Letters to the Editor: For the People

For the People

For far too long, inequity has corrupted our democracy. It is time for all Americans to stand up and demand an expansion of voting rights, limits to big money in politics and accountability by ending gerrymandering. This is why I support the For The People Act, also known as H.R. 1.

The For The People Act was recently reintroduced in the House of Representatives as a sweeping bill that provides for reform in our electoral process; including redistricting, ethics reform, campaign finance and voting rights. For the last two years, Mitch McConnell blocked a vote on H.R. 1 in the Senate.

We need a government that’s fair—where representatives listen to their constituents. The For the People Act would help make that a reality. I believe it’s crucial to restore accountability in our democracy. I support this bill because it would provide much-needed democracy reform.

Now is the time to reshape our democracy into one that is truly of, for and by the people. That is why I’m asking my fellow citizens to contact their representatives and demand they vote “Yes” on the For The People Act.

Tracey Turner, Marin County

Sonnet Bloom

There is a THING out there

a thing you don’t want to bring home

so you stay in place

and erase your face

with a mask and a flask

you zoom till you fume

quickstep from room to room

waltz with a broom

You wish “it” would bloom

into healthy flesh and blood,

a flood of emotions

oceans of devotions,

so you can touch like it’s 1999

and dance like it’s 1959

Selena Anne Shephard, Marin County

Newsom Signs Bill Extending State Eviction Protections Through June 30

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill extending the state’s coronavirus-related eviction moratorium Friday, keeping protections intact through June 30.

Newsom’s signing of Senate Bill 91 comes two days before protections would have ended statewide, triggering a wave of evictions in counties that had not passed their own moratoriums. 

Tenants are required to pay at least 25 percent of their monthly rent to benefit from the moratorium and also have a minimum of 15 days to provide proof of financial hardship to remain protected from eviction.

Newsom said he was “not naive” in acknowledging that SB 91 would not be a panacea for the state’s renters struggling to keep pace with their bills amid the pandemic.

“We recognize we have to do more,” Newsom said Friday during the signing ceremony. “And we have to continue to support those most vulnerable in this pandemic-induced economy, in the recession that we continue to work our way through. 

The bill also established the State Rental Assistance Program, utilizing the $2.6 billion in aid for renters the state received from the latest federal stimulus bill.

Newsom said Monday during a briefing on the pandemic that the state will use the federal funding to pay up to 80 percent of low-income residents’ outstanding back rent to landlords, while the remaining 20 percent will be forgiven. 

That funding will be targeted at renters who make less than 50 percent of the area median income for their local jurisdiction, with the potential to expand relief to renters making less than 80 percent of their AMI.

SB 91 represents “the nation’s strongest rental protections,” Newsom said. “And that’s a point of pride at this moment in our nation’s history, certainly in the history of this state.”

State legislators passed the original eviction moratorium, co-authored by Assemblyman David Chiu, D-San Francisco, in late August after the California Judicial Council voted to rescind the statewide ban on evictions during the pandemic that it had adopted in April.

At that time, Chiu characterized the moratorium bill, Assembly Bill 3088, as necessary but not perfect, and not as sweeping as his original proposal, AB 1436, which would have prohibited evictions for missed rent payments until 90 days after the state’s emergency order is lifted or April 1, 2021, whichever came first.

AB 1436 also would have granted tenants an additional 12 months after that to pay back rent before a property owner could take them to court.

“I expect there will be a need to revisit this legislation to address gaps and provide relief to additional tenants,” Chiu said Monday in a statement. 

Shortly after AB 3088’s signing, tenant rights activists criticized the bill as being too conciliatory toward landlords and property managers and failing to forgive outstanding rent payments that had piled up for struggling tenants. 

SB 91 has spurred similar disapproval from activists, who note that the State Rental Assistance Program is strictly voluntary, allowing landlords and property managers to continue asking tenants for back rent rather than accessing relief funds from the state.

Activists plan to hold a demonstration Friday at Oakland’s Elihu M. Harris State Building to chide state officials, call for stronger protections and hold a candlelight vigil for tenants at risk of eviction and lawsuits over back rent. 

Oakland City Councilwoman Carroll Fife is expected to attend. 

“It is imperative that we do the work to protect everyone with this federal stimulus whether the landlord lobby likes it or not,” Fife said in a statement. 

The demonstration and vigil are expected to begin at 5:45pm, according to organizers.

Stay Online with Weekend of Digital Events

Even as vaccines start rolling out in the North Bay, the Covid-19 pandemic continues to halt in-person gatherings in 2021.

Due to social-distancing, several North Bay organizations are hosting online events boasting music, theater and other family-friendly delights this weekend. Here’s a round up of what’s worth looking forward to.

Virtual Film

Each year, countries from across the globe submit their best films for consideration in the Academy Awards Best International Feature Film category. For the last 17 years, the California Film Institute has screened many of these acclaimed films in “For Your Consideration,” a screening series that normally takes place at the Smith Rafael Film Center in San Rafael. Due to the pandemic, this year’s series screens directly to the audience at home, with online access to a selection of more than two-dozen movies. “For Your Consideration” is live now and runs virtually through Feb. 11. Single tickets, $7–$12; all-access pass, $55–$75. Cafilm.org.

Virtual Theater

Years before the Covid-19 pandemic, award-winning virologist Dr. Nathan Wolfe proposed a then-ignored plan to protect the economy from pandemics. Now, Wolfe’s story is told in a new one-man show. “The Catastrophist” was recently written by Wolfe’s wife, acclaimed playwright Lauren Gunderson, and it’s currently debuting in a world premiere digital production starring William DeMeritt (Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole World, HBO’s The Normal Heart) and helmed by Marin Theatre Company in collaboration with Washington, D.C.–based company Round House Theatre. The online production is available to stream through Feb. 28. $30. Marintheatre.org.

Virtual Concerts

Each summer, world-renowned classical ensembles and soloists come to North Bay for the Music in the Vineyards chamber music festival. This past summer, the festival moved online due to the pandemic, and organizers are keeping the music going into the winter for the first time in the festival’s history with this weekend’s virtual winter festival. The online affair features four string quartets performing music that ranges from Beethoven to traditional Scottish folk tunes. The program also features a family concert that acts as an introduction to string quartets for young ones. Tune in on Friday and Saturday, Jan. 29–30. Free. Musicinthevineyards.org.

The next day, Jan. 31, the Napa Valley Music Associates presents their first virtual concert. The group is celebrating its 26th annual “Mostly Mozart in Napa Valley” on Youtube. The online showcase will include works by Mozart, Schubert, Bach and Beethoven as performed by featured guest artists such as vocalists Emily Thebaut and Dr. Christina Howell, as well as guitarist Dr. George England and pianist Aaron Petit. Tune in on Sunday, Jan. 31, at 2:30pm. Free; $25 suggested donation. Napavalleymusicassociates.org.

Virtual Reading

Lured by the myths and mysteries of the American West, author and historian Sherry L. Smith writes about the region’s indigenous people and contemporary characters. This week, Smith reads from and talks about her new book, Bohemians West: Free Love, Family & Radicals in Twentieth Century America, as part of Book Passage’s ongoing online Conversations With Authors series. The book examines a particular moment in American history as told through letters between poets Sara Bard Field and Charles Erskine Scott Wood, and Smith appears in a discussion with Peter Coyote on Saturday, Jan. 30, at 4pm. Free. Bookpassage.com.

Virtual Concert

Renowned trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis (pictured) spent much of 2020 writing a new instrumental work in response to the events that unfolded over the last year. The Democracy! Suite is an inspiring reflection on the political, economic and social issues that dominated headlines all year. Fear not, The Democracy! Suite also carries an uplifting message of how the country can collectively create a better future. Marsalis leads the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra Septet in a virtual performance of The Democracy! Suite, via the Green Music Center, on Saturday, Jan. 30. 7pm. $10 and up. Gmc.sonoma.edu.

The Wheel: An Under Desk Peddler Odyssey

Going nowhere fast

Moss may grow fat on a rolling stone, but you can grow both fat and mossy by simply sitting at a desk.

This is an issue for many a writer, this writer included. Unless you’re an embedded war correspondent (or, with the risk of being redundant, a White House reporter), writing is mostly a sedentary gig. You don’t move, sans a few wriggling digits over the keys. It’s like the old phone book ad—you let your fingers do the walking. And that’s about all the exercise you get.

Add to that all the requisite binge drinking and the sourdough conspiracy that defined the early quarantine (a sinister plot to keep us fat, dumb and happy), and your waistline becomes a wasteland. 

Like most Americans, I put on a few pounds during the quarantine. This is why I finally clicked the “Buy Now” button on Amazon and awaited delivery of my industrial-grade Deskcycle. It’s essentially a stationary bike stripped of every aspect of bicycleness except the pedals, and it fits under a desk. Ergo, it’s an “under desk peddler.” The Wheel, as I call it, began our immobile journey at my desk but I later relocated it under a coffee table near the TV so we could watch Nordic Noir series together.

It’s like a spin class but without the commute, contagion and class. And implacable Swedish police detective Kurt Wallander is there. The basic tenet of my wheel-based weight-loss program was “go nowhere fast,” which eventually became “go nowhere at a more sustainable pace.” In addition to pedaling the Wheel, I added a calorie-tracking app for good measure. Like me, you might be astonished to learn that a bottle of red wine contains around 600 calories—basically a meal in itself. Vanity, I’ve found, inspires moderation.

And yes, I acknowledge that I’m basically turning a rat wheel made for a human, but it keeps me away from the cheese. I also accept that even if I win the rat race I’m still a rat, but I’m also a leaner, meaner rat who, in a few months, shed 25 pounds.

I can now play the lead in the motion picture of my life—rather than my own paunchy sidekick. They will call the film The Pedaluman and it will be about how I best a rival Deskcycle gang—basically The Wild One meets a Jane Fonda workout tape. They should make it soon, since I’m all out of Wallander … and the Wheel keeps turning.

Daedalus Howell puts the pedal to the meddle at daedalushowell.com.

Petaluma Threatens to Shut Down Creamery Due to Safety Concerns

When Larry Peter purchased the Petaluma Creamery in 2004, the local agricultural community celebrated the move as a means of preserving the North Bay’s dairy industry.

“It’s a way to keep agriculture and the dairy industry part of Sonoma and Marin counties,” Peter, the owner of Spring Hill Jersey Cheese, who has family roots in the North Bay’s agricultural community, told the Press Democrat when news of the acquisition broke.

Unfortunately, Peter’s Petaluma Creamery quickly began to miss bills and rack up fines. By September 2010, the business owed the city of Petaluma $604,720 in unpaid water bills and fines, according to press coverage from the time.

The city of Petaluma, home of the Butter and Egg Days Parade, regards agribusiness as a core part of its identity and modern heritage. But should Petaluma use tax dollars to keep a mid-sized creamery alive when it is not operating sustainably—all in the name of preserving its agricultural roots? City managers have grappled with this question for more than a decade.

In a 2010 letter to Peter threatening to shut off the plant’s water unless he paid some of his debt, then-City Manager John Brown indicated that the city had been lenient in an effort to save the Petaluma Creamery, which was founded as the Petaluma Cooperative Creamery in 1913.

Brown wrote that the city had worked with the Creamery “because it is important to the city to support agribusiness and because we recognize the outlet the creamery provides local dairy farmers for their milk. Nonetheless, the city’s water/wastewater ratepayers cannot subsidize the creamery.” 

Despite Brown’s threat and the city’s continued efforts to work with the Creamery for the past 10 years, Peter has racked up additional unpaid bills and failed to obtain city safety permits. The Creamery has also run afoul of a regional air quality regulator and Peter is currently being sued by former employees for allegedly violating employment laws.

To cap things off, two small fires at the Creamery last year—one in June and another on Dec. 7—brought renewed attention regarding the safety of the facility.

On Dec. 21, Petaluma City Manager Peggy Flynn sent a letter threatening to press civil or criminal charges against Peter if he continues to discharge wastewater without receiving city approval by March 1.

The Creamery currently owes $1,425,258.54 to the city in wastewater discharge fees, sewer capacity rental fees and permit violation fines, according to Flynn’s letter. Peter did not respond to requests for comment.

Broken Promises

Flynn’s letter, and other public records obtained by the Pacific Sun, indicate that Peter often started to collaborate with the city, but ultimately failed to follow through on promises.

For instance, in 2015, the Creamery completed a safety report known as a Process Hazard Analysis (PHA), a list of recommendations for safety and regulatory compliance. The city began to work with the Creamery to complete the list, but the Creamery ultimately failed to provide the city with evidence that it has completed “over 100 items” included in the most recent version of the PHA, according to the Dec. 21 letter.

The city is now requiring that the Creamery provide proof it has completed the PHA before March 1 in order to continue storing ammonia on the premises for use in a refrigeration system. “Anhydrous ammonia is a toxic gas that may cause severe injury or death if inhaled,” the Dec. 21 letter states.

In April 2018, the city took legal action against the Creamery in an effort to collect the Creamery’s mounting bills.

The city’s legal action followed the completion of a February 2018 audit of the city’s wastewater pretreatment procedures by an Environmental Protection Agency contractor, which reminded the city of its obligation to increase its enforcement efforts instead of simply issuing the Creamery more fines.

The “Petaluma Creamery has been chronically violating the City’s [Biological Oxygen Demand] BOD and oil and grease local limits since 2008. The City regularly issues notices of violation… but has not escalated enforcement,” the audit reads in part, according to a legal filing by the city of Petaluma. 

In November 2018, a judge ordered the Creamery to pay the city $624,046.06 in 24 monthly installments, ending on Dec. 31, 2020.

The Creamery failed to pay the complete amount, according to Jordan Green, a deputy City Attorney. The remaining unpaid amount is included in the $1.425 million the city says the Creamery owes them.

Green says the city is considering placing a tax lien on the Creamery, an option included in the November 2018 settlement if Peter failed to pay the installments.

On May 24, 2018, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) filed a lawsuit against the Petaluma Creamery. A BAAQMD engineering report obtained by the Pacific Sun shows that the Petaluma Creamery repeatedly filed for permits to operate various pieces of machinery, but then failed to complete the steps required to receive final approval.

A BAAQMD spokesperson told the Pacific Sun that Peter paid a fine resulting from the lawsuit, but that the agency is currently investigating the plant for compliance with air quality requirements.The spokesperson declined to comment on the specifics of the ongoing investigation.

Three recent lawsuits against Peter, brought by former dairy employees, allege a series of labor violations. The cases—two of which are ongoing—ask the court for over $100,000 in damages due to unpaid wages and other labor violations.

On Monday, Dec. 7, a fire broke out at the Creamery’s headquarters at 621 Western Ave., six months after another smaller fire broke out at the business. According to December press coverage, employees reported smelling smoke and discovered a fire in the rafters above a decommissioned boiler.

Although the Creamery’s sprinkler system activated and put out much of the fire, the Creamery does not have an alarm system, and the fire was detected and reported to the Fire Department by an employee. Fire fighters cut a hole in the roof to finish the job. All told, there were about $25,000 in damages, the city estimates.

A cause for the fires has not been determined, but the city is requiring the Creamery to install an alarm system which would automatically alert the city’s emergency dispatch service, according to Green, the Petaluma deputy city attorney. 

The city has not provided a deadline for the installation of the alarm system and is working to help the Creamery comply, Green said. 

Last year, as his bills mounted, Peter found an unlikely ally in Verizon Wireless. 

The cell phone company filed an application with the city to install equipment on top of one of the Creamery buildings. In exchange for the use of his roof real estate, Verizon would pay Peter an unknown amount of rent for many years to come.

While some Petaluma residents opposed the proposal, it was set for consideration at a Monday, Jan. 26, Planning Commission meeting.  

But, on Friday, Jan. 22, an attorney for Verizon informed the city that the company had decided to withdraw its application. 

“Verizon Wireless has chosen to withdraw the application immediately in light of the recently-discovered compliance matters affecting the subject property that are unrelated to the proposed wireless facility, as well as the recent fire that affected an adjacent structure,” a company attorney wrote.

Verizon may restart the permit process once the Creamery comes into compliance, the attorney added.

Government Cheese

In a Jan. 5 email to concerned neighbors of the Creamery, Flynn, the current city manager, took a similar approach to Brown, her predecessor who sent a letter to the Creamery back when Peter owed less than half of what he does today.

“As you may know, the Petaluma Creamery has a long and historic presence in our City,” Flynn wrote to the neighbors. “It has been an important link to our agricultural community and a vital amenity for processing and providing local dairy products to consumers.”

“As part of our efforts, they have made some corrections, but the compliance hasn’t been consistent and the agreed upon next steps have not been completed to date,” Flynn continued. The tipping point which led the city to increase its enforcement actions was a growing concern for public safety, Flynn concluded.

The Creamery’s appeal of the November 2018 judgement requiring the Creamery to pay the city $624,046 indicates that Peter’s business struggled from the start. The business did not operate as a processing plant between September 2005 and July 2007, and then ran at “vastly reduced levels until 2012 due to the recession,” according to a February 2019 appeal written by Peter’s attorney.

The broader trends in the dairy industry—which is increasingly dominated by fewer, larger producers—likely didn’t help Peter’s business either.

While the number of dairies in Sonoma County has dropped from 800 at the height of the local industry down to 56 licensed cow dairies in 2018, the amount of milk produced has remained relatively steady over the decades. The county produced 500 million pounds in 1969 and 466 million pounds in 2017, according to Sonoma County crop reports.

In fact, Sonoma County’s 2018 crop report notes that “the challenges facing Sonoma County dairies today largely revolve around an oversupply of organic milk” by producers nationwide, leading to a low price for the North Bay’s producers.

Across the country, the dairy industry has struggled to match demand for specific products as consumers’ tastes change

The status quo is supported by large amounts of money from the federal government. A 2018 report commissioned by the Dairy Farmers of Canada found that the U.S. dairy industry received $22 billion dollars in direct and indirect federal subsidies in 2015, allowing American dairies to produce milk despite the fact that the sale price does not cover production costs.

Unfortunately for small farmers, the federal government’s generous subsidies don’t necessarily trickle down, meaning that small farms struggle while some large producers prosper.

In 2019, President Donald Trump’s agriculture secretary Sonny Perdue put it bluntly after visiting the World Dairy Expo: “In America, the big get bigger and the small go out.”

In response to these and other problems, some commentators have called on the government to help dairy farmers transition into other industries.

Still, the question remains, should Petaluma continue to subsidize the Petaluma Creamery as it has for 10 years?

Sticker Standoff in Fairfax

A petition addressed to Marin County District Attorney Lori Frugoli demands that she prosecute a 19-year-old Livermore man who posted swastika stickers in downtown Fairfax in late November. Frugoli recently issued a statement declining to press charges against the man, claiming there was “insufficient evidence.”

Hogwash.

A brave San Anselmo resident, Noah Mohan, 21, followed the Nazi supporter, confronted him and recorded the encounter. Mohan caught him red-handed with the stickers.

Frugoli received a gift she’s refusing to accept: sufficient evidence.

Perhaps she thinks a crime wasn’t committed when the man placed stickers bearing a swastika and the words “we are everywhere” on public and private property. Surely, she could make a case for California Penal Code 11411:

“Any person who places or displays a sign, mark, symbol, emblem, or other physical impression, including, but not limited to, a Nazi swastika, on the private property of another, without authorization, for the purpose of terrorizing the owner or occupant of that private property or in reckless disregard of the risk of terrorizing the owner or occupant of that private property shall be punished …”

The rest of the code provides the penalties, which could include a fine and/or imprisonment.

Or Frugoli could prosecute under Penal Code 594, which refers to malicious mischief. Heck, she’s the DA. It’s her job to figure it out. She shouldn’t just give up.

“Frugoli does our Marin community and Noah Mohan a huge disservice by deciding there is insufficient evidence to charge this person,” the petition says. “If there is doubt, let the jury weigh in.”

The petition’s author, Mark Solomons, felt violated and upset when he heard about the swastikas posted in his town. He felt violated again after the DA refused to prosecute.

“When Frugoli says not enough evidence, what is enough evidence?” Solomons said. “Why doesn’t it meet the hate crime standards?”

These are excellent questions and I posed them to the DA.

“There are no new developments or comments on the case,” Frugoli said in an email. “The statute of limitations has not yet expired in this matter and should any new information come to light we would reevaluate the case, as we do in all cases where we receive information after an initial filing decision has occurred.”

I’m not sure what other information needs to surface. Mohan supplied a nine minute and 44 second video of the man, in which he admitted to subscribing to Nazi ideology and proudly displayed a roll of swastika stickers. Those same stickers were found on poles, trash receptacles, electrical boxes and on top of a BLM sign at Peri’s Bar.

Solomons and more than 690 petition signers want the suspect held accountable. He doesn’t even necessarily need to serve time. Another option is restorative justice, which seeks to repair the damage caused by a crime.  

“He could sit in a room with people who have survived the holocaust or the children of survivors,” Solomons said.

With restorative justice, the parties involved decide together how to bring about resolution. Hopefully, the criminal is transformed by the process and the victims begin to heal. But the DA’s office needs to sign on.

“Restorative justice requires a cooperative effort by communities and the government,” according to the Centre for Justice & Reconciliation.

It’s worth the effort. A seven-year study in the United Kingdom found that 85% of victims feel satisfied with the outcome of restorative justice and it is more effective in reducing recidivism than incarceration.

Instead, Frugoli scheduled a forum with community leaders to help stop hate crimes and hateful behavior. That’s a lovely, but empty gesture. The only people who will attend the forum are already on board.

“Frugoli is tone deaf,” Solomons said.

Hopefully, the petition restores her hearing. Until a hate crime perpetrator is prosecuted under the hate crime statutes, Marin will continue experiencing acts of hate.

To sign the petition, click here.

Open Mic: A Letter to North Bay Administrators

By Laurel Green

Dear Principals,

I am writing to put some firm, respectful pressure on you as leaders. It’s unfortunate that you do not have more support to foster growth that is needed in our times to handle the changing, powerful student populations that are moving through our schools now. This is a tight spot.

However, there is a courageous stance that I implore you to embrace: Keep your vision centered on the historically underrepresented students (Black, Brown, those with Special Needs) and remember that those who the system has historically centered upon (white privileged, middle/upper class children) will still thrive when the focus turns in the direction of the underrepresented.

It’s a rational stance. What would it take for you to FULLY claim this stance? Everything about your school would be stronger. What if you elicited the thinking of every Indigenous, Black, Latino, Jewish, Asian, LGBTQ, multiple-language speaker, person born outside the USA, and European heritage person, (both individually and collectively), to cultivate access to a TRUE learning environment on your campus? What if language liberation were at the forefront of all communications, and all languages honored? What would you have to face in your own heart and mind to set things right?

The time is NOW to center those whose voices have historically been unheard.  

Listen to people from each demographic, ask them how they want the school to look, feel, be like, and sound like. Ask them what they hope to never have to face, handle, or deal with again in the school setting. Then: LISTEN. Then: Gather your village and ACT. Set the tone for your school community. Create social policies on your campus that honor the voices of ALL students. BOLDLY GO WHERE ONLY THE STUDENTS CAN TAKE YOU. Hold out the vision of an inclusive climate. EVERYONE will SOAR. Schools will only foster education for all when all are involved in developing their educational climate and culture.

“Everyone is an equity officer, or no one is an equity officer.” ~Jeff Duncan Andrade. 

Thank you.

Laurel Green has been teaching since 1998. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write to us at op*****@********un.com.

Letters to the Editor: Concerns Over Cannabis Tourism

Cannabiz Concerns

Just say “NO” to cannabis tourism. Public safety is at stake! Our Supervisors will be voting on the Cannabis Ordinance soon and are considering removal of the current cannabis-tourism prohibition. Please write your Supervisor and demand the County retain and actually enforce the ban on cannabis on-site hospitality activities. Request the County uphold County Ordinance No. 6245, Sec.26-88-250 (c) (5), which states: “Tasting, promotional activities, and events related to commercial cannabis activities are prohibited.”

Before further endangering public safety by adding more inebriated drivers to our rural by-ways, Sonoma County officials need to address current tourist-related traffic problems, including the County’s higher than average accident rate and DUI- related fatality rate.

Sonoma County’s traffic analyses, released November 2019, concluded that future travel conditions will worsen. And, as more roads operate below acceptable levels, safety hazards and accident rates will increase. The reports also found significantly higher peak-season accident rates – especially from 1-6 pm on weekends – indicators that tourist autos and bicycles play a role in increased accident rates.

Our rural residents and tourist’s public safety has been jeopardized by unregulated alcohol tourism; let’s not make the same mistakes and expect a different outcome with the cannabis industry.

Judith Olney, Healdsburg

 
Editor’s Note:

In reply to the recent spate of reader correspondence regarding cigarette advertising in the Pacific Sun and the Bohemian—believe me, I get it. Please note that the editorial team is neither part of, nor privy to, the decisions that manifest whatever advertising accompanies our work. Suffice it to say, the ad team does their job so that we can do ours.

Admittedly, that can lead to disconnects, like running a cigarette advert in a purportedly “Health & Wellness” edition. The irony was not lost on us, nor was it by some understandably concerned readers. Your emails reminded, in stark black-and-white, the deleterious effects of smoking and how off-brand and tone deaf the ads seemed. Your voicemails used more colorful language—point taken. This feedback helped spark important, ongoing internal conversations (and echoed many of our own concerns).

I personally appreciate, welcome and encourage you to continue sharing your thoughts with us, f-bombs included. — Daedalus Howell, Editor

North Bay Theater Company Awarded for Decade of Performances

As the name implies, BroadwayWorld celebrates all things theater, with daily coverage of Broadway, Off-Broadway, regional, and international theatre productions.

Recently, the 2020 BroadwayWorld Regional Awards also celebrated the best in local theatre over the past decade. In the San Francisco region, Sonoma County-based Transcendence Theatre Company has received 14 awards, including Theatre Company of the Decade.

“We’re so grateful,” Amy Miller, Transcendence Theatre Company Artistic Director, says. “There’s a feeling of pride. It’s not just for the company and the individuals, but for the entire community. We all built this up from a field in a state park.”

Transcendence Theatre Company, a nonprofit arts organization, marks its tenth year of productions in 2021. The company became known for its “Broadway Under the Stars” series that takes place in Jack London State Park.

The park almost closed in 2011 due to budget cuts. When Miller and the other founding artists of Transcendence Theatre Company moved into the park, they worked with community sponsors, donors, nonprofit groups and volunteers to provide the park with the funds to stay open.

The “Broadway Under the Stars” series regularly features performers who have appeared in Broadway productions. Of those performers, Dee Tomasetta and Meggie Cansler Ness, who both appeared in “Those Dancin’ Feet” in 2019, won the Dancer of the Decade award and the Performer of the Decade award respectively.

Also from 2019, Transcendence Theatre’s production of A Chorus Line won several BroadwayWorld Regional Awards. Those awards include Director of a Musical of the Decade (Amy Miller), and both Set and Sound Design of the Decade (Michael Kramer and Nils Erickson). The show also earned Vocalist of the Decade (Natalie Gallo), Best Ensemble, and Production of a Musical of the Decade.

“It’s my favorite show of all time, and it has guided my entire life,” Miller says about A Chorus Line.

The musical is also the first full production of a show that Transcendence Theatre Company was able to produce for “Broadway Under the Stars.” The series normally offers musical revues and original productions based on songs from several shows and films.

“It was the show we wanted to do for our opening season in 2012,” Miller says. “The fact that it took so many years to do made it this triumphant experience for the whole community.”

“We brought together a dream team of cast and crew to do that show, and it was magnificent,” Brad Surosky, Transcendence Theatre Company Executive Director, says. “To see it win all those awards is pretty cool.”

Transcendence Theatre Company also won the award for Arts Educator of the Decade, Best Theatre Staff, and Best Youth Theatre Camp/ After-School Program of the Decade.

Longtime patrons and new fans recently viewed many productions from Transcendence Theatre’s first decade of shows, as the company transitioned to an online format last summer.

With Jack London State Park closed due to the pandemic, Broadway Under the Stars” became the “Best Night Ever Online.”

The digital series featured four multi-media compilations from the company’s past, all captured on rarely-before-seen videos.

Transcendence Theatre also adapted to the Drive-In Theater model for its socially distant holiday presentation last December. Those shows combined video compilations with live hosts performing for in-car audiences at outdoor settings.

“It was very successful,” Miller says. “We had over a hundred thousand viewers. The community could step back and look at all these moments of inspiration and what we built together. What is the potential on the horizon to inspire people all around the world now that we are digital?”

With the pandemic’s horizon still unclear, Transcendence Theatre made several contingent plans to present theater live and/or online in 2021.

“We’re going to be forever in the virtual world,” Surosky says. “So we will have virtual offerings and shows all throughout the year, as well as being back in the park and having live performances. That is the hope.”

Get the complete list of winners from the 2020 BroadwayWorld San Francisco Regional Awards here.

Anti-Racism Expert Speaks to Marin in New Virtual Series

Over the last several months, Marin County has reported a disturbing pattern of racist and anti-Semitic incidents.

Now, the newly formed Marin County Office of Equity is taking action to address renewed calls for civil rights, social justice, inclusivity, diversity and equity in Marin County.

The office recently appointed a small group of community members to serve on its Race Equity Planning Committee, which will provide recommendations on how to build equity within the entire county.

The office is also hosting a new online series of events in collaboration with the Marin City Community Services District. The series, “Community at the Table: Leading with Anti-Racism,” opens on Monday, Jan. 25, with a one-on-one Zoom conversation between influential author and scholar Dr. Ibram X. Kendi and Marin County’s Equity Director Anyania Muse.

Kendi is one of America’s foremost historians. He is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities at Boston University and the founding director of the BU Center for Antiracist Research.

He is also a National Book Award-winning and #1 New York Times bestselling author of books like How to Be an Antiracist. In 2020, Time magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world. Just this month, Netflix announced that is would be adapting Kendi’s books into three documentary projects.

For the “Community at the Table: Leading with Anti-Racism” event, Kendi offers a critical look at race as a social construct that impacts government policies and everyday life.

In talking with Marin County’s Equity Director, Kendi will also address the meaning and consequences of institutional, environmental, and systemic racism.

Marin County Board of Supervisors named its top “Four E’s” of ongoing focus; beginning with Equity and including Education, Economy and Environment.

As Marin County’s first Equity Director, Anyania Muse and the equity team are revamping the initiatives laid out in Marin County’s 2017 Racial Equity Action Plan.

“The next year is critical to our collective approach to equity work in the county,” Muse said in a recent statement. “We have a responsibility to our employees and the county at large to ensure that the equity work takes root and grows…in Marin County. Our relationships with the most marginalized populations in Marin must be healed to move this work forward in dynamic ways. That healing comes from changing the model of how we engage, support, and create connection with community.”

Join Muse and Kendi on Zoom for the first installment of the new “Community at the Table: Leading with Anti-Racism” speaker series on Monday, Jan. 25, at 5pm. Closed captions, ASL/CDI, and Spanish interpreting will be provided. Because of contractual obligations, the session will not be recorded for public viewing later. Space is limited to 1,000 participants and registration is required.

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