October 18 – 24, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton…about Joy… Greensite…will definitely be back next week. Steinbruner Hayes…being present naturally. Patton…A Mark Twain Lesson. Matlock… Matlock will be back next week. Eagan … Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress…pick of the week: when opera makes you cry Quotes… “SEX” 

...

CONSTRUCTION OF CVS (LONG’S) DRUG STORE. This was taken July 22, 1965. You can see The Del Mar Theatre on the far left. Van’s Super Market in the photo is about where Oswald’s Restaurant and that ugly three story parking structure is located on Front Street.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE October 16

MORE CONCERNING JOY SCHENDLEDECKER. There’s been some confusion about my dropping Joy Schendledecker’s column from BrattonOnline. Let’s be very clear right from the start…I completely support Joy Schendledecker and her politics and I will definitely vote for her, no ifs ands or buts about it. Over the 48 (forty eight!!) years that I’ve been writing a weekly column (since Good Times Vol 1, April 1, 1975) I’ve dropped many co-writers, some of whom were my very best friends…simply because their “work just didn’t fit”. That’s what I told Joy and it’s impossible to explain further than “her writing just didn’t fit”. Not politics, nothing personal, her work just didn’t fit. Go here to read more about Joy and her campaign, and note my name among her endorsements …it’s been there quite a while. joyforsantacruz.com

MUNCHING WITH MOZART & FRIENDS. This free concert series happens every third Friday in the upstairs meeting room of the Downtown Santa Cruz Library. This will be Music for Violin and Piano with Brian Johnston, violin and Vlada Volkova-Moran, piano. That’s Friday October 20 at about 12 noon (better by 11:30 am).

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.8 IMDB). * It does give credit to Edgar Allen Poe for the title but not much else is from the book. It’s really a not too subtle riff on the very real Sackler Family and the opioid pharma OxyContin disaster. Usher’s Mom dies, her grave empties mysteriously, and six kids fight forever over the fortune. It’s really a horror film with a very confusing, crazed plot.

A DAY AND A HALF. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (5.8 IMDB). ** This is a Swedish movie and is supposedly based on a true story. A crazed dad searches for his baby daughter, gets a gun and leads police on a long multi car chase all over Sweden. There is so much sadness and tragedy and combining of plots that it’s hard to follow and share the tension and mystery.

FAIR PLAY. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.6 IMDB). *** An absolutely engrossing and magnetic movie that grabs you at the start and you’ll watch every second. It’s about hedge fund business in New York City… no, it’s really about an affair that an up and coming woman exec has with an equally ambitious male executive. It’s the job versus love, its love versus money its strength versus weakness and you’ll watch every second trying to figure out who’ll win….don’t miss it.

BALLERINA. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.3 IMDB). ***A Korean action movie and they just get better and better. Ballerina is full of violence and minimal ballet. It’s how one woman seeks revenge after her soon to be best friend gets into a complex and dangerous situation. The scenes between the two friends are touching and real and the violence is just as real…be aware but enjoy it.

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

BECKHAM. (NETFLIX SERIES) (8.5 IMDB). **    Not being a soccer or “football” fan as they call it in England, I had little idea of who David Beckham was…or is. He’s the greatest soccer star to ever make it bigtime. This excellent documentary takes us through his entire life from total 100% fame and love to absolute hell and disgust from every soccer fan in the world. He marries a Spice Girl, worries about kidnapping, and restores his fame and reputation after making a terrible mistake in one of his games. Go For it.

KHUFIYA. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.2 IMDB). This slow moving movie deals with the Pakistan vs. India war. It drifts from the spy driven plot and has many of the musical minutes that India movies keep inserting. There’s lung cancer, possible lesbian love the CIA, Osama Bin Laden and it still drags.

THE WONDERFUL STORY OF HENRY SUGAR. (NETFLIX MOVIES) (7.5 IMDB) (new addition) Wes Andersen took four stories by Roald Dahl and made simply fabulous and totally engrossing movies from them. First there’s “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar” (39 minutes) which stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Ralph Fiennes, Ben Kingsley and Dev Patel. Immediately next on Netflix is “The Rat Catcher” (6.7 IMDB) featuring Rupert Friend and Ralph Fiennes. Licorice lovers should heed advance warnings on that one! Then there’s “The Swan” (18 minutes) (6.9 IMDB). Again starring Rupert Friend and Ralph Fiennes, The Swan deals and nearly faces some gruesome facets of human depravity…added as the fourth of the Dahl & Anderson group is POISON. (17 MINUTES). (6.9 IMDB). This short movie has all the casts of the previous films. Cumberbatch, Dev Patel, Ralph Fiennes and Ben Kingsley. It’s an impossible and intense story with Cumberbatch in a hospital bed with a poisonous snake lying in wait on his stomach. Go for the four of these by all means.

...
October 16

Gillian will definitely be back next week.

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.

...

October 16

APTOS VILLAGE PROJECT ROAD HAZARD TO NISENE MARKS STATE PARK VISITORS

The County Public Works Dept. still has done nothing about the public safety hazard caused by the Aptos Village Project’s construction fence encroaching into Aptos Creek Road and creating a real blind corner that should not be allowed.



And what will Swenson do with all this drain pipe, stored on a big gash made in the hillside that is supposed to be a new County Park?  Likely it will be used to take all the parking lot and roof drainage through the Aptos Village County Park and let the polluted stuff drain into the clean waters of Aptos Creek.  Do you think that California Dept. of Fish & Wildlife knows about this potential pollution of the southern-most coho salmon habitat?

Contact Ms. Serena Stumpf, biologist for CDFW, tasked with watching over our creeks:

Serena Stumpf serena.stumpf@wildlife.ca.gov

Her supervisor is Wesley Stokes wesley.stokes@wildlife.ca.gov, so copy him on your letter.

Ask County Parks Director Jeff Gaffney how this drain pipe will cross the County Park property:

Jeff Gaffney jeff.gaffney@santacruzcountyca.gov

A GLIMPSE OF JUST HOW HIGH SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT RATE INCREASES WILL BE

The big debt for the massively-expensive and over-budget Project of Soquel Creek Water District to inject treated sewage water into the MidCounty aquifer’s drinking water supply is coming due, and ratepayers will soon be screaming about yet another series of big rate increases.

Last Tuesday, the Soquel Creek Water District Board of Directors heard their Raftelis Consulting staff explain just how far in debt the District is, thanks to the massively-expensive PureWater Soquel Project, and just how steep the upcoming rate increases will have to be in order to pay the bills..

Here is the link to that October 17 Soquel Creek Water District Board agenda packet

Item 7.2 Rate Study on page 110 is of interest

The last rate increases were all based on an anticipated PureWater Soquel Project cost of $60 million.  The Project cost is now approaching $200 million. What’s more, the last round of rate increases, which were cumulative and added up to a 54% rate hike and also formulated by Raftelis Consultants with the goal of financing the Project, were calculated on an assumption that customers would use a lot more water than they actually did.  So, although the PureWater Soquel Project costs have skyrocketed, the revenues have been significantly less than anticipated, because people have cut way back on water use.  Hmmmm…

  • Grants (all for PureWater Soquel Project)

* The state and federal grant programs have contributed over $100 million dollars to the District through the State Water Resource Control Board’s Prop 1 Program, Department of Water Resource’s Sustainable Groundwater Program, and the Bureau of Reclamation’s Title XVI Program.

  • Debt Profile (This is debt encumbered with the PureWater Soquel Project)

* The District has three existing lines of debt. The 2020 Revenue Refunding Bonds are currently being repaid, the Seawater Intrusion Control Fund repayments begin in FY 2026, and WIFIA repayments start in FY 2030. The final payment for the CoBank Revolving Line of Credit will be in FY 2025.

SEE PAGES 110 AND 111 FOR PROPOSED RATE INCREASE SCENARIOS TO COVER THIS DEBT:

 Scenario 1

10% annual gross revenue adjustments are projected for the next ten years from fiscal year (FY) 2024 through FY 2033. Total fund balance reserves are drawn down to a relatively low level (Operating cash only) in FY 2026 and FY 2027 before rebuilding to the target reserve level by 2033. While these more modest, level rate adjustments do avoid rate spikes for customers, this example results in a high degree of financial risk for the District, relative to the other examples

Scenario 2

 25% gross rate revenue adjustment in FY 2024 (current year) followed by annual adjustments of 7.5% from FY 2025 through FY 2033.

This example provides the least financial risk for the District (relative to the other examples) as financial policy targets are achieved in nearly every year of the financial planning period. However, a significant initial rate revenue increase is required to achieve this degree of financial stability

or

Scenario 3

 12.5% annual gross revenue adjustments are projected from FY 2024 through FY 2028, followed by 5.5% adjustments from FY 2029 through FY 2033. This scenario moderates financial risk for the District by achieving, or nearly achieving, financial policy target levels throughout the financial planning period. 

Scenario 4

If customers use 300 AcreFeet/year more water than the Scenarios above use as a basis:

In this what-if scenario, 8.5% annual gross revenue adjustments are projected from FY 2024 through FY 2033.

At the time of this writing, it is unknown what action the Board directed Raftelis Consultants to take. 

CUSTOMERS NEED TO SPEAK UP NOW.   ONCE THE BOARD HAS DECIDED WHICH SCENARIO THEY WANT THE RATE CONSULTANT TO PRESENT LATER NEXT MONTH FOR THEM TO RUBBER STAMP, IT IS A DONE DEAL AND WILL DEPEND ON A PROP 218 PROTEST BALLOT VOTE THAT WILL BE NEARLY IMPOSSIBLE TO ACHIEVE.

But don’t worry…the Board approved a hefty pay increase all around for Mid-Management. Page 37 of the packet includes Consent Agenda Item 4.5 contract for mid-management:

7.1 Wages 

  1. Effective the first pay period in January 2024, a 5% increase to the salary schedule. 
  2. Effective the first pay period in January in the years 2022 and 2023 2025 and 2026 wages shall be increased by the amount of the “San Francisco/Oakland/San Jose All Urban Consumers” Consumer Price Index from October to October, with a minimum of 0.5% and maximum of 4.5%. 

Page 55 shows that mid-management will also get double the monthly stipend for certification ($100).

There is a reason why Soquel Creek Water District is known as “TH GOLD PLATED WATER COMPANY”.

WILL SELLING AN ADU SEPARATELY AFFECT WATER SERVICE REQUIREMENTS?

At the last Soquel Creek Water District Board meeting, a ratepayer let the Board know that he was trying to convert his garage into an ADU (“Granny Unit”) but had been shocked that the District insisted that the unit have a separate water service and meter.  “$33,000 for a water hookup to my garage seems a bit excessive” he said.

He pointed out that the District’s policy on this is old, dating back to 2002.    Staff put the matter on the October 17 Board agenda for review as Item 7.3 (see page 112)

The current separate metering policy applies to the following development types:
• Commercial units
• Single Family homes
• Multi-family dwelling units
• New construction ADUs (up to 1200 sq. ft)
• Tiny homes and tiny homes on wheels (less than 400 sq. ft)
Several laws that have taken effect in the last five years have prohibited water agencies like the District
from requiring separate metering for particular development types. Senate Bill (SB) 229 (Wieckowski)
excludes conversion ADUs, which are ADUs that are contained within the existing square footage of a legal
structure, from separate metering mandates. SB 7 (Wolk) prohibits water agencies from requiring

individual metering for multi-family projects defined as low-income housing.

Thus, the current separate metering policy does not apply to the following development types:

  • Conversion ADUs, including junior accessory dwelling units (JADUs)
    • Multi-family units designated as low-income (residential building financed with housing tax credits,
    revenue bonds, general obligation bond, or local/state/federal loans or grants, in which at least
    some of the rents are prescribed by deed restrictions or regulatory agreement, and in which at least
    90% of the dwelling units are designated for lower-income occupants

However, while it may have seemed logical that the Board might direct staff to remove the District’s requirement for separate water service and metering for an ADU, Governor Newsom’s action to sign into law the ability to sell an ADU separately from a main residence muddies the water, so to speak.

AB1033, introduced by Assembly Member Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, allows cities to decide whether property owners can sell ADUs as condos, separate from homes. The bill repeals an existing law that prohibits separate sales of ADUs and will allow homeowners to get loans to build them, as opposed to repaying loans through rental income. 

Ting also introduced AB976, which bans local ordinances that require property owners to live in their ADUs — removing barriers that would have otherwise prevented ADUs from being used as rental properties.

ADUs could be sold separately from homes under new California law [SF Chronicle article]

With 20% of California’s housing construction coming from ADU’s, this all merits consideration.

JUST TOO MUCH PRESSURE

Of interest on the Soquel Creek Water District Board agenda of October 17 is this Consent Item 4.6 to DENY a claim for damages due to a faulty pressure regulator (see page 95)

“On June 29, 2022, it became known to Palm Terrace’s Board of Directors that a Soquel Creek Water pressure regulator on or near Soquel Drive had been faulty and was the cause for substantial damage to Palm Terrace’s underground water lines. The water pressure reached close to 100 psi and caused several underground water lines to burst. Palm Terrace spent over $35k on plumber’s fees to stop the water leaks caused by the burst pipes and to repair the damaged pipes”

This is a familiar scenario for many of the District’s rate payers, especially in Seascape.  The Board always takes the action to deny the claim.

WHERE WILL THIS DENSE IN-FILL HOUSING BE LOCATED?

Mark your calendar now for the October 25 County Planning Commission 9am hybrid format meeting because it likely will be your last chance to weigh in with your solutions for where the County should re-zone for ultra-high-density housing developments.  Whatever the Commission decides about the Housing Element update will then go to the County Board of Supervisors for what is sure to be a rubberstamp of approval.

Read the documents presented on September 27, which the Commission will continue reviewing October 25: Planning Agenda

They will also review the 2024 County Growth Goal, which they did not have time to review at all on September 27.

The Housing Element is one of the most drastic changes to our neighborhoods as we know them.  Take a moment and read through the Plan.  You need to make your voice heard.

We should all be asking our elected officials:

WHY IS NO ONE CHALLENGING THE CRAZY STATE MANDATES WHEN THE STATE FINANCE DEPT. AUDIT PROVES ALL THE NUMBERS ARE UNSUPPORTED?

The elected officials are not asking, but many people are: Home – Catalysts for Local Control

California will have a relatively stable population over the next 40 years, and last week the state acknowledged it.  

The population will not grow by 7 million by the end of the RHNA cycle (2031). As suspected, the state has been working off of erroneous population projections and other data to create the overblown RHNA, and despite a 2022 audit that clearly said so, the HCD has so far refused to adjust housing mandates.

The AUDIT page links to many official state audit documents from last year describing “faulty methodology.” Independent researcher Gaetan Lion has been sharing his analysis with the state since January 2023, which confirms the new numbers. 

This should, in a reasonable world, force the recalculation the Regional Housing Needs Assessment (RHNA). The figures are out of whack, and so are the proportions of housing they demand: 40% above moderate, 20% moderate, 40% combination of low and extra low. We are not short of above moderate (market rate) units, but we are short of everything else — because they are not as profitable. Current state housing policy encourages creation of NINE market rate units to every ONE “affordable” unit. 

Independent researcher Gaetan Lion sums up the changes here

Join the weekly Catalysts for Local Control online webinars every Monday, 5pm-6pm, and learn what you can do to meet with your elected decision-makers to bring this information they either are not aware of or simply don’t want to examine, and have to take action to insist the State Housing & Community Development (HCD) recalculate the Regional Housing Needs Allocation (RHNA) mandate numbers.

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND THE PLANNING COMMISSION MEETING OF YOUR CHOICE AND MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD. 

LIGHT A CANDLE FOR PEACE IN THE WORLD.

MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING SOMETHING.

Cheers,

Becky

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

...
October 16

Being Present, Naturally

Family, friends – when you aren’t present, they feel it, you know it.

Nature can help you be present: clouds, wind, scents, the unexpected, the fascinating.

Help heal adults and children the same.

Our best moments are when we feel the most present. The stories we tell, the good ones and the bad ones, reflect on the times when we were most attentive. If you read that statement and let that realization sink in, you might be inspired to take a break from reading this.

The media we return to is that which absorbs us. When we see or read something that catches our attention, we focus on it and the world around us can fall away. Likewise, when we turn our attention outward, the world opens up. The more we pay attention, the more we see. We are incredibly good observers if we stop to do just that.

My favorite way to open myself to discovery, is to find a quiet place in nature and let all that is occurring there slowly reveal itself. There is so much complexity in any wild place that the discovery goes as deep as you are willing to observe.

Jon Young at least used to live near Santa Cruz and has written and taught a lot about how to become more present in the moment and how that presence of mind can help heal. This 17 minute TedX talk summarizes some of his most poignant lessons. Telling stories, listening to stories, being aware of your natural surroundings, and allowing yourself to become more a part of your surroundings are all central themes.

Mr. Young advocates for choosing a ‘sit spot’ to visit as a door-opening exercise to discovering yourself and nature, to finding a way to be present. Visiting one spot in nature and sitting there for an hour regularly with little movement allows us the time for discovery and the time for those beings that occupy that place to accept our presence and reveal themselves.

The Nature of Being in Nature

When we go into nature, how do we change? Some people go into nature for the most active forms of recreation: extreme or less extreme mountain biking, jogging slow or fast, the many forms of exercise for people or beast called ‘horseback riding,’ and then there is destination hiking or exercise hiking. Some people go into nature for more passive activities such as wildlife viewing, natural history study, art, poetry, contemplation, meditation, teaching children, learning from nature, becoming more at one with the wild and other beings, or just plain observation. The active forms of recreation (fast mountain biking, especially) are not compatible in the same time and place with the more passive types of natural area visitation. And yet, natural area managers mostly plan for ‘mixed use’ or ‘multi-use trails,’ mixing all of those uses together when they design and manage open space. This is despite a very well-honed natural areas planning science enshrined by the National Parks Service and other agencies who manage for visitor use expectations and experiences. There are University degree programs focusing on training natural areas managers in this science. Unfortunately, despite the huge investments in natural areas, I am unaware of any such science being applied in our region.

The Num-Num Cult

I recently came across an example of the kindergarten-level conversation we are subject to by the local open space managers who design the visitor use experiences we must tolerate. Check out this survey to “let us know if trails are meeting your needs” recently offered by the Santa Cruz Mountains Stewardship Network. The survey is meant to help inform the “State of the Trails Project,” which mostly otherwise appears on the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District’s website. Here is a link if you want to take it. When it disappears, you can view the blank survey as it appeared saved on my website, here.

I was disheartened by the survey in that none of the rich passive uses of parks were reflected in the choices respondents could choose from. Using their terminology, all my friends’ uses of parks would be forced to fit into one use – ‘hiking’ – which is very far off from our real and precious experiences in nature. Luckily for us, the survey has blank spots that allow you to add comments.

Majority Rules?

Such a survey makes me wonder where we are heading with managing natural areas for the quality of visitor use experiences. If businesses have any say, they will support visitor use experiences that raise the most capital, experiences with expensive equipment that breaks or wears out. More passive uses of natural areas will never compete. The most passive uses, the most healing uses, will create the least amount of spending. The frugality of healthy people is astonishing.

Will those of us who are turning away from techno-gadgets and buying things be so marginalized that we will have nowhere to go to have the natural areas experiences we cherish?

Nature Heals

Many of us already understand the importance of nature in helping us stay healthy. The most recent term highlighting this phenomenon is called ‘forest bathing.’ Health care professionals recommend forest bathing, which is about practicing mindfulness, being present in nature so that we see the wealth of colors, sounds, and smells that are around us. This requires peace and quiet, the most peaceful places are the places that heal the best.

Wilderness Changed

The term wilderness is fast disappearing, for better or for worse. The term was problematic, anyways as it ignored the wealth of indigenous presence across the whole earth and the importance of indigenous people’s stewardship. And yet, the idea of wilderness being a place where technology, bustle, and noise is left behind, where contemplation and connection with nature are paramount needs to be attended to in our natural areas. Besides the wonky science of natural areas management for the ‘quality of visitor experience,’ it seems we lack a phrase that well contains such places.

Your Turn

I hope that you take the opportunity to fill in that survey and that you let politicians and open space managers know about the many ways that you cherish nature in open spaces. Let’s inform them of the term ‘displacement’ when you no longer feel comfortable going to a natural area because of the type or number of other ‘users.’ Every one of us has a right to our kind of use in natural areas, and it is open space managers’ jobs to accommodate those uses. They should be asking us about the quality of our experiences and adjusting their management to maximize that quality over time.

I hope that you also take some time to do some forest bathing. It will do a world of good. The more of us that do it, the more peaceful the world will become.

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

...

October 12
#285 / A Mark Twain Lesson

That is a picture of Lahaina, Maui, above. I got this picture from an article written by Tiffany Hsu, published in the August 31, 2023, edition of The New York Times. Hsu titled her article, “After Summer’s Natural Disasters, Cue the Climate Conspiracies.” That title comes from the “hard copy” version of the newspaper. Here is how Hsu begins her article:

As natural disasters and extreme environmental conditions became more commonplace around the world this summer, scientists pointed repeatedly to a shared driver: climate change.

Conspiracy theorists pointed to anything but.

I think Hsu’s article is fine – it’s worth reading if you can penetrate The Times’ paywall. However, I am not commenting, here, on Hsu’s description of how conspiracy theorists are diverting our attention from what we are actually doing wrong, and are thereby making things worse. That’s true, but I want to focus on something else.

I am taking this occasion (stimulated by Hsu’s reporting) to denounce the use of the phrase, “climate change,” as a description of the “cause,” or the “driver,” of the various events and occurrences that are ever more frequently putting local communities in danger, or (as in the case of Lahaina) virtually wiping them out. I am, by the way, not the only one who objects to the description of the global emergency we face as “climate change.” Kirpatrick Sale, writing in Counterpunch calls that language a “dangerous contrivance.”

PLEASE do not use the term “climate change” to refer to the cause of the events that we see occurring all around the world. The correct term is “global warming.” That is what is causing the problems that we see documented all too frequently on the news, or in our morning newspapers. Human actions are causing the world to get hotter. “Climate change” is the “result,” not the “cause,” of our problems.

Mark Twain is popularly associated with the expression, “Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it.” “Weather” and “climate” are similar words; they refer to the same thing. Like talking about the “weather,” everybody is talking about “climate change.” And…. nobody is doing anything about it, pretty much.

That should (and must) change.

Maybe there is a chance that we will actually “do something about it” if we correctly understand what has gone wrong – what’s causing the problems. The problems aren’t “caused” by the fact that our climate is “changing.” The fact that our climate is changing is “caused” by the fact that human actions are now heating up the entire globe.

If we don’t want more burned down cities, more city-destroying floods and hurricanes, more species going extinct, then we need to do something. So, let’s be clear what we need to do.

We need to take actions that will stop our human activities from warming up the world. The cause of our problems is “global warming,” which has, of course, changed our climate.

But the change we can see in climatic conditions, and all the impacts that go along with those changes that we see, are the result of what we have been doing, and continue to be doing, to warm up our planet.

Mainly, we need to stop burning hydrocarbon fuels. Burning hydrocarbon fuels heats up the planet, and “global warming” is what happens when we do that, and “global warming” is causing the climate changes that are putting human communities in danger.

PLEASE do not use the term “climate change” to refer to the cause of the events that we see occurring all around the world. Human actions are causing the world to get hotter. “Climate change” is the result, not the “cause,” and what we need to combat is “global warming.”

How we use language is important, and we should not be allowing ourselves to use language that helps us dodge our responsibility. If we start thinking that the “problem” is the fact that our weather is changing, we’re not going to do anything about it.

Mark Twain was right about that!

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

...

October 16

Matlock will be back next week.

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

“Sex”

“Sex without love is as hollow and ridiculous as love without sex.”    
~Hunter S. Thompson

“Sex is the consolation you have when you can’t have love”
~Gabriel García Márquez

“Sex is an emotion in motion.” 
~Mae West

“Someone told me the delightful story of the crusader who put a chastity belt on his wife and gave the key to his best friend for safekeeping, in case of his death. He had ridden only a few miles away when his friend, riding hard, caught up with him, saying ‘You gave me the wrong key!'”     
~Anais Nin

...

OMG, this is amazeballs! Look at her face when she hears the person singing!! Backstory: she is on her 4th encore, and she sings a duet without having the male counterpart on stage with her. She was expecting the male part to just be played on the piano, but to her obvious delight an audience member steps in and sings with her. Turns out he’s an opera student, and after the show he went to apologize to her for his rudeness in interrupting(!)

This is so wholesome and sweet, and I cry every time I watch it 🙂 You’re welcome!


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...


Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

October 11 – 17, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton… Peoples Democratic Club of Santa Cruz, Chamber Players. Greensite…will be back next week, really. Steinbruner LAFCO, Soquel Creek Water District, Aptos Village, and more… Hayes…slowing down or rushing? Patton…Yellow Knife…Matlock…imaginary lightning strikes and high standards. Eagan …Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress…pick of the week: Drunk History on Halloween… Quotes… “Spiderwebs” 

...

SANTA CRUZ BEACH & BOARDWALK 1940. This photo contains plenty of long ago history, By squinting you can see what used to be Opera Island over by the east parking lot in the San Lorenzo River. Note too The Casa Del Rey Hotel later turned into a senior center later razed rapidly (1989) by Charlie Canfield /Boardwalk to get FEMA earthquake money. Of course you notice the pier running out from the Boardwalk. Then there’s The La Bahia Hotel.  

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE October 9

PEOPLES DEMOCRATIC CLUB. With new energy the folks at the Peoples Democratic Club of Santa Cruz (PDC) reconvened last Saturday after the covid lull. I got there and was delighted to see Brian Murtha and others so eager to get their political wisdom back online and into the voting booths.  Check here, and even though it’s not quite up to date it’s the reconnection that works.

SANTA CRUZ CHAMBER PLAYERS. Present their concert #1 of this season titled Music of Hope. It features Rebecca Jackson, violin…Jessica Chang, viola… Samantha Cho, piano…  Katie Youn, cello & concert director. They will be performing music by Brahms, Enescu, Mahler, Nazaykinskaya, Shaw, Simon, and Wie on SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 7:30 PM and SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 3:00 PM. As usual the concert will be at Christ Lutheran Church 10707 Soquel Drive, in Aptos… uphill from the CHP Headquarters. The four women players are part of “SAGE, a musician’s collective appearing with the Santa Cruz Chamber Players for the first time, will perform music that paints a vivid portrait of the emotional consequences that the pandemic has had on us all. The concert begins with works about COVID-19 by SF composer, educator, and performer Jungyoon Wie and Composer-in-Residence at the JFK Center for the Performing Arts, Carlos Simon. Also featured is Caroline Shaw’s Limestone and Felt, which Shaw writes, “may represent two opposing ways we experience history and design our own present”, and Polina Nazakinskya’s Hope. The program, which includes Mahler’s Piano Quartet, Enescu’s Aubade for String Trio, and Brahms’ Piano Quartet in c minor, creates an astounding vision of our shared experience—one that transcends boundaries and inspires hope! Go here for tickets and data. Once again, that’s SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 7:30 PM and SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 3:00 PM.

MUNCHING WITH MOZART & FRIENDS. This free concert series happens every third Friday in the upstairs meeting room of the Downtown Library. This will be Music for Violin and Piano with Brian Johnston, violin and Vlada Volkova-Moran, piano. That’s Friday October 20 at about 12 noon.

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

BECKHAM. (NETFLIX SERIES) (8.5 IMDB). Not being a soccer or “football” fan as they call it in England, I had little idea of who David Beckham was…or is. He’s the greatest soccer star to ever make it bigtime. This excellent documentary takes us through his entire life from total 100% fame and love to absolute hell and disgust from every soccer fan in the world. He marries a Spice Girl, worries about kidnapping, and restores his fame and reputation after making a terrible mistake in one of his games. Go For it.

KHUFIYA. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.2 IMDB). This slow moving movie deals with the Pakistan vs. India war. It drifts from the spy driven plot and has many of the musical minutes that India movies keep inserting. There’s lung cancer, possible lesbian love the CIA, Osama Bin Laden and it still drags.

THE WONDERFUL STORY OF HENRY SUGAR. (NETFLIX MOVIES) (7.5 IMDB) (new addition) **** Wes Andersen took four stories by Roald Dahl and made simply fabulous and totally engrossing movies from them. First there’s “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar” (39 minutes) which stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Ralph Fiennes, Ben Kingsley and Dev Patel. Immediately next on Netflix is “The Rat Catcher” (6.7 IMDB) featuring Rupert Friend and Ralph Fiennes. Licorice lovers should heed advance warnings on that one! Then there’s “The Swan” (18 minutes) (6.9 IMDB). Again starring Rupert Friend and Ralph Fiennes, The Swan deals and nearly faces some gruesome facets of human depravity…added as the fourth of the Dahl & Anderson group is POISON. (17 MINUTES). (6.9 IMDB). This short movie has all the casts of the previous films. Cumberbatch, Dev Patel, Ralph Fiennes and Ben Kingsley. It’s an impossible and intense story with Cumberbatch in a hospital bed with the possibility of a poisonous snake lying in wait on his stomach. Go for the four of these by all means.

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

FORGOTTEN LOVE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (7.6 IMDB). *** A well-meaning and nearly famous doctor / professor who lost his memory after an attack on the street by some thugs spends his days inundated by friends and neighbors who need his doctoring. It’s a sad unveiling of the difference between the rich and the poor. A bit corny and predictable but magnetic and you’ll stay with it.

SONG OF THE BANDITS. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.2IMDB). **   An unusual slice of history when the Japanese attacked and murdered more than 5000 Koreans in 1915. This movie comes across almost like our westerns when the cowboys murdered our Indians. It’s fast moving, much blood and the violence is almost in the comedy department. Worth checking out.

THURSDAYS WIDOW. (NETFLIX SERIES) (6.01 IMDB). ** This production has a point to make and it’s aimed at the differences or maybe the similarities between the rich and the poor. It all happens in Mexico and throws in plastic surgery, lots of politics and bold statements against the hired help. It will result in your thinking about the class differences you’ve seen in your lifetime.

...
October 9

Will be back next week.

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.

...
October 9

LAFCO APPROVES SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT SERVICE TO RENAISSANCE HIGH SCHOOL
Last Wednesday, the Santa Cruz County Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFCO) gave the green light for Renaissance High School on San Andreas Road to purchase water from Soquel Creek Water District under an Extra-Territorial Agreement. That means the Pajaro Valley Unified School District and the Water District can move forward quickly to install necessary pipes and equipment to supply the students and staff water that is not so high in Chromium 6, a carcinogen, and not have to formally annex the parcel to the District’s service boundaries. The process is much faster, and less expensive.

My question to the Commission was why the Agreement does not also include the adjacent KOA Campground, also on a private well and likely having issues with Chromium 6 levels. It is the nature of the groundwater in that area of the Aromas Red Sands Aquifer, and LAFCO’ s report last year had recommended Soquel Creek Water District provide service to Renaissance High School and the KOA Campground.

No one on the Commission addressed my question.

It was interesting that LAFCO approved one other such Extra-Territorial Agreement in the Scotts Valley area for sewer connection to a parcel in the Manana Woods area subdivision.

Previously, LAFCO has approved such agreements for expediency and the areas later were annexed.

BRANCIFORTE FIRE DISTRICT WILL DISSOLVE
Last Wednesday, the Santa Cruz County LAFCO also finalized the dissolution of the Branciforte Fire District, moving the annexation of that area with Scotts Valley Fire District. This means the residents of Happy Valley area will hand over all assets (their fire station, fire engines, equipment, land) as well as property tax assessments, the Measure T special tax they approved in 2016 to fund equipment for their fire station, and also a $500,000 gift by the Barnes Family Trust. It remains to be seen what level of control or reprentation the residents within the Branciforte Fire District boundaries will have once the merger (aka “reorganization”) is finalized.

Right now, CalPERS is reviewing the cost analysis. Despite assurances to the Commissioners from LAFCO’s Director, no request had been made by Scotts Valley Fire to obtain the analysis that is critical to the Branciforte Fire staff being hired on to Scotts Valley Fire responders.

For the second time, I have notified the Commissioners that critical documents, such as Resolutions, have erroneous dates and inaccurate information.

The LAFCO Director has made a habit of not including my correspondence on this matter available to the Commissioners or onn the website until the very morning of their meetings. This in fact happened at the October 4 meeting, when Commissioners only learned about the fact that the September 27, 2023 Protest Hearing for the Brancifortte Fire Reorganization was changed at the very last moment to be virtual only, and the LAFCO office at 701 Ocean Street location stated in mailed notices to residents was closed and not accessible. I know this…because I was locked out.

None of that seems to bother the Commissioners. With few exceptions by Commissioner Roger Anderson, the group is a Rubber Stamp, No Questions Asked Club.

Why does this matter? Keep your eye on many upcoming consolidations in the County regarding hospital, fire and water services.
Ask questions and verify the information.

SANTA CRUZ CITY WATER PROJECTS WILL ENCOURAGE REGIONAL WATER SHARING
Last week’s Santa Cruz City Water Commission meeting was really encouraging. Staff provided excellent presentations about the various cpital improvement projects the City is undertaking that will really support sharing water with neighboring water agencies when it is plentiful, and storing it in the groundwater reservoirs for use when needed. Along with conservation incentives, this is exactly what the Water Supply Advisory Committee (WSAC) and civic-minded folks such as Rick Longinotti, Scott McGilvray, Jerry Paul and many others have asked for since 2013 when the desalination project fell by the wayside due to high energy demand inherent.

It is encouraging to see this all in action now with the amazing projects the City of Santa Cruz is doing.

View the presentations here: View Meeting – OnBase Agenda Online

View Meeting – OnBase Agenda Online
The Santa Cruz Mid-County Regional Water Optimization Study, which will provide information about how water can be regionally-managed, is fully grant funded through a $7.6 milion gift to the MidCounty Groundwater Agency from the California DWR Sustainable Groundwater Management Grant Program.

The results are due to be public any day now, having been earlier promised for the City’s Water Commission meeting last week, but was not on the agenda. However, a recent comment by Soquel creek Water District Boardmember Bruce Jaffe last month makes it clear that the results will be of great interest: “PureWater Soquel will benefit things in other ways…” Hmmm…

What remains to be seen is whether other players, such as Soquel Creek Water District, will come onboard with the regional use of rainwater, or cling steadfastly to the expensive highly-energy demanding PureWater Soquel Project treated sewage water?

Sadly, last winter, when rainwater was so plentiful, Soquel Creek Water District did not even ask to purchase potable surface water from the City of Santa Cruz via the existing intertie, even though they could have, under the terms of the Agreement in place. When quizzed why not, District staff reported they “just did not have the resources to manage” the water transfer project. Hmmm…

SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT BOARD APPROVES NEW ASSOCIATE MANAGER JOB AND A NICE PAY RAISE FOR ALL

The Board of Directors approved pay raises all around for everyone last week, and agreed with the General Manager Ron Duncan that, in addition to his Assistant Manager, Melanie Mow-Schmacher, he needs an Associate Manager to help out with “all things PureWater Soquel” treated sewage water injection into the aquifer. The Board also approved a 4.5% top-of-the-rate salary raise for Mr. Duncan, too! See items 7.2-7.5, beginning on page 33

It seems the District has unlimited funds, even in the face of the looming huge debt and skyrocketing operational costs when PureWater Soquel Project comes online next year. But wait! Another round of rate increases is scheduled to come to the Board next month on the November 21 agenda, right before Thanksgiving when many people likely won’t be paying close attention.

Stay tuned…

COUNTY COMMISSIONS IN FOR A BIG CHANGE?
Last week, staff from County Environmental Health let the County Water Advisory Commission know that big changes are in store for the County’s Commissions. The Board of Supervisors are due to review the County Administrative Officer’s plan to drastically change the Commissions on November 14. Two that are staffed by Environmental Health Dept. staff will be axed.

Will this be an improvement for the people, or a move by the CAO to further exclude us? Stay tuned.

APTOS VILLAGE PROJECT RUMBLES ALONG…WHAT ABOUT THE PARK?
Aptos Village Phase 2 under way [Santa Cruz Sentinel] County District Supervisor Zach Friend gave a glowing report of the work happening to build solid three-story buildings on both sides of Aptos Village Way in the Aptos Village. What he did not say is that the area is already so congested, traffic snarls are a common occurrence,Swenson reduced the number of affordable Measure J units from 12 to 10, and the parking promised is virtually nil.

Supervisor Friend is well aware of all this, as his office sits in the high-rent zone of the Project…the County financially bailed Swenson out with a 15-year lease for the MidCounty Safety Center, which is rarely open and whose meeting room can only accommodate 10 people…not exactly a Townhall Meeting venue for Zach.

And what about the County Park land? Ridiculous! Take a look in the photo below at the steep hillside above Swenson’s Phase 2 mess. County Parks staff are on record as admitting they have NO IDEA how this land could be used for a park, let alone the “active recreation” use it was supposed to provide the Community at the insistence of the Planning Commission in response to the world-famous Post Office Bike Jumps being bulldozed. Not to worry…the County gifted Swenson FREE drainage easement from teh Phase 2 parking lot and roof stormwater into the Aptos Village Park, and WAIVED PARK DEVELOPMENT FEES ($1000/bedroom for the 69 units anticipated).

Take a look at the”new county park land” behind these workers…the hillside behind the huge retaining wall. Do any of these workers look like they may be monitoring the excavation in this known Native American archaeological site? That is one of the project’s Conditions of Permit Approval. Hmmm….
Write Matt Machado and ask why Swenson is not including Native American observers for all earth disturbance, as they are required to do.

Last week, Swenson closed Aptos Village Way, the main access for the area through the Village, aside from Soquel Drive. Not only did it cause more traffic congestion within the area, it removed alot of the parking that Swenson has promised the people, including for Nisene Marks State Park.

Write Supervisor Zach Friend with your thoughts Zach Friend <zach.friend@santacruzcountyca.gov>. Maybe he will respond.

SIGN UP WITH COUNTY’S NEW “CRUZAWARE” NOTIFICATION PLATFORM
October 17, 1989 is a memorable day for those who were here and in the Bay Area, and experience the Loma Prieta Earthquake. On that note, and with respect to all other natural disasters that are possible, sign up with the County’s new CruzAware emergency notification platform to receive information in many modes:

After the floods last winter, many residents say they did not receive notice of impending floodwater risk and evacuation warnings. The old notification system, CodeRed, did not allow for digital text messaging on social media. Hopefully, the new CruzAware system will.

Wouldn’t it be a good idea to test the system’s effectiveness before it is actually needed? The Office of REsponse, Recovery and Resilience (OR3) is responsible for this operational alert system. Any FireWise Communities can arrange such a test. Mine did last Sunday and we discovered quite a few glitches that hopefully will be resolved soon.

However, I have to wonder if having a Countywide test , similar to what occurred on a national level October 4, might be a better solution? Contact David Reid, Director of OR3, and request this if you think it is important. David Reid <david.reid@santacruzcountyca.gov> Note the new e-mail template.

CHINESE PIONEERS
I really enjoyed the conversational interview last Saturday with George Ow and Sandy Lydon, sponsored by the Santa cruz Public Library and held at Project 418 on River Street in Santa Cruz. If you have not read “Chinese Gold”, you need to do so. The book has been reprinted in English and Chinese.

Go see the great exhibit “CHINESE PIONEERS: Power and Politics in Exclusion Era Photographs” that is happening now through November 12 at the San Lorenzo Valley Museum (6299 Gushee Street, Felton).

COMMUNITY MATTERS GUESTS THIS FRIDAY
This Friday (2pm-4pm) log onto Santa Cruz Voice.com online radio and listen to Ms. Veronica Elsea giving us all a better perspective on how to regard blind and sight-impaired people using white canes (National White Cane Safety Awareness Day is October 15). The second hour, Mr. Brian Peoples, Director of TRAIL NOW, will help us all understand what could be done on the railroad corridor.
santacruzvoice.com

Join the conversations!

MAKE ONE CALL. WRITE ONE LETTER. LEARN MORE ABOUT LOCAL HISTORY AND DO WHAT YOU CAN TO PRESERVE IMPORTANT CULTURAL RESOURCES. JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK…YOU WILL MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE!

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

...
October 9

SLOWING DOWN – OR- RUSHING?

So much environmental degradation seems to be due to our rushing around. How can we best slow down? Each of us can do our part in creating the Great Slowdown that we need to sustain the planet.

Save More, Buy Less

The first and easiest way to help the Great Slowdown is to stop buying so much Stuff. If you haven’t watched the Story of Stuff in a while, or not at all, DO IT NOW. This 21-minute video is compelling, fun, and has changed more lives than many a 20-some minute experience otherwise. I think it’s worth watching regularly, perhaps in October just before the stuff-a-thon holiday season besets our culture.

If you listen to the news, you will understand how important buying stuff is for our unsustainable economy. “Inflation is up, but ‘luckily’ consumer spending is cooking right along, otherwise our economy would be hosed.” A president once said in a national crisis, something like, “Just keep buying stuff!” Time is money, and by spending your money on useless crap, you are wasting your time, carelessly throwing away your life, and helping to wreck the planet. A few years ago, someone did a calculation and the transaction cost of each dollar spent was a liter of oil. I’m betting its worse now. Save a buck, keep a liter of oil from burning up.

Stop Rushing at Work

There is so much pressure to do more at work, but is that really helping anything? Chances are good that the more we rush, the worse off the planet is. How about we slow down? Carefully watch those who rush around with their work: why are they doing that? I’m betting that they mostly want to impress people, get others to work harder, or they are avoiding problems at home or something they might better be doing for Real Good.

The labor movement has something called ‘working by the book,’ which we might emulate to improve the planet. What is absolutely necessary to do with your work? What does the job description say? What are the metrics for success? Often, organizations keep the productivity targets elusive, to keep everyone guessing or trying to push for more. On the other hand, if productivity targets are defined, ask yourself if they are set too high. If so, it might be time to work with your colleagues to reduce them to something more manageable.

Slowing down at work is part of the solution, part of the Great Slowdown.

Working for the Planet

The capitalist system mostly asks each worker to create efficiencies that are bad for the planet. As we learn to care more for the planet, we will find ways to sneak improvements into the workplace that will help Earth. Is there a way to reduce driving, material transport, waste? Does your workplace purchase recycled paper, organic foods, and other eco-friendly products? Maybe there’s a sustainability policy on your business’ horizon.

Beware the Fakes

If you see potential greenwashing, ask about it! I recently asked a seemingly eco-conscious caterer what they meant by “gourmet sandwiches, made from the finest local ingredients” and it turned out that they used very mainstream factory-farmed meats and conventionally grown produce distributed from warehouses far away. They soon thereafter changed their menu language. That was the third time I was able to affect that kind of change. Do we choose places that are true to their word about their products? How do we know if we don’t ask? Why would they be true to their word if folks never asked?

Buy Green

The list of businesses that are truly green is getting smaller, not larger in Santa Cruz. There are fewer restaurants serving local, organic foods than there were a few years ago. Local grocery stores are sliding further from, not closer to, sustainability. I suspect all of this is because people are not pursuing green purchases.

Keep Your Keel

How easy it is to go with the flow, but is that truly the best thing for the planet? There is a concept called ‘slippage‘ where environmental policies are interpreted in ways that slip away from the intent of the policy, usually with negative environmental consequence. If your work entails intersection with environmental policies, it is time to ask how you can help interpret those to environmental benefit, not environmental degradation. It is time also to ask what is the greatest good you can do with your work, focusing on the issues of greatest impact for environmental improvement. As I’ve said in prior posts, the metric should be species conservation: how can our work best affect that outcome? The answers are usually easy to arrive at.

Beware of False Dichotomies

Those who are most invested in slippage often use false dichotomies. Parks managers often note that they have a difficult dual mandate: to provide for public recreational access while conserving wildlife. For a large portion of Santa Cruz County, managers are leaning heavily on this false dichotomy to ‘sell’ the concept that it’s just fine for our wildlife to disappear because of their mismanagement. Trails erode tons of sediment into streams and wetlands, trash litters our beautiful beaches, and graffiti proliferates on sea cliffs because of the slippage that is embraced by the poor logic presented by parks managers’ adoption of their false dichotomies.

Parks Management Slippage

Many of these parks’ managers use other forms of slippage. The California Public Resources Code says this about State Parks: “Following classification or reclassification of a unit by the State Park and Recreation Commission, and prior to the development of any new facilities in any previously classified unit, the department shall prepare a general plan or revise any existing plan for the unit.” Look at the North Coast beaches, and Gray Whale Ranch…and, enter slippage: none of those have general plans, and all have ‘new facilities.’ I’m sure that someone, somewhere can provide some beautiful logic about how that can be possible. Has someone said ‘if anyone asks just tell them we never “classified or reclassified” those “units” and they were never “previously classified” (hardy-har-har-har, that’ll get ’em).‘ Anyone in their right mind would know that the responsible thing to do would be to create a general plan before opening a park, and that’s what was meant by that part of the Resources Code. Meanwhile, we must all ask WHY are these precious places opened to visitation without a plan to conserve wildlife on those spectacularly biodiverse places?? If you work for State Parks, you must ask yourself what place you have played in allowing such things to happen and how you might reverse this slippage. If you work for other land conservation organizations, you might have similar things to ponder: do you hold a false dichotomy promulgated by those with anti-conservation agendas? Do you serve Earth or Greed? If you are torn and in doubt, maybe it’s time to slow down and ‘work by the book.’ It might be better if you embrace the Great Slowdown in your job while you increasingly help others become aware of slippage.

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

...

October 6

#279 / Yellowknife

Today’s brief blog post can best be understood as a follow-up to yesterday’s brief blog post. The “generalization” advanced yesterday was that there is no longer any ability to engage in “away living,” if there ever was any such ability. The truth of that observation was reinforced for me by a message from Bill McKibben, which I received the day after actually writing my October 5th blog posting.

The picture above shows a line of people waiting for evacuation from Yellow Knife, Canada, which was mentioned by McKibben in his August 18, 2023, statement. That statement was titled, “An Ever-Smaller Board On Which To Play The Human Game.”

As McKibben wrote near the end of August, Yellow Knife was threatened with the kind of destruction visited on Lahaina, Maui earlier in the month. Things don’t look too dire in the photo above, but McKibben’s statement was accompanied by the following image, which does look a lot like the photos we saw as fire descended upon Lahaina:

Here is the specific statement by McKibben that captured my attention:

It’s important—in this year that has seen global warming come fully to life—to describe accurately what’s happening on our planet. And one key thing is: the number of places humans can safely live is now shrinking (emphasis in original).

In yesterday’s blog posting, I included an image of Earth from space. If you can’t visualize it, you can revisit that image by clicking right here. We’re in this together, now more than ever.

Just one more reminder, this one coming from Yellow Knife, Canada!

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

...
October 9

IMAGINARY LIGHTNING STRIKES AND HIGH STANDARDS

Steven Lauter, columnist for the LA Times, said it: “The problem wasn’t McCarthy.” In his view, the former speaker let his bad habit of making promises he couldn’t, or wouldn’t, keep. With both political parties distrusting him he was removed from his position as Speaker of the House with the solidarity votes of Democrats and the eight rebels led by Representative Matt Gaetz. Recent Speakers Boehner and Ryan had their own unpleasant experiences, with Kevin McCarthy establishing a first, becoming the only Speaker removed by a vote of the House of Representatives. Lauter thinks that Victim #4 awaits a similar fate, and Andrew Glassman, congressional expert at Georgetown University says, “Someone will get 217 votes, but I’m not sure that the Republican conference is governable.” A Speaker is given significant authority, with real power emerging only with the individual’s ability to incorporate the the will of the House majority, presently not a coherent attribute, so symbolically  it’s just a guy holding a wooden gavel waiting for lightning to strike. Mary Trump observed: ” Kevin McCarthy served as speaker for approximately 27 Scaramuccis.”

Several weeks ago, McCarthy reported that the House GOP was “in a good place” on the spending bill, but their closed door sessions came up with nothing, listening to Trump instead of Speaker McCarthy. As Politico commented, “McCarthy is being chopped into pieces, and he doesn’t even know it.” Shirley Kennedy in The Palmer Report wrote, “Several Republicans refused to go along with McCarthy’s defense spending bill, being joined by Democrats. One can only wonder if he now regrets repeatedly giving in to the far-right members of his party, who now seem to be holding their power and Donald Trump over his head…these people are bending to an imaginary god who has no power. They believe, however, that their power is in supporting him, but what will they do when he is convicted of the myriad crimes with which he has been charged? They even attempt to cover for him.” She goes on to say that when asked about the former president’s demand to shut the government down, “McCarthy replied, ‘He only wants to “hold the line” and “pass appropriate bills.” Please. “Trump has no idea what bills are appropriate. He’s not in the same position as the many people who voted these clowns into office, and he could care less about any of them. Similarly, McCarthy doesn’t care either.” Kevin McCarthy now finds himself in the belly of the beast that he tried to ride.

The Speaker was able to muster enough support from Democrats and Republicans to pass a spending bill, avoiding a government shutdown, but Gaetz then mounted his campaign to remove McCarthy from the speakership, accusing him of collusion with the dreaded Dems. Kevin took the challenge, telling Matt to “bring it on,” to “get it behind us and start governing.” While assuming that he had strong party support, McCarthy accused the Florida representative of showboating to distract from his own problems, such as his accusations of ethics violations of misconduct, drug use, and other allegations. In leading the successful drive to oust McCarthy, Gaetz has stirred some Republicans toward even bolder steps to hold him accountable, even expelling him from Congress. Bring it on, huh, Matty!?

The New Yorker’s political satire columnist, Andy Borowitz, writes that, “House Republicans have convened an emergency meeting to determine who must sit next to Representative Matt Gaetz going forward. Members of the conference had hoped to take a week off after the grueling ordeal of ousting Kevin McCarthy, but the matter of who would be forced to sit next to Gaetz ‘had to be settled,’ one GOP congressperson said. ‘Colleagues have declared that, if they are required to sit next to Matt, they will retire from politics instead,’ the legislator, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said. ‘We could lose our majority over this.’ Republicans’ hopes that they had found a willing seat mate for Gaetz collapsed when Representative Lauren Boebert flatly refused the assignment. ‘Even I have standards,’ she reportedly said.”

Doing his part in spouting for the media, Matt Gaetz, is/was an advocate of the GOP’s impeachment of President Biden until he said too much. However, the foredoomed attempt was based on phony ‘evidence,’ or as it turns out no evidence at all. A generic House hearing was held, but votes to hold an actual impeachment inquiry disappeared along with the ‘evidence.’ As Bill Palmer writes, “Matt Gaetz is in way over his head. He doesn’t understand how to create allies within his own House Republican caucus. He doesn’t understand messaging. He thinks politicians get things done by running their mouths in front of cameras, and doesn’t understand that actual political muscle is flexed behind the scenes. So of course Gaetz got caught on camera admitting that his own party’s agenda is illegitimate. He’s that idiot.”

Steven Pastis in his Pearls Before Swine comic strip: Pig visits Wise Ass on the Hill and asks, “Oh, Wise Ass..for an immigrant to become a citizen and be able to vote, do they have to take a test?” Wise Ass answers, “Yes, a civics test.” Pig then asks, “Why do they have to do that?” Wise Ass answers, “Because if you’re gonna help us choose our elected officials you have to be knowledgeable,” whereupon Pig queries, ” Do the elected officials need to take a test?” And Wise Ass blows him away with, “No, they can be total morons.” Pig journeys down the hill and meets Rat, telling him, “The more I know the less I understand.” Amen to that!

McCarthy was only concerned about his precious speakership, with no idea on how to lead, and because of the agreements he made to get elected, he got tossed out on his ear. One is reminded of a description written by Roald Dahl of Henry Sugar, his character in the short story, ‘The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar’: “Men like Henry Sugar are to be found drifting like seaweed all over the world. They can be seen especially in London, New York, Paris, Nassau, Montego Bay, Cannes, and San Tropez. They are not particularly bad men, but they are not good men either. They are of no particular importance; they’re simply part of the decoration.”

Immediately following Kev’s dismissal, the maneuvering began to stick another victim in the seat, bringing up the names of Majority Leader Steve Scalise and Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim (Gym) Jordan. Endorsements are accumulating, not the least of which, is The Don’s praise for Jordan who has been a Trumper since day one. Scalise, who has called himself “David Duke without the baggage,” made a brief foray to secure backing in January, so a path to success may not arise on this go around, either. Jordan, not an ’empty suit’ but more of an ’empty shirt’ with the sleeves rolled up, may not have the support, not being able to rally the troops around his extreme conservatism, with Democrats readying themselves to pounce in light of the controversy surrounding Jordan’s years as an Ohio State wrestling coach. His baggage has become a target to be brought front and center, and Democrats will make it headline news again. Newcomer, Representative Kevin Hern of Oklahoma, and chairman of the Republican Study Committee has been discussed as a possibility because he may have new approaches to doing things instead of sticking to same slog that has bogged down the GOP for years. Jordan was the founding member of the confrontational House Freedom Caucus, and was a leader in pushing out former Speaker Boehner, who calls Gym a “legislative terrorist.”

The campaigning preceded last Tuesday’s candidate forum, followed by Wednesday’s planned vote in the GOP conference on a nominee for the position. The Dems nominated Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, in the event the House majority was unable to coalesce around a candidate. McCarthy ally, Garret Graves of Louisiana, recalled the four days it took to elect Kevin, saying it would require “some divine intervention” to wrap it up quickly. Some Republicans have floated the idea of making The Former Guy a nominee, after which he said he might consider it as a temporary position to be a “unifier” and “if necessary,” but his focus is winning the presidential nomination where he sees dismissal of all charges against him.

So, all of the above can only serve as background as this is being written, and everything may still be contentiously up in the air, disputable, open to doubt or perhaps settled, at least temporarily, by the time this is posted. With the urgency in the flare up between Israel and Hamas, the leaderless House GOP has brought up the possibility of reseating Kevin McCarthy, as this state of war may need their actions sooner rather than later. Initially, Kevin was “aware and grateful” of the suggestion but was not engaged in any discussion or negotiations. Lawmakers were also considering giving clearer powers to acting Speaker Pro Tempore, Patrick McHenry, for the short term or electing him outright, both unprecedented moves. Representative Mark Alford of Missouri posted on X, “We are paralyzed as a body. World events dictate urgency.”

Conservative radio host, Hugh Hewitt, asked McCarthy if he would serve as Speaker again should a deadlock result in the tumultuous body, to which he responded, “Look, the conference will make that decision. I’m still a member. I’m going to continue to fight and act. Whatever the conference wants, I will do. I think we need to be strong. I think we need to be united. The eight (conference members who voted against him), in my view, don’t look to be – it was a personal thing.” After losing his position he said he would not run again, as he reminded the press that the vast majority of the House GOP voted for him to remain in the post. Where does/did the GOP land in this continuing debacle? Poet and musician, Patti Smith says, “We go through life. We shed our skins. We become ourselves.” We can only hope the House has shed enough skin to benefit the rest of us.

This advertisement was posted on the Quora website: “NOW THAT THE PRESIDENT IS GONE, WHY NOT VISIT THE…Trump Presidential Library, Casino and Strip Club! A perfect way to remember the Bigliest President of all!

Contains all the key documents related to the Trump Presidency, a colored-in placemat from ‘Wendy’s’, a copy of Penthouse with Melania as the centerfold from 1989, and a signed copy of ‘The Art of the Deal.’

Roulette, Blackjack, and Poker are just three of the strippers performing two erotic shows nightly. PLUS…all you can eat free shrimp gumbo from the buffet Friday to Sunday!

Come for the historical documents of record, stay for the best girly show in Nevada.

The Trump Presidential Library, Casino and Strip Club. We’re three miles out of Vegas, turn left on the Interstate 9, follow the neon sign, we’re the first right by the Truckers Rest Diner. Free entry Monday through Thursday. No cover charge, first drink on the house.”

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.
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down .

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

“Spiderwebs”

“The spider’s web: She finds an innocuous corner in which to spin her web. The longer the web takes, the more fabulous its construction. She has no need to chase. She sits quietly, her patience a consummate force; she waits for her prey to come to her on their own, and then she ensnares them, injects them with venom, rendering them unable to escape. Spiders – so needed and yet so misunderstood.”
~Donna Lynn Hope

“The greatest artist and web-designer ever is indeed a spider!”    
~Munia Khan

“What was building a web but a gustatory expression of hope?”  
~Adrian Tchaikovsky

“Spider webs are images of the nonlinear, of the many directions in which something might go, the many sources for it.”
~Rebecca Solnit

...

Drunk History on the birth of Halloween as we know it…

Check out the entire drunk history series, they are pretty hilarious and educational all at the same time.


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...


Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

October 4 – 10, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton…What’s up?  Santa Cruz Chamber Players. Greensite….will be back next week. Steinbruner…Our Downtown Our Future, injecting sewage water, Aptos Village, declining population, student housing, desal water, Lydon-Ow interview. Hayes…flowers for fall. Patton…a phenomenal culture of welcoming. Matlock…playing catch up with the hands of time. EaganSubconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress…pick of the week. Quotes…”Towers”

...

SANTA CRUZ 1948. One of the first noticeable changes we can see here is the absence of trees. Thanks to so much good work and planning our tree population has increased substantially. But as Gillian Greensite notes so consistently and patiently the officials are still cutting them helter skelter.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE October 2

WHAT’S UP? I don’t remember a time since I arrived in Santa Cruz (in 1970) that the political scene was as bitter and divided as it is right now. Name calling and label slinging and out and out lying seem to have become the way of life each day. Is this a result or spinoff from our National Trump scene or is it the after effect of years of masks and covid? And on the same page UCSC’s ceasing of providing us with so many attractions of live stage, movies, and concerts has made them more of a factor to work AROUND instead of joining. Like so many others I’m going back to live concerts that are filling our music and churches again with happy and community connections.

SANTA CRUZ CHAMBER PLAYERS. Present their concert #1 of this season titled Music of Hope. It features Rebecca Jackson, violin…Jessica Chang, viola… Samantha Cho, piano…  Katie Youn, cello & concert director. They will be performing music by Brahms, Enescu, Mahler, Nazaykinskaya, Shaw, Simon, and Wie on SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 7:30 PM and SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 3:00 PM. As usual the concert will be at Christ Lutheran Church 10707 Soquel Drive, in Aptos uphill from the CHP Headquarters. The four women players are part of “SAGE, a musician’s collective appearing with the Santa Cruz Chamber Players for the first time, will perform music that paints a vivid portrait of the emotional consequences that the pandemic has had on us all. The concert begins with works about COVID-19 by SF composer, educator, and performer Jungyoon Wie and Composer-in-Residence at the JFK Center for the Performing Arts, Carlos Simon. Also featured is Caroline Shaw’s Limestone and Felt, which Shaw writes, “may represent two opposing ways we experience history and design our own present”, and Polina Nazakinskya’s Hope. The program, which includes Mahler’s Piano Quartet, Enescu’s Aubade for String Trio, and Brahms’ Piano Quartet in c minor, creates an astounding vision of our shared experience—one that transcends boundaries and inspires hope! Go here for tickets and data   Santa Cruz Chamber Players, Music of Hope  once again, that’s SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 7:30 PM and SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 3:00 PM.

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange and usually co-hosted  by Kaos and Calamity Kyle.

FORGOTTEN LOVE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (7.6 IMDB).***   A well-meaning and nearly famous doctor / professor who lost his memory after an attack on the street by some thugs spends his days inundated by friends and neighbors who need his doctoring. It’s a sad unveiling of the difference between the rich and the poor. A bit corny and predictable but magnetic and you’ll stay with it.

THE WONDERFUL STORY OF HENRY SUGAR. (NETFLIX MOVIES) (7.5 IMDB) **** Wes Andersen took three stories by Roald Dahl and made simply fabulous and totally engrossing movies from them. First there’s “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar” (39 minutes) which stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Ralph Fiennes, Ben Kingsley and Dev Patel. Immediately next on Netflix is “The Rat Catcher” (6.7 IMDB) featuring Rupert Friend and Ralph Fiennes. Licorice lovers should heed advance warnings on that one! The Dahl & Anderson 3 movie set closes with “The Swan” (18 minutes) (6.9 IMDB). Again starring Rupert Friend and Ralph Fiennes, The Swan deals and nearly faces some gruesome facets of human depravity…go for the three of these by all means.

SONG OF THE BANDITS. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.2IMDB).**   An unusual slice of history when the Japanese attacked and murdered more than 5000 Koreans in 1915. This movie comes across almost like our westerns when the cowboys murdered our Indians. It’s fast moving, much blood and the violence is almost in the comedy department. Worth checking out.

THURSDAYS WIDOW. (NETFLIX SERIES) (6.01 IMDB). ** This production has a point to make and it’s aimed at the differences or maybe the similarities between the rich and the poor. It all happens in Mexico and throws in plastic surgery, lots of politics and bold statements against the hired help. It will result in your thinking about the class differences you’ve seen in your lifetime.

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

INFAMY. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.1 IMDB). A movie from Poland that hammers on us the terrible local prejudices against the area Gypsies. There’s a 17 year old girl who has to face the hatred and pain in being a minority. It’s a simple movie with lots of amateur mugging and posing, but it does get the point across.

HOW TO DEAL WITH A HEARTBREAK. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (4.0 IMDB). They list it as a comedy drama and it sure is both. This woman author tries hard to write her book. Then her dad dies and returns to help her write the book. So yes there are laughs/snickers but she’s 34 years old so we do lose patience with her.

SUSPECT X. (NETFLIX SERIES) (NO IMDB YET). Her husband disappears but he was an evil sort and this film from India makes quite a story out of it.  She has a math teacher as a neighbor, he’s loved by all and helps her hide the truths behind the husband’s disappearance from the police. It’s a bit overdone and heavy, but worthwhile.

BURNING BODY. (NETFLIX SERIES) (6.7 IMDB). A policeman is found burned to death in his own police car. The acting is well done and it’s done mostly in Spanish and in Barcelona.

It’s based on a true and well known case that happened a few years ago. It’s mostly centered on the woman or women in his life and is worthwhile watching.

...
October 2

Gillian will be back next week.

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.

...
October 2

HOW DID THIS HAPPEN, AND WHAT CAN WE DO?

Affordable housing…what can we really do that will fix this problem in Santa Cruz?  Is that even possible? Please join the great discussions hosted by the Our Downtown, Our Future folks on Saturday, October 14 at the London Nelson Center to hear and participate in thoughtful discussions with three panels of local public leaders, with a range of opinions and perspectives. ourdowntownourfuture.org

Please sign up to inform the organizers about numbers so there is plenty of food for the lunch provided.

YOUR LAST CHANCE TO COMMENT ON INJECTION OF TREATED SEWAGE WATER INTO OUR AREA’S AQUIFER

Are you comfortable having Soquel Creek Water District inject treated sewage water that could contain nitrate and unregulated contaminants into the pristine groundwater the Midcounty area residents depend upon for clean drinking water?

You need to send written comment to the Central Coast Water Quality Board by October 11. This Permit Application is likely the final opportunity for public comment on the Project’s impacts to the groundwater quality and potential marine impacts.

I have reserved the meeting room at the Capitola Library (2005 Wharf Road) for Saturday, October 7, 3:30pm for a public study session and discussion.  I hope that any who are interested in this Project and potential impacts on the groundwater quality and marine habitat near the pipeline outfall will attend and submit informed comment to the Regional Water Quality Control Board by October 11.

The District has applied to the Regional Water Quality Control Board for a permit to inject treated wastewater into the MidCounty Groundwater Basin. Here is a link to the Permit application document for the Proposed Order No. R3-2023-0033

I have not been able to get a clear answer from the Water Board whether or not a legally-required Final Anti-Degradation Analysis has been approved to verify this injected water will not adversely affect the high-quality groundwater.  (Santa Cruz City’s injection of potable water into the aquifer in a pilot program caused arsenic spikes in water retrieved.)

However, according to recent correspondence from Mr. Harvey Packard at the Water Board, it won’t matter if this Permit to Inject Recycled Water is approved by the Board on December 14-15.  The Board staff seems willing to accept Soquel Creek Water District’s interpretation of draft analysis and sign off on any further study:

“If the board adopts the injection permit, there will be no further need for anti-deg analysis, and we will consider the district’s report final.”

What bothers me is that the District’s vague analysis would allow 3.5 mg/L of nitrate in the “product water” to be injected into the groundwater, and there would only have to be a “Best Practices Plan’ in place for how this could affect the MidCounty Groundwater Basin. There is no link provided at all to any actual Final Anti-Degradation Analysis report to verify any of the vague statements made in the Proposed Permit R3-2023-0033 (see page F-19 / page 137 of the document)

Public Comment on this application is due October 11.

Although the Proposed Permit Fact Sheet (page F16-19) gives a summary of Soquel Creek Water District’s findings regarding ANTI-DEGRADATION ANALYSIS, there is no link to the actual study to verify any of the vague claims that the Water Board seems willing to accept.  There is no evidence that the Water Board has reviewed and approved any such detailed Analysis that will ensure the protection of the high-quality waters of the aquifer.

Please note that on page 25, there is information about the permit conditions not filed under EPA Clean Water Act, and time-sensitive appeal:

11.3. These requirements have not been reviewed by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and are not issued pursuant to Clean Water Act section 402. 

11.4. Any person aggrieved by this action of the Central Coast Water Board may petition the State Water Board to review the action in accordance with California Water Code section 13320 and CCR title 23, section 2050. The State Water Board must receive the petition by 5:00 p.m., 30 days after the date of this Permit, except if this date falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or State holiday, then the petition must be received by the State Water Board by 5:00 p.m. on the next business day. Copies of the law and regulations applicable to filing petitions may be found on the internet or will be provided upon request. The provisions of this Permit are severable, and if any provision of this Permit, or the application of any provision of this Permit to any circumstance, is held invalid, the application of such provision to other circumstances, and the remainder of this Permit must not be affected.

Also, please note the conditions causing the Board to Reopen the Permit on page 26:

12.1. The Central Coast Water Board may reopen this Permit to include the most scientifically relevant and appropriate limitations for this discharge, including a revised Basin Plan limit based on monitoring results, anti-degradation studies, or other Central Coast Water Board or State Water Board policy.

The City of Santa Cruz is also applying for a separate permit to discharge the concentrated treatment brine from the PureWater Soquel Project into the Pacific Ocean via the City’s sewage treatment outfall pipe, also open to Public Comment, and due October 12.  Here is the link to that PROPOSED ORDER NO. R3-2023-0001 and NPDES NO. CA0048194

The Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board will consider both applications at their December 14-15, 2023 meeting.

Here is the link to the Water Board website for full information on both applications and comment procedure: Tentative Orders, Permits, Complaints and Resolutions | Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board

Please attend the Saturday, October 7 3:30pm study session at the Capitola Library if you have questions, but above all, submit your comments to the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board by October 11 for the injection well permit, and October 12 for the ocean outfall brine effluent.

WHAT IS THIS?  STRANGE WATER CONNECTION IN THE APTOS VILLAGE PROJECT

Last weekend, I happened to travel through the Aptos Village Project Phase 2 construction zone, which is happening on both sides of Aptos Village Way. A strange water connection near the road caught my attention.  See the photo below:

Is this “service connection” legitimate?  Who, if anyone, is paying for the water?  Is this connection being assessed a hefty monthly service connection fee, like all the other ratepayers have to pay?  What about vandalism, and potential leaks and geysers (that happened in the Phase 1 construction) and contamination….

This is what happened last weekend in the Aptos Village Project mess.  Since Swenson removed all parking along Aptos Village Way between Parade Street and Aptos Creek Road, and the County Public Works staff is fine with allowing the contractor to fill up Aptos Creek Road with construction vehicles and mobile office space, things are not so rosey in the Aptos Village Project area.  This vandalism happened just a few yards away from that strange water service connection pictured above.

Write Soquel Creek Water District and ask about this strange water service connection: Board of Directors bod@soquelcreekwater.org.

Write Matt Machado at Public Works about the significant and adverse impacts on local traffic caused by Swenson’s construction and encroachment into Aptos Creek Road.  It is quite a hazard, and Swenson linked arms with then-County Supervisor Ellen Pirie to assure the public would have plenty of free parking, even for Nisene Marks State Park visitors (their limited parking fills up quickly).

Matt Machado (matt.machado@santacruzcountyca.gov)

Why is Swenson allowed to encroach into Aptos Creek Road with fencing, creating this real safety hazard?  Can you see the bicyclist that was quickly exiting Nisene Marks State Park on the right of this intersection at Aptos Village Way?   How do you think this encroachment would affect a fire evacuation out of the Park?  Yikes!

Please contact State Parks Chris Spohrer (chris.spohrer@parks.ca.gov),  Central Fire District Fire Marshal Mike DeMars (miked@centralfpd.com) and Sheriff Sgt. Zach West (zach.west@santacruzcounty.us)  (831) 454-7760  and ask that the construction fencing be  relocated out of the public roadway, and re-establish 200′ line of sight visibility at the Aptos Creek Road and Aptos Village Way intersection for public safety and fire evacuation needs.

DECLINING POPULATION TRENDS IN SANTA CRUZ COUNTY AND CALIFORNIA AS A WHOLE

Last Wednesday, the County Planning Commission met to discuss not only the County Housing Element draft update and RHNA mandates, but also the County’s Annual Growth Goal.  The Commission ran out of time to discuss the latter, which will come back next month.

The Planning Dept. staff report included a very interesting analysis of the 430-unit subdivision planned for the Par 3 Golf Course next to Highway One, near State Park Drive.  That analysis had not been included in last week’s Housing Element presentation to the County’s Housing Advisory Commission.  Likely, it was quickly drafted to address a legal threat by The Aptos Council, sent to the Board of Supervisors in early September, pointing out many major CEQA violations.

Planning staff assured the Commissioners there will be an environmental Addendum made available soon, hopefully by the Planning Commission’s  October 25 Public Hearing on the Draft Housing Element Update.

The Commissioners also wanted to know why the Planning Dept. factored in an additional 10% buffer in the number of parcels to be rezoned for high-density development, four -six stories tall. The total unit goal jumped from 4,634 to 5,098 units to be built within the next eight years, with many parcels having to undergo re-zoning.

“We need to have HCD believe us.” said the planner.

“Can the Cabrillo College 640-bed project be included in the RHNA number response?” Commissioner Andy Shiffrin wanted to know?

“NO” said Planning Director Stephanie Hansen, because student housing is considered “temporary housing” and cannot be counted.  Commissioner Renee Shepherd pointed out that the UCSC and Cabrillo students occupy a lot of permanent housing, and certainly have an impact.

During public comment, Central Fire Protection District Chief Jason Nee spoke about how the District has been planning to purchase the parcel at 41st Avenue and Soquel Drive for a new fire station, replacing the flood-prone station in Soquel Village.  However, now that the County has identified the parcel as a re-zone location for very dense and tall housing, the owner raised the sales price such that the Fire District may not be able to afford to buy it.

Does any of this make sense?

Take a look: Population Trends

According to the Census and the State Department of Finance (DOF) population estimates, the unincorporated area had a growth rate of -1.3% in 2022 and is estimated to have an approximate -1.0% decrease by the end of 2023. In 2021 the unincorporated growth rate decreased by an estimated -3.4%. However, US Census data from 2020 indicates that population in the unincorporated area had steadily increased over the last decade. By comparison, the county as a whole decreased by -0.2% in 2021 and -1.1% in 2022. The state population also decreased by -0.5% in 2021 and -0.4% in 2022. These rates reflect the recent decline in state population estimates since the COVID-19 pandemic began and mark a major shift in the state’s historical trend of continued population growth.

Take a look at page 20, where Table 2 shows AMBAG’s approved population projections show a 1% increase in the County’s population between 2015 and 2045

So, why would AMBAG mandate a 300% increase in housing units in the 6th Cycle of RHNA?  Hmmm…

Some feel that the State Housing & Community Development Dept. (HCD), the agency tasked with forming these RHNA mandates and whipping municipalities into breakneck process to meet their approval deadlines, has been captured by special interests.  Learn more about this and start asking questions of local legislators.

DESAL WATER COSTING LESS AND LESS TO PRODUCE? 

Ten years ago, the local Desal Alternatives successful citizen initiative petition called for the ability of Santa Cruz City voters to decide whether or not to move forward on a desalination plant (in partnership with Soquel Creek Water District).  The group rightfully raised the red flag on  the exorbitant energy demand the process would require to produce potable water for the area, and demanded alternatives be examined.  The City Council immediately backed away from the Project, leaving Soquel Creek Water District to move in a feverish pace to adopt the PureWater Soquel Project (modified many times without EIR) that will instead use massive amounts of energy in an attempt to clean up sewage water and inject it into the pristine groundwater.

Now, new technology has drastically lowered the energy required for desalination.

Bill Maher recently interviewed Elon Musk. When Maher claimed that we are running out of water, Elon replied that “Earth is 70 percent water.” Maher shot back that “you can’t drink that.”  Musk calmly replied that desalination is “absurdly cheap.”

Can desalination save a drying world?

Think about this.  Should the Soquel Creek Water District Board of Directors been so quick to jump on the best-available grant funding for what is known as Indirect Potable Re-Use of this sewage water when energy technology for desalination was making big strides in efficiency, and the State of California was quickly moving to allow Direct Potable Re-Use of the recycled water instead of injection into the aquifer?  The State Waterboard is due to approve Direct Potable Re-Use by the end of this year.  That means Soquel Creek Water District customers could be drinking the stuff directly….soon.

I would welcome your thoughts.

CHINESE GOLD BROUGHT TO LIFE WITH AUTHOR SANDY LYDON AND GEORGE OW INTERVIEW

Don’t miss this opportunity to learn more about the history of the Chinese in shaping Santa Cruz County, sponsored by the Santa Cruz County Public Library, this Saturday, October 7 at 10am-12:30pm. It’ll be at The 418 Project, 155 River St S, Santa Cruz, CA, 95060

“Experience the history of Chinese Americans in Santa Cruz with Author Sandy Lydon in conversation with George Ow. Lydon’s groundbreaking local history, “Chinese Gold” will be transformed into a multimedia book discussion by artist and educator Rui Li. Li presents additional interviews with Lydon and Ow in addition to a treasure-trove of images of old Chinatown. Copies of the book will be available for purchase in both English and Chinese.”

Write one letter.  Make one call.  Expect elected officials to answer your questions and make sure they do.  Make a big difference this week by just doing something.

Cheers,

Becky

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

...

GREY HAYES.

October 1

FLOWERS FOR FALL

One native plant’s flowering is more enigmatic than any others for representing Fall on California’s central coast: coyote bush. This easy-to-identify and quite common shrub has so many stories to tell that it might serve as a gateway plant for those otherwise uninterested or unfamiliar with the native plants and plant communities that surround us.

Coyote Bush: the Trickster

For those of you who are following the series of columns where I’ve named native flowering plants each month in 2023, this is October’s flower. Unlike the others, this species is easy to find, so I’m letting you (and me) off the hook on that front. Instead, I present a different kind of challenge: sorting out the boy coyote bushes from the girl coyote bushes. This tricky shrub has separate female and male plants; I’ve never heard of a hermaphrodite, but there’s yet another challenge for the intrepid. The flowers of this shrub are tiny; there are no petals to be seen. But, there are so many flowers that the masses stand out. Male plants produce clusters of flowers bedecked with yellow pollen. Female plants apparently make nectar but more evidently make lots of white fluff, the ‘hair’ for which the plant is named.

Associated Wildlife – Mice!

My favorite mouse, the teeny tiny harvest mouse, loves coyote bush for many reasons. From film footage I’ve collected, it appears that harvest mice make use of meadow vole highways. And, meadow voles (aka meadow mice) love to use coyote bush as cover. Vole runs are at the soil surface and fan out like spokes in a wheel from a coyote bush into the surrounding prairie. Voles are voracious grazers and families of voles claim large areas of prairie as their grazing grounds, establishing what becomes a highway system, hidden just below a grassy roof. My Vole Cam footage barely catches the voles as they rocket so quickly back and forth on those highways. They jet down their transportation system in search of fresh hay, which they harvest until their mouths are fat with it, and it hangs out in all directions. Once full up, they rocket back home, dropping bits and pieces of their hay. They are very messy, and by the end of their foray, their trails are littered with criss-crossed grass pieces.

After the voles settle down in their holes for a rest, the harvest mice appear, sneaking in from hidden side roads and onto the messy vole highway. The harvest mice meticulously clear the litter from the vole highway and, by the time the voles wake up again, the harvest mice have left a clean trail for them to run up and down again. The voles put up big wads of hay in food chambers. I haven’t figured out if the harvest mice store food or just eat it on the spot. But, I have found very interesting harvest mouse nests, up in the boughs of coyote bush.

Coyote Down Nests

Harvest mice gather the ‘hair’ from female coyote bushes and weave the softest of tear-drop shaped nests where they raise their babies. Perhaps they weave in the longer down from thistles, as well. However they make their nests, they are small, intricately woven, and about 2′ up in coyote bushes…maybe even right above the coyote bushes that serve as home central for the vole family with which they associate. The harvest mice nests have a hidden or tiny doorway, which I haven’t figured out, yet. Perhaps they seal them shut coming and going, and I suspect I know why: alligator lizards.

Alligator Lizards in the Air…in the Air!

If the title of this section makes you mysteriously reminisce, perhaps you should listen to the America song, Ventura Highway one more time. The songwriter was sharing an ecological insight: aerial alligator lizards are a real thing. When seeking harvest mouse nests, I encounter alligator lizards perched in coyote bushes. They are often on the sunny side, perhaps basking while they seek their prey. No doubt that harvest mice are one of their meal items, and no doubt they seek out the nests within the canopies of coyote bushes. There’s so much going on in those coyote bushes!

Unwelcome Coyote Bush

Even with that wildlife story, and there are many others, humans don’t always welcome coyote bush: it’s an invasive species! For 2 million years, a diverse menagerie of large herbivores roamed California’s grasslands, grazing the grasses, uprooting trees and massively setting back shrubs. Much more recently, native peoples tended grasslands using fire and other tools that kept shrubs and trees at bay, stewarding the very species rich grasslands along California’s coast where coyote bush would have otherwise blanketed thousands of acres. Without tending coastal grasslands, coyote bush quickly invades. From seedlings to a continuous canopy of coyote bush takes only 20 years. The hundreds of grassland-dependent species don’t like that. Livestock managers don’t like that, either. And, parks and open space managers don’t like it: there goes the view and here comes a bad fire danger!

Flaming Bush

Coyote bush isn’t always easy to burn, but burn it sometimes does. When the fire weather calmed down after the worst of the Lockheed Fire in 2009, I watched hundreds of thousands of dollars get wasted as fire agencies tried igniting swaths of coyote bush to create a containment line and supposedly to make a study of this as yet unstudied fuel type. They dropped lots of different types of igniting devices on that stand from helicopters and from ground mounted guns. After hours of such play, the choking smoke that rose out of those areas blanketed Santa Cruz for days, but hardly anything had burned, there was no containment line, and, try as I might, I could never get any word about the results of their fuels modeling study.

Years later, in 2020, as I watched the CZU Lightning Complex Fire advance towards my home, I was able to witness how wildfire interacts with coyote bush. As the fire backed down a hill across from me, long swaths of coyote bush would smolder at first and then roar alight, followed by the next downhill swatch and so forth…the fire marching towards me. After the fire, the trunks and thick branches of the coyote bush remained, dead. 90 percent of those burned shrubs resprouted from their bases. The skeletons 3 years later are still pliable, not easily broken off…really difficult to negotiate on a walk. Soon, that and many other coyote bush stands will be green again…green with a continuous standing dead fuel load waiting for the next fire.

Coyote Bush Nursery

On the other hand, some people really welcome coyote bush. They say, ‘up with coyote bush! It’s a nurse plant!!’ They claim that coyote bush shade and shelter helps other species to establish. After the initial invasion of coyote bush in our native grasslands, up shoots poison oak, blackberry, oaks, monkeyflower, and California sagebrush. Whether or not those species really needed coyote bush to nurse them along remains a mystery, but the march of new, woody species into our endangered coastal prairies is fairly predictable after that initial wave of coyote bush. Tromp into a stand of coast live oak sometime – see if you spot old skeletons of coyote bush in the understory. They might be telling you a story of ecosystem change.

Your Turn

Whatever you do, please do try to get out and look carefully at coyote bush. Can you spot a female vs. a male? Also, crush some leaves in your hand and take a big sniff- you won’t soon forget the delightful piney scent of the foliage.

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

...

October 2
#275 / A Phenomenal Culture Of Welcoming

Pictured above is our “Wall” at the United States’ border with Mexico, as seen from Nogales, Arizona.  Mexico is right on the other side. I took the picture in May, 2021, and I was appalled. I have never forgotten my visit to that border, and the statement that this border wall represents.

This picture documents how our fear and rejection has been made into a barrier of concrete and steel, with the razor wall making clear that the penalty for trying to come across that border will likely be death. Most recently, Texas has installed a floating barrier-wall in the Rio Grande River, also including razor wire. The news story from which I took the image below said this:

The Mexican government reported for the first time Wednesday that a body was spotted along the floating barrier that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott installed recently in the Rio Grande, across from Eagle Pass, Texas. Mexico’s Foreign Relations Department said authorities were trying to recover the body, and did not know the person’s nationality or the cause of death. Many had warned about the danger of the barrier, because it is designed to make it more difficult for migrants to climb over or swim under it.

You probably remember the statement that the United States has, historically, provided to those who would want to come here from another country:

The story from which I took the above image of the Statue of Liberty said this:

In the early 1900s, Georgina Shuyler was one of many to point out that the statue’s proximity to Ellis Island, and its visibility for ships and boats coming ashore, made it a powerful, welcoming symbol for immigrants entering the United States. In response to this new interpretation, the words from Emma Lazarus’s poem The New Colossus were famously etched into a plaque at the base of the statue in 1903, including the words: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore.” It became recognized as a symbol of America’s rich multicultural history, founded by people from around the world.

I thought to write this blog posting about the topic of immigration because, as is so often true, a single phrase from a newspaper article caught my attention. The article was authored by David Oshinsky, who is director of the Division of Medical Humanities at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and a professor in the NYU Department of History. The article appeared in the Saturday-Sunday, September 30 – October 1 edition of The Wall Street Journal, and was titled: “The Nobel Prizes Need A Makeover.” In his article, Oshinsky noted the disproportionate number of Nobel Prizes that have been awarded to Americans:

If one were to make a composite of the typical Nobel Prize winner in science, it would be a middle-aged American man, nurtured in elite surroundings, whose eureka moment occurred about 15 years or so before winning the prize. The U.S. has dominated these competitions, winning close to half the science Nobels since 1901…

America’s dominance can be partly attributed, in fact, to its role as a haven for scientists seeking freedom and opportunity. What began as a trickle in the 1930s with the arrival of refugees from Nazism became a steady stream by the 1960s, as the U.S. liberalized its more restrictive immigration laws. Since then, the number of Nobels in science won by Americans born elsewhere has skyrocketed. Immigrants have accounted for close to 40% of the prizes awarded to Americans in the 21st century. “The U.S. has built a phenomenal culture of welcoming,” says Stefano Bertuzzi, an Italian émigré who heads the American Society for Microbiology (emphasis added).

Please let me say that I endorse the thought that a “culture of welcoming” is a positive for this nation. Wouldn’t you agree?

Let’s not forget that!

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

...
October 2

PLAYING CATCH UP WITH THE HANDS OF TIME

The black and gold 16-foot clock seen in the photos of Trump Tower in New York City was erected on the sidewalk over twelve years ago without the required permits and city officials are now attempting to collect those fees. The ten-year permit for this type of clock installation is usually billed at $300 per year; and though the city’s oversight on the matter was not an issue until 2015, pursuit was dropped when Donald Trump became a presidential candidate and was then successful in his election to the office. NYC’s Department of Transportation wrote the organization recently to remind them that the clock and other “structures continue to be encroachments on the public right of way and are subject to enforcement.” It remains to be seen how this might be enforced with Manhattan Judge Arthur Engoron’s dissolution order for the Trump Organization last week…it may mean that removal of the ‘Trump‘ moniker from the tower as well as from the four faces of the intruding timepiece is in the offing. The attorneys for the former president were in court the day after the ruling asking for more clarity, but were denied, with the justice saying to check back later…stand back and stand by, if you will.

This is a monumental coup for New York Attorney General Letitia James in her lawsuit against Trump’s golf and real estate organization, which includes his two sons, TweedleDumb and TweedleDumber, and the executives who have been party to the perpetuation of years of fraud. Engoron made an early decision, after three years of pre-trial investigations and litigation, that Trump’s fraudulent inflation of his worth to banks and insurers added approximately $3.6B in fictional value to his annual net worth. Those knowledgeable about such matters have termed the ruling “the corporate death penalty” because it orders the cancellation of state ‘certificates’ allowing the Trump Organization and the hundreds of underlying trusts and LLCs to function as corporate entities. The order specifies that within ten days, Trump’s attorneys must submit names of three possible “independent receivers to manage the dissolution of the cancelled LLCs” to the court, which means selling corporate properties. However, the judge honored the request of the attorneys for thirty days to agree to a receiver, which then brought up the name of retired judge, Barbara Jones, an independent monitor currently, to assume that role.

This is a unique case for which there is little guidance to dissolve a multi-billion-dollar company, assets which range from not only Trump Tower, but home addresses held as LLCs, as well. Sticking points such as these led the judge say he was not prepared to make a ruling, leaving the two Tweedles with roofs over their heads for the time being. The state has alleged fraud involving two of Trump’s residences: Mar-a-Lago and the Trump Tower’s 10,000 square feet triplex penthouse where he lives on occasion…which was fraudulently tripled in size to 30,000 square feet in financial statements. Banks relied on the accuracy of this information to collateralize and maintain the hundreds of millions of dollars in Trump Organization loans. The court found that Trump valued Mar-a-Lago at $739M based falsely on the premise that it was free of any development restrictions, which gained him a generous tax benefit for which he was to give up residential development rights. Actual value of this property should have been around $75M, as estimated by the attorney general. Denying that the valuations were fraudulent, Trump’s attorneys claim that The Don was a “visionary” who saw value beyond what non-visionaries could see, as they prepare to fight fraud accusations and appeal the dissolution order. So, who gets the $25M clock?

Likely it won’t be Melania. Being the visionary that she is, she has recently renegotiated the marital pre-nuptial for the third time to protect the financial interests of Barron, her 17-year-old son, as his father’s legal troubles multiply and his financial future becomes questionable. “Melania is most concerned about maintaining and increasing a substantial trust for Barron,” a source said, as she hopes to secure “a specific amount at minimum,” and even as she seeks more money and property for her own security. Bill Palmer writes on his The Palmer Report, “Donald Trump is going to prison. His fate was sealed the minute the goons breached the Capitol.” The hype from both sides of the aisle about how he will escape prosecution and take over the country again, after four indictments and 91 criminal charges, is now looking grimmer by the day, and even Trump understands the predicament he faces. His posing questions to those around him concerning prison itself…state or federal, orange jumpsuit or not?…point to his behavior as the equivalent of a child who is realizing the enormity of his indiscretions. Yet the media is still playing his game that somehow he will remain politically viable, furthering their own game of selling cars, shampoo, miracle cures, and McDonald’s fast food – which, by the way, is not allowed in a prison populace!

Palmer goes on to say that Trump’s bragging in a civil trial deposition that his properties are worth much more than his current evaluations, resulting in a windfall should he be forced to sell, is showing that the influence of his ‘babysitters’ have prepped him for that very eventuality, by a liquidation at the end of Letitia James‘ civil trial. Being so far gone in his senile and delusional state, he’ll just accept that scenario as being real, always at the ready with another set of lies. Palmer concludes, “As always, the key part of the story is just how far gone Trump is cognitively. Based on how he now comes off in his public appearances, he seems to be at a point where his ‘babysitters’ could probably convince him of anything. That now apparently includes convincing him that his properties aren’t being forcibly sold off as part of liquidation, but are instead being sold off because he’s a financial genius. Anything to soften the blow on the way down.”

Trump’s defense in Georgia took a blow last week when Scott Hall, a bail bond business owner and one of the nineteen indicted in the Fani Willis conspiracy case, pleaded guilty to five misdemeanor counts, the first to do so. His plea agreement in Judge Scott McAfee’s hearing resulted being sentenced to five years’ probation, a $5000 fine and 200 hours of community service, and, being forbidden to participate in any “polling activities” while on probation. He is required to write a letter of apology to the citizens of Georgia and must testify honestly in any future proceedings in the case. Hall’s case centered on his breach of a Coffee County election office on January 7, 2021, along with a group who conspired to “intentionally interfere with and hinder and delay” the duties of another co-defendant, Misty Hampton, who was Coffee County’s election supervisor. The group’s goal was to “unlawfully access all election machines in said county in order to obtain proprietary data or property of Dominion Voting Systems used in the administration of elections in the state of Georgia.” Sidney Powell is likely in need of smelling salts, and Rudy Giuliani’s hair dye rivulets are out of control by now.

Perhaps in anticipation of being on the skids, Donald Trump, Jr. is branching out with his business acumen. He has been seen on Xwitter hyping a brand of coffee, called Blackout Coffee, a brand with conservative values! In a video from his podcast, Triggered, DonnyJ says, “You don’t have to choose between what you believe and what you buy. You’re gonna be drinking coffee anyway, and if you do, show support for a brand aligned with your conservative values. It’s American-made, it’s family-owned. And, they support what we believe in,” adding, “So, from sourcing beans, to roasting the coffee, and that processed customer support, and shipping, Blackout Coffee will never compromise on taste or quality, and they do it all while supporting freedom-loving values.” One Xwitter user wrote in response, “How does coffee become conservative…do they plant the beans in a MAGA hat?” Another user added, “Junior is gonna have to sell a lot of coffee to cover Big Daddy’s legal bills. I never thought I’d see the day when Presidential candidates have to sell coffee, t-shirts and gimme hats to get elected to the formerly greatest office in the world…” The brand’s website also offers mugs that read, “Give me coffee, or give me death,” and “Pro life-god-guns, and coffee,” among other catchy kitsch keepsakes.

Melania Trump, while keeping a low profile for the most part, managed to surface recently, making a sales pitch for – Christmas ornaments! We all remember her disdain in handling the White House Christmas decorations, as recorded by former friend and aide, Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, when she infamously said, “I’m working my ass off at Christmas stuff. You know, who gives a f*** about Christmas stuff and decoration, but I need to do it, right?” True, she did sell ornaments last year, but has added “a corresponding digital collectible” to the current $35 to $45 offerings. Some have suggested she engrave the ornaments with her past utterances about the holiday. Ah, anything to keep the home fires burning.

The Flaxen-Klaxon-Hair-On-Fire, Marjorie Taylor-Greene, is still managing to stir things up online with her antics. She recalled a recent air terminal experience with an airport worker, posting, “Friendly airline employee smiles and says, ‘tell President Trump that African American Muhammad says hello and is with him!” Xwitter users jumped her for fabricating her tale, one posting, “I’ll take things that didn’t happen for $200, Alex!” Another called her out by saying, “Racists always use adjectives to describe a person for the purpose of stating that they are not racist (i.e., “African American Muhammad”); however, it’s not necessary to do so, if you’re NOT racist, because actions speak louder than words.” “Jamal must have been on a break…they love that name for their imaginary black friends,” wrote one user. Then Ms. Jewish Space Lasers got her Jewish holidays mixed up by picturing a Chanukah menorah in a posted Yom Kippur message to the Jewish community. Why does she bother? She promptly deleted the post, but not after being called a meshuggener, along with other names for her ridiculous post. One person joked that she acted quickly in order to avoid Nancy Pelosi’s Gazpacho Police. Meidas Touch’s co-founder, Brett Meiselas, punched back with, “Frankly, Jews don’t need an antisemitic maniac who gives speeches at Nazi events sending out holiday messages in the first place.” Democratic Representative Jared Moskowitz of Florida adds, “Yom Kippur is where you atone for your sins. Lord knows you will be very busy.” TV comedy writer, Frank Lesser, says in Marge’s defense, “She thought it was an eight-pronged Jewish space laser.” And to help the befuddled Georgia-Marge-In-Charge in her future endeavors, SnarkTank99 designed her an Easter greeting for later posting, with a cartoonish Santa waving jovially with his bag of gifts.

Representative Andy Ogles of Tennessee gifted the former president with a new handle last week when he accidentally referred to him as “President Chump” as he spoke on the floor of the House. He quickly corrected this Freudian slip, but just as quickly it spread on the internet. “Sir, you had it correct the first time,” posted one responder. We may recall Ogles having to defend his Second Amendment-family Christmas card in 2021, as the group posed with their guns…shortly after The Covenant School in Nashville suffered a mass shooting in which six died. “No regrets,” he said at the time. And, Chris Christie during the GOP presidential debate last week gave Trump a new nametag…to the chagrin of the Disney Corporation, no doubt. Trump’s no-show status at the debates…dodging any controversial embarrassments with his competitors, earns him the honorific of “Donald Duck.”

A customer goes into a bookstore, asking the clerk if they stock Trump’s new book on how to deport aliens. The offended clerk tells him, “Get the hell out and don’t come back.” The customer replies, “Yes, that’s the one…do you have it in paperback?”

Dr. Dana Ménard informs us, “The cat who was completely obsessed with my bump when I was pregnant is quite uninterested in the baby now that she’s out. It’s a weird way to find out my cat is a Republican.”

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

    “TOWERS”

“The collapse of the Tower of Babel is perhaps the central urban myth. It is certainly the most disquieting. In Babylon, the great city that fascinated and horrified the Biblical writers, people of different races and languages, drawn together in pursuit of wealth, tried for the first time to live together – and failed”.
~Neil MacGregor

“Living in a community with very wounded people, I came to see that I had lived most of my life as a tightrope artist trying to walk on a high, thin cable from one tower to the other, always waiting for the applause when I had not fallen off and broken my leg”.
~Henri Nouwen

“The whole imposing edifice of modern medicine is like the celebrated tower of Pisa – slightly off balance”.
~Prince Charles

“A man’s mind is wont to tell him more than seven watchmen sitting in a tower”.
~Rudyard Kipling

...

Television in the 50s. The product promotion, the smoking, the everything – this is a fascinating glimpse from an episode of “I’ve got a secret”


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...


Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

September 27 – October 3, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton….housing for people, hidden valley concert. Greensite…on the Wharf and the Historic Preservation Commission. Steinbruner…Santa Cruz wastewater, Renaissance High school well, few CZU fire survivors, housing developments. Hayes…how change happens. Patton…streets without buses. Matlock…king kong house party and nerfs on meet the frass. Eagan…Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress…pick of the week. Quotes…”October”

...

SANTA CRUZ TAXI FLEET…May 7, 1951. That’s Mayor George M. Penniman in the suit giving the Safety Award to the fleet representative. Looks like some ACME taxis in among the Yellow fleet.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE September 25

HOUSING FOR PEOPLE. There’s a deadline on getting enough signatures to get this on the ballot and what it will accomplish is more than necessary… it’s vital. Go to housingforpeople.org to get all the details but just remember it will increase the affordable housing ratio to 25% and it’ll give us a chance to stop the super tall buildings (12 + stories) that developers now cram through our easy to please city government. It’ll give our community a chance to vote on whether or not the buildings provide a human and reasonable percentage of affordable units. As the website says, “The citizens deserve a right to vote when builders want to break the current height limits”. It also states…” If you want to maintain our diversity by increasing low-income housing, so family members, low and moderate wage earners, youth and elders can continue to live here, sign our initiative!”

One reader sent the following summary/plea … Housing for People- NOT unaffordable towers! The ballot initiative will implement TWO important things:

  • Take back our right to vote on height and density when developers exceed the current zoning limits.
  • And it will increase the affordable housing ratio to at least 25% in all new developments of 30 units or more.
  1. The Santa Cruz City Council shall not adopt amendments to the City’s General Plan or Zoning Ordinance that increase the allowable height limits or Floor Area Ratios (F.A.R.) for development projects, which are greater than the height limits and F.A.R. in effect in the City’s General Plan as of June 1, 2023 (or the earliest date allowed by law), without a prior vote of the people approving the proposed increase.
  2. The inclusionary (affordable) housing requirements shall be increased from the existing 20% to at least 25% for developments with 30 or more housing units.

HIDDEN VALLEY STRING ORCHESTRA PRESENTS

“AQUARELLES”

HIDDEN VALLEY STRING ORCHESTRA Sixteen of Northern California’s finest string players. In the early tradition, the orchestra will perform without a conductor. Prepared under the direction of concertmaster, Roy Malan. Comprising sixteen of Northern California’s most talented and accomplished string players, the String Orchestra of Hidden Valley debuted to acclaim in November 2014. Lyn Bronson of Peninsula Reviews said of the String Orchestra’s debut, “A gorgeous performance. Every section . . . a perfect jewel.”

Repertoire:
Two Aquarelles by Frederick Delius
Intermezzo by Franz Schreker
The Peninsula Suite by Nancy Bloomer Deussen
Romance by Gerald Finzi
Serenade by Antonin Dvorak

TWO CONCERTS, TWO LOCATIONS:
The doors open 30 minutes before the performance. Reception with the musicians will immediately follow both performances.

Carmel Valley
Friday September 29 at 7:30 PM
Hidden Valley Theatre

104 W. Carmel Valley Rd, Carmel Valley CA 93924

Santa Cruz
Saturday September 30 at 4:00 PM
Peace United Church

900 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060

TICKET INFORMATION:
$100 Patron, $25 General Admission, $10 Student

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

INFAMY. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.1 IMDB). A movie from Poland that hammers on us the terrible local prejudices against the area Gypsies. There’s a 17 year old girl who has to face the hatred and pain in being a minority. It’s a simple movie with lots of amateur mugging and posing, but it does get the point across.

HOW TO DEAL WITH A HEARTBREAK. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (4.0 IMDB). They list it as a comedy drama and it sure is both. This woman author tries hard to write her book. Then her dad dies and returns to help her write the book. So yes there are laughs/snickers but she’s 34 years old so we do lose patience with her.

SUSPECT X. (NETFLIX SERIES) (NO IMDB YET). Her husband disappears but he was an evil sort and this film from India makes quite a story out of it.  She has a math teacher as a neighbor, he’s loved by all and helps her hide the truths behind the husband’s disappearance from the police. It’s a bit overdone and heavy, but worthwhile.

BURNING BODY. (NETFLIX SERIES) (6.7 IMDB). A policeman is found burned to death in his own police car. The acting is well done and it’s done mostly in Spanish and in Barcelona.

It’s based on a true and well known case that happened a few years ago. It’s mostly centered on the woman or women in his life and is worthwhile watching.

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

JEANNE DIELMAN, 23, QUAI DU COMMERCE, 1080 BRUXELLES. (MAX MOVIE). (7.6 IMDB). **** This 1975 movie was just re-discovered and 480 movie critics from the Sight and Sound magazine (which is part of The British Film Institute) have stated that Jeanne Dielman is the greatest film of all time. Many, many critics around the world agree. Its three and a half hours long and was directed by a woman director Chantal Akerman. It covers three days in the life of a widowed mother and her son and takes place in Brussels. There’s almost no dialogue, the camera never moves from left to right, and it’s definitely worth watching.

EL CONDE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.6 IMDB). **   A surprising re-take and reversion and political commentary on Augusto Pinochet’s public and private life. It was made in Chile and they call it a comedy. They have Pinochet being first born in 1776 and still being on earth as a 250 year old vampire. It parallels his actual political and personal history adding the vampire secret, and we get to watch blood drinking from a blender many times. It’s “filmed” in black and white which really adds to the desired mood. Note… Augusto Pinochet was leader of the military junta that overthrew the socialist government of President Salvador Allende of Chile in 1973.

A HAUNTING IN VENICE. (DEL MAR THEATRE) (6.8 IMDB). ** Kenneth Branagh is back with the third in his Hercule Poirot versions of Agatha Christie’s books. Michelle Yeoh and Tina Fey are deadly serious in it too. Branagh moved the plot to Venice in 1947 from Christie’s book “Halloween Party” she first published in 1969. It’s deadly serious, very confusing, and it’s hard to stay interested as Poirot makes his rounds. Not recommended.

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.9 IMDB) *• An overly cute teen ager love story about two kids who fall in love at the airport as they depart to two different locations. Some critic called it a cheesy rom com and I agree. It’s silly, trite, and brings in a cancer drama to give it some validity. Not worth watching.

INSIDE. (PRIME MOVIE) (5.5 IMDB). *** It’s good fun to see Willem Dafoe back on screen. This time he’s a specialized art thief who flies in a helicopter and gets trapped in a penthouse in New York City that he was robbing. Because he’s a thief he can’t call or hope for help. He tries climbing, stacking furniture…nothing works. Dafoe is a fine actor and its good fun to watch his many attempts to escape.

...
September 25

PRESERVING OUR HISTORY

There are times when a picture is worth a thousand words as the adage says. Such was the case at the recent monthly meeting of the city’s Historic Preservation Commission. The meeting’s agenda included a public hearing on the recently released Final Environmental Impact Report (FEIR) for the Wharf Master Plan and the Plan itself. The recommendation in the Agenda Report from staff was that the commission recommend to the city council, approval for both. This hearing was the first of three commission hearings prior to the issue going to city council at the end of November.

If you had no idea the Wharf Master Plan, with its unpopular forty feet tall new buildings and much increased commercial was back, you can be forgiven. Throughout this long process from the first FEIR in 2020 the city has failed to give their widely unpopular make-over of the Wharf the publicity it deserves. The city’s public notice in the Sentinel of the release of the current FEIR in early September was buried in the Real Estate section, with no city seal, under a public notice from the county, with county seal. The required public hearing on the draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) was held one day before the end of the comment period, by zoom during working hours with few attendees since few knew it was happening.

You may recall that the city was taken to court by the community group, Don’t Morph the Wharf! over inadequacies in the city’s 2020 environmental review for the Wharf Master Plan. The Court ruled against the city and in the community group’s favor. The Court ruling was that the city must rescind both the EIR and the Wharf Master Plan. Thus began a new process. However, the city decided to recirculate for public review only a portion of the original Plan and EIR, allowing comments only on that new Recreation portion and not responding to comments outside of that portion.

EIR’s are required to include a study of Alternatives, including a No-Build Alternative. Alternative 2- The Modified Project, included in the 2020 EIR, got rid of the lowered Western Walkway (more on that in a moment) and reduced the height of the three new buildings from forty-five to forty feet. The city stated that Alternative 2 (a less environmentally impactful alternative) met all project objectives but they did not state the basis for not adopting it. The Court’s ruling included that the city had not provided evidence for non-adoption of Alternative 2 and required that the issue be addressed. At the Historic Preservation commission hearing, under the one slide referencing the Court Ruling, Alternative 2 was included as bullet point three in the slide show presented by the city’s Asset Manager in charge of the project. No commentary added.

The photo above, in my view, beautifully captures the essence of this historical structure. The city’s hired historical consultant for the 2020 EIR wrote that the historical portion of the 1914 Municipal Wharf lies in its 4500 wooden pilings. Its length (longest on the Pacific Coast and one of five longest in the world) and unique shape at the southern end are usually added to that list of unique features.

Take a moment to absorb the feeling and character of the Wharf captured in the photo. There is for me much beauty in the uninterrupted flow of dark pilings, curving at the southern end to lessen the impact of winter waves. It is said that Master Engineer Brunnier, who went on to design and build many iconic San Francisco structures, spent a year on Beach Hill observing the waves, wind and currents before designing the Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf.

The proposed lowered Western Walkway would bisect the pilings eight feet below deck with an add-on made of different materials, for about half the length in the photo, starting roughly on the left. The Walkway would bring people, bustle, noise, and movement into this scene. For me, and others, this is transformative. In prepping for my comments at the Historic Preservation Commission I decided to print and hand out this photo.

The effect was electric. Hence the adage. All commissioners present “got” the impact. The chair waved the photo aloft stating that had they been given this photo they would have objected sooner, or words to that effect. Unfortunately, staff did not clarify that they could vote to recommend Alternative 2, which removes the Western Walkway, since this is a new approval process for both the FEIR and the Wharf Master Plan. Unaware of this option and unclear on what they were voting for, the commission voted to continue the meeting and form a sub-group to get more input from staff to get clearer on the issues.

With this opening at the Historic Preservation Commission level, the community has a chance to be better heard. Over two thousand people signed the 2020 Don’t Morph the Wharf! petition stating they did not want the Wharf to be so dramatically changed as per the Wharf Master Plan. We have only a few more months to make a difference. You can email me at gilliangreensite@gmail.com if you would like to be involved.

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.

...
September 25

COMMENT PERIOD OPEN FOR SANTA CRUZ WASTEWATER AND SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT PERMIT TO DUMP INTO THE OCEAN

If you are concerned about the pollutant levels the City’s sewage treatment plant dumps into the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and Pacific Ocean, including the future concentrated contaminants and carcinogenic disinfection by-products of the PureWater Soquel Project treatment plant scheduled to start up next year, you have until October 11 to register your concerns with the Central Coast Water Quality Control Board, the permitting agency.

Staff of the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board will present Draft Order No. R3-2023-0001 (Draft Order) for adoption at the Board’s December 14-15, 2023 meeting that will include all public comment received before October 12, 2023.

“The Draft Order includes requirements for the discharge of waste from the City of Santa Cruz Wastewater Treatment Facility (Facility) to the Pacific Ocean. The Draft Order also establishes requirements for production of disinfected tertiary recycled water. The Draft Order is intended to serve as a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit and will supersede existing Order No. R3-2017-0030, which remains effective until the Central Coast Water Board adopts a new order and the new order goes into effect. The Draft Order includes a Monitoring and Reporting Program and Fact Sheet as Attachments E and F.

Take a moment to look through the Draft Order and associated attachments and send your comments

Here is the link to the Notice regarding the Soquel Creek Water District Permit Staff Report for their part of the wastewater effluent

Written comments are to be sent to the Waste Discharge Requirements Unit by email (must be no more than 15 megabytes)

RB3-WDR@Waterboards.ca.gov or by mail to:

Waste Discharge Requirements Unit Central Coast Water Board
895 Aerovista Place, Suite 101
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

Please also indicate in the subject line “Comment Letter – Pure Water Soquel”

Contacts for further information:

James Bishop, (805) 542-4628, james.bishop@waterboards.ca.gov
Rachel Hohn, (805) 542-4789, rachel.hohn@waterboards.ca.gov
Jennifer Epp, (805) 594-6181, jennifer.epp@waterboards.ca.gov

No studies were ever conducted to evaluate the impact on the marine habitat that the PureWater Soquel Project’s concentrated brine effluent with carcinogenic disinfection by-products and temperature fluctuations. 

SOQUEL CREEK ANNEXATION OF RENAISSANCE HIGH SCHOOL WATER SERVICE
The private well at Renaissance High on San Andreas Road is polluted with high levels of hexavalent chromium, a known carcinogen. The Pajaro Valley Unified School District has attempted to treat the problem by installing reverse osmosis units at the well, but there is so much sand that gets pumped, likely the very fine pores of the membrane filtration clog easily and require a lot of maintenance.

Soquel Creek Water District did not want to annex the School into their service area, and also refused to annex a large parcel nearby whose owner requested service in order to subdivide and develop.  No one is even mentioning the KOA Campground adjacent to the School, whose well also very likely has trouble with hexavalent chromium levels.

I am very glad the Renaissance High School is being added for water service, and hope that the KOA Campground will also soon be added.

LAFCO Notice of Public Hearing

Here is one recent Letter to the Editor on the topic

SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT COULD LEARN FROM PLEASANTON CITY COUNCIL…DELAY HIGH RATE JUMPS

It is refreshing to see that some elected officials do listen to their constituents and take responsive actions accordingly.  Soquel Creek Water District customers should read this article and speak out on impending water rate hikes coming your way:

Pleasanton Council Votes to Delay Proposed Water Rate Hikes

WHY HAVE SO FEW CZU FIRE SURVIVORS REBUILT?

Compare with Santa Cruz County … only 36 of 911 have rebuilt after three years.

The Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) received two responses in the survey of local jurisdictions that identified the number of units lost during declared states of emergency. The City of Santa Rosa indicated that 3,043 housing units were lost on October 8, 2017 and that, as of February 2020 when the survey was conducted, 2,323 units had been completed or were in the construction/permitting process. The County of Sonoma stated the unincorporated county lost 2,200 units in the 2017 Sonoma Complex Fires and 1,235 units had been rebuilt or were under construction as of February 2020.

FINAL REGIONAL HOUSING NEEDS ALLOCATION (RHNA) PLAN: San Francisco Bay Area, 2023-2031 (page 44)

SONOMA COUNTY IS CREATIVE WITH HOUSING ELEMENT STATE MANDATES…WHY NOT SANTA CRUZ COUNTY?

Santa Cruz County could learn a lot from Sonoma County and how Mr. Tennis Wick is fighting back creatively to protest the unreasonably high building requirement the State’s Housing & Community Development (HCD) is mandating through regional Councils of Government, which in our area is the Association of Monterey Bay Area Governments (AMBAG).

Sonoma RHNA appeal

Solano County is also taking an interesting approach by using sub-regions and keeping flexibility to move the number allocations around for future planning.

The Santa Cruz County Planning Commission will likely have met by the time you are reading this, with their Study Session scheduled for September 27, 9:30am

WHAT IS HOME RULE AND HOW COULD IT BE USED TO AFFECT LAND USE HERE?

Listen in this Friday at 2pm on “Community Matters” on Santa Cruz Voice to hear local activist Ms. Lira Filippini explaining Home Rule and how it could be used to keep local discretionary means to shape the quality of life in our County for future generations: Santa Cruz Voice – Listen and Be Heard

ARE THOSE HIGH STATE-MANDATED BUILDING NUMBERS LEGITIMATE?  LISTEN IN NEXT MONDAY EVENING!

Recently, the California State Auditor determined that the State Housing & Community Development (HCD) mandated numbers for counties and cities statewide to meet in updated housing element planning documents is unjustified because statistics and models show California population has in fact declined and will remain stagnant through 2060.

So, why is the HCD whipping municipalities to update planning documents at a feverish and impossible pace to include such big jumps in numbers of units?

Make sure you listen in next Monday, October 2 at 5pm to the Catalysts for Local Control webinar to find out the truth:

catalystsca.org

The Regional Housing Number Allocation (RHNA) mandates are not evidence-based and have no connection with reality, imposing unfunded mandates that have altered the planning process into a production process, and will burden all municipalities with funding infrastructure to support what appears to be favoring special interests.

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  LISTEN TO THE CATALYSTS FOR LOCAL CONTROL WEBINAR NEXT MONDAY AT 5PM AND LEARN ABOUT HOW PHONEY THE RHNA NUMBERS REALLY ARE AND HOW YOU CAN GET INVOLVED IN EFFORTS TO HOLD THE STATE ACCOUNTABLE.

JUST DO ONE THING THIS WEEK AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

Happy Autumn,

Becky

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

...
September 25

HOW CHANGE HAPPENS

How we interact with our immediate community will determine the future of life on Earth.

A retired professor recently told me a story about a transition he’d seen over the last 25 years of teaching. Twenty-five years ago, when he entered the lecture hall, the room was noisy with conversation. That noise died away with hand-held computers: students were staring at their machines! It was eerily quiet.

Disastrous Blame

Do we blame a person or a political party for how polarized our society seems to be? Why? How often do we sincerely attempt to bridge interpersonal political divides? Occasions present themselves all the time for one-on-one bridging albeit briefly, but the opportunity to have longer, rich, safe dialogues are rare. But this must change if we are to steer away from the social, environmental, and economic catastrophes we are enmired in currently.

Not Dialogues

There are pressing local issues receiving no public discourse. Instead, we have public comment at City Council, County Supervisor, Coastal Commission, or other political body meetings. Citizens get three minutes to say something, during which more likely than not the political officials are chatting with each other, doodling, or otherwise checked out. There are no responses, no discussion or acknowledgement. On any particular subject, political officials occasionally explain their positions in the shortest, vaguest terms. More lengthy written opinions from one side or the other appear in various media, and you can occasionally follow the back-and-forth for a few volleys. All of this misses many important elements of a well moderated discussion and the crappy outcomes we experience clearly reflect that.

Thoughtful Discourse

Would you participate in a group dialogue with diverse perspectives if you knew that it would be well facilitated, and people would show each other respect? Imagine 100 people seated in a circle on comfortable chairs with a facilitator in the center. They are gathered to discuss a pressing local issue of interest to you. Experts on that issue are present, as are key decision makers. Everyone has pledged to be respectful and attentive. The facilitator is renowned for their skill. A group conversation unfolds where you feel heard, and you learn new substantive things about the issue. Others share perspectives that are different than yours, so afterwards you know more about why they hold those positions, just as they better understand why you hold yours. The group returns each month for a year to continue the conversation. Everyone’s understanding deepens. Perhaps the conservation results in improved decision making in our community. Perhaps it changes how things are implemented.

Small Hurdles

The kind of discourse I just described requires many things, many of which are attainable. There would need to be a skilled facilitator. It would be necessary that the participants be committed to the process, curious, respectful, and willing to share their perspectives. They would need to participate according to rules that allow everyone shared respect and time to speak. Experts and decision makers would need to be present. All parties would need to be willing to invest the time to allow the understanding to unfold. Probably, there would need to be a way of participants interacting with an easily accessed record of their discussion that they could reference to follow the progress. That list represents the superficial, easy necessities, but there are some deeper needs that would be more difficult to attain.

Bigger Hurdles

Financial costs and political power conspire to make such dialogues difficult if not impossible. Great facilitators, subject matter experts, and decision makers all would require payment for participation, including for preparation for, and follow up from, the in-person meetings. That funding would be more possible than the deeper problem: political opposition. It is in the interest of those in power to oppose any such dialogue, which is deeply dangerous to their power. They are effective in their opposition through challenging any public funding, decrying bias from the private funders, infiltrating the discourse with disrupters, publishing derogatory pieces about the discourse in the media, challenging participating members, reproaching participating members’ employers, etc., etc. These bigger hurdles represent the real challenges we must overcome to reclaim our democracy through the kind of participatory decision making I am presenting here. These larger challenges will need to be anticipated in through the organizing principles and personally through dedicated organizing committees.

Where to Start?

There are existing long-running, nascent, and still-to-be-born opportunities for my readers to get involved with the richly awarding discourses I have outlined. You might see them named ‘salons’ or ‘town halls.’ Some are called ‘collaborative natural resource management.’ People sometimes call them gatherings focusing on the ‘radical center.’  If you attend something with these names or tag lines, you must discern if you can see a way to having a voice with equal opportunity to contribute, if everyone is respectful, if the discourse is organized with rules and structure, and if the many divergent perspectives are well represented. Too often, the empowered or elite will falsely advertise so-called dialogues using these terms, so be on the lookout for those fakes.

Far too frequently, there are no organized discourses, and it is necessary to build the capacity to start them. You could have a place in that capacity in a variety of ways. If you have the means, you might consider funding the initiative. Without such means, you might consider other roles: facilitator, convener, note-taker, timekeeper, vibes monitoring, leader, or organizing committee member. Each of those roles is crucial and each requires different time commitments or skills.

A Priority Environmental Focus Area

Although the above can be applied to any subject, this column focuses on environmental issues. So, I want to focus the remaining space here on an issue that could use a well-facilitated collaborative dialogue across the Monterey Bay region.

If we are to accommodate all species, there needs to be facilitated landscape-scale collaborative conservation. We are currently dooming all species in our region because each conservation group is focusing only on its tiny piece of ground or issue. State Parks operate largely on a park-by-park planning basis. Different parks agencies do not collaborate with conservation planning. Land trusts do not work together with strategic planning for species conservation. The Bureau of Land Management does not cooperate actively with any other conservation group, and especially not with State conservation agencies to recover sensitive species. Private landowners are not invited into dialogue with ‘official’ conservation lands managers, even if they are adjacent. Conservation minded groups like the Santa Cruz Bird Club, The Wildlife Society, and the California Native Plant Society are neither leading nor participating in collaborative strategies for regional conservation. Municipal land planners aren’t working with any of the above to ponder how to collaborate on conservation.

This would be the first subject area I would suggest prioritizing. Such an effort would net great results and further widen the potential for recovering function to the Nation’s democracy. It would help societal healing. This work is necessary for the future of this region’s wildlife. We sorely need leadership. Please help.

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

...

September 20

#263 / Streets Without Buses?

I am from Santa Cruz, California, and I really love our “picture buses,” one of which you can see above. The buses feature the outstanding and award-winning photography of Frans Lanting. “Whale Buses,” for instance, are now zooming around our local streets, urging us to protect whales “One Ride At A Time.” There are some other “picture buses,” too, celebrating other aspects of our natural world.

Frans and his partner, Christine Eckstrom, allied with The National Geographic Society, have been helping us to see the wonders of the natural world through their many years of superlative photography and video. Their recent book, Bay of Life, celebrates the environment of the Monterey Bay Area. There is now a “Bay of Life Project,” in fact, which accounts for those “picture buses.” The Community Foundation of Santa Cruz County will gladly accept your donations!

Much as I love the “picture buses,” the most common observation that I hear about buses in general is that there isn’t anyone, really, riding them! This observation, regretably, is pretty much on target; it’s accurate. A friend of mind, who has served on the Santa Cruz County Transportation Commission for many years, has always told me that our local transit agency is basically delivering “social services,” not “transportation services.” The system is really aimed at providing transportation to those lower income persons who can’t afford a car. Again, there is some truth to that!

Couldn’t we, I have long thought, get more for our money by trying out a different approach? One of my blog postings, back in November 2021, called for “Streets Without Cars.” I advanced a specific proposal for a new way of providing transportation services, to help reduce, or even eliminate, the traffic congestion that is so horrendous in my local community.

My proposal would remove from our streets and highways many of those greenhouse gas-spewing cars that clog them now. Traffic congestion is a big problem for almost everyone, and the Santa Cruz County Transportation Commission is trying to combat traffic congestion through highway widening projects. This is, in fact, a self-defeating strategy, because widened highways actually “induce demand” for more automobile trips, and so make the problem worse.

My proposed solution was to create a public, demand-responsive approach (like Uber or Lyft), so those who needed to get around our local community would end up “sharing” automobile trips. If you’d like to see what I said about that proposal, you should click this “Streets Without Cars” link.

I was surprised to read – in the Sunday, September 17, 2023, edition of my local newspaper, The Santa Cruz Sentinel – that this idea is actually being tried out in Wilson, North Carolina. The article was titled, “What if public transit was like Uber? A small city ended bus service to find out.”

Probably, unless you are a Sentinel subscriber (whose ever-increasing subscription prices are driving long-time subscribers, like me, to terminate their subscriptions), you’ll be blocked when you click the link. Thus, I am providing the following “screenshot” image of the story, which I think should expand if you click on it. You can also get essentially the same story, online, from another newspaper, by clicking right here.

In our case, here in Santa Cruz, we’d still need buses. LOTS of buses, in fact, because our “City On A Hill” (the UCSC campus) is a major destination for students who either don’t own a car or who couldn’t afford to park a car on campus. A transit hub, or hubs, could provide direct, express service to the campus. Other trips would utilize the “ride sharing” strategy now being tried out in North Carolina. Financing the system would be one major issue; the newspaper article doesn’t really outline that aspect of the system, but there are definitely solutions.

The big question? Are we willing to share?

I’d like to think so.

Let’s save the whales (and ourselves) “One [Shared] Ride At A Time.”

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

...

September 25

KING KONG HOUSE PARTY AND NERFS ON MEET THE FRASS

Charles P. Pierce, in Esquire magazine, asks of Kevin McCarthy: “Was it worth it, Kevin? The Speakership of the House of Representatives, I mean. The long, excruciating session of the House back in January? Fifteen long, excruciating ballots, between which, you had to negotiate with people who have pinwheels in their eyes? All of it on television, as the Democrats sat back and blithely watched the auto da fé like rubberneckers at a train wreck? All of that pain and embarrassment so you could call yourself the Speaker of the House even though everybody and his Uncle Fud knew you couldn’t actually be Speaker? Is it all worth it now, when there are too many chickens and not enough roosts?” So, here we stand…Kev has to be in his position to insure that the government is funded for the next year, but nobody is lifting a hand to help. Pierce says, “The Democrats are sitting over in the corner, making more popcorn. To the members of his own narrow majority, McCarthy is now poison among the extremists for going back on the deals he made to become Speaker, and among the more marginally sane, he is now poison for having made those deals in the first place. And Representative Lauren Boebert seems to be the only one capable of reaching across the aisle.” Snort, snort…good one!

Pierce believes our radical conservatives owe their current power to Newt Gingrich from his two years of radicalism in harassing the Clintons. “The logical end of being fed red meat constantly is cannibalism. And that’s the evolutionary stage of American conservatism at which McCarthy, that sap, finds himself now,” adds Pierce. He goes on to say that McCarthy’s fall parallels that of Gingrich after the GOP saw their House majority narrowed, particularly after Newt spent so much time on the Lewinsky scandal. He does credit him as being the architect of the first GOP House majority since 1954, giving him a couple of years of power and street cred…something Kevin lacks, and will never have.

Michelle Cottle of The New York Times contends that Mac has had it with the bullying of the zealot horde he has encouraged, but Gaetz and Greene are probably correct in that the Speaker is not following their rules, made in the smoke-filled rooms back in January, a problem with deals hatched in secrecy. Cottle says if the rabble-rousers wish to be taken seriously, they need to stop the King Kong act and at least file their threatened motion to dump McCarthy. She says, “The extremists are easy to denounce, especially with their tendency to act out like unruly teens – or Lauren Boebert at ‘Beetlejuice, but they are not to blame for the chaos consuming the House. It is Mr. McCarthy who led them to believe he would champion their policies and priorities. And it is Mr. McCarthy who elevated their influence in the conference, empowering them to wreak even greater havoc. Of course, they are going to make more and more outrageous demands. That’s what they do.”

Politico’s site reports the more than dozen Republicans, mostly Representative Byron Donalds‘ colleagues in the conservative Freedom Caucus, who are publicly torching the spending plan he brokered. With just a four-seat majority, Speaker Kevin McCarthy can only afford to lose a handful of them given that he can’t count on Democratic votes, leaving the GOP bill effectively D.O.A. The failure of the two negotiators he had empowered has brought on a full-House-party rebellion. Going beyond a simple centrist vs. right-wing clash, the Freedom Caucus itself is divided, with members backhanding the plan presented by their own leaders, along with the rising hue and cry to oust McCarthy should he rely on the Democrats to avoid a shutdown. Indiana’s Republican Representative Victoria Spartz vented, “The Republican House is failing the American people again and pursuing a path of gamesmanship and circus. Neither Republicans nor Democrats have the backbone to challenge the corrupt swamp that is bankrupting our children and grandchildren. It is a shame that our weak speaker cannot even commit to having a commission to discuss our looming fiscal catastrophe.” Charles Pierce describes Spartz as “one of the few truly eccentrics left in the Republican caucus in what passes for the GOP middle these days.”

Andy Borowitz in his The Borowitz Report in The New Yorker writes.“Calling a conflict raging in the U.S. Capitol “a clear and present danger to the world,” Volodymyr Zelensky offered to broker a peace deal between Representative Kevin McCarthy and his fellow House Republicans. The Ukrainian President warned that, if the fighting in Washington continued to escalate, it could spread to neighboring regions such as Maryland and Virginia. ‘My message to the warring parties is simple: it is time to stop the madness,’ he said. He said that he hoped to arrange a sit-down between McCarthy and House Freedom Caucus members such as Representative Lauren Boebert, ‘perhaps over a vape pipe.’ Though hopeful for a breakthrough, Zelensky acknowledged that negotiating with McCarthy and his Republican foes will be a challenge because ‘English does not appear to be their first language, either.'”

In the week following Kristen Welker’s first broadcast on Meet the Press, taking over after Chuck Todd’s retirement from the Sunday news show, she and NBC have endured a barrage of criticism for providing yet another venue for Trump to spout his drivel…with little pushback from Welker. Shades of Chuck Todd! Couldn’t we expect to be rid of this timidity in a new start which we’ve needed since losing Tim Russert? Jamess on Daily Kos says they have lost him as a viewer if NBC is simply going to act as a doormat for Donald Trump’s lies, feeling that he is not alone in that regard along with others who are grounded in reality. Kristen permitted Trump to blather on with statements untethered to reality on many critical issues without any forceful, dogged or worthwhile response. Trumpy the Clown did his usual shtick with his machine gun tongue…a stolen election, the J6 insurrection…anything that Welker brought up to have a decent exchange was dismissed. She was not prepared, and is not endowed, with the necessary intensity to take on Trump’s bombast, and is perhaps even unable to seize upon the issues of importance. Trump smelled fear and he went to work, with his torrent of outrageousness. One TV executive said, “It was a crazy way to set the tone of what Meet the Press will be under Kristen Welker.”

CNN’s senior media reporter, Oliver Darcy, makes the observation that newsrooms currently are treading into the unknown with the problem of “covering Trump.” This isn’t 1990, when decorum and honest debate, based on underlying policies were the rhetorical standard…the party of insurrection has a new leader, a new standard with bullying and shoveling the b.s. Darcy says, “When interviewing Trump, the goal cannot be to make ‘news’ like one might attempt with a typical politician. The purpose of the interview must be to hold power to account. It must be about asserting the facts in a meaningful way and forcing Trump to confront them. He will still, of course, lie – but at least the audience might be able to see through the showmanship if the interviewer displays a firm grip on the subject matter and exerts command. Unfortunately, few in the press who have taken on the assignment have proven capable of executing the difficult task in a compelling way. That doesn’t bode well for the news industry or, more importantly, democracy at large.”

So, wherein lies the need to interview Mr. Trump at all? What is there to gain since he lies like the rest of us breathe? Why go to the trouble, being unprepared to challenge the onslaught of lies in real time? He doesn’t need a national media platform if he refuses to play by the rules that are set down. Lending a modicum of respectability and credibility to the most ruinous and dishonest politician/showman/conman/grifter to further trash the goals and values of a once fact-based society is beyond comprehension. Definition of Meet the Press now making the rounds: the new home of Trump-speak – an ongoing train-wreck of compliance and deference to the perpetual Bully. Since everyone in the country is running for the US Presidency, primarily to keep themselves out of jail, they’re only here to help. The Constitutional mission of a newsroom, a free press, should be a dedication to holding government to account…not the greatest show on Earth, just the facts, Ma’am! Yeah, that’s the ticket, just the NEWS…assuming that skill-set is still an option in corporate news media.

Keith Olbermann in his Countdown podcast says he believes NBC News has launched internal investigations into Meet the Press staffers, including Kristen Welker and the executive producer, David Gelles, regarding violations of existing guidelines by airing the Trump/Welker ‘interview‘ without adequate fact-checking or warnings. The pre-taped program seems to fly in the face of “The NBC News Employee Handbook” which prohibits presenting provable falsehoods, which gave them three days between taping and broadcasting to edit any b.s. A second issue may be that a fact-check was not done in a simple dereliction of duty, but a pre-arranged agreement to convince Trump to submit to the presentation after his four-year snub of NBC. Olbermann has no proof of any of this and is on the trail. He speaks from his own experience with NBC, as he received a suspension without pay several years ago when he tangled with the network over involvement with campaigns of Raul Grijalva and Gabby Giffords. He was demoted from staff to a non-contract employee without benefits, after which he sued NBC for breach of contract, which garnered him $18M in damages. He thinks heads may roll, a la the Chris Licht/CNN dumpster fire when Kaitlan Collins had a similar ‘interview‘ with Trump on that network’s Town Hall, and that Meet the Press itself has a questionable viability. “They wouldn’t run this tripe on Dateline!” barks Olbermann.

Olbermann seems to know for certain that NBC veterans are calling for investigations based on the fact Welker and NBC News reporter, Dash Burns, wined and dined with Washington insiders including Jason Miller, Steven Cheung, and Chris LaCivita, Trump thugs all, in Milwaukee the night preceding the first GOP presidential debate. This would not necessarily be considered a breach of the NBC code, but the handbook would probably discourage such a meet-up; and, as Politico reports, the news employees paid their own expenses and not be guilty of accepting meals, gifts or other items of value from a political contact. At 10:00 am Eastern time, NBC website posted a fact check of the Welker fiasco. At 10:13 am its Meet the Press account tweeted: ‘Former President Trump made a spate of false and misleading comments about immigration, foreign policy, abortion, and more in a wide-ranging interview with Meet the Press moderator, Kristen Welker.’ So, why this post? The interview was in the can for three days before the broadcast…the content was well-known, so they knowingly aired lies, false or misleading commentary sans disclaimers or caveats. In violation of their own policy – an extinction-level event! With follow-up clips sent out on MSNBC, CNBC and NBC-owned affiliates! Then they had the nerve to interview Peter Baker of The New York Times who rationalized why the network wasn’t committing journalistic suicide by platforming a skilled, practiced, professional, psychotic liar. Insert a Shrug Emoji dressed in a suit, says Olbermann.

Summing it up, Olbermann believes NBC News, Meet the Press and Kristen Welker will never live down their premeditated decision to forfeit 75 years of journalistic credibility built up by their predecessors, and the best Welker can hope for is to be viewed as damaged goods, or a punchline, as is Kaitlan Collins after the CNN Town Hall snafu. The MAGA-Fascist lunatic right see NBC and CNN as the worst news entities, yet both organizations have engaged their networks in shocking and disgraceful episodes by prostituting their platforms to give Trump unfettered access to poison the viewing public with his lies and vows of political revenge, and the promised destruction our democratic institutions, while seeking to pardon his band of convicted insurrectionists. It seems that both networks are positioning themselves to survive in a world taken over by Trumpists in the future, or they are too greedy, blinded to the fact that they have been manipulated into pimping for the evil in our body politic. So, is it complicity or stupidity? Have they seen the actions of a Rupert Murdoch and his Fox News as successful? Olbermann casts a sidelong glance at the likes of Anderson Cooper, Wolf Blitzer, Lester Holt, and Savannah Guthrie, and even Rachel Maddow, wondering if they are completely adhering to their principles or merely standing up for the high dollars of their salaries. Will the dominoes start to fall, or will the softballs complacency turn into mere Nerf balls?

During a dull White House dinner several years ago, Melania Trump leaned over to chat with Secretary of State Tillerson.

“I bought Donald a parrot for his birthday. That bird is so smart, Donald has already taught him to say over two hundred words!”

“Very impressive,” said Tillerson, “but, you do realize he just speaks the words. He doesn’t really understand what they all mean”

“Oh, I know”, replied Melania, “but neither does the parrot.”

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

    October

“The end of the summer is not the end of the world. Here’s to October…
~A.A. Milne

“There is no season when such pleasant and sunny spots may be lighted on, and produce so pleasant an effect on the feelings, as now in October.”
~Nathaniel Hawthorne

“October, tuck tiny candy bars in my pockets and carve my smile into a thousand pumpkins…. Merry October!”
~Rainbow Rowell

“I have been younger in October than in all the months of spring”.
~W. S. Merwin- Henry Ward Beecher

...

Nursery rhymes are never the innocent entertainment they appear to be…


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...


Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

September 20 – 26, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton…UCSC rankings and status, Munching with Mozart concerts.Greensite…on heritage tree loss and the appeal process. Steinbruner…Pajaro River problems, Cummings vs. Koenig and housing, Laird and zoom meetings, Bayview Hotel entrance. Hayes…a fine legacy. Patton…what do we need to do now? Matlock…snarking acquittals-r-us and loyalty oaths. Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress…pick of the week: why are funerals so expensive?! Quotes…”Earthquakes”

...

SANTA CRUZ’S TOWN CLOCK’S ORIGINAL LOCATION. This was July 27, 1964 when they took down our town clock. It then sat in one of our parks for years until a movement by activists got the new location where it sits today.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE September 18

UCSC’s PLACE IN THE WORLD. U.S. News & World Report did a study/survey of colleges last week and there are some surprises. In addition to the surprises there’s a lot to consider when we are so often forced to deal with our very important neighbor…and attraction. To cut to the chase…UCSC came in at #82. “UC Berkeley came in at #15 nationally, tying with UCLA. UC Davis was #28. They reported, “University of California, Santa Cruz is a public institution that was founded in 1965. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 17,502 (fall 2022), and the campus size is 2,000 acres. It utilizes a quarter-based academic calendar. University of California, Santa Cruz’s ranking in the 2024 edition of Best Colleges is National Universities, #82. Its in-state tuition and fees are $15,288; out-of-state tuition and fees are $47,862. Go here to get the full impact of that report…

MUNCHING WITH MOZART RETURNS. Due to covid Munching With Mozart & Friends took a 3 year break and resumed its concerts last Friday. Carol Panofsky leads and emcees the concerts which are held every third Friday from 12:10 to about 1 p.m. Last Friday more than 80 people (mostly masked) jammed into the upstairs meeting room in the Downtown library. We heard Music For Piano Solo performed by Ziyue (Amy) Zeng a 17 year old piano master. She played Bach, Prokofiev, Beethoven and Franz Lizst and was absolutely wonderful. Check your calendars for October 20, November 17 and December 15 for the next concerts.

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

EL CONDE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.6 IMDB). ****   A surprising re-take and reversion and political commentary on Augusto Pinochet’s public and private life. It was made in Chile and they call it a comedy. They have Pinochet being first born in 1776 and still being on earth as a 250 year old vampire. It parallels his actual political and personal history adding the vampire secret, and we get to watch blood drinking from a blender many times. It’s “filmed” in black and white which really adds to the desired mood. Note… Augusto Pinochet was leader of the military junta that overthrew the socialist government of President Salvador Allende of Chile in 1973.

A HAUNTING IN VENICE. (DEL MAR THEATRE) (6.8 IMDB). **** Kenneth Branagh is back with the third in his Hercule Poirot versions of Agatha Christie’s books. Michelle Yeoh and Tina Fey are deadly serious in it too. Branagh moved the plot to Venice in 1947 from Christie’s book “Halloween Party” she first published in 1969. It’s deadly serious, very confusing, and it’s hard to stay interested as Poirot makes his rounds. Not recommended.

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.9 IMDB) **** An overly cute teen ager love story about two kids who fall in love at the airport as they depart to two different locations. Some critic called it a cheesy rom com and I agree. It’s silly, trite, and brings in a cancer drama to give it some validity. Not worth watching.

INSIDE. (PRIME MOVIE) (5.5 IMDB).****It’s good fun to see Willem Dafoe back on screen. This time he’s a specialized art thief who flies in a helicopter and gets trapped in a penthouse in New York City that he was robbing. Because he’s a thief he can’t call or hope for help. He tries climbing, stacking furniture…nothing works. Dafoe is a fine actor and its good fun to watch his many attempts to escape.

JEANNE DIELMAN, 23, QUAI DU COMMERCE, 1080 BRUXELLES. (MAX MOVIE). (7.6 IMDB). **** This 1975 movie was just re-discovered and 480 movie critics from the Sight and Sound magazine (which is part of The British Film Institute) have stated that Jeanne Dielman is the greatest film of all time. Many, many critics around the world agree. Its three and a half hours long and was directed by a woman director Chantal Akerman. It covers three days in the life of a widowed mother and her son and takes place in Brussels. There’s almost no dialogue, the camera never moves from left to right, and it’s definitely worth watching.

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE. (MAX SERIES) (7.2 IMDB) ****  It takes place in 1910 New Orleans and Storyville to be exact. The acting is stylized, the scenes are overly dramatic, and it’s not that kind of vampire. This is about a three way gay love affair and will it work? Much sex, booze, and posing. Roger Ebert called it cheesy, he’s right.

A TIME CALLED YOU (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.4 IMDB). ****  An involved Korean series that I really got caught up in. There’s a plane crash and a girl’s boyfriend dies…or did he? His girlfriend travels back in time to 1998 several times or does she? Maybe she’s actually in 1998?? It’s touching, well-acted and fleeting…don’t miss it.

WHO IS ERIN CARTER? (NETFLIX SERIES) (6.4 IMDB). There’s a hold up in a super market and a killing. But little tension, slow moving, little sympathy for anyone and everyone involved. Spain, Mexico and Britain all get involved but save your time and credit and forget Erin Carter.

SITTING IN BARS WITH CAKE. (PRIME MOVIE) (6.7 IMDB). ****It’s a lot of LA with plenty of bars with girlfriends getting the brilliant idea of making cakes and bringing them to bars to grab the guy’s attention. Bette Midler is legally in the film but there’s no good reason for her rare appearances. There’s a father with cancer, drinking, anger, a brain tumor, shouting and lots of making out. No reason to watch this one.

ONE PIECE. (NETFLIX SERIES) (8.5 IMDB). **** Another attempt by a studio to combine live action fantasy with animation. It’s into the pirate world and back again. The actors and voices are as good as you can expect when you’re dealing with a two world set-up like this one. Maybe if you’re aged 5 to 12 you might be thrilled but otherwise it’s too cute and not intelligent enough. It’s only been season one so far…maybe they’ll tighten it up and add tension and better jokes….so go warned.

INVASION. (APPLE SERIES) (6.1 IMDB). **** Long time movie goers will recognize Sam Neill as the sheriff in this invasion of earth movie. All sorts of clues and warnings that aliens are coming but it’s not very exciting. Much of it is in the telling and re telling of individual’s personal history and their reaction to the invasion. It’s mostly nothing you/we haven’t seen before.

...
September 18

LOSING OUR HERITAGE

The Coast Redwood pictured above lives at the corner of Walnut and Lincoln streets, near the High School. Its life hangs in the balance as humans tussle over its fate. The property owner of the adjacent fifties-style apartment building, when advised by the city that the sidewalk was needing repairs, applied for, and was granted a permit for the tree’s removal by the director of Parks and Recreation, based on the findings of the city arborist. The section of the Resolution cited to allow this heritage tree to be cut down is Criteria and Standards 1: The heritage tree has or is likely to have, an adverse effect upon the structural integrity of a building, utility or public or private right of way.”

The public has the right to appeal a tree removal permit, so long as that action is taken within ten calendar days of the granting of the permit. The notice of a tree removal permit is posted onsite. One problem with this arrangement is that you have to live near or be passing by the site to know that a heritage tree is about to have its life ended. The city has no online list of pending heritage tree removal permits available for review.

Two days ago, I passed by the lovely tree pictured below. Whenever I see such a tree posting my heart sinks because I know what it means. Either the appeal period is over and it’s a done deal, as I found out later is the case for this tree, or I have to consider going through the arduous appeal process, pay the fee and invariably lose. The real loser is the tree. However, our lives and that of the birds are diminished with each heritage tree eradicated. Plus, that much less oxygen enters the atmosphere and eventually, more carbon dioxide, depending on the method of disposal of the tree. Grinding a downed tree into mulch is very popular these days. Short of fire, that is the fastest way to release carbon.

The typeface on the posting for the liquidambar was so small I couldn’t read it without stepping onto the property which I will not do. A long time ago, trying (unsuccessfully) to save a beautiful cypress tree via the appeal process, I and the then mayor walked up to the property door, knocked, and asked the tenant if we could look at the tree which was in the back yard. She said yes, we did and after a brief inspection, left. A few days later, a friend called me at work to say the property owner was on the radio accusing me and the mayor of trespassing. So, I avoid stepping onto private property.

The Coast Redwood was appealed to the Parks and Recreation Commission. I am no longer a commissioner, despite being eligible for a second term and unanimously elected as vice chair for the previous year by fellow commissioners. Council member Scott Newsome passed me over for the head of the non-profit Save the Waves Coalition, which has an MOU with the city, is interested in economic opportunities along West Cliff Drive and the city has donated money to the non-profit.

I attended the Redwood tree appeal hearing at the Parks & Recreation commission on August 14th. The usual format for an appeal is a staff report followed by fifteen minutes for the appellant, fifteen minutes for the applicant, public comment, five minutes rebuttal only for the appellant since that party has the burden of proof, then hearing body deliberation and vote. Not in this case.

The chair allowed five minutes for each side’s presentation and five minutes rebuttal for each side. Very unusual. The commission vote was three to two against the appeal. The appellants were young residents of Santa Cruz. They spoke compellingly, without hyperbole or unrealistic assertions. Despite their losing the appeal, my hopes for humanity were raised by their caring and involvement.

I just heard that this tree’s life sentence is not yet determined. The commission’s decision has been appealed to the city council. I assume but do not know that the appellants are the same.

The date for the new Redwood tree appeal is September 26th, at city council.

Your support would be welcome. It’s a tough issue since the tree is close to the house and there is impact to the sidewalk and the building’s low brick facade which appears superficial. Around the corner from the tree the foundation has a crack, which may or may not be tree root related and can be filled. If the growth of this ten-foot diameter tree is very slow, it is likely the apartment building will be torn down and rebuilt before any further impact is likely. The property owner’s civil engineer did not offer substantial evidence of structural integrity damage but did conclude there was some. The report appeared cursory, at least to me and apparently also to two commissioners.

Well-meaning but unrealistic clamors by members of the public to “save the tree, tear down the building!” will not get votes. Yes, the tree was here first but people’s property is not just expendable. I suggest an independent engineering inspection, paid for out of the city’s tree fund, with far more rigor and detail that has yet been made available. This tree, and all our fast-disappearing heritage trees (about thirty a month) deserve at least that much attention prior to being sentenced to death.

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.

...
September 18

GUT AND AMEND TO THE RESCUE

It never ceases to amaze me what elected representatives can do to help when there is a will and a need.  Known as “gut and amend”, a representative can completely change (“gut”) the entire content of a piece of legislation that has cleared many committee reviews and is close to completion, and the new  “amended” legislation that nowhere near represents what has been reviewed continues to quickly sail on to the Governor’s desk for approval.  Voila!  It is done.

Here is what has happened locally to completely sidestep environmental reviews that would have been needed to repair the Pajaro River levee:

“California Assembly Speaker Robert Rivaswhose district includes the Pajaro Valley, originally proposed Assembly Bill 876 in February focused on record-keeping related to certain child fatalities. On Aug. 29, with the end of the session less than three weeks away and the Feb. 17 deadline to submit new bills long passed, Rivas completely overhauled AB 876 to focus on expediting the Pajaro River levee repairs.”

A bill to speed up reconstruction of the Pajaro river levee heads to Newsom’s desk

The bill would allow the project to skip the California Environmental Quality Act requirements, a notoriously lengthy and expensive permitting process that can often add years to a project. When I spoke to Mark Strudley, executive director of the Pajaro Regional Flood Management Agency, a couple weeks ago, he said the ability to get a pass on the state’s environmental permitting requirements plays a central role in starting the project in 2024.

FOUR TO SIX STORY BUILDINGS IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD…THE FEVERISH PACE TO RUBBERSTAMP A NEW COUNTY HOUSING ELEMENT WITH SUPERVISOR KOENIG NIXING INCREASED AFFORDABTILITY REQUIREMENTS.

Last Tuesday, following staff reports on the proposed County Housing Element to ensure compliance with State mandates, Supervisor Justin Cummings wanted to increase the percentage of affordable housing required in new projects to be 25% in larger projects and to address affordability issues related to wage gaps of residents.

However, Supervisor Manu Koenig refused to allow that language to be added as a friendly amendment to his motion to rubberstamp staff recommendations.  Why?

Unfounded fears of scaring away developers with higher affordable housing percentages being required was addressed during public comment by Sandy Brown, who spoke on her own behalf and not as a representative of the Santa Cruz City Council on which she serves.  She said the number of applications for building increased after the City increased inclusionary affordability percentages in 2019 to 20% (from 15%).

“The timeline to get this approved is too quick to allow any slowdown this could add.” Supervisor Koenig said.  Planner Suzanne Ise agreed that it would “not reflect well on the county if we are late” in getting the State Housing & Community Development (HCD) approval.

Supervisors Bruce McPherson and Zach Friend went along with the move to stonewall increased affordable housing requirements.  Supervisor Friend was mostly upset that the 13-acre former Par 3 Golf Course on Mar Vista Drive in his district is targeted for inclusionary affordable housing, that may not include senior housing focus or open space. (Is he thinking about the postage stamp “Village Green” of AstroTurf he supports in the Aptos Village Project?)

It was refreshing that Supervisor Justin Cummings persisted: “I feel strongly about this, so I am going to make a substitute motion that this change be added,”  Again, the three Supervisors voted NO, leaving only Supervisors Cummings and Felipe Hernandez supporting increasing percentages of affordable housing required.

Supervisor Koenig said “We disagree on the cause (of the affordable housing shortage).  It’s due to restrictions on developers.  Adding an increase to required inclusionary percentages burdens developers.”

Having been stomped on, Supervisor Koenig’s motion to accept staff recommendations, with some nod to Supervisor Friend’s concerns, was then approved unanimously.  Hmmm…

You can watch what happened yourself on the County Board of Supervisor meeting recording

Click on item #9 on the agenda to listen to the presentations and discussions. Supervisor Friend’s questioning about the Par 3 golf course property begins about minute 1:50, but things are quite out of synch in terms of speaker and image. Sandy Brown’s presentation is at minute 2:04.

My question about why the County declared the 38 acres at 7th and Brommer as “excess property” to sell rather than retain it for affordable housing projects never got answered (minute 2:12) and no one answered my question about the defunct Kaiser Medical Center project that is zoned for 102 affordable units (minute 2:11)

Supervisor Justin Cummings begins advocating increasing affordable housing requirements at minute 2:17:10 with concerns that Nexis studies the County would require to identify locations of affordable units could take up to five years to complete.

What does all this mean for the quality of life in our County, and for private property rights?

I had attended the County Housing Advisory Commission meeting the week previous, and gathered some interesting information.

“Every parcel we have identified will be developed.”  said County Planner Ms. Ise.  What’s more, the County will require the applicant to build at least 75% of the minimum building requirement the planners have established.

Where are all these locations?

The parking lot at Seascape Golf Course, Par 3 Golf in Aptos, areas across from Rancho del Mar in Aptos, the farmland in Soquel, many places in Pleasure Point considered “under-utilized” and will be re-zoned to dense infill development..

Take a look at these maps, found in Appendix HE-F

Attend the County Planning Commission meeting Wednesday, September 27 at 9:30am review of the proposed Housing Element update and rezoning, and get your thoughts included:

Planning Agenda

Write the Commission c/o Nicholas Brown  Nicholas.Brown@santacruzcountyca.gov

NEW COUNTY E-MAIL TEMPLATE FOR YOUR CORRESPONDENCE

About two weeks ago, Santa Cruz County government e-mail templates changed, supposedly just so our County would be consistent with the templates other counties in the state area using.  I searched for a Press Release about this but found none.  County Public Information Officer Jason Hoppin said there had not been any press release, but it was posted on the County’s website.  He said the federal government is encouraging all government agencies to use the .gov domain name.  Although he wasn’t exactly sure why, he thought it might be more secure, and likely would encourage grant funding opportunities.

WHAT IS HE THINKING?

State Senator John Laird’s proposed SB 544 would restrict the public’s access to powerful State-level representatives when they meet by requiring the meetings to be in-person only half the time.  It would reduce the public’s accessibility because those who make policy at state commissions and boards would not actually have to be there in person to see and even know if they were listening.

California boards want to keep pandemic rules for public meetings. Critics call it bad for democracy.

This harkens back to the County Board of Supervisors meetings during COVID, when for over two years, we did not see the images of Supervisors Zach Friend or Ryan Coonerty on the meeting portal screens, and had no idea if they were even in the room of their remote locations during discussions on critical budget items affecting us all.

This SB 544 just landed on Governor Newsom’s desk.  Contact him and voice your opposition: 

Phone: (916) 445-2841
Email form

STUDYING THE ROCKY SHORELINES WITH LIDAR

ROXSI – Rocky shOrelines eXperiment and SImulation – Wilson Nearshore Research Group

SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT SEEKING RUBBER-STAMP APPROVALS OF FUTURE RATE INCREASES

Soquel Creek Water District is planning to raise rates yet again, having hand-picked a group to show bobbleheads support of whatever the District staff feeds them, yet provide glowing support for rate jumps again.  This was described in the District’s newsletter,

“Quick Sips”  (because that’s all the water rate payers can afford?)

Raftelis Consultants did this five years ago to craftily raise rates to support the PureWater Soquel Project before the Board had even approved the Project’s Draft EIR.

The District formed a Water Rates Advisory Committee comprised of customers, board members and staff to work with Raftelis Financial Consultants to develop new water rates. The advisory committee has learned how water rates are created and have provided insight into the best ways to inform customers about any upcoming rate changes. Looking ahead, they will focus on a 10-year finance plan and rates necessary to support investment in critical infrastructure, operation of the water system and replenishment of the groundwater basin. A public rates hearing is anticipated for February 2024. Customers will be invited to attend and will receive notifications of any potential rate changes. Stay tuned for more updates.

COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ CLOSES BAYVIEW HOTEL ENTRANCE

The County of Santa Cruz closed the entrance to the historic Bayview Hotel last week with ugly orange plastic barricades.  The County has been the lead in getting the approvals required from the CPUC to get Swenson’s new Parade Street entrance to Soquel Drive.  The CPUC regulates new private railroad crossings and doesn’t like them.  The Commission approved the County’s request for Parade Street if they closed two other such private at=grade rail crossings.  The County arbitrarily chose the entrance to the historic Bayview Hotel, and a crossing in Davenport known as the Warrenella Road crossing.  Swenson was supposed to improve Cement Plant Road to cyclist and pedestrian traffic as a mitigation, but when that became too expensive, the improvements were cancelled, and the County successfully lobbied the CPUC to back off on closing the Warrenella Crossing.

Last week, Swenson removed the bright orange barricades that had been plopped there when Parade Street got opened.  The Bayview Hotel parking lot did get some much-needed paving, and now the former driveway entrance to the Hotel is gone.  How will the surface drainage directed from Soquel Drive onto the railroad track area get drained? It is often a pond in the big winter storms.  Write Public Works Director Matt Machado and ask.  matt.machado@santacruzcounty.us

Here is what the entrance to historic Bayview Hotel looks like now, with an asphalt curb along Soquel Drive’s bike lane.

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK, AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

Cheers,

Becky

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

...
September 17

A FINE LEGACY.

How do we leave a good legacy that will benefit future generations in a world of uncertainty? Some suggest well – raised children are a sure bet, but with that this humble must demur. We must however try

A World of Uncertainty

We live in extraordinary, unprecedented times. Humans have built a remarkable global civilization with a burgeoning population. To survive, we are in a race to shed polluting fossil fuels. But, we have no idea if and how we can replace all that petroleum has provided to fuel population growth and the civilizing of landscapes. No matter what superficial form of government seems to be in place, the “oilogarchy” is deeply entrenched, exercising economic and political control. For evidence, just watch US politics: both parties’ have an inability to act in the expeditious way that the vast majority of citizens know to be necessary. And so, life, including human life, on Earth will likely become much more difficult for the next several hundred years. Of course, we should rise up and protest as if life itself depends on it, but there are other tangible things we can do to make the world more habitable for future generations.

Species and Ecosystem Restoration

There are a variety of activities you can partake in to help restore species and ecosystems, which humans will increasingly rely on for their wellbeing. As global warming creates climate chaos, and as humans increasingly falter without boosts from cheap petro-supplies, species diversity and resilient ecosystems will become more closely tied to better standards of living.

Oil and Water

For an example, let’s consider water. Some suggest oil and water don’t mix, but the two are closely intertwined over most of the world. We might suppose that the role petroleum plays in repairing, creating, and powering our water supply will be replaced by some renewable energy supply in the future. Plastic pipes will be made from hemp, renewable energy will power our pumps, electric vehicles will transport the legions of water district workers who maintain water systems, etc. However, when rain comes in torrential bursts or not at all, we will rely on very well-tended ecosystems to absorb and meter out rainfall so that we can benefit from more dependable surface or groundwater supplies.

Dust Storms

For another example, let’s consider erosion. The stability of our infrastructure- homes, utility lines, roads, dams, communication towers, airports, etc., depends on more than just good geological anchors: that stability is deeply dependent on functioning ecosystems. Species hold our stuff together. On the coast and along rivers and streams, species protect shorelines. On hillsides, in the mountains and on the plains, species hold the land in place. Without a wealth of species supported by resilient ecosystems, everything will come unzipped – gullies, floods, landslides…infrastructure collapse. At the same time, the bared soil will start to blow and dust storms will become more frequent, destroying engines, burying buildings and roads, and darkening the sky.

Restoration Means Now

The species that currently perform best at the “holding the soil in place” function are likely not the ones that will do best in a hundred years, given the rapidly changing climate. So, we must conserve every species, and plan to allow species migration through a healthy landscape of resilient ecosystems. Right now, this very year, we must quickly turn increasingly to restoration of the land because we have degraded too many places already. You can help by volunteering with the many habitat restoration projects in our area, taking better care of your land, voting for politicians that support ecological restoration and land care, spreading the word, and/or giving money to groups that are making a difference. Many people are joining this movement, we are making a difference, and we need more help.

Bye-Bye Soil, Hello Agricultural Substrate

Since World War 2, agricultural systems have become increasingly intertwined with petroleum at great expense to the soil that humans rely on for sustenance. Petroleum-fueled mechanical cultivation has destabilized billions of tons of soil which has already washed or blown away due to recklessness. You can watch it happening, still: in the Salinas and Pajaro valleys and along Santa Cruz’ North Coast watch the soil blow or wash away, depending on the season. At the same time, cheap fertilizers and expedient pesticides have been made possible by petroleum and the application of these have destroyed ecosystems that once sustained and built topsoil. Farmers for years have acted like soil is just a substrate, something to hold a plant in place long enough to harvest a crop. And so, most agricultural land is highly degraded and production is increasingly and deeply dependent on the supply of petroleum. While we can, there is a great opportunity to build the kind of soil health that will be necessary to feed humans when petroleum-subsidized fertilizers become too expensive, and the human population is still larger than it is now.

Soil Health

Healthy agricultural soils can retain more water, provide plants more dependable nutrition, and stabilize pest outbreaks. So, why would a farmer not create more healthy soils? There are two main reasons. First, investing in healthy soil reduces profits. For example, using cover crops to cover and build the soil during the rainy season means the loss of one or more potential harvests. That also drives up food costs, which then helps to create the second reason: mandates for soil health are politically difficult. The good news is that you can help with both of these conundrums.

You Can Help Create Healthy Soil

We all purchase groceries, and the choices we make can help support soil stewardship. Already, the organic agriculture movement has been growing and makes a difference for soil health. Certified organic agriculture requires farmers to find alternatives to pesticides and fertilizers that are synthesized from petroleum. In ‘conventional’ agriculture, novel petro-created compounds working alone or as a mixed concoction are released into agricultural systems without analysis on long-term soil health. Organic farmers more often rely on soil health as a means of production, and the higher cost of those products reflects that investment. Some tell me that they can’t afford organic foods, but discussions reveal that they are unwilling to make more basic food choices, preferring to rely on processed foods or meat that are especially more expensive when certified organic. Going organic may mean dietary changes that might be more healthy, anyway.

Besides using the power of your purse to support farmers who build soil health, you might more directly create healthy soils in community orchards or gardens. You can volunteer in a school garden which has the added benefit of helping children better understand soil health and healthy foods. You might also support, by volunteering or donations, organizations that are working to improve soil health on agricultural lands.

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

...

September 16
#259 / What Do We Need To Do Now?

I don’t really know too much about Pauline P. Schneider. If you click the link to her name, and read about her, you will then know exactly as much as I know. Though I don’t really know her, I received a posting she made on her Substack blog about a month or so ago. I thought it was worth passing along. Schneider’s blog posting is also where I got the image I am using above. The blog posting that captured my attention was titled, “When Nations Drown/Burn.”

On the very same day I read Schneider’s blog posting, I got a bulletin from Tom Engelhardt, who was writing on the same topic, in “TomDispatch.” Both Schneider and Engelhardt were focusing on global warming. Engelhardt put it this way:

Hey, who knows? It could be the Gulf Stream collapsing or the planet eternally breaking heat records. But whatever the specifics, we’re living it right now, not in the next century, the next decade, or even next year. You couldn’t miss it — at least so you might think — if you were living in the sweltering Southwest; especially in broiling, record-setting Phoenix with 30 straight days of temperatures above 110 degrees Fahrenheit; or in flaming Greece or western China on the day the temperature hit 126 degrees Fahrenheit or sweltering, blazing Algeria when the temperature reached an almost unimaginable 135 (yes, 135!) degrees Fahrenheit; not to speak of broiling Canada with its more than 1,000 fires now burning (a figure that still seems to be rising by the week) and its 29 million acres already flamed out; and don’t forget Italy’s 1,400 fires; or Florida’s hot-tub-style seawater, which recently hit an unheard-of 101-plus degrees Fahrenheit. And though I’m still writing this as the month is ending, July is more or less guaranteed to set the record for the hottest month in history. And don’t assume that “record” will stand for long, either.

Who even remembers that this June was the hottest since records have been kept or that July 6th was the hottest day in recorded history (and July 3rd through 6th, the hottest four days ever)? And don’t be surprised if 2023 ends up setting a record for the hottest year or assume that such a record will last long on a planet where the previous eight years were the warmest ever. And if I’m already boring you, then one thing is guaranteed: you’re going to be bored out of your mind in the years to come.

Englehardt provides a link to a New York Times’ article, in making his claim that temperatures in Algeria reached 135 degrees Fahrenheit during July. Schneider doesn’t provide any link, but her blog posting claims that temperatures reached 154 degrees Fahrenheit in Iran.

What Schneider does propose (that Englehardt doesn’t) is a list of specific ideas of what we should do about the kind of catastrophic temperatures that are now being experienced, almost everywhere, on Planet Earth. Here is Schneider’s list, copied from her blog:

What to do?

  1. Birth control, sterilization, and abortion should be free and readily available globally. Yes, even in Texas.
  2. ALL Nations should decommission nuclear power plants immediately. They cannot be operated safely in a normal climate, even less so in a smouldering climate.
  3. All militaries and their weapons of mass destruction should be immediately repurposed and decommissioned as well. Same reason as for nuke plants above.
  4. The IPCC scientists should be publicly horsewhipped for minimizing the climate crisis since Reagan (Ronnie Raygun). Even though that was the purpose of their creation-to minimize the crisis, & defuse any positive climate activism. Thank you Heartland Institute for helping to murder the planet. Kevin Hester explains that in detail. https://kevinhester.live/2021/09/06/its-time-to-acknowledge-the-spectacular-success-of-the-ipcc/.
  5. Any and all pseudo “Green” and “sustainable” energies should be called out for their lies and misinformation. Electric cars, solar and wind, hydroelectric, nuclear, are all NOT green, nor sustainable. They all require MASSIVE amounts of fossil fuels, mining, transportation, and a secure grid-tied infrastructure. Few nations have that, and the US especially lacks a secure infrastructure of any kind. Thanks Heartland Institute for helping to ruin our infrastructure with your greed-based, inhumane policies.
  6. Finally, as we (most of us) recognize the existential crisis we are facing, billionaires should be banned from speaking, or having any public presence, or holding public office. There should be no billionaires to begin with, that is an obscenity of capitalism and has led to the destruction of our only home. They are welcome to leave and go to Mars. Today is good.
  7. Societal changes:

All humans must be treated with dignity and compassion as we begin to exit this existence. This is simple. Basic needs met for all: housing, food, medical care, safety. We MUST end the houseless/homeless crisis in the US. We MUST provide universal healthcare for all. We MUST ensure our poorest have a basic living income. We MUST have sane gun control in the US (like other nations do) to ensure safe neighborhoods, schools, parks, and shopping areas.

oooOOOooo

There are some problems with Schneider’s list of recommended actions (particularly if you believe that individuals should continue to enjoy the kind of constitutional rights about which Schneider seems little concerned).

That said….. I think this is what Schneider is trying to convey: (1) We need to take immediate and effective action to stop contributing to the processes that have driven and are still driving the catastrophic global warming that both Schneider and Engelhardt describe; (2) We need to take immediate and effective action to mitigate and reverse those processes, to the greatest degree we possibly can; and (3) We need to take immediate and effective action to make radical, real changes to how we conduct our lives and structure our economy and society.

Anyone disagree that we need to do those things? If not, if we are all in agreement that we need to take the kind of immediate and effective actions outlined in the preceding paragraph, I would like to suggest that we focus on those two words, “radical” and “real.”

Making radical and real changes in how we do everything. That is what we need to do now!

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

...
September 18

SNARKING ACQUITTALS-R-US AND LOYALTY OATHS

The attempt by the Texas GOP to clean up its party fell short, as the Texas Senate acquitted their state attorney general of all charges following his corruption trial, not only echoing the thrust of the national organization, but showing its ability to be one of the most extreme bodies in the country. In defense of Ken Paxton during the impeachment proceedings, Texas representative, John Smithee said, “Today it could be General Paxton, and tomorrow it could be you.” In other words, Texas is fighting for all of us, just as Trump is standing strong between THEM and US! Paxton has been a vehement supporter of the former president, calling Biden’s 2020 presidential victory an “overthrow” by pulling off a coup to take away Trump’s ‘rightful place’ in the Oval Office. The Texas GOP is noted for a 2022 resolution designating Biden “an illegitimate and acting president,” implying that he won’t long be occupying his unearned seat and might be removed at will. As Ruth Ben-Giat on her Lucid/substack.com site says, “The logic of corruption also matters here. The GOP has embraced the methods and values of authoritarianism. It now depends on propaganda (the ‘Big Lie’), intimidation, and corruption – election denial being a form of corruption – for its identity and to maintain itself in power. In particular, it is a party that has remade itself in Trump’s image, with the goal of protecting the corrupt, and, the criminal dictating its actions.”

The New Yorker magazine’s snarky contributor, Andy Borowitz, writes “thousands of hardened criminals poured into Texas over the weekend after learning how easy it is to secure an acquittal there. Interstate freeways were reportedly backed up for miles as acquittal-seeking perpetrators sought to put down roots in soft-on-crime Texas. Harland Dorrinson, a self-styled recidivist who has been convicted in Ohio, Missouri, and Wisconsin, said that he was heading to the Lone Star State because, ‘in Texas, no one is below the law. An acquittal is yours for the asking if you’re white, male, and nefarious. I check all the boxes’. When told that one must also be elected as a Republican in order to qualify for Texas’ special “conviction exemption,” the career criminal was unfazed, noting that “even Greg Abbott” managed to do that.”

As Carl Gibson writes on Nation of Change, “Despite four criminal indictments totaling 91 felony charges, two impeachments, 26 women with sexual misconduct allegations, and arguably an act of sedition, and an attempt to incite a civil war, Donald Trump remains the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. What the indictment of Trump and 18 other Republican operatives, many being longtime acolytes of GOP causes, by a Fulton County grand jury truly shows that the Republican Party goes far beyond Trump.” He goes on to say that if an indictment within the Democratic Party occurred it would likely doom the individual’s career, with Trump it has only raised his polling position, despite charges in three separate jurisdictions. Should this not be regarded as a sign that the party is morally bankrupt and rotten to the core? Georgia’s RICO statute specifies that each co-conspirator in the case is equally liable, each facing up to 20 years in prison with a mandatory minimum of five years’ prison time. DA Fani Willis has said the guilty will not be able to serve less than five years, or be able to substitute time served with probation. Gibson feels that Trump is merely a byproduct of an increasingly criminal political party, with Eastman, Clark and Chesebro shouldering as much guilt in the plot to use fake electors to subvert the election; and while the GOP’s base has frowned upon dissent within its ranks, criminal accountability may finally be coming for operatives and elected officials.

Many in the GOP believe that Trump’s position at the top of the Republican ticket spells political disaster, with a loss of the US House, giving Democrats full control of Congress. Former Georgia Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan who testified before DA Willis‘ grand jury, expressed his belief that a Trump nomination would be a big mistake, comparing his candidacy to that of the failed Herschel Walker campaign. “We didn’t ask who was the best leader. We didn’t ask who had the best resume. Unfortunately, Republicans looked around to see who Trump supported, and he was a famous football player, and so he became our nominee and now we’re paying the price.” Former GOP Congressman Will Hurd of Texas admonishes Trump as being toxic to the Republican Party as a whole, and his nomination “gives the 2024 election to Joe Biden.” Other shoes may drop since Jack Smith’s grand jury is still active as it meets in the DC courthouse, continuing investigations of other individuals, pointing to unindicted co-conspirators who may face the music. And of course, we all are waiting with bated breath over Fani Willis‘ pointing to the 30 other unnamed co-conspirators in her Georgia case…the fun rolls onward. However, Carl Gibson says that it the GOP stays electorally competitive, democracy may remain in peril for years to come.

Jenna Ellis, a Trump lawyer who shares some of his criminal charges for attempted election subversion, now says she will not vote for this “malignant narcissist” who can’t admit his mistakes, and his tendency to simply say he’s never done anything wrong. Ellis also has a show on American Family Radio, a rightwing evangelical network run by American Family Association, a non-profit that describes itself as having been “on the frontlines of America’s culture war” since 1977. Her charges of violating Georgia’s anti-racketeering laws, while soliciting violation of an oath by a public officer, resulted in being granted $100,000 bail after her not-guilty plea. Her claims of being a constitutional lawyer have been widely doubted, though she served as a former counsel for the Thomas More Society, a conservative Catholic group, being sought out by Trump after he saw a television commentary by her. She rose in prominence to become part of what she termed an “elite strike force team” working to overturn Trump’s defeat by Biden, then being signed by Family Radio late last year. On a recent show, she spoke with rightwing host Steve Deace, who said, “Before that man needs to be president again…[to] escape the quote-unquote, ‘witch-hunts,’ that man needs Jesus again because…his ambitions would be fueled by showing some self-awareness. And he won’t do it because he can’t admit, ‘I’m not God’.” Ellis agreed with Deace, commenting, “I have great love for him personally. And the total idolatry that I’m seeing from some of his supporters that are unwilling to put the constitution and the country and the conservative principles above their love for a star is really troubling. As Christians we need to take this very seriously and understand where we are putting our vote.” Ellis was censured by a Colorado judge in March for her spouting falsehoods about the 2020 election, and she has been criticized for hateful comments about the mass shooting at the Club Q gay nightclub, in addition to showing a cruel video concerning a Mitch McConnell hospitalization. Curiously, Ellis tore into Trump in 2016, calling him an “idiot and a bully” unable to “handle criticism” before making a complete turnaround to back him. True to form, the former prez chose not to fund her defense or fund any of his co-defendants, which spurred suggestions that she could flip on him in her testimony.

An attempt to keep Trump off Colorado’s state ballot in 2024 in a suit initiated by a group of voters was filed several weeks ago, related to his role in the J6 riots, arguing that he should be barred under the 14th Amendment of the Constitution. A particular section prohibits anyone who has “previously taken an oath” to uphold the Constitution, who has “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” from holding office again. The suit was filed by six Republican, and other unaffiliated state voters, by Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility, which asked the court to rule it “improper and a breach or neglect of duty” for Secretary of State Jena Griswold to allow Trump’s name on future ballots. Griswold said she hoped “this case will provide guidance to election officials on Trump’s eligibility as a candidate for office.” Florida, on the other hand, just voted to abandon a rule adopted earlier this year which would require all 2024 GOP presidential candidates to pledge support to the eventual nominee should they want to be placed on the state’s March 19 primary ballots. The winner in that revision is none other than former President Donald Trump, who has loudly refused to sign any such commitment, and a slap in the face to early signer, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. Loyalty pledges have become an issue in the GOP as they attempt to unify the party behind one candidate in 2024. For instance, to appear on the first candidate debate stage in Milwaukee, individuals had to sign the pledge; but, although Trump refused to sign he also refused to appear to debate, keeping peace in the family for the present, anarchy averted.

Andy Borowitz strikes again with his revelation that “in order to qualify for the next nationally televised debate, Republican Presidential candidates must sign a pledge to go to prison in place of Donald J. Trump…confirmed by the Republican National Committee. Ronna McDaniel, the RNC chairperson, said that agreeing to serve hard time for Trump was ‘the only way’ that GOP candidates could prove their loyalty to the party. As for whether Trump had been asked to sign a pledge to go to prison for any of his Republican rivals who might become convicted of a crime, McDaniel said, ‘Absolutely not. He’s very busy these days, and we didn’t want to bother him.’ Nearly all of the GOP contenders immediately agreed to sign the pledge, with the exception of Chris Christie and Asa Hutchinson, the latter of whom said he preferred to be ‘hog-tied.’ ‘I’m sorry to hear that Asa feels that way,’ McDaniel said. ‘Being asked to go to prison in place of Donald Trump is an honor that only comes around only four or five times in a lifetime.’ In a related matter, the RNC chair confirmed that none of the candidates had agreed to go to prison in place of Senator Lindsey Graham.”

CNN’s conservative commentator, S.E. Cupp, on her ‘The Lead‘ broadcast, says don’t expect Trump’s rivals to start seriously attacking him anytime soon. She notes Chris Christie’s, Asa Hutchinson’s and Texas’ Will Hurd’s blasts at the former president, but others have been stingy with any criticism. “The problem is, for these people to implicate Trump, they also have to implicate his voters. None are willing to say, ‘Listen white nationalists, Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, we don’t want you. The Republican Party is not your safe space. You will not find comfort in a Nikki Haley administration’. They won’t say that because they all still want to win and they all still think they’re going to get Trump voters if they don’t swing at Trump more vigorously.” Her reality check is, “They are not going to win the cult of Trump over. It’s just not going to happen. There’s only one of him for a reason.” Right! We can only wish that were true…there’s a bunch more in the wings waiting to step into his tiny shoes!

It’s been reported that Melania Trump has rejected several requests from her husband to join him in his campaign appearances, though he claims he has been keeping her away and that she will accompany him soon, saying, “She’s a private person, a great person, and a very confident person and she loves our country very much.” He certainly has the “best words,” eh? To this assertion to Kristen Welker on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press,’ Trump added, “And, honestly, I like to keep her away from it. It’s so nasty and so mean.” The New York Times in July reported that she’s told friends she feels betrayed by staffers and friends during her time in the White House, but still supports and believes in the relevancy of her husband’s candidacy, while steering clear of any of his court appearances. As his legal woes accumulate, PR experts say she should “keep her distance, but plan an escape route,” before the legal complexities worsen. The easiest option for her is to claim she has to spend time with Barron, or doing charity work, being busy with anything for which she can’t be faulted, and The Donald isn’t going to make an issue of it. Amid the various rumors about their marriage is that it is merely a transactional union with an iron-clad prenup, making son, Barron, the big hang-up in their relationship, especially with any rumored breakup.

One of Trump’s fanatical backers last week was unceremoniously ejected from the Buell Theater in Denver after she was accused of vaping, singing, recording the show and being generally disruptive during the performance, along with her companion, Quinn Gallagher. Representative Lauren Boebert, who has been quietly dating Gallagher for a few months, denied they were causing a disturbance, just simply enjoying the musical, ‘Beetlejuice.’  Being warned about their behavior during an intermission after several complaints, they were finally escorted out following additional accusations of being too frisky…but not before Boebert tried to ‘pull rank’ and threaten the ushers and other theater personnel. Her campaign manager verified that the couple were shown the exit, but tried to sugar-coat the circumstances, before encouraging the public to see the zany and raucous show for themselves. Boebert is seen on video honoring the various theater workers with one-finger salutes on her way out, holding Quinn’s hand as she twirled around. Gallagher, a Democrat, is a co-owner of the Hooch Craft Cocktail Bar in Aspen, where they previously staged “a winter Wonderland Burlesque & Drag Show,” per an invitation for the event during Aspen Gay Ski Week“an evening of cocktails, appetizers, and laughs.” Perhaps Boebert should apply for a position at Hooch because Adam Frisch is campaigning hard for her congressional seat in an attempt to remove the “unneeded distraction in her district.”

After Joe Biden moved into the White House, he questioned why he had always seen two Army soldiers standing near a Rose Garden bench as if they were guarding it. He approached them, asking why they were assigned to this duty. They weren’t knowledgeable, but thought it was some kind of tradition. Biden then called former President Trump, who told him it must have been a tradition that he simply had kept in place. A call to former President Obama garnered a similar answer; then a call to George W. Bush questioning the presence of the guards provided the answer. “What?! Is the paint still wet?!” he responded.

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

“Earthquakes”

“You can no more win a war than you can win an earthquake”.
~Jeannette Rankin

“I will remember this day for the rest of my life. There is nothing you can say. It’s just like you won the match after the earthquake and it just feels great”.
~Elena Vesnina

“We want a story that starts out with an earthquake and works its way up to a climax”.
~Samuel Goldwyn

...

I have played you videos of hers before, but that’s not stopping me. Her name is Caitlin, and she’s great! Watch this video on the cost of funerals…


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...
Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

September 13 – 19, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton…about Hawaii diaspora, Mozart lunches. Greensite… on centering girls’ and women’s safety. Steinbruner…is getting ready for the County Fair and will be back next week. Hayes…BLM Overlooking Precious Wildlife Conservation. Patton…the “Law” of supply and demand. Matlock…disagreeing on that midnight train to Georgia. Eagan…Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress…pick of the week. Quotes… “Santa Cruz”.

...

SANTA CRUZ FIRE DEPARTMENT circa 1941. Still the same building but the trucks have been updated.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE September 11

THINKING ABOUT HAWAII and HAWAIIANS.

I’ve subscribed to Ka Wai Ola for years. It’s the Office of Hawaiian Affairs monthly free newspaper. The September issue had a statement that surprised me…”more Native Hawaiians now live on the continent than in Hawaii”. It goes on to talk about the loss of statehood, the takeover by capitalists and government officials and concludes with the Maui wildfires. I looked up more “news” about the diaspora. Here’s some of what I found…”According to 2021 population estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau, the biggest growth of Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander populations was in Clark County, Nevada, which includes Las Vegas, and Sacramento County, California. The biggest decline of Native Hawaiian residents was in Honolulu”.

Then a quote from NPR…”Residents in Hawaii are spending on average 42.06% of their income on rent, which is the highest of any state, according to a Forbes Home analysis. California ranks second, but at a much smaller proportion of income going toward rent: 28.47%”. Lastly from NPR again…”Estimates from the American Community Survey showed that in 2011, there were about 296,400 Native Hawaiians in Hawai’i and about 221,600 on the continental U.S. Just a decade later, those numbers flipped. In 2021, there were about 309,800 Native Hawaiians in Hawai’i and about 370,000 in other states”.

MUNCHING WITH MOZART RETURNS. The heroic, brave, talented Carol Panofsky is bringing back and recreating the every third Friday noon free concerts to our downtown library’s second floor meeting room. The first return concert will be this Friday, September 15, 2023 from 12:10 – 12:50. It features solos by Ziyue (Amy) Zeng, at the piano. She’ll be playing Johann Sebastian Bach, Sergei Prokofiev, Ludwig van Beethoven and Franz Liszt.

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

ABOUT ROTTEN TOMATOES AND IMDB. Some statistics somewhere showed that folks almost always go to critic’s reviews/critiques before attending a movie. I’ve always included IMDB (International Movie Data Base) ratings and since we found out last week that some Rotten Tomatoes critics were on the take and receiving monies from movie companies for good reviews I’m happy to stay with IMDB.

INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE. (MAX SERIES) (7.2 IMDB)   It takes place in 1910 New Orleans and Storyville to be exact. The acting is stylized, the scenes are overly dramatic, and it’s not that kind of vampire. This is about a three way gay love affair and will it work? Much sex, booze, and posing. Roger Ebert called it cheesy, he’s right.

A TIME CALLED YOU (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.4 IMDB). **  An involved Korean series that I really got caught up in. There’s a plane crash and a girl’s boyfriend dies…or did he? His girlfriend travels back in time to 1998 several times or does she? Maybe she’s actually in 1998?? It’s touching, well-acted and fleeting…don’t miss it.

WHO IS ERIN CARTER? (NETFLIX SERIES) (6.4 IMDB). There’s a hold up in a super market and a killing. But little tension, slow moving, little sympathy for anyone and everyone involved. Spain, Mexico and Britain all get involved but save your time and credit and forget Erin Carter.

SITTING IN BARS WITH CAKE.(PRIME MOVIE) (6.7 IMDB). **It’s a lot of LA with plenty of bars with girlfriends getting the brilliant idea of making cakes and bringing them to bars to grab the guy’s attention. Bette Midler is legally in the film but there’s no good reason for her rare appearances. There’s a father with cancer, drinking, anger, a brain tumor, shouting and lots of making out. No reason to watch this one.

ONE PIECE. (NETFLIX SERIES) (8.5 IMDB). ** Another attempt by a studio to combine live action fantasy with animation. It’s into the pirate world and back again. The actors and voices are as good as you can expect when you’re dealing with a two world set-up like this one. Maybe if you’re aged 5 to 12 you might be thrilled but otherwise it’s too cute and not intelligent enough. It’s only been season one so far…maybe they’ll tighten it up and add tension and better jokes….so go warned.

INVASION. (APPLE SERIES) (6.1 IMDB). ** Long time movie goers will recognize Sam Neill as the sheriff in this invasion of earth movie. All sorts of clues and warnings that aliens are coming but it’s not very exciting. Much of it is in the telling and re telling of individual’s personal history and their reaction to the invasion. It’s mostly nothing you/we haven’t seen before.

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

THE EQUALIZER 3 (Del Mar Theatre) (7.1IMDB). ** Denzel Washington (age 69) and Dakota Fanning (age 29) head the cast of this conclusion to the Equalizer series. I can’t find or remember what I wrote about the first two Equalizer series…and this part 3 just left me cold, bored and mystified. Somehow Denzel the Equalizer goes to Italy and gets all involved with the Mafia in order to protect his friends who live there. His background/history are mysterious and only hinted at. Go warned.

MASK GIRL. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.4 IMDB). ** Most definitely a Korean film that plays out as a semi comedy and some tragedy. A plain looking but shapely girl decides to wear a mask and performs strip dances online. Her followers work hard to expose her and it’s a foolish but curious use of animated cartoons and dance numbers to tell this foolish story.

THE CHOSEN ONE. (NETFLIX SERIES) (5.6 IMDB). ** A movie from Mexico (Baja California) about a 12 year old boy who discovers that he has powers like Jesus. It’s almost an amateur’s first attempt at making a movie. He makes wine from water, helps the handicapped folks and makes some momentous decisions about how to live his life. I’ve watched the first two episodes and will ignore the rest.

...
September 11

WE CAN DO BETTER

Continuing with the theme from last week on the stark difference I experienced between Tanzania and Santa Cruz on addressing violence against women, this photo is of a member of Monduli Teachers’ College exploring the topic of how a father might best react to hearing that his daughter has been raped. It applies also to granddaughters. This issue is rarely addressed, both in Tanzania and in Santa Cruz. As that country opens a dialogue on issues of violence against women, the city of Santa Cruz closes it down.

There is no lack of examples of the city’s marginalizing these issues. It was evident when I attended the recent meeting of the Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women last Wednesday. To say the meeting was frustrating would be an understatement. This indictment is not directed towards commissioners. Most are largely unaware of how neatly the city has stacked the deck to render them less than effective in their ordinance-mandated role.

In contrast to the first thirty- three years, the long-term dedicated staff position for the commission has been terminated. This was a position we worked very hard to secure. The person hired was trained in the issues and gave a minimum of twenty hours a week solely on commission work. That position has been replaced by a revolving door of city manager employees who are present for the meetings but have limited availability outside those few hours. The latest iteration is a senior member of the city manager’s office who had no clue how to handle a tied vote due to one commissioner abstaining from voting. Nor did the chair know what to do with a tied vote. The staff person left the chambers to look up the by-laws. Meanwhile I’m in the audience, prevented only by decorum from calling out, “you can’t abstain from voting unless it’s a conflict of interest!” After ten minutes or so, they figured it out.

Nor were they aware that a commission (or council) standing committee, in this case the Commission Police Committee must be publicly noticed, with time, place and agenda posted. When the public comment period for that item was recognized, I reminded them of this Brown Act requirement. I never expect a thank you, but a cold stare has a chilling effect.

This is small stuff but signifies a less than functional city body. It appears that valuable past commission records and documents have “disappeared.”  There is no institutional memory. The commission recently hired a consultant to tell them what they should be doing, all of which is in the records, if they are ever “found.”

Of more serious import is the issue of commission members’ access to redacted police records of reported sexual assaults, excluding those under investigation. Such access is not only supported by the Ordinance language, confirmed by state law but also has been the practice since 1981, until now.

By reviewing redacted reports of sexual assault and compiling the results, the commission can evaluate the quality of investigative techniques and provide the community with a comprehensive overview of important information about sexual assaults committed: when; what part of town; whether by a person unknown or known; whether an arrest was made; whether there were more or less sexual assaults reported last year or the last five years; whether the city has more sexual assaults reported compared to other similar cities; whether we have more or fewer arrests than other cities; whether we have a higher percentage of sexual assaults committed by strangers than other cities (we do). Such information is crucial for public awareness and safety.

When such information was available and developed by the commission in its required annual report to council, the city of Santa Cruz did not feature well. Our rate of reported rape was higher than average; our rate of arrest was lower than average; our rate of rapes committed by strangers was well outside the norm. The last commission comprehensive report was in 2012. A combined three -year report through 2016 was a one pager but still contained some data- based information. Since that time, reports have been a description of events with no data. When I wrote to council this year regarding the commission’s upcoming presentation of its report, pointing out the lack of data in the Agenda Report, a one slide pie graph of aggregate numbers from the SCPD website was added for the council meeting.

Put on notice (by me) that the commission was floundering, lacking dedicated staff; resources and access to police data, the council at that meeting gave the green light for the commission to send to council its wish-list for what the council could do to be of better support. Since then, the commission has drafted and approved a letter asking for more support, referencing the ordinance language that requires police cooperation to provide information not deemed confidential by state law. However, the city attorney has determined that providing such information will be problematic and has recommended against its provision. He has left it in the hands of the city council.

Message to council and the community: the commission cannot do its mandated work without that information and the public cannot be educated without that information. It’s a long road back to a functioning Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women and it starts with this one step. For girls and women’s safety…take it!

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.

...
September 11

Becky is at the County Fair and will be back next week.

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

...
September 11

BLM OVERLOOKING PRECIOUS WILDLIFE CONSERVATION.

Santa Cruz County’s newest conservation land managers are supposed to conserve the wildlife prioritized by the State of California, but are failing to acknowledge their obligations, which means some of our area’s iconic wildlife species will disappear faster due to lack of Federal cooperation at Cotoni Coast Dairies.

Background

The Bureau of Land Management oversees management of Cotoni Coast Dairies, but it is following much-outdated wildlife conservation guidance. Land management agencies like the BLM are guided by policies and procedures that guarantee that they do a good job of managing wildlife. For instance, BLM has its 6840 Manual “Sensitive Species Management,” which notes:

“The objectives of the BLM special status species policy are:

  1. To conserve and/or recover ESA-listed species and the ecosystems on which they depend so that ESA protections are no longer needed for these species.
  2. To initiate proactive conservation measures that reduce or eliminate threats to Bureau sensitive species to minimize the likelihood of and need for listing of these species under the ESA.”

In other words, BLM recognizes that the agency should not be contributing to wildlife species becoming rarer and so receiving more regulatory protection, which would impact private landowners by restricting the uses of their property.

Mouritsen’s Duty, Neglected

To avoid that, BLM California’s State Director Karen Mouritsen is required to, “at least once every 5 years,” review and update the BLM-maintained list of sensitive species in coordination with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW). It is unusual for such policy guidance to lay out a specific timeline, which adds clarity to expectations. The last time California BLM’s sensitive wildlife list was updated was in 2010, before Director Mouritsen’s tenure: 13 years ago! A lot has changed in those intervening years, and scientists have recognized that many more wildlife species are in need of protection by BLM.

Repercussions at Cotoni Coast Dairies

What happens when BLM’s sensitive wildlife species list isn’t updated? Let’s look at the Cotoni Coast Dairies example. BLM has already completed a Resource Management Plan that is meant to guide wildlife conservation on the property. Under the guidance and environmental review provided by the RMP, the agency is building miles of trails and parking lots, implementing a cattle grazing program, and allocating funding to other prioritized activities. BLM will soon embark on a Science Plan for the property. The RMP didn’t and the Science Plan will not consider conservation of wildlife species that do not appear on the BLM’s sensitive species list. And so, the following 10 rare wildlife species will receive no attention, pushing them further towards extinction: ferruginous hawk, grasshopper sparrow, Northern harrier, olive-sided flycatcher, American badger, San Francisco dusky-footed woodrat, Western pond turtle, California red-legged frog, American peregrine falcon, and short-eared owl.

A Deeper Dive – Grasshopper Sparrow

Let’s consider one of those species with a little more detail, the grasshopper sparrow. If this species is nesting in an area, under California law they are protected and our state wildlife agency, CDFW, has been charged with their conservation. According to BLM guidance, Director Mouritsen is 13 years overdue in updating the agency’s sensitive wildlife list for California to include this species. As their name suggests, grasshopper sparrows are grassland-dependent organisms. There is an abundance of nesting grasshopper sparrows at Cotoni Coast Dairies.

Without active management such as with carefully planned livestock grazing or fire, all of the grasslands at Cotoni Coast Dairies will disappear, being invaded first by brush and then by trees. This is already happening with extensive French broom and coyote brush invasion.

Already, BLM has planned its livestock grazing and recreational trail uses without consideration of preferred habitat for nesting grasshopper sparrows. Livestock grazing could be taking place to the detriment of the species, already. The construction of recreational trails and parking lots may have already destroyed important nesting habitat. When recreational visitors start using those facilities, it may occur before BLM has a baseline study of the density and location of nesting grasshopper sparrows. So, the agency will be unable to understand how land uses are impacting the species and so will be unable in an informed way to adjust its recreational or livestock management to better conserve the species.

It may well be that BLM’s management of Cotoni Coast Dairies will further reduce nesting populations of grasshopper sparrow, pushing the species closer to the point where they will need to be listed as threatened or endangered. When that occurs, private landowners whose land supports nesting grasshopper sparrows will see increased regulation and oversight by the State and/or Federal government. Their property values will be reduced and their ability to develop homes, farms, or other uses will be diminished.

An Alternative

On the other hand, if the California BLM State Director Mouritsen were to meet her regulatory obligation and update the BLM State Sensitive Wildlife Species List in the near future, a bunch of good would result. First, Cotoni Coast Dairies’ Science Plan could provide guidance for conserving those species. Second, because BLM funding is tied to the number of sensitive species on each property, Cotoni Coast Dairies would be better situated for increased conservation funding. If the Science Plan succeeded in moving forward the conservation of sensitive species like the grasshopper sparrow, BLM’s leadership on these issues could help many other land managers do the right thing for species, contributing to the potentiality of ‘delisting’ species, reducing the potential for increased regulatory burden and loss of private property values.

Do Your Part

I’ve said it before in this column, but I’ll say it again. NOW is the time to write Director Mouritsen to urge her to do her job. She hasn’t replied to any of the numerous letters she’s already received, so evidently she needs more pressure to take this seriously. Here’s some language to send to her via her email kmourits@blm.gov

Dear Director Mouritsen,

I care about wildlife and plant conservation on BLM’s Cotoni Coast Dairies property in Santa Cruz County. I write to urge you to help by adding sensitive species found on that property to the State BLM’s sensitive species lists. Only if those species are on the State’s lists will local administrators consider impacts of their management on those species in their analyses and planning for the property. So, I ask that you please:

  • Publish an updated State BLM sensitive wildlife list in collaboration with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, as mandated by the BLM’s 6840 Special Status Species Manual.
    • This list was last updated in 2010, but you are required to update it at least every 5 years.
  • Publish an updated State BLM sensitive plant list to include the State ranked 1B plant species documented at Cotoni Coast Dairies, as mandated by the 6840 Manual.

I would appreciate a reply to this email with details about how you intend to address these issues.

Signed,

xx

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

...

September 6

#249 / The “Law” Of Supply And Demand

Readers of my blog postings may or may not have heard about a plan, pushed by land speculators and development interests, to turn huge areas of open space and farmland in Solano County into a “new city.”

Click this link to read a recent AP news story about what has been a “stealth” effort by “billionaires” to buy up land for this proposed project. The whole idea – great for the billionaire land speculators – would be fundamentally inconsistent with Solano County’s current land use policies.

An attorney friend of mine – who lives in Southern California – recently wrote me a note in which she made the following observation, with reference to the proposed Solano County development:

I thought the whole point of these housing density bills was to stop sprawl. I wonder if the governor is supportive of this project too? I’m sure these billionaires assume they can just roll the land use laws. This will be a test to see whether the legislature and the governor will finally put their money where their mouth is, so to speak.

My friend’s comment references the fact that the Governor (and the State Legislature) have recently been undermining “local control” over land use. I mentioned that phenomenon in my blog posting last Monday, suggesting that an initiative petition being circulated in the City of Santa Cruz would be an important way to bolster local control over future high-rise developments in the city, besides helping to ensure that developers produce more “affordable” housing units than state law would otherwise make them produce.

The “housing density bills” my attorney friend mentions in her note to me are bills that mandate new density in existing cities, while depriving local elected officials (and local voters) of their ability to try to balance the demands for new development with other important objectives of good land use policy. For instance, preserving farmland and open space is important. So is dealing with issues like traffic, parking, neighborhood compatibility, water availability, etc., as new developments occur inside already existing urban areas. Recent state laws (those “housing density bills”) constrict or remove the ability of local officials to make key land use decisions, as they attempt to establish the right balance.

I wrote back a response to the question posed by my friend. I suggested that the newest efforts at the state level to reduce local discretion over local land use questions is mainly driven by our state’s very real, and very urgent, housing crisis. Unfortunately, the proposed “solution” for this crisis – eliminating local land use discretion and mandating new high-rise and high-density developments – isn’t actually effective in producing more “affordable housing.”

I have a theory why the state is going along with the developers, which I sent along to my attorney friend. She thought it was a pretty good explanation, so I decided I’d pass it along to those who read this blog.

If the so-called “Law of Supply And Demand” were actually a “law,” equivalent to the law of gravity or other such laws that describe the inevitable consequences of some action or condition, then maybe the state’s preemption of local authority would make some sense. But there is no such operational “law,” which is the point I made in the response I sent to my friend (I have also talked about this topic before):

It is my opinion that the political efforts now underway to overturn and undermine local land use controls (to promote “affordable” and “infill” housing) have very little to do with the “smart growth” philosophy that many of us have supported – and that I, certainly, still support. “Smart growth” does require infill, and infill projects, clearly, are more difficult politically (and often economically) than “greenfield” projects that represent the typical “sprawl” style of development that “smart growth” is intended to counter. In fact, genuine “infill” development (as contemplated in the “smart growth” philosophy of future land use development) requires great attentiveness to the “neighbors” who will, inevitably, be impacted by new infill development. Allowing local governments to figure out how to accomplish politically challenging infill projects requires the exercise of lots of local discretion, because the parking, traffic, and utility issues are very real.

In my opinion, the political basis upon which the YIMBY [“Yes” In My Backyard”] argument that the state should preempt local discretion is founded on the implicit claim that there is a reality to a posited “Law of Supply and Demand.” Proponents win the argument in favor of new, high-density development (both in the legislature and in the mind of the public) based on people’s belief that there really is a “Law” that insures that a reduction in housing prices will occur if the “supply” of housing is only increased. The argument that makes acceptable the erasure of rules intended to balance community concerns as development proceeds is based upon a genuine (though terribly mistaken) belief that if the “supply” of housing can be made to increase then the “price” of housing will fall.

The lack of affordable housing is a national, and state, and local crisis. So, to the degree that the supposed “Law of Supply and Demand” will provide a solution, as many believe it will, other important priorities can be disregarded. Of course, in the state legislature, the “pay to play” principle is also a major reason for our state legislators’ recent willingness to sell out the communities they represent for campaign dollars (and in some cases, probably, for personal dollars).

In fact, “demand” is not a constant, so increasing the “supply” doesn’t inevitably mean a decrease in price. The “demand” in my community, for instance, is functionally unlimited. If new housing units are made available in Santa Cruz County, there will be more than enough demand (coming from outside the community and generated by the possibility provided by the new supply) to “raise,” not lower, prices. That’s what is actually going on, but I have observed well-intentioned people say that while it’s “too bad” that local neighborhoods will be undermined by the developments being approved, on the basis of recently-enacted state laws, these outcomes are really alright, and necessary, since it is so important to produce affordable housing.

Regrettably, the state legislature has not mandated universal inclusionary housing requirements (requirements that we instituted in Santa Cruz County in 1978), which might actually help address the lack of affordable housing. Instead, the legislature is backing the “supply and demand” theory that if we just let the developers build more units the price will go down. Ironically, some of the legislature’s newest efforts have actually undermined our local inclusionary housing ordinance, by giving out “density bonus” units to developers that are substituted for what would otherwise be inclusionary affordable units required by our local ordinance.

Anyway, this short rant, stimulated by your inquiry to me, is intended to encourage all of us to try to get local and state officials, and the public at large, to realize that MORE housing does not, absent very specific, and increased, affordable housing mandates, mean more “affordable” housing. Certainly in places like Santa Cruz, California, these new state law mandates for more, more, more – and for higher, higher, higher – have just the opposite effect.

That’s the analysis that I sent to my Southern California friend. For residents in the City of Santa Cruz, let me reiterate my suggestion that we should be trying to get that “Housing For People” initiative measure qualified for the city ballot next March! It would increase the “inclusionary” percentage, locally, meaning more affordable housing, despite what the state has been doing to reduce our affordable housing requirements. It would also “secure our right to vote on height.”

If you care about affordable housing, and want to have more local control over new development, not less, this initiative measure is a step in the right direction!

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

...

September 11

DISAGREEING ON THAT MIDNIGHT TRAIN TO GEORGIA

Last week the Fulton County, Georgia grand jury report containing the suggested charges in the election tampering case, with 39 names which had been under consideration for possible indictments by DA Fani Willis wasreleased. Of the names on the list Willis selected 19 for indictments. Former Georgia senators, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler were included, as was South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham, but the DA decided to leave them as un-indicted co-conspirators…so far. Her reasoning was likely influenced by the vote tallies of the grand jury members, which were weighted heavily toward indictment but with enough variations which may have presaged problems with future trial jurors, not to mention the complex legal arguments involving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The complexity of indicting Trump national security advisor, Michael Flynn, though the jurors voted 20 to 1 for indictment, may have given him a temporary reprieve with his exclusion. The same explanation might be applied to Trump aide, Boris Epshteyn. One dissenter is noted on each of the votes for Trump’s recommended indictments, and Willis filed several of those charges against him; but, she also included her own charge for the fake elector scheme, not recommended by the grand jurors. Of course, Trump on Truth Social, dismissed the report as having “ZERO credibility.” “Essentially, they wanted to indict anybody who happened to be breathing at the time. It totally undermines the credibility of the findings, and badly hurts the Great State of Georgia, whose wonderful and patriotic people are not happy with this charge,” he whinged.

(Not-a-)Senator(-from-Georgia-) Graham, who appeared before the grand jury after the court ordered him to do so – taking it to the Supreme Court – said he was “totally surprised” to have been on the list and, “The next election, if I have questions, I’ll do the same thing.” Representative Adam Schiff pounced on Graham after he claimed his actions were “consistent” with being a Senator. “I think Lindsey Graham’s explanation doesn’t pass the laugh test,” Schiff said. “You don’t – as a Senator, a House member or another elected official – call a secretary of state in some other state and try to get them to toss out votes. That is not the least part of the job description, and he’s lucky not to be indicted.” Graham reportedly had called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to toss ballots, “not to find votes,” in hopes of giving Trump the state’s electoral votes. The Former Guy’s attorneys filed three lawsuits asking the court to toss out the grand jury report and countermand Willis’s inquiry, along with an effort to sue the DA and Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney, who presided over the grand jury. A heavily redacted version of the report concluded no evidence of rampant chicanery resulting in a Trump loss, after which The Don’s legal team protested that some of the report’s content might influence a jury. Declining to take up the matter, the Georgia Supreme Court wrote that Trump was simply “circumventing the ordinary channels” for obtaining relief.

Cartoonist Clay Bennett of the Chattanooga Times Free Press portrays the old Proud Boys slogan – ‘Stand back and stand by,’ with the new one – ‘Stand trial and serve time.’ The Boys took a few hits last week with sentences handed down for their insurrectionist incursion on the D.C. Mall and environs on January 6, 2021. As the last of the seditious conspiracy cases wrapped up, which resulted in various charges for over 1,100 rioters, the groundwork is being prepared for the highest profile conspiracy case yet: the trial of un-President Trump, and the 18 others indicted along with him, with another 10 un-indicteds standing in the wings, awaiting their chances. Mary McCord, former federal prosecutor and Georgetown Law professor said, “The cases involving seditious conspiracy and the case in which Mr. Trump is charged federally do all involve an effort to prevent the peaceful transition of presidential power – to overrule or override the will of the voters. Mr. Trump is a different defendant than an ‘Enrique’ Tarrio or a Stewart Rhodes.” The conspiracies alleged are not the same, with prosecutors presenting different cases to a D.C. jury than that of the extremist group leaders.

Trump faces ‘only’ four counts in DOJ Special Counsel Jack Smith’s D.C. case, but the cases indicate a cause-and-effect tie with the extremist groups to engage in their various conspiracies according to Stan Twardy, a former federal prosecutor and practicing attorney. “Trump lit the match, and the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys were the gasoline that exploded here,” Twardy says of the indictments. Violence in both speech and behavior were basis of the DOJ’s cases against the Oath Keepers who predicted a civil war and had stashed weapons across the Potomac. The Proud Boys called for “war and revolution” as they dismantled barricades, breached the Capitol building and fought with law enforcement. Proud Boy ‘Enrique’ Tarrio crowed, “Make no mistake…we did this.” Trump’s case will be based on communications, revealing his words and those of his co-conspirators indicating the willingness, and agreement, to commit a crime. Mary McCord says, “Prosecutors will likely present a mix of Trump’s public statements and private ones to make their case. His legal team will likely argue that Trump had no intent to subvert the election results because he honestly believed he was the winner. Mr. Trump maintains to this day that there was fraud in the election. I think he’s tried to make the public believe that if he honestly and truly believed the election was stolen, that essentially, he couldn’t be guilty of anything because he had a right to attack the results of the election.” Trump’s delusional belief won’t necessarily clear him of misconduct as charged in Jack Smith’s indictment, with mention of the riot in which the former president sought to “impair, obstruct, and defeat the federal government function through dishonesty, fraud and deceit.”

Proud Boys, some of whom will be Old Boys by the time they see freedom outside of prison walls, were convicted in May, and last week got sentences ranging from 17 to 22 years. ‘Enrique’ Tarrio, who was seen as “the ultimate leader” by US District Judge Kelly, got 22 years, though he was not present at the J6 riot as he continued to spur his compatriots on. Four other PBs, Nordean, Biggs, Rehl, and Pezzola, got off with slightly lighter sentences, even after the prosecutors sought longer terms all the accused. The judge conceded that the conviction met the guidelines for enhanced terrorism penalties under federal law, saying further, “the terrorism adjustment overstates” their roles in the offense since they did not have the intent to kill or cause mass casualties. Though Tarrio apologized for the harm caused to the Capitol police on J6, the judge felt there was no remorse for those actions for which he was convicted. Judge Kelly said, “I think we’re talking past each other in many ways. There’s only so much that statement can go toward assuring me that deterrence is not warranted.”

Prison sentences will not deter the Proud Boys from infusing their destructive energy into the GOP, and their attempts to alter American’s lives by being in effect the Republican paramilitary force. After Oath Keepers leader, Stewart Rhodes, was sentenced to 18 years for seditious conspiracy, that organization has experienced a decline in numbers; but, Proud Boys draw their energy from the GOP, with Matt Gaetz, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Roger StoneLauren Boebert, and Michael Flynn carrying their banner. Arizona Representative Paul Gosar supposedly recruited Proud Boys to block certification of election results in his state after the 2020 election to no avail. And who can forget President Trump’s call to the Boys in a debate with candidate Biden saying, “Proud Boys, stand back and stand by?” Their membership rolls increased as they became his BFFs, and they showed us of what they are capable in their insurrection. Think Trump is starting to feel a bit edgy, now that the court system is showing its power?

A post on Quorum wonders if Florida Judge Aileen Cannon in her drive to absolve Trump of all charges, will continue to risk losing her cushy forever-job, or will she follow the law and precedent? An example of following the law: A jury is picked in Trump’s purloined documents case. Immediately the defense attorneys ask that the charges be dismissed because of blah, blah and blah… only a formality, which most presiding judges decline to honor, but they don’t HAVE to deny the request. So, should Trump’s team begin by saying, “Your honor, we ask that all charges be dismissed because the Moon is in the 7th House, and Jupiter is aligned with Mars.” Judge Cannon, hearing the power and logic of the appeal, might say, “Case dismissed.” Scary enough for you?

In Jack Smith’s D.C. case, he and the Justice Department will examine closely the cases against the insurrectionists, and in particular the verdicts returned against the leaders, which might inform them of the persuasive points, and what jurors will find to be compelling evidence. Former federal prosecutor, Barbara McQuade of the University of Michigan, feels attempts to portray the J6 actions as patriotic is one facet that has been, and will be, rejected by a jury. She said, “Jack Smith can be confident that a reasonable jury can be selected that sees the events of that day for what they were – a profound display of disloyalty to the United States.” Henry (Enrique) Tarrio’s seditious conspiracy conviction lets prosecutors see that a jury understands the guilt of a person who isn’t present at the scene of the crime, since Tarrio was in Baltimore on January 6 after being arrested on separate charges. McQuade warns that no two juries are alike, with just one outlier able to bring it crashing down. Again: the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that there is criminality.

Representative Jim ‘Gym’ Jordan got his sore butt handed back to him by Fulton County, Georgia DA Fani Willis last week after he attempted to interfere with her criminal investigation into Donald Trump and his minions. Jordan sent a letter demanding information and communications with the Department of Justice and Executive Branch officials, and information on federal funding the her office receives. The Ohio representative knows full well that Willis is within her rights to proceed with her case with the 19 indictments involving Trump’s four year crime spree of corruption and incompetence, but he and the MAGA crowd couldn’t care less. One writer compared Jordan’s letter to emails from ‘Nigerian princes’ which are intentionally loaded with grammatical mistakes and punctuation errors seeking to scam recipients of money or hard drive data. Smart people immediately know they are dealing with a scammer and hit ‘delete,’ leaving the ‘princes’ with the stupid recipients who won’t catch on until it’s too late…distilled brainlessness! The MAGA messages attempt to accomplish the same thing with their wacko conspiracy theories…smart people move on, or the conmen find a sucker.

Fani Willis is not one to put up with this meddling, and she forcefully responded to Jordan’s letter by telling him, “It is clear you lack a basic understanding of the law, and are overstepping your congressional authority.” The Palmer Report’s Bocha Blue feels it would make a good Saturday Night Live sketch, with Willis being a spirited and fiery woman against Jordan’s sludge-like character. Further, Willis told ‘Gym,’ “Your job as a legislator does not include criminal enforcement.” Blue describes Jordan as a ‘lurker,’ poking his nose into places it shouldn’t be, a person who has an unusually thick skull that doesn’t register phrases like ‘critical thinking skills.’ Willis essentially told the meddler where to stick his inquiry, and that his calling the prosecution a ‘political stunt‘ being related to ‘federal interests,’ does not relate to the interference in state-run elections. The charges against Trump in Fulton County rightfully belong to the state of Georgia, not the federal government! ‘Prince Gym’ tried to come across as knowledgeable, but it all fell flat in the face of Willis’ onslaught, as she pointed out several inaccuracies and misleading statements. She went on to state that his actions offend “each and every one of the settled principles of law,” as he attempted to obstruct the proceedings and advance his own partisan goals. The topper in her response used Jordan’s own words in his earlier letter to the House Select Committee: “This unprecedented action serves no legitimate legislative purpose and would set a dangerous precedent for future Congresses…the American people deserve better.” DA Willis is well-versed in the law and proper procedure, as she proved that Jim Jordan is a complete ass!

Former youth pastor and author, John Pavlovitz, who is known for his progressive social and political writings from a liberal Christian perspective posted an open letter on his website several years ago, which deserves a look-back. He says the phrase, ‘We’re just going to have to agree to disagree,’ is unacceptable, and he refuses the term. His response would be, “I believe you’re deeply, profoundly, and egregiously wrong…this is not a disagreement.” See his post here. Perfect for the after-Thanksgiving dinner-food fight!

Remember what Leonard Cohen said: “There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in!”

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

Santa Cruz

“Growing up in northern California has had a big influence on my love and respect for the outdoors. When I lived in Oakland, we would think nothing of driving to Half Moon Bay and Santa Cruz one day and then driving to the foothills of the Sierras the next day”.
~Tom Hanks

“When I go home to Santa Cruz, I’m the same girl as when I grew up.”
~Marisa Miller

 “My own zigzag path through life led me back to Santa Cruz in the early Eighties, and I have revisited regularly since. The place hasn’t changed: head in the clouds, backside on the hills and feet in the ocean – one of the most decent and beautiful places on earth.
~Clive Sinclair

...

It’s a story of reincarnation, and it’s quite beautiful.


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...
Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

September 6 – 12, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton…about “brave and free”, letters to the editor concept, housing for people initiative. Greensite…on rendering rape invisible in Santa Cruz… Steinbruner…Big secret city land purcheses,make less garbage, B40 fire district, local opioid addiction, Aptos Village plot? Cabrillo name change.Hayes…a primer in conserving California’s coastal prairies. Patton…sign that petition!. Matlock…sanchismos, copyrights and rolling the dice. Eagan … Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress…pick of the week: Standup! Quotes “Hawaii”

...

BEACH BOARDWALK PLUNGE. April 25, 1963. One of almost yearly changes the Boardwalk does to bring in more business. This plunge became their miniature golf course.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE September 4

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR CONCEPT. I decided even before starting BrattonOnline  that Bratton Online wouldn’t deal with “letters to the editor” weekly and that’s been the idea for the almost 20 years we’ve been online. When I ran Keith McHenry’s 4000 word “letter” last week I wanted to give readers a chance to see what Keith was really like. WE read his accomplishments with Bread Not Bombs and his praise for Brave and Free and boasting and bragging… it was an almost auto-biography of one of our most noticeable citizens.

HOUSING FOR PEOPLE INITIATIVE. Steve Bare who is a local activist and much involved community member wrote a letter to Gary Patton. Gary, Steve and I decided that it would help Housing for People to reprint his letter in its entirety right here. Here’s his letter…

“Dear Gary,

This is Steve Bare. You know me when you see me; I’ve been around a long time and been active in peace and social justice efforts.

As you may know, I’m deeply involved with our Housing For People Initiative effort. (Loved the shot of you and our t-shirt!) You also probably realize that the Initiative is a relatively modest one that simply attempts to return some decision-making power to citizen voters and insists on a true 25% “affordable” housing inclusion in new development. It’s not a game-changer; it’s simply a step in the right direction. A step (one you have nobly taken many times in the past) toward retaining livability, community, sustainability, and uniqueness for us and our town.

Gary, this is no longer the unique, accepting, quirky, and eclectic town it was when I moved here over 40 years ago. But it’s still a wonderful place. But for how long? Well, not long at the rate things seem to be evolving. However, folks, and many non-political citizens as well, are shocked and saddened by the changes and the proposed development. The Housing For People Initiative can slow down what is, to my eye, the exploitation and commodification of our precious town. Frankly, what I see is simply an extension of a shameful system of exploitation that harms not helps, profits the few at the expense of the many.

I revere and respect all you’ve done to keep this town livable, civil, and unique. Will you consider giving more help and support to our humble Initiative? We need you, and what we’re doing is an extension of all the effort you’ve made heretofore.

Let’s take the next step. Go to … housingforpeople.org

Peace, Steve Bare

...

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

THE EQUALIZER 3 (Del Mar Theatre) (7.1IMDB). ???? Denzel Washington (age 69) and Dakota Fanning (age 29) head the cast of this conclusion to the Equalizer series. I can’t find or remember what I wrote about the first two Equalizer series…and this part 3 just left me cold, bored and mystified. Somehow Denzel the Equalizer goes to Italy and gets all involved with the Mafia in order to protect his friends who live there. His background/history are mysterious and only hinted at. Go warned.

MASK GIRL. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.4 IMDB).  Most definitely a Korean film that plays out as a semi comedy and some tragedy. A plain looking but shapely girl decides to wear a mask and performs strip dances online. Her followers work hard to expose her and it’s a foolish but curious use of animated cartoons and dance numbers to tell this foolish story.

THE CHOSEN ONE. (NETFLIX SERIES) (5.6 IMDB). **** A movie from Mexico (Baja California) about a 12 year old boy who discovers that he has powers like Jesus. It’s almost an amateur’s first attempt at making a movie. He makes wine from water, helps the handicapped folks and makes some momentous decisions about how to live his life. I’ve watched the first two episodes and will ignore the rest.

Been there, seen that...

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

THE POPE’S EXORCIST. (NETFLIX) (6.1 IMDB). **** This scary, religious horror movie is taken from books by a Roman Catholic priest who actually did some exorcisms in and around the Vatican community. Russell Crowe is the priest and he’s as good as any actor could be in this touch-feely scary role.

TELEMARKETERS. (HBO) (7.7 IMDB). **** A fake documentary about those damned telemarketers who call all of us saying they are with the police and are trying to raise money for some phony police event or cause. It gives us a comedic view of their lives and how fake and almost illegal it is. Watch about half an hour…you’ll learn enough.

GOLDA. (DEL MAR THEATRE). **** Helen Mirren carries the role of Golda Meir and Moshe Dayan is in it and Liev Schreiber acts as Henry Kissinger. Golda is the first head (prime minister) of the new state of Israel and as you’ll be shown is/was a chain smoker (Chesterfields). It’s absorbing, well made, complex and basically covers the three week Yom Kippur war. Don’t miss it.

SHELTER. (PRIME) (6.6 IMDB) **** Tough to follow this mystery. A man dies in a terrible car crash…but does he die? His high school age son is nearly devastated but endures several other worldly experiences involving his dad. It’s even light and cute in parts and there’s even a Batlady and a character named Dylan Shakes. Watch at your own risk.

JURY DUTY. (PRIME SERIES) (8.3 IMDB) ****   Be very careful this is billed as a comedy but if you’ve ever been on a jury or been excused from serving on one…it’s no laughing matter. This jury selection takes place in Huntington Beach near LA. (or as we know it “Surf City”). It’s done in a pseudo-documentary style and goes through all the legal time and mind consuming legal steps in how a jury is selected. Not too bad a movie but torture if you’ve ever done time on a complex court case.

FIVE DAYS AT MEMORIAL. (PRIME SERIES) (7.7 IMDB). **** Not a new one, but a good one about the disaster during and after the Katrina hurricane that hit New Orleans in August of 2005. Vera Farmiga is one of the staff and all the acting and special effects are well worth watching.

JESUS REVOLUTION. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (7.1 IMDB). ???? A very sweet, well intentioned Christian feel good and true movie about Los Angeles teenagers in the 1970’s. Kelsey Grammer plays a minister who eventually sees that the hippies around his part of LA mean well and they all join together to worship Jesus in a slightly different way.

...
September 4

LESSONS FROM TANZANIA

The statement above represents a commitment by the principal and teaching staff of Monduli Teachers’ College in Tanzania to take significant steps to address the serious issues of sexual harassment and rape. Prior to a three- day training for administrators and teachers, which I had been invited to co-facilitate, these issues were largely silenced, hidden by taboos from public discussion and accountability. By the end of the three days, there was a measurable decrease in victim-blaming and an eagerness to publicly tackle both issues that disproportionally affect women and girls.

When I was asked whether the situation is different in my hometown of Santa Cruz, I had to admit that it is. “In Tanzania”, I replied, “you have few resources yet a commitment to highlight these issues and make them public. In Santa Cruz, we have all the resources yet no commitment to highlight and make the issues public.” In Santa Cruz there appears to be a concerted effort to render them invisible. City management and various city councils over the past 18 years have effectively marginalized the city’s forty- year- old Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women, stripping it of resources, programs, and half-time trained staff. Despite an average of thirty reported sexual assaults annually, none is reported in the local media. You could be forgiven for concluding it is a non-issue. My hunch is that is the goal in this tourist town.

One issue of sexual harassment was recently reported in Lookout, Santa Cruz on August 13th, 2023. The story was written by a 16- year-old female high school student who described her experience while waiting for the bus, of being approached by a male who initiated conversation that quickly turned into verbal sexual harassment. She described her reactions, feelings, fears, and criticism of the Metro system for what she saw as a lack of resources to address such intimidation. Regrettably, the Lookout editors allowed a mistake in both the headline and the Quick Take summary of the article to be published. Both erroneously state that the incident took place “on the Santa Cruz Metro” for the headline and “on a Santa Cruz Metro bus” for the summary. This is not a minor mistake and should have been corrected. While the major issue is the sexual harassment, wrongly stating that it took place on a Metro bus not only casts doubt on the integrity of bus drivers to halt such behavior but also potentially discourages other females from taking the bus.

After forty- four years in rape prevention education, my instinct is to listen carefully to how people responded to sexual harassment, and sexual assault. My aim is to help the person lessen self-blame, a common response, while helping them expand their options for any future incident. The self-defense workshops I held at UCSC were titled Alternatives to Fear.  After a gargantuan effort and much student support, we were able to get Women’s Self Defense as a regular PE class at UCSC. One of my first actions as the first chair of the Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women in 1981 was to establish Women’s and Girl’s Self Defense Classes through the city’s Parks and Recreation Department and later, in city schools. As a balance, educational programs were aimed at males, as allies, as bystanders and as potential perpetrators. I’ll never forget the words of a young male, found guilty of rape and expressing remorse, who at his sentencing said, “I crossed a line I didn’t know existed.” With sex education non-existent in most states and most families, young males need more than slogans, peers, and popular media to navigate the sexual terrain. Most males don’t rape. And some who do are beyond education. However, look into the family dynamics of men convicted of rape and you will find another male figure who paved the way.

As recently as 2015, most universities and many communities across the country had some version of a Women and Girls’ Self-defense program. Such programs are not traditional martial arts, in fact they are distinctly different from a martial art. Women’s self-defense includes verbal assertiveness as well as simple physical techniques best described as “dirty fighting.” You aim for, not avoid, the vulnerable parts of the attacker. The verbal training helps the transition from a passive “why are you doing this? please don’t” to a loud “back off!!” That, and to trust one’s instincts. I’ve lost count of how many students shared their stories of avoiding an overly intrusive or threatening male by drawing on one or more of these options.

Thus, I was greatly frustrated when I first heard about Women’s Self-Defense no longer supported across the country because of the latest ideological posturing that self-defense was not “primary prevention.” Apparently “primary prevention” means you stop a male raping. How that is achieved gets a bit vague. When I pointed out that a female getting out of a situation by kicking a male in the groin is “stopping that male raping” I was told that,” no, he will go on to rape somebody else.” Such is the absurdity of ideology versus reality. One of the results of this misguided activism was the ending of self-defense classes at UCSC plus those funded and organized by the city of Santa Cruz.

I thought of all this history as I read the 16-year-old’s experience of sexual harassment at the bus stop. When she wrote “I hoped and prayed that maybe my instincts were wrong this time, that I misjudged him,” I could only bow my head in defeat. Trusting one’s instincts is the sine qua non of Women’s Self Defense.

If I return to do rape prevention work in Tanzania and am asked if things have improved in Santa Cruz, reluctantly I will have to say things have gotten worse: that the issues of rape, domestic violence and sexual harassment have been further marginalized and rendered invisible. The example I will use is the recent council approved Strategic Plan. Under the Public Safety section there are eight entries. Not one addresses these issues even though the 1981 Ordinance that created the Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women mandates” that the prevention of rape and domestic violence shall be one of the city’s highest priorities”. Noting the absence of these issues in the first reading of the Plan I spoke at city council, reminded council members of the Ordinance requirements, and asked that these issues be added to the Public Safety section of the Strategic Plan. At the next meeting, final reading, and unanimous council vote, they had not been added.

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.

...
September 4

COUNTY HOUSING ELEMENT UPDATED PLAN NOW AVAILABLE:

Project Documents

BIG LAND PURCHASES FOR BAY AREA UTOPIAN CITY KEPT SECRET…COULD IT HAPPEN HERE?

There has been much talk in the news recently about a group of ultra-wealthy investors, one of whom has a residence in Santa Cruz County, buying large tracts of farmland in Solano County and aggressively forcing farmers who do not want to sell their land to enter into legal settlements.  Solano County leaders say the deals have been secretive until recently, and worry about the security of such a new subdivision, Flannery Associates LLP’s “California Forever”, that would border Travis Air Force Base.

Do you think such a thing could happen in Santa Cruz County, say in some of the CZU Fire areas where few have been allowed to rebuild and costs to do so are climbing higher by the minute due to more studies the County wants and wide paved roads CalFIRE requires?  Or maybe on land owned by Lockheed Martin, also ravaged by the CZU Fire?  Hmmm…  Consider this below.

‘California Forever’: Company behind land purchases near Travis Air Force Base launches website, details plans

Below is a list of news sources from Wikipedia on the “Mystery Company” purchase:

  1. Peterson, Kristina; Gillum, Jack; O’Keeffe, Kate (7 July 2023). “Investors Bought Nearly $1 Billion in Land Near a California Air Force Base. Officials Want to Know Who Exactly They Are”The Wall Street JournalISSN0099-9660. Retrieved 22 July 2023.
  2. ^Sierra, Stephanie (21 July 2023). “‘Mystery company’ buys $800M worth of land near Travis AFB, raising concerns about national security”KGO-TV.
  3. ^Dougherty, Conor; Griffith, Erin (25 August 2023). “The Silicon Valley Elite Who Want to Build a City From Scratch”The New York TimesISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 August 2023.

Many local landowners are getting sued for not caving in to Flannery Associates LLP’s aggressive land grab tactics: ORDER signed by District Judge Troy L for Flannery Assoc. LLC v. Barnes Family Ranch Assoc., LLC et al :: Justia Dockets & Filings

According to a Settlement document filed by all parties in the lawsuit (U.S. District Court, Eastern District, Sacramento Division Case 2:23-CV-00927-TLN-AC), the legal action is on hold while there is  discussion about a possible settlement, due to be complete by October 17, 2023.

Here is a map of current Flannery Associates holdings and areas pending takeover

It adjoins not only Travis Air Force Base, but also the Grizzly Island Wildlife Refuge

Learn more about that Wildlife Refuge here

Would nearby Jepson Prairie and Vernal Pools be affected? Jepson Prairie | Solano Land Trust : Suisun City, CA

The point that concerns me is that the artist’s rendering of this utopian California Forever project reminds me a lot of how the Aptos Village Project was sold to the public, and how easily (and secretively) deals are made behind closed doors to benefit the wealthy and the County coffers.

What would California Forever look like? Here are artist renderings from the developer

Now, think about what the north coast’s Cemex Land and CZU Fire areas look like now, and how the County is making it nearly impossible for anyone but the wealthy to rebuild.  Just think about it, and pay attention.

HOW CAN WE MAKE LESS GARBAGE?

Santa Cruz County’s Buena Vista Landfill has only a few years left before it will be full and will be closed.   Where will our garbage go then?  The plan is to truck it to Marina.

Last week while visiting the County Building, I happened to spot the agenda posted outside for the Santa Cruz County Local Solid Waste Task Force meeting on September 7.  I know some of those Committee members who work hard to help businesses and the general public to reduce, recycle and reuse, and am grateful for their good work.

What impressed me most about the agenda is the thorough review of all State legislation pending that manages to address how we can better handle the piles of garbage by just not creating so much in the first place,  recycling what we can and holding commercial enterprises accountable for reducing packaging.  Take a look at the Sept. 7 agenda, and participate if you can: Local Task Force

WHY IS LAFCO AVOIDING THIS?

Santa Cruz County LAFCO Executive Officer Joe Serrano responded to my Request for LAFCO to reconsider the August 2 approval of a Resolution that was wrought with errors and provided inaccurate voter numbers for the Branciforte Fire District area in the face of a move to dissolve their District.  Basically, he corrected the erroneous dates, arbitrarily shortened the Protest Period by a week, and claimed the updated voter registration numbers were irrelevant because County Elections had not notified him of any changes since he had last asked in May, 2022.

Claims of notices posted in the Sentinel have not been proven, and I could not find them in recent editions of the newspaper.

Initially, the Protest Hearing date of September 27 for the Branciforte Fire District Dissolution was shown on the LAFCO meeting website as “Protest Hearing for RO 22-07”.  How’s that for transparency?  Luckily, the project was described after I asked that this be done.

So, what’s the cause behind this feverish rush and clouded action?  Maybe transfer of tax monies to Scotts Valley Fire District in order to be collected by tax bills for 2024?  Maybe the Director’s application for an award to LAFCO for getting a consolidation accomplished in Santa Cruz County in two years?  Hmmm….Stay tuned. [Staff Report]

WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH $20.3 TO $26 MILLION TO ADDRESS OPIOID ADDICTION IN SANTA CRUZ COUNTY?

The County will receive about $26 million over the next 18 years as part of a class-action settlement against opioid manufacturers, distributors and retailers who settled for $51 billion.  What do you think would be the best use of that money to actually make a difference for people addicted to opioids?

“County Director of Substance Use Disorder Services Casey Swank explained that the Health Services Agency facilitated a community survey in August among Medi-Cal beneficiaries and substance use disorder treatment providers who were asked to rank core strategies within the eligible high impact areas defined in the settlement.”

Public shares priorities for Santa Cruz County opioid settlement spending

The County’s survey of 238 agencies and care providers yielded this:

“…the top three core strategies were treatment and recovery support for people involved in the justice system, reliance on substance use disorder wellness centers to divert people away from the justice system and treatment for individuals in the justice system.

Preferred uses among the 181 providers that responded to the survey are, in order of preference, crisis stabilization centers as an alternative to emergency rooms, peer support specialists or recovery coaches in emergency departments and substance use disorder wellness centers for youth and adults.”

What do you think?

I think the County would do well to launch a pilot project using Ibogaine to address and reduce addiction problems, as is being done in Brazil, New Zealand and South Africa under medical supervision: Ibogaine for addiction: Research, benefits, and more

Studies are showing it is effective and could remove addictive tendencies.

Then, I think we need to give these folks life skills to help manage money and learn new job skills that help them become independent, self-respecting people, and maybe have a farm modelled on the Homeless Garden Project in Santa Cruz to help them along the way.

Notice that I did NOT mention Safe Injection Centers or handing out free needles.

Please let me know your thoughts.

IS THE STATE INSURANCE COMMISSIONER MAKING DEALS?

A front-page article in the September 4  San Jose Mercury News caught my eye, reporting that State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara may be making deals with insurance companies in hope that Californians will be able to get insurance coverage in the future.  But at what price?

Anxiety builds as coverage dissolves [article]

At issue is that insurance companies who claim they can no longer afford risky coverage in California are now leaving the state, not renewing existing policies and refusing to write new policies.  The claim is that this is brought on by Prop. 103, passed by the voters in 1988 (by 51%), that regulates what insurance providers can charge, subject to approval of the State Insurance Commissioner, which became an elected position rather than appointed.  Insurance companies were required to roll back their rates by 20%..

Information Sheet: Proposition 103 Intervenor Process

What can you do if you have a mortgage and are required to have insurance, but no companies will issue a policy?  The State’s FAIR Plan is the last resort, but is expensive and restrictive.  It is not a government or public tax-funded program but rather high-priced, narrow policies underwritten by a consortium of all insurance companies doing business in the State and that is administered by the FAIR Plan agency.  About FAIR Plan

FAIR Plan Insurance

What is of interest is that State Insurance Commissioner just approved an increase of 15.7% for FAIR Plan rates, yet rates for private insurance companies themselves is being held down.

The article in the Mercury News, California insurance companies have to base rates on historic losses rather than using predictive computer climate model numbers.  That prevents insurance companies from being able to recover their own insurance for large payouts in disasters, which they buy for their own economic survival.

What consumer watchdogs feel is happening is that Ricardo Lara is making deals with legislators to ease the restrictions on insurance companies.

The bottom line is that something has to be done to help those who are receiving non-renewal notices.

Participate in the online presentations on this topic as it relates to wildland fire risk

Listen in online to your local talk program “Community Matters” on Santa Cruz Voice.com this Friday (9/08) 2pm-4pm for a discussion with local insurance and real estate agents about this issue affecting Santa Cruz County. (santacruzvoice.com) State Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara and staff have been requested to participate.

FAIR INSURANCE PLAN RECOGNIZES FIREWISE COMMUNITIES FOR DISCOUNTS

When neighbors work together to reduce wildfire risk, it makes a big difference in favor of safety.  When those neighbors join together to become a nationally-recognized FireWise Community to expand that cooperative work and education, many insurance companies now recognize the effort and grant a discount on insurance policies within the FireWise neighborhoods.

Even the FAIR Plan now recognizes the value of FireWise Communities.  Below is just such information, sent by California Insurance Commissioner’s Office staff, Ms. Mary Beth Bykowsky, forwarded by Ms. Lynn Sestak, FireWise Coordinator  of the Santa Cruz County FireSafe Council:

—– Forwarded Message —–

From: Bykowsky, Mary Beth marybeth.bykowsky@insurance.ca.gov
Sent: Monday, August 28, 2023 at 06:43:30 PM PDT
Subject: New FAIR Plan Discounts

“I wanted to let all my Fire Safe Council, Firewise Communities and other concerned communities members know that the Department of Insurance has already approved the FAIR Plan to begin offering insurance discounts starting yesterday, August 23, and expects to have other companies approved by the end of the year. The FAIR Plan has offered a 10% discount on policies in a participating Firewise Community since May 2018. Now, the FAIR Plan is offering two more wildfire hardening discounts: one for Protecting the Structure, and another for Protecting the Immediate Surroundings of the dwelling. When applied, these discounts will reduce the wildfire portion of the policy’s premium by 10% and 5% respectively. Depending on your level of wildfire risk, this can be a large component of your overall premium. Contact your broker to find out what this means for your premium, how to qualify, and when you could receive a discount.”

Learn more here: Firewise USA Recognition Program

APTOS VILLAGE TRAFFIC CHANGES THIS WEEK

A friend sent me this note over the weekend:

“Parade Street in Aptos Village will be open to all traffic on Tuesday, Sept. 5 while the Bayview Railroad Crossing will be closed to all traffic from this date forward! ?? Please be prepared for potential traffic congestion as Parade Street reopens and Bayview Railroad Crossing closes. Make sure to plan your commute accordingly and explore alternative routes if possible.”

I wonder why this boondoggle had to happen on a school day, when traffic is already choking the area?

What will be done to close the historic Bayview Hotel private entrance?  At the time of this writing, neither Swenson nor the County has contacted the owner of the Bayview Hotel about what will be happening there.

Contact Santa Cruz County Dept. of Public Works Director Matt Machado<matt.machado@santacruzcounty.us> with your thoughts about Aptos Village traffic issues.

KEEP YOUR EYE ON CABRILLO COLLEGE BOARD OF TRUSTEES ABOUT THAT DELAY IN NAME CHANGE

The Board of Trustees voted last month to pause on taking further action on selection a new name for Cabrillo College.  There continues to be thoughtful Letters to the Editor in the Sentinel regarding the matter.  We all need to keep paying attention and offering written and public testimonies with solutions to the Board of Trustees because it is important to our Community.

The next Board meeting will be Monday, September 11 at 6pm in the Horticulture Bldg. at the Aptos Cabrillo College campus.

[Board meetings and dates]

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING AND ASK QUESTIONS.  JUST DO ONE THING THIS WEEK AND YOU’LL MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

Cheers,

Becky

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

...
September 4

A PRIMER IN CONSERVING CALIFORNIA’S COASTAL PRAIRIES

California’s coastal prairies are super-diverse habitats that (barely) still exist around the Monterey Bay and deserve careful attention by public and private landowners alike if we are to conserve these habitats for plants and wildlife for future generations.

What are Coastal Prairies?

Coastal prairies are dominated by herbaceous species (grasses, grass-like plants, and broadleaved plants aka ‘forbs’) where there is incursion of summer fog. Old growth coastal prairies are where human plows have not ‘turned over’ the soil, mixing the lower levels with upper levels and permanently altering the ecology. Old growth coastal prairies are extremely rare because people have historically farmed so much of what they primarily saw as productive prairie soils. Secondary coastal prairies have been intensively plowed and have a different ecology that requires different management approaches. Beyond the split between old growth and secondary coastal prairies, there are many, many types of coastal prairies.

Hydrogeomorphology Drives Diversity of Coastal Prairie Communities

Understanding soils and the corresponding differences in geology and hydrology will help with understanding of how beautifully complex coastal prairie classification can be. There are three geomorphic subdivisions that have been used to help to start classifying coastal prairies: flat, hillsides, and shallow-soiled ‘balds.’ Because water doesn’t drain quickly off of flat areas, coastal prairies found in such places often support extensive wetlands, some of which are only very wet in the most rainy of times. And, because soil doesn’t erode rapidly from those flat areas, deep soils typically develop under coastal prairies’ productive plants, which are so diverse as to have some species growing in every season. Hillside coastal prairies are better drained, and soil more readily erodes, so these drier, less productive prairies have a different ecology. And, at the top of those slopes there is frequently no soil at all…these areas are called ‘balds’ because only certain plants can grow there among the oft-exposed and bald-looking rock.

Let’s add two more levels of geomorphic complexity to this coastal prairie stew, both related to oceanic activity. Tides strongly influence the rarest types of coastal prairies, which thrive only where floods and King Tides inundate areas, with very salty and occasionally quite wet soils. These areas are also known as ‘saline wet meadows.’ Some line estuaries and lagoons and some are located even far inland where salts have accumulated over eons, like the flat areas where the Pajaro River wends its way across the valley north of Hollister. The ocean’s waves and tides carved stair-step flat areas, aka ‘marine terraces’ into the ocean-facing hills in the Big Sur and Santa Cruz mountains. You can see that terrace formation in action as you watch waves chiseling at the land across wide flat tide-pool-dotted rock: the soft-rock cliffs fall apart, Public Works drops massive piles of boulders, and someone inevitably proposes the ultimate boondoggle, a “sea wall.” Episodically, there’s an ice age, the ocean recedes, and tectonic uplift elevates the lowest marine terrace above the force of waves. There are at least 6 terraces, each with its own diversity of different-age soils and correspondingly diverse different coastal prairie types.

Managing Diverse Coastal Prairies

To conserve plants and wildlife, people looking to manage the bewilderingly diverse coastal prairies have a lot of work to do. The first rule in managing coastal prairies is: steward what you have, not what you want. We know diddly-squat about introducing new species to new places, but humans are apt to want to superimpose ideas from elsewhere on the spot they are looking at: that’s a common mistake. The second rule: manage for the thing you have that you want, not what you don’t want. Those two rules require you to start by cataloging everything. Get to know your place, make lists and maps…ask for help! People love cataloging and mapping species; iNaturalist, CalFlora, eBird, and other platforms offer increasingly easy platforms to help with this. Each species is in each place for its own reasons, and we are just getting to know coastal prairie species, so understanding why species are where is important to understanding how to conserve every species for future generations. For instance, we are beginning to understand that some species are only going to thrive in old growth coastal prairies. Other species require specific amounts of moisture. For decades, I have been working with a research team that has been documenting the importance of cattle grazing in conserving native annual wildflowers of California’s coastal prairies. Grazers can reduce vegetation height and the depth of dead plant material, both critical factors to allowing some species to thrive. Other species like taller, denser vegetation.

Indicator Species

Rightly or wrongly, and this is quite contested stuff, humans gravitate to looking at a small subset of species to indicate whether or not they are good land stewards. Because the citizens of the USA strongly support wildlife conservation and believe in conserving all species, we have national and state laws and policies that provide for the protection of rare, threatened, and endangered species. That focus makes these “listed” species the most commonly used species to inform land stewardship, and they have proven their value as such over and over again. Other government policies provide impetus for other biotic indicators. The California Coastal Commission at times designates suites of species as indicators of legally protected ESHA, Environmentally Sensitive Habitat Areas because of either their rarity or function. Wetland plant species serve as indicators of the most common ESHA and coastal prairie species have also served in that capacity in some places. Also, the Antiquities Act allows for US Presidents to provide for protection of species, ecosystems, or habitats. In the Monument Proclamation that provided protections for Cotoni Coast Dairies, there are several coastal prairie species listed that will also be used as indicator species for the BLM managers on that property.

Species Indicators of Coastal Prairie Management Success: a case study at Cotoni Coast Dairies

There might be enough policy-mandated indicator species in the coastal prairies at Cotoni Coast Dairies to adequately protect all the species that require those habitats. The Monument Proclamation lists the following species found predominantly in coastal prairies at the Cotoni Coast Dairies site: California buttercups, brown-headed rush, meadow vole, American kestrel, and white-tailed kite. The California Coastal Commission hasn’t yet weighed in on ESHA designation at Cotoni Coast Dairies, so we’ll have to wait and see how those designations change which species are used as indicators. Protections for rare, threatened and endangered species add a few more species to the list: Point Reyes Horkelia, Choris’ popcornflower, American badger, golden eagle, northern harrier, short-eared owl, grasshopper sparrow, and western pond turtle. It is fortunate that BLM is required to manage for, and monitor, so many coastal prairie indicator species: with this wealth and diversity of species, there is a good chance that many other species will be conserved. But, managing for this extensive suite will not be easy.

What’s the Management Recipe?

Each species has its own stewardship requirements. Managing for healthy buttercup populations requires managers to maintain wet meadows, most typically found on the terraces, but also in seeps on hillsides. Conservation of brown headed rush is similar, but this species likes less disturbance intensity. Meadow voles like dense grass in wet meadows, places that buttercup wouldn’t thrive. Choris’ popcornflower and Point Reyes Horkelia won’t thrive without higher disturbance intensity, which provides the extensive bare soil and lack of light competition that they need to proliferate. None of the coastal prairie indicator species will thrive without the right timing and intensity of grazing, mowing, or fire…which vary by species.

Applying the Principles

The guidance to manage for so many coastal prairie indicator species which are extant at Cotoni Coast Dairies provides a great foundation for rule 1: ‘steward what you have, not what you want’ but what about rule 2, ‘manage for the thing you have that you want, not what you don’t want?’ There is a great temptation for managers to focus on the negative in coastal prairie; too often coastal prairie managers say ‘I don’t want non-native grasses,’ with the ensuing endless stewardship battle as wave after wave of new non-native grasses invade following whatever stewardship attempt there was to control the preceding non-native grass management priority. I call this the exotic plant treadmill: one after the next weed keeps coming unless you focus on managing for what you want, the existing native species, to give them a chance to thrive in those same places.

It will be very interesting to see the BLM’s Science Plan for Cotoni Coast Dairies. I wonder how the science and procedures I outlined above might be applied to the property’s extensive coastal prairies.

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

...

FROM GARY A. PATTON  From Gary’s “We Live In A Political World” website…

September 4
#247 / Sign That Petition!

Today’s blog posting is specifically addressed to residents of the City of Santa Cruz. Currently, volunteer signature gatherers are attempting to qualify an initiative measure for the City election to be held in March of next year. Supporters are calling the proposed initiative measure, “Housing For People.” Click that link to find out more about it. You can click the following link, too, to read coverage in the Santa Cruz Sentinel.

In essence, the proposed initiative measure would do two things, presuming that the measure qualifies for the ballot and is then enacted by the voters:

First, the initiative would increase the City’s so-called “inclusionary percentage” from 20% to 25%. When developers build new housing units, the City currently requires that 20% of these new units be reserved for persons with average or below average incomes. Given the housing prices that are set by the private market, this inclusionary requirement is one of the only ways that the City can insure that new development actually opens up new housing opportunities for ordinary, working people and their kids.

Unfortunately, the State Legislature is doing everything it can to reduce the ability of local inclusionary ordinances to make sure that at least some significant share of the new development occurring will benefit average and below average income people. Recent state laws essentially reduce the impact of the inclusionary percentages set by the local City Council, or the voters. That is one reason that the initiative measure now in circulation is so important. It is a way to make sure that we get the maximum amount of affordable housing possible, as new development occurs – even as recent state laws act to reduce, not increase, the mandated affordable housing percentage. Upping the local inclusionary percentage works against these state law efforts to reduce local requirements to benefit the developers.

Second – and I personally think that this is also important – the initiative measure, if ultimately enacted, will require the voters to approve any increase to the height limits currently set in the City’s General Plan and Zoning Ordinance.

The City’s Planning Director was proposing new developments in the “South of Laurel” area that would be on the order of twenty-one (21) stories high – more than twice the height of the Dream Inn. Right after his election last year, Mayor Fred Keeley suggested that the Council reduce this to twelve (12) stories, maximum, and the Council backed up that idea. However, no final decision on height limits in the so-called “South of Laurel” neighborhood has yet been established, and it is worth noting that twelve stories (while much less than twenty-one stories) is still about TWICE the height of the new development at the corner of Laurel and Pacific, as pictured in that Sentinel article.

The proposed initiative measure is being promoted on the following basis:

Secure Your Right To Vote On Height

When the Save Lighthouse Point Association took action to “Save Lighthouse Field,” back in the early 1970’s – an effort in which I was personally involved – one of the key ways that voters headed off planning policies that really didn’t take account of what City residents wanted was by passing an initiative measure that was placed on the June 1974 ballot.

Some have told me that our local community is no longer all that concerned about giving voters real power over the future development of the City. I hope that’s not true. In our system of self-government, City voters ARE the City.

So, let’s up that inclusionary percentage! Let’s “Secure Our Right To Vote on Height!”

Sign that petition!

Even better, get a copy of the petition measure, by clicking this link, and get your friends and neighbors involved, too.

Time is short and the stakes are very high!

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

...
September 4

SANCHISMOS, COPYRIGHTS AND ROLLLING THE DICE

While the phrase ’tilting at windmills’ may not apply directly to our disgraced former president, most experts agree that he exhibits the classic paranoid personality disorder in his eccentric, odd behavior. That is borne out by his suspicions of those around him, along with his refusing to take blame for his past deeds. The Orange Don Quixote, who betrayed the country while catering to a long-time foreign enemy, had his Sancho Panza in the person of White House Chief of Staff, Mark Meadows, who proved to be incapable of being a voice of reason in dissuading his master’s delusional treachery, his ‘sanchismos’ not able to break through The Don’s fantasies. VP Pence lost his ‘sidekick’ designation in the game to throw out the election results, making Meadows a most intriguing persona within the coup team.

He knows all the secrets, where the skeletons are hidden, and where the bodies are buried, but was playing both sides as the investigation dragged on, even as his aide, Cassidy Hutchinson, spilled the jar of beans before the J6 Committee. After his indictment, Meadows sought in a hearing to have his case moved to federal court, where he will attempt to assert immunity as a federal officer during which he was simply doing his job under the Former Guy. At this writing the judge has not made a decision on the switch, but either way, Meadows is going to have to make a decision quickly about whether he will take the bullet for Trump. Meadows’ attorney wrote in his court filings, “These and the other acts that form the basis for the charges against Mr. Meadows all fall squarely within his conduct as Chief of Staff. This is precisely the kind of state interference in a federal official’s duties that the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution prohibits, and that the removal statute shields against.” Advantages for Meadows in moving to federal court would widen the jury pool to an area more GOP-heavy, plus a televised trial is not likely which would expose him to more embarrassment during the trial.

For the above hearing, DA Fani Willis subpoenaed Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and two others who were present during the infamous “find 11,780 votes” phone call that precipitated two charges against Meadows. In court filings, it was noted that a government watchdog agency found Meadows and other Trump officials in their political activity prior to the election violated federal law. “Since the defendant was forbidden by law to use his authority or influence to interfere with or affect the result of an election or otherwise participate in activity directed toward the success of Mr. Trump as a candidate for the presidency, every single one of these activities fell outside the scope of his duties, both as a matter of fact and as a matter of law,” prosecutors wrote. Should these activities be adjudged to be in the scope of his duties, Meadows must then prove he has a tenable federal defense.

A brief written by eight prosecutors and federal officials backing the prosecutors in the Georgia case, all having served in GOP administrations. One of the individuals was J. Michael Luttig, a former federal appeals court judge with whom we are familiar from his appearance before the J6 Committee and numerous talk shows. The eight wrote, “The purpose of federal-officer removal statute – to protect federal operations by preventing retribution in state court for locally unpopular exercises of federal authority – would not be served by removal here. To the contrary, removal would be perverse, as this prosecution arises from interference with state-government operations and seeks to vindicate Georgia’s voice in a federal election, the very contest from which federal authority flows.” If the judge rules in favor of Meadows‘ move to the federal court, others indicted in the case will attempt to do the same and it is feared that all co-defendants will automatically be moved, as is being argued by indicted former Trump Justice Department official, Jeffrey Clark, whose hearing is scheduled for September 18. We can be certain that Trump is watching closely, though he unsuccessfully tried to move his New York hush money case to federal court, which is under appeal.

A commenter on the Quorum website says, “In a shocking roll of the legal dice, Mark Meadows preemptively put himself on the stand during pre-trial motions in a desperate attempt to convince a judge that participating in a wildly illegal and extremely clumsy conspiracy to overthrow our democracy with a crackpot team of America’s worst lawyers and ideological sociopaths was somehow “part of the job” of being Chief of Staff to the president…riiiiiiiiight!” Bill Palmer on his blog writes, “It’s one thing for Meadows to try the low percentage play of trying to get his Fulton Country criminal charges moved to federal court. Even though he’s unlikely to win, it can’t hurt to try, right? Actually, it can hurt to try, quite a bit, when you’re as much of an idiot as Meadows is. Meadows made the ground-breakingly stupid decision to take the stand under oath during the hearing about moving the trial. During that testimony he appears to have committed perjury, which can disqualify his request and get him hit with additional criminal charges. But it gets stupider. Meadows’ stated reason for going along with Donald Trump’s criminal plot to overthrow the election? He said that if he didn’t go along with it, ‘I know I would get yelled at’ by Trump. No really, he said this, on the witness stand. This admission wipes out a whole range of reasonable doubt defenses that Meadows might have tried to use. Meadows just made it a whole lot easier to convict him a trial. Meadows keeps proving himself to be astoundingly stupid. Fiction writers would have a hard time coming up with this character and making it believable.” As Sancho would say, “Hope is a good breakfast, but a bad supper.”

The aforementioned judge J. Michael Luttig in a recent appearance on Nicolle Wallace’s MSNBC show, claims that he has never been a “political person, or a political partisan” though he held the views, beliefs and principles, and the policy positions of the GOP during his lifetime. He is troubled by the current position and direction of today’s Republican party and is hopeful that it will come to its senses, both collectively and constitutionally. Together with Harvard’s Laurence Tribe, Luttig penned a column in the New York Times explaining their belief that Trump can be barred from holding office by using the 14th Amendment of the Constitution. Both the Attorney General and the Secretary of State of New Hampshire announced that they are seriously considering barring Trump’s name from the state ballot, based on Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which states that those who have “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” may be disqualified from running for office again…for which Trump has been indicted.

Or how about, as Bocha Blue writes on the Palmer Report, that Trump be tried as an axe murderer? He quotes Georgia Republican and former Lieutenant Governor Geoff Duncan’s harsh words about Trump and Republicans in general as saying, “Trump has the moral compass of an axe murderer.” Sans axe, Trump managed to kill hundreds through his COVID-19 negligence, and his fomenting of the insurrection resulted in the death of one rioter and eventually several Capitol police officers. Blue says, “So yes, there is blood on Donald Trump’s hands. I thank Duncan for these remarks, not that they will have any weight with the Republican party, but in this case, it’s the thought that counts.”

The Lincoln Project website points to people trying to compare the Georgia case, with Trump and the 18 co-conspirators, to Watergate, but analyzes it as going much deeper because it indicts every member of the GOP…senators, congress members, staffers, the RNC, big money donors…corruption that goes to the very core of the GOP. And that’s why the Former Guy is being defended so vociferously…the whole bunch is tainted! President Nixon had to reckon with his own party, which had a moral conviction in evidence which has long since disappeared. Trump’s criminal enterprise is so feared that it’s easier to go along, in an attempt to legitimize the lies and false conspiracies. Sadly, these ignoramuses have the ear of a good portion of the American electorate who are scarfing up those “Never Surrender” mug-shot mugs, posters and t-shirts following Trump’s surrender.

SiriusXM radio host Dean Obeidallah thinks a legitimate legal case can be made against Trump, that he has violated U.S. copyright laws by hawking merchandise using the Fulton County mugshot. Indictment Don bragged that $7M flowed into his coffers from the $34 t-shirts and $25 mugs as soon as they were offered, but the rightful recipient of that money may be the Fulton County Sheriff’s department, an entity which could use a huge influx of funds for its ailing, poor conditions. According to a 2022 article in the University of Georgia School of Law’s Journal of Intellectual Property Law, “In the context of photographs taken by law enforcement during the booking process, the author of the mugshot photograph is the law enforcement agency.” So, does Fulton County want to see The Don in court…again…over copyright infringement?

Aldous J. Pennyfarthing writes, “After being mugshot (mugshouted? mugsharted?), Trump returned to X, which is what nobody calls the platform formerly known as Twitter, to send an X, which is what nobody calls a post formerly known as a ‘tweet,’ to his supporters in the death cult, which is what many of us call the party formerly known as the GOP. The sweet included Trump’s mugshot and a grift summons. Remarkably, QAnon folks saw something in it other than a surly, glowering weirdo who looks like he’s on Day Two of a three-day Strawberry Yoo-hoo cleanse. ‘It’s always darkest before the storm,’ one Trump supporter tweeted in response to the mugshot. ‘Tsunami Trump is coming for the swamp.'” Aldous J. questions the statement with, “Wouldn’t a tsunami make swamp immeasurably worse? Shouldn’t that be Wet Vac Trump? Or Intracranial Stent Trump?” It has been said that Donald Trump can be described as “a poor man’s idea of a rich man, a weak man’s idea of a strong man, and a dumb man’s idea of a smart man.” Touché! As Steve Schmidt said, “America has had its share of president’s who were crooks (Warren G. Harding, Richard Nixon), bigots (Andrew Jackson, James Buchanan), and incompetents (Andrew Johnson, George W. Bush). But never before Donald Trump have we had a president who combined all these qualities.”

Trump, in one of his Fox News & Agitprop interviews recalled the cognitive test he took during his presidency, under the supervision of White House doctor Ronny Jackson, and indicating that he had taken another test recently. “If you’re in the office of the presidency, we have to be sharp. The exam was 30 or 35 questions. The first questions are very easy, the last questions are much more difficult.” And we all remember the to-do he made earlier over the memory portion, of his being able to recall the words, “person, woman, man, camera, TV” Trump went on to say that his results impressed the medical staff, “They say, ‘Nobody gets it in order.’ It’s not that easy, but for me it was easy. And that’s not any easy question. They say, ‘That’s amazing, how did you do that?’ I do it because I have, like, a good memory. Because I’m cognitively there. Joe Biden should take the test.” Court, jury, verdict, prison…repeat those words several times, Donny.

After Trump’s mugshot was released, Georgia artist Chris Veal began painting a large mural on a building in Atlanta, using the photo in his creation, with right-wingers applauding what they thought was a protest against the arrest of the former prez. Veal finished his mural, to which a word bubble was added, which read, “M.A.G.A. My Ass Got Arrested.” The artist says feedback has been positive, with passersby smiling, laughing and giving him high-fives.

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

“Hawaii”

 “I thought my book was done, then we went to Hawaii and the whole last chapter happened.”
~Mariel Hemingway

“Hawaii is still the single most frequent fantasy destination, not because of political stability or conveniences, but because Hawaii seduces the imagination. It’s the perfect postcard – no props, no fillers.”
~Robert Wintner

“Hawaii is a paradise born of fire.”-
~Rand McNally

...

Have some fun! Here’s a bit of standup from Matteo Lane, one of my recent favorites 🙂


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...
Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

Aug 30 – Sep 5, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton…reactions to and from Brave and Free Santa Cruz, Sandy Lydon talk, goodbye Linda Burman-Hall, movie critiques. Greensite…on West Cliff Drive well-funded not-so hidden agenda. Schendledecker…what makes safer streets. Steinbruner… county codes and Swenson, coastal commission and grant, new Aptos library, new county charter. Hayes…August’s flower. Patton…Kissinger’s crimes. Matlock…flight risk on the stare away to the big chair. Eagan Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress pick of the week: strange celebrity talents… Quotes. “Hard Work” & “Labor Day”

...

PACIFIC AND COOPER STREETS JANUARY 4, 1965. Back then it was our very own Santa Cruz County Bank. Now it’s Pacific Avenue’s Surf Shop. Do note how wide the streets and the cars are…progress??

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE August 28

BRAVE AND FREE in Santa Cruz.

Joy Schendledecker wrote her weekly piece here in BrattonOnline a couple of weeks ago (August 7). She dealt with and mentioned the Brave and Free group. It caused all sorts of hell. From one reader…

“About the malicious article, it’s clear that Joy knows nothing about Brave and Free and has never been to a meeting. Last week, the featured speaker was Lira Fillipini detailing the work to get the Stop the Skyscrapers on the ballot. We also have had videos about the WEF, the push for digital IDs through the cashless society. Joy has some wonderful politics but she is not cut out for holding office. I don’t think she could win an election as she has alienated some of her base”.

MORE BRAVE AND FREE REACTION. Keith McHenry, who is the co-founder of the global movement Food Not Bombs, wrote a 4000 word response to Joy’s essay. I’m running the entire piece…its well worth thinking about… 

JOY FOR MAYOR – Welcome to Brave and Free Santa Cruz

“It’s easy to understand why people in less-educated classes have rallied around Trump as their best warrior against the educated class” – David Brooks – commentator – August 4, 2023.

In her post on BrattonOnline (8/7), Joy Schendledecker may have jumped to some conclusions about the local community group Brave and Free Santa Cruz. I am pleased that she has given me the opportunity to introduce more people to our efforts to protect our health, defend our civil liberties and work for peace.

Brave and Free’s first action was our participation in the Fourth of July Parades in 2022, where we were greeted with enthusiastic support by the public. It seems many people were done with the coercion, restrictions and mandates, and were relieved that someone was breaking the silence.

With economic conditions growing more difficult, with attacks on our privacy through the implementation of biometric ID connected to programmable Central Banks Digital Currency, and with threats of a global war, we need more groups like Brave and Free Santa Cruz that are bringing people together from diverse political, racial and cultural backgrounds.

I have found that people share much more in common with one another than what the media says divides us. We all want to enjoy time with our families and friends. We want to have a safe place to sleep and tasty food to eat, we want to live a life of meaning with dignity.

But those in power want us fighting and have intentionally magnified our differences, fostering a red blue tribalism.

One of the most terrifying features cultivated by those in power is how close-minded people who support their agenda have become. Anyone who isn’t on board is considered a dumb hick Trump Putin puppet.

We are considered that “basket of deplorables”.  Yet we are that working class that Joy for Mayor’s campaign literature claimed to be supporting. We are the people who repair your cars, prepare your food and wire your homes. We are people who are capable of thinking for ourselves.

Joy’s essay echoes the perspective of David Brooks, when he sneers at struggling Americans calling us “the less-educated classes”, while also assuming we all support Trump. But really, we are the essential workers. Thankfully, a growing number of people are understanding that the amplified caricature of division exploited by the ruling class isn’t a true depiction of our country. It’s a fiction.

I would have never imagined that the left which I have been a part of for over five decades would come to support NATO expansion and the arming of white nationalists and Nazis. A left that supports the escalation in the nine year Ukrainian war. We denounced Victoria Nuland and her boss Dick Cheney when they instigated the Iraq war based on lies, but we praise her today for starting the war against Russia also based on lies. This conflict with Russia is on the verge of becoming a world war, this time between nuclear armed nations.

This is a left that has abandoned class struggle and instead embraces the master’s hyped-up divide and conquer culture wars. Many of my left friends have become enforcers of the program to geofence ourselves into the billionaire class’s digital prison. A left that has abandoned the right to free speech, and now argues that we must be protected from information that might challenge the interests of the military industrial state.

The gatekeepers of correct-think work at places like the Aspen Institute’s Commission on Information Disorder, whose website brags of the inclusion of former CIA agents on its board.  These gatekeepers work at NATO’s Atlantic Council and the International Monetary Fund, with their plans for a programmable Central Bank Digital Currency linked to biometric facial recognition. They also work at the United Nations, which is promising to provide “proof of personhood’ digital ID for everyone on Earth. No wonder Elon Musk plans to place 65,000 satellites in orbit in this program to connect everyone to their totalitarian matrix. Privacy has vanished.

THE LEFT’S LONG TRADITION OF RESISTING THE GLOBALIZATION OF THE ECONOMY

The left I have been a part of has a long history of organizing against the globalization of the economy. On a chilly March 26, 1981, Food Not Bombs set up its first soup line outside the Federal Reserve Tower on Atlantic Avenue in Boston, to protest the policies of the Bank of Boston, its interlocking board of directors, and their investments in a global web of resource extraction and ghetto creating redlining.

We protested Clinton’s NAFTA. We rallied outside the offices of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund during their annual meetings. In 1992 I joined tens of thousands of labor, environmental and human rights activists in Bonn, West Germany to protest the creation of the Euro and the European Union.

Every year the left gathers in Davos, Switzerland to denounce the exploitative policies of the World Economic Forum.  In 1997, I spent two months traveling North America on the UnFree Trade Tour, speaking out against the World Trade Organization’s framework of corporate consolidation.  We formed the Direct Action Network, disrupting the WTO’s Seattle summit in November 1999 and took our protest against the WTO to Cancún and Genoa.

I worked with anti-war activist Ronnie Cummings and food sovereignty activist Vandana Shiva on the Millions Against Monsanto Campaign in an effort to stop the patenting of seeds. Private ownership of life is one key element of the trade agreements that we have been fighting against.

So, when the institutions that those of us had spent decades protesting against started to implement what they called Build Back Better, Fourth Industrial Revolution, and “Great Reset”, I knew I had to push back.

CITIZEN POLICING IN THE SERVICE OF THE STATE AND THEIR BILLIONAIRE MASTERS

What surprised me was how many of those I had been working with suddenly came to the defense of Trump’s Operation Warp Speed, and his deployment of the military counter measures born from the gain-of-function research that my friends and I had spent decades organizing against.

Even more horrifying was the way these allies willingly enforced the authoritarian orders of the corporate state. They blocked the participation of the working class from their meetings, cafes and film showings, a working class which is understandably suspicious of government mandates and threats to their employment.

So, on the day Biden announced the end of the pandemic, I went to London Nelson Community Center to support Joy’s campaign for mayor. Soon after I arrived, when I failed to show my vaccination papers, three of her supporters started physically assaulting me in this public facility. That “show your papers” demand recalled the dark days of Apartheid South Africa, the East German secret police Stasi or my days with working with Palestinian farmers and merchants on the West Bank.  Another local peace activist in her 70’s was also the victim of assault and battery at the same event when she failed to show her papers. Violently brutalizing your supporters might not be the best way to win an election.

Naturally, when I was being personally threatened by the emergence of this new totalitarian atmosphere, I supported the formation of a local movement to stop it. There were many months when my family and I thought we were alone in seeing the formation of a dystopian fascist corporate state. I recalled the sad entries in German artist Kathe Kollwitz’s diary about her colleagues’ growing support of Hitler.   It would be months before I would learn that other progressive activists shared my horror at the clampdown.

ARE THESE PEOPLE REALLY GULLIBLE FAR-RIGHT HOMOPHOBIC RACISTS?

Two local women, Diane D. Jones, a retired carpenter, and Kathleen Lynch, a social worker, started Brave and Free Santa Cruz to defend the freedoms that are under attack. Kathleen expressed that you must be brave in these Draconian times if you wished to stay free.

A mass hysteria had ensued against anyone who did not agree with the messaging of the New York Times, National Public Radio and CNN. People were insulted and bullied into compliance with unscientifically based orders.  We now know, from FOIA emails of the NIH and court cases that the masking and six foot “social distancing” were just made up by the security agencies without any scientific basis. Stopping the virus dead in its tracks with two injections and two weeks to flatten the curve turned into months of restrictions and regular boosters. Our vaccinated friends kept getting COVID while the unvaccinated rarely contracted the illness. Now, it looks like the drumbeat demanding a return to those failed policies is again growing louder in the halls of government, in the media and online. Another winter of virtue signaling and social control.

I was as frightened as anyone when the pandemic was announced, but I soon started to think that some things were not adding up. My friend, virologist Dr. Shannon Murray, who had spent years at the NIH developing the mRNA technology, warned me against using the experimental countermeasure. She explained that the survival rate of their lab subjects was very poor and that there could be another agenda behind the pandemic.

Yet, those who just years before had been my allies in denouncing the military, the CIA and corporate power were now treating me as though I was diseased.  A baseless Witch Hunt of political correctness descended on our community. Noam Chomsky even suggested the unvaccinated be interned in prison camps and left to starve. I could relate to the concerns of Kathleen and Diane.

Joy’s essay included, “I have nothing against any of the individuals in this group, since (as far as I know) I don’t know any of them particularly well. I suspect that a few people that I like very much may be increasingly drawn to them as they are drawn to support RFK Jr’s seriously effed-up presidential bid or Ukraine anti-war positions that may lean towards Putin-apologists.”

ARE THESE PEOPLE REALLY GULLIBLE FAR-RIGHT HOMOPHOBIC ANTI SEMITIC RACISTS? (Part 2)

One of the people Joy doesn’t “know particularly well” is Kathleen Lynch so I will share a bit about her and you can see if you think she is politically naive and would as Joy said, “employ dangerous tropes and misinformation, while partnering with people and organizations that are funded by the far-right”.

When Kathleen was attending San Jose State University, she volunteered with the Catholic Workers sharing meals with the homeless. She became a staff person at the San Jose Peace Center and joined Scott Kennedy and others here in Santa Cruz in organizing against war. She was arrested protesting the nuclear arms race outside Lawrence Livermore Labs, spending two weeks in Santa Rita Jail. She also spent time incarcerated with others from the Abalone Alliance protesting the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Station.

Kathleen joined Peace Brigades International and moved to El Salvador, spending 6 years of the war in the zones of combat. She stood between a death squad and striking workers barricaded inside their factory in San Salvador, helping win their demands. She survived aerial bombing raids and armed assaults, secreted people out of the country to freedom and organized women’s groups across the rebel held territories of Morazán.

When she returned to the United States, she organized a patients’ union at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center in San Jose. Years later she would walk precincts in the snow in Reno for Bernie Sanders, and proudly stuck a Bernie for President sticker on her car’s bumper. Kathleen has also been an active member of SEIU walking picket lines.

Kathleen was a Medical Social Worker at Good Samaritan and Dominican Hospitals during the pandemic. She taught our Food Not Bombs volunteers the COVID safety protocol. She helped COVID patients, and once Trump’s vaccines were introduced, she found herself helping the vaccine injured navigate the medical system.

Most of you know something about my history. I will share some of what you may not know about to see if you agree with Joy and share her claims that I am also gullible and would let myself be used by the far right.

You may know that I co-founded the global movement Food Not Bombs in 1980. The movement is active in over 1,000 cities in over 65 countries. When Russia’s Special Military Operation started, our Moscow Food Not Bombs volunteers were arrested for marching for peace. A Putin linked white supremacist group murdered several of our volunteers, including Timur Kacharava in St. Petersburg as he was leaving the Food Not Bombs meal in November 2005.  So, I am not really a fan of Putin.

This is the background of this “deplorable” who must be an anti-semitic racist homophobe. The suggestion that Brave and Free condones racism and homophobia is odd considering my history.

What you might not know is that the Klan marched around my family’s home in Virginia with flaming torches and threw rocks at our house, because my parents stood up for the rights of our town’s only Jewish family during a PTA meeting. That same elementary school was finally forced to allow black children to attend when I was in the sixth grade, but like me they were placed in the special education class to keep us away from the good white students.

I am proud to count as good friends Black Panther leaders Kiilu Nyasha and Carol Hill. I delivered groceries to the Black Liberation Army controlled housing project at Columbia Point in Boston in the early years of Food Not Bombs. I was the director of the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee, the native American political prisoner, and helped Pam and Ramona Africa on the campaign to free Abu Jamal. I have worked with Food Not Bombs volunteers in Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia, Palestine, Turkey, and dozens of cities in Eastern Europe, Mexico, the Philippines and Indonesia. Racists always join people of color in addressing the suffering of war and poverty.

I participated with Act Up in protests against Anthony Fauci, and the police violence waged against my gay and trans friends in the Castro. I designed the weekly full color drag queen magazine “Current News”, staffed the Kansas City’s Gay Lesbian Hotline, and like most of us I have gay and lesbian friends and family members who I love.

As you may know, I did 500 nights in jail in San Francisco and faced twenty-five to life in prison for my work with Food Not Bombs. I was captured on three occasions and taken to a dark room, had my clothing ripped off, was lifted by my arms and legs until my ligaments and tendons tore, and was stuffed naked into a stress position cage for three days each time.

The FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force sent a memo to the San Francisco Field Office on August 29, 1988 after witnessing our arrests at Golden Gate Park, claiming Food Not Bombs was a “credible national security threat”. That is a huge endorsement of my ability to organize.

When I arrived at Chris Krohn’s recent San Francisco Mime Troupe after party, a dear friend and owner of Veg News happened to walk by with her brother. He had just finished reading Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States.”  He was excited to tell me that I was included in Zinn’s book. I shared that Howard and I had been friends and that he wrote the forward to my first two books. Chris Hedges wrote the forward to my last text, ‘The Anarchist Cookbook.”

NONVIOLENT RESISTANCE TO WAR AND THE ATTACKS ON OUR FREEDOMS

Again, I tell you all this in response to Joy Schendledecker’s attack against Brave and Free in Bruce Bratton’s newsletter www.BrattonOnline.com  (8/7), where she claims the group is some stealth-racist far right group made up by innocent dupes. Do you really think I am that politically unsophisticated?

Kathleen initiated Brave and Free Santa Cruz, using her decades of experience in the peace and social justice movement to inform the strategy of our local resistance to the AI managed digital prison being implemented as this phase of global centralized control. I designed the Brave and Free logo and most of our literature.

Working class people of every background joined the group. We held a series of workshops on how to build a nonviolent movement against a totalitarian government. We asked our members to read “CANVAS:  A Guide to Effective Nonviolent Struggle”.  A group of about thirty people met at the Resource Center for Nonviolence writing our Values and Mission Statement, as suggested by what we had learned from studying the process that the activists in Serbia had used to build their nonviolent resistance movement against Milosevic, much of which was based on the teachings of Gene Sharp.

When CodePink announced a national protest for an end to the nearly decade long war in Ukraine, the members of Brave and Free Santa Cruz agreed to participate. It was chilling to see our peace rally being hijacked by supporters of Ukrainian Nazi leader Stepan Bandera with their “Clear the Skies” signs. This particularly disturbed me because, in May 2014, I watched a livestream video of a mob attacking the Trade Union Center in Odessa, Ukraine, setting the building on fire and killing over 40 people. Some of those attacking the union hall waved red and black flags that I generally associate with left anarchist allies. So I wrote my Food Not Bombs friends in Ukraine to find out why anarchists were involved.  They responded that that was the flag of the far right Nazi group Azov and that their members had been terrorizing our volunteers for years. They said that they had a history of attacking the annual gay pride march and often assaulted the Roma community.

The “Clear the Skies” group at our rally were proud to show me their Facebook pages with Bandera’s photo and red and black profile backgrounds. One board member of the Resource Center for Nonviolence vigorously defended them when I expressed alarm that Nazis were participating in our peace protest, and were calling for an escalation in the conflict that would most certainly lead to a nuclear war.  CodePink’s Medea Benjamin also expressed frustration that they had attended our protests. That red and black flag can still be seen in current videos and photos flapping over the graves of those killed during the war in Ukraine, and flying on the tanks provided to them by the taxpayers of America and Europe.
While social media censors their reporting, if you look hard enough you can follow journalists like Patrick Lancaster, Wyatt Reed, and Eva Bartlett who have been reporting from the Donbas for years covering the war.

I am currently getting 15 to 20 heartbreaking calls a morning from seniors who live in rural America, seeking food. Many express anger that we are sending billions of dollars to Ukraine, while they are down to their last can of tuna and don’t have money to buy gas for their car. This crisis is only going to become more dire.  LendingTree reported on March 30, 2023 that more than 8.07 million people in the United States were behind in their monthly rent payments.

While nearly half of the members of Brave and Free probably call themselves progressive, we also have support of people who may have voted for Biden or Trump. Some members might be backing Trump, Robert F Kennedy Jr or Dr. Cornel West. Others like myself don’t care at all about the divisive Presidential theater that was designed to pit Americans against one another, to insure we will never be a threat to power.  Brave and Free doesn’t endorse any political party or personality. We are united against the threats to our health and freedoms, bound together by our values and mission statement.  We stand against war and the increased escalation in Ukraine that brings us closer every day to a nuclear conflict. That is why we chose to hold a rally for peace in Ukraine on Hiroshima Day, the anniversary of the first use of nuclear weapons on a city.

THOUGHT POLICE – SUPPORTING CENSORSHIP TO PROTECT CORPORATE DOMINATION

Joy Schendledecker also attacked the website “The Last American Vagabond” where independent journalists like Whitney Webb publish their ground breaking research on the inner workings of power and the role of the mafia, finance, and the security state in building a system of control that has no allegiance to any political party or political personality.

Whitney Webb’s two volume book “One Nation Under Blackmail” provides a detailed account of covert manipulation of our society. I can confirm from direct experience that the perspective on power that she details are accurate. We plan to show one of her interviews at our next meeting. Two of my old leftist friends, Dr Shannon Murray and Palestinian American journalist Sam Husseini both suggested I read Webb’s work, and I am pleased that they introduced me to her research.

When social media started to censor unofficial information and flooded the media with their divide and conquer propaganda, the information provided on far left sites like “The Last American Vagabond” and “The Corbett Report” provided access to information that had been silenced at the request of the state. We now know from discovery in federal lawsuits, FOIA requests and the Twitter Files that the government was able to hide experts who expressed perspectives on the pandemic, war or the economy that interfered with the agenda of the corporate state.  We have direct personal connections with the people whose websites we have linked on our website, and we know they are not supporting racists, or homophobic hate.

Joy, you seem to believe that these websites are based on the dog-whistle images on unrelated ads you may see pushed by AI algorithms. You seem to be making things up to fit your ideology. For example, it’s weird to accuse Brave and Free of endorsing a t-shirt simply because it’s on the same merchandise platform as that used by a totally different channel. Currently, I can’t access the braveandfreesantacruz.org website because our “webmaster” Commander X has disappeared with the details, and I have more important things to do. But if I could, I would add more links and sure would not remove the great links we already have.

These censors live among us. Google’s Trust and Safety team is managed by three former CIA agents. A total of 165 people from the Intelligence Community work at Google. Facebook and Twitter also have large numbers of spooks gatekeeping speech. Three years ago, everyone on the left would have been horrified by the use of the security forces to silence dissent.

Our digital history is even being rewritten. The co-founder of Wikipedia, Larry Sanger, has been making some serious allegations about the manipulation of information on the platform by intelligence agencies, specifically the Central Intelligence Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Information I could find three years ago while writing my memoir has vanished.

Before 2020, those of us on the far left lived by a slogan “Question Authority.” We stood against censorship, militarism, big Pharma, mass surveillance and CIA coups. We supported bodily autonomy, labor rights, the protection of the environment, and defended our civil liberties. That seems to no longer be the case for many of our colleague, who see themselves as the “educated class” and believe that the working class are ignorant antisemitic, homophobic, racist rednecks.

“Obey Authority” has become the slogan of the lockdown liberals.

The black, gay, lesbian, trans and Jewish members of Brave and Free Santa Cruz might not agree with Joy Schendledecker and her depiction of our organization.

Thankfully our movement is growing in response to the increasing threats to our freedom and the very real danger of a global war between nuclear armed nations.  I encourage you to join us in what has become one of the most important times in our half century of resistance to the totalitarian policies of these global institutions. I encourage Joy and her supporters to attend one of our meetings to verify their claims.

SANDY LYDON EVENING…plan ahead. On Saturday October 14 Sandy Lydon will give a talk at the Rio Theatre 1205 Soquel Avenue, East Santa Cruz at 7p.m. He’ll start at 7 and the doors open at 6:15. Tickets will go fast… so go to sandylydon.eventbrite.com. It’s sponsored by Leadership Santa Cruz County. If you want to read more from Sandy like his opinion on the college name change go to sandylydon.com/

WE’LL MISS LINDA BURMAN-HALL. It was and will be nearly impossible to enjoy serious music in our community without thinking about Linda Burman-Hall. Herb teaching music at UCSC for decades, her creating and staging the Baroque Music Festival for so many years and so much more. Even recently Linda’s devotion to the “new” radio station KSQD made it a huge success. She was great fun to go to concerts with because she always knew more than the program notes.

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

THE POPE’S EXORCIST. (NETFLIX) (6.1 IMDB). This scary, religious horror movie is taken from books by a Roman Catholic priest who actually did some exorcisms in and around the Vatican community. Russell Crowe is the priest and he’s as good as any actor could be in this touch-feely scary role.

TELEMARKETERS. (HBO) (7.7 IMDB). This is a fake documentary about those damned telemarketers who call all of us saying they are with the police and are trying to raise money for some phony police event or cause. It gives us a comedic view of their lives and how fake and almost illegal it is. Watch about half an hour…you’ll learn enough.

GOLDA. (DEL MAR THEATRE). Helen Mirren carries the role of Golda Meir and Moshe Dayan is in it and Liev Schreiber acts as Henry Kissinger. Golda is the first head (prime minister) of the new state of Israel and as you’ll be shown is/was a chain smoker (Chesterfields). It’s absorbing, well made, complex and basically covers the three week Yom Kippur war. Don’t miss it.

SHELTER. (PRIME) (6.6 IMDB) Tough to follow this mystery. A man dies in a terrible car crash…but does he die? His high school age son is nearly devastated but endures several other worldly experiences involving his dad. It’s even light and cute in parts and there’s even a Batlady and a character named Dylan Shakes. Watch at your own risk.

JURY DUTY. (PRIME SERIES) (8.3 IMDB) Be very careful this is billed as a comedy but if you’ve ever been on a jury or been excused from serving on one…it’s no laughing matter. This jury selection takes place in Huntington Beach near LA. (or as we know it “Surf City”). It’s done in a pseudo-documentary style and goes through all the legal time and mind consuming legal steps in how a jury is selected. Not too bad a movie but torture if you’ve ever done time on a complex court case.

FIVE DAYS AT MEMORIAL. (PRIME SERIES) (7.7 IMDB). Not a new one, but a good one about the disaster during and after the Katrina hurricane that hit New Orleans in August of 2005. Vera Farmiga is one of the staff and all the acting and special effects are well worth watching.

JESUS REVOLUTION. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (7.1 IMDB). A very sweet, well intentioned Christian feel good and true movie about Los Angeles teenagers in the 1970’s. Kelsey Grammer plays a minister who eventually sees that the hippies around his part of LA mean well and they all join together to worship Jesus in a slightly different way.

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

DEPP Vs. HEARD. (NETFLIX SERIES) (4.7 IMDB). Watching all 3 episodes was the guiltiest pleasure I’ve had from a screen in months. I was on Amber Heard’s side against the 60 year old Johnny Depp. And since experts say, “About 1 in 4 women and nearly 1 in 10 men have experienced some form of intimate partner violence”. It’s a terrifically spliced together documentary so that we think they were both in court at the same time.  They are both actors and you sense it constantly but do watch it…it’ll take you attention away from almost everything.

KILL BOKSOON. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.6 IMDB). She is an assassin and very good at it except that she has a daughter that she loves and who loves her too. It’s a Korean film as so many are these days…and usually they are a cut above

THE BOYS. (PRIME SERIES) (8.7 IMDB). This mess of a takeoff on Marvel Comics has Jack Quaid and a bunch of sillies dressed as Superheroes acting a nutso plot in the real world. Elizabeth Shue is back and is a welcome addition. The rest of the movie isn’t worth your time or rental.

GUILTY MINDS (PRIME SERIES) It takes place mostly in a courtroom in India when a case against a guy who’s like Harvey Weinstein gets charged with and how he handles his case. It’s complex and includes video games even a murder and an abortion. Absorbing but not great.

UNLOCKED. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.4 IMDB).   A Korean movie that centers on cell phones and hi tech murders. One woman loses her cell phone and a very clever killer finds it and uses it to tease and torture her every single move for days.  It’s fast paced, subtle, well-acted and has a surprise ending which is worth watching and waiting for

...

August 28

SEARCHING FOR THE HIDDEN AGENDA

In the above photo, if you recognize the room as city council chambers, you’d be correct. What are the people doing? My computer auto selected “A group of people praying in a church” which is not correct. Another possibility: a group of people simultaneously discovering their shoelaces are untied. Again, incorrect. It is a group of people, including me, being led in Climate calisthenics by the city’s Sustainability and Climate Action Manager at a City Council Study Session regarding West Cliff Drive on August 15th, 2023. The people in the pews include two Department Heads and other senior city staff. On the other side of the podium were four city council members, the city manager and city attorney, the latter two absenting themselves from the calisthenics portion. A total of thirteen city senior staff was in attendance, either in person or via zoom, not including the city clerk and deputy city clerk. Plus, of course the consultant team from Farallon Strategies.

This is the third city-generated public gathering addressing West Cliff Drive that I have attended. All have abundant senior staff and the consulting team in attendance. This one, held in council chambers was named, Understanding the Dynamic Coast. It was largely a repetition of previous meetings with a few updates. If you believe as I do that there is a not-so-hidden agenda here, then some of the consultant and staff comments were signaling.

Repairing last winter’s storm damage to portions of West Cliff Drive appears as an afterthought at these meetings. Even the diverted traffic off West Cliff, causing headaches for residents is labelled a “pilot-study.” Pilot for what? We did get a brief update from the city Public Works director regarding repairing the Bethany Curve Bridge where Woodrow enters West Cliff. Repairing this bridge is key to re-opening the road. According to the director, the inability to secure contractors earlier on means the timeline for the bridge repairs to begin is predicted to be spring of 2024. If fixing the damage and restoring the drive were the main goals, there would be no need for the ongoing involvement of multiple senior staff, repeated public meetings and the ever-present consulting team. Occasional updates from Public Works would be all that is needed.

The council-approved development of a fifty-year vision for West Cliff Drive should not require such an investiture of senior staff, consultants, and public monies and if it does, then maybe we cannot afford to do visioning at this time. Unless behind the scenes, these players already know what they want for West Cliff Drive and are gaming the system to fulfill that goal.

We heard a lot about Adaptive Management Strategies and Adaptive Pathways, which includes “knowns and unknowns.” That there is “regularity uncertainty” which means agencies such as the CA Coastal Commission (CCC) haven’t yet made up their minds about the future of West Cliff Drive. The red flag is if the staff and consultants who are talking with the CCC staff are pushing their agenda of “managed retreat” which will certainly include turning West Cliff into a one-way road. I suggest that is what is happening, and it excludes the public, especially those who will be most impacted by any departure from the current road configuration.

Then there’s Nature-based solutions which are being promoted and we learned have many definitions. We heard that riprap and sea walls can alter surf breaks which is true except the areas of West Cliff which need repairs already have riprap which failed due to lack of maintenance since the 1990’s, according to the engineer from Public Works whose voice has been curiously silent or silenced since the first days after the storm damage. One Nature-based solution to create wider beaches suggested in an online local publication is the depositing of sand off-shore. The writer used Seabright Beach as a great example. That beach, which significantly widened after the Small Crafts Harbor was built, also deflected the mouth of the San Lorenzo River including the build-up of a summer berm leading to flooding of the Boardwalk basement, necessitating the recent erection of expensive pipelines and pumps to keep the river lagoon water level at five feet. Be careful fiddling with Mother Nature.

We heard from the consultants that there will be limitations in future funding from the state and national levels (not supported by evidence, nor does it apply to repairing the current damage) with the conclusion that the burden for resilience will be shifted back to the local level. Does this imply that future economic development along West Cliff will therefore have to be accepted?  The non-profit Save The Waves which has an MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) with the city and accepted money from the city according to its website, highlights economic development for this stretch of the coast.

The constant refrain is that there will inevitably be similar damage from future storms, a conclusion not supported by statements from the city engineers. Of course, if repairing the current damage is delayed, there may be more damage this winter, which becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

The consultant handed it over to the city manager to conclude the meeting. His words suggest a very different future in the works for West Cliff Drive. He advised everyone “to recognize the moment, to be bold, to be innovative and forward-thinking. At the heart of all this is to build out the innovative, ambitious fifty-year vision. A foundational vision for achieving some really exciting things along West Cliff over the decades to come.”

The need to fix the damage, to return the road to its pre-damaged state for all to enjoy, to protect the lower westside neighborhoods that will be devastated if they shoulder the burden of future diverted traffic doesn’t rate even a bit part in this vision. That exclusion will not sit well with those impacted. I expect there will be bold, innovative resistance.

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.

...
August 28

WHAT MAKES SAFER STREETS, AND FOR WHOM?

Last Saturday I moderated the “Safe Streets” panel at the Transportation Justice Conference put on by the Campaign for Sustainable Transportation. It was an honor to be part of the conversation, and a great opportunity for me to dive into the subject of street safety and “Vision Zero.”

Vision Zero is a program adopted in Sweden in 1997 to eliminate traffic-related serious injury and death. Dozens of countries, and dozens of cities in the US, have adopted it in various iterations since then. At the US federal level, the National Roadway Safety Strategy and Zero Deaths and The Safe System integrate Vision Zero principles, with “Safe Streets and Roads for All” funded by “Build Back Better” infrastructure funding (aka H.R.3684 – Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act).

There are six principles that form the basis of the Safe System approach: deaths and serious injuries are unacceptable, humans make mistakes, humans are vulnerable, responsibility is shared, safety is proactive, and redundancy is crucial. Instead of the Street Smarts program created in San Ramon 3 Es (Education, Engineering, and Enforcement), Vision Zero is moving from individual blame to shared responsibility, including for those who design and implement the systems.

I see a kinship between Vision Zero principles and Harm Reduction and Abolitionist philosophies.

“By taking action at the local (and state) levels to prioritize safety in our policies and practices, we can create a new reality in which everyone — those of us walking and driving, and those of us riding a bus or a bike —feel safe and comfortable moving about our communities.” Vision Zero Network

According to the National Harm Reduction Coalition: “Harm reduction is a set of practical strategies and ideas aimed at reducing negative consequences associated with drug use. Harm Reduction is also a movement for social justice built on a belief in, and respect for, the rights of people who use drugs.”

Miriam Kaba defines abolition as: “It’s trying to bring into being a world where we have everything that we need to survive and thrive. …That includes food and shelter and education and health and art and beauty and all the things. That’s what PIC [Prison Industrial Complex] abolition is as a framework and a practice.”

Vision Zero was adopted by the Santa Cruz County Public Health department in 2017. The Santa Cruz County Community Traffic Safety Coalition has a Vision Zero Work Plan 2020-2022.

The City of Santa Cruz Public Works has been using the “Street Smarts” program. Though in 2019 city council passed their Vision Zero resolution, with a year-long Street Smarts media campaign as the main educational component, county-wide. In addition, the City of Santa Cruz 2021 Local Roadway Safety Plan addresses safety for unhoused pedestrians and cyclists, but not for others with access and functional needs.

At the county level, significant and ongoing unmet needs have been laid out by the county Elder and Disability Transportation Advisory Committee. Vision Zero is working to support municipalities and bring together agencies that historically have not collaborated much, but clearly there are deep structural and cultural challenges to full, fast implementation.

For a fascinating (depending on how much you like public policy) look at some of the challenges with implementing Vision Zero on our local streets, balancing the needs of all street users–including people with disabilities and those who feel unsafe in other ways than by traffic–watch the presentation and community dialog on Item 15 of the March 15th council meeting.

Caption: Under equality, everyone gets the same resources. Under equity, the specific historical and present-day circumstances and abilities of individuals and communities are taken into consideration to provide appropriate solutions that provide everyone with opportunities to live safe and healthy lives. © 2017 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Modified, with permission, by FHWA. https://highways.dot.gov/safety/zero-deaths/equity-roadway-safety

Another problem is the continuation of traditional enforcement measures within many adaptations of Vision Zero. For example, California Office of Traffic Safety (CA OTS) grants money to local police departments for enforcement programs. One funded program is “Before Aggressive Drivers Get Everyone Stopped” or BADGES, a multi-jurisdiction effort focused on enforcement, in place since at least 2006 and ongoing through at least September 2023.

Meanwhile, Santa Cruz County traffic stop data shows a continued pattern of racial profiling in traffic stops. Police accountability and transparency is sorely lacking in all four municipalities, though to comply with state law AB 953, The Racial Profiling and Identity Act of 2015,  we should be seeing that data in their transparency portals any day now.

Image caption: screenshot of https://www.santacruzcounty.us/VisionSantaCruz/PerformanceMeasurement/TransparencyPortal.aspx

I have lots more I want to write but I’m past my deadline! See my notes and an article that I didn’t find a way to link to here. Perhaps there will be a part 2 to this column soon, getting more into mobility justice and traffic stops. In the meantime, I’ll end with an extended quote from the website of Bike East Bay.

“People experience different intersectional barriers to mobility and feeling safe on our streets such as car-based violence, harassment, economic insecurity and public policies and processes. Mobility Justice is about investing in and supporting innovation in our marginalized communities so that we can all move free, safe, and unafraid.” And “We work with people who have lost loved ones to traffic and police violence, in neighborhoods left behind by systemic racism, and fight bureaucracies that neglect the human impacts of its actions. In the face of grief, trauma and frustration, we revive and sustain ourselves by nurturing, healing and caring for each other.”

“We work to ensure transportation planning and policies are developed, applied, and implemented to counter and redress the effects of systemic and institutional racism. We prioritize improving safety and access to bicycling for people of color, lower-income people, and immigrants to improve the health outcomes of these communities. We recognize people of color are more likely to be stopped by police for bicycle and pedestrian infractions and we will call on local police departments to disavow racially biased traffic enforcement. We strongly believe that displacement is a transportation issue and we work to keep communities in place.”

Joy Schendledecker is an artist, parent, and community organizer. She lives on the Westside of Santa Cruz with her husband, two teens, mother in law, and cats. She was a city of Santa Cruz mayoral candidate in 2022. You can email her at: schendledecker@icloud.com.

...
August 28

COUNTY CODE COMPLIANCE IS COMPLACENT FOR SWENSON

Last week, I included some photos here regarding the problems that Swenson’s Aptos Village Project Phase 2 is causing the public and the environment.  I filed a Complaint with the Santa Cruz County Code Compliance Dept. about Swenson’s contractors using most of what little public parking is left on Aptos Creek Road, even using a large pickup truck tailgate parked in front of a fire hydrant in a red curb zone.  I asked why the County was allowing this, when there is a Swenson mobile construction trailer and space for parking within the construction zone?

County Code Compliance’s answer below is shocking.  Please write Matt Machado matt.machado@santacruzcounty.us and express your thoughts on the matter.

****************

Hi Becky,

We understand that this project might bring challenges to public roads and public parking.  However, the public space utilized by the project helps meet its needs/goals to make expected progress and will only be temporarily.  We appreciate your time. 

Thank you,
Code Compliance

****************

COASTAL COMMISSION DELAYS CONSIDERATION OF COUNTY’S PLANNING DOCUMENT

The Coastal Commission will grant itself a delay of up to one year for further consideration and approval of the County’s Local Coastal Plan (LCP) proposed update for dense in-fill development in the coastal areas.

The next California Coastal Commission meeting is September 6-8.  It is a hybrid format, with in-person meeting in Eureka (location recently changed to accommodate many large wildland fires in that area). The Commission will take actions on September 6 that affect Santa Cruz County.

Although the County’s LCP was deemed complete on May 24, 2023, the updates within are so significant, tne Commission needs more time to review them. LCP-3-SCO-23-0004-1-Part B (Sustainability Update – Time Extension)

The proposed update would affect agricultural and urban areas in the coastal zones, and would restructure the permitting schemes, change zoning regulations “(including expanding allowable uses in most zoning districts and changing development and design standards), among other changes.”

  • The proposed updates would “foster mixed-use development within existing developed communities and along primary transportation corridors. The amendment also updates much of the LCP’s background text regarding the County’s physical, social, and biological context, allowed uses within particular zoning districts, and standards related to priority land uses and potential conversion of those uses, among other things.”

If you have comments, you can submit them to the Coastal Commission here

CALIFORNIA COASTAL COMMISSION AWARDS $780,000 GRANT TO SANTA CRUZ COUNTY FOR CONSULTANTS TO STUDY SEA LEVEL RISE IMPACTS AND ADAPTATION PLANS

When in doubt, do a study, and hire expensive consultants to do it.  The California Coastal Commission is set to approve awarding the County of Santa Cruz a $780,000 grant to hire a consultant to study the impacts of sea level rise, gather “robust” public input, and make some recommendations as to how the County could adapt.  Planner David Carlson asked for $733,000 in the application.  Take a look at the cost of the consultants vs. staff.  The photos are amazing, but there are none from the flooding in the coastal areas in the unincorporated areas near Watsonville.

I guess the Commission has extra money…and will award an extra $50,000 more than what Planner Carlson requested from the $31 million the State has made available.  What is not clear is why.

“Staff recommends that the Commission award $780,000 in Local Coastal Program (LCP) Local Assistance grant funds to the County of Santa Cruz to complete a series of technical studies on sea level rise (SLR) hazards, economic impacts, and adaptation pathways that will culminate in an LCP amendment on SLR. The project would build adaptation approaches at both the countywide and neighborhood scale, including phased, trigger-based adaptation pathways, as described in the County’s grant application”

I always wonder why such recommendations for our Communities have to come from an outside consultant that knows little about the area?

WILL YOU PLEASE RECONSIDER THAT?

The dates of the LAFCO Resolution approved August 2, 2023 to order the Branciforte Fire Protection District to dissolve are all inaccurate and the CalPERS cost analysis of moving the Branciforte Fire staff over to the Scotts Valley Fire District staff expired July 1, 2023.  There was no accurate budget information given to the Commission to verify the repeated claim that “this ship is sinking”.  Information supplied by the County Elections Clerk, Ms. Tricia Webber, showed that if there were to be district-based elections after the consolidation, Branciforte Fire District voters would have 51% representation in their district, and will compose more than 10% of the total voters in the combined Scotts Valley Fire District, not 7%, as LAFCO’s staff claimed.

For these reasons and more, I filed a REQUEST FOR RECONSIDERATION, for Public Benefit, with the LAFCO, as any person can do.  I feel this is important because LAFCO is planning, in my opinion, a number of annexations (or “reorganizations”, as this one has been termed) and the manner in which the Branciforte Fire Protection District is handled sets a precedent.

As it stands, the people in that existing District will surrender all monies and assets that include their fire station and engines, yet have no effective representation.

At the time of writing this, LAFCO has not yet posted the agenda for the September 6, 2023 meeting when the REQUEST FOR RECONSIDERATION will be heard.  Meeting Schedule, Agendas & Minutes | Santa Cruz LAFCO

However, you can find the link to the approved document from August 2 meeting here

NEW APTOS LIBRARY GETS BIG MONEY BOOST FROM FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY

Last Tuesday, the Board of Supervisors accepted $394,000 from the Friends of the Santa Cruz Public Libraries. Listen to the presentation here, as Item #7

The new library is massive, and is due to open in October.  I am glad to see the solar panels on the roof…projected to supply all the energy the library will need for operation.

NEW LIVE OAK LIBRARY ANNEX MOVING ALONG BUT WILL HAVE NO BOOKS

If you haven’t visited the Simpkins Swim Center lately, you might be interested in knowing what the new Live Oak Library Annex is looking like these days.   Even though the County used monies from Measure S Library taxation to pay for this, there will be no books and no librarian there.

Read the Santa Cruz County Civil Grand Jury Report about this

Contact your County Board of Supervisors with your thoughts; Board of Supervisors boardofsupervisors@santacruzconty.us

WE WILL PAY OVER $9,000 EACH MONTH FOR THE NEXT 13 YEARS FOR A PARK THAT KIDS CAN’T SAFELY ACCESS?

Last Tuesday, the County Board of Supervisors swiftly approved $2.3 million to  purchase the 38-acres property at 188 Whiting Road for a new park out near the County Fairgrounds, with zero discussion regarding how kids will be able to safely access the proposed “temporary soccer fields”.

While the staff report made claims of collaboration and agreements with the Fairgrounds, this park has never been publicly discussed as an agenda item by the Fair Board in the last four years and the current CEO knew nothing about the new park next to the Fairgrounds.

Will it be safe for kids to ride their bikes on Highway 152?  The alternate route is Paulsen Road, which is narrow and has no shoulder.

The deal has been struck behind closed doors.  The taxpayers will shoulder $9,000 every month to pay for this purchase at a time when Parks Dept. cannot even take care of what they already have, and upgrading the existing County-owned Pinto Lake Park or developing the vacant County-owned land at Freedom Boulevard and Crestview where families can easily and safely access the parks was never even discussed.

Write Parks Director Jeff Gaffney jeff.gaffney@santacruzcounty.us with your thoughts and solutions.

WHAT ABOUT A NEW COUNTY CHARTER?

Tune in this Friday at 1pm to Santa Cruz Voice and “Community Matters” to hear a discussion about what happened when citizens tried to change the Santa Cruz County Charter.

A HAPPY AFTERNOON CONCERT IN FELTON

Many thanks to Hallcrest Vineyards in Felton for the wonderful outdoor concert featuring well-known cowboy singer and song writer Dave Stamey and Annie Lydon singing harmony.  It was a great venue, and wonderful music for a lighthearted afternoon.

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING AND ASK QUESTIONS THAT SIMPLY NEED TO BE ANSWERED.  GO TO A CONCERT AND HAVE SOME FUN.

MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING SOMETHING.

Cheers,

Becky

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

...
August 28

AUGUST’S FLOWER

California harebell is the native wildflower I’m challenging folks to seek in the near future. August seems like it might be a difficult month to see wildflowers, but this species wasn’t easy to pick out from a wide variety of native wildflowers blossoming right now. I picked California harebell (Smithiastrum prenanthoides) because it is not easy to find, but finding it will lead to lots of other discoveries.

Harebells

Harebells – what an evocative name! Perhaps this common name is from association with rabbit (hare) habitat. I haven’t heard anyone call a local rabbit a hare, but I just saw a large rabbit in the high snowy areas of the Eastern Sierra Nevada which is called a ‘snowshoe hare.’ It would be a mistake to associate this California harebell with bunnies for reasons I’ll share in a bit.

Harebells are common garden plants for folks who are keen on blue flowers in their gardens. Blue is a sought-after flower color for gardeners, and harebells in the garden area large, luxuriant bell-shaped flowers. Our California harebell, however, is a speck of a blue flower, easily overlooked. And, with additional irony, our harebell is not bell shaped, at all. This is getting confusing!

Taxonomy!

One day, if anyone wants to help, I’ll lead a common name registry for plants…to help solve some of the confusion with names. How many people have given up on plant identification from frustration with Latin names or the many vastly different common names assigned to plants. There is also the problem with common names that don’t fit. Like, in this case, ‘bellflower’ – I was imagining what one would need to do in order to make a bell shaped like this flower. The bell would have had to have been made of pliable metal and dropped from a very high location to explore the side of the bell in ribbons. Somehow, in this scenario, the ‘clapper’ of the bell would have to survive to stick way outside of the exploded body. If I were to rename this windflower in a way that makes it easier to relate to the plant, I’d call it something like ‘tiny blue woodland trumpets’ The plural in this case because you always see the flower in bunches, never singly. Delving into the Latin is a cause for a headache, but bear with me to discover what botanists put up with.

When I first learned the plant, it was called Campanula prenanthoides but then it was changed to Smithiastrum prenanthioides. My botanist friends did their solid best to train me to this new name and then I started writing this essay to discover the name has changed yet again to Asyneuma prenanthoides – that genus has similar non-bell shaped flowers but is found in Northern Africa and Eurasia, with lots of interesting species found in Turkey. Being a gardener, and squint as I may, I couldn’t see how this plant was a campanula except for its beautiful blue color. So, any of these new names are better than the old one, with its odd reference to what might otherwise conjure bells and rabbits and such. Oh, but the common name stayed!

If you can get past the issue of Latin names, which seem here to stay with the classification of Life, there is one thing you might celebrate about the bouncing about of Latin names. Let’s smile and shout out cheerily every time something changes its Latin name. It means that someone is making a living studying, and publishing, taxonomy. Yes, someone is actually making a living studying the relationships of living beings to one another.

Where to Look

Back in the real world of flowers, how might you find these beautiful blue wildflowers? Santa Cruz County is ALMOST the southern range limit of this species along the coast. Botanical wizard extraordinaire Dean Taylor documented the species on the West Slope of Cushing Mountain in Big Sur- so, maybe others can find the species in more Monterey County locations. In Santa Cruz County, look in dark moist spots in forests. I find it in areas that are seepy in the winter and dry and shady in the summer where there isn’t much competition. Roadcuts are good, but let’s try to find the species where roads haven’t made marks.

Visiting shady forests is a good thing to do in midsummer, anyways, don’t you agree? Get cool, smell that distinct warm redwood scent, feel the crunch crunch of dry redwood branchlets and needles under your feet. And, celebrate the lack of smoke in the air this summer, at least for the time being.

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

...

August 22

#234 / Kissinger’s Crimes

Having recently had a birthday, Henry Kissinger is now over 100 years old. If you don’t know who he is, please feel free to click the following link, which will take you to an extensive Wikipedia write up on Dr. Kissinger.

The unflattering picture of Kissinger, reproduced above, comes courtesy of an online story from the London Times, dated in May 2021. This current blog posting of mine, referencing Kissinger, was stimulated by a May 24, 2023, story published by Democracy Now. Here’s the Democracy Now headline, with a link to the story:

Kissinger at 100: New War Crimes Revealed in Secret Cambodia Bombing That Set Stage for Forever Wars

To summarize what Democracy Now has to say, let me give you the initial paragraph:

A bombshell new investigation from The Intercept reveals that former U.S. national security adviser and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was responsible for even more civilian deaths during the U.S. war in Cambodia than was previously known. The revelations add to a violent résumé that ranges from Latin America to Southeast Asia, where Kissinger presided over brutal U.S. military interventions to put down communist revolt and to develop U.S. influence around the world. While survivors and family members of these deadly campaigns continue to grieve, Kissinger celebrates his 100th birthday this week. “This adds to the list of killings and crimes that Henry Kissinger should, even at this very late date in his life, be asked to answer for,” says The Intercept’s Nick Turse, author of the new investigation, “Kissinger’s Killing Fields.” We also speak with Yale University’s Greg Grandin, author of Kissinger’s Shadow: The Long Reach of America’s Most Controversial Statesman (emphasis added).

When I was in college, I read what was then Kissinger’s brand-new and much-heralded book, The Necessity of Choice. I gather, from an online search, that this book is pretty much out of print, today. Amazon reported having two paperback copies available (as of May 24, 2023), with the low-priced paperback listed at $84.73. Yesterday (I just checked), those seem to have been sold. I couldn’t find my own copy, which kind of surprised me, since I never throw away a book, but I haven’t exhausted all the bookshelves on which I might have lodged it, and if I can find my copy, maybe I can make some money by selling it off. I more or less remember thinking that the book was quite good, when I read it, shortly after it was published in 1962, but then I met Kissinger personally. Having done so, I have never since been a fan.

MY HENRY KISSINGER STORY

As I say, I did meet Henry Kissinger personally, at Stanford University – and I had some dealings with him. This was back in 1964; at least, I think so. I am a bit unclear on the actual date; it could have been in 1963. Having just read in the Democracy Now story that Kissinger should really be considered a war criminal, I thought I would tell my personal “Henry Kissinger Story,” to demonstrate to those reading this blog why I am NOT a Henry Kissinger fan – aside from the fact that there is a good argument that he is, and should be considered, a war criminal. Based on  my personal experience, I expect the worst from Henry Kissinger, always, and I am not that surprised to hear about how he, personally, helped our government to commit atrocities not previously all that evident. As I reviewed the Wikipedia entry on Kissinger, I noted that it says that the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Kissinger, in 1973, was “controversial.” Well, those who protested were definitely on to something!

I entered Stanford University as a freshman in the Fall of 1961, and during the 1961-1962 academic year, I lived in Wilbur Hall, a dormitory for freshmen men. During the Fall and Winter Quarters of the 1962-1963 academic year, I attended the Stanford overseas campus in Tours, France. I was back on the Stanford campus for the Spring Quarter of 1963, residing in Stern Hall. I also lived in Stern Hall during the 1963-1964 academic year.

While living at Stern, I helped coordinate the Stern Hall “Guest In Residence Program.” Again, I am not certain, now, what year this was. Notable people would come and actually live in the dormitory, eat with the students, and also make speeches for the campus and community at large. During the time I helped run the program, Henry Kissinger was our invited guest. As I say, I am pretty sure that was sometime during the 1963-1964 academic year.

I can’t remember all my responsibilities, but I guess I was considered to be “in charge” of the Guest In Residence Program the year that Kissinger was our guest – although I certainly had played no part in deciding whom to invite. One day, I was called to the phone, to take a call from Dr. Kissinger. There were no “texts” or “emails.” Phones were the high-tech way to communicate, and the call from Dr. Kissinger, which somehow came to me, was made four days before Kissinger was supposed to arrive for his stay at Stern Hall. In the call, Dr. Kissinger told me that he wasn’t coming – at least, he wasn’t coming if I couldn’t pay his first-class airfare to and from Stanford. I think that was then about $1,000. Kissinger was under contract to show up, and there were no provisions in his contract for any reimbursement for transportation. I did know about the contract, and so I reported the contractual situation to Dr. Kissinger. Well, said Kissinger, that was his booking agent’s fault, but WE were going to have to rectify it.

I had not made the arrangements with Kissinger myself, but I was now tasked with getting Kissinger another $1,000 or so, all within a couple of days. If I couldn’t deliver, the whole program would go down in flames.

I more or less remember appealing to the President’s office, and to the Politics Department, and to the administrators of Stern Hall. Somebody, and I don’t remember who, did come through. The money was found. Kissinger came.

When he arrived at Stern Hall, Kissinger was met by an official delegation, and I was among them. He shook my hand cordially, and gave me a big smile. No apologies for shaking down the program. No acknowledgment that he had acted badly.

Like I say, I am NOT a fan of Henry Kissinger. And I am not a fan of his war-mongering foreign policy either.

If you would like to learn a bit more about the kind of foreign policies that Kissinger has enabled, I do suggest that you read the article in Democracy Now. Or, read what The Nation has to say, in its article, “Kissinger, War Criminal – Still at Large at 100.”

On the other hand, there are those who celebrate Kissinger. The former President of Armenia, for instance, Armen Sarkissian, calls him a “great teacher of statesmen.” Click this link to read what Sarkissian has to say. If you can penetrate the paywall erected by The Wall Street Journal, you will find that Sarkissian finds great virtue in the kind of cynical realpolitik that qualifies Kissinger for that “war criminal” designation, in the eyes of others.

Eyes like mine.

Like I say, I am NOT a fan.

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

...
August 28

FLIGHT RISK ON THE STAREAWAY TO THE BIG CHAIR

Donald Trump surrendered on Thursday of last week after being indicted by the Fulton County Georgia grand jury, with all the hoopla that one might expect from him as he took advantage of the prime time TV coverage that milked his every move as he traveled from New Jersey to Georgia and back again. A threatened “major news conference” to prove his innocence with “new evidence” was cancelled the previous Monday at his legal team’s insistence since his claims were without merit, though he insisted he is innocent of any wrongdoing and is being politically persecuted, a broken record that is wearing awfully thin at this point as the evidence continues to mount. Trump’s attempts to relitigate the stolen election claim within the cases against him will certainly be a sticking point for the legal system and will require a strong push to keep him at bay.

Trump had earlier expressed his unhappiness about the judge setting his bond at $200K in the Fulton County Georgia case, but confirmed that he would nonetheless surrender, at the same time lashing out at DA Fani Willis in a bizarre, mocking post on Truth Social. “The failed District Attorney of Fulton County, Fani Willis, insisted on a $200,000 bond from me,” he wrote. “I assume, therefore, that she thought I was a ‘flight’ risk – I’d fly far away, maybe to Russia, Russia, Russia, share a gold domed suite with Vladimir, never to be seen or heard from again.” He added, “Would I be able to take my very ‘understated’ airplane with the gold TRUMP affixed for all to see? Probably not, I’d be much better off flying commercial – I’m sure nobody would recognize me!” Sure, and maybe Putin can arrange a small business jet for the last leg of your journey!

Trump’s bond agreement, known as a consent bond order, sets strict rules for his release. He will not be allowed to communicate with witnesses or co-defendants about the case, except through his lawyers, and is barred from intimidating witnesses or co-defendants. He cannot make any “direct or indirect threat of any nature against the community or to any property in the community,” including in “posts on social media or reposts of posts” from others on social media. His attorneys crack the whip as much as they dare on this restriction, but try as they might, the uncontrollable Former Guy can hardly restrain himself as he slowly digs a deeper hole. Bond agreements set for eighteen of Trump’s co-conspirators varied in bond amounts and court orders, though restrictions were not as strict as those set for Trump, and all were charged and processed during the week like any other arrestee, with fingerprints and a mug shot taken at the main county jail. The booking during prime-time viewing hours was also said by some to be an effort by Trump to minimize the charges and distract from the indignity of his surrender, but the almost instantaneous offer by his campaign for t-shirts with the newly released mugshot dispels that notion. “NEVER SURRENDER” it blares beneath the glowering and hostile shot of the former prez, a pose that he undoubtedly aped, and rehearsed…unlike an unexpected arrest, from a black and white shot of Adolf Hitler, as posted on Steve Schmidt’s The Warning blog on Saturday, August 26…a picture is worth a thousand words.

Some are calling Trump’s look as “The Kubrick Stare,” one of movie director Stanley Kubrick’s techniques, where he had the character stare at the camera with a forward tilt, conveying to the viewer that the individual on the screen has reached the peak of mental derangement. Think Jack Nicholson in ‘The Shining’; R. Lee Emery in ‘Full Metal Jacket’; and Malcolm McDowell in ‘A Clockwork Orange.’ One writer refers to the Greek myth where the goddess Athena punished Medusa by transforming her hair into a bed of serpents, whereupon this monster creation would then turn to stone anyone who gazed into her eyes. Seems right! Instead of snakes, Trump’s head may be covered in mousse or spray, but avoid those eyes. As writer John Waters mightsuggest, our Hairpiece Himmler may use cornstarch to stiffen his locks…which would explain why he avoids going out into the rain, and by ignoring Melania or Barron, keeps his umbrella to himself, otherwise…Gravy Train!

Megan Garber in The Atlantic says, “Welcome to the age of mugshot rule. Trump, evidently pleased with his portrait, broadcasted it on social media. The caption he appended to the shot suggests that, in this elemental legal document, questions of legality are beside the point. And it attempts to turn the language of the accusation against itself. It is a reminder to all who see it of the threat embodied by a vengeful Trump. His photo is a symbolic gesture, but is also something of an omen. This will never be over, it suggests. That face, with all its dangers, will only become more difficult to avoid.” Ned Ryun of the American Majority, a conservative political-training organization, was asked by Fox host Jesse Watters to comment on the mugshot, in reply saying that Republicans should counter with their own indictments. “You’re saying Republicans should promise mugshots of Democrats,” Watters suggested. “One hundred percent,” Ryun shot back. Fox’s Sean Hannity began his show, displaying Trump’s new picture, with the intro, “You are looking at Joe Biden – oh, I’m sorry, Donald Trump’s official mugshot.” Pausing, he went on, “Joe Biden will be soon enough anyway.”

Former Trump attorney, the indicted Kenneth Chesebro, apparently attempted to get DA Willis in a bind with trial scheduling, by requesting a speedy trial, which by law must occur within the next succeeding regular court term, after August 31. Consequently, if a trial is not initiated within sixty days, the defendant goes free, per Georgia law. Chesebro probably choked when Willis indicated she’s ready to go, scheduling a trial on October 23; Trump and his team probably choked since they have been attempting to delay the start of trials until the 2024 election is past. By doing this, citizen Trump might be able to lose twenty-five more pounds of weight, and reach a height of seven feet; upon his arrest in New York he told registrants that he was 6’2″ and 240 pounds, but at his Fulton jail processing he had lost twenty-five pounds and grown an inch taller! Or maybe the lifts in his shoes are saltwater logged. Stormy Daniels then posted on X, “Mmmkay! And I’m 110 lbs and a virgin!” She says she’s known 215 pound men, and Tiny Trump was not one of them.

Alina Habba, attorney and legal mouthpiece for Trump, was interviewed by Fox News Sunday host, Shannon Bream following the Georgia booking, saying, “We’re not concerned because we know the facts of these cases, which I can’t get into obviously for privileged reasons. But I can tell you it’s to tie him up, it’s definitely political.” Habba insists there is no need to prep Trump for any of the four pending trials he’s facing, and the team isn’t concerned because he’s “intelligent.” Bream didn’t fall over backwards, nor ask Habba for clarification on this pronouncement, but we can visualize the MAGA base across the nation, in unison, nodding their heads in agreement. No, that was NOT a Taylor Swift earthquake, only marbles rolling inside spacious skulls, but it was terrifyingly real! Attorney Habba went on to say, “If this was a normal person, I could understand the concern. President Trump is not your average person. He’s incredibly intelligent and he knows the ropes. He knows the facts because he lived them.” She then says he doesn’t have to be prepped for the truth, not when you’ve done nothing wrong. Alina, Alina, Alina…now tell us how a person so smart gets into multiple quagmires of these magnitudes? Oh, and Your Honor, in an effort to guarantee a fair trial, we move for a change of venue to the defendant’s imagination…and free baby unicorns for all.

And keep sending money, folks. Remember, our ex-Commander-In-Cheat is running out of money, having spent more than half of his grifting funds on legal fees this year. It’s reported that his ‘Save America’ pac, which is paying his legal bills, is running low on cash. Assuming he even has it, he certainly won’t be spending any of his personal funds on his troubles…it’s a service to the country, his standing between US and THEM! Donations to the Trump Presidential Campaign see 10% going to the pac. Even Crazy Rudy Giuliani is running out of money, selling off personal property to stay afloat. A trip to Mar-a-Lago to beg for Trump’s assistance on his defense fund resulted only in a promise from The Don that he would sponsor a fund raiser for America’s Mayor, but we know where that’s headed, right? When Trump did fundraising for Herschel Walker’s Senate Campaign during the midterms season, only 10% went to Hersch, so we suggest, Rudy, that you keep those Ebay fires burning!

Recently, CNBC reported that several of Trump’s indicted co-conspirators who put their efforts into overturning Joe Biden’s election, were never paid by the Trump crime syndicate for their legal work, and topping the list are Rudy, Sidney Powell, and John Eastman. Giuliani, who worked five days a week during the last two months of 2022, will never see the $800K in fees he billed – a handshake will have to suffice. All they have to show for their loyalty is careers in the dumpster, and serious criminal charges that may result in prison terms. It appears that Loser Trump took in $250M in donations off his Stop the Steal attorneys, while funneling money into the ‘Save America’ political pac, leaving his loyal band on the outside looking in, as he paid a contingent of different lawyers to serve his own interests. Never mistake the crime syndicate’s godfather for a truth teller. We can only hope that by stiffing this band of corrupt attorneys, the unprincipled Trump has contributed to his own demise.

A few weeks ago, Trump spoke at a rally in Ohio for 103 minutes, speaking over the music playing as they tried to turn off this windbag. “This is deeply, deeply weird,” tweeted conservative writer, Tom Nichols of The Atlantic. “It really is Jonestown-level stuff. These people are worshiping a real estate developer from Queens who can barely hold a thought in his head. This is beyond un-American. It’s psychotic. I think Democrats should run clips of the rally and ask: ‘Is this the party you want running the country?’ Trump is the best weapon Democrats have.” Retired four-star General Barry McCaffrey warned, “Astonishing Trump language. The crowd is similar to a Nuremberg rally in 1936. A lawless Trump in office after a 2024 election would slide us into autocracy and deny our Constitutional safeguards. This is our greatest danger as a nation since 1860.” “Very scarily and tragically, this will only get worse…a rally or a death cult?” wondered Arne Duncan, former Education Secretary. Washington Post columnist, Helene Olen reported, “This is seriously strange. Also: notice the empty seats.” Poignantly, Will Bunch of the Philadelphia Inquirer, wrote, “Fascism…now with music!”  But thanks to Alina Habba, we are assured that he is intelligent!

On Monday Trump posted on Truth Social, “Roomer (sic) are strong in political circles that Ron DeSanctimonious, whose Presidential run is a shambles, and whose poll numbers have absolutely crashed, putting him 3rd and 4th in some states, will be dropping out of the Presidential race in order to run, in Florida, against Rick Scott for Senate. Now that’s an interesting one, isn’t it?” Providing no basis or source for this “roomer”, he later posted, “THE GREATEST & ‘HOTTEST’ FORM, SYSTEM, & PLATFORM OF COMMUNICATION IN AMERICA, & INDEED THE WORLD, TODAY. THAT’S WHY I USE IT. THERE IS NOTHING THAT COMES EVEN CLOSE!!!” Looks as though he needs a more intelligent Spellcheck to make it halfway decent! Now, back to you Ron!?

A scene at the Pearly Gates: God asks George W. Bush, “What do you believe in?” W answers, “I believe in the free market, and a strong, faithful America!” “Very well, come sit at my right hand,” says God. He then asks Barack Obama, “And, what do you believe in?” Barry replies, “I believe in the power of democracy, with equal rights for all!” “Come, sit on my left,” says God. Facing Donald Trump, he says, “I hear you are intelligent…what do you believe in?” Glaring back, Trump answers, “I believe you’re sitting in my chair.” Sounds of trumpets, thunder…lightning flashes…over and out!

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

“Labor Day”

(and hard work)

“Without hard work, nothing grows but weeds.”
~Gordon B. Hinckley

“You always pass failure on your way to success.”
~Mickey Rooney

“Do we settle for the world as it is, or do we work for the world as it should be?”
~Michelle Obama

...

Here’s a neat little Graham Norton compilation of strange celebrity talents…


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...
Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

August 23 – 29, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton…Schiff info re senate race, movie critiques, Greensite…will be back next week. Schendledecker…recent hate crimes against unhoused people. Steinbruner Hayes…understanding citizenship. Patton…witness statement. Matlock… magic 8 balls, a ginger mint conspiracy, and local calling. Eagan Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress pick of the week. Quotes “Hawaii”

...

DOWNTOWN BOULDER CREEK 1890’S. This was called Central Avenue and you can see the Alpine House on the right.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE August 21

SCHIFF, PORTER AND LEE FOR SENATE.

I wrote in this space last week how I favored Adam Schiff for Senate but was (and still am) open to any/all news opinions. Then I got this piece from Stephen Zunes…Aside from being a professor of politics and international Studies at USF (check him out) he’s an author and authority on Middle East policy. He writes…

“The big concern I have about Schiff is in regard to foreign policy.

He was among the rightwing minority of Democrats who voted to authorize the illegal, unnecessary, and predictably disastrous U.S. invasion of Iraq. To justify his support, he falsely claimed that Iraq had somehow miraculously reconstituted its nuclear weapons program and was amassing stockpiles of biological and chemical weapons programs, dismissing reports from the UN agencies, arms control journals, think tanks, and others showing otherwise. Recall that 90% of Mideast specialists and 80% of International Relations scholars opposed the invasion, recognizing it would be harm U.S. interests and regional security, but Schiff insisted that Bush & Cheney somehow knew better. Similarly, while the Catholic Church and every mainline Protestant denomination came out against the invasion, Schiff sided with the rightwing fundamentalists in support it. (Personally, I would no more vote for someone who allies with the fundamentalists on war and peace issues than I would someone who allies with them on abortion or LGBTQ rights!)

Schiff has also supported unconditional military aid and arms sales to brutal dictatorial regimes in the Middle East and elsewhere. He has been a strong supporter of the Israeli and Moroccan occupations. He has rationalized and covered up for war crimes by allied rightwing governments and has even attacked the United Nations, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the International Court of Justice, the International Criminal Court and others which have documented systemic human rights violations by U.S. allies.

Indeed, he reminds me of Senator Henry (Scoop) Jackson and other Democratic hawks of an earlier era who adopted reasonably liberal domestic policy agendas but allied with rightwing Republicans on foreign affairs. Schiff is certainly well to the right of the vast majority of Democrats when it comes to military spending, Israel/Palestine, arms control, human rights, and other foreign policy issues. What I fear is that if a future President Trump of DeSantis called for invading Iran, Venezuela, or some other oil-rich country, Schiff would support it just as he did with Bush’s invasion of Iraq. And he would certainly continue to vote against Congressional efforts to condition military aid and arms sales to Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and other repressive governments.

Fortunately, there are two outstanding Congresswomen who are also running for Senate, both of who take positions much more in line with the majority of Democratic voters on U.S. foreign policy. I really think your readers need to know just how dangerous Schiff’s foreign policy positions are and how out of touch he is with the Democratic rank-and-file regarding human rights, international law, arms control, and related issues”.

Best, Stephen Zunes
Professor of Politics
University of San Francisco

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

DEPP Vs. HEARD. (NETFLIX SERIES) (4.7 IMDB). Watching all 3 episodes was the guiltiest pleasure I’ve had at a screen in months. I was on Amber Heard’s side against the 60 year old Johnny Depp. And since experts say, “About 1 in 4 women and nearly 1 in 10 men have experienced some form of intimate partner violence”. It’s a terrifically spliced together documentary so that we think they were both in court at the same time.  They are both actors and you sense it constantly but do watch it…it’ll take you attention away from almost everything.

KILL BOKSOON. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.6 IMDB). She is an assassin and very good at it except that she has a daughter that she loves and who loves her too. It’s a Korean film as so many are these days…and usually they are a cut above

THE BOYS. (PRIME SERIES) (8.7 IMDB). This mess of a takeoff on Marvel Comics has Jack Quaid and a bunch of sillies dressed as Superheroes acting a nutso plot in the real world. Elizabeth Shue is back and is a welcome addition. The rest of the movie isn’t worth your time or rental.

GUILTY MINDS (PRIME SERIES) It takes place mostly in a courtroom in India when a case against a guy who’s like Harvey Weinstein gets charged with and how he handles his case. It’s complex and includes video games even a murder and an abortion. Absorbing but not great.

UNLOCKED. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.4 IMDB).   A Korean movie that centers on cell phones and hi tech murders. One woman loses her cell phone and a very clever killer finds it and uses it to tease and torture her every single move for days.  It’s fast paced, subtle, well-acted and has a surprise ending which is worth watching and waiting for

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

PAINKILLER. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.4 IMDB).     Mathew Broderick does a perfect job as the reigning head of the Sackler family. As we’ve learned in the last years the Sacklers invented and pushed OxyContin and created Purdue Corporation. OxyContin contains heroin and still the FDA passed on it. An amazing and very true story about how they were finally confronted. The Sacklers are no longer in the Purdue business and they never paid a fine or did time for all the deaths they’ve caused.

HEART OF STONE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.1 IMDB). Gal Gadot (Wonder Woman) is back with a story that flops miserably. Too much violence, too many car/truck chases and it tries to develop an AI theme involving a girl hacker. No character development so we don’t care or know enough to care about any of the characters. Gal Gadot was once crowned Miss Israel and is herself now worth over 30 million dollars!!

PARADISE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.3 IMDB). A German Sci-fi adventure movie that is complex but intriguing. The AEON corporation sells a treatment that takes years off your life…but at a special price which isn’t made too clear. It’s about class differences and power and sexism too but it doesn’t develop any theme or plot too closely.

HIDDEN STRIKE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (5.3 IMDB). When you have a 69 year old Jackie Chan who never was a contender for an Oscar, sharing the screen with John Cena who tops almost everyone’s worst actor list together in a stale saga about rescuing employees and nearby civilians from an oil refinery in Iraq you’ve got a genuine flop of a Mad Max Fury Road counterfeit failure. I lost all interest after about a half hour.

...

Gillian Greensite will be back next week

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.

...

August 21

RECENT HATE CRIMES AGAINST UNHOUSED PEOPLE

My friends, I’m feeling a little down about endemic discrimination and hate in our town and beyond.

This includes: the recent (re)defacement of the BLM mural downtown, diving into the Brave and Free Santa Cruz links (and some of the responses I got to that), the lack of support for a young latinx femme person riding a SC Metro bus, having a queer-femme friend seriously harassed and doxxed online, the mass-shooting murder of a former Santa Cruzan at a queer/trans punk show in Minneapolis, the advertisement of a QAnon-linked film in a local Facebook group that’s meant for mutual aid and resource-sharing, a continued culture of anti-homelessness in Santa Cruz (recent examples to follow), and another death in our jail.

On the other hand, I have gotten a good number of thanks for my Brave and Free column; I’m in conversation with others who are as concerned as me about discrimination, hate, and systemic violence here; and I see others speaking up online and backing each other up. I’m disturbed, but emboldened to continue speaking out and speaking up, even if it might feel risky. I hope you’ll all join me, because as the evergreen union slogan goes, “an injury to one is an injury to all!”

A Few of the Most Recent Assaults Against Unhoused Friends and Neighbors

My friend B and his friend were attacked two Saturday nights ago by a group of 5 young white guys at 2 am on the river levee. B and friend had stopped to look after another unhoused person who needed care. It started with anti-homeless and racialized slurs and demands to clear the pathway–including calling a large Black man “boy” repeatedly. When B and friend stood up for themselves, telling the mob to leave them alone, it escalated to physical assault, including a punch with a rock to B’s temple, causing him to lose sight temporarily (and for it to still be impaired when I saw him 5 days later). Fortunately, the mob left without more major injuries.

K, who has been sleeping in a doorway on the 200 block of Pacific Avenue, was awoken in the middle of the night last week by a man urinating on him and his sleeping bag. K followed the man back into the bar across the street, identified the man to the bartender, and asked him to call the cops for him. He was answered with laughter, and no support or a call to the cops. Aside from the assault, the next day he had to launder all his possessions, which isn’t cheap for someone of limited means.

K has also been denied access to the library because he brings his possessions with him in an old stroller. In his experience, if he leaves his possessions outside of the library, they will be stolen. This means he hasn’t been able to access computers or other resources in a public facility.

V, who herself has been harassed repeatedly, took video of an attack on a Latino man last month at the CVS on Front Street. She got him to the nearby bus stop and cared for his injured ear as best she could.

D, who often stays by Main Beach, has witnessed the aftermath of many attacks on targeted, single, drunk unhoused men. He thinks that it is a group of young white men who do this repeatedly, including video-recording their harassment and assault session. In at least one case, they forced a man to watch the recording of the first assault when they assaulted him at another time.

S reported what he thought might be a new local police tactic: last Thursday morning, police (who arrived in five cars) woke up about 15 people staying in city lot 16, by the downtown library. These residents were men and women in their 50s, who had been told they could stay there (I’m not sure if this was an official or unofficial permission, or who gave it, but that was their understanding). They were threatened with arrest for being on city property and told that they had to leave immediately. Worse, they were told they would be given citations if they took any of their possessions with them. Then all their possessions were deemed abandoned and thrown away.

At other times and places, police allow people to take their things, and wait patiently for them to collect themselves and move on.

People without housing have the right to keep their personal property, Santa Cruz City Police, private property managers, and others continue to discard possessions without storage, violating the constitutional rights of residents. This lack of consistent and legally defensible procedure for respecting the personal property of unhoused people in Santa Cruz is a problem, obviously.

City leaders themselves, including Mayor Keeley; Vice-mayor Golder; councilmembers Watkins, Kalantari-Johnson, Brunner, and Newsome; City Manager Matt Huffaker, and others have stated their support for a city-wide policy of “preventing entrenchment.” Said another way, this is a policy of enforced itinerancy, where individuals are not allowed to stay in one place for more than a few days and communities of unhoused residents are continually disrupted. Unfortunately, these leaders seem to set the tone and standard for the prevailing attitudes towards people without housing, which undermines efforts to alleviate their problems while we work on structural inadequacies.

Science, evidence, and anecdotes tell us that humans need community for survival. We also have decades of research on the connection of housing status to national economic trends and low-income housing supply. These are not new problems, and the various attempts to “solve” homelessness locally have been, and will continue to be, destined to fail as long as the roots of the problem remain the same.

In the meantime, at the very least what the city can do is not make the situation worse with “enforced itinerancy” and destruction of property; and not undermine the efforts of the county, including the Department of Public Health (i.e. by opposing the Harm Reduction Coalition’s needle exchange program).

In my friend B’s first-hand experience, for people without housing, having community equals more safety, both within camps and within the supportive, larger community around it.

He reports that since the Benchlands breakup last fall there has been: more outside harassment and attacks, more in-fighting and stealing, more hunger, more overdoses, more self-destructive behaviors and hopelessness, and more gender-based violence.

He says, “breaking up camps endlessly disrupts communities.”

In K’s experience: designated camps with sanitation work better than not having them at all, and when they’re closed there’s less safety. He flags two concerns: that designated camps need more security to work even better, and the problem is always where to find the land.

So, until we rebuild the local low-income housing that has been lost or underbuilt over the past 50 years, let’s use public property for safe sleeping and parking. And let’s work to shift the false narrative of personal and community failure back to what’s really failed us all: the firmly entrenched and highly successful national project of neoliberalism, with its extraction of wealth from the majority of people to be hoarded for the benefit of the very few.

While many of us disagree with each other (vociferously!) on many of the issues, we may in fact largely be blaming each other for creating problems that are actually rooted elsewhere. While we call each other in to say and do better, locally, let’s also disrupt our cycles of ineffective bickering to work together on bigger system changes that will benefit the vast majority of us, from the most precarious to the comfortably middle-class.

By that I mean: universal health care, federal rent control and tenant protections, reinvesting in non-police community safety and social programs, and public housing, just to name a few. The ordinances that we do pass at the municipal level should be protecting us all from the hoarding of property and wealth by the wealthy, especially global hedge funds, rather than punishing the most vulnerable of our residents. 

In other news

At the Transportation Justice Conference this Saturday, I will be moderating a panel on “Safe Streets First.” Tickets are available with free and donation levels, lunch included.

Xylazine test strips are now available from the Homeless Persons Health Project. I have not been able to confirm yet, but expect that the Santa Cruz County Syringe Services Program and their partner Santa Cruz County Harm Reduction Coalition have or will soon have them too. I’ll keep you posted.

Joy Schendledecker is an artist, parent, and community organizer. She lives on the Westside of Santa Cruz with her husband, two teens, mother in law, and cats. She was a city of Santa Cruz mayoral candidate in 2022. You can email her at: schendledecker@icloud.com.

...

August 21

APTOS VILLAGE PROJECT PHASE 2 HAS TROUBLING IMPACTS ON THE COMMUNITY

Swenson Builder is going full-court press with the Phase 2 Aptos Village Project, but causing some real problems for the Community and the environment.  Although earlier presentations to the public had stated there would be a Phase 2A and 2B, it appears that Swenson got a green light from Santa Cruz County Bank to move ahead with development on both sides of Aptos Village Way.

Swenson has now removed on-street parking on Aptos Village Way between Parade Street and Aptos Creek Road, and allows the construction contractor (Durden) to have their crews park on Aptos Creek Road, rather than within the construction area itself.  The photos below were taken last week.

This is the area adjacent to the hillside that Swenson will dedicate to the County for a new park.  Hmmm…  County Parks staff has stated they have no idea what to do with a hillside like that, but never mind…the County waived all developer park fees ($1000/bedroom in the new subdivision) and granted FREE drainage from this Phase 2 area across Aptos Village County Park for Swenson to dump the storm drain effluent into Aptos Creek.  The light-colored soil you see above in the foreground is capping the actual site of the fuel tank Swenson and SCUP crews unearthed in 2016 and hauled away in the middle of the night with some sort of unidentified petroleum material dripping all the way.  Swenson quickly demolished the foundation of the historic Lam Mattison Apple Dryer that likely relied on the fuel to power the hot air for the dryers.

Last week, I stopped in at County Environmental Health Services and talked with the new Director, Mr. Andrew Strador.  He saw no reason for the County to monitor the soils in this area, and was not troubled that Swenson had lied about the true location of the buried fuel tank their crews hauled out in the night.

Maybe the guy with the white helmet is watching for Native American artifacts begin dug up from this State-registered archaeologic site, but maybe not.  Who knows?  Does the County care?  If you care, please file a Public Records Act request with the County Planning Dept. for the reports submitted as part of the mitigation plan approved in 2012.   You might also ask if the 2010 Parking Study the County approved for this Project has been updated?

This is Aptos Creek Road, the gateway to Nisene Marks State Park, and directly across from Aptos Village Park.  There used to be some wonderful concerts in that Park, but that all went away when Swenson barricaded the dirt parking lot along Aptos Creek Road, removing the necessary staging space for the concert support crews and equipment.  Now the road is barely passable, due to encroachment into the paved road, creating narrowed entry to Nisene with a blind corner so motorists heading into the Park can’t see the walkers and bicyclists coming out until they are nearly on the hood of the vehicles.  Quite a bottleneck for emergency response vehicles and hazard for public safety.  If this bothers you, please contact County Public Works Travis Rieber and ask about the overly-greedy encroachment of pavement that Swenson is gobbling and if that is what was planned (and paid for??) with the County.  If the safety hazard bothers you, please contact Central Fire Marshal Mike DeMars and ask about this hazardous congestion for fire and medical response.

Not only is Swenson barricading Aptos Village Way to prevent any public parking, the construction contractor, Durden, is using Aptos Creek Road as a place to park their mobile office and crews.  Note that the mobile office is parked in a red curb area and in front of the fire hydrant that a fire engine would need to access should there be a fire in Nisene Marks State Park or the luxury homes on Mattison Court, on the hill above the Phase 2 Aptos Village Project construction.

I wanted to verify that the Durden mobile office was associated with Swenson’s construction…yep.  There are the plans and proof on the tailgate of the Durden truck (the one parked in the red curb area).  I happened to be at the site at noon, and witnessed construction crews climb into at least three vehicles parked on Aptos Creek Road.  I wonder why they are not being made to park in the construction area, and use the Swenson construction trailer that is on-site?

If this bothers you… please contact County Planner Randall Adams randall.adams@santacruzcounty.us

and Code Compliance Director Matt Johnston Matt.Johnston@santacruzcounty.us

WHAT WILL UCSC DO TO HOUSE THEIR STUDENTS?

Enrollment is way up at UCSC, according to LookOut Santa Cruz:

From LookOut Santa Cruz;

UC Santa Cruz sent offer letters to more than 43,000 first-year students this year, the largest of any of the nine UC campuses. That number is up nearly 40% from last year, the biggest increase of any UC school. But UCSC is expecting to enroll around just 4,650 first-year students between fall and winter as it juggles a complex confluence of factors that have made it harder to anticipate how many students will ultimately accept admission offers.

Where will all these students live?  I am told by local real estate agents that there are empty rental units in Santa Cruz, but are offered at extremely high rental rates.  The owners are NOT dropping the rent price…I guess they are waiting for the University students to flood in with desperate dollars to crowd the neighborhoods?

BOARD OF SUPERVISORS APPROVE SELLING EXCESS PROPERTY TO BENEFIT SEABREEZE TAVERN PROPERTY OWNER?

The Board approved, as Item #42 on the Consent Agenda, the sale of what the County now determines is “Excess Property” on the Esplanade in Rio del Mar.  The claim is that it is prone to flooding, due to sea level rise.  It always has been prone to flooding, but the County twisted the arm of the former owner of the SeaBreeze Tavern to take it over.  The Parks Dept. Director Jeff Gaffney claimed to a surprised Parks Commissioner that it was a good place to sell concessions to beach visitors.  That did not pan out too well, as the concessionaire contracted rarely showed up.

Agenda Item
DOC-2023-713; Adopt resolution to sell surplus real property located at 105 Esplanade

So, I have to wonder if the County’s declaration to sell this parcel will benefit the new Bay Area developer of the SeaBreeze Tavern area, Omar Billawala ……maybe remove restrictions for a large luxury hotel?

Remember, the County just declared a large parcel of land above the Santa Cruz Harbor as “excess property”, likely to make way for a luxury hotel, as Swenson proposed a few years ago.

BOARD OF SUPERVISORS APPROVE PURCHASE OF LARGE NEW SOUTH COUNTY PARK THAT IS FAR-REMOVED FROM THOSE LIKELY TO USE IT

The Board of Supervisors approved a $2.3 Million purchase of a 38-acre vacant farm near the Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds, far-removed from the area’s youth who might make use of the “temporary soccer fields” planned. The staff report states: 

Background

“The Property is approximately 38.54 gross acres located near Watsonville and zoned Commercial Agriculture (CA).  The Property is envisioned as a recreational/ agricultural mixed-use project.  The recreational use would include multiple non-permanent soccer fields, portable restrooms, a natural surface trail, active farming, and agricultural tourism and demonstration for students.  Additionally, the Property has been strategically targeted to address the County’s future emergency response needs due, in part, to its adjoining property line with the Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds.”

The problem is that according to Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds CEO Zeke Fraser, the County is not talking with the Fairgrounds about that idea….or are they?  I wrote to David Reid, Director of the County’s Office of Response, Recovery and Resilience (OR3) that is supposedly planning the County’s emergency response matters what plans the County is making to bridge the ravine between this new Park and the Fairgrounds for accessibility.  He did not respond.  The only Metro Bus service to the Fairgrounds is on Sundays for the Flea Market, and during the County Fair.

Santa Cruz County CA Agenda Item DOC-2023-724

Join the discussion on Community Matters this Friday, 1pm on Santa Cruz Voice.com

WHY ARE KIDS IN CALIFORNIA STRUGGLING TO LEARN TO READ?

This is pretty troubling.  See what you think, and offer to help out as a reading mentor, if only in your own family and neighborhood.

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND ONE MEETING AND ASK QUESTIONS TO HOLD OFFICIALS ACCOUNTABLE.  HELP A CHILD LEARN TO LOVE TO READ.

MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING SOMETHING.

Cheers,

Becky

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

...
August 20

UNDERSTANDING CITIZENSHIP

I thought I might write this week about how to identify fascism, but then thought of the twist…how best to fight fascism. This builds off of my essay last week – the root of the battle against fascism is compassion. However, it cannot stop there. We need more citizens to be actively engaged in governance! I outline some things that you can do to help below.

Compassion Towards Inactive Citizens

While building compassion, we must also build momentum for change. Last week, I listed a bunch of reasons that we, as individuals, have difficulty acting in any way to help the environment. Earlier, when wondering why more people hadn’t responded to my request to write a short (cut-and-paste, even!) email to help protect Santa Cruz’s wildlife, I wrote about other reasons why I could see that folks weren’t responsive. Here’s a list (compiled from those two essays) of reasons why I think folks have a hard time taking even small steps to respond to local conservation issues that are important:

  • We are creatures of habit living in a difficult world, and behavioral change is a lot of work.
  • It is easy to blame others rather than act ourselves.
  • We are often immersed in bad media, feeding us negativity about the environment, which is disempowering.
  • We have little leisure time, and so no time to learn about conservation priorities, let alone act on them. So, we often say dismissive things like “I hope it turns out okay!” or “Thoughts and prayers!”
  • We have been subjected to a poor educational background and so have little basis for understanding (ecology) or the reasons we should act (civics).

Compassion Towards Ourselves and Future Generations

None of the reasons I list help to make us feel better, or grow into better people…so, to be kind to ourselves, we must do something different. Recently, I suggested that people write a short email asking an official to help protect local wildlife. And, I will do that again, below. Those emails have an impact; they show that someone cares about wildlife conservation. Writing even a brief email to help protect wildlife makes us feel good! And, good public officials know that the first sign of an issue they must resolve is in emails, and those emails can portend more trouble if they don’t act. The media might cover the issue, politicians might get involved and affect their budget, their employees, family members, and friends might start asking them questions about the issue, etc.

Another thing you might do to help is to donate to an environmental conservation organization. Earthjustice is one of the most effective environmental organizations that I’ve experienced with local issues. They are a group of lawyers who fight for the environment, and they are very, very good at their work. Their work protected wildlife at Castle Rock State Park by forcing State Parks to convene scientific advisors to enact measures that will improve their wildlife conservation planning. The Center for Biological Diversity also has an excellent local track record. Their work was essential in forcing the federal government to list the Ohlone tiger beetle as endangered. They have also been active in other endangered species protections locally. The more folks from this area that join and donate to these two organizations, the more that these organizations will be interested in working on local issues. We need them!

Another thing you might do is to talk to someone about the actions above. If we each inspire one other person to take action, environmental conservation momentum will build.

Here’s Something to Do NOW

We need more emails to the State Director Mouritsen of the Bureau of Land Management if we are going to protect wildlife in Santa Cruz. Here’s something to cut-and-paste into an email:

Dear Director Mouritsen,

I care about wildlife and plant conservation on BLM’s Cotoni Coast Dairies property in Santa Cruz County. I write to urge you to help by adding sensitive species found on that property to the State BLM’s sensitive species lists. Only if those species are on the State’s lists will local administrators consider impacts of their management on those species in their analyses and planning for the property. So, I ask that you please:

  • Publish an updated State BLM sensitive wildlife list in collaboration with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, as mandated by the BLM’s 6840 Special Status Species Manual.
  • Publish an updated State BLM sensitive plant list to include the State ranked 1B plant species documented at Cotoni Coast Dairies, as mandated by the 6840 Manual.

I would appreciate a reply to this email with details about how you intend to address these issues.

Signed,

xx

Here’s her email address: kmourits@blm.gov

Why Do Anything?

I heard from BLM during our last email campaign. They are definitely paying attention to our emails. Santa Cruzans have a long track record of success with environmental campaigns, and we can do this!

Our work on this issue is getting other attention, too. The Wildlife Society is considering advocating for this issue.

If the State BLM adds more sensitive species found at the Cotoni Coast Dairies to their State Sensitive Species lists that will mean that they will receive more funding to manage the property for species conservation. If BLM manages the property for sensitive species conservation, there is a better chance that future generations will enjoy the wildlife we take for granted right now.

I hope you’ll consider writing Director Mouritsen an email. Please let me know if you do: coastalprairie@aol.com

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

...

August 20

#232 / David Attenborough’s Witness Statement

Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born May 8, 1926) is pictured above, at the age of ninety-three. Attenborough is a British broadcaster, biologist, natural historian and author. He is best known for writing and presenting, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, the nine natural history documentary series that form “the Life collection,” a comprehensive survey of animal and plant life on Earth.

In 2020, in collaboration with Netflix, Attenborough wrote, photographed, and presented another film, “A Life On Our Planet.” Attenborough called this film his “Witness Statement.” In this documentary, Attenborough documents what has happened to Planet Earth since Attenborough began his work as a wildlife documentarian. He tells us what he has “witnessed.” It is a heartbreaking story – a story that we know.

Attenborough’s story both begins, and ends, in the Ukrainian city of Pripyat, adjacent to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Attenborough tells us, as he walks through the deserted city, that nature is now reclaiming it. He tells us that what happened at Chernobyl was a miscalculation; it was a “mistake.” Attenborough’s film documents another such miscalculation and “mistake,” one that has involved the entire planet, and that has extended so long that this mistake is now on the brink of making our entire planet uninhabitable for human beings. This is the heartbreaking story that we know – that virtually everyone knows, and doesn’t want to talk about because it is too painful to do so, and because we think that, by now, there is nothing we can do.

Attenborough’s film, though, is not only a testimony to what he has seen – his “Witness Statement.” It is also a film that tells us how we can restore a right balance between our human civilization and the planet upon which we depend, the blue jewel of the Earth. To me, Attenborough’s presentation on what we can do was as “solid,” and “certain,” as the parts of the film that shows those who watch it what a huge “mistake,” indeed, we have made (and continue to make).

I would like strongly to encourage you to watch Attenborough’s movie.

If you have Netflix, no problem. Click on this link to “Netflix.” I think that should take you to the film. If you do not subscribe to Netflix, I encourage you to seek out another way to watch this film, to stream “A Life On Our Planet” to wherever you are.

Attenborough tells us that the damage that human activities have done to the planet can be reversed within the span of one hundred years – within a lifetime equivalent to the lifetime that Attenborough has spent on Earth. Attenborough includes, specifically, the damage done by human-caused global warming, and he provides specific advice. I think we should believe what he says.

I think we should believe what Attenborough says – and I think we should do what he advises!

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

...
August 21

MAGIC 8 BALLS, A GINGER MINT CONSPIRACY, AND LOCAL CALLING

Donald Trump, who had planned to show us his Magic 8 Ball’s declaration of his “conclusive and complete exoneration” during a news conference last week, cancelled his appearance upon advice of his legal team. “Rather than releasing the Report on the Rigged & Stolen Georgia 2020 Presidential Election on Monday, my lawyers would prefer putting this, I believe, Irrefutable & Overwhelming evidence of Election Fraud & Irregularities in formal Legal Filings as we fight to dismiss this disgraceful Indictment,” which Stephen Miller, in Trumpspeak 101 fashion, obviously wrote for The Former Guy on Truth Social. Shooting from the hip after the Georgia indictment was announced, Trump ad-libbed that he would use the “major news conference” at his New Jersey golf club to reveal an “almost complete report” for his vindication. His ‘report‘ was not prepared by hotshot investigators or election experts, but by his communication aide, Liz Harrington, whose voice we have heard on the recorded conversation during which Trump brags as he shows top secret military plans for a potential invasion of Iraq. He seems to have forgotten the 60+ court decisions that have cast aside the MAGA attempts to overturn the election around the country…always someone who doesn’t get the word? The rabid MAGA base laps this stuff up, but independent and moderate voters say it’s time to move it along…perhaps by having his tailor take precise measurements to ensure a perfect fit for his orange jumpsuit? It’s certainly imperative by now, as we saw from his Pillsbury Doughboy tux back when he called on Queen Elizabeth.

The federal district judge, Tanya Chutkan, overseeing the Georgia election conspiracy RICO indictment against Trump warned him of the limits to which he can spill publicly any of the evidence as he attempts to recapture the GOP nomination for the presidency. The judge warned that the more “inflammatory” his public statements, there will be a greater urgency to move to trial quickly to combat witness intimidation or sullying the jury pool. Even Georgia’s Republican governor, Brian Kemp, criticized the Former Guy’s attacks on the integrity of the vote, X-tweeting, “The 2020 election in Georgia was not stolen. For three years now, anyone with evidence of fraud has failed to come forward – under oath – and prove anything in a court of law.” But, The Donald will not be silenced, as he attempts not to prove his innocence of the mounting crime charges, but to harp on the stolen election in the now turgid atmosphere of his own making.

Trump actually cancelled his Magic 8 Ball event after Governor Kemp made his comments, and radio host ? suggested the governor’s opposition to Trump’s accusations may have had some influence on the cancellation. “You saw that he cancelled that press conference saying his lawyers didn’t think it was a good idea? I don’t know when he has done anything because his lawyers thought it was a good idea,” she opined. Kemp’s name weighs heavily in the RICO indictment, with DA Willis citing a phone call from Trump to the governor, as well as several tweets attacking him over the election, as “overt” acts “in furtherance of the conspiracy” to overturn the election. Kemp and Trump, at loggerheads since 2020, resulted in Trump throwing his endorsement to Senator David Perdue in the 2022 governorship primary. Trump’s 2021 statement about Democrat candidate Stacey Abrams, “she might be better than having your existing governor, if you want to know the truth,” further inflamed the relationship.

Despite Judge Chutkan’s setting of behavioral boundaries for Trump, he is surely evaluating how far he can push the envelope, weighing whether or not incarceration will boost his standing among the electorate, well beyond the MAGA horde’s support. House arrest would seem to be out of the picture…confinement to a golf resort in Florida is not likely to instill fear in the accused. Detention with no access to the internet agitation ability would likely be the fear factor, which would spur the defense team to ask for a speedier trial. So, lock him up!

Mark Sumner provides an interesting summation, writing on Daily Kos, that the GOP and Representative Gym ‘Shower Monitor’ Jordan in particular, are attempting to break Trump’s crimes down into such small increments that nothing is a crime on its own. He asks: Since when is it a crime to buy a rope, a knife, and a few garbage bags? A guy in Manhattan buys a new burner phone, which later is found to be used to contact female victims, later murdered and abandoned at Gilgo Beach. Another guy rents a Ryder truck in Kansas to drive to Oklahoma City…innocent enough, but Timothy McVeigh then destroyed a building. A neat-freak buys some garbage bags to clean up his residence, later being accused of murdering his wife when an overlooked blood-stained knife was found. Sumner says all three guys would be on the street if the courts used the same standard that Jordan and his colleagues are applying to Trump’s criminal escapades…after all, cyanide is just nitrogen and oxygen, and we gotta breathe. Reducing Trumpian actions to being simple phone calls, tweets and offering legal advice to ensure a legit election process is the gist of their absurdity. After all, since when is it a crime for a doctor to meet with a college athlete, Gym-my-boy?

MSNBC’s Ari Melber, on his The Beat show, has shown a November 5, 2020 video of Trump ally, Roger Stone, dictating a memo to an associate as part of the fake electorate scheme. The video segment is part of a documentary shot by Danish documentarian, Chirstoffer Guildbrandsen, who had followed Stone and his contingent during the 2020 election campaign. But American legal scholar, Laurance Tribe has revealed that such a scheme was in the works as early as February 2019, as shown in the sexual harassment suit against Rudy Giuliani by assistant Noelle Dunphy. She was told by Giuliani that a plan had been prepared in the event that Trump lost his reelection bid, in which he would claim “voter fraud’ and that he had actually won…nineteen months before the election! Indicted in the Georgia case as part of this plan was attorney Kenneth J. Chesebro, a mentee of Tribe, who expressed his disappointment in his student, saying, “He was not making good-faith legal arguments for his client. He was inventing legal fiction that paid no attention to the law and creating a pretext for a conspiracy to steal an election.”

Georgia state law requires that names and addresses of grand jurors be released to boost transparency of the legal process, but already MAGA goons are threatening revenge on them for daring to indict their beloved Golden Calf as seen on a ‘fringe website.’ Trump’s base of violence-minded insurrectionists have posted juror photos, spurring discussions about whether “people need to be outside these people’s houses” or whether it would mean walking into a deep state and media trap. Initially, there was no indication that authorities were taking any actions to protect jurors…maybe that has changed by now. But, we’ll still have these red-hatted militias being the enforcers of their justice, with their sidearms, and showing as much respect for law and order as does TrumpThe Former Guy will go after each juror as surely as he and Giuliani went after poll workers, Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, who rigged the Georgia election with a ginger mint.

The saber-rattling following the indictment(s) is now only a part of the shifting political scene, where the radicalized partisans believe violence is necessary to achieve their ends. “The idea that violence is legitimate for political purposes has moved into the mainstream,” says University of Chicago political science professor Robert Pape. “It’s still a minority…But if you’ve got 10 or 15 percent of a community that believes violence is acceptable for some political causes, that just encourages more violence for those causes.” The January 6 coup attempt should serve as a reminder that this country does not have an immunity any more than other nations, and threats against our government and its leaders are heightened in these perilous times. Representative Mary Gay Scanlon, Democrat of Pennsylvania, attributes much of this trend to Trump, who was the tough-guy candidate at his rallies in 2016. “Violence and intimidation on the right started following the election cycle in 2016. And so we would see justifications for violence among regular people rising at the election period – 2016, 2018 at Trump’s impeachment – obviously at the different events leading up to certification over January 6. There’s a sense that this violence is increasingly targeted at politics.” Donald J. Trump didn’t change the GOP – he just took off the wraps for a more accurate view.

As Trump prepares to defend himself in the courtrooms of New York, Washington, Georgia and Florida against his alleged crimes, obtaining evidence in Melania’s emails is a target of New York DA Alvin Bragg. A source tells Radar Online that her emails following her husband’s alleged Stormy Daniels escapade might be quite revealing as she shows her anger and possible plans to file for divorce. “She’s likely written emails to counsel asking for guidance on her rights if her husband is convicted on all these charges, and if she should use whatever she knows to squeeze him in divorce court,” says a source close to the Trumps. Previously denied requests to view Melania’s emails, Bragg is still in the hunt. An insider alleges, “Those emails could make Melania relive the entire betrayal again in the public eye. It would also reveal what she knew about the affair along with many other humiliating aspects of her husband’s business and personal life. The emails hang the president out to dry.” In spite of all this, sources say the couple are “on good terms.” 

According to former Trump lawyer, Michael Cohen, all the pressure on Trump is likely to make the Former Guy turn against his closest allies. “He’s going to flip on all of them…he never sees himself as the problem, it’s always somebody else, including his wife,” Cohen maintains. “He’s going to turn on his accountant and point the finger; he’s going to say, ‘Don Jr. handled that, Ivanka handled that; Melania, don’t take me. Take Melania,” Cohen predicted. “That’s the kind of guy he is.” We have to admit that Cohen has seen it all, and judging by the recent account that Rudy Giuliani sought some financial relief from Trump to help with legal expenses, only to be turned away, he is likely correct.

A fiendish character approached Trump in New York City, offering to sell him an inexpensive cell phone, claiming it was Satan’s personal hotline, open for calling the Devil at any time. Trump smirked, but bought the phone anyway, and made a call. A five minute conversation convinced Trump to run for President, with a promise of a guaranteed win. Checking later, Trump found the call had cost him $5000, refusing to use the phone ever again. But he ran for President and won! Having no idea what to do in the job, he swallowed his pride and made another call to Satan. The Evil One was happy to be able to assist Trump in all the destructive policies he would later enact in his tenure. Waiting a few minutes, Trump decided to call about the charges. The bill was $5. He asked, “Why the big discount?” “It’s now a local call, sir.”

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

    “Hawaii”

“One of the happiest times of my life, I lived in a tent on a porch on Hawaii.”
~Diane Greene

“I don’t look down on tourism. I live in Hawaii where we have 7 million visitors a year. If they weren’t there, there would be no economy. So I understand why a tourist economy is necessary.”
~Paul Theroux

Chasing kids on the beach and sleeping is the closest I come to exercising while in Hawaii.”
~Adam Scott

...

Chicken in a snowstorm…


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...
Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

August 16-22, 2023

Highlights this week:

Bratton… California Senate race endorsements, Dave Stamey & Ann Lydon return. Greensite…on San Lorenzo Park hot-air balloon. Schendledecker…does a linear left-right political spectrum make sense? Steinbruner…land use permits and height, city survey issues, Soquel’s farm park, Soquel Creek’s new board member, Zach Friend won’t be missed. Hayes…humanity. Patton…naming some names. Matlock…the deep state, other people’s money and irrelevancy. Eagan… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. Webmistress pick of the week: 18th century automata Quotes “Lighthouses”

...

GERMANIA HOTEL, 1877. This was one of many “railroad hotels” in the Santa Cruz Watsonville area. It was known as the Railroad Hotel, then it became, and is known today as, the Santa Cruz Hotel. It’s at 200 Locust Street and is primarily known for its very active bar and cozy atmosphere upstairs on the second floor.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

DATELINE August 14

AN ONGOING DISCUSSION. The campaigns for California State Senate are getting deeper and deeper. I’ve liked Adam Schiff for a few years now. Checking out his campaign pages I see that he’s got a very impressive and familiar list of endorsements. They include Nancy Pelosi, Jimmy Panetta, Sam Farr, John Laird, Aaron Peskin, Leon Panetta and Fred Keeley among many others.

Then when you see Katie Porters endorsers you start wondering. There’s Carol Fuller, Hollie Locatelli, Martine Watkins, Renee Golder, Shebreh Kalantri-Johnson.

But now think about Barbara Lee’s endorsements such as London Breed, Dolores Huerta, Anna Caballero, Dr. Cornel West, Fiona Ma, Ro Khanna and Justin Cummings too. This discussion will go on, so send me any and all news and info that seems missing.

DAVE STAMEY & ANNIE LYDON RETURN. Country and western music fans know about this and tickets are going fast. Dave and Ann will be at the Hallcrest Vineyards Sunday August 27. The outdoor show begins at 4 p.m. Hallcrest Vineyards are at 379 Felton Empire Road just up the hill from town. Come early bring a picnic, enjoy the wines. Tickets online at www.hallcrestvineyards.com

I search and critique a variety of movies only from those that are newly released. Choosing from the thousands of classics and older releases would take way too long. And be sure to tune in to those very newest movie reviews live on KZSC 88.1 fm every Friday from about 8:10 – 8:30 am. on the Bushwhackers Breakfast Club program hosted by Dangerous Dan Orange.

PAINKILLER. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.4 IMDB).      Mathew Broderick does a perfect job as the reigning head of the Sackler family. As we’ve learned in the last years the Sacklers invented and pushed OxyContin and created Purdue Corporation. OxyContin contains heroin and still the FDA passed on it. An amazing and very true story about how they were finally confronted. The Sacklers are no longer in the Purdue business and they never paid a fine or did time for all the deaths they’ve caused.

HEART OF STONE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.1 IMDB). Gal Gadot (Wonderwoman) is back with a story that flops miserably. Too much violence, too many car/truck chases and it tries to develop an AI theme involving a girl hacker. No character development so we don’t care or know enough to care about any of the characters. Gal Gadot was once crowned Miss Israel and is herself now worth over 30 million dollars!!

PARADISE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.3 IMDB).   A German Sci-fi adventure movie that is complex but intriguing. The AEON corporation sells a treatment that takes years off your life…but at a special price which isn’t made too clear. It’s about class differences and power and sexism too but it doesn’t develop any theme or plot too closely.

HIDDEN STRIKE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (5.3 IMDB). When you have a 69 year old Jackie Chan who never was a contender for an Oscar, sharing the screen with John Cena who tops almost everyone’s worst actor list together in a stale saga about rescuing employees and nearby civilians from an oil refinery in Iraq you’ve got a genuine flop of a Mad Max Fury Road counterfeit failure. I lost all interest after about a half hour.

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, or PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.

QUEENMAKER. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.6 IMDB). Another meaningful and well-made Korean movie. This one tells the dynamic story of a Korean woman who is a public relations chief for a huge corporation who gets into politics. She fights developers and leads a campaign for the mayor of Seoul and realizes where she’s both powerful and weak. Almost reminds us of our very local political scene!

LITTLE WOMEN. (NETFLIX SERIES) (7.8 IMDB). Definitely NOT the Louisa May Alcott story or from any other Little Women sagas playing on your video now. This Korean movie tells the tricky and complex story of three sisters who have a cruel mother and face poverty and corporate theft plus alcoholism and even suicide. It does have some plot holes later on but it’s well worth watching.

THE LOST FLOWERS OF ALICE HART. (PRIME SERIES) (8.0 IMDB) It’s good to see Sigourney Weaver back on screen in this Australian movie.  She does a wonderful job as the prime mover in this series dealing with children and women who have been abused. They live in a community named Thornfield and help each other survive and return to their lives. The stories start out with a nine year old’s fate, then a fire and deeper and deeper. Very well done as far into the series as we’ve seen so far.

THE ENGLISH. (PRIME SERIES) (7.8 IMDB). A very serious almost pageant like saga about the relationship between the American Indians and the settlers from England and the rest of the world. Emily Blunt is the English woman who is hunting for the man who killed her son. She runs into such evil doers as Toby Jones and Ciaran Hines but makes close friends with Chaske Spencer who is a real Lakota Sioux. Together they make their way through all the usual western movie plots and scenes. It’s very heavy and serious…especially for a western.

THE LADY OF SILENCE. (NETFLIX MOVIE) (6.4 IMDB). This documentary is from Mexico and deals with the 49 murdered senior women from 1998 to 2005. There are many suspects…all the women were strangled with cords, ropes, or wire. The governor of Mexico is involved and much also happens in Juarez. It comes down to the terrible job the police do in finding and pursuing the killer. It’s well done and has a few surprises which I won’t divulge here.

...
August 14

FLOODPLAIN. WHAT FLOODPLAIN?

The photo above captures the San Lorenzo Park benchlands during a winter flood. While this year’s flooding was more extreme than other recent years, flooding of the benchlands is a normal, natural process. It was one reason, before the winter rains, the city required the removal of the two hundred tents and campers in the city- sanctioned benchlands campsite.

This section of the San Lorenzo River on its east bank is the only area of the river south of Highway 1 that has not been armored with levees. It is wholly contained within San Lorenzo Park. The Park consists of these lower benchlands plus the upper area that has the duckpond, bowling green, restrooms and children’s playground with its distinctive 1964 serpent, recently repainted by volunteers.

My first encounter with San Lorenzo Park was in 1977, at the Spring Fair and then the Pride Parade. Besides these two annual events, I also took my four-year-old son to play on the serpent which became a favorite. So, when the city Parks and Recreation Department embarked on a San Lorenzo Park Redesign Process, I was more than a little interested.

It is no secret that San Lorenzo Park had fallen on hard times with the anti-social behavior of some of the campers making the Park unsuitable for children and nearby senior residents. Erecting a chain-link fence around the playground did not solve the problem nor add to its former welcoming charm.

By the time Bionics Consulting and staff came before city council on August 8th for a vote to continue the process, the redesign had already secured extensive public input from well over a thousand online survey responses, from numerous stakeholder meetings, and been reviewed by the Parks and Recreation Commission. All agreed that the outreach had been stellar. Congratulations to staff and consultants was unanimous and well-deserved. So, what’s not to like? As it turned out, quite a lot.

My radar pinged when I heard “the more you keep people present, the more you eliminate uses you’d rather not see there” (consultant), and its equivalent, “the more active participation the less we have to think about safety” (council member). Such statements are often used as a rationale for urbanizing open space, especially if there have been some “problems”. We must occupy the land to save it line of reasoning. However, the research is clear that anti-social behavior is more common where there are more people congregating not where there are fewer. So, what really is being addressed is “certain kinds of people.” Not to minimize anti-social, illegal, or aggressive behavior but we have a whole department which is supposed to take care of those problems short of “populating” the land with assumed well-behaved people.

My radar pinged louder when the consultant, after acknowledging that this is a neighborhood park, stated that “the Park redesign is an opportunity for it to be a real asset for downtown growth; that it can serve a wider population and be a destination for many more people; that it can be a real offering for the Bay Area.”  What! We are talking about a 13.8-acre neighborhood park most of which is in a flood plain. Maybe this is the problem with having consultants do the job that in my opinion could be done by staff: the tendency to go beyond what is feasible, to be grandiose and lose sight of reality. And not always be accurate. A member of the public, long-time San Lorenzo River expert and former council member Bruce Van Allen corrected the consultant’s claim that the benchlands lacked wheelchair accessibility, which he had been instrumental in securing many decades ago.

In their stellar outreach efforts, staff and consultants cast a wide net, asking hundreds of community members what they wanted to see in the park. Chances are some or maybe many who responded had never been to San Lorenzo Park, had no idea where it is located nor that it includes a floodplain. As a result, the long wish list included zip lines, Ferris Wheel, pump track, pickleball, disc golf, roller skate dance area, weddings, SUPs, a seasonal dock, yoga, exercise classes, damming the river, playgrounds for different abilities along with events, native habitat restoration, nature trails, and bird walks. Many such suggestions were enthusiastically supported by councilmembers.

Laurie Egan of Coastal Watershed Council did include the topic of how to improve flood protection in her public comments, but it was up to Mayor Keeley to bring the hot air wish-list balloon back to earth. He noted that the lengthy list most likely was a public expression of a shortage of park facilities which then became focused on this one park, which could not possibly cater to all. The mayor stated the need to recognize the flood control aspect of the benchlands; that there should be no permanent structures planned for that area although special events in the off-winter period would be fine. When it became clear that nowhere in the consultants’ Design Goals and Guiding Principles was the flood plain section of San Lorenzo Park acknowledged (despite the above photo in their slide show), an amendment stating that fact was added to the main motion and passed unanimously. The item will be back before council later in the year as specific design elements and environmental review are completed.

There is a cautionary tale here. More and more city projects are being handed over to consultants with apparently no reality-based limits to what their imagination (and commercial interests) can conjure up. West Cliff Drive is another example. A consulting firm, many public meetings, two special council presentations and countless hours of staff time spent on a vision for West Cliff fifty years into the future! Meanwhile we are told the city is strapped for funds and is contemplating yet another sales tax increase on the next ballot. Perhaps they need a consultant to help figure out why the public has lost trust in its city.

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.

...

August 14

DOES A LINEAR LEFT-RIGHT POLITICAL SPECTRUM MAKE SENSE?

Within the organized left, some colloquially invoke terms like moderate, conservative, or right-wing, often in derogatory ways towards and against the perceived political opposition, both outside of and within the left.

I’ve been thinking about this kind of linear left-right political assignment for a few reasons. Of course it has long been a big topic in national politics, perhaps more vociferously since the Tr*mp years, or maybe the Bush years. Or was it the Reagan years? Basically, the divide has been intensifying over the course of my life. And it seems like most people in our country are sick of it. People want change for the better, but instead we’ve ended up with increased confusion and polarization.

The right-left argument comes up in Santa Cruz politics, like last election season’s public squabble over who gets to use the “Progressive” label (that squabble also has a long history). And it has been a recurring theme in some of my smaller political organizing groups as a kind of litmus test, with accusations of people moving to the relative “right” or “left” as a result of the strategies and tactics they want to employ (i.e. rank and file worker organizing versus electoral politics).

Image caption: my 11th grader’s AP US History textbook cover and explanatory page on “who were the progressives”

More and more, I think that this language, especially when used to categorize people within the same movement, who are otherwise acting in solidarity, is counter-productive: it sets up false oppositions and flattens people into this or that categories. It also just doesn’t work, because people who are inevitably complex invariably don’t fit neatly into a single spot on the line. I find it misleading and divisive, both broadly speaking and particularly in my own organizing efforts–even while I acknowledge that it is deeply ingrained in me to speak of political positions in this way, so practicing using more descriptive rather than evaluative language is also a personal challenge.

Caption: image origin unknown; this is an example of an inadequate and confusing attempt to graph complex political positions on lines

Focusing In on the “Larger Left” 

I can see that from one perspective, rooted in the history of revolutionary France, it could seem technically true that there is a political spectrum within the left that runs from ultra-left to near-moderate and  relatively to the “right”–even though its application to specific strategies and tactics is far from universally agreed upon. This framing tends to encourage sectarianism and harden internal conflicts, in turn eating away at movement-based solidarity.

For many people, it is easy to perceive being labeled “right” or “left” as dismissive, name-calling, derogatory, alienating, confusing, and insider-jargony. The result is counter to our shared goal of building a diverse working-class movement.

It can lead to people thinking that they must be misinformed, or feeling inadequate or dismissed, as if they have to endlessly argue their position to survive, or they shouldn’t even share their thoughts. Sometimes it causes them to leave the political arena altogether. A winner-take-all logic is the exact opposite of consensus-building relationality, and can come with authoritarian-like results in aiming to shut down the “other side” by invoking a simplistic label, instead of compassionately understanding difference and building shared ground from there.

Often the interpretation of “right” and “left” is based on tactics and strategy. For instance, sometimes one hears that electoral politics is a “rightward” or moderate position. The rationale is that electoral work (especially in relation to candidates and electeds) means compromising and working within neoliberal systems of governance from a minority working-class minority position that can often achieve mere superficial reformism, owing to the anti-democratic and pro-capitalist structural conditions of the electoral framework in the US, including lobbying and corrupt practices that end up serving the ruling class.

But calling electoral work “conservative” unfairly shoehorns an important tactic into near uselessness, if it is granted utility at all. What about electoralism within union rank-and-file organizing? What about socialist electoralism? What about seeing electoralism as a necessary part of a strategic diversity of tactics, one that can and should complement other forms of work-place and social-movement organizing?

It may be true that elections will never secure a socialist future on their own (and who is suggesting this anyway?)—for that we need worker-self-organization, where “worker” is extended to all its diverse representatives, including unpaid domestic workers, migrants, gig-economy and precarious laborers, and so on. But neither will labor strikes guarantee emancipation either, especially if all they aim for is a better contract. The point is to come up with a strategy that integrates and mobilizes multiple interlinked approaches, carefully deployed and backing each other up, for structural transformation, including non-reformist reforms (reforms that are never simply an end in themselves) that can help us get there one step at a time.

No organizing strategy or tactic is inherently “left” or “right,” but is always situational and context-dependent. Labor unions can be extremely conservative, even, in the case of business unions, outright capitalist (total bummer that our Building Trades Council donated $1,000 to Santa Cruz Together in 2018 to help defeat rent control), while base-building social movements can be reactionary or even fascist (hello neo-nazis in our backyards).

Similarly, the most radical rank-and-file unions, as well as democratic revolutionary movements, will include electoral and representative components within their inner organization (for instance, electing leadership, labor reps, and convention delegates), just as leftist electoralism should necessarily have deep connections to labor organizing, base building, and class struggle.

We should also avoid lumping less visibly active co-organizers in with the “right” or assume they are “moderates” just because they’re not out in the streets with us. In reality, one could have an infinite variety of political positions, as well as life circumstances, that determine one’s political involvements—paid work, care work, neurodiversity, temperament, alienation from the organization, illness or disability, access and functional needs, distance, financial hardship—or draw them to this or that tactic. In the end, “we” are not all the same, even if our side shares a broad-based political analysis in its opposition to capitalist exploitation and its embrace of social welfare that answers to the needs of the many rather than the profits of the few. Our movement should hold a place for everyone’s engagements, and we should recognize that this diversity makes us stronger.

Image credit: screenshot of http://christianspreafico.altervista.org/PoliticalNetwork/indexPN.html

Here’s what I’m thinking about and trying to practice right now, to avoid all those pitfalls outlined above:

I really like this Political Network Map by Christian Spreafico, and not just for the cool rhizomatic visualization, clickability, and obscure information. I think it more accurately represents the complex web of relationality and positionality that actual people experience, without reducing them to simple binaries. With all of our complexities, positionalities, and inconsistencies, none of us can fit neatly onto a line. We are multidimensional beings in a web of interconnectedness. Intersectionality–which registers the fact that we lead multi-issue lives and therefore must have a multi-issue politics–is, I believe, the only way to go.

Practicing the use of descriptive rather than evaluative language helps us minimize making assumptions about others’ motivations and positions (and is good practice for any and all relationships).

Trying to slow down and move at the speed of trust (much easier said than done!) is also important, as argues Adrienne Maree Brown’s book Emergent Strategy: “Inspired by Octavia Butler’s explorations of our human relationship to change, Emergent Strategy is radical self-help, society-help, and planet-help designed to shape the futures we want to live. Change is constant. The world is in a continual state of flux. It is a stream of ever-mutating, emergent patterns. Rather than steel ourselves against such change, this book invites us to feel, map, assess, and learn from the swirling patterns around us in order to better understand and influence them as they happen. This is a resolutely materialist “spirituality” based equally on science and science fiction, a visionary incantation to transform that which ultimately transforms us.” Borrow it, buy it, listen here, or download here.

Strategically we must use a diversity of tactics, working inside and outside of existing power structures. In this case, factionalist name-calling within the left, which reinforces the divide-and-conquer tactics of the right, is a hindrance to much-needed solidarity in an era of real fascist threat.

In my column last week (scroll down to see it) I “called-in” Brave and Free Santa Cruz to critically re-examine their website links and disavow the discrimination contained therein. I’ve looked at all of the “resources” and “important links,” and I feel even worse about their organizational alignments to: curtailing access to reproductive health care; content that is anti-trans, pro-gun, anti-“woke”, anti-vegan, and pro-voter suppression (support for requiring photo ID); anti-democratic views (against DC statehood); and opposition to the Special Counsel investigating Tr*mp’s Jan. 6, 2020 actions.

I’ve been accused of fomenting antagonism towards BnF members, and those who are unvaccinated. Some readers may have missed the care I took to say that I don’t think any of the local members of BnF intend to be discriminatory. The messages that I’ve received defending BnF have focused almost exclusively on covid-related issues. I barely mention covid in my column, and in fact explain that I’m not very concerned about vaccine-skepticism even though it turns me off. I have barely even gotten acknowledgement of the linked content that seriously concerns me and was the central point of my column. I find it troubling that there seems to be an insistence on addressing the thing that I find least problematic while avoiding the long list of dangerous content that I detail with examples and links.

So, I invite Brave and Free Santa Cruz once again to look closely at its own questionable connections. Put some thoughtful statements about the need to counter discrimination on your website; get rid of links to hate and hate-adjacent content; and show up for minoritized groups in Santa Cruz, with a commitment to listening, learning, and supporting.

Joy Schendledecker is an artist, parent, and community organizer. She lives on the Westside of Santa Cruz with her husband, two teens, mother in law, and cats. She was a city of Santa Cruz mayoral candidate in 2022. You can email her at: schendledecker@icloud.com.

...
August 14

PROPOSING A CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT TO PROTECT LOCAL DISCRETION FOR LAND USE 

You will be shocked when you take a quick look at the Active Building Permit Applications for Significant Projects in the City of Santa Cruz and see the parade of very tall and dense structures planned for downtown:

Active Planning Applications | City of Santa Cruz

Accordingly, an OpEd CalMatters article in Sunday’s Sentinel caught my attention.  A possible Constitutional Amendment on the ballot to restore local land use discretion?  That would be great to push the State’s big stick back, wouldn’t it?

Here is what I learned.

Here is example of what this amendment would provide (see pages 5 and 6)

(2) A county or city shall not supersede or otherwise interfere with any voter approved local initiative. 

 (b) (]) Except as provided in paragraph (2), a local law shall prevail over conflicting land use planning and zoning statutes. 

(c) (l) State funding appropriated before the effective date of the act adding this subdivision shall not be modified due to a city or county adopting or enforcing any local law that pre-empts any land use planning and zoning statute pursuant to this section. 

(2) State funding appropriated after the effective date of the act adding this subdivision shall not discriminate in favor of, or give any preference to, a city or county that voluntarily complies with any land use planning and zoning statute. 

Here is CalMatters analysis of the impact of this Initiative, brought about by the State’s mandate to build 2.5 million new housing units by 2030, double the number in the previous 8-year cycle mandate:

How a ballot measure and population revisions complicate California housing war

But here is the rub:

State Demographers have revised the projected growth and housing needs and now reveal that California’s population trend is stagnant, with no real increase through 2060.

After decades of historic growth, California switching to a period of chronic stagnation

So, shouldn’t the State Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) also revise the Regional Housing Allocation Number (RHNA) mandates that are currently causing our County and Cities to feverishly re-zone to have dense, tall infill that will obliterate the character of our Communities?

Here is the Attorney General’s analysis of the 2021 Constitutional Amendment Initiative proposed for this same matter, but that was not put on the ballot.

If you want to get involved, join  “Our Neighborhood Voices”, the group of movers and shakers behind trying to preserve our local discretion on land use issues: Our Neighborhood Voices – Our Neighborhood Voices

The “Catalysts for Local Control” also has excellent information about this:

ABAG’s Bay Area population projections are way too high | Catalysts for Local Control

Sign up to participate in their District-wide meetings with elected representatives about this issue.  By and large, the representatives are not up to speed with what is really going on.

Recent Santa Cruz Voice online radio interviews with Lira Filippini and  John Hall from “Our Downtown, Our Future”, and Keresha Durham and Frank Barron from “Housing for People” revealed that the State’s housing mandates would actually reduce the number of affordable units overall, because developers would be allowed Density Bonuses to build many more market-rate units if their plans include a small percentage of the baseline number as “affordable”, sometimes increasing the total size of a development by 50%.

Such is the case of the proposed 908 Ocean Street NEW proposal for 389 units with mixed use retail on ground floor.…demolishing eight commercial buildings, 12 residential units, remove 13 heritage trees, requesting a 42.5% density bonus from a base density project of 273 units. 

Does it concern you that in 10 years, our Communities will be gone, in the interests of the greedy developers who have convinced elected officials to allow them to erase the quality of life and character of our communities, and not provide any real increase in affordable housing, not to mention bypassing developer impact fees for infrastructure?  Please get involved with like-minded people in “Catalysts for Local Control”, and “Our Neighborhood Voices”, or contact your elected representatives with your thoughts and solutions

Pencil in October 14 on your calendar now to attend what promises to be a great public discussion at the London Nelson Center with panelists to address the issue of local affordable housing, RHNA mandates, and what we want our Communities to look and feel like decades from now. 

THE CITY’S SURVEY ABOUT WHAT CONCERNS YOU

Last week, the City of Santa Cruz sent a link to a survey, wanting to better understand public concerns about environmental issues.

Oddly, the survey could only be accessed by a cell phone scanning the QR code

However, digging around in the City’s website revealed a link to the actual survey

What’s on your mind?  Take the survey and let the City know, but beware the veiled grab for personal property restrictions.

I THOUGHT IT WAS GOING TO BE A PARK FOR THE PEOPLE

Recently, I saw tractors parked at the Farm Park area along Soquel Drive near the Quik Stop in Soquel, at Hardin Way.  I thought it must finally be progress being made on the bike jumps that County Parks officials have long promised to get built there.

I was wrong.

In reading the County Parks Commission agenda packet for August 14, 2023, here is what I learned:

An undeveloped portion of The Farm County Park is being leased to Monterey Peninsula Engineering, for the next approximately 15 months to use for staging of construction equipment and materials for the County’s Soquel Drive Buffered Bike Lane and Congestion Mitigation Project. Public Works is the contact for any questions. 

(see page 5)

This view of Farm Park is from Soquel Drive, and was supposed to be a bike jump place for the kids, with work donated by the local cycling clubs.

Here is the view from the small parking lot within the Farm Park entrance on Cunnison Lane.  It seems that MPE is already quite at home, but what about the Park promised to the people, decades ago?

Will this equipment be eventually used to help construct a Farm Park for the people?  The soils may get contaminated with oils that leak (see small puddle in the foreground?)

Meanwhile, this bridge. aka “Bridge to Nowhere”, that County Parks Dept. purchased nearly a decade ago to connect the two areas of the Farm Park is still just across the ravine and part of the Farm Park, rusting and in disrepair.  It is an ugly nuisance and hazard for the Tee Street neighborhood.

Please contact Supervisor Manu Koenig and ask why the County’s Farm Park is such a disgusting eyesore, and why the people still have no recreational park there.  831-454-2200   Manu Koenig manu.koenig@santacruzcounty.us

Public Works Director Matt Machado responded to my query with “I suspect the agreement will generate revenue for Parks, I further suspect the agreement and use does not conflict with Parks plans to develop the park further.  All that said it seems this current use is good for everyone, including the community. New revenue, Soquel Drive improvement.

Win-Win”

What an odd statement from a public servant.

SOUTH COUNTY PARK PURCHASE NEGOTIATIONS MOVE FORWARD WHEN COUNTY CANNOT EVEN MAINTAIN WHAT IT HAS BEEN GIFTED?

How can it be that the County Parks Dept. can in good faith move forward to purchase 38 acres at 181 Whiting Road for a new County Park, yet has shuttered the Bert Scott Estate Park for over 20 years, an incredible gift from the founders of Granite Construction Company? Bert Scott Estate Santa Cruz County Park, Corralitos, CA

Take a look at page 7 of the County Parks Commission agenda, and see that:

South County Parkland Acquisition County Parks is negotiating with the owner to purchase the property via owner-provided financing.

PARKS AND RECREATION COMMISSION AGENDA, Aug 14

This proposed new County Park will have no safe access for kids to ride bikes to attend future athletic activities, other than riding or walking on Highway 152.  Is this the best use of Parks Dept. public monies?

STRANGE AND PRE-DETERMINED INTERVIEW OUTCOME FOR SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT NEW BOARD MEMBER

I was able to attend most of the interviews last week that the Soquel Creek Water District Board conducted of the 13 applicants for the vacant Board seat.  There were some excellent applicants that would have brought real professional expertise to the Board.

It was nearly comical to witness the haphazard approach the Board took to decide who the finalists would be, and what questions to ask them.  It was painfully obvious that General Manager Ron Duncan was pulling the strings of the puppet Board.  He handed them the questions to ask, and further suggested the Board ask finalists: “Where were you when you found out about the application process?  How did you feel?”

The answer to that odd and seemingly lame question revealed that Ron Duncan had text-messaged the women who were ultimately chosen as finalists to encourage them to apply initially.  They were given priority over other applicants because they had already been hand-picked to serve on the District’s Standing Committees.  Hmmm…Ron did state at the Board meeting when it was quickly decided to fill the vacancy by appointment rather than election that choosing someone from the Standing Committees would be a real possibility.

It sure was a priority for the Board last week.

The new Board member is Ms. Jennifer Balboni, floating to the top of the Applicant list because of her involvement on the Infrastructure Standing Committee and her abundant energy.  It will be interesting to see how she blends with the establishment.

She will be officially sworn in next Tuesday.

MANY IN THE SECOND DISTRICT WON’T MISS THIS FRIEND

A great Letter to the Editor last Sunday summed up the sentiments of many regarding the announcement  of Supervisor Zach Friend not seeking a fourth term of office.  Rest assured, we have not heard the last of this arrogant politico, bound for climbing the ladder at the expense of constituents.  No one can remember when the last time he held a town hall meeting of any sort…and good luck ever getting a reply to your correspondence.

“The announcement by the 2nd District Supervisor on not seeking reelection has been a long time coming. The irreversible damage to my community in Aptos will last forever while he moves to his next political position. When a politician comes into a community without any historical knowledge of previous agendas and the disdain they caused and then carries one of the most contentious developments in this community’s history, it’s time for him to go.

By the way when is the Army Corps of Engineers going to begin repairing that levee? You helped get the funds but what’s the start date? Before or after the next break?

— Arnold L. Versaw Jr., Aptos”

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING AND ASK QUESTIONS TO HOLD ELECTED OFFICIALS ACCOUNTABLE.

DO JUST ONE THING THIS WEEK, AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

Cheers,

Becky

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

...
August 14

HUMANITY

Compassion for others in a political setting is a challenge that, as citizens, we must all ponder. As citizens in a democracy, we are active participants in the global experiment on Nature and how future generations will fare based on our individual decisions in the moment. We purchase things, we vote, and we make thousands of choices that each has an impact on other species. Each of us has our way and our reasons. A compassionate approach to others may open the many stuck doors to create a more lasting environmental conservation movement. And, we must ponder how institutions and individuals interact to enact that compassion.

The Government

Our style of democratic government reflects the will of the Nation’s people, over time. We vote directly for one of the three branches of government – the Legislative branch – and the House directly reflects representation of the majority of the population. The Senate changes the ‘majority rules’ notion to evenness of geographic representation, no matter the population, giving small numbers in sparsely populated geographies more power. Election of the Executive branch has a system of election using delegates, which also reflects an intention to create more even geographic distribution of power, but also has aspects that embed extra-democratic power relationships including freedom of delegate choice into the equation. Judicial branch members are appointed by that Executive branch and seated when confirmed by the Senate and so also reflect the problems associated with the elections of those two portions of the government.

In short, we have a system of government designed to amalgamate the geographies, popular opinions, and existing power relations in order to make choices that we are meant to respect as ‘representative.’ The way this works is particularly challenging to issues that do not raise to prominence for voters. When votes matter, politicians and the power network that supports them sway government actions. Environmental conservation is one of those issues that the power structure never wants to see come to the fore, and citizens are easily swayed in other directions. News media and social media, which are easily manipulated, herd citizens towards issues that are both divisive and convenient for those in power. Environmental conservation threatens all members of those in power, no matter what the political persuasion.

The top issues that sway US citizens’ votes are the ones that the media focus on: the economy (always first), healthcare, and safety – e.g., police (local), military (global). Environmental concerns always rank Way Down the list, despite being the single greatest element to having a sustainable economy, healthy humans, and a safe society.

When considering environmental conservation, it is the will of those in power and the government they manifest that creates the challenges to having compassion on two factions of our society: your fellow citizen, who is in some way responsible for the government, and the employees of government institutions, who act within governmental decision frameworks.

The Citizen

How do we approach compassion, to see the humanity in our fellow citizens when the government does so little for environmental conservation? It is easy to blame governmental actions on the citizens of the country, but is it fair?

It is also easy to understand why your neighbors, friends, and relatives do not prioritize environmental conservation with their actions. We are creatures of habit living in a difficult world. It is difficult to change our behaviors, even if they negatively affect the environment. It is difficult to see our individual choices as mattering and easier to blame the impacts on the environment on other people, other nations, or even evolution, fate, or a Deity. We all do these things. When we listen to the news or tune into social media, the messages there do not help us to understand elements of environmental conservation and what we can do about them. Even the supposed ‘neutral’ (really ‘centrist’) NPR rarely covers much of the breadth of environmental conservation import and then mostly with disempowering messages. Because the US has become so expensive and the pace so breakneck, citizens are afforded almost no leisure time to learn about environmental issues. And, with the decline in broad, critical thinking education, environmental conservation has become a tiny part of anything students are exposed to, favored by Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) focus. The term ‘Science’ in STEM doesn’t mean organismal biology nor does it include any conservation elements. Highlighting this STEM education is a real success of the power structure in the US as they hope to create a (somewhat) skilled workforce.

In sum, citizens do not know, and cannot find a way to know, about environmental conservation and without such knowledge they act innocently and ignorantly in ways that collectively negatively impact the environment. Aren’t we all like that? Let’s have a little compassion for everyone and figure out where to go from there.

The Government Worker

Government workers are citizens who have even more burdens on their environmental conservation actions. Those people who work for governmental institutions that are supposed to protect the environment face all the challenges of the average citizen described above. While it is true that the government requires some of those workers to have higher levels of education to qualify for their jobs, the required bachelor’s or master’s degrees never train them for the environmental conservation elements of their jobs. The most relevant field is called ‘conservation biology.’ There are very few institutions of higher education that offer this focus, and the combined top ten programs in the US graduate fewer than 100 undergraduates, and far fewer graduate students, each year. Once out of school, these individuals have a high incentive to work in a lucrative field, environmental consulting where they can earn 5 times more than a government employee. And so, government institution personnel that are responsible for environmental conservation have not received the education they need for their jobs, have not been raised in a culture that supports inquiry, and are strained by economic and social situations that make it difficult to prioritize environmental conservation. And then they go to work in institutions with similar individuals under conditions of extreme political pressure exerted in contravention to environmental conservation.

Governmental Institutions

The government institutions that have responsibility for environmental conservation have never been designed to be effective with that responsibility. Because conservation rarely and briefly rises to the fore for politicians, consistent oversight and policy development is lacking. Instead, environmental conservation frameworks are weak and up to the interpretation of the agency. Locally, State Parks is required to have General Plans for all of their lands, but there is no required timeline for creating them, no mandate to update them (ever), and little guidance on key features of those plans such as what a ‘carrying capacity’ analysis might be. Locally, County and City Parks have no guidance at all about environmental conservation and there is none in the making. Locally, the Bureau of Land Management has guidance documents for environmental conservation, again with no timelines for enacting them and insufficient guidance to maintain the scientific integrity of those efforts.

Workers are Human, Too!

Even if they don’t recognize it and can’t hear it, the too few employees charged with environmental conservation at governmental institutions find themselves without sufficient means and support for substantive, science-based environmental conservation action. And so, they go about their jobs doing what little they can to try to make a difference. Most of them are proud of their accomplishments. Being social humans, they form bonds with their workmates and take their personal pride and form institutional pride. They are proud of the work of State Parks, they are proud of City and County Parks Department accomplishments, and they are proud to be part of the BLM team.

Many of us can relate. Many people find themselves in institutions that have elements of good and elements of bad (which sometimes we don’t want to see!); we choose to focus on the good work we are doing within those institutions. We make friendships at work and want to support those friends. Some of us work for institutions where the public believes that our work is good and just, and so it is easy to become proud of our institution and even to defend our institution when challenged. Let’s have a little compassion for the people we see who have ended up like that and figure out where to go from there so that there is better environmental conservation even by governmental institutions.

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

...

Thursday, August 10, 2023

#222 / Naming Some Names

In case you don’t recognize him, that’s Jeffrey Epstein with the Harvard pennant. Wikipedia identifies Epstein as “an American sex offender and financier.” Epstein died in jail on August 10, 2019, exactly four years ago today. Officially, the cause of death was determined to be “suicide.” Others are not so sure about that.

The Nation Magazine published an article about Epstein, which appeared in its August 7/14, 2023, issue. The article is titled, “How Jeffrey Epstein Captivated Harvard.” How? How did he do that? In short, money!

What I thought most interesting in The Nation’s article were the names of all the “famous” people associated with Epstein. Here is a partial list. Read the article for more names. If you don’t recognize someone in the list that I am providing (for instance, Leon Bottstein, the President of Bard College, isn’t known to everyone), just click the link for some biographical information.

All of these people were associated with Epstein. All of them are “famous,” in some way:

Here’s what I thought, when I read the article in The Nation, and started tallying up the names: Ugo Betti.

No, I wasn’t thinking that The Nation had missed adding Ugo Betti to the list of those seduced into a relationship with Epstein by either money, or sex, or both. If you don’t recognize Ugo Betti’s name, click the link. Betti was both an Italian judge and a playwright. And I wasn’t thinking about Betti as an individual so much, but was really thinking more about a speech from one of this plays, The Burnt Flower BedI often think about this speech, and often quote it, too – particularly to students who take courses from me at UCSC:

That’s what’s needed, don’t you see? That! Nothing else matters half so much. To reassure one another. To answer each other. Perhaps only you can listen to me and not laugh. Everyone has, inside himself … what shall I call it? A piece of good news! Everyone is … a very great, very important character! Yes, that’s what we have to tell them up there! Every person must be persuaded – even if he is in rags – that he’s immensely, immensely important (emphasis added)!

Our system of democratic self-government is premised on the idea that each one of us is “immensely, immensely important.” We are so important that we get to run the country ourselves. That’s the idea, anyway!

Letting the rich run the world – and Jeffrey Epstein’s life is an example – underrates our own importance.

Let’s listen to what Ugo Betti tells us.

Let’s not forget it!

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

...
August 14

THE DEEP STATE, OTHER PEOPLE’S MONEY AND IRRELEVANCY

“It’s Joe Biden and ‘the deep state’ that are lying and unfairly trying to keep me from winning back the presidency!” That is only one of Donald Trump’s mantras along with his daily whining about the stolen election and his persecution in spite of his “innocence.” Upon closer examination he should discover that it has been an all-Republican crowd that has enlightened the investigations into his criminality beginning with the House J6 Committee and Special Counsel Jack Smith’s grand jury, both of which have found willing participants to weigh in on the former president’s schemes. Some have spoken up out of a patriotic duty, and some have done so to shield themselves legally or politically. Even Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said to his Senate colleagues, “Trump didn’t get away with anything – yet. We have a criminal justice system in this country. We have civil litigation, and former presidents are not immune from being accountable by either one,” as he cast a vote to absolve the president of any wrongdoing after the J6 insurrection. What do you say now, Mitch? The man continues to destroy the Grand Old Party, casting himself as a leader of the MAGA subversives, using party funds to pay his legal team as he continues his grifting within the base to secure even more money. “I love other people’s money,” The Don is captured saying on video.

Many in the Congress have been quieted since the indictments began, but too many others create Trumpian distractions, while emphasizing a need for revenge, taking up The Don’s lead of “Go after me, I’ll come after you!” And as we’ve seen and continue to see, the crazy MAGA base is all too willing to heed the call. Following the Smith indictment, a Reuters/Ipsos poll indicated 45% of the GOP voters would not give Trump their vote if he is convicted of a felony; yet, 35% side with him anyway, with others being undecided. The party needs its leadership to step up, grow a backbone, and get back on course from the right-turn it took after the Nixon debacle, of catering to older, white and rural base, especially with the country becoming a racially diverse, younger and urban crowd. ‘Wokeness‘ cheerleader, Ron DeSantis, has seen his campaign flounder, mainly because he is an unlikeable jerk, but because the ‘anti-woke’ mantra has become boring…imagine, voters being more interested in economics and security! And, hopefully, sensibility! This ain’t no party, this ain’t no disco, this ain’t no fooling around!

Court testimony in Trump’s appearances by an all-Republican retinue will likely favor public support for the legal process, and remind the GOP about its supposed law and order planks of the past. Former VP Mike Pence will surely be a witness, with his recent statement ringing in our ears, “Today’s indictment serves as an important reminder: Anyone who puts himself over the Constitution should never be President of the United States. Our country is more important than one man. Our Constitution is more important than any one man’s career.” Can’t you hear it now, the applause…or, wait, are they saying, “Hang Mike Pence! Hang Mike Pence!” Yep, that’s more like it. Or will we have the likes of the Utah man who fought the FBI’s incursion before Biden’s visit to the state, “dusting off my M24 sniper rifle” which he called ‘the Democrat eradicator?’ We have to end these attacks on democracy, the intentional tactics to divide us, and the vicious hate engendered by the MAGA crowd!

Senator Lindsey Graham’s on-again-off-again relationship with Trump, as he tries to stay in the good graces of the MAGA base, has resulted in his being accused of belittling himself in his home state. He was booed at a recent Silver Elephant Gala where Trump was keynote speaker, when he joked that the former president “beat him like a drum,” in reference their golfing together. Graham exhorted the attendees to “not screw with Trump or you’ll regret it.” Though the senator is not up for election until 2026, possible challengers are testing the waters already, seeing some vulnerability. Graham will likely be called to testify in Georgia, as Fulton County DA Fani Willis presents her case in Trump’s election interference. The Senator claims a commonality with the Former Guy, and “I’ve come to like him.” Maybe they can assign adjoining cells to accommodate this mutual admiration society.

A recent Mike Luckovich cartoon has Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and Assistant Supreme Court Justice Ginni Thomas, reacting to the duress of new revelations of even more gifts and travel. Ginni’s word balloon has her saying, “Being criticized for backing the coup and revelations Clarence repeatedly accepted financial gifts is very stressful.” Clarence appeals, “Hey, wealthy benefactors. We could use a vacation!” Sounds very true to life, no? ProPublica and The New York Times aren’t letting up, discovering more and more about the largesse accepted by the Thomases over three decades of Supreme Court tenure from industry titans and the ultra-wealthy.  Vacations aboard their yachts, premium suites at sports arenas, private jets to pick him up to join them in their squalor of riches, by the benefactors who share the ideology that propels his jurisprudence. The tally at this point, includes 38 destination vacations, one of which was a voyage on a yacht around the Bahamas; 26 private jet flights and eight helicopter trips; at least a dozen VIP passes to pro and college sports events, most viewed from a skybox; two stays at luxury resorts in Florida and Jamaica, with a standing invitation to an exclusive golf club on the Atlantic shore. This is probably only a partial list, an undercount, due to the difficulty in researching such information. Stays in private residences may not be unethical, but non-disclosure of the other generous gifts is over the line. The consistency of these violations is unprecedented, just for those gifted by Harlan Crow, originally pointed out by ProPublica; but now Berkshire Hathaway exec, David Sokol, is now on the list, as is late billionaire H. Wayne Huizenga. A Christmas tree and stockings hung by the fireplace are left year ’round in the Thomas household, ‘cuz the gifts keep rolling in.

Oil baron, Paul ‘Tony’ Novelly’s gifts have not been reported. Only Crow’s name appears in Thomas‘ financial disclosures as required by law, and who knows what value was given Crow’s largesse. Since 1991, Thomas has probably benefitted in the millions of dollars. Don Fox, the former general counsel of the US Office of Government Ethics and the senior ethics official in the executive branch, said, “It’s just the height of hypocrisy to wear the robes and live the lifestyle of a billionaire.” Working under both Democrat and Republican administrations, he advised every new political appointee the same thing: “Your wealthy friends are the ones you had before you were appointed…you don’t get to acquire any new ones.” The American taxpayer has the right to expect that Supreme Court justices are not living on the dime of others. Thomas and Novelly have not responded to questions, and Huizenga’s son, who survives his father, offered no response. Sokol defended his 21 year friendship with the Thomases and acknowledged trips together, defending the justice as upright and ethical, with conversations about helping young people, about sports, and discussing family matters. With security concerns nowadays, he feels justices should fly privately or on US government aircraft…not commercial. Especially with First Class being phased out by most carriers, huh? As Upton Sinclair said, “It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it.” Both Thomases are well short of understanding anything and we just keep giving our tax dollars to him, as well as to his benefactors. Talk about double jeopardy! Comforting to know that Thomas accepts BOTH MasterCard and Visa, as well!

Of course, we can’t forget the $270K Prevost Marathon, the ‘Rolls Royce of Motor Coaches,’ mysteriously purchased for the Thomas Twins with a ‘loan’ by healthcare executive Anthony Welters, a loan never disclosed in 1999. But hey, it allows the part-time RV nomads to travel the country, just being regular schmoes, as they mix it up with the other Unethical DC Road Warrior Sugar Babies, looking for another handout. His accomplice, Supreme Court Justice aka Sugar Baby Alito, purple robed and wearing a tiara, is diligently scoping out the territory on that same trail. Poor Chief Justice John Roberts is probably still lamenting the loss of the retired Justice Stephen Breyer, who he confided was his “only friend on the Court.” That in contrast to Clarence Thomas‘ referring to the court makeup prior to Roberts appointment, as a “fabulous court…we were family.” Sadly, it’s the ‘Robert’s Court’ in name only. “I don’t think I would want to be Roberts right now,” says USC law professor, Lee Epstein, whose specialty is examining voting patterns of the court. “He has some very aggressive, ambitious colleagues on this right who want to do a lot very quickly, and that’s just so not Roberts. He tries to slow things down, but they’re not going to be slowed.” 

Mike Davis, who worked to get Trump’s judicial nominees confirmed, now heading the conservative Article III Project, says of Roberts, “He’s just less relevant now. Trump transformed the 5-4 John Roberts court into the 5-4 Clarence Thomas court, meaning the court’s just going to follow the law and not be concerned about the political fallout.Harvard Law School professor emeritus, Laurence H. Tribe, co-author of the book on the Roberts court, made the same point from the opposite ideological perspective. “He’s largely irrelevant, except that the court has gone so far, so fast that he may become more relevant depending on whether anybody else is chastened,” Tribe says. Roberts risks appearing weak if he insists on a slower approach, losing what little ability he retains to influence and constrain the conservative majority. If he votes with that majority, it’s a risk that he contributes to what he is trying to prevent: the decline of the institution. The vote of the Chief Justice is just one of nine, with his authority of being able to assign the authorship of opinions when he is in the majority. Roberts, with his eye on history has been quoted as saying, “It’s sobering to think of the seventeen chief justices; certainly a solid majority of them have to be characterized as failures; the successful ones are hard to number.” He would prefer that the nine would speak as one, and not with discord and dissent…a charming and old-fashioned idea, not seen for at least thirty-five years or so.

Not likely to make it to the Supreme Court, or even out of the county, Ocean Fathoms, a company which ages $500 wine under the ocean, has been busted by Santa Barbara’s DA over alcohol being stored offshore without any permits. Seems that the firm failed to procure an ABC sales permit, while also failing to pay sales taxes on their limited sales, then abandoning the cache which they claimed would be a developing reef ecosystem, a violation of the Water Code. The FDA considered the wine unfit for human consumption after a prolonged submersion, so what were these guys thinking?

Following Trump’s 2016 election victory, the Obamas invited Donald and Melania to the Oval Office for a preview. After some pleasantries, The Don asked to use the bathroom, and was astonished to see a solid gold urinal, later telling Melania excitedly about his discovery. That evening, Barack and Michelle were discussing the visit, with Michelle asking her husband, “Guess who peed in your saxophone?” Whatever your path there are always a few puddles!

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
 

...

EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. View classic inner view ideas and thoughts with Subconscious Comics a few flips down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

    “Lighthouses”

“If you want to help a lighthouse, just don’t block its light, that’s the greatest help!”
~Mehmet Murat ildan

“If you close your eyes, no lighthouse can help you!”  
~Mehmet Murat ildan

“Light-houses, my boy! Beacons of the future! Capsules with hundreds of bright little seeds in each, out of which will spring the wiser, better England of the future.”

~Arthur Conan Doyle, Sherlock Holmes

...

This is a film about automata, mechanical robots from the 18th century. Engineering meets art – this is AI 300 years ago. At an hour long, it’s a short movie, and it’s fascinating and worth the time. Go on, grab some popcorn and marvel at human ingenuity!


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!
Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
Cell phone: 831 212-3273
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
...
Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment