Wee Keg

0

Pale, cold, slightly alcoholic and bitter. That’s not a winner of an online dating profile, that’s what Lagunitas Brewing Company has to say, with characteristic snark and whimsy, about its latest brew: a 12-ounce aluminum can of hoppiness called the 12th of Never.

It was “never” meant to happen, at least according to Lagunitas founder Tony Magee, who lampooned environmental claims about canned beer in a 2012 Twitter diatribe. But in an email message from last July, specialty brewmaster at Lagunitas Mark Hughes coyly told the Bohemian, “It is hard to say ‘never’ about anything in brewing!”

The can was coming. The aptly named 12th of Never pale ale was released this July in 12-ounce, purple “minikegs,” i.e., aluminum cans. Billed as a pale ale with tropical notes, it’s a hoppy one, that’s for sure—crack the pop-top and pour it into a glass to get the best hit of that classic, piney California pale ale aroma (5.5 percent alcohol by volume). Then again, if I hadn’t already evaluated my advance sample, which was shipped from the brewery’s Chicago digs, I might have wanted to take it on the hike I went on the other day instead of meeting my deadline for this column—one of the key benefits of aluminum cans being packability. “We decided that beer lovers think cans are cool and recognize they can go places glass cannot,” Magee says in the company’s press release.

Already, the can has been getting around. At the top of the mountain, I ran into someone I hadn’t seen for years, and without prompting, he said, “I had this Lagunitas beer in a little purple can—it was really hoppy!”

Meanwhile, new brews continue to clatter off the old glass bottling line. Lagunitas describes its Stoopid Wit (6.3 ABV) as a “Belgian-ish Wit-ly-esque-ish-ness brew,” perhaps because they’re cheekily self-conscious that their beers may seem like stylistic variations based on the same chassis. Some of that fruity, dried-banana, Belgian-style aroma does share the nose with those piney hop notes in this style-bridging beer, but it’s all classic, dry California pale ale after that.

A blast from the past in glass, the brewery’s “WTF,” or Wilco Tango Foxtrot, a “malty, robust, jobless recovery ale,” has just been rereleased in 22-ounce bottles (7.85 ABV). While the premise is dated, with the days of jobless recovery replaced by, well, whatever this is that we’re having now, a few glasses of this big, hoppy imperial brown ale will take the edge off any kind of trying times.

Last Stands

0

After an era of relative quiet compared to the so-called timber wars of the 1980s and ’90s, conflict over logging in the forests of Northern California has returned.

A plan to log 100- to 150-year-old redwood trees across 320 acres of northwestern Sonoma County in the Gualala River floodplain has generated fervent opposition from environmentalists and local residents over the past year. Clear-cutting of 5,760 fire-impacted acres in the Klamath National Forest kicked off in April, much of it on land previously designated as endangered species habitat.

The indigenous people of the area, the Karuk tribe, worked with local environmentalists to craft an alternative plan, but the Forest Service largely ignored it. The Karuk and the environmental groups have filed a lawsuit in an attempt to scuttle the logging. Last month, Karuk tribal members and local activists blocked the road leading to the logging while holding up a banner reading “Karuk Land, Karuk Plan” in an effort to slow the logging operations pending a legal judgment that could come as soon as late August.

During the last period of conflict 30 years ago, regional environmentalists curtailed some logging operations by setting aside talismanic stands of old-growth redwood trees in parks and preserves, and by pointing out that forests provide important habitat to numerous species, many of them endangered, including northern spotted owls, marbled murrelets and coho salmon.

California is home to some of the most prodigious forests on earth, but lumber production in California has steadily declined since the 1950s. A similar trend also occurred in other western states. But now logging companies are coming back to pick over what’s left.

Many timber companies treated their trees like green gold that was theirs to mine.

“Companies have come in and gotten up to a 16 percent return per year on their timberland, but the forests are only physically capable of yielding about 1 percent per year over the long run,” says former California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) director Richard Wilson, who lives outside the northeastern Mendocino County town of Covelo. Cal Fire is the agency that regulates timber harvests on the state’s private lands.

As a result, soil that once grew trees in the forest has washed into streams and chokes vital fish habitat. The trees that remain—many third-, fourth- and sometimes even spindly fifth-growth replacement trees—hold back less floodwater, provide far less animal habitat and sequester far less carbon dioxide.

Even so, timber remains a major industry in California, particularly in northern counties like Humboldt, Shasta, Siskiyou and Mendocino, which account for about half the state’s timber harvest. Roughly
20 percent of that harvest currently occurs on public lands.

In some cases, this logging involving cutting old trees that survived the liquidation logging of previous eras. Most often, though, contemporary lumbering means harvesting from lands scarred by past operations, thus eliciting messy disputes.

During Wilson’s tenure at Cal Fire (1991 to 1999), he sought to address the problem of over-harvesting by requiring that timber companies file 100-year management plans for sustaining the volume of timber in their forests, called “sustained yield plans.”

But he says the industry has used its political clout to undermine these regulations, such that a large proportion of the state’s remaining timberlands continue to be degraded by companies like Sierra Pacific Industries, California’s largest timber company, which owns
1.8 million acres and relies heavily on clear-cutting.

“We’ve got the rules,” Wilson says. “It’s a question of enforcing them.”

In this story, we highlight several timber-industry fights playing out in the North Coast. These sorts of struggles will shape the long-term well-being of rural economies, the health of local ecosystems and the well-being of indigenous cultures.

These struggles are woven into a broader ecological context. Northern California’s forests make up the southern leg of the conifer-rich “Pacific temperate rainforest,” which extends from Prince William Sound in Alaska to California’s Central Coast. These forests contain the largest mass of living and decaying material of any ecosystem in the world on a per-unit basis, prompting many scientists and environmentalists to view their maintenance and restoration as crucial in the fight against global climate change.

THE WESTSIDE PLAN: 5,700 ACRES OF CLEAR-CUTS

The Marble Mountains are among the ecological jewels of Northern California’s national forest system and home to numerous old-growth conifer stands. In the 1990s, the U.S. Forest Service set aside many mature forest habitats as reserves for the benefit of old-growth-dependent species, such as the northern spotted owl, which is listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.

In 2014, a series of wildfires known as the Westside Fire Complex burned across 183,000 acres of the broader region, most of it in the Klamath National Forest. In response, the Forest Service has designed timber sales that include more than 5,700 acres of clear-cuts, including fire-killed and living trees, many of them occurring in the mature forest reserves or on steep slopes above streams federally designated to promote the long-term survival of coho salmon.

The Forest Service often auctions off fire-impacted lands to timber companies for “salvage logging.” The Westside Plan is the largest post-fire timber sale in the recent history of northwestern California.

Klamath National Forest supervisor Patricia Grantham says the standing dead trees in the forest pose a major long-term fire hazard. By aggressively logging these areas of the forest, her agency is supplying logs to local mills and biomass power plants, contributing to the long-term health of the forest and protecting local residents’ safety.

“When fire returns to the area in the future, it will be smaller and less severe because of the actions we’re taking on the landscape today,” Grantham says.

But environmentalists and tribal members regard the Westside Plan as a giveaway to the timber industry of historic proportions.

“The Westside [Plan] is absolutely the worst project I’ve ever seen in Pacific Northwest national forests,” says Kimberly Baker of the Arcata-based Environmental Protection Information Center (EPIC). She has been monitoring timber sales on national forests for the past 18 years.

The Karuk tribe, EPIC and three other environmental groups have filed suit in federal court to challenge the project. Logging began in April, and it is unclear how much of the land will remain intact when the judge reaches a verdict.

[page]

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has also expressed skepticism regarding the Forest Service’s proposal, noting that dead trees “greatly improve” the quality of habitat for spotted owls and other creatures as the forest naturally recovers over time.

According to Fish and Wildlife’s estimate, the Westside Plan could lead to the deaths of 103 northern spotted owls—at least 1 percent of the species’ entire population.

Many of the slopes where the logging is occurring are among the most unstable in the Klamath National Forest. They also happen to be right above several of the Klamath’s most important salmon-bearing streams. By removing anchoring vegetation and carving a spider-web pattern of roads and log landings, the logging threatens to bury the streams with silt.

The Karuk tribe worked with environmental groups to develop an alternative plan that would rely on prescribed fires to regenerate the land over the long run. Logging would be confined to ridgelines, for the purpose of developing fuel breaks, such that some logs would still feed local mills. Much of the Klamath Forest is the Karuk’s aboriginal territory.

The Forest Service’s Grantham says she incorporated most of the Karuk’s input. “The plan I ultimately decided on for the project and the Karuk Plan are about 75 percent similar,” Grantham says, “and in some ways we came all the way over to their way of thinking.”

Karuk tribe natural resources adviser Craig Tucker says that simply isn’t true. “In reality, the Forest Service basically told us we can go pound sand,” he says regarding the agency’s response to the Karuk management plan.

According to public records, the Forest Service has spent approximately $24 million developing the Westside logging plan and is auctioning most of the logs for a paltry $2.50 per truckload, thus generating only about $450,000 in revenue for the agency.

In May, tribal members and environmental activists blocked the road leading to the salvage logging project while holding up a banner that read “Karuk Land, Karuk Plan.” They are considering further civil disobedience as the logging proceeds.

“The Karuk tribe’s been here for at least 10,000 years,” Tucker says. “The Forest Service has been here for about a hundred. Yet they don’t listen.”

IN THE SHADOW OF HURWITZ

In 1985, Houston-based investor Charles Hurwitz used junk bonds floated by financier Michael Milken (who later spent two years in jail for financial fraud) to finance a hostile takeover of locally owned logging company Pacific Lumber. This cutthroat move gave Hurwitz control of 200,000 acres of Humboldt County timberland, including more than half of all remaining privately owned old-growth redwoods on the West Coast—and, thus, in the world.

By the time Hurwitz cashed out of the land in the mid-aughts, his company, Maxxam Corporation, had clear-cut roughly three-quarters of his ownership.

In 2008, the Fisher Family of San Francisco purchased the land and formed Humboldt Redwood Company (HRC). Best known as owners of the Gap and Banana Republic clothing companies, family matriarch Doris Fisher and her sons, Robert, William and John (who is also well-known as the majority owner of the Oakland A’s), are all billionaires. Along with forestland they had previously purchased in Mendocino and Sonoma counties, the Fishers own more coastal redwood forest than perhaps any private entity ever has, roughly 440,000 acres.

The company immediately pledged a new era of harmony between environmentalists and the timber industry. They vowed to abstain from traditional clear-cutting, preserve old-growth trees and invest in road improvements to reduce erosion into streams, which despoils fish habitat.

“From the beginning, we committed to demonstrating that it is possible to manage productive timberlands with a high standard of stewardship,” recently retired HRC President Mike Jani told me in an interview last year.

To many residents of the Elk River watershed, which drains into Humboldt Bay south of Eureka, those words are almost entirely empty. For the past 20 years, large-scale logging upstream has caused floods of increasing intensity that have damaged their homes and threatened their safety.

The problems started when Hurwitz’s Maxxam conducted large-scale clear-cutting that badly reduced the soil’s capacity to absorb rainwater and created a massive sediment plume that has buried much of the river’s north fork. But the problem has worsened as HRC and another large timber company, Green Diamond Resources Company, have continued intensive logging.

“HRC’s ‘sustainability’ is based on trampling our constitutional rights, and spending huge sums of lobbying money in order to do so,” says Jesse Noell, a long-time Elk River resident.

The EPA has informed state agencies that the destruction of the Elk River, an important salmon-bearing stream, violates the Clean Water Act. In the late-1990s, they enacted a “memorandum of understanding” with the North Coast division of the state water board requiring that the board develop a plan for cleaning up the sediment in the river by 2002.

Fourteen years later, the water board still has not implemented the plan. According to Rob DiPerna, EPIC’s forest and wildlife advocate, the reason is straightforward: political pressure from timber companies and the regulatory agencies that favor them.

[page]

DiPerna notes that Maxxam caused most of the original damage, even if HRC has worsened it. A 2015 post on the company’s website said that “Humboldt Redwood had a recent difference of scientific opinion with the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board and remains in dialogue with the agency about the best way to address downstream flooding issues.” But the company later filed a lawsuit against the board for not authorizing sediment discharge and logging operations into the Elk River as part of a timber harvest plan the company filed.

“For HRC, the problem is that the Elk River is one of the only areas of its land with large stands of merchantable timber, since Maxxam cut so much and most of the other merchantable stands are protected from cutting until at least 2049, per a habitat conservation plan Maxxam negotiated with state and federal agencies, politicians, and national environmental groups in the late-’90s.

Noell and other local residents say that doesn’t constitute an excuse.

“We have a right to be able to use our water and not to be flooded three to 20 times per year,” says Kristy Wrigley, a fourth-generation apple farmer who lives along the Elk River’s north fork. Her lands are no longer productive due to the flooding.

One of the only other places where HRC owns large stands of timber is in the Mattole River watershed. It meets the Pacific Ocean at the westernmost point of the continental United States, in the town of Petrolia, located along the largest swath of undeveloped coastline in the nation, the Lost Coast.

In the Mattole, HRC has received approval to conduct the largest late-successional (a term for nearly old-growth) timber harvest in Humboldt County in at least 17 years. The areas they are attempting to log include steep slopes that Maxxam had failed to reach—a fact that is deeply painful for residents who fought off those plans in the late ’90s and early 2000s.

A road blockade erected by local activists in 2014 has forestalled most of the logging, and HRC has since been engaged in discussions with locals and environmentalists about a compromise.

A newly minted local residents group called the Lost Coast League is seeking to acquire HRC’s land in the Mattole—including about 18,000 acres—to become an ecological preserve that would limit the harvest of trees to that which facilitates their recovery.

HACK ‘N’ SQUIRT IN MENDOCINO COUNTY

Spanning the coastal zones from Santa Barbara to southern Oregon, tanoak trees have been a staff of life for indigenous people, who historically relied on their acorns as a food source. To modern timber companies, however, they are largely a weed tree. Tanoaks often thrive in land disturbed by logging, which include most of California’s coastal redwood and Douglas fir forests.

The most cost-effective means of eliminating tanoaks—and other undesirable hardwood species—is a method called “hack ‘n’ squirt,” which involves cutting around the base of the tree, peeling back the bark and spraying a systemic herbicide called Imazapyr into the freshly opened gashes.

The largest practitioner of this technique is Humboldt Redwood Company’s southern counterpart, Mendocino Redwood Company (MRC), which the Fisher family also owns. According to documents MRC submitted to state and federal agencies in 2012, they had conducted hack ‘n’ squirt on 78,000 acres of their land at that point—roughly 3 percent of vast Mendocino County’s private lands.

But the widespread herbicide use and killing of trees has outraged many Mendocino County residents. In June, Mendocino County voters resoundingly passed Measure V, which declares intentionally killing and leaving standing dead trees a public nuisance under the county code. The measure’s explicit aim is to restrict hack ‘n’ squirt, and it passed with 62 percent of the vote—even though MRC spent roughly $300,000 in a campaign to defeat it.

In 1984, the California Legislature responded to agribusiness interests by adopting a bill sponsored by Asemblymember Bruce Bronzan, which overturned a Mendocino County ban on aerial spraying of herbicides. In a naked power play, the bill stipulated that only the Legislature can restrict the use of pesticides and herbicides, and not counties. Thus, Mendocino County activists have been unable to call for an outright ban on hack ‘n’ squirt.

The rationale for Measure V is that MRC and other smaller timber companies are “manufacturing a fire hazard,” says Albion-Little River volunteer fire chief Ted Williams, by leaving so many trees standing dead. Williams was one of the measure’s official proponents.

MRC says they try to use hack ‘n’ squirt only “once in the life of a stand [60–80 years],” and that the practice is necessary for speeding up the restoration of redwoods and Douglas firs that predecessor timber companies recklessly over-harvested. They also note that it is the most cost-effective way of limiting tanoaks.

The effectiveness of Measure V is subject to legal interpretation. As MRC forester Jessie Weaver informed local residents, the company has continued to use the technique since the passage of Measure V, though he would not say if they plan to continue relying on the practice after the county officially certifies the measure.

On July 19, about 30 local residents temporarily blocked one of the entrances to MRC’s Ukiah mill to call on them to “abide by the spirit” of Measure V by committing to an outright hack ‘n’ squirt ban.

LOGGING THE GUALALA FLOODPLAIN

Last year, Gualala Redwoods Timber (GRT)—owner of 29,500 acres in northwestern Sonoma and southwestern Mendocino counties—submitted plans to log hundreds of large second-growth redwoods in the Gualala River’s sensitive floodplain. The Dogwood Plan encompasses 320 acres, making it the largest Gualala River floodplain logging plans in the modern regulatory era.

The redwood trees in the floodplain are at least 100 years old. Sonoma County’s regional parks district has eyed the floodplain area as a possible park site for more than 50 years, while a consortium of conservation groups has sought to buy the remainder of the land and create a “working community forest” characterized by a lighter-touch approach to logging.

Instead, the property has been purchased by the Burch family of San Jose, whose West Coast timber franchise spans three states.

More than a year after submitting the Dogwood Plan,
Cal Fire signed off on it last month. The plan had received so much opposition from local residents and environmentalists that the company submitted the plan four different times.

Peter Baye, a coast ecologist who works with Friends of the Gualala River, notes that GRT still hasn’t surveyed for spotted owls or protected species of rare plants. “I really have doubts whether they are following protocols, or just shuffling paperwork,” he says.

Friends of the Gualala River and Forest Unlimited have filed a notice of their intention to sue to stop the plan. They will likely seek an injunction to stop the logging pending a trial that could occur later this or next year.

On July 16, about 200 people attended a rally against the Dogwood Plan at Gualala Point Regional Park. Gualala Redwoods Timber forester Henry Alden, whose previous job was with Maxxam, has said that criticism of the logging plan is exaggerated, and that the company plans to log much more selectively than most critics of the project have been led to believe.

Many Dogwood Plan opponents note that the Gualala River has already sustained enormous damage. According to a 2010
Cal Fire report on sustainable forest management, the average annual California timberland harvest covers 1.64 percent of private timberland acres. By contrast, the company’s total logging from 2004–14 covered about 30 percent of its land, which translates to a harvest rate of around 2.7 percent per year—far beyond what experts consider sustainable.

Richard Wilson, the former Cal Fire chief, says that battles between environmentalists and timber companies will continue until timber companies are forced to limit their harvesting practices to sustainable levels that balance the needs of other species and local residents.

“Most of the public doesn’t realize we still have a long way to go to get to sustainability,” he says.

Beyond the Grove

0

The Bohemian Grove recently settled a lawsuit for $7 million brought by over 600 former employees of the luxe West County campground where super-fabulous white men (for the most part) in khakis gather annually to get loaded, eat chili manly-man style, and sit around in circles for sing-alongs with the likes of Steve Miller.

This Bohemian heard from former Bohemian Grove worker David Gelsinger right after the settlement was announced, and he came by the office to share photos and his Bohemian Grove story. Gelsinger was basically an all-purpose man, making $250 a day to help campers kick back and commune with nature. It was, he says, a 24-7 job, for which he was not paid a 24-7 wage. Gelsinger says that this recent suit would not have happened had he not taken Bohemian Grove to court over underpayment for the hours he put in at the Grove. And he says they still owe him $1.5 million in back wages and wrongful-termination dollars.

Gelsinger worked at the Grove from 1994 until 2014 (the same year he sued) at various camps within the super-secret enclave, and says that during that time he was kicked by an attendee and also endured such hijinks as attendees writing “I’m gay” on his timecard. Very mature. He shared a photo of himself sitting in a circle with a bunch of men—in khakis—listening to Steve Miller strum the guitar and sing.

Gelsinger says he settled his suit under duress, for an undisclosed amount somewhere north of $50,000. For his part, Steve Miller claims to be a joker, a smoker, a midnight toker. He sure didn’t want to hurt no one.

Sing It

0

A stage show with music, built backwards. That’s one way to define a “jukebox musical.” This year’s Summer Repertory Theatre Festival at Santa Rosa Junior College, includes two very different examples of the “jukebox musical,” in which the story is constructed around a random list of songs, rather than the other way around.

Nice Work If You Can Get It, revolving around classic 1920s and ’30s songs by George and Ira Gershwin, is pleasant, classy, solidly performed and light as a feather. Rock of Ages, constructed from pop rock and metal tunes from the garish ’80s, is coarse, crude, exuberant and sprinkled with sleazy Sunset Strip darkness and danger.

Created by Chris D’Arienzo, Rock of Ages employs songs by Journey, Van Halen, REO Speedwagon, Pat Benatar, Starship and others in telling the story of Drew (Nate Stuckey), a wannabe rocker stuck cleaning the bar at an L.A. music club, and Sherri (Jessica Merghart), the aspiring actress he falls hard for. Yes, singing Steve Perry’s “Oh Sherrie” is inevitable. Both are working at a legendary rock venue called the Bourbon Room when their budding romance is derailed by the arrival of Stacee Jaxx (Mark Jammal), the amoral lead singer of a band called Arsenal.

A subplot involves a scheme by German developers to raze the Bourbon Room to make way for chain stores, galvanizing the club’s supporters into various forms of protest, including repeated group performances of Twisted Sister’s “We’re Not Gonna Take It.”

As written, it’s a bit of a hot mess, with a fair share of gleefully offensive moments and one potentially moving scene marred by the actors’ use of distasteful stereotypes. But overall, Rock of Ages is infectiously pleasurable, with loads of high energy, a kind of gritty, youthful innocence, and tunes written to stick in your brain for days.

Rating (out of 5):

Meanwhile, Nice Work If You Can Get It, written by Joe DiPietro, seems to evaporate almost as soon as it’s over, along with the majority of its pleasing but strangely unmemorable tunes, the two or three exceptions including “Someone to Watch Over Me,” “ ’S Wonderful” and “Fascinating Rhythm.”

The plot, about a Prohibition–era playboy (a delightful Alex Stewart) falling in love with a sweet bootlegger (Aubrey Reece, also delightful) on the eve of his marriage to a famous dancer (Sophie Madorsky, hilarious), is slight and silly, but crammed with old-fashioned, simplistic charm.

Enough Already

0

The wine industry study session held by the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors earlier this month was a step in the right direction, as local officials try to balance the interests of the wine industry with a growing backlash by rural residents who complain that unruly crowds, loud noise and traffic congestion on back-country roads are destroying the peace and quiet of their neighborhoods and contributing to the Napafication of Sonoma County.

While the wine industry is advocating for fewer restrictions, neighborhood groups are pressing county officials to rein in winery development and cap the number of permitted events. The wine industry continues to pitch proposals that categorize events by attendance or sponsor. Merely labeling a dinner-dance as a “distributor meeting” does not reduce the noise, long duration drinking or the potential of impaired drivers on our rural one-lane roads.

According to county data, there are 2,600 event days held annually. In the Valley of the Moon alone, there are over a thousand annual events with over 170,000 visitors that create ongoing traffic and noise nightmares for residents.

Since 2000, there has been a 300 percent increase in the number of wineries approved county-wide, exceeding the general plan’s assumption of 239 wineries by 2020. There are now 447 wineries and tasting rooms outside city limits, with 60 more in the pipeline.

Supervisors agreed on stepped-up enforcement, limiting amplified music, regulating food service, establishing minimum parcel sizes and considering county-based event coordination. The board will reconvene in 60 days to continue exploring options with the Permit and Resource Management Department, whom they directed to bring back ordinances for their review, with a 2017 spring timetable for enactment.

Progress is being made, thanks to the many residents who have joined forces with Preserve Rural Sonoma County and other neighborhood groups to stand up and voice their opposition to the rampant growth and case by case permitting of ever more projects, ignoring the cumulative impacts. The current growth rate is not sustainable, environmentally or economically. Increasingly intense competition hurts existing wineries, and the impact from overdevelopment erodes the rural charm that attracts visitors.

Padi Selwyn is co-chair of Neighbors to Preserve Rural Sonoma County.

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.

Pence on Pot

The Republican nominee’s choice of Indiana governor Mike Pence as his running mate means Donald Trump has selected a man who is the very embodiment of last century’s “tough on drugs” prohibitionist attitudes.

Pence’s anti-drug reform stances are part and parcel of his overall social conservative, Tea Party positions. He has also been a strong opponent of gay marriage and abortion rights, and a strong supporter of “religious freedom.”

Indiana has tough marijuana laws, with possession of even the smallest amount of pot worth up to six months in county jail and possession of more than 30 grams (slightly more than an ounce) a felony punishable by up to 18 months in prison. Selling any amount more than 30 grams is also a felony, punishable by up to two and a half years in prison.

Mike Pence is just fine with that. In fact, three years ago he successfully blocked a move in the Ohio Legislature to reduce some of those penalties, saying that while he wanted to cut prison populations, he didn’t want to cut penalties to achieve that end.

“I think we need to focus on reducing crime, not reducing penalties,” he said. “I think this legislation, as it moves forward, should still seek to continue to send a way strong message to the people of Indiana, and particularly to those who would come into our state to deal drugs, that we are tough and we’re going to stay tough on narcotics in this state.”

Pence did sign emergency legislation allowing for needle exchange programs in some Indiana counties last year, but only after initial resistance, during which more than 150 cases of HIV/AIDS were reported in one county alone. His hesitation was in line with his anti-drug values, as evidenced by his 2009 vote as a U.S. representative to maintain a federal ban on needle-exchange funding.

Pence is also a gung-ho drug warrior when it comes to the Mexican border, having voted to support billions in funding for Mexico to fight drug cartels and for using the U.S. military to conduct anti-drug and counter-terror patrols along the border.

Bizarrely enough, there is one drug Pence has no problems with, but it’s a legal one: nicotine. He is an apologist and denier for Big Tobacco.

“Time for a quick reality check,” he said in 2000. “Despite the hysteria from the political class and the media, smoking doesn’t kill.”

Pence has been handsomely compensated by tobacco companies for his advocacy against anti-smoking public health campaigns, even though they have proven wildly successful in driving down smoking rates.

Phillip Smith is editor of the AlterNet Drug Reporter and author of the ‘Drug War Chronicle.’

Letters to the Editor: July 27, 2016

Radioactive Sushi

Last week’s cover (“Japanese Food Is Hot,” July 20) initially brought on excited hopes that our North Bay weekly on the West Coast of the United States would finally weigh in on the Fukushima nuclear explosions and tsunami on the east coast of Japan. However, there is no word of how lethal the fish caught off our shores and in the Pacific Rim fishing grounds has undoubtedly become.

I, for one, and perhaps many others, have stopped eating sushi and even stopped going to Japanese restaurants due to continuous leaking of radioactivity from the third reactor into the oceans off the coast of Japan. I have decided it is not safe to eat fish or seaweed. Your article does mention the importing of Japanese vegetables not being allowed, but no mention of them not being safe to eat. It is good to learn that local growing sources are being utilized for organic options and tastes.

Your article is definitely an opportunity to feature the new wave of Japanese cuisine restaurants. This is a promotion with serious questions to be asked, questions not welcomes by the new owners and chefs, I’m sure. Why not weigh in on the dangers to our health? That is my question to you and your editorial staff. We need your voice in the North Bay to report the serious health hazards we are currently facing.

Sebastopol

Does Anybody Remember Laughter?

OK, well now it looks like we have received a really famous rant, assuming that the recent article in the Open Mic (July 20), which almost caused me to have a trumper tantrum, was actually written by Donald Trump’s wife, and not someone with the same name.

First, Melania, regarding Menswear: yes, men do swear, but so do women, so stop staring away and talking about a stairway to menswear. And, speaking of women, I thought Caitlyn Jenner was actually a man?

Yes, people do smoke pot in California, as they do around the world. However, many more people smoke tobacco, which kills thousands every year. Speaking of rings of smoke, I assume you are not old enough to have ever seen nor met Captain Smith, or Pocahontas.

As for as the rest of the nonsensical article that I was barely able to comprehend, might I suggest you hire Michele Obama to help you write an article? Or maybe you should go back to Slovenia.

Novato

Trumpty Dumpty

Trumpty Dumpty sat on his wall
Trumpty Dumpty had a great fall
All his king’s horses
And all his king’s men
Could not put Trumpty Dumpty
together again.

Pity, maybe he should hire some good, cheap Mexican labor for the repair job.

Santa Rosa

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

Aloha in Napa

0

Come uke out in Napa at Oxbow Market’s sixth annual Uke-A-Palooza on July 29. The event, hosted by the market and Judd and Holly Finkelstein of Judd’s Hill Winery, features Polynesian-inspired music, food and wine. It aims to be a fun, family-oriented night.

The headlining musical act is Judd Finkelstein’s Maikai Gents, a Napa-based band known for their renditions of classic Hawaiian songs. To complement the performances and food from Oxbow Market vendors, there will also be a raffle benefiting Voices of Napa. The nonprofit group helps young people in Napa County ages 16–24 transition from foster care into the wider community.

The market will feature Polynesian specials as well as Hawaiian vintage wear for sale. Uke-A-Palooza runs from 6pm to 9pm on Friday, July 29, at Oxbow Public Market in Napa. Admission is free.

Mindful Notes

0

About this time last year, Napa restaurant and live music venue City Winery announced it was cutting ties with its downtown location at the historic Napa Valley Opera House amid reports of underwhelming cuisine and under-attended concerts.

That news was followed with word six months ago that another popular franchising venue, the Blue Note Jazz Club out of New York City, was in talks to take over the space by summer of 2016. Now, with summer firmly here, Blue Note is indeed planting roots in Napa, though it’s taking the slow and steady approach.

“The experience goes back a number a years,” says Blue Note managing director Ken Tesler. Having worked with Blue Note’s founding family, the Bensusans, for the last decade, Tesler first got the idea to bring the club—which also has locations in Hawaii, Japan and Italy—to Napa Valley during a winetasting trip nearly four years ago.

“I fell in love with the region,” Tesler says. “For a good three years, I took my time learning this area and this market. I was determined to put the right business model together.”

Tesler sought out friend and five-star hotel and restaurant manager Jeroen Gerrese. “He has tremendous restaurant management experience, and I have the music experience,”
Tesler says.

The partners looked at properties throughout Napa Valley before the Opera House became available last year. When word reached them of City Winery’s move, they jumped on it.

Tesler moved his family to Napa from the East Coast in April, when contracts were finalized. Since then, he says he and his staff have been “taking our time, making sure we do things correctly.”

The plan for the forthcoming Blue Note Napa is to turn the Opera House’s first floor restaurant into a 150-seat supper club featuring nightly live music from a roster of acclaimed jazz artists spanning the genre and beyond. “We want a little of that intimate New York jazz-club vibe,” Tesler says. “And we want it to meet Napa Valley, to have the best of both worlds.”

The second-floor theater, which holds upwards of 600 people standing, will remain the historic Opera House Ballroom, with Blue Note opening the space to other local promoters and events like the BottleRock Napa Valley after-shows that happened there last May.

While there is no opening date yet, Tesler expects Blue Note Napa to take off by early fall. “You only get one shot to hit it out of the park,” Tesler says. “When we open our doors, we have got to show people we can do it right.”

Labor Pains

0

What does a single mother with three kids, a master’s degree and 27 years of experience as a physical therapist have to do in order to pay the bills? Apparently, find a job in a better paying county.

Mary Bertling is a member of the Engineers and Scientists of California union (ESC), and her plight is not uncommon among top-tier health practitioners in Sonoma County. Bertling is passionate about her work and the people she works with, but, she says, “I just can’t sacrifice my own kids much longer for the sake of other people’s.”

On July 12, Bertling and other ESC members gathered in front of the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors to continue their ongoing fight for better pay and push for higher recruitment and retention rates for the union. There are 252 employees who work under the ESC umbrella in the county, according to the county website. ESC members and supporters addressed the supervisors and told stories of how much the union’s work benefits local children—and implored the board to step up and pay the union workers what they deserve.

The latest wage fight in Sonoma is similar to the recent SEIU Local 1021 fight for better pay. That effort saw county workers go on strike for four days as they tried to leverage better pay for lower-tier healthcare workers who provide in-home support services throughout the county.

“I think there is a direct connection between the county workers’ strike and the bargaining at ESC Local 20,” says Marty Bennett, co-chair of North Bay Jobs with Justice.

He sees intersecting issues between the two unions, such as understaffing, low morale and falling retention rates among the workers, and the impact that has on the overall quality of the services that are provided to residents. Bennett’s organization plans to host a workers’ rights board hearing on Aug. 13, where members of ESC will highlight the critical services they provide the county.

Lis Fiekowsky, business agent for ESC Local 20, says that while the respective union battles share a similar arc, the county needs to do a better job at distinguishing between the work that each group performs.

“The county is actually using the SEIU negotiations as a framework for the bargaining concerning ESC Local 20,” Fiekowsky says, “but Local 20’s population is a different group than 1021.”

She adds that the union is pushing Sonoma County away from a “one size fits all” approach to the negotiations, and prioritizes the Local 20 members whose work, she says, keep Sonoma County healthy and safe. The distinction can be seen through the wages each group typically earns. The in-house support workers pushed for a $15 hourly wage and settled on $13.10, but ESC workers earn significantly more than that: hourly rates range from a bottom end of about $30 to a top tier of over $94 for county psychiatrists.

Worker retention is a key concern of Local 20, given that they’re among the last batch of county workers still negotiating a new contract following the 2008 economic crash. “All the other unions have completed bargaining and ratified their contracts,” Fiekowsky says, adding that they’ve also “gotten new healthcare options and better county contributions.”

Bargaining over the Local 20 contract began last December, a few months before the contracts were to be renewed in February. The strategy was obvious: begin the bargaining process before the contracts were renewed to improve the terms for the workers. Now it’s late July, and the bargaining is ongoing.

Like many contract negotiations these days, ESC workers continue to be saddled with concessions and agreements that were made during the Great Recession. When Sonoma County was facing down a budget crisis wrought by the 2008 crash, workers agreed to over a week of unpaid furlough to help the county deal with the crunch.

Even as the economy has improved, the furlough days have not been lifted, and the healthcare workers have seen an overall
2 percent cut to their paychecks as a result. They’re asking for a 3 percent cost-of-living (COLA) increase on top of a 5 percent hike to the hourly rates, to bring Sonoma County in line with what other counties pay for the same services. The county has budged on the COLA increase—offering 2 percent—but the bargaining team hasn’t been able to get the supervisors to move on the mandatory furlough days.

“While we have maintained strongly and clearly that the final agreement needs to include an economic package that allows Sonoma County to recruit and retain the important public service providers that keep our community healthy and safe,” says Fiekowsky, “the county’s behavior at the table has been somewhat erratic, making it difficult to find a solution that meets our needs and theirs.” Reached for comment, supervisor Susan Gorin says she can’t discuss the ongoing negotiations.

The negotiations have spanned 20 meetings between the union and the county, whose Employee Relations Division of the Human Resources Department notes that county officials have indeed made some concessions along the way to a better package for the union workers. “The county has proposed an economic package similar to that negotiated with other bargaining units, which includes [a] two year agreement with annual COLAs, an additional employee pension cost-share with an equal offset for legacy employees, a substantial increase in county’s health insurance contributions, minor enhancements to benefits, and 0.5 percent [in] one-time money.” The county also notes that its proposed increases in health insurance contributions is the functional equivalent of a raise, as it “represents an average of 6 percent, and up to 14.6 percent for some classifications, increase in gross wages for employees enrolled in family level insurance coverage.”

Natalie Hall, a union member who sits on the bargaining team, says she sees negotiations drawing to a resolution soon. “We have a confident and great team, and we’re on it,” she says. “The reason this bargaining team has worked is because we are all very good at different aspects of the process.”

Hall is a behavioral health nurse in the county’s crisis unit and works with people who are under observation because they might do harm to themselves or others. The demands of the job, she says, make it critical that workers are performing at their best, “but the workers cannot be at 100 percent when they have to work three jobs just to live in the county,” she says. “Hopefully, the county will see a lot of us are struggling to make it. I have my master’s, but I have to work three jobs just to have a home.”

Wee Keg

Pale, cold, slightly alcoholic and bitter. That's not a winner of an online dating profile, that's what Lagunitas Brewing Company has to say, with characteristic snark and whimsy, about its latest brew: a 12-ounce aluminum can of hoppiness called the 12th of Never. It was "never" meant to happen, at least according to Lagunitas founder Tony Magee, who lampooned environmental...

Last Stands

After an era of relative quiet compared to the so-called timber wars of the 1980s and '90s, conflict over logging in the forests of Northern California has returned. A plan to log 100- to 150-year-old redwood trees across 320 acres of northwestern Sonoma County in the Gualala River floodplain has generated fervent opposition from environmentalists and local residents over the...

Beyond the Grove

The Bohemian Grove recently settled a lawsuit for $7 million brought by over 600 former employees of the luxe West County campground where super-fabulous white men (for the most part) in khakis gather annually to get loaded, eat chili manly-man style, and sit around in circles for sing-alongs with the likes of Steve Miller. This Bohemian heard from former Bohemian...

Sing It

A stage show with music, built backwards. That's one way to define a "jukebox musical." This year's Summer Repertory Theatre Festival at Santa Rosa Junior College, includes two very different examples of the "jukebox musical," in which the story is constructed around a random list of songs, rather than the other way around. Nice Work If You Can Get It,...

Enough Already

The wine industry study session held by the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors earlier this month was a step in the right direction, as local officials try to balance the interests of the wine industry with a growing backlash by rural residents who complain that unruly crowds, loud noise and traffic congestion on back-country roads are destroying the peace...

Pence on Pot

The Republican nominee's choice of Indiana governor Mike Pence as his running mate means Donald Trump has selected a man who is the very embodiment of last century's "tough on drugs" prohibitionist attitudes. Pence's anti-drug reform stances are part and parcel of his overall social conservative, Tea Party positions. He has also been a strong opponent of gay marriage and...

Letters to the Editor: July 27, 2016

Radioactive Sushi Last week's cover ("Japanese Food Is Hot," July 20) initially brought on excited hopes that our North Bay weekly on the West Coast of the United States would finally weigh in on the Fukushima nuclear explosions and tsunami on the east coast of Japan. However, there is no word of how lethal the fish caught off our shores...

Aloha in Napa

Come uke out in Napa at Oxbow Market's sixth annual Uke-A-Palooza on July 29. The event, hosted by the market and Judd and Holly Finkelstein of Judd's Hill Winery, features Polynesian-inspired music, food and wine. It aims to be a fun, family-oriented night. The headlining musical act is Judd Finkelstein's Maikai Gents, a Napa-based band known for their renditions of...

Mindful Notes

About this time last year, Napa restaurant and live music venue City Winery announced it was cutting ties with its downtown location at the historic Napa Valley Opera House amid reports of underwhelming cuisine and under-attended concerts. That news was followed with word six months ago that another popular franchising venue, the Blue Note Jazz Club out of New York...

Labor Pains

What does a single mother with three kids, a master's degree and 27 years of experience as a physical therapist have to do in order to pay the bills? Apparently, find a job in a better paying county. Mary Bertling is a member of the Engineers and Scientists of California union (ESC), and her plight is not uncommon among top-tier...
11,084FansLike
4,446FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow