No Relief

Today (March 29) is the third day since Congress passed a Covid-19 relief bill that is supposed to actually help everyday people. The first two relief bills demonstrated that people like you and me are not Congress’ No. 1 priority. A huge corporate bailout and a one-time payment of $1200—not enough to pay the rent for most people—shows how out-of-touch Congress is. 

The rent is due in two days, and I have yet to hear any elected official tell America just when we’ll see this stimulus money. And while evictions and foreclosures have been frozen, rent and mortgage payments have not. 

So where is the outrage from our federal officials? Who is speaking up for YOU? Who is demanding to know when their constituents will see a check or standing up and saying “This just isn’t enough”? Why do we keep electing the same hacks? Where is our representation? America can do better than it is doing and Americans can do better than 99 percent of our current elected officials. 

Jason Kishineff

American Canyon

Other Options

Amazon’s top legal executive suggested the company’s senior leaders fend of workplace safety criticism by turning the focus onto an activist warehouse worker it had fired just days earlier, according to leaked notes from a meeting with top executives.

Amazon General Counsel David Zapolsky proposed a strategy with CEO Jeff Bezos in attendance, and Amazon Senior Vice President of Operations Dave Clark and Senior Vice President of Global Corporate Affairs Jay Carney executed it.

Bezos won’t quit, but he has the authority and obligation to FIRE Clark, Carney and Zapolsky.

There are other options for Amazon; they just require a few more clicks of the mouse.

Gary Sciford

Santa Rosa

When it roars it purrs

Like the rest of the nation, I’ve been sheltering in place trying to avoid the most virulent contagion in recent memory—Tiger King. In my limited space here, I won’t bother explaining what this Netflix phenom is all about except to say it’s a streaming docu-series about an eccentric private zoo-owner, whose story is aptly summed in the show’s subtitle “Murder, Mayhem and Madness.” ’Nuff said—if you need more, read Sarah Summers’ exclusive “Before You Watch ‘Tiger King’ Tonight, Read This” at Bohemian.com. 

Being the editorial professional that I am, I thought I should at least know what Summers’ excellent article was about before running it so, yes, I risked my wellbeing in the interest of journalistic integrity and cued up Tiger King. But before doing so, I also thought it prudent to inoculate myself with some wine. Ergo, I opened a bottle of my regular Wednesday night go-to—the Eric Kent 2018 Appellation Series, Sonoma Coast, pinot noir. 

I usually sip this fine, complex red while ensconced on a couch at La Dolce Vita Wine Lounge but alas, sheltering in place precludes me from doing so. Fortunately, the proprietor makes her stock available for no-contact pick-up outside the Petaluma wine lounge at a discounted retail price (about $25). Brilliant. So here we are and this is where the eerie synchronicity begins: On the back of the wine’s tastefully appointed label is an image, one that draws its inspiration from Dada, Surrealism and Pop Art (my holy trifecta), and one that also suddenly took on added resonance—yep, it’s a tiger.

Now, I’m not one to get woo-woo about a picture of a cat on a wine bottle just because there’s one on TV, but my Jungian hackles do get up when, within minutes, I receive a random email with William Blake’s The Tyger copypasta’d in it.

Tyger Tyger, burning bright,

In the forests of the night;

What immortal hand or eye,

Could frame thy fearful symmetry?

Neither my hand nor eye was immortal enough to frame such fearful symmetry, and suffering a childlike propensity for being Jung and easily Freudened, I stood a chance of having a full-blown panic attack had the remedy not been readily at hand—the lush red and black fruit, hints of Asian spice, a whisper of French oak and 14.2 percent alcohol already in my glass. 
“This inaugural bottling is already very pleasing and we’re certain it will reward some near to mid-term cellaring (if you can keep your hands off it),” reads the wine’s romance copy. “Sonoma Coast Pinot lovers will not want to miss this delicious gem.” Here, here. Pair with Joe Exotic, Blake and perhaps Jacques Tourneur’s 1942 film Cat People.

Horoscope: Week of April 9

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Moses did 40 years’ worth of hard work on behalf of his people, delivering them out of slavery in Egypt. Yet God didn’t allow him to enter into the Promised Land. Why? At the end of his travails, he made a minor mistake that angered God beyond reason. Petty? Harsh? Very much so. I’m happy to say that your fate will be very different from Moses’. Some months from now, when your labors bring you to the brink of your own personal version of the Promised Land, not even a small error will prevent you from entering and enjoying it. And what you do in the coming weeks will help ensure that later success.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Built in the third century B.C., the Colossus of Rhodes was a monumental statue of the Greek sun god. It stood in the harbor of the island of Rhodes, and was called one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Alas: An earthquake struck the area 54 years after it was finished, knocking it over and smashing it into fragments. Three centuries later, many of the chunks still lay scattered around the harbor. I offer this as a teaching story, Taurus. If there are any old psychological ruins lying around in your psyche, I encourage you to conduct an imaginary ritual in which you visualize throwing those ruins into a big bonfire. Clear the slate for the new beginnings that will be available once the COVID-19 crisis has settled down.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “Argue with anything else,” writes author Philip Pullman, “but don’t argue with your own nature.” Amen! That’s always good advice for you Geminis, and it will be especially crucial in the coming weeks. A certain amount of disputation and challenging dialogue with other people will be healthy for you, even an effective way to get clarity and advance your aims. (Don’t overdo it, of course.) But you must promise never to quarrel with, or criticize, your own nature. You should aim at being a radiant bastion of inner harmony and a powerhouse of self-love. Do whatever’s necessary to coax all your different aspects to work together in sweet unity.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Like many Cancerians, painter Marc Chagall cultivated an intimate relationship with his dreams and fantasies. His fellow artist Pablo Picasso remarked, “When Chagall paints, you do not know if he is asleep or awake. Somewhere or other inside his head there must be an angel.” Being a Crab myself, I know how essential it is for us to be in close connection with reverie and the imagination. Every now and then, though, there come occasions when the demands of the material world need our extra, focused attention—when our dreamy tendencies need to be rigorously harnessed on behalf of pragmatism. Now is one of those times.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Is there an influence you’re ready to outgrow, Leo? Are there teachers who have given you all they have to offer, and now you need to go in search of new founts of inspiration and education? Have you squeezed all possible value out of certain bright ideas and clever theories that no longer serve you? Are you finished with old sources of excitement that have lost their excitement? These are the kinds of questions I encourage you to ask yourself in the coming weeks. It’ll be a favorable time to celebrate the joyful art of liberation—to graduate from what might have been true once upon a time, and prepare for the wide-open future after the COVID-19 crisis has mellowed.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Your words of power in the coming days are simple: deep, low, down, below, dig, dive and descend. I invite you to meditate on all the ways you can make them work for you as metaphors and use them to activate interesting, nourishing feelings. There’ll be very little worth exploring on the surface of life in the coming weeks, Virgo. All the hottest action and most valuable lessons will be blooming in the fertile darkness. 

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Before the COVID-19 crisis arrived, were you ensconced in roles that were good fits for your specific temperament and set of talents? Did you occupy niches that brought out the best in you and enabled you to offer your best gifts? Were there places that you experienced as power spots—where you felt at home in the world and at peace with your destiny? Once you’ve meditated on those questions for a while, Libra, I’ll ask you to shift gears: Meditate on how you’d like to answer similar questions about your life in the future. Once this crazy time has passed, what roles will be good fits for you? What niches will bring out the best in you? What will be your power spots?

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Fen” is a word that’s not used much these days. It means a marsh or a boggy lowland. Decades ago, Scorpio poet Marianne Moore used it in a short poem. She wrote, “If you will tell me why the fen appears impassable, I will tell you why I think that I can cross it if I try.” In my opinion, that’s an apt battle cry for you right now. You shouldn’t be upset if people tell you that certain things are impossible for you to do. You should be grateful! Their discouragement will rile up your deep intelligence and inspire you to figure out how you can indeed do those things.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Goodness alone is never enough,” wrote author Robert A. Heinlein. “A hard, cold wisdom is required for goodness to accomplish good. Goodness without wisdom always accomplishes evil.” I think that’s an interesting thought for you to consider during the coming weeks, Sagittarius. If you want your care and compassion to be effective, you’ll have to synergize them with tough intelligence. You may even need to be a bit ferocious as you strive to ensure that your worthy intentions succeed and the people you love get what they need.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Are there any ways in which you have been wishy-washy in standing up for what you believe in? Have you shied away from declaring your true thoughts and feelings about important issues that affect you and the people you care about? Have you compromised your commitment to authenticity and integrity for the sake of your ambition or financial gain? In asking you these questions, I am not implying that the answers are yes. But if in fact you have engaged in even a small amount of any of those behaviors, now is an excellent time to make corrections. As much as possible, Capricorn, focus on being trustworthy and transparent.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Physicist Edward Teller believed there is no such thing as “exact science.” And in his view, that’s a good thing. “Science has always been full of mistakes,” he said. But he added that they’re mostly “good mistakes,” motivating scientists to push closer toward the truth. Each new mistake is a better mistake than the last, and explains the available evidence with more accuracy. I suspect that you’ve been going through a similar process in your personal life, Aquarius. And I predict that the good mistakes you’ve recently made will prove to be useful in the long run.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Few astrologers would say that you Pisceans are masters of the obvious or connoisseurs of simplicity. You’re not typically renowned for efficiency or celebrated for directness. Your strength is more likely to be rooted in your emotional riches, your ability to create and appreciate beauty, your power to generate big dreams, and your lyrical perspective on life. So my oracle for you this time may be a bit surprising. I predict that in the coming weeks, your classic attributes will be very useful when applied to well-grounded, down-to-earth activities. Your deep feelings and robust imagination can be indispensable assets in your hard work on the nuts and bolts.

LBC begins online programming

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Since 1981, the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts has hosted national touring artists in its 1,600-seat theater and been the home for locals Left Edge Theatre and Roustabout Theater. Now, the doors to the Santa Rosa art center are shut for the foreseeable future due to the coronavirus outbreak.
Yet, the LBC is more than a building, and the nonprofit organization’s staff now works to continue their various community engagement and education initiatives, shifting to an online format with three free, digital, social-media programs—Let’s Be Creative, Drop the Mic and Luther Locals.
“We knew that we wanted to produce something for the families and students at home, to keep them connected to the arts and arts education,” says Ashleigh Worley, director of education and community engagement. “The other demographic that is important to us is teachers, and what can we offer for schools and teachers that would be helpful.”
Let’s Be Creative is the LBC’s answer to the first part of that equation. The daily video series features interactive lessons in dance, musical instrument care, visual arts and more for kids of all ages. For teachers, the LBC is launching a weekly email list of local resources for teaching classes at home.
The LBC’s other digital programs hope to keep the general public connected to arts as well.
Drop the Mic is a curated content list of online clips, shows and other projects, with weekly topics centered around streaming concerts, comedy culinary arts and more. Luther Locals features a weekly remote performance from a local musician.
“Luther Locals is an idea of how we can engage more with our local artists, because there are so many talented people here,” says Anita Wiglesworth, director of programs and patron services. “The current situation had us shift focus to not only support our local artists, but provide entertainment for our community.”
Luther Locals debuted last week with a video by Sonoma County pianist and singer-songwriter (and former LBC box-office employee) Joni Davis, who performed a darkly melodic original song, “Lyell Canyon,” from her living room.
“I wrote that song a couple years ago,” Davis says. “It came out of a hard time, when I took a minute out of my life to sit and think. When Anita approached me for this idea, I thought of it, because I feel like I’m in that same reflective space with everything that’s going on.”
Luther Burbank Center for the Arts’ digital programs are on
facebook.com/lutherburbankcenter.

Local photographer captures the moment

What began as a way to document this unique historical moment for her own family turned into a community-driven mission for San Rafael mom-and-photographer Cristen Wright.

With her trusty Canon camera in hand, Wright has now set about capturing images of area families sheltering at home—not just for posterity but for the sense of community it engenders. Local media—including producers for local television station KGO, which recently profiled Wright—has noticed. Below is our Q&A with the lauded photographer.

Bohemian: From what I understand, this project began as a way to document your own family’s experience through this historic time. What inspired you to venture out to capture images of other families?

Cristen Wright: Yes, I am always taking photos of my family and when the shelter-in-place started and remote learning for school began I wanted to make sure to document this time for our family. For the first time ever, our calendars have been cleared and we have been given this time to be with our family. I wanted to photograph our journey as a family. A good family friend and neighbor told me about a photographer in his hometown offering “porch sessions”—photographing families on their front porches during the COVID pandemic. I thought it was a great idea and a great way for me to give back to the neighborhood and community I love so much. So many families are at home together, right? I wanted to document that. 

B: How does a “no contact” photoshoot work? What’s your creative process?

CW: Friends and neighbors reach out to me via text and sometimes email. I set up a time to come by their home to do a quick photoshoot of their family from the sidewalk in front of their home and then I am on my way. I send them a text to let them know I am out front and we start when they come out. It only takes a few minutes, all done from a safe distance (I use my telephoto lens), and then … I move on to the next house. All of the families I have photographed are friends or friends-of-friends in our neighborhood.  

B: In the KGO profile (congrats!) it says you captured images of 13 families in a single Saturday—on a bike! How do you find the drive to achieve so much, given what’s happening in the world?  

CW: My husband is a physician and we have numerous friends and family who are physicians around the state and country. I hear what is going on and what our healthcare professionals are facing. I really wanted to give back to our community in some way and to bring some light and joy during a time that for all of us is challenging. Photography is something that I love so I wanted to share it with our neighbors.

B: How have the families you photograph responded to the process and the resultant images? 

CW: Families have been so appreciative! I have had so many families share with me the joy that this has brought them. I will share some of the feedback I have gotten from families …

“Cristen, Thank you for doing what you are doing. I know for a fact it is a light during these times for everyone you photograph.”–Sandee

“Sitting here crying. These are so special. You have no idea how amazing you are. Love you so much.”

“You are the MVP of SIP. Thank you for sharing your amazing talent and joy!!!”

B: I know you’re not charging for these photos (so cool!). Is this work rewarding and is it therapeutic for you as an artist?

CW: Correct, no charge! It is incredibly rewarding to do something for others! I really love capturing the connection between families through photos. It has been really neat to photograph families in front of their homes. Every home is different and each home so special. 

Fire victims question PG&E proposal

A deal intended to allow PG&E to exit bankruptcy protection later this year may have begun to crumble.

Since declaring bankruptcy in January 2019 to shield itself from an estimated $30 billion in liabilities tied to recent wildfires, PG&E has reached agreements with various parties, including insurance companies, stockholders and bondholders.

In March, the utility proposed an updated deal with fire victims. At first, the proposal appeared to be gaining momentum. Gov. Gavin Newsom endorsed the idea and some attorneys representing fire victims began to push their clients to vote in favor of it.

But, in recent weeks, opposition to the deal among fire victims has grown. In the past two weeks, three of eleven members of the Tort Claimants Committee (TCC), a group of 11 fire victims who represents 70 percent of fire victims in bankruptcy court, have resigned in order to publicly criticize PG&E’s latest proposal.

There are many criticisms of the deal, however, the main point of contention around is whether or not the proposed settlement will actually be worth $13.5 billion by the time victims get their share. There are even concerns about when victims will receive payment if they do approve the deal. 

PG&E has promised to pay other groups, including insurance companies, in cash. However, the largest chunk of the victim’s part of the proposed $13.5 billion proposed payout is $6.75 billion in stock options which will be slowly distributed through a trust. 

Now, with a worldwide financial crisis unfolding due to the coronavirus pandemic, those stock options could be far less valuable than victims were once led to believe. 

In a legal filing on Monday, Eric Lowrey, a Certified Restructuring and Insolvency Advisor (CIRA) hired by a separate group of wildfire victims, testified that the victims’ stocks may only be worth $4.85 billion, not $6.75 billion, by the time fire victims gain access to them.

In a document filed Monday, attorneys representing the TCC asked U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Dennis Montali for permission to send a letter to all fire victims informing them of their concerns about the proposed deal. They also requested that victims delay their vote until they have more information about PG&E’s proposal.

“The TCC is requesting the victims to delay voting on the plan, yes or no, until the May 2-15 time period, so the victims can learn whether or not PG&E has fixed these problems before voting,” Michael Carlson of Caymus Vineyards, a TCC member, said in a statement released to the press on Monday, April 6.

Montali had not announced a decision on the request as of press time on Tuesday, April 7.

During a bankruptcy court proceeding Tuesday morning, Stephen Karotkin, a lawyer representing PG&E dismissed the TCC’s claims as “a blatant attempt to renegotiate the deal that they signed” and added that PG&E had never guaranteed the price of the stock, a reporter for Utility Dive, an online industry publication, wrote on Twitter.

Kirk Trostle, a Camp Fire victim who was one of three people to recently resign from the TCC, says he will vote against PG&E’s current proposal and encourages other fire victims to do the same.

“Unless there are significant changes and PG&E guarantees and 100 percent protects $13.5 billion in a fire victims trust fund, I will be opposing the plan,” Trostle told the Bohemian on Tuesday, April 7.

But Trostle doesn’t want other fire victims to take his word about the deal. He is urging other fire victims to read court documents before voting.

“Educate yourself before you vote,” Trostle said. “There’s a lot of misinformation out there.”

Victims have until May 15 to vote. The plan requires two-thirds support to be approved.

Fire victims question PG&E proposal

A deal intended to allow PG&E to exit bankruptcy protection later this year may have begun to crumble.

Since declaring bankruptcy in January 2019 to shield itself from an estimated $30 billion in liabilities tied to recent wildfires, PG&E has reached agreements with various parties, including insurance companies, stockholders and bondholders.

In March, the utility proposed an updated deal with fire victims. At first, the proposal appeared to be gaining momentum. Gov. Gavin Newsom endorsed the idea and some attorneys representing fire victims began to push their clients to vote in favor of it.

But, in recent weeks, opposition to the deal among fire victims has grown. In the past two weeks, three of eleven members of the Tort Claimants Committee (TCC), a group of 11 fire victims who represents 70 percent of fire victims in bankruptcy court, have resigned in order to publicly criticize PG&E’s latest proposal.

There are many criticisms of the deal, however, the main point of contention around is whether or not the proposed settlement will actually be worth $13.5 billion by the time victims get their share. There are even concerns about when victims will receive payment if they do approve the deal. 

PG&E has promised to pay other groups, including insurance companies, in cash. However, the largest chunk of the victim’s part of the proposed $13.5 billion proposed payout is $6.75 billion in stock options which will be slowly distributed through a trust. 

Now, with a worldwide financial crisis unfolding due to the coronavirus pandemic, those stock options could be far less valuable than victims were once led to believe. 

In a legal filing on Monday, Eric Lowrey, a Certified Restructuring and Insolvency Advisor (CIRA) hired by a separate group of wildfire victims, testified that the victims’ stocks may only be worth $4.85 billion, not $6.75 billion, by the time fire victims gain access to them.

In a document filed Monday, attorneys representing the TCC asked U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Dennis Montali for permission to send a letter to all fire victims informing them of their concerns about the proposed deal. They also requested that victims delay their vote until they have more information about PG&E’s proposal.

“The TCC is requesting the victims to delay voting on the plan, yes or no, until the May 2-15 time period, so the victims can learn whether or not PG&E has fixed these problems before voting,” Michael Carlson of Caymus Vineyards, a TCC member, said in a statement released to the press on Monday, April 6.

Montali had not announced a decision on the request as of press time on Tuesday, April 7.

During a bankruptcy court proceeding Tuesday morning, Stephen Karotkin, a lawyer representing PG&E dismissed the TCC’s claims as “a blatant attempt to renegotiate the deal that they signed” and added that PG&E had never guaranteed the price of the stock, a reporter for Utility Dive, an online industry publication, wrote on Twitter.

Kirk Trostle, a Camp Fire victim who was one of three people to recently resign from the TCC, says he will vote against PG&E’s current proposal and encourages other fire victims to do the same.

“Unless there are significant changes and PG&E guarantees and 100 percent protects $13.5 billion in a fire victims trust fund, I will be opposing the plan,” Trostle told the Bohemian on Tuesday, April 7.

But Trostle doesn’t want other fire victims to take his word about the deal. He is urging other fire victims to read court documents before voting.

“Educate yourself before you vote,” Trostle said. “There’s a lot of misinformation out there.”

Victims have until May 15 to vote. The plan requires two-thirds support to be approved.

Elevated With Legacy

Soon after California’s Department of Public Health lodged cannabis-industry laborers on the state’s “essential workforce,” and therefore not required to stay at home, David Drips, 39, and his business partner, Zac Hansen, 28, began performing essential tasks on a windswept, 300-acre farm in West Sonoma County. The fierce wind, along with county regulations and regulators, seems to have given Drips and Hansen more trouble than the coronavirus, at least so far. Neither of them has been physically ill.

At 410 feet above sea level, I had a spectacular view of Sonoma Mountain, Taylor Mountain and the Cotati Grade on Highway 101. 

Drips sat down, rolled a fatty, fired it up and inhaled. If he was stoned, I couldn’t tell. I didn’t need his joint, and wouldn’t have taken it even if he had offered.

In a text that morning, my friends at the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) urged me and all cannabis consumers not to share pipes, joints and bongs, and, if-and-when possible, to turn to tinctures and edibles since they don’t stress lungs. Those NORML friends also urged the use of 90-percent-plus Isopropyl Alcohol to rid germs and pathogens from delivery systems.

Before I met with Drips and Hansen, I bought gummies at my local dispensary, and after consuming just one I was high. Tens, if not hundreds of thousands, of other Californians were also high. In the wake of the virus, cannabis sales have boomed, according to one source, by more than 200 percent. Last year legal cannabis sales in California topped $3 billion, while the illicit market came in at just under $9 billion.

Drips and Hansen, both in T-shirts and jeans, started their business on Petaluma Hill Road. Hence the name of their company, “Petaluma Hill Farms,” which they’ve retained, though they were forced to move to Two Rock Road where there are more rocks and cattle than human beings.

“We were fucked by the Sonoma County Planning Department,” Drips says. “We understand the need for some rules, but the county has used too big an axe, so a lot of my friends have been cut out of the industry. The only option for Zac and me has been to adapt. We moved from a parcel zoned RR, or “Rural Residential,” to LEA, or “Land Extensive Agriculture District.”

The 300-acre-parcel is well suited for cannabis. There are no schools or school kids nearby, and no next-door neighbors who might go to court to stop them. The cannabis garden itself is set back 900 feet from the road. There are no creeks to protect and no trees that might need to be chopped down to provide more sunlight. 

“We have all the sun we need,” Drips says. “Plus good soil and lots of clean water. That equals good marijuana.”

Drips isn’t your ordinary California pot farmer, though few—if any—pot farmers are “ordinary.” Over the past 40 years, I have met scores of them: the law abiding and the outlaws, the environmentally conscious, the greedy and the compassionate. Drips keeps on keeping on and abides by best industry practices. Hundreds, if not thousands, of growers—some of them his friends—once cultivated modest commercial gardens in and around Sebastopol and were pushed out by legalization, taxation and regulation.  

“I have faith in what we do at our farm,” Drips says. “I believe in marijuana sociologically, economically, medically, spiritually and more. I can’t see doing any other job, though I have worked in construction.”

Hansen adds, “I love this work.”

A graduate of Rancho Cotate High School, where he played lacrosse, Hansen has grown cannabis ever since he turned 16. His 8-year-old daughter attends school in Rohnert Park, his hometown.

Like Hansen, Drips knows and loves Sonoma County, though he was born in Stockton, has traveled widely and has lived in Louisiana, Florida and Virginia.

“America is a beautiful place,” he says. “Though there’s no place more beautiful than here.”

What makes Drips stand out more than anyone else in the field of marijuana cultivation is that he served for five years in the U.S. Navy, and was deployed in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan. 

“The military helped me to grow as a person,” he says. “I visited 23 different countries and acquired a foundation of knowledge.”

Sonoma County officials may not know his military background and training. He doesn’t brag about it, though he’s not hiding it either. Assertive without being aggressive, he’s ready to fight the good fight. 

“The county is waging a war of attrition against marijuana growers,” Drips explains. “They want us to fail. They hope that we’ll pack up, clear out and not come back.”  

Drips says he has no beef with most of the county supervisors, including Linda Hopkins, Shirlee Zane and Susan Gorin. He’s attended enough meetings to know them and he’s spoken out so often that he’s made a name for himself as an advocate for the cannabis industry. But let’s be absolutely clear: He doesn’t appreciate the folks at Code Enforcement who have hammered away at him and at other growers sometimes, it seems, just to be ornery. 

Drips has had a series of verbal skirmishes with officials who want him to jump through one hoop after another: build a fence, plant trees to hide the fence, pave a road in case of fire and more.

Drips hasn’t minded spending money on essentials at Friedman’s Home Improvement and Harmony Farm Supply & Nursery, and paying Weeks Drilling and Pump for a well. In fact, he points out that he and his fellow marijuana farmers have helped to keep local businesses afloat through drought and fire. 

“I have not taken any corporate investment,” Drips says. “It’s all personal savings, though a friend gave me a $30,000 personal loan.” 

He’s received counsel from a half-dozen lawyers, including Joe Rogoway, Omar Figueroa and Lauren Mendelsohn. Drips and the growers who have his back, as he has theirs, recently revived the dormant Hessel Grange, which now, for the first time, has an emphasis on cannabis farmers and farming.

“Some of us feel like we’ve been denied our basic rights,” Drips says, “But we still believe in the American Dream.” 

His son Donough attends elementary school and his stepson Joshua goes to high school. Drips would like them to inherit the business and become farmers.

The Show Must Go On(line) at Marin Theatre Company

Marin Theatre Company, Mill Valley’s acclaimed nonprofit live theater institution, was right in the middle of a world-premiere production of “Love” by playwright Kate Cortesi when the shelter-in-place order halted all social gatherings.

Though the doors to the theater are closed, the show must go on; and Marin Theatre Company has transitioned to online streaming to finish the run of the new dramatic play, about a woman at a crossroads when a male friend and former lover is accused of harassment by a group of women.

All ticket holders with valid emails have been contacted with instructions on how to stream the video of the new production from their home, and virtual tickets are also available for streaming through Sunday, April 12.

Find details and purchase virtual tickets to “Love” on MTC’s website.

How the Coronavirus Came Between the Logan Whitehurst Doc and You

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As the timetable for the coronavirus outbreak and the subsequent stay-at-home response continue to lengthen into May and beyond, more and more events and planned creative projects are being shelved for a later date or being canceled outright.

The recently crowdfunded documentary Your Friend Logan: The 4-Track Mind of Logan Whitehurst, about late North Bay–musician Logan Whitehurst, is the latest endeavor to suffer from the sheltering orders. Director Conner Nyberg announced today on the project’s Kickstarter site that the production, planned to begin this summer, has been delayed at least a year due to the current pandemic.

As reported in the Pacific Sun in February, the documentary, helmed by the South Carolina–based Nyberg and North Bay–producer-and-performer Matlock Zumsteg, will include interviews with dozens of people who knew Whitehurst best and incorporate Whitehurst’s original animations and rare archive material to create an intimate and celebratory film

Nyberg’s statement on the delay notes that several of the interviewees are high-risk for coronavirus and the disease COVID-19, and that one interviewee was recently quarantined. The 20-year-old Nyberg also begins film school fall semester, meaning the earliest he and Zumsteg now predict that filming can begin is summer of 2021.

That said, the production crew remains hard at work prepping the film’s production, including combing through archival footage from Whitehurst’s life in music and art.

Read the full statement from Nyberg below:

Hi everyone. Some bad news today.

When the fundraiser ended, COVID-19 just began to spread in the States. At the time, Matlock (our producer) and I were cautiously optimistic, believing that once the initial panic had worn off, things would be able to carry on as usual. 

Needless to say, that hasn’t been the case, and it appears that things still have ways to go before it starts to get better again. Several of our interviewees are high-risk (one interviewee was recently quarantined), and if projections are true, we’ll be expecting a second wind from this virus when school starts back up in the fall.

So we’ve decided to indefinitely postpone production.

Like everyone else, we’re taking this all day by day, but if we had to give an ETA for when we’ll be able to start back up production, our best estimate would be Summer 2021. This is keeping in mind that this virus probably will not totally blow over until the end of the year, and that I’ll be starting my first year of university this fall.

That being said, work on the documentary is not over. Far from it – we’re taking advantage of this situation to get even more done. This has given us even more preparation time, a chance to collect more resources, and more time to focus on getting rewards out to all of you.

Speaking of which, there are only a handful of people who haven’t yet completed their reward surveys! Please fill those out as soon as you can, so that we can try and get the batch of Needlejuice rewards out at one time.

We apologize for such a large delay. This is as unusual of a situation as it gets, and we hope you understand. We also hope that all of you are safe and that you’ll stay safe. 

Thank you for all of your support so far, and we will continue to keep you guys updated on this awesome project.

Your friend,

Conner

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