December 22, 2021 – January 4, 2022

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Abbott Square’s owner? Santa Cruz Opera Society celebrates. GREENSITE…on Don’t Morph the Wharf v. City of Santa Cruz results. KROHN…Will be back in January. STEINBRUNER…Soquel Creek Water District and dirty water issue, new Watsonville Mayor, Wildfire defuse. HAYES… Post Fire Early Winter Mixed Conifer Forest. PATTON…Violence Interrupters. MATLOCK…musings on Mar-A Lago, Trump, Birx, Nunes, McConnell and Freedom Tree. EAGAN… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Leftovers II”

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SNOW IN SANTA CRUZ!! One of my favorite photos that answers the big question, “does it ever snow in Santa Cruz?”. This was 1957 and was at the then corner of Mission and Water Streets or Front and Pacific. The Bianchi sign on the once McHugh Bianchi market is now the Bank of the West.                          

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE December 20
      

ABBOTT SQUARE MARKET, THE OCTAGON, MAH AND LEGAL ISSUES. The following issue (word for word) is from a very trustworthy observer, someone I’ve known for decades. It centers on the business dealings of Tom and John McEnery. John McEnery IV’s firm owns our Abbott Square Market, which now includes seven restaurants and two bars. It also owns the Oakland Assembly food hall project. Martin Menne the president of MCM also “serves as development partner with Barry Swenson Builder in several Bay Area projects” according to their website.

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“Former San Jose Mayor Tom McEnery is at the center of a new lawsuit over an alleged botched business deal involving the city’s popular San Pedro Square Market.

John McEnery IV filed a federal lawsuit Monday against his uncle, Tom McEnery, alleging that the former mayor exploited him for his own financial gain.

Tom McEnery, who served as mayor from 1983 to 1991, is part-owner of the market — located on St. John Street between San Pedro and Almaden in downtown San Jose — along with his nephew, John McEnery IV, and MCM Diversified Inc., an investment company created and managed by Martin Menne. The market, which opened in 2011, consists of two main buildings with an eclectic mix of food and drink vendors and a large outdoor plaza.

John McEnery IV lives in South Carolina and began looking for ways to sell off part of his shares in the market after indoor businesses were shut down due to COVID-19 public health orders.

“Cash flow stopped, and John P. McEnery IV’s investment became harder to justify from a financial perspective. Unlike his wealthy uncle, McEnery IV’s investment in the LLCs represented a significant portion of his family’s financial assets and income,” the lawsuit states.

John McEnery IV started talking with his cousin, Oliver Herning, about selling him a portion of his shares. But, according to the lawsuit, the former mayor and Menne tried to intentionally ruin that venture soon after they caught wind of it. Tom McEnery allegedly began dropping by the home of Herning and “pulled out all the stops” to dissuade him from continuing discussions with his cousin, according to the lawsuit. Tom McEnery and Menne’s efforts eventually were successful and Herning walked away from the negotiations, depriving John McEnery of a viable business partner and the loss of at least $75,000, the suit states.

Patrick Hammon, a partner at the McManis Faulkner Law Firm, called it a “sad case.”

“There have been quite a few bad business dealings between members of the McEnery family for years,” Hammon said. “And it’s sad that the former mayor interfered with a business discussion between his nephew and another one of his nephews.”

Tom McEnery, who said he has yet to be served, called the lawsuit “unfortunate.”

“What we’re trying to do is keep 17 small businesses going within the market and make sure we can pay our bills,” he said.

The former mayor added that he felt the prominent San Jose-based attorney representing his nephew, James McManis, has some sort of vendetta against him.

In 2009, when Tom McEnery’s family first proposed the construction of a public market in downtown, McManis filed a complaint with the city’s Ethics Commission on behalf of an anonymous critic.

The 2009 complaint accused Tom McEnery and his family of failing to disclose dozens of meetings, as required by lobbying disclosure rules, while seeking $6 million in city redevelopment aid for the construction of what would become San Pedro Square Market. The complaint was dismissed after a five-month independent investigation that found the McEnery’s made a good-faith effort to comply with the lobbying rules despite a few omissions deemed unintentional. The identity of the anonymous critic was never revealed.  Hammon disputes Tom McEnery’s claims, saying that the law firm would never use a client’s case to sort out personal matters”. 

Now the question is what will our Santa Cruz County Government (the County owns Abbott Square, the City doesn’t) do about protecting this property? The loss of funds, the looming job losses and proper oversight of the entire operation are all in serious question.

SANTA CRUZ OPERA SOCIETY CELEBRATES. As a very long time supporter and opera lover (I’ve attended over 300 performances) I was delighted to attend the 45th anniversary celebration of the founding of SCOSI (Santa Cruz Opera Society Incorporated) by Miriam Ellis and Lili Hunter. In addition to seeing SCOSI members again we were gifted with a vocal performance by soprano Lori Schulman with maestro Michel Singher at the piano. It’s groups/friends like these that make Santa Cruz such a special place to live…BRAVO!

Be sure to tune in to my very newest movie streaming 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.

SWAN SONG. (APPLE TV SINGLE). (6.6 IMDB) Mahershala Ali is an incredibly great actor and plays a man in the near future who decides to allow himself to be cloned by Dr. Glenn Close because he’s dying from some disease and doesn’t want his family to suffer from his departure. He has fine scenes with his double which are good fun to watch and the entire plot is intriguing. You can get quite involved with how you’d react to dealing with the real you or your double. Good for the whole family.

NIGHTMARE ALLEY. (DEL MAR THEATRE). (81RT). I’ve never forgotten the 1947 version of Nightmare Alley starring Tyrone Power and Joan Blondell. It was awe inspiring and not in a good way. This new one stars Bradley Cooper and Rooney Mara and doesn’t quite have the power of the early version. . It’s about the rise and disastrous fall of a huckster turned geek. Toni Collette, Cate Blanchett and even Ron Perlman don’t move the plot fast enough but they still remain the very best of our contemporary character actors

THE HAND OF GOD. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (82RT) An absorbing, perfectly acted, sensitive story of a young boy coming of age in Naples. Full of cinema touches like Fellini, religion, sex, Stromboli, and even an international soccer star, this is a surefire way to ease the holiday season. Don’t miss it. 

THE COYOTES. (NETFLIX SERIES) (5.2 IMDB) A squad of scouts in Belgium go into the woods and one of them finds some diamonds previously owned by the Mafia while he’s high on some kind of psychedelic. Hiding a body, questioning brother’s loyalty, fighting to be free of parental control all add up to a watchable series. 

IN THE EARTH. (HULU SINGLE) (5.2 IMDB) (79RT). Filmed in England just after the covid pandemic hit this film depends on our fear and worries to produce a very scary movie. 98 percent of the effects are done by easy camera edits and they work. It’s gruesome, bloody, and savage, contains flashing lights, and is a genuine unique thriller about being lost in the woods with something like Covid threatening at every turn. 

BRUISED. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (6.2 IMDB) (54RT). Halle Berry both directed and stars in this woman centered martial arts boxing in a cage soap opera. Berry plays a former boxing champ who’s fallen on hard times. Will she make it in her big championship bout is the question. It’s predictable, and she’s given the chance to become a good mother when her deserted son is returned to her. It could have been a much more exciting, biting movie.

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.  

VIENNA BLOOD. (PRIME SERIES). (7.5 IMDB). It’s the very old story of the detective with an aide who actually makes the plot work. It’s 1906 in Vienna and the detective has a young Doctor who is far superior to his supposed mentor. There’s a suicide that really isn’t a suicide and some séance ghost friends who add to this very light, almost comedy. Enjoyable but not necessary.

THE UNFORGIVABLE. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (7.2 IMDB). Sandra Bullock plays a convict released from prison in search of her younger sister who was sent to adoptive parents. Solemn, sad, involving, but also containing some unbelievable plot points. The surprise ending changes everything the film was built on and makes it an involving but not great cinema effort. 

PIG. (HULU SINGLE). (6.9 IMDB). Not quite the sequel to Julia, this centers on Nicolas Cage as a famed master chef in Portland who gave it all up and lives in the woods with his truffle hunting pig. He spends the entire film searching for his stolen pig and encounters both bad and good adventures from his past life. Unusual, and contains deep connections about what’s important in our lives. 

BEING THE RICARDOS. (DEL MAR THEATRE). (7.2 IMDB) Quite surprisingly I’m having a tough time forgetting this movie about Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. Nicole Kidman and Javier Bardem do as good as or better than anyone we could imagine. It’s about a week in the production of the I Love Lucy series when all involved have to deal with Lucy’s communism, her having a baby on television, Desi’s infidelity and more. Aaron Sorkin directed and wrote the movie and if you’ve ever wondered about Lucy’s real genius and ability to succeed on and off screen against all odds, you’ll like this one. 

AND JUST LIKE THAT. (HBO MAX). (6.4 IMDB). Sex and The City revisited from when the three city dwellers were cute and nerdy to now when they are in their 50″s and have wrinkles and somewhat deeper issues. Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis are still somewhat interesting to watch but the plot lines get tangled. They talk about a face problems with sex, semen, masturbation, racial problems, and gender decisions, and manage to get some laughs too. 

BORDERTOWN. THE MURAL MURDERS. (NETFLIX SINGLE & SERIES). 6.4 IMDB. A serial killer is on the loose in this Finnish dramatic mystery. But the killer only kills bad people who have been on police lists to be watched and investigated. Murals are painted with the blood of the victims. It’s tense, exciting and the acting is superior.

Dr. BRAIN. (APPLE TV). (7.0 IMDB). Famed Korean director Jee-woon Kim creates a weird fantasy when a brain Doctor has serious problems trying NOT to remember his childhood and all the pain and deaths it involved. He discovers new truths no one else can decipher. Then he learns how to transfer memories and thoughts from new cadavers and even animals into his own consciousness. A superior plot and unlike anything we’ve seen on any screen.

LANDSCAPERS. (HBO SERIES). (100RT) (7.6 IMDB) Brand new and each episode will be released on Mondays. Olivia Colman and David Thewlis costar in this comedy drama about an elderly couple who have some secrets in their past. It’s got a unique style that keeps us guessing about what really happened and why. With those two stars heading the cast it has to be great and a bit slow moving at times but it’s not to be missed.

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SANTA CRUZ ACTORS THEATRE announced….

“8 Tens @ 8 Short Play Festival” at the Center Stage Theater 1001 Center Street (831) 431-6237 January 14 – February 6.

Tickets here! 

THE SANTA CRUZ CHAMBER PLAYERS announced…
“Gabriel Fauré and His Circle of Influence”

THE NISENE ENSEMBLE: Cynthia Baehr-Williams, Concert Director and Violin

They’ll be playing music by Martinu, Boulanger, Saint-Saëns, Kodály, Bloch and Fauré
It’ll be at Christ Lutheran Church, 10707 Soquel Drive, Aptos. (Off Highway 1 at Freedom Blvd.) Saturday, January 29, 2022 at 7:30 pm and Sunday, January 30, 2022 at 3:00 pm

Go here for info: scchamberplayers.org 

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December 21

DON’T MORPH THE WHARF! v CITY OF SANTA CRUZ

For those who have been wondering what happened to the city’s Wharf Master Plan, that widely unpopular project to transform the 107 year-old Municipal Wharf, we have some good news. 

Last Friday (12/17), Judge Paul P. Burdick ruled in favor of the community group, Don’t Morph the Wharf!. He announced that he will issue a judgment and a writ of mandate ordering the city to set aside its approval of the Wharf Master Plan project. Among other things, the judge ruled that the city’s environmental review process did not adequately address inconsistencies with adopted land use plans and would affect the important recreational uses by removing the current sea-lion viewing holes and reducing fishing. Further, the city’s findings that an alternate plan that would eliminate the Western Walkway and the 40-foot Landmark Building proposed at the end of the Wharf would be infeasible was unsupported. The city “does not explain why engineered infrastructure support, other than a pedestrian walkway (which the City acknowledges would have adverse impacts on nesting coastal birds), could not be utilized to provide lateral support and protect pilings.”

The exact language of the judgment and writ as to particulars relating to aesthetic and structural issues will be resolved at a final hearing on February 18, but Judge Burdick was clear that judgment will issue for Don’t Morph the Wharf!

Kudos to Susan Brandt-Hawley, attorney for Don’t Morph the Wharf!, who legally dissected and dissolved the city’s arguments with precision. Thanks to Judge Burdick for his comprehensive review and enforcement of state environmental law.

Thanks also to Don’t Morph the Wharf! the community group which persisted since 2015 to confront the city to keep the character of the Wharf intact, reflecting the wishes of thousands of petitioners and hundreds of Wharf visitors who made their opposition to the city’s plan well-known.  

A brief history of the effort: In 2014 the city applied to the federal Department of Commerce for close to one million dollars (including a few thousand in matching city funds) to make repairs to the Wharf, which the city claimed was “severely damaged” by the tsunami of 2011. Those of us who stood on the cliffs above Cowell Beach and watched the tsunami come in disputed that claim. The waters around the Wharf were as still as a millpond, unlike the Small Craft Harbor that did suffer extensive damage due to its narrow opening.  A Public Records Act request uncovered the document to the feds that contained the city’s claim of “severe damage” to the Wharf while the city’s engineering report at the same time stated the Wharf was “undamaged” by the tsunami.

ROMA came up with a design that would transform the Wharf into a more upscale destination with an 86% increase in commercial space, three new public buildings of 45 feet in height, one at the end of the Wharf larger in mass than a single family lot size (60X120′) plus many more changes to send shudders down one’s spine. At first the city tried to get away with a Mitigated Negative Declaration (MND) that failed to include impacts on migratory birds nesting annually under the Wharf. We pushed back and they included the birds, citing no significant impacts.  The plan and its MND was headed to city council in 2016. A letter from Susan Brandt-Hawley citing the legal need to do a full Environmental Impact Report (EIR) caused the item to be tabled until such EIR was completed.

 For a few years all was quiet. We hoped the project was off the stove rather than just on the back burner.  Then the EIR was released in 2019. Its weaknesses were apparent: no mention that the 45 feet tall building at the end of the Wharf would cover the popular sea lion viewing holes; inaccurate conclusions that the fishing areas would be increased; no impact on migratory birds’ access to their nests under the Wharf.  Pronouncements of “increased access” despite new limits on residents’ access to free fishing areas and free recreation such as viewing sea lions.

The city will have the right to appeal the legal ruling after it is finalized in February. Rather than a challenge to this fair and welcome ruling, a better course of action would be to go forward with a plan to preserve the Municipal Wharf without the unnecessary changes such as the Landmark Building and Western Walkway. 

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.

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Chris will be back for that first week in January edition.

Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and a Santa Cruz City Council member from 1998-2002 and from 2017-2020. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. On Tuesday evenings at 5pm, Krohn hosts of “Talk of the Bay,” on KSQD 90.7 and KSQD.org His Twitter handle at SCpolitics is @ChrisKrohnSC Chris can be reached at ckrohn@cruzio.com

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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December 20

SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT PLANS TO DUMP 1.5 MILLION GALLONS OF CONSTRUCTION WASTEWATER INTO THE BAY, WITH NO CURRENT PERMIT

The Water District is planning to dump 1.5 million gallons of contaminated construction wastewater into the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary but does not have current Pollution Discharge Permit to do so, and therefore may not have to follow restrictions for developing this new well in Rio del Mar. 

 We all need to contact the State Water Board, NOAA and the Dept. of Fish and Wildlife to demand this effluent be carefully monitored by their environmental staff.

The Country Club Well and 1, 2, 3-TCP Treatment Project at 251 Baltrusol in Rio del Mar will generate 1.5 million gallons of construction wastewater, containing high levels of a carcinogen 1,2,3-TCP, into the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, but without a current permit from the State to do so when it is required.

The Board of Directors for Soquel Creek Water District is preparing to approve a Mitigated Negative Declaration for the Country Club Well and 1, 2, 3-TCP Treatment Plant at their December 21 meeting that will allow the construction crew to dump 1.5 million gallons of contaminated well effluent and drilling muds into Bush Gulch in Rio del Mar, and on into the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary.

The District’s environmental analysis document states:

“All water discharged to Bush Gulch would comply with SqCWD’s existing National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit requirements under Order WQ 2014-0194-DWQ, General Order No. CAG14001, Waste Discharge Identification Number 4DW0118.”  (page 12 of the ISMND found on page 222 of the Agenda packet)

However, a footnote on that page divulges that “the existing statewide NPDES permit under which SqCWD has coverage is formally expired; however, the SWRCB has indicated that until the statewide NPDES permit is renewed, SqCWD’s existing permit is administratively extended and continues to be in effect.”

Why would the District be allowed to discharge construction and well-development waters into the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, not the Pacific Ocean, as the document states, without a valid Pollution Discharge Permit from the State?  The District has violated the conditions of the former permit by discharging turbid sulfate-laden waters into the Bay when developing the Twin Lakes Church Injection Well.  This construction wastewater will have high levels of the carcinogen 1,2,3-TCP, will also likely be very turbid, and may have high sulfate levels due to the dechlorination process used in developing the new well.   

I am troubled that the Project Determination Findings have been made by the District’s Associate Engineer, Mr. Mike Wilson, who is not an environmental analytical specialist. (see page 230 of the agenda packet).

Please write the State Water Quality Control Board and ask why Soquel Creek Water District would be allowed to dump 1.5 million gallons of construction effluent into the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary without a current and valid NPDES permit that the State requires.  Matt Keeling matt.keeling@waterboards.ca.gov  and Thea Tryon thea.tryon@waterboards.ca.gov  Telephone Ms. Tryon, in Legal Affairs, at 805-542-4776.

Contact Fish and Wildlife environmental staff Serena Stumpf serena.stumpf@wildlife.ca.gov  and Wesley Stokes wesley.stokes@wildlife.ca.gov  

Contact NOAA environmental permit staff Lisa Wooninck lisa.woonninck@noaa.gov  and Sophie De Beukelaer sophie.debeukelaer@noaa.gov  Phone: (831) 647-4201

THANK YOU SUPERVISOR KOENIG FOR INCLUDING THE CALIFORNIA GRANGE IN NEW COUNTY ANIMAL CONTROL CODE LANGUAGE.

The Santa Cruz County Supervisors generally tend to ignore all constituents who take time to testify at their Board meetings with suggestions and requests.  That is why it was refreshing and much appreciated that Supervisor Manu Koenig added language, at my spoken request, to include and recognize the California Grange as a valid animal raising and exhibition program for youth, on par with 4-H and FFA, at the December 7 Board meeting.

This matters a lot because youth who choose to be such independent exhibitors at the County Fair are recognized and welcomed, so it is necessary that the County’s new Animal Control codes regulating such activities also recognize the validity of the Grange for youth.

Oddly, the Santa Cruz County Fair Board ignored my similar request, but Supervisor Koenig did not.  Thank you, Supervisor Koenig!

STEPHANIE HARLAN APPOINTED TO CENTRAL COAST REGIONAL WATER BOARD

It was a surprise to find Stephanie Harlan back on the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board for last week’s meeting.  She had served on that Board for one year (2018-2019) and was not reappointed…until just last week.

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO HAVE 80% WATERSHED LANDS MANAGED?

I asked this question at last week’s Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board meeting during their consideration of the Draft Triennial Watershed Report.   Mr. John Inman, the staff environmental scientist presenting the Report, answered that he did not have any metric for monitoring the watershed management just yet.  A bit vague…and did not address the core of my question about how this might affect private land owners in watersheds.

Another issue the Board discussed, thanks to thorough consideration of Director Dr. Hunter, involved scrutinizing the Los Osos wastewater treatment / water purification project that has been the subject of many, many problems.  She asked why it was not higher on the priority list of issues to address. This project is very similar to the Soquel Creek Water District’s Modified PureWater Soquel Project, aka using treated sewage water to recharge the aquifer.  

Dr. Hunter pointed out that the beleaguered Los Osos project construction and operational costs have skyrocketed to over $200 million (same current price tag as Soquel Creek’s boondoggle) and is causing great financial burden for the disadvantaged communities there (same as Soquel Creek Water District’s skyrocketing rates now, tailored to pay for their boondoggle project).  “The prolonged economic feasibility of this facility is in question.” she said….ditto for the extremely expensive Modified PureWater Soquel Project boondoggle. 

Here is the link to that 73-page Triennial Report 

The Vision for the Central Coast Water Board is Healthy Watersheds.  Here are the Board’s goals to align with that Vision:

“Healthy Aquatic Habitat. By 2025, 80 percent of aquatic habitat is healthy, and the remaining 20 percent exhibits positive trends in key parameters. 


Proper Land Management. By 2025, 80 percent of lands within a watershed will be managed to maintain proper watershed functions, and the remaining 20 percent will exhibit positive trends in key watershed parameters.

Clean Groundwater. By 2025, 80 percent of groundwater will be clean, and the remaining 20 percent will exhibit positive trends in key parameters. 

(page 8)   

Permaculture Design for Wildfire Defense

WELL…COULD THIS BE AN IDEA?

Creating fire defensible space is a real challenge for people living on the steep slopes of the Santa Cruz Mountains.  Because it is so arduous to drag vegetative material up the hill to get chipped, the work often just does not get done, contributing to high fire risk.  The video below discusses a great idea called “Hugelkultur” that uses downed trees (charred wood seems best) to make a foundation for large raised beds.  Add in swales to capture rainwater, and you have a nice place to grow something without irrigation…or at least a way to sequester carbon while creating fire defensible space, and adding in stormwater recharge to the aquifers.

Here is a bit more about that good word for your next Scrabble game, hugelkultur  

WATSONVILLE GETS ANOTHER GOOD WOMAN FOR MAYOR

What good fortune for the people of Watsonville to have a strong and intelligent woman now leading the City Council.  Many times, while observing Watsonville City Council meetings, Ari Parker has impressed me with her clear language and bright intellect, always taking firm and fair action to best support the people she represents. 

 Let’s hope she will run for County District Four Supervisor in the next election!

Ari Parker takes over as Watsonville Mayor – The Pajaronian 

Mayor Parker helped organize a citizens group, “Let the People Vote”, in 2014 that successfully placed three citizen initiatives on the ballot, and all were voter-approved. 

Measure H added to the City Charter  a requirement that a vacant (as defined) Council seat be filled only by voters at either a General Municipal Election or a Special Municipal Election rather than by Council election, required to be held within ninety (90) days after the vacancy (as defined) occurs.   

This recently came into play when Councilman Aurelio Gonzales resigned in September.  The seat remained vacant until the December 7 Special Election, whose results will be certified on December 28.

The other two successful citizen initiative measures were called Measure I and Measure J. Measure I required a rotating mayoral position, meaning that the council member from each of the seven city districts has a turn serving as mayor over time. Prior to Measure I, the city charter required the mayor to be elected from among the city council members by the city council. 

Measure J required public places to be named through an election of the people, instead of being named by the city council.

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  YOU CAN MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE IF YOU JUST DO SOMETHING.

Happy Holidays and All the Best Wishes for a Healthy New Year,

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

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December 20

POST FIRE EARLY WINTER MIXED CONIFER FOREST.

The widespread mixed conifer forest in the hills of Santa Cruz County’s North Coast is drippy wet now, even between storms. Seventeen months ago, the CZU Lightning Complex Fire devoured tens of thousands of acres of mixed conifer forest just north of Santa Cruz. Now, there are thousands and thousands of stark blackened standing dead trees. There are also living and resprouting trees. The dead and the living conifers tower over a wet, glistening, vibrantly green, and lush understory. It is slippery and hikeable now, but as the trees fall and the brush grows up it will become impossible to explore until the next fire…a decade away.

What is Mixed Conifer Forest?

Mixed conifer forest is our most common forest type. While it is true that we have patches of redwood-dominated forest and patches of Douglas fir-dominated forest, many areas have a mix of the two. At the larger scale, peering out of an airplane at 10,000 feet, all of the local forested landscape includes a mix of conifers – redwood, Douglas fir, knobcone pine, ponderosa pine, Monterey pine, and Santa Cruz cypress. Where Douglas fir and coast redwood co-dominate, this type of mixed conifer forest hosts a mix of plants and animals that are distinct to this habitat type. Low light levels from a high, dense canopy and a preponderance of difficult to digest resinous needles are important factors determining what else can live in this habitat type.

Flaming Bark

The mixed conifer forests burned unevenly in August of 2020. Douglas fir trees take a little coaxing, but coast redwood trees take real convincing, to burn. There are many more fire-killed Douglas firs than redwoods. During the last two fires, I watched both redwood and Douglas fir trees catch on fire. Fire seemed to race up Douglas fir trunks, spewing sparks and crackling away whereas redwood trunk flames were slower to move up the tree and was less sparky and noisy. 

Unlike redwood, Douglas fir trunks are covered with sticky sap that ignites easily. I heard a story about a teenager that thought it would be fun use a lighter to light some sap on fire on the side of a tree and very shortly needed the help of the fire department to put out the flaming tree, which was threatening the family home.

Glowing Holes

For weeks after the initial fire storm, glowing spots throughout the forest decorated the night. Mostly, these were the smoldering stumps of trees that had died long before the fire. In the mixed conifer forest, there were many dead or dying madrones and tan oaks that had been shaded out. These hardwood stumps made for some hot holes that burned for days. Some smaller Douglas fir trees had also died before the fire, but they burned up quicker.  There are now quite a few treacherous holes making forest hiking more interesting.

Understory Greens

The rains have germinated 3″ deep shag carpets of lush herbs and hydrated huge patches of shorter bright mosses below blackened tree trunks. Miner’s lettuce, phacelias, and weedy forget-me-nots make the carpet. In patches, taller plants like hedge nettle, blackberry, nightshade and many other plants add to the hillsides of bright green. Many areas are already dotted with white, pink, or purple blossoms brought on by the winter rains and encouraged by warm bright days between storms. A lot more sunlight hits the forest floor now. Where there are patches of live trees, the understory is less thick. In some places, the fire left small hillside meadows, without any trees at all. 

The forest soil is still black and slippery with soot and ash. During each of my recent forest hikes, I have slipped and would have tumbled a long way were it not for my grip on the very strong 4′ tall redwood basal sprouts. The soil, in the hotter burned places where the understory herb seeds were destroyed, is covered by strikingly bright mosses littered by needles and small branches blown from the few remaining live trees somewhere uphill or up wind.

Post Fire Wildlife

The burning of the mixed conifer forests means more food for more birds: redwood and Douglas fir forests normally have few seed producing plants, but that’s changed now. In mixed coniferous forest, deer have little to eat; now, the forest floor is covered with deer food. It is easy to see the birds and easy to find the deer tracks. Sharp deer hooves, forming new trails, cut through mosses and lush hillside wildflowers, exposing forest soil. The tracks criss cross the steep hills, patches of tasty miner’s lettuce chewed off. I’ve been seeing deer beds of very flattened understory plants, mostly on level spots along old logging roads. Expect healthy coats on momma deers, more big antlered bucks and spotted big eyed deer twins navigating the hills on dainty legs this spring. Mountain lions prefer dark forest to move around, but they’ll be enjoying more food while the forest canopy grows back.

Fire Makes Beaches and Bonfires

Mostly, the forest floor is healing, and little erosion has been happening. The exception is where humans created roads during the early logging days. To create roads on hills, people carved uphill and dumped the soil they removed downhill. This is called ‘cut and fill’ road engineering. Sometimes the fill side buried logs and stumps which burned under these old roads in the recent fire. Now, the uphill scar is unstable in many places, the fire having destroyed the stabilizing plants. Between burned out fill sides and steep, less vegetated cut sides…there is lots of erosion. Throughout the fire, you can find large and small scallops of hillside slumping onto the old roads or downhill from the roads towards the creeks. Besides being activated post-fire, this legacy of disturbance is most evident now that you can better see the soil surface across the hillsides.

With the couple large storms we had, streams have been carrying soil and logs. Local streams are flowing with mud, as evidenced by the ocean’s big brown plume up and down the coast right after the last storm. That mud will sort out and the sand part will become our beaches- bigger beaches after fires? We’ll see. 

One local stream was more black then brown for a while- probably because of ash and soot. Streams are also carrying logs. Judging from the scouring of streamsides, streams have been blocked by post fire logs (ever encounter the term ‘logjam?’); those blockages eventually give way and are swept downstream with great force, battering and baring stream banks downstream and far up their banks. Those logs become driftwood on the fire-augmented sandy beaches. That driftwood will become the bonfires for rocking all night parties that the Coastal Commission has just sanctioned by mandating the creation of 24-hour parking lots from Santa Cruz to Davenport. So, part of the post wildfire wildlife effects will be the noisy, blazing, smokey disturbance of whatever shorebirds were counting on nocturnal refuge on those once peaceful beaches. The CZU mixed conifer forest flames will carry on for human and non-human animals alike, for better or for worse.

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

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December 18

#352/ Violence Interrupters

Anywhere there’s a significant level of crime there are also homegrown peacemakers.

An Associated Press story out of Nashville, Tennessee caught my attention on Sunday, August 8, 2021. I found the story in that day’s edition of the San Jose Mercury News. I was delighted to learn that there are grassroots efforts, throughout the nation, to combat community violence:
 
Smaller, grassroots efforts in communities across the country are trying alternative strategies to curb violence, recognizing the fallout from decades of “tough on crime” policies that criminalized a generation, leaving them with fewer resources and opportunities than ever.

That includes violence interrupter programs such as Gideon’s Army or Cure Violence Global, which started in Chicago and has branched out to other cities. Other groups, including the West Nashville Dream Center, primarily attack structural issues such as poverty and educational inequality. The groups differ in philosophy but share a common goal of improving life in their communities. 

Read more here 

Our salvation as a nation (and this is one of those “revelations” that Jad Abumrad talks about in one of my previous blog postings with a Tennessee connection) will come from small, local, volunteer, grassroots groups, mobilized to deal with problems that seem impossible to deal with at a larger scale. 

 
Think that can’t work? As one of our most impressive thinkers has told us, “it’s the only thing that ever has.” 

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

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December 20

Much has come to light this week from D.C., NYC, Fresno, and Mar-A-Lago, as various committees, governmental departments, and legislators dig into the previous administration’s policies and actions. The rate of speed governing these investigations will likely take the next three generations of Americans to completely unravel, unless, of course, Boss Tweet manages to wrest the U.S. Constitution from its display case.

Revelations have shown how the Trump Maladministration ignored, undermined, and thwarted the roll-out of any strategies, or a campaign to aid Americans in the burgeoning COVID epidemic as it began its spread around the world. A harried and haggard Dr. Fauci was allowed out of detention periodically, from the White House basement where he was forced to live for several months after being too truthful in his initial reporting. Dr. Deborah Birx, was allowed some freedom as long as she kept her “What, me worry?” façade during her worried, and worrisome, press conference appearances. Outgoing NIH director, Dr. Francis Collins was pressured by Trump to endorse non-scientific remedies for the virus, near to the point of arm wrestling, as Collins tried to stay relevant in his precarious position.

Dolly Parton, twice offered the Congressional Medal of Freedom by Benedict Donald Trump, and turning him away twice, was instrumental in getting the Moderna vaccine developed by her generous monetary contributions. It was just revealed that she also had a ‘do not accommodate’ list for certain persons as a prerequisite for acceptance of her money toward the lab testing, and, admirably delayed her own dose until the project was well underway across the nation.

California’s 22d district representative, Devin Nunes, personal footstool (or milking stool) of The Lyin’ King will soon be on the payroll of the Trump organization’s new social media platform to spread his gospel of grift, and to continue milking the public, providing a bit of respite for the district taxpayer’s pocketbook – not to include those duped by the Trump 2024 campaign, and whose bank accounts are being drained as we speak. Nunes will be sorely missed by his central valley constituents. Heaven forfend!

Sen. Mitch McConnell, surprised at learning of the January 6th insurrection at the capitol, denied having any input before, during, and absolutely-cross-my-heart for certain, not afterwards, says he is eager to learn what the fuss is all about. More is coming to light daily, as many of the coup plotters respond to the U.S. House of Representatives January 6th investigating committee, with an abundance of emails from November 2020 through January 2021 flowing into the hands of the probers. Keep Mitch on your speed-dial to be the first to let him know when the perpetrators are conclusively revealed. O-o-oh, we can hardly wait!

A suspicious event occurred at Fox News headquarters this week, as the Christmas/Hannukah/Freedom/America ‘Tree’ is set afire by an unsavory, homeless, ‘released criminal’. The ‘tree’, a decorated framework with ornaments depicting Big Bird, Sponge Bob, Bert and Ernie, Elmo, Potato Head, Dora the Explorer, G.I. Joe, Cat in the Hat, Snagglepuss, and other cartoon or fictional characters, was partially saved by NYFD; however, the conflagration reeks of suspicion in that it may have been a planned inside job, a warning against further endorsement of COVID-19 vaccines by the companies that control these trademarks. The publisher of Dr. Seuss’ catalog could not be reached for comment. Heavens to Murgatroyd!

As the country slips into the holiday atmosphere, we can only hope that 2022 will begin with new vigor and we can slide from the darkness of the past into a brighter future. What say, Mitch? 

Dale Matlock is the former owner of the Shirt Factory in the Sashmill, lived in Hawaii off and on and can be reached at dalematlock@sbcglobal.net 

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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

    “LEFTOVERS II”

“The most remarkable thing about my mother is that for thirty years she served the family nothing but leftovers. The original meal has never been found.”  
~Calvin Trillin

“I unwrapped my love for her like one might unwrap leftovers. Gotta eat up the old stuff first, as a cannibal might say in a retirement home”.
~Dark Jar Tin Zoo

“Leftovers come to those who wait.”
~Ljupka Cvetanova

 “All things come to him who waits, but they are mostly leftovers from those who didn’t wait.”
~Evan Esar

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Here’s more to show why I love trevor Noah.


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
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com
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Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

December 15 – 21, 2022

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Sad predictions, London Nelson’s sign, Movies, Live Here Now events. GREENSITE…on the Library Charade. KROHN…City council and library garage, houseless, Martin Bernal, grassroots rescue. STEINBRUNER…Redistricting county lines/Koenig & Timm, CZU and Supes reaction, Live Oak Library, PureWater Soquel issues, parkletts. HAYES…”Douglas Fir Forests. PATTON…Muskism and Mrs. Brown. MATLOCK…Departures, the train has left. EAGAN… Eagan Blog, Subconscious Comics, Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Tsunamis”

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CHRISTMAS TREE ON OUR COURT HOUSE, December 3, 1954. Before it was reclaimed and named the Cooper House this was our Santa Cruz County courthouse. It was built in 1894 and even though it was retrofitted, the city allowed it to be destroyed after the 1989 earthquake. The thin plaster fragile structure located there now is the O’Neill Surf Shop.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE December 13

SAD PREDICTIONS. Keith McHenry, one of the founders of the nation-wide Food Not Bombs volunteer program and director of our Santa Cruz Chapter, has a lot to say about homelessness in our area and the very, very, near future. Keith meets, and has more connections with, our homeless and attached issues than anyone. He told me last week that the number of homeless is growing, and growing faster than ever, and that Food Not Bombs are handing out more tents and services than any time in the past. Our local homeless situation is multiplying way beyond our level of help and the winds and rains and cold nights are getting worse. Authorities need to do more than find legal ways to shuffle our less fortunate from site to non-site/sight. Go here to see how we/you can help out and write to the City Council to get better focused.

LONDON NELSON’S NAME, STILL AN ISSUE. For some reason (mainly irresponsibility) the Council hasn’t yet repainted the London Nelson Community Center‘s Sign at the corner of Center and Laurel Streets. It still reads Louden Nelson! Check it out online, it’s been corrected there… Why doesn’t the council take the responsibility, and probably only about $200, and hire one of our great muralists/artists to simply re-paint the one line with his name properly? Peter Bartczak, Russell Brutsche, Laurel Bushman, Kathleen Crocetti, Ann Thierman and many more would probably be happy for the opportunity to correct this prominent city mistake. I must add that two or three weeks ago I was driving by that sign and saw a few people posing in front of a cheap looking white plastic slip covered sign designed to cover over the Louden Nelson sign. What’s going on?

Be sure to tune in to my very newest movie streaming 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.

VIENNA BLOOD. (PRIME SERIES). (7.5 IMDB). It’s the very old story of the detective with an aide who actually makes the plot work. It’s 1906 in Vienna and the detective has a young Doctor who is far superior to his supposed mentor. There’s a suicide that really isn’t a suicide and some séance ghost friends who add to this very light, almost comedy. Enjoyable but not necessary.

THE UNFORGIVABLE. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (7.2 IMDB). Sandra Bullock plays a convict released from prison in search of her younger sister who was sent to adoptive parents. Solemn, sad, involving, but also containing some unbelievable plot points. The surprise ending changes everything the film was built on and makes it an involving but not great cinema effort.

PIG. (HULU SINGLE). (6.9 IMDB). Not quite the sequel to Julia, this centers on Nicolas Cage as a famed master chef in Portland who gave it all up and lives in the woods with his truffle hunting pig. He spends the entire film searching for his stolen pig and encounters both bad and good adventures from his past life. Unusual, and contains deep connections about what’s important in our lives.

BEING THE RICARDOS. (DEL MAR THEATRE). (7.2 IMDB) Quite surprisingly I’m having a tough time forgetting this movie about Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. Nicole Kidman and Javier Bardem do as good as or better than anyone we could imagine. It’s about a week in the production of the I Love Lucy series when all involved have to deal with Lucy’s communism, her having a baby on television, Desi’s infidelity and more. Aaron Sorkin directed and wrote the movie and if you’ve ever wondered about Lucy’s real genius and ability to succeed on and off screen against all odds, you’ll like this one.

AND JUST LIKE THAT. (HBO MAX). (6.4 IMDB). Sex and The City revisited from when the three city dwellers were cute and nerdy to now when they are in their 50″s and have wrinkles and somewhat deeper issues. Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis are still somewhat interesting to watch but the plot lines get tangled. They talk about a face problems with sex, semen, masturbation, racial problems, and gender decisions, and manage to get some laughs too.

BORDERTOWN. THE MURAL MURDERS. (NETFLIX SINGLE & SERIES). 6.4 IMDB. A serial killer is on the loose in this Finnish dramatic mystery. But the killer only kills bad people who have been on police lists to be watched and investigated. Murals are painted with the blood of the victims. It’s tense, exciting and the acting is superior.

Dr. BRAIN. (APPLE TV). (7.0 IMDB). Famed Korean director Jee-woon Kim creates a weird fantasy when a brain Doctor has serious problems trying NOT to remember his childhood and all the pain and deaths it involved. He discovers new truths no one else can decipher. Then he learns how to transfer memories and thoughts from new cadavers and even animals into his own consciousness. A superior plot and unlike anything we’ve seen on any screen.

LANDSCAPERS. (HBO SERIES). (100RT) (7.6 IMDB) Brand new and each episode will be released on Mondays. Olivia Colman and David Thewlis costar in this comedy drama about an elderly couple who have some secrets in their past. It’s got a unique style that keeps us guessing about what really happened and why. With those two stars heading the cast it has to be great and a bit slow moving at times but it’s not to be missed.

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 Prime, PBS etc.) 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.

C’MON, C’MON. (DEL MAR THEATRE). (96RT) A deep but heartfelt, feel good movie starring Joaquin Phoenix as an emergency step dad for a little boy (nephew) who has emotional issues. The boy played by Woody Norman is absolutely perfect and deserves an Academy Award immediately. Phoenix acts the role of a radio interviewer and creates one of the warmest roles we’ve seen him create.

GAIA. (HULU SINGLE). 84RT. This is a monster movie unlike most monster movies. It’s one you can almost believe!!! Cast into a South African jungle the woman survivor meets a fugitive father and son and together they try to survive the deadly fungus fed monsters. It is exciting, suspenseful and terrifically filmed. Any more than this would ruin the suspense.

THE POWER OF THE DOG. (NETFLIX SINGLE). 96RT. Bernard Cumberbatch plays a
college educated American cowboy with deep problems. Other critics are going berserk over this
mess by noted director Jane Campion. Kirsten Dunst acts as the drunken mother who lost her rich husband and is raising her effeminate son who shares the problems. Complex, weird, and incredibly dark, I left it sad, bewildered and bothered.

SARDAR UDHAM. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). 94RT. 8.9 IMDB. A huge and well produced true drama of the Indian hero Sardar Udham who led a lifelong struggle and uprising against the British rule of India. Starting in 1919 and continuing until this century it clearly shows the evil, killing, and profiteering by the English. Excellent acting, superior photography and a terrifying plot, similar to what the USA does in our territories.

DHA-MA-KA. (NETFLIX SINGLE). Set in modern day Mumbai it’s a tense but nearly unreal saga of a television station and its anchor newsman being threatened by a mysterious bomber who blows up a bridge and wants his message heard on TV. It’s unfortunately almost a true story of what’s behind not just Indian commercial TV but our local journalism management.

ME FAMILIA 2. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). 4.5 IMDB. A waste of time plot that looks like rejected scenes from The Sopranos. Mafia from Sicily fights black mobsters in Harlem and local crooks seek some kind of protection from New York City Italian crooks. Avoid at all costs.

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SANTA CRUZ ACTORS THEATRE announced….
“8 Tens @ 8 Short Play Festival” at the Center Stage Theater 1001 Center Street (831) 431-6237 January 14- February 6.
Tickets here!

THE SANTA CRUZ CHAMBER PLAYERS announced…
Gabriel Fauré and His Circle of Influence
THE NISENE ENSEMBLE: Cynthia Baehr-Williams, Concert Director and Violin
They’ll be playing music by Martinu, Boulanger, Saint-Saëns, Kodály, Bloch and Fauré
It’ll be at Christ Lutheran Church, 10707 Soquel Drive, Aptos. (Off Highway 1 at Freedom Blvd.)
Saturday, January 29, 2022 at 7:30 pm and Sunday, January 30, 2022 at 3:00 pm

scchamberplayers.org

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December 13
THE DECEPTION CONTINUES

This is the design for the new library/parking/housing project drawn up by consultants, Jayson Architecture for the city of Santa Cruz. It was showcased to a limited public zoom audience last Friday December 10th and is on city council agenda for Tuesday the 14th for approval or tabling, depending on whether integrity and commonsense prevail.

This is intended to be the new location for the downtown library. It abandons the current historic site at the Civic Center, requires the relocation of the Farmers’ Market and Antique Fair and bulldozes the Frog Fitness building on Lincoln.

Integrity has been in short supply over this issue. In 2016, a $67 million Library Improvement Bond Measure (Measure S) was placed on the ballot and passed by a wide margin. With respect to the downtown branch, the assumption was that some of the money would go toward its renovation. Nowhere in the promotional materials or highlighted ballot language was that assumption disabused. But like a rat hidden out of sight, a tiny entry in the fine print mentioned, “rebuilding.” Scores of us would have voted “no” had we known of this hidden agenda. The charade continued, not only with a survey that didn’t include a single question on “would you support a new location for the downtown branch?” but also with the committee charged with moving the issue forward voting to approve the library move and only then opening up for public comment.

The process continued with the council majority voting in September of this year to select an architectural firm to draw up design plans for the mixed-use project, the aforementioned Jayson Architecture. The public was promised full involvement.

Last July, before any design team selection and knowing how important preserving the magnificent onsite heritage trees are to so many community members, I advised the Downtown Commons Advocates, the group of dedicated folks aiming to preserve the site for open public use, build affordable housing on earmarked city lots and renovate the library in its existing location, that it was critical to remind the city to alert the chosen design team about the Heritage Tree Ordinance and its Resolution that spells out the only criteria that allow a heritage tree to be removed. The pertinent entry (3) reads as follows:

Resolution NS–23,710 defines Criteria and Standards in relation to the City code, chapter 9.56. Specifically, one of the three Criteria and Standards allows tree removal only if:

(3) A construction project design cannot be altered to accommodate existing heritage trees or shrubs.

Some long time readers of this column will remember our battle to save the 110 year-old Red Horse Chestnut tree on Broadway, site of the current Hyatt Hotel. Hyatt came in with a design and wouldn’t budge an inch to save the tree, despite the tree’s location close to the sidewalk and massive public outcry. If we had senior city planning staff that sees their role as upholding the community good rather than facilitating growth and gentrification, then a developer would be apprised of the above legal requirements and told to come back with a design to accommodate a heritage tree. Given that lack, I felt it critical that we get in on the ground floor and highlight the above Resolution language before any design was committed to paper.

As an aside, Save Our Big Trees successfully sued the city in 2015 when the city tried to weaken its Heritage Tree Ordinance by adding a qualifier to the above so that, had they prevailed, the language would now read:

(3) A construction project design cannot reasonably be altered to accommodate existing heritage trees or shrubs.

But they did not prevail. It cost the city a lot of money in its failed attempt to weaken the Heritage Tree Ordinance.

Understanding that the city is no champion of its own Ordinances and Resolutions when related to environmental protection, in July of this year, Downtown Commons Advocates and Save Our Big Trees wrote to Economic Development Director Bonnie Lipscomb, quoting the above entry and asking her to alert whoever was chosen as the design team of its requirements. She said she would do that.

I attended the 9am zoom community meeting last Friday. It was slickly run with pre-determined questions, focus group summaries that found the current library nostalgic but shabby. And then a lengthy unveiling of the design pictured above.
I wonder how the focus groups were selected? Carefully, I’m sure.
The absence of any preserved heritage trees is glaring.

When my hand was recognized I challenged the lack of heritage tree preservation in the design. I quoted the Ordinance and Resolution and told them the Economic Director had confirmed such requirements would be presented to the design team. It was obvious that they had not been apprised. That or they were good actors at playing dumb.

A mere 4 days later the above design is before council for a vote of approval. By the time you read this you will know whether the charade continues or whether we have a council with the spine to call out its senior staff to respect the city’s Ordinances and Resolutions and table the item: to go back and create a design that respects the laws on the books to preserve our heritage trees.

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.

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December 13

LOADING UP THE YEAR’S LAST CITY COUNCIL AGENDA
Par for the Political Course

As is often common, the last Santa Cruz City Council meeting of the year (12/14/21) has an agenda that is filled with items of significance, ones that may have proved to be thorny over at least the past year, but they are issues that need to be addressed. The December 14, 2021 city council agenda is no different. None other than the sometimes difficult, often controversial, and painful problematic political controversies of affordable housing (item#25), the endless search for enough water (item #24), public space (item #26), housing the houseless (item #28.1), and green economics (item #13) have all been left for the end of the wash cycle before we ring in the new year. On the bright side, these are the issues that lie at the forefront of any politically vibrant progressive city. It’s just that the current council majority support market rate housing and “greening” the city without spending any money. In 2022, vote like your climate depends on it.

Library, Parking, Childcare and Street Trees, Oh My!
Yes, it’s back! While Downtown Commons Advocates (DCA) aligned with the Campaign for Sustainable Transportation (CFST) and Santa Cruz Climate Action Network (SC CAN) hunt for signatures on the Our Downtown, Our Future ballot initiative, other, perhaps more nefarious forces of $capital$, try and nudge the city council in a different, more climate-unfriendly direction. Will the downtown library be ripped from its historic Church Street location and unceremoniously moved to “Lot 4” some three blocks away, only to be situated next to a 310-space five-story monument to the automobile? Don’t forget, originally the library was envisioned by some narrow-minded Public Works bureaucrats to be placed at the bottom of the parking garage. That group cried loudly that we needed 600 parking spaces. (What happened?) Also, will the Downtown Farmer’s Market stay on Lot 4 where petition advocates hope, or be hauled off to Front Street and placed in yet another parking lot? Will “a minimum range of between 100-125 units” of affordable housing be built onto the garage as currently negotiated for by some affordable housing advocates? Or, if the petition effort prevails, will many more than 125 units be built on city downtown parking lots as specified in the initiative and supported by many other champions of real affordable housing?

A Dream Deferred
Somewhere, former City Manager Martín Bernal must be shaking his once politically-exploded head. Was it all just a bad dream that he left behind? What he wanted was all so neatly transcribed on his office white board back in 2015. A five-story parking garage on Lot 4 on Cedar Street between Lincoln and Cathcart, check! Move the library to the bottom of the garage (what a great idea!?) following the passage of Measure S, check! In-between, get some money to fix up the Civic Auditorium, build a sports palace for the G-League (formerly D-League) Warriors, and then get ready to move his offices into a new building where the former downtown library sat for over 100 years, check! In his political wake, there has been a fast and furious effort to patch together the former city manager’s original dream of generating more revenue by parking more cars using outdated greenhouse gas emitting 20th century technology, while also trying to appeal to a Santa Cruz audience that yearns for more affordable housing and daycare. So who could blame Martín? After all, the seas around Santa Cruz had not yet risen, the second and third-growth redwood trees still remained in the former Cowell Ranch confines (okay, some were burned last year), and the sea air continued to be breathable, except during those unforeseen pesky forest-fire events. It was a most remarkable vision and he, Martín Bernal, would finally be given his due credit in the annals of city manager-hood. But then the electorate woke up, smelled a ruse, and Bernal exited, stage right.

Agenda Item #26: Library Mixed-Use Project Updated Site Program and Design
I attended a most remarkable session last Friday, facilitated by Abe Jayson of Jayson Architects, in which he proceeded to lay out a pretty good vision of what a downtown library might be like: a grand reading room surrounded by tall windows; a green roof; building materials that reflected the color and texture of the cliffs jutting out towards the ocean on the city’s Westside; a daycare center; and lots of public meeting rooms and spaces for young adults. What’s not to like? It would have been a remarkably cheery and visionary meeting except for any real opportunity for public input and critique. In essence, it was the currently acceptable political vision of the Santa Cruz Economic Development Department (EDD). The session totally reminded me of one of these telephone push polls you might have received right before an election. You are asked questions that basically confirm the views of those who paid for the poll. In this case, with Architect Jayson conducting and EDD’s Bonnie Lipscomb at first violin, there were only two questions to be addressed by the two breakout session groups, which would not be recorded, but Abe’s presentation can be seen on the city web site. Those questions were: 1) What did you like about the design presented today? and 2) How did the design differ from your expectations, good or bad? Could you honestly create any narrower of criteria in which to critique what could be the largest publicly funded undertaking in the history of Santa Cruz?

Meeting Analysis: It was and incredibly partisan affair. The group of 24 included in the 3pm session seemed to love the current design, as I did, but I argued with no response from Abe, that it all could be done at the current Church Street site, and I would be in favor of it. But what is ripping this community apart is moving the Farmer’s Market, cutting down the 10 heritage trees, and building an unnecessary five-story parking garage. I was politely tolerated by group members, but my questions were never addressed.

Outcome: It is an all-hands-on-deck political battle now being waged, but by who? City bureaucrats? The Chamber of Commerce? A small group of current and former librarians who mean well? Affordable housing advocates? Versus whom…? Open space supporters? Environmental reuse proponents? Farmer’s market defenders? Affordable housing advocates? In my 36 years of political engagement in Surf City, I’ve seen very few battles as heated as this one. (Okay, perhaps the rail with trail vs. trail-only debate tops it and it’s likely headed for a June ballot decision.)

The Grassroots to the Rescue
If the Our Downtown, Our Future group that organized the ballot petition effort now underway had as many highly-paid consultants to present data, participate in breakout sessions, and pay for public polling then it might easily win this sharp political elbow struggle. Maybe even hands-down. But it doesn’t have those kinds of resources. What it has is people-power, and people-power is what has won every worthwhile struggle in Santa Cruz from Lighthouse Field to Wilder Ranch to the Del Mar Theatre and the Tannery Arts Center. One conversation at a time, relentless, persistent, and consistent…that is how this type of bare-knuckle politics is usually played out here. The good news is that very few people outside of the city bureaucracy, and these three focus groups of 75, have ever even heard much of this discussion. The field is open. As the EDD machine cranks up and seeks to head off meaningful community debate by jamming agenda items through the city council, the people-power ballot initiative process is just getting started. Go out, get some signatures and see what your neighbors are doing.

Addendum
Again, the city council agenda is packed with important issues this week (Dec. 14 meeting) and I urge you to go here to review them. The other item I must point out is #13 on the Consent Agenda, the “Green Economy Resolution.” Since we are living through a climate crisis, and this agenda item seems to offer little in terms of armoring, protecting, and mitigating Santa Cruz in the face of a warming planet, except maybe for applying for grants and “identifying “development measures,” I wrote the following letter to the city’s former Climate Action Coordinator. (I hear she was moved to the assistant to the assistant city manager position)

Dear Climate Action Coordinator,
Just reading your report and thinking about the library-garage meeting I attended via zoom on Friday. I am struck by the irony of building a parking garage under the guise of explaining it away with a seeming throw-away line like, “we are consolidating the surface parking lots” into that garage. I know your job has changed recently, but it is up to the climate coordinator, and really all concerned city employees, to let the council know this future they are planning is being built like a house of cards when it comes to real climate mitigation. Seems to me that none of what you have written in the report is being followed in the current march toward constructing a new library building and placing it next to a carbon emitting 5-story garage (I’m thinking of the tons of cement that will have to be poured to build it). The canary actually needs to escape the coal mine, bury the old fixes, and tell the council the enormous number of possibilities that lie in that “no carbon” future.

You wrote in your report, (item #13, Green Economy): “From these efforts the City of Santa Cruz has developed a broad, working definition of the green economy as one which is low to no carbon, resource-efficient and socially inclusive, encompassing jobs related to environmental quality and resource protection. These jobs may include but are not limited to clean renewable energy, public transportation, waste management and recycling, ecotourism, sustainable agriculture, urban forestry, land conservation and remediation, and environmental monitoring.”

Is there a way for you to tell the council that building the garage and cutting down ten heritage trees does not somehow fit into the “no carbon, resource efficient and socially inclusive” future of this popular coastal town that is visited and admired by literally millions of people? We have a real opportunity to be a model. The precipice we are now on is not accidental and not predetermined. We can choose a carbon-neutral future and be the example, that model California City that faced down the climate crisis and saw others follow.
Please pass on this message.

“Kellogg’s workers came to work during the pandemic. They worked 12-hour shifts. They worked 7 days a week. Kellogg’s made $1.26 BILLION in profits last year. Their CEO made over $11 million. Don’t you think workers deserve a contract that treats them with dignity and respect?” (Dec. 13)

Dog Beach Exclusive: “If you want a friend in this town, get a dog.” His name is Wallaby, or Mr. Wall-E, part Australian Cattle dog, and part something else.
Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and a Santa Cruz City Council member from 1998-2002 and from 2017-2020. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. On Tuesday evenings at 5pm, Krohn hosts of “Talk of the Bay,” on KSQD 90.7 and KSQD.org His Twitter handle at SCpolitics is @ChrisKrohnSC Chris can be reached at ckrohn@cruzio.com

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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December 13

TWO SUPERVISORS REJECT COUNTY REDISTRICTING MAPS…
The murky business relationship between Supervisor Manu Koenig and Scotts Valley Mayor Derek Timm was kicked under the rug at last Tuesday’s Board of Supervisor meeting with simple “NO” votes by Supervisors Bruce McPherson and Ryan Coonerty, rejecting the County Redistricting lines, but without any public discussion explaining why.

Likewise, Supervisor Manu Koenig failed to make any public declaration regarding the fact that he is employed by Derek Timm, but nevertheless cast the swing vote at the previous meeting to change the District boundaries for Scotts Valley into District 5. This will not bode well come 2024, when the District 5 seat is up for election.

[Adopt “Ordinance Repealing Santa Cruz County Code Chapter 2.04 (Supervisorial Districts) and Adopting New Chapter 2.05 (Supervisorial Districts),” and take related actions (approved in concept on November 16, 2021)]

SC COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS ACCEPTED VAGUE CZU FIRE AFTER ACTION REVIEW AS CONSENT AGENDA ITEM AND HELD NO DISCUSSION
The Board failed to publicly discuss this CZU After-Action Review, submitted by the Office of Response, Recovery and Resilience, well over one year after the fire happened. Buried in the Consent Agenda as item #52, this report does not discuss any issues regarding County Fire Department interactions with CAL FIRE, and other jurisdictions. Supervisor Bruce McPherson thanked staff for working together to get it done….but what does the Report really accomplish?

Accept and file 2020 CZU August Lightning Complex Fire Santa Cruz County After Action Report, as recommended by the Director of the Office of Response, Recovery and Resilience – Santa Cruz County, CA

The Board took action on September 28 this year to write a letter to CAL FIRE requesting:
“Direct the Board Chair to write a letter to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) requesting that an After-Action Review of the State’s response to the CZU Lighting Complex Fire be conducted and provided and, if the request is declined, provide the rationale for doing so.”

[Consent Agenda Item #36]

Did Chairman Bruce McPherson actually write that letter? If so, has CAL FIRE responded?
Please write your Supervisors to find out.

LIVE OAK LIBRARY ANNEX MOVING OUT TO BID
Another Consent Agenda Item (#92) on last Tuesday’s Board of Supervisor meeting was to approve Public Works Dept. sending the new Live Oak Library Annex project out to bid.

[Using Measure S Library tax funding, bids to build this new library-that-will-have-a-small-number-of-books will come back in March, 2022 for Board approval.]

Measure S funding of $5,750,600, County Library Fund funding of $302,340, and County Parks funding of $500,000 has been budgeted for Live Oak Library Annex project costs totaling $6,552,940.

Wow….what a lot of money from Parks Dept. to build a library, when there are so many existing parks that have extensive deferred maintenance projects.

EXCELLENT LETTERS TO SC COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS…
There are many interesting letters that people have taken time to send to the Board of Supervisors, made public in correspondence at the end of the 2400+ page Board packet., but in my opinion, the best one is from Mr. Chris Berry, citing the County’s Fish & Wildlife Commission concerns and recommendations to the Board about water quality and fire hazard problems the homeless camps along creeks cause. [See letter “x” at the end of the agenda]

Another good letter discusses the problems of encroachment along the rail corridor, relative to negative significant impacts to mobile home park unit owners (letter ab):

“…an alternative requiring that these homes be “moved” eight feet further into the park, resulting in a 15′ wide one-way street, would require, at a minimum, trenching to move and/or relocate underground utilities, repaving the narrowed roadway, breaking the homes into two sections, moving the sections, reuniting the sections, with the homeowners storing all of their furnishings and themselves for months, probably a minimum of six months, maybe longer.”

Will the Board actually pay attention to this excellent correspondence? Write your Supervisor and ask that they do.

RECYCLED WATER EFFLUENT HAS HIGHER LEVEL OF CONTAMINATION THAN WASTEWATER DISCHARGE SOURCE WATER
The Santa Cruz Sentinel and other news sources reported the PureWater Soquel Project got underway last Friday, but failed to discuss the many problems the Modified Project has been experiencing. For example, the new information that the source supply will be treated sewage water with higher-than-thought contamination levels has caused the Soquel Creek Water District to greatly modify the Project…starting eight months late, and failing to provide any important Public Comment period for the Modified Project.

Consider that the Project has no Final Anti-Degradation Analysis for the sewage brine effluent that Soquel Creek Water District now plans to dump directly into the Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary. This could be really bad news for the surfers, beach-goers and marine life in the area adjacent to Neary Lagoon.

An artist’s rendering shows what the future Chanticleer water purification plant will look like. The site will also include an outreach center, where educational programs will take place. (Hannah Hagemann/Santa Cruz Sentinel)

Consider this critical study performed re: contamination levels of recycled water brine on nearby aquatic and marine habitats:
Reverse Osmosis Concentrate Treatment Research Results and Context for San Francisco Bay
Prepared by:
University of California Berkeley
Stanford University
San Francisco Estuary Institute
April 21, 2020

Please write the County Water Advisory Commission, City of Santa Cruz Water Commission, and Water Quality Control Board about this Modified PureWater Soquel Project that is burdened with problems and for which there is no Final Anti-Degradation Analysis to show the Modified Project will not harm the high-quality waters of our area.

ARE CAR-FREE STREETS AND OUTDOOR CAFE AREAS HERE TO STAY?
Food for thought: Read the Mercury for details…
Are the Bay Area’s car-free downtown streets, expanded outdoor dining here to stay?

Call or write your Supervisor with your thoughts on this.

Also consider the related action that the Board of Supervisors approved in Consent Agenda #39 last Tuesday regarding allowing reduced parking space for dense in-fill development:
“Direct the Board Chair to write a letter to Senator John Laird and Assembly member Mark Stone requesting that they introduce legislation that would give the County the ability to include a separate line item on property tax bills for the collection of non-tax transit fees on specific properties that meet requirements defined by the County.”

WRITE ONE LETTER OR MAKE ONE CALL THIS WEEK. YOU CAN MAKE A BIGGER DIFFERENCE THAN YOU THINK.

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

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December 12

DOUGLAS FIR FORESTS
According to tradition, people are hauling Douglas fir trees into their homes and decorating them for annual winter rituals. Some purchase dense, pruned trees, while others harvest spindly saplings from the woods (aka “Charlie Brown trees”). Soon, strings of lights cast needle shadows on the walls and ceiling, infants gurgle and sputter with delight, wide eyed at the beauty. The unique Douglas fir scent fills the air – a bright lemony pine smell. Hallways are festooned with ribboned Douglas fir garlands and people weave fir wreaths to decorate doors. In breaks between storms, on crisp cool days, we saunter into the forest, catching fresh fir scent moist with rain, sparkling in the foggy, low-angled sun rays.

Mouse Tales
Douglas fir is not a real fir- it’s a pseudo-fir, creating cones distinguished from genuine fir cones by having “the tail ends of mice” sticking out the cone. Check it out sometime- there really are what looks like two back legs with an accompanying tail poking out, so cones look like a bevy of mice are feasting on Douglas fir seeds.
The cone decoy seems to have worked, evolutionarily speaking. From Northern California though Canada, Douglas fir is the sole home of red tree mice. These mice live high in canopies and feed on only on needles. On huge branches among the complex old growth Douglas fir canopy, they maintain long lived, wickedly well-designed homes that include rooms with specific uses. If they aren’t careful while they are out harvesting needles, a spotted owl will eat them – red tree mice are a favorite and important food for this equally endangered bird. We’re apparently too far south for the red tree mouse- Santa Cruz is the near the southern end of Douglas fir’s range, and maybe there aren’t enough thick forests, or too frequent of fire, for these little critters.

Northward Ho!
Moisture-loving conifers have been retreating northward for a few thousand years, and Douglas fir may also be headed that way. There are layers of grand fir pollen up until just 15,000 years ago in the sediments of a pond in northern Santa Cruz County. The nearest grand fir is in Sonoma County, nowadays. South of here, if you look at the forest on either side of highway one south of Freedom Boulevard, you’ll see a few widely spaced straggly Douglas firs – those trees look like similar to those in the hills above Elkhorn. And that’s as far south as they go along the coast. But, north of there you’ll notice that they don’t appear to be having trouble making thick forests.
Rock Scissors Paper (Douglas fir wins)
In the rush to capture the sun, Douglas fir quickly wins against all but the coast redwood around here. Look at most any of our majestic coast live oak forests, and you’ll see Douglas fir trees winding their flexible leaders between old oak branches. Play that forward, and those oak trees will be toast, shaded and outcompeted for water by these highly invasive conifers. Douglas firs are also invading coastal scrub and coastal prairie.

Pull ’em Up, Chop ’em Down
Kat Anderson reported to me some documentation that tribal peoples have long pulled Douglas fir seedlings as part of their tending of oak groves. The tribal peoples took over from the tree-invasion prohibiting Pleistocene megafauna. Just north of here, a remarkable recent turn of events saw reintroduction of native people land stewardship with collaboration between the Amah Mutsun and State Parks. The Quiroste village site was once in a matrix of super diverse, well-tended coastal prairie framed by managed oak woodlands, but for the last hundred years, without stewardship, those systems succumbed to Douglas fir invasion. After careful planning, and with some controversy, the tribe and State Parks have been restoring the site by clearing Douglas firs…almost like the old days, but the trees got bigger and so it takes saws and a lot of work to remove them. With their work, the area is becoming more species rich and more fire safe.

Doug Fir, Associates
While coastal prairies and coast live oak forests are much more species rich, Douglas fir forests do have their own set of interesting species associates. Instead of tree mice harvesting Douglas fir needles around here, we get ants. Anywhere there are Douglas firs in the Santa Cruz Mountains, you’ll find 2′ tall piles of needles teaming with ants. These are Formica intercedens, a mushroom farming ant, growing their fungi food in piles of Douglas fir needles. This needle harvesting critter forms armies of harvesters walking in long and sometimes wide lanes across and down human trails: watch out…don’t be rude by stepping on them!
Orchids also seem to like growing in Douglas fir forests. Also at its southern range limit, the gorgeous Calypso orchid has been documented with ephemeral populations at UCSC and near Davenport (both gone now), but has a somewhat famous large population under a north-facing Douglas fir forest in Butano State Park. Coral root orchids also seem to prefer Douglas fir forests. Curiously, ground nesting ‘yellow jacket’ wasps seem to key into coral root populations under Douglas fir. So, maybe look very carefully before walking off trail to get a closer look at the subtle but beautiful colors of coral root orchids.

Timber!
“Douglas fir doesn’t pay for itself to harvest.” That’s what local foresters tell me. By the time they do the timber harvest planning, go through the regulatory process, carefully fell the trees, trim and haul the few logs they find that aren’t damaged/diseased, mill and dry the wood, they can’t recoup their investment because someone elsewhere has produced a similar board, cheaper. The Pacific Northwest and Canada, with more lax forestry regulations and healthier Douglas fir trees, are creating cheaper Douglas fir (and similar) 2x4s for sale. So, for many years, we’ve been growing some large Douglas firs on the area’s timber lands.
Then came the CZU fire…now, there are thousands of large and small standing dead Douglas fir trees: what should we do? If left, these trees will gradually fall over and create a Giant Fire Hazard. The next fire, spreading through those hundreds of acres of log piles, will be very intense, torching whatever trees tried to recover and scorching the soil badly. It will be a hot fire storm, to a great extent our fault.

Biomass Fuels?
If you have toured the CZU Lightning Complex Fire area, you have probably noticed piles and piles of logs. Burned up trees are dangerous to houses, roads, and power lines, so they must be felled and hauled away. “Away” is an odd word…mostly it means a landfill (another odd word). Ever throw something away? It is instructive to visit ‘away’ at the end of Dimeo Lane or near Buena Vista. We must find a new ‘away’ soon, but no one wants ‘away’ near their homes or over their groundwater. Piles of post fire logs will fill up landfills quickly, especially with more frequent fires. Why not use modern technology and turn those logs into electricity? There are new carbon-neutral, mobile wood-fired power plants that burn wood, make electricity, and create ‘biochar’ that has been shown to be a useful soil amendment for agriculture. Keep your fingers crossed that we might get one of these at one of our local landfills sometime soon. That way, when you throw something ‘away’ that can be safely burned, you’ll be making your own electricity and enriching agricultural soils.

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

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December 8
#342 / Muskism And “Mrs. Brown”

No, that is not Elon Musk, pictured above. But I suspect you knew that. Pictured above is Jill Lepore. Lepore is a professor of history at Harvard, and writes for The New Yorker, and is definitely my favorite historian of the present day. Lepore has written about Musk, which is why her picture graces this blog posting. Her article, published in The New York Times on November 7, 2021, is titled, “Elon Musk Is Building a Sci-Fi World, and the Rest of Us Are Trapped in It.” It’s worth reading.

Here’s how Lepore starts off (and then keeps going):

The last week of October, Bill Gates (net worth: $138 billion) celebrated his 66th birthday in a cove off the coast of Turkey, ferrying guests from his rented yacht to a beach resort by private helicopter. Guests, according to local reports, included Jeff Bezos (net worth: $197 billion), who after the party flew back to his own yacht, not to be confused with the “superyacht” he is building at a cost of more than $500 million.

The world’s richest person, Elon Musk (net worth: $317 billion), did not attend. He was most likely in Texas, where his company SpaceX was preparing for a rocket launch. Mark Zuckerberg (net worth: $119 billion) wasn’t there, either, but the day after Mr. Gates’s party, he [Zuckerberg] announced his plan for the metaverse, a virtual reality where, wearing a headset and gear that closes out the actual world, you can spend your day as an avatar doing things like going to parties on remote Aegean islands or boarding a yacht or flying in a rocket, as if you were obscenely rich.

The metaverse is at once an illustration of and a distraction from a broader and more troubling turn in the history of capitalism. The world’s techno-billionaires are forging a new kind of capitalism: Muskism. Mr. Musk, who likes to troll his rivals, mocked Mr. Zuckerberg’s metaverse. But from missions to Mars and the moon to the metaverse, it’s all Muskism: extreme, extraterrestrial capitalism, where stock prices are driven less by earnings than by fantasies from science fiction.

Metaverse, the term, comes from a 1992 science fiction novel by Neal Stephenson, but the idea is much older. There’s a version of it, the holodeck, in the “Star Trek” franchise, which Mr. Bezos was obsessed with as a kid; last month, he sent William Shatner, the actor who played Captain Kirk in the original series, into space. Billionaires, having read stories of world-building as boys, are now rich enough, as men, to build worlds. The rest of us are trapped in them….

Muskism has origins in Silicon Valley of the 1990s, when Mr. Musk dropped out of a Ph.D. program at Stanford to start his first company and then his second, X.com. As the gap between the rich and the poor grew wider and wider, the claims of Silicon Valley start-ups became more and more grandiose. Google opened an R&D division called X, whose aim is “to solve some of the world’s hardest problems.”
Tech companies started talking about their mission, and their mission was always magnificently inflated: transforming the future of work, connecting all of humanity, making the world a better place, saving the entire planet. Muskism is a capitalism in which companies worry — very publicly, and quite feverishly — about all manner of world-ending disasters, about the all-too-real catastrophe of climate change, but more often about mysterious “existential risks,” or x-risks, including the extinction of humanity, from which only techno-billionaires, apparently, can save us….

Ursula K. Le Guin once wrote an essay, a riff on an essay by Virginia Woolf, about how the subject of all novels is the ordinary, humble, flawed human being. Woolf called her “Mrs. Brown.” Le Guin thought midcentury science fiction — of the sort written by Isaac Asimov and Robert Heinlein, two more writers lavishly admired by Mr. Musk and Mr. Bezos — had lost track of Mrs. Brown. This version of science fiction, she worried, seemed to be “trapped for good inside our great, gleaming spaceships, hurtling out across the galaxy,” ships she described as “capable of containing heroic captains in black and silver uniforms” and “capable of blasting other, inimical ships into smithereens with their apocalyptic, holocaustic ray guns, and of bringing loads of colonists from Earth to unknown worlds,” and finally “ships capable of anything, absolutely anything, except one thing: they cannot contain Mrs. Brown.”

The future envisioned by Muskism and the metaverse — the real and virtual worlds being built by techno-billionaires — doesn’t contain Mrs. Brown, either. Misreading both history and fiction, it can’t even imagine her. I think someone maybe ought to make a sticker. It could read, “EXIT THE METAVERSE.”

The point that Lepore is making is that, interestingly enough, Musk, Bezos, and Zuckerberg – billionaires all – are all hoping to live in what is actually a fantasy world. To be more accurate, I guess I should say a “science fiction world,” realizing, as I do, that the partisans of the two genres definitely think that “science fiction” and “fantasy” are different from each other.

Whatever!

Money, these billionaires seem to think, can do anything. Bezos is aiming to start a new colony on the moon. Musk is shooting to do the same thing on Mars. Zuckerberg is trying to escape to a new world in a cyber-reality accessed through the headsets that his newly-renamed company will supply (at a pretty price, of course).

This “Mrs. Brown” person is you and me, the non-billionaires who are living ordinary lives here on Planet Earth. What we know (and what Lepore is reminding us, just in case it might have slipped our mind) is that the world of our human creation here on Earth is the immediate reality in which we actually live, and in which we must live, since there is not, actually, any alternative reality that is truly real. “Muskism” is without any genuine substance.

Money makes a person think that the person with the money is God. The “I am God” temptation is a temptation we all have, but money amplifies the delusion. Mrs. Brown is here to remind us that we’re not God, and that what is going on in that “real” world that we actually inhabit is in desperate need of our attention.

The billionaires aren’t helping.

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

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December 13

DEPARTURES…THE TRAIN HAS LEFT.

Of late, this has been a significant time of departures for the socio-political world…the train has left the station, in various scenarios, for many notables in our nation. Of note is the passing of former U.S. Senator Bob Dole, news of which has received various treatments and reactions, some respectful, some reverential, and many “who’s thats?”. After all, he was ninety-eight years of age, eons in the political scene.

Dole received the heroes’ treatment from the Biden administration and the military, while the Democrats as a body viewed him with cautious praise as a decent, democracy-loving Republican. The media, as expected, tried to out-sainthood Dole, in their reporting with the competition. Republicans, on the other hand, revealed a mixture of respect for their past candidate for the presidency, a smattering of “who’s that?”, and varying degrees of ‘another RINO bit the dust’.

Another significant departure, is newsman Chris Wallace’s transition from Fox News to bluer pastures, with a streaming startup, CNN+, which debuts early next year. The empty seats at Fox are no doubt of increasing concern to the network heads, but Tucker Carlson smilingly adds another chip to his winnings.

Continuing on his Magical Misery Whine Tour, Donald J. Trump keeps the wheels rolling with funds from his unsuspecting dupes who insist on sending him their hard-earned cash toward resuming his lost crown. His latest foray, with ‘The No-Spin Zone’ curator, Bill O’Reilly, was a disaster, having to move the few paying attendees into huddled masses in front of the stage (at no extra cost) to present a more solidified rank and file. Time to derail this Donnybrook, thirteen months overdue, that train is long gone!

As the Trump train rolls along, Mark Meadows can be seen running alongside in an attempt to regain his former glory as a Trumpist by apologizing profusely and denouncing the contents of his own book, recently published, about his time in the former administration. Madison Cawthorne was seen brushing the dust from his clothing as a result of his jumping off the train, having had enough of the nonsense.

And, the Brothers Flynn, in a world of trouble, are rumored to be applicants for the French Foreign Legion, Captain Jean Danjou being a bit reluctant after reviewing their qualifications. Honneur et Fidélité, indeed!

I enjoy writing these pieces for BrattonOnline, and hope readers get some satisfaction too…political lies are easy to dispense, and create, as well, so why not join the party!? Somewhere underneath will be found some truths, ugly though they may be. Contact me at cornerspot14@yahoo.com with any feedback. Thank you! Dale

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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.

    TSUNAMIS

“We always say live for today and don’t waste time worrying about tomorrow. But what keeps us up at night is knowing that tomorrow is roaring down on us like a tsunami, and a lot of us don’t know how to swim.”
~Barbara Nickless

“These old Australians or Californians who spend all their days staring at the ocean without leaving their limousines, which they have turned into their panoramic childhood sites and their coffins, and who dream there, while awaiting the last wave, the one that will come from the depths of the ocean to engulf them.”
~Jean Baudrillard

“COVID-19 is a tsunami of financial catastrophe.”
~Steven Magee

“This world is filled with a tsunami of people, and only a few would ever feel a connection with each other.”
~Avijeet Das

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Emma Thompson, one of my 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
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