Leading the Way in Sustainability: Solful Joins 1% for the Planet

Sponsored content by Solful Dispensary

Despite the optimism surrounding legalized cannabis, there has been an ever-growing concern over the industry’s impact on the environment. The numerous regulations and restrictions surrounding the packaging, labeling and tracking of plants and indoor growing practices put a significant strain on the planet’s resources. 

Many core values of ending prohibition are rooted in people’s belief that this plant offers a holistic healing modality. They see cannabis as a natural remedy that may allow us to bypass some of the more inherently less appealing options to improve our health and happiness. Yet, this idea of “natural” health is in contradiction to excess waste and less-than-impressive efforts to change the course for the better. What about the health of our environment? 

Not all businesses in the cannabis industry are letting these hurdles distract them from the goal of environmental responsibility. In fact, Solful, a Northern California dispensary, has made history as the first dispensary to become a business member of 1% for the Planet. A move that honors their continued commitment to sustainability and community outreach. 

Solful Company Profile

Inspired by their own experiences witnessing the positive impact of cannabis on a loved one’s health, Peter Dickstein and Eli Melrod decided to create a dispensary that would promote community health and well-being through the responsible use of quality cannabis. They wanted to make cannabis more accessible, understandable and normal for those seeking to improve their health and happiness.

Solful opened its doors with a clear mission in mind. The goal was to always source locally and support their community wherever possible. Fortunately for Solful, that means incredibly potent and pure cannabis grown in the heart of the Emerald Triangle. This region is well known for producing some of the most incredible plants on the globe. When it comes to edibles, tinctures and topicals, Solful partners with local producers that often produce in small batches and focus on organic ingredients. 

Each of Solful’s partners holds themselves to similarly high levels of integrity, and this attention to detail and commitment to sustainability is evident when you walk in the door of Solful’s dispensaries. 

solful cannabis dispensary

Building a Better Future Together: Solful and 1% for the Planet

Solful was a thriving dispensary in Northern California, making a positive impact on the community every day. However, Peter and Eli knew they could do more. They realized that, as the cannabis industry continued to grow, so did its impact on the environment. They knew that they could stand out in the industry and lead by example.

That’s why they made the bold decision to become a member of 1% for the Planet, the world-renowned organization committed to protecting the planet through environmental giving. By committing 1% of all sales of Solful-branded products to nonprofit organizations that focus on sustainable agriculture and climate adaptation, they are doing their part to help offset their impact on the environment and support the preservation of the planet.

With this historic membership, Solful became the first and only cannabis retail dispensary to become a business member of 1% for the Planet. It was a proud moment for everyone involved, a testament to the company’s unwavering commitment to sustainability and its mission to make the world a better place, one cannabis plant at a time.

What is 1% for the Planet?

Founded in 2002 by Yvon Chouinard (founder of Patagonia clothing company) and Craig Mathews (founder of Blue Ribbon Flies), 1% for the Planet is a non-profit organization that connects businesses with environmental nonprofit organizations. Businesses that become members of 1% for the Planet pledge to donate 1% of their annual sales to environmental causes, and the organization helps certify their donation. 

The goal of 1% for the Planet is to encourage businesses to give back to the environment by supporting conservation, sustainability and preservation efforts. To date, the organization has directed over $435 million in funding to approved environmental partners, positively impacting the planet and its ecosystems. There are currently over 5,000 member affiliates.

solful cannabis dispensary

Cultivating Sustainability and Community

Solful has supported plenty of local organizations, even before its membership with 1% for the Planet. This includes The Botanical Bus, a mobile health care center serving Latinx and Indigenous communities with herbal remedies, and Daily Acts, a nonprofit promoting sustainability through community leadership and education. The Ceres Community Project is a nonprofit helping low-income families struggling with serious illnesses by providing nutritious meals, community support and a focus on youth development. This membership will mean even greater impact with the opportunity to get involved with more incredible businesses. 

“Solful has always existed for the health, well-being and happiness of our community, customers and the planet. Now, more than ever, as recreational cannabis takes off and medicinal awareness grows, we want to ensure a healthier, more sustainable environment, which includes supporting important organizations that are working diligently to make our world a better, more liveable place,” said Eli Melrod, CEO and co-founder of Solful.

Solful customers can expect a unique experience when visiting Solful dispensaries. The team of Health and Happiness consultants is dedicated to educating and assisting customers to find the best products to fit their individual needs. And now, with Solful’s 1% for the Planet membership, the experience is even more meaningful.

Solful places great importance on sustainability and is committed to promoting environmental consciousness both among customers and staff. Through educational materials and social media campaigns, Solful aims to raise awareness about the significance of sustainability in the cannabis industry.

With two thriving locations in Santa Rosa and Sebastopol, Solful recently expanded its reach to the Bay Area with a third location. The new 2,513 square-foot storefront in the Inner Sunset neighborhood of Irving Street is a community-focused, boutique retail experience for customers. The team at Solful is thrilled to serve the neighborhood and continue to promote sustainability.

Branford Marsalis Quartet brings the saxxy back to GMC

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Chamber Music Marin

Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church, 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley. chambermusicmarin.org

Telegraph Quartet and San Francisco Conservatory of Music graduate students make the grade. 5pm, Sunday, April 2. $40.

Elephant in the Room

177 Healdsburg Ave., Healdsburg. elephantintheroompub.com.

The juice is definitely worth the squeeze with Sweet ‘N’ Juicy—and no pulp. 6pm, Friday, March 16. Free.

The Flamingo Resort

2777 4th St., Santa Rosa. vintagespacesr.com.

Shhh—the secret’s out—Don’t Tell Comedy brings its weekly lineup of undercover comedians to the North Bay. 9pm, Thursday, March 16. $20.

Green Music Center

1801 East Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park. gmc.sonoma.edu.

The Branford Marsalis Quartet brings the saxxy back to Rohnert Park.

3pm, Thursday, March 16. $25-85.

Hopmonk Tavern Sebastopol

230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. hopmonk.com.

The Tempest unleashes a storm in a pint glass at Hopmonk.

7:45pm, Friday, March 17. $18

The Lost Church

427 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. thelostchurch.org.

Ric and Bryan Paisley, with special guest Malpica, take their new album, Sideways Trip, on the road. 8:15pm, Saturday, March 18. $12.

Starling Bar Sonoma

19380 Highway 12, Sonoma. starlingsonoma.com.

Friends with Benefits (because why have friends without benefits?) perform live.

3pm, Sunday, March 19. Free.

Sweetwater Music Hall

19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. Sweetwatermusichall.com.

Pardon the Interruption disrupts the ordinary while tackling sociopolitical issues.

9pm, Friday, March 17. $24.

— Desmond Howell

Kids Camps in Marin

The Bay Area’s unusually blustery weather marks this year’s rainy transition from winter to spring. Though the stormy weather may not scream, “summer is on the horizon!” that doesn’t mean that Marin County’s summer camps for kids aren’t already filling up fast—and getting ahead of the camp curve means knowing what options are available. 

From the arts to the sciences, from outdoor sports to indoor crafts, to just about everything in-between, Marin has endless options to enrich local children’s summers through unique, interactive and downright delightful summer camp experiences.

The Marin County Camp Fair

Perhaps the most informative place to start when it comes to considering options for children’s summer camps is at the 11th annual Marin County Camp Fair. This event, sponsored by Stanford Medicine Children’s Health, is free to the public and offers ample free parking options. 

The fair is set to take place on Sunday, March 26 from 11am to 2pm. The Marin County Camp Fair gives locals a chance to visit dozens of exhibitions for children’s camps alongside enrichment programs, sports options, specialty schools, art, STEM and STEAM programs, and much more. 

For more information about the Marin County Camp Fair, visit the website at kidfestconcord.com/camp-school-fairs, send an email to ja*@***************st.com or call 925.408.4014. The fair will be held at the Marin Center Exhibit Hall at 10 Ave. of the Flags in San Rafael.

Dance Camps

Marin Conservatory of Dance

The Marin Conservatory of Dance offers professional and personable lessons in classical ballet to students of all ages. Their summer camp program offers six levels of summer camp lessons, with some restrictions for older, more experienced students.

For more information, visit the website at marinconservatoryofdance.org, call 415.326.5117 or send an email to le*****@**********************ce.org or me*****@**********************ce.org. The Marin Conservatory of Dance is located at 365 Miller Ave. in Mill Valley.

Love2Dance

Love2Dance is a dance studio that offers lessons in all genres of dance to anyone over the age of 14 months. Summer camp registration began in mid-February, so it’s recommended to get a beat on this summer dance camp sooner rather than later.

For more information, visit the website at love2dance.biz, send an email to in**@********ce.biz or call 415.898.3933. Love2Dance is located at 830 Sweetser Ave., Suite A in Novato.

Just Dance Academy

Just Dance Academy teaches ballet, jazz, tap, hip-hop, lyrical and contemporary dance to students all across the county, starting at age four. They offer two sets of summer 2023 dance camp sessions that, alongside dancing, also include crafts and opportunities to perform.

For more information, visit the website at justdance.biz, send an email to in**@*******ce.biz or call 415.451.1734. Just Dance Academy is located at 933 D. St. in San Rafael.

Nature Camps

NatureBridge Coastal Camp

According to the NatureBridge website, their summer camp (registration now open) aims to help kids connect with nature and explore topics like marine biology, coastal ecology, conservation and cultural history, all against the beautiful backdrop of the Marin Headlands. “Our highly qualified staff engage campers’ interests and curiosity with a program that is flexible and adaptive to each group’s needs,” the website states.

For more information, visit the website at coastalcamp.org or call 415.331.1548. NatureBridge Coastal Camp is located at 1033 Fort Cronkhite in Sausalito.

WildCare Summer Camp

WildCare, Marin County’s very own wild animal sanctuary, offers a summer wildlife camp for children that strives to get kids back outside and provides kid campers with unforgettable wildlife experiences in a weekly camp program designed to educate young people on the animals they share their community with.

For more information, visit the website at discoverwildcare.org or call 415.456.7283. WildCare is located at 76 Albert Park Ln. in San Rafael.

Activity-Based and Sports Camps

Shredder’s Summer Skate Camp

Shredder’s Summer Skate Camp is the perfect summer camp for the skateboard-enthused kid. Beginners and experienced skaters alike are welcome to join the 2023 summer skate camp session at Shredder’s.

For more information, visit the website at shreddersskatecamp.com, send an email to in**@****************mp.com or call 415.529.8364. Shredder’s Summer Skate Camp is located at 310 Smith Ranch Rd. in San Rafael.

Morning Star Farm

Morning Star Farm offers horseback riding summer camp sessions that are filling up fast—with two-thirds of the summer camp slots already filled, there’s no time like the present to sign up for a summer spent on horseback. Campers can learn to walk, trot, canter and jump horses at this children’s riding summer camp.

Morning Star Farm is located at 885 Sutro Ave. in Novato. For more information, visit morningstarfarm.info or call 415.897.1633.

Marin GreenPlay Camp 

Marin GreenPlay Camp is, according to their website, “Marin County’s favorite Earth-friendly summer camp that’s been making nature fun for over ten years!” They offer a wide variety of age-appropriate experiences, from rock climbing to environmental education.

For more information, visit the website at maringreenplay.com, send an email to in**@************ay.com or call  415.264.2828.

Education and Theater Camps

Chronos Academy’s Maker Camp

Chronos Academy, a boutique school for gifted children, is set to host their summer Maker Camp. According to the Chronos website, they aim to provide “a summer camp with a focus on using science, technology, engineering, art and math (STEAM) to create, build and discover.”

For more information, visit the website at chronos.academy, send an email to ce*****@*****os.academy or call 415.383.2283. Chronos Academy is located at 110 Magnolia Ave. in Larkspur.

Marin Theatre Company

The Marin Theatre Company, a longstanding leading theater in the Bay Area, hosts yearly summer camps to teach the fine art of performance to Marin’s youth—not many spots are left in this summer camp program, so it’s recommended to act fast to reserve one. Summer camps are available for grades two through 12.

For more information, visit marintheatre.org, send an email to in**@**********re.org or call 415.388.5200. The Marin Theatre Company is located at 397 Miller Ave. in Mill Valley.

Marin Shakespeare Company

The Marin Shakespeare Company aims to educate and promote social justice through the lens of the most famous playwright of all time. Their summer camp programs offer opportunities for games and activities, to learn about The Bard himself, to interact with peers and learn from skilled teachers. They offer a variety of camps for ages eight to 19.

For more information, visit the website at marinshakespeare.org or call 415.499.4488. Marin Shakespeare Company is located at the Forest Meadows Amphitheatre at 890 Belle Ave. in San Rafael.

‘Woke’ Words

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By Jonathan Klate

Wokeness is what folks on the political right love to declare themselves as being against these days. But, what is it, really, that they oppose?

The term “woke” was derived from African American vernacular English, meaning alertness to racial prejudice. For those who have used the term positively, something I am not sure anyone actually does anymore, its meaning evolved to encompass awareness of other social inequities and forms of oppression, such as sexism, misogyny, white privilege, the oppression of any minority person or community, and human and environmental predations of exploitive corporations. This is sometimes called “intersectionality,” another term that is often denigrated.

The opposite of “wokeness” could be characterized as indifference by those with privileged status to the suffering of others.

For those on the right, it has become a generalized pejorative, almost an expletive for any attitudes they attribute to those who see the patterns of oppressions in the world differently than they do, who strive to bring those oppressions out of the darkness of ignorance, to ease the despair of those who dwell under their yoke, to contemplate how these cultural oppressions can be remedied and to actively work to actualize those remediations.

When I hear or read someone put down “wokeness,” I perform a simultaneous mental translation and substitute “kindness” for “wokeness,” and this clarifies their actual sentiment.

Simple kindness is a recognition that we are all in our essential human nature of the same kind, and it is imperative that we recognize we have far more similarities to one another than differences between us. This includes equal entitlement to the essentials of a healthy and comfortable life, safety in communities, and a sustainable environment in which to live and to bequeath to those who follow on.

Placing kindness in the foreground of thinking, including opening to all the facts of shared heritage, even those that may make some feel uncomfortable, can lead to a spiritual renewal. Opposing equal rights for those who may in some respect differ is not just anti-wokeness, it is anti-kindness.

Jonathan Klate writes regularly about spirituality, political ideology and the relationship between these two.

San Anselmo’s Mayor Steve Burdo

I met Steve Burdo when my family moved to San Anselmo in 2022. He was friendly and immediately welcoming, and one could tell he was a guy who loved his town. It’s no surprise he’s the town’s current mayor, but still down to earth. The following is an interview with Burdo.

How long have you lived in Marin?

16 years — moved to California/Marin in 2006.

Where can we find you when not at work?

Grabbing a coffee at Peet’s and taking a walk at Memorial Park; enjoying a margarita with friends at Taco Jane’s; or running a game on fools at the local Ross Valley basketball courts!

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin was, where would you take them?

San Anselmo’s annual Beatles Night in the Park. Such an amazing evening, a great reflection of our town’s character and charm. Mountain Play or a concert at Cushing Ampitheatre at Mt. Tam. Dinner at Marin Joe’s in Corte Madera on a Saturday night.

What’s one thing Marin is missing?

Late night entertainment and food.

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites?

Explore every part of Marin County for its natural beauty, recreational opportunities and culinary delights. Don’t get complacent in your attempts to find that new awesome hike or favorite restaurant. There’s always another hidden gem in that place you didn’t look.

If you could invite anyone to a special dinner, whom would they be?

Neil DeGrasse Tyson, Barack Obama and my deceased grandfather.

What’s some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago?

All things, no matter how good or bad, will pass. Relish the good moments, weather the bad ones, but always stay true to yourself.

What’s something that in 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy?

I’d say climate change deniers, but that’s already cringeworthy. So, I guess I’ll go with the fact that there’s currently a movie in theaters about a bear who gets addicted to cocaine. Surprisingly titled, Cocaine Bear.

Big question. What is one thing you’d do to change the world?

Anytime someone opposes someone or something, they would be forced to put themselves in the other person’s position as a means of ensuring empathy, understanding and collaboration. I’d also get rid of cable TV op-ed news programming that is mostly political theater instead of news reporting.

Steve Burdo can be found working in and around the town of San Anselmo, doing all sorts of mayoral things. (townofsananselmo.org and on Instagram at @steveburdo77)

Free Will Astrology, March 15

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): I highly recommend the following experiences: 1. ruminating about what you learned in a relationship that ended—and how those lessons might be useful now. 2. ruminating about a beloved place you once regarded as home—and how the lessons you learned while there might be inspiring now. 3. ruminating about a riddle that has long mystified you—and how clarifying insights you receive in the coming weeks could help you finally understand it.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): For “those who escape hell,” wrote Charles Bukowksi, “nothing much bothers them after that.” Believe it or not, Taurus, I think that in the coming weeks, you can permanently escape your own personal version of hell—and never, ever have to return. I offer you my congratulations in advance. One strategy that will be useful in your escape is this idea from Bukowski: “Stop insisting on clearing your head—clear your f*cking heart instead.”

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Gemini paleontologist Louis Agassiz (1807–1883) was a foundational contributor to the scientific tradition. Among his specialties was his hands-on research into the mysteries of fossilized fish. Though he was meticulously logical, he once called on his nightly dreams to solve a problem he faced. Here’s the story: A potentially crucial specimen was largely concealed inside a stone. He wanted to chisel away the stone to get at the fossil, but was hesitant to proceed for fear of damaging the treasure inside. On three successive nights, his dreams revealed to him how he should approach the work. This information proved perfectly useful. Agassiz hammered away at the slab exactly as his dreams suggested and freed the fossilized fish. I bring this marvel to your attention, Gemini, because I suspect that you, too, need to carve or cut away an obstruction that is hiding something valuable. Can you get help from your dreams? Yes, or else in deep reverie or meditation.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Will you flicker and sputter in the coming weeks, Cancerian? Or will you spout and surge? That is, will you be enfeebled by barren doubts, or will you embolden yourself with hearty oaths? Will you take nervous sips or audacious guzzles? Will you hide and equivocate, or else reveal and pounce? Dabble gingerly or pursue the joy of mastery? I’m here to tell you that which fork you take will depend on your intention and your willpower, not on the caprices of fate. So which will it be: Will you mope and fritter or untangle and illuminate?

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I applaud psychologists who tell us how important it is to feel safe. One of the most crucial human rights is the confidence that we won’t be physically or emotionally abused. But there’s another meaning of safety that applies to those of us who yearn to express ourselves creatively. Singer-songwriter David Bowie articulated the truth: “If you feel safe in the area you’re working in, you’re not working in the right area. Always go a little further into the water than you feel you’re capable of being in. Go a bit out of your depth, and when you don’t feel that your feet are quite touching the bottom, you’re in the right place to do something exciting.” I think this is a wise strategy for most of us, even those who don’t identify as artists. Almost everyone benefits from being imaginative and inventive and even a bit daring in their own particular sphere. And this will be especially applicable to you in the coming weeks, Leo.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You are in the sweet, deep phase of the Receiving Season. And so you have a right and a duty to show the world you are ready and available to be blessed with what you need and want. I urge you to do everything necessary to become a welcoming beacon that attracts a wealth of invigorating and healing influences. For inspiration, read this quote by author John Steinbeck: “It is so easy to give, so exquisitely rewarding. Receiving, on the other hand, if it be well done, requires a fine balance of self-knowledge and kindness. It requires humility and tact and great understanding of relationships . . . It requires a self-esteem to receive—a pleasant acquaintance and liking for oneself.”

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran poet E. E. Cummings wrote that daffodils “know the goal of living is to grow.” Is his sweet sentiment true? I would argue it’s only partially accurate. I believe that if we want to shape our destinies with courage and creativity, we need to periodically go through phases of decay and decline. They make periods of growth possible. So I would say, “The goal of life is to grow and wither and grow and wither and grow.” Is it more fun to grow than to wither? Maybe. But sometimes, withering is educational and necessary. Anyway, Libra, I suspect you are finishing a time of withering and will soon embark on a series of germinations and blossoms.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): All of us have elements of genius. Every person on the planet possesses at least one special talent or knack that is a gift to others. It could be subtle or unostentatious, like a skill for communicating with animals or for seeing what’s best in people. Or maybe it’s more spectacular, like composing beautiful music or raising children to be strong and compassionate. I mention this, Scorpio, because the coming weeks will be an excellent time to identify your unique genius in great detail—and then nurture it and celebrate it in every way you can imagine.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): The emblem associated with Sagittarius is an archer holding a bow with the arrow pointed upwards. This figure represents your tribe’s natural ambition to always aim higher. I bring this to your attention because your symbolic quiver is now full of arrows. But what about your bow? Is it in tip-top condition? I suggest you do some maintenance. Is the bow string in perfect shape? Are there any tiny frays? Has it been waxed recently? And what about the grip? Are there any small cracks or wobbles? Is it as steady and stable as it needs to be? I have one further suggestion as you prepare for the target-shooting season. Choose one or at most two targets to aim at rather than four or five.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): It’s prime time to feel liberated from the urge to prove yourself to anyone. It’s a phase when your self-approval should be the only kind of approval you need, a period when you have the right to remove yourself from any situation that is weighed down with gloomy confusion or apathetic passivity. This is exciting news! You have an unprecedented opportunity to recharge your psychic batteries and replenish your physical vitality.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I suspect you can now accomplish healthy corrections without getting tangled up in messy karma. Here are my recommendations: 1. As you strive to improve situations that are awry or askew, act primarily out of love rather than guilt or pity. 2. Fight tenderly in behalf of beautiful justice, but don’t fight harshly for ugly justice. 3. Ask yourself how you might serve as a kind of divine intervention in the lives of those you care about—and then carry out those divine interventions.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In describing her process, Piscean sculptor Anne Truitt wrote, “The most demanding part of living a lifetime as an artist is the strict discipline of forcing oneself to work steadfastly along the nerve of one’s own most intimate sensitivity.” I propose that many Pisceans, both artists and non-artists, can thrive from living like that. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to give yourself to such an approach with eagerness and devotion. I urge you to think hard and feel deeply as you ruminate on the question of how to work steadfastly along the nerve of your own most intimate sensitivity.

Destiny vs. Digits: A Numbers Game

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German author Ernst Junger’s 1951 book, The Forest Passage, a paean to the path of resistance in a mechanized world, has inspired both radicals and reactionaries.

Among the tome’s profound pronouncements is the assertion that in the modern world each person faces the choice between having a destiny or being a number—be it Social Security number, credit score, IP address or anything else the Leviathan, as he terms it, can use to classify as one of the soulless masses.

Those disinclined to choose being a number must therefore opt for having a destiny. But how does one discover this destiny, let alone begin to manifest it?

One starts by facing the Seven Governors.

A recurring motif in ancient myths involves the shedding of seven garments: Istar discards one each time she passes through a gate in the underworld, while Salome performs her dance of the seven veils, which are removed one by one.

Likewise, a recently discovered third-century Hermetic doctrine, entitled “Discourse on the Eighth and Ninth,” speaks of the celestial sphere beyond the Seven Governors, the point at which all earthly bonds have been severed. The divine realm only begins with the “fixed stars,” or 12 houses of the zodiac.

The solar system—with its seven visible bodies corresponding to seven metals, not to mention the seven chakras and seven colors dispersed by the light of the sun—is geocentric, and the planets are not so much deities as powers that can unconsciously rule love lives, as with Venus, or fill one with either apathy or rage, as with Mars, until one has seized magnetic control over these seven metals and bent them to serve rather than rule. Hence the vital importance of knowing one’s astrological chart.

The zodiac is the true realm of the gods, and where human destinies are written. But the past two centuries of materialism and scientific reason have obfuscated the inner life where destiny is divined. It’s almost like an end-times conspiracy, the closing of a cosmic cycle in which souls become numbers in a regression to mass collectivism—precisely what the Leviathan wants.

Rising from the undifferentiated underworld to claim sovereignty over one’s own being has been the foundation of the hero myth and the struggle for individual consciousness from the beginning of time.

In meditative states in which the ego is transcended, one’s voice resounds on the vault of heaven, returning in flashes of insight from the fixed stars that seek to reveal one’s destiny in the sphere of life in which it is meant to unfold.

Your Letters, March 15

Too Big to Fail

While the failure of Silicon Valley Bank is a serious issue to the global financial system, it pales in comparison to the type of astounding loss North Bay citizenry would have to endure should businesses such as Oliver’s Market, Nick’s Cove, Marvin’s Diner, Sol Food, The Silver Peso or the 2AM Club disappear.

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

Visiting Hours

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (GA) said she plans to visit jailed suspects of the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot and would focus on what she claimed to be “reports of abuse.” Yes, let’s give aid and comfort to seditionists and murderers.

Gary Sciford

Santa Rosa

Write Us

We love to hear what’s on our readers’ minds. Send your “Letters to the Editor” to letters@pacificsun or le*****@******an.com and be sure to include your name and city.

Thanks, The Editor

Vidi Veni Verde

North Bay

Easy Being Green

Bay Area donut juggernaut Johnny Doughnuts invites those seeking to add a bit more green to their diets to do so not with, say, kale but with a St. Patrick’s Day makeover of its so-called “Sprinkley Guy” donut. Yep—it’s green, thanks to a sea of shamrock green sprinkles, which apparently makes it “leprechaun-approved.” (Editor’s note: leprechauns don’t exist.) No need to search for the end of a rainbow to find this gustatory gold—get those taste buds singing “Danny Boy” at one of three North Bay locations: 2257 Larkspur Landing Cir., Larkspur; 1617 4th St., San Rafael; and 1200 4th St., Santa Rosa. The special Sprinkley Guy will only be available on Friday, March 17. Suggested pairing—Irish whiskey and maybe, I dunno, some insulin?

Tiburon

Fare to Pair

Tiburon’s The Bungalow Kitchen by Michael Mina invites diners whose money doesn’t jiggle-jiggle but folds to indulge in a four-course dining experience featuring wines from Napa Valley’s oldest family-owned grape-growing estate, Larkmead Vineyards. Executive chef Harrison Chernick and sommelier Ian Macdonald partner with the Larkmead team to guide diners through the seasonally curated menu. Here’s a wee taste from the third course: Lambchetta—Olive, Caper, Fingerling Potatoes, Lamb Jus and the Larkmead, Dr. Olmo, Cabernet Sauvignon, Napa Valley, 2014. The prix fixe affair runs $250 per person (plus tax and gratuity) and begins with a reception at 6pm, Wednesday, March 22. Reservations can be had via SevenRooms.com, or by calling 415-366-4088. Get a table for two and I’ll see you there.

Sebastopol

‘Before They Take Us Away’

At the commencement of World War II, Japanese Americans residing on the West Coast were confronted with the possibility of being forcibly removed from their homes and detained in concentration camps. To evade this fate, some took matters into their own hands and departed to states located further inland, becoming internally displaced persons in their own nation during a dark chapter of American history. This is the subject of the acclaimed documentary, Before They Take Us Away, which screens as part of the Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival at 7:30pm, Friday, March 17 at Rialto Cinemas, 6868 McKinley Ave., Sebastopol. Tickets available at bit.ly/before-sdff.

Mill Valley

Go to Hell Man

The term “pickin’-and-grinnin’” is one of those American idioms that makes some want to run for the hills…but, of course, The Hills Have Eyes. The Hellman Spring Stomp coming to the Sweetwater Music Hall next week, however, is all ears. Starting at 6:30pm, Sunday, March 19, the Go To Hell Man Band, the children, grandchildren, friends and bandmates of the late, great Warren Hellman, founder of the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival, will throw down a puntastic evening of American roots music configured in five separate Hellman combos. Special guests The Quitters open. Tickets are $20 per person. Sweetwater Music Hall is located at 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. SweetwaterMusicHall.com.

Governor’s budget proposal chops funds for sea level rise preparation

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed budget would cut funding for coastal resilience projects almost in half. 

If enacted, the budget would eliminate more than half a billion dollars of state funds this year that would help protect the coastal communities, including some in Marin County, against rising seas and climate change.

The cuts are part of Newsom’s proposed $6 billion in reductions to California’s climate change programs, in response to a projected $22.5 billion statewide deficit.

California’s coastal resilience programs provide funding for local governments to prepare coastal plans and pay for projects that protect beaches, homes and infrastructure at risk from rising seas. Greenhouse gasses are responsible for warming the planet, which melts ice and causes sea levels to rise.

Newsom’s proposal would budget $734 million for coastal resilience, a cut of 43% or $561 million compared to 2021 and 2022, according to the Legislative Analyst’s Office.

Some lawmakers said that they are concerned about Newsom’s proposal to gut the programs that are helping coastal towns prepare for flooding that has already damaged many communities.

Sen. Josh Becker, who chairs the Senate’s budget subcommittee, called the cuts “highly concerning,” especially because they are excessive compared to the cuts applied to other state programs.

“Most programs received 10% cuts,” Becker, from San Mateo, said in an interview. “I’m very concerned about it, given the timing that we are experiencing these floods. My county is among the most endangered in the state for sea level rise.”

Becker said he hopes to restore some of the money, possibly by finding federal funds to backfill some programs.

“These are dramatic cuts to something we agreed upon, and I’m going to try to get it back,” he said.

Newsom’s budget, released on Jan. 10,  is not final, with revisions due in May.

Experts say there’s a lot at stake if sea level rise and coastal projects are not addressed now. Last month, the state Department of Transportation, Caltrans, released a draft management plan estimating that it needs nearly $15 billion over the next 10 years to protect bridges and roads from sea level rise.

A 2020 report by the Legislative Analyst’s Office projects more than $20 billion worth of California property will be at risk or underwater by 2050 without planning and funding. “Waiting too long to initiate adaptation efforts likely will make responding effectively more difficult and costly…. The next decade represents a crucial time period for taking action to prepare for” sea level rise, the report says.

Much of the funding on the chopping block is in the form of grants to local governments to fund projects and planning. Included is $64 million for cities to prepare extensive management plans to prepare for sea level rise.

Chris Helmer, director of environmental and natural resources for the city of Imperial Beach, said, “If the state cuts adaptation projects, that would be a concern.”

Imperial Beach received about $200,000 to prepare a draft sea level rise plan, he said. It also has a grant pending with the Ocean Protection Council for another project to protect the city from encroaching seas.

“If there’s no money, that’s a major concern for us,” Helmer said. January’s storm exacerbated already massive flooding issues, he said. Waves broke on city streets, sand was driven well past the beach and rocks were thrown through residents’ windows. The cleanup took two months.

Meanwhile in Ventura, about a half hour south of Santa Barbara (and a leisurely 10 hour coastal drive from Marin County), recent storms also undermined beachfront infrastructure. This proved the value of a project at Surfers’ Point, partially funded by a $1.6 million state grant, that relocated a parking lot and bike path away from the water and protected the beach with a “living shoreline.”

The second phase of that project is contingent on a $16.2 million grant application with the state. The timeline to begin is this winter.

Cody Stults, the city’s associate engineer, said he is optimistic that the grant would survive the cuts, but added that there is no way the city could afford to pay for the next phase of the Surfers’ Point project.

“If we can’t get the money, I can almost guarantee that the work will not be going through this winter,” he said.

Among the statewide programs with deep proposed cuts are protecting the coast from climate change, with a 65% cut; adapting infrastructure to sea level rise, a 74% cut; and implementing SB 1, a 63% cut.

SB 1 provides funding for much of the state’s sea level rise response. The author, Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins, said the threat is more urgent now than when the 2021 law passed.

“The intent of SB 1 was to empower communities to work to find solutions at the local level to address sea level rise in partnership with the state,” the San Diego senator said in a statement. “While we are facing challenging times, the past decade of responsible budgeting has prepared the state to withstand a downturn without devastating cuts to critical programs.” 

In testimony before the legislature recently, Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot characterized the governor’s proposed cuts as “surgical.” When pressed to explain how the administration prioritized programs that would be trimmed, he said the focus was on addressing “clear and present danger.” He identified wildfire and water projects as posing a direct and immediate threat to Californians.

Environmentalists said the governor’s proposal to cut climate funding is shortsighted: Rising seas are often described as a “slow moving disaster,” as the most devastating impacts are projected to show up in coming decades.

“Sea level rise is here,” said Laura Walsh, California policy manager for Surfrider Foundation. While wildfires are a “huge deal and we don’t want to compare sob stories, at this particular moment, living on the coast feels like an emergency. This is not belt-tightening; this is drowning,” she said.

Newsom proposed the cuts right when California was lashed with a damaging series of atmospheric rivers, flooding and high surf, which was proof enough that sea level rise is already harming the state, said Donne Brownsey, chair of the California Coastal Commission. 

Brownsey didn’t criticize the governor’s proposed cuts. But she said she hoped they would be re-evaluated.

“What we saw in January was the trailer for the movie. That’s the way it’s going to roll,” she said. “We’re hopeful that given what happened—all the flooding and damage up and down the coastline—we are hoping there will be a reevaluation of these programs. It’s not a future problem. It’s today.”

Crowfoot told the Senate budget panel that state agencies have been scouring federal programs for money to backfill state funding losses. About $4 billion in new federal money is set aside for coastal resilience projects.

The Newsom administration floated the idea of a general obligation bond to make up for the cuts, and a “trigger” provision that would restore funding if the revenue picture brightens.

But Rachel Ehlers of the Legislative Analyst’s Office told the Senate subcommittee that expecting revenues to rebound is “optimistic.” She said there is a strong chance that the deficit will grow.

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