Culture Crush: Live Events Bloom This Week in the North Bay

California is one week closer to fully reopening, and the North Bay is getting in on the fun with several safe, distanced events this week in addition to online and virtual get-togethers. Here’s a sample of what’s in store for this weekend.

Live Pop-Up Shop

Marin art, crafts and plants go on display this weekend in the a Spring Pop-Up and Plant Sale. Find vintage finds from a local artist’s estate, a curated collection of home and garden items, artwork ranging from plein-air oil paintings to prints and watercolors, and specialty plants that are perfect for the season. The sale benefits the Marin Art and Garden Center, which is complying with a health guidelines indoors and out during the pop-up event on Saturday, May 22, at 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Ross. 10am to 3pm. Free admission. Maringarden.org/shop.

Live Event

Now that Napa’s di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art is open to in-person visitors, the center is ramping up it’s event calendar, beginning with this week’s panel discussion; In Conversation: Nicki Green, Sahar Khoury, & Maria Paz. The three artists are currently exhibiting at di Rosa in the group show, “Ceramic Interventions,” which celebrates the Bay Area’s enduring and thought-provoking ceramic art movement. Now, the artists come together for an intimate, insightful and socially distanced in-person conversation with exhibition curator Twyla Ruby on Saturday, May 22, at di Rosa, 5200 Sonoma Highway, Napa. 4pm. $10, free with admission. dirosaart.org.

Live Art Reception

Housing 23 artists’ studios, three showroom galleries and two warehouses packed with fine art and furniture, Fulton Crossing is reopening its doors to visitors this month with featured artist Teresa Ferrari exhibiting “Movement in Our Oceans.” The paintings on display feature ocean and coastal scenes created with a deep palette of color and broad strokes from an oil brush that calls to mind masters like van Gogh or Monet. This weekend, Ferrari and the gallery’s other featured and working artists are on hand for a distanced art reception on Saturday, May 22, at Fulton Crossing, 1200 River Rd., Fulton. 4pm. Free. fultoncrossing.com.

Live Comedy

Multi-faceted actor, comedian, and author Finesse Mitchell (pictured) burst onto the comedy scene with his three-year run on NBC’s iconic late night sketch series Saturday Night Live, in the hit urban movie Who’s Your Caddy, and as a series regular on the family sitcom “Outmatched.” Now, he’s coming to wine country to headline a special fundraising stand-up show hosted by Barrel Proof Comedy, Pasta & Punchlines, that pairs big laughs with pasta dinners. The event will be held Saturday, May 22, outside at the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Santa Rosa, 1011 Hahman Dr., Santa Rosa. 5:30pm. $75 and up. santarosaboysandgirlsclub.com.

Virtual Theater

Formed in 2015, Marin Shakespeare Company’s Returned Citizens Theatre Troupe gives actors who have survived incarceration the opportunity to continue their study of theater and to share their stories with the help of a dedicated support group. This weekend, the troupe presents its latest online production, Stages of Healing: Voices From the Inside Out, which tells stories that reflect on life during the pandemic. This original theater performance was created to give voice to those who are incarcerated in California State Prisons by taking their written word from the page to the stage on Saturday and Sunday, May 22 and 23, at 7:30pm. Marinshakespeare.org.

Live Concert

SF-Marin Food Bank welcomes the North Bay to an afternoon of music and fun this weekend at its sixth annual concert fundraiser, Festival For Food. The local lineup includes Mat Karan & Buds, Key Lime Pie, Susan Z & Friends, Johnny Mosley Quartet and Rai Z Jobe. Barbecue, beverages and other goodies are available, and a raffle helps raise funds for the SF-Marin Food Bank’s ongoing mission to feed the Bay Area. The Festival For Food commences in a safe, outdoors setting on Sunday, May 23, at the San Rafael Elks Lodge, 1312 Mission Ave., San Rafael. Noon to 6pm. $10; free for kids under 13. elks1108.org.

Letters to the Editor: Heroes and Scoops

Local Hero

While under the influence of my own special chaos fairy, I dropped my wallet on the street right in busy downtown San Anselmo. I didn’t even have time to realize my wallet was missing when my neighbor called to tell me a Good Samaritan had returned my wallet to my home address—with a not-insignificant amount of money (at least to me) still intact! What a sweet and heroic thing to do! So happy to have such a potentially big problem taken care of for me! We need to celebrate the general goodness of so many people in this world, and I definitely want to thank my own special hero.

Michelle Baucke, San Anselmo

What a Scoop!

Thank you for the article about people who don’t pick up after their dogs (Pacific Sun, News, April 27). I live on the part of Stinson Beach where dog people bring their dogs. What do you think is the first thing a dog wants to do when he gets to the beach after riding over Mt. Tam for 45 minutes? Yup, that’s right. Poop! Dog owners look the other way, pretending not to notice, as if they don’t think their dog is running around frantically looking for a place to leave a big steamer.

People have told me dog poop is organic, biodegradable, full of nutrients for the ocean. Others won’t use the plastic bags we provide because “they are not biodegradable.” So many dog owners walk right past the bag dispenser and the pet waste container on their way to and from the beach. Can you imagine what a drag it would be to take your four dogs to the beach and have to carry back four big sacks of poop? Well, some folks do it religiously and I want to thank them for that. Pick up after your pet like your children, who play in this sand. Thanks everyone!

Dino Colombo, Stinson Beach

Open Mic: Mooning

By Sandra Rae Davies

Amazing moon

Lets spoon

Honey on crackers

Cheese and laughter

Mooning with you

Makes me

Crazy

Wishing upon a star

You’re not far

Away

Now

Cow jumps over

Green leaf clover

In her mouth

Howling

Mooning with you

Makes me

Looney

Shake off

Pants

Let’s dance

Mooning the moon

Cow breathlessly gallops

Crazy not lazy

Anymore

Another luna dance

With your magnetism

Wildly out of my mind

Afterwards

Passionately

Melting

Like a lemon drop

Sandra Rae Davies lives in San Anselmo. We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Pepperwood Preserve Officials Consider Drought’s Effect on Fire Risk

When I arrived, in mid April, at Pepperwood Preserve just northeast of Santa Rosa, I saw countless California poppies lining the edges of a long meadow. Michael Gillogly, the preserve manager since 2005 and a worker at the preserve since 1994, greeted me and asked if I wanted to take a closer look.

As we walked into the field of short, green grasses, Gillogly explained that nine native species of grass grow here. But, because of the extremely low amount of rain, the plants were not as lively as they usually are during spring.

“Things are usually a lot taller and more robust [right now]. In April, for it to be dry,” Gillogly said as he kicked a clump of grass, revealing soil already dry to the point of cracking, “that’s almost unheard of.”

With a state drought declaration now covering 49 out of California’s 58 counties, North Bay residents are understandably concerned by the possibility of the dryness adversely affecting the coming wildfire season. According to scientists and conservationists the Bohemian spoke to at Sonoma County’s Pepperwood Preserve, drought conditions don’t guarantee larger fires will occur, but they cause the already-lengthy fire season to stretch on even longer, increasing the chances of fires.

“The fire season is lengthening,” Gillogly told me. “The soil is drying out quicker, and it is because of climate change.”

As places like Sonoma County get warmer, climate change will increase the severity of the dry weather conditions by drying out the soil more quickly, according to the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES). It will also change the course of atmospheric rivers, which C2ES says may potentially severely affect the Western United States, further worsening the issue of quickly drying soils. 

However, there are many factors that make predicting the scale of the fire season difficult.

“You need three things for a [large] fire,” said David Ackerly, UC Berkeley forest ecology professor and researcher at Pepperwood Preserve.

The first ingredient is fuel. This is readily available each year in our Mediteranean climate, with grasses, native and non-native alike, drying out into the tan husk that makes the hills of Sonoma golden. These dry grasses, and Douglas firs, a conifer commonly found in Sonoma County, make up most of what fuels fires. However, during a very dry year, many trees—such as oaks and bay—in other, more fire-resilient woodlands, can become fire fuel as well.

“As the trees dry out, the twigs lose water and the leaves lose water,” Ackerly said. “They’re literally not as fully hydrated. The more they lose, the more easily they catch on fire.”

Unfortunately, Ackerly explained, there have been no studies looking at how much moisture is lost in oak and bay trees during the dry season.

The second factor is ignition, which can be caused by an ember from a campfire, a misfiring engine, live power lines breaking in strong winds and—sometimes—lightning.

“Last year’s lightning, it was one of those once-a-decade lightning complexes,” Ackerly said. “Other times, obviously, we’re seeing a lot of issues with power lines and the [other] issues we know all too well.”

Strong winds, the final factor in creating large fires, worsen the spread of fire once it ignites. Seasonal winds coming from the Sierra Nevada are called Diablo winds in Northern California; they push fast and dry air currents into the Bay Area and surrounding regions.

A 2020 paper, written by California scientists, states that  “the dryness during DWs [Diablo winds] has become more severe with time, especially in October, and possibly leading to an increase in the likelihood of fires and exacerbating the destructiveness of those fires.” This year looks to be no different, with the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration reporting below-average rainfall. When the Diablo winds come, they will likely bring with them a higher chance of large fires, like the Tubbs fire of 2017. That said, it’s important to remember this does not mean a large fire is guaranteed.

As Michael Gillogly and I looked across the meadow at Pepperwood Preserve, I noticed on the top of a small hill a stand of Douglas firs, burnt black, with small shrubs and new bay tree shoots growing up around the dead totems.

“In October it roared right through here,” Gillogly said, referring to the Tubbs fire, which tore through over 90% of Pepperwood Preserve’s 3,117 acres. All told, the fire claimed 22 lives, making it the fourth deadliest fire in California history.

This meadow we stood on was burnt by the flames, along with Pepperwood’s main work building and Gillogly’s house.

We drove to the north end of Pepperwood Preserve. As we walked up to the top of a hill, I looked out to a clear sky over woodlands tucked into the creases of already-drying hills. In 2019, the Kincade fire torched 77,000 acres, including most of the view we saw from Pepperwood Preserve. Firefighters managed to stop the progress of the fire on Pepperwood, using bulldozers in the area where we stood. With the help of many volunteers, Pepperwood managed to fold the top soil back where it was, preserving the native seeds stored in the dirt. I could see no signs of the bulldoze line or other evidence of the fire. It was as though they had disappeared into the landscape. 

I asked Gillogly if controlled burns or cattle grazing might help reduce the risks of wildfires. He said yes, we need to do more controlled burns, but also mentioned that, when the conditions are right, there isn’t much humans can do to stop the spread of a raging wildfire.

“The Tubbs fire—nothing would stop that. It crossed six lanes of 101,” he said. “You can’t forest-thin your way out of those kinds of firestorms. Only getting rid of climate change is going to have much of an impact on that.”

When asked what he thought might happen this coming fire season, Gillogly shrugged. “I think we’re gonna have fires,” he said.

BottleRock Napa Valley Unveils Lineup for 2021 Festival

It’s been a long road to BottleRock Napa Valley this year, though the massive music, food and wine festival’s return is now taking shape.

Several months ago, BottleRock Napa Valley organizers officially moved the festival’s 2021 dates from its traditional Memorial Day weekend to Labor Day weekend, September 3 to 5, 2021.

Now, the three-day event has it’s musical lineup, featuring some headlining acts that were scheduled to perform in 2020, as well as new additions to the party.

Guns N’ Roses, Stevie Nicks, Foo Fighters, Miley Cyrus, Megan Thee Stallion, G-Eazy and Run The Jewels and more than 80 other musical acts will appear at the Napa Valley Expo on September 3-5, 2021. Three-day festival tickets go on sale at 10am on Thursday, May 20, and single-day tickets go on sale Thursday, May 27, at BottleRockNapaValley.com.  

“We’re thrilled to be bringing live music back to the Napa Valley this fall, arguably the most beautiful time of the year in wine country,” says Dave Graham of BottleRock Napa Valley in a statment. “We are happy to reward our loyal fans with a lineup that once again features a wide variety of genres, combining legendary performers with up and coming bands and some of the most talked about artists in the world.” 

The BottleRock Napa Valley lineup also includes Brandi Carlile, Cage The Elephant, Portugal. The Man, Young the Giant, Maren Morris, Black Pumas, Future Islands, James Murphy (DJ Set), Jimmy Eat World, FINNEAS, Polo G, Jack Harlow, Milky Chance, Jessie Reyez, Dominic Fike, Chromeo, Mavis Staples, Jon Batiste, Walk Off The Earth, Olivia O’Brien, MAX, Digable Planets, Kota the Friend, MOD SUN, Turkuaz w/Jerry Harrison & Adrian Belew: Remain in Light, Village People, Gracie Abrams, Matt Nathanson, Watchhouse, Hobo Johnson & The LoveMakers, Lawrence,  Hamilton Leithauser, Absofacto, Joywave, Big Freedia, MUNA, Atlas Genius, White Reaper, Mondo Cozmo, Ripe, Meg Myers, North Mississippi Allstars, Spafford, DeVotchKa, BabyJake, Donna Missal, Reignwolf, JJ Wilde, 99 Neighbors, Smith & Thell, Full Moonalice, Suki Waterhouse, DJ Z-Trip (Silent Disco), Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears, The Last Bandoleros, Valley, Six60, In the Valley Below, Oliver Riot, The Alive, Crimson Apple, HOKO, Molly Moore, Chris Pierce, Pacific Radio, Buffalo Gospel, S8NT ELEKTRIC, Peter Harper, Lily Meola, Sam Johnson, OTTTO, Grass Child, Obsidian Son, The Silverado Pickups and Napa Valley Youth Symphony.

BottleRock Napa Valley will also present its popular Williams Sonoma Culinary Stage each day. The culinary stage has itself become an attraction at the festival for its exciting showcase of cooking demonstrations featuring renowned chefs, celebrities and festival performers. Details on the 2021 Williams Sonoma Culinary Stage will be announced at a later date.

With the new 2021 dates and updated lineup, festival organizers have informed all existing ticket holders that their current tickets are valid for the September dates, along with their ticket return options.

To offer a safe festival experience, BottleRock Napa Valley will follow all local and state Covid-19 health and safety guidelines required at the time of the festival’s return in September. BottleRock Napa Valley is produced by Latitude 38 Entertainment and presented by JaM Cellars.

For more information, visit www.bottlerocknapavalley.com.

River to Sea

From Petaluma to Pt. Reyes

Petaluma has always been aspirational. As a native, I’ve watched it dream of seceding from the United States of Americana—looking at you, Lucas and Coppola—and of joining bougier Marin County. Now, with its million-plus-dollar homes dotting the alphabetic West Side grid, it’s difficult to distinguish Petaluma, on paper, from its sister county’s tonier towns. In person, however, it’s a different story.

This is Petaluma, summed up in a single moment: The local, Waldorf-inspired, kindergarten-through-eighth-grade charter school, with all its hand-knitting and kale beds, shares its grounds with the local fairground, which is why the “Fair Food” drive-thru is parked in front of the school, selling slushies, hot dogs and deep-fried paeans to the heart of the nation.

Other culinary curiosities include the best Middle Eastern-themed food in town available at the Swedish restaurant, Stockhome (stockhomerestaurant.com), unless we’re talking about the best hummus, which is found at La Dolce Vita Wine Lounge (ldvwine.com). These aren’t contradictions, so much as complementary conundrums. Think cantaloupe and prosciutto—who knew, right?

Before proceeding further, consider this: Though this piece may bear a “spotlight” badge, please don’t confuse this effort with, say, the Boston Globe’s “Spotlight” investigative team. No investigation occurred here; this riff is highly subjective, personal and idiosyncratic to the nth degree. It reflects no special interests other than my own and what I found interesting in any particular moment. It is, by definition, wildly incomplete, lopsided and shaded by my own proclivities and peculiarities.

This is to say, don’t bother writing a “letter to the editor” to complain about my apparent willful—or more likely, “blissful”—ignorance of your favorite spot. You have better things to do than share a piece of your mind with a writer who you will never know; instead, share a piece of your heart with someone who you do. Life is too short for hate mail—send someone a love letter instead. Moving on …

It took a pandemic for Petaluma to finally accept that it has a natural water feature in the form of the Petaluma River, which lines the aptly named Water Street. This is our Left Bank. It is both our Seine and drain. And soon to be bain—as in French for “bath”—when a controversial public art installation, consisting of 5 sculpted bathtubs on stilts, goes up. Before the “Bathwatergate” conspiracies start, consider dining al fresco along the waterfront. Restaurants abutting Water Street that now have outdoor dining include faves Cucina Paradiso (cucinaparadisopetaluma.com) with its Cal-Ital lunches—my wife and occasional Bohemian contributor Kary Hess and I had some laughs there with cannabis columnist Jonah Raskin—and the nearby Wild Goat Bistro (wildgoatbistro.com), whose killer short rib is a welcome part of their permanent menu.

For a European piazza experience with enough wine to keep your spirits afloat until Covid ends, visit the aforementioned La Dolce Vita Wine Lounge (ldvwine.com) in Theater Square. Pandemic measures led LDV to flow seating into the Square, which made a perfect experience even more so. The wine list is beautifully curated and well-matched with a rotating array of house-made hummuses, soup, salads, pizzas, sandwiches and more. Pro tip: LDV is ideal for a date at any stage of your relationship—sip, kiss, sip, kiss. … Everybody’s doing it.

Heading down D Street Extension into the wilds of West Petaluma, it’s a relief to find the road is mellower than when I was a teenager and “Hell Driving” through the hills was a rite of passage—I realize now it was just Darwinism on wheels. The county line falls on San Antonio Creek, which I’m presuming once had an indiginous name that was replaced by some missionary. St. Anthony was the patron saint of lost and stolen articles—including land, it would appear. 

The elbow joint that connects Sonoma and Marin counties is the Marin French Cheese Co., a.k.a. the Cheese Factory (marinfrenchcheese.com). It  boasts picnic tables, a pond and floating fowl of some kind—I’m not an ornithologist, I don’t play “Name That Duck.” To me, they’re all water chickens. It’s a perfect stop for motorists and bicyclists alike. If you grew up around these parts like I did, the cheese factory was a favorite school field trip, apart from the funky smell of aging cheese that once permeated the premises. That’s gone now, and you no longer need to duck your nose into your Izod polo shirt to avoid it. Ironically, I now miss the smell. Double irony—I’m also wearing a mask.

Further west is a striking illustration of the effects of climate change in real time—the mud puddle that was once the Nicasio Reservoir. Where did all the water go? It never arrived due to our truncated rain season. Area fire departments are already alerting citizens about potential fire hazards. Drive by and see if you can spot the vertebrae of the long-dried out sea monster, “Nicasio Nell.”

What’s the difference between Pt. Reyes and Pt. Reyes Station? Everyone I stopped on the street to ask where we were was a tourist, and thought they were in Pt. Reyes. I left it at that.

The best way to gauge the intellectual health of a town is to visit its local bookstore. Pt. Reyes Books (ptreyesbooks.com) is, as my Chron colleague Nick Marino put it, “The platonic ideal of a modern indie bookstore,” which means that visitors are likely surrounded by the cognoscenti of Marin County. Pt. Reyes Books is a browser’s paradise, and a buyer’s moral obligation.

Inasmuch as a good book can feed the soul, stepping next door for a coffee and a pastry courtesy of Bovine Bakery (bovinebakeryptreyes.com) can feed the body. The beloved bakery has adapted to the times and provides a convenient walk-up service, with its usual line of devoted patrons now winding down the street. Conceivably, the line could be long enough that you end up across the street at Toby’s Feed Barn (tobysfeedbarn.com), a family-owned-and-operated “general store and working feed barn that has been serving the community since 1942,” according to its website. Toby’s offers a variety of fresh, organic produce as well as pet food, hay and grain. Toby’s coffee bar also offers a CBD latte for $7.25, which, by all accounts, is well worth it.

What’s also worth it is driving the 7.7 miles westerly to Pt. Reyes National Seashore (nps.gov/pore/index.htm), which the National Park Service bills as a “natural sanctuary, a human haven.” And, for once, the government got it right. You’re invited to respectfully frolic with over 1,500 species of plants and animals; but be wary, as there is a Red Flag fire warning in effect at present writing. “Outdoor burning is not recommended” is the understatement of the year. So leave the barbecue at home, and enjoy the fresh air.

Hang Eight: Five-Year-Old Co-Authors Book About Surfboarding Spider

Local five-year-old, Ryeson Bull, and his mom, Shana Bull, just published their first children’s book, Randall the Blue Spider Goes Surfing. Randall’s tale is just now reaching the public, but Ryeson first told his mom about the intrepid arachnid when he was only two.

A few serious health conditions in the family were integral to Randall’s creation; when Ryeson’s grandfather was hospitalized in Southern California after a cycling accident, Shana took her son to his favorite ocean park in Seal Beach. Ryeson couldn’t go inside the hospital because he has cystic fibrosis, which makes it risky for him to be around germs.

While his dad visited his granddad, Ryeson told his mom the story of a surfboarding spider who got nervous when others watched him surf. A couple of years later, Shana’s own diagnosis of cancer—which came amid the Covid-19 pandemic—changed her career path and led the mother-son duo to turn the surfboarding spider’s adventures into a picture book.

The pair teamed up with artist Brady Lovell to illustrate the book. Lovell is married to Shana’s college roommate, and Shana has admired his cartoon designs on Instagram through the years. Ryeson sent Brady original drawings to inform his illustrations.

“It was Brady’s very first children’s book, and like me being an author, it was a bucket list come true for him,” Shana says.

Released by East 26th Publishing, the book is available in paperback and as an Amazon Kindle edition. In Sonoma County, it will be available at Safari West, Baby Bon Ton Studio and Savvy Little Shop. As Randall surfs into stores, Ryeson and Shana are already hard at work on outlining 10 additional stories for the spider and his friends.

Shana says, “All [of the stories] take place by the ocean, and all will have a fun message—but told in a silly, relatable way.”

Lovell is already working on his second draft of illustrations for the next book in the series, which revolves around playing pretend and dealing with bullies.

Randall has garnered many fans, who have also become fans and supporters of Ryeson and Shana. At school, Ryeson’s friend Camellia asks him to read her the story over and over. 

On May 15, Ryeson and Shana will give a Zoom reading of the book as part of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation’s annual fundraising campaign Great Strides. Shana will also be a featured blogger on the foundation’s website (cff.org) and will talk about the book and give some tips for traveling with kids who have the currently-terminal disease. Shana also has an upcoming article for the website Cancer Wellness, in which she’ll tell her cancer story, which is also the story of how her book came to be.

Culture Crush: Virtual Events This Week Feature Music and Art

As the North Bay inches towards the reopening, several groups keep the distancing going with virtual event offerings this weekend. Here’s a sample of what’s coming up online.

Virtual Reception

Under the supervision of art instructor Ginny Geoghegan, Tomales High School’s art program remained a bedrock of creativity for students navigating the course of the past year’s unprecedented distance-learning ordeal. This month, several of those students participate in Gallery Route One’s exhibition, “Tomales High School Artist Showcase 2021,” featuring paintings, drawings, photography and mixed-media works. The show opens with a virtual reception on Friday, May 14, and will be viewable online as well as in-person through May 23 at Gallery Route One, 11101 Highway One, Point Reyes Station. Thurs–Sun, 11am to 5pm. galleryrouteone.org.

Virtual Art Walk

The poet John Keats famously declared, “Beauty is truth, truth beauty.” Several ceramic artists from Pacific Rim Sculptors ponder that logic and other ideas related to the exhibit, “Beauty or Truth,” now on display at San Rafael’s Art Works Downtown and online. This weekend, the gallery hosts its monthly Virtual Art Walk and Reception to offer a digital tour of the show and presentations that enrich the work. Tune in on Friday, May 14, at 6pm. Art Works Downtown is open for in-person viewing at 1337 Fourth St., San Rafael. Fri, 5–8pm; Sat and Sun, 1–5pm. artworksdowntown.org.

Virtual Family Event

While the theater remains closed for live events, Luther Burbank Center for the Arts continues to host events online, and the center’s season-long Clover Sonoma Family Fun Series entertains and educates children and their families from the comfort of their homes with free virtual performances. This weekend, bilingual kids’ music sensation Sonia De Los Santos (pictured) shares her cheerful, inspiring and award-winning music, sung in Spanish and English, and families can get a sneak peek into how Sonia and her friends make music with special demonstrations. Tune in any time between Saturday, May 15, and Sunday, May 16. Free. lutherburbankcenter.org.

Virtual Festival

For the last decade, the Sonoma County Matsuri! Japanese Arts Festival has showcased traditional Japanese dance, music and cultural presentations in downtown Santa Rosa. This year, the 11th annual Festival will be held virtually due to the pandemic. Yet, the arts, music and culture will still be on hand with featured artists like master musician Riley Lee from Australia performing the Shakuhachi (Japanese flute), Sonoma County Taiko and TenTen Taiko both offering drumming performances, the DeLeon Judo Club from Petaluma sharing their martial arts skills and others appearing over Zoom on Saturday, May 15, at 6:30pm. Registration required. sonomamatsuri.org.

Virtual Concert

Santa Rosa Symphony concludes its 2020–2021 virtual concert season this weekend with a show that celebrates Sonoma County. Acclaimed San Francisco–based pianist Elizabeth Dorman joins the orchestra for a performance of composer and Santa Rosa Symphony Artistic Partner Ellen Taaffe Zwilich’s “Peanuts Gallery.” Continuing with the local theme, the concert also features a performance of “Sonoma Strong,” with a new arrangement by Santa Rosa–native Paul Dooley to accommodate the smaller orchestra necessitated by Covid restrictions. The concert premieres on Sunday, May 16, at 3pm, with a pre-concert talk at 2pm. Free, donations gratefully accepted. Srsymphony.org.

Open Mic: Driving Stress

By Ann Troy

Driving is one of the most stressful things we do—and it brings out the worst in us. Most of us don’t progress to road rage, but still, our anger and frustration take a toll on us and on those around us.

I have thought a lot about this and have come up with some tips to make it less stressful.

First, it helps if you can leave rested and relaxed. If you meditate, try meditating for a few minutes before you take off. Also, give yourself more time than you think you will need. This way red lights, traffic jams and road construction won’t be as stressful.

Try to avoid anger. When you get angry whose heart rate goes up, whose blood pressure increases, whose gastric acidity increases, whose catecholamines increase, whose cortisol level rises? Yours—with immediate, short-term and long-term negative consequences to your health and wellbeing.

If you find yourself getting angry, try to distract yourself, as you would distract a two-year-old who is about to have a tantrum. Sing your favorite song, turn on some music, notice the natural beauty around you. Remind yourself: “This is not who I want to be, this is not how I want to interact with the world and this is not what I want to do to my mind, my heart and my body.”

It helps to take some deep “belly breaths.” This is a relaxation technique in which you take slow, deep breaths that expand your belly. You can also remind yourself that everyone around you is in the same awful traffic. Do a “loving kindness” meditation in which you wish everyone around you—and yourself—peace and happiness. It helps to do these two things at the beginning of your trip and also intermittently, especially as you encounter frustrating situations.

Last but not least, smile and be courteous to other drivers. Let someone cut in front of you, let a pedestrian cross, try to be patient and forgiving of others’ less than perfect driving. Who knows, maybe they are having a bad day. Remember that we, too, are less than perfect. The Golden Rule applies here.

Ann Troy lives in San Anselmo. We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Foppoli-Backed Security Company Comes to Sudden End

While embattled Windsor Mayor Dominic Foppoli still clings to his seat despite facing numerous allegations of sexual assault, at least one company he invested in last year fell apart last month.

On April 8, the day the San Francisco Chronicle first published four womens’ allegations about Foppoli, politicians and companies raced to distance themselves from the now-toxic politician. Among them was Whitestar Security Group, a Santa Rosa-based company in which Foppoli invested between $100,000 and $1,000,000 last year, according to a financial disclosure he filed on April 1.

While interviews with two of the company’s founders indicate that the growing company faced internal problems for at least the past six months, it was the Chronicle’s investigation into Foppoli that led to the company’s sudden death—and the loss of an as yet unknown number of jobs for its employees.

Whitestar Security Group was formed last May after a group of young professionals approached Mark Adams, a 55-year-old private investigator with a background in law enforcement. Clayton Taylor, a former Teamsters organizer, came to Adams with a proposal to form a new security company using Adams’ state security license. Taylor’s business partner, Brandon Rojas, a former employee of the homeless services nonprofit St. Vincent de Paul, would offer the new company insight into working with local homeless care providers.

Adams agreed to allow the new company to use his state security license. He also agreed to let the new company, Whitestar Security Group, use the name and branding of his longstanding, but entirely separate, private investigations company, the Whitestar Group.

A combination of the company’s focus on compassionate care for homeless clients, its well-connected founders and a global pandemic which increased demand for the company’s services made Whitestar Security Group something of a quick success. In the first year of business, the company landed contracts with two nonprofits and the Sonoma County Department of Health Services.

In interviews, Taylor and Adams’ accounts of the company’s internal problems differed in some regards. However, both acknowledged that there had long been tensions at the company. Late last year, Adams informed the company’s board and investors that he planned to revoke his security license from the company in June 2021.

When the Foppoli story finally did break in early April, the company’s clients began to flee, and Adams decided to pull his security license at the end of April instead of in June.

Taylor, who managed the company’s day-to-day business, says he was left with the task of informing  dozens of employees that they would lose their jobs within 48 hours. Some of the company’s 70-or-so employees have been hired by other security companies who picked up Whitestar’s contracts, but many were suddenly left unemployed, Taylor says.

“The employees had no idea who the investor was because he wasn’t involved [in day-to-day operations]. There wasn’t one job site that he [Foppoli] showed up to,” Taylor told the Bohemian

In an interview, Adams said that he gave the company’s founders ample time to apply for their own state security license. But, because they never did so, the company was left to scramble when the Foppoli story broke and Adams decided to pull his license earlier than originally planned.

Trauma Informed Care

Taylor says he partnered with Rojas, who worked for St. Vincent de Paul for two and a half years, with the idea of building a socially-conscious security company by combining Taylor’s background as a security manager and Teamsters organizer with Rojas’s experience working for a homeless service provider.

In addition to paying their workers better than the industry standard, Taylor says the company planned on training its employees in “trauma-informed care” to improve the services the guards provided to people experiencing homelessness and other clients.

Late last year, the company lined up two contracts with the Sonoma County Department of Health Services. Under the larger contract, records obtained by the Bohemian show, Health Services paid Whitestar a total of $439,680 between Dec. 7, 2020, and April 30, 2021 to provide security services at two local hotels which the county purchased to offer shelter for people experiencing homelessness during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The county contract called on Whitestar to provide three unarmed security guards at Hotel Azura in downtown Santa Rosa, and the Sebastopol Inn on the outskirts of Sebastopol. If things ever got particularly dangerous, Whitestars’ guards were expected to call on the nearest law enforcement agency to manage the situation, according to the company’s contract with the county.

Jennielynn Holmes, Catholic Charities’ chief programs officer, says that the nonprofit hired Whitestar without a bid last year as the nonprofit scrambled to meet the increased demand for services caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Jack Tibbetts, the executive director of St. Vincent de Paul, the former employer of Rojas, says Whitestar was selected to provide security services at St. Vincent’s Los Guilicos encampment after the nonprofit conducted a competitive-bidding process.

Tibbetts, who also serves on the Santa Rosa City Council, acknowledges he’s a friend of Rojas but insists he followed proper procedures when it came to hiring Whitestar.

When the Foppoli story broke, both Catholic Charities and St. Vincent de Paul immediately replaced Whitestar with other security companies in an effort to distance themselves from the unfolding scandal.  Emails obtained through a public records request show that Taylor and the Sonoma County Department of Health Services amended Whitestars’ contracts to end on April 30, the day Adams revoked the company’s license. 

New Company

When Rojas left Santa Rosa to join the Navy late last year, Tibbetts served as his proxy on Whitestar’s board in February and March. Tibbetts says that he was not paid by Whitestar and that he received permission from St. Vincent’s board of directors to serve as Rojas’s proxy.

He resigned from his position at Whitestar on April 6, two days before the Chronicle published its first story about the allegations against Foppoli. 

On March 26, Adams filed paperwork to form a new security company, Whitestar Protection Group, in order to start the process of creating a new security company after he revoked his license from the company in June.

When the Foppoli story broke, Adams says he approached Rob Muelrath, a local political and public relations consultant, for advice about how to distance his pre-existing Whitestar Group from the Foppoli-backed Whitestar Security Group. Muelrath, who runs Muelrath Public Affairs, has a long list of clients, including many local politicians.

Adams says that after talking to Muelrath and Tibbetts during the past month, he offered both men positions on the board of his new company due to Muelrath’s business acumen and Tibbett’s knowledge of the local system of care for the homeless.

Muelrath and Tibbetts both confirmed that Adams offered them positions at the company, however both say they have not responded to Adams’ offer. 

In an email, Tibbetts said he hasn’t had time to fully consider Adams’ offer or to receive legal advice about whether working for the company might conflict with his position on the Santa Rosa City Council.

“At this point, I have not signed anything. I am not a partner, and I have accepted no compensation,” Tibbetts said.

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