Tagged

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Sim Van der Ryn, California state architect under Gov. Jerry Brown in the 1970s, and a leading figure in the sustainable architecture movement, was “red-tagged” by Marin County building inspectors last year for a structure he was building on his Inverness property.

At issue was a “detached accessory structure for living space,” under construction without a permit, says Christy Stanley, the code-enforcement officer on the case. But the county inspection—which followed a confidential civilian complaint against Van der Ryn—yielded “additional violations on the property,” says Stanley. Van der Ryn submitted new building applications in late January that would bring other structures up to snuff with county rules, after “a couple of rounds of inspections, both on-site and in our office,” says Stanley, a 25-year employee of the county.

Van der Ryn modified the red-tagged building and has “chosen to scale back some of the improvements to limit his permit exposure” on other structures, says Stanley.

Van der Ryn tells the Bohemian that one red-tagged building was an attempt “to create affordable housing for some people who work here. Now those people are gone.” In Brown’s administration, “I was the state’s chief enforcement officer,” he says with a laugh as he defends the county’s code-enforcement mandate. “The county isn’t a villain, they are not the problem,” he says. “They have to do the investigation.”

For now, Van der Ryn says he’s working to bring his properties into compliance, and that the real villain is the well-heeled NIMBYism of newcomers unfamiliar with local byways (i.e., the person who called the county on him last summer).

“People can feel the change here,” he says.—Tom Gogola

Rhone Rangers

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There’s still plenty of loose talk in California about “Burgundian-style” wine, but it’s the rare wine that’s billed as such right on the bottle. I found one that is, but it’s a Rhone-style blend—pithy comment on the state of Rhone varietals and blends in advance of the Rhone Rangers 17th annual tasting event.

When I reached for two samples of nationally distributed, nicely priced blends of Grenache, Syrah and Mourvèdre recently, I found that neither said a word about these grapes on its label, front or back. Worse, it’s just as well, since neither is likely to inspire one to saddle up with the Rhone Rangers.

The good news is that, with a little more effort and not too much more money, plenty of exciting wines in this category can now be found. Unlike California’s popular “kitchen sink” blends of Cab, Zin, Syrah and other grapes, Rhone blends usually—but are not required to—conform to a formula traditional to France’s Côtes du Rhône region. But the grapevines themselves are nothing new to California, as Napa winemaker Jillian Johnson (pictured) found while working for Bonny Doon. They used wine from a singular survivor in Lodi, a 137-year-old vineyard planted entirely to Cinsault, to punch up Le Cigare Volant and other blends. Now Johnson contracts four acres for her own label. The Onesta 2011 Lodi Cinsault ($29) is peppery, warmly imbued with plum and licorice, and is a real pleasure to drink.

I expected Cline’s 2012 Cashmere ($21) to also be a pleasure to drink. From some of Cline’s heritage Contra Costa County vineyards, it’s light-bodied and soft, but smells older than its years and tastes a bit “rescued.” On the plus side, proceeds help support Living Beyond Breast Cancer.

Francis Ford Coppola‘s 2012 Chateau Red ($14) is a new addition to the winery’s Votre Santé line. More deeply colored and with stickier tannin, this hints at savory notes over black cherry fruit and is easy to drink, but seems to have been bullied into the bottle too early.

So how do they do it back in “home, sweet Rhone?” Famille Perrin’s 2010 Les Sinards Châteauneuf-du-Pape ($35) comes from the folks behind Château de Beaucastel, partners also in Tablas Creek of Paso Robles. Dried fruits are drowned out by waves of Bergamot orange, leather, fermenting hay and assorted volatile aromas that sing from the glass. Medium-bodied, astringent, tensely herbal and cherry-fruited all at once, it’s heaps wilder than the California blends, but I just keep coming back to it. Perhaps some of our Rangers will pick up the trail here.

The Hunger Artifice

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Congressman Jared Huffman made the wrong call when he helped to cut food stamps recently by voting yes on the Agricultural Act of 2014, aka the Farm Bill.

Huffman should have known better. Last June, he participated in the “SNAP Food Stamp Challenge” for five days, to find out what it’s like to have just $4.50 a day to spend on food. On the first day of the effort, Huffman said, “I can already tell that [quality] protein and just about anything fresh are going to be casualties of a food-stamp diet.”

Huffman endured the ordeal for a week. Imagine coping with it for 52 weeks a year.

I had guessed that Huffman would vote no on the Farm Bill for two reasons: he had voted against cuts to food stamps in November, and he’d personally experienced what it was like to try to eat a healthy diet on a food-stamp allowance. But I called his Washington, D.C., office anyway, to state that I strongly opposed any further cuts to food stamp benefits, and urged that the cuts from November be restored.

Instead, I was horrified to learn that Huffman had in fact voted for the Farm Bill, a measure that further reduced the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program by $8 billion, worsening the damage done by $5 billion in cuts that were passed by the House just three months before.

Unlike most Democrats from California in the House of Representatives, Huffman chose to vote for a bill that leaves hungry people even hungrier than they were last fall. Huffman issued a statement after his vote, soft-pedaling the damage that he helped to inflict. He said that the original bill called for $40 billion in cuts, so it was good that only $8 billion over 10 years was cut. Not good enough, I say.

Huffman should have stood up and said, “It’s a disgrace that Congress would even consider cuts to basic nutrition programs in these times of record-breaking corporate profits,” and voted no.

Alice Chan is Co-Chair of the Coalition for Grassroots Progress and an elected delegate to the California State Democratic Central Committee. She lives in Sebastopol.

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.

Lasso Come Home

It’s a delightfully twisty idea: a semi-fictional story about a man whose pursuit of truth led him to invent an imaginary character.

Throw in a little bondage and a three-way love story, and you have Lasso of Truth, Marin Theatre Company’s perceptive and proudly kinky premiere of Carson Kreitzer’s unforgettable new play. Directed with astonishing dexterity by Jasson Minadakis, Lasso is a kind of speculative origin story, offering a partially fabricated glimpse into the life of inventor William Marston, whose professional achievements included the invention of the lie detector and the creation of the first comic book superheroine, Wonder Woman.

“Let me now praise the beauty of strong women!” exults Marston, called the Inventor (an excellent Nicholas Rose). A psychologist with a taste for sexual danger, he’s happily married to the Wife (Jessa Brie Moreno, absolutely sensational here). The textbook description of a strong woman, she is the chief breadwinner of the family. Most importantly, she also indulges her husband’s tastes for playful bondage games, an extension of his professional interest in domination and submission.

The real Marston apparently did have a longtime polyamorous marriage that included his research assistant, here called the Amazon (Liz Sklar, sexy and electric). The play explores the idea that the women in the relationship might have had as much attraction to each other as Marston had for them, a realization that hits him hard when he discovers them engaging in their own bondage games—without him.

Of course, by this time, crushed that his lie detector hadn’t transformed the world into the better place he imagined, Marston had already fused the best elements of his lovers into his one unforgettable comic character.

The play would have had plenty of chewy material right there, but playwright Kreitzer throws in the Girl (Lauren English), a contemporary woman on a quest for the original Wonder Woman comic book, and the Guy (John Riedlinger), a collector who won’t part with it. Kreitzer uses these characters to explore the impact Wonder Woman has had on generations of girls who grew up idolizing her, and the feminist significance of the lasso-cracking Amazon comes out in these scenes, which start to make Lasso seem a bit stretched and overladen with ideas.

Still, the pleasures of the play far outweigh the faults.

Brilliantly executed, Lasso of Truth is as bold and original, as entertaining and groundbreaking, as the truth-telling Amazon who inspired it.

Rating (out of 5): &#9733 &#9733 &#9733 &#9733 &#189

Thrive Talking

On a recent weekday evening, only a couple of bar stools sit empty at Santa Rosa’s new Whiskey Tip bar in Roseland. Owner Justin Neuroth is in the kitchen, putting the final spices on a basket of signature Bacon Bombs for a buddy who helped him remodel what was once the old Gigas dive bar on Sebastopol Road.

The renovated building is now full of swanky décor and party functionality, ready for a summer packed with touring bands, DJ-hosted Sunday brunches and everything from karaoke to WFC fights. With over 90 varieties of whiskey, there is a lot of potential for the Whiskey Tip to be the next great venue in Sonoma County.

Outside, the 2,200-square-foot patio has murals by local graffiti artist Gabriel Adams, and opposite a beer bar, the stage is going up just in time for Santa Cruz reggae rockers Thrive to perform this Saturday night. Thrive continue to tour after releasing their second studio-length album, Relentless, in May. The record reached considerable heights on the iTunes reggae charts, which has helped make the band one of Northern California’s leading opener acts for reggae stars like Barrington Levy, Tarrus Riley and SOJA.

Still, the band is hardworking and consistent about developing new material. “I’m in my home studio every day,” says lead vocalist and guitarist Aaron Borowitz. “When I’m traveling, I bring it with me.” Over the past year, Thrive’s evolving musical range is spearheading a unique style of California reggae, where pop, rock and R&B fuse with reggae’s skankin’ guitar riffs. “Those influences are starting to shine as our group matures,” says Borowitz.

The last few months brought drastic change for the band with the loss of their saxophone player, Petaluma native Scott Shipper. He was 29 when he died of cancer in December. “We respected Scott’s knowledge of music and his work ethic, not only with the band, but with his charity Unify to Thrive,” says Borowitz.

What hasn’t changed, though, is the conscious lyricism of their music. Every verse exhales positivity. They sing about love and unity, and like the breeziness of their melodies, they delve just far enough into social injustice to keep it real without getting upset.

Helping Thrive keep it classy is Hawaiian native Hirie, who plays island-sweet melodies on her ukulele. This could be the start of something great, and Lord knows Santa Rosa needs it.

Thrive play the Whiskey Tip on Saturday, March 8, at 8pm. $5. 1910 Sebastopol Road, Santa Rosa. 707.843.5535.

Decarceration Nation

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For most people, the idea of abolishing prisons is right up there with colonizing Mars—a far-out concept torn straight from a science-fiction novel. But for writer and former labor union organizer Steve Martinot, the abolishment of prisons is the social justice issue of the 21st century.

“The first step towards creating a humane, egalitarian society would be eliminating the prison system and the prison ethic,” explains Martinot by phone from his home in Berkeley.

Now 74 years old, the retired UC Berkeley and San Francisco State adjunct lecturer first became involved with the prison abolition movement after attending a Critical Resistance conference in the late ’90s. Founded by former political prisoner and UC Santa Cruz professor Angela Davis, Critical Resistance takes as its mission dismantling the prison-industrial complex.

Like Thomas Paine, whose Common Sense inspired the American Revolution, Martinot turned to the pamphlet as the form through which to disseminate his argument about the prison system. He’ll be speaking on the ideas contained in “The Need to Abolish the Prison System: An Ethical Indictment” on March 9 at the Glaser Center, sponsored by Racial Justice Allies and the Peace & Justice Center of Sonoma County.

The pamphlet came about as Martinot heard people in the movement express dissatisfaction that there wasn’t a philosophical argument that made the “abolition of prison intelligible on an ethical basis.”

“I’d been doing a lot of work on the structures of racialization in the United States, so I took the project on myself to see if I could provide an ethical and political argument on a philosophical basis for the abolition of prisons,” he explains.

Considering that the U.S. Supreme Court described conditions in overcrowded California prisons as bordering on “cruel and unusual punishment,” Martinot may be on to something. In the 2011 ruling that directed California to address its prison overflow, Justice Anthony Kennedy described the situation thus: “A prison that deprives prisoners of basic sustenance, including adequate medical care, is incompatible with the concept of human dignity and has no place in civilized society.”

California was required to reduce its prisoner population from 143,000 to 110,000. The verdict is still out on whether prison realignment, which sent lower-level offenders to local and county jails, where they often benefit from early release, has been successful in alleviating the strain on a prison system that was housing almost double its capacity.

But for activists like Martinot, simply reorganizing the prison system, or reforming it through measures such as Proposition 36, the 2012 legislation that exempts nonviolent offenders in California from “three strikes” mandatory life sentences, is only a band-aid on an enormous bleeding wound.

His ideas take as foundation books like Michelle Alexander’s eye-opening book published in 2012, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, which argues that the millions of African Americans locked up in prison represents the rebirth of a caste-like system, one that relegates these men and women to permanent second-class status. “She’s really doing the exposure literature of what the ‘judicial machine’ is all about,” says Martinot.

He mentions restorative justice—a movement that brings together the victim and the offender for dialogue, reparation and community dialogue—as one alternative to locking people up and throwing away the key. Another solution would be the immediate release of anyone currently in prison for what he calls a “victimless” crime. (According to Martinot, 70 percent of those currently incarcerated are in for victimless crimes like prostitution, drug possession and drug use.)

“If you define crime as an act that someone commits that makes someone else suffer, then all of these people in prison for victimless crimes are, they themselves, the victim,” he says. “So even before you can ask how we can abolish the prison system, everybody who’s been involved in a victimless crime should be released today.”

When Martinot speaks before a room of people, the reaction to his radical ideas about prison tends to be a collective silence, he says.

“A nonresponse on a group level—from my teaching background—means I’ve hit on something very profound. That silence means that whatever response my argument is going to get, I’m not going to be there to see it, but it’s going to be there and it’s going to be real.”

Help Out Frank and Get Tickets for Hayhurt’s Hip Trip

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Frank Hayhurst, Francis Rico, the Zone Music guy; no matter how you know him, you probably know him as a good guy who doesn’t think twice about helping out musicians in need. Now that he can use a little help, he’s asking for it in the most fun way imaginable: by hosting a barbecue with over a dozen musical acts.
Hayhurst, who owned the landmark Cotati music store Zone Music for over 20 years and started the nonprofit Musicians Helping Musicians Foundation, recently underwent successful hip surgery. He feels great now, says the musician-shaman-author, but as anyone who has spent time in a hospital bed knows, medical bills can be staggering, even with insurance covering most of the tab. And this event is just $10, with food options by Rasta Dwight’s BBQ from $5–$15 and beer from Lagunitas available, too.
Musicians include: Gator Nation, Uncle Wiggly, Danny sorentino, Levi Lloyd, Onye Onyemaechi, Sarah Baker, Allyson Page and many, many more, including the legendary Bronze Hog. Frank Hayhurst’s Hip Trip goes down Sunday, March 23 at the Sebastopol Community Center. 7985 Valentine Ave., Sebastopol. 5–9:30pm. $10.

Napa Officials Profess Love For New Bottlerock Festival Producers

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Dave Grohl at a screening last year of "Sound City" at the Uptown Theater in Napa

Bottlerock, the weekend-long Napa music festival that began with a bang last year but nearly fizzled when it wound up owing almost $10 million to everyone from food vendors to port-o-potty providers, has announced that it will return this year under new ownership. Today, it was revealed that not only do the new producers have support from city officials, they’re ahead of the curve as far as submitting permits for the event at the Napa Valley Expo. “I appreciate the fact that Latitude 38 has brought in a team that has us far ahead of planning at this point last year,” says Napa Police Captain Steve Potter in a press release.
This is revealing for two reasons. First, it shows the faith city officials have in the new producers. The city was shorted over $100,000 the first time, and the Expo Center itself was owed over $300,000. Now, with new producers, everyone is all smiles. “The Latitude 38 team has the right business experience, skill sets and vision to make BottleRock Napa Valley thrive in 2014,” says Napa mayor Jill Techel in a statement. “BottleRock puts Napa on the map in a new and good way and as mayor, I look forward to Napa hosting it again.” Wow, that’s almost second base, right there. Keep the lights on, you two.
Bands will be announced in mid-March, say the event producers, but judging from last year’s lineup, which included the Black Keys, Kings of Leon, the Shins, Zac Brown Band, Jane’s Addiction, the Flaming Lips, Primus, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, the Black Crowes and many others, it will be a big deal. At a pre-concert screening of his movie, “Sound City” last year at the Uptown Theater in Napa, Dave Grohl said it didn’t work out logistically that year, but if Bottlerock happened in 2014 the Foo Fighters would play the festival. That would be pretty darned cool. And while we’re making suggestions, at least one music fan is crossing his fingers for Prince to be top the list of headliners this year, too.
This year’s festival takes place May 30–June 1 at the Napa Valley Expo.

Jello Biafra Returns to Arlene Francis Center

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We’re pretty stoked that after 3 years away, Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine are coming back to Santa Rosa’s Arlene Francis Center, appearing April 4. In the last year, the punk icon/outspoken artist and his band released their second LP, White People and the Damage Done, and the former Dead Kennedys front man has been getting punks into mosh pits around the world, from Coachella Festival appearances to tours in Australia and Europe. Now, Biafra returns with the help of Pins of Light, We Are the Men, and local favorite Jack Attack in reportedly his final performance ever. Absolutely not to be missed, tickets for the April 4 all ages show go on sale March 1. $15.

Pub Republic: Poetry in Poultry, and Thick Cut Bacon

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Sometimes you just want to throw down about a dish. Thick cut bacon. A dish with healing powers. Thick cut bacon. A dish to thicken the blood, brighten the mood, and get yer mojo working. Thick cut bacon. A dish whose various elements come together in a combination of plain ol’ googly-eyed comfort and crispy, primal bliss to satisfy the inner yowling caveman. The Brick Chicken & Brussels Sprout Bacon Hash at the friendly Petaluma outpost Pub Republic is one such dish. Thick cut bacon. Here’s how it works: You take a brick, wrap in it some foil, stick it on top of the chicken, and cook the freaking chicken. Behold the result: Crispy, flattened skin of the bird, encasing some juicy white meat so tender a spork can cut it. Thick cut bacon. I’d have taken a picture but for the fear of stealing that dish’s soul.

From the menu, it appears that the Brick Chicken is actually a poem, disguised as food:

Screen_shot_2014-02-26_at_11.07.32_AM.png

Free Range
Crispy Boneless
Half Chicken
Fresh
Brussels Sprout,
Thick
Cut
Bacon,
and
Fingerling
Potato Hash

Give that dish a MacArthur Genius Grant! Make it the poet laureate of well-tendered poultry! Thick cut bacon. And salute the power of the non-boiled Brussels Sprout, which also appears on the menu in a munchy-lunchy taco incarnation. Thick cut bacon. Is it time for lunch yet? And here’s a question, for the ages: Why would you not order the jumbo Arugula and Pistachio salad to go with the Brick Chick? The $11 salad with the toasted nuts and juicy bites of luscious grapefruit? The one with a Mt. Tam-size heap of fresh, crisp, musky greens, a little shaved fennel throughout, and those little pebbles of pistachio. Thick cut bacon. Oh yes. And I love a restaurant that doesn’t charge ya for seltzer water, and whose bartender doesn’t give the stink eye for not ordering a beer with your supper. Did I mention the thick cut bacon? Or the thick cut bacon? They also have some thick cut bacon at Pub Republic.

Tagged

Sim Van der Ryn, California state architect under Gov. Jerry Brown in the 1970s, and a leading figure in the sustainable architecture movement, was "red-tagged" by Marin County building inspectors last year for a structure he was building on his Inverness property. At issue was a "detached accessory structure for living space," under construction without a permit, says Christy Stanley,...

Rhone Rangers

There's still plenty of loose talk in California about "Burgundian-style" wine, but it's the rare wine that's billed as such right on the bottle. I found one that is, but it's a Rhone-style blend—pithy comment on the state of Rhone varietals and blends in advance of the Rhone Rangers 17th annual tasting event. When I reached for two samples of...

The Hunger Artifice

Congressman Jared Huffman made the wrong call when he helped to cut food stamps recently by voting yes on the Agricultural Act of 2014, aka the Farm Bill. Huffman should have known better. Last June, he participated in the "SNAP Food Stamp Challenge" for five days, to find out what it's like to have just $4.50 a day to spend...

Lasso Come Home

It's a delightfully twisty idea: a semi-fictional story about a man whose pursuit of truth led him to invent an imaginary character. Throw in a little bondage and a three-way love story, and you have Lasso of Truth, Marin Theatre Company's perceptive and proudly kinky premiere of Carson Kreitzer's unforgettable new play. Directed with astonishing dexterity by Jasson Minadakis, Lasso...

Thrive Talking

On a recent weekday evening, only a couple of bar stools sit empty at Santa Rosa's new Whiskey Tip bar in Roseland. Owner Justin Neuroth is in the kitchen, putting the final spices on a basket of signature Bacon Bombs for a buddy who helped him remodel what was once the old Gigas dive bar on Sebastopol Road. The...

Decarceration Nation

For most people, the idea of abolishing prisons is right up there with colonizing Mars—a far-out concept torn straight from a science-fiction novel. But for writer and former labor union organizer Steve Martinot, the abolishment of prisons is the social justice issue of the 21st century. "The first step towards creating a humane, egalitarian society would be eliminating the prison...

Help Out Frank and Get Tickets for Hayhurt’s Hip Trip

Frank Hayhurst, Francis Rico, the Zone Music guy; no matter how you know him, you probably know him as a good guy who doesn’t think twice about helping out musicians in need. Now that he can use a little help, he’s asking for it in the most fun way imaginable: by hosting a barbecue with over a dozen musical...

Napa Officials Profess Love For New Bottlerock Festival Producers

Bottlerock, the weekend-long Napa music festival that began with a bang last year but nearly fizzled when it wound up owing almost $10 million to everyone from food vendors to port-o-potty providers, has announced that it will return this year under new ownership. Today, it was revealed that not only do the new producers have support from city officials,...

Jello Biafra Returns to Arlene Francis Center

We're pretty stoked that after 3 years away, Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine are coming back to Santa Rosa's Arlene Francis Center, appearing April 4. In the last year, the punk icon/outspoken artist and his band released their second LP, White People and the Damage Done, and the former Dead Kennedys front man has been getting...

Pub Republic: Poetry in Poultry, and Thick Cut Bacon

Sometimes you just want to throw down about a dish. Thick cut bacon. A dish with healing powers. Thick cut bacon. A dish to thicken the blood, brighten the mood, and get yer mojo working. Thick cut bacon. A dish whose various elements come together in a combination of plain ol' googly-eyed comfort and crispy, primal bliss to satisfy...
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