May 7: Worldly Visuals in Petaluma

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Entering its eighth year, the Petaluma Film Fest brings a global array of short films, both animated and live action, to the North Bay for a day of lively screenings and conversations with visiting filmmakers. The program opens with a local boy, as SRJC student Miles Levin shows his timely political satire The Berninator. From there, the lineup of shorts comes from locations like Switzerland, Spain, Bhutan, Australia, New Zealand, Chile and elsewhere. Tickets are available for matinee, afternoon or late-night blocks of films, or you can stay the whole day and take in a world of cinema on Saturday, May 7, at McNear’s Mystic Theatre, 23 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma. 707.765.2121. Noon. $10–$30. petalumafilmalliance.org.

May 7: Pop Art in Sebastopol

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Born in Washington state and now living in west Sonoma County, painter and pop-culture enthusiast Tony Speirs displays his latest batch of vintage-meets-exotic paintings in a new show, ‘Unreliable Narrator.’ For the last 15 years, Speirs has painted dazzling and engaging pieces that fuse together his childhood love of comic books, classic advertising icons, vintage toys and even international art like Japanese anime, Mexican dia de los Muertos sugar skulls, Middle Eastern pattern work and more. Speirs shows off his playful, complex paintings through the month and celebrates with an opening reception on Saturday, May 7, at Kitty Hawk Gallery, 125 N. Main St., Sebastopol. 5pm. Free. 

May 10: Ripe Sounds in Inverness

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With chapters in Point Reyes, Bolinas and Stinson Beach, the community choir and musical group Sound Orchard celebrate their first year of promoting local artists and musicians, as well as connecting Marin’s diverse musical communities through events and music programs. Now Sound Orchard is throwing a benefit party that boasts an evening of food and music. While guests enjoy a prix fixe dinner, Sound Orchard’s signature Common Voice Choir will lead a sing-along, and executive and artistic directors Debbie Daly and Tim Weed play an acoustic show on Tuesday, May 10, at Saltwater Oyster Depot, 12781 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Inverness. 6pm. $75. soundorchard.org.

Focusing on the Future

The 2016 Bridge to the Future Rites of Passage class at Santa Rosa’s Community Baptist Church is celebrating a decade of graduating local teenagers and preparing them for the future. The program, created by late, longtime pastor James E. Coffee and Shirley Gordon, former vice president of operations for the North Bay regional State Farm office, is a unique and special celebration this year.

“Our keynote speaker, Chantal Jenkins, is an alumna of the very first class,” says Sue Sion, part of the coordinating team.

Jenkins, an attorney, was a graduate of the class of 2000 and now works for the Social Security Administration in San Francisco. Jenkins just won her first case.

The program “is keeping [Pastor Coffee’s] dream alive,” says Vivian Coffee, his widow. “The graduates are contributing members of the community.”

Coffee says her husband’s idea was to provide youth with life skills they aren’t taught in school. The workshops, which are held monthly, include time management, a team-building ropes course, financial awareness, self-esteem, cultural awareness and other classes.

Participants also perform service projects, in which they give back to the community. This year, the service projects included providing gifts for children of inmates incarcerated in the Sonoma County jail system.

The Rev. H. Lee Turner is celebrating five years as pastor of the Community Baptist Church, and notes how the program has grown. “These young people are remarkable,” he says. “They learn abilities that they need in life, including self-confidence. This program is a foundation-builder . . . it’s one of a kind.”

Lenita Marie Johnson lives in 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.

Debriefer: May 4, 2016

Last week, the Bohemian published a story about a political action committee called Votesane, and the $35,500 it sent to Napa Rep. Mike Thompson’s 2016 re-election campaign.

The PAC, advertised as an online portal where so-called conduit contributions are collected and forwarded to candidates, jumped out because of the fact that the aggregate $35,500 that went to Thompson was all traced back to the real estate industry, via filings with the Federal Election Commission (FEC).

Let’s get under the hood of the conduit PAC phenomenon a little deeper, now that the Bohemian has heard from Votesane’s founder Rob Zimmer and the FEC after publication.

Under the law that created the conduit PAC, the donors who give through the PAC are subject to campaign-contribution limits, but the PAC itself is not. The conduit PAC, in its most benign form, exists to process a credit card on behalf of a contributor and forward the cash to the candidate, minus a small fee.

Under FEC rules, the board of any conduit PAC is not allowed to decide who gets a contribution; nor can the board send a contribution to a candidate other than the recipient earmarked by the donor.

If a conduit PAC was found to be endorsing a candidate or steering donations to one or another candidate, it would be subject to the same rules as any other advocacy PAC, including the most important of all: there would be annual limits on how much the PAC could donate to a particular candidate.

That’s how it is with such organizations as the National Association of Realtors, which also regularly contributes to Thompson. Under existing law, Votesane can funnel as much aggregated real estate money to Thompson as its donors see fit to contribute.

That’s the legal landscape. But what of the ethical one? Zimmer and the FEC both compared Votesane to another conduit PAC called ActBlue. But the big difference there is that it’s pretty obvious what ActBlue’s purpose is: to funnel contributions from donors to Democratic Party candidates. The ActBlue board doesn’t endorse, they don’t
pick the candidates who’ll get contributions—they just send the money.

There’s no language in the conduit PAC rule that addresses the business ethics of these newcomer PACs on the post–Citizens United American election scene.

It doesn’t address, for example, the phenomenon of a conduit PAC set up as an “anyone can give” site but which, within a year of its formation, is seeing business only from one industry—and whose founder comes out of that same industry.

Zimmer says that he has tried to drum up other business at Votesane from big labor and other industries, but has been unable to do so. He blames the absence of any non–real estate industry contributions after 2010 on an older citizenry who are still used to writing checks to candidates and who aren’t going online to participate in democracy.

“It’s fair to say that the realtor community has found it to be an efficient form of giving,” Zimmer says, adding, “I’m glad it happened. The first big customer is always the hardest.”

As it stands, the only rule for customers seeking out a conduit PAC is caveat emptor.

And why should a buyer beware? Well, let’s take an extreme hypothetical case. A white supremacist sets up a conduit PAC called the One Love PAC. It’s advertised as open to everyone, but soon after the PAC gets off the ground, everyone donating through the site just happens to also be a white supremacist.

Let’s say you stumble across a positive news story about One Love that calls it a bipartisan clearinghouse for anyone who wants to participate in the political process. The website says the same thing. Most of the money is going to Donald Trump, but you’d have to check the group’s FEC filings to know that.

So you sign up and send $500 to Nancy Pelosi—and now Pelosi just accepted $500 from an organization with ties to white supremacists.

This is an issue perhaps best addressed by best-practices business law, consumer law or even the Virginia Better Business Bureau, where Votesane is located. At the federal level, Congress would have to amend the law that created the conduit PACs in order to deal with the phenomenon of a conduit PAC whose founder comes out of the same industry as all of its donors.

Zimmer was forthcoming about the difficulties in getting a start-up off the ground and insisted that the board is operating on the up-and-up. “Success is not ordained,” he says.

Still, it’s a fair question to ask whether Votesane, and by extension, its advisory board, is the functional equivalent of a lobbyist, since every contribution that comes through the PAC is from the same industry (and Zimmer’s not the only one on the board with a background in real estate).

Speaking generally, the FEC’s deputy press officer Christian Hilland had this to say on the subject of Votesane and the aggregated contribution to real-estate-friendly Thompson:
“We are unable to comment on
any particular committee’s financial activity for the potential for enforcement matters to come before the Commission.”

Caveat Emptor

Gov. Jerry Brown signed the landmark Domestic Worker Bill of Rights into law in 2014, but there was some fine print: the law extended overtime benefits to a class of workers previously left out of wage-equity efforts, yet the rights will expire on Jan. 1, 2017, subject to renewal or rejection by the Legislature.

The many-thousands-strong state domestic-worker workforce is dominated by immigrant labor, much of it historically of the low-pay and often undocumented variety. The new bill was a great deal for those workers; it was always easy to rip off or underpay domestic workers, some of whom would just as soon stay in the shadows and not rock the immigration boat than fight with a chintzy employer over just compensation.

As the Jan. 1 sunset date looms, revisiting the 2014 law raises another question about a class of workers left out of the final language enacted by the Legislature and signed by Brown. Overtime reform is one thing, but how about worker protections for those who don’t work a whole lot of hours, the visible and casual workforce that does all kinds of work around the yard, grass cutters and yard-maintenance crews out in force as the fullness of spring unfurls?

As legislators considered the Domestic Worker Bill of Rights in 2014, the first versions of the bill contained another reform directed at those casual workers, way down at the bottom of the text. The reform was designed to close a gap in workers’ compensation coverage for low-hour laborers, but it never made it out of committee.

The proposed language would have eliminated a section of state labor code, enforced under the aegis of the California Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Cal-OSHA) that says short-term, casual employees are only eligible for workers’ compensation benefits after working a minimum of 52 hours over 90 days (workers have to make at least $100 in that time).

Casual workers and day laborers who fall below the line are not considered “employees” under state labor code. Under California insurance law, a homeowner’s insurance package has to include workers’ compensation protections for workers at the home who are deemed to be employees under state law.

The implications are obvious. If a casual worker who is not considered an “employee” under state law is injured on the job, the homeowner could be sued for whatever medical or other expenses ensue—even if such lawsuits are rare.

“The laws don’t match the daily phenomenon that has gone on for the past 20 years,” says Jesús Guzmán, lead organizer at the Graton Day Labor Center. The past two decades have seen the advent of a visible day-laborer economy dominated by immigrants, and the establishment of places such as Graton.

The day laborer workforce has expanded, but the coverage gap still exists, and Guzmán says the liability almost always falls on the worker’s shoulders. He shares the story of an area day laborer who fell off a ladder and sued the homeowner, but because he hadn’t reached the 52 hour threshold, the homeowner’s insurance didn’t cover the injury, “so the worker carried the full brunt of the injury and couldn’t work for two months.”

The original language in the Domestic Bill of Rights eliminated the 52-hour rule, and thus closed the gap in coverage that leaves workers unprotected and homeowners potentially on the hook for medical bills. “Almost all of the risk and liability falls on the worker,” Guzmán says. There’s no indication that legislators will try and reinstate that language in a re-upped version of the bill.

The bottom line for homeowners? All the law firms that specialize in this kind of litigation say the same thing: As you tool around the home and garden, making the to-do list and looking for laborers, always work with a licensed contractor when one is required, and make sure that your homeowner’s insurance is up to date.

Guzmán says the Graton center will tell homeowners who call in looking for a worker that “if someone is injured, they are responsible for them. We make it clear that they are responsible for the worker. Homeowners can ask their agent about their coverage, but we don’t tell them that the insurance is covering them. It’s a challenge for us, because it exposes workers to a system where they are really vulnerable and they are the ones with the most to lose when they are injured.”

For its part, the Graton shape-up center goes the extra mile to keep its workers safe, Guzmán says. Before anyone goes on a job, “we communicate and do intensive training around health and worker safety,” he says.

Letters to the Editor: May 4, 2016

Rent Control

Rent control is a mandated lottery that results in a few winners and a lot more losers, including all taxpayers who must support yet another segment of city bureaucracy.

While the Santa Rosa City Council bleats about affordable housing out of one side of its mouth, the opposite side supports insanely costly building requirements and fees, through a bloated “planning” department that would be better described as an “extortion” department.

If you want to control housing costs, you could start by adding up all the unnecessary costs and delays caused by the city planning department. Its attitude is, “It’s not our money, so we don’t care” and “We know better than all the engineers, architects and builders who actually have to make their livings by making intelligent, cost-effective decisions—those requirements don’t apply to us.”

The costs and delays caused by the planning department drive up the costs of housing, and drive down the supply. These policies distort the market—an unintended consequence of the collective hubris of a city council that thinks it can repeal the laws of economics.

Santa Rosa

For Noreen

The late Bill Kortum, father of the California Coastal Act and Sonoma County’s champion in preventing a nuclear power plant at Bodega Head, used to talk about our “green mandate,” meaning that voters here approved a remarkable array of local environmental protections, including establishment of the open space district, urban growth boundaries, community separators, etc.

Sonoma County is a place where citizens revere their natural environment. The percentage of people here who consider themselves environmentalists is much higher than in the country as a whole. And in western Sonoma County, the 5th Supervisorial District, the ethic of environmentalism is strongest.

For this reason, it’s important that there be no confusion about which of our supervisorial candidates represents our environmental ethic best. And that is Noreen Evans. Noreen has demonstrated commitment to west Sonoma County’s land and environmental justice for its diverse population all through her terms in the Santa Rosa City Council beginning in 1996, up through her service in the State Assembly and then the State Senate since 2004.

She has been endorsed by the Sierra Club and by Bill Kortum’s legacy group, Sonoma County Conservation Action. Please do your personal best to keep West County in its pristine state and join me in casting your vote for Noreen Evans for 5th District Supervisor.

Sebastopol

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

Buzz Kill

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I’ve been trying to grow a hardy stand of clover for years, having heard that it’s a good, organic way to enhance the fertility of the soil. As a perk, flowering clover looks a lot prettier than cover crops like bell beans. This year, success at last, thanks to winter rains.

The brilliant, crimson flowers are so nice-looking, in fact, it seems a shame to mow it all down. And while crouching to admire it up close, I see there’s more. The clover is abuzz with bees: big, fuzzy bumblebees and European honeybees gorging on the cone-shaped flowers. And even more: scores of big, gangly crane flies and tiny, quick wasps—if your imagination tends more toward science fiction than nature doc, it’s like a galactic supercity scene of lumbering freighters, speedy transports and nimble speeders zipping purposefully around their own little green world.

Now, I’ve heard that to be a good organic grower, I need to take that clover down. But is it fair to the bees to snatch away this lavish picnic of pollen I’ve laid out for them? And what about those little guys—are they those organically beneficial bugs I’ve heard about? I called on Jeffery Landolt, estate vineyard manager at Benziger Family Winery, for advice.

Landolt affirms that I’ve got to mow that clover before it has bloomed 100 percent. “I shoot for about 75 percent,” says Landolt. “That’s your best bang for the buck. If you let it go to seed, you kind of miss the window, and if you go too early, you don’t get the full potential.” After the clover is tilled into the soil, a process called mineralization slowly makes nitrogen available to the grapevines.

And some of those bugs are indeed good bugs. “Most of them are parasitoids,” Landolt says. “Those little wasps that you see? They’re laying their eggs inside a ‘negative’ insect, and as those eggs develop, they kill that insect. They have this little stylet . . .” And now we’re in sci-fi horror territory.

At Benziger, they help out the beneficial insects in their organically and biodynamically farmed estate vineyards by seeding every 10th row with a season-extending blend of wildflowers and other plants. Leaving 10 percent is sufficient, according to Landolt, and the insects will meanwhile move on to different flight patterns and life stages.

Benziger’s 2013 Sonoma County Cabernet Sauvignon ($20) is made with grapes from sustainably certified growers, who incorporate some of the techniques developed at the estate. This tongue-coating, plush Cab would be great with a well-crusted steak—but I just might pour a splash on the freshly tilled ground, for my honeybees.

Home Grown and Locally Made

For this week’s home and garden issue, we checked in with some of our favorite artisans, growers and craftsmen for fresh ideas and DIY know-how.
—Stett Holbrook

THE CURLY-
BURLY MAN

Chuck Oakander dreams of waves intermingling with wood. The dreams will be so vivid that they’ll wake the arborist-sculptor from his slumber and send him to his notebook, where he’ll scrawl out the vision—and then he’ll create it.

The Bolinas arborist makes functional, fun sculpture from tree trunks, and one of his signature creations is the long, carved-out wave benches, rendered mostly from Monterey cypress. These designs are as sculptural as they are functional, and sync well with Oakander’s passion for surfing—where he’s strictly of the longboard persuasion. Oakander is all about the curls and the burls.

He has carved about a half-dozen of the benches in his 25 years working as an arborist-sculpture. Oakander doesn’t get up in the trees much himself anymore, he says, leaving that work to a younger, more nimble crew—and sometimes he’ll leave the crew at a work-site and head home for a few hours of sanding and grinding his latest work. No matter how tired he is, Oakander marvels at how working on one of his sculptures is a kind of instant rejuvenator. He also sport-climbs redwood trees up on the Bolinas ridge, for kicks.

The 56-year-old is a friendly and ruddy-faced icon in Bolinas, known as much for his surfing skills as for the functional sculptures that populate his property—and at some homes around town—and which take many months to complete, from initial rough-out to the final, smooth and sculpted product.

Oakander looks for trunks and trees that speak to his swirls-and-curls aesthetic, adding that he’s not interested in standard woodworking conventions when he’s designing or dreaming up a piece. He’s not interested in milling wood, and hard-angled table corners seem to bore him—or at least he doesn’t dream of them.

“I am drawn to things with interesting curves,” says Oakander.

Asked to name an artistic inspiration, he immediately identifies his across-the-street neighbor, fisherman and clay sculptor Josh Churchman. Also his mom, Oakander adds, who was a night-owl, an art teacher and a maker herself, mostly of clothing.

The pieces he renders take many months to be fully realized, and there’s often a long waiting period before he even gets to work on a piece after he’s secured the tree. Depending on the wood and where it was growing (in the shade or in the sun—it makes a big difference in how the wood ages and decomposes), he will age the wood for between six months and six years before bringing the tools of his trade to bear on it.

But don’t call Oakander a chainsaw artist. The chainsaw comes out only at the very beginning of the process, when Oakander is roughing out his latest vision—for example, a massive and gored-out trunk that presents a tempting place to rest one’s head, and whole body, after a vigorous Bolinas ramble. After the rough-out and after the wood is aged, it’s on to various adzes and power grinders and Oakander’s favorite tool of all, the gutter adze (it was once used to make wooden gutters, he explains), which he deploys and demonstrates with obvious glee.

Oakander is committed to using sections of wood that might otherwise wind up in the dump. When he started out as an arborist some 25 years ago, there were lots of people in West Marin who burned firewood for heat; that business has dropped off considerably in recent years because of county regulations and other factors.

“We used to burn a lot of this wood up,” says Oakander. “I feel some responsibility here, too, that the wood is not wasted.”

In addition to Monterey cypress, Oakander also uses blue-gum and red-gum eucalyptus, black acacia, California bay laurel and coast live oak. “Each has sculptural qualities of its own,” Oakander says during a tour of his workshop and grounds. He’s still working with Monterey cypress trees that were downed in a storm about 10 years ago, and which he hauled to the shop from nearby Dogtown.

Oakander may have one of the more popular front-yard gawk-sites in the county. People pull up all the time, he says, out of curiosity and occasionally to make a purchase. He says that for every 50 or 60 who take an interest in his sculpture, one will follow through all the way to the end.

There’s a really cool carved-out chair in the garage that he’s been working on and that reminds me of Game of Thrones by way of an Ent-approved furniture store. The cutaway inside the flagellated trunk looks like it was burned out by a sculptor, a popular technique. But that’s all-natural damage to the wood, done by a fungus, Oakander explains. He fashioned a separate lift-off seat for the chair, which he says could sell for around $15,000. Oakander has also sold simpler hand-hewn pieces in the $1,000 range. He did carve his wife, Cass Hicks, a neat wooden spoon from a lemon-tree branch on the property—a labor of a different kind of love, and one that he’s not going to do for you.

Oakander has also carved out some pieces on commission, but prospective clients should not expect him to sit down and draw out the specifications. This is an all-natural process, in an all-natural town, and Oakander has a dream for how this should go.
—Tom Gogola

PERMACULTURE ARTISAN

“A landscape and garden isn’t just a landscape and garden,” says Sebastopol’s Erik Ohlsen. “It’s a place to resolve a lot of issues.”

At least it could be.

Ohlsen is something of a permaculture impresario. He runs five businesses from a five-acre plot off Gravenstein Highway South that houses offices for his Permaculture Artisans landscape business, the Permaculture Skills Center nonprofit, incubator farms, a digital mapping service and a new ecology-based children’s’ book publishing company.

The site, with its interpretative gardens and designs, is open to the public.

“We wanted to make this totally accessible to everyone,” says Ohlsen.

The incubator farms help ease the problem of access to farmland, a costly commodity in the North Bay. The Permaculture Skills Center’s 10-week, farmer training program attracts students from all over the world. The current class has students from as far as Finland and South Africa.

“This place is really on the map for the global permaculture community,” Ohlsen says.

All of Ohlsen’s businesses and programs are based on permaculture, a school of agriculture and social movement created by Australia’s Bill Mollison in the 1970s. Put simply, permaculture is a method of design based on the principles and systems of nature. That sounds simple enough, but too often nature is seen as an obstacle rather than an ally. Instead of working with topography, water flow patterns and existing flora and fauna, we impose our plans on the land. In spite of how many chemicals or dams or bulldozers are used to make the round peg fit in the square hole, the garden, farm or economic system that isn’t integrated into the natural world will fail sooner or later.

Permaculture looks at all the pieces of the puzzle—water, soil health, energy use, plant type—and tries to weave them into a harmonious whole, says Ohlsen. Decisions about what to plant in permaculture begin with questions of utility.

“In a permaculture landscape, we always look for useful plants,” says Ohlsen.

What’s a useful plant? It’s one that smells nice and looks good, but also has other functions, such as fixing nitrogen in the soil, producing food or attracting beneficial insects.

One of Ohlsen’s favorite plants is comfrey. It’s a squat little flower that reseeds rather prolifically. The roots have well-known healing properties. Cut off a pile of leaves and weigh them down in a bucket with a rock, like a batch of sauerkraut, and in a few months the smelly ferment can be used as fertilizer at a ratio of 25 to 1.

If a 10-week course is more than you need, Ohlsen has some basic spring gardening tips:

• Grow food as close to your home as possible. Out of sight, out of mind doesn’t make a garden grow.

• Keep as much water on-site as possible. Using mulch, swales and “rain gardens” to hold moisture means your landscape needs less additional water and is drought-resistant.

• Instead of discarding yard clippings, pile them up to create mulch and compost. Chop and drop.

As much as it is an agricultural philosophy, Ohlsen says permaculture is a model for social change, and it’s one he’s eager to share. “We want to take our model out into the community,” he says.—Stett Holbrook

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SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL FLOWER FARMER

According to Modern Farmer magazine, we’re in the midst of a flower-industry boom, the biggest since the 1990s. As delightful as flowers are to smell and admire, in Sonoma County they are part of a timely conversation about local farming, commerce and community.

“A lot of people don’t realize around 80 percent of flowers sold in the U.S. are imported from other countries,” says Nichole Skalski, a floral designer and member of the five-year-old North Bay Flower Collective. More often than not, she says, “the imports come from farms that treat workers poorly, and use pesticides and chemicals not regulated by the U.S.”

The collective of 15 local farmers, florists and floral designers living and working in Sonoma County calls its approach “slow flowers,” borrowed from the international Slow Food movement. Just as Slow Food underlines the importance of seasonality and locality, the flower collective strives for a deeper understanding of the flower market, its place in the community and its environmental impact. This focus flourishes when growers and designers are brought together.

“I think it’s important for the designer to hear how the farmer tended those seeds until they were passed on to be included in an artistic design for a wedding ceremony or gift to a loved one, carefully selected and arranged,” Skalski says.

The collective also supports its members in what Skalski calls “an essentially tough industry” by providing educational, marketing, resources and business opportunities. The value of “local,” too often a marketing buzzword, is front and center with collective members.

“Locally grown flowers aren’t grown strictly for shelf life and sturdiness for air travel,” Skalski says, “so we see lots of heirloom, fragrant and more delicate varieties than imports will ever provide.”

Fresh bunches of those delicate varieties, and many more local blooms, can soon be smelled and purchased at Skalski and partner Kathy Green’s new flower shop, California Sister. Named after the butterfly Adelpha californica, the shop will open in Sebastopol’s Barlow shopping center later this month.

“Our mission is to grow and support our local flower farms, our local economy, and make locally grown flowers more accessible,” says Skalski.—Flora Tsapovsky

REPURPOSED
& REMADE

Michael Deakin’s nickname “Bug” is a mystery—even friends who’ve known him 35 years don’t know how he got it. What they do know is that the founder and owner of Heritage Salvage, Petaluma’s reclaimed building-materials retailer and custom building company, can and will do anything with wood. A master builder, Deakin deftly puts his love of repurposing to use in outfitting everything from posh restaurants to rustic gardens.

Deakin first learned woodworking from his father. “His motto,” says Deakin, “was, ‘If it’s broken, we can fix it, and if we don’t have one, we can build it.'”

Growing up in British Columbia, Deakin started working with reclaimed materials back in the 1970s in Vancouver, starting a collection of wood and steel while working in demolition. “We took to what we considered stealth building,” says Deakin, whose first reclaimed building project was a four-bedroom house constructed in eight days.

Moving to Los Angeles in 1978, Deakin started building sets in the movie business, where he grew as a carpenter and designer. He also spent seven years traveling the world and studying architecture, marveling at sights like 40-foot-high bamboo scaffolding in Hong Kong.

He moved to Occidental in 1983, and started building custom homes in his neighborhood. In 1999, Deakin put an ad in the paper to take apart chicken barns in exchange for the material, and got 36 responses in two days, amassing a new collection of old material. “I have three acres out there, and my sister said, ‘Buggy, I’m glad you don’t have 10 acres.'”

These days, Heritage Salvage is half design and construction services, and half retail building material. “It is a very unique model in that respect,” Deakin says. “Very few companies like ours do design and build while also selling wood.”

Salvage, though, is Deakin’s true passion. “I love finding the stories and passing the stories on,” he says. “I’m the guy who, when we are taking apart a barn, talks with grandma and grandpa and finds out what happened in that barn.”

When Deakin is not out in the field finding long-forgotten pieces of lumber or claiming well-worn sheets of metal, he can be found on Heritage Salvage’s three-acre spread of land, working with the company’s resident art teacher Chris Cheek, head designer Heather Gallagher and an expert team that includes welder Dave Rawson and yard dog Chris Raby. “They’re all artists and hard-working people,” Deakin says.

Heritage Salvage is also known for its creative projects in the community. Heritage regularly works with the Rivertown Revival festival to help the event achieve its rustic aesthetic, and donates wood to the nonprofit Petaluma Bounty for planter boxes and garden greenhouses. The company has also built custom pieces for the Petaluma Historical Library & Museum, Tolay Park and several local schools.

Deakin’s story can be found in his book Heritage Salvage: Reclaimed Stories, which chronicles the company’s process and philosophy alongside gorgeous photos of some of the more than 150 restaurants and countless homes Heritage has shined its light on.—Charlie Swanson

Kitnapped

Keanu, the new movie from sublime comedy team Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele, plays something like a Quentin Tarantino version of That Darn Cat. In good comedy-team fashion, the film upholds the tradition of a straight player trying to keep order beside a partner whose grip has long since gone.

The protean Key, facially bland enough to portray dozens of characters, as he did for five seasons of the Key & Peele sketch comedy show, plays Clarence, an anxious suburban family man in a madras shirt. When Clarence’s wife and kids go away for the weekend, this exec is finally given a chance to stretch his legs—then he gets a call from his cousin Rell (Peele).

Rell has just been dumped by his girlfriend, who told him he wasn’t going anywhere in life. (“I don’t even know what that means!” he whines through a mouthful of bong smoke.) One day, heaven sends Rell a stray, silver tabby, scratching at his door. The cat completes him—they share milk from a saucer.

The cat, the titular Keanu, is the lone survivor of a bloodbath, when two gangsters from Allentown (also Key and Peele) shoot and carve up a lair full of drug-dealing rivals in the best John Woo style. After burglars strike Rell’s house, the kitty vanishes. Clues lead to a gangsta named Cheddar (Method Man). To impress this downtown criminal and his cohorts, the cousins pose as the deadly Allentowners.

Like the baby in Raising Arizona, Keanu stirs up everyone’s emotions without having any of its own. Wearing a bitty do-rag and tiny bling around its neck, the little mite is a symbol of fragile, finer feelings threatened by the heavy boots of the urban world. The subject gives these two prime comedians something to sink their teeth into.

‘Keanu’ is playing in wide release in the North Bay.

May 7: Worldly Visuals in Petaluma

Entering its eighth year, the Petaluma Film Fest brings a global array of short films, both animated and live action, to the North Bay for a day of lively screenings and conversations with visiting filmmakers. The program opens with a local boy, as SRJC student Miles Levin shows his timely political satire The Berninator. From there, the lineup of...

May 7: Pop Art in Sebastopol

Born in Washington state and now living in west Sonoma County, painter and pop-culture enthusiast Tony Speirs displays his latest batch of vintage-meets-exotic paintings in a new show, ‘Unreliable Narrator.’ For the last 15 years, Speirs has painted dazzling and engaging pieces that fuse together his childhood love of comic books, classic advertising icons, vintage toys and even international...

May 10: Ripe Sounds in Inverness

With chapters in Point Reyes, Bolinas and Stinson Beach, the community choir and musical group Sound Orchard celebrate their first year of promoting local artists and musicians, as well as connecting Marin’s diverse musical communities through events and music programs. Now Sound Orchard is throwing a benefit party that boasts an evening of food and music. While guests enjoy...

Focusing on the Future

The 2016 Bridge to the Future Rites of Passage class at Santa Rosa's Community Baptist Church is celebrating a decade of graduating local teenagers and preparing them for the future. The program, created by late, longtime pastor James E. Coffee and Shirley Gordon, former vice president of operations for the North Bay regional State Farm office, is a unique...

Debriefer: May 4, 2016

Last week, the Bohemian published a story about a political action committee called Votesane, and the $35,500 it sent to Napa Rep. Mike Thompson's 2016 re-election campaign. The PAC, advertised as an online portal where so-called conduit contributions are collected and forwarded to candidates, jumped out because of the fact that the aggregate $35,500 that went to Thompson was all...

Caveat Emptor

Gov. Jerry Brown signed the landmark Domestic Worker Bill of Rights into law in 2014, but there was some fine print: the law extended overtime benefits to a class of workers previously left out of wage-equity efforts, yet the rights will expire on Jan. 1, 2017, subject to renewal or rejection by the Legislature. The many-thousands-strong state domestic-worker workforce is...

Letters to the Editor: May 4, 2016

Rent Control Rent control is a mandated lottery that results in a few winners and a lot more losers, including all taxpayers who must support yet another segment of city bureaucracy. While the Santa Rosa City Council bleats about affordable housing out of one side of its mouth, the opposite side supports insanely costly building requirements and fees, through a bloated...

Buzz Kill

I've been trying to grow a hardy stand of clover for years, having heard that it's a good, organic way to enhance the fertility of the soil. As a perk, flowering clover looks a lot prettier than cover crops like bell beans. This year, success at last, thanks to winter rains. The brilliant, crimson flowers are so nice-looking, in fact,...

Home Grown and Locally Made

For this week's home and garden issue, we checked in with some of our favorite artisans, growers and craftsmen for fresh ideas and DIY know-how. —Stett Holbrook THE CURLY- BURLY MAN Chuck Oakander dreams of waves intermingling with wood. The dreams will be so vivid that they'll wake the arborist-sculptor from his slumber and send him to his notebook, where he'll scrawl out...

Kitnapped

Keanu, the new movie from sublime comedy team Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele, plays something like a Quentin Tarantino version of That Darn Cat. In good comedy-team fashion, the film upholds the tradition of a straight player trying to keep order beside a partner whose grip has long since gone. The protean Key, facially bland enough to portray dozens of...
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