine country oasis with a stunning new entryway and several redesigned points of interest, including the lobby and check-in experience, the Lazeaway Club restaurant and bar, and all 170 guest rooms and suites.

The new architectural palette of wood, steel and glass complements the classic mid-century design and the modern touches honor the resort’s legacy while infusing a relaxed contemporary vibe into the Flamingo. 

“The rebirth of Flamingo Resort embodies our vision to create an environment where guests, locals and team members can embrace spiritual wellbeing and the adventure of life,” said Stephen Yang, Founder and Co-CEO of SPOKEN. “We are excited for guests and locals to stay with us to relax and find their flow.”

As guests arrive at Flamingo Resort, they are first drawn to the floor-to-ceiling glass windows of the new “Porte Cochere” entryway and led to the focal point and social center of the hotel; the pool and outdoor courtyard featuring a commissioned HYBYCOZO garden sculpture.

The designers recreated the Flamingo’s lobby into an inviting greeting space that emulates the experience of arriving at someone’s home. Guests check-in at a large table similar to a kitchen island surrounded by serpentine-shaped couches done in a velveteen fabric. Custom light fixtures play off a tropical feel, bringing the outdoors in with palm leaves, pompous grass, and other references to the natural agricultural area of Santa Rosa.

The integration of art throughout the hotel consists of curated vintage and modern photographs, prints, paintings and commissioned art pieces including a multi-ethnic, provocative lobby wall mural by Serge  Gay Jr., a HYBYCOZO pendant chandelier in the Entry Foyer of the meeting spaces, and a stunning rope  sculpture by artist Windy Chien which adorns the wall outside the main ballroom.

Flamingo Resort’s guest rooms and spacious poolside suites, many with private outdoor patios, are also redesigned to blend the resort’s mid-century architecture with a modern design, featuring floor-to-ceiling windows and a color palette inspired by the ‘50s, ‘60s and ‘70s.

As part of its redesign, Flamingo Resort is also introducing new wellness and culinary programming that celebrates the spirit of Sonoma County and invites guests to connect to the local community and the great outdoors with an array of complimentary and by-reservation activities like Afternoon Tea, yoga, meditation, sound healing and more.

Flamingo Resort room rates start at $189 per night and suites start at $350 per night. The resort is offering two grand opening packages; “Flock to Flamingo” which includes a $100 daily spa credit or “Recharge and Relaunch” which includes 15 percent off accommodations plus a daily $25 resort credit.

Flamingoresort.com

Recycling Your Dead Batteries

Trash or Charge?

What happens when the single-use batteries in your flashlight, remote or toy go dead? You replace them. What do you do with the dead batteries? If you throw them in the trash, you’re a criminal.

In California and 18 other states, it is illegal to dispose of batteries in the trash. By law, California’s batteries must be recycled at a hazardous waste disposal facility, a universal waste handler like a storage facility or broker, or at an authorized recycling facility. If batteries reach a landfill, rains will come, eventually corroding the batteries, which then leach nasty chemicals such as mercury, lead and cadmium into the soil.

The chemicals pollute the water table, eventually permeating our food and bodies. Valuable metals and minerals in the batteries such as steel, iron, brass, manganese, nickel, cobalt and zinc are lost. According to some estimates, the average person in the United States discards eight dry-cell batteries per year, amounting to three billion batteries annually, and worldwide, about 15 billion batteries are tossed every year.

In Central Marin, some Next Door contributors are discussing environmental problems and what individuals can do about them. You might now be wondering about how to recycle your household batteries: The alkaline and the lithium, and those old Ni-Cad and NiMh rechargeables, plus the newer lithium-ion batteries found in mobile phones, laptops, tablets, medical equipment, electric vehicles and power tools that all contain recoverable materials.

Fortunately, if you live in Marin, there are approximately 58 drop-off locations that accept batteries for recycling, including some food stores and other commonly visited businesses. Most take all types of batteries, but some take only rechargeables.

However you accumulate your used batteries, the important thing is to keep them out of the trash. Marin County has two main waste streams for consumer batteries. They work something like this: The first end-point is the Marin Household Hazardous Waste Facility at 565 Jacoby St. in San Rafael, near Marin Sanitary Service’s processing center.

This stream is fed by drop-off points at 23 fire stations; seven city offices and police stations; six hardware stores; both Good Earth stores; both United Markets; Radio Shack; Waterstreet Company in Sausalito; Staples and Renew Computers; and, in Mill Valley, the Library, the Sewerage Agency and the Community Center. Additionally, batteries can be dropped off directly at the hazardous waste facility.

Kathy Wall, the Facility’s program manager, provided me with a spreadsheet showing all the locations. She informed me that, although the list is not currently online, it will be made available soon and will include one or two locations that I discovered were not yet on the list. Below, there is a link to Zero Waste Marin’s collection locations:

zerowastemarin.org/residents/zero-waste-resources/bulb-battery-take-back-program/

In Sonoma County, the ZeroWasteSonoma.gov website reminds us that “By law, retailers selling rechargeable batteries are required to take back used rechargeable batteries weighing 11 pounds or less from their customers.”

Santa Rosa and Windsor have an alternate collection solution for batteries that, well, kicks ass. All you have to do is prevent shorting by taping the terminals of all rechargeable batteries and alkaline batteries 9-volt or larger, then tape your batteries up with heavy-duty clear tape. Place the batteries in a bag—preferably paper, of course—and seal it firmly, then place the bag on top of the blue recycle cart for pick up.

In addition, you can dispose of all kinds of batteries through the Agency’s Household Hazardous Waste Facility and related programs. The same packaging instructions apply. Each of the three Sonoma haulers have their own sorting guidelines, also found on the Zero Waste Sonoma website, ZeroWasteSonoma.gov.

Call2recycle.org has a partial list of other local recycling locations, which I have rounded out with the following: Both Staples stores take all household batteries, plus many office and home items. Home Depot accepts rechargeable batteries only. Best Buy and Renew Computers, in San Rafael, seem to be the overall recycling champions, although they, too, only accept rechargeable batteries and not common, single-use batteries such as alkaline, lithium and “heavy duty” non-alkaline batteries.

Best Buy also accepts button batteries, along with a long list of office and home equipment. Renew Computers also takes computers and electronics to be “sorted, repaired, reused, or properly recycled.”

Those batteries are organized, then taped up for shipping by one person at the hazardous waste facility, then are sent to a Battery Solutions center in Mesa, Arizona, for aggregation with other deliveries, which then go on to Battery Solutions headquarters in Wixom, Michigan, for processing.

Battery Solutions processes batteries to recover materials by sorting batteries by their various chemical components. Then, rather than using high heat, they use a mechanical process to separate the component materials.

The 20% that is steel is magnetically separated and sent on to steel mills. The 15% comprising the paper and plastic bits of the label and the brass pin are sifted out and distributed. The 58% that is a powdered zinc/manganese concentrate is separated. Interestingly, at least some of the zinc and manganese are used as soil amendments to enhance the productivity of such crops as corn and beans. 7% is lost in moisture.

The second all-types-of-batteries stream, run by Zero Waste Marin, is fed by 10 collection points from Bolinas to Sausalito. Those collection points can be found at: https://zerowastemarin.org/residents/zero-waste-resources/bulb-battery-take-back-program/

Not listed at that site is Batteries + Bulbs in San Rafael, which accepts only rechargeable batteries.

Zero-waste batteries are periodically collected by Don Lees of Revolt Recycling in San Leandro. According to Lees, “Only 22% of Californians recycle their household batteries.”

Lees also collects from several other jurisdictions in the Bay Area. He organizes them by type, tapes them up and ships them to Battery Recycling Made Easy (BRME) in Georgia.

BRME is headed by John Patterson, who says his company accepts all household batteries for recycling. However, they melt only cell phone batteries, creating a “recovered remelt alloy,” which includes nickel, cobalt and iron, and is sold to “the super specialty alloy industry.”

Patterson says that “nickel and cobalt are used in jet engines.”

Iron, of course, can be used to make steel and other iron alloys. When asked what exactly is done with the other batteries that he accepts, Patterson states that, “We recycle them.” When pressed about how that is done and what happens to the resulting metals, Patterson, unlike Spalding of Battery Solutions, responded, “I’m not going to tell you,” a recurring phrase throughout our conversation.

While all batteries have some potential for fire and explosion, there are many more potential hazards with lithium-ion batteries. They are high-energy, and sensitive to humidity and puncture. Stories circulate about computers and toys that use li-ion batteries catching on fire. A runaway fire in a shipment of li-ion batteries brought down a UPS cargo plane, killing its two crew members. That’s why you can’t airmail li-ion batteries.

Fires have also started in garbage trucks, at least one Fedex truck, in homes and at various fire station collection points. Because of that, it’s recommended to put a little tape on the battery terminals when recycling, especially on the lithium-ion ones and alkaline batteries of nine volts and greater.

Robert Alexander massages, trains people, writes and digs through the trash in San Anselmo.  He can be reached at rp*****@***il.com.

Sonoma County Struggles to Disburse Covid-19 Rent Relief

Six weeks into its existence, a Sonoma County program to distribute state and federal money to assist tenants and landlords impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic had dealt out less than 10% of the total $32 million available.

In a June 8 report to the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors, Tina Rivera, the interim director of the county’s Department of Health Services, said that the county had distributed nearly $2.7 million to 1,477 applicants between April 19 and June 3.

Under state law, tenants and landlords must apply for funding together. If the landlord agrees to participate, they can receive up to 80% reimbursement for some rent which went unpaid due to a reason related to the Covid-19 pandemic. If the landlord does not agree to participate in the program, the program will cover 25% of a tenant’s unpaid rent under the time period covered by state law.

Asked about the struggle to distribute the funds, local officials at recent meetings often pointed to state and federal restrictions on how local governments can spend the money. Meanwhile, the head of one of the nonprofit organizations which the county has contracted with to distribute the funds reported cited the fact that the application paperwork is lengthy and complicated, leaving the organizations distributing the funds on behalf of the county with considerable backlogs of requests.

Sonoma County is by no means the only area struggling to hand out the funds. On June 8, the Wall Street Journal reported that, “Local governments across the U.S. have struggled with how to distribute the money, and some have complained that their staffs are being deluged by a flood of aid requests.” The federal government estimates that approximately 11 million renter households across the country are considered at risk of eviction due to financial hardship, the Journal reported.

A recent survey of 177 California tenant advocates by the Bay Area Regional Health Inequities Initiative (BARHII) and two other organizations found that tenants were struggling to access the funds because of technical difficulties, failure to properly document loss of income and owing money to someone other than their landlord, among other things.

As a result, the state had paid out only $20 million of the $4.6 billion available at the time the report was published in late May.

One major flaw identified by Sonoma County officials is that state and federal laws do not allow local government agencies to distribute funds to struggling tenants who paid their rent during the pandemic by turning to friends and private lenders for loans.

“What we’re finding is that many of our community members really compiled credit card debt to pay down the rent, so that they had a place to stay, and now they’re faced with the interest rates accumulating along with the debt on the credit card,” Supervisor Susan Gorin said during a June 8 Board of Supervisors meeting.

“Accumulated interest and loans is not an eligible use for these [state and federal] dollars. So unfortunately we cannot use these particular dollars for that particular debt,” Rivera responded.

Concerned that the restriction could cause the county to leave some of the $32 million wasted, Gorin and other local officials are requesting that state and federal officials loosen the rules governing how the existing funds can be used.

“My plea [to state and federal lawmakers], is that these restrictions around these dollars be loosened or lifted so that we can use these dollars to provide security for individuals who are facing the mounting debt that creates the housing insecurity for them,” Rivera said at the June 8 Board of Supervisors meeting.

The lengthy paperwork process and the sheer number of requests for assistance are other problems local officials are dealing with when distributing the funds.

“There is a lot of phone time associated with each one of these applications,” Elece Hempel, the executive director of Petaluma People Services Center, said during a May 19 public meeting with city and county officials. 

“We’re getting about 900 questions a day from landlords and tenants on ‘how does this work,’ and ‘what does it mean,’” Hempel added.

On May 10, fresh off the news that the state had a $38 billion budget surplus, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a plan to allocate $5 billion of the funds to increase rent debt reimbursement from 80% to 100% for tenants and landlords who qualify. So far, that change has not come to pass, although negotiations are likely ongoing.

In response to criticisms of the online application system, the state has simplified the application process for rental assistance. However, as of press time, state and federal lawmakers have yet to change what kinds of debts can be covered with the rent aid dollars.

Protection Patchwork

Another issue no doubt causing frustration among tenants and landlords alike is the complexity of the local, state and federal rules governing evictions during the pandemic. Beginning last March, state and federal agencies passed restrictions on some evictions during the pandemic. Then, in response to pressure from tenants’ advocates, Sonoma County passed its own protections.

To make matters more complicated, the rules at all levels have been updated numerous times throughout the past year, making for a dizzying number of interlocking regulations. 

On June 30, some state and federal evictions are set to expire. The restrictions passed by the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors are set to outlast the higher orders. However, some Sonoma County cities seem to be getting antsy.

On June 8, the Santa Rosa City Council discussed the possibility of opting out of the county’s more stringent protections in favor of the state law. In effect, the change would have allowed landlords the ability to evict tenants for a wider array of reasons.

Supporters of the proposal argued that the county regulations are too burdensome on local landlords, discouraging them from continuing to own or manage rental properties in Sonoma County’s largest city.

Ultimately, after the majority of the public speakers at the June 8 council meeting urged the council to remain under the county’s rules, the council voted to revisit the issue in late August.

Local Galleries Share Eco-Centric Art This Summer

Since the beginning of the environmental movement, artists and creators have worked to expose humanity’s detrimental impact on the Earth and to provoke positive societal change through their art.

This summer, several North Bay galleries are taking up the movement once again with exhibitions that speak to the perils facing the planet and the importance of saving the natural landscapes we call home.

Across the country, the multimedia project “EXTRACTION: Art on the Edge of the Abyss” is shining a light on all the ways the extractive industry of mining and drilling exploits and destroys fresh water, fertile soil and other resources. The project—founded by members of Bay Area-based CODEX Foundation—encompasses nearly 50 exhibitions, performances, publications, poetry readings and other events.

In the North Bay, a group of creatives and galleries are participating in “EXTRACTION,” including Santa Rosa’s Calabi Gallery, which is displaying a diverse array of artists who respond to environmental issues through a variety of mediums.

“The world is in crisis, and people just don’t seem to be aware of it,” says gallery Director Dennis Calabi. “As artists tend to be in the vanguard of progressive thinking, art is a great way to spread the word that we are in crisis and we need to fix it.”

“EXTRACTION” exhibits at Calabi Gallery, Saturdays from noon to 5pm and by appointment, through July 31. (calabigallery.com)

Elsewhere, Sonoma Valley Museum of Art is showing a retrospective exhibition, “Sacred Landscapes: The Art of Ynez Johnston,” featuring paintings, sculpture and prints spanning seven decades.

Born in 1920, Johnston grew up in the Bay Area and held her first solo exhibition at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art—now SFMOMA—at age 22. Influenced by natural and cultural iconography, Johnston’s modernist paintings almost always featured imaginative animals and environments.

“Sacred Landscapes” exhibits at SVMA along with an innovative video installation titled “Question Bridge: Black Males”—which explores challenging issues within the Black male community across geographic, generational, educational and economic levels—through Sept. 5. (svma.org)

In San Rafael, artist Peter Adamyan exhibits his post-consumer art in the solo show “This Land Is Land,” at Art Works Downtown. Running June 25 to August 1, the show includes paintings that reflect modern society’s obsession with resource consumption. Adamyan contrasts that notion with several works that represent Native American societies, and environmentalists both past and present.

“I want to show what over extraction of resources and commodification of land looks like in the extreme of a materialistic society,” writes Adamyan in his artist statement. “‘This Land Is Land’ is about giving ownership of land to itself.” (artworksdowntown.org)

In July, the Santa Rosa Arts Center will provide artists and writers a way to respond to current environmental concerns in the non-juried group show, “Our Precious Planet.” The exhibit opens with a reception as part of the SOFA Arts District First Friday Open Studios on July 2, and will feature artistic and poetic interpretations of nature, people and places, with works that express environmental respect, love, fear and caution. (santarosaartscenter.org)

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