What is a Turducken?

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The Frankenstein monster, that crude assemblage of body parts stitched into an ill-fated attempt to recreate life, has at least one counterpart in our nation’s kitchens—the “turducken.”

More than mere portmanteau, the legendary dish comprises a whole turkey, stuffed with a whole duck, which, in turn, is stuffed with a whole chicken, all in a manner that recalls Russian nesting dolls. It is, in a word, “fowl.”

The turducken has at least two potential fathers. Cajun-Creole fusion chef Paul Prudhomme proffered turducken as early as 1983 in Duvall, Washington, and none other than venerable journalist Calvin Trillin attributes the origin of the beast(s) to Herbert’s Specialty Meats of Maurice, Louisiana, which likewise has produced commercial turduckens since the mid-’80s.

No matter what caché being the father of the turducken may confer upon these pioneers of gastronomy, neither has come anywhere near the nested-bird-extravaganza known as the Rôti Sans Pareil, or “Roast without equal,” which transpired in France during the early 19th century. All tolled, 17 birds were stuffed, one within the other, in a gustatory orgy that has yet to be repeated on civilized plates. A bustard was stuffed with a turkey, stuffed with a goose, stuffed with a pheasant, stuffed with a chicken, stuffed with a duck, stuffed with a guinea fowl, stuffed with a teal, stuffed with a woodcock, stuffed with a partridge, stuffed with a plover, stuffed with a lapwing, stuffed with a quail, stuffed with a thrush, stuffed with a lark, stuffed with an Ortolan Bunting, stuffed with (finally) a garden warbler. The warbler is so petite it could only be stuffed with a single olive. Whether or not that olive had a pimento lodged in it is lost to history (where it belongs).

A related, if less taxidermic, trend is the annual carving up of what are known as “heritage” turkeys. Like the “heritage” trend in everything from tomatoes to radishes, the turkeys are likewise rarer, weirder-looking and more expensive. They also look like dinosaurs. The Dinobuzz page at the University of California Museum of Paleontology elucidates:

“Ask your average paleontologist who is familiar with the phylogeny of vertebrates and they will probably tell you that yes, birds are dinosaurs… and (strange as it may sound) birds are technically considered reptiles,” it reads. “In fact, the evidence is overwhelmingly in favor of birds being the descendants of a maniraptoran dinosaur, probably something similar (but not identical) to a small dromaeosaur.”

Yum. Kind of makes one’s appetite go the way of the dino, or dodo, or whatever? Pass the Tofurky.

Daedalus Howell is thankful to give it all away at DaedalusHowell.com.

Are THC Numbers Really Rising?

When you buy marijuana on the licit or illicit market, do you know what you’re really getting?

Even if the product has been sold by a dispensary and there’s a label with THC and CBD percentages, the information might be inaccurate. Someone along the line might have concealed the facts.

That’s why the American expression, “Let the buyer beware,” applies to cannabis as well as to all kinds of products, from olive oil to snake oil. When the seller knows more than the buyer about goods and services, it’s known as “information asymmetry.” Sadly, the cannabiz is awash with it.

Part of the problem is that much of the illicit weed on the market isn’t tested. The grower’s and the dealer’s word are all that the buyer has to go on. Also, some testing services fudge results and report higher levels of THC in flower than is actually there.

Not every grower is dishonest and not every testing service is sketchy. Many are transparent. Sometimes, the most truthful fellows are the outlaws, not the law-abiding folks. As Bob Dylan once said, “To live outside the law you must be honest.”

Samantha Miller, a trained scientist who owns and operates Pure Analytics, has tested marijuana from all over California for a decade. She and her team at the Santa Rosa lab adhere to the data and the facts.

“For years, the industry focus has mostly been on potency,” Miller tells me. “But I’ve recently heard that some buyers want unique terpenes.” She adds, “That’s a good sign.”

What’s not a good sign, Miller tells me, is that there’s been a dramatic uptick in the amount of THC (between 35 percent and 40 percent) that labs post online after they test cannabis flowers.

“That didn’t seem plausible,” Miller says. She talked to folks in the cannabiz and found that many of them shrugged their shoulders when she mentioned the uptick. “That’s the market,” was the standard reply.

Miller asked questions, dug deeply and put the pieces together.

Consumers often want THC-rich weed, she explains. Growers get $2,500 a pound for weed with high levels of THC, maybe a thousand dollars less for weed with 20 percent THC.

The third group of players in the mix are the labs that generate the high numbers. The dollar, not science, drives the data.

It’s called “pumping the numbers.”

Miller doesn’t point fingers or call names. But she has sound advice.

“Consumers ought to rely less on numbers and more on their own senses, especially smell,” she says. “Often, the stronger the bouquet, the more effective the product. Pay for what’s real and get the most for your money.”

Jonah Raskin is the author of “Marijuanaland: Dispatches from an American War.”

State Delays Commercial Dungeness Crab Season Until Mid-December

Commercial Dungeness crab season is delayed until at least mid-December, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife announced.

The original opening date of Dec. 1 is delayed to Dec. 16 due to various factors including whale presence and low-quality crab meat.

In the CDFW’s central management area, from Point Arena to the Mexico border, whales remain in the crab fishing area resulting in a potential for entanglement. In early December, the department will reassess entanglement risk and whale presence.

In addition to whale presence, meat quality testing in crabs in the CDFW’s northern management area has shown that the crabs will not be ready to be fished until mid-December.

“Our hope is both quality testing and additional marine life survey data will support a unified statewide opener on Dec. 16, just in time to have crab for the holidays and New Year.” CDFW director Charlton Bonham said.

More information on Dungeness crab can be found online at www.wildlife.ca.gov/crab.

Broadway Holiday Spectacular Screens Safely in Sonoma County

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Best known for star-studded and show-stopping live performances, Sonoma County’s Transcendence Theatre Company was forced to cancel in-person events and move things online this year due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

This summer, the company let audiences relive the best moments from its annual “Broadway Under the Stars” festival—normally presented at Jack London State Park—by presenting online video showcases of the family friendly song-and-dance shows.

Transcendence Theatre Company also regularly treats North Bay crowds to a “Broadway Holiday Spectacular” stage show each December. This holiday season, Transcendence transitions to safely present “Broadway Holiday Experiences,” featuring entertainment at the drive-in as well as online.

Like their “Broadway Under the Stars” video showcases, Transcendence has collected five years of recorded stage performances from the “Broadway Holiday Spectacular,” and will screen those performances for socially distant crowds at drive-in events on Dec. 4–6 at SOMO Village in Rohnert Park, and Dec. 11–13 at Sonoma Raceway in Sonoma.

“I have been fortunate to be part of four of the last five holiday concerts,” says Tony Gonzalez, Director of this year’s “Broadway Holiday Experiences” at the drive-In. “And we’ve got a fun momentum going, creating this warm holiday-in-the-home feel with friends and family, accentuating the best part of the holidays.”

The video collection of concert footage features over 60 performers from Broadway musicals including White Christmas, Hamilton and Frozen; and featured performers include Will Ray (Les Misérables), Brittney Morello (Young Frankenstein), Luis Figueroa (42nd Street) and others.

Those drive-in screenings will also feature live hosts Meggie Cansler Ness and David Gordon performing alongside the filmed entertainment.

“They’re two performing artists that have been in multiple shows these last five years, so they will share some memories and songs in person,” Gonzalez says. “It’s been fun to create this kind of hybrid form of entertainment to keep everyone safe.”

The drive-ins will also include in-car activities, and food from local purveyors will be available to purchase, along with popcorn and snacks.

“In an effort to have folks involved, we are creating a kit that goes in your car with props that go along with the songs,” Gonzalez says. “We’re also going to lead everyone in a sing-along because that just feels right at the holidays and you’re safe in your car because no one else has to hear you except for your family.”

The “Broadway Holiday Experiences” video showcase will then move online for free viewing via YouTube from Dec. 18 through Dec. 23.

“Transcendence over the years has wanted to reach out further than the Bay Area,” Gonzalez says. “We encourage everyone to share the link and watch along with friends and families.”

‘Broadway Holiday Experiences’ plays at the drive-in Dec. 4–6 at SOMO Village in Rohnert Park and Dec. 11–13, at Sonoma Raceway in Sonoma. 5pm arrival, 6:15pm show. $59–$249 per car. Transcendencetheatre.org.

Letters to the Editor, Nov. 25


Wrong Mountain

You have no doubt heard from many readers that the correct answer to question 1 (c) in the Nov. 18 edition of “Trivia Cafe” is FALSE because the premise is incorrect.

California’s highest mountain is Mt. Whitney, not Mt. McKinley. Mt. McKinley is in Alaska and is now officially called Denali.
Tom Conneely
Mill Valley

Good Reads
Great job, Eddie! (“Next Chapter,” Lit, Nov. 18) Awesome you’re writing and telling these stories—they need to be heard.
Ali2
Via bohemian.com

Robot Talk
RE: “Sorry Siri” by Rita S. Losch (Open Mic, Nov. 18) I can’t stop laughing. And you wonder why I don’t follow Siri driving directions? LOL!
Jane Sneed
San Francisco

Why Hawaii
State Sen. Bill Dodd on Thursday, Nov. 19, defended his participation in a policy conference at a Maui beachfront luxury hotel as the coronavirus surges in California, calling it “business as usual” in his job as a lawmaker.

Last I read Hawaii was careful with mainlanders, so quarantining was not in effect? Who paid for this trip as Sen. Dodd is from a purple county? Couldn’t use Zoom, Live Meeting or GoToMeeting?
Gary Sciford
Santa Rosa

Open Mic: Practicing Gratitude

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I have to admit, it’s been a bit harder this year to muster up feelings of gratitude and appreciation.

But just like a challenging uphill workout leaves me tired, invigorated, proud of myself and ultimately stronger, so too does an emotional and psychological workout!

I have been anxious about the pandemic … but grateful that I am healthy, and that those friends and family members who have been infected experienced mild cases.

I have been depressed about having to stay close to home, missing seeing loved ones and going places I love … but grateful that I have a nice home.

I was antsy when the fire-related air quality prevented me from riding … but grateful that I was not in an evacuation zone and that the County had no fatalities.

These emotional juxtapositions have been our reality for the last several months. But what motivates and inspires me more than anything is the way the cycling community has come together and taken care of each other during these challenging times. I feel so fortunate and proud to live here!

I am so grateful for, and proud of, my staff at Sonoma County Bicycle Coalition. They show up every day with passion, grace and humor, and regularly go above and beyond the call of duty. With schools closed and events cancelled, while juggling their kids and spouses as all work from home, they have learned new technologies and retooled our programs to operate in our new, virtual world.

I am grateful for our recent wins in the courtroom, on the roads, and at the ballot box.

I am grateful that many people are riding who haven’t ridden in years. Our group rides, workshops, and events have had a long hiatus, but bike sales are through the roof as more people are getting back in the saddle, experiencing anew the joy of two wheels!

I am grateful for all of you who step up in our mission to make cycling safer and more joyful in Sonoma County.

What are you grateful for?

Eris Weaver is the executive director of Sonoma County Bicycle Coalition. Donate to the Coalition’s year-end fundraising campaign now at bikesonoma.org.

Black-Backed Woodpeckers Show Importance of California Fires

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Two years ago, my father and I visited my brother in South Lake Tahoe. At the time he was leading bird surveys for Point Blue, a nonprofit research and conservation organization. He started working at Point Blue in 2014, first as an intern at their world-renowned Palomarin research station in the Point Reyes National Seashore, eventually becoming a crew leader for Point Blue in the Sierra Nevada. We arrived at his house in South Lake just before sunset and walked out into the open shrubland beyond his house. It was made up mostly of manzanita and mountain whitethorn bushes, with tall Jeffery pines and red fir dotting the flat expanse. This shrubland, my brother told us, was created by the Angora fire of 2007 which burned most of the 3,000-acre area to ash, destroying 254 homes in the process. This kind of fire, one that kills almost all plant-life in its path, is called a high-severity fire.

However, my brother pointed out that for wildlife this wasn’t necessarily bad. Even beyond the shrublands, in places burned completely black, he told me, wildlife thrives.

After a fire, many plants and animals—including western wood pewees, western bluebirds, morel mushrooms, wood-boring beetles, and, most notably, black-backed woodpeckers—begin to live in the burned areas.

“This bird [the black-backed woodpecker] screams fire,” said Dick Hutto, an emeritus professor at the University of Montana.

According to the Institute for Bird Populations (IBP), a non-profit bird research organization that recently relocated from Point Reyes Station to Petaluma, black-backed woodpeckers are much more common in recently burned forests of the Sierra Nevada, and rarer in unburned forests.

With their distinctive black backs that blend perfectly into burnt bark, this bird’s livelihood directly depends on severely burned forests. Due to their unique dependence on forest fires, black-backed woodpeckers in recent years have become a symbol of the importance of wildfires in the Western United States.

Recent studies conducted by IBP only solidify this. According to an article written by IBP this year, scientists found that black-backed woodpeckers are more likely to nest and forage in areas of high-severity fires.

“It’s a reflection of a long, evolutionary history,” Hutto said.

According to the same study, black-backed woodpeckers prefer to nest near low and mixed-severity burned areas, or on the edges of large burns, where their young can find better cover from potential predators. Due to this, some scientists believe that the fires we are seeing might not mean a boon for the birds.
“Habitat is being created for them, I don’t have any questions about that,” said Rodney Siegel, the executive director of IBP. “The question is, if there are these incredibly large high-severity patches, like we saw for example in the King fire [of 2014], there may be areas that are just too far from low-severity or unburned forests, so they just can’t set up a home range there.”

However, Siegel was quick to point out that the size of the fire wasn’t the important factor.

“From the woodpecker’s perspective, the size of the fire isn’t the issue, it’s the characteristics of the fire,” he said, referring to the size of areas within a fire that burned at high, mixed or low severity.

Regardless of the kinds of fires, these birds depend on them for their survival.

As Ryan Burnett, the senior Sierra group leader for Point Blue, recently said, “If we lost fire in the Sierra, we probably would lose the species.”

However, as the threat of fire increases across the Western United States, these areas where the black-backed woodpeckers thrive are under threat.

Usually, after a fire, the Forest Service and other organizations go to these high-severity sites and cut down many of the trees in order to replant the forest. Foresters call this “salvage logging.” The idea is that, since all of the seeds in the soil burned up, no trees will grow back for a long time, so they might as well cut the burned trees down and replant the forest. And, in the process, black-backed woodpeckers lose critical habitat.

“The idea that we can replant these places is just a 20th century fire-suppression ideal,” Burnett said, mentioning that he was working on an article about salvage logging and how it affects black-backed woodpeckers. What he and a team of scientists working with Point Blue found in their yet-to-be-published study is that salvage logging hurts black-backed woodpecker habitat. “It’s pretty unequivocal that salvage logging, at least within a home range of a black-backed woodpecker, is going to have negative consequences [for the bird].”

However, as fire seasons worsen due to climate change, and the patches of high-severity burns increase, there is concern that the forest may not be able to grow back fast enough.

“If there’s no forests, there’s no forests to burn,” Siegel said.

This fear has mounted over the course of this year’s fire season, in which over four million acres have burned, to date. As I write this in Marin, it is the first week of clear skies in almost two months. After consecutive years of fires devastating the state, with 18 of the largest 20 fires ever recorded occurring since 2003, large fires have become a regular seasonal occurrence. Summer is no longer a time to relax and go to the beach, but instead a time to be on high alert, to prepare for a sudden run from the fires.

“It’s not a choice of whether we have fires or want fire,” Burnett said. This is why we have to “fight fire with fire.”

Controlled burns create resilience in the Sierra, and other wildlands across California, by creating a mosaic of habitats within the forest, helping wildfires burn more naturally and with less potential to decimate entire towns.

And, as climate change makes fires larger and more difficult to control, the use of prescribed burns is more important than ever, for people and for wildlife such as the black-backed woodpecker. Yet, even as the Forest Service and other organizations understand that the best way to fight fire is with fire, they suppress more burns than they permit.

According to the United States Department of Agriculture, “The Forest Service and its partners suppress more than 98 percent of wildfires on initial attack, keeping unwanted fires small and costs down.” This means that only 2 percent of all fires that are started are out of control, even in such an unprecedented year as 2020.

“Prescribed fire and managed wildfire is really the only way to go,” said Malcolm North, a fire ecologist and professor at UC Davis. “There really isn’t any other choice.”

So, if prescribed burning helps protect people and towns, and wildlife such as black-backed woodpeckers, why do we suppress fires in areas where there is little threat to towns? North points to an overly cautious system.

“I’ll be blunt with you because I’ve worked in the Forest Service,” he said. “People know what they need to do. And Forest Service managers know that they need to have more fires on the landscape, but everything is working against [them]. The public doesn’t like the smoke, and if [the fire] escapes, your ass is on the line for liability. Everything is kind of against doing the right thing. Where this whole thing is going to change is if the public gets out from under the myth of Smokey the Bear and realizes that fires are inevitable.”

Smokey the Bear—co-created by the Ad Council and the Forest Service—has been the enlightened spokesman of fire suppression since he appeared in 1944. His message: wildfires can only be bad. Due to his incredibly successful public campaign, the forest management has used fire suppression as its main tool for close to a century fire. But, for many ecologists, this thinking is damaging.

“[Smokey the Bear] was a terribly misguided campaign,” Siegel said.

Referencing the movie Bambi, Dick Hutto said, “[The movie is saying] ‘all my forest friends are hurt and dying and dead. Won’t you be good and prevent forest fires?’”

And it seems that legislators are beginning to understand that Smokey the Bear was wrong.

According to the Mercury News, a new agreement between the federal government and California mandates that by 2025 one million acres of prescribed burning must be implemented every year. In the United States Senate, there is a new Emergency Wildfire and Public Safety Act on the floor, a bipartisan bill supported by Sen. Diane Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.), that aims to increase the ability for the Forest Service and other agencies to respond quicker to wildfires.

However, to Hutto, these bills neglect the bigger picture surrounding these landscapes.

“We’ve moved out of the cities and out into the wildlands, where 98 percent of the causes of fire are lightning and have been there forever,” Hutto said. “So you have this complicated message that needs to be more nuanced.”

Jack Cohen, a former researcher at the Forest Service, has fought since the 1990s to change the way the Forest Service thinks about fire. To Cohen, the best way to combat fires is to learn how to live with them. After seeing many photos of burned neighborhoods where the trees were unharmed by the fires, Cohen began studying the issue of burning homes and found that the Forest Service should be funding new ways of building houses that are fire-resistant. Instead of fighting fires, Cohen thinks we should build better houses.
Ryan Burnett believes we need learn and be lead by the practices of Native American communities to live with fire, because, “there is no way our diesel-powered technology will get us there.”

If we learn to live with fire, many other animals, such as the black-backed woodpecker, will benefit.

As I sit here in Marin County, I can’t help but think about that open shrubland behind my brother’s house in South Lake, and how many years of mismanagement and natural processes allowed it to burn, to be “altered” into something new, as Burnett would say. Currently, there are 19 major wildfires burning in California. As the fire season nears its close, it is hard to say if these fires, such as the Creek Fire in Fresno and Madera Counties, will be good or bad for the black-backed woodpecker. We’ll only be able to know once the fires are over.

If there is anything to learn from the black-backed woodpecker, it is that fires are a natural part of the California landscape, and it might be time to bring fire back. It is, as Hutto said, about listening to the bird.

“If we’re willing to listen,” he said, “the insight we can get—of where it occurs and where it doesn’t occur—is profound. It tells us something about whether we’re behaving properly.”

Sonoma County Releases Homeless Count as Economic Crisis Drags On

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On the morning of Tuesday, Nov. 17, Santa Rosa police officers accompanied a private security company in the latest sweep of an encampment within the city limits. All told, an estimated 60 to 80 individuals were removed from a private property owned by the Union Pacific Railroad, a private company, local press and homeless advocates reported.

The action came on the same day as the North Bay’s first major fall rainstorm—a blessing for those worried about more fires, but a curse for the people sleeping on Sonoma County’s streets each night. On Wednesday, the day after the sweep, Sonoma County released the results of its yearly estimate of the number of people living without shelter.

A county press release stated that the estimate, a point-in-time count conducted this February, “shows that the number of people experiencing homelessness in Sonoma County decreased by 7 percent since 2019.”

But, that conclusion, comes with a few caveats. By their nature, point-in-time counts only offer an estimate of how many people were living in precarious conditions at any given time.

That’s especially significant for a few reasons this year. First, the county dispersed a large homeless encampment on the Joe Rodota Trail weeks before the 2020 count. Then, weeks after the count, the Covid-19 economic crisis began to unfold, leading a record number of Americans to file for unemployment and an as-yet unknown number to lose steady housing.

Meanwhile, the county and local cities continue to move residents of encampments from one spot to the next.

The latest chapter in the county’s decades-long struggle to house homeless people began last winter, when an encampment on the Joe Rodota Trail, a bike-pedestrian trail which connects Santa Rosa and Sebastopol, swelled to over 250 residents, drawing attention from neighbors, homeless advocates and the media.

In late January, after months of mounting political pressure, county officials ordered the hundreds of tents and other residences to be cleared from the trail, while investing $12 million dollars in efforts to house the encampments’ residents temporarily or permanently.

While the federal department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) requires local governments to complete their semi-annual point-in-time counts in the last 10 days of January, Sonoma County received permission to push their 2020 count back to late February by citing a county-declared health emergency due to the Joe Rodota Trail encampment.

The county press release touting the results of the 2020 count notes that 104 trail residents were placed into alternative housing options—including the especially-created Los Guilicos temporary shelter. However, because there were an estimated 258 people living on the trail before it was dispersed, that leaves 154 people who moved into other parts of the county, likely making them harder to count.

Concerns about point-in-time counts as a means of tracking the number of homeless individuals aren’t new or specific to Sonoma County.

A 2017 report by the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty (NLCHP) concludes that “regardless of their methodology or execution, point-in-time counts fail to account for the transitory nature of homelessness and thus present a misleading picture of the crisis.”

“Annual data, which better account for the movement of people in and out of homelessness over time, are significantly larger: A 2001 study using administrative data collected from homeless service providers estimated that the annual number of homeless individuals is 2.5 to 10.2 times greater than can be obtained using a point in time count,” the report continues.

At the end of 2020, a year in which millions of Americans struggled to find work and redeem unemployment insurance benefits, that long-term count could prove even more important than usual.

Last week, researchers from The Century Foundation reported that a Dec. 26 deadline written into the CARES Act, the federal law Covid-19 stimulus bill Congress passed in March, could lead 12 million people across the country to lose one or two remaining federal unemployment benefits if Congress does not take action in the next month. An estimated 1.2 million workers in California alone could lose those federal unemployment benefits due to the cutoff, potentially leaving them in still more precarious housing conditions.

So, does the county have a plan to deal with even larger numbers of people living on the streets?

The “no” argument was codified in a report this summer by the Sonoma County Civil Grand Jury. The June 2020 report, titled “Sonoma County Has a Homeless Crisis. Is There a Response Plan?” concluded that “The greatest constraint on housing the homeless population is the lack of available accommodations of any type. There are simply not enough beds to fulfill the needs.”

In keeping with these findings, Sonoma County has focused on a Housing First model, which prioritizes placing individuals in long-term housing where they can receive various kinds of help in order to one day support themselves.

The press release touting the results of the 2020 point-in-time count notes the county’s increased investment in various kinds of housing and shelter over the past two years. And, in light of the Covid-19 crisis, Susan Gorin, the chair of the Board of Supervisors, promised that “we will continue to allocate resources to widen our safety net and help our residents stay off the streets.”

However, there is an ongoing problem. As the Grand Jury Report puts it: “Less clearly addressed [by the county] is the question: ‘What do we do about the 2,000 people who are unsheltered tonight?’”

At an Oct. 20 meeting, the Board of Supervisors approved a response to the Grand Jury. The response agreed that the insufficient number of temporary shelters was a “primary factor” in the consistently high number of homeless people sleeping on the streets and that more geographically dispersed shelters catering to different needs will be required to meet the needs of the homeless population.

However, the supervisors disagreed with one of the Grand Jury’s other contentions: that the county does not yet have a countywide plan to deal with encampments which will inevitably crop up due to the number of people on the streets. The supervisors’ response points to the Interim Encampment Policy, which the Board of Supervisors approved this March in the aftermath of the Joe Rodota Trail encampment.

The interim policy is not countywide. It only applies to the unincorporated county and seven of the county’s smaller cities. Santa Rosa, where 53 percent of the county’s total homeless population resides according to the 2020 count, has its own encampment policy.

After they cleared the Joe Rodota Trail, local officials did largely stop clearing encampments for two months as the nation suffered through the first nationwide Covid-19 lockdown.

But, in late May, Santa Rosa police officers began again clearing camps, beginning with one underneath Highway 101 near Railroad Square. Since then the city has moved at least six large encampments despite recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) against the practice, since splitting up an encampment can spread the virus.

Attorneys for a group of homeless residents suing Sonoma County and the city of Santa Rosa argue that the city is making use of a loophole in a temporary legal injunction between the parties to continue relocating encampment residents.

Attorneys in the case had a brief hearing in front of a judge last week. Another hearing is expected to take place in early December.

Sonoma Community Center to Distribute Hundreds of Thanksgiving Meals

The Sonoma Community Center will be providing more than 500 free Thanksgiving dinners to residents this year as part of their annual tradition.

Meals will be available for curbside pickup at the center’s back patio at 276 E. Napa St. in Sonoma starting at 1 pm Thursday, Nov. 26. Distribution will continue until the center runs out of dinners.

Local businesses, including Bright Event Rentals, Paul’s Produce, Sonoma Market, Clover Dairy and Vintage House, have all donated supplies and ingredients for the event.

Meals will be pre-packaged and available for either two people or a family of four. All Thanksgiving dinners are free and available on a first-come, first-served basis. The center welcomes donations from the public.

For more information, people can visit sonomacommunitycenter.com or call (707) 938-4626.

North Bay Teen Artist with Autism Debuts at de Young Museum

Marin County teenager James Lee, also known as Jamesey, finds joy in making art. Diagnosed with autism at age two, Lee has been drawing and painting since he was a young child, finding comfort in the colors he works with and in the gestures of painting on large canvases, which often gets him dancing as he paints.

A longtime student at Oak Hill School in San Anselmo, which serves students with autism spectrum disorders and other health impairments, Lee was forced to stay home when the school shut down due to the pandemic in March. So, he turned to art and started painting every day.

Soon after that, in June, the de Young Museum in San Francisco announced an open call for submissions from local artists for “The de Young Open” exhibition. Over 6,000 artists from nine Bay Area counties submitted over 11,000 works, including Lee’s mother, who submitted two works on behalf of her son under the name Jamesey.

Of those works, jurors selected Jamesey’s “Pandemic Blue #1” to display as part of “The de Young Open,” giving Lee his official debut as an exhibiting artist.

For de Young’s open exhibition, the jurors accepted less than 8-percent of all the works submitted, and each piece of art was reviewed anonymously, meaning the jurors had no idea that “Pandemic Blue #1” was the work of a teen with autism when they selected it.

“Pandemic Blue #1” can be seen now at the de Young Museum or on the museum’s website, which shares Lee’s story in the artist statement, writing that though Lee cannot verbally identify colors, he has an instinctive grasp of color theory. Painting a layer at a time, Lee varies his hue and tone, and he is now learning to “self-edit” his art by covering parts of the canvas in plastic, applying layers of paint over them, and removing the plastic to create shapes or structures. This process is repeated over and over until Lee declares that the canvas is “so beautiful.” Finally, he draws over the layered colors in Sharpie, adding symbols of swimming pools and lifesavers that have become his own personal iconography.

In addition to “Pandemic Blue #1,” Lee has over a dozen paintings in his ongoing pandemic series, and his family is generously donating his paintings for a virtual auction to benefit Oak Hill School, which has had to cancel its annual fundraiser that provides scholarships to students in need. To own a Jamesey piece of art and support Oak Hill School, visit the auction site airauctioneer.com/jamesey.

What is a Turducken?

The Frankenstein monster, that crude assemblage of body parts stitched into an ill-fated attempt to recreate life, has at least one counterpart in our nation’s kitchens—the “turducken.” More than mere portmanteau, the legendary dish comprises a whole turkey, stuffed with a whole duck, which, in turn, is stuffed with a whole chicken, all in a manner that recalls...

Are THC Numbers Really Rising?

When you buy marijuana on the licit or illicit market, do you know what you’re really getting? Even if the product has been sold by a dispensary and there’s a label with THC and CBD percentages, the information might be inaccurate. Someone along the line might have concealed the facts. That’s why the American expression, “Let the...

State Delays Commercial Dungeness Crab Season Until Mid-December

Commercial Dungeness crab season is delayed until at least mid-December, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife announced. The original opening date of Dec. 1 is delayed to Dec. 16 due to...

Broadway Holiday Spectacular Screens Safely in Sonoma County

Transcendence Theatre Company provides holiday entertainment at the drive-in as well as online.

Letters to the Editor, Nov. 25

Wrong Mountain You have no doubt heard from many readers that the correct answer to question 1 (c) in the Nov. 18 edition of “Trivia Cafe” is FALSE because the premise is incorrect. California’s highest mountain is Mt. Whitney, not Mt. McKinley. Mt. McKinley is in Alaska and is now officially called Denali. Tom...

Open Mic: Practicing Gratitude

A cyclist's perspective

Black-Backed Woodpeckers Show Importance of California Fires

Two years ago, my father and I visited my brother in South Lake Tahoe. At the time he was leading bird surveys for Point Blue, a nonprofit research and conservation organization. He started working at Point Blue in 2014, first as an intern at their world-renowned Palomarin research station in the Point Reyes National Seashore, eventually becoming a crew...

Sonoma County Releases Homeless Count as Economic Crisis Drags On

On the morning of Tuesday, Nov. 17, Santa Rosa police officers accompanied a private security company in the latest sweep of an encampment within the city limits. All told, an estimated 60 to 80 individuals were removed from a private property owned by...

Sonoma Community Center to Distribute Hundreds of Thanksgiving Meals

The Sonoma Community Center will be providing more than 500 free Thanksgiving dinners to residents this year as part of their annual tradition. Meals will be available for curbside pickup at the center's back patio at 276 E. Napa St. in Sonoma starting at 1 pm Thursday, Nov....

North Bay Teen Artist with Autism Debuts at de Young Museum

Jamesey’s “Pandemic Blue #1” was selected out of 11,000 entries for display in the museum’s open exhibit.
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