Romping Rights

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With only a few hours to spare, two determined Marin County women helped stop the National Park Service from severely curtailing dog walking in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area.

The very day that the National Park Service (NPS) was scheduled to finalize a restrictive dog management plan, it capitulated and halted the plan until further notice, in part due to the work of Laura Pandapas and Cassandra Fimrite, who simply wanted to keep walking their dogs.

Neither activists nor rabble-rousers, Pandapas, an artist from Muir Beach, and Fimrite, a Tam Valley mom of two teenagers and one black lab, took a stand against the NPS and its plan, which would have slashed off-leash dog walking by 90 percent and on-leash dog walking by 50 percent.

The NPS cited various reasons for the sweeping changes, including the protection of wildlife and newly planted native species, yet it provided no site-specific data to back up its claims. The women, who have been fighting the NPS for years, sought to ensure that it ran a fair planning process and complied with the law. They lobbied lawmakers, requested NPS documents, hired a lawyer and filed a lawsuit. For now at least, they have won.

“It’s the birthright of everyone here to use the public lands of the [Golden Gate National Recreation Area] in the way that Congress intended,” Pandapas says.

Congress established the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA) in 1972. The land was designated a recreation area rather than a national park, because the open space was much needed in an urban setting like the Bay Area. A pet policy followed in 1979 that allowed dog walking on select portions of the GGNRA, which amounted to less than 1 percent of the land.

The idea of further restricting dog walking has been bandied about by the NPS for 15 years. In 2005, an attempt was aborted by the court for lack of proper public notice. The NPS began the necessary public process the following year. Meetings were held and public comment periods ensued, but dog devotees who attended the meetings cried foul. They became convinced that the NPS was not providing the public with adequate scientific studies to demonstrate the need for a change, and it seemed the government agency had a heavy bias against dog walking. The NPS decision, they said, was a fait accompli.

“There are tried-and-true conservation methods, such as a land buffer, seasonal buffers and time-of-use restrictions,” says Pandapas. “The NPS could have given the public a buy-in, but they didn’t. Instead, the only tool they employed was the removal of dogs.”

The park service presented a draft plan with extensive changes in the dog rules last February. It banned all off-leash dog walking on the fire roads and trails in Marin, and left only Rodeo Beach for dogs to play off-leash. Concerned that the plan was too restrictive and did not address the impact on Marin County open space and local parks, the Marin County Board of Supervisors, the Mill Valley City Council, the Muir Beach Community Services District and the Marin Humane Society opposed the plan. Congressman Jared Huffman suggested off-leash access in some areas before 10am, as well as other compromises, but the NPS refused to budge.

The final dog management plan rolled out last month and was almost identical to the draft. On-leash trails in Marin had been cut from 24 miles to just eight miles. Then, on Jan. 10, when the NPS was to sign the Record of Decision and publish the final rule for dog management at GGNRA, it issued a press release stating that it was halting the plan until further notice.

Why the unexpected change on the part of the NPS? “We showed that the NPS had a systemic pattern of bias and inappropriate relations with external groups,” Fimrite says.

When the NPS initially provided its draft plan, a coalition of dog and recreation advocate groups, including Marin County DOG (Dog Owners Group), an organization founded by Pandapas and Fimrite, requested public records from the NPS. The NPS refused to comply. The groups filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit to obtain the information, and a federal court recently ordered the NPS to produce the documents.

More than 260,000 heavily redacted pages trickled in and were methodically combed through by the four plaintiff groups: Marin County DOG, Save Our Recreation, SFDOG and Coastside DOG of San Mateo County, and their attorney Chris Carr, of Mill Valley, a partner with Morrison & Foerster.

On Jan. 4, less than a week before the final plan would be signed into the official record, the plaintiffs revealed examples of unethical and perhaps illegal conduct on the part of senior GGNRA officials and staff. They posted more than 40 damning documents on a website they called WoofieLeaks.

In one instance, former GGNRA director of communications and partnerships Howard Levitt, who retired last October, used his personal email account to conduct business regarding the dog management plan. And for good reason. The decision-making process was required to be unbiased, but Levitt had reportedly worked with several private organizations to stack the deck against dog walking.

Levitt also directed staff to destroy emails and discuss aspects of the plan offline. “Everyone: Please delete this and the previous message,” Levitt wrote in a September 2013 email. “These conversations are best done by phone.”

A GGNRA wildlife ecologist urged staff in a 2006 email to leave out data from the dog management plan environmental impact statement, because it did not jibe with the desired outcome—specifically, to virtually eliminate dogs in the GGNRA.

It also seemed that Levitt had a personal bone to pick with dogs. In April 2014, he wrote to Kimberly Kiefer of the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department about his broken finger: “Ironically, it’s my middle finger . . . probably broke it expressing my opinion of out of control off-leash dog visitors.”

“The level of hubris and arrogance contained in these documents is unfathomable,” Carr says. “This is evidence of bad faith on the part of the government. The park service was bound and determined to get the result they wanted.”

The documents that came to light on WoofieLeaks spurred the decision by the NPS to halt the signing of the plan and conduct an internal investigation. According to the NPS press release, “The decision comes in response to requests from members of Congress to extend the waiting period for the final environmental impact statement. This pause will also allow the National Park Service to conduct a review of certain records being released in response to an ongoing Freedom of Information Act request related to the park’s Dog Management Plan and rule.”

Congresswoman Jackie Speier believes that doesn’t go far enough and has called for a “truly independent inquiry into whether NPS employees acted improperly with regards to their work on the GGNRA Dog Management Plan.”

The NPS refused comment for this story and instead referred to two press releases that stated it would be investigating the documents.

“The records belong to us, the people,” Carr says. For that reason, Carr and his clients will move ahead with the Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the NPS. Fimrite considers the emails as proof that the entire plan must be thrown out.

“Someone has to address what happened in the GGNRA,” Pandapas says. “The NPS can’t seem to engage in an honorable process. What’s happening in the Bay Area is nothing to be proud of.”

Watch the Music Video for Go By Ocean’s New Single

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[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FzXkOdZ-IK4[/youtube]
San Francisco indie rock band Go By Ocean has released a visually metaphorical music video for their new single, “Ring Around the Sun.” The song is from the band’s forthcoming sophomore album, Sun Machine, due out in April.
“Ring Around the Sun” boasts a brightly upbeat sound that is a welcomed sign from the band and frontman Ryan McCaffrey, who reportedly went through an extended period of difficulty and darkness in the last few years. The new video’s visuals tell the story of his recent struggles, seen as inky black clouds that follow the characters in otherwise sunny settings.
The band celebrates the single’s release with a show on Thursday, February 23, at Sweetwater Music Hall in Mill Valley. Click here for more info.

Feb. 19: Wine Times in Napa

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The Winemaker by Richard Peterson
is a memoir about the Napa wine expert and author’s 50 years in the industry, his many inventive contributions still in use today and his tenure with Napa Valley wines like Atlas Peak Vineyards. But it’s a book about more than wine. It’s a personal look back at Peterson’s life, one that began in the Great Depression, and it traces California’s agricultural history from the vantage point of someone who saw it all. Peterson reads from The Winemaker on Sunday, Feb. 19, at Napa Bookmine’s Oxbow Market store, 610 First St., Shop 4, Napa. Noon. 707.726.6575.

Feb. 19: String Theory in Mill Valley

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Among the most celebrated bands in Ireland today, We Banjo 3 have spent two decades regaling audiences with a mix of Irish traditional tunes and Americana grass-fed folk for a sound steeped in history and infused with contemporary sensibility. Featuring banjo, fiddle, mandolin, guitar, vocals and percussion, We Banjo 3 give a new twist to old classics and invent modern takes on old sounds in a style they call “Celtgrass,” and this weekend, the banjo band make their way to the North Bay with a show on Sunday, Feb. 19, at Sweetwater Music Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. 8pm. $20–$22. 415.388.3850.

Feb. 21: Hard Rock Maestro in Petaluma

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Uli Jon Roth has secured his place in classic-rock history as a one-time lead guitarist of the Scorpions, joining the German headbangers in the ’70s for a stretch of four studio albums. After leaving the band, he formed his own heavy rock outfit, Electric Sun, and has performed solo ever since. The guitarist is also a composer who’s written symphonies and concertos, and is the inventor of the “sky guitar,” custom built with extra frets to mimic the tone of a violin. Uli Jon Roth brings his world of music to the stage on Tuesday, Feb. 21, at McNear’s Mystic Theatre, 8:30pm. $24. 23 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma, 707.765.2121.

Feb. 22: Farmed Films in Healdsburg

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Healdsburg’s Shed is inviting local ranchers and harvesters to get out of the cold and rain and kick up their heels for the Farmers and Friends Movie Night, featuring a double bill of agricultural documentaries. First up is Unbroken Ground, which explores four ways to change our relationship with the earth. Next is Changing Season, a look at the famed Masumoto Family Farm, in which a father and daughter work to keep the farm afloat in transitional times. See the films and sip on fermented drinks on Wednesday, Feb. 22, at Healdsburg Shed, 25 North St., Healdsburg. 6:30pm. Free for farmers, $5 for friends. 707.431.7433.

Bright Noir

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Halfway into a tasting of LaRue wines, I need wine charms—those shiny little baubles that are supposed to attach to the base of the glass—to tell them apart. Even the last in the lineup, typically the boldest and darkest wine of the lot, is just as luminescently raspberry-red as the first.

Winemaker Katy Wilson (pictured) makes Pinot Noir from the westernmost part of the Sonoma Coast appellation. True, her 2014 Emmaline Ann Pinot Noir winks at darker aromas of smoky oak and leather, and has the savor of lingonberry instead of cool cherry or raspberry candy. Still, light, bright Pinot Noir all around. So is this what we can expect from Pinot from this region?

Not the whole story. At a tasting of Pinot Noir from the Coastlands Vineyard, all from the same vintage but different wineries—some of which Wilson also consults for—each wine was distinct, she says, showing a range of Pinot characteristics from bright-red berries to dark, cherry-cola flavors.

The winemaker brings a lot to the barrel, says Wilson, and that’s why she wanted to start her own brand, even when she’s already busy making wine for a roster of other wineries, including Claypool Cellars. For LaRue, Wilson does nearly everything herself, including punch-downs and toppings. It’s hard to say that any one quotidian task stamps the wine as being hers alone. But in the end it is. Content to make just 500 cases a year, Wilson says that growing a big winery with her name on it isn’t the point—besides, she named LaRue after her great-grandmother, Veona LaRue, who advised Katy she could do anything she wanted in life.

Wilson wasn’t sure what she wanted to do until she learned in ag 101 at Cal Poly that making wine was an option—she was in. Having grown up on a walnut orchard (“small by Central Valley standards”), Wilson is happy to go off on a tangent about nut pricing and the arcana of dairy shares with the same personable enthusiasm she brings to talking about fine wine. Although five appointments is a big week at the “fancy booze caboose,” the funky tasting-room-in-a-train-car she shares with Claypool Cellars in Sebastopol, she doesn’t mind showing visitors around the vineyards, and then stopping at Freestone for pastries—it’s all part of what she does for her wine.

LaRue Wines, 6761 Sebastopol Ave., (Gravenstein Station), Sebastopol. Tasting by appointment, $15; vineyard tour, $45. Wines are priced at $60 to $75. 707.933.8355.

Pot Tax

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If you live in Sonoma County, you recently received your voter information guide for a March 7 special election. You may have been surprised to see that you are being asked to vote on commercial cannabis—again.

Didn’t November’s passage of Proposition 64 create rules for cultivating, distributing and selling cannabis in our state? What’s left to vote on at this point? Taxes.

Measure A asks how commercial-cannabis activity in the unincorporated areas of the county should be taxed and what restrictions should apply to those activities. The county wants to impose a business-license tax on commercial cannabis, and state law requires that such a general tax must be passed by a majority of voters.

As a general tax, revenue from the proposed tax would flow into the county’s general fund and would be available for general use by the county or as specifically directed by the board of supervisors. As noted by the county counsel’s analysis in the voter guide, these uses could include code enforcement, public safety, fire protection, health, housing, road improvements and environmental protection.

The proposed cannabis business tax provides for taxation of cultivators in two ways: based on the gross receipts of the cannabis business or based on the size of the cultivation area.

In each instance, the proposed ordinance provides for tax limits based on the manner of cultivation. For outdoor cultivation, the limits are set at
10 percent of gross receipts, or $10 per square foot of cultivation area; for indoor cultivation, the limits are set at 10 percent of an operation’s gross receipts, or $38 per square foot of cultivation area; and for mixed-light (i.e., greenhouse) cultivation, the limits are set at 10 percent of the operation’s gross receipts, or $22 per square foot of cultivation area.

The proposed ordinance specifies that taxation of all other commercial cannabis businesses—manufacturers, transporters, distributors, nurseries, testing laboratories and dispensaries—will be based on gross receipts.

Certainly, some level of taxation is appropriate to, at minimum, cover the cost of the county’s implementation and oversight of its newly enacted commercial cannabis regulations. On the other hand, if the tax is too high, it may have the undesirable consequence of keeping local cannabis business operating in the dark to avoid the tax. Regardless of your views, every resident should show up to the polls March 7 and vote.

Aaron Currie is an attorney with Dickenson, Peatman & Forgarty who assists cannabis businesses in complying with state and local laws. Contact him at ac*****@*****aw.com.

Ms. Warren Goes to Washington

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In the 1939 film Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Jimmy Stewart’s character, Jefferson Smith, an idealistic and slightly naive man, is appointed the junior senator from his home state. Throughout the film, he appears to be out of step, behind the eight ball, but willing to learn “how the game is played” in Washington, from his sinister senior senator.

When the dirty business of politics and conflicts of interest arise, Smith defends his cause and is shown no mercy or respect and eventually slandered with false accusations. (Sound familiar?) He is literally brought to his knees when he faints after his 24-hour filibuster in the senate chambers. But the movie has a happy ending, owing to director Frank Capra’s belief that there is something to be said for this here democracy and what one person’s voice can accomplish.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, no less idealistic but with greater knowledge of the workings of Congress, was also shown great disrespect and temporarily silenced by an arcane rule, for reading historical letters from Sen. Edward Kennedy and Ms. Coretta Scott King, that voiced their concern for Jeff Sessions’ appointment to the courts in Alabama. These are letters that would allow for the robust debate the American people need at this time in our democracy, especially when it appears our independent judicial branch of government is under attack.

Even more distressing is the fact that fellow male senators rose and completed reading those letters without being subjected to that same rule applied to Sen. Warren. It appears that Sen. Mitch McConnell not only showed poor judgment in his decision to curtail discussion of a prospective appointee’s qualifications, but he has now opened a second front with his boorish behavior toward a female colleague. Perhaps Sen. McConnell would retitle his version of Capra’s classic as Woman, Shut Up and Sit Down!

E.G. Singer lives in Santa Rosa.

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

Copia Reborn

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It was an ambitious project—perhaps too ambitious. In 2001, downtown Napa cut the ribbon for a nearly 80,000- square-foot center for food, wine and art named after the Roman goddess of abundance, Copia. In its seven years of operation, however, Copia more closely resembled the Greek hero Icarus, who flew too close to the sun.

Between 2001 and 2008, Copia welcomed visitors to its museum, two theaters, classrooms, demonstration kitchen, restaurant, rare-book library and vegetable and herb gardens. But poor ticket sales and changes to Copia’s focus and offerings left the center in bankruptcy in 2008, and Copia closed its doors.

But after almost a decade of darkness, new light is coming into the defunct space. In October 2015, the Culinary Institute of America (CIA) purchased the northern portion of the property for $12.5 million to complement the school’s St. Helena campus. It’s now called the CIA at Copia.

The CIA is considered the premier culinary school in the country, with campuses in New York, Texas and the Napa Valley. The St. Helena campus, located at Greystone Cellars, has been in business since 1995.

The new Napa location is the first space that the CIA is gearing toward public events rather than programs for cooking professionals and students. Last year, CIA began hosting events at the center, like Flavor! Napa Valley and this weekend,
Feb. 18–19, the CIA at Copia
holds its grand opening.

Continuing with its ongoing schedule of cooking classes and demonstrations, the event includes several hands-on classes, available for moderate fees, that show you how to make everything from your own condiments to fresh cheeses to eclairs.

Many of the weekend’s events are free and family-appropriate, meaning the kids can take part in activities like cookie decorating while parents attend book signings and film screenings in the Copia theater.

The weekend’s special guests include CIA president Tim Ryan, author and cheese expert Janet Fletcher and Silver Oak Winery chef Dominic Orsini. Several Napa Valley wineries including including St. Helena’s Clif Family Winery, Napa’s Cuvaison Estate Wines and Calistoga’s Storybook Mountain Vineyards will offer winetasting.

Keeping the original Copia’s love of art in mind, the new center wraps its grand opening weekend with an art unveiling in the Copia Gardens. Napa artist Gordon Huether, whose large-scale art installations are renowned for their striking color and shimmering glass-like qualities, will be honoring original Copia backers Robert and Margrit Mondavi with a new work of art.

Romping Rights

With only a few hours to spare, two determined Marin County women helped stop the National Park Service from severely curtailing dog walking in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. The very day that the National Park Service (NPS) was scheduled to finalize a restrictive dog management plan, it capitulated and halted the plan until further notice, in part due...

Watch the Music Video for Go By Ocean’s New Single

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FzXkOdZ-IK4 San Francisco indie rock band Go By Ocean has released a visually metaphorical music video for their new single, "Ring Around the Sun." The song is from the band's forthcoming sophomore album, Sun Machine, due out in April. "Ring Around the Sun" boasts a brightly upbeat sound that is a welcomed sign from the band and frontman Ryan McCaffrey, who reportedly went through an...

Feb. 19: Wine Times in Napa

The Winemaker by Richard Peterson is a memoir about the Napa wine expert and author’s 50 years in the industry, his many inventive contributions still in use today and his tenure with Napa Valley wines like Atlas Peak Vineyards. But it’s a book about more than wine. It’s a personal look back at Peterson’s life, one that began in...

Feb. 19: String Theory in Mill Valley

Among the most celebrated bands in Ireland today, We Banjo 3 have spent two decades regaling audiences with a mix of Irish traditional tunes and Americana grass-fed folk for a sound steeped in history and infused with contemporary sensibility. Featuring banjo, fiddle, mandolin, guitar, vocals and percussion, We Banjo 3 give a new twist to old classics and invent...

Feb. 21: Hard Rock Maestro in Petaluma

Uli Jon Roth has secured his place in classic-rock history as a one-time lead guitarist of the Scorpions, joining the German headbangers in the ’70s for a stretch of four studio albums. After leaving the band, he formed his own heavy rock outfit, Electric Sun, and has performed solo ever since. The guitarist is also a composer who’s written...

Feb. 22: Farmed Films in Healdsburg

Healdsburg’s Shed is inviting local ranchers and harvesters to get out of the cold and rain and kick up their heels for the Farmers and Friends Movie Night, featuring a double bill of agricultural documentaries. First up is Unbroken Ground, which explores four ways to change our relationship with the earth. Next is Changing Season, a look at the...

Bright Noir

Halfway into a tasting of LaRue wines, I need wine charms—those shiny little baubles that are supposed to attach to the base of the glass—to tell them apart. Even the last in the lineup, typically the boldest and darkest wine of the lot, is just as luminescently raspberry-red as the first. Winemaker Katy Wilson (pictured) makes Pinot Noir from the...

Pot Tax

If you live in Sonoma County, you recently received your voter information guide for a March 7 special election. You may have been surprised to see that you are being asked to vote on commercial cannabis—again. Didn't November's passage of Proposition 64 create rules for cultivating, distributing and selling cannabis in our state? What's left to vote on at this...

Ms. Warren Goes to Washington

In the 1939 film Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Jimmy Stewart's character, Jefferson Smith, an idealistic and slightly naive man, is appointed the junior senator from his home state. Throughout the film, he appears to be out of step, behind the eight ball, but willing to learn "how the game is played" in Washington, from his sinister senior senator. When...

Copia Reborn

It was an ambitious project—perhaps too ambitious. In 2001, downtown Napa cut the ribbon for a nearly 80,000- square-foot center for food, wine and art named after the Roman goddess of abundance, Copia. In its seven years of operation, however, Copia more closely resembled the Greek hero Icarus, who flew too close to the sun. Between 2001 and 2008, Copia...
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