March 11 – 17, 2026
Greensite… on running for Mayor… Steinbruner… Work on Aptos Bridge… Hayes… A Cotoni Coast Dairies update… Patton… Landlords Are Not The Problem?… Matlock… trapped…nosering…church picnic…dug in… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… ADHD diagnosis in the Holderness family Quotes on… “ADHD”
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CHECK OUT THE VIDEO FOR THIS WEEK. The Holderness Family are Penn and Kim Holderness, who make really funny parody videos, a little like Weird Al. Theirs are more about their lives, I think, like family and holidays and aging, etc etc. The first one of theirs I remember seeing was their thanksgiving mashup video from ten years ago (how?!?!?!), with the unforgettable hook of Watch me sip my Chardonnay nay, featuring Kim, somewhat unhinged, drinking wine in the woods. They’ve only gotten better as the years have passed, and I guess now they have a podcast (Laugh Lines) as well. This week’s video is from that podcast, namely Kim announcing that she’s been formally diagnosed with ADHD, and subsequent discussion.
As a woman with ADHD, diagnosed late (LATE) in life myself, I relate to soooo many of the things she mentions in this video: imposter syndrome, time blindness, perfectionism, etc etc etc. Personally, one of the things I have the hardest time with is when people express that they think that I “use my ADHD as an excuse”. If you’ve ever had that feeling towards someone, please watch this video, or some other material about it. That’s really not a thing.
Since this column went up so late, the next one is coming in a couple of days!
~Webmistress
SCARPETTA. Prime. Series. (5.9 IMDb)
This series is about a noted Medical Examiner (Kidman) investigating a murder tied to a string of killings from 25 years ago.
Wait—no. It’s about sibling rivalry that apparently has no expiration date (Kidman/Curtis).
Then again, it’s about the adult niece of a Medical Examiner who can’t let go of her deceased wife and builds an AI replacement.
Any one of these might’ve made for an interesting series—just not all at once. Good cast, so-so mystery, and way too much going on. Pick a lane.
~Sarge

A MURDER BETWEEN FRIENDS. Prime. Movie. (3.5 IMDb)
Half a point for being in focus. Joan Collins fronting for a series – at least according to the end card. Six… “people,” I guess… reunite at an Airbnb “castle” owned by a legendary mystery writer, played by Joan Collins. One of them ends up floating in the hot tub. That’s about it.
Everyone treats Joan Collins as a full-blown Mary Sue: “You’re a great mystery writer – we should all listen to you.” What does she actually do? Watch security cameras that most of the cast already know about, while they continue misbehaving anyway.
It’s embarrassing to watch, especially since I’m reasonably sure she bankrolled it. Not worth a watch. Stand well back. Mind the gap. Go watch “Agatha Christie’s 7 Dials” on Netflix.
~Sarge
THE LAST KIDS ON EARTH. Netflix. Series (1hr pilot). (7.2 IMDb) ![]()
This largely bloodless animated series began with a pilot-style special and ran for two seasons. It’s based on the children’s book series by Max Brallier, with character designs inspired by the illustrations of Douglas Holgate.
The story follows orphan Jack Sullivan as he adjusts to life after an invasion of extra-dimensional monsters and a zombie apocalypse. He soon bands together with a scrappy group of kids who missed the evacuation – along with a loyal monster-dog – forming their own ragtag survival team.
Aimed primarily at the 8–12 crowd, the show still has enough sharp humor and creature-feature flair to entertain adults. The voice cast includes Nick Wolfhard (brother of Finn), Mark Hamill, Keith David, Catherine O’Hara, and Rosario Dawson. Worth a watch – with or without your kids.
~Sarge
AGATHA CHRISTIE’S SEVEN DIALS. Netflix. Series. (6.2 IMDb)
There have been a fair few non-Poirot/Marple adaptations recently, and this is certainly one of them.
The cast is solid – Martin Freeman is great, and Mia McKenna-Bruce really shines in the lead role (though Helena Bonham Carter kind of phones in a stock twitchy character). The film doesn’t quite hook you into the mystery, though. It’s not slow, just… not all that engaging. The highlight for me was definitely Mia jumping out of a window to dodge a wedding proposal. On the plus side, it’s only 3 episodes. Many clocks.
It’s probably worth a watch if you’re looking for something to pass the time before the next episode of your favorite show drops.
~Sarge
THE MUPPET SHOW. Disney+. Series. (8.4 IMDb) ![]()
Or, as I like to think of it, ANTI-MELANIA. They both star a woman who is completely self-obsessed, clinging to a less attractive mate’s position: I mean, of course, the return of … THE MUPPET SHOW!
That’s right, the same old gang at the same old theatre. Minus the legendary Jim Henson and Frank Oz (who is still alive, at time of writing), it actually defies the concern of losing the magic – it’s almost like it never ended. Which is a good thing. Only one episode so far, but it’s off to a good start. Worth a watch!
~Sarge
LA BELLE ET LA BÊTE (1946). Disney+, Max. Movie. (7.4 IMDb) ![]()
Just ran back across this amazing version of Beauty and the Beast (literally haven’t watched it since the early 90’s), with amazing magical settings, and honestly a beast you like so much more than the Prince underneath. There are a number of visuals that have found their way into other lesser films. Jean Marais literally smolders in his cat-like beast. In French with English subtitles. Ça vaut le détour.
~Sarge
RIOT WOMEN. BritBox. Series. (8.5 IMDb)
In the early ’90s, a musical revolution erupted – one part punk, many parts feminism – spearheaded by bands like Bikini Kill and Bratmobile (<3): "Riot Grrrl". It laid the foundation for bands like L7 and Hole, whose raw energy and unapologetic attitudes reshaped rock music. Fast forward 35 years, and those fierce grrrls are now navigating the challenges of menopause. Enter Riot Women, a series that follows a group of "women of a certain age" who've had it up to here with hot flashes and feeling invisible. What starts as a joke quickly transforms into something more: they decide to start their own band. While only a few episodes are currently available on BritBox (released weekly), the show's got heart, humor, and plenty of punch. If you've ever felt overlooked or dismissed, Riot Women is a riotous reminder that it's never too late to reclaim your voice. Available exclusively on BritBox (via PrimeVideo for me) - worth a watch, so far. ~Sarge
COVER-UP. Netflix. Movie. (7.5 IMDb)
I was all of eight years old when I first heard about William Calley and the massacre at My Lai. No details, just that someone had destroyed a village. For years I assumed it was a bombing: distant, impersonal. I was today years old when I finally learned just how VERY up-close and personal it actually was. I’ve experienced true tunnel vision only twice in my life. This made it the third.
“Cover-Up” is an extraordinary first-hand (self-)account of the life and career of Seymour Hersh, a journalist hip-deep in some of the most damning exposés of the last half-century – from My Lai to Watergate to Abu Ghraib.
Fair warning: the first quarter focuses on My Lai, and the images and descriptions are brutal enough to send you – perhaps not for the first time – into the streets to protest the Vietnam War.
This is the biography of an irascible reporter who will stop at nothing – for better or worse – to get at the truth. It’s deeply uncomfortable viewing, and absolutely worth it.
~Sarge
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Sarge, aka Jeffery Sargent, cut his teeth on the Golden Age of Hollywoood on TV and with regular trips to the Sash Mill. Film classes then, at Cabrillo with Morton Marcus, broadened his scope – he found he preferred Keaton over Chaplin, and Akira Kurosawa was his Yoda. Sarge spent 15 years working in Special Effects, on everything from Starship Troopers to Battlestar Galactica. He is a staunch geek who has a weak spot for Cozy Mysteries and loathes “Reality” shows. While he doesn’t care for the unrelenting banal horror of “True Crime”, he licks his lips over a twist like the end of Chinatown. Email Sarge at JeffLSargent@gmail.com |
March 9, 2026

As you might have read in last week’s issue, I have thrown my hat in the ring and am running for Mayor of the City of Santa Cruz. The photo above of the current council and Mayor will have at least one change at the end of this year and possibly three. Mayor Keeley is ending his four-year term and has not filed for a second term; council members Scott Newsome and Renee Golder are both running for re-election and both face challengers to their seats.
So, why am I running for Mayor? I’ve lived in the city of Santa Cruz for 51 years. For 46 years, I’ve been actively involved in local politics at the city council level, and with few exceptions, always on the public side of the podium. I’ve experienced how public input is regarded at city hall; have watched closely how decisions are made; have observed the various mayors, how they run meetings and set the agenda. And then there’s the upper management staff. Do they follow policies set by council? Or does the tail wag the dog? With all this experience, I’d like a chance to be on the decision-side of the podium.
I’ve brought many issues before the various councils. The first issue in 1981 involved evaluating the city’s response to rapes reported to the Santa Cruz Police Department (SCPD). This focus evolved from my position as founder of Rape Prevention Education on campus. I was hired by UCSC in 1979 to establish and head this brand-new program, which I did for 30 years. Taking the issue into the community in the 1980’s, led to an organizing drive to put the issue on the ballot. This effort led to the then council adopting the ordinance rather than it going to a public vote. This Ordinance 81-29 mandated the formation of a city commission, the Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women. I was appointed by council as a commission member and its first chair. My immediate task was to read and evaluate two years of reported rapes, about 48 redacted reports in all. The results were of grave concern. The quality of investigations was inadequate on many levels. I wrote up recommendations and waited for council to act. I’m still waiting. Fast forward to 2023-24 when I served a year on the Santa Cruz County Civil Grand Jury. One of the investigative topics included an analysis of rapes reported to the SCPD and the city’s handling of the issue. Deja Vue. The current council’s response was a repeat of the council from the mid 1980’s. Apparently, a tourist town does not want rape to be publicly aired.
Other issues that have brought me to city hall on the public side of the podium include the major effort by a small community group, Don’t Morph the Wharf! to stop the city turning the Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf into a Pier 39. Other issues include trying to protect our remaining heritage trees, an effort so far with few successes. I have some ideas on how to change that result. Of course, a mayor is only one of seven; work needs to be collaborative and respectful of staff. But undemocratic patterns have set in and are rarely challenged.
A common pattern at city hall is to prepare and try to defend wholly inadequate environmental reviews of major projects. The public is routinely ignored, leaving the only option to file a lawsuit, which the city usually loses, squandering large amounts of public monies. I believe this pattern can and should be changed.
Speaking of money, from the perspective of 46 years, I note a recent city trend of accelerated hiring at the top management levels, including a plethora of consultants, leaving the boots on the ground workers lean and spread thin. I saw this happen at UCSC over 30 years and now the city on a hill is in the red. The same thing will happen at the city level if this trend continues. Retirement of highly paid public servants can bankrupt a city.
Council members now have districts. I would recommend regular in-person meetings between individual council members and their constituents. Not just a wandering around a room to chat with department heads or put sticky notes on a board but proper town hall meetings.
The biggest issue I see right now is the rampant overbuilding in the city and the gutting of the established built landscape, the loss of a sense of place. Why is this happening; who benefits; what are the myths that keep us acquiescent? I’ll explore more of this next week.
In the meantime, if you are keen to volunteer to help move my campaign forward, email me at greensiteformayor@gmail.com.
| Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association http://darksky.org Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild. |
Because Chair of the Board Monica Martinez pulled Consent Agenda item #25, a lively debate resulted in good public information at last Tuesday’s Board of Supervisor meeting.
Thanks to the good work and sharp eyes of the public, it was discovered via Public Records Act request materials that the State Housing and Community Development (HCD) made an error in the date on a letter certifying the County’s Housing Element that allowed three developers to file applications for significant projects under Builder’s Remedy.
Consent Item #25 was pulled to become Regular Agenda Item 9.1, to more closely examine this action:
Direct the Board Chair to send a letter to the Director of the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) requesting that HCD issue a clarification letter confirming that Santa Cruz County’s Housing Element was determined to be in substantial compliance as of March 15, 2024, when HCD completed its substantive review, and take related actions.”
I am reprinting the portion of the Staff Report on this, because it is tricky to find on the Board of Supervisor website, but it truly merits reading…
Discussion
On November 14, 2023, the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors adopted the County’s 2023–2031 Housing Element and authorized the Director of Community Development and Infrastructure to make non-substantive revisions necessary to obtain certification from HCD. The revised Housing Element was submitted to HCD on February 23, 2024, following a required seven-day comment period. The County received HCD’s formal written certification letter on April 23, 2024. That letter was subsequently re-issued and backdated to April 12, 2024, after HCD acknowledged an earlier administrative error related to the County’s Housing Element deadline.During the period between the completion of HCD’s review and the issuance of the formal certification letter, several developers submitted preliminary applications invoking the “Builder’s Remedy” provision of state housing law. These include proposed projects at 841 Capitola Road, 3500 Paul Sweet Road, and Graham Hill Road. Builder’s Remedy allows certain housing projects to ignore local zoning and General Plan requirements if a jurisdiction does not have a Housing Element in substantial compliance with state law at the time of application.
Documents obtained by residents through Public Records Act (PRA) requests indicate that HCD completed its substantive review of the Housing Element by March 15, 2024 (Attachment A) and verbally informed County staff that the document was ready for certification. Internal communications further indicate that no additional substantive review occurred after that date. However, the official certification letter was not received until April 23, 2024, and was not due to inaction by the County, but rather due to delays caused by HCD.
Based on the emails that were received through a community public records request, it is clear that the County acted in good faith to meet the deadlines set forth by HCD and complied with making any necessary revisions in a timely manner to avoid Builders Remedy. Because the County made a good faith effort and email correspondence indicates that the County was in compliance as of March 15, 2024, the Board Chair is directed to request that HCD backdate certification of Santa Cruz County’s Housing Element to March 15, 2024, with a determination that the County was in substantial compliance, or provide clarification as to why we were not in compliance as of March 15th, given the information provided by HCD via PRA. This action would help resolve ongoing legal and policy questions regarding the applicability of Builder’s Remedy to these projects and provide clearer guidance for future land use decisions
What amazed me was the long discussion between Supervisors, with Chair Monica Martinez making a motion delay any action to send a letter to HCD to correct the date on the Housing Element compliance letter. County Counsel Jason Heath did a good job of scaring the Supervisors into worry about lawsuits from the developer of the 841 Capitola Road project that has already been approved under the Builder’s Remedy restrictions on the County. He emphasized that the developer has spent alot of money on the project.
I was happy to hear Supervisors Cummings and Koenig push back with a second motion to send the letter to HCD right away, and stand up to protect the Community’s interests rather than bowing to the developers. Supervisor Koenig also eloquently supported that intent.
Members of the public in the audience who had brought forth this issue, with support from Senator Laird and Assemblymembers Addis and Pellerin, sighed with relief when the Board voted 4:1 to approve sending the letter to HCD to request correcting the date on the Housing Element Certification of Compliance, much to the seemingly disgruntled County Counsel Heath’s dismay. Chair Martinez was the lone dissenting vote.
What is Builder’s Remedy, anyway? Take a look here.
Listen to the amazing discussion on Item 9.1 beginning at about Minute 2:46:00
As a “PS” to this report, the amendment to the Housing Element made by the Planning Department Director was to allow ministerial or “by right” development (no discretionary public hearings) of 70+ parcels rezoned to allow “ developers of those parcels will have the option to pursue multi-family housing development on a ministerial basis as required by the new statutory language, if the developer is providing 20% of the total units in the project as deed-restricted lower-Income units. One way to achieve that would be to add those additional parcels to the by-right or ministerial overlay zone described in Program H-1C, which applies to seven parcels in the inventory, as indicated by the “-Min” designation next to those parcels in Table 7 of Appendix HE-E (see attached). Staff’s preliminary analysis of this requirement concludes that approximately 27 additional parcels would be eligible for inclusion in the ministerial overlay zone, beyond the seven already flagged as such in the adopted element. The parcels are needed to fill the lower-income “RHNA gap” through rezoning (Program H-1B).”
This was the Board of Supervisor action that will now allow ministerial approval of the seven-story apartment building and 197 townhomes in Aptos, identified as the “Village on the Green” on the County’s Major Projects.
DO YOU SUPPORT ALLOWING HIGHER SALES TAX?
It sure was refreshing to hear Supervisor Koenig read aloud a section from the County’s General Fund Budgeting Principles when the Board was asked in Consent Agenda Item #19 to support Senator Laird’s tailor-made bill for the County to allow going skirting around ballot measures causing unconstitutionally-high sales tax levels.
Listen in at Minute 43:00
Here is what the Board voted to support…but with the addition of the County’s Budget Policy to not spend more than it has.
Senate Bill (SB) 1078 (Laird) would allow the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors to ask voters to approve a countywide transactions and use tax of up to 0.5% above California’s current 2% statutory cap on local sales taxes. The bill is needed because all local jurisdictions count toward the statutory cap, and some jurisdictions are within 0.5% of the cap.
SB 1078 does not impose a tax or authorize a vote. It merely gives the Board the authority to authorize a vote. The authority would expire on December 31, 2030.
Discussion
SB 1078 provides the County with a pathway to fiscal flexibility. California law currently limits combined local sales taxes to 2% above the statewide base rate. In jurisdictions that have reached this cap, counties cannot ask voters to approve additional local sales taxes unless the California Legislature grants an exemption. SB 1078 would create such an exemption specifically for Santa Cruz County. These kinds of exemptions have been used in other jurisdictions, and other counties are currently pursuing them to address the extraordinary challenges presented by H.R. 1.Without new revenue tools, significant reductions in programs and services are likely to occur. SB 1078 does not raise taxes and simply authorizes the County to place a measure before voters.
Here is that County Budget Policy Supervisor Koenig referenced:
COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ POLICIES AND PROCEDURES MANUAL GENERAL FUND BUDGETING PRINCIPLES
FIREFIGHTERS DONATE $150,000 TO HELP REPLACE A CRITICAL WATER TENDER
Many thanks to the South Skyline Firefighters for donating $150,000 to help Santa Cruz County Fire Department purchase a new 3,000-gallon water tender for protecting the rural summit area. The existing apparatus is aged, and a new one costs $675,657.79. It is curious that the County Service Area (CSA) 48 assessments do not seemingly cover the full cost, as the 2020 Benefit Assessment report to property owners promised.
Many thanks to Supervisor DeSerpa for publicly recognizing the donation that will make a new water tender for rural Santa Cruz County Fire Department in areas that have limited water for fire suppression.
Let’s hope that the current CEO Nicole Coburn does not delay the ordering of this new water tender for the summit area. Historically, CAO Susan Mauriello sat on the funds made available by the Loma Prieta Fire supporters’ donations, delaying for three years the release of funds and order of the new water tender for their community. It took bold public action by the County Fire Chief to finally force her to procure the new water tender, because their existing one was not functional and the public’s safety was at risk.
WORK AT THE APTOS CREEK BRIDGE
For the past few weeks, PG&E crews have assembled scaffolding and have been working under the Aptos Creek Bridge, sometimes accompanied by a security guard stationed on the bridge. Hmmm…what is going on?
A quick stop and conversation with a PG&E worker at the site let me know that the crews are sandblasting the 16″ diameter natural gas pipeline attached under the bridge as part of their maintenance program. Once sandblasted, ultrasound testing will determine the pipe wall thickness integrity for further inspection and eventual re-coating. It is a tricky job, the fellow said, because all sandblasting material must be suctioned away so as not to land in Aptos Creek, per Fish and Wildlife orders.
Whew! Who would know such a large gas pipeline was there? Let’s hope that all goes well on the pipe that seemingly was installed when the Aptos Creek Bridge was built in 1928….nearly 100 years ago.

Scaffolding and access stairs for the critical work happening at the Aptos Creek Bridge.
HOW CAN YOU KNOW WHEN A BIG PROJECT IS PLANNED FOR YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD?
I recently interviewed Mr. Lee Butler, Director of Planning for the City of Santa Cruz, to discuss what some consider to be shocking changes in the downtown developments. You can
listen to that February 27 interview (hour #2) here
Some listeners later asked how can people know when a big project is planned for their neighborhood, and how can they keep apprised of the proceedings as the permit process moves along?
Mr. Butler sent the excellent explanation, featured below.
The best way for people to find out about large projects early in the process is to sign up for email alerts. From our website (www.SantaCruzCA.gov), there is a blue and white “Stay Connected” tab at the bottom right. You can sign up for email alerts there. There’s also a link at the very bottom of the homepage. See below for instructions:
- Community member can sign up to stay updated from the website (very bottom)
- Then they can select the topics. We have for project specific for “significant projects” and “Community Development Updates”, along with the commissions.
- Then as a follow up, after a new project page is created, then . This is new / different from the previous platform of GovAccess notifications.
Many thanks to Mr. Lee Butler for this information.
MAKE ONE CALL. WRITE ONE LETTER. SIGN UP TO FOLLOW A PERMIT APPLICATION FILED IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.
DO ONE THING THIS WEEK AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.
Cheers,
Becky
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Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.
Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com |
It has been a while since I gave an update on Cotoni Coast Dairies, but I have previously written much about that piece of (unfortunately) federally-owned ‘conservation’ land on Santa Cruz County’s North Coast. In August 2025, BLM staffer Zachary Ormsby had a chance to address the public about the parkland. Here, I present additional perspectives including some more recent developments.
Ch-ch-ch-Changes!
A year ago, as many of us had predicted, the Federal government made yet another of its radical political shifts, affecting the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), which oversees Cotoni Coast Dairies. Just before that transition, California’s BLM director changed. Karen Mouritsen, a Trump appointee who had lasted most of the 4 years of the Biden Administration, had been pressing to maximize public access and denying any funding to take care of the land’s pressing invasive species, wildfire, and erosion issues. Then, in 2024, Joseph Stout was appointed head of the California BLM; Joe had previously been deputy director of BLM but mysteriously left for most of Karen Mouritsen’s term. At the start of their term, the Trump Administration fired the national head of BLM and, as of March 1, 2026, has yet to replace them. Nevertheless, the leaderless BLM has turned its already understaffed offices to resource extraction rather than conservation. The staff in our BLM region now spend much of their time advertising, negotiating, and monitoring leases to extract oil. Luckily, the nonprofit conservation organization Trust for Public Land, which signed the land over to BLM, restricted the property deed, prohibiting oil extraction.
Public Access
Public access is a little less extractive to open space than pumping oil out of the ground, and usually less toxic. Visitor use of natural areas has long been recognized as one of the top threats to species, globally. Nevertheless, at Cotoni Coast Dairies, an area set aside primarily for conservation, BLM (in close partnership with mountain biking sports advocates) has begun development of an extensive trail network through globally significant threatened habitats, disrupting and possibly displacing endangered wildlife species. Sole source government contracts paid these mountain bikers hundreds of thousands of dollars to organize volunteers in transforming a little-known virgin wildland into a recreational park. The nine miles of new trails emanate from a 90-car parking lot replete with two restrooms and a few interpretive signs. Although the park is open sunrise to sunset, the gate to the parking lot is open all of the time. Despite promises to the contrary, the restrooms are locked weekdays even though there are lots of visitors filling the parking lot. The interpretive signs have minimal interpretation of nature but lots of rules. If you don’t speak English, you better have a smart phone (and reception!) if you want to translate the signs, which don’t present even Spanish language translations. One of the rules is to stay on the marked trails, but there are well worn and often-used roads that aren’t labeled for access but frequently used by mountain bikers. The trails are too narrow and the sides too steep to accommodate mountain bikers comfortably passing hikers. During a recent visit, I experienced a mountain biker who was furious about being interrupted from bombing down the trail…there was nowhere to get off the trail– after a wave of explicatives, red faced and loud, the biker stumbled past me, his embarrassed girlfriend trailing. But, pedestrians far outnumber the barnstorming bikers who are no doubt made all the more angry because their volunteer work hasn’t panned out for their unimpeded high-speed endorphin-laden ‘rad times.’ Such glowering is occasionally interrupted by the too-frequent trailside plastic tacky signs profusely gushing about the generosity of mountain biking volunteers for everything the visitor might experience.
“Innovative” Cattle Grazing
One of the mandates for BLM at Cotoni Coast Dairies was changing the historic livestock regimes to something more innovative and natural resource protection oriented. Up went super expensive high-tech antennae. Cattle were fitted with electronic shock collars designed to train them into grazing within ‘invisible fences.’ Innovative, indeed – especially if there was a grazing PLAN (there isn’t)! As of Spring 2026, this technology remains innovative in one way only: convincing the public that something innovative is happening with the livestock program: otherwise, no one has turned on the switches to make the system active. However, innovative livestock management isn’t the only thing lying dormant on the landscape…
Science-Based Land Management
At the apex of conservation lands are National Monuments, which (logically!) must publish science strategies to support their (also mandated) Management Plans. Being one of many units of the California Coastal National Monument, Cotoni Coast Dairies has such a science strategy underway (or maybe even published and not publicly available) with the help of experts at the US Geologic Survey.
Along with such science-based strategies, BLM is required to update its California Special Status Animal Species list every 5 years. The last one was published in 2019 and the most recent update was due in 2024. Where is it? Not on their website. Have they, as required, worked with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to collaboratively develop that updated list? Who knows? One thing of interest…the mountain lions on the Central Coast have recently been listed as Endangered by the State of California. As such, pumas should receive priority protection by BLM at Cotoni Coast Dairies, applying Dr. Wilmers’ (UCSC) research findings indicating the importance of protecting large areas from any human visitation whatsoever and planning for wide, forested movement corridors. The emphasis here is on forested areas, which on Cotoni Coast Dairies are being threatened by French broom invasion.
Broom Farming
The BLM at Cotoni Coast Dairies has been officially recognized for their expertise in French broom farming by the Invasive Species Agricultural Association (ISAA). President Rex Fowler, in awarding the distinguished prize noted, “BLM has exceeded expectations both in fostering the health of, and increasing the spread of, the dreaded and most pernicious invasive species French Broom. We look forward to marveling at extensive fields of this excellently invasive pest for generations to come.”
Hillsides of once diverse prairies, stands of majestic coast live oaks, and ridgelines of coastal scrub and maritime chaparral are being overrun by monocultures of French broom at Cotoni Coast Dairies. With a seedbank that lasts 40+ years, the scope of any eventual control program is expanding rapidly. BLM managers’ unsubstantiated smokescreen for corrupt, self-serving sole-source contracts with mountain bikers for spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on visitor use access was the proclamation that ‘there shall be no land management until visitors are flooding the park.’ Well folks – what now? Visitors are flooding the park! Now we hear ‘we must drill baby drill!’
What Next?
There is an opportunity in the current Administration to solve this mess. What?! How so?? The Federal government has been murmuring about dumping federal property: why not give it back? Back to who? How about the Amah Mutsun? California’s land back movement is gaining momentum. Let’s give the land back to the tribal people! Why not?
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Grey Hayes is a fervent speaker for all things wild, and his occupations have included land stewardship with UC Natural Reserves, large-scale monitoring and strategic planning with The Nature Conservancy, professional education with the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, and teaching undergraduates at UC Santa Cruz. Visit his website at: www.greyhayes.net
Email Grey at coastalprairie@aol.com |
Tuesday, March 10, 2026

We are in the midst of a housing crisis. At least, most people would say that – and certainly people in my own hometown of Santa Cruz, California. Binyamin Appelbaum, who is the lead writer on economics and business for The New York Times‘ editorial board, wants to assure us that “Landlords Are Not The Problem.”
They’re not? Well, no; they’re not “the” problem; let’s admit it. While some affordable housing advocates would probably disagree – and would have some good points to make – there isn’t, really, some greed-driven National League of Landlords whose sole purpose in life is to make sure that their rentals cost more than those needing housing can afford.
Still, look at the first few paragraphs of Appelbaum’s recent column, and then think about the way he defines the issues (emphasis added):
President Trump relishes a handy scapegoat and, on Wednesday, he picked one to blame for the nation’s housing crisis: investors that are buying large numbers of single-family homes and operating them as rental properties.
Mr. Trump wrote on Truth Social that he was taking steps to prevent such purchases as part of a broader program to make homes affordable again. He said that “people live in homes, not corporations.” He said he’d provide more details in two weeks, when he visits Davos, a Swiss ski resort not known for its affordable housing.
But there’s no need to wait for the details. Landlords are not the cause of the nation’s housing crisis, and any plan that reduces investment in housing is only going to make matters worse.
Appelbaum says that the actual problem is easily understood as an issue of “supply and demand.” According to Appelbaum, building more housing is the answer:
The problem is that the United States does not have enough housing. The hard part is building more. It is certainly easier, and perhaps better politics, to talk about barring investors, or imposing rent controls, or kicking immigrants out of the country, but none of that is going to do the trick. The way to make housing more affordable is to build more housing (emphasis added).
Again, it’s hard to disagree with Appelbaum’s statement. Clearly, building more housing, if that lowered the price, would help solve the problem. However, as I have revealed above, I live in Santa Cruz, California, which has tried to solve its affordable housing crisis by “building more” – and LOTS more has been built, and lots more is in the process of construction. Has the crisis been eliminated? Has the increase in “supply” lowered the price?
The short answer seems to be a very clear: “NO.” Here’s another question, and it’s related: based on our local experience, has the “building more” solution even improved our situation? I believe that most local residents would say (or, more correctly, “admit”) that the housing crisis in our community has not been improved by the very significant increase in housing “supply” that has been foisted upon the community by those who claim that “more housing” means more “affordable housing” – and that specifically includes the California State Legislature and our Governor, who have virtually eliminated local decision-making over land use. Has turning decisions about housing construction to those who want to build “more” led to more “affordable” housing? Nope! Hasn’t been working in my hometown.
In fact, to refocus on Appelbaum’s column, those investors who are buying large numbers of single-family homes and then operating them as rental properties, are, effectively, kicking out lower-income people to make housing available to higher-income people. In other words, they are, in fact, helping to cause our housing crisis, as our current president suggests. To remember something from my blog posting yesterday, this is a particularly anguishing example of how “private equity” impoverishes, rather than enhances, our overall economic situation.
Locally, our so-called “median income” is escalating rapidly. That is a feature of the “housing crisis” that everyone admits exists. As people with higher incomes become those who can afford to rent or buy, the “affordable housing” programs that tie housing assistance to “median income” become less and less effective to help lower income, working people.
To eliminate the crisis, we need to make housing “more affordable,” and simply building more housing doesn’t, in any direct way, have such a price-reducing impact. Maybe some economics course in high school or college told us that when supply is increased the price (inevitably) goes down, but even if that might be true “theoretically,” this isn’t what is happening in our “real world.” What is happening is that the process hailed by Appelbaum is driving out those people who can only afford a housing payment that is 30% or less of the income they receive. And they don’t make enoough in their local employment to pay the rent, or to purchase a home. “More” is not equal to “better,” because “more” does not mean “more affordable.”
“Landlords” are not the problem. That’s what Appelbaum says. Ok. Let’s agree. But let’s also agree that it is “the system” that is the problem. Building more housing doesn’t make housing more affordable unless the price is, somehow, “controlled.” Why is that? Well, in Santa Cruz, there is a much greater demand for housing (it’s a really nice place to live) than there are local folks who can afford the rents (or the purchase price of any new homes constructed). Our current president’s plan, as sketched in by Appelbaum, actually would help reduce prices, which might actually help.
I think that there was a time (post World War II) when housing was seen as a place for families to live, and not as an “investment.” That time has passed. It passed long ago, too. As I was growing up, in Palo Alto, California, my parents moved the family five times. They bought their first home, and then they always sold for more than they had paid, and then moved on to an even nicer place, and that was an “income strategy.” My parents were very clear about that. Buying a home for its investment potential, not (only) for its value as a home, made perfect sense. In fact, “investing” in a home was a “good” investment. Whatever the purchase price, the “selling” price, a few years later, was always more. That is still what’s happening. “Housing” is a good “investment.” Well, most working people aren’t “investing” to produce income for themselves and their family, they’re working for it. And working people are making less, and they can’t keep up with the prices based on those who are investing to make a “profit,” not those who are trying to find a nice place to live.
There are some ways our national government could do something about this. They could, for instance, mobilize federal funding to build housing, making it available at cost to individuals or families who live in the various local communities in which it is constructed, but with a resale price restriction would say that the “selling price,” later on, could not exceed the “purchase price” plus any verified inflation since the date of the purchase. There would have to be some further complexities, undoubtedly, but that’s the idea. That kind of housing would cease being an “investment,” and be useful only as a place to live. Of course, to fund this kind of solution the federal government would have to raise taxes, but given that the government has been reducing taxes for the most affluent among us, including all of our “billionaires,” there seems to be a pretty easy way to find the money to start this program.
The problem is NOT “landlords.” I’m with Appelbaum on that. The problem is the “system” that has turned residential housing into an “investment,” since that means, as a practical matter, that only the wealthy are able to afford housing. “Price control,” in its various iterations, is needed. “More” does not mean “less expensive.”
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Gary Patton is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney for individuals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. You can read and subscribe to his daily blog at www.gapatton.net
Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com |
Borrowing a line from comedian Steven Wright who said, “The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese,” we might classify President Donald Trump as the early bird in his June 2025 bombing of Iran’s nuclear facilities. However, as the first mouse, the president is caught in his own trap, as Benjamin Netanyahu sweeps in to claim his prize of deciding who gets credit for initiating the second incursion into Iran — in the planning stages since November. As John Stoehr of The Editorial Board states, our ally put Trump in a no-win situation toward launching an illegal war, though Trump could have condemned Netanyahu after the fact; but, apparently the appeal of being in a war had a greater influence on the commander of the world’s mightiest military. Allowing the foreign head of state to lead him around by the nose has resulted in a plethora reasons for entering into combat, and no matter how unconvincing those reasons put forth by him and his cabinet may be, it still draws attention — in the views of many — that Trump is probably not entirely in charge. It’s like Netanyahu told him, “I couldn’t repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder.”
That viewpoint is problematic for many in Congress who declare that if Trump was not acting in our self-defense, then this is a war of choice which did not receive the consent of that governing body. Now, Trump will have to explain himself, risking his being held accountable for consumer prices, the rocky Wall Street situation, and chaos and destruction all around the Middle East as the war spreads. The best White House rationale for the war is that the US was forced to attack, because if Iran was forced to defend itself against a lone Israeli attack, they would also launch attacks on US facilities in the region. Trump asserted to CNN that in his opinion “Iran was going to attack first if the US didn’t.” If the MAGA crowd has faith in this lie, Trump will have affirmed his dominance. If he’s seen as Netanyahu’s puppet, this will be problematic far beyond the abstract debates in Congress over war powers. The problem the president has initiated for himself is not rooted in high-minded principles like freedom and national sovereignty, but in conspiracy theory and antisemitism — terms given the veneer of respectability by right-wing intellectuals and gullible reporters.
The largely ignored isolationist group, America First Committee, has an unshakeable belief in a global Jewish conspiracy against America, which was beneath the drive to release the Epstein files in the 2024 presidential campaign. Trump represented the God-sent hero to fulfill a prophecy to save America from a secret cabal of powerful Jews involved in sex-trafficking young girls to untouchable elites, with Jeffrey Epstein heading this syndicate. John Stoehr says, “Once reelected, Trump was supposed to bring them all to justice. When he didn’t, he triggered a crisis of faith that can be registered in polling that lumps him in with the rest of the ‘wealthy elites’ who act with impunity for the law — the so-called ‘Epstein class.'” However, these supporters can shift from anti-war to pro-war as smoothly as has the president; but not being rooted in high-minded principles — only Jew-hate — supporters are not going to warm up to the appearance of an American president seeming to take orders from the leader of a Jewish state. Instead, they might see Trump doing to believers in America First what he has done to supporters who demanded the release of the Epstein files. Thus, the president’s lie that he forced Netanyahu’s hand. Yet, this assertion of dominance is compounded by his heel-turn in the Epstein files case — the crisis of faith within MAGA leaves a growing suspicion that instead of destroying the global Jewish conspiracy against America, he has joined it.
The host of Anchor Watch on Lincoln Square, retired Navy commander Bobby Jones, offered his opinion on a week’s worth of warfare with Iran: “It’s important that people understand this is not going to be something that is a shot-term or easy operation to get out from under. If we’re not careful, it’s going to make Afghanistan and Iraq look like a church picnic.” To emphasize the lack of leadership, Jones says, “Depending on which one of the three — Trump, Hegseth, or Rubio — you’re talking to, you get a different justification for why these actions are taking place, which is a telltale sign that strategically, people are not aligned across the board.” Donald Trump’s claims of an imminent Iranian threat are so unbelievable that the Associated Press had given him personal ownership of the fiasco, reporting that Republicans in Congress stopped a war-powers vote last week concluding efforts to end ‘Donald Trump’s war against Iran.’ Pete Hegseth, obviously replaying one of his favorite video games, said, “This was never meant to be a fair fight. And it is not a fair fight. We are punching them while they’re down, which is exactly how it should be.”
The Raw America blog reports that as President Trump was threatening Iran with annihilation on Truth Social, the “White House was quietly doing something that should alarm every mayor, police chief, and sheriff in America: blocking the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, and the National Counterterrorism Center from warning local law enforcement that his war has raised the terror threat on American soil.” The Daily Mail reported that the three agencies had prepared a five-page joint intelligence bulletin entitled ‘A Public Safety Awareness Report: Elevated Threat in the United States During US-Iran Conflict’ to send to state and local authorities. Detailed were elevated threats from Iranian government operatives, Iranian proxies, threats to Jewish and Israeli institutions, and the danger that radicalized individuals of varying ideologies might use as cover for their violence. Local law enforcement will never know how to respond because the bulletin never went out — Department of Homeland Security gave the White House a heads-up beforehand and Trump’s cronies put it on hold.
The White House didn’t deny killing the bulletin, with spokeswoman Abigail Jackson offering that the administration was “ensuring information being disseminated is accurate, up to date, and has been properly vetted.” A senior DHS official slammed the decision with, “They don’t want anything getting out that says what they’re doing in Iran is raising the threat level at home.” Such bulletins are meant to be politically untouched — neutral, fact-based, and issued without White House input. Such speculation was borne out in an Austin, Texas bar after Operation Epic Fury was launched, when a gun-toting supporter of the Iranian regime opened fire, killing three people and wounding fifteen before law enforcement dispatched him. Following the incident, FBI Director Kash Patel placed counterterrorism teams on high alert nationwide. As Raw America says, “The threat is real. The bulletin was real. And the White House sat on it.”
Hegseth’s accusations against the Islamic Republic that it is “hell-bent on prophetic Islamic delusions,” and Rubio’s statement that the country needed to be attacked now because “that entire regime is led by radical clerics who make decisions based on their view of theology, which is an apocalyptic one,” stand in contrast to the executors of the war which phrase the conflict in apocalyptic terms of their own — that they are fulfilling the promises of their own holy books, and that their justice is in fact God’s. As Séamus Malekafzali, journalist and writer focusing on Middle East politics, writes in The Nation, “Both the US and Israel have long asserted the right to commit imperial violence with impunity, while expecting other countries to pay a high price if they do the same. Now that double standard is being applied to the idea of holy war itself. Theocracy, it would seem, is wrong only when some people do it. To play an old trope: ‘The apocalyptic prophecies are coming from inside the house.‘”
The Raw America site exposes the central horror of this moment: “Plainly, we are fighting a war under the direction of a man whose motivations nobody — not his allies, not his Cabinet, not the people who work for him every single day — can fully explain. Trump has made something of a brand out of this. He brags, openly, that nobody knows what he’s going to do because he doesn’t know what he’s going to do. In a previous life, in a different kind of man, that might be strategic ambiguity. In Donald Trump, it is simply the truth.” As for the people around him, Marco Rubio wears the expression of a man who has realized the building is on fire. JD Vance has pivoted so many times he’s lost track of which direction he’s facing. And even Benjamin Netanyahu, after wanting American military action for decades, has the energy of a man attempting to cash a check before the bank changes its mind.
It comes down to one person who understands Trump most clearly — Jared Kushner — who is not in the government but is likely running foreign policy for his father-in-law. Jared collecting a $2B investment from a Saudi-backed fund after leaving office in Trump’s first tenure, earned Trump’s respect, despite not being a pART of the DEAL — or was he? The Donald’s reaction was blissful unawareness in his expression of satisfaction: “Jared can really work the Arabs. They like Jews to handle the money.” For some — who question what Trump sees in this war — it has nothing to do with strategic interest, security, or regional stability, but something far simpler: what’s in it for him! The oil in Iran (which the Israelis are burning, to his horror), reconstruction money, and Persian Gulf sovereign wealth funds looking for a post-war landscape to invest in. Perhaps Trump can’t explain why he’s taken us to war, but his son-in-law will figure out what it all means and how to profit from it.
As Steve Schmidt tells us in The Warning, “Only a fool would be surprised to discover that Jared Kushner is at the center of a growing scandal around highly sensitive national security matters — a torrent of corruption that follows in the footsteps of Kushner and Trump’s Middle East negotiator, Steve Witkoff.” Schmidt says it is stunning, with no words to adequately describe the depravity of the theft and their betrayal of the USA, as the full details of the sale of America’s most sensitive computer chips to the UAE become known. It is estimated that the Trump and Witkoff families pocketed $187 million and $31 million, respectively, in the sellout of American security, not in a corrupt business deal, but in an act of espionage. While The New York Times detailed Kushner’s $2 billion deal in April 2022, no one seemed to care, but Schmidt calls the corruption so gargantuan that it is beyond comprehension.
Trump has shattered every convention and tradition that requires dignity and integrity, while obliterating the law, duty, responsibility and obligation. Even the honor of being twice-elected to the presidency only bolstered his belief that his temporary power was a license to take, steal, smash, punish, destroy and avenge, with the current term experiencing his unleashing of cruel Gestapo-like secret police to terrorize the American people. Kushner has been an abhorrent contributor to American decline and division over the last eleven years, a sinister and corrupt figure who perfectly represents the fantastical levels of corruption that have engulfed Washington, DC in the Trump years. Schmidt describes Kushner as a soft-handed and fragile-boned child of privilege, whose only skill is the flattery of sociopathic egos. His family’s wealth obscured his mediocrity as he entered Harvard University, before diving into the “jungles of Manhattan” where he continued to prove that any child of an indulgent billionaire parent can make it anywhere…’New York, New York!‘
Kushner’s failed business decisions found him drifting into the Oval Office with Donald Trump, where they have done more damage to the US than any people since Secession, adding $6.7 trillion to the national debt, but parlaying $2.4 billion in personal income into their pockets. Anything and everything was for sale, with the American people being cut out of the equation, as the government was only for the Trump Crime Syndicate and the MAGA movement, with Kushner serving as an “informal advisor.” The ‘advisor’ was denied a security clearance, failing background investigations, as security officials deemed him untrustworthy and not to be trusted with classified information. Not a problem for father-in-law Don who then gave him the highest level security clearances, leading the classified-briefings-loving Jared to request them more often than any staff member as he began his flitting around the world as an architect of Middle East ‘peace.’ Both Jared and wife, Ivanka Trump, were “mediocrities who were unread, inexperienced, sheltered, arrogant beyond measure, and surprisingly simple fraudsters who didn’t know very much about anything except where to look for money,” says Schmidt.
Understood by most, that the US Congress is a thoroughly broken institution, though shining through is the January 6 Committee which showed what is possible when honorable men and women come together, putting America ahead of political parties and cults of personality. Schmidt says that in this vein, the Kushner payoff deserves scrutiny by Congress, counter intelligence officials, and the media until every detail comes out. Extremist movements are always corrupt and corrupt movements always become extremist movements — the NRA and CPAC being perfect examples of this circumstance. We should all care about knowing the details of what Jared Kushner did to get this money, as well as the reasoning behind Director of National Intelligence’s Tulsi Gabbard locking away in a safe a whistleblower’s report about Kushner.
President Trump has been insisting that he must be personally involved in the process of selecting a new leader in Iran, and that the Iranians are “wasting their time” in considering the 56-year old son of the late Ayatollah, Mojtaba Khamenei, as the likely replacement. Trump said, “We want someone that will bring peace and harmony to Iran — Khamenei’s son is a lightweight. Potential future leaders keep dying — everyone who wants to be leader ends up dead.” There was some political dissension among leaders in Iran about the hereditary selection of the Ayatollah’s son, which resembled a clerical version of the rule of the shah who was toppled in the 1979 Islamic Revolution, but the leadership of the Assembly of Experts were in favor of this appointment for prosecution of the war. So, in the end Mojtaba was chosen to be in charge of Iran’s armed forces and any decision regarding pursuit of Tehran’s nuclear program. The successor has never held any governmental post, either elective or appointive, and he is said to be even more hard-line than his father, which will put him directly in the gunsights of the Israelis, but Iran’s Revolutionary Guard and Lebanon’s Hezbollah both issued statements of support.
Trump’s pronouncement insisting on his involvement in choosing a successor was likely to complicate efforts to end the ongoing conflict, but now that Mojtaba has been selected, our president will view him as a “transitional figure” with a bullseye on his back, even as some Iranians are “chanting for his death.” The Trump administration may be willing to keep the Iranian regime in place if they accede to US demands involving the enrichment of uranium, ending their ballistic missile program, and an end to terrorist proxies around the world. CNN’s Fareed Zakaria termed Mojtaba’s appointment “a very bad sign for the war” in that Iran’s hardliners now have the upper hand, “showing that the Iranian regime is dug in.”
So we’ll just have to wait for a slithering Trump to provide us with an answer or justification for going to war, even as he demands “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!” from the Iranians. Satirist Andy Borowitz offers his take on the new Iranian leader with this: “In a blistering takedown of Iran’s new Supreme Leader, on Sunday Eric Trump claimed that the late Ayatollah’s son was an incompetent idiot who only attained his position through nepotism. ‘The last thing the world needs is yet another total bonehead getting a leg up just because of who his dad is,’ Trump said. ‘If this dope’s last name was Henderson instead of Khamenei, he wouldn’t even be in the conversation.’ He added that giving someone control over massive sums of money just because he had a powerful father is ‘a recipe for disaster.’ ‘What kind of backward country showers someone with riches because of who his dad is?’ Trump asked. ‘All I can say is, congratulations, Iran: you just chose a member of the Lucky Sperm Club.'”
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Dale Matlock, a Santa Cruz County resident since 1968, is the former owner of The Print Gallery, a screenprinting establishment. He is an adherent of The George Vermosky school of journalism, and a follower of too many news shows, newspapers, and political publications, and a some-time resident of Moloka’i, Hawaii, U.S.A., serving on the Board of Directors of Kepuhi Beach Resort. Email: cornerspot14@yahoo.com. |

Thomas is traveling and forgot to bring his book. He’ll be back!

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Thomas Leavitt is the husbandy thing to our illustrious webmistress. A resident of Santa Cruz (now part time) since 1993, his interests include history, technology, and community organizing. He started the world’s first self-service web hosting company, WebCom, located at 903 Pacific in May of 1994. He’s been part of too many community organizations to mention, and ran for City Council in the early aughts. Email Thomas at ThomLeavitt@gmail.com |
“ADHD”
“Not making it on time to an appointment because your brain has compromised time-management function is an actual limitation, not a character flaw.”
~Penn Holderness
“Procrastination is not Laziness”, I tell him. “It is fear. Call it by its right name, and forgive yourself.”
~Julia Cameron
“The problem is that everyone expects you to be motivated by the same things that motivate others.”
~Jesse J. Anderson
“The ADHD brain is built for responsiveness, for novelty, for meaningful stimulation. It is attuned to cues of interest and urgency, rather than arbitrary deadlines or routines.”
~Ronen Dancziger
“People don’t need to be taught so much as they need to be inspired.”
~Walt Disney
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So, at first I was just going to link a funny video from the Holderness Family. The wife, Kim, just got diagnosed with ADHD, and there’s a funny song about it. I lost the link when my laptop crashed, and looking for it, I found this podcast where she makes the “formal” announcement. It’s a really good one, so I’m linking to that instead. Watch all their music videos, they’re hysterical, but do watch this video on ADHD. You might understand me better if you do, just sayin’… |
Direct questions and comments to webmistress@BrattonOnline.com
(Gunilla Leavitt)

February 25 – March 10, 2026
Greensite… on the Sixth Cycle Housing Element… Steinbruner… BESS, County Fairgrounds, County Budget. Hayes… Naming and Renaming… Patton… Wrecking ball / Don’t Pee On My Leg And Tell Me It’s Raining Matlock… …a comeuppance…a lovely ballroom…refunds…who will? / …closing walls…wag-the-dog…firestorm…blow up… Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover … Webmistress serves you… Ötzi, the Iceman… Quotes on… “War”
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DOUBLE-ISH ISSUE THIS WEEK. Yeah, I know. It’s March now! Wild, if you ask me… Don’t forget that we are springing forward this weekend! Starting Sunday, it will be light longer at night… I do love that part of it, even if I’m thrown ALL the way off for days and days after the time change.
Now, onward with this week’s content!
~Webmistress
A MURDER BETWEEN FRIENDS. Prime. Movie. (3.5 IMDb)
Half a point for being in focus. Joan Collins fronting for a series – at least according to the end card. Six… “people,” I guess… reunite at an Airbnb “castle” owned by a legendary mystery writer, played by Joan Collins. One of them ends up floating in the hot tub. That’s about it.
Everyone treats Joan Collins as a full-blown Mary Sue: “You’re a great mystery writer – we should all listen to you.” What does she actually do? Watch security cameras that most of the cast already know about, while they continue misbehaving anyway.
It’s embarrassing to watch, especially since I’m reasonably sure she bankrolled it. Not worth a watch. Stand well back. Mind the gap. Go watch “Agatha Christie’s 7 Dials” on Netflix.
~Sarge

THE LAST KIDS ON EARTH. Netflix. Series (1hr pilot). (7.2 IMDb) ![]()
This largely bloodless animated series began with a pilot-style special and ran for two seasons. It’s based on the children’s book series by Max Brallier, with character designs inspired by the illustrations of Douglas Holgate.
The story follows orphan Jack Sullivan as he adjusts to life after an invasion of extra-dimensional monsters and a zombie apocalypse. He soon bands together with a scrappy group of kids who missed the evacuation – along with a loyal monster-dog – forming their own ragtag survival team.
Aimed primarily at the 8–12 crowd, the show still has enough sharp humor and creature-feature flair to entertain adults. The voice cast includes Nick Wolfhard (brother of Finn), Mark Hamill, Keith David, Catherine O’Hara, and Rosario Dawson. Worth a watch – with or without your kids.
~Sarge
AGATHA CHRISTIE’S SEVEN DIALS. Netflix. Series. (6.2 IMDb)
There have been a fair few non-Poirot/Marple adaptations recently, and this is certainly one of them.
The cast is solid – Martin Freeman is great, and Mia McKenna-Bruce really shines in the lead role (though Helena Bonham Carter kind of phones in a stock twitchy character). The film doesn’t quite hook you into the mystery, though. It’s not slow, just… not all that engaging. The highlight for me was definitely Mia jumping out of a window to dodge a wedding proposal. On the plus side, it’s only 3 episodes. Many clocks.
It’s probably worth a watch if you’re looking for something to pass the time before the next episode of your favorite show drops.
~Sarge
THE MUPPET SHOW. Disney+. Series. (8.4 IMDb) ![]()
Or, as I like to think of it, ANTI-MELANIA. They both star a woman who is completely self-obsessed, clinging to a less attractive mate’s position: I mean, of course, the return of … THE MUPPET SHOW!
That’s right, the same old gang at the same old theatre. Minus the legendary Jim Henson and Frank Oz (who is still alive, at time of writing), it actually defies the concern of losing the magic – it’s almost like it never ended. Which is a good thing. Only one episode so far, but it’s off to a good start. Worth a watch!
~Sarge
LA BELLE ET LA BÊTE (1946). Disney+, Max. Movie. (7.4 IMDb) ![]()
Just ran back across this amazing version of Beauty and the Beast (literally haven’t watched it since the early 90’s), with amazing magical settings, and honestly a beast you like so much more than the Prince underneath. There are a number of visuals that have found their way into other lesser films. Jean Marais literally smolders in his cat-like beast. In French with English subtitles. Ça vaut le détour.
~Sarge
RIOT WOMEN. BritBox. Series. (8.5 IMDb)
In the early ’90s, a musical revolution erupted – one part punk, many parts feminism – spearheaded by bands like Bikini Kill and Bratmobile (<3): "Riot Grrrl". It laid the foundation for bands like L7 and Hole, whose raw energy and unapologetic attitudes reshaped rock music. Fast forward 35 years, and those fierce grrrls are now navigating the challenges of menopause. Enter Riot Women, a series that follows a group of "women of a certain age" who've had it up to here with hot flashes and feeling invisible. What starts as a joke quickly transforms into something more: they decide to start their own band. While only a few episodes are currently available on BritBox (released weekly), the show's got heart, humor, and plenty of punch. If you've ever felt overlooked or dismissed, Riot Women is a riotous reminder that it's never too late to reclaim your voice. Available exclusively on BritBox (via PrimeVideo for me) - worth a watch, so far. ~Sarge
COVER-UP. Netflix. Movie. (7.5 IMDb)
I was all of eight years old when I first heard about William Calley and the massacre at My Lai. No details, just that someone had destroyed a village. For years I assumed it was a bombing: distant, impersonal. I was today years old when I finally learned just how VERY up-close and personal it actually was. I’ve experienced true tunnel vision only twice in my life. This made it the third.
“Cover-Up” is an extraordinary first-hand (self-)account of the life and career of Seymour Hersh, a journalist hip-deep in some of the most damning exposés of the last half-century – from My Lai to Watergate to Abu Ghraib.
Fair warning: the first quarter focuses on My Lai, and the images and descriptions are brutal enough to send you – perhaps not for the first time – into the streets to protest the Vietnam War.
This is the biography of an irascible reporter who will stop at nothing – for better or worse – to get at the truth. It’s deeply uncomfortable viewing, and absolutely worth it.
~Sarge
PRINCESS BRIDE. Hulu. Movie. (8 IMDb)
Meathead made good…
- Spinal Tap
- When Harry Met Sally
- Stand By Me
- A Few Good Men
- Misery
- The. Princess. Effing. Bride.
Undoubtedly, you’ve all heard about the murder of Rob & Michele Reiner, allegedly by their son Nick (who suffered from drug addiction and schizophrenia – not, as the Tangerine Pustule would have you believe, from “T***p Derangement Syndrome”).
Rather than dwell on the sadness, I’d point you to the brightest light Carl Reiner’s boy ever put into the world: The Princess Bride. It’s a film that keeps finding new fans, while never losing the old ones. I read William Goldman’s 1973 novel and was in no way disappointed by Reiner’s loving, pitch-perfect adaptation.
My review? Go watch it again. In this terrible time, belief in the triumph of True Love feels urgently necessary. Worth a watch — again, and again, and again.
~Sarge
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Sarge, aka Jeffery Sargent, cut his teeth on the Golden Age of Hollywoood on TV and with regular trips to the Sash Mill. Film classes then, at Cabrillo with Morton Marcus, broadened his scope – he found he preferred Keaton over Chaplin, and Akira Kurosawa was his Yoda. Sarge spent 15 years working in Special Effects, on everything from Starship Troopers to Battlestar Galactica. He is a staunch geek who has a weak spot for Cozy Mysteries and loathes “Reality” shows. While he doesn’t care for the unrelenting banal horror of “True Crime”, he licks his lips over a twist like the end of Chinatown. Email Sarge at JeffLSargent@gmail.com |
March 3, 2026
I wrote the following piece in 2023. Today I would retitle it as The Future Is Now. The issues discussed are as relevant as ever, if not more so. An additional fact is that in the Fifth Cycle, the city not only met but doubled the required number of housing units. Why do that, given the negative impacts involved with rapid growth? We are two years into the Sixth Cycle and from the projects approved and built since 2023, and the line-up of many more awaiting building permits, plus the unnecessary, staff-proposed Overlay District, the city is poised yet again to overbuild, this time on steroids.
I’m running for Mayor, in part to take on this issue. More on that next week.
~Gillian

“This is just the beginning” advised the city Planning Director as he presented the Sixth Cycle Housing Element to council on the 12th of December. With few comments and lavish praise for the Director and his team, council unanimously approved the document, launching an ambitious housing growth blueprint for the next eight years.
The number of additional housing units mandated for the city of Santa Cruz by the state agency HCD, Housing and Community Development, is a staggering five times the units mandated for the previous eight-year cycle: 3736 units versus 747 and a far higher increase than for other county cities such as Watsonville or for the county itself.
Few CA cities reached the Fifth Cycle mandated housing goals. Santa Cruz city was among the small six per cent of those that did. Not only reached but exceeded the mandate, especially for the above moderate income housing units. How you view that accomplishment depends on whether you think the more housing the better or whether you think we’ve reached a tipping point of carrying capacity. As for “affordable” housing, to qualify for the Low-Income category, an individual can have an annual income up to $92,500, a number that rises with the rise in the AMI, Area Median Income, a target forever moving upwards as the affluent buy into Santa Cruz.
Nevertheless, the city council enthusiastically accepted the Sixth Cycle with nary an objection or critical comment. Councilmember Sandy Brown did note that the entry regarding Mobile Homes was incorrect, that they are not affordable, and that the entry gave the wrong impression but that was it. Very few members of the public spoke. The majority of the four who spoke were from the housing advocacy group YIMBY. Only one member of the public called the mandated numbers of housing units “excessive” and that the report was being “rubber-stamped” by the council. It was hard to disagree with that assessment. One barrier to a more critically- inclined council is the current practice of council members asking questions of staff and getting answers before the meeting, out of the public arena. So, the community never hears their questions nor the answers. That may be more efficient, but it is less democratic.
One important fact worthy of council comment and discussion yet receiving none was contained in the last paragraph of the Agenda Report. It said, “New housing will increase the City’s tax base, but services provided to new residents generally cause new housing to result in net negative fiscal impacts over the long-term.” (emphasis added). Fora city about to raise taxes due to a projected long-term budget shortfall, ignoring this fact seems fiscally irresponsible. Yes, the state is mandating this new housing but where is the push-back from our city leaders? Where is the strategy discussion on how to engage the state to demand compensation for their required excessive housing requirements? It was a non-issue.
Many other cities are far more critical of the state’s housing mandates than is the city of Santa Cruz. By contrast, our department heads, and by extension our city council seem to embrace and amplify the mandate to build, baby, build. Buried in the long lists of goals, policies and objectives were several entries going above and beyond the requirements.
Consider the following:
- 1.5e. Present to Council amendments to the City’s ADU regulations regarding owner occupancy to provide greater flexibility to existing and future ADU developments.
- Policy 3.5 Facilitate new student housing as well as housing for university faculty and staff. My note: this is off-campus housing.
- 1.6a. Utilize the Planned Development Permit process to facilitate housing development by considering modifications to building setbacks, street standards, lot coverage, lot area, parking and loading, landscaping, open space, uses, and maximum height.
- 1.3c. Adopt code changes that reduce parking requirements, increase shared parking allowances, and increase off-site parking allowances to further facilitate housing, with the ultimate goal to eliminate parking minimums citywide by January 2028.
- 1.3g. Adopt zoning changes by January 2027 to align development standards and use allowances with the maximum intensity already allowed under state law, following a comprehensive review. Zoning changes will include heights and lot coverages among other development standards.
- 6.2d. Adopt an ordinance that expands housing opportunities in single-family zones by amending the Zoning Ordinance to allow the conversion of larger homes to multiple units when doing so would currently exceed limitations on types of housing allowed and would currently exceed density limits.
While this all may be music to YIMBY’s ears, it is a loud raspberry to anyone who has lived in Santa Cruz long enough to wince at this urban, dense, largely affluent make-over into a new place where long-time truly low-income residents are leaving en masse.
The last words to council from the Planning Director were that all this new housing will mean a “more equitable and more sustainable future.” I have my doubts.
| Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association http://darksky.org Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild. |
Saturday, February 28, there was an event in Pinto Lake City Park, on Green Valley Road in Watsonville, sponsored by the Stop Lithium BESS is Santa Cruz County. We will be back with more information from this, but in the meantime, you can
- Sign the petition at change.org
- Donate to the gofundme for the organization (to stand a chance at being effective, they need a lawyer)
- Listen to this February 22 Interview on KSQD Radio
Trust and believe that this issue is nowhere near over and done with.
THE COUNTY PICKS AND CHOOSES WHEN IT ENFORCES POLICY
Why would County Planning Staff recommend a developer can slide by offering less affordable housing than what the County Planning Commission recommended? That was a great question that met with Supervisor Koenig ignoring residents of the Beachcomber Mobile Home Park who had waited for hours to speak at the public hearing on the project at 5940 Soquel Avenue Frontage Road, which will add 100 new units with a total of 17 three-story tall buildings towering over them and erasing privacy.
Supervisor Cummings and Supervisor Hernandez wanted 20% affordable, aligning with County Planning Commission recommendations, but the other supervisors rejected that. Supervisor Martinez wanted to know if there could be less than 15% affordable? Supervisor Koenig cautioned that “if we ask for too much, we will get nothing.” County Counsel affirmed the developer could walk away if the Supervisors chose to be too stringent by asking greater that 15% affordable inclusionary units.
The developer and staff insisted only 15% affordable “for-sale” units would pencil out, even though the Planning Commission had recommended 20%. The Planned Unit Development (PUD) approved in 2008 had specified 40% affordable. Supervisor Cummings pressed to support the Planning Commission’s recommendation of 20%, and pointing out that earlier Nexus Studies had determined that for a project like this, where all the affordable units will be dedicated to moderate income buyers, the number should deed 23% of the units affordable.
He pointed out that the developer had provided no actual evidence that 20% inclusionary housing “would not pencil out” for moderate income units.
Supervisor Koenig exposed that the emergency secondary access would be routed through the County Sheriff Center parking lot adjacent, and requested clarification that County workers (likely law enforcement?) would be given priority preference for purchasing the affordable units. The planner confirmed that as true.
This site in Live Oak is next to the former Nigh Lumber Yard (now Marshall’s Roofing). The parcel was approved locally and by the State for a Planned Unit Development (PUD) in 2008 to provide 40% of the 102 units to be affordable. The environmental review of the site back then rendered a mitigated negative declaration.
It has served as a storage yard and office location for a few tow truck companies until recently being cleared, including cutting a couple of large trees where hawks purportedly roosted, and demolishing a permanent structure on the premises, perhaps without a demolition permit.
One man who testified played a recording of the frogs singing at the site. When it rains, the site is alive with frogs and other creatures, due to the ponding that happens there.
“Stormwater drainage at this site cannot be over-emphasized,” said former County Planning Commissioner Michael Guth, calling in to provide history of the parcel, and cautioning the Supervisors about the inadequacy of the proposed on-site bioswale that is supposed to keep all stormwater runoff on-site.
Mr. Sam Nigh testified and provided photos supporting that the area handles great volumes of stormwater from a culvert beneath Highway One that drains the runoff from the former Skyview Drive-In to the area proposed for this 100-unit new subdivision. I also testified to support that, having worked for a few years at Far West Nursery adjacent, and witnessed the entire rear area of the property under 12″ of water when the drain ditch overflowed.
“I won’t vote against an any project with affordable housing,” said Supervisor Cummings after Supervisors Martinez, Koenig and DeSerpa rejected his motion to require 20% inclusionary affordable housing for moderate incomes, “but it just seems that the County picks and chooses when it will follow County policies” he said, having read into the record what the Planning Commission had recommended,.
He was obviously upset that the majority of the Board rejected an opportunity to add more affordable housing rather than siding with the KB Homes developer to do their bidding for maximum profits.
Later, one resident informed me there had been no notice to their adjacent community about the Board was holding a public hearing on this project. “Several had their comments ready, timed to two minutes, but they did not know this was happening today.” Hmmm…….
Who will inform the frogs that the bulldozers will soon arrive?
Here is a link to the meeting video. Click on Item #8
At minute 15:24, listen to the man asking that the Board to do better environmental analysis to consider the frogs. At Minute 19:56, a resident of the Beachcomber Mobile Home Park speaks up. Chair Martinez admonished others who also wanted to speak on the item, informing them they must wait until the item was up for discussion ….which turned out to be hours later.
THE COUNTY BUDGET WILL HAVE A $26.2 MILLION GAP
The County has spent money as if there were no tomorrow…and now “tomorrow” is here, with an anticipated $26.2 Million gap. That was the message delivered by CEO Nicole Coburn and staff to the Board of Supervisors Tuesday. The presentation seemed to point the finger at the HR 1 federal funding cuts, but it was evident the County made some bad decisions on spending in the last few years.
The Covid spending and 2017 storm damage to roads brought about such massive debt, the County opted to take out an unprecedented $90 Million bond to finance paying the bills. Meanwhile, then-CEO Carlos Palacios encouraged many large purchases, such as the new South County Government Center in Watsonville, the building adjacent to the Live Oak Sheriff Center to house the Children’s Mental Health Crisis Center (over-budget and still not open due to licensing problems), and purchase of 38 acres of farmland on Whiting Road to make into hiking trails in Watsonville.
Current CEO Nicole Coburn again mentioned the project under study to build workforce housing on the 701 Ocean Street campus…which would require demolition of the County Court House. Many new hires were initiated to fill staffing gaps, often at higher salary rates “in order to retain qualified workers”. Hmmm…
The debt service payments on that $90 Million bond is anticipated to be $6.5 Million annually.
In response, the CEO announced that effective February 25, 2026, there is a freeze on all County hiring and staff travel. The Board voted to notify all non-profits currently contracted to receive millions of dollars that the County may not be able to follow through with those payments.
What is next? Stay tuned for March 10 when CEO Coburn will have better numbers. She mentioned there may be a new sales tax in the future. Hmmmm…. Will that pay for more homeless and drug addiction “resources” offered by a multitude of non-profits who don’t seem to be making much of a difference, other than filling their own pockets??? The Board approved adding nearly $6 Million more to two such non-profits (Consent Items #33 and #34):
33. Approve rate agreement with The Camp Recovery Center, LLC in the amount of $4,304,795 to provide withdrawal management, residential, and outpatient programs to adults with substance use disorders, and take related actions (Health Services Agency)
34. Approve first amendment to rate agreement with Encompass Community Services, increasing the amount by $1,062,393 for a total of $8,746,826, to add services for Recovery Residences for adults with substance use disorders, and take related actions (Health Services Agency)
Try taking a look at the salaries of the folks running the County, but sit down…many make over half a Million annually.
Here is a link to the meeting video…click on Item #10: Feb 24, 2026 Board of Supervisors – Regular Meeting – Santa Cruz County, CA
CHANGES AT THE SANTA CRUZ COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS RACETRACK…WILL IT GET SHUT DOWN?
Last week, the Santa Cruz Fairgrounds Board approved a new contract for the race track, with a brand new company from San Jose. Will it be as successful as the former Ocean Speedway tenant, Mr. John Prentice? Will the new tenant be able to tolerate the economic abuse that has frequently been dealt by the Fairgrounds Foundation?
What has many worried is that the contract is only valid for one year. Then what?? It has been no secret that the Fairgrounds CEO does not seem to understand the importance of the race track to many or the economic boost it all brings to Watsonville, placing it on the racing map.
Will the Foundation convince the new CEO that shuttering the racetrack would be best??? Hmmm… If you or someone you know enjoys the racetrack, please write the Board and let them know. Fair Board Correspondence
A SEA OF PLASTIC AT THE FAIRGROUNDS PARKING LOT…BUT WHY?
Last week, I was surprised to find a sea of thick black plastic covering the area at the western edge of the Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds parking lot, adjacent to a creek that runs into College Lake.
This area has been the subject of much legal wrangling in Fairgrounds Board Closed Session meetings, ever since former Fairgrounds CEO Zeke Fraser allowed Granite construction to dump massive amounts of fill dirt there, taken from the Highway One excavation for the new Capitola Avenue overcrossing a couple of years ago. He claimed he had no idea it was happening, even though he signed an agreement with Granite to allow it..
Here is the edge of the plastic-covered area, and the new drain pipe to carry surface runoff to the creek below.
Here is the outfall for both drain pipes that lead into the creek and College Lake. It was really spouting stormwater from the parking lot, as well as the sea of plastic.
The parking lot “lake” waiting to be drained into the creek via a subsurface culvert.
Is the imported soil contaminated? Last winter, the area was covered in jute and seeded. Hmmm… College Lake is now a source of water for the beach-area agriculture.
Stay tuned.
SIGN UP AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE!
The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors just proclaimed March as Civil Grand Jury Awareness Month,
highlighting that important role of citizen oversight in local government. The California Constitution mandates each county have a Civil Grand Jury (not to be confused with a Criminal Grand Jury). Nevada is the only other state with such a mandate for citizen oversight of local government.
The County is actively recruiting volunteers for the 2026–2027 term, with information sessions planned for April 2 and 3 to encourage participation in investigating local government, ensuring transparency, and accountability. Find more information and applications here
You can also listen to this February 20 interview with
Mr. Bob Broussard, current Foreperson of the Santa Cruz County Civil Grand Jury.
WRITE ONE LETTER. MAKE ONE CALL. ATTEND A PUBLIC HEARING TO PROTECT THE ENVIRONMENT AND QUALITY OF LIFE. APPLY TO SERVE ON THE SANTA CRUZ COUNTY CIVIL GRAND JURY.
DO ONE THING THIS WEEK AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.
Cheers,
Becky
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Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.
Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com |
Ecologists often note that place names reflect things that have been destroyed. Elk Grove, California, has neither elk nor groves. The Elkhorn Slough likewise is missing its elk. Grizzly Island in the Delta doesn’t have grizzly bears anymore. Oakland is no longer a place full of oaks, and you’d be hard-pressed to find that many oaks in Thousand Oaks. Clear Lake is turbid. Forestville is distinctly unforested. The fine pools for which Los Banos Creek received its name have been replaced by a huge reservoir, which is sometimes unswimmable due to dangerous algal blooms. Examples go on and on. All of these names are recent, all colonist names.
Indigenous Names
Somewhere along the way humans saw fit to keep the indigenous names of places. Soquel is the original people’s name meaning ‘rushing waters’ – Soquel Creek still rushes and that seems a fine name, still. The indigenous name “Aptos” could have meant people, which works still, or ‘meeting of two streams’ which is also true. It might be a good start to start revitalizing the indigenous names of places.
Changing Back
Junipero Serra Peak is being changed back to Pimkolam a shortened version of “pimkoia’m, ti’at aula” the indigenous name for an unknown plant that grows there. Prior to 1950, it was known as Santa Lucia Peak. Near San Juan Bautista (a terrible name), an important site to local native peoples is now protected and is known by its original name, Juristac.
Other Changes
Without explanation, the current administration is making some seemingly sinister changes to place names. For instance, the highest peak in the USA is appropriately named by indigenous people ‘Denali‘ but the President wants to change it to Mount McKinley. That same someone with power recently also decided to change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America; I say let’s at least add an ‘s’ to that – the Gulf of the Americas would at least help us to realize that South and Central Americans are Americans, too. If it is becoming more acceptable to change place names, I say let’s go for it – there are lots of other changes and perhaps the next administration can force through a bunch in its first 100 days.
More Changes Needed
I have a particular problem with some place names imposed on locations and wish them changed. Far too many places have the name ‘devil’ in them. Devil’s Gate in Eastern California is one such instance. There are many more. Then there are legions of places named after people who barely deserved to have anywhere named for them. Scotts Valley, for instance: why do we care so much for Hiram Daniel Scott to have his name affixed to the town, still? And, does the town really deserve to be called a ‘valley’ anymore? Davenport, (for ‘Captain John Davenport’ the whaler) for that matter, deserves another name.
And then there are the religious references, so out of date. Santa Cruz makes little sense, anymore, if it ever did. And all those saints, San Lorenzo, San Luis, San Jose, San Francisco – so much potential for renaming there!
Let’s Ask The People
As we thankfully have momentum for recognizing the lands around us as unceded territory of various other peoples, wouldn’t it feel good to begin replacing the colonist imposed names of places with the names given those places by the people who lived there for thousands of years? If there are places without such names, why wouldn’t those representing the tribes play a central role in giving those places appropriate names? Let’s learn together the renaming that needs to take place – it will help bring us together and help more people respect and look anew at the land around us.
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Grey Hayes is a fervent speaker for all things wild, and his occupations have included land stewardship with UC Natural Reserves, large-scale monitoring and strategic planning with The Nature Conservancy, professional education with the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, and teaching undergraduates at UC Santa Cruz. Visit his website at: www.greyhayes.net
Email Grey at coastalprairie@aol.com |
February 23, 2026

The “Opinion” page in the February 19, 2026, edition of The New York Times included an editorial statement by Massimo Calabresi, the title of which reads like this: “Trump Is A Wrecking Ball, And He’s Only Getting Started.”
I am told you can read the whole statement by Calabresi by simply clicking the link that I have just provided, and that no paywall will prevent that. I certainly encourage you to read Calabresi’s statement, and to see what he has to say.
To summarize his main point, Calabresi says that our current president is disturbing (and destroying) the nation’s international relationships, and that “the outlines of his disruption are already clear: the collapse of multilateralism, a shift away from the liberal democratic values established after World War II and an embrace of a might-makes-right approach to national security.”
Our current president is asserting that what he says, and what he thinks should be understood as a statement by the nation itself. Obviously, this is a huge misunderstanding of how the United States has actually organized its government. Our president is charged with carrying out and “executing” the laws and directions of Congress. The “president,” in other words, is supposed to “do what he’s told to do by the Congress,” and it is not his job to tell everyone else what to do, and what to think, and what is what.
Of course, it is absolutely understandable that other nations might not get this. It seems like a lot of our own citizens don’t get it, either – including hundreds of those citizens who are elected Members of Congress, and who have totally abdicated their Constitutional responsibilities.
It is important that “we, the people,” make clear that what our current president is doing, and saying, does not, emphatically, “speak for us” in any official way. Again, it simply must be admitted that we, as citizens, aren’t doing as good a job as we should in making this crystal clear. The “No Kings” protests organized by Indivisible are powerful and important, but our individual responsibility is to insure that our local representatives to Congress say and do what WE want them to do, so the world doesn’t get the wrong impression of our nation.
We need to get a lot more “political,” in other words, if we want to make clear that the current occupant of the White House should be understood for who he actually is – a whack job who is literally taking a wrecking ball not only to our continuing foreign policy goals, but even to our president’s official residence, and is acting like what he happens to think is what “we” think!
Not true, right? If we want other nations to understand us (and not to succumb to the improper idea that the “president,” whenever the president acts or speaks, is always acting and speaking for the nation as a whole), then Congress should enact laws, and issue statements, that make that clear.
What our “Wrecking Ball” of a president is saying, and doing, is not to be interpreted as our own statement of national purpose!
Monday, March 2, 2026

I have already noted that the State of the Union speech, presented by our current Chief Executive on Tuesday, February 24th, was not noted for any genuine evaluation of where we actually are, right now, as a nation. As I said in that earlier blog posting, CBS found that most of what was asserted by our current president was either flat-out “false,” or “misleading.”
I have not read about anyone renaming that most recent “State of the Union” speech as the “State of Delusion,” but I was tickled to see that a couple of New York Times’ columnists suggested that the speech brought to mind the statement that I have used as my title, today: “Don’t Pee On My Leg And Tell Me It’s Raining.” Another, similar, statement would also work: “Who Do You Believe? Me, Or Your Lying Eyes.”
The Times’ column I am talking about, which ran in the February 27, 2026, edition of the paper, was called, “Trump Has Lost Touch With Reality.” Click on the link to read it. No paywall should prevent you from doing that.
Friends, whatever tenuous connection our Chief Executive has with “Reality,” it is imperative that “we, the people,” don’t succumb to delusions (of either grandeur or misery). We need to be in touch with the “real world,” the world as it actually is, not the world that somebody is trying to pawn off as reality.
Why is that particularly important? It’s important because “we, the people” are actually responsible for what our nation does, and we can’t (properly) blame someone else.
The way we run the country is by electing people who act as our “representatives,” much as lawyers “represent” their clients in court, and in important negotiations.
If you happen to end up with a representative who is not, actually, “representing” you, and who is not doing what you would like that representative to do on your behalf, election time is the time when you can make some changes.
In case you haven’t noticed, there are some alarming signs that our current Chief Executive, and his henchmen, would like to make sure that this doesn’t happen. There are concerted efforts to make sure that the upcoming November elections will result in the elevation to office of people who will do what they’re told (by our current president), as opposed to telling our current president what he is supposed to do, on behalf of their constituents.
This is just one more thing to worry about, right?
Well, true! And there is nothing wrong with worrying about it, but how about getting yourself together with one of those groups across the nation that are working to ensure election integrity? Locally, in Santa Cruz County, I am partial to “Indivisible.” Think about clicking some links! Do something, in other words, don’t just agonize!
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Gary Patton is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney for individuals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. You can read and subscribe to his daily blog at www.gapatton.net
Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com |
LAP DOGS, WATCHING A CHILD, PILLARS CRUMBLING
President Trump received his comeuppance from the Supreme Court last week, when they handed back to him his unlawful tariffs on a fool’s gold platter. As Bill Maher joked on his show, the court told him not to mess with the money and he took it very well…NOT! The president called the ruling a disgrace, cursing at the courts. Maher mused, “He’s such a Karen. You know, I mean, everything he does. Everything is always, ‘I want to speak to the manager.’ And the Supreme Court said, ‘We’re the manager.’ After this whole year of tariffs we’ve been going through, have you been thinking to yourself, ‘why didn’t other presidents think of doing this and not confiding in Congress when the Constitution says they have to?’ They did think of it. They thought it was illegal, so they didn’t do it. Now, the president says there are other ways he can get what he wants with the tariffs. I don’t know what they are, but…if you’ve ever been to Washington, DC, and you’ve seen that majestic Supreme Court building, it’s going to make a lovely ballroom.”
David McAfee writes on Raw Story that the Supreme Court justices may be fearing for their lives after Donald Trump’s response to their legal smackdown. The impending danger possibility was broached by Temidayo Aganga-Williams, an attorney who served as an investigator for the House J6 Committee, in his appearance on MS NOW, when he was asked about Trump’s response to the court ruling against his acting on a whim. The attorney says the president went personal because he nominated two of the justices, and there could be dangerous consequences. “It’s always about the person. And I think what’s stark is that he cannot hide behind who appointed them. These are folks that he appointed, that he picked, that he shook hands with, nominating them, and espousing how great they are. And even they came down against him. So he has to go down to attacking them personally, which I think is incredibly, incredibly dangerous because it’s one thing to say a judge got it wrong, but when you attack the person, you suggest that the way to rectify this is with that person. And in a world of political violence, I think we get closer to teaching the American people that what they have to do to rectify their needs is not to go through institutions, but instead something far more dangerous. And I think that’s the path we’re down.”
Trump continues to be filled with rage at the six court judges who ruled that he exceeded his authority by imposing tariffs based on a “national emergency,” which then prompted him to immediately institute a global 10% tariff, before he decided to increase the rate to 15% the following day. He lashed out at justices Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett in particular, saying their “families should be ashamed” of their decisions, calling them “lap dogs,” “a disgrace to our nation,” and “disloyal to the Constitution.” Joanna Coles of The Daily Beast said that watching Trump’s news conference was like “watching a child,” threatening to do tariffs anyway. “It absolutely is the mad queen from Alice in Wonderland. ‘Off with their heads, off with their heads.'” Author Michael Wolff commented that “he wears it all on his sleeve…done that for years now,” noting that his erratic strategy can be hard for the opposition to combat. Trump now has a new enemy in Chief Justice John Roberts, in direct contrast to the friendliness seen between the two following last year’s State of the Union speech when all seemed to be peaches and cream.
Attorney Neal Katyal, who successfully argued against Trump’s tariffs before the Supreme Court, argues against the new 15% global tariffs the president wants to impose as problematic. The particular statute Trump wants to use has “no obvious application here,” and, “If he wants sweeping tariffs, he should do the American thing and go to Congress. If his tariffs are such a good idea, he should have no problem persuading Congress. That’s what our Constitution requires,” said Katyal. Democratic strategist Jon Cooper responded that “Trump CANNOT legally impose a global tariff because the US doesn’t meet the clear emergency economic conditions envisioned by Section 122, and if he tries to invoke it, it would certainly face immediate legal challenges, economic pushback, and potential congressional scrutiny.” Author James Surowiecki called the imposition of global tariffs “just ridiculous,” since Trump has made it clear that his action is for ‘retribution.’ Journalist David Stockman had the most observant solution, saying, “Help…the man needs his meds!!”
click here to read the rest (link expands, click it again to collapse)
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PROTRACTED DISTRACTION, OPEN BETRAYAL, COLD WAR MOMENT
Last Monday, NPR’s revelation that their investigation into Trump’s Justice Department showed removal of Epstein files that contain allegations of sexual abuse against Donald Trump — at least 50 pages of FBI interviews with a woman who accused the current president of sexually assaulting her when she was 13 years old — gone! She was interviewed four times, resulting in documents with cross-referencing serial number stamps, which proved to NPR that those pages had vanished. Representative James Comer agreed to investigate and, remarkably, both political parties wanted answers about why the files were hiding Trump’s name. A few days later, The Washington Post reported that the Justice Department was investigating in an internal review to determine if the missing documents were wrongly withheld — Trump’s walls were closing in.
Hillary Clinton, after much fanfare back-and-forth, relented to sit for a closed-door House Oversight Committee deposition last week regarding her ties with Jeffrey Epstein, and the GOP’s attempt at humiliating her was handily turned around by her six-hour ordeal. With The New York Times‘ news that Trump, Melania, Mar-a-Lago and related terms appeared in the Epstein files more than 38,000 times, Clinton accused the committee of using her to distract from Trump’s ties to the accused pedophile/trafficker. The committee scheduled Bill Clinton for his closed-door session on Friday, with not much to show for that deposition, either. But things were working in the background with the Trumpers, and even with Oman’s foreign minister’s statement that negotiations between the US and Iran were making progress, the president later announced that he was “not happy” and would allow more time for discussions. Just hours later, he wagged the dog — he chose war.
Military strikes on Iran began early Saturday morning, as millions of Iranians were commuting to work or dropping kids at schools, without warning. Trump’s video statement calling on Iranian citizens to shelter in place accomplished little, as the first confirmed civilian casualties were at a girls’ elementary school in Minab, near the Strait of Hormuz. Initially, Iran’s state media reported 40 students killed, then 53, and by day’s end 85 killed and 63 wounded, as the detritus was scoured by rescuers. The death toll by morning was over 150. Of course, none of these actions were authorized by the US Congress, and curiously a vote on war powers resolutions had been scheduled to restrict exactly what Trump’s unconstitutional bullying had wrought. So now we are in a regional war caused by a president who is in cahoots with a Justice Department who chose to hide his presence in the Epstein files.
President Trump now faces a political minefield with this second strike on Iran, particularly after his claim that the Iranian nuclear threat was destroyed in June of last year. Conservative and MAGA voters were promised no new foreign wars during his ’24 campaign, and this new adventurism has created a firestorm within his base. According to Politico’s Erin Doherty, “The political damage is substantial and immediate action is necessary.” This global news and information company found in a recent poll that only half of Trump voters would support military action against Iran, with 30 percent opposed. Doherty wrote, “Those fractures, combined with largely unified Democrats, meant Americans broadly did not want an attack on Iran.” An Economist/YouGov poll also confirmed broad public opposition to action in the region. The future seems particularly dire for the GOP as they head into the midterm elections, and even small rebellions within the 2024 coalition will carry hefty consequences. Trump’s support within this coalition was tepid before his decision for war, resulting in a volatile situation depending on the aftermath. Republican strategist Jason Roe said, “The political risk depends on the outcome. If we break Iran without terrorist attacks coming to America or harm coming to allies in the region, it will be a political win for Trump. If this expands into a protracted conflict, or ends up with troops on the ground, it will be a liability.”
click here to read the rest (link expands, click it again to collapse)
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Dale Matlock, a Santa Cruz County resident since 1968, is the former owner of The Print Gallery, a screenprinting establishment. He is an adherent of The George Vermosky school of journalism, and a follower of too many news shows, newspapers, and political publications, and a some-time resident of Moloka’i, Hawaii, U.S.A., serving on the Board of Directors of Kepuhi Beach Resort. Email: cornerspot14@yahoo.com. |
Thomas will be back next week!
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Thomas Leavitt is the husbandy thing to our illustrious webmistress. A resident of Santa Cruz (now part time) since 1993, his interests include history, technology, and community organizing. He started the world’s first self-service web hosting company, WebCom, located at 903 Pacific in May of 1994. He’s been part of too many community organizations to mention, and ran for City Council in the early aughts. Email Thomas at ThomLeavitt@gmail.com |
“War”
“The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.”
~George S. Patton
“War does not determine who is right – only who is left.”
~Bertrand Russell
“The two most powerful warriors are patience and time.”
~Leo Tolstoy
“I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.”
~Albert Einstein
“Older men declare war. But it is the youth that must fight and die.”
~Herbert Hoover
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YouTube has full documentaries, and a lot of them! This one, about Ötzi, the Iceman is fascinating! Do give it a watch!
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Direct questions and comments to webmistress@BrattonOnline.com
(Gunilla Leavitt)














