North Bay Progressives Raise Funds for Blue Candidates in Red States

The national, grassroots nonprofit-organization Sister District Project supports progressive Democratic political candidates in red or swing states by organizing political volunteers in blue districts to lend a hand.

Much like how Sister Cities promote cultural and social ties between socially-distant populations, the Sister District Project matches politically-blue districts with politically-red or swing districts elsewhere, so that Democratic activists in places like Sonoma County can channel their volunteers and their economic resources toward races that are both significant and winnable for progressives across the country.

In 2019, Sister District Project supported 27 races, with more than 23,000 donations averaging $24.57 each and over 31,000 volunteer-hours logged in the field.

For 2020, the project’s focus is to end gerrymandering in red districts, end widespread voter suppression in red states and help defeat President Trump by getting Democrats elected to state legislatures across the country.

In the North Bay, the East and West Sonoma County chapters of the Sister District Project combined their resources to host an online virtual fundraiser, Auction for Action, in support of three Democratic candidates running for state offices in Georgia, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.

The 10-day Auction for Action virtual fundraiser opens for online bidding June 17 and runs through June 27, ending with a live virtual event on June 27 at 4pm. The online auction is uniquely designed to safely raise political awareness and funds during the ongoing Covid-19 crisis.

“This upcoming election is especially important as the state legislatures in 37 states will be redrawing district lines,” says Rebecca Casciani, cofounder of Sister District Sonoma County East Chapter. “It is time to stop partisan gerrymandering.”

The West and East Sonoma County chapters of the Sister District Project are among the fastest-growing groups of the project’s progressive volunteers, and both chapters are striving to make an impact in the November 2020 elections by helping candidates in red states turn their state legislatures blue.

The Sonoma County West Sister District is specifically raising funds to support Shea Roberts, who hopes to join Georgia’s state legislature in November. The Sonoma County East Sister District supports Brittney Rodas, who is running for Pennsylvania State House, and Robyn Vining, an incumbent Democrat in the Wisconsin State Assembly.

Although the global coronavirus outbreak brought an immediate halt to planning in-person fundraisers, Sister District organizers quickly realized that online events offer a convenient way to reach even larger audiences.

“We’re not going to let a quarantine keep us from winning in November,” says Mary Radu, cofounder of the West Sonoma County chapter, which has supported eight candidates since its inception in 2017 in a variety of community-building fundraisers, including a paella feed and a popular annual clothing swap. “We think 2020 is our best chance to turn red states blue.”

The two Sonoma County chapters’ combined Auction for Action includes art created by talented local artists such as Marylu Downing and Elizabeth Peyton alongside many other artworks and crafts by various artisans. Bidders can also choose to bid on packages such as handyman services from Mark Miller, Sonoma County’s “Mench with a Wrench,” stays in several vacation homes, VIP wines and cheese tours at Cline Cellars in Sonoma, a tasting tour of Benizger’s Sonoma Mountain Estate and winery tram, an annual pass to Sugarloaf Ridge State Park, gift certificates at local restaurants and stores, and much more. Direct donations can also be made to the project on the auction site. Additionally, an anonymous donor will match the amount raised for candidates.

The Sonoma County Chapters of Sister District Project host Auction for Action online Wednesday, June 17 through Saturday, June 27, when a live virtual auction caps off the event at 4pm. Visit Facebook or email sd***************@***il.com for more information.

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Let My People Be Free to Breathe

Returning back to school this year—50 years old, an Afro-Latina, a disabled student—I chose to dive into the community headfirst. I did not wish to allow my adversity to define my experience but to influence how I chose to engage with other students, faculty, and staff at Santa Rosa Junior College. I began joining various clubs, meeting students, planning events, and through time, began to understand that there was a real need for black and brown students to be more active, present and supported on campus. I joined various racial-affinity groups, social groups, and more. I ended the first semester with a 4.0 GPA and was appointed Vice President of Clubs of Petaluma.

Once the Pandemic had begun its onslaught of altering my communities and what we knew as normal, I believed nothing could get worse. That’s when the Black Lives Matter movement re-emerged in the wake of the deaths of Breonna Taylor, Tony Mcdade and George Floyd. 

Immediately, the Black Student Union, various community leaders and I began planning a community event that promoted the leadership and presence of black voices and protested against police brutality and injustice. We came up with a series of demands, a program that will ensure Santa Rosa Junior College promotes racial equity and inclusion. 

We will no longer be silent. These are our demands. 

  1. We DEMAND FREE tuition for Black and Indigenous students.
  2. We DEMAND Black Scholarships.
  3. We DEMAND an Office for Black Student Development starting FALL 2020.
  4. We DEMAND a more racially-diverse faculty and staff.
  5. We DEMAND the hiring of a Black Counselor, specifically, Dianna L Grayer.
  6. We DEMAND a Black/Ethnic Studies Department be implemented.
  7. We DEMAND Proper Comprehensive Racial Awareness training to all Staff, Faculty and Administration. 
  8. We DEMAND SRJC Create a Strategic Plan that will increase Retention Rates for marginalized students.
  9. We DEMAND the IMMEDIATE Removal of Don Edgar from the Board of Trustees. ANYONE in Leadership, Staff, Faculty or Administration who has been accused of Embellzelment, Bribaries, Discrimination, Bullying, Stigmatizing or Harassing should be removed from their positions IMMEDIATELY.
  10. We DEMAND that Campus Security shows fair and equal treatment regarding events that are hosted by the BSU.
  11. We DEMAND that Summer Classes not have Due Dates or Deadlines.
  12. We DEMAND that Dr. Chong come to our BSU meeting once a semester to keep us posted on the progress of our DEMANDS. 
  13. WE DEMAND THE JOBS OF THE FACULTY, STAFF AND ADMINISTRATORS THAT SUPPORT US NOT BE THREATENED DUE TO THEIR SUPPORT OF BLACK STUDENT UNION STUDENTS.

We don’t want to be pacified. It’s time for a change.

Delashay Carmona Benson is a re-entry college student at Santa Rosa Junior College where she advocates for inclusivity, diversity and equity.

Reps Cosponsor Police-Reform Legislation

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North Bay Reps. Jared Huffman and Mike Thompson are among dozens of democratic Congressmembers to co-sponsor federal legislation aimed at reforming law-enforcement agencies across the country.

Introduced on Monday, June 8, the Justice in Policing Act of 2020 is the Democrats’ response to the daily protests across the nation.

The list of changes proposed in the legislation includes a countrywide ban on chokeholds, carotid holds and no-knock warrants. The bill would also require state and local law enforcement “to use existing federal funds to ensure the use of police body cameras” and create a National Police Misconduct Registry intended to prevent officers with a history of violence or problematic behavior from transferring to a new department.

All of this sounds good, but it may not match the urgency many people on the street want. Even if the police-reform legislation passes, meaningful law-enforcement agency reform will require ongoing oversight and a change in officers’ mindsets, not just new rules.

Rules, as Americans have witnessed over and over again, can be broken or blatantly ignored when a law-enforcement agency lacks a culture of accountability.

PG&E Plans Move to Oakland

As the Pacific Gas and Electric Company awaits word on whether its bankruptcy exit plan will be approved before June 30, the utility announced plans to move its corporate headquarters from downtown San Francisco to Oakland beginning in 2022.

“Oakland is the perfect fit for us for a host of reasons,” a PG&E executive said in a statement on June 8. “It is a thriving hub of industry and innovation in our state, and we look forward to establishing our headquarters and contributing to life there.”

The bigger issue question still remains: How will PG&E fare once it successfully exits bankruptcy court—an outcome that looks likely in the next few weeks—while the state heads into yet another fire season?

Nobody knows, but adding another round of widespread power shutoffs or wildfires—PG&E-induced or not—to an ongoing pandemic and protests against police brutality could make the next six months even more eventful.

Our unhelpful advice? Buckle up and buy some extra batteries.

Head West Marketplace supports purveyors in pandemic

The journey for the modern maker from concept to customer is not an easy one, especially for small artisan producers and brands trying to find an audience for their products and services in a crowded online marketplace.

Jimmy Brower was one such creative, a North Oakland retail professional who left the corporate world to pursue his own desert-inspired lifestyle brand, West Perro, in 2016. Through the brand, Brower creates and sells sun hats, jewelry and other items in his online shop. In figuring out how to sustain and survive as a self-employed creative in an expensive Bay Area, Brower knew he had to create a community.

“I would find myself participating in craft shows and markets, and my network broadened,” he says. “All these things that are a benefit in the small business world; but the things I saw that were lacking in these larger fairs and markets was accessibility, affordability and diversity.”

In 2018, Brower founded Head West Marketplace to provide a diverse array of local purveyors a pop-up platform with which to share and sell their products and services in a physical space akin to a farmers’ market, only this one features art and crafts instead of fruits and vegetables.

“I wanted to build something that was affordable for new or emerging artists, or small businesses, or makers, or shop owners,” Brower says. “And I wanted to make it accessible to people in their own community, their own neighborhood.”

The first few months of Head West Marketplace in 2018 happened 10 blocks from Brower’s house, at Bay Street Shopping Center in Emeryville. He and the artisan crafters and makers who participated in those early markets saw immediate results.

“People were coming up to me that had not been exposed to small business in the form of sole entrepreneurs just working out of their households,” he says. “There were a lot of conversations happening about the value of time and materials and ultimately the value of products and services when it’s coming from a human being versus a corporation.”

While the pop-up space in Emeryville could accommodate 20 booths of local purveyors, Head West Marketplace quickly grew beyond that capacity and expanded its market at different venues, moving between Hangar One Distillery in Alameda and the Temescal District on Telegraph Avenue in North Oakland.

“I started to see doors open for all shapes and sizes of makers in the Bay Area,” Brower says. “These individuals needed an outlet from out behind their computer screen to physically connect with people, whether it be their already existing customer base, their followers on social media or just their family and friends to test out their ideas and creations. “

Brower also found that customers were coming to these marketplaces from the North Bay, the South Bay and the far East Bay. In 2019, Head West Marketplace doubled from two venues to four, adding pop-up markets at 1717 Fourth Street in Berkeley and at the Barlow in Sebastopol.

While Brower is still the one-man operation behind Head West, he acknowledges he does not do it alone, and he says he’s blessed to work with partners at these community-minded venues to create space for the makers and creators.

“It’s a passion,” he says. “It’s a passion for seeing people’s dreams grow into physical realities.”

All of this rests, in some way, in Brower’s childhood, growing up in a small town in Illinois, with a mother who worked graveyards shifts at a hospital, a father who worked with his hands as a welder and a stepfather who would come home covered in soot from his job in a coal mine.

“Being inspired by that type of blue-collar hard work helped me to infuse that into what I’m doing today,” he says.

Today looks very different from the 2020 that Brower envisioned for Head West Marketplace, which was poised to hold an outdoor market nearly every weekend at one of its four venues beginning in March and running through the holidays.

“I led with this mentality of, ‘2020 is the year to see things clearly,’” he laughs. “I started hearing those things being echoed, that this was THE year of things happening. And things are happening, absolutely, important things are happening. But if I put myself in the silo of small business and those stay-at-home makers and crafters and designers, it’s been very difficult.”

Head West did host its first market of the year on March 7 at the Barlow Center in Sebastopol.

“I was elated,” Brower says, of the event that drew 3,000 people. “There was so much success, so much optimism and so much positivity with that bellwether marketplace.”

Less than a week later, most of the Bay Area issued a stay-at-home order to stop the spread of Covid-19. Brower was disheartened to have to cancel his Head West markets, ultimately through June.

Yet, Brower says he’s also seen uplifting news in that time. He’s networked with other like-minded market organizers up and down the coast, inspiring him to continue to support makers and purveyors with online resources and exposure.

To that end, Head West Marketplace has assembled a comprehensive resource guide for Bay Area small businesses dealing with the Covid-19 fallout. These resources include grant and loan opportunities, and Brower’s informed opinion on options for staying afloat during these dire economic times.

“I’m one of those business-minded people that says loans are for growth, not for crisis, and there were a lot of predatory lenders trying to capitalize on panicked individuals,” he says. “I built the online resources in the mindset that it is about making sure you survive after this moment, what that looks like in terms of personal finance and income, and what it means for your business revenue.”

In addition to providing resources for business owners, Head West is also sharing a list of Bay Area–and-beyond makers and designers who have pivoted to creating customizable and artistic face coverings during the ongoing pandemic.

Beyond supporting the shop-local scene, recent events in the U.S. have prompted Brower to join the growing chorus of “Black Lives Matter,” and when Head West returns to public events, Brower is making commitments to support Black makers and businesses, highlighting many planned actions listed on the Head West website such as providing no-cost booth-space scholarships at every marketplace for Black-identified participants.

Brower is also assembling a resource and support directory for Black empowerment in the Bay Area on Head West’s site, with contact information for dozens of organizations including the local NAACP chapter, defense funds, lawyers’ guilds and more.

“I see myself on this rollercoaster—I don’t know how I got on it, but I look around and I see everyone I know sitting on it with me, we’re all experiencing the same thing but we’re all having different emotions because it’s affecting us on an individual level,” Brower says. “We don’t know when it’s going to end, but when it does end we are going to get off the ride together, as one.”

headwestmarketplace.com

Letters to the Editor: Dropped

Because nothing “new” has come to light except the country’s excessive amount of police brutality (“Dismissed: District Attorney drops charges against Graton Couple,” News, June 3). This case was phony from the very beginning. Also, Press Democrat’s original article heavily sided with the police report, which was falsified. The DA and Sheriffs should be sued. They need to euthanize Vader because that dog is a liability. They need to press charges on its handler because he was either massively incompetent or another vicious liability.

The top police-dog trainer reviewed the footage and explained that the officer never gave the heel command and instead pulled on the dog’s harness which tells the dog to bite more aggressively. They never had reason to believe he was the one being identified in the report of a gun-toting individual. They showed up to his house out of harassment. That’s why this whole case fell apart on them. They got the wrong guy and then brutalized him. Luckily someone got it all on video. Now they drop all their charges because they knew they were wrong the whole time. Shame on Jill Ravitch. Shame on Sonoma County Sheriffs. Shame on Press Democrat.

They should all be sued.

J. Nunez

Via bohemian.com

In Focus: An introduction to Japanese cinema

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Coming on the heels of Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month, here’s our primer for movie-crazy, pop-cultural adventurers looking for seldom-visited territories to explore: Japan is ready for its closeup. Japanese cinema has a rich and rewarding history, but one that never seems to get the same attention eager American film buffs have always lavished on the Europeans. A trip to the real-life Land of the Rising Sun is out of reach while we’re in the throes of this pandemic, but thanks to streaming and other home-video options, we can cross the Pacific and immerse ourselves in, say, the intrigues of Tokugawa Shogunate, anytime we want.

Without delving into a comprehensive discussion of such a panoramic subject, here’s a bite-sized introduction to a few filmmakers and their movies, most of them available for streaming and all of them indispensable for anyone interested in this truly world-class national film industry. Names are listed Japanese-style, with family names first.

Kurosawa Akira: Arguably Japan’s most renowned filmmaker, Kurosawa reached for universal themes and found international audiences with: Seven Samurai (one of the greatest movies ever made); Ikiru; Rashomon; Throne of Blood (a feudal-era version of Macbeth, with three grotesque witches and the raging power lust in actor Mifune Toshirô’s eyes); The Hidden Fortress (a major influence on Star Wars); Sanjuro; Yojimbo; and the King Lear-in-feudal-Japan costumed epic, Ran. For a number of reasons, perhaps including his height—the filmmaker was almost six feet tall—Kurosawa stood out from his Japanese movie-biz contemporaries. Critics in his home country sometimes clucked disapprovingly about his choice of subjects—the Shakespeare adaptations, Seven Samurai’s tribute to Aeschylus’ Seven Against Thebes, etc., his popularity in the West and the “un-Japanese” point of view in many of his projects. He once described Seven Samurai as being as rich as a buttered steak topped with broiled eels. Kurosawa’s Dersu Uzala—a 1975 Soviet-Japanese co-production with Mosfilm—is of special interest because its thrilling story of the friendship between a native trapper/guide and a visiting surveyor in the Siberian wilderness is presented in Russian.

Ozu Yasujirô: Considered by many to be the most quintessentially “Japanese” of the classical directors. His spare visual style and carefully constructed scenarios tell the stories of ordinary people dealing with the ordinary heartaches of life, with extraordinary grace. But don’t be fooled by Ozu’s reputation for “austerity.” His emotion-packed family dramas are a feast of characterization and repressed sensuality lurking just beneath the surface. For example: A Story of Floating Weeds; Tokyo Story; Late Spring; Early Summer; Tokyo Twilight; and Equinox Flower. Ozu is notorious for his habit of placing his camera, in indoor scenes, at the eye level of a person kneeling on a tatami mat. Hara Setsuko, one of Ozu’s most frequent leading ladies (her fond nickname was “The Eternal Virgin”), has one of the most radiant smiles in existence, even when portraying a compromised character.

Mizoguchi Kenji: A master stylist enthralled by the stories of women, whose low status in traditional Japanese society makes them vulnerable to injustice and mistreatment. Some of the saddest films you’ll ever see: Sansho the Bailiff, aka Sansho Dayu (the heartbreaking tale of an unfortunate family’s interrupted journey); Ugetsu Monogatari (a dreamlike ghost story from ancient Nippon); The Life of Oharu (a gorgeous weepie starring the lead actress of Sansho, Tanaka Kinuyo); Utamaro and His Five Women; Miss Oyu (also with the long-suffering Tanaka); A Geisha; and A Story from Chikamatsu (aka The Crucified Lovers). Mizoguchi’s compositions are as thrillingly composed as a ukiyo e masterpiece.

Writer-director Kurosawa Kiyoshi is no relation to Kurosawa Akira, but shares the older director’s affinity for depicting characters confronting moral and ethical dilemmas. His elegantly paced contemporary projects range from outright horror to eerie relationships to soulful character-studies of modern urbanites in distress: Cure; Serpent’s Path; Séance (an extra-creepy remake of Séance on a Wet Afternoon); the internet chiller Pulse; Doppelganger; and Tokyo Sonata, the 2008 story of a middle-class family’s downward spiral after the father loses his job.

Kore-Eda Hirokazu: “The New Ozu”? Kore-Eda’s closely observed dramas have a strong social consciousness, none more so than Nobody Knows, the 2004 story of a family of school-age Tokyo children abandoned by their mother. Also recommended: Shoplifters; After the Storm; Our Little Sister; Like Father, Like Son; Hana; Maborosi; and Air Doll, the tale of a lonely man who falls in love with his inflatable sex doll.

Suzuki Seijun: His jazzed-up, frantic, gaudy, sexy gangster-and-spy flicks of the 1950s–1990s made him a hipster art-house fav in the U.S. Dig these shiny entertainments: Branded to Kill; Youth of the Beast; Gate of Flesh; Tokyo Drifter; and the inimitably titled Detective Bureau 2-3: Go to Hell Bastards! Some of Suzuki’s most distinctive movies feature actor Shishido Jo, notorious for having tissue from his butt cheeks grafted onto his face, in an attempt to give him a more “Western” appearance.

Imamura Shôhei: Sardonic social and political commentary—with more than a touch of grim humor and sexuality—adorn this director’s hyperactive array of films from 1950–2000. The standouts: The Insect Woman; Pigs and Battleships; The Ballad of Narayama (Imamura’s adaptation of a story by Fukazawa Shichirô, first filmed in 1958 by director Kinoshita Keisuke); Black Rain (a moving protest against nuclear warfare); Vengeance Is Mine; The Pornographers; and Profound Desires of the Gods.

Honda Ishirô: Best known for creating the original Godzilla (Japanese title: Gojira, from 1954), Honda’s filmography is packed with loads of audience-pleasing sci-fi and horror spectacles, including: Mothra vs. Godzilla (1964, pick hit from the long-running kaiju giant-monster franchise); The Mysterians (1957); 1959’s The H-man (another atomic-age mishap); Destroy All Monsters (1968); and Matango (1963), the fantastic saga of a group of shipwrecked men and women battling a killer fungus on a spooky island—American tagline: Attack of the Killer Mushrooms.

Twisted genre excitement with a sadistic streak is the trademark of cult figure director Miike Takashi. One of his most unforgettable is Audition (1999), in which a selfish businessman tries to hoodwink a succession of prospective would-be “brides” and ends up paying the price. Also in Miike’s immense, bizarre filmography: irreverent cowboy actioner Sukiyaki Western Django; the enormously influential Dead or Alive; Ichi the killer; Blade of the Immortal (piles of corpses ad absurdam); and Over Your Dead Body.

For rip-roaring, costumed sword-fighting action, try: director Inagaki Hiroshi’s 1954-56 Samurai trilogy (Musashi Miyamoto; Duel at Ichijoji Temple; and Duel at Ganryu Island). Also fine: The Sword of Doom (1965) by director Okamoto Kihachi, with actor Nakadai Tatsuya’s amazing freakout bloodbath in the climactic scene. Further genre-action fun, from underworld intrigue to youth-market ultra-violence: anything by jack-of-all-trades Fukasaku Kinji, especially Yakuza Graveyard. Fukasaku’s Battle Royale movies, in which teenage contestants kill each other on a tropical island, outraged audiences and spun off a host of imitators.

Also recommended are the works of Oshima Nagisa (his intense sexual melodrama In the Realm of the Senses created a sensation in 1976); Naruse Mikio (the urban prostitute drama When A Woman Ascends the Stairs); and Shindo Kaneto (Onibaba, a ghost story about a predatory mother and daughter living in a marshland shack). Ichikawa Kon, director of acclaimed sports documentary Tokyo Olympiad, ranged over a variety of genres: family relationship dramas like The Makioka Sisters; the samurai adventure 47 Ronin (a remake of Mizoguchi’s 1941 samurai pic); and Ichikawa’s harrowing World War II nightmares, Fires on the Plain and The Burmese Harp. Kobayashi Masaki’s powerful three-part The Human Condition strikes a similar chord in tracing the ordeal of an anti-war Imperial Army soldier (played by Nakadai Tatsuya) stationed in Manchuria. Kobayashi’s trilogy clocks in at nearly 10 hours total running time.

Likewise on the bellicose side of the slate are the graphic tough-guy antics of actor-filmmaker “Beat Takeshi” Kitano (Boiling Point; Fireworks), and the comparatively benign swordplay of mega-popular actor Katsu Shintarō (“Kats-Shin”), who portrayed the blind masseur/gambler Zatoichi, defender of cute little kids and threatened women, in some 26 movies.

Mishima: A Life In Four Chapters (1985) is that rarity of rarities, an intelligent Japanese-language film by an American director, Paul Schrader. It’s a heavily stylized dramatization (starring actor Ogata Ken) of the life of controversial novelist-actor-militarist Mishima Yukio, who committed seppuku after unsuccessfully attempting a 1970 coup d’état in Tokyo. Before coming to his bloody end the real-life Mishima wrote and/or acted in a lengthy roster of art films and campy extravaganzas, including Black Lizard (1968) and Black Rose (1969), both of which starred “gender illusionist” Miwa Akihiro, and both of which were helmed by the above-mentioned Fukasaku Kinji.

Lastly, an easy choice from among the ocean of Japanese anime films is the oeuvre of the creative genius Miyazaki Hayao, guiding light of Studio Ghibli, who gave us the animated masterpieces My Neighbor Totoro; Princess Mononoke; Spirited Away; Howl’s Moving Castle; and Ponyo.

Many (but not all) of the above titles are available from various home video streaming services. Check JustWatch.com.

Enough is Enough

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I have asked myself many times this week, when will enough be enough? How many times do we have to see a black man killed in front of us by a police officer for us to say enough is enough?

It is not enough to not believe the stereotypes, to not tell that racist joke, to be nice to people of color. I can insert many lies I have told myself over the years here. I am guilty myself of thinking that I am doing enough, while black people are suffering everyday. I am ashamed of myself for being complacent for far too long. I can no longer sit on the sidelines and not actively take part in tearing apart a system that does not work for everyone. Society does not work unless it works for everyone in that society.

I tell myself I’m doing the best I can, but am I? I can do better; we all can. I liken it to trimming trees. We need to cut off the dead limbs and the branches that are sucking energy from the healthy part of the tree. To be stronger, grow taller and bear more fruit, the useless parts need to be cleared away.

I would like to say that it is time that we listen to the black people in our lives, but that time has long passed. Yes, we still need to listen, but the time now is for action. We have been told, and we have known for hundreds of years, that this is not working. Recognizing the problem is not enough. Taking steps to solve the problem is a good start, but also not enough. It is time to have conversations with the people we love about what we are doing to make things better every day. It is time to be in the trenches instead of standing aside thinking things will be better when the dust settles. It is time to fight, and to continue fighting, until there is some resolute change.

It is time to do more than just enough.

Deborah Unger lives in Graton.

Top Cop’s Kerfuffle

Down on the corner and out there in the streets they’re calling it “Ravitch’s kerfuffle.” Jill Ravitch, the Sonoma County DA, mocked citizens when they protested the Georgia slaying of African-American, Ahmaud Arbery.

“I seek to do justice in the work I do, not by marching,” Ravitch boasted.

Fifth District Supervisor Lynda Hopkins replied, “I worked, and I marched.”

Hopkins’ sentiments were widely echoed.

Over the past two weeks, hordes of citizens like Hopkins have worked and protested the death of George Floyd and marched against police brutality. It’s the American way.

Defense lawyer Omar Figueroa cranked up his sarcastic and said, “Jill is hard at work ignoring environmental crimes and police brutality. Time to retire. I’ll pay for the cake.”

Still, Figueroa allows that Ravitch was a “great trial lawyer” who did good when she created The Family Justice Center. He isn’t thrilled about her stance on cannabis, though her office has been clearing nearly 3,000 cannabis-related convictions.

As the county’s “top cop,” and nearing the end of her 10th year in office, Ravitch is less popular than ever. Courthouse buzz says she won’t run for reelection, though when I called Ravitch and popped the question, she wouldn’t answer.

Lawyer and longtime Sonoma County “police watchdog,” Jerry Threet, suggests that Ravitch’s record has been mixed and that she might have gone after white-collar and environmental crimes more vigorously.

“Usually the violators get a slap on the wrist,” Threet says. But he’s quick to add that as a young woman Ravitch didn’t have an easy time “stepping into the old boys’ network that ran the criminal justice system in the county.”

Ravitch is Sonoma County’s first woman DA. Unlike young, feisty DAs around the country, she has not gone out of her way to redress inequalities in the criminal justice system based on class and race. She didn’t lobby for the legalization of cannabis or take part in the movement to reform California’s marijuana laws. Some DAs did.

Threet says that Ravitch’s story is “complicated.” She brought criminal assault charges against a police officer, but the jury declined to find him guilty.

Veteran defense lawyer Chris Andrian says, “The cultural divide in the county makes it hard to convict cops.” He adds, “Sometimes I kicked the DA’s butt and sometimes I had my butt kicked.”

When Ravitch retires, the cannabis industry won’t shed tears. Neither will friends and family members of Andy Lopez, the 13-year-old shot and killed by deputy Erick Gelhaus on October 23, 2013, whose ghost still haunts Santa Rosa’s streets.

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

Oh Captain, My Captain: Cloverdale Performing Arts Center Shares Online Poetry Series with the North Bay

When the Covid-19 pandemic forced North Bay theater companies to shutter their stage productions in March, many theaters took to the Internet to continue their work.

Some have taken to Zoom for live-streaming presentations of their productions, others are putting up videos of past productions for viewing.

The Cloverdale Performing Arts Center is taking a new route for their stay-at-home plans by undertaking a series of social media-based entertainment programs like the center’s online Dead Poets Society, led by Cloverdale native and CPAC resident director Amy Lovato.

“When the theatre shut down, I reached out to the board and Artistic Director Yavé Guzmán, to see what the future held,” Lovato says. “It was hard to hear that the theatre may not survive the shutdown due to cancelled performances and no known date to re-open.”

Lovato teamed up with fellow CPAC director and actor Alessandra Ziviani to think about how they could produce a form of programming for patrons and the North Bay community that would also benefit the performing arts center.

With the board’s encouragement, they went forward with three social media campaigns; “Make-Up Mondays”, which provides theatrical make-up tutorials; “FlashBack Fridays” where the performing arts center posts photos, videos or slideshows of productions from the past and the new Dead Poets Society.

“As far as CPAC’s Dead Poets Society is concerned, we wanted there to be an outlet for the community to express themselves during this time, and poetry is such a versatile piece of art,” Lovato says. “It can be read, performed and interpreted in so many ways. Poetry is also a wonderful form of self-expression, which gives people a way to release pent-up emotions in a creative way; especially during shelter in place, when emotions are running high.”

Already, the poetry series has uploaded dozens of videos on YouTube, where poets and non-poets alike. Participants can recite their own words, or –if they can’t find the words themselves, or aren’t interested in writing their own poetry– participants can choose one of the many poetic works that can be found within the public domain; which is what led Lovato to the name “Dead Poets Society.” Poetry that is not within the public domain is also able to be performed under the principle of fair use.

“Social media is an open platform for sharing creativity and self-expression and the easiest way to reach the community during a shutdown,” Lovato says. “Kim Ziviani, a former CPAC board member, aptly nicknamed our Dead Poets Society artists ‘The Pandemic Players,’ which I thought was appropriate. But, CPAC’s Dead Poets Society is a way for everyone to engage as much or as little as they want.”

Anyone in the community can send Lovato and CPAC any poetry that they would like to see read, or they can participate by sending CPAC their own poetry videos and “check in” at CPAC when they post to Facebook or Instagram. The society encourages participants to base their poems on the weekly themes that the society takes on, with recent themes concerning injustice, love and nature. Those who simply want to watch the poetry videos can easily find them on CPAC’s Youtube, and the other social media programs can also be found on the center’s Facebook page.

The community artists that have lent their talents on camera include Lovato and Ziviani as well as Beulah Vega, Arte L Whyte, Jonathan Graham, Christopher Johnston, William B Thompson, Karen Lovato, Caitlin Morrison, Dan Stryker, Nichole Phillips, Dawn Gibson, Marisha Zeffer, Emily Stryker, Joe Dobbins, Guy Conner, Seana Maclure, Ashlyn Delfino, Tania Richardson, Dobie Edmonds, Jude Gibson, Angela Squire, José Esparza, Domenic Bianco, Bob Williams, Linda Hughes Freeth, Sarah Bird, and Scarlett Johnston, Jessika Ceniceros and Kim Ziviani.

“We welcome feedback and invite the community to share their ideas for themes for upcoming weeks,” Lovato says. “When we started we had no idea how long we’d be putting these things together, so it’s definitely a work in progress. We’ve adjusted our schedule a few times, and will continue to do so. We love to see how people interpret the theme each week!”

Lovato adds that the video series’ ultimate goal is to create a continued collaboration with the community, partially to stay relevant during the theatre’s closure, but mostly to give an outlet to those that may want or need one during this time.

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Streaming Beethoven: North Bay Chamber Musicians Take to the Internet

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Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1856) was one of the most famous and revered composers of his time, and he’s remained one of the most popular figures in classical music for more than two centuries, so it’s safe to assume he knew his works would be performed long after his death.

Yet, there’s no way he could have predicted that those concerts would come via radio and television broadcasts as well as Internet streaming. Though that’s exactly what is happening this summer, as the Valley of the Moon Music Festival becomes the latest North Bay event to move online for 2020 in the wake of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.

Based in the heart of Sonoma Valley, the historically accurate chamber music organization originally planned an ambitious 2020 program centered around Beethoven’s influence on chamber music. That program has been delayed to summer of 2021, and in its place, the festival will present an equally ambitious virtual schedule of concerts that will focus on Beethoven’s many smaller works.

First, Valley of the Moon Music Festival co-founder and musician Eric Zivian performs a series of weekly solo concerts that will be broadcast on local radio and television before they are available to stream on the festival’s website.

That series begins this Saturday, June 13, and runs through the calendar year. Given that 2020 is the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth, Zivian will perform the complete cycle of Beethoven’s 32 sonatas for piano.

“Were it not for the shelter-in-place order, this is a project I would never have had time to take on,” says Zivian. “As a feat of endurance, it’s a challenge not unlike hiking the full length of the Pacific Crest Trail. It’s also a wonderful opportunity to explore the full range of Beethoven’s style, and the emotion, humor and spirituality of these treasures.”

Zivian specializes in playing the fortepiano, an early version of the piano that dates between the late 18th to early-19th century and which was heavily used by composers like Haydn, Mozart, and the younger Beethoven, who wrote his piano sonatas on the instrument.

Over the course of the 2020 sonata cycle, Zivian will use two different Viennese fortepianos corresponding with the instrument’s changing sound during Beethoven’s lifetime. Zivian will use a smaller Paul Poletti-made copy of a 1795 fortepiano for the earlier sonatas and an original 1841 Rausch-made fortepiano for the later sonatas.

Every Saturday, the concerts will broadcast on KSVY 91.3 FM radio at 11am and Sonoma Valley Television, SVTV 27, at 6pm, and the performances will also be available for streaming free of charge on the Valley of the Moon Music Festival website for a week after each broadcast.

Bay Area musicians and scholars from the festival’s Blattner Lecture Series will introduce each sonata and provide commentary, with speakers including Nicholas Mathew, author of Political Beethoven and associate professor in the Department of Music at UC Berkeley; Nicholas McGegan, former artistic director at Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra; and Kate van Orden, Harvard University’s Dwight P. Robinson, Jr. Professor of Music. Members of the festival’s “Virtual Beethoven Society” can also get early access to each new installment with weekly live-streams of Zivian’s performances on Wednesdays.

In addition to the year-long weekly cycle of Beethoven’s piano sonatas, Valley of the Moon Music Festival hosts a Virtual Beethoven Festival, running online July 18 – August 2, with concerts exploring the composer’s various chamber works and featuring performers including Zivian alongside fellow festival co-founding director and cellist Tanya Tomkins, violinist Francisco Fullana, viola player Liana Bérubé, fellow fortepiano player Audrey Vardanega and soprano vocalist Maya Kherani.

The Virtual Beethoven Festival will live-stream a new concert each Saturday and Sunday from July 18 – August 2 at 4pm. All programs are entirely free to the public. A suggested donation of $10 will go directly to supporting the festival’s artists and staff.

The complete Valley of the Moon Music Festival virtual program and more information can be found at valleyofthemoonmusicfestival.org.

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Streaming Beethoven: North Bay Chamber Musicians Take to the Internet

Valley of the Moon Music Festival opens a stay-at-home season of concerts on June 13.
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