Stretch out as U.S Attorney in Northern District as Sessions Snuffs out Cole Memo

On Thursday, as U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that the Department of Justice would rescind Obama-era guidance for federal prosecutors in pro-pot states (the so-called “Cole Memo”), the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California, Brian Stretch, announced he’d left his post for a private-sector job at the San Francisco law firm of Sidley Austin.

Stretch, a 2016 Obama appointee, abruptly left the DOJ’s North Bay office as Sessions stepped in days after California’s landmark Proposition 64 went into effect in 2018. Prop 64 legalized recreational use of the federally-banned flower in the nation’s most populous and diverse state.

Now it’s up to Sessions to appoint an interim district attorney. A permanent successor would be subject to senate approval.

Stretch, the departing U.S. Attorney, is a career prosecutor and a former assistant district attorney in Marin County, home of the pro-cannabis “4/20” movement, the Grateful Dead, and lots of pot smokers. He had earlier escaped a Trump-Sessions purge of dozens of U.S. attorneys undertaken when the administration first lurched into the White House.

Who will step into the breach in the Northern District? A Jan. 4 report on the Recorder, which first reported on Stretch’s curiously timed departure, said that “candidates in the mix to fill Stretch’s position include current Sidley Austin partner David Anderson, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo, and former U.S. Attorney Joseph Russoniello—all veterans of the local prosecutor’s office”

Sessions had not named an interim by Friday Jan. 5, and Stretch’s last day was reportedly to be on Saturday.

A report Thursday on the NBC television affiliate in San Diego reported that the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District, Adam Braverman, had embraced the Sessions move. Braverman told the station that rescinding the Cole Memo had “return[ed] trust and local control to federal prosecutors,” when I comes to enforcing the federal Controlled Substance Act, which outlaws cannabis.

Braverman, who has prosecuted drug cartels, is a Trump appointee who was sworn into his post in November.

Stretch’s new private-sector role will in some way continue to be of a piece, if indirectly, with legal issues now swirling around the Trump White House: Stretch will focus on white-collar crime at Sidley Austin, with, as a press release from the firm notes, “a particular emphasis on corporate investigations, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and criminal defense matters.”

According to a profile of the storied law firm on Wikipedia, Sidney Austin is the sixth largest corporate law firm in the United States with 1,900 lawyers in its stable. It’s been around since 1866, reports Wikipedia and was founded in the aftermath of the Civil War, a time of great divisiveness in the land.

The author of the 2013 Cole memo, James Cole, has since left the government and is now himself a partner at Sidley Austin, according to a Recorder piece that ran on Jan. 5. That same piece quoted California Attorney General Xavier Becerra pledging to fight for the new law and “to vigorously enforce our state’s laws and protect our state’s interests…. In California, we decided it was best to regulate, not criminalize, cannabis,”

Jan. 4: Stand & Deliver in Santa Rosa

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Conceived by Russian River Brewing Company brewer Jacob Totz and hospitality industry colleagues, Stand Up Sonoma is a comedy benefit that aims to use laughter to help the King Ridge Foundation help Sonoma County rebuild after October’s wildfires. The showcase features top-tier comics including Nick Kroll and Chris D’Elia, who’ve all been seen on Netflix comedy specials, television shows and movies. The massive benefit show starts with a reception and raffle before the standup stars shine on Thursday, Jan. 4, at Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa. 8pm; reception, 6:30pm. $55–$125. 707.546.3600.

Jan. 5: Drawn to Dogs in Sebastopol

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In the Chinese calendar, 2018 is the Year of the Dog. To celebrate, Sebastopol Center for the Arts is honoring man’s best friend with a group art show, ‘Year of the Dog,’ that features nearly 90 pieces of art dedicated to mutts of all shapes and sizes. Selected by the curating team at Napa’s di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art, Amy Owen and Kara Smith, “Year of the Dog” is a spirited showing that runs through Feb. 11 and opens with an artists’ reception on Friday, Jan. 5, at Sebastopol Center for the Arts, 282 S. High St., Sebastopol. 6pm. Free. 707.829.4797.

Jan. 7: Cosmic Wonder in Novato

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Scientists at NASA and other space agencies have begun shedding new light on the mysteries of the universe by studying gravitational waves, actual ripples in spacetime that can only be created by immensely powerful forces of energy. By examining data from these waves, we can now “see” things like black holes, neutron stars and other space objects that are thought to have created heavy elements on earth and formed the Milky Way. This week, UC Berkeley astronomer Eliot Quataert geeks out about these far-out findings with a talk titled ‘Cosmic Gold’ on Sunday, Jan. 7, at HopMonk Tavern, 224 Vintage Way, Novato. 7pm. Free. 415.892.6200.

Jan. 8: The Write Spot in Petaluma

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New Year’s resolutions are great to make, but sometimes you need inspiration to get you going. For anyone whose resolutions include writing, there’s no better jolt in the North Bay than the Jumpstart Writing Workshop, returning this week after taking the last month off. All you have to do is bring a notebook and pen, and workshop leaders will get you writing with a variety of prompts to ignite the imagination. Whether you’re looking to write fiction, memoir or poetry, this weekly gathering will kick your creativity into gear on Mondays, beginning Jan. 8, at Copperfield’s Books, 140 Kentucky St., Petaluma. 6:30pm. $15 per week. 707.762.0563.

Natural Appeal

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Nestled in the foothills of Sonoma Mountain since 1979, Coturri Winery might, by contemporary California standards, be said to be a winery of a certain age. The scene on the cellar floor, however, is positively antediluvian.

“It’s astounding to me,” winemaker Tony Coturri says approvingly of his new collection of amphorae, buried in the dirt floor of his cellar in between stacks of tarnished oak barrels that are looking fairly ancient too. “For 8,000 years they’ve been using these things.”

These clay vessels are actually quite younger than that—brand-new, shipped from the nation of Georgia, where wine made in the beeswax-lined fermentation vessels is enjoying a renaissance among new fans of old traditions.

Coturri says he’s been getting interesting results from the odd-looking ovoids—a cloudy fermentation cleared up after the full moon, for instance. But how to clean these things, when they’re buried deep in the earth? Luckily, he’s got a lanky assistant in the person of Caleb Leisure, a globetrotting young winemaker who, after stints in France, has been helping Coturri to reboot the winery in the last two years to meet increasing demand for the “natural” wine category.

Coturri grants that that he’s been called the godfather of natural wine, a loosely defined term that generally means wine made without added yeast or sulfites. When you’ve got good grapes, says Coturri, there’s no need to add sulfites.

Yet after Leisure lifts a heavy glass cover off the clay seal of an amphora to extract a sample of a firm, flavorful 2017 white wine that was fermented on its skins, he tops it with inert gas with the greatest of care. Even in this rustic setting, hygiene, not sulfur, is the key, says Coturri, relating what a Southern California wine distributor told him: “Tony, your wines are a bridge between conventional and natural wines—because they’re so clean, you can’t tell they’re natural.”

Strangely enough, there isn’t much of a market for such wines in the North Bay, Coturri says, even if he was the poster boy—or poster graybeard—for organic winemaking pictured on the wall of the local Whole Foods‚ until he pointed out that they no longer carried his wines.

An everyday red blend from Mendocino and Sonoma County fruit, the non-vintage Sandocino North Coast Lot No. 2 ($25) smells like mixed berries in a bed of hay, and brings me right back to the first Coturri Zins I sampled from a folding table they’d set up in the Sonoma Plaza for some wine event or other, about 10 years ago. Or is there something about this aroma more ancient than that?

Find Coturri wines at Crocodile Restaurant in Petaluma, and at coturriwinery.com.

Green Dawn

As we head into 2018, we find ourselves, in this part of the world, embarking on a journey that’s been millennia in the making.

Cannabis—possibly our oldest cultivated plant ally, a camp follower to the core, a plant in which we have a receptor system designed specifically for—has taken to the mainstream and garnered the attention of a global audience of patients and detractors. Its future begins here, in California, the nucleus of contemporary cannabis culture,

From a grounded state of an
8 to 1, CBD to THC ratio, this is what I see as I look back at how we got here and where we are going.

We have smashed taboos and proclaimed, through experience and wisdom, now supported daily by new medical science discoveries, that cannabis is a medicine and is the key to reclaiming autonomy over one’s health and vitality. Through this, we have unlocked the power of cannabinoids, following our nose into the therapeutic abilities of terpenes, embracing the entourage effect of whole plant medicine. Understanding how and why our endocannabinoid system functions and is tuned through cannabis has reopened alliances with the rest of the plant and fungal worlds. Cannabis is the great potentiator.

California cultivators grew more cannabis this past season than any place ever has. It’s been a full-scale agrarian takeover, monumental and unrivaled in the history of plant medicine.

Yet this is a moment of duality and uncertainty. Medical or adult-use? Renegade or regulation? Raging against the machine or assimilating with it? The challenges this new era poses, especially to the localized economies and individual members of the cannabis community, are daunting. Yet this move to legality demands creativity, community and collaboration. Innovation spawns from perceived catastrophe. The unbounded ability for the cannabis community to shine is exciting to imagine.

It is my belief that we, myself included, are doing the bidding of the plant herself. We have placed her in our bodies, minds, communities, economic and political systems. The abundance of resource, the catalyzing of effects medical discovery and the community support created by this moment is real.

This is what brings me the most joy contemplating this inevitability. We get to show the world how this is done. So in true California fashion, let a wild rumpus begin!

Patrick Anderson is a lead educator at Project CBD and patient consultant at Emerald Pharms.

Shifting Sands

All is quiet on a breezy winter morning at Lawson’s Landing in Dillon Beach as land-use negotiations continue to play out between the Lawson family and the California Coastal Commission.

In its latest appearance before the 12-member commission in November, Lawson’s long-in-the-works wastewater-removal plan was rejected because it reportedly posed a threat to federally endangered red-legged frog habitat.

I spent the morning with Lawson’s lead legal consultant and self-described environmentalist Tom Flynn and the affable Mike Lawson, a co-owner of the grounds, touring the variegated acreage and getting the rundown on their plan for a new wastewater system after the coastal commission shot down their latest iteration of the plan.

To hear the pro-Lawson’s forces tell the tale, Lawson’s has been working in good faith to come into compliance with various upgrades and state demands since 2008 when the Environmental Action Committee of West Marin (EAC) appealed a Marin County Board of Supervisors’ decision to approve low-cost camping on about 90 acres in the 950-acre property.

Lawson’s has been in operation since the 1950s and mostly serves out-of-town campers rolling in from the Central Valley. It’s a wind-scrubbed haven near the mouth of Tomales Bay that features camping, fishing and boating, and hosts a boat livery and machine shop for boat repairs.

The site had numerous environmental issues that predated the takeover of the facility by a younger generation of Lawsons. A sand-mining operation has been shuttered. Numerous old bathrooms have been shut down and hundreds of camping spaces have been closed in order to accommodate the demands of the coastal commission.

The Lawsons submitted a Coastal Development Plan (CDP) that was approved by the commission in 2011 and which set out the contours of a plan that would keep Lawson’s in business, while addressing environmental-remediation issues over a period of years and projects.

Over the following six years, the family tried to meet the demands of both the EAC and the Coastal Commission, says Flynn, as it set out to bring the facility into full compliance with environmental law, and which included retiring some old bathrooms in sensitive camping areas. This transition at Lawson’s appeared to reach its most physically obvious and painful nadir when the Lawsons removed the last of the funky old legacy trailers from the site in 2016 as part of the 2011 agreement.

In early December, the place felt like it was lost in a limbo as the latest coastal commission vote represented a “back-to-the-drawing-board” moment for the Lawsons and Flynn. They’ve been busily sussing out a new pathway for the wastewater pipes that won’t run afoul of the commission, by avoiding areas that the coastal commission says would unduly impact the frogs. In the transition from the old wastewater system (which has been removed) to the new one (which has yet to be approved), Lawson’s has leaned heavily on portable toilets for its guests.

As for those old funky trailers, the idea was to replace them with higher-end cottage-trailers, says Lawson, and to expand the camping areas to accommodate tent campers.

Those spots now remain vacant, save for the addition of some picnic benches. It’s the slow season and the biggest crowd they’ve seen lately were the 500 or so folks who showed up after getting burned out in the North Bay fires.

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Scott Hochstrasser, a former Marin County environmental review officer, submitted a letter to the coastal commision that summed up the history at Lawson’s to date, and the pro-Lawson’s frustration at the EAC. Hochstrasser wrote that Lawson’s was “an appropriate place for expansion of visitor-serving facilities including overnight camping and boating, providing appropriate environmental resources were protected and sewage disposal facilities were improved to State Regional Water Quality Control Board standards.”

The latest setback for Lawson’s ensued after the commission voted 8–4 against a wastewater-treatment plan that was prepared by the hydrologist recommended by the EAC, says Flynn. In the meantime, says Mike Lawson, the family has been making all sorts of improvements to the business. Lawson’s is now hosting a Friday-night beer-and-oysters shindig, offering succulent bivalves from its recently upgraded camp store. And they’ve put in new picnic tables with great views of Tomales Bay for day-use adventurers who head to this remote little part of Northwest Marin County.

The Coastal Commission vote and push by local environmentalists to reject the Lawson’s wastewater plan has given rise to what pro-Lawson’s forces describe as a “move the goalposts” dynamic.

The characterization is not shared by the EAC, says the organization’s director, Morgan Patton.

At issue in the latest ruling is the fate of a resident population of red-legged frogs and making sure a wastewater system doesn’t impact their habitat.

On the one hand, Lawson’s was given permission to build new camping spaces under that part of the California Coastal Act that guarantees coastal access to all. But the Coastal Act also restricts development in “environmentally sensitive habitat areas,” which is exactly where the frogs currently reside.

In essence, the original 2011 agreement with Lawson’s set out to find a balance between the two Coastal Act edicts, and hinges on the installation of a new wastewater-removal system in wetland areas that host the ponds that the frogs populate.

Flynn cites reams of documents and counter-arguments to the coastal commission, as he says the wastewater plan was supported by commission staff, but that a push from local environmentalists swayed a few of the commissioners.

In a bristling op-ed in the Marin Independent Journal that followed the commission’s no-vote, Flynn also claimed that the Lawson’s plan to protect the frog was even superior to the one offered by the EAC. During a visit to the facility, Flynn and Lawson pledged to continue to work with the organization to find a solution to the wastewater dilemma, and they’ve already set out to offer a revised plan to transport wastewater to a place where it can be properly filtered before re-entering the watershed.

In his letter to the Coastal Commission, Hochstrasser accused the EAC of setting out to “exclude rural property owners from succeeding to provide low-cost, visitor-serving recreational opportunities on coastal lands for future generations who live outside of Marin County.” In effect, he accused the EAC of trying to drive Lawson’s out of business.

The EAC’s Patton notes that the latest offering from Lawson’s had two problems: the impact on frog habitat, and a preexisting conflict-resolution process enshrined in the Coastal Act that was already adjudicated in the original deal with Lawson’s.

That was the heart of the 2011 resolution between the competing demands of the Coastal Act, she says, when Lawson’s was given permission to develop recreational camping in wetlands areas, and also agreed to build a new wastewater system along with other environmental upgrades.

“The EAC has worked with the Lawsons along the way,” says Patton, strongly dismissing any notion that move-the-goalposts chicanery is afoot, or that the EAC is indifferent to the recreational needs of out-of-town beachgoers. “We are supportive of what they are doing. We just want to make sure it’s in the appropriate place that’s not damaging the habitat.”

Patton says that the EAC is simply trying to hold the Lawsons to the agreement they signed in 2011 that set out their Coastal Development Plan.

“It’s not moving the goalposts,” she says. “It’s looking at the
CDP.”

Dirty Ice

A “much ado about nothing” movie, I, Tonya retells the true-life tale of the assault on skater Nancy Kerrigan in winter 1994, when a hired thug wielding a baton tried to get the Olympic athlete out of the way of her rival, Tonya Harding.

Over 20 years later, the circumstances of the assault are still murky, swamped in he-said, she-said details. Here, the story is heightened by frame-breaking. Its star and co-producer, Margot Robbie, strangely excels at direct address to the camera, as in The Big Short, when Robbie took a bubble-bath to better concentrate the minds of viewers while she explained the concept of the sub-prime mortgage.

Those convinced by Suicide Squad that Robbie couldn’t act will be astonished by the glittering, scowling vehemence she brings to this performance. It’s furious, and yet it’s never monotonous; she’s dead impressive as a talented woman whose troubles were arguably not her own causing.

I, Tonya reminds us of the scope of Harding’s achievements as a skater, as well as the way her dirt-poor Portland upbringing skunked her with the patricians in charge of the world of figure skating. But the movie adds pleading for Harding. First, it focuses on the battery she took from her mother (Allison Janney, a deep-down dirty figure from a melodrama—hissable but hard to believe). The abuse continues from her porn-‘stached husband, Jeff Gillooly (Sebastian Stan), whom mom warned Tonya about.

To the camera, Tonya denies she took a potshot at Jeff, even as we see her pumping the smoking shell out of the shotgun. After the scandal, we see her short-lived career as a boxer. The best known of Tonya’s bouts was the foxy-boxing match she did with Monicagate veteran Paula Jones for a loathsome reality show on Fox. There’s juicy material in Harding’s story, but director Craig Gillespie’s quest for excitement muddies the water.

‘I, Tonya’ is playing in wide release in the North Bay.

The Race Is On

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Standing in front of an 11-foot-tall Christmas tree, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa laid out a vision for housing and redevelopment in California, surrounded by a living room crowd of mayors, city councilmembers, county supervisors, former politicians and Democratic heavyweights.

Villaraigosa, a leading candidate in the 2018 California governor’s race, came to Santa Cruz for a meet-and-greet at the home of former county treasurer Fred Keeley, a friend of Villaraigosa going back to their days in the state assembly together. Villaraigosa preached an “all-of-the-above strategy” to bring down housing costs.

“If you don’t have a strategy of ‘all of the above,’ we’re really not going to deal with this crisis,” Villaraigosa said in a brief interview, after speaking and answering questions from the crowd. “Everybody talks about homelessness, everybody talks about the housing crisis, and we’re not treating it like it is a crisis, like it’s an emergency.”

Villaraigosa is campaigning in advance of the June 5 primary election. If no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the vote, the top two candidates will go to a runoff in November.

Villaraigosa, 65, said he remembers buying his first home in a far different housing market at age 24, just by saving up—something he knows is impossible for most young people in 2017.

He has big ideas for how to make housing affordable once again. Some are hotly contested topics like increased housing density and building along major transit corridors.

He broke that plan into five bullet points:

• Put together a housing trust fund. Create a statewide revenue source to fund affordable projects.

• Bring back redevelopment in what Villaraigosa calls “Redevelopment 2.0.” Even though the original decision to ax redevelopment programs was a controversial one, Villaraigosa knows that bringing it back won’t be easy, because legislators have already gotten used to having the nearly $2 billion a year that comes from local property tax. Still, he hopes to restore those tax increments—some of which used to go to affordable housing—to local governments. If elected, Villaraigosa hopes to restore the program, with the support of mayors from around the state, while eliminating the excesses that Gov. Jerry Brown had criticized while unveiling a plan to gut redevelopment in 2011.

• Encourage cities to plan “smart growth” housing construction. Cities that want to access state money would need a plan for affordable housing. That would include building for a variety of lower incomes, adding density and building along major transportation corridors. “Every mayor here, every councilmember here knows part of why we have a crisis,” Villaraigosa said. “Because the more affluent communities, with single-family dwellings, constantly complain about the lack of housing, homelessness, and then push back every time you try to build. And the fact of the matter is you’ve gotta build.”

• Introduce regulatory reform. Require that local governments quicken permitting for proposed projects. Villaraigosa said the state also needs to look at reforming the California Environmental Quality Act, without weakening environmental requirements.

• Make everyone pitch in. Under his plan, Villaraigosa said he would not give a pass to the affluent communities that don’t want to build “smart growth” and affordable housing. Villaraigosa said they will “have to put money in a kitty for the region so they can build that housing.”

Just hours earlier that same day, the Los Angeles City Council approved a linkage fee for new development that will charge developers between $1 and $15 per square foot, depending on the type of project and location. Villaraigosa supports that approach and says these tools are important, even though they could get in the way of housing construction if they’re too cumbersome.

“You gotta find the balance,” he said. “Obviously, if it’s overly bureaucratic—that’s the argument that a lot of developers make. New York has inclusionary zoning. Probably a hundred cities in the state have inclusionary zoning. Let’s look at the best practices, let’s look at the places that are doing it well. I agree there is no question that some of these things could have the effect of delaying and raising the cost of housing. But in a crisis like this, we can’t let the perfect get in the way of the good.”

The idea of building may not go over well in all corners of the state, but Villaraigosa’s fellow candidate, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, has also called for a housing boom. Newsom, who leads Villaraigosa in the polls, says California needs to nearly quadruple its housing construction.

The race also includes state treasurer John Chiang, former state schools chief Delaine Eastin, attorney John Cox, and Assemblymember Travis Allen.

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Villaraigosa on the Issues

On support for the state’s public universities

“I’m a product of UCLA. I was going to UCLA when our tuition was $275 a quarter. Even with that, we had Cal Grants. I think we’re going to have to really figure that out.”

On pension reform

“If you talk to College Futures, and you ask, ‘What are some of the biggest driving costs for higher education?’ it’s pensions. When I was mayor, we were looking at a bankruptcy. At the time, I said, ‘Not on my watch.’ I was going to have to lay off 5,000 employees out of 37,000 folks. I worked with our unions, and I said, ‘Look I don’t want to lay off people, but we’re going to have to do something.’ Under our constitution, you can’t take away someone’s pension. It’s an earned right, so you have to give them something of like value. So what I gave them was early retirement, and they went from 6 percent to 11 percent. Not everyone’s going to agree with it, but the fact of the matter is a progressive is going also to have to balance budgets. And we’re going to have to acknowledge that she [pointing to a young woman] has a right to a decent pension [too].”

On high-speed rail

“I’m the guy who said, ‘We’ll build a subway.’ In the middle of the recession, we put a half-penny sales tax, generating $40 billion, built four light rails, lined one busway. We’re in construction on two more. I’m the infrastructure candidate. Having said that, we have to drive down the costs in value engineering. I think we have to look at a public-private partnership. . . . I do think we’re going to have to think out of the box in terms of cost.”

On the race

“When I go to faith leaders, and they say, ‘I want to pray for you to win,’ I say, ‘No, pray for wisdom.’ Pray for that. I’d love your vote, but you know what I want you to do? I want you to pay attention.”

Stretch out as U.S Attorney in Northern District as Sessions Snuffs out Cole Memo

On Thursday, as U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that the Department of Justice would rescind Obama-era guidance for federal prosecutors in pro-pot states (the so-called “Cole Memo”), the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California, Brian Stretch, announced he’d left his post for a private-sector job at the San Francisco law firm of Sidley Austin. ...

Jan. 4: Stand & Deliver in Santa Rosa

Conceived by Russian River Brewing Company brewer Jacob Totz and hospitality industry colleagues, Stand Up Sonoma is a comedy benefit that aims to use laughter to help the King Ridge Foundation help Sonoma County rebuild after October’s wildfires. The showcase features top-tier comics including Nick Kroll and Chris D’Elia, who’ve all been seen on Netflix comedy specials, television shows...

Jan. 5: Drawn to Dogs in Sebastopol

In the Chinese calendar, 2018 is the Year of the Dog. To celebrate, Sebastopol Center for the Arts is honoring man’s best friend with a group art show, ‘Year of the Dog,’ that features nearly 90 pieces of art dedicated to mutts of all shapes and sizes. Selected by the curating team at Napa’s di Rosa Center for Contemporary...

Jan. 7: Cosmic Wonder in Novato

Scientists at NASA and other space agencies have begun shedding new light on the mysteries of the universe by studying gravitational waves, actual ripples in spacetime that can only be created by immensely powerful forces of energy. By examining data from these waves, we can now “see” things like black holes, neutron stars and other space objects that are...

Jan. 8: The Write Spot in Petaluma

New Year’s resolutions are great to make, but sometimes you need inspiration to get you going. For anyone whose resolutions include writing, there’s no better jolt in the North Bay than the Jumpstart Writing Workshop, returning this week after taking the last month off. All you have to do is bring a notebook and pen, and workshop leaders will...

Natural Appeal

Nestled in the foothills of Sonoma Mountain since 1979, Coturri Winery might, by contemporary California standards, be said to be a winery of a certain age. The scene on the cellar floor, however, is positively antediluvian. "It's astounding to me," winemaker Tony Coturri says approvingly of his new collection of amphorae, buried in the dirt floor of his cellar in...

Green Dawn

As we head into 2018, we find ourselves, in this part of the world, embarking on a journey that's been millennia in the making. Cannabis—possibly our oldest cultivated plant ally, a camp follower to the core, a plant in which we have a receptor system designed specifically for—has taken to the mainstream and garnered the attention of a global audience...

Shifting Sands

All is quiet on a breezy winter morning at Lawson's Landing in Dillon Beach as land-use negotiations continue to play out between the Lawson family and the California Coastal Commission. In its latest appearance before the 12-member commission in November, Lawson's long-in-the-works wastewater-removal plan was rejected because it reportedly posed a threat to federally endangered red-legged frog habitat. I spent the...

Dirty Ice

A "much ado about nothing" movie, I, Tonya retells the true-life tale of the assault on skater Nancy Kerrigan in winter 1994, when a hired thug wielding a baton tried to get the Olympic athlete out of the way of her rival, Tonya Harding. Over 20 years later, the circumstances of the assault are still murky, swamped in he-said, she-said...

The Race Is On

Standing in front of an 11-foot-tall Christmas tree, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa laid out a vision for housing and redevelopment in California, surrounded by a living room crowd of mayors, city councilmembers, county supervisors, former politicians and Democratic heavyweights. Villaraigosa, a leading candidate in the 2018 California governor's race, came to Santa Cruz for a meet-and-greet at the...
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