Barn Raising

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In the North Bay, where two venerable theater groups have recently lost their homes, and where other theater failures seem imminent or possible, one little company in Napa is doing something unthinkable. They are building a new theater from scratch.

“We’re really not crazy!” laughs Taylor Bartolucci, cofounder of Lucky Penny Theater Co., which this weekend officially opens the Lucky Penny Community Arts Center with a two-weekend run of Lionel Bart’s moody musical Oliver!

The center—complete with an 85-seat theater, rehearsal and dressing rooms, costume and scenery shops, and more—is a former kitchen tile store, now receiving its final, transformative touches before the Thursday-night opening.

“This building is happening because it has to happen,” explains Bartolucci, who’s directing Oliver! along with Lucky Penny co-founder Barry Martin. Citing the closure of the Napa Valley Playhouse last year on the heels of the Opera House’s transformation into the mostly musical City Winery venue, Bartolucci and Martin—who created Lucky Penny in 2009 and have performed at the above venues and a few others—realized that no affordable options were left for theater artists seeking a place to stage a show in Napa.

“This was always in the back of our mind, to eventually have our own venue,” says Bartolucci. “But now we feel we have to build our own theater, because we simply won’t have a theater company anymore if we don’t.”

“Before we committed to this place,” says Martin, gesturing across the sawdust-covered room to where dressing room walls are being framed and sheetrocked, “we talked to every conceivable other venue in the area. We talked to owners of vacant buildings. We talked to schools. We talked to everyone. And nothing else made sense.”

The cost of the renovation is estimated at $200,000, over half of which has already been raised through private donations and fundraising events. And the closer the new facility comes to opening, the more Bartolucci says she can feel the community’s excitement rising.

“People see this space and they see the progress we’ve made, and they are floored!” she says. “They say, ‘Oh, wow! You’re really doing this!’ Yes we are! Look at the history of Lucky Penny. When we say we’re going to do something, we pretty much always do it.”

“And this time,” says Martin, “we’re not just doing it to put on one show. We’re building something that will be a resource for the whole community for years to come.”

Seize Mentality

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Last August, a fire in a Sebastopol building exposed a cannabis growing operation on site. Sonoma County detectives, invoking a federal asset-forfeiture program called “equitable sharing,” seized property and goods on the property that included 1,421 gold and silver coins and $1.4 million in cash.

But late last week, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder all but ended the equitable sharing program, whereby the feds, state and local law enforcement agencies split the proceeds from the sale of confiscated goods.

The Sebastopol story, first reported in the Press Democrat, raised eyebrows since the local police didn’t charge the property owner with anything—and six months later still haven’t charged him with anything.

When asked about the whereabouts of the gold and silver last October, Sonoma County assistant district attorney Bud McMahon confirmed that it been turned over to the feds.

The reason, he said, was because “we don’t have any local state charges here. We don’t have any identified suspects. All the cash and the precious metals were sent to the federal government for asset forfeiture purposes.”

This week, McMahon told the Bohemian that Holder’s move would have “little or no impact” on the Sonoma County District Attorney’s office, and said he “doesn’t know any more about the case. I never read any police reports. I don’t know anything about it.”

McMahon added that the rationale for seizing the goods in Sebastopol was that law enforcement didn’t want to leave it there “for someone else to steal.”

And he downplayed the county’s use of the program. “We don’t use the federal government for asset forfeiture, hardly at all,” McMahon said.

The Washington Post was first out of the box with this story last week and noted in its report that Holder’s move came with some exceptions—guns, child pornography and explosives.

But, the Post noted, those items represented a fraction of the assets seized since 2008. Since then, the Post reported, the feds have made more than 55,000 seizures worth over $3 billion, much of it cash money.

The program has been widely criticized for being a convenient lever for local law enforcement to pad their budgets from the sale of the confiscated goods. Under the program, the feds keep 20 percent of the proceeds, and the localities get 80 percent.

Now, under the Holder ruling, absent a warrant or criminal charges being filed at the state or local level—exactly the scenario in the Sebastopol bust—local law enforcement agencies will no longer be able to seize assets using the federal program.

The program was of special value in California, where state asset forfeiture laws are not only more difficult to invoke, but are less harsh than the federal program, according to materials offered by a San Francisco law firm that’s been in the asset-forfeiture trenches.

The Shouse California Law Group, based in San Francisco, has represented clients caught up in asset-forfeiture cases all around the state. The firm’s website details how, in California, this program was leaned on by law enforcement.

“The laws passed by the California Legislature actually provide pretty good protections for individuals caught up in asset-forfeiture proceedings,” the firm notes.

“But equitable sharing allows California cops to get around those laws by handing property they have seized over to federal law enforcement agencies. That property then gets handled under federal asset-forfeiture laws, which are much harsher than California’s.”

McMahon said that assertion is “absolutely untrue,” and that whether it was the federal or state asset-forfeiture law, “it’s the same burden of proof.”

He added that the district attorney’s office relied almost entirely on state asset-forfeiture laws: “We do asset-forfeiture cases all the time, and we gladly accept them and we rarely turn them down.”

McMahon said he was unfamiliar with the equitable sharing 80–20 split and went on to admit, “I don’t know the rules of federal asset law, it may be broader, but we do not do that in Sonoma County.

“To suggest to me that it’s harder to do it from a state standpoint than from a federal standpoint—we’re as fair as we can be. We give property and money back all the time that’s been seized.”

The Holder move, he said, “is not going to change our workload or the number of asset forfeitures that we do.”

Shouse reports that in California, between 2000 and 2008, “more than $300 million worth of assets was seized in California through equitable sharing.”

The firm notes, “What this means is that California cops can do an end-run around the restrictions on asset forfeiture that were put in place by California’s own elected officials, and still make plenty of money for their departments.”

Rohnert Park: The Walmart Friendly City

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It did not go well for protestors and others intent on stopping a proposed Walmart expansion in Rohnert Park. A Tuesday night meeting at Rohnert Park City Hall found the town’s cowed councilmembers voting 4-1 in favor of letting the supercenter plan go forward, according to an exhaustive report in the mid-week Press Democrat.

The vote ended, presumably, a five-year battle fought by opponents against the megalithic market, which has been trying to expand an already extant Walmart in town.

In the meantime, it went ahead and built another Walmart in Rohnert Park, a so-called “neighborhood market.”

Anti-Walmart agitator Rick Luttman sent an email overnight Wednesday, after the vote, that prompted one of those chuckling, “Tell us what you really think, Rick” moments.

Luttman described the development as “outrageous and disgraceful. No other city in Sonoma County would have done something like this. They’re all a bunch of wimps.”

“The worst part,” he adds, “is they clearly don’t believe in democracy. The opinions expressed by citizens last night was overwhelmingly opposed to Walmart.”

I reached out to my old friend and colleague Liza Featherstone, a journalist, professor and the author of Selling Women Short: The Landmark Battle for Workers’ Rights at Walmart, for some scope-out thoughts on how Walmart might have managed to convince Rohnert Park officials to green-light the proposed expansion—despite a broad base of opposition to the proposal, which extended to numerous justice and workers’ rights groups around the area.

The corporation has gotten savvy over the years, Featherstone notes, given the relentless torrent of criticism directed at them for low wages, poor job security, and ongoing patterns of naked gender discrimination.

“The company has gotten really good at telling a different story,” she says. “They’ve had so much practice over the years.”

And indeed, the Tuesday vote was met with protestors banging drums, and with, as the P-D reported, Walmart supporters wearing Walmart buttons and carrying signs that said how wonderful the company was. Yes, shopping at Walmart is definitely cheaper than blowing a hole in your paycheck at Whole Foods.

But despite the self-generated hype to the contrary, long-documented workers’ rights problems with Walmart haven’t been addressed by the company in any substantive way, says Featherstone. It has plowed forth with public relations campaigns, many featuring smiling brown workers cheerfully sporting the signature blue Walmart apron, gushing about the friendly corporate culture and blah blah blah.

And why should Walmart give a hoot about its wage-slavery: people still apply to work there, in droves, despite well-documented policies that aren’t exactly in the best interests of workers. The company, as has been noted elsewhere, provides new employees with applications for food stamps, since it knows workers will be left short at the end of the week.

Ain’t it ironic.

“It’s not just about the low hourly wages,” says Featherstone, “but the difficulty in just getting enough hours, and reliably just being on the schedule, which is another huge challenge for someone trying to make ends meet. And, on top of that, the health insurance is terrible, and it’s hard to get it because it’s so hard to get the necessary hours to qualify for it.”

The Press Democrat report was larded with gibberish from the Rohnert Park officials, who essentially argued that it’s not their business, necessarily, to decide which businesses are good for the city and which aren’t. Let them all come, and the market will decide.

As Featherstone notes, one of the tricks to a successful Walmart bulldoze-the-opponents campaign is to promise jobs in an area that’s otherwise short on them. But I checked, and the jobless rate in Sonoma County has plummeted over the past two years, from almost 7 percent in 2013 to below 5 percent as of late 2014.

But the issue isn’t necessarily the quantity of available jobs, but the quality.

Featherstone notes that “any conservative, or just an observant person, would argue that people apply for these jobs. If there were better jobs in the community, obviously people wouldn’t be applying at Walmart, and that’s one thing that communities have to consider. Why would they want these low-paying jobs? The community probably needs to be providing other ways that people can make a living. If there is support, it’s probably because there are significant numbers of people who are not finding jobs. If you find that there are people in the community who don’t really care or actually want it to be there, it might be because the community needs to figure out better ways for economic opportunity.”

Featherstone goes on to note that longstanding gender discrimination concerns at Walmart haven’t gone anywhere. “There are these additional insults to employees’ dignity, in the form of sex discrimination. The majority of workers are women, and they are paid less and promoted less often. That issue has never been resolved despite a class action suit, from the first decade of this century.”

In other words, the terrorists have won. Oh no you didn’t!

The P-D report was filled with handwringing jeremiads from town leaders extolling the virtue of the Blessed and Irreproachable Free Market. It wasn’t their job to decide whether another Walmart in the town would drive out other businesses, such as Food Maxx, that provide the same service but without the odious corporate profile and well-documented history of screwing its workers at any and every turn. Vive Le Costco!

At least the proponents of expansion kept it civil. Give them that. One thoughtful Walmart supporter waxed downright philosophical in the Press Democrat when he considered the substance of opponents’ arguments against the expansion. He called them a bunch of “sniveling, crying, mental midgets.”

That person was not Ted Nugent, but it might as well have been. 

Panda Bear to Play Gun Bun in April

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Panda_Bear_PSVSGR_Announce
Noah Benjamin Lennox is best known as a member of experimental indie rock group Animal Collective, and under the pseudonym Panda Bear, Lennox has evolved considerably as an electronic artist with a pitch perfect penchant for expansive melodies in his sampled beats.  This week, Panda Bear released his fifth solo album, Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper, to universal acclaim; and today at noon tickets go on sale for Panda Bear’s upcoming concert at Gundlach Bundschu Winery in Sonoma on April 16. This is a great chance to see the indie star in the intimate setting of Gun Bun’s newly restored Old Redwood Barn. Click here to grab tickets to the show, and watch the official video for “Mr Noah,” the first single off the new album.
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmXIIL2tmR8[/youtube]

Jan. 15: Fangs in Sebastopol

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Last month, things were not looking good for Hooded Fang. The Toronto-based indie band was all set to open a string of West Coast shows for famed guitarist Johnny Marr, when a family emergency meant Marr canceled the tour right after Hooded Fang arrived in California with all their gear. Turning life into lemonade, the resourceful four-piece instead carved out their own tour, traversing the coast in their van. Their infectious energy has made them an underground favorite, and their last album, 2013’s Gravez, is an underrated garage-punk party starter. Hooded Fang get the party started with support from Secret Cat and Basement Stares on Thursday, Jan. 15, at 775 After Dark,
775 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. 8pm. $8. 707.829.2722.

Jan. 16: Gold and Rust in Novato

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Singer and songwriter Lauren Shera has long been inspired by her home state of California, but she left the Golden State for the epicenter of country music, Nashville. Now an emerging star who has performed alongside the likes of Shawn Colvin and Jason Mraz, Shera’s latest album is a heartfelt farewell and ode to California. Gold and Rust is a meditative and elegant work of American folk and country-tinged rock that looks at the creative impact her family and childhood surrounding had on the young performer, who has also spent time at Chicago’s famed Old Town School of Folk Music. This week, Shera makes her way back to the West Coast, touring in support of Gold and Rust, and appearing on Friday, Jan. 16 at HopMonk Novato, 224 Vintage Way, Novato. 8pm. $12. 415.892.6200.

Jan. 16-17: WInter Hoot in Santa Rosa

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It’s been frickin’ freezing out there the last few weeks, and, frankly, I’ve had enough. This weekend, I’m going to warm myself with fiery music and fierce drinks at the Winter Hoot Fest. Hosted by Josh Windmiller and the North Bay Hootenanny, who are trying to finance themselves into becoming a genuine nonprofit organization, this two-day benefit show is a who’s who of popular North bay folk and rock bands. John Courage, Three Legged Sister, Manzanita Falls, the Crux, the Bad Apple String Band, Pine Street Ramblers, Royal Jelly Jive, Mr. December, Kristen Pearce, the Sam Chase, Snake Walk and others are all slated to perform. The fest keeps the cold away on Friday and Saturday, Jan. 16–17, at the Arlene Francis Center. 99 Sixth St., Santa Rosa. 6pm. $10–$20. Northbayhootenanny.com.

Jan. 17: Orbison Returns to Napa

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Country-Western singer Wiley Ray was a big Roy Orbison fan, but he never thought of pursuing a tribute career to the famed “Pretty Woman” crooner. That was, until Wiley stunned a crowd at a karaoke bar with a rendition of Orbison’s biggest hit, and was encouraged to go the next step. Wiley brings the beautiful rockabilly and memorable country tunes to a new generation of fans with his fully realized stage show, Roy Orbison Returns. Complete with costumes and a set list of hits, Wiley and company explore Orbison’s 30-plus year career and the lasting effect the late songwriter has had on music history. You’ll swear Roy Orbison has returned on Saturday, Jan. 17, at the Uptown Theatre, 1350 Third St., Napa. 8pm. $25–$45. 707.259.0123.

Lighten Up

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No groundbreaking scientific study or trendy rumor has yet managed to undermine the status of breakfast, “the most important meal of day,” as far as we’re concerned.

And yet the face of the all-American breakfast is rapidly changing, as heavy, greasy pancake stacks and bacon manifestations make room for greener, lighter and more healthful meals. Versatile and ever trend-sensitive, the breakfast was the first meal to introduce smoothies, oatmeal and omnipresent kale, and it just keeps getting better for you—and better tasting.

The North Bay has certainly given way to earthy, natural, energetic morning starters in recent years, and although the cholesterol-laden breakfast still lurks, more healthful options are gradually taking over.

Slice of Life An endless menu lists lots of gluten-free options, and the breakfast section is elaborate and inviting. A vegetarian morning icon, the tofu scramble ($7.50), is especially good here, Simple and satisfying, it’s full of flavor, courtesy of spices, sautéed onions and mushrooms—and it’s customizable, too,
with additional vegetables. 6970 McKinley St., Sebastopol. 707.829.6627.

The Spinster Sisters This local staple is charming after dark, but the breakfast macro bowl ($14) justifies a morning visit. When quinoa, red cabbage, kale, pickled carrots, mushroom broth and other goodies mingle with a decadent poached egg, nurturing comfort is born. Pricey, but utterly delectable. 401 South A St., Santa Rosa. 707.528.7100

Backyard The farm-to-table spot is well-known for its dinner and lunch, but the weekend brunch features some superstars too. The shiniest of them is the Alive and Healing Tempeh Scramble ($12), which, in fact, isn’t a scramble at all; it’s a feast of mushrooms, leeks, onions, potatoes and pungent kimchi, served with crispy toast. Alive and healing, indeed. 6566 Front St., Forestville. 707.820.8445.

Native Kitchen & Kombucha Bar The organic, biodynamic and seasonal menu is served all day, but the sweet corn cakes ($13) are perfect for breakfast. Served with quinoa, marinated kale and house made salsa, they provide an energetic starter, and prove that breakfast can survive without an egg. 110 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma. 707.559.3750.

Juju’s In the Middle East, starting your day with hummus totally makes sense, as the rich, delicious paste is packed with iron, vitamin C and other energy- and wellness-promoting features. This small, welcoming place has some of the best hummus in the county—a bowl of it is perfect for a late, lazy breakfast ($7 with a pita bread). 3375 Old California Way, Napa. 707.226.6537.

Andaz Farmers Table Though it’s part of the Hyatt group, the Andaz manages to feel local. The generally organic breakfast menu doesn’t hurt, either. The Skyhill Farm goat-milk yogurt ($9), served with grapes and granola, hits the sweet-yet-lightweight spot perfectly. More healthful than a Belgian waffle, more luxurious than veggies. 1450 First St., Napa. 707.687.1234.

Comforts The sunny restaurant serves plenty of decadent breakfast temptations, but veggie lovers and calorie counters should consider the kale bowl ($12.50). Brimming with roasted squash, barley and quinoa, topped with two eggs and decorated with pumpkin seeds and currants, it easily outshines the heavier items on the menu. 335 San Anselmo Ave., San Anselmo. 415.454.9840.

In Vinum Medicine?

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In the narrow field of memorable winery mottos, it’s tough to beat Ravenwood’s “No Wimpy Wines.”

More entertaining is their line of translated variations on the theme, such as, “Nullum vinum flaccidum,” in Latin. But my favorite was a winner of Ravenswood’s annual employee T-shirt contest for harvest, 2003: “Thanks to resveratrol, Joel can work another harvest!”

he joke was both gently wry—winemaker Joel Peterson, although past master of Zinfandel, is no dotager—and timely. Researchers at Harvard Medical School had just published a study linking resveratrol, a polyphenol found in red wine, to a longer lifespan—for yeast, worms and flies. In 2006, they concluded that fat mice on a rich diet lived longer when dosed with resveratrol. Others found that resveratrol-revved mice were better able to run pointlessly on a treadmill. And who doesn’t aspire to more of that?

Naysayers nagged that you’d have to chug dozens of cases of wine to get the same dosage given the mice. The dietary supplements industry sprang to the rescue: as noted in the Bohemian (Jan. 19, 2011), consumers were “spending anywhere from $17 to $44 for 60 capsules of resveratrol.”

Then in May, 2014, a long-term study of senior citizens in Chianti, by Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, concluded that a high-resveratrol diet had no effect on whether individuals developed life-threatening diseases or not.

Headlines went from “Is Resveratrol the Magic Bullet?” to “Resveratrol Is No Help at All.” Depressing narrative? Cheer up—with a glass of wine. Or two. In 2010, another study concluded that people who abstain from drink entirely might end up with shorter lifespans—not only as compared to moderate drinkers, but heavy drinkers as well.

Anybody can tell you, of course, that there’s little harm and probably some benefit to a habit of moderate wine consumption—they just won’t make headlines. If you’re still waiting to be told whether to drink red or white, hedge your bets and go with pink.

So fresh off the vine, it’s got to be good for you (I am not a doctor; please consult with your physician and/or sommelier before starting any heavy drinking program), Martin Ray Winery’s 2014 Russian River Valley Rosé of Pinot Noir ($18) enjoys the palest hue of a pink rose and evokes happy memories of frozen cheesecake and pink bubblegum. Strawberry, bubblegum flavors repeat on the palate, finishing crisp but with a bit of sweet viscosity. Have it with a mild cheese, like Point Reyes toma. Sure, it’s a wimpy wine, but we mice don’t mind at all.

Barn Raising

In the North Bay, where two venerable theater groups have recently lost their homes, and where other theater failures seem imminent or possible, one little company in Napa is doing something unthinkable. They are building a new theater from scratch. "We're really not crazy!" laughs Taylor Bartolucci, cofounder of Lucky Penny Theater Co., which this weekend officially opens the Lucky...

Seize Mentality

Last August, a fire in a Sebastopol building exposed a cannabis growing operation on site. Sonoma County detectives, invoking a federal asset-forfeiture program called "equitable sharing," seized property and goods on the property that included 1,421 gold and silver coins and $1.4 million in cash. But late last week, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder all but ended the equitable sharing...

Rohnert Park: The Walmart Friendly City

City officials get rolled by the corporate giant

Panda Bear to Play Gun Bun in April

Noah Benjamin Lennox is best known as a member of experimental indie rock group Animal Collective, and under the pseudonym Panda Bear, Lennox has evolved considerably as an electronic artist with a pitch perfect penchant for expansive melodies in his sampled beats.  This week, Panda Bear released his fifth solo album, Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper, to universal...

Jan. 15: Fangs in Sebastopol

Last month, things were not looking good for Hooded Fang. The Toronto-based indie band was all set to open a string of West Coast shows for famed guitarist Johnny Marr, when a family emergency meant Marr canceled the tour right after Hooded Fang arrived in California with all their gear. Turning life into lemonade, the resourceful four-piece instead carved...

Jan. 16: Gold and Rust in Novato

Singer and songwriter Lauren Shera has long been inspired by her home state of California, but she left the Golden State for the epicenter of country music, Nashville. Now an emerging star who has performed alongside the likes of Shawn Colvin and Jason Mraz, Shera’s latest album is a heartfelt farewell and ode to California. Gold and Rust is...

Jan. 16-17: WInter Hoot in Santa Rosa

It’s been frickin’ freezing out there the last few weeks, and, frankly, I’ve had enough. This weekend, I’m going to warm myself with fiery music and fierce drinks at the Winter Hoot Fest. Hosted by Josh Windmiller and the North Bay Hootenanny, who are trying to finance themselves into becoming a genuine nonprofit organization, this two-day benefit show is...

Jan. 17: Orbison Returns to Napa

Country-Western singer Wiley Ray was a big Roy Orbison fan, but he never thought of pursuing a tribute career to the famed “Pretty Woman” crooner. That was, until Wiley stunned a crowd at a karaoke bar with a rendition of Orbison’s biggest hit, and was encouraged to go the next step. Wiley brings the beautiful rockabilly and memorable country...

Lighten Up

No groundbreaking scientific study or trendy rumor has yet managed to undermine the status of breakfast, "the most important meal of day," as far as we're concerned. And yet the face of the all-American breakfast is rapidly changing, as heavy, greasy pancake stacks and bacon manifestations make room for greener, lighter and more healthful meals. Versatile and ever trend-sensitive, the...

In Vinum Medicine?

In the narrow field of memorable winery mottos, it's tough to beat Ravenwood's "No Wimpy Wines." More entertaining is their line of translated variations on the theme, such as, "Nullum vinum flaccidum," in Latin. But my favorite was a winner of Ravenswood's annual employee T-shirt contest for harvest, 2003: "Thanks to resveratrol, Joel can work another harvest!" he joke was both...
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