Heavenly Sounds

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Since moving to the North Bay from Austin, Texas, over a decade ago, guitarist and songwriter Danny Click has made a name in the local scene with his outfit, Danny Click & the Hell Yeahs! delivering a sizzling countrified Americana that’s garnered them accolades in the Bay Area and beyond.

“People must like what we’re doing,” says Click. “It’s nice to have people come to shows.” A while back, he says, someone likened their shows to going to church, “so I started calling it the electric church.”

This month, Click unplugs and shows off a different side of his music when he unveils a new live album,

Dannny Click & the Americana Orchestra: Live at 142, featuring a string quartet backing his band in an all-acoustic recording.

“I always wanted to play with a string quartet,” Click says. “I wanted to do something different than what we usually do.”

The album was recorded nearly four years ago at Mill Valley’s Throckmorton Theatre, though the project took a backseat when Click had the opportunity to work with legendary producer Jim Scott (Tom Petty, the Rolling Stones, Wilco) to record a studio album.

“We said, ‘Stop the presses! We got the call from Jim and we have to go do this,'” says Click.

That recording became Holding Up the Sun, released in 2015 to universal acclaim. Click spent the next two years touring and playing in support of the album, almost forgetting about his Americana Orchestra until recently.

After finishing the mixing and mastering process last year, Click is ready to share the new live album when he performs a record-release show on May 4, back where it all began at Throckmorton Theatre in Mill Valley.

On the new album’s 10 live tracks and one bonus studio track, Click reworks some of his most popular tunes, like the Southern rocker “We Are the People” and the soulful “Life Is a Good Place.” He also adapts classics like Bob Dylan’s “Girl from the North Country” and Tom Petty’s “You and I Will Meet Again.”

Live at 142 has plenty of lush, beautifully melodic moments of music that may surprise Click’s fans. Even Click admits he got chills while playing with the string quartet.

“Having those intimate strings right there in my ear while I sang these songs almost choked me up,” he says. “It was kind of like being in heaven for a little bit.”

Way Out There

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Petaluma has it boutiques and pre-1907 earthquake architecture. Sonoma and Napa have wine stardom. Guerneville has the river and gay pride. Santa Rosa is the county seat, but has always fallen between the branding cracks. Out There Santa Rosa, a new website and an upcoming expo, are hoping to change that, one step at a time. Early this year, Facebook ads started popping on Bay Area residents’ screens, featuring a gritty, urban look and feel. “Out there. In the Middle of Everything” read the slogan on the adds, leading to a website where the city’s bike culture, music scene, food and art are showcased and profiles with prominent locals are displayed.

The media push has been leading up to the Santa Rosa Out There Exposition April 29 where the city aims to showcase its virtues. The Idea Cooperative, a boutique agency with branches in Petaluma and San Anselmo and Matt Sharkey, a Petaluma-based event marketing consultant who had previously worked with Levis, Cliff Bar are the brains behind the campaign. The Idea Cooperative, the city of Santa Rosa’s go-to for all things branding and marketing, teamed up with Sharkey in the hopes of diversifying Santa Rosa’s image and appeal, starting with a neighborhood focus—Railroad Square and Rosemont are first —and expanding to additional city corners later.

“We’re focusing on all of the makers and creative class that aren’t at the forefront of everybody’s mind,” says Sharkey. “Santa Rosa have always been known for its proximity to the wine making region, and now sadly it’s also knows for the recent fires, while the whole idea is to showcase the talented people who make up the culture of the city itself, to give a more robust look.”

Sharkey, who grew up in the South Bay and have lived in Sonoma and Marin for the past 20 years, remembers discovering the city’s skater community as early as the 90s and realizing that not many people outside of Santa Rosa are aware of it.

“Usually you’d have to talk to someone from the city specifically to know about its creative happenings,” he says, “and often even locals aren’t fully exposed to Santa Rosa’s vibrant arts community.”

The upcoming free expo will be located at Out of Order Warehouse, a regular host of graffiti and mural exhibits near Railroad Square and the Art Museums of Sonoma County. Inside, Justin Shaw of Faith Tattoo will offer free Santa Rosa-themes tattoos, and a screening of Rosa Park, a short documentary directed by Jon Lohne about the historic Santa Rosa Skatepark alongside an art exhibition by local artists. Outside, bike stores will offer repairs, brews from the likes of Plow and Moonlight will be poured and wines from wineries from Woodenhead, St. Francis and D’Argenzio Winery will be sipped to the sound of local bands like the The Easy Leaves, Lungs & Limbs and others.

All proceeds from wine and beer sales will go to the Lost Church, a local nonprofit experimental theater which is now seeking a permanent facility.

Sharkey says he’ll be thrilled with 500 guests but anything above 300 will do, especially if it’s a mix of local families who are curious to rediscover their community and San Francisco dwellers who, upon visiting, will hopefully decide to ditch the coast and the vineyards for a dose of Santa Rosa charm, at least occasionally. He thinks the city is ready: “My observation is that there’s been a lot effort put into reinvigorating the city in the last couple of years, to really make it a destination,” Sharkey says.

outtheresr.com

To Do List

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Before participating in the national school walkout against gun violence on Friday April 20, Credo High School students got a visit from Congressman Mike Thompson.

The moderate Democrat began his speech at the Rohnert Park school by stating, “I’m a gun owner. I believe in the 2nd Amendment.”
Although Thompson has been in the House since 1998—first for the 1st District and now for the reapportioned 5th District—it wasn’t until the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting in 2011 that gun violence became the target for his advocacy.

“I was duck hunting in Sacramento when my phone buzzed with the news. Nancy [Pelosi] and I talked and decided to start the task force on gun violence protection.”

Since then, he has served as the Chairman of the House Gun Violence Prevention Task Force. Here, Congressman Thompson and his colleagues focus on writing policy that has both the biggest effect on citizen safety and the highest chances of being passed in the deeply partisan House. For example, he said, there is not currently enough Republican support in Congress to ban military assault weapons. He himself has opposed any attempt to limit civilian access to high-capacity rifles such as the AR-15.

Thompson went on to cite what he believes is the most effective form of gun control: background checks. One of his current bills on this has over 200 co-sponsors—a personal high for Thompson—but only 12 are Republicans. If the Democrats win control of the house this November, he promised that this bill would be one of the first up for a vote.

When asked if guns really did help with self-defense, he suggested, “Leave criminals to the police, they’ve undergone extensive fire arm training.”

For this same reason, the Congressman said to great applause from Credo students and faculty alike that “teachers should educate you not spend hours practicing at the shooting range.”

Since nearly all Credo students are constituents of either Thompson or of Congressman Jared Huffman, both of whom are advocates for gun control reform, he advised Credo students who are fed up with the current situation to write fellow high school students in Republican districts to also demand action from their representatives.

“The NRA pales in comparison to all y’all student leaders and the work you’re going to do,” he said. “It’s always the young people who change this country.”

April 27: Landmark Film in Larkspur

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Based on the bestselling novel by Kent Nerburn, last year’s indie film ‘Neither Wolf Nor Dog’ takes audiences on an eye-opening road trip through Lakota life and culture. The film stars elder Dave Bald Eagle (once called “the world’s most interesting man” by NPR), who was 95 years old during filming but died before its release. After playing at dozens of cinemas for the past year, Neither Wolf Nor Dog debuts in Marin with a weekend of screenings starting Friday, April 27, at Lark Theater, 549 Magnolia Ave., Larkspur. Friday, 6:30pm; Saturday, 3:45pm; Sunday, 10:30am. $8–$11. 415.924.5111.

April 27: Free Range Folk in Sebastopol

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Sonoma County folk outfit the Musers are new to the scene as a trio, though the members are all North Bay musical veterans. Songwriters, vocalists and multi-instrumentalists Megan McLaughlin (Cularan) and Anita Sandwina (Spark & Whisper), along with standup bassist Tom Kuhn, share a tight musical connection on their upbeat acoustic originals, which can be heard on the group’s debut CD. It’s available this weekend when the Musers perform an album-release show alongside fellow folk outfit the Farallons on Friday, April 27, at the Sebastopol Community Center Annex, 425 Morris St., Sebastopol. 8pm. $10. 707.823.1511.

April 28: Local Fling in Guerneville

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Nearly two dozen local culinary purveyors get a chance to rub elbows at the Russian River Food & Wine Spring Fling this weekend. Stations of food and wine from the likes of Sonoma Coast-based Flowers Vineyards & Winery and local oyster bar Seaside Metal will line the street, and highlights include bites by noted Guerneville chef Crista Luedtke, owner of Boon restaurant, book signings by Sonoma County chef, cooking instructor and cookbook author Michele Anna Jordan and live music by West County favorites THUGZ. Enjoy the fling on Saturday, April 28, on Main Street in downtown Guerneville. 1–4pm. $30–$50 and up. russianriver.com.

April 28: Pure Art in Healdsburg

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With an emphasis on emotional expression over figurative representation, abstract art is a long-evolving movement that is increasingly finding a global audience. This week, Sonoma County gets a major dose of today’s hottest artists in the field when ‘Purely Abstract: Visions in Line, Form and Color’ opens in Healdsburg. Artist Jerrold Ballaine and art historian Satri Pencak juried the show, featuring works from over 50 artists, including locals like Sonoma’s Shotsie Gorman and Santa Rosa’s Max DuBois. The exhibit opens with a reception on Saturday, April 28, at the Healdsburg Center for the Arts, 130 Plaza St., Healdsburg. 5pm. Free admission. 707.431.1970.

Power Politics

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As he sets out to rebuild the North Bay after the October wildfires, Sonoma County developer, newspaper investor and regional Democratic Party power broker Darius Anderson is now lobbying in Sacramento on behalf of Pacific Gas & Electric interests.

According to the California Secretary of State, Anderson’s lobbying firm, Platinum Advisors, was hired by the utility on
March 28—just as a Senate bill that’s targeted at PG&E’s fire liability was scheduled to make its way through the committee process. Co-sponsored by North Bay pols Bill Dodd and Mike McGuire, SB 819 sets out to limit the extent to which electric utilities can pass off legal fees and fines to ratepayers.

If signed into law, SB 819 would enhance the state’s current ability to regulate rate hikes; California law already gives the state Public Utilities Commission leverage to “fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable.”

The current regulations prohibit gas corporations from “recovering any fine or penalty in any rate approved by the commission,” and SB 819 extends the prohibition to investor-owned gas and electric corporations such as San Francisco–based PG&E, which provides power to some
16 million California residents and is the dominant investor-owned utility in the state.

Senate Bill 819 would seem designed to head off the utility’s attempt to convince Sacramento regulators and lawmakers that fallout from the “new normal” of climate change and wildfires shouldn’t fall on the utility, even if its equipment is determined to be a culprit. Two state agencies are investigating the historic blaze that swept through the region last October, and no final official determination has been made about PG&E’s ultimate responsibility for the fires.

Sacramento-based PG&E spokesperson Lynsey Paulo says that “PG&E has not taken a position on Senate Bill 819. We’re committed to working with the state to build resiliency into our infrastructure, as we collectively confront the escalating pace and intensity of catastrophic events brought on by climate change. We ask the legislature to take a more holistic view in dealing with this new normal of extreme weather events driven by climate change.”

The bill unanimously passed the Senate’s Energy, Utilities and Communications committee last week and was headed for another hearing with the Judiciary Committee this week. Sen. McGuire is a member of the former committee. His office did not respond to a request for comment on Platinum Advisors or Anderson’s new role lobbying for PG&E. Like many elected California officials, McGuire has been a recipient of PG&E campaign funds.

The bill was introduced on
Jan. 3, and the Senate set last week’s hearing date on March 12. Platinum Advisors was hired by PG&E about two weeks later, but the company won’t say for how much or for how long. “Like many individuals and businesses, PG&E participates in the political process,” says Paulo. “PG&E holds itself to the highest standards of public disclosure and compliance with applicable laws and regulations.”

Platinum Advisors was founded by Anderson, a Sonoma resident who is also a principal investor at the Sonoma Media Group, which owns the Press Democrat and several other publications around the region.

He’s also the founder of the Rebuild Northbay Foundation, a nonprofit he created after the fires. It is registered as both a 501(c)3 and 501(c)4, which means that Rebuild Northbay can act as a charitable nonprofit organization and as a lobbying group. The 501(c)(4) designation is for “social welfare organizations,” which can endorse political candidates; 501(c)(3) nonprofits are restricted from influencing legislation and can’t participate in campaign activities for or against candidates.

The Rebuild Northbay Foundation’s board members include Steven Malnight, currently a senior vice president at PG&E. According to the Rebuild website, Malnight until recently served as PG&E’s senior vice president for regulatory affairs, “where he oversaw PG&E’s regulatory policy efforts at the national and state levels, including interactions with the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC).”

Paulo did not respond to a follow-up email inquiring about Malnight’s role as a PG&E employee who is also a board member at Rebuild Northbay.

The utility has come under intense scrutiny following the wildfires last fall, as state investigators set out to determine what caused the fires that destroyed nearly 9,000 homes and buildings, killed more than 40 people and prompted hundreds of lawsuits against the utility—including a suit by Sonoma County itself. At last count, Sonoma County faced a $2.2 million budget deficit because of the fires, and sued PG&E in February. County Counsel Bruce Goldstein told the Press Democrat that the county hoped to recover between $9 million and $25 million in county funds spent on the cleanup and overtime pay.

As he announced the lawsuit against PG&E in early February, James Gore, chairman of the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors, told the San Francisco Chronicle that the county sued the company with reluctance, and that PG&E were “great partners” for the county. Gore’s wife, Elizabeth, is chair of the Rebuild Northbay Foundation, whose founder is now lobbying for PG&E’s interests in Sacramento. James Gore did not return a call for comment.

Noreen Evans, the Santa Rosa lawyer who lost to the Anderson-backed Lynda Hopkins in the 2016 5th district Sonoma County supervisors race, apparently doesn’t see much in the way of a “good partner” in PG&E. Responding to PG&E’s mid-March superior court pushback to fire-related lawsuits, she told the Press Democrat that “PG&E wants to increase your utility bill to pay for burning your home.” Evans is representing local plaintiffs who are suing the utility.

Anderson’s new deal with PG&E comes as the developer has for-profit business before Sonoma County this week through his firm Kenwood Investments. The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors was set to vote Tuesday on Anderson’s plan to build out his Wing & Barrel Ranch, an upper-crust shooting club in the Sonoma baylands whose splashy plans come complete with a restaurant, a fishing pond, an 18,000-square-foot clubhouse, and a new 85-foot tower nestled among a hay field dotted with 250-foot PG&E towers.

As part of an agreement with the county, Kenwood Investments agreed to knock one story off the proposed three-story clubhouse, set aside a couple days a week for hunters of lesser means and cap club membership at 500, including 25 corporate memberships of three-persons each. The proposal was conditionally approved in 2012.

According to Wing & Barrel promotional materials, those memberships are $75,000 a year for individuals, and $145,000 for corporations to enjoy the Charlie Palmer menu and premium cigars. Anderson did not respond to an email seeking comment, and a call to Platinum Advisors was not returned.

Does PG&E plan to purchase a corporate membership at Anderson’s new venture? Has Wing & Barrel sent its marketing materials to the company’s investors? Paulo did not respond to a follow-up inquiry which sought to answer these questions.

The North Bay fires caused an estimated $9 billion in insured damage, and many residents hold the utility directly responsible for their losses. Numerous press reports have noted that PG&E carries about $800 million in liability insurance. The upshot is that the investor-owned utility may be facing one of the more severe existential crises in its hundred-plus-year history, and issued a statement in January which, even as it didn’t oppose it, argued that SB 819 could not have come at a worse time for the utility or its ratepayers—given its commitment to participating in the state’s climate-change reduction strategies.

Since the fires, PG&E has embarked on a vigorous public-relations campaign to assure ratepayers that it’s on top of its responsibilities to clear vegetation from around power lines. Some suspect the fires began with sparks from wind-whipped power lines that ignited nearby trees.

The utility participates in the region’s clean power initiative (Sonoma Clean Power) and has extensive ties in the county, some of which are reflected through its community investment program. In 2015, for example, the utility donated $2,500 to the nonprofit Children’s Museum of Sonoma County; it also displayed a hydroelectric model in the facility as the museum was getting off the ground. Leslie Horak, one of the founding members of the museum, works as a communications specialist with PG&E and manages its college-scholarship program. The museum was not damaged by the October wildfires.

As wildfire suits mounted late last year, PG&E put the heavyweight Sacramento lobbying group Capitol Advocacy on its payroll as of Jan. 1 of this year. It added more lobbying firepower with the addition of Platinum Advisors about three months later.

Just days after it hired Capitol Advocacy, on Jan. 4, local news outlets reported that Petaluma resident Katie Kerns Davis was promoted to chief of staff for PG&E chief operating officer Geisha Williams. Davis is a former head of the Petaluma Chamber of Commerce, and her husband, Mike Kerns, is a former Sonoma County Supervisor; her corporate bio notes that in her nine years at PG&E, she had recently “taken part in company-wide initiatives on corporate strategy and the strategic response to last fall’s Northern California wildfires.”

That strategy appears to be: hold the line at any attempt to hold the company liable for damages in the fires; enhance local partnerships with deep-pocket developers; and serve the interests of investors in the process. At the time of the fires, PG&E shares were trading for about $70; by early February,
the stock had bottomed out at $38 a share, and has slowly crept back to $45 a share as of late April. The company reported $17.14 billion in revenue in 2017 and announced late last year that it would suspend dividend payouts to investors in 2018, given the uncertainty over its liability for the fires.

By the middle of March, the utility had taken its case to court and submitted multiple findings in state superior court pushing back against the mounting lawsuits.

At issue for PG&E is the principle of “inverse condemnation,” whereby California says the utility can be held liable for damages from a wildfire, as PG&E argued in a press release on Jan. 3, “even if the utility has followed established inspection and safety rules.” The utility had been negotiating with the state Public Utilities Commission over extant regulations right up until the fires broke out in early October. The commission has historically been taken to task for its too-cozy relationship with the utility and its Wall Street backers, but did announce after the fires that it was launching an investigation of its own and told the utility to preserve all its emails and documents.

Power Politics

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As he sets out to rebuild the North Bay after the October wildfires, Sonoma County developer, newspaper investor and regional Democratic Party power broker Darius Anderson is now lobbying in Sacramento on behalf of Pacific Gas & Electric interests.

According to the California Secretary of State, Anderson’s lobbying firm, Platinum Advisors, was hired by the utility on
March 28—just as a Senate bill that’s targeted at PG&E’s fire liability was scheduled to make its way through the committee process. Co-sponsored by North Bay pols Bill Dodd and Mike McGuire, SB 819 sets out to limit the extent to which electric utilities can pass off legal fees and fines to ratepayers.

If signed into law, SB 819 would enhance the state’s current ability to regulate rate hikes; California law already gives the state Public Utilities Commission leverage to “fix the rates and charges for every public utility and requires that those rates and charges be just and reasonable.”

The current regulations prohibit gas corporations from “recovering any fine or penalty in any rate approved by the commission,” and SB 819 extends the prohibition to investor-owned gas and electric corporations such as San Francisco–based PG&E, which provides power to some 16 million California residents and is the dominant investor-owned utility in the state.

Senate Bill 819 would seem designed to head off the utility’s attempt to convince Sacramento regulators and lawmakers that fallout from the “new normal” of climate change and wildfires shouldn’t fall on the utility, even if its equipment is determined to be a culprit. Two state agencies are investigating the historic blaze that swept through the region last October, and no final official determination has been made about PG&E’s ultimate responsibility for the fires.

Sacramento-based PG&E spokesperson Lynsey Paulo says that “PG&E has not taken a position on Senate Bill 819. We’re committed to working with the state to build resiliency into our infrastructure, as we collectively confront the escalating pace and intensity of catastrophic events brought on by climate change. We ask the legislature to take a more holistic view in dealing with this new normal of extreme weather events driven by climate change.”

The bill unanimously passed the Senate’s Energy, Utilities and Communications committee last week and was headed for another hearing with the Judiciary Committee this week. Sen. McGuire is a member of the former committee. His office did not respond to a request for comment on Platinum Advisors or Anderson’s new role lobbying for PG&E. Like many elected California officials, McGuire has been a recipient of PG&E campaign funds.

The bill was introduced on Jan. 3, and the Senate set last week’s hearing date on March 12. Platinum Advisors was hired by PG&E about two weeks later, but the company won’t say for how much or for how long. “Like many individuals and businesses, PG&E participates in the political process,” says Paulo. “PG&E holds itself to the highest standards of public disclosure and compliance with applicable laws and regulations.”

Platinum Advisors was founded by Anderson, a Sonoma resident who is also a principal investor at the Sonoma Media Group, which owns the Press Democrat and several other publications around the region.

He’s also the founder of the Rebuild Northbay Foundation, a nonprofit he created after the fires. It is registered as both a 501(c)3 and 501(c)4, which means that Rebuild Northbay can act as a charitable nonprofit organization and as a lobbying group. The 501(c)(4) designation is for “social welfare organizations,” which can endorse political candidates; 501(c)(3) nonprofits are restricted from influencing legislation and can’t participate in campaign activities for or against candidates.

The Rebuild Northbay Foundation’s board members include Steven Malnight, currently a senior vice president at PG&E. According to the Rebuild website, Malnight until recently served as PG&E’s senior vice president for regulatory affairs, “where he oversaw PG&E’s regulatory policy efforts at the national and state levels, including interactions with the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC).”
Paulo did not respond to a follow-up email inquiring about Malnight’s role as a PG&E employee who is also a board member at Rebuild Northbay.

The utility has come under intense scrutiny following the wildfires last fall, as state investigators set out to determine what caused the fires that destroyed nearly 9,000 homes and buildings, killed more than 40 people and prompted hundreds of lawsuits against the utility—including a suit by Sonoma County itself. At last count, Sonoma County faced a $2.2 million budget deficit because of the fires, and sued PG&E in February. County Counsel Bruce Goldstein told the Press Democrat that the county hoped to recover between $9 million and $25 million in county funds spent on the cleanup and overtime pay.

As he announced the lawsuit against PG&E in early February, James Gore, chairman of the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors, told the San Francisco Chronicle that the county sued the company with reluctance, and that PG&E were “great partners” for the county. Gore’s wife, Elizabeth, is chair of the Rebuild Northbay Foundation, whose founder is now lobbying for PG&E’s interests in Sacramento. James Gore did not return a call for comment.

Noreen Evans, the Santa Rosa lawyer who lost to the Press Democrat–endorsed Lynda Hopkins in the 2016 5th district Sonoma County supervisors race, apparently doesn’t see much in the way of a “good partner” in PG&E. Responding to PG&E’s mid-March superior court pushback to fire-related lawsuits, she told the Press Democrat that “PG&E wants to increase your utility bill to pay for burning your home.” Evans is representing local plaintiffs who are suing the utility.

Anderson’s new deal with PG&E comes as the developer has for-profit business before Sonoma County this week through his firm Kenwood Investments. Tuesday the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors approved Anderson’s plan to build out his Wing & Barrel Ranch, an upper-crust shooting club in the Sonoma baylands whose splashy plans come complete with a restaurant, a fishing pond, an 18,000-square-foot clubhouse, and a new 85-foot shooting tower nestled among a field dotted with 250-foot PG&E towers.

As part of an agreement with the county, Kenwood Investments agreed to knock one story off the proposed three-story clubhouse, set aside a couple days a week for hunters of lesser means and cap club membership at 500, including 25 corporate memberships of three-persons each. The proposal was conditionally approved in 2012.
According to Wing & Barrel promotional materials, those memberships are $75,000 a year for individuals, and $145,000 for corporations to enjoy the Charlie Palmer menu and premium cigars. Anderson did not respond to an email seeking comment, and a call to Platinum Advisors was not returned.

Does PG&E plan to purchase a corporate membership at Anderson’s new venture? Has Wing & Barrel sent its marketing materials to the company’s investors? Paulo did not respond to a follow-up inquiry which sought to answer these questions.

The North Bay fires caused an estimated $9 billion in insured damage, and many residents hold the utility directly responsible for their losses. Numerous press reports have noted that PG&E carries about $800 million in liability insurance. The upshot is that the investor-owned utility may be facing one of the more severe existential crises in its hundred-plus-year history, and issued a statement in January which, even as it didn’t oppose it, argued that SB 819 could not have come at a worse time for the utility or its ratepayers—given its commitment to participating in the state’s climate-change reduction strategies.

Since the fires, PG&E has embarked on a vigorous public-relations campaign to assure ratepayers that it’s on top of its responsibilities to clear vegetation from around power lines. Some suspect the fires began with sparks from wind-whipped power lines that ignited nearby trees.

The utility participates in the region’s clean power initiative (Sonoma Clean Power) and has extensive ties in the county, some of which are reflected through its community investment program. In 2015, for example, the utility donated $2,500 to the nonprofit Children’s Museum of Sonoma County; it also displayed a hydroelectric model in the facility as the museum was getting off the ground. Leslie Horak, one of the founding members of the museum, works as a communications specialist with PG&E and manages its college-scholarship program. The museum was not damaged by the October wildfires.

As wildfire suits mounted late last year, PG&E put the heavyweight Sacramento lobbying group Capitol Advocacy on its payroll as of Jan. 1 of this year. It added more lobbying firepower with the addition of Platinum Advisors about three months later.

Just days after it hired Capitol Advocacy, on Jan. 4, local news outlets reported that Petaluma resident Katie Kerns Davis was promoted to chief of staff for PG&E chief operating officer Geisha Williams. Davis is a former head of the Petaluma Chamber of Commerce, and her father, Mike Kerns, is a former Sonoma County Supervisor; her corporate bio notes that in her nine years at PG&E, she had recently “taken part in company-wide initiatives on corporate strategy and the strategic response to last fall’s Northern California wildfires.”

That strategy appears to be: hold the line at any attempt to hold the company liable for damages in the fires; enhance local partnerships with deep-pocket developers; and serve the interests of investors in the process. At the time of the fires, PG&E shares were trading for about $70; by early February, the stock had bottomed out at $38 a share, and has slowly crept back to $45 a share as of late April. The company reported $17.14 billion in revenue in 2017 and announced late last year that it would suspend dividend payouts to investors in 2018, given the uncertainty over its liability for the fires.
By the middle of March, the utility had taken its case to court and submitted multiple findings in state superior court pushing back against the mounting lawsuits.

At issue for PG&E is the principle of “inverse condemnation,” whereby California says the utility can be held liable for damages from a wildfire, as PG&E argued in a press release on Jan. 3, “even if the utility has followed established inspection and safety rules.” The utility had been negotiating with the state Public Utilities Commission over extant regulations right up until the fires broke out in early October. The commission has historically been taken to task for its too-cozy relationship with the utility and its Wall Street backers, but did announce after the fires that it was launching an investigation of its own and told the utility to preserve all its emails and documents.

Correction and clarification: an earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Kerns’ husband is a former Sonoma Supervisor; Mike Kerns is her father. Also, an earlier version stated that Hopkins was backed by Anderson. She was backed by the Press Democrat, which is co-owned by Anderson.

On Strike

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‘Shut it down” became students’ rallying cry throughout the halls of academia and across the nation’s college and high school campuses during the late 1960s. The call and walkouts were in response to the Vietnam War and domestic injustices.

In the past month, we have seen the same strategy being employed not only by students, but by underpaid teachers in various parts of the United States. West Virginia teachers frustrated by low pay and poor working conditions took action and walked out, forcing its own union’s hand in what is called a “wildcat” strike. One month later they had won.

Now teachers in Oklahoma, Kentucky, Colorado and Arizona are picking up the torch of their West Virginia brethren. In Oklahoma, teachers might get up to a $40,000 yearly annual income after 10 years!

Many teachers not only work multiple jobs, before and after school, but often rely on social services and local food pantries to support their own families. Out-of-pocket and unreimbursed expenses for classroom supplies to enhance their students’ learning experiences is the norm in many parts of the country.

Those who chose to become teachers love and value children. They are a crucial, interdependent link in the process of instilling values, knowledge and a sense of community in young people.

There is a saying that goes, “My family has a good doctor and dentist we pay very well, a good lawyer we pay very well, a good accountant we pay very well, and my children have good teachers—and we really appreciate it!” Teachers deserve much more than our appreciation.

E.G. Singer lives in Santa Rosa.

Open Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Heavenly Sounds

Since moving to the North Bay from Austin, Texas, over a decade ago, guitarist and songwriter Danny Click has made a name in the local scene with his outfit, Danny Click & the Hell Yeahs! delivering a sizzling countrified Americana that's garnered them accolades in the Bay Area and beyond. "People must like what we're doing," says Click. "It's nice...

Way Out There

Petaluma has it boutiques and pre-1907 earthquake architecture. Sonoma and Napa have wine stardom. Guerneville has the river and gay pride. Santa Rosa is the county seat, but has always fallen between the branding cracks. Out There Santa Rosa, a new website and an upcoming expo, are hoping to change that, one step at a time. Early this year,...

To Do List

Before participating in the national school walkout against gun violence on Friday April 20, Credo High School students got a visit from Congressman Mike Thompson. The moderate Democrat began his speech at the Rohnert Park school by stating, “I’m a gun owner. I believe in the 2nd Amendment.” Although Thompson has been in the House since 1998—first for the...

April 27: Landmark Film in Larkspur

Based on the bestselling novel by Kent Nerburn, last year’s indie film ‘Neither Wolf Nor Dog’ takes audiences on an eye-opening road trip through Lakota life and culture. The film stars elder Dave Bald Eagle (once called “the world’s most interesting man” by NPR), who was 95 years old during filming but died before its release. After playing at...

April 27: Free Range Folk in Sebastopol

Sonoma County folk outfit the Musers are new to the scene as a trio, though the members are all North Bay musical veterans. Songwriters, vocalists and multi-instrumentalists Megan McLaughlin (Cularan) and Anita Sandwina (Spark & Whisper), along with standup bassist Tom Kuhn, share a tight musical connection on their upbeat acoustic originals, which can be heard on the group’s...

April 28: Local Fling in Guerneville

Nearly two dozen local culinary purveyors get a chance to rub elbows at the Russian River Food & Wine Spring Fling this weekend. Stations of food and wine from the likes of Sonoma Coast-based Flowers Vineyards & Winery and local oyster bar Seaside Metal will line the street, and highlights include bites by noted Guerneville chef Crista Luedtke, owner...

April 28: Pure Art in Healdsburg

With an emphasis on emotional expression over figurative representation, abstract art is a long-evolving movement that is increasingly finding a global audience. This week, Sonoma County gets a major dose of today’s hottest artists in the field when ‘Purely Abstract: Visions in Line, Form and Color’ opens in Healdsburg. Artist Jerrold Ballaine and art historian Satri Pencak juried the...

Power Politics

As he sets out to rebuild the North Bay after the October wildfires, Sonoma County developer, newspaper investor and regional Democratic Party power broker Darius Anderson is now lobbying in Sacramento on behalf of Pacific Gas & Electric interests. According to the California Secretary of State, Anderson's lobbying firm, Platinum Advisors, was hired by the utility on March 28—just as...

Power Politics

As he sets out to rebuild the North Bay after the October wildfires, Sonoma County developer, newspaper investor and regional Democratic Party power broker Darius Anderson is now lobbying in Sacramento on behalf of Pacific Gas & Electric interests. According to the California Secretary of State, Anderson’s lobbying firm, Platinum Advisors, was hired by the utility on March 28—just as...

On Strike

'Shut it down" became students' rallying cry throughout the halls of academia and across the nation's college and high school campuses during the late 1960s. The call and walkouts were in response to the Vietnam War and domestic injustices. In the past month, we have seen the same strategy being employed not only by students, but by underpaid teachers in...
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