Gather Round

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With St. Patrick’s Day upon us, the North Bay shows off its Irish side this weekend at several concerts and community events on March 17, and for fans of traditional Irish folk, new Sonoma County ensemble Cularan provide a perfect melodic pairing for several rounds of Guinness and gaiety.

Formed last year by guitarist Megan McLaughlin, mandolin player Randall McNeill, violinist Rufus Gondardi and percussionist and flutist Christopher Dillingham, the band was born out of weekly Irish jam sessions at Berkeley pub the Starry Plough.

In Ireland, a

cúlarán is a wildflower, commonly known as a pignut in Irish Gaelic. “The boys in the band wanted to call ourselves Pignut, and I said absolutely not,” laughs McLauglin. “So we came up with Cularan.”

McLaughlin herself is a veteran songwriter, best known around the Bay Area as part of folk-rock band the Musers, and for her three solo albums. Last summer, McLaughlin moved from her longtime home of Oakland to Sebastopol.

“I love it up here. I spent a wonderful 28 years in Oakland, but it was time to live out in the country,” says McLaughlin. “The musical community here is fantastic.”

In Cularan, McLaughlin and her bandmates cover a wide swath of traditional Irish music, including jigs, polkas, waltzes and both rowdy and heartfelt folk jams.

“The repertoire is huge,” says McLaughlin. “I started in on this music about 10 years ago. The more you listen, the more you pick up. It’s very much in the oral tradition where people just listen and learn by ear.”

In addition to performing classic compositions, Cularan also plays some of McLaughlin’s originals mashed up with Irish tunes, and offers up three-part harmonies as well as intricate acoustic arrangements.

While the group is planning on a new album, the only way to hear Cularan this week is to see them live. On March 15, the band gets the weekend off on the right foot with a set at Redwood Cafe in Cotati. On March 17, the group takes over McNear’s Saloon in Petaluma for the restaurant’s 31st annual St. Patrick’s Day Bash, performing their Irish folk amid pints of green beer and Irish-inspired food.

“Most often, we get people dancing,” says McLaughlin. “The Irish dance community has got their own ways of communicating, so we’ll show up and people will be ready to dance. It’s amazing to watch.”

Resilient Hope

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‘Harriet Tubman was a wilderness leader,” says Rue Mapp. “She traversed the wilds without a GPS.”

Tubman, an abolitionist and spy for the Union Army, is a role model for Mapp, the founder of Outdoor Afro and one of the headliners at this year’s Geography of Hope (GOH) Conference, running
March 17–18 in Point Reyes Station. The theme is “Finding Resilience in Nature in Perilous Times.”

If that sounds familiar, it should. North Bay survivors of last fall’s fires have been talking about nature and resilience for months. Still, the conference promises to deliver new insights and strategies.

In 2016, just as the Black Lives Matter movement spread across the country, Mapp put her fledgling organization on the map when she launched a series of outdoor events called “Healing Hikes” that resonated widely.

“The hikes came along in tandem with Black Lives Matter,” says Mapp. “Synchronicity was at work.We need to lay our burdens down by the riverside. Streets are a hard landscape to find release from trauma.”

The hikes have swelled the ranks of Outdoor Afro, which started as Mapp’s own personal blog. Now the organization has members in 30 states with a hundred leaders who guide inner city residents through forests and meadows where they breathe clean air, identify medicinal plants and appreciate natural beauty.

In spite of the group’s name, Mapp says, all races are welcome.

Mapp aims to strengthen communities and make up for lost time. A rare opportunity slipped through the cracks of history in 1964, says Mapp, when the wilderness cause and the Civil Rights cause might have been linked and weren’t.

That year witnessed the passage of the Wilderness Act and the
Civil Rights Act, both of which President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law. In the half-decade that followed, African Americans moved toward “Black is beautiful” and black liberation, while whites moved toward Earth Day.

“Unfortunately, we now have two siloed movements,” says Mapp. “One is for people, and the other is for land.”

At the GOH conference, Mapp and fellow presenters will suggest ways to fuse them.

The event is made to order for local environmentalists, community activists and citizens who crave a brave new vision of the world. Mapp will be joined at GOH by Peter Forbes, the founder of the Center for Whole Communities, and by Caleen Sisk, the Tribal Chief of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe based in Northern California.

The event includes vocal improvisation led by David Worm, a founding member of Bobby McFerrin’s Voicestra. The conference wraps up with an outdoor restoration project with Peter Wohlleben, author of The Hidden Life of Trees.

For more information go to gohconference.org

Rise Up

This is an open letter to the so-called cannabis community, a community that is unable to stand together and express any political power; that is unable to see that the regulatory regime isn’t really about cannabis, but rather economic control, blind ideology and loss of civil liberties; and that pretends to have the moral high ground, but lacks the moral courage to claim it.

There are a lot of good people in the cannabis industry and there are some responsible businesses and corporations, but there is no cannabis community. There are a few brave (or foolhardy?) souls and marginal organizations fighting the battle for crumbs, that nevertheless don’t engage in political freedom and cultural integrity. There are also a lot of self-righteous, identity-politics “victims” unable to look beyond their narcissistic neediness.

People who really care about the free and creative use of cannabis as a social health and safety benefit have two albatrosses around their necks: the oppressive, arrogant and treacherous government apparatus, and the passive, frightened and atomized cannabis community itself.

We face two ongoing struggles. The first is a running series of skirmishes to claw back rights lost to corporate behemoths that own the control-fraud rackets (and the governments administering them); the second is a decades-long cultural-values war as medical facts supplant the reefer hokum ideologies and the overall structure of suppression and regulation. Truly, cannabis acceptance advances one funeral at a time.

We must engage both simultaneously and continuously with some dynamic combination of soul-numbing bureaucratic confrontation and high-integrity civil disobedience against the hypocrisy, extortion and abuse of process by our “leaders” and their owners. Cannabis growers and suppliers have decades of experience working with integrity outside the law, which will continue in a black market made inevitable by the regulatory excesses.

Both the content battles and the acceptance war will advance with a series of test cases in the courts, combined with a general refusal to play the regulatory game designed from the beginning to destroy the existing cannabis culture and violate our natural human right to maintain our health and sanity.

I challenge, invite and encourage all people who have any stake in this matter and the financial wherewithal to fund the skirmishes and the war itself. Decide what’s really important to you and which side you are on, and whom you really serve. Enroll your peers in the community to step up their engagement and build political power through weight of aligned numbers. Finally, put your time, money and personal energy where your mouth is.

‘Oaky Joe’ Munson is a Forestville cannabis grower.

Letters to the Editor: March 14, 2018

Byrne After Reading

It is election season once again, and Congressman Jared Huffman allowed the Bohemian to follow him around for a few hours on the campaign trail (“On the Road With Jared,” March 7). Overall, Huffman’s political positions have much to commend—with the exception of his strong opposition to the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement, which is having a positive impact on Israeli oppression of the Palestinians and deserves support. It’s an important topic that, sadly, did not make it into the story, which bordered on hagiography.

Nor did the story report that Huffman’s largest campaign donor this season is Honeywell International—yes, that Honeywell, the multinational conglomerate that pollutes our natural resources drilling for oil and gas and has billions of dollars in war industry contracts. And in fourth place as a Huffman donor is CBRE Group, the real estate behemoth with billions on federal contracts that is owned by the family of Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

Is there a moral compass guiding Huffman’s career? Maybe, but as the Bohemian reported, his “childhood political hero” is Harry Truman, stalwart of the Kansas City Prendergast Machine, member of the Ku Klux Klan and the man who ordered the dropping of atom bombs on tens of thousands of Japanese children.

Petaluma

C Is for Conservation

We are very happy that Napa County’s Watershed and Oak Woodlands Protection Initiative has been approved for inclusion as Measure C on the June ballot. We particularly like that this was named Measure C, as “C,” to us, stands for conservation, which we favor because our natural resources are not infinite. Those of us who have come together now have a name: Growers/Vintners for Responsible Agriculture. We want to communicate to the citizens of Napa County that there are many of us in the grower and vintner community who support this initiative. Our focus is on stewardship of our watershed, and we recognize that Measure C gives the voters the opportunity to ensure that our watershed is protected now and into the future.

The Agricultural Preserve came into existence in 1968. Its 50th anniversary is being celebrated in many ways this year. Though it was considered very controversial and legally uncertain, it has weathered all tests and has protected Napa Valley for agriculture for the last half century.

Measure C aims to offer protection to our agricultural watershed. Our watershed is the source of most of the water we use. We, as members of the vintner and grower community, understand how important a healthy watershed is to the citizens of Napa County, to our natural environment and to the perpetuation of sustainable agriculture. To the latter point, we know that we have a right to farm, but it is our obligation to farm responsibly.

As with the Ag Preserve, the question to be asked is: Will the Napa Valley itself be better if this measure is passed? We strongly think so.

Napa County

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

Zero Out Emissions

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Transportation remains the biggest challenge to clean air and climate protection in car-dependent California. Fortunately, Phil Ting, assemblyman from San Francisco, has proposed a game-changing piece of legislation, Assembly Bill 1745, also known as Clean Cars 2040.

Vehicles that run on fossil fuels are responsible for nearly 40 percent of California’s total greenhouse gas emissions, so electrification of transportation is crucial for the health of our people and the planet. Assembly Bill 1745 would unleash market forces by requiring that all new passenger vehicles registered in California would be zero-emission starting in 2040.

The Center for Climate Protection is leading an all-out effort first to get AB 1745 voted into law. This will take a statewide effort. The campaign kicks off locally with a Call to Action meeting in Santa Rosa at the Glaser Center on March 22.

The bill is in the Assembly Transportation Committee right now and is due to be voted on in mid-April. The top priority is to get eight yes votes from the transportation committee so that the bill advances to the Assembly floor. Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, who represents parts of Sonoma, Napa, Lake and Yolo counties, may be a swing vote on the committee. Her constituents need to let her know that they want her to vote yes on AB 1745.

What else can you do? Show up and bring your friends to the launch and rally on March 22. We need everyone who supports clean air and climate protection to be there. You can also sign and share the Center for Climate Protection’s online petition in support of AB 1745 at climateprotection.org.

To RSVP for the kick off meeting or for more information, contact jo**@***************on.org.

Jane Bender served on the Santa Rosa City Council for 10 years, including service as mayor from 2004–06. While in office, she championed the greenhouse gas emission targets, among other climate-protection initiatives.

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.

Winter Greens

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Ten years ago, “locavore” was anointed the 2007 word of the year by the New Oxford American Dictionary.

Since then the idea of wanting to eat closer to home and in season has only gained traction, which has naturally invited skepticism. Number crunchers have found enough cases of it being more carbon-friendly to purchase food from far away that, if saving the world is the goal, the locavore case could be sunk.

Pierre Desrochers, co-author of Locavore’s Dilemma: In Praise of the 10,000-Mile Diet, argues that it’s more energy-efficient to ship a tomato thousands of miles in winter than to grow one in a heated greenhouse close to home. His calculations miss an important X-factor: few locavores have much interest in a fresh tomato in the middle of winter. They tend to taste like red snowballs. Best to wait until July.

But if it’s a salad you want, you don’t have to wait until summer for local produce. Once upon a time, a winter salad didn’t even contain leaves, much less tomatoes, and was made of shredded roots that had been squirreled away during warmer times. Such a meal was originally made possible by the advent of root cellars and other winter storage facilities that kept certain crops cool but not frozen. Today at grocery stores and winter markets, it’s easy to acquire a rainbow of tubers and greens. I just returned from the winter market with carrots, purple and white daikon radish, Brussels sprouts and onions.

Nowadays, a winter salad can mean more than roots and cabbage. Greenhouse innovations have ushered in a winter-salad revolution on par with that brought on by the advent of root cellars. And in coastal California, Brussels sprouts are hitting their prime now in the waning days of winter.

This recipe comes fron consummate gastronome Allen Broach of Greensboro, S.C.

Brussels
Sprout Salad

1 yellow onion, thinly sliced

3/4 c. white balsamic vinegar

1/4 c. olive oil

1 clove garlic, minced

salt and pepper

1 pound Brussels sprouts leaves torn from the sprouts

1/2 c. toasted walnuts

3 tbsp. finely grated pecorino Romano cheese

3 tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil or to taste

1/2 tsp. kosher salt

1 tbsp. freshly ground black pepper or to taste

balsamic vinegar reduction

pomegranate seeds

Marinate onions in 1/4 c. vinegar, olive oil, garlic and salt and pepper for at least 30 minutes.

The inner core of the sprouts, which haven’t yet differentiated into leaves, can be thin-sliced.

Coarsely grate the cheese.

For the balsamic reduction, heat a half-cup of balsamic on low, allowing it to slowly thicken to about half the volume. Toss with pomegranate seeds and the onion dressing. It’s special. And local enough.

Singular Sip

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While claims of unique wines from unique terroirs are nothing new to Napa and Sonoma County wine country, Hanna Winery has recently turned out something that’s truly, well, unique: a varietal wine made from Saint Macaire, a nearly extirpated French grape that’s finally getting a little respect in California soil.

The story of Saint Macaire starts a bit like a trick question: What is the sixth member of the classic Bordeaux quintet of grapes? The usual suspects include Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec and Petit Verdot, but in California the Meritage Alliance also allows the use of Carmenère, Gros Verdot (you knew there had to be a Gros Verdot, when there’s a Petit), and the even scarcer Saint Macaire, which is so rare as to be functionally nonexistent in Bordeaux, according to Jeff Hinchliffe, winemaker at Hanna since 1998.

An experimenter, Hinchliffe wanted to take the winery in new directions, while staying true to founder Dr. Elias Hanna’s favored Cabernet Sauvignon–based wines. “The idea was, we’ll stay in the Bordeaux box, but let’s explore the corners of that box,” says Hinchliffe. The first corner was planted with Malbec, and it was a success, yielding intensely red-fruited wine with soft tannin.

Saint Macaire was harder to track down, but didn’t come out of nowhere: it was widely planted in Bordeaux prior to the phylloxera root louse that devastated French vineyards, and was grown in University of California trials in the 1880s and again in the 1940s. Ultimately it was deemed only suitable for the warmest of California growing regions.

It was a different time, a different climate: Hinchliffe is betting that Saint Macaire’s attributes of color stability and higher acidity will help bolster their Bordeaux blends in the toastier times to come. Planted in 2012, Hanna’s half acre is half of California’s total Saint Macaire vineyard—over on Howell Mountain, O’Shaughnessy grows a bit to blend with its Cabernet, and it has been spotted in old vineyards amid misfit grapes like Pinot
St. George and Béclan noir.

Hanna’s 2015 Reserve Alexander Valley Saint Macaire ($68) fits somewhere in between Charbono and Petit Verdot: violets, burnt coffee beans and Syrah-like savoriness, with dried black olive and clove oil or spiced tea, suggest a big wine, but the finish lets up on the tannins and the wine easily sloughs off its 100 percent new oak. Some may object to the 16 percent alcohol by volume. Regulations permit wineries to label such a wine as low as 14.5 percent, Hinchliffe went the honest route. Perhaps another rarity in the wine world .

Hanna Winery, Russian River Valley: 5353 Occidental Road, Santa Rosa. 707.575.3371. Alexander Valley:
9280 Hwy. 128, Healdsburg. 707.431.4310. Open daily, 10am–4pm. Tasting fee, $15.

Debriefer: March 14, 2018

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Splitting the Difference

The influential North Bay Labor Council has taken a stand on who it will endorse for Sonoma County Sheriff in 2018. Or rather, they’ve taken two stands. OK, they punted. Delegates at the NBLC, an arm of the AFL-CIO, couldn’t agree whether to endorse Santa Rosa city councilman and former city cop Ernesto Olivares, or former LAPD station commander John Mutz. So after taking a couple of votes where neither gained the requisite two-thirds to prompt a single endorsement, they announced a split endorsement on March 5.

Mutz has emerged as a favorite among Sonoma County police-accountability activists. Olivares is the lone Latino in the race after Windsor sheriff Carlos Basurto dropped out. A big driver pushing the “change” mantra in this race centers around fallout from the 2013 killing of Andy Lopez by a county cop. SCSO Captain Mark Essick is the sole remaining candidate who is currently an employee of SCSO.

The candidates will square off in a June primary. The top two candidates will be the nominees in the first contested sheriff’s race in the county in decades. A NBLC press release on the split endorsement noted that Essick has been on the force for about 20 years. It remains to be seen whom the council will endorse if Mutz and Olivares emerge victorious in the primary.

“We would go back again to the delegates and try it again,” says NBLC executive director Jack Buckhorn, who adds that the union had a choice: sit on the sidelines or go with the dual endorsement. “We felt very strongly that change is needed,” he says, adding that there’s not much daylight between Mutz and Olivares on the issues. “If you listen to the debates, there’s not much difference between what they are saying.”

Ravitch Reconsiders

Just as Sonoma County cannabis lawyer Omar Figueroa was cogitating on Facebook about a potential run for district attorney last week, Jill Ravitch, the current Sonoma County DA, did a big ol’ reversal on pot and said she would review local misdemeanor cannabis convictions with an eye toward expungement of those cases.

Late in January, San Francisco DA George Gascòn said his office would be reviewing similar cases in his jurisdiction, and the Bohemian followed up on that story by asking Ravitch whether she would take up the cudgel and review local cases. She said no, and that there was a petition process in place and that her office was sticking with the plan as detailed by Proposition 64. The new pot rules in California allow for people who were convicted of pot crimes that are no longer crimes to clear their records.

A local daily newspaper followed up on the Bohemian‘s reporting with additional reporting that quoted Ravitch as saying she didn’t have the staff or resources to expunge the minor pot charges. That was the same argument offered to the Bohemian by Marin DA Edward Berberian, who said in February he would not be taking up the Gascòn initiative. Berberian is not seeking re-election this year. He’s been the DA down yonder since 2005.

Ravitch said she was inundated with requests for expungement and decided to heed the public’s call, and found the resources to expunge misdemeanor pot charges after all. Ravitch is seeking re-election this fall.

And Now Yountville

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State Sen. Bill Dodd was at a meeting in Napa County about wireless emergency alerts this past Friday morning when the emergency alert on his phone went off, along with those of Sonoma County Supervisor James Gore and District 4 Assemblywoman Cecilia Aguiar-Curry.

Dodd has sponsored a bill in Sacramento this year to address reported failings in the region’s early warning system after last year’s wildfires, but nobody could’ve warned the North Bay representative about what was happening Friday: U.S. Army veteran Albert Wong, a former infantryman, took three persons hostage and killed himself and the three women at a nonprofit residential unit run out of the California Veterans Home in Yountville, located in Dodd’s district.

When contacted last week, Dodd had just briefed a representative from Gov. Jerry Brown’s office. Early in the episode and while it was still an “active shooter” moment, he reported what’s now widely known about Wong: “This was a veteran who has PTSD that was in a program and apparently terminated from that program, and came back with body armor and an automatic weapon.”

Wong’s identity wasn’t released to the public until after law enforcement found him with the three women he reportedly shot after a tense day-long siege at the facility, one of the largest veterans homes in the country.

Wong had been a recent resident at the Pathway Home on the grounds of the veterans center. The Pathway Home is licensed by the state to provide outsourced mental-health treatment for so-called 9/11 veterans who signed up for service after the 2001 terror attacks. The program is focused on returning Iraq and Afghanistan veterans; Wong served in Afghanistan around 2012–13 and returned to the states with a vicious bout of post-traumatic stress disorder.

This latest episode of gun violence occurred just weeks after the Parkland, Fla., school shooting, and as the events in Yountville unfolded locally, other gun-related issues were simultaneously playing out, as if in split-screen.

Even as Wong was engaged in a shootout with a Napa County sheriff, Florida Gov. Rick Scott was announcing a set of NRA-unfriendly new gun laws in that state, none of which target or ban any specific weapon. The Parkland killer used an AR-15. Dispatch calls released by the Napa Sheriff’s Office indicate that Wong was armed with an M4 rifle. Civilian versions of that weapon, which is used widely by the U.S. Army, came on the domestic market in 2012, according to online gun magazines.

The terror in Yountville unfolded as the Trump administration continues its push to fully privatize the Department of Veterans Affairs and as the president flip-flopped wildly on gun-control measures in recent days. And it occurred as U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson has been promoting a putatively “bipartisan” bill in Congress that would enhance background checks while staying away from any discussion around banning assault weapons.

“People across our nation are calling for meaningful action, and the White House is merely feigning in order to appease his base,” said Thompson in a statement as he teed off on Trump. “While I am disappointed, my resolve to force action is only strengthened. We have legislation that is widely supported by Democrats and Republicans that will strengthen and expand our background checks system and help keep guns out of the hands of dangerous individuals. We must take action to prevent gun violence and keep our schools, our communities and our nation safe.”

Thompson is a lifetime gun owner and a Vietnam War veteran. Post-Parkland, he told a crowd in St. Helena that banning assault weapons isn’t the right approach to gun control, given that there are already so many of the military-style weapons in the hands of Americans. Tragically, one of those Americans was Albert Wong.

Thompson, like Dodd, was on-scene all day following the Yountville shooting, which occurred in his Congressional district. As the tragedy unfolded, Thompson indicated that he’d had enough not only with Trump, but with the president’s supporters. In a remarkably testy Facebook moment, he lashed out at a Trump-supporting man from Brooklyn who jumped on Thompson’s page to slag on law enforcement in Napa County for pulling a Parkland and not engaging with the shooter.

“How dare you troll on a post honoring these wonderful women who served our veterans,” Thompson shot back. “You have no idea about the situation and how law enforcement did or didn’t respond. Please refrain from these comments on a post honoring these selfless women.”

Time Out

Four years ago, Dr. Alex Murry (Chris Pine) vanished in a bizarre physics accident. Meg (Storm Reid, decked out with a pair of glasses and a flannel shirt meant to make her look plain) is consoled in her fatherlessness by her indifferently drawn mother (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) and her brilliant little brother Charles Wallace (Deric McCabe).

The movie is getting on its feet when the supernatural emerges: first, a home invasion by Mrs. Whatsit (Reese Witherspoon) to announce that news of Meg’s plight has been received by her space sisters. She is joined by the quilt-covered Mrs. Who (Mindy Kaling)—sadly, is no relation to the Doctor. And then comes the arrival of the large and in charge Mrs. Which (Oprah Winfrey). The three teach Meg how to “tesser”—to fold space in search of her father. Dad is easily found, considering the size of the universe: look for him on planet Camazotz, the home of a primal evil called, IT.

This movie is going to hit a lot of aging children hard. Wrinkle was the first nerd-book in many ways. Meg was the awkward heroine to many bright rejects, and Reid doesn’t let the character down. But the trio of stars bulldoze the picture, and director Ava DuVernay can’t coordinate this bunch who barely seem to be in the same movie. They pose and smile. In the book the three were perhaps Shakespeares’ witches from Macbeth. But it’s hard to take these star-women seriously in costumes apparently designed by Sid and Marty Krofft.

Bad movies happen to good people. And reactions to the errant awfulness of A Wrinkle in Time may not represent the alt-right’s slander or white backlash from Black Panther‘s wonderful world of color. DuVernay must go on—the intimacy in the scenes of father and daughter are touching. Even in this tempest of pixels, requiring the ensemble to awe-gaze so many times at so many lightshows, Reid is a presence.

‘A Wrinkle in Time’ is playing in wide release in the North Bay.

Gather Round

With St. Patrick's Day upon us, the North Bay shows off its Irish side this weekend at several concerts and community events on March 17, and for fans of traditional Irish folk, new Sonoma County ensemble Cularan provide a perfect melodic pairing for several rounds of Guinness and gaiety. Formed last year by guitarist Megan McLaughlin, mandolin player Randall McNeill,...

Resilient Hope

'Harriet Tubman was a wilderness leader," says Rue Mapp. "She traversed the wilds without a GPS." Tubman, an abolitionist and spy for the Union Army, is a role model for Mapp, the founder of Outdoor Afro and one of the headliners at this year's Geography of Hope (GOH) Conference, running March 17–18 in Point Reyes Station. The theme is "Finding...

Rise Up

This is an open letter to the so-called cannabis community, a community that is unable to stand together and express any political power; that is unable to see that the regulatory regime isn't really about cannabis, but rather economic control, blind ideology and loss of civil liberties; and that pretends to have the moral high ground, but lacks the...

Letters to the Editor: March 14, 2018

Byrne After Reading It is election season once again, and Congressman Jared Huffman allowed the Bohemian to follow him around for a few hours on the campaign trail ("On the Road With Jared," March 7). Overall, Huffman's political positions have much to commend—with the exception of his strong opposition to the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement, which is having a...

Zero Out Emissions

Transportation remains the biggest challenge to clean air and climate protection in car-dependent California. Fortunately, Phil Ting, assemblyman from San Francisco, has proposed a game-changing piece of legislation, Assembly Bill 1745, also known as Clean Cars 2040. Vehicles that run on fossil fuels are responsible for nearly 40 percent of California's total greenhouse gas emissions, so electrification of transportation is...

Winter Greens

Ten years ago, "locavore" was anointed the 2007 word of the year by the New Oxford American Dictionary. Since then the idea of wanting to eat closer to home and in season has only gained traction, which has naturally invited skepticism. Number crunchers have found enough cases of it being more carbon-friendly to purchase food from far away that, if...

Singular Sip

While claims of unique wines from unique terroirs are nothing new to Napa and Sonoma County wine country, Hanna Winery has recently turned out something that's truly, well, unique: a varietal wine made from Saint Macaire, a nearly extirpated French grape that's finally getting a little respect in California soil. The story of Saint Macaire starts a bit like a...

Debriefer: March 14, 2018

Splitting the Difference The influential North Bay Labor Council has taken a stand on who it will endorse for Sonoma County Sheriff in 2018. Or rather, they've taken two stands. OK, they punted. Delegates at the NBLC, an arm of the AFL-CIO, couldn't agree whether to endorse Santa Rosa city councilman and former city cop Ernesto Olivares, or former LAPD...

And Now Yountville

State Sen. Bill Dodd was at a meeting in Napa County about wireless emergency alerts this past Friday morning when the emergency alert on his phone went off, along with those of Sonoma County Supervisor James Gore and District 4 Assemblywoman Cecilia Aguiar-Curry. Dodd has sponsored a bill in Sacramento this year to address reported failings in the region's early...

Time Out

Four years ago, Dr. Alex Murry (Chris Pine) vanished in a bizarre physics accident. Meg (Storm Reid, decked out with a pair of glasses and a flannel shirt meant to make her look plain) is consoled in her fatherlessness by her indifferently drawn mother (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) and her brilliant little brother Charles Wallace (Deric McCabe). The movie is getting on...
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