Arts Hub

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Santa Rosa art lovers love the city’s South of A Street Arts District (SOFA) that’s nestled northeast of the Highway 101 and 12 interchange, and which houses an eclectic amalgamation of art galleries, studios, performance spaces and shops.

At the heart of the district is the spacious Chroma Gallery, established in 2014 by artist and Village Art Supply founder and former owner Simmon Factor. “I decided to form a gallery because there wasn’t anything like what I envisioned happening in Santa Rosa,” says Factor. With Chroma Gallery, Factor has curated some 35–40 group art exhibits featuring local talents, offered classes and hosted concerts both in the gallery space and outside during SOFA’s monthly First Friday Open Studios events. “We’ve served a real function in the community,” he says.

While Factor has long been immersed in the community as an artist, instructor, curator and gallery owner, his vision is larger than that. This year it comes to fruition when the Chroma Gallery transitions into the Santa Rosa Arts Center, acting as a resource for art, music, film and literary shows, lectures, classes and more.

“I’m at the point where I wanted to pull back a little on managing the art gallery, and I discovered that by getting a fiscal sponsorship we could get nonprofit status,” says Factor. In September, Factor received sponsorship from Santa Rosa–based Inquiring Systems Incorporated and officially formed the Santa Rosa Arts Center as a nonprofit, one month before the fires.

While that disaster delayed
the Arts Center’s plan, it also re-committed Factor to the mission of enriching the community through the arts. Earlier this year, Santa Rosa Arts Center hosted its first show, “Healing by Art: After the Fires.”

“We were inspired to create an event for the community that we hoped would help in the healing process,” says Factor, who estimates that nearly a thousand people viewed the show. The center will host a second fire-related exhibit this summer, “Healing by Art: Landscape & Memories,” which Factor hopes will encourage the community to see the fires as a transformative tipping-point for the physical and cultural landscape of Santa Rosa. “We need to look back to look forward,” he says.

This week, Factor welcomes the community to the center with the inaugural “Santa Rosa Arts Center Members Show,” featuring works from several local artists. Membership to the center is open to all, and only requires a $30 (or more) donation. Workshops and events will, for the most part, be open to the public.

Factor says the venue will retain the name Chroma until next February when the Arts Center will officially take over the name on the building’s lease.

“Everybody knows the name ‘Chroma Gallery,'” he says. “Now we have to create the story of the Santa Rosa Arts Center. “

Villaraigosa, Pt. 2

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In a field with six major candidates for governor, Antonio Villaraigosa, who once served as the State Assembly speaker, is locked in a dead heat with Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, according to the most recent polls.

Last month we reported on his views around housing. We recently caught up with him for a second conversation, this time on immigration, healthcare and ethics.

Bohemian: If you were governor right now, how would you respond to Attorney General
Jeff Sessions’ lawsuit against California over its immigration policies?

Villaraigosa: I’d do what Gov. Brown did. I’d say that you’re not welcome in our state when you misrepresent what we’ve done in California. There’s nothing in the California Values Act that says if people commit violent crimes, they won’t go to jail. They will go to jail. They are going to jail.

The biggest reason [Sessions] came to California is, for almost a year now, he has been under almost a weekly assault from Donald Trump, criticizing how he’s carried out his duties as an attorney general. He’s struggling, fighting to keep his job, so he came here to California to curry favor with his boss.

You’ve advocated for creating a public option for healthcare. How is that better than trying to build a single-payer system from scratch?

First of all, I supported universal healthcare my entire life. SB 562 is legislation that essentially articulates the goals of a state-paid-for healthcare system that would end Medicare and Medi-Cal as we know it; eliminate all insurance-based healthcare plans, including Kaiser; require a federal waiver from Donald Trump, who wants to eviscerate the Affordable Care Act [ACA] and Medicaid; and cost at least $200 million, assuming you could suspend Proposition 98. And you’d have to suspend it each year, and you’d have to pay back to community colleges the money that would have gone to them. So it’s really a $400 million price tag. So I’ve asked Gavin Newsom, who’s tripled down on SB 562, to debate me on this issue.

The number one issue for the next government is to protect the ACA. In California, we need to do the following: one, restore the individual mandate at a state level; two, we need to focus on prevention to a much greater degree; three, we need to look at best practices here and around the country—Cleveland Clinic, Kaiser—where we can adopt cost-containment measures, to drive down the spiraling cost of healthcare. It’s not just a public option; it’s a public option, along with the exchange, along with what we currently have right now.

You paid fines in 2011 for ethics violations for accepting free tickets to high-profile events during your time as mayor. How can you convince voters that you have the ethical standards to be governor?

Before I was mayor, everybody on the powerful commissions—the airport commission, the port commission, the planning commission, community redevelopment—mayors used to put people in those positions that raised money for them. I signed an executive directive my first day in office prohibiting my appointees on any commission, including those powerful ones, from being able to raise money or contribute to the mayor.

What I was fined over was an issue that, prior to me, no one had ever been fined for, and I’ll tell you why. In my case, if I went to a game, a concert, and they gave me tickets, I would have to report them, and I always did. I was speaking at all these events. At every one of these events, I was speaking. Only once in a great while did I actually stay at those events.

Expunge

Unlike the office’s current occupant, each of the three candidates for Marin County District Attorney this year supports a push to proactively expunge old misdemeanor pot charges.

San Francisco District Attorney George Gascón said in December that he was moving to expunge thousands of cases in that city. Sonoma County District Attorney Jill Ravitch initially said that she wouldn’t be following Gascón’s lead, but reversed course. She is up for reelection this year in a county that has seen a rough rollout of Proposition 64, despite vast interest in cashing in on legalization.

In Marin County, which has not embraced legalization, outgoing DA Ed Berberian is under no such political pressure, and said last month that he didn’t have the staff to take on the expunging of cases. The candidates for his seat say they’ll find a way.

Anna Pletcher (pictured) views the expungement issue through the lens of a failed War on Drugs. She says she would move to expunge misdemeanor pot cases and take the extra step of bringing the process out into the community—specifically, the community of Marin City, whose population is roughly 40 percent African-American. “This is a racial-justice issue in my view,” says Pletcher, a former lawyer at the Department of Justice. Pletcher said she would “table” with the public defender in Marin City: “The purpose in proactively expunging the cases is this: to undo the damage done by the war on drugs.”

Lori Frugoli has worked at the Marin County District Attorney office for 27 years, and the deputy district attorney says that she,
too, favors proactively expunging low-level pot convictions. She emphasized that “I would want to carefully review the cases to ensure they did not involve firearms or sophisticated sales operations involving large quantities of cash or proceeds. Those cases would require more scrutiny.”

Frugoli says she would go to the county Board of Supervisors to make sure she had the staff as she noted that requests for expungement are piling up. “Our public defender’s office has a robust expungement program with dedicated staff who research cases and file expungements on a regular basis. Often, we are unable to keep up with the motions’ response dates due to the number of requests.”

A. J. Brady is also a currently serving assistant district attorney in the county, and says Proposition 64 provides an opportunity for DA’s to affirmatively call up data “rather than waiting for people to file petitions.” Brady noted that it would be easier to call up more recent cases, since the county has a mixed digital and analog system, and the digital system only goes back to the early 2000s. Anything before that, he said, exists as paper files and would require more labor and time to review. I couldn’t commit to something that would destroy our staffing, but we could make a spreadsheet. It’s the job of the Marin elected DA to do this.”

Enough!

In the movie Network, the prophetic newscaster says: “[You’ve] got to say, ‘I’m a human being, damn it! My life has value!’ . . . I want you to get up right now and go to the window . . . and yell, ‘I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take this anymore!'”

Here we are, 40 years after Network opened. Many of us are beyond mad, and beginning to say so. Women are speaking out about harassment. People of color are proclaiming that black lives matter. And teens are taking matters into their own hands, speaking out against gun violence and even running for office themselves.

Since the Parkland shooting, there have been half a dozen threats at local high schools, including my daughter’s. Today, she wondered if she should wear a certain pair of chic boots, worried that they were impractical from running away from a potential shooter. Our kids should not have to worry about such things! How do we engender a sense of trust in our children when the world is so obviously unsafe? How do we protect our community’s kids, still healing from the trauma of the wildfires?

It’s beyond time for commonsense gun laws, as well as stronger gun regulations, and perhaps a community buy-back program and a boycott of gun vendors.

In terms of the president’s idea to address mental-health issues, we can start by reinstating the law passed under President Obama making it harder for people with a history of instability to acquire firearms. We can put money into preventive treatment. We can teach our boys that it is manly to express a full range of emotion, not only anger and violence. We can provide mental health coverage as part of a universal health plan and engage in a public health campaign to de-stigmatize seeking treatment. We can adequately fund and staff mental-health institutions or even better, develop a system of safe places people can go to “cool off,” to work through issues of grief and trauma with compassionate healers, without being penalized for taking time off work, charged untenable costs or forced into warehouses to medicate rather than to truly heal.

If nothing else in these divided times, we all do share the same humanity and love for our children. So let’s collectively open the windows of our souls and call out: “We’re mad as hell, and we will not take it anymore!”

Alissa Hirshfeld-Flores, MFT, lives in Santa Rosa. Due to an editing error, Hirshfeld-Flores’ Open Mic last week was transposed with another column. Her correct column is above. The ‘Bohemian’ regrets the error.

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.

Letters to the Editor: January 31, 2017

Watching ‘Cops’

There’s nothing “out there in the middle of everything” about Cops (“‘Cops’ Under Fire,” March 28). This has got to be one of the dumbest stunts I’ve ever seen. I say ‘NO!’ to filming any episodes here in Sonoma County.

Via Bohemian.com

I say YES! Let people walk in their shoes for a day to get a little understanding of what they are up against.

Via Bohemian.com

So it’s rigged. Any deputy misconduct or unprofessionalism will not see the light of day: “The SCSO contract signed in March gives the sheriff’s office final say over what clips are used.”

Via Bohemian.com

Any blowback on local police agencies that might occur from authorizing Cops to film locally will be well deserved by any dunces who sign off on the deal. Cops is just another corporate-owned attempt to propagandize police work and to marginalize everyone else under fear of “the law.” Why doesn’t Cops instead visit Congress or the United States Capitol Police and get at the real story of this nation’s justice system, which has long since established a multi-tiered system of laws, enforcement actions, and justice that only serves the few at the expense of the many? Probably because no corporations would advertise on a network that might actually question our ignominiously unjust, failed legal system.

Let’s get rid of Cops and cops, the entire U.S. military, and then prosecute all the power-brokers who are the real criminals in this country and put them in the hole for the rest of their sick, twisted lives. True justice has yet to be served in the 241-plus years of this nation’s miserably distorted and corrupt history, so it’s about time for a paradigm shift.

Via Bohemian.com

Re: Districting

Gerrymandering election districts to favor downtown property owners and businesses is a cynical and deliberate ploy to weaken the “one person, one vote” basis for our local government. Making seven districts equal in population of registered voters and based on the “manmade breaks” of highways 101 and 12 are more fair and reasonable. Poor planning by downtown business owners and political power brokers in the past divided the city into four quadrants.

Now it’s time to let citizens have an equal voice in decision-making processes for a better future for all Santa Rosans, not just businessmen and property owners. There should only be one downtown district for the residents of the downtown area near the concrete plaza at Fourth Street and Mendocino Avenue. Six more districts, with three others on each side of 101, totaling seven voting districts, is a reasonable and helpful approach to better representation for Santa Rosa residents not connected to downtown power brokers.

Santa Rosa

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

About a Barn

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The funny thing about my visit to the La Crema tasting room at Saralee’s Vineyard is, I wouldn’t have been so critical upon reading their website description of the place afterward if I hadn’t already really enjoyed an informative tour there.

“The legacy of this historic barn continues as it is transformed into a multi-level tasting room for La Crema,” the technically accurate copy reads. What’s left out is what’s filled in on a tour of the “barn” and a bit of the 265-acre estate. Situated a few stone’s throws south of the La Crema winery, which has always been more of a workaday production facility than a winetasting destination, Saralee’s Vineyard was founded by Richard and Saralee Kunde in 1989—although in a mini-mural upstairs, they paid homage to earlier owners of the property. In 2012, they sold to Jackson Family Wines, which added their name to the fruit-crate roster.

The historic barn had already been transformed into a cozy, if expansive, house by the Kundes, who were beloved in Sonoma County for their philanthropy and entertaining across the decades. Richard, a member of the Sonoma Valley family of Kunde Winery, bought a small nursery called Sonoma Grapevines in the 1980s and became an influential supplier of quality vines for countless California vineyards.

Saralee McClelland Kunde grew up in the dairy country of Petaluma, and made that heritage part of her style by collecting numerous, often kitschy cow-related gifts that friends gave her over the years. To the credit of the staff at La Crema, they’ve not only preserved many details of the Kundes’ former residence, but put a few photos on display of how it was.

Now it’s a thoughtfully designed tasting room in the contemporary trend. Visitors are greeted at the front counter and directed to their appointment, or to a tasting room in the back that was the Kundes’ library. The estate wines definitely show their difference. The 2014 Saralee’s Vineyard Chardonnay ($45) invites a lemon meringue comparison to the rather wispy set of other Chards, and the 2014 Saralee’s Vineyard Pinot Noir ($55) murmurs about spicy, raspberry herbal tea, while the 2015 Russian River Valley Pinot Noir ($40) boasts, shyly, about vanilla, raspberry and cola.

The Jackson folks are more than eager to show off their Oregon acquisitions, so you’ll find plenty of offerings from up north. But the smoky and brooding 2015 Los Carneros Pinot Noir ($40), I’m told, won’t put off the occasional visitor who demands, “So where’s your Cab?”

La Crema Estate at Saralee’s Vineyard, 3575 Slusser Road, Windsor. Tasting fee, $15–30; tour, $65. 707.525.6200.

SCSO Spokesman Spencer Crum: I Never Praised Cops

Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Sgt. Spencer Crum says his comments in the Bohemian this week mischaracterized his views on Cops and that he never offered praise for the program.

His statement comes a day after the Bohemian reported that the Santa Rosa Police Department had not signed off on a contract with the controversial reality show. The SCSO signed a contract with the Cops producers, Langley Productions, earlier this month and the program started filming last week in Sonoma County.

Crum was sent a set of questions about SCSO’s decision to sign a contract with the Cops producers earlier this week, and one asked whether the spokesman could provide SCSO’s view of the critique of Cops that was laid out in a recent Marshall Project report.

The criminal-justice investigative website called Cops the most polarizing reality show in America in a report that ran in January, the same month that Langley was emailing SCSO and SRPD to solicit interest in Cops.

The inquiry sent to Crum, and to SCSO public-affairs specialist Misti Harris, noted that the show had been dropped by Fox in 2013 over longstanding concerns about its racially-biased depiction of policing.

Crum didn’t address any of that. Instead, he sent the following response:

“COPS provides a platform to provide information to the public on the good work being done by Sonoma County deputies and the challenges they face on the streets.”

That sure sounds like praising a show instead of addressing legitimate questions about it.

In an email, Crum now says that “I was praising the good work of our deputies and only stating COPS provides a platform to show our good work. I wasn’t praising the television show and I think your article mischaracterized my statement. That’s all I wanted to point out. In none of my answers did I praise the show.“

‘Cops’ Under Fire

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As the Cops film crews roll with deputies from the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office (SCSO), there is growing pushback against the controversial reality TV show’s sudden arrival in the county last week—and questions about whether the Santa Rosa Police Department will ride along with the plan.

After an SCSO-led media push celebrated the show’s arrival last week, with multiple outbreaks of the show’s theme appearing in the Press Democrat and KSRO, local elected officials are now questioning the wisdom of allowing film crews into a region hammered by the October wildfires and continuing to deal with fallout from the shooting death of 13-year-old Andy Lopez in 2013. All of that, and it’s an election year, too, which will see the first contested sheriff’s race in more than two decades.

Sonoma County Supervisor Lynda Hopkins represents the part of the county where Lopez was shot by a deputy who remains on the force as a lawsuit against the SCSO and Sonoma County drags on. She wonders if Cops is in the best interest of her constituents.

“Given the heightened anxiety in our community in the wake of the fires, going through a sheriff’s candidacy and election process,” she says, “I would question anything that could disrupt the fragile peace that we have right now in general.”

It’s unknown at press time whether the Santa Rosa police will sign a contract with Langley Productions, the Santa Monica–based production company that produces Cops.

Santa Rosa Police Chief Hank Schreeder is meeting with Santa Rosa City Council members this week and taking the pulse of the community before he makes a decision, say city council members, the city manager’s office and a spokesman for the city police force.

“They are still in the planning phase as far as the contract
goes,” says Santa Rosa police
Lt. Rick Kohut. He says Schreeder might decide to pull the plug on Santa Rosa’s participation in the program. “I would say that it is a possibility,” Kohut says.

At issue is the content of the contract and the extent to which it gives the Santa Rosa Police Department (SRPD) latitude to participate in the editing of the show. The SCSO contract signed in March gives the sheriff’s office final say over what clips are used.

And, says Kohut, the chief is aware of the show’s controversial history of portraying policing in starkly “black-and-white” terms—often literally—and how such portrayals might be viewed as counterproductive to effective policing.

“We absolutely want to avoid that,” Kohut says.

POLARIZING TV

But can they? Even as Langley Productions was emailing the SRPD and SCSO to solicit their interest in participation in January, the Marshall Project criminal-justice organization produced an investigative feature on Cops that declared it the “most polarizing reality show in America.”

That’s a message city officials are hearing as they meet with Schreeder this week to figure out whether to sign on with Cops.

Cops follows a general formula that features an opening bit of action, some reflection in the police cruiser and more action to close out the episode.

The stock-in-trade of the long-running show is the foot chase. It makes for great television—but does it provide a fair depiction of the communities where Cops has filmed?

“Our city image has already been negatively impacted by the fires,” says Santa Rosa council member Julie Combs. “Tourism is already down. We don’t need an unearned and exaggerated portrayal of violent crime too. I’m not sure what the city is getting out of having such a polarizing program filmed here, especially since I don’t think the show is compensating the department, even though they are making money off of it.”

Law enforcements agencies receive no financial benefit from the show’s producers.

Santa Rosa Assistant City Manager Gloria Hurtado says the city is waiting on the chief’s recommendation before deciding how to proceed. His recommendation, she says, will “weigh heavily.”

“The chief is doing due diligence, asking for additional information and deciding whether this is the right thing to do at this time.”

ROCKY ROLLOUT

That’s not how the Cops producer envisioned the run-up to the show’s episodes set in Santa Rosa and Sonoma County. An email exchange between producer Zach Ragsdale and the show’s public relations firm the Lippin Group provides insight into what Cops‘ producers had hoped would happen.

The original plan was for the SRPD and SCSO to roll with the cameras at the same time. It’s unclear what would become of the sheriff’s office’s participation if the SRPD decides to pull the plug on Cops.

Cops has come under fire for its portrayals of racial basis. In 2013, the civil rights group Color of Change successfully pushed Fox to drop the program based on its claim of persistent racial bias. It’s now on the Paramount Network. The show has changed channels, but not its treatment of race, says Arisha Hatch, Color of Change’s managing director of campaigns. She ran the Fox campaign for Color of Change in 2013.

“Our concerns about the show then are the same as our concerns about the show now.”

Hatch says that she wouldn’t expect any episode of Cops filmed in Sonoma County to be an accurate portrayal of the criminal-justice system there, “because it’s just not set up that way. . . . It has been kind of a [public relations] machine for police departments across the country for several decades now.”

The Bohemian emailed questions to Langley Productions about racial bias, the status of the contract with SRPD and what role, if any, last year’s fires played in the selection of Sonoma County. An email exchange inadvertently sent to the Bohemian between Ragsdale, who signed the SCSO contract on behalf of Langley Productions and is the point person on a presumptive SRPD contract, and the show’s PR firm revealed some of the producers’ thinking.

[page]

“This is the first time filming with this agency [SRPD],” Ragsdale wrote to the Lippin Group. “We were supposed to start filming with them last week when we started with Sonoma County but the city was slow to get the agreement complete, so I pushed the start date for Santa Rosa PD to May. The agreement still isn’t done. I prefer to give this guy as little as possible.”

The fires? The fires, Ragsdale wrote, had nothing to do with the show’s decision to come to Sonoma County.

The persistent charges of racism raised by Color of Change? “You already know how to answer this one,” Ragsdale wrote to the PR firm. The answer: don’t answer it.

After the back-and-forth between Ragdsale and the Lippin Group, Langley Productions provided the following statement to the Bohemian: “We are looking forward to featuring the exceptional work the men and women of the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office do everyday in upcoming episodes of Cops.”

After learning about the mistakenly sent email, Cops‘ executive producer Morgan Langley weighed in: “The intent of Cops is to document the reality of policing on the ground as it happens. There is no intended bias in the show.”

ENTERTAINMENT OR REALITY?

Color of Change’s work on this issue hasn’t gone unnoticed by Santa Rosa officials. Less clear is whether anyone at SCSO is aware that Cops is considered by police-accountability advocates to be a highly problematic program.

“Studies have shown that this TV program portrays a disproportionate number of people of color than the actual percentage involved in crimes,” Combs says. “And it shows violent crimes disproportionately—and also underrepresents women and minorities on the police force itself. It also misrepresents effective police work. I think our city is better than this.”

The controversy over Cops now touches on who will be Sonoma County’s next sheriff and heightened scrutiny of law enforcement accountability following Lopez’s death and officer-involved shootings across the country.

Ernesto Olivares wears three hats in this debate as a member of the Santa Rosa City Council, a former city cop and a candidate for sheriff. He says that if it had been his decision to make, he would have said no to Cops.

“My historical perspective is that it hasn’t really provided any real public benefit,” he says as he emphasizes ongoing efforts at police accountability and transparency in the county.

Candidate John Mutz, a former Los Angeles police captain, says he could support Cops if it portrayed “honest transparency” in policing. At its best, he says the show portrays police officers on the beat doing a difficult job.

“People have to understand that it’s a show based on ratings and entertainment,” and that if it does reflect biases, “that is not acceptable. From my POV, as sheriff, I wouldn’t participate in that kind of viewpoint. In that case, this is more of the corporate-media coverage of crime. It is not helpful and is strictly entertainment.”

Mark Essick, the other candidate for sheriff, is currently on the SCSO force and did not respond to a request for comment.

Chief Schreeder’s due diligence is not the typical response of local law enforcement when contacted by Cops, says Hatch. In her study of the show, she has never seen a situation where “there is an effort to get community buy-in, and it’s part of the normal [public relations] machine that has been intentionally set up.”

“It might be rare, but it’s not rare in Santa Rosa,” says Olivares, who likens Schreeder’s effort to the city’s recent rollout of body-cameras. “When Schreeder introduced body cameras, he initiated input throughout the community to help shape the policy.”

Not so at SCSO, which did not reach out for community input before signing the contract with Cops on Feb. 7. The show’s producer told the sheriff’s office that SRPD would be participating.

Sheriff’s office spokesman
Sgt. Spencer Crum says SCSO had not consulted with SRPD “at all about their decision to be involved. Don’t know their decisions, other than a Cops producer told us they had agreed.”

Crum has praise for the show and did not address questions about bias.

Cops provides a platform to provide information to the public on the good work being done by Sonoma County deputies and the challenges they face on the streets,” Crum said in response to a set of emailed questions. “It’s also a chance to showcase how far along policing, training and community relations have come since Cops started filming 31 years ago.”

The SCSO’s work with Cops had nothing to do with ongoing fallout from the Lopez incident, says Crum, who adds that the sheriff’s office based its decision on input from the Stockton Police Department, where Cops recently filmed.

“The filming of Cops was widely accepted by the community, the elected leaders and their individual officers.”

Crum believes police-accountability groups would appreciate the sheriff’s office’s efforts to provide “better transparency on a local and a national level.”

Hatch, for one, does not.

“The show never tackles accountability,” says Hatch. “It paints a one-sided view of law enforcement. At its worst, Cops is very cheap to produce, and it’s a very dangerous television show,” she says, noting that police officers can and do perform for the cameras, as she highlights that there is no profit or benefit to the community. The profits go to the Paramount Network, “and those are the people who are profiteering off of the pain of the individuals and the community. There is nothing to gain for Sonoma in Cops coming to town.”

We’re Not Going to Take It

Due to an editing error, Alissa Hirshfeld-Flores’ Open Mic was transposed with another column. Her correct column is now below. The Bohemian regrets the error.

In the movie “Network,” the prophetic newscaster says: “[You’ve] got to say, ‘I’m a human being, damn it! My life has value!’…I want you to get up right now and go to the window…and yell, ‘I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take this anymore!’”

Here we are, 40 years after this movie opened. Many of us are beyond mad, and beginning to say so. Women are speaking out about harassment. People of color are proclaiming that black lives matter. And teens are taking matters into their own hands, speaking out against gun violence and even running for office themselves.

Since the Parkland shooting, there have been half a dozen threats at local high schools, including my daughter’s. Today, she asked if she should wear a certain pair of chic boots, worried that they were impractical from running away from a potential shooter. Our kids should not be having to worry about such things. How do we engender a sense of trust in our children when the world is so obviously unsafe? How do we protect our community’s kids, still healing from the trauma of the wildfires?

It’s beyond time for commonsense gun laws, as well as stronger gun regulations, and perhaps a community buy-back program and a boycott of gun vendors.

In terms of the president’s idea to address mental health issues, we can start by reinstating the law passed under President Obama making it harder for people with a history of instability to acquire firearms. We can put money into preventive treatment. We can teach our boys that it is manly to express a full range of emotion, not only anger and violence. We can provide mental health coverage as part of a universal health plan and engage in a public health campaign to de-stigmatize seeking treatment. We can adequately fund and staff mental health institutions or even better, develop a system of safe places people can go to “cool off,” to work through issues of grief and trauma with compassionate healers—without being penalized for taking time off work, charged untenable costs or forced into warehouses to medicate rather than to truly heal.

If nothing else in these divided times, we all do share the same humanity and hopefully love for our children. So let’s collectively open the windows of our souls and call out: “We’re mad as hell, and we will not take it anymore!”

Alissa Hirshfeld-Flores, MFT, 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.

Arts Hub

Santa Rosa art lovers love the city's South of A Street Arts District (SOFA) that's nestled northeast of the Highway 101 and 12 interchange, and which houses an eclectic amalgamation of art galleries, studios, performance spaces and shops. At the heart of the district is the spacious Chroma Gallery, established in 2014 by artist and Village Art Supply founder and...

Villaraigosa, Pt. 2

In a field with six major candidates for governor, Antonio Villaraigosa, who once served as the State Assembly speaker, is locked in a dead heat with Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, according to the most recent polls. Last month we reported on his views around housing. We recently caught up with him for a second conversation, this time on immigration, healthcare...

Expunge

Unlike the office's current occupant, each of the three candidates for Marin County District Attorney this year supports a push to proactively expunge old misdemeanor pot charges. San Francisco District Attorney George Gascón said in December that he was moving to expunge thousands of cases in that city. Sonoma County District Attorney Jill Ravitch initially said that she wouldn't be...

Enough!

In the movie Network, the prophetic newscaster says: " got to say, 'I'm a human being, damn it! My life has value!' . . . I want you to get up right now and go to the window . . . and yell, 'I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore!'" Here we are, 40 years...

Letters to the Editor: January 31, 2017

Watching 'Cops' There's nothing "out there in the middle of everything" about Cops ("'Cops' Under Fire," March 28). This has got to be one of the dumbest stunts I've ever seen. I say 'NO!' to filming any episodes here in Sonoma County. —Robert van de Walle Via Bohemian.com I say YES! Let people walk in their shoes for a day to get a...

About a Barn

The funny thing about my visit to the La Crema tasting room at Saralee's Vineyard is, I wouldn't have been so critical upon reading their website description of the place afterward if I hadn't already really enjoyed an informative tour there. "The legacy of this historic barn continues as it is transformed into a multi-level tasting room for La Crema,"...

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SCSO Spokesman Spencer Crum: I Never Praised Cops

Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Sgt. Spencer Crum says his comments in the Bohemian this week mischaracterized his views on Cops and that he never offered praise for the program. His statement comes a day after the Bohemian reported that the Santa Rosa Police Department had not signed off on a contract with the...

‘Cops’ Under Fire

As the Cops film crews roll with deputies from the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office (SCSO), there is growing pushback against the controversial reality TV show's sudden arrival in the county last week—and questions about whether the Santa Rosa Police Department will ride along with the plan. After an SCSO-led media push celebrated the show's arrival last week, with multiple outbreaks...

We’re Not Going to Take It

Due to an editing error, Alissa Hirshfeld-Flores' Open Mic was transposed with another column. Her correct column is now below. The Bohemian regrets the error. In the movie “Network,” the prophetic newscaster says: “ got to say, 'I'm a human being, damn it! My life has value!'…I want you to get up right now and go to the window…and...
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