Zen Life

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Nyoze Kwong was only three years old when his family came to Sonoma Mountain in 1973, and he’s been there off and on for most of his life.

His parents, Jakusho and Laura Kwong, founded the Sonoma Mountain Zen Center, one of the first such centers in the United States, on 80 acres of land atop the summit, and Nyoze Kwong continues the center’s mission of spreading Soto Zen under the lineage of the late Shunryu Suzuki, one of the main figures of Soto in the United States.

“The Zen center in the West is a combination between traditional temple and monastic training and American community life,” says Kwong. Back in the 1960s, when Suzuki first came to America and founded the San Francisco Zen Center, Kwong says that a growing Western existentialism, highlighted by the Beat and hippie movements, bolstered the West’s embrace of Zen.

Soto, the largest sect of Japanese Buddhism, emphasizes sitting meditation. “You breathe and your mind and body become what you would say ‘one with the universe,'” Kwong says. “Soto Zen is not praying to a deity; it’s not becoming anything other than the universal self that we already are and that we already have been born with.”

The Sonoma Mountain Zen Center is a residential space, housing between eight and 15 people at a time, with resident programs that last between three months to a year. Ten residents currently call the center home.

Days at Sonoma Mountain start at 5am, with two periods of meditation in the morning. Residents share communal meals and work in capacities that range from gardening to cooking to administration duties; two periods of meditation end the day.

For Kwong, the cultivation of Soto Zen and the enrichment of the quiet mind is something he especially wants to share with the younger generation. “And its not to say we have to be a certain way or that the internet is bad; I think it’s all good,” says Kwong. “But this is a way that we can live our life without being driven by things and we can make choices that are a lot deeper.”

This weekend, the Zen center opens its space to the general public for its annual fundraising bazaar. Now in its seventh year, the bazaar will feature art pieces by a diverse group of artisans and craftspeople including Sonoma County ceramicist Bill Geisinger, sculptor Takayuki Zoshi and many others. There will also be a Omotesenke tea ceremony demonstration by Soei Mouri Sensei, homemade baked goods and freshly made mountain jam picked from berries in the center’s gardens, Taiko drumming performances, music by Black Sheep Brass Band and activities for all ages.

Snowballs in Hell

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The nation’s oldest established environmental group gets upwards of $60 million in annual donations from various interest groups and individuals. But they aren’t on easy street.

On the one hand, the Sierra Club, founded by legendary California naturalist John Muir in 1892, has for years endured the wrath of former supporters and way-left detractors who have pilloried the group for its establishment posturing and for some money it has accepted, which includes donations tied to the fracking industry.

On the other hand are relentless efforts from climate-change hoax proponents to assail the Sierra Club at every turn, who see nothing but self-interest and eco-hypocrisy at play whenever a Sierra Club member boards a jet, in the manner of Al Gore, to go ramble on somewhere about all those polar bears floating around on ice cubes in the distant waters of Antarctica.

You say global warming and the deniers say, “Hey, here’s a snowball from the streets of Washington, D.C.—what are you talking about?” Readers may recall that choice bit of hoax-posturing from Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe in 2015 when he famously threw a snowball in the direction of climate-change sanity. Fast forward to 2017, and the United States Geologic Survey just warned Oklahomans to take a page from California and prepare for even more catastrophic and unusual earthquakes. The quakes have been prompted by an unapologetic embrace of fracking in that state, whose scant pile of electoral votes will likely accrue to climate-denier Donald Trump this November.

Meanwhile, President Barack Obama was talking with New York Times reporters two weeks ago and said that when his science guy brings the latest graphs and charts into the Oval Office depicting climate change impacts, it’s downright “terrifying” to behold.

With these dynamics in mind, what can North Bay residents expect from a visit from the Sierra Club’s executive director, Michael Brune, who gives a talk on Friday, Sept. 16, at the Glaser Center in Santa Rosa at 7pm?

Brune says the purpose of his visit is to highlight the organization’s efforts to beat back climate-change effects with the acknowledgement that it’s getting kind of hot out there, even if it’s kind of cool in Santa Rosa this week.

Sonoma County is a national leader in an emergent shift toward renewable power sources being funneled into the grid, via its community choice effort that saw the rise of the local utility Sonoma Clean Power. Brune says that “while we are making great strides in transferring to clean power here and around the country, the pace of climate change is also accelerating. It’s worse than we thought, and it’s happening more quickly than we thought. Everything is falling apart even as it is coming together.”

Well, that’s exactly the rub of the matter, says Ann Hancock, director of the Santa Rosa–based Center for Climate Protection. “Are we doomed already? That’s the question. Is there reason for hope, scientifically? Scientists say there is, and we affirm that. Solutions do exist,” she says, “and the science is terrifying.”

Brune took over as executive director of the Sierra Club in 2010, in the aftermath of a rolling scandal at the organization centered on the fact that Sierra Club had accepted donations totalling more than $26 million from the gas-and-oil industry. The organization had by then also been in a green-washing deal with Clorox for several years, which got the Sierra Club seal of approval for its emergent eco-friendly product line in exchange for $1.3 million.

Brune came aboard and did not renew the Clorox contract, and the Sierra Club later declined
$30 million in pledged donations from the oil-and-gas industry.

Woody Hastings is also with the Center for Climate Protection and specializes in “community choice aggregates,” local power companies that have sprung up all over the nation in recent years. Like Hancock, he is a longtime member of the Sierra Club, and proudly so, and says its dalliance with fracking money “is old news and that is really a former and long gone set of policy priorities” at the organization. He’s been a member since the 1980s and says that of course he doesn’t agree with everything the organization has done over that time, but it has been critical and pivotal to statewide efforts to enact community choice aggregates.

Hastings’ colleague Geoffrey Smith chimes in that the Sierra Club has a membership base of around 1 million, and that “for better or for worse” it’s a democratically run organization. He describes it as an organization that is “constantly in transition but with a solid foundation at the grassroots level.”

Six years after Brune took over the Sierra Club, he now says the organization is far more likely to join forces with Silicon Valley tech giants in the fight against climate change than with the oil-and-gas industry that was at the gate under his predecessor, Carl Pope.

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It’s ironic that the Sierra Club has worked with the likes of Google, Apple and Facebook given that the Sierra Club was driven out of its longstanding San Francisco headquarters precisely because of the tech-driven acceleration of rents in that town. “After 124 years, we moved to Oakland,” Brune says, after the organization saw its rent jacked by $1.5 million earlier this year.

A lot has changed in the renewables industry since Brune came aboard, and he highlights that solar and wind power have become more feasible alternatives from a cost perspective.

“We’re seeing solar and wind becoming cheaper than nuclear, oil, gas, and there are more available jobs, and that all gives regulators more authority to quicken the pace of change,” he says.

But the switch to renewables is also highly disruptive on public utilities and their shareholders, “so you see many utilities that are fighting further deployment of solar or are looking to slow it down or to burden taxpayers with fees and interconnection charges,” Brune says.

Another big change since 2010: a concerted effort by the Sierra Club and the Obama administration to shut down heavy-polluting coal plants; Brune says 240 have been taken offline or been scheduled for closure over that time. He says this as he notes that there are lots of jobs out there in the renewable-energy market, a refrain that has lately been taken up by Hillary Clinton. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the No. 1 job in demand in the first quarter of 2016 was for wind-power service technicians. Solar panel installers were also in the top 10, Brune notes.

Renewables have become more economically viable in short order, and the Sierra Club has abandoned its previous embrace of the American natural-gas industry as a “bridge energy” toward an all-renewables future. This has been the operating modality under Obama, who embraced an “all-of-the-above” strategy toward energy independence as a candidate and through his first term.

The Sierra Club was along for that ride before 2010, but under Brune, the organization has shifted to a leap-frog position when it comes to the confounded natural gas bridge. Given the terrifying contours of the global-warming moment, that can’t happen soon enough for the organization, or the planet.

“Coal and nuclear are dying out under the weight of their own failings,” Hastings says. “That’s all going away, anyway, and there has been double-digit growth in renewables, in wind and solar.” Hastings credits the community-choice movement for pushing utilities away from tried-and-true energy sources and for “putting pressure on the market to get the cleaner sources,” which also include hydropower and, especially in these parts, geothermal energy.

But still there are jobs and the economy to consider, and Obama is not the first Democratic president to encourage or otherwise unencumber an industry experiencing economic growth despite its cost to the environment or negative impact on greenhouse gas emissions. Obama launched his presidency with a commitment to all forms of energy that is mirrored in Gov. Jerry Brown’s embrace of fracking. Before Obama, dial back to the era of the first Clinton who stood by the side of the road during his presidency and watched the SUV-ization of American highways at the urging and insistence of an auto industry that saw big growth potential—if only domestic consumers could access those gas-guzzling, high-emissions vehicles.

For his part, Brown has pushed the state forward with nation-leading carbon-emissions standards, even as he has accepted millions in donations from the gas-and-oil industry and vigorously resisted calls and legislative efforts to ban fracking in California outright.

Brune says that the Sierra Club engages these high-tone political dynamics in distinct ways. When politicians refrain from getting in the way of a recovering economy despite the environmental consequences, the organization “will point out the risks of all-of-the-above or with a reliance on SUVs,” he says.

They’ve worked with the hand dealt by lawmakers, and when it came to the Obama all-of-the-above strategy, the Sierra Club put an emphasis on making sure that all-of-the-above meant that all energy producers were operating on a level playing field “where they would have to account for their pollution,” Brune says.

The relentless, and some would say ruthless, anti-coal posture, in tandem with new environmental standards from the federal Environmental Protection Agency, has made it virtually impossible for the coal industry to compete in the new energy economy, much to the chagrin of climate change deniers and defenders of the coal-blackened white workers of Virginia and elsewhere.

At the same time the Sierra Club engaged and enraged the polluters, it was also “pushing as hard as we possibly can to advance clean energy,” Brune says, which took all sorts of forms including direct negotiations with utilities and corporate polluters. “We want to help any company large or small become more environmentally responsible and move to 100 percent clean energy,” Brune says.

Depending on the company, the Sierra Club will either take a very confrontational approach (i.e., the coal industry) or will work in a more collaborative manner “to help those companies change their energy strategies.”

Despite the terrifying state of global-warming affairs described by Obama, Brune says not to expect any future president, or Gov. Brown, to back away from fracking or other job-creating enterprises of questionable environmental wisdom.

“It’s the same thing with Brown or with Clinton, should she become president,” he says. “Both will point to the jobs associated with fracking, and we will point to the environmental risks associated with fracking.”

Drinks All Around!

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After 14 years in the saloon business, I think I have a fairly good, if cynical, take on the dark side of the booze business. Sonoma, Marin, Napa and Mendocino counties form a quartet of the highest percentage of problem drinkers in the state. Booze defines our economy and culture. Don’t be fooled by the soft vs. hard liquor myth. A standard drink of beer, wine and distilled spirits each contains the same amount of absolute alcohol.

There was a time when you needed to serve a modicum of food to get a beer and wine license. Not anymore. How about free wine and beer in your no-food barber shop or hair salon? Check the lady spending hundreds to add some hair extensions taken from the head of an orphan in a Third World country while knocking back a glass of $50-a-bottle Cab. Hair salon/saloon reviews now include how a Chardonnay pairs with a bob cut. Why not free booze at your tattoo parlor or nail saloon or laundromat? A touch of craft beer at your used bookstore? Why not “wine flavored” yogurt?

What if the econo-SMART train becomes a wino train to “enhance” its revenue? The wine train was born to lose money, and now it wants to drink its way out of bankruptcy? Train attendants with full benefits in “smart” new outfits, serving wine and beer. Start drinking in Cloverdale, carry your glass over to the ferry in Larkspur. A person could be three drinks drunk by the time they get to the ferry building.

Booze in a theater near you. Time was, serving popcorn and candy was a good job for a teenager. Now you have to be over 21 to serve a glass or bottle of wine to a 21-year-old guy so he can take it into the theater and share it with his 17-year-old girl-friend. Same guy can share his beers (in the dark) with his underage buddies. And how about the lady lush who just spilled her drink (giggle-giggle)—pardon me while I go out and get a refill. Take your child to a “G” movie and knock back a (“What are you drinking daddy?”) glass or two.

The ABC doesn’t, and won’t have, enough agents to police this runaway booze train/barbershop/movie debacle. You want to “enhance” revenue? Free or not, just start drinking more wine and beer and get a “drink local” card for extra points.

Neil E. Davis lives in Sebastopol and owned Sausalito’s Bar With No Name Bar from 1959 to 1974.

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.

Two by Sea

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Hotel restaurants were once shunned in favor of more adventurous standalone options. But now some of the best eateries, from Vegas to Macau, are a step away from a reception desk.

The Hotel Petaluma, a city landmark going through a major makeover, is on its way to becoming a boutique destination, and its month-old restaurant, the Shuckery, fits perfectly into the hotel’s relaxed vibe. Clean walls, good lighting and an open kitchen add to a lively buzz in the often-crowded dining room.

The buzz goes beyond the novelty of a new restaurant. If you’ve attended a few Sonoma County weddings or special events, chances are you encountered the Oyster Girls, the traveling oyster bar by sisters Aluxa and Jazmine Lalicker. Shucking Tomales Bay oysters since 2007, the sisters invited chef Seth Harvey to build a seafood-centric menu in which the oysters are only part of the opening act. Following in the footsteps of modern hotel restaurants, the Shuckery isn’t afraid to take risks. The menu is ambitious and adventurous, and in most cases, it pays off.

The raw oysters ($3 each; six for $16; 12 for $30) are natural winners. The Humboldt Kumamoto bivalves, which the waitress recommended, are smooth and satisfying, with a hint of sweetness. Compared to them, the baked oysters in salsa verde (three for $11; six for $20) are too skinny and didn’t deliver the same delicious mouthful.

When an ingredient is prepared “two ways,” the chef’s goal is typically to demonstrate creativity and technique, and Trout Two Way ($14), from the Bites sections, does the trick, displaying a delicate trout tartar next to a crispy, skin-on fillet served with yogurt sauce.

The vegetarian appetizer, cauliflower Hot Wings ($14), was equally revelatory. Coated in rice flour and gochujang paste and sprinkled with green onion, it was crispy on the outside and surprisingly rich on the inside. The generous portion makes it a worthy option for non-fish eaters.

Many North Bay restaurants make decent fish tacos, so it makes sense to opt for something less ordinary at the Shuckery, like the calamari relleno ($26). On the Mediterranean, fried squid is stuffed with crab meat and served with sweet and creamy yellow corn soubise and a refreshing, electric-green tomato and poblano pepper purée. Both sauces are great, and so is the filling, but the squid could have used more salt.

The Shuckery has only two desserts on the menu: dueling budinos ($9), a couple of rich mousses, and a bread pudding with peaches and crème anglaise ($9). On the menu, they appear under a heading that reads “If you still got room . . .” We didn’t, and after oysters and seafood, it would be nice to have a lighter, fruitier option.

The Shuckery is a promising new restaurant with plenty of pleasant surprises that is already fulfilling the Lalicker sisters’ vision as well as that of a reimagined Hotel Petaluma.

Americana Radicals

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First formed in 1989, the Mavericks have developed a formidable and devoted fan base. And even though the group has endured more transitional periods than should be allowed, including a hiatus that ran from 2004 to 2012, the highly ambitious tour in support of their latest release, 2015’s Mono, thankfully seems to have no end in sight and features an extended West Coast run of dates.

“During [Mono‘s] writing process, I found myself wanting certain things,” says bandleader Raul Malo. “When you hear Cuban or world music of any kind, you may have no idea what the singer is saying, but you can feel it. That was what I wanted: to evoke a feeling.”

On Mono‘s standout songs like “Stories We Could Tell” and “The Only Question Is,” the group excels at several different music styles including (but not limited to) country, Americana, blues and swing, without sounding dated or derivative.

This weekend, the Mavericks play Earle Fest alongside Lucinda Williams, the Paladins, Girls + Boys and others. The annual event supports Santa Rosa’s Earle Baum Center, which serves to heighten awareness of the visually impaired and blind through numerous services.

Earle Fest happens Saturday, Sept. 17, at the SOMO Village Event Center,
1100 Valley House Drive, Rohnert Park.
2pm. $55 advance. All ages. 707.664.6314.

Letters to the Editor: September 13, 2016

Death Sentence

So, I’m reading along, trying to enjoy my lunch as I get educated about why the farmworkers might not get their extra money for their extra work. And I got to this unbelievable sentence:

“But let’s back up a minute here. To understand the genesis of Raudabaugh’s juicy online riposte—whose ‘snowflake culture’ language is more typically seen in rightward-leaning discourses that slam college campuses over trigger warnings and safe spaces as a bulwark against the dread onslaught of the oversensitized and politically correct—the overtime bill aims to move California beyond federal overtime rules that date back to the presidency of Franklin Roosevelt and are enshrined in the 1938 Federal Fair Labor Standards Act, which, as AB 1066 itself recalls, ‘excluded agricultural workers from wage protections and overtime compensation requirements.'”

Whew! I first stopped at “riposte,” and needed to look it up, but as the sentence continued, I looked back to see who wrote this. Surprised me, ’cause I am a fan of yours, Tom, have been reading you regularly since you first appeared in these pages, but what happened here? I think the news editor needs an editor. Just sayin’

Guerneville

Bill Bowker Blues

I went to the Russian River Jazz and Blues Festival this year because of the lineup (“Forty Years of Music,” Sept. 7). I’d been waiting far too long to get back to the basics of the blues with a lineup that hasn’t toured up and down the West Coast for the past year. I do respect and appreciate all past performers, but this year was a treat. I’m disappointed, as I know many others are, for the Bohemian failing to mention Bill Bowker and company when reporting about the Russian River Jazz and Blues Festival. He has worked harder than anyone to keep the blues alive in and around Sonoma County, and I thank you for that, Bill Bowker.

Via Bohemian.com

Hopkins Yes

Logical fallacies often show up in campaign speech; for example, the use of simplistic either/or reasoning and appeals to fear. This kind of communication is not helpful to voters, because it primarily misleads rather than informs.

At the beginning of her race for supervisor, Lynda Hopkins made it clear that she would run a thoughtful and reasoned campaign. She has done just that by focusing time and effort on substantive policy issues. Looking ahead, Hopkins aspires to be a positive and effective supervisor, using a collaborative approach that increases the likelihood that problems get solved. This ambition echoes a campaign theme: “Let’s work together.” She will then regularly seek consensus and, sometimes, appropriate compromise.

Being a longtime environmentalist and an organic farmer, Hopkins knows that environmental protection is a critical governmental responsibility. Moreover, she believes that we can safeguard our scenic coast and fertile landscape without choosing to disparage certain community members.

Eschewing divisiveness, she will endeavor to involve the entire community in the wise defense of our natural heritage. She is a strong, new leader, a leader who can help us move beyond the old paradigms impeding our ability to address important challenges—present and future.

Sebastopol

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

Second Home

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‘Each person who’s made it to Occidental has a story about how they got there,” says songwriter Jen Tucker. A fixture there since moving to Sonoma County seven years ago, Tucker gives the town a starring role on her new folk roots album, Occidental Journey, released this month.

Tucker grew up in Cleveland, and moved to Dallas as a teenager. There she got involved in the new wave and punk scene before moving to California to attend the California College of the Arts back when the Oakland school still called itself the College of the Arts and Crafts in the 1980s.

For many years, Tucker lived in San Francisco, worked for a dotcom company and kept music on the backburner, until she moved to Sonoma County in 2009. “This is a great music scene, and it reconnected me with my music,” Tucker says. “It was the perfect environment to get back into music some 25 years later.”

After relocating, Tucker recorded and released three albums of original music, 2011’s Something I Didn’t Do, and, in 2012, an LP, Songs from the Bohemian Highway, and EP, Angry Girl.

Over the last three years, Tucker has focused on chronicling the gifted people, the gorgeous redwood settings and her inspiring experiences in Occidental for the new album, recorded this year at Jackalope Records in Santa Rosa.

Tucker points to local personality Ranger Rick, formerly the unofficial mayor of Occidental, who in 2011 first befriended and guided Tucker through the community, introduced her to local musicians, promoted her shows around town and even found her a band at the local farmers market. That band now regularly consists of guitarist Kyle Martin, bassist Paul Lamb and drummer Kevin Cole.

Before Ranger Rick passed away in 2012, Tucker says he also came up with a line, “the songs of the redwood trees,” that inspired the new album’s collection of folkloric fables set in the west Sonoma County hamlet.

“Finding Occidental is a really long journey; it’s such a magical place,” says Tucker. “I love the town and the people so much, everyone is genuine, everyone has an appreciation of the arts, and it’s an escape from the rest of the world.”

Up in Smoke

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One cannot grow up in Sonoma County without gaining at least some awareness of who Jack London was, that he wrote books about wolves and dogs, and that his home is now a state park a mere 30-minute drive from Santa Rosa.

This year, the county marks the centennial of London’s 1916 death with numerous events, many taking place on or around the gorgeous sprawling property he once called home near Glen Ellen.

Interest should be high, therefore, for Cecelia Tichi’s passionate world premiere, The House That Jack Built. Directed with resourceful tenacity by Craig Miller, the play appears alongside Charlie Bethel’s acclaimed one-man telling of London’s Call of the Wild, at 6th Street Playhouse.

Propelled by a first-rate performance by Ed McCloud as Jack London, Tichi’s play is set in August of 1913, just as London was completing construction of Wolf House, the vast rock and redwood residence he’d sunk his dwindling fortune into building for himself and his wife, Charmian (Elizabeth Henry).

Few locals don’t know the eventual fate of Wolf House, but that something bad is going to happen is easy to guess from all of the first-act foreshadowing about insurance and creditors. The act is anchored by a long barroom conversation between London and three old associates—boyhood pal Frank Atherton (Lito Briano), newspaper reporter Cloudesley Johns (James Rowan) and photographer—and one-time South Sea shipmate—Martin Johnson (Matthew Cadigan).

As bar owner Johnny Heinold, Ben Harper is delightfully natural, all watchfulness and easy grace. But the whole first act is little more than a vigorous recitation of well-researched historical details about London, his progressive worldviews, his successes and failures, and anything else the playwright—a scholar at Vanderbilt University—felt lovingly compelled to squeeze in.

The second act—highlighted by an unexpected boxing match and the climactic event that altered the course of London’s life—is far livelier, but still feels less like a play than an interpretive docudrama presented to visiting tourists.

As drama, The House That Jack Built, for all its charms and local significance, strains under the weight of being so aggressively “educational.” That said, it’s never boring, due mainly to McCloud’s muscular, fully engaged performance, and to the wild excitement of London’s extraordinary life.

Rating (out of 5): ★★★½

Reprieve

For over 20 years it has been legal to cultivate and dispense medical cannabis to patients under California law. But the regulatory landscape began to change over a year ago with the passage of the Medical Cannabis Regulation and Safety Act.

So with clear guidelines, most medical cannabis businesses should be able to follow those rules and feel safe from criminal prosecution, right? Wrong. Cue the federal Department of Justice. Although 25 states and the District of Columbia have enacted laws that permit providing medical cannabis to patients in need, the DOJ has continued to prosecute individuals in those states. California is no exception.

Recently, however, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals struck a blow against the DOJ’s continued prosecution against lawful medical cannabis providers. A decision from the 9th Circuit is significant since it is binding on all lower federal courts in the nine states under its purview, including Washington, Oregon and California. In United States v. McIntosh, the court ruled that the DOJ cannot prosecute medical cannabis operators if they are in compliance with their state’s medical cannabis laws and regulations.

The basis for the decision is interesting. Almost two years ago, Congress quietly amended the federal appropriations bill. The one-sentence change stated that the DOJ could not use federally appropriated funds to prevent “states from implementing their own state laws that authorize the use, distribution, possession, or cultivation of medical marijuana.”

Many hoped this amendment would end federally subsidized raids on state legal medical marijuana operations. However, raids of medical cannabis businesses continued, as did federal prosecutions by the DOJ. But the 9th Circuit Court confirmed that the appropriations bill amendment meant what it said: the DOJ cannot spend money prosecuting individuals engaged in conduct permitted under state medical cannabis laws if they are “fully” complying with those laws. That’s a pretty significant decision for the cannabis movement and the states leading the charge.

The McIntosh decision comes with a few caveats. The federal appropriations bill could be amended to remove the provision that serves as the foundation of the court’s decision. If that happens, the McIntosh decision would be meaningless. And the court’s decision only applies to medical, not recreational cannabis.

But for the first time, medical cannabis businesses willing to take the necessary steps to strictly abide by California’s various laws and regulations may be able to stop looking over their shoulder for the feds. For now.

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.

Out of Darkness

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‘The most surprising thing about this whole process for me,” says actor Dameion Brown, who’s playing the lead in Marin Shakespeare Company’s new production of Othello, “is hearing all of these amazing actors I’m working with, these incredibly experienced professionals, look me in the eye and say, ‘You belong here. This is your place. This is your home.’ That’s been the biggest surprise.

“I also got another surprise last night, during dress rehearsal,” he adds with a laugh, “when I realized how hot a Shakespearean costume can be!”

Taking on what is believed to be one of Shakespeare’s most difficult roles would be considered a challenge for even the most seasoned of actors. Not only has Brown never acted on a professional stage, he’s got just one stage performance to his name. In May of 2015, he played Macduff in a production of Macbeth. The one-time-only production was held inside California’s medium-security Solano State Prison, where Brown was then incarcerated, an inmate of the correctional system since the age of 25. He is 48 now.

“Theater is about transformation,” says Robert Currier, artistic director of Marin Shakespeare Company (MSC), and the director of Othello. “Actors transform themselves into characters, and that can be an incredibly healing thing,” he says. “It transforms the actors and it transforms the audience, who see people in ways they’ve never seen—and as part of that, theater eventually transforms the world, one play at a time.”

For more than 12 years, MSC has been conducting Shakespeare workshops in California prisons as part of its Shakespeare for Social Justice program. Overseen by Lesley Currier, managing director of MSC, the prison project currently operates workshops and stages plays, performed by prisoners, at several institutions, including San Quentin, Solano, Folsom Women’s Facility and High Desert State Prison. This, says Lesley Currier, is the first time one of the program’s participants, after being paroled, has been cast in a role during Marin Shakespeare’s summer season of shows at the Forest Meadows Amphitheatre on the Dominican University campus in San Rafael.

It’s one of many firsts that the company and Brown are experiencing together this summer. Along with his first time performing alongside professional actors, the long-imprisoned Brown recently took a dip in a pool during a cast party to break up a long day and night of rehearsals.

“That was the first time I’ve gone swimming in 26 years,” he says. “It felt good.”

Brown first encountered the Curriers after signing up for the workshop, which he learned about from a flyer posted in the prison. At the time, he was in the 22nd year of his life sentence (with possibility of parole), following his 1993 conviction for a number of violent offenses against his family and children. After years of self-education and a long effort to come to grips with the harm he’d caused the people he loves, Brown says he was ready to dig deeper, but had no idea that the opportunity would come through an acting class.

“I saw the flyer, and I really thought it was some kind of short-term workshop, and that would be the end of it,” Brown says. “It was something to do. I signed up for the class out of curiosity, with no expectation that I would end up cast in a play or that it would end up sparking the kind of transformation journey I’ve been on ever since.”

The class, conducted by Lesley Currier, consisted of a variety of acting exercises. Brown admits that they seemed “weird” at first, so alien and contradictory compared to everyday life in prison.

“Ultimately, it was an opportunity to laugh,” he says. “To laugh at oneself and to laugh at someone else, without anyone taking offense. It was amazing, and it lightened up the environment in which we all lived.”

Previous to that, Brown’s only experience with acting was in school, back in Jackson, Tenn., where he grew up as one of 12 children. In middle school, he was cast in a production of Othello, but the show never took place.

“I’d gotten the lead,” he says, “and I wanted to play the part and we were going to perform it, but then there were divisions amongst the adults—the black and the white adults. Being in the South, some parents did not want their daughter intermingling with an African-American man, and some African-American adults did not want a young black man intermingling with white people’s daughters.”

Brown says he never forgot his brush with Shakespeare, and he remembered it as he committed himself to the class at the prison. Expecting little more than a series of exercises and perhaps the performance of a scene or two, he was surprised when Currier announced that she would be auditioning the participants for a production, to be held at the prison, of Shakespeare’s Macbeth.

“I’d never really acted before, so I asked for a very small role,” Brown recalls. “I didn’t want to shoulder the responsibility of anything large. So of course, Lesley gave me the part of Macduff.

“That,” he says with a laugh, “was a heavy load.”

What followed was a period he now looks back on as some of the hardest work he’d ever done in his life.

“It helped that the men who were in the play were very serious about getting it done,” Brown explains. “That camaraderie, that sense of ‘We need you,’ ‘We’re in this together,’ ‘If you’re there, we’ll be there’—that thing took over, and it became a family, in a sense.

“Family is not smiled upon in prison. There are different gang members, different races, who would otherwise not interact in this manner. But because of the play, and our common interest in creating the best play we could do, all of that other stuff went out the window once we were in that room together, during that time. It was beautiful.”

The play, in which Scottish warlords fight for territory and Macbeth becomes addicted to violent action, gave the cast an opportunity to talk about the part violence had played in their own lives. The day of the performance, he says, was incredibly emotional for all of them.

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“We only performed it once,” he says. “At the time, had you said, ‘Would you like to perform it twice?’ I’d have said, ‘Are you crazy?’ I had so much anxiety leading into the play. I just wanted to do it and be done.

“There was a fellow actor, Ronan, who was in the play,” Brown continues. “He said to me, ‘Whatever you think, you are ready for this. And I guarantee you, once you complete it, you are gonna want to do it again.’ And I said, ‘I can guarantee you that I will not.’ And then, after we had completed it, the first thought that crossed my mind was, ‘How many different ways are there that I could make this even better if I had the opportunity to do it again.’ It was natural. I did want to do it again.”

Over the course of those rehearsals, Brown says he developed a great deal of trust in Lesley Currier.

“She gave me everything I could receive to help me do well,” he says. “And then we did the play, and I didn’t get a single report back that was critical of my performance—and this was in a place that is one of the most highly critical places on earth.”

Shortly afterwards, Brown was paroled. After a brief stay in transitional housing in Vallejo, his parole was moved to San Francisco—which put him within a bus ride of the Marin Shakespeare Company.

“During Macbeth, Lesley had always encouraged me to think about acting more in the future, and that if I was allowed parole, to consider looking the company up,” Brown says. “At the time, I just took that as a polite thing to say. Lesley is a very sweet, very humane person. I thought she was just being nice. I appreciated it, but I didn’t believe it.”

Once in San Francisco, Brown called up the Curriers, who invited him to see their production of Richard III, staged last summer with Aidan O’Reilly in the lead. For Brown, it marked another first.

“It was my first time seeing a professional play,” he says. “I was blown away.”

Not long after, Brown took a chance, and told the Curriers that if they ever wanted to stage Othello, he wanted to be considered for the part.

“Plain and simple, we chose Othello for this season because Dameion wanted to play the role,” says Lesley Currier. “We decided to do it last year, when Dameion was paroled and came to San Francisco. Bob has spent a lot of time reading through the play with him. He’s been taking diction lessons. He’s been working very hard, and it’s paying off in spectacular ways.”

Marin Shakespeare Company last staged Othello 12 years ago, and Lesley Currier believes that this production is electrifying, in part because of the raw honesty of Brown’s performance, and a cast of professional actors who, she says, have been incredibly supportive. After all, casting a recently paroled, untested actor as the lead in one of Shakespeare’s most powerful dramas is, by definition, a risky move.

“We spoke to our board about it and had a lot of discussion about whether this would be potentially distracting publicity for the company,” Lesley says. “The board had concerns that we tried to answer. Dameion was living in transitional housing in the Tenderloin. His life situation was tenuous. He didn’t know where
he’d be living. We didn’t know if he’d be able to live up to the demands of rehearsing and performing.

“But,” she continues, “you meet this man for one moment, and you know he’s a trustworthy man, a man who is committed to doing something with his life. He’s talked to his family, to make sure that they were OK with it, if there was publicity about his background. We all did a lot of soul-searching, and we decided, ‘Let’s do it!'”

“My family [has] been very supportive,” Brown says. “They want me to do it. They believe they are strong enough to deal with anything that might come their way in terms of the content of Othello. And they believe I am strong enough—so here we are.”

Brown praises the work ethic of his fellow performers, who include Luisa Frasconi as Desdemona, the wife of the Moorish general Othello, Jeff Wiesen as his faithful secondhand man Cassio and Cassidy Brown as the treacherous Iago, who schemes to make Othello jealous of his new wife.

“Acting is very hard work,” Brown says. “I was given a very serious introduction doing Macbeth. That was incredibly hard work. But this—working with people like Luisa and Jeff and Cassidy—they are top-shelf actors, and they are so generous with their knowledge. They are giving and they are encouraging. That feels good.”

For his part, in addition to rehearsing hard for Othello, Brown has been working as a case manager for transitional-age youth and high-risk young people, through a program headquartered out of the San Francisco Sheriff’s Department. “It’s very humbling work,” Brown says. “Very satisfying, very painful work, but very rewarding.”

He’s found support there, too.

“Some of the deputies, some of my co-workers and some of my clients, they are planning on coming to see the show,” he says. “That’s going to be something.”

Asked if he’d like to continue acting, Brown smiles.

“I think, this time, I am not going to say I can guarantee I will not want to do this again,” he says. “I do want to keep doing this, if I am fortunate to receive the opportunity. What I wonder, though, is if I have it in me—with the places I’ve been and the things I’ve experienced—to ever be effective in a role that is not tragic, like what I’ve played in Macbeth and now Othello. Could I ever play comedy? Nothing I’ve experienced convinces me that I have that inside me.

“But maybe I’ll try it,” he says with a laugh. “I am willing to be surprised.”

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