Letters to the Editor: New Plan

This is my third go around being homeless and flying under the radar. I am blind so I of course don’t have the luxury of being able to hide in a van, (“A Man, a Van, a Plan” Features, March 11) which means I have to be more creative. 

The safest thing for me to do before the pandemic was to hang out at one of the 24-hour restaurants near me. Since everything is closed now, pretty much the only way for me to sleep is on BART. I just ride around on the train for a couple hours unless the driver orders people to get off. 

Most of the time, they will just take a break for about five minutes and then turn the train right back around so if you go to San Francisco airport, it will just switch right back around and take you to Richmond. My number one fear is that a police officer will mistake me for someone who is loitering or on drugs. A more risky move for me is to sleep at the bus stop benches. The danger is that I never know if an officer might spot me while they are making their rounds.

People always say to me, why don’t you get a social worker or why don’t you go to one of the shelters that offer services? They will not treat me like a human being. Anytime I’ve tried to do that in the past, they automatically want me to attend counseling or take part in one of their job training programs. They assume that I became homeless because of poor choices that I made in my life. The truth is though that bad things do happen to good people. Along with everybody else, I did not ask for this pandemic to shut everything down. I think a lot of homeless people don’t want to come forward about their predicament for similar reasons as mine. They don’t want to be stereotyped. They don’t want to be labeled. A vast majority of us are decent people with loving hearts.

Hearn Stewart

Oakland

Via Bohemian.com

Pray Their Names

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What’s in a name? Reverend Katie Morrison, the creator behind the traveling outdoor-art installation “Pray Their Names,” aims to help us find out. 

The project was envisioned by Morrison as a field of 160 wooden hearts—each bearing a hand-lettered name—memorializing 160 Black lives that have been lost to police violence. It is currently at the First Congregational Church of Sonoma United Church of Christ.

“In the BLM movement we’ve been hearing the call to ‘say their names,’ and I wanted to create a space where people could say their names and then go deeper,” Morrison says. “I call it ‘Pray their Names.’ It’s not separate from Black Lives Matter, it’s in the spirit of the movement. Whatever your spiritual practice, you can interact with the names.” 

Walking amongst the names is a moving experience. Placing one’s own body amongst these lives is a testament to the power of art to influence us in ways beyond intellectual knowing.

The church’s Reverend Curran Reichart, who is married to Morrison, says, “Before she was a teacher, Katie traveled the nation, teaching churches about inclusion. The vision for this installation comes out of a lifelong sense of solidarity with the pain and suffering endured by Black and Brown bodies.”

Morrison, known to her Special Education students at Venetia Valley K-8 School as “Ms. Mo,” says of her piece, “I hope that this visual work will be a source of healing for all bodies, a unifying force to bring people together to meet in the pain and wrestle with the implications of institutionalized racism. Once we acknowledge and face the wrong, we can begin to do what is right.”

There have been more than 8,000 deaths of Black and Brown people by police since Emmett Louis Till’s lynching in Mississippi in 1955. Each of the 160 hearts represent the life of a Black person killed while unarmed and/or in police custody. The blank hearts represent the lives lost whose stories were not told. 

“I want to be clear,” Morrison says, emphatically. “This exhibit is not against the police; just because you do something for people doesn’t mean it’s against other people. I believe the police need places to be resensitized to Black bodies as human beings and places to grieve alongside and places to be able to stand tall again and do a better job.” 

Morrison, who was an American Studies major with a focus on race relations, explains that our culture teaches white people many ways to fear Black people, while they simultaneously benefit from that culture—economically, historically and politically. The police, in particular, have a long, entwined history with racism.

“There are so many connections from the beginning of policing and how police forces came to be in America that is directly linked to slavery,” she says. “The first patrols were slave patrols, and now we have patrol cars.”

At least 20 volunteers became involved in the Pray Their Names project.

“It’s been an incredible opportunity for storytelling all the way through,” Morrison says.

Morrison initially called her friend, Sonoma artist Lois Chambers, to tell her the idea she had for the field of hearts. Chambers recommended Peter Craig, a professional woodworker in town, to cut the hearts, and also her daughter, Nicole Grimes—a professional sign maker at Vine Country Signs in Sonoma—to do the hand lettering of the names. Jeanne Sharkey dug the foot-deep holes in the field next to the church. It took two days to dig just 32 holes. 

“It was like cement; it was so hard to crack the earth,” Morrison says of the field, equating it to how people feel about the subject of her piece. “It’s also so hard for people to crack open and be raw about racism.”

Intent was all-important—Morrison made sure the project was infused with reverence every step of the way.

“Everything about this needs to be respectful,” she says. “Through all the work there’s no joking around, we do this with prayerful intention. If you’re coming to volunteer, you’re willing to hold the grief. When we handle these hearts, we’re thinking about the families, we’re thinking about the mothers who lost children, we’re thinking about the traumatized communities. That intention has been infused every step along the way.”

Visitors can scan a code with their phone on the entryway sign to read the stories of each person named. There are 144 stories, each researched by a team of volunteers.

“Folks can walk the rows with their phone and not only say the names but see the face and read the story, be confronted with the horror within the story of how their lives were ended and then walk in their body with it and hopefully be called to a deeper sense of commitment to dismantle the 1,000 cuts a day that are racism,” Morrison says.

It is Morrison’s hope that the healing power of the memorial be for both Black and white people: that Black people will feel heard and seen in their grief and trauma, and that walking with these stories will give others the clarity and the boldness to confront one another when a friend or colleague expresses racism.

“What reparations can you do—if our government isn’t going to do it, what can you do?” she asks. “What Black businesses can you support? How can you be sure that people on the margins are getting some of the benefits that you get based on being of European descent?”

“As progressive people of faith, we believe that there can be no peace until there is justice for all God’s children, no exceptions,” Reichart says. “Pray Their Names evokes the spirit of all that is good in us. Literally out of the weeds in the churchyard, hearts now bloom.”

The dedication was well-attended and included inspiring talks from Morrison, Reichart and D’Mitra Smith, outgoing Sonoma County Human Rights commissioner. Mayor Logan Harvey and Police chief Orlando Rodriguez were invited, but both were out of town during the event. The mayor helped with the installation beforehand and recorded a message for the dedication expressing his support.

A reading of the names will be held on Friday, July 31 at 7pm. Everyone is invited to come, help read names, lay flowers and walk among the hearts.

The installation of hearts will travel to at least four locations in the coming months. After a month in Sonoma, it will move to Santa Rosa, then Berkeley, then Mill Valley.

And what’s in a name?

“A whole life is in a name,” Reichart says. “From conception to death our names speak of the hopes and dreams of our parents, our own aspirations and accomplishments, our bruises and our blessings, all in that universally shared possession—a name.” 

First Congregational Church UCC, 252 West Spain St., Sonoma. July 18–August 14. Open sunrise to sunset. Free. facebook.com/praytheirnames.

Prison Protest

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Outraged by the rapidly growing number of Covid-19 cases in San Quentin State Prison, 14 protesters chained themselves to a driveway gate in front of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s home in suburban Sacramento on Monday, July 28.

Gov. Newsom, who lived in Marin County before his election as governor, has failed to manage the Covid-19 outbreak in the state prison system properly, the organizers of the protest, the California Liberation Collective, argued in a statement to the Associated Press.

By Tuesday, July 28, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation reported 7,704 total Covid-19 cases throughout the state prison system. There are 1,753 active cases and 47 deaths across the system, including 528 active cases and 19 deaths at San Quentin alone.

The group also called on Newsom to stop all coordination with the federal immigration agency, ICE.

“(Newsom) criticizes Trump when convenient, but … turns incarcerated Californians who are eligible for release over to ICE instead of their loved ones,” the group told the Associated Press in a statement.

The Associated Press reported that Highway Patrol officers cut the chained protesters off of the fence as dozens more protesters stood nearby in support. It was not immediately clear how many people were arrested.

Contact Corps

Marin County Public Health and Dominican University announced a new partnership on Tuesday, July 28, which promises to give students important experience helping public officials track—and ultimately restrict—the spread of Covid-19.

During the coming fall semester, the university will offer up to 20 students spots in the one-unit course. Students will complete an online training course and then work with public health officials to track the spread of the virus.

“(Contact tracing) is a century-old public health strategy for communicable disease control,” Dr. Patti Culross, director of the university’s Global Public Health program, said in a statement about the partnership. 

The county is funding the course in the hopes that participants will be able to bolster the number of local contact tracers. Currently, about half of the county’s contact tracers are volunteers, according to a statement from the county.

“Although that inspirational spirit is needed to help limit the virus’ spread and tremendously appreciated during the crisis, it will take more than volunteers to effectively handle the demand in the coming weeks and months,” the county statement says.

“We want to be prepared for the ebbs and flows of volunteers as we move forward in this pandemic,” Deputy Public Health Officer Dr. Lisa Santora said of the program. “And we also know that as the school year starts there will be more social activity and possibly an increased number of cases in our county. Having that workforce development opportunity with the university will have us better prepared as we see the increases in cases, which we do expect to see.”

Local Cinemas Call for Help; Sonoma Film Festival Moves Online

A month ago, there was hope in the North Bay that public gatherings could re-open this summer; yet things are looking bleak for many venues and businesses that rely on socializing as the summer moves into August with restrictions on hosting events still in place to stop the spread of Covid-19.

Five months into the shutdown, movie houses in Sonoma County and elsewhere in the North Bay are especially feeling the effects financially. As the film industry continues to push back opening release dates for major films like Christopher Nolan’s Tenet, local theaters are joining a national movement to call upon Congress to “Save Your Cinema.”

The online campaign is asking for the public’s help to urge Congress to keep movie theaters alive until they can fully reopen. Specifically, the “Save Your Cinema” campaign is gathering letters from the public demanding that Congress support the RESTART Act, which will provide seven-year loans covering six months of
expenses for theaters, and to press the Treasury and the Federal Reserve to implement more relief measures for cinemas of all sizes.

“The moviegoing experience is at the heart of everything we do as we work with lawmakers and film distributors to protect, innovate, and improve the movie theater experience for audiences everywhere,” the National Association of Theatre Owners, who represent theaters in all 50 states, writes on the “Save Your Cinema” website.

Local theaters participating in the campaign includes Sebastopol’s popular Rialto Cinemas, which recently celebrated its 20th year of screening films in the North Bay. Located adjacent to Sebastopol’s Barlow Center near downtown, Rialto Cinemas has established itself as an anchor of the community, bringing world-class films to West Sonoma County, and updating its accommodations to include a full kitchen, beer and wine service and other modern comforts.

Now, due to the Covid-19 pandemic and the ongoing shelter-in-place orders in Sonoma County, Rialto Cinemas fears not only for its own survival, but for the survival of the entire industry.

In a recent release, Rialto Cinemas writes that, “We closed for the sake of public health and are abiding by strict safety restrictions and guidelines as we plan our reopening. But even when we are able to reopen, it will be very difficult to sustain our business with limited capacity. We need more relief so that we can survive this crisis.”

Without the relief offered by the RESTART Act and the loans that come with it, Rialto Cinemas and other local theaters fear that they will be forced to permanently close their doors. To take action and join the letter-writing campaign, visit SaveYourCinema.com.

Sonoma International Film Festival Opens Virtual Program

Last March, the Sonoma International Film Festival became one of the first North Bay events to cancel in the wake of a shelter-in-place order that made social gatherings impossible.

Now, the festival is turning to the Internet to turn it’s globe-trotting party into an online affair for the SIFF 2.0 Virtual Film Festival, running Thursday, July 30, through Sunday, August 2.

The online event features over a hundred films streaming over the weekend, running the gamut from documentaries to short films, and representing 26 countries.

SIFF is also hoping to include socially distant offerings and plans to host up to 16 select film screenings at various outdoor venues, including local drive-ins. All in-place health orders and guidelines including social distancing, face coverings and hygiene requirements will be implemented.

Other highlights of the virtual festival include a showcase of student films from the Sonoma Valley High School media arts program, a program of short films by women filmmakers presented by the traveling Lunafest, video conversations with filmmakers, and more.

Those who purchased tickets and passes to last March’s planned SIFF will have access to the virtual festival, and anyone can purchase streaming access per film, based on availability, or through a SIFF 2.0 Virtual Pass available at SonomaFilmFest.org.

Sonoma County DACA Recipient Battles with DA’s Office Over DUI Charge

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After leaving a Petaluma bar one night in February 2019, Miguel Rodriguez was arrested for drinking and driving. Rodriguez, who grew up in Sonoma County, is an undocumented immigrant and a participant in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.

The DACA program, established in 2012, does not entail a path toward citizenship for participants but does provide some stability to participants, commonly known as Dreamers. Participants admit that they are deportable, but are protected from deportation during their enrollment, which is renewable every two years. While enrolled, they are also eligible for a work permit.

About 200,000 DACA recipients live in California. In 2017, Trump tried to end the DACA program, though it was upheld in the Supreme Court in June 2020. On Tuesday, July 28, Trump announced new plans to limit the scope of the program.

Because DUI convictions make a person ineligible for DACA, the legal proceedings which kicked off that night—and are still ongoing—set off a series of changes in Rodriguez’s life that a U.S. citizen facing the same charges would not experience.

Rodriguez’s lawyer Heather Wise says that the Sonoma County District Attorney’s office ignored their legal responsibility to consider her client’s immigration status and to avoid immigration consequences while bringing him to justice.

Because Rodriguez’s experience is not especially unique among immigrants navigating the justice system in California, his story sheds light on the challenges created when one’s legal status in the U.S. is insecure.

Rodriguez asked to use a pseudonym in order to protect his family.

“We think of immigration as solely controlled by the federal government, but really, local players have a lot of power over deciding who gets deported and who doesn’t,” Rose Cahn, a senior staff attorney at the Immigration Legal Resource Center (ILRC) explains. “Prosecutors in their charging and plea bargaining posture really are the gatekeepers to the deportation pipeline.”

At the time of his arrest, Rodriguez was enrolled in college, working and living away from home. He had two drinks at a Petaluma bar and left near closing time. At a stop light, he came to a complete stop part-way into an empty crosswalk. When Petaluma police arrested Rodriguez, his blood alcohol content (BAC) was 0.127 percent, over the legal limit of 0.08 percent, according to court documents.

If a U.S. citizen is convicted of a first DUI offense, common consequences may include three to five years of probation, DUI school, fines, six months of driver’s license suspension, installation of an interlock breathalyzer device in one’s car, and more. Upon completion of DUI probation, those convicted are eligible to petition for expungement, which allows a plea to be withdrawn and the case dismissed.

The consequences are more serious for DACA recipients. A DUI is considered a significant misdemeanor offense and makes Rodriguez exempt from DACA eligibility, which could subject him to ICE detention, among other ramifications.

Wise and Rodriguez asked the district attorney for a plea to an alternate charge colloquially known as a “wet reckless,” which would have allowed for Rodriguez to be sentenced to all of the same possible consequences as a DUI without making him ineligible to renew his DACA.

Wet reckless is a charge of reckless driving that carries a note referencing that alcohol or drugs were involved. No one can be initially cited for a wet reckless—it’s a reduced sentence that someone charged with a DUI may plead guilty to in a plea bargaining.

The prosecutors on Rodriguez’s case refused the bargain, stating in an email that they considered the collateral consequences and, “given the [defendant’s] BAC and public safety risk, a wet is not appropriate.”

Rodriguez says, “We spent nine months urging the DA to consider the immigration consequences in my case, essentially reminding them of their own responsibility. I completed a six-month DUI Program—part of the sentencing conditions—before I was convicted of the crime to show the court I take this matter very seriously. A misdemeanor conviction that comes more than six months after the arrest date represents a gross failing of the justice system.”

During the plea bargaining process, Rodriguez and Wise proactively offered that the defendant could, in exchange for the reduced charge, face harsher consequences than the proposed three years of probation the prosecution sought. In exchange for an immigration-neutral sentence, Rodriguez offered to serve additional jail time, complete community service hours, install an interlock device, or wear a continuous alcohol monitoring device to prohibit drinking entirely.

The deputy district attorney prosecuting the case rejected every offer, according to emails and court documents reviewed by the Bohemian. The prosecutor’s supervisor also stated that he did not believe a wet reckless was in the interest of justice.

“It’s just plain false to assert that consideration of immigration consequences requires giving some lesser punishment to non-citizen defendants; it doesn’t,” Cahn says.

With no option for a wet reckless, Rodriguez was ineligible to renew his DACA status, which requires renewal every two years. It expired in August 2019. Without DACA, Rodriguez lost his job, which meant that he could not afford to keep living on his own. He quit the college classes he was taking in the South Bay and moved back home with his parents.

In December 2019, Rodriguez entered a “no contest” plea to the DUI charges and was sentenced to three years of probation.

On Wednesday, July 29, he will return to court and a judge will rule on his petition for an early termination of probation and expungement. If Rodriguez’s case is expunged then, he will have until August 30, 2020—one year from its expiration—to renew his DACA status.

So, why do prosecutors need to care about a defendant’s immigration status?

In 2016 and 2017, California Legislature passed Penal Code Sections 1016.2 and 1016.3, respectively. Co-authored by the ILRC, the first law states that defense attorneys have a constitutional obligation to advise and defend noncitizen clients from the immigration consequences of offenses. The second law places a parallel requirement on prosecutors to always consider the avoidance of the immigration consequences when engaging in plea bargaining.

Functionally, these penal codes mean that the district attorney is asked to recognize that loss of eligibility for DACA is a punishment that may be more severe than is warranted by a defendant’s charges.

Cahn explains that, for years, prosecutors would often say that to consider immigration consequences of crimes would violate equal protection or somehow give benefit to non-citizens.

“[This legislature] gives us a very powerful tool to say, ‘No, in fact, you must consider those consequences, and you must consider the avoidance of those consequences because the legislature directs you to do so.”

The Bohemian emailed to Sonoma County Chief Deputy District Attorney Brian Staebell with general questions about his office’s understanding and application of the 2016–17 state laws governing the treatment of immigration consequences.

Staebell told the Bohemian, “California Legislature placed a responsibility on the prosecution to consider adverse immigration consequences as one factor during plea negotiations. We, as an office, are very aware of our responsibilities in this regard, and we have held training on the subject on more than one occasion.”

However, Wise argues that the Sonoma County’s District Attorney’s office is not truly considering Rodriguez’s immigration status in the proceedings, from their lack of urgency to their lack of acknowledgement of the inequitable impact that the punishment they sought for him carries.

Cahn says that California lawmakers wrote the recent laws because they recognized the value of the state’s immigrants and the impacts of deportation.

“California has the highest immigrant population of any state in the country—one out of every four of us was born outside the country,” she says. “One out of every two children goes to bed at night with a parent born outside the U.S. We as a state understand that deportations wreak havoc on our communities. These laws require that all the key stakeholders in the criminal legal system understand the immigration consequences of crimes and, in effect, take pains to mitigate or eliminate those consequences.”

Cahn says that immigration consequences are often illogical and there is often nothing preferential about dispositions that do not trigger immigration consequences versus those that do.

The ILRC argues that a wet reckless is an appropriate alternative charge to a DUI for immigrant defendants, specifically because it allows for a judge to impose any of the same consequences in the interest of public safety.

“We’re not saying someone should escape accountability for their alleged conduct, and we understand prosecutors have a duty to protect public safety,” Cahn says. “We are saying that protecting public safety doesn’t require that the defendant also be deported at the end of their criminal case.”

In their article, “A View Through the Looking Glass: How Crimes Appear from the Immigration Court Perspective,” judges Dana Leigh Marks and Denise Noonan Slavin write, “The United States Supreme Court has called the effect of being ordered deported or removed to be the equivalent of banishment, a sentence to life in exile, loss of property, life or all that makes life worth living, and, in essence, a ‘punishment of the most drastic kind.’”

Cahn says, “Increasingly we are seeing prosecutors adopt immigration policies that govern their office’s practices—Alameda County, Marin County, Contra Costa County, all have newly revised or newly-adopted immigration policies that provide some direction to all of the line DAs.”

So far, Wise says that the Sonoma County District Attorney has not taken that step.

Cahn says that she has worked closely with elected district attorneys in the aforementioned counties and led trainings for the California District Attorneys Association, but has never worked with the Sonoma County prosecutor’s office.

King Street Giants Get Vocal on New Album

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Sonoma County septet the King Street Giants are the North Bay’s liveliest disseminators of traditional, New Orleans–style jazz.

Inspired by the boisterous and raucous music that can be found in the halls, clubs and streets of the French Quarter, the band originated their sound in street-busking sessions throughout the Bay Area, and in recent years they’ve shared the stage with iconic artists including Bonnie Raitt, Galactic, Rebirth Brass Band, Charlie Musselwhite, New Orleans Suspects and many more at major festivals throughout the West Coast.

On August 3, the King Street Giants will release their third full-length LP, Everything Must Go. The 11-track record is the band’s first release to feature vocals and it is the first release under the group’s current name, as the band previously played under the name Dixie Giants until changing the name two years ago.

“We were gearing up to do our first trip to New Orleans (in 2018), and as we were talking to friends and colleagues who had moved or toured down there, we started getting a lot of questions about the name Dixie Giants,” says band co-founder and sousaphone player Nick Pulley.

As the group did research into the name, they found that the word Dixie still has a strong connotation with the Confederacy in the South.

“We all grew up on the West Coast, and the term Dixieland Jazz doesn’t bat an eye,” Pulley says. “But, we learned that Dixieland Jazz was a term that white record labels used in the 1920s and ’30s to tell the public this is white musicians playing this music.”

Dropping the potentially offensive term from their moniker, the group quickly decided to rebrand the band with a name inspired by their at-the-time practice space on King Street in Santa Rosa.

“And, of course we changed the name, and then we moved,” Pulley laughs. “Recently, seeing the Dixie Chicks change their name and seeing (New Orleans–based) Dixie Beer change their name, it’s good to get that reinforcement from people who have an international platform who are making those same changes and learning those same histories.”

For the record, the King Street Giants were warmly welcomed in New Orleans in 2018, and the band—made up of Pulley on sousaphone, Casey Jones on clarinet and tenor sax, Jesse Shantor on alto sax, Jason Thor on trombone, Daniel Charles on banjo and both Libby Cuffie and Dylan Garrison on drums—have made a new name for themselves over the past two years, treating the North Bay to raucous live shows up until the Covid-19 pandemic shut down the scene.

At the time of the shutdown, the King Street Giants had just recorded Everything Must Go at Prairie Sun Studios. The album features all original tunes, several with vocals, that range from freewheeling shuffles to sonorous ballads and even an old fashioned dirge. Pulley says the album title reflects the group’s attitude about getting rid of bad habits and working on bettering oneself. He also says there is a political angle, and that despite the group’s ebullient musical output, he and other members of the band are currently writing more somber music to reflect the ongoing pandemic and protest movements.

Originally, the group was going to release the album in mid-July, and they were hoping to perform live to celebrate the occasion. Even as the pandemic keeps people isolated, the group went ahead with the album release, set for August 3.

“We’re very proud of it and there’s no point in sitting on it and keeping it a secret and waiting for a release show to happen,” Pulley says. “The response that we’ve been getting from close friends who’ve heard it has been positive, so why wait? People have time to listen to it, and I think people need something new to listen to.”

The King Street Giants will be featured in the Online Petaluma Music Festival on Saturday, Aug. 1, at petalumamusicfestival.org; and in the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts’ online video series ‘Luther Locals’ on Friday, Aug. 7, at lutherburbankcenter.org. ‘Everything Must Go’ is available Monday, Aug. 3, at thekingstreetgiants.com.

[UPDATED] Rohnert Park Police Officer Charged With Embezzlement

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The Sonoma County District Attorney has charged Rohnert Park Public Safety Officer David Sittig-Wattson, 34, with one felony count of grand theft by embezzlement, according to a press release from the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office.

Sittig-Wattson, a former treasurer for the Rohnert Park Public Safety Officers Association, the union which represents officers in labor negotiations and other matters, turned himself into the Sheriff Office on Monday after the Sheriff’s Office completed an investigation of financial practices at the union.

The alleged embezzlement, which the Sheriff’s Office investigated at the request of the union, took place over a 4-year period. The felony charge could lead to a sentence of between six months and three years of imprisonment. Sittig-Wattson was released on $5,000 bail on Monday, according to the Sheriff’s Office release.

Nonprofit paperwork filed by the police union lists Sittig-Wattson as the group’s treasurer in 2014 and 2015. More recent paperwork is not available online.

UPDATE — July 28, 10:00am: Sittig-Wattson is one of five police officers named in a lawsuit against the city of Rohnert Park by the family of Branch Wroth, a man who died in a Budget Inn in May 2017 after multiple officers attempted to arrest him.

According to a lawsuit brought by Wroth’s family, multiple officers, including Sittig-Wattson, knelt on Wroth’s back while he lay on the ground, handcuffed. Wroth was pronounced dead at the scene. Wroth’s family has argued in court that he died of “positional asphyxiation” as the result of the officer’s actions.

After reviewing the case, the Sonoma County District Attorney concluded that the officers did not use “unreasonable force” and declined to prosecute the officers involved.

“The effects of the drugs on Mr. Wroth’s system, likely combined with his physical exertion while fighting against the reasonable response from officers, induced cardiac arrest at the time he was subdued,” District Attorney Jill Ravitch wrote.

In June 2019, a jury agreed to award Wroth’s family $4 million in the case, however the settlement was overruled by another judge over concerns that the jury instructions in the first trial were unclear. A new trial is now underway.

North Bay Author Offers Guide to ‘Dying Well’

The inevitability of death has always been a source of dread and anxiety, across all ages and human societies. But the modern age has produced a new, very particular dimension to that primal fear.

Many of us fear not so much death itself, but rather the chaotic, disorienting and often extremely expensive process of dying made common by modern medicine.

But if dying is still inevitable, a messy and inhumane death it does not have to be. That’s the message behind journalist Katy Butler’s recent book The Art of Dying Well: A Practical Guide to a Good End of Life (Scribner).

Butler, who discusses the book online in a virtual event hosted by Napa Bookmine and the Yountville Community Center on Friday, July 31, has crossed this terrain before. Her 2013 book Knocking on Heaven’s Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death was part memoir and part investigation, offering the story of her father’s death as an illustration of what she calls “the Gray Zone,” the suspended state between an active life and clinical death largely created by modern medical technology.

“I felt I had laid out a problem in the first book,” says Butler, a long-time Bay Area reporter and writer. “I felt there was a need for a book that was about solutions, and that’s really the difference—this book says, OK, granted we have a broken medical system that is very fragmented toward the end of life, and we are afraid of death anyway. So given these problems, here are the workarounds—stories of people who have actually risen to the occasion and trusted their own best instincts to create a death that was less bad, or maybe even really good.”

The Art of Dying Well works best as a kind of handbook. Its seven chapters are determined by the particular stages of life, from “Resilience,” when you’re still active and healthy, all the way to “Active Dying,” the moment when it’s time to say goodbye. Along the way, each chapter outlines the attitudes and methods of preparation that can lead to a dignified and emotionally fulfilling end of life. The book’s format, says Butler, allows readers to return to it at different times in their lives.

“If you’re in the ‘Resilience’ part of life,” she says, “where you can still reverse a lot of health conditions, then you might want to read that chapter and call it a day, and put it away until you’re in some very different stage of life. And, if you’re in crisis, if there’s someone in your house who is dying, then skip the early parts and turn to the last two chapters and you’ll get a lot out of that.”

Butler’s inspiration was an antique text called Ars Moriendi, translated from the Latin as The Art of Dying. The text dates back to the 1400s and is a kind of medieval guidebook on the best way to meet death. She calls it one of the first bestselling self-help books. “It framed dying as a spiritual ordeal, and it named five different sorts of temptations and emotional struggles at the end of life, and how your attendants or friends could reassure you and help you through that.”

Though the fact of dying hasn’t changed, the circumstances of death have been upended since the Middle Ages. Butler started the writing process mindful of what links ancient ideas of death with contemporary ones.

“I do think there’s some commonality to what people think of as a good death. Clean and comfortable and relatively free from pain, having people that you love around you, being spiritually at peace,” she says. “Those things are still the same.”

The new book also offers up practical policy ideas to address what she calls a “technology-rich but relationship-poor” health care system. One such idea is a Medicare program known as PACE, which keeps ailing seniors out of hospitals and nursing-care facilities when it’s practical to do so, while still meeting their needs for home care, therapy and medication. The problem is, PACE is limited in its capacities and its funding. Still, there are many more down-to-earth approaches people can adopt to make a fulfilling end of life better for everyone—approaches that previous generations knew something about.

“You look at the ‘Greatest Generation,’” Butler says, referring to those who lived through the Great Depression and World War II. “They had stronger social networks and more of an understanding to bring a covered dish when someone has a major health crisis. We need to relearn some of those more rural or red-state values of neighborliness and being part of community groups. That stuff matters.”

Katy Butler discusses ‘The Art of Dying Well’ on Friday, July 31, online at 5pm. Free; $5 donation suggested. RSVP required at Napabookmine.com.

Original article by Wallace Baine, with additional reporting by Charlie Swanson.

Virtually Attend These North Bay Music Festivals

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New cases of Covid-19 continue to rise in the Bay Area, and social gatherings remain off-limits for many venues and organizations that annually host major music festivals in Sonoma and Napa County each summer.

Some events, including BottleRock Napa Valley, have delayed the festivities until 2021. Other productions, such as the Broadway Under the Stars theatrical series in Glen Ellen, are moving online, with virtual versions of their popular performances.

As summer moves into August and sheltering orders stay in effect, several events planned for the late-summer season are opting to stream their festivals in place of presenting live events.

Founded in 2011, the Napa Porchfest lives by the mantra of taking the music “out of the garage and onto the porch.” The summer showcase takes over several blocks of downtown Napa, with dozens of bands and artists turning the historic neighborhood’s porches, lawns and public spaces into stages.

Back in May, the organizers of the festival, which always takes place on the last Saturday of July, canceled the event, writing on Facebook that, “We love Porchfest and think it’s a great local event, but the health and safety of our community is much more important.”

Now, the festival is effectively moving “out of the porch and onto the internet,” as Napa Porchfest hosts several artists in a livestream event this weekend. On Saturday, July 25, Bay Area party band Sweet HayaH and others will stream live at 7pm. On Sunday, July 26, Napa Porchfest presents a full day of virtual sets from local bands including Skunk Funk and Midnight Crush. Visit Napa Porchfest’s website for the full schedule. Bands can also register to add their live stream to the schedule.

In Sebastopol, the summer traditionally brings with it the beloved weekly concert series Peacetown, which attracts local bands and music lovers to Ives Park each Wednesday for a joyous celebration of music and positivity.

In the wake of Covid-19, the North Bay could use a little more positivity this summer, and in lieu of live concerts, the Virtual Peacetown Concert series is instead presenting engaging videos of past performers streaming every Wednesday evening through the summer season.

The weekly videos also feature interviews with local businesses and restaurants, keeping the community connected in times of crisis. The Virtual Peacetown Concert series continues next week, on July 29, with video performances by local Beatles cover act Pepperland and veteran Sebastopol rock group Bohemian Highway. Other bands scheduled to appear this summer include reggae rockers Sol Horizon, Americana outfit Laughing Gravy, dance band New Copasetics, zydeco masters Gator Nation and more local favorites. Find the full schedule and tune in Wednesdays at 7pm on Peacetown’s Facebook page.

In Petaluma, the summer is not complete without the Petaluma Music Festival, which annually presents local and internationally touring acts on five stages at the Sonoma-Marin Fairgrounds. Founded by Petaluma High School music director Cliff Eveland, the nonprofit event raises tens of thousands of dollars each summer for music programs in local schools, and the festival always puts on a fun and engaging day of live music and local flavor.

This year’s planned 13th annual event was scheduled to take place on Saturday, Aug. 1, though the organizers canceled the festival a month ago when it became apparent that Covid-19 would still be around in August.

In place of the live festival, the organizers are now offering the first-ever Online Petaluma Music Festival, which will feature live-streamed and/or archived video performances by many of the headline artists that were a part of this year’s lineup, plus past performers and surprise special guests.

The online festival takes place Aug. 1, and confirmed bands on the virtual bill include Denver funk outfit The Motet, New Jersey Americana act Railroad Earth, Hawaii soul guitarist Ron Artis II, Nashville folk-rock band the Wood Brothers and Bay Area bands including Royal Jelly Jive, T Sisters, Chris Robinson Brotherhood, David Nelson Band, the Mother Hips and dozens of others. Watch the Online Petaluma Music Festival on the fest’s website.

Later this summer, the Cotati Accordion Virtual Festival will replace the planned 30th annual Cotati Accordion Festival. Instead of happening at La Plaza Park, the virtual festival will take place online Aug. 22 and 23 with internationally acclaimed virtuosos from nine different countries, such as Cory Pesaturo, Alex Meixner, Pietro Adragna and Gary Blair, performing live. Details on the event’s streaming platform and more are still forthcoming.

“The world premiere of the Cotati Accordion Virtual Festival will give the viewers a chance to see the accordion played at artistic levels never imagined by the uninitiated,” festival organizers write in a statement. “Whether you are an accordion aficionado or just curious, the performances will be unforgettable.”

Pandemic forces a radical re-imagining of theater

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Way back in the mid-1970s, when pop star Billy Joel was compelled to write a song about the approaching collapse of the American empire, he began his lurid tale of ruin and destruction with a nod to theater. To strike a suitably apocalyptic tone, he chose as the song’s first line: “I’ve seen the lights go out on Broadway.”

The song was called “Miami 2017,” and it turns out Joel undershot the moment by only a few years. On March 12, 2020, by government order, the lights did in fact go out on Broadway. And, in late June, it was announced that Broadway would remain dark for the rest of the year.

A year ago, such an image was the stuff of nightmares, for both those who love theater and those who produce it. Today, it’s a stark reality. And, as goes Broadway, so go hundreds of theater and performing arts companies around the country.

Four months after a sudden and crippling shutdown of live performance that still has no end in sight, the theater industry is in the midst of a painful existential crisis. One that has presented a series of daunting challenges, from keeping staff employed to retaining the attention of audiences to embracing new substitutes for live performance to facing fundamental questions of purpose and meaning.

In the rich and diverse world of Bay Area theater, many companies have been kept afloat to this point by the largesse of their donors and loyal audiences (“You could basically yell into a hole asking for a donation and people would give it to you,” says one insider). But artistic directors in the region—from the mighty powerhouses such as American Conservatory Theatre (ACT) in San Francisco and California Shakespeare Theater (Cal Shakes) in Berkeley, to smaller neighborhood companies ringing the Bay Area—know they can’t depend on generosity as a long-term strategy. With a potent mix of fatalism and hope, theaters in the region struggle with a dramatic adapt-or-die moment. And many are responding by pushing their creativity and ingenuity to its limits.

“The pandemic is likely the biggest catalyst to creativity that any of us will see in our lifetimes in the theater world,” says Ron Evans, a long-time consultant to theater and performing arts companies in the Bay Area and elsewhere. “It’s forced us to basically start from scratch in moving people emotionally.”

Even if the new year dawns with a newly released Covid-19 vaccine, a new president and a new national resolve to revive American commerce, there is emerging in the local theater world a consensus that there is no turning back to the pre-Covid sense of normalcy. Even under the most ideal circumstances, theater companies are likely to emerge in 2021 as different creatures than they were 2019. Whether those creatures are diminished and broken, or stronger and better positioned to meet the future, is now being determined.

The Room Where It Happened

March is commonly a time in live theater when new productions are launched. That was the case with many companies at the moment that the Covid menace moved suddenly from a troubling specter on the far horizon to an immediate shutdown threat.

Sebastopol’s Main Stage West was in the middle of a major transfer of leadership just as Covid-19 forced the theater to cancel upcoming performances of Accidental Death of an Anarchist and A Doll’s House, Part 2.

In April, outgoing Main Stage West co-artistic director and managing director Elizabeth Craven announced that artistic and administrative duties of the theater were being handed over to Keith Baker and Ivy Rose Miller. Recently, Baker and Miller updated Main Stage West patrons and friends with a statement that acknowledges everything in the world of live theater is still very much up in the air four months into the pandemic.  

“When we know more about how to keep you, our actors, and our staff safe during a performance, you will certainly be the first to know,” Baker and Miller write in their statement. “We are taking the opportunity to clean our closets and put a fresh coat of paint on a few things. We continue to make plans for an upcoming season and are pursuing grants to help stay afloat in the meantime.”

Marin Theatre Company was in the middle of presenting the world premiere of playwright Kate Cortesi’s Love when the company was forced to cancel the remaining performances of its 2019/20 season, including the programmed productions of Jordan Tannahill’s Botticelli in the Fire and Antoinette Nwandu’s Pass Over.

“We did not come to this decision lightly. It took us some time because we wanted to make sure we had as much information as possible,” Marin Theatre Company’s artistic director Jasson Minadakis says in a statement on MTC’s website. “But rather than moving these shows around or deeper into the summer, we decided that we will cancel the remaining performances, and we will be focusing on ways to move forward over the summer. We’re hoping to bring much of our company back when we start performances again.”

Novato Theater Company was just days away from opening their ambitious staging of the Who’s Tommy when Marin County’s shelter-in-place orders shuttered the production in mid-March.

“It was a very dark weekend in my life,” says director and choreographer Marilyn Izdebski. “You nurture this baby and right when it’s going to open, you know, it was horrible.”

Izdebski, who is also president of the company’s board of directors, adds that the lack of information regarding the sheltering timeline has put everything at NTC on hold.

“We postponed Tommy, we cancelled Sordid Lives, we had our next season all mapped out, and we can’t even go forward with our next season until we know when and if we can open,” Izdebski says. “We have a tremendous responsibility to our patrons, our members and our staff to wait until it is absolutely safe to re-open.”

History Has Its Eyes on You

When nationwide protests erupted after the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, theater companies generally felt an urge to respond in some way that conformed with their mission. Cal Shakes went one further. Instead of focusing on programming, artistic director Eric Ting launched into an acceleration of the kind of soul searching that had been going on since he’d taken the reins at the company four years prior. Covid caused him to question the mission of Cal Shakes, with the aim of forging a new way based on the values of EDI (equity, diversity and inclusion).

“We’ve been wrestling for a while now with what it means to be a theater when you can’t do theater,” says Ting, one of the few people of color in the country running Shakespeare companies. “When the thing that was at the core of our identity as an organization was removed, there was a giant void at the center. That was a clarifying moment for us. Without (performances), we had all this creative energy to focus on something else specifically.

“And the movement toward racial justice was an opportunity for us as an organization to truly embrace the values that we have been practicing and modeling for years now. What would it be like if we actually thought of ourselves, at least for this period of time, less as an arts organization and more as a civic institution in service to the betterment of our community?”

Such conversations are inevitably leading Ting and his staff to even challenge the cultural hegemony of his company’s namesake.

“Not a day goes by,” he says, “when I don’t have a conversation with somebody within the circle of Cal Shakes who says, ‘So, why are we doing Shakespeare?’”

The police protests and the new civil rights movement it has sparked also compelled Bay Area theater companies to come together in response. PlayGround in San Francisco had been developing a production of Vincent Terrell Durham’s Polar Bears, Black Boys & Prairie Fringed Orchards, a contemporary play that dramatizes many of the issues behind the Black Lives Matter movement.

“It starts as a cocktail party,” says PlayGround’s co-founder and artistic director Jim Kleinmann about the play. “Then it goes into this Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf thing, and by the time it’s done, everyone is shredded and no one gets out alive.”

Shortly after the Floyd incident, PlayGround actor/producer Aldo Billingslea moved quickly to convert Polar Bears into a Zoom-based online production to be presented on Juneteenth (June 19) with the co-sponsorship of theater companies from around the Bay Area. In the end, 43 Bay Area–based theaters and performing arts companies signed on sponsors, to underwrite the production’s royalty and fees costs. The production is still available for free through Sept. 1.

“We were able to have a conversation, shock people awake and energize around the idea of Black voices and Black theater,” Kleinmann says.

Leaning In

Some companies—including Opera San Jose—conform with what Covid demands of them, and push ahead anyway.

Covid, says OSJ general director Khori Dastoor, is “kryptonite for opera.” Indeed, by its nature, opera is particularly vulnerable to a virus that is a bigger threat to older people (opera’s majority audience), flourishes in enclosed spaces with lots of people (like opera halls) and may be most effectively spread through aerosol droplets by forceful singing (like every aria ever).

After many sleepless nights, Dastoor and her team decided to lean into the crisis. For years, OSJ has had an apartment building in San Jose that it uses to host its resident artists (Dastoor herself lived there in 2007 as a guest soprano; it’s where she met the man who became her husband). For its latest production, OSJ used the apartment building to its advantage, quarantining its cast of performers for the incubation period of two weeks, testing the cast often and isolating them as a kind of “family unit” so they could perform in close proximity without masks. One apartment was left empty as an “isolation suite” in case anyone tested positive.

On top of that, the opera company invested heavily in video technology with an emphasis on high-end audio recording equipment, and partnered with a professional video company to produce the best product they could. The result is an online virtual concert called Dichterliebe (A Poet’s Love), now available for streaming.

“It would be my advice to a lot of folks not to try to fight the tide on this one,” Dastoor says. “It’s bigger than all of us. How do you turn to the population in two years, or however long it’s going to take to come back, and say, ‘Hey, we’re essential!’ Well, are you? We’ve already lived without you for two years and done fine.

“I really think staying present in people’s minds is an essential part of not just entertainment but good health. We’re all reading Stoic philosophy under the covers to keep from going into a deep depression. This is a time when we’re relying on art to pull us through. I want OSJ to be serving that need for people.”

ACT in San Francisco, one of the most high-profile theater companies on the West Coast, is not only a premiere performance theater, but also a highly regarded academy for aspiring actors and directors. It has been able to make the transition to online programming much easier on the educational side than on the performance side.

“There’s a lot of sorrow,” says ACT’s artistic director Pam MacKinnon. “It’s a worldwide shutdown of our craft, so it’s devastating.”

ACT’s own audience surveys indicate that only about 35 percent of the theater’s audience will ever return. In the face of such troubling numbers, MacKinnon says her company must focus on three areas of investment: developing new works for the stage, investing in state-of-the-art digital technology and investing in the company’s already strong education and community programs. “We’re just going to be a smaller theater for a while,” she says. “And, maybe by 2023, we’ll be back to some bigger numbers.”

It’s not just the big players that are suffering, of course. Shoestring theater companies are also fighting to survive. Elly Lichenstein has been with Petaluma’s Cinnabar Theater for 45 years, the last 20-plus as its artistic director. Cinnabar has jumped into survival mode by investing in high-end digital video technology and producing new material much like a television or film studio would do.

“I had to be dragged into this idea,” Lichenstein says, “because it is so antithetical to what live theater really does and what sets us apart from television and movie production.”

Evolution as a Value

Cinnabar’s experimentation is emblematic of another soul-searching arena in theater circles. What exactly is the “secret sauce” that distinguishes stage theater from the vast sea of entertainment options offered by Netflix and their competitors? If it’s the in-person experience, that’s off the table for now.

Jonathan Rhys Williams of Tabard Theatre believes the magic is in the live experience, even if separated from the in-person part of it. This month, Tabard is live streaming a fully staged one-person play called Looking Over the President’s Shoulder for 11 performances, through August 9. In this case, live means live—no on-demand viewing, no pausing the action for a bathroom break, no editing out the flubs.

“It’ll be a three-camera shoot switched live,” Williams says. “It won’t be that single camera in the back of the house. There will be tight close-ups, body mics, high sound quality, all of it. Not losing the live element is very important to us.”

Other than the technological and marketing challenges, streaming—whether it’s live or recorded material—presents big issues on the legal front, with theater companies compelled to work with licensing firms and actors/technicians unions on new contracts. Plus, live streaming represents a challenge on the audience side, re-introducing what used to be called “appointment television” habits in an age when almost everyone is used to on-demand time shifting.

“From the artistic side,” Williams says, “my mind just really starts to fly. What might be able to happen by integrating this new technology? What could we do? We’ve already put people on body mics. What if we put them on body cameras too? It could be a new way of creating theater.”

For still others, the secret sauce in theater is remaining closer to street level, to present theatrical arts that are too immediate or too raw or too provocative to float into the ether of big-budget mass entertainment. Shotgun Players performed in more than 40 different venues in Berkeley before finding a home at the former church at Ashby Stage in 2004. Artistic director Patrick Dooley says the twin catastrophes of Covid and the police protests revitalized Shotgun.

“Evolution is one of our values,” Dooley says. “We’ve always been asking ourselves, ‘How are we able to evolve in the moment?’ But we’re trying to do a little better about looking before we jump. A lot of our success over the years has been, we’re going to jump and we’ll figure out how to build the parachute on the way down. That’s part of the thrill ride for our audience.

“This is going to be a crazy ride. But that can be really stressful for some folks. So, we’re trying to figure out a way to keep that daredevil spirit, while realizing the process is not healthy.”

Shotgun’s response to the Covid summer is The Niceties, a live-streamed, two-person play about a white college professor and an African-American student facing off over the legacy of slavery. The play was presented on Zoom. Dooley is a true believer in a new kind of theater aesthetic emerging from all the on-line experimentation.

“There’s a time in every Zoom performance I’m watching that I just kind of disappear into the moment,” he says, “and I feel I’m right there with them. At first, it’s alienating with the screen and that blue tint. But every time I’ve done one of these, I find that the membrane breaks and I drop in and I buy into the convention.”

The Third Act

What the future holds for local theater is far from certain.

“My hope,” says Mike Ryan, artistic director of Santa Cruz Shakespeare, “is that when we come out the other side of this, there will be a hunger for live work because it has been so long denied to us.”

Consultant Ron Evans says there will be a lot of terrible online theater before the good stuff emerges. But the good stuff is coming: “There will be a flavor of theater that will be digested online and loved. And that style is in the very early phases of finding its voice right now.”

The traumas of 2020 may also inspire new theatrical art, plays only now, or even not yet, being written. One-person plays that don’t require masks or social distancing may be experiencing a renaissance.

On the other end, many theater companies may not survive. Elly Lichenstein of Cinnabar says she’s 99 percent certain that her company “will have to build itself back up, start again from scratch. I can see that as something good, if we have to hand this over to younger people who can start at the bottom like we did 48 years ago.”

“Now that we’ve slammed on the brakes,” says Patrick Dooley, “we have a chance to look at ourselves and take inventory. How are we doing? Is this working for me? Is this sustainable? Is this healthy, or just? It’s giving us some time to do a deep evaluation of the underpinnings of our culture and start to design a different architecture. And that’s radical.”

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Virtually Attend These North Bay Music Festivals

More events go online as pandemic endures

Pandemic forces a radical re-imagining of theater

Way back in the mid-1970s, when pop star Billy Joel was compelled to write a song about the approaching collapse of the American empire, he began his lurid tale of ruin and destruction with a nod to theater. To strike a suitably apocalyptic tone, he chose as the song’s first line: “I’ve seen the lights go out on Broadway.” The...
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