North Bay Events Turn into Fire Relief Benefits

No one in the North Bay has been left unaffected by the recent wildfires that ripped through Sonoma, Napa, Mendocino and Lake Counties this month. As a result, several events and festivals planned this month have been cancelled. Those that are continuing on are almost all now acting as fire relief fundraisers and several events are popping up specifically to benefit victims of the fires. Aside from the events listed in this week’s issue, here’s a round-up of some of the ways you can enjoy community gatherings and support families who lost everything in the fire.

Tonight, Oct. 18, San Rafael’s Key Tea House, located inside Open Secret, is turning its weekly open mic into a North Bay Resiliency Event, featuring music from Lauren & the Arrows, Kendra Current and After the Fall, as well as a silent auction. Donations will be accepted and proceeds will go to various fire departments and relief funds.

Also tonight, the final week of the popular Songwriters in the Round event at HopMonk Tavern in Sebastopol features host Jon Gonzales and musicians Pete Stringfellow, Mimi Pirard, Chris Haugen and Kate Magdalena performing to raise funds for Redwood Credit Union’s Fire Relief Fund.

Tomorrow, Oct. 19, Redwood Cafe in Cotati is hosting “People Helping People,” a benefit concert featuring members of Onye & the Messengers and Afrofunk Experience as well as Amadou and DJ Loisaida. Proceeds and monetary donations will go to people affected by the Sonoma County fire and clothing donations collected by non-profit Bloom will be redistributed to those who need it most.

On Friday, Oct. 20, Silo’s in Napa presents an evening of music to benefit the four-legged victims of the fires, featuring Blues and R&B band Second Street and donating a portion of the ticket proceeds to Napa Humane, which is caring for lost and displaced pets.

On Saturday, Oct. 21, Sonoma Cider and Black Sheep Revival Productions team up for a benefit concert featuring Two Lions Band, Three for Silver and Fast Heart Mart to benefit those impacted by the recent Sonoma County Fires.

Also on Oct. 21, the Healdsburg Hotel hosts a community gathering featuring jazz music by Chris Amberger Group, comfort food by chef Scott Romano and local beer and wine. A portion of proceeds will benefit the Sonoma County Resilience Fund.

On Sunday, Oct. 22, Catelli’s Restaurant in Geyserville is holding the previously promoted “Harvest for Harvey” event, now renamed “Harvest of Hope,” to raise funds for Sonoma County fire relief victims.

These and other events are displaying the supportive, selfless attitude that many in the region have taken in the wake of the wildfires. The Bohemian has also set up our own relief fund, Rebuild Sonoma, and you can donate by clicking here.

Oct. 20: Cult Community in Santa Rosa

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The ongoing CULT Film Series had lined up an October filled with Halloween goodness, but last week’s fires shifted the focus of the series from fun to fundraising. This week, CULT teams up with Hot 101.7 radio station to present 1987’s horror-comedy gem Blood Diner, screening at the Roxy 14 with director Jackie Kong in attendance and featuring an afterparty at Bibi’s Burger Bar. All ticket sales will benefit victims of the fires, so arrive early and fill the theater for a cathartic evening of thrills and chills on Friday, Oct. 20, at Roxy 14 Stadium, 85 Santa Rosa Ave., Santa Rosa. 7pm. $15. 707.525.8909.

Oct. 21: Healing Energy in Sebastopol

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Every summer, the Peacetown concert series mixes music and positive energy for weekly love fests in Sebastopol. This week, the organizers behind the series, specifically the Mr. Music Foundation, which also provides music programs in local schools, are gathering together for a special day-long Peacetown Fire Benefit. The event promises to include music, dancing, laughter and healing for those affected by the fires. Admission is free, though monetary donations will be gladly accepted for the Redwood Credit Union Fire Fund. Food, beer, fine wine and a silent auction will also raise funds on Saturday, Oct. 21, at the Sebastopol Community Center, 390 Morris St., Sebastopol. 2pm. Free. 707.508.5449.

Oct. 22: Musical Relief in Napa

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As the smoke clears, Napa County’s artistic community is beginning to rally. Such is the case with singer-songwriter Shelby Lanterman, who is organizing the Napa Strong: Benefit Concert, featuring an array of local talent. The all-day event features performances by Ordinary Sons, Dirty Cello, the Sorry Lot and a ton of other songwriters. All proceeds from the door go to Napa Valley firefighters and a tip jar and silent auction will benefit the Napa Valley Disaster Relief Fund for victims of the fire. Come support Napa on Sunday, Oct. 22, at Billco’s Billiards, 1234 Third St., Napa. 1pm. $5. 707.226.7506.

Oct. 22: Laugh & Give Back in Santa Rosa

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Sonoma County improvisation and standup group Evil Comedy was prepping their second annual HaHaHalloween event when fires swept through the region last week. Now, the comedy extravaganza is proceeding as a benefit for victims of the recent fires in Sonoma and Napa counties. First responders will get in for free and the proceeds for the event will be donated to support relief efforts. In addition to a lineup of local comedians, the event will have beer and wine on hand and a silent auction. Evil gives back on Sunday, Oct. 22, at the Arlene Francis Center, 99 Sixth St., Santa Rosa. 7pm. $10. 18 and up. 707.528.3009.

The Terrifying New Normal

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As I walked among the embers of what was the Coffey Park neighborhood Monday morning, my eyes burning from the smoke as I watched weeping residents gazing at where their homes once stood, I was shocked not only by the devastation, but by the fact that a wildfire could reach so far into the city. I thought wildfires were supposed to stay in wildlands, not move into subdivisions with busy intersections, schools and restaurants. Of course, fires don’t follow any such rules, but if this working-class neighborhood could fall victim to a wildfire raging down the hills like a flood, what neighborhood is safe?

Indeed, Coffey Park was outside of the city’s “very severe” hazard zone. As the

Los Angeles Times reported Sunday, that meant homes were exempt from regulations to make them more fire-resistant. It’s not clear how such precautions would have protected the neighborhood from the early-morning firestorm. More than 1,200 homes were incinerated in a matter of minutes.

I don’t see this as city or state negligence, but as a chilling testament that we live in a different era of fire danger. The climate has changed and so have the risks. This is the terrifying new normal.

Sparking PG&E power lines may have pulled the trigger on last week’s catastrophic fires, but evidence shows that climate change built the weapon and aimed it right at the North Bay. And we remain under the gun.

From the most destructive hurricane season on record to the devastating fires still burning in the North Bay, the reality is becoming devastatingly clear: the climate has changed and the conditions for fires will intensify. It was just two years ago that that the Valley fire exploded in the parched hills of Lake, Napa and northern Sonoma counties, burning 76,000 acres and 1,350 homes and killing three. Northern California’s 15 concurrent fires have scorched 220,000 acres, burned an estimated 5,700 structures and caused at least 40 deaths, making them the deadliest and most destructive wildfires in California history.

“That’s the way it is with a warming climate, dry weather
and reduced moisture,” said
Gov. Jerry Brown in a press conference last week. “These kinds of catastrophes have happened, and they are going to continue to happen.”

Wildfires in California are a fact of life. Fire plays an important ecological role in the chaparral and conifer forest ecosystems of the North Bay. Problems arise when people choose to live in those fire-prone environments. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and local fire departments mandate property owners carve out a ring of defensible space to help defend against wild fires. But there was little chance fending off wind-whipped fires of such intensity and speed.

“We know that Northern California’s climate has changed,” says Noah Diffenbaugh, a climate scientist at Stanford University, “and we’re in a climate that’s different than when a lot of what we have on the landscape was designed and built.”

Climate plays an important role in wildfire risk, but it’s not the only influence, says Diffenbaugh. Human elements such as ignition, forest management and where and how we build also play a role, he says. Climate change is the biggest human element of all.

“Climate sets the stage, and we have strong evidence that the global warming that’s already happened has increased wildfire risk in the western United States through the effects of temperature drying the landscape,” he says.

“For this particular event, we can really see the impacts of heat. We had record hot conditions during the drought. We had record high temperatures that coincided with record low precipitation that created the most severe drought on record that killed tens of millions of trees. Those record drought conditions were followed by extremely wet conditions this winter that were again followed by record hot conditions.”

Rising temperatures also lead to less snowfall in the Sierra and earlier melting of that snow, Diffenbaugh says, meaning there is less runoff available during the hot, dry days of fall.

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In California, Diffenbaugh says, low precipitation levels are twice as likely to produce drought if they coincide with warm conditions. “Overall, we’ve seen a doubling in frequency of drought in California in recent decades.”

The east-to-west Diablo winds that fanned the flames, reaching hurricane strength at higher elevations, may also be pegged to climate change, Diffenbaugh says.

Richard Heinberg, a fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, a nonprofit think tank focused on climate change and sustainability issues, lives in Santa Rosa and was evacuated the first night of the fire. His house was spared. While the links between climate change and wildfires can be indirect, he says the impacts of a warming climate on California are clear.

Heinberg says research shows that increased CO2 in the atmosphere leads to rapid but less viable plant growth. More fuel for fire.

“It’s almost like we’re growing junk food with more CO2 in the atmosphere,” he says.

On a larger scale, he says data shows that California is moving into a hotter and drier climate.

“The 20th century was a wet spell for California,” he says.

City officials say Santa Rosa
will rebuild and will be “better than before.” But better in
what way? Better prepared
for future wildfires? Better built to reduce the CO2 emissions that contributed to the perilous state we’re in? Or will better just mean bigger? While Gov. Brown admirably sounds the climate change alarm, it’s not keeping pace with the explosive conditions on the ground.

In an essay on the North Bay fires called the “The Devil in Wine Country” to be published in the London Review of Books, Mike Davis, author of Ecology of Fear: Los Angeles and the Imaginations of Disaster, admits he’s “an elderly prophet of doom” as he laments “the hopelessness of rational planning in a society based on real estate capitalism.”

“We’ll continue to send sprawl into our fire-dependent ecosystems with the expectation that firefighters will risk their lives to defend each new McMansion,” he writes, “and an insurance system that spreads costs across all homeowners will promptly replace whatever is lost.”

Santa Rosa Mayor Chris Coursey says he’s thought about how the city might rebuild to be more resilient, but with the fire still blazing and people’s lives at risk, now is not the time for that. “I’m not there yet,” he said after a press briefing at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds.

Ann Hancock, executive director of Santa Rosa’s Center for Climate Protection, says that when the time is right, she hopes the conversation centers on reducing the impacts of climate change.

“It’s not too early to start thinking about that, so long as the people who are suffering are taken care of,” she says.

As a trained public health professional, Hancock is a strong advocate for prevention. “Prevention is where we have the best opportunity for impact with the lowest cost.”

Local measures such as better forest management and more defensible space are worthy, but her organization is focusing on bringing down the greenhouse gas emissions that helped get us into this crisis.

“It’s is a wholesale systemic change and that’s overwhelming for most people to think about, and yet we have to.”

When the North Bay rebuilds, Heinberg calls for building great resiliency into local infrastructure— redundant electric and water systems, larger inventories of food and supplies—that can better withstand future disasters. Knowing that climate change is exacerbating the risks, he says the region should deepen its investment in mass transit, zero-energy buildings and clean energy.

“Ultimately, though, what all this suggests is we need to build differently, change our patterns of living and build a lot more resilience into our whole society, because we unquestionably have more disasters on the way of different kinds, not just wildfires.

“We in California have the opportunity to see the handwriting on the wall and make some changes.”

The Displaced

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The infernos that ravaged Santa Rosa have destroyed 5 percent of the city’s housing stock and caused at least $1.2 billion in damage, as thousands of first responders worked through the week to beat back the stubborn Tubbs, Nuns, Oakmont and Adobe fires.

As evacuees begin to head home this week, the numbers are piling up: More than 4,000 homes and structures burned across the region. Forty-one confirmed dead, 22 of them in Sonoma County, and more than 50 remain missing as the fires continue to burn. There was some pretty good news, too, as the number of missing persons drops day by day and an intense outpouring of public support continues, which has buoyed spirits as the fires grind on into their second week.

Four-hundred-and-one persons remained in emergency shelters as of Tuesday afternoon, said Sonoma County Supervisor James Gore, down from a crisis peak of 5,000. More than 60,000 people were evacuated due to the fires and as of Tuesday, fire officials reported that 36,295 persons had returned to 13,956 houses that escaped the flames.

The county has received 1,969 reports of missing persons since the fires broke out on the early morning of Oct. 9, and has been mainly searching for the missing in homes or what remains of them, while the National Guard has been scouring evacuated and burned-out areas for remains.

Twenty-four of those calls were reports filed about missing homeless persons, said Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office (SCSO) spokesman Sgt. Spencer Crum early this week. None of the victims so far identified, he said, was one of the homeless persons that was the subject of a missing-person report. On Tuesday afternoon, SCSO Sheriff Rob Giordano said the number of missing that his department was still looking for was 27; the Santa Rosa Police Department is meanwhile searching for an additional 26 missing persons.

Meanwhile, pending a hopeful forecast of rain for Thursday, fire officials were cautiously optimistic early in the week that they’d have 100 percent containment on some, if not all, of the fires by the weekend, ending nearly two weeks of the wind-driven crisis.

The civic response to the disaster has been staggering and heart-rending in its scope. The questions now raised by the fire are equally staggering. Against the backdrop of a massive tent city that has sprung up at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds—for the thousands of first responders who have come to Santa Rosa to battle the blazes and secure the city—the unfolding of a housing crises on top of an already extant one and questions about where everyone would go once they fires were out were top priority for officials interviewed over the week.

Where is the transitional housing coming from? What’s the fate of the already homeless citizens of Santa Rosa? When can homeowners start to rebuild?

For homeowners who have lost everything, now begins the process of filing and settling a claim with their insurance provider. That was a problematic process during the aftermath of Lake County’s Valley fire two years ago, said Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom in a recent interview at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds command center, and one the state set out to fix.

The 2015 conflagration to the north, said Newsom, provided lessons that would be useful moving forward, as he stressed the state’s role on the legal front and in “making sure the private sector is paid off on a timely basis,” when, for example, contractors are hired to rebuild homes and businesses.

Sonoma County Supervisor Shirlee Zane approached the lieutenant governor and said, with a friendly pointed finger, “Your Department of Insurance is going to hold the insurance companies liable.”

(State Department of Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones was scheduled to meet with fire victims in Napa on Oct. 17.)

Newsom said Gov. Jerry Brown’s priority when it comes to the state’s role in rebuilding was to “make sure we are here six months from here,” as he pledged to draw down on all available federal assistance.

Sonoma County Supervisor David Rabbitt said supervisors would take up preliminary talks this week about what to do about the thousands of displaced residents who have lost their homes. Sonoma County had an estimated pre-fire homeless population of 2,835, as of May 2017.

It just got a lot larger, as approximately 1,300 structures were burned in the residential Coffey Park neighborhood alone this week.

Rabbitt expected that an initial outpouring of community support would continue, and residents and businesses would “extend the initial surge of generosity” that has met the first week of the unprecedented regional catastrophe.

Rabbitt described the horrifically intensified local housing crisis in terms that were at once sensitive and appreciative of the forward-looking opportunities. The number one priority looking beyond the fire, he said, was getting people out of shelters and back home or into “some kind of transitional housing.”

What will that look like?

The fire, Rabbitt said, could serve as a catalyst for county and city leaders who are “looking for smart, efficient answers” to an affordable-housing question that is now much more complicated. The question for civic leaders, he suggested, was how to rebuild in the face of “a huge economic hit” that the fire will take on the county.

Rabbitt said he hoped all cities in Sonoma County would “take a look at the opportunities” the rebuild might afford, as he noted that the county has given more leeway to homeowners on granny units and other second units than cities in the region.

The potential for small-home developments in county or urban areas remains an open question, and one of many. Supervisors had a preliminary discussion about the path forward on housing Tuesday. Rabbitt expressed optimism in the face of a potential wintertime spike in homelessness. “I think we have the tools in the county to avoid any crisis,” he said.

Rabbitt also noted that the county had reached out to local participants in the short-term rental economy for assistance in providing housing to the displaced.

“We are asking people to take places off of Airbnb,” he said. It was not immediately clear how many had done so, he added.

To ease with the immediate and imminent housing crunch, officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency were scouting local properties early this week to see where they might bring in some FEMA trailers for the displaced, though officials at the agency said the timeline for their arrival was unclear (see Nugget, p26, for more).

They can’t come soon enough, as the fires still burn, as patience wears thin among residents eager to go home, and as many questions remain, some for another day but others of a more immediate urgency.

For instance: How many homeless persons died in the fire? It’s not yet known. “The goal is to find the victim that we don’t know about,” said Giordano when asked about the potential for “unknown unknown” missing persons.

Santa Rosa chief of police Hank Schreeder said the ripple effect the fire will have on the city’s pre-fire homeless population remains to be seen. The SRPD devotes significant patrol time to checking in on areas around the city where the homeless tend to congregate. Those patrols include areas of Cleveland Avenue that were destroyed by the fire.

In light of overflowing demand for shelter beds and intense pressure on local social services agencies and nonprofits that serve the poor and vulnerable, what’s to become of the pre-fire homeless of Santa Rosa as the nights grow colder and the fires are at last extinguished?

“I wish I knew where we are going to be on that,” Schreeder said.

The looming uncertainty is a common thread as the damage is tallied and the ash settles. There was good news for local homeless advocates when a group of between 40 and 50 homeless camped out in the Fountain Grove area were able to escape the flames, but Jennielynn Holmes-Davis, director of shelter and housing at Catholic Charities of Santa Rosa, said “we’re not clear yet” when it comes to a tally of the homeless.

“We were already in a homeless and housing crisis when this happened, and it will be interesting to see what happens next,” said Holmes. She warned about two waves of housing nightmares facing fire victims. One is in the short term, when the evacuation centers start to close down “and people start heading home, and we’ll see who is without recourse” said Holmes.

The bigger wave of desperation will be in six months, she said, as disaster assistance runs out and fire victims enter the real estate market—only to find themselves priced out of it. “This happened in the foreclosure crisis—they entered the rental market, and then they got pushed out into homelessness,” Holmes said. “I think that may happen even faster here. People who have not been homeless in the past are facing homelessness,” she said. (Ironically, it was only a few months ago, in June, that the county lost some $600,000 in emergency grant money that was funding an unpopular sleep-in-your-car program for the homeless, which Catholic Charities participated in.)

Now, said Holmes, all short- and long-term housing solutions have to be considered, including tiny-house communities within incorporated urban areas of the county.

She said that as leaders sort through the new housing normal in Sonoma County, it will be a while before homeless advocates will track everyone down in their circles—and that there may be unknown homeless still in the ashes that nobody will ever know about.

“We’re definitely worried about that,” she said. Many of the clients her organization works with do tend to fall off the radar. “We don’t see them for a while; they go out of town or out of the county. It’s going to take a long time to find out who is truly missing and who is dislocated for the moment.”

The health issues that attended the fires are magnified for people who were already living outdoors, and oftentimes under and around highway underpasses. “Last week, we were very worried about people living outdoors and being exposed to this,” said Holmes, who adds that “these are people already at a high risk for respiratory disease, and COPD [chronic obstructive pulmonary disease] and asthma are common among this population already.”

Through it all, the emergent mantra being proffered by officials, for all citizens of Sonoma County, is please be patient. Even when the fires are out, it may be days or weeks before some people will be allowed back into heavily damaged areas. There will be checkpoints and escorts, even for homeowners whose domiciles may have survived amid the surrounding wreckage of their neighbors’ homes—a common and jarring visual juxtaposition of destruction and blind luck that is one of the hallmarks of the great and terrible North Bay fires of 2017.

Up in Smoke

This story has updated to reflect a new fundraising URL for recovery donations.

While many wineries had harvested their grapes before last week’s firestorm, cannabis growers were not so lucky. That meant untold quantities of cannabis went up in smoke last week—as the did the financial future of many small-scale Sonoma and Mendocino County growers.

Since cannabis is not covered by crop insurance or other safety nets, many growers lost everything with no hope of compensation. Growers can’t get loans and won’t qualify for federal recovery funds.

SPARC, a sprawling cannabis farm and warehouse in Glen Ellen, was nearing harvest for its inaugural season when the wildfires struck.

“It’s pretty much a total loss, as far as structures are concerned,” says company CEO Erich Pearson. Only one of four homes on the property survived. The company’s 50,000 square feet of barns were destroyed, as were all of its outdoor crops. Some cannabis in greenhouses survived, but it may be tainted with ash.

“It was the beginning of the fire right there in Nuns Canyon, and [the farm] got hit very hard, just as the surrounding neighbors did.”

The company rented the property and it was insured. Pearson says he plans to rebuild. In the meantime, he had to lay off all but seven of his 22 employees. He’s working on disaster relief and internal financial assistance for those workers.

Hezekiah Allen, executive director of the California Growers Association cannabis trade group, said last week that 23 farms had been damaged, 21 of them lost entirely. He said most of the losses came in Sonoma County. His organization was working with state legislators to create an insurance program, but the work wasn’t done yet. “It was all about to happen.”

Santa Rosa’s CannaCraft lost 15 greenhouses around Santa Rosa, about 5,000 plants. In a dramatic rescue, staffers trudged up near Hood Mountain as the fire raged to salvage what they could from greenhouses. The company will be testing the cannabis to see whether it’s been contaminated.

As devastating as their losses were, the company opened its offices to other cannabis businesses displaced by the fire. It donated $100,000 worth of products to area dispensaries and is serving as a regional headquarters for the Red Cross. The company may also host FEMA trailers for displaced residents.

“We see the industry coming together as a community,” says company founder Dennis Hunter.

When the time comes, he hopes city and county officials will consider tax relief or other assistance for cannabis companies impacted by the fire.

The California Growers Association has established a recovery fund for victims of the fire at https://emeraldgrowers.nationbuilder.com/wildfire

Letters to the Editor: October 18, 2017

The Fires

Well, what a strange sensation to see your name in print (“Hell Fire,” Oct. 11). I want to compliment editor Stett Holbrook for his compassionate and friendly tone when stopping to interview me Monday.

It is starting to really settle in just how truly devastating the loss is now. We will never be the same, not my neighbors’ lives, not my little pocket neighborhood in ashes near Coffey Park’s own devastation wrought wide, not nearly all of northwest Santa Rosa or Fountaingrove, and surely not Mark West/Larkfield, where so many of my former beloved students and their families lived, and perhaps not the entire greater community.

Take deep breaths once we can breathe again, cherish what we still have, and find the will to move forward to whatever changed future awaits us.

Santa Rosa

The tragedies besetting our beloved communities this week bring us to the edge of what was previously unthinkable. Our hearts keen for those who’ve lost everything. Our minds grapple with how and why these simultaneously ignited holocaustic events could unfold on our places of home/ground/place so readily, so swiftly, so adeptly. Firepower claimed our hillsides, our homes, our beloved friends, neighbors, colleagues and plant communities and wildlife. We stand shaken, broken and united in the face of our own fragility, our own impermanence.

Just one week ago, all was well in our world, and overnight we make this radical shift in our way of life—as if a bomb struck our very wellbeing. Indeed, I imagine war is like this. Scores of evacuees are still clamoring for a shower, a bed, a meal, a warm hug, the smallest of signs of a “normal” day. The things, the people, the services we have such easy access to in “normal” times become our primary quest. Our comforts and conveniences and our status quo has been shaken to its foundations.

I am struck by the parallels that exist between evacuees and refugees. At what point does an evacuee become a refugee? Is it when the wind keeps driving and no containment is possible ever? Is it when there is no community left to bring services such as temporary housing, shelter, drinking water, sewer systems, medical services, food? Is the distinction that evacuees can have some semblance of hope that returning to the community is possible, even if the time/ground/place is different?

Today, I’m sending billowing bubbles of love out to all who are displaced by this tragedy in Northern California, and the tragedies in Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico. And I’m including those who are displaced by the wars initiated by our country. And I’m reminded that we cannot cause displacement and reject with closed arms the same refugees we have made through acts of war. Evacuees and refugees, we see you, we feel you, and engage our governments to do right by you. We know you need refuge. We all need refuge.

Santa Rosa

All affected by the wildfires are in our thoughts and prayers. Sonoma County, please pray the little prayer every day, and for those who know how, the Holy Rosary as well.

Rome, Italy

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

Our Common Humanity

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If there’s any silver lining to the North Bay fires, it’s the overwhelming outpouring of compassion and volunteerism in support of victims and first responders. In our darkest days, the very best in us came pouring out.

As was made painfully clear, fire does not discriminate. We are all equal before the flames. Given the toxicity of national politics, it was refreshing and deeply moving to see how the North Bay responded to the catastrophe. It felt good to do something, anything, to help.

Food and clothing drives popped up overnight. Restaurants offered free meals to first responders. People opened their homes to displaced strangers. Local kennels took in homeless animals free of charge. Banners thanking fire fighters went up on freeway overpasses.

The question “How are you?” has become much more than a throwaway pleasantry, because, one way or another, we’ve all been affected by the fires, whether or not we lost our homes or loved ones. It could have been any one of us trapped in a burning home with no way out.

The horror of the fire revealed our common humanity. America prides itself on its rugged individualism, but in times of crisis like this, it’s clear we are not strong because we stand alone; we are strongest when we depend on each other. The fire revealed that we are rugged dependents who support each other through the worst of times.

Eventually, the smoke will clear and fire victims will go about the hard work of rebuilding their lives. There will be talk of a return to normalcy, and that’s good. But let’s hold on to the part of our common humanity awakened by the fires.

The Bohemian has set up a fund to aid the nonprofits helping fire victims in Sonoma and Napa counties. One hundred percent of the money collected goes to them. Please give what you can at RebuildSonomaFund.org.

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.

North Bay Events Turn into Fire Relief Benefits

No one in the North Bay has been left unaffected by the recent wildfires that ripped through Sonoma, Napa, Mendocino and Lake Counties this month. As a result, several events and festivals planned this month have been cancelled. Those that are continuing on are almost all now acting as fire relief fundraisers and several events are popping up specifically...

Oct. 20: Cult Community in Santa Rosa

The ongoing CULT Film Series had lined up an October filled with Halloween goodness, but last week’s fires shifted the focus of the series from fun to fundraising. This week, CULT teams up with Hot 101.7 radio station to present 1987’s horror-comedy gem Blood Diner, screening at the Roxy 14 with director Jackie Kong in attendance and featuring an...

Oct. 21: Healing Energy in Sebastopol

Every summer, the Peacetown concert series mixes music and positive energy for weekly love fests in Sebastopol. This week, the organizers behind the series, specifically the Mr. Music Foundation, which also provides music programs in local schools, are gathering together for a special day-long Peacetown Fire Benefit. The event promises to include music, dancing, laughter and healing for those...

Oct. 22: Musical Relief in Napa

As the smoke clears, Napa County’s artistic community is beginning to rally. Such is the case with singer-songwriter Shelby Lanterman, who is organizing the Napa Strong: Benefit Concert, featuring an array of local talent. The all-day event features performances by Ordinary Sons, Dirty Cello, the Sorry Lot and a ton of other songwriters. All proceeds from the door go...

Oct. 22: Laugh & Give Back in Santa Rosa

Sonoma County improvisation and standup group Evil Comedy was prepping their second annual HaHaHalloween event when fires swept through the region last week. Now, the comedy extravaganza is proceeding as a benefit for victims of the recent fires in Sonoma and Napa counties. First responders will get in for free and the proceeds for the event will be donated...

The Terrifying New Normal

As I walked among the embers of what was the Coffey Park neighborhood Monday morning, my eyes burning from the smoke as I watched weeping residents gazing at where their homes once stood, I was shocked not only by the devastation, but by the fact that a wildfire could reach so far into the city. I thought wildfires were...

The Displaced

The infernos that ravaged Santa Rosa have destroyed 5 percent of the city's housing stock and caused at least $1.2 billion in damage, as thousands of first responders worked through the week to beat back the stubborn Tubbs, Nuns, Oakmont and Adobe fires. As evacuees begin to head home this week, the numbers are piling up: More than 4,000 homes...

Up in Smoke

This story has updated to reflect a new fundraising URL for recovery donations. While many wineries had harvested their grapes before last week's firestorm, cannabis growers were not so lucky. That meant untold quantities of cannabis went up in smoke last week—as the did the financial future of many small-scale Sonoma and Mendocino County growers. Since cannabis is not...

Letters to the Editor: October 18, 2017

The Fires Well, what a strange sensation to see your name in print ("Hell Fire," Oct. 11). I want to compliment editor Stett Holbrook for his compassionate and friendly tone when stopping to interview me Monday. It is starting to really settle in just how truly devastating the loss is now. We will never be the same, not my neighbors' lives,...

Our Common Humanity

If there's any silver lining to the North Bay fires, it's the overwhelming outpouring of compassion and volunteerism in support of victims and first responders. In our darkest days, the very best in us came pouring out. As was made painfully clear, fire does not discriminate. We are all equal before the flames. Given the toxicity of national politics, it...
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