Newsom’s Budget Proposal Includes Billions for Education, Covid-19

Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his proposed budget for the 2021-22 fiscal year Friday, touting record investments in education and a $15 billion budget surplus in spite of the economic uncertainty wrought by the coronavirus pandemic.

The $227 billion proposed budget, with a $164.5 billion general fund, represents a stark difference in the state’s financial outlook from last year, when plummeting sales, personal income and corporate tax revenue during the pandemic’s early days resulted in a $54 billion budget deficit.

According to Keely Bosler, the state’s Director of Finance, the state received more revenue than expected over the last year after misjudging the depth of the pandemic-induced recession and that the stock market would maintain its strength. 

“Not an easy journey,” Newsom said Friday about the process of developing the proposal. “A challenge the likes of which we’ve never experienced in such a contracted period of time. Numbers changed but our values did not.”

Newsom said his focus when drafting the budget centered on getting state residents vaccinated against the virus as quickly as possible while spurring the state’s economic recovery and reopening schools across the state.

The budget includes $85.8 billion for the state’s schools, the largest investment in education in the state’s history, according to Newsom. 

The proposed funding would allow the state to avoid making permanent education cuts or layoffs while recruiting and training new teachers, keeping college and university tuition and fees at current levels and ensuring all school staff and students have access to coronavirus testing and vaccination in the coming months. 

At the end of December, Newsom announced that the state would invest some $2 billion in reopening schools in February for students in transitional kindergarten through second grade and progressing into higher grades later into the spring.

While schools in 41 counties across the state were holding in-person classes to some extent, as of November, Newsom said state officials aim to use the $2 billion and incentives for additional resource allocation to resume in-person classes statewide.

Newsom added that officials wouldn’t shy away from taking a more heavy-handed approach with school districts that have been more hesitant to reopen in the coming months.

Superintendents from seven of the state’s largest school districts, including those in San Francisco and Oakland, expressed such hesitation earlier this week in a letter to Newsom, suggesting that the $2 billion plan would be implemented inequitably and included vague markers for reopening such as what constitutes a “safe school environment.”

“I think this budget reflects the vast majority of their concerns,” Newsom said Friday about the letter, adding “we share the same goal for safe reopening of in-person education.”

The proposed education budget also includes funding for mental health services for students, extending when schools are in session to make up for the learning lost as result of the pandemic and the development of open-sourced textbooks as a way of disrupting “the racket that is textbooks in this country,” Newsom said.

The budget would utilize $6.7 billion in federal education funding as part of its allocation to the state’s schools. 

California State University Chancellor Joseph Castro said the budget “provides a welcome reinvestment in the California State University and demonstrates his continued belief in the power of public higher education in developing future leaders of our state and improving the lives of the residents of California.”

The California Faculty Association, which represents staff at all 23 CSU campuses, described its reaction to the proposal as “encouraged.”

“This proposal is the opening move in the budget process that includes a May revise and final approval in June,” the CFA said in a statement. “CFA looks forward to working with the California state legislature and Gov. Newsom over the next several months to secure necessary funding to enable us to best serve CSU students.”

Outside of education, the proposed budget includes $4.4 billion to continue the state’s expansion of coronavirus testing, contact tracing and vaccination efforts.

Newsom lamented that California has lagged behind many other states in its coronavirus vaccination efforts, arguing that it is somewhat out of his control and that the state itself has not received any vaccine doses, which are being distributed directly to local health jurisdictions and health care systems. 

State officials have set a goal of administering 100 million vaccines by the end of next week, according to Newsom, who noted roughly 2 million vaccine doses have been received in the state as of Thursday.

“The predicate in terms of our focus on a budget is the reality of getting out of the freezers, and administering into peoples’ arms, these vaccines,” Newsom said. “We must do that in order to safely reopen, for in-person instruction, our schools; to reopen our small businesses as well as businesses large and small all across the state of California.”

Newsom said he has asked the state legislature to pass an immediate funding package by the end of the month to allocate funding for reopening schools, issuing grants and fee waivers to small businesses and extending the state’s moratorium on evictions, which expires Jan. 31.

Assemblyman David Chiu, D-San Francisco, who authored the eviction moratorium bill last year, lauded Newsom for his proposal, including the $1.75 billion allocated to sheltering the state’s unhoused residents long-term.

“Despite an ongoing pandemic and difficult economic circumstances, Governor Newsom has used this budget to make wise investments and safeguard our social safety net,” Chiu said, adding “while no budget is perfect, this proposal is good news for California.”

The immediate funding package would also include $600 stimulus payments to 2019 taxpayers who received an earned income tax credit from the state and 2020 taxpayers who have Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers.

Residents with an annual income of $30,000 or less are eligible for the tax credit, while ITIN taxpayers include people like undocumented residents who were not eligible for federal stimulus payments.

California Republican Party Chair Jessica Millan Patterson suggested Newsom should have also used the state’s one-time surplus to support residents who have been hit hard in their wallet by the pandemic.

“His shutdowns and lack of leadership in handling Covid-19 has put many Californians in dire situations – foreclosures, evictions, isolation from family and friends and a lost academic year for millions of school children,” Millan Patterson said in a statement.

Bay Area leaders praised Newsom’s budget for investing in the state rather than making dramatic cuts amid the pandemic. 

“In addition to all the challenges we have been facing for years, right now in this moment, our workers, families, and young people are in desperate need of immediate relief,” San Francisco Mayor London Breed said. “By proposing direct investments to working people, small businesses, and our schools, the governor is doing just that.”

“Even amid this pandemic, homelessness will persist as the lasting crisis of our generation,” San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said. “Mayors throughout the state urged Governor Newsom to remain steadfast in his commitment to housing solutions, and he stepped up.”

“This budget wisely commits to assistance for small businesses, greater support for public health programs, a good working plan to reopen schools, as well as addressing non-Covid related threats like climate change impacts,” state Sen. John Laird, D-Santa Cruz, said.

The full budget proposal – which also includes billions in funding for wildfire preparedness, tax credits and loans for businesses and early childhood care – can be found here

New Play About a Noted Virus Hunter Debuts Digitally From a North Bay Stage

Years before the Covid-19 pandemic, award-winning virologist Dr. Nathan Wolfe proposed a plan to protect the economy from pandemics.

Even though Wolfe earned the title of the ‘100 Most Influential People in the World’ in TIME for his work tracking Ebola and swine flu, no one took his proposal seriously. Now, a new one-man show written by Wolfe’s wife–acclaimed playwright Lauren Gunderson–tells Wolfe’s story.

This month, The Catastrophist debuts in a world premiere digital production helmed by Mill Valley-based Marin Theatre Company in collaboration with Washington, DC–based company Round House Theatre. The online production is available to stream January 26 to February 28.

“You think you know your partner of a decade. And then you attempt to write a play about them,” Gunderson says in a statement. “When (Marin Theatre Company Artistic Director) Jasson Minadakis posed the idea of writing a new play about my husband, I initially rejected it. But the idea started to make more and more sense.”

Gunderson is currently one of America’s most prolific and most produced playwrights. She has worked with Marin Theatre Company since the world premiere of her award-winning play I And You in 2013 and a tenure as MTC’s playwright-in-residence that began in 2016.

“When the reality sunk in that we would not be in theaters in 2020, Lauren and I began discussing projects that could live between the worlds of theatre and film in a virtual space, and ‘The Catastrophist’ went straight into development as a new commission,” Minadakis says in a statement. “‘The Catastrophist’ is like nothing Lauren has attempted before. I’m delighted to be partnering with Ryan and Round House on this unique experience and look forward to the conversations it sparks across our country.”

Akin to Marin Theatre Company, Round House Theatre is one of the leading professional theater companies in the Washington, DC area; producing new plays, modern classics, and musicals each year.

“There really couldn’t be a more timely production in content or presentation,” Round House Artistic Director Ryan Rilette says in a statement. “In the midst of a global pandemic, Lauren Gunderson has created a deeply personal story about the man who has been sounding the alarm on them for years. I had read Dr. Wolfe’s book, ‘The Viral Storm,’ years ago when I was still Producing Director at Marin, and I immediately wanted to see a stage adaptation. I was thrilled when Jasson reached out to say that he and Lauren were finally going to make that happen, and I’m thrilled to work with them to share that story with audiences in the DC metropolitan area, the Bay Area, and everywhere in between.”

Filmed on stage in MTC’s Boyer Theatre, The Catastrophist is directed by Minadakis and stars William DeMeritt (Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole World, HBO’s The Normal Heart) as Wolfe. The digital production’s creative team also includes producer Nakissa Etemad, dramaturg Martine Kei Green-Rogers, costume designer Sarah Smith, lighting designer Wen-Ling Liao, composer and sound designer Chris Houston, director of photography Peter Ruocco, assistant director Christina Hogan and Covid compliance officer Liz Mastos.

“Of course, I told Nathan what I was writing and asked his permission, but I didn’t let him read it or see it until the very first rehearsal,” Gunderson says. “I wanted him to not only be the subject of the play, but its first audience. He laughed, he cried, he gave me several notes on the science. This play has both the hardest play I’ve ever written and the most meaningful. What a joy to share it so widely so soon.”

‘The Catastrophist’ premieres online January 26 and is available for streaming through February 28. $30. Marintheatre.org.

Gov. Newsom to Call for $4.5 Billion in Covid Aid in Proposed Budget

Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to unveil his proposed budget Friday at 11:00 am for the 2021-2022 fiscal year, with an estimated $4.5 billion earmarked to help the state’s economy recover once the Covid-19 pandemic fades.

Newsom said this week that he will propose allocating $575 million for grants of up to $25,000 for the state’s small businesses that have been negatively affected by the pandemic. 

The grant funding would be allocated in addition to the $500 million the state previously allocated for small businesses.

About $25 million in grants would also be reserved for small cultural institutions like museums and art galleries. 

“These budget proposals reflect our commitment to an equitable, broad-based recovery that ensures California remains the best place to start and grow a business – and where all Californians have an opportunity to reach their dreams,” Newsom said in a statement.

The proposal includes $500 million to develop upwards of 7,500 units of long-term housing by issuing to developers grants intended to cover the costs of aspects like sewers and site preparation.

It also includes $600 stimulus payments to 2019 taxpayers who received an earned income tax credit from the state and 2020 taxpayers who have Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers.

Residents with an annual income of $30,000 or less are eligible for the tax credit, while ITIN taxpayers include people like undocumented residents who were not eligible for federal stimulus payments.

What is ultimately trimmed and removed entirely from Newsom’s proposal will hinge on several factors, including the potential of another federal relief bill after President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration. 

While the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, which was passed last March, included funding for state and local governments, the more recent stimulus package passed at the end of December did not. 

The proposal includes more than $500 million in tax credits for businesses that stay in the state, create new jobs and hire former employees as well as a $1.5 billion investment in bulking up the state’s renewable energy infrastructure. 

That infrastructure would support Newsom’s September 2020 executive order banning the sale of all new gasoline-powered passenger vehicles by 2035.

“I look forward to continuing to partner with the legislature to advance these priorities so our economy can emerge stronger, fairer and more prosperous than before,” Newsom said.

Open Mic: Last Grab

“You’re fired!” were the final words from the Donald’s mouth as he dismissed the contestants of his game show, The Apprentice, for not living up to his ruthless ideas of what is necessary to conduct business in Trumpworld. 

Little Donnie was a product of a family who did not see displays of compassion and understanding for others as a moral strength, but as a weakness and a character flaw. It played out both personally and in his business dealings, where he could shirk his responsibility, buy his way out, or walk away from his debts. And so he brought that cancerous philosophy into the White House and it metastasized.

After almost four years of chaos, Mr. Trump appears to have exhausted the citizenry of the country, with his bellicose ramblings and inability to address the needs of the nation. Now the people have spoken! But, he will not go gently as he seeks to hold on to power—nor should we expect it— for he has tapped into a great discontent that needs to be addressed as time goes on.

We are a divided nation, but make no mistake, we always have been; from the time slaves were brought to this land; to the destruction of the Native-American way of life, with our manifest destiny and rugged individual philosophy; through the Civil War; and on to the Gilded Age. We have been raised to fear the other—whether they are people of color, people of class, people of different religions, and now the rural versus urban populations.

In 1974, President Gerald Ford, in pardoning Richard Nixon, stated, “Our long national nightmare was over,” referring to the Watergate scandal involving his predecessor. Now another nightmare is ending!

Mr. Trump, your inappropriate attempt to grab power in our democracy has been as awkward, transparent and disgusting as your behavior in grabbing parts of the female anatomy!

Mr. Trump…You’re fired—OH, and don’t let the door hit your fat ass on the way out!  

E. G. Singer lives in Santa Rosa. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Bay Area Reps Call on Pence to Invoke 25th Amendment Against Trump

By Bay City News Service

Bay Area members of Congress who had to flee from the House chambers Wednesday as supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., are among those calling for Vice President Mike Pence to gather Trump’s cabinet in order to invoke the 25th Amendment and deem the president unfit for the office.

Trump gave a speech earlier Wednesday, falsely claiming he won the election and calling for his supporters to march to the Capitol as Congress was holding hearings on the certification of the Electoral College vote following November’s election of former Vice President Joe Biden as president over Trump.

During the insurrection, one woman died in a shooting by police inside the Capitol building and three other people died in the area around the Capitol grounds as a result of unspecified medical emergencies, according to local police. At least 52 people were arrested, and videos went viral on social media of people ransacking congressional offices, including that of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco.

Rep. Jackie Speier, D-San Mateo/San Francisco, and Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Napa, both called for the invoking of the 25th Amendment, which states that the vice president “and a majority of either the principal officers of the executive departments” can write to Congress to say the president “is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.”

The vice president, in that event, would assume the powers of the presidency, but the president could also write to Congress that no inability exists, and would then resume the powers. The decision would ultimately go to Congress to decide, with two-thirds votes needed in both the Senate and House to remove the president.

Speier wrote on Twitter, “Trump has given us no choice. The 25th Amendment must be invoked NOW. We need to immediately wrest control of the country from him. He is not the commander (in) chief of the US. He is commander (in) chief of the Trump mob & proud boys. @VP Pence must step up & defend our democracy.”

Thompson, also calling for invoking the 25th Amendment, wrote, “On this dark day for our nation, we need to stand up and end this immediately. Nothing less than the future of our democracy is at stake.”

Rep. Jerry McNerney, D-Stockton, and other members of Congress have joined that call, but a local politics professor said such an action is unlikely at this point.

Jeremiah Garretson, associate professor of political science specializing in political psychology and media at California State University East Bay, said given that the president’s cabinet is stacked with loyalists who are unlikely to vote to remove him and that enough Republican members of Congress also support the president, the 25th Amendment seems like a long shot to remove Trump ahead of the Jan. 20 inauguration of Biden.

Garretson said he unfortunately wasn’t surprised by the storming of the Capitol given that the president’s rhetoric about election fraud — which earned Trump temporary suspensions Wednesday on social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook and Instagram — has been spread widely on right-wing media and was preceded last year by similar actions at statehouses, including in Michigan over COVID-19 protective measures.

“It just took a few nudges with these people believing that they are trying to restore democracy to get them to act in a way that is completely contrary to democracy itself,” Garretson said.

On Thursday, other members of Congress, including North Coast Rep. Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, called for Trump to be impeached, whether or not the 25th Amendment is invoked.

“Good. But let’s be clear: impeachment must happen with or without 25th Amendment action. Hard to imagine this monster ever again inflicting his crimes and abuses on our nation as President, but impeachment is necessary to make sure,” Huffman wrote on Twitter Thursday in response to news that Pelosi called on Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment.

Additional reporting by Will Carruthers

Bay Area Representatives React to Chaos in Washington

Bay Area congressional representatives reacted Wednesday to the chaos created by supporters of President Donald Trump who overcame police and breached the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. 

Both chambers of Congress were holding hearings Wednesday on the certification of the Electoral College vote following November’s election of former Vice President Joe Biden as president over the incumbent Donald Trump. 

Some Bay Area representatives took to Twitter to react to the violence at the Capitol or let others know their condition. 

Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Napa, said, “I am currently sheltering in place in the Capitol at a secure location. I will give more updates. This is a very sad day for democracy.”

“My staff and I are safe,” Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo Alto, said. “Praying for an end to this violence.”

“Never imagined I would be locked down in the US Capitol trying to ride out a violent coup attempt led by an American President,” Rep. Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, said, referring to Trump. 

Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, said, “I am horrified that colleagues and staff are on lockdown in House office buildings as I tweet this.

“I am equally horrified that Trump and members of the GOP have called for this blatant attempt to disrupt & undermine our democracy. Please stay safe.”

Fig Hunter: Cult fruit has admirers but at what cost to native flora?

We pedal our bikes through a gray industrial neighborhood in San Rafael, past warehouses, parking lots, shipping containers and auto shops. Vehicles roar by as we stop beside a tree hanging over a chain link fence. Under our feet are the remnants of the year’s crop—splattered figs. 

It’s November, and there are no fruits to taste today, but Maria and I have had them before—large black figs filled with sweet raspberry pulp—and today we’ve come for something better: the tree’s wood. With a pair of rose cutters, I take several two-foot branch ends and drop them into my bike pannier. 

Turning to my girlfriend, I quip a favorite tagline to outings like these: “We may not have any figs to take home, but at least we have the genes.” 

At my home in South Sebastopol, I cut the wood into six-inch sections and stick them into pots of moist garden soil. Within weeks, they’ll sprout roots and leaves—replicate trees being born. Rooting figs is an easy process; cloning for dummies. Eventually, exact genetic copies of the San Rafael tree will be growing in my backyard orchard, along with a few dozen other fig varieties.

People have been doing this same thing for millennia. A native of the Old World, the common fig originated somewhere in the Middle East, and humans have cultivated it since the agricultural crack of daylight. Traders dispersed the species north into the Caspian basin, eastward into Asia and west to Africa and Europe. Figs arrived in North America with the Spaniards, who, along with their guns and cannons, packed along their favorite varieties, and the trees found their way to the West Coast with the missionaries. For many decades thereafter, fig trees grew in the gardens of Catholic mission churches and on small farms.

But Ficus carica has escaped the confines of California’s agriculture industry. Accelerated by birds which eat the fruit and disperse their seeds, figs have gone wild and become a notorious invasive pest. In the Sacramento River valley, they have formed dense thickets along the banks of the river, smothering native plant communities. Conservation groups and agencies have tried with limited success to eradicate figs in several state parks.

But for another community of people, the invasive trees have created a playground for discovery. Driving along rural roads or bushwhacking through riverbed fig jungles, hobbyist fig growers are now tapping this resource for undiscovered treasures. In recent years they have found exceptional edible fruit on wild seedlings growing nowhere else. Propagated from cuttings in home gardens and marketed via online trading platforms, these new, genetically unique varieties have attained star stature and are finding their way into private fig collections nationwide. The Yolo Bypass fig was discovered several years ago in its namesake flood control channel near Sacramento and has become a prized collector’s item on Figbid.com. So have new varieties such as Belmont’s Beauty, found growing along a cliff in the Sierra Nevada foothills; Holy Smokes, first collected from a Santa Barbara churchyard; and a colorful plethora of others from Lake Shasta to San Diego.

Sonoma County permaculture teacher and edible plant collector John Valenzuela discovered a wild fig tree near the Tiburon peninsula while riding a bicycle about 20 years ago. During the next fall fruiting season, he had his first taste of its jet-black figs. 

“I was blown away by their beauty, outside and inside, their size, their flavor, and just the miracle of the tree being in that spot—you had to wade across a salty tidal ditch next to the freeway along a fence line,” he recalls. “That was such a magical find.” 

Valenzuela began distributing cuttings of the tree, and he keeps potted copies of his own at the Hidden Forest Nursery, where he works. Here, Valenzuela grows about 20 fig varieties. 

But Valenzuela’s collection is eclipsed by others. In Napa, Aaron Nelson has about 50 different fig trees. Near Occidental, Gary Pennington has experimented with roughly 200 varieties, sold or discarded many, and now has about 80. A grower near the Delta town of Isleton, perhaps known best by his social media handle “Figaholics,” has an orchard of more than 300 varieties. One Santa Barbara fig hunter, Eric Durtschi, has grown and evaluated roughly 800 varieties, many first collected from wild seedling trees.

Hundreds more collectors, connected via social media, are assembling extensive fig libraries across the continent, from Vancouver Island to Florida, from the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes. With proper seasonal care, most varieties will produce high-quality edible figs just about anywhere in the Earth’s mid-to-lower latitudes. Fig growers enjoy ripe summer fruits in such boreal regions as British Columbia and even Sweden. 

California Fig Hunter

But California is a very special place for fig enthusiasts. That’s because, within the United States, it’s only here that Ficus carica grows wild. This came about through a string of events beginning in the late 19th century, when farmers of the San Joaquin Valley imported a fig from Western Turkey, near Smyrna. A yellow-skinned variety known as the Sari Lop, it was planted in large groves around the Fresno area. After several years, growers observed a disappointing pattern: Each July, their Sari Lop figs swelled to the size of a walnut, then shriveled and dropped without ever ripening.

Through several expeditions to the eastern Mediterranean to investigate local cultivation methods, the United States Department of Agriculture identified and solved the problem: Certain figs—Sari Lop among them—will not ripen unless pollinated by a particular species of wasp, Blastophaga psenes, a miniscule insect native to Western Eurasia. So, the USDA imported the fig wasp to California, as well as the hermaphroditic caprifig trees essential to the insect’s life cycle. The industry promptly took off, the first successful crop of Sari Lop figs hit the market in the summer of 1899, and the variety—renamed locally the Calimyrna—became the state’s signature commercial cultivar alongside the black mission, whose fruits ripen without pollination. 

But besides allowing Smyrna-type fig varieties to ripen, the fig wasp does another remarkable thing: It makes fig seeds fertile, thereby enabling populations of figs to sexually reproduce. Thus, as the wasps became established in California, fig trees began sprouting like weeds. 

In the Old World, wild figs grow from the cobblestones of ancient architecture, like Roman bridges and castle turrets. In California, their bushy foliage is seen beside parking lots and gas stations, irrigation ditches and chain link fences, train tracks and freeways. I once saw a small fig growing from the top of a palm tree in a San Diego bus station, and a thicket of figs was recently removed from under a highway overpass in San Rafael. Watchful Amtrak riders may see wild figs out the window between Antioch and Martinez.

Fig Hunter
NOTED Bland’s fig-infused travelogue, circa 2009.

Introducing the wasp to California opened a Pandora’s box of untasted figs, which are now spilling onto the landscape. The fig wasp’s range is limited by an intolerance of harsh winters, restricting them to the United States’ coastal southwest, but wherever they fly, wild figs grow. 

This makes much of the state a fig collector’s paradise. 

“To have the generation of new varieties right here, I think it’s so exciting,” Nelson, in Napa, says. 

The self-generating engine of the fig-wasp partnership makes fig control efforts seem almost hopeless. 

“It’s heartbreaking,” says Katherine Holmes, the deputy executive director with the Solano County Resource Conservation District. “Fig is a terrible invader of a very narrow niche—riparian woodland. It doesn’t invade everywhere, but where it does invade is precious habitat, and it totally takes over.” 

Holmes has worked on fig eradication programs in the Central Valley, where F. carica is overwhelming the last remnant parcels of native riparian forest. Holmes says she has personally killed thousands of fig trees using a combination of chainsaws and herbicides, and in isolated spots, including Caswell Memorial State Park, she and her colleagues have had success.

However, the species is only tightening its grip on the landscape elsewhere. The trees spread via root suckers and seed dispersal and can overtake large areas and push out native plants. Holmes says just several percent of the Central Valley’s riparian woodlands remain intact, and fig trees threaten their survival. 

F. carica is spreading through Southeast Marin County, and fig seeds are apparently sprouting around the East Bay. The Berkeley-based California Invasive Plant Council’s WeedMapper program, a user-generated database, shows wild fig reports from West Oakland’s Willow Street, the Marina Park Pathway in Emeryville, a suburban yard in San Ramon and a hillside just west of Discovery Way in Concord, among more locations.   

Pennington says he often sees enormous wild figs while driving in the Central Valley, but he isn’t particularly interested in inspecting or propagating them. Instead, he has focused on established, if still hard to find, cultivars, many of ancient French and Portuguese origins.

“All these new, terrific figs keep coming along, but if you’re chasing new seedlings, you can’t keep up,” he says. 

Most wild figs produce fruit that is dry, pithy or simply unremarkable. One in a handful will produce fruit worth pulling off the road to taste, and among these head-turners, a rare few are standouts. When collectors find them, they keep locations secret and, using evocative, drippy names like Cherry Cordial, Raspberry Latte, Crema di Mango, Gold Rush and so on, they can score thousands of dollars in branch cutting sales. 

But the hype quickly tails off as cuttings from the mother tree are distributed far and wide. Soon, the variety becomes an established component of the global fig inventory, and the relevance of the original seedling tree as a source of unique genetics is reduced to another blur of roadside shrubbery. 

Fig Swap

I spent one summer after another in my 20s and 30s bike camping through Europe and Turkey. I got lost in beautiful mountains, weathered terrible storms, dodged men with guns, learned new languages, saw bears and ran out of food—but the focus of those outings was figs. The roadsides offered an unending buffet, and as I cycled between Portugal and the Black Sea, I ate countless fig varieties, interviewed local growers and observed distinctive regional variations in shape and flavor. I even visited government germplasm collections in Greece and Georgia. 

Today, my relationship with figs is more grounded. I began building a potted collection around 2014, mostly sourced from unidentified trees in Marin County. When I bought a property in 2017, the floodgates opened. I purchased a few new varieties, replicated ones I really loved, acquired more from other growers, and eventually built up a potted and planted orchard of more than 50 varieties. Twelve feet between trees seemed prudent when I got started; now I’m making excuses for squeezing them in at six feet.  

The attraction of the untasted keeps all of us grabbing up more. The day before Christmas, I pay a visit to Pennington’s home to make a trade. I bring him a small Burgan Unknown while he sets aside for me extras of two of his favorites, Bordissot Blanca-Negra and Del Sen Juame Gran, in five-gallon pots. I offer him cuttings of Black Zadar and Grantham’s Royal. If Pennington is trying to cull his collection, which lines his driveway in plastic pots and half wine barrels, I’m not helping. 

Figs, in fact, are not Pennington’s favorite fruit. 

“That would be a drop-dead-ripe apricot,” he says.

But figs are a close second, and they’re easier to propagate. Indeed, the willingness of a fig branch to sprout roots makes fig trees appealing plants to grow. This certainly drew the attention of ancient peasants, too, who researchers believe began growing fig trees from cuttings before domesticating any other plant. In a paper published in Science in 2006, three scientists, led by Israeli archaeologist Mordechai E. Kislev, concluded that fig trees were “the first domesticated plant of the Neolithic Revolution.” They analyzed fig residue from an 11,000-year-old village in the Lower Jordan Valley that they determined originated in the fruits of “trees grown from intentionally planted branches.” 

The game that started then continues now as California fig hunters search for the next prize. With the nonstop emergence of new genetic variants from wild populations, the hunt may never end. In Southern Europe, I believe it may be possible to travel for weeks without ever losing sight of a fig. They grow almost as rampantly as the Himalayan blackberry does here, and eventually the species will likely naturalize throughout California as firmly as it has in the Mediterranean fig belt.

“My hope has been to draw attention to this and do something before we get to that point,” Holmes says.  

But Valenzuela sees a thread of poetry in the spread of the species. To him, the trees—which in a sense are followers more than invaders—symbolize the human quest for security and comfort in harsh environments. 

“The fig is part of our paradise garden,” he says. “If you’re in the desert, there’s bad weather and animals, but you build a wall and inside you create a protected garden with aromatic plants and fruits. It’s like the Garden of Eden, where everything was perfect, beautiful and abundant. I see the fig as an integral part of that paradigm.”

More than a metaphor, his words take me back many years, to a craggy volcanic island in the Aegean Sea. Against a howling gale, I pedaled my bike to the top of a mountain, where I entered a beautiful monastery. The monk inside, vowed to silence, nodded his greeting and walked me through the dark stone chambers and into the walled garden. Tomatoes and beans grew in the sun, and from a spigot I filled my bottle with icy water. The monk brought a plate of olives, and for a moment I sat in the shade of an old fig.

Folk Artist John McCutcheon Treks to Sonoma Virtually

Even though he lives in the city of Smoke Rise, Georgia, veteran folk singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist John McCutcheon is a popular Sonoma County fixture.

That is because McCutcheon annually plays at Sonoma’s historic Sebastiani Theatre as part of a self-described “Left Coast Tour” that he’s embarked upon each January for more than 30 years.

This year, McCutcheon could not make the trip out to California due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic. So he’s doing the next best thing, performing an online show that will benefit the theater on Saturday, Jan. 9.

That online show is one of two concerts McCutcheon is hosting as part of his Virtual Left Coast Tour, and each show benefits a number of California venues and organizations that McCutcheon regularly works with.

For example, Sebastiani Theatre is sponsoring the Jan. 9 performance alongside co-sponsors The Freight & Salvage (Berkeley), KVMR (Nevada City-Grass Valley), Modesto Peace & Life (www.peacelifecenter.org) and KZFR (Chico).

On McCutcheon’s webpage, virtual concertgoers can purchase tickets to the show through their preferred venue’s link, which will ensure their ticket helps to support that sponsor directly.

“A lot of these presenters have become old friends by now. I want and need them to survive so that we can continue our work together on the other side of all this,” McCutcheon says in a statement. “Each presenter gets a unique ticketing URL and sells tickets to ‘their’ audience. They get a cut of the sales that they sold, just as if I were there live. In fact, it’s a better percentage and they don’t even have to turn the lights on.”

Tickets are available for the virtual concert at three price points to give the show a “Pay what you can” feel, including a five-dollar “unemployed/laid off” ticket.

“Everyone needs music these days, so we want to keep it affordable,” McCutcheon says.

The prolific musician also promises he will have plenty of new songs and stories for the upcoming virtual show, as he does each year that he comes to town. In fact, McCutcheon recently released his 41st album, Cabin Fever: Songs from the Quarantine.

Written over the course of three weeks of self-imposed isolation following an Australian tour in Mid-March, Cabin Fever: Songs from the Quarantine is not the album McCutcheon planned on recording in 2020.

Following his last release, To Everyone In All the World: a Celebration of Pete Seeger, McCutcheon had stockpiled over 30 new songs, but that record went on the shelf once the pandemic-related music and lyrics began pouring out of him while he was in isolation.

Like his upcoming virtual concert, McCutcheon wanted to make the album accessible to everyone, regardless of finances.

“We’re in this together and we need to look out for one another,” McCutcheon says. “It’s the only way, in the music business or in ‘real life,’ that we’re going to make it.”

John McCutcheon performs his Virtual Left Coast Tour in partnership with Sebastiani Theatre on Saturday, Jan. 9, at 4pm. $5–$30. Get tickets at Folkmusic.com.

Open Mic: Tax Talk Continues

By Joseph Brooke

I read with interest the position offered by Mr. Burnett on the “need” to revise Prop. 13 revenue stream to be more consistent with present property values (Open Mic, Dec. 30).

And I have to say: No.

I am actually one of “those” people now. I bought my house in West Marin 16 years ago and now that I am retired, my income has been reduced to 25 percent of what I made when I was working formerly. Dec. 10th and April 10th are stressful days. Any property owner should know those dates by heart, they are when county property taxes are due.

But just for fun, let’s argue in the alternative; so I can’t afford to pay my property taxes, and then I have to sell my house … how many buyers will there be for people who can afford my home, afford my neighbor’s home, multiply that across the state. What happens to the houses that no one buys? Think it won’t happen? It happened during the Carter years when interest rates on home mortgages were 18 percent—sure people had the down, but they couldn’t afford the cost of money … now replace the cost of money with: the cost of taxes.

Whenever a new CEO comes to a failing company, he or she has basically two tools, sell more widgets (more income) or cut costs. Those are the ONLY two choices for turning a company OR a state to profitability.

So? Why go for the former? California taxes are enough, that Elon guy is moving to Texas … HELLO? Anyone listening? Can I respectfully call him the Canary in the Coal mine? The hotbed of innovation and technical skill (San Francisco, CA) now has become too costly to operate here? Evidently, it’s no different for the homeowner.

I pay plenty of taxes and you know how many kids I have? Zero. I pay enough.

Stop asking for more money, and cut costs. If we can’t afford it, then we can’t have it, and as true as that is, I don’t want that to be the case with me personally and my house!

Joseph Brooke lives in Point Reyes Station. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Letters to the Editor: No Butts

In the midst of so much disease and uncertainty, there is something that individuals can do to improve their own well-being, as well as their community’s health. There is no better time to quit smoking or vaping tobacco (or other substances) than during this pandemic.

Studies show that smoking and vaping compromise the immune system and weaken the lungs’ defenses. Sadly, for children and other vulnerable populations, exposure to secondhand smoking or vaping aerosols (including both nicotine and cannabis) increases the risk of respiratory diseases including Covid-19 and makes recovery more difficult.

Those sharing a household or an apartment wall with residents who smoke are also at higher risk. Luckily for smokers and vapers, plenty of free resources are available to help them quit.  Many people make health-related New Year’s Resolutions in January. If you know anyone struggling with this type of addiction, please share this with them.

The California Smokers’ Helpline (nobutts.org) offers personal support via phone and text, plus a free two-week starter kit of nicotine patches, while supplies last. Also, the Smoke-Free Marin Coalition (smokefreemarin.com) is launching a county-wide campaign to help people quit smoking and vaping tobacco (and other substances) in the New Year.

Our Tackling Tobacco Team at San Rafael–based Bay Area Community Resources (bacr.org) supports individuals of all ages who want to quit and provides free resources, such as a new YouTube Channel created to help individuals quit during the pandemic.

Anita Renzetti

Project Director

Adult Cessation Services

Bay Area Community Resources

Newsom’s Budget Proposal Includes Billions for Education, Covid-19

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Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his proposed budget for the 2021-22 fiscal year Friday, touting record investments in education and a $15 billion budget surplus in spite of the economic uncertainty wrought by the coronavirus pandemic. The $227 billion proposed budget, with a $164.5 billion general fund, represents a stark difference in the state's financial outlook from last year, when plummeting...

New Play About a Noted Virus Hunter Debuts Digitally From a North Bay Stage

Years before the Covid-19 pandemic, award-winning virologist Dr. Nathan Wolfe proposed a plan to protect the economy from pandemics. Even though Wolfe earned the title of the ‘100 Most Influential People in the World’ in TIME for his work tracking Ebola and swine flu, no one took his proposal seriously. Now, a new one-man show written by Wolfe’s wife–acclaimed playwright...

Gov. Newsom to Call for $4.5 Billion in Covid Aid in Proposed Budget

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Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to unveil his proposed budget Friday for the 2021-2022 fiscal year, with an estimated $4.5 billion earmarked to help the state's economy recover once the Covid-19 pandemic fades.

Open Mic: Last Grab

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“You’re fired!” were the final words from the Donald's mouth as he dismissed the contestants of his game show, The Apprentice, for not living up to his ruthless ideas of what is necessary to conduct business in Trumpworld.  Little Donnie was a product of a family who did not see displays of compassion and understanding for others as a moral...

Bay Area Reps Call on Pence to Invoke 25th Amendment Against Trump

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By Bay City News Service Bay Area members of Congress who had to flee from the House chambers Wednesday as supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., are among those calling for Vice President Mike Pence to gather Trump's cabinet in order to invoke the 25th Amendment and deem the president unfit for the office. Trump...

Bay Area Representatives React to Chaos in Washington

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Bay Area representatives, including Reps. Mike Thompson and Jared Huffman, took to Twitter to react to the violence at the Capitol on Wednesday.

Fig Hunter: Cult fruit has admirers but at what cost to native flora?

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We pedal our bikes through a gray industrial neighborhood in San Rafael, past warehouses, parking lots, shipping containers and auto shops. Vehicles roar by as we stop beside a tree hanging over a chain link fence. Under our feet are the remnants of the year’s crop—splattered figs.  It’s November, and there are no fruits to taste today, but Maria and...

Folk Artist John McCutcheon Treks to Sonoma Virtually

Even though he lives in the city of Smoke Rise, Georgia, veteran folk singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist John McCutcheon is a popular Sonoma County fixture. That is because McCutcheon annually plays at Sonoma’s historic Sebastiani Theatre as part of a self-described “Left Coast Tour” that he’s embarked upon each January for more than 30 years. This year, McCutcheon could not make the...

Open Mic: Tax Talk Continues

microphone_matt_botsford_unsplash
By Joseph Brooke I read with interest the position offered by Mr. Burnett on the “need” to revise Prop. 13 revenue stream to be more consistent with present property values (Open Mic, Dec. 30). And I have to say: No. I am actually one of “those” people now. I bought my house in West Marin 16 years ago and now that I...

Letters to the Editor: No Butts

In the midst of so much disease and uncertainty, there is something that individuals can do to improve their own well-being, as well as their community’s health. There is no better time to quit smoking or vaping tobacco (or other substances) than during this pandemic. Studies show that smoking and vaping compromise the immune system and weaken the lungs’ defenses....
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