San Rafael’s ‘Social Justice Park’

The impact of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery’s murders is not forgotten in Marin County. 

On Oct. 22, a permanent art monument will be installed in San Rafael’s Arbor Park, which will be dedicated by the city as a Social Justice Park. 

The installation, two years in the making, is the result of a convergence of factors and contributors. 

In 2020, during the height of the Black Lives Matter’s response to Taylor, Floyd and Arbery’s murders, a chalk mural was put up at the corner of Las Gallinas and Freitas Parkway in San Rafael, to show support of the movement, and the fight for justice. The mural was removed multiple times, and was at one point the site of gun wielding.

The local residents were irate, and gathered together to approach the city, demanding intervention. A resulting group came together, made up of artists, advocates, city officials and community members, who ultimately decided to respond by installing a permanent art piece, addressing social justice, equality, freedom and racial issues. 

Kristen Jacobson, executive director at a San Rafael nonprofit called Youth In Arts (YIA), sat on that group. YIA would come to play a significant role in the city’s decision and subsequent development of the art installation.

“I was actually on that first call, all via Zoom, of course, in October of 2020,” Jacobson recalled over the phone last week. “We all had no idea where things were going to go. But as more and more interested parties started to join, including a lot of city representatives, we pretty quickly decided we wanted to put something somewhat permanent in Arbor Park. It’s right across the street from the chalk mural, so it was pretty perfect placement.” 

The decision made, the group put out a call for artists, reaching out to, among others, Petaluma painter Orin Carpenter. Carpenter is an artist of color, who uses his exceptional painting skills and his passion for art as an invitation to others to expand their perspectives and see the world through different eyes—read more on Carpenter’s work at www.pacificsun.com/orin-carpenter-paintings—and he loved the idea of participating in the piece’s fabrication, with one caveat:

“He was only interested in being involved with the project if he could work with the youth of Marin County, helping them expand their art and use their voices in such critical matters as social justice,” said Jacobson.  

Thus, Youth In Arts became directly involved, turning the project into a youth-based, funded summer program, and putting out a call for emerging youth artists. A group of 10 was selected: Owen Martinez-Alejandre, who was also elected the lead emerging artist, and now attends Sonoma State University; Amber Easterby, En-Ya Zhan and Valarie Baltazar from Terra Linda High School; Anaya Ryan from San Marin High School; Kyndall Carpenter from Marin Catholic High School; Miya Kotaka from Williams High School; Natalie Wong from Balboa High School; Natasha Hirschfield from Marin School of the Arts; and Anonymous from Novato High School. 

The group came together over the summer of 2021, under Carpenter’s mentorship, for six weeks. They met twice weekly, for three hours per session, to discuss social justice, share ideas and envision what the piece would look like. 

“The exciting part is that we were able to pay the youth for their participation—this program became a work-study style project for youth artists that we’re hoping to continue. It was a natural evolution to the process,” said Jacobson. 

The resulting art work, entitled Regeneration, is a symbolic, interpretive landscape piece, representative of multiple ideas, including the diversity of the community, Marin County’s Indigenous roots and the social justice issues still at hand. Regeneration features a Mt. Tam-esque mountain, and the names of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery are etched into one of the trees.

An architect from the initial community group volunteered his time to design a permanent installation to house Regeneration, which was photographed and is being split into three separate pieces of aluminum, mounted triptych style atop a concrete base, with the words Liberty, Justice and Freedom etched below. 

After significant fundraising efforts, and partnership with the city of San Rafael, the parks and recreation department, and with the help of countless community members, the stars aligned and enough money was raised to begin construction on the project, which started in August of this year. 

On Oct. 22, an unveiling ceremony will take place in Arbor Park, from 11-12:30pm. Remarks will be made by Assemblymember Marc Levine, County Supervisor Damon Connolly, Mayor Kate Colin, Councilmember Rachel Kertz, project facilitator Lorenzo Jones, Youth in Arts executive director Kristen Jacobson, Youth in Arts mentor artist Orin Carpenter and Youth in Arts lead emerging artist Owen Martinez-Alejandre. There will also be a performance by Youth in Arts group ‘Til Dawn. 

For more information on this event, visit www.youthinarts.org.  

Pan Solo: Life-sized ‘Star Wars’ bread art

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Sure, too many baked goods could make you look like Jabba the Hutt, but has it never occurred to you to consider what Jabba the Hutt would make with baked goods?  

Thanks to French Laundry-trained baker Hanalee Pervan, we have an answer. Meet “Pan Solo”—a life-sized tribute to Han Solo, frozen in carbonite, made entirely out of bread. 

Before she put the “carb” in carbonite, Pervan, co-owner and head baker of Benicia’s One House Bakery (onehousebakery.com), had another Star Wars-themed hit with her 2020 masterpiece: “The Paindoughlorian”—a life-size sculpture of the Mandalorian and Baby Yoda, also made entirely from bread.

Pervan’s award-winning bakery (which has supplied bread to Michelin-rated Bouchon Bistro, among other laudable clients) made “Pan Solo” as part of Benicia’s Annual Scarecrow Contest, a Halloween mainstay for the city’s First Street merchants. That said—kid, I’ve flown from one side of this galaxy to the other. I’ve seen a lot of strange stuff, but I’ve never seen anything to make me believe that baked carbonite is edible. What’s in it?

“Dead dough, which is a bread dough made without yeast and a higher concentration of sugar. That helps make it harder when it’s baked. We also used some plywood and some glue,” said Pervan via an email Q&A.

DH: After Kylo killed Han in The Force Awakens, is this your way of making him “rise again?”

HP: That’s also a great take on it! We were also thinking about how Han was suspended for over a year and how it echoed our pandemic experience. Everything stopped; businesses closed; we didn’t go anywhere or do anything except work and go home. When he is rescued from the carbonite, it’s a new start, an awakening and a continuation of life. Our bakery is reopening to the public this month since we closed our doors over two years ago, and is a brand new start for us.

DH: Clearly, you are a talented baker and have a thing for Star Wars, (sky)walk me through your experience as a fan and when/how/why it occurred to you to mix your passions as a professional and a fan?

HP: There are so many iconic characters in the ‘Star Wars’ franchise, it’s hard to choose just one. The main constraint is whether the figure will fit into our bread oven. We did the Pandelorian and Baby Yoda with a Pan droid two years ago, and we knew we wanted to revisit the universe, and Han Solo just kept coming up. It’s quite a scary image, with his face contorted into an expression of pain and fear; his hands are clenching and reaching for escape. We thought it would be a nice scary image for Halloween.

Prior to Pervan’s creations, a mashup of baking and Star Wars hasn’t been this successful since the early Hardware Wars’ film parody replaced Princess Leia’s iconic side buns with cinnamon rolls. Pervan’s creation breaks new, um, bread and begs the question, what kind of bread does Pan Solo fly? Millennium Focaccia. How is it? “Chewy.” …I’m a Gen X dad, I can do this ’til the gluten-free droids come home.

For more pics of “Pan Solo,” visit Instagram.com/p/CjlKAzUr6cK.

Daedalus Howell goes solo at DaedalusHowell.com.

Fashion 101 On Display at
One-o-One in Healdsburg

Sponsored content by One-o-One

To understand the design aesthetics of Chris Bryant, the owner of One-o-One, fashionistas need look no farther than the website, 101Healdsburg.com.

There, Chris and a friend model new fall and winter arrivals to the chic Healdsburg boutique. They’re twirling, dancing, posing and having fun in front of the camera wearing stylish prints, subdued tones and lush fabrics. Welcome to Chris’ latest finds for the season.

In an interview from her Cazadero home between trips to New York Fashion Week and the Prêt a Porter in Paris, Chris remains as enthusiastic about her passion for fashion as the day she opened her first shop in 1978.

A self-confessed former hippie who attended UC Santa Cruz, Chris got her start stitching leather purses for craft fairs when she worked at a tannery selling leather. Those in-demand accessories became the backbone of Out of Hand, a store she opened in October 1978 in Duncans Mills and closed in Healdsburg in 2008. Chris made everything there herself, out of hand. “I used to make everything, all my own clothes. I made clothes for plays and friends. Then we had children, and that was the end of making everything for the shop” she laughed.

Around her 50th birthday in 2002, as life settled a bit, Chris contemplated a high-end boutique like One-o-One to showcase independent European clothing designers. She and her husband, Bill Bryant, refurbished the space at 101 Plaza Street, to create the exclusive women’s store Chris had been dreaming of.  She opened One-o-One in November 2002, right next door to their mens’ store, Outlander.

Today, One-o-One brings in unique treasures with a bit of quirk and whimsy by designers from around the world. Each purveyor is a small designer, and many are women who not only design their lines, but also run their own small businesses. “They are all someone’s vision of interesting clothes for interesting people and also someone whose vision I appreciate and agree with,” Chris said, singling out Pal Offner, a designer collaboration between two young German women. “There are few young women designers that really have a vision like mine, making clothes that are a little unusual, a little eccentric.”

one-o-one, outlander, fashion, clothing stores in healdsburg

What’s on the racks at One-o-One? “Not trendy clothes at all. They are all stylish clothes that stay nice for years,” said Chris, who eschews fast fashion in favor of fewer, nicer and pricier garments to hold onto. “Nothing here is going to be thrown away next year.”

Chris is drawn to clothes that make her feel comfortable, and this fashion maven decidedly will not tolerate discomfort. “None of my clothes go with high heels–that’s what I mean,” she said. “I want people to smile when they look at my clothes and think how nice I look.” Chris, who prefers fashion that enhances her own personality and style, said, “I want to show confidence, and I look for a sense of play in my clothes. I don’t like them to be super strict or restrictive. I like them loose and playful.” You won’t find intense colors or wild prints in Chris’ collection, because she doesn’t want to be wearing an “art piece.” Instead, she views herself more like an artist using her clothed body as an everyday canvas for fashion that will endure the test of time.

On the buying front, this savvy retailer goes for what she likes and follows a simple philosophy: If she likes it, she buys it, and if she loves it, she buys a lot. 

Over the years, Chris has developed a loyal base of customers, catering to Healdsburg locals and regional customers from Ukiah to the Bay Area, but also attracting shoppers from all over the country. 

One annual event that regular and new customers alike adore–and very much look forward to–is One-o-One’s annual New Year’s Day sale, when the merchandise is marked down to half price. It’s Chris’ way of putting some truly expensive items into a more reasonable realm. “It’s quite a big deal,” she said.

chris bryant one-o-one, Healdsburg boutique

Chris said she’s been lucky to have Bill Bryant as her partner in life and business, summing up their relationship this way: “He is the starter in our lives, and I’m the finisher. You need both.”

While Chris has been searching the world over for unusual and unique designers and lines for decades, she hasn’t tired of it one bit. In fact, she relishes her time alone at the annual apparel and fashion trade shows where she can do as she wishes and go where her eye and heart tug her.

It could be that even after 44 years in business in Sonoma County, Chris doesn’t consider what she is doing to be work at all. 

“I am proud to say I have not had a real job since 1974,” she said—just before heading off on her 39th buying trip to Paris. 

One-o-One, 101 Plaza St., Healdsburg, CA, 707-433-2800, 101Healdsburg.com, open daily 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 

Mustache: Should I shave or should I grow

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The prevalence of unironic mustaches is growing. By “unironic,” I mean mustaches grown in earnest without self-conscious consideration, self-parody, critique or “cool.” By mustaches, I mean hair facial growth above the lip, unaccompanied by a goatee, beard, chinstrap, soul patch or fashion sense.   

Banished as relics from the ’70s (when only hippies and rock stars were permitted to grow them), those who came of age in the ’80s like myself have long perceived lone mustaches as suspect markers of machismo and Marlboro cigarettes. We recall a decade of bare faces and eurocentric undercuts, occasionally underscored by eyeliner (and later, pink eye). 

The Reagan era was not only clean shaven; men’s hair fashions were a veritable throwback to the ’50s, thanks to a nostalgia fest exploding at the box office (Back to the Future, Peggy Sue Got Married, Stand By Me, etc.).

Sure, there were outliers, rogue mustachioed loners like Sam Elliott or Wilfred Brimley and the occasional cowboy flick that found a pretty mug like Val Kilmer’s festooned with a Guy Fawkes’ mustache (looking at you, Doc Holliday). But by and large, the ’80s were a good time to own stock in Gillette.

Then it all began to change within a few distinct outgrowths: First, there was the designer stubble of the ’80s, courtesy of Miami Vice and post-Wham George Michael. Then came an outbreak of grungy Van Dykes in the early ’90s that persisted in various forms (and lengths) until the relatively clean-shaven aughts. 

This was the calm before the storm that arrived in the form of the so-called “hipster beards” that have blown in the winds of time since 2010. They come, they go, they have blogs and Instagram accounts, and sprout from the faces of those who identify as men, in part, I suppose, to remind them that they are. 

I’ve personally worn all the above and more (I starred in a werewolf movie, after all), but I’m three days into the week and have yet to shave, which is an inflection point for relatively hirsute gents like myself. Should I shave or should I grow?   

Generally, this quandary is answered by whether or not a fresh blade is on hand. Thanks to the proliferation of razor subscription services, they usually are (first rule of Dollar Shave Club, you do not talk about Dollar Shave Club).

My wife says, “shave.” My boys say “grow”—they’re young teens, still enamored of the possibilities of male grooming, blissfully unaware of the tedious ritual that will be their own soon enough. The compromise, of course, would be a mustache—grown as a gesture of goodwill. 

The irony.

Editor Daedalus Howell cuts it close at DaedalusHowell.com.

The Moors at Sebastopol’s Main Stage West

Playwright Jen Silverman is known for work that bends genre as much as it bends reality, and The Moors, now playing at Sebastopol’s Main Stage West through Oct. 23, is no exception. It’s a little Jane Eyre mixed with a little Hound of the Baskervilles, but it’s also a modern look at relationships, expectations and identity. 

Set somewhere between 1820 and 1899 in an old parsonage on an endless moor, the play begins with a new governess (Katherine Rupers) arriving. Hired by the head of the household (who may or may not be dead) to look after a child (who may or may not exist), she slowly realizes that beauty and peril are closely aligned. Added into her confusion is a staff which may or may not be all one person (Taylor Diffenderfer), an attention-hungry younger spinster (Maddi Scarbrough), a tough-as-nails older spinster (Brenda Reed), a depressed mastiff (Kevin R. Bordi) and an injured moorhen (Nora Summers). 

The actors all handle the existential absurdity well. Scarbrough brings a lot of believability to the neurotic sister. Reed is well grounded in the Brontë bad-boy trope. Bordi plays the mastiff with his usual aplomb trimmed with despair. Rupers could have found more naivety earlier in the show to make her character arc more defined, but her choices are consistent and her instincts are sound.  

While everyone delivers a solid performance, standouts are Diffenderfer as Mallory/Marjory/Margaret, who may have typhoid or may be pregnant, but is definitely up to no good, and Summers, as the anxiously adorable moorhen with a short memory but a better grasp of reality than anyone else on the moors. Both women play to their strengths to create successfully compelling characters out of what could have been simple silliness.

To aid the actors in this world are a beautiful costume design by Tracy Hinman and a lushly spooky set by David Lear.

Though this play is billed as a dark comedy, do not expect this to be a laugh-out-loud experience. It is a comedy with clear inspiration from Ionesco—absurd and cruel. And like all theater of the absurd, this play will require careful thought to follow. In short, if you enjoy your entertainment a little on the darkly-unsettling side with a deep meditation on loneliness and a healthy dose of absurdity, you should go see The Moors. And we should grab coffee sometime.

‘The Moors’ runs through Oct. 23 at Main Stage West, 104 N. Main St., Sebastopol. Thu-Sat at 8pm; Sun, 5pm. $20-$32. Masking required. 707.823.0177. mainstagewest.com

San Rafael’s 34th Día de los Muertos Celebrates life, Honors Dead

San Rafael is set to throw its 34th annual Día de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, celebration on Nov. 5 from 3 to 9pm with an uplifting and affirming experience for community members from all walks of life.

Día de los Muertos is a traditional Mexican and Central American holiday that is celebrated with families coming together to honor the lives of their ancestors and family members who have passed. It is a day of bright colors, festive spirits, a wide array of dances, customary costuming and face paint, and, of course, remembering with good cheer the lives of those who are no longer living. 

“You will find a very welcoming, safe and festive environment where people can enjoy art workshops, live music, culture, a procession through the community and much more,” said Douglas Mundo, executive director of San Rafael’s Día de los Muertos organizing committee. “Día de los Muertos is my favorite holiday, and I love to celebrate it with my family, friends and community.”

Día de los Muertos is typically celebrated with three major symbols. The first is brightly decorated sugar skulls, often left along with toys as offerings to children who have passed. Secondly are marigold flowers to decorate ofrendas (altars) and graves. The flowers’ vibrant colors and strong scent is used to assist the dead in navigating to and from their graves to the family home. 

And lastly, butterflies are a huge symbol for Día de los Muertos celebrations. They are said to hold the spirits of the departed, especially since the migration pattern of the Monarch butterflies coincides with early November, when Día de los Muertos is traditionally celebrated.

“I want to make sure that people understand that Día de los Muertos is not Mexican Halloween. It is a sacred time of healing to remember those who have passed away and for family to remember our ancestors. It’s a time to celebrate life in a different way; it’s a happy event. We want people to understand this and dress appropriately. 

“For those who are not part of our culture, I ask for respect, understanding and education about what Día de los Muertos means. If you don’t know what you are doing, you can always ask! In order to keep our traditions alive, we want to keep it traditional.”

This free-to-attend celebration takes place in the Canal neighborhood of San Rafael and includes art workshops for children, live music (multiple performers), cultural performances, altar viewing, a walking procession through the neighborhood and traditional food available for purchase. Over a dozen altars in downtown business windows and 22 altars at the event will be displayed, during the month of October and through the first week of November.

“Day of the Dead has been a healing, humanizing coming-together of the community in San Rafael for 34 years now,” said Catherine John, coordinator for the Día de los Muertos organizing committee. “People of many backgrounds and walks of life gather to pay their respects to those we’ve lost and celebrate being together in community. It is a beautiful, upbeat, colorful celebration, and one which has come to characterize San Rafael over the years. Art, music, food and altars are all provided by locals, and we welcome visitors from near and far. 

“Thanks to a tireless committee of volunteers, we were able to keep our celebration going in a semi-virtual format during the pandemic year of 2020, and in 2021 we resumed our in-person one-day event with full attendance. We look forward to keeping this tradition alive for many years to come.”

During COVID, when Día de los Muertos could not be hosted as an in-person event, the organizing committee held a COVID-friendly car procession through the Canal neighborhood and partnered with altar makers in downtown San Rafael businesses so that the community could view the altars in store windows at their leisure while social distancing. The organizing committee has decided to continue with some of these modifications by adding them to the traditional celebration. 

On Saturday, Oct. 22 at 3pm, the car procession will depart from City Hall and travel through downtown San Rafael, after which a car show and community gathering will take place at the Multicultural Center of Marin, 709 5th Ave. Community members are invited to decorate their cars and trucks and cruise along with the procession.

Altar viewing and food sales will take place throughout the entire celebration from 3 to 9pm, art workshops in the multipurpose room from 3 to 5pm, Pan Rafael (Steel Pans) in the lobby from 3 to 4pm, Enriching Lives through Music in the gymnasium from 4 to 5pm, Cascada de Flores in the gymnasium from 5 to 7pm and an outdoor procession from 6 to 7pm. Cultural performances from Danza Azteca Mixcoatl and Ballet Folklórico Netzahualcoyotl will take place in the gymnasium from 7 to 7:30pm, and a community dance with Sang Matiz will be held in the multipurpose room from 7:30 to 9:30pm.

“We end the celebration with a community dance,” said Mundo. “During the day full of Día de los Muertos activities, at least 2,000 people come through, plus those who are reached through the procession. It’s amazing to see how the community comes together to celebrate Día de los Muertos with us.”

Those who wish to get involved with the Día de los Muertos organizing committee are welcome to reach out and offer their assistance. Planning for this event begins in February every year, and a great deal of time, care and consideration is put towards hosting this annual celebration of life, family and community.

“I’m ready to pass the torch to the new generation and am calling out to the younger generation to join us and continue the celebration for years to come,” Mundo said. “For the last 34 years, this event has been free to the community, and we plan to keep it that way.”

Parking for San Rafael’s 34th annual Día de los Muertos celebration is available at Pickleweed Park. The Multicultural Center of Marin will be running a continuous free shuttle service between the Marin Health and Wellness Campus (3240 Kerner Blvd.) and the Boro Center from 3 to 9:30pm. Parking at the Health and Wellness Campus is free and time-unlimited.

The Día de los Muertos organizing committee thanks their lead sponsors, the Marin Community Foundation and Sol Food, for making this event possible. For more information, visit dayofthedeadsr.org.

Culture Crush—Bryan Bielanski, Polar Bears and More

Sonoma
Bryan Bielanski 

An evening of dinner and drinks while listening to acoustic rock? There are worse ways to spend a Saturday. Step out to the Starling Bar in Sonoma and check out singer-songwriter Bryan Bielanski. Inspired by rock greats like Tom Petty and REM, Bielanski also brings his own distinct musical style and lyrics, which inspire thought and reflection over a great beat. Bielanski is a critically acclaimed musician, who has been traveling the United States and abroad for the last 10 years. He has played everywhere from Belgium to China to Louisiana to Greece to New Jersey. The man’s well-traveled, and his music reflects it. “…intelligent and musically coherent power pop with soul,” wrote Woody Mitchell (Charlotte Observer daily periodical, Charlotte, NC). “East Coast singer-songwriter packs more hooks than a tackle box!” according to Erika Boling (Metrospirit Magazine, Augusta, GA). Bielanski plays Saturday, Oct. 19 at the Starling Bar, 19380 Highway 12, Sonoma. 6-9pm. Free. www.starlingsonoma.com 

Petaluma
Polar Bear Fundraiser

Why not get a taste of Christmas in October? David Templeton’s solo show, Polar Bears: A True Story About a Very Big Lie, is on this Saturday, to support Templeton and raise money for his New York City performance of the show later this month. Written and performed by Templeton, Polar Bears is at once funny, touching and poignant, telling the story of a young father, desperate for his children to believe in Santa for longer than he did. (At four, he recognized the polar bear wrapping paper “Santa” had used to wrap his presents, and the dream was shattered.) His increasing obsession with the details of a perfect Christmas experience only amplifies when a family tragedy strikes. But things start to spiral out of control and everything, including the family’s celebration of Christmas, takes an unpredictable turn. Polar Bears: A True Story About a Very Big Lie is Saturday, Oct.. 15 at 145 Keller St., Petaluma. 6:30pm. Tickets $27. www.davepokornypresents.com 

Larkspur 
Mill Valley Film Festival 

Opening night featured such glitterati as Kate Hudson and Kathryn Hahn, and the festivities have only just begun. Now through Oct. 16, don’t miss The Mill Valley Film Festival. This year, as always, come to celebrate the best in independent and world cinema, across multiple genres. Nicknamed “the filmmaker’s film festival” and now in its 45th year, MVFF was founded in 1977 by director Mark Fishkin. It’s a non-competitive, film-loving atmosphere that invites thorough reflection on and enjoyment of film. See work from new and established filmmakers, and meet fellow film lovers. Screenings are in Larkspur, Mill Valley, Berkeley, San Rafael and San Francisco Oct. 6-16. Tickets $90-$145. www.mvff.com 

San Rafael
Fall In Festival

Come get to know Marin’s thriving Jewish community at the Marin Jewish Community Center’s Fall In Festival. This free, harvest-themed event features food, activities, crafts, music and a chance to get to know your neighbors. Hear about the JCC’s offerings, from Camp Kehillah and early childhood education to adult learning programs and fitness and aquatics offerings. Learn about making a ritual bouquet for the harvest holiday of Sukkot, and make leaf garlands that can be planted once the season is over. Participate in Harvest Yoga and Bountiful Bootcamp, learn harvest stories, view sukkah pop-up art installations—which will be completed live during the festival—listen to music and devour pastries. The Fall In Festival is Sunday, Oct. 16 at 200 North San Pedro Rd., San Rafael. 2-5pm Free. www.marinjcc.org 

—Jane Vick 

One Night Only: ‘Dream with the Fishes’ Returns to the Screen

Sundance hit celebrates 25th anniversary with a special screening at Smith Rafael Film Center

Oakland native and San Francisco State University alumnus Finn Taylor’s critically acclaimed, seriocomic directorial debut, Dream with the Fishes, celebrates its 25th Anniversary with a theatrical screening of the newly-created hi-res master at the Smith Rafael Film Center, Monday, Oct. 17.

Shot in nearly 60 locations in 23 days throughout the Bay Area, and triggered a bidding war after its 1997 Sundance premiere; its distribution deals with both Sony Pictures Classics and Lakeshore Entertainment facilitated the film being exhibited theatrically and on home video throughout the world.

In the film, heroin addict Nick (Brad Hunt), who’s been given only a few weeks to live, enters into a life-or-death pact with Terry (David Arquette), who’s facing his own set of demons…but not long after they depart on a road trip to facilitate living out their fantasies, life keeps getting in the way.

This screening will be the first time that the cast has reunited since the film’s release and features an in-person Q&A with actors David Arquette, Cathy Moriarty, Brad Hunt, Kathryn Erbe, and Patrick McGaw, plus writer-director Taylor, producer Mitchell Stein, director of photography Barry Stone, and music supervisor Charles Raggio

‘Dream with the Fishes’ screens at 7 pm, Monday, Oct. 17 at Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 4th Street, San Rafael. Tickets are $13–15 ($10 for CFI members) and are available here.

Open Mic: Sonoma County Supervisors to review living wage law

The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors will finally revise the county’s Living Wage Ordinance approved in 2015 at their Oct. 18 meeting. Three fires and one flood since 2017 have delayed reconsideration of the ordinance, which a coalition of labor, environmental, faith and community-based organizations have long urged. The law applies to county workers and employees of large county contractors.

Nationwide, 120 cities and counties have implemented living wage laws, including 43 in California. Three cities in Sonoma County, Sebastopol (2003), Sonoma (2004) and Petaluma (2006), have done so. Sonoma County’s existing living wage law is one of California’s weakest and least comprehensive.

Corporate profits have reached record levels while, according to the latest U.S. Census data, wages have stagnated or declined for the bottom 60% of Sonoma County wage earners since 2000. Simultaneously, the California Housing Corporation reports that rents have climbed by 25%, while renter incomes grew by just 2% annually.

The county’s Portrait of Sonoma 2021 report recommends that the board thoroughly revise the Living Wage Ordinance to address inequality and working poverty.

Proponents are urging the board to expand the ordinance to the county fairgrounds and airport, increasing the number of workers covered to 1,800.

The board can further improve worker job quality by providing 12 days of paid sick leave, barring part-time employment by county contractors except in unusual circumstances, and implementing a retention provision for employees of a county contractor whose contract is not renewed. 

In addition, by adopting a proposed responsible bidder provision, the county will ensure that contractors have an excellent record of compliance with applicable federal and state labor laws.

Expanding the ordinance to the airport and fairgrounds, ensuring responsible contracting, and improving job quality for covered workers will promote racial and gender equity, as most affected employees are workers of color and women.

The county is the largest employer and contractor in the North Bay. By revising the ordinance as recommended, the county can become a model for public employment, and supervisors can demonstrate their commitment to economic and racial justice.

For more information, see www.northbayjobswithjustice.org/raise-the-wage.

Martin J. Bennett is instructor emeritus of history at Santa Rosa Junior College and a consultant for UNITE HERE Local 2.

Two Democrats spend $1.2 million in fight for North Bay Assembly seat

Two Democrats are waging a costly fight to represent the North Bay in the state Assembly.

In the June primary, Democrats Sara Aminzadeh and Damon Connolly took 36.2% and 37.1%, respectively. The district, newly numbered 12, covers all of Marin County and the southern half of Sonoma County.

Aminzadeh has taken the lead in fundraising, raising $620,111 this year through Sept. 24, compared to Conolly’s $530,789 in the same period. Recent campaign filings show that two Democrats have spent over $1.2 million fighting each other so far.

Connolly has represented San Rafael and surrounding communities on the Marin County Board of Supervisors since 2015 and, before that, sat on the San Rafael City Council. Aminzadeh is more of a newcomer to the district, but appears to have stronger connections in Sacramento. She worked for environmental nonprofits before being appointed to the California Coastal Commission in 2017.

Aminzadeh’s biggest financial supporters include the California Faculty Association ($19,200); Gap Inc. executive Robert Fisher and his wife, Elizabeth ($10,800); and the Association of California School Administrators ($9,700). Her campaign has also received $49,250 from 30 employees of Boies Schiller Flexner LLP, a law firm where her husband is a partner. 

Meanwhile, Connolly’s biggest single contributors include the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees ($19,400), the Operating Engineers Local Union No. 3 ($14,600) and a total of $49,000 from 10 chapters of Govern for California, a network of 18 nonprofits which has reportedly spent over $3 million on California elections this year.

The pair’s websites each sport long lists of endorsements, both including local politicians and labor groups.

Connolly has claimed endorsements from both daily newspapers in the district—the Press Democrat and Marin Independent Journal—and seven current members of the state legislature. Meanwhile, Aminzadeh has been endorsed by more state and federal officials, including Rep. Jared Huffman, Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis and 36 current members of the state legislature.

Some are staying out of the in-fighting all together. The California Democratic Party failed to reach a consensus on an endorsement in the race and, as a result, local Democratic groups didn’t endorse in the race either. Levine, the outgoing Assemblymember, hasn’t publicly picked his successor.

One thing is certain: Once the dust settles, the North Bay will send another Democrat to the statehouse.

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Two Democrats spend $1.2 million in fight for North Bay Assembly seat

Sara Aminzadeh and Damon Connolly
Two Democrats are waging a costly fight to represent the North Bay in the state Assembly. In the June primary, Democrats Sara Aminzadeh and Damon Connolly took 36.2% and 37.1%, respectively. The district, newly numbered 12, covers all of Marin County and the southern half of Sonoma County. Aminzadeh has taken the lead in fundraising, raising $620,111 this year through Sept....
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