County approves work plan for San Geronimo Watershed

After over a decade of back and forth on a policy to resuscitate the Coho Salmon population in central Marin’s San Geronimo Watershed, the Marin County Board of Supervisors last week approved a plan for the first phase of a proposed environmental-remediation strategy.

“Coho were once plentiful in the natural waters that drain into Tomales Bay and the Pacific Ocean, but recent spawning counts were well below the federal recovery target needed to bring the salmon out of its endangered status,” a county press release states.

The board expects the Stream Conservation Area (SCA) Ordinance for the San Geronimo Valley, which includes considerations of stream and wildlife impacts, to be finished in early 2021, according to the press release. 

The work plan comes over a decade after the Salmon Protection and Watershed Network (SPAWN) sued the county over an Environmental Impact Report (EIR) the county prepared in 2007. 

In 2014, a state appeals court concluded that the county’s first EIR was partially inadequate. Last September, SPAWN sued the county once again, alleging that the new EIR is not strong enough either.

County to Open New Affordable Senior Living Complex

Applications to live in Victory Village, a new county-subsidized housing complex for seniors in Fairfax, are now open.

The complex, which cost $35.6 million and was years in the planning, includes 53 single family homes. Officials set aside 11 homes for people transitioning away from homelessness. They also designated 28 of the units for people with mobility impairments. 

The county allows anyone 62 years old or older and making less than $72,500 per year to apply, according to a press release from the county. Each unit will hold up to three people.

More information about the application process is available on the Marin Housing Authority’s website, www.MarinHousing.org/victory-village-senior-housing

Marin Ranked Second Healthiest County in State

A New York City healthcare startup has ranked Marin County as the second healthiest county in the state in a recent analysis of eight equally-weighted factors.

The analysis weighed factors including the percentage of residents who smoke (10 percent), the percentage who have healthcare (95 percent) and life expectancy (85.1 years). San Francisco is the healthiest county in the state, according to Voro’s analysis.

Voro, a web platform with venture-capital backing, allows users to rate and review doctors, while making medical decisions.

While the startup doesn’t have a Marin County connection, cofounder and CEO Tomas Hoyos says the company is trying to publish more information which can help users make better choices, including using public healthcare options like Medicaid.

“We’re starting to publish information about areas other than doctors which ties in with our mission: inspire better health for people and communities everywhere,” Hoyos says.

Horoscope

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Do you feel ready to change your mind about an idea or belief or theory that has been losing its usefulness? Would you consider changing your relationship with a once-powerful influence that is becoming less crucial to your life-long goals? Is it possible you have outgrown one of your heroes or teachers? Do you wonder if maybe it’s time for you to put less faith in a certain sacred cow or overvalued idol? According to my analysis of your astrological omens, you’ll benefit from meditating on these questions during the coming weeks. 

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): When she was alive more than 2,500 years ago, the Greek poet Sappho was so famous for her lyrical creations that people referred to her as “The Poetess” and the “10th Muse.” (In Greek mythology, there were nine muses, all goddesses.) She was a prolific writer who produced over 10,000 lines of verse, and even today she remains one of the world’s most-celebrated poets. I propose that we make her your inspirational role model for the coming months. In my view, you’re poised to generate a wealth of enduring beauty in your own chosen sphere. Proposed experiment: Regard your daily life as an art project.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Have you ever dropped out of the daily grind for a few hours or even a few days so as to compose a master plan for your life? The coming weeks will be an excellent time to give yourself that necessary luxury. According to my analysis, you’re entering a phase when you’ll generate good fortune for yourself if you think deep thoughts about how to create your future. What would you like the story of your life to be on March 1, 2025? How about March 1, 2030? And March 1, 2035? I encourage you to consult your soul’s code and formulate an inspired, invigorating blueprint for the coming years. Write it down!

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian novelist William Makepeace Thackeray (1811–1863) is famous for Vanity Fair, a satirical panorama of 19th-century British society. The phrase “Vanity Fair” had been previously used, though with different meanings, in the Bible’s book of Ecclesiastes, as well as in works by John Bunyan and St. Augustine. Thackeray was lying in bed near sleep one night when the idea flew into his head to use it for his own story. He was so thrilled, he leaped up and ran around his room chanting “Vanity Fair! Vanity Fair!” I’m foreseeing at least one epiphany like this for you in the coming weeks, Cancerian. What area of your life needs a burst of delicious inspiration?

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Who loves you best, Leo? Which of your allies and loved ones come closest to seeing you and appreciating you for who you really are? Of all the people in your life, which have done most to help you become the soulful star you want to be? Are there gem-like characters on the peripheries of your world that you would like to draw nearer? Are there energy drains that you’ve allowed to play too prominent a role? I hope you’ll meditate on questions like these in the coming weeks. You’re in a phase when you can access a wealth of useful insights and revelations about how to skillfully manage your relationships. It’s also a good time to reward and nurture those allies who have given you so much.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Doom and gloom dominate the forecasts made by many prophets. They experience perverse glee in predicting, for example, that all the rain forests and rivers will be owned by greedy corporations by 2050, or that extraterrestrial invaders who resemble crocodiles will take control of the U.S. government “for the good of the American people,” or that climate change will eventually render chocolate and bananas obsolete. That’s not how I operate. I deplore the idea that it’s only the nasty prognostications that are interesting. In that spirit, I make the following forecasts: The number of homeless Virgos will decrease dramatically in the near future, as will the number of dreamhome-less Virgos. In fact, I expect you folks will experience extra amounts of domestic bliss in the coming months. You may feel more at home in the world than ever before.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I don’t require everyone I learn from to be an impeccable saint. If I vowed to draw inspiration only from those people who flawlessly embody every one of my ethical principles, there’d be no one to be inspired by. Even one of my greatest heroes, Martin Luther King Jr., cheated on his wife and plagiarized parts of his doctoral dissertation. Where do you stand on this issue, Libra? I bet you will soon be tested. How much imperfection is acceptable to you?

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Scorpio comedian John Cleese cofounded the troupe Monty Python more than 50 years ago, and he has been generating imaginative humor ever since. I suggest we call on his counsel as you enter the most creative phase of your astrological cycle. “This is the extraordinary thing about creativity,” he says. “If you just keep your mind resting against the subject in a friendly but persistent way, sooner or later you will get a reward from your unconscious.” Here’s another one of Cleese’s insights that will serve you well: “The most creative people have learned to tolerate the slight discomfort of indecision for much longer, and so, just because they put in more pondering time, their solutions are more creative.”

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian philosopher Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677) developed a vigorous and expansive vision. That’s why he became a leading intellectual influence in the era known as the Enlightenment. But because of his inventive, sometimes controversial ideas, he was shunned by his fellow Jews and had his books listed on the Catholic Church’s Index of Forbidden Books. Understandably, he sometimes felt isolated. To compensate, he spent lots of time alone taking wide-ranging journeys in his imagination. Even if you have all the friends and social stimulation you need, I hope you will follow his lead in the coming weeks—by taking wide-ranging journeys in your imagination. It’s time to roam and ramble in inner realms.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Absolute reason expired at 11 o’clock last night,” one character tells another in Henrik Ibsen’s play Peer Gynt. I’m happy to report that a different development is on the verge of occurring for you, Capricorn. In recent days, there may have been less than an ideal amount of reason and logic circulating in your world. But that situation will soon change. The imminent outbreak of good sense, rigorous sanity and practical wisdom will be quite tonic. Take advantage of this upcoming grace period. Initiate bold actions that are well-grounded in objective, rather than subjective, truth.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Renowned Aquarian composer Franz Schubert (1797–1828) created more than 700 compositions, some of which are still played by modern musicians. Many of his works were written on and for the piano—and yet he was so poor that he never owned a piano. If there has been a similar situation in your life, Aquarius—a lack of some crucial tool or support due to financial issues—I see the coming weeks as being an excellent time to set in motion the plans that will enable you to overcome and cure that problem.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In 1908, British playwright W. Somerset Maugham reached the height of success. Four of his plays were being performed concurrently in four different London theaters. If you were ever in your life going to achieve anything near this level of overflowing popularity or attention, I suspect it would be this year. And if that’s a development you would enjoy and thrive on, I think the coming weeks will be an excellent time to set your intention and take audacious measures.

Advice Goddess

Q: I’ve had two close female friends “ghost” me in five months. I’ve known each for 15 years. (They don’t know each other, and one lives out of state.) I’ve tried repeatedly to contact each, asking, “Did I do anything to hurt or offend you?” No response. I want the truth so I can move on.—Baffled  

A: There comes a time when you wish someone would treat you with a little more kindness, like by screaming out all the reasons you deserve to be left for dead.

Even more painful than being dumped by a friend is being dumped by a friend and having no idea why. Lingering questions we can’t answer are mental weevils. Their fave food is our peace of mind, which they gnaw through at random moments. In scientific terms, psychologist Bluma Zeigarnik found that when we have unfinished business, the mind remains in a “state of tension” until we get closure. 

Because of the way our memory is engineered, questions that are both unanswered and unanswerable eat away at us. Psychologist Robert Bjork explains that we encode information into memory by first taking it in, then taking a break from it, and later going back and retrieving it. Each “retrieval” is a “learning event,” burnishing the info more deeply into memory. So, each time you pull up this unanswerable question, “Why did these friends ditch me?” you move it closer to the front row of your consciousness.

To shove it back to the crappier seats, consider the apparent function of nagging questions: pushing us to figure things out. (We can’t learn from our mistakes unless we know what they were.) Though “Why did they ditch me?” will likely remain a mystery, there are constructive questions you can answer, like, “Am I generally a good friend? Are there ways I fell short?” 

Also consider whether you have shared values. We like to believe this is the basis of our friendships. However, I love the finding by psychologist Mitja Back that we tend to form friendships through “mere proximity”—like being next-door neighbors.

Another way to cut the spin cycle is by imagining a plausible reason each disappeared on you and accepting it as THE reason. Psychologist Elizabeth Loftus finds that recalling an event we were told about but didn’t actually experience can implant it in memory, turning it into an experience we swear we had. So, the more you reflect on the plausible reason, the more it might pass for the actual one.

Finally, you could try to make peace with the mystery. When “Why did they ditch me?” swings around, have a stock answer at the ready: “I’ve decided to accept that I just can’t know, and I’m good with that.” 

Q: Why are men okay with living in gross conditions? The guy I started dating is a sweetheart, but his place is absolutely disgusting (including the kitchen and bathroom). He doesn’t even notice it. Why do women seem to have a higher standard for cleanliness than men?—Dismayed

A: Some men do wait a while to clean the bathroom—like until they go from needing a bottle of Mr. Clean to needing a bottle of Mr. Arson.

Science suggests you’re right in observing that men, generally speaking, are less disturbed by gross living conditions. Study after study finds higher “disgust sensitivity” in women, meaning women tend to be more icked out by signs of pathogens—bacteria and microorganisms—and indications of possible infection or disease.

Evolutionary psychologist Diana Fleischman explains that women have faced recurring issues over evolutionary history that may have led to “heightened pathogen disgust sensitivity.” These include women’s temporary declines in immunity during the menstrual cycle and pregnancy. “Women also must protect children and infants who are vulnerable (to) disease.” Additionally, women are “uniquely able” to pass infections on to their offspring during pregnancy, birth and breastfeeding.

Let the guy know you’re a woman with needs: clean sheets and towels, a clean bathroom and kitchen, and general housekeeping at his place. Suggest options (rather than telling him what to do): He could clean the place himself; however, hiring a cleaning service (especially for the first go-round) might be a good idea. Professionals have vastly higher standards for cleanliness, while he seems to be waiting for a sign to scour the place—like the crud on the coffee table growling at him when he sets down his beer.

Fight over ballot measure heats up

Last week, the total spending on a ballot measure to extend the funding mechanism powering the North Bay’s new train for an additional 30 years ticked past $2 million. In less than a month, spending on the ballot measure went through the roof, making it the most expensive election in the region’s history.

Measure I, a ballot measure up for consideration by voters in Sonoma and Marin counties on March 3, will extend the quarter cent sales tax funding the Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit (SMART) from 2029 until 2059.

On paper, SMART is a perfect vehicle to mend fences between business groups, environmentalists and public transit advocates.

Developers will get to build up downtown by taking advantage of state and local incentives, potentially weaning North Bay cities off of their car addiction and boosting cities’ revenues. The last SMART sales tax measure, passed in 2008, had the support of bicycling advocacy groups. Many labor unions have also backed the bond this time, presumably because construction projects will give workers local jobs.

But a sudden infusion of money into the “no” campaign and a lack of support from bicycle groups this time around have made the campaign far more uncertain than its backers may have expected when they placed it on the ballot last fall.

Cash Infusions

Since Jan. 7, Molly Gallaher Flater, a business executive at the Sonoma County-based Gallaher Homes and Poppy Bank, has contributed over $1 million into NotSoSMART.org, a campaign committee aiming to stop Measure I in its tracks.

In response, the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria contributed $1 million to Stay Green, Keep SMART 2020, the committee supporting Measure I, on Jan. 29. Measure I is also backed with some money from business interests, labor unions, and SMART contractors. The Sonoma County Alliance, a business group, has endorsed the measure as have many elected officials from both counties.

Eric Lucan, the president of SMART’s board of directors and a supporter of Measure I, says that the extension will let the agency refinance hundreds of millions of dollars in debt over a longer period of time, allowing SMART to pay about $6 million per year instead of $18 million per year as it is now. SMART will reinvest that additional $12 million into maintaining service levels and various construction projects, Lucan says.

Since beginning service in August 2017, the train has carried 1.6 million passengers, according to SMART. In December, SMART opened a station in Larkspur, allowing riders to more easily travel to San Francisco.

If Measure I doesn’t pass, SMART will have some reckoning to do. The agency’s current projected budget assumes that Measure I will pass. If it doesn’t, the agency will have to reconsider its calculations.

“If the measure does not pass, there will need to be some difficult decisions that are made,” Lucan says. “We’d most likely be looking at service cuts and reducing train trips so that we could continue to make debt service payments and manage the budget.”

Some North Bay residents have long opposed the train, arguing that it is a waste of tax-payer funds that is largely unaccountable to the public. But SMART’s opponents never had too much money to oppose the alliance supporting the train.

The “no” campaign argues that SMART is behind schedule and over-budget on many of the goals it laid out during the Measure Q campaign in 2008, including completing the construction of the railroad. Mike Arnold, an economist and longtime critic of SMART who serves as treasurer of the NotSoSMART.org campaign committee, did not respond to a request for an interview.

Bicycle Concerns

The Sonoma County Bicycle Coalition and Marin County Bicycle Coalition are both taking no position on Measure I.

In separate announcements published last week, both groups stated that, although they backed Measure Q in 2008 and understand the need for additional public transportation options, they cannot support Measure I due to concerns about slow progress on a bike path running parallel to the tracks over the past ten years and a lack of a timeline for the completion of a bike path in Measure I.

Eris Weaver, the executive director of the Sonoma County Bicycle Coalition, said she is also concerned about a lack of transparency from the agency when she asked staffers questions about progress on the bike path.

An expenditure plan passed along with Measure Q promised to guide tax proceeds towards the construction of a “bicycle/pedestrian pathway from Cloverdale in Sonoma County to Larkspur in Marin County.”

But progress on the bicycle-pedestrian path has been slow. So far, about 24 miles of the path in both counties has been completed, according to SMART.

While she understands that SMART brought in less tax revenue than expected and cuts to bike projects were necessary, Weaver says that the cuts to the bike path were disproportionate.

Ultimately, both groups decided not to support or oppose Measure I in part due to a lack of a timeline to complete the bike paths. Weaver says she and her colleagues have had trouble getting information about expenditures on the bike path from SMART.

Then, while drafting Measure I, SMART’s board of directors turned down two of the bicyclist groups suggested changes.

“Neither the text of Measure I nor the appended Expenditure Plan include a timeline or guaranteed funding for the bicycle and pedestrian pathway; and language included in the 2008 plan that required SMART to prioritize any unanticipated revenue windfalls for construction of the pathway has been removed,” the Sonoma County Bicycle Coalition wrote in a post announcing their decision.

“We’re going to do everything that we can to complete that path,” Lucan said in response, arguing that refinancing SMART’s debt could allow the agency to put more money towards completing the paths, even though there isn’t a formal timeline for the completion of the paths.

The Gig Is Up for Arts

What is the definition of the word “artist?”

Should it be defined by artists themselves, or by politicians? What happens when theater companies are told their actors, designers and directors are “workers” and must be treated as such?

We’re about to find out.

A new state law that most Californians believed was designed to protect Uber and Lyft drivers from exploitation went into effect on New Year’s Day, bringing unexpected consequences and spreading confusion and fear across an array of industries. These “industries” include arts nonprofits and theater companies, along with the actors, musicians and designers who collaborate with them. As not-for-profit organizations struggle to comply with the law, many say the law’s strict requirements could mean the end of community theater as we know it.

In the North Bay, the law—Assembly Bill 5 (AB-5)—which has been in effect just over a month, is already changing the way theaters have operated for more than a century. With little warning, theaters are struggling to turn short-term, temporary artists into employees. Though some Marin County and Sonoma County theater artists say it’s about time that experienced actors were paid what they are worth, others point out that most small theater companies simply can’t survive the economic burden the law requires of them, insisting it will end up hurting the very people it was designed to help.

“The law was advertised as being directed at a certain industry when it was passed,” says Julie Baker of Californians for the Arts. “The scope was not something that people in the arts anticipated.”

A California-based advocacy and education organization formed to build public awareness around the value and impact of the arts and the creative sector, Californians For the Arts has been working with legislators to bring some clarity to the law, which has left many artists and nonprofits thoroughly confused—and in a very tight spot.

“The legislation was signed in 2019, and till then, nobody was sure what was going to be in it, and then suddenly, it’s going to be law on January 1,” Baker said. The timing was especially bad, she said, as the majority of the state’s theater companies had already set their seasons and fiscal year budgets by then.

Authored by San Diego Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez and signed into law last September by Gavin Newsom, AB-5—commonly called the “Gig Worker Bill” as it worked its way through the legislature—establishes narrow new restrictions on how independent contractors can be defined.

At a town-hall meeting held on Thursday, Feb. 6 at Santa Rosa’s Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, artists and representatives from dozens of North Bay theater companies gathered to ask questions, express their concerns and openly call for more clarification as to what, exactly, the new law demands. Present were representatives of Marin County’s Novato Theater Company, Ross Valley Players and the Mountain Play, plus Sonoma County’s Main Stage West, 6th Street Playhouse, Spreckels Performing Arts Center, the Imaginists and Cinnabar Theater. Emotions in the room ran high for the duration of the meeting’s 90-minute runtime.

“Has the state even looked at the financial impact of the probable dissolution of all these small arts organizations?” asked Executive Director Diane Dragone, of Cinnabar Theater, during a session with nonprofit lawyers. “As written, we all know this law is never going to allow us to sustain our operations; not for a lot of us. What kind of impact will that have on the state, to lose so many artists and arts organizations? Who’s going to be left?”

The panel of experts, which included lawyers and professional arts advocates (including Baker), had little comfort to give, beyond a general admonition to follow the law and wait for the courts to work out the details.

Samantha Kimpel, creative coordinator for Creative Sonoma—a division of the Sonoma County Economic Development Board—set the tone early on.

“It is a challenging time,” Kimpel said. “We are here tonight because we’re all committed to working in the arts. We want to come together and try to get through this.”

The present crisis can be traced back to April 30, 2018, when the California Supreme Court issued the Dynamix Decision, which changed existing laws on how independent contractors are classified.

“Basically, it made it much more difficult to classify someone as an independent contractor,” Baker said. “To clarify what was intended, the court adopted an ABC test.”

Under the ABC test, a “worker” can be classified as an independent contractor only if the following three factors apply:

  1. “The worker is free from the control and direction of the hiring company in connection with the performance of the work, both under the contract for the performance of the work and in fact.” In other words, the worker does not answer to any authority, or isn’t required to follow an authority’s directions or arrive and depart at any particular time. The “worker” is their own boss.
  1. “The worker performs work that is outside the usual course of the hiring company’s business,” meaning if they are a juggling circus clown doing a show as entertainment during a tech company’s annual picnic, the clown is an independent contractor, not a temporary employee, since putting on juggling shows is not what that company does on a day-to-day basis.
  1. The worker is “customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, or business of the same nature as the work performed for the hiring entity.” In other words, if you are a juggling circus clown hired by a circus to entertain audiences who have come to see a circus, even for a day or a week, then you are not an independent contractor.

As written in the law, a hiring entity’s failure to prove any one of these prerequisites will be enough to establish that the worker is an included employee, not an excluded independent contractor.

“We’ve been speaking to legislators about how the arts work,” Baker said. “We’ve tried to explain that the arts don’t fit into that one-size-fits-all mold. AB-5 is intended to provide protections for people against exploitation. That’s not a bad thing. But for those in the arts who want to remain independent, it’s a painful thing, because it affects their own flexibility, it affects how they do their taxes and their expense deductions, it affects their intellectual property rights—because once you do something as an employee, the company owns whatever that piece of work is.”

According to Baker, all those hours spent with legislators did result in one change to the law: the inclusion of “fine arts” as an exemption alongside grant writers, marketing professionals, travel agents and others.

“‘Fine arts,’ that’s what we got,” Baker said, shrugging. “But what does that mean? There is no definition of ‘fine artist’ anywhere in the legislation. I used to own an art gallery; I think I know what a fine artist is. The definition is intentionally broad, Gonzalez has admitted. The author herself, if you follow her on Twitter, has said that ‘fine arts’ was intended to be that broad, but that in her mind it includes people like musicians.”

According to Baker, Assemblywoman Gonzalez had, just that day, tweeted an announcement that more clarity about what constitutes a “fine artist” would be coming in the future.

“So now we wait and see,” she said.

“Personally,” remarked Elly Lichenstein, Cinnabar’s artistic director, “I’m a bit livid that after spending my life as an artist, I’m now being told that I don’t know what an artist is, that I have to wait for a group of politicians to decide whether I’m an artist or not.”

“I’m just hoping that ‘fine artists’ includes lighting designers and sound designers for theaters,” said Santa Rosa sound technician Dough Faxon. “That’s an art, too. I work in community theater, for little 72-seat theaters. There are a lot of people who make a stage show happen, and there’s art all through it.”

Meanwhile, Baker pointed out that another bill, AB-1850, has been introduced by Gonzalez, while eight other pieces of legislation, most of those others designed to either repeal AB-5 or alter it, have also been introduced. Gonzalez’s new bill would reportedly “clarify” the AB-5 distinctions. Additionally, Gonzalez has announced that $20 million dollars of emergency funds will be made available to certain qualified organizations and individuals, to—in Baker’s words—“manage the transition to AB-5.”

She advised those in attendance not to become too hopeful the law will be repealed, or to hold their breaths waiting for actors and sound designers to be reclassified among the exempted “fine artists.” Several unions operating in the state, including Actors Equity—which is staunchly in favor of AB-5—have publicly stated they will mobilize against any effort to have actors and other theater artists added to the list of exempted parties.

“AB-5 is not getting repealed any time soon,” Baker said. “What we’re suggesting to you, in terms of our advocacy, is that if AB-5 is causing you to reduce programs, close programs and even potentially close your organization—and we are hearing these stories all around the state—then you need to tell your elected official. Send them a letter, there’s a template on our website. It matters. The more they hear from real people telling real stories, the harder it will be for them to pretend this is not having a major impact on the people who elect them.”

This is part one in an ongoing series on the impact of AB-5 on the North Bay arts community.

Sausalito’s Bump Bar serves up the caviar

How many Sausalito residents are aware that their town is home to a key player in the local restaurant industry? The California Caviar Company, supplying restaurants such as Petit Crenn and SPQR with top-notch caviar, has been operating in Sausalito since 2007, with a tasting room and a packing facility just a few steps away from downtown. It might not have been on your radar if you’re not a caviar connoisseur, but now, with the launch of the Bump Bar—a revamped space with a nightly dinner option and caviar service—even those who weren’t aware have easy access to the good eats. Come in, do a bump by licking the precious product straight from your hand, or stay—and it’s worth it—for the whole menu.

Company-founder Deborah Keane and Executive Chef Nate Tauer, previously of the Michelin-starred Coi in San Francisco, are behind the new endeavor. They recruited additional Coi alumni, Wine Director Danielle Megears and Sous Chef Fernando Arias, to help out in the tiny, open kitchen. The seating, with a 20-person maximum, is primarily around the bar, with Tauer and Arias cooking and Megears pouring bubbles right in front of the diners.

“It took me five years to obtain the liquor license,” Keane says, when I ask her about the timing. “Until now, we have been able to do some tasting and demos, but people really want to have that caviar and champagne experience, so we’re really happy to bring it to the next level.”

The next level is all the way up—alongside domestic and imported caviar flights ($75 and $160) and a caviar service with plump blinis, pickled onions and other elevated treats (ranging from $18 to $182). There’s also an a-la-carte menu and a $125 tasting menu. The latter delivers seven artfully executed dishes, placed on vintage dinnerware and paired with champagne.

“There’s something for everyone,” Keane says, adding that the whole menu, aside from the caviar service, is brand-new.

Those who don’t want to commit to a full-blown caviar extravaganza can order delicious bites like the croquettes ($12) with country ham, scallion and pressed caviar (a result of a collaboration between Keane and the legendary French chef Jacques Pepin) or the delicate fluke crudo ($19) with konbu, black lime, sea lettuce and white sturgeon caviar. Every item, small or large, delivers a singular flavor combination worthy of a proper Michelin establishment, the taste enhanced by the Bump Bar’s decidedly intimate, unbuttoned atmosphere.

“Many times in fine dining the caviar is the highlight, but we’re able to use it as an ingredient—it plays more of a part in the orchestra,” Tauer Says. He built the menu relying on Keane’s expertise. “Some people are just purists, and that’s totally cool—that’s why we have the tasting experience.”

But for adventurous eaters, Tauer has many surprises in store, current and upcoming.

“Right now the menu is really fish-centered, but I’m thinking, let’s stretch our legs a little bit, let’s do things that are a little experimental,” Tauer says. “For example, we have a dish with fish, pineapple and chicken jus, and it was surprising even to us that it worked so well!”

Working at Bump Bar does come with its challenges. Tauer commutes from San Francisco, and, after the vast team at Coi, had to adapt to a smaller crew and scale. But, he says, the intimacy leads to a better collaboration and a greater sense of control and accountability; some dishes are built together with Arias, others call for Keane’s feedback.

“Deb understands the nuance of caviar, and that’s the coolest part about having her expertise,” Tauer says. “Most of the time when it’s about caviar, she’s right.”

In the future, Tauer and Keane plan to change and evolve the menu according to seasons, while keeping the good vibes associated with the gourmet product. The “bump,” for example—the idea of licking pure caviar from the top of your own hand—has been with Keane since the beginning of her culinary career.

“There’s an anonymous quote that says something like ‘Caviar: the pause that says “I love myself,”’” jokes Keane.

Taking this luxurious, playful pause just became much easier.

The Bump Bar, 1403 Bridgeway, Sausalito, CA. 415.332.0822 californiacaviar.com/the-bump-bar.

Reporters Win Award

0

Reporters at the Pacific Sun’s sister paper, the North Bay Bohemian, won recognition from the Society of Professional Journalists’ Northern California Chapter last week

Longtime Bohemian-contributor Peter Byrne and Bohemian news-reporter Will Carruthers were awarded the Society of Journalists Northern California’s James Madison Freedom of Information Award for the first two parts of “The Power Brokers” series, published by the Bohemian last year.

The series scrutinized the actions of the Rebuild North Bay Foundation, a PG&E-funded nonprofit founded by Darius Anderson, a lobbyist and owner of the Santa Rosa Press Democrat and other North Bay newspapers.

“[Byrne and Carruthers’] reporting showed how the Rebuild North Bay Foundation had performed little or no relief work, instead funneling money to benefit a handful of prominent local businesspeople,” an SPJ NorCal press release states.

“Byrne and Carruthers did this work in the face of fierce pressure in a community where the major sources of news are now owned by the same lobbyist who established the foundation they investigated,” the release continues.

Find the first two parts of “The Power Brokers” series—Juiced, July 24, 2019 and Charity Case, Nov. 20, 2019—online at Bohemian.com.

The Fund for Investigative Journalism supports “The Power Brokers” series, which receives pro-bono legal assistance from attorneys at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Levine Proposes Compulsory Voting

Assemblymember Marc Levine last week proposed legislation to require all registered voters to participate in future elections.

The announcement came as the Iowa caucuses devolved into disaster and a month before Californians cast their votes in the 2020 presidential primaries.

“This is not a time to be complacent at the ballot box. My Assembly Bill 2070 will ensure that the voices of all California voters are heard loud and clear,” Assemblymember Levine said in a press release.

If passed, the legislation would move California in the direction of approximately 30 countries which currently have compulsory voting laws on the books. Those countries include Belgium, Argentina and Australia, according to the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), an intergovernmental agency that studies voting and democracy.

The Secretary of State’s office would craft rules to “enforce civil remedies” to ensure participation, according to Levine’s press release.

While it sounds like a good idea, compulsory voting laws may pose problems of their own.

“It has been proved that forcing the population to vote results in an increased number of invalid and blank votes compared to countries that have no compulsory voting laws,” according to the International IDEA. Furthermore, in order to avoid fines for not voting, people might just not register to vote at all.

On the other hand, more voters may lead to a better, more robust political debate. In November 2008, a particularly high-turnout election, 79.4 percent of registered voters cast ballots but only 74.6 percent of eligible voters were registered to vote.

Levine’s bill would take effect in 2022.

Horoscope

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Now that she’s in her late forties, Aries comedian and actress Tig Notaro is wiser about love. Her increased capacity for romantic happiness has developed in part because she’s been willing to change her attitudes. She says, “Instead of being someone who expects people to have all the strengths I think I need them to have, I resolved to try to become someone who focuses on the strengths they do have.” In accordance with this Valentine’s season’s astrological omens, Aries, I invite you to meditate on how you might cultivate more of that aptitude yourself.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus artist Joan Miró loved to daub colored paint on canvases. He said he approached his work in the same way he made love: “a total embrace, without caution, prudence thrown to the winds, nothing held back.” In accordance with astrological omens, I invite you to invoke a similar attitude with all the important things you do in the coming weeks. Summon the ardor and artistry of a creative lover for all-purpose use. Happy Valentine Daze, Taurus!

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In 1910, Gemini businessman Irving Seery was 20 years old. One evening he traveled to the Metropolitan Opera in New York City to see an opera starring the gorgeous and electrifying soprano singer Maria Jeritza. He fell in love instantly. For the next 38 years he remained a bachelor as he nursed his desire to marry her. His devotion finally paid off. Jeritza married Seery in 1948. Dear Gemini, in 2020, I think you will be capable of a heroic feat of love that resembles Seery’s. Which of your yearnings might evoke such intensely passionate dedication? Happy Valentine Daze!

CANCER (June 21-July 22): I’ve been married twice, both times to the same woman. Our first time around, we were less than perfectly wise in the arts of relationship. After our divorce and during the few years we weren’t together, we each ripened into more graceful versions of ourselves; we developed greater intimacy skills. Our second marriage has been far more successful. Is there a comparable possibility in your life, Cancerian? A chance to enhance your ability to build satisfying togetherness? An opening to learn practical lessons from past romantic mistakes? Now is a favorable time to capitalize. Happy Valentine Daze!

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In 1911, the famous Russian poet Anna Akhmatova and the famous Italian painter Amedeo Modigliani were in love with each other. Both were quite poor, though. They didn’t have much to spend on luxuries. In her memoir, Akhmatova recalled the time they went on a date in the rain at the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris. Barely protected under a rickety umbrella, they amused each other by reciting the verse of Paul Verlaine, a poet they both loved. Isn’t that romantic? In the coming weeks, I recommend you experiment with comparable approaches to cultivating love. Get back to raw basics. Happy Valentine Daze!

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): [Warning: Poetry alert! If you prefer your horoscopes to be exclusively composed of practical, hyper-rational advice, stop reading now!] Happy Valentine Daze, Virgo! I hope there’s someone in your life to whom you can give a note like the one I’ll offer at the end of this oracle. If there’s not, I trust you will locate that person in the next six months. Feel free to alter the note as you see fit. Here it is. “When you and I are together, it’s as if we have been reborn into luckier lives; as if we can breathe deeper breaths that fill our bodies with richer sunlight; as if we see all of the world’s beauty that alone we were blind to; as if the secrets of our souls’ codes are no longer secret.”

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In the course of your life, how many people and animals have truly loved you? Three? Seven? More? I invite you to try this Valentine experiment: Write down their names on a piece of paper. Spend a few minutes visualizing the specific qualities in you that they cherished, and how they expressed their love, and how you felt as you received their caring attention. Then send out a beam of gratitude to each of them. Honor them with sublime appreciation for having treasured your unique beauty. Amazingly enough, Libra, doing this exercise will magnetize you to further outpourings of love in the coming weeks.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): [Warning: Poetry alert! If you prefer your horoscopes to be exclusively composed of practical, hyper-rational advice, stop reading now!] Happy Valentine Daze, Scorpio! I invite you to copy the following passage and offer it to a person who is receptive to deepening their connection with you. “Your healing eyes bless the winter jasmine flowers that the breeze blew into the misty creek. Your welcoming prayers celebrate the rhythmic light of the mud-loving cypress trees. Your fresh dreams replenish the eternal salt that nourishes our beloved song of songs. With your melodic breath, you pour all these not-yet-remembered joys into my body.” (This lyrical message is a blend of my words with those of Scorpio poet Odysseus Elytis.)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): The poet Virgil, a renowned author in ancient Rome, wrote three epic poems that are still in print today. His second was a masterpiece called the Georgics. It took him seven years to write, even though it was only 2,740 lines long. So on average he wrote a little over one line per day. I hope you’ll use him as inspiration as you toil over your own labors of love in the coming weeks and months. There’ll be no need to rush. In fact, the final outcomes will be better if you do them slowly. Be especially diligent and deliberate in all matters involving intimacy and collaboration and togetherness.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): [Warning: Poetry alert! If you prefer your horoscopes to be exclusively composed of practical, hyper-rational advice, stop reading now!] Happy Valentine Daze, Capricorn! I invite you to copy the following passage and offer it to a person who is ready to explore a more deeply lyrical connection with you. “I yearn to earn the right to your whispered laugh, your confident caress, your inscrutable dance. Amused and curious, I wander where moon meets dawn, inhaling the sweet mist in quest of your questions. I study the joy that my imagination of you has awakened. All the maps are useless, and I like them that way. I’m guided by my nervous excitement to know you deeper. Onward toward the ever-fresh truth of your mysterious rhythms!”

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Aquarian author Derek Walcott had a perspective on love that I suspect might come in handy for you during this Valentine season. “Break a vase,” he wrote, “and the love that reassembles the fragments is stronger than that love which took its symmetry for granted when it was whole.” I urge you to meditate on how you could apply his counsel to your own love story, Aquarius. How might you remake your closest alliances into even better and brighter versions of themselves?

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Piscean poet Saul Williams wrote a meditation I hope you’ll consider experimenting with this Valentine season. It involves transforming mere kisses into SUBLIME KISSES. If you choose to be inspired by his thoughts, you’ll explore new sensations and meanings available through the act of joining your mouth to another’s. Ready? Here’s Saul: “Have you ever lost yourself in a kiss? I mean pure psychedelic inebriation. Not just lustful petting but transcendental metamorphosis, when you became aware that the greatness of this other being is breathing into you. Licking your mouth, like sealing a thousand fleshy envelopes filled with the essence of your passionate being, and then opened by the same mouth and delivered back to you, over and over again—the first kiss of the rest of your life.”

Flashback

0

50 Years Ago

The draft lottery is a statistical bummer and should be thrown out, says an action filed Monday with the U.S. district court in San Francisco by attorney Joel Shawn of Corte Madera.

…The suit claims the alleged random selection of draft members was anything but random, and it has enlisted the expert testimony of three Stanford statisticians and one from UC Berkeley to bear it out.

If the suit were victorious, it would result in sending the whole system back to General Lewis Hershey’s drawing board for the Selective Service boss to try again.

…Valmar Schaaf is bugged by the whole approach to the lottery. “It was a matter of contempt on Hersey’s part to turn the whole thing over to a pair of military men. But then the whole draft is contemptible. My grandfather came to America to avoid conscription there. Now it’s all reversed and American kids are running away to Europe to avoid involuntary servitude.”

— Uncredited, 2/11/70

40 Years Ago

George Lucas’s carefully calculated gamble to put a popular space fantasy on the screen has paid off beyond his wildest reckonings.

…Lucas has drawn the curtain on interviews since the phenomenal success of Star Wars

But the Sun kept asking, finally persuading him to forego the hermit image and answer a few questions.

Star Wars was one of the biggest box office successes of all times with a gross of $400 million. What was its genesis?

Star Wars is really three trilogies, nine films. I wrote it as one long 18-hour movie in two-hour increments. When it’s all done it will be one of the most expensive films ever made… it won’t be finished for probably another 20 years… When I finish the third film, Luke Skywalker’s part, I’m going back to the first trilogy, which is about young Ben Kenobi, young Luke’s father, young Darth Vader.

…Are there new characters in The Empire Strikes Back?

There’s a new character played by Billy Dee Williams, a friend of Hans Solo’s, and there’s another character who’s a Jedi master who’s teaching Luke how to be a Jedi.

…Why did you choose not to direct Empire?

I’ve sort of retired from directing. If I directed Empire then I’d have to direct the next one and the next for the rest of my life. I have never really liked directing.

Writing is what you like to do?

No. I hate writing. What I enjoy is editing.

…What’s your production schedule. What else is on the horizon?

…We’re doing the Star Wars series. Then I’m doing another film called Raiders of the Lost Ark directed by Steven Speilburg [Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind]. We’ll start shooting this spring. It’s an adventure film, a period piece that takes place all over the world.

⁠—Joanne Williams, 2/8/80

30 Years Ago

President George Bush is breathing a bit easier after last week’s losing congressional bid to override his veto of a bill that would have protected 40,000 Chinese students from deportation.

…The episode underscores the president’s disappointing record on human rights issues…

…The most visible example of his failure to take the lead is reflected in his policy toward China, where in June authorities crushed the democracy movement and killed protesters probably numbering in the hundreds, possibly the thousands. The administration responded meekly by imposing the minimum sanctions an outraged U.S. public would tolerate and lobbied hard against legislation to impose further sanctions.

⁠—Greg Cahill, 2/9/90

Compiled by Alex T. Randolph

PETA Mail

The $50 million pledged by Governor Gavin Newsom to end euthanasia of animals in California’s shelters for lack of homes could go a long way toward achieving that goal—if it is used for prevention.

Subsidizing sterilization services and making them easily accessible to every animal guardian would prevent millions of animals from being born only to end up unwanted, homeless or neglected. Mandating spaying/neutering and outlawing the unregulated breeding and sale of animals by pet stores, breeders, flea markets and puppy mills are also crucial.

Trying to implement “no-kill” policies before animal births are brought under control inevitably results in more animals suffering and dying, badly. Shelters under pressure to go “no-kill” often warehouse animals for months or years or turn them away, leaving them on the streets (where they starve or are hit by cars) or in the hands of people who don’t want them. In some cases, “no-kill” policies have led to a high rate of deaths from disease or injury in facilities that are supposed to be safe havens.

California would be wise to join Los Angeles County, the Santa Barbara Humane Society and a growing number of humane experts nationwide in adopting Socially Conscious  Animal Sheltering—a progressive model that puts the focus on animals’ quality of life instead of on numbers. The only way to become a “no-kill” state is to first become a “no-birth” one.

Teresa Chagrin

Animal Care and Control Issues Manager

PETA

SMART Tax

To those who complain about SMART trains that are not full at mid-morning, I offer this: Drive the freeway at 3am. Those empty three- and five-lane highways are the biggest waste of money you’ve ever seen. SMART trains don’t yet run in the middle of the night.

Actually, it would be nice to have a late-night, ferry-train connection on Fridays and Saturdays. Many of us like to see music or a show in the city but don’t want to drive those spooky empty freeways after a long evening. A “Yes” vote on Measure I allows for that possibility, and makes a cleaner, greener transportation future for our children.

Denny Rosatti

Sebastopol

County approves work plan for San Geronimo Watershed

After over a decade of back and forth on a policy to resuscitate the Coho Salmon population in central Marin’s San Geronimo Watershed, the Marin County Board of Supervisors last week approved a plan for the first phase of a proposed environmental-remediation strategy. “Coho were once plentiful in the natural waters that drain into Tomales Bay and the Pacific Ocean,...

Horoscope

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Do you feel ready to change your mind about an idea or belief or theory that has been losing its usefulness? Would you consider changing your relationship with a once-powerful influence that is becoming less crucial to your life-long goals? Is it possible you have outgrown one of your heroes or teachers? Do you wonder...

Advice Goddess

Q: I’ve had two close female friends “ghost” me in five months. I’ve known each for 15 years. (They don’t know each other, and one lives out of state.) I’ve tried repeatedly to contact each, asking, “Did I do anything to hurt or offend you?” No response. I want the truth so I can move on.—Baffled   A: There comes a...

Fight over ballot measure heats up

Last week, the total spending on a ballot measure to extend the funding mechanism powering the North Bay’s new train for an additional 30 years ticked past $2 million. In less than a month, spending on the ballot measure went through the roof, making it the most expensive election in the region’s history. Measure I, a ballot measure up for...

The Gig Is Up for Arts

What is the definition of the word “artist?” Should it be defined by artists themselves, or by politicians? What happens when theater companies are told their actors, designers and directors are “workers” and must be treated as such? We’re about to find out. A new state law that most Californians believed was designed to protect Uber and Lyft drivers from exploitation went...

Sausalito’s Bump Bar serves up the caviar

How many Sausalito residents are aware that their town is home to a key player in the local restaurant industry? The California Caviar Company, supplying restaurants such as Petit Crenn and SPQR with top-notch caviar, has been operating in Sausalito since 2007, with a tasting room and a packing facility just a few steps away from downtown. It might...

Reporters Win Award

Reporters at the Pacific Sun’s sister paper, the North Bay Bohemian, won recognition from the Society of Professional Journalists’ Northern California Chapter last week Longtime Bohemian-contributor Peter Byrne and Bohemian news-reporter Will Carruthers were awarded the Society of Journalists Northern California’s James Madison Freedom of Information Award for the first two parts of “The Power Brokers” series, published by the...

Horoscope

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Now that she’s in her late forties, Aries comedian and actress Tig Notaro is wiser about love. Her increased capacity for romantic happiness has developed in part because she’s been willing to change her attitudes. She says, “Instead of being someone who expects people to have all the strengths I think I need them to...

Flashback

50 Years Ago The draft lottery is a statistical bummer and should be thrown out, says an action filed Monday with the U.S. district court in San Francisco by attorney Joel Shawn of Corte Madera. …The suit claims the alleged random selection of draft members was anything but random, and it has enlisted the expert testimony of three Stanford statisticians and...

PETA Mail

The $50 million pledged by Governor Gavin Newsom to end euthanasia of animals in California’s shelters for lack of homes could go a long way toward achieving that goal—if it is used for prevention. Subsidizing sterilization services and making them easily accessible to every animal guardian would prevent millions of animals from being born only to end up unwanted, homeless...
3,002FansLike
3,850FollowersFollow