August 18 – 24, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Ryan Coonerty as City Manager?!? Credit Union Hotel Sale NO, Rail YES, Greenway NO. GREENSITE…on fossil fuels and fossils. KROHN…Credit Union hearing, Democratic Socialists of Santa Cruz. STEINBRUNER…Cleaner County Fairgrounds, CZU fire district property and resident issues, temporary Santa Cruz City Manager, tree removals and Soquel Creek sewage water problems. PATTON…Pathetic Grift and Entitlement (PG&E). EAGAN…”Grrreat” is the Eagan Blog profound topic, don’t\ miss it. QUOTES…”The Internet”.

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MORRISSEY BOULEVARD AND SOQUEL STREETS, June 12, 1953. Much has changed at this big corner. Do note the Highway One marker by the first palm tree on the right. Behind that now are the US Bank, and Grocery Outlet. Across the palm lined Morrissey is Safeway and right behind this photo is the OKA Center.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE AUGUST 16

MANAGING SANTA CRUZ…OR NOT! The world may little note nor long remember what we do in Santa Cruz, but plenty of locals will be surprised to learn that Ryan Coonerty has applied for the job of Santa Cruz City Manager!! But, you’ll say, he has no experience in managing a lot of people! You could also say that means he’ll very soon be resigning as County Supervisor and could that be why he announced his leaving the County Supervisor job so soon? When Ryan does resign from the Supe Job, the governor will appoint his successor. Is that why as we continue on with this soapy opera? We have Shebreh Kalantari-Johnson and most of the rest of our City Council UNDER Donna Meyers (definitely excluding Justin Cummings and Sandy Brown) working nearly silently to manage and rearrange our city districts. Yes, it’s also true that Donna Meyers, better known as “Prima Donna”, is near affectionately known as “The Fabulous Five”. The future does indeed lie ahead…watch this space.

CREDIT UNION YES, HOTEL NO!! There’s no reason why our Santa Cruz Community Credit Union can’t wait until another buyer comes along. A buyer who can leave the present building in its present shape and size instead of a buyer who wants to destroy this building and stack up a brand name hotel which our community doesn’t need. The Credit union created a very controlled virtual meeting last Friday the thirteenth. It was nearly impossible to link into it and it was so tightly limited it should never be labeled a community meeting. Cynthia Mathews as we would expect got her 3 minutes and voiced in favor of the hotel. So did Casey Beyer of the Chamber of Commerce and the Santa Cruz County Business council along with Darius Mohesin, the multi profit making landlord. A few columns ago I expressed faith in the management of the Credit Union to do the right thing and supported whatever decision they made re: selling to a hotel. I was really wrong. The Credit Union has been believed to be a part of the community, not a money-business thing. They need to genuinely listen to all of its members. Why doesn’t the Credit Union enclose a postcard ballot in our next bank statement and get a true vote from all of us who are members instead of faking a community meeting? 

RAIL YES, GREENWAY NO!! Debbie Bulger co-author of “Secret Walks & Staircases in Santa Cruz” released her thoughts and recent postings of Coast Connect in a newsletter. She wrote…”August is an amazing time to walk, roll, or pedal on the Rail Trail! Get outside if you can to explore the newest segment of the Rail Trail in Watsonville. This month has also brought new challenges regarding the potential of rail transit in Santa Cruz County. In today’s newsletter you’ll find local news and perspective on transportation in our community: 

  • 5 Reasons Not to Sign the Greenway Petition
  • Why Does Coast Connect Include Rail Transit
  • Gentrification and Displacement
  • Take a Look! Our websites have been updated
  • Help us Continue our Work: ways to take action today!
     

5 Reasons Not to Sign the Greenway Petition

  1. DELAYS THE TRAIL -This will stop all forward progress on the 32 mile Rail Trail. 
  2. KILLS RAIL TRANSIT – This measure removes all rail transit planning leaving us sitting in traffic for decades.
  3. HARMS OUR ENVIRONMENT – This measure ensures we are dependent on Highway 1 and polluting personal vehicles. 
  4. DARK MONEY POWER PLAY – Cynical power play by dark money donors who want to block all transit on the corridor. 
  5. ISOLATES OUR COUNTY – This measure disconnects our county from the State Rail Network. 

For more details, please follow this link.

Just the Facts: Why Does Coast Connect Include Rail Transit?
Sometimes people ask why it’s important to work for passenger rail transit next to the Santa Cruz Rail Trail. The Coast Connect Vision includes building the Coastal Rail Trail; running clean quiet passenger-rail service on our community-owned rail line, expanding safe bike and pedestrian spaces on our local streets, and integrating first and last mile options from rail stops so we can leave our cars at home. 

To read more about why electric rail transit makes sense in Santa Cruz County, why Rail and Trail together is the best use of rail corridor, and other facts about electric rail options, please follow this link.

How can we add essential services without harming our neighborhoods? A look into gentrification and displacement
Gentrification describes a process where urban communities, often low-income and working-class, experience the inward migration of new wealthy residents. With these new residents comes increased investment in infrastructure, neighborhood amenities, and property values. But rising costs of living can push out long-term residents and businesses from their neighborhoods. Due to redlining and the racial wealth gap, communities experiencing gentrification are often communities of color, adding a racial dimension to gentrification.

Click here to read more about these issues, our solutions, and the community values we are committed to upholding.

Take a Look! Our FORT & Coast Connect websites have been updated

The Friends of the Rail and Trail and Coast Connect websites have both been updated to reflect all the transportation research we have collected with the intent to connect more people to these resources.

Help Us Continue Our Work: Take Action Today

Here are some things you can do right now to help advocate for a more equitable and planet-friendly transportation system in Santa Cruz County:

  1. Donate to help us with outreach events and communication to the community. Click here to donate. 
  2. Endorse the Coast Connect vision. Click here to add your name. 
  3. Volunteer with Friends of the Rail & Trail: click here to sign up.  
  4. Sign the petition for rail transit. 
  5. Like, share, and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram

Thank you for supporting this work!

NETFLIX AND NO ON GOV. NEWSOM RECALL. As a near permanent movie streamer I was pleased to see that Santa Cruz resident Reed Hastings and co-owner of Netflix helped pay for Senator Elizabeth Warren’s  pitch to vote NO on Recalling Governor Newsom.

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.

GONE FOR GOOD. (NETFLIX SERIES). It’s set in Nice, France around the French Riviera. Juvenile delinquents are the main theme here as a man returns after being away for ten years and learns that two people he cared for and loved have vanished. It switches back and forth from 2010 to present day as he keeps searching. He falls in love with a fellow worker and the plot will keep you involved. Only one episode released so far, we’ll stay in touch. 

BECKETT. (NETFLIX SERIES). Do not, I repeat do not confuse this with Samuel Beckett or any other Beckett. The lead actor is John David Washington son of Denzel Washington and a real star in his own. It has a twisted, even convoluted, plot involving a car crash, a very long car chase, more political charades in Athens… even including protestors! There are some excellently filmed scenes and sincere efforts to make a good thriller. You’ll stay involved, go for it. 

CODA. (APPLE PRIME SINGLE). A heart rending story of CODA (Children Of Deaf Adults) families dealing with deafness. Marlee Matlin is back and mugging her way through a half comedy- half serious drama. One daughter can hear and it’s her lifetime job to translate her families deafness messages. They run a fishing boat business in Massachusetts and she wants to leave and go to Berklee Music school and sing. Go for it, instead of trying to decipher all the virus variant “facts”.

THE HEAD.(HBO MAX SERIES). An engrossing mysterious scary thriller set in Antarctica. They have six months of darkness then the sun comes out, probably. During the dark time one or more of the Polaris VI crew are murdered and the isolated inter-connected survivors must determine who is doing it. The plot actually involves climate change and some serious survival issues. Worth watching.

BLOOD RED SKY. (NETFLIX SINGLE). For no good reason some parts of this movie are in untranslated German, beware! A very confusing plot including a terrorist takeover of an intercontinental airplane. One mother who is ill turns out to be an old fashioned Vampire and bites almost everybody. She grows fangs and sucks blood for what seems like hours. Not the worst film you could watch, not much better though.

SINALIENTO “BREATHLESS”. ( HBO MAX SINGLE). A very sick and mean detective in Santa Domingo harasses his woman partner as they go searching for the murderer of a drug gang member. The detective’s daughter falls in love with one of the bad guys and it goes from there. Much domestic violence, cruelty, and a convoluted plot BUT it’ll keep you glued just trying to remember all the twists. Intriguing, time consuming, and what more can we ask for nowadays?

THE VAULT. (PRIME VIDEO) SINGLE. (54RT). It’s the old “lets rob the impossible bank vault” plot. The Bank of Spain has the world’s toughest bank vault and of course some extremely clever thugs of mixed backgrounds keep us on the edge of our seats wondering if they’ll succeed. The treasure came from 17th century gold coins once found inside a sunken Spanish ship. Freddie Highmore and Liam Cunningham lead the cast and its fun watching. 

SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, 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.  

VAL. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE) (93RT). Val Kilmer was and is a very half good actor. He’s got throat cancer now and has to speak through his throat. He amassed a zillion hours of himself during his acting career and made this documentary. Odd appearances by a very fat Marlon Brando, Tommy Lee Jones, and Nicole Kidman. It details his temper and ego in dealing with directors and only watch this if (a big IF) you like, or liked watching Val Kilmer .

THE SUICIDE SQUAD. (HBO MAX SERIES). (92RT). This is another very popular DC Comics silly hero worshipping gang. The squad has Idris Elba, Viola Davis and even Sylvester Stallone in it. Stallone plays the voice of King Shark, the shark wearing pants is one of the squad. I can’t watch this kind of comic violence and quit after 30 minutes. It is of course one of the biggest box office hits of the year….go figure.

CORMAN (APPLE TV SERIES). (64RT). Joseph Gordon-Levitt is the funny/ sympathetic fifth grade school teacher in Los Angeles. He’s got internal issues and many, many external ones. Even Debra Winger as Levitt’s mom doesn’t add enough depth to the plot, and it just keeps fading away. Not too bad but save your time and subscription money for anything better.

MORTAL. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). A very twisted plot that has you rooting for and against the main characters. It’s a Norwegian production that is maybe telling us that Jesus has returned deep within this guy who definitely has other world powers and deep problems. Then we see that it’s not Jesus but Thor who gets his hammer back!! Not too bad to watch it all depends on your mood…go warned.

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August 16.

AMAZON: A RIVER OF CONSUMERISM

Visiting Northern Kentucky this past week I was in the belly of the transportation beast, one we keep well fed. The photo above is a section of the new Amazon central hub at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. Covering 600 acres, employing 2000 workers with a plan to expand with 100 new Amazon planes it is the carbon price we pay for quick online deliveries. At its recent opening, Jeff Bezos drove a fork lift saying it was a lot of fun. Try it for a ten hour shift Jeff. 

My son moved to northern Kentucky to be close to his work, an admirable thing to do as we are reminded by climate activists. He is a pilot and flies cargo. His new home is a hop, skip and a jump from Interstate-75, which passes through 6 states and runs from south Florida to the Canadian border, a length of 1786 miles. You can hear it from his home and now see it, thanks to developers removing most of the trees to accommodate even more new homes. Before we start feeling superior remember we just cut down a big grove of trees at Highway 1 and River St. to widen the freeway.

The flow of traffic along I-75 is constant, day and night. There are no “less traffic” times. Watching it is like watching a news ticker. About one in 3 vehicles is a long haul truck, some of incredulous lengths. In Santa Cruz, our packages, which likely went through this hub, are dropped off at our address and few give a moment’s thought as to how that is made possible and at what environmental cost.

In close proximity to the Amazon airport hub and Interstate-75 there was no way to avoid the immensity of the impact of our collective consumerism. The disconnect between the IPCC Report on climate change and the constant flow of air and land transport before my eyes was disconcerting. 

The solutions based on ending fossil fuel dependency and replacing internal combustion engines with battery powered electric vehicles brings with it a set of new problems. While coal-powered electricity is steadily dropping in the US and is now just below 20%, fossil fuels still account for 60% of electricity production with renewables and nuclear each around 20%. And then there is the problem with the batteries.

Oh yes, the batteries. Their production involves the mining of cobalt, manganese, nickel and lithium. The largest deposits of lithium are in Chile, followed by Australia, Argentina and China. In the USA there is a large lithium deposit at Thacker Pass in Northern Nevada. As is often the case with mineral deposits, the land is also the ancestral home of the Fort McDermott Paiute and Shoshone Tribe who are opposing the proposed open pit mine under the banner of People of Red Mountain. Lithium mining requires prodigious amounts of water and leaves behind arsenic contamination. Choose your poison.

Then there is the hope for hydrogen-powered vehicles. Under a misleading headline of “Hydrogen-powered vehicles touted as path to clean energy” we learn that hydrogen production at present is made from natural gas or coal and emits carbon dioxide. There is always the expressed hope that new technologies will lead to breakthroughs and that may well happen. The elephant in the room remains.

So long as we are seduced by advertising, capitalism’s handmaiden, into consuming more and more goods from far-flung regions, the search for alternative fuels to whet our appetite will continue to be a chimera. Simply put, we need to consume less and as far as possible, from local sources. 

Individually it’s a drop in the bucket:  collectively, it’s the only way out. So far no country, including China has been willing to oppose the excesses of consumer capitalism. And who are we to tell the world to consume less!

If you turn right out of my son’s neighborhood you quickly enter the natural beauty of northern Kentucky. Rolling green hills and beautiful big trees. The nearby State Park (all state parks in Kentucky are free) is Bone Lick State Park. The sulfur springs in the park contain salt licks that attracted the mammoths. The fossils of mega fauna remain. The hiking trail was a joy with no unleashed dogs or mountain bikes to ruin the day.  Time and space to ponder if we homo-sapiens will survive our own creations. 

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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August 16.  

SANTA CRUZ CREDIT UNION BOARD GETS AN EAR-FUL.
The Santa Cruz Community Credit Union board decided to sell the rather large site they own on Front Street near the corner of Laurel Street in downtown Santa Cruz. The sale was never an issue until it became public that the board decided to sell to a hotel group represented locally by land-use “Fixer,” Owen Lawlor.

But I Digress… 
(Owen Lawlor, upon graduation from UCSC, drifted off to NYC to obtain a degree in real estate development (see it before the site is “scrubbed”) and then drifted back to Santa Cruz after realizing how beautiful this place is and what a cash cow it might become for him and a few of his investor buddies, but this is all a story for another column. In Owen’s world, he is called an “entitler,” because he does the nasty work many developers shun in Santa Cruz, like glad-handing members of the Economic Dev. Dept., securing permits for market-rate projects, and making parcel-property exchange deals, but I digress.) 

On with the Show
About a dozen Santa Cruz Community Credit Union members organized a petition effort to force a special meeting of the SCCCU board. That meeting was held this past Friday (Aug. 13). At the beginning of the meeting, someone on the board said it was not an official meeting because the signatures were not “official,” even though the group had obtained over 700 and needed only 426, but alas, the meeting went on. If it wasn’t “official” then did it really happen? And why did it happen?

The COMMUNITY in SCCCU to the Rescue
This was perhaps the most secretive of public meetings held in the pandemic era. Just registering for the meeting was excruciating, and no link was forthcoming after registering until the day of the meeting. It led to great uncertainty among those wanting to attend the membership meeting to contest the sale of SCCCU property to a hotel group. Even after receiving “a link” many members were unclear as to how to use the link they received and were consequently locked out of the Friday “members-only” meeting. It was not a typical Zoom meeting either, one in which you could see who was attending, exchange “chats” with each other, and pose questions to the board for all to see. No, this was as tightly controlled a virtual gathering as I have been to in Covid-19’s eighteen-month reign. Why? No one knows why the board sent off such paranoid vibes and made the meeting so opaque as to squelch a good deal of dissent. Of course, rumors abound as to why the meeting secrecy was so heavy, but I will not go into them here. I will say there were at least 88 members present. Someone on the board later alluded to the number 100, but I am not sure as the participant number did not appear on the screen as it normally does in Zoom virtual meetings.

The good news is that a vote by those present was taken. It was a pretty simple up or down one. Do you support the credit union being sold to a hotel developer? When it came time to vote on this resolution, put forward by former city councilmember Micah Posner, 66% of those present voted NO, they don’t support their member-owned credit union being sold to a hotel developer! One would think it was a resounding victory: Hey, credit union board, STOP the sale, immediately! But, if you remember, since it wasn’t an “official” meeting, this was an advisory vote. Lots of unanswered questions…What were their lawyers telling the board? Was it a financial cover-your-ass move in front of the membership?

Nevertheless, those who spoke in favor of cutting ties with the hotel group were informative, eloquent, and forceful in their 3-minute statements before the board. A compelling argument was made, but since the vote is non-binding, the ball is now in the board’s public relations court. How will they spin it? It is anyone’s guess, but they have been staunchly adamant about following through on the sale of the property before this meeting. Will they have a change of mind? Stay tuned.

Questions for SCCCU’s Chief Exec, Beth Carr, and Board
Barbara Riverwoman, a keen observer of local politics, has her eyes fixed on the SC Credit Union’s sale of the property to a hotel group headed by locals, but it includes New York hotel person/group (won’t tell us) as well. She watched last Friday’s meeting and posed these all too relevant questions:

  1. Is the sale of the credit union still in escrow?  What penalties would be assessed if the credit union withdrew from the sale? 
  2. Why did the Board and staff fail to actively solicit the input from the membership back in 2018 when you first began exploring the sale?
  3. Why did the Board and staff meet with Bonnie Lipscomb, the City’s Economic Development Director, the Chamber of Commerce and other pro-development players in Santa Cruz but not with its own members
  4. Did the Board ever consider working with the City to combine the three pieces of land as one – which would then have required the construction of affordable housing on that plot?
  5. The credit union received an assessment of $4.9 million on the land and building.  Was an assessment ever made on the combined land of the City and the Credit Union.
  6. Why did CEO Beth Carr wait so long to send us the minutes of the Board meetings and why were there so many last-minute redactions (blacked out lines) in the minutes?
  7. And why have there been so many closed session meetings with no minutes as to subject of each of these meetings?
  8. Why did Beth Carr absolve herself and the credit union of any responsibility in the matter of who was the buyer of the property?  (And, as Stacey Falls posed the question at the membership meeting: Would the credit union have sold the property to ICE if they wanted to put a detention center there? I think not, so they likely have discretion over who they sell the property to, no?)

 
Short-term Electoral Politics vs. Building a Working-class Movement
Since Bernie Sanders ran for President on the Democratic ticket but as a Democratic Socialist in 2016 and lost, and lost again in 2020, there has been a raging debate across the US among socialists of all stripes as to the relevancy of electoral politics. On one hand, lots of socialists feel that the system is rigged and as they look back now, Sanders had a chance of becoming the Democratic Party’s candidate, not in a million years. Others, while they agree, look to all the gains other socialists made on the coat-tails of Bernie: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Jamaal Bowman, Cori Bush, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley and many others were elected and now are poised to implement a socialist agenda. The Democratic Socialists of America just completed their biannual convention, virtual this year because of the pandemic, and this topic was an electric one. Locally, Jeb Purucker, the Santa Cruz DSA co-chair, lent his perspective to this debate. I reprint it below from an email exchange we engaged in. Recently, Nina Turner lost a Democratic primary to an insider Democratic National Committee candidate to represent the Cleveland area in congress. The DNC threw everything at Turner. She was Bernie Sanders’ national presidential campaign co-chair in 2020. The question I posed to Jeb was did he see a place for socialists, Turner being one, within the Democratic Party? In other words, should socialists hold out for possible short-term gains in maybe winning the odd election, or should they be looking at a bigger picture and forming a viable third party. His response follows.

by Jeb Purucker, Co-Chair

Santa Cruz Democratic Socialists of America

I am sure it won’t surprise you, but I think this is exactly the wrong lesson to draw from the [Nina] Turner loss… for me the question isn’t “electoralism or not?” but rather “what do we need to do to actually build power independent of the democrats?”  If we start from the premise that what we need is a party that truly represents working people rather than corporate interests, the question is what do we do to get there?  The option [Ryan] Skolnick puts forward–running against conservative democrats and trying to take over the Democratic Party–is an immediatist approach.  It says, essentially, that we don’t have to build new forms of worker organization; we don’t have to deal with the profound disorganization of the working class over the past century.  It assumes that all you have to do is message your campaign right, and knock on enough doors, and then magically the difference in organization between an extremely organized and experienced ruling class faction in the Democratic Party and the disorganized and atomized working class elements in the party can be overcome.  In short, it assumes that the main site you need to organize is the party apparatus itself.  

In my opinion, Turner’s loss (and Bernie’s loss too) reflects the limits of this kind of magical thinking.  Both cases show that the party apparatus is capable of absorbing really strong challenges.  If we take the approach that [Ryan] Skolnick is advocating here, and start by mobilizing mass numbers of working people and progressives into the democratic party, we are still doing essentially the Turner/Bernie thing of trying to take over the party without actually organizing the class itself outside the party first.  Ultimately, that kind of extra-party work is the only thing that can sustain a real challenge to a much more organized capitalist class.  

We have to instead ask what kind of work is NOT being done when we are focusing on taking over a party apparatus that is, at its core, built around the interests of certain segments of the ruling class.  When you are registering people to vote Democrat, or working on taking over local central committees etc. you are NOT out there organizing working people around their own immediate concerns and interests; you are NOT building independent worker organizations–tenant unions, labor unions, socialist organizations etc.  

So, I think Skolnick gets the question wrong when he poses it as “inside or outside electoral politics?” or “inside or outside the democratic party?”.  The question should instead be: “do we think we can build and sustain a party of the working class before we have done the hard work of rebuilding working class organization?” Skolnick wants to jump right to organizing the party before organizing the class.  I think that this can produce some limited victories (and a lot of defeats), but ultimately if we want to build something that is sustainable in the long term, the focus has to be on base-building.  What would have happened in the Turner race if it weren’t just a bunch of Justice Democrat activists knocking on strangers’ doors, but instead were built on a foundation of a robust network of tenant organizations and independent labor unions that were primarily turning out their own members and that had strong political education campaigns built in? 

“It is absolutely wild that members of Congress are still allowed to buy and sell individual stock. It shouldn’t be legal. We’ve introduced legislation to end the practice, but as one can imagine it’s a very uphill battle to pass. This shouldn’t even be controversial though!” (Aug. 12)


Rick Longinotti (left) and Russell Brutsche (with guitar) address a crowded Campaign for Sustainable Transportation (CFST) picnic this past Sunday (August 15) at Harvey West Park. It’s a celebration! CFST raised more than $50k to confront the forces of highway widening, get the Regional Transportation Commission to consider alternatives, and take them to court if they do not. Because of this group’s efforts, alternatives to ever-expanding highways in Santa Cruz County will be considered and Highway 1 expansion has been put off, at least for now. The struggle continues.
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(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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August 16

PREPARE FOR SOMETHING 10 TIMES WORSE, AND BE READY TO ABANDON YOUR PLAN
One year ago, the CZU Lightning Complex Fire forever changed the lives of so many local residents, and we still trying to deal with the aftermath on many, many levels.  Here is a video, “A High and Awful Price: Lessons Learned From the Camp Fire”, made by a survivor of the Camp Fire in Paradise, created with the hope of passing along to others the wisdom of lessons learned by that community’s residents and responders. 

It is excellent, especially Part 4, at minute 42:25. Watch it here!

Many thanks to Bob Wiser, an amateur radio volunteer who has served tirelessly to help Santa Cruz County plan for and activate emergency plans, for sending me this excellent video.

Sadly, Santa Cruz/San Mateo unit CAL FIRE officials have curiously chosen to dismiss an opportunity to learn from what happened, or did not happen, during that disaster, thereby missing an opportunity to learn from their mistakes, and improve their level of service to the people for future disaster response.  These public servants have failed to produce an After Action Review of the CZU Lightning Complex Fire.  

Why?

Chief Ian Larkin, who also serves as the Chief of the Santa Cruz County Fire Dept., needs to be held accountable.  Please flood his desk with correspondence: 

Ian Larkin ian.larkin@fire.ca.gov    or
Mailing Address
CAL FIRE San Mateo Santa Cruz Unit 
PO Box Drawer F-2
Felton, California 95018
Phone: (831) 335-5355 

ENCOURAGING CZU FIRE PROPERTY OWNERS TO JUST GO SOMEWHERE ELSE?
About ten days ago, the Santa Cruz County Assessor website posted information about the CZU Fire tax base.  Those who intend to rebuild will be assessed for their base value, but for those who are planning to relocate, there is a list of other Counties that will accept transferred tax base values:

Proposition 19 allows wildfire victims to transfer the property tax base of a primary residence to a replacement property purchased in any county in California after 4/1/2021.

RTC (Revenue and Taxation Code) Section 69.3 may be the best option if your replacement property is located in one of the 13 counties that has adopted an ordinance to accept out of county transfers. As of 1/16/2020 those counties included: Contra Costa, Glenn, Los Angeles, Modoc, Orange, San Diego, San Francisco, Santa Clara, Solano, Sonoma, Sutter, Ventura, and Yuba.

Assessor’s Office

WILL THE COUNTY HELP THESE CZU SURVIVORS TO STAY AND REBUILD?
Last Tuesday’s Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisor meeting (in-person allowed again!), brought forth many CZU Fire Survivors who pleaded with Supervisors to convince the Planning Dept. to remove onerous and prohibitively expensive soils test requirements mapping previously-unknown ancient landslides.

It was heart-wrenching, but none of the Supervisors responded to let these people who were speaking during the opening of the meeting even know that there would be a matter discussed later in the agenda directly related.

Listen to what people had to say during Item #5, and then later when the issue was discussed in agenda Item #9 by clicking on the agenda item here:

Video Outline – Santa Cruz County, CA

In the Consent agenda item #50, the related staff report and action was to have come before the Board on August 10 was delayed:

Recommended Action(s):
Defer further consideration of policy regarding rebuilding after the CZU August Lightning Complex Fire, including consideration of the requirements of Santa Cruz County Code Chapter 16.10.

Executive Summary
On June 29, 2021 the Board of Supervisors approved applying the exception process in Santa Cruz County Code (SCCC) 16.10 to allow deferral of geologic reports until after recovery building permits are issued, in order to support survivors of the CZU fire. Further consideration of rebuilding policies, including the application of SCCC 16.10, was to occur in August, 2021. A technical debris flow-flood hazard study is underway in the 2020 CZU Fire burn area that will provide additional information to support policy discussion on this topic. Staff is therefore recommending that further consideration be deferred until additional technical information provided by the report is available.

In summary, the Board will consider on September 14 allowing the CZU survivors to move forward with permit applications, and not have to pay for assisting the County in gathering expensive geologic information that could obfuscate and block the entire rebuild effort.

Here is the recap of the actions, as reported in the Sentinel: CZU Fire victims could see geologic hazard inspection waived in rebuilding process

TRAINING MORE HAND CREWS FOR FIRE PROTECTION AND RESPONSE
Many thanks to Supervisor Manu Koenig for sponsoring Consent Agenda Item #32 on the August 9 Board of Supervisor agenda to urge the Governor to fund training more hand crews locally for boots-on-the-ground firefighting efforts.

Recommended Action(s):
Authorize the Chair to write a letter to Governor Newsom and The Department of Forestry and Fire Protection requesting funding be allocated for the establishment of more fire hand crews and the establishment of a new fire hand crew site that would jointly serve Santa Cruz and San Mateo Counties at the former Youth Probation Center located at Camp Glenwood located in the unincorporated community of La Honda in the Santa Cruz Mountains.

Now, how about working with local FireWise Communities and Parks Dept. crews to train those residents also?  It was efforts like that in San Mateo that helped stop the CZU Lightning Complex Fire from entering the town of Pescadero, according to the CAL FIRE town hall meeting March 3, 2021.

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY PLANNING DIRECTOR KATHY MOLLOY HAS RETIRED
Quietly, Planning Director Kathy Molloy has retired.  It was a very brief send-off at the Board of Supervisor meeting last week.  It is unknown who will assume the helm.

click here to continue (link expands, click again to collapse)

GOOD NEWS!  SANTA CRUZ COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS CLEANS UP ITS ACT AND STEPS FORWARD TO RECYCLE
Last week’s Blog included photos of mountains of putrid trash in large, uncovered dumpsters at the Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds.  I am happy to report receiving this good news from Ms. Mary Ann Lobalbo, County Recycling Dept. staff:

“We met yesterday (August 9) with Dave Kegebein and Diana from Calrecycle:  California’s Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) brings together the state’s recycling and waste management programs and continues a tradition of environmental stewardship.

The Fairgrounds understands what they need to do in the coming weeks prior to the fair. Dave will be calling Green Waste this week to set up a newer and better system to source separate the waste stream there. Dave and his team are already collecting cardboard, glass, aluminum cans. More recyclables will be collected such has the milk containers, hard plastics, tin cans, and even office paper! Very exciting!! Training to come!

At the fair, we have a minimum of 3 picnic table locations with the 3 stream containers (recycle, landfill, and food waste) that will be manned by volunteers to help people to source separate their waste! Start to sign up with the county volunteer center now. Still need to work out the shift times etc., but they are on track to help the planet even more!! Thank you!

Thank you all for your concerns and attention to this matter. We look forward to seeing how things will change with education and training for all involved.

Please start to sign up to volunteer today!!  more events to come around the county besides the fair!! Fair date Sept 15-19!”

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  ATTEND ONE ZOOM MEETING IN YOUR PAJAMAS.  JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK, AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

Cheers, Becky

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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August 14

226 / Pathetic Grift & Entitlement (PG&E)

Alison Cordova has written a powerful indictment of Pacific Gas & Electric Company, an investor owned utility that provides gas and electric service to 5.2 million households in Northern California. Cordova’s statement appeared at the top of the editorial page in the August 12, 2021, edition of the San Francisco Chronicle and is titled, “Dixie Fire and PG&E negligence.” If you can evade the Chronicle’s paywall (which may or may not be possible for non-subscribers), you can read what Cordova wrote by clicking this link. The picture, above, came with the editorial. 

Cordova was previously a partner at the Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy law firm and was part of lead counsel that took on PG&E for the 2015 Butte Fire, the 2017 North Bay Fires, and the 2018 Camp Fire. She is not listed as having anything to do with the 2011 San Bruno gas explosion, caused by PG&E negligence. The San Bruno PG&E pipeline failure resulted in eight deaths and massive property damage. The picture of the Dixie Fire, above, seems to show a minor blaze, in comparison with what happened in San Bruno. There, eyewitnesses reported that the initial blast “shot a fireball more than 1,000 feet in the air,” and the explosion caused a measurable earthquake. 

Here is a sample of Cordova’s damning analysis of how PG&E’s failure to exercise reasonable oversight led to what is now the second-largest wildfire in California history, a fire that is still uncontained: 

PG&E operates 63 hydroelectric facilities in Tier 2 and Tier 3 high fire threat areas, known as “HFTD’s.” Twenty-four of its facilities are in Tier 3, which is the highest fire risk zone possible. “The Rock Creek-Cresta Hydroelectric Project” consists of the Rock Creek and Cresta reservoirs, dams and powerhouses. Cresta is one of PG&E’s Tier 3 hydroelectric facilities. That means it should have been a top priority for enhanced wildfire mitigation inspections, especially in the run-up to fire season. Not to mention, Cresta’s facilities are located in the Feather River Canyon — the same region where the deadly 2018 Camp Fire started. 

In the months leading up to the Dixie Fire, however, PG&E wrote a letter to the CPUC admitting that it had “discovered” a mistake in its 2020 Wildfire Mitigation Plan: It had forgotten to include its hydroelectric substations.

Despite its outrageous record of malfeasance, PG&E continues to be in charge of the gas and electric systems that provide electricity to millions of California residents. Cordova’s editorial column makes a very good case that PG&E should be relieved of that responsibility – and at the earliest moment possible. 

I believe that California should now require the transformation of PG&E into what might be called a “consumer cooperative.” The customers – the California residents who rely on the system – should actually be in charge of the system. 

If that were true, we could have an electric utility that would put the interests of its customers first, instead of pursuing profit over safety. I have called PG&E “Pathetic Grift & Entitlement” for a pretty good reason. A cooperative gas and electric utility would provide better service, and greater safety, at a lesser price than an investor owned utility that is structurally required to put its profits first. 

I grew up in Palo Alto – where electricity was provided by a city-owned and managed municipal utility, not a for-profit corporation. We need to reconfigure our electric and gas systems in their entirety, eliminating the “gas” part, as soon as we can, and structuring our electric service to a system based on what some call “microgrids.” We need local self-sufficiency, and to maximize solar power on every rooftop, parking lot, and other urban location where solar electricity can be installed. 

Maybe, after the current recall, our Governor can turn his attention to that challenge!

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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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. Eagan’s Blog this week is all about “Grrreat”! Scroll to it!!

    THE INTERNET

“The internet could be a very positive step towards education, organization and participation in a meaningful society”.  
~Noam Chomsky 

“The Internet is so big, so powerful and pointless that for some people it is a complete substitute for life”.
~Andrew Brown 

“We are all now connected by the Internet, like neurons in a giant brain”. 
~Stephen Hawking

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When the CZU fires broke out, local artist Tom Ralston and his partner Rachel, like so many others, picked up what they could and left. Some however, did not. Groups of individuals chose to stay behind and fight the fires. They were called Renegades and some of the “Dooners” called them “The Rag Tag Renegades”.

“Bonny Doon Strong” is a tribute song, written about the bravery and steely resolve of the men and women who stayed behind to fight the CZU fires.


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

August 11 – 17, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Goodbye Palace Arts, Still more on Rail Plus Trail, movie critiques. GREENSITE…will be back next week. KROHN…Tough To Keep Up. STEINBRUNER…Scotts Valley Water issues, UC’s Natural Resources $ increase, LAFCO report coming soon. PATTON…Public Service. EAGAN…Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Railroads”.

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THE SOUTH PACIFIC COAST LOCOMOTIVE AT BOULDER CREEK. 1895. This sturdy engine would leave Boulder Creek and make its way to the fish hatchery, Newell Junction, the golf links and finally, Santa Cruz. That’s according to Rick Hamman’s book, “California Central Coast Railways”.

photo credit: courtesy of Neighborhood Moving Services…see below
Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE August 9

PALACE ARTS CLOSES. It doesn’t seem that long ago (1970’s) when I would shop at the Pacific Avenue original location which is where Artisans art store in the Odd Fellows Building is today. Colonel Frank Trowbridge himself worked the counter and sold not just stationery and print goods but bibles and greeting cards. They also had a frame business in the basement. Sure Amazon and the internet caused the loss of onsite business. It’s a very real part of Santa Cruz that we’ve lost. 

RAIL PLUS TRAIL CONTINUED. Some F.O.R.T. (FRIENDS OF THE RAIL AND TRAIL) sent this letter to the Regional Transportation Commission. It covers everything from dealing with Roaring Camp Railroad to many other Greenway claims. Complex and many sided but well worth staying involved with this very divisive issue that Greenway continues to pursue.

Dear Director Guy Preston and RTC staff,

I’m appealing and asking that the Director’s Report for the August 5, 2021RTC meeting address concerns raised by the Yes-Greenway initiative.
Petitioners are seeking signatures to put the Yes-Greenway Initiative on the ballot that seeks to rewrite sections of the Santa Cruz County General Plan that impact our county. The Initiative language can be found on their site, and also here. The initiative seeks to remove essential transit-related sections from the General Plan while adding new language that constrains our transit options for the future which benefit everyone. 

Removed sections include these:

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MONTHLY-ISH PITCH

Bratton Online is a work of passion; the writers don’t get paid for all the time they put in. There are costs associated with running a website, however. If you feel so moved, you can make a donation for the running of BrattonOnline. Every little bit helps, and is most appreciated!

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Thank you!

Objective 3.7: Rail Facilities
To preserve and protect the Santa Cruz and Monterey Bay Railway (owned by RTC), for availability to carry freight, for possible future passenger rail transportation.

3.7.1 Rail Ridership Potential
…to preserve and protect existing railroad right-of-way and existing rail facilities for current seasonal recreational travel, for availability to carry freight, for possible future passenger rail service within the County, and for possible future passenger rail transportation for intra-County commuter use.

3.7.3 Rail-Trail Planning  — Santa Cruz/Watsonville; Programs

  1. Identify land use policies which will support future passenger rail use and prepare recommendations for General Plan and LCP Land Use Plan amendments at such time passenger rail use is approved and funded. (Responsibility: Planning Department, Regional Transportation Commission, Board of Supervisors)
  2. Participate in planning and consider funding for fixed guideway/rail service in the Santa Cruz/Watsonville corridor. (Responsibility: Planning Department, Public Works, Regional Transportation Commission, SCMTD, Board of Supervisors)
  3. If initiated by the RTC or other agencies, participate in a Santa Cruz to Los Gatos rail study and an around the hill recreational and commuter or passenger rail service study. (Responsibility: Planning Department, Public Works, Regional Transportation Commission)

 
PLEASE address the potential impacts of the passage of this initiative ASAP so that the public being asked to sign the petition can be fully informed:

  1. In what ways would passage of the initiative deter our ability to plan for rail transit?
  2. In what ways would passage of the initiative inhibit continued maintenance of the rail line?
  3. In what ways would passage of the initiative interfere with or delay construction of the Coastal Rail Trail?
  4. Please detail any of the known or potential costs to the county and/or losses of funding that could result from the passage of this initiative, including legal costs and the costs of delayed construction of projects already under way?
  5. What are some of the potential impacts to Roaring Camp/Big Trees operations and business viability?

Thank you for your hard work, and please continue to care for our invaluable rail line.  

 
Measure D provides funding for maintenance and must not be redirected toward other expenditures at the risk of maintaining and restoring the rail line.

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.

THE RESORT. (HULU SINGLE) (38RT). After the commercials this poorly made supposedly scary haunted Hawaiian resort flop of a movie will bore you for what seems like hours. A silly foursome book a tour of a falling apart resort on Kilahuna Island and try to get us scared. It fails miserably, and is not to be confused with White Lotus on HBO, which is excellent and not haunted. 

VAL. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE) (93RT). Val Kilmer was and is a very half good actor. He’s got throat cancer now and has to speak through his throat. He amassed a zillion hours of himself during his acting career and made this documentary. Odd appearances by a very fat Marlon Brando, Tommy Lee Jones, and Nicole Kidman. It details his temper and ego in dealing with directors and only watch this if (a big IF) you like, or liked watching Val Kilmer .

THE SUICIDE SQUAD. (HBO MAX SERIES). (92RT). This is another very popular DC Comics silly hero worshipping gang. The squad has Idris Elba, Viola Davis and even Sylvester Stallone in it. Stallone plays the voice of King Shark, the shark wearing pants is one of the squad. I can’t watch this kind of comic violence and quit after 30 minutes. It is of course one of the biggest box office hits of the year….go figure.

CORMAN (APPLE TV SERIES). (64RT). Joseph Gordon-Levitt is the funny/ sympathetic fifth grade school teacher in Los Angeles. He’s got internal issues and many, many external ones. Even Debra Winger as Levitt’s mom doesn’t add enough depth to the plot, and it just keeps fading away. Not too bad but save your time and subscription money for anything better.

MORTAL. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). A very twisted plot that has you rooting for and against the main characters. It’s a Norwegian production that is maybe telling us that Jesus has returned deep within this guy who definitely has other world powers and deep problems. Then we see that it’s not Jesus but Thor who gets his hammer back!! Not too bad to watch it all depends on your mood…go warned.

SON OF THE SOUTH. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). Another view of racism and politics and protests especially in Montgomery, Alabama. Spike Lee was in the production of this one and it shows. A much older Brian Dennehy plays a white racist. (61RT), and Julia Ormond is the understanding mother figure. Old timers will enjoy the history of SNCC (snick) and even Rosa Parks figures into the toughest scenes. The KKK are featured villains and it’s an important document of our not Critical Racist Theory times, as shameful as they were and are. It’s based on a very true story, so watch the closing credits.

OUR FRIEND. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE).(85RT). Casey Affleck is one of three tightly bound friends…Jason Segel is the nearly nutty buddy and Dakota Johnson is the misunderstood wife with terminal cancer. It’s based on an Esquire Magazine article written by the hero in the film. It flips backwards and forwards in time and is tough to remember where they/we are in the plot. There’s two young daughters who have to be told about Mom’s impending death and it becomes a heavy weeper but worth watching….when you’re in a good mood.

EVERY BREATH YOU TAKE. (HULU SINGLE). Again Casey Affleck has the lead in this (19RT) would be dramatic thriller. He plays a psychiatrist who has a woman patient commit suicide. The psychiatrist’s wife gets involved with the suicide’s surviving brother and it gets even more complex but worse as a movie. There is absolutely no reason to watch this movie, be kind to yourself instead. 

A FORTUNATE MAN. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (86RT). This is one fine movie. It’s from Denmark and has a deep enough sub plot centering on Christians and Jews that will keep you very attached. It’s a love story, a social commentary of that period in history, and a portrait of a young man with a destiny…at least he thinks so. Go for it.

THE PURSUIT OF LOVE. (AMAZON PRIME SERIES).(84RT) Covering the period between 1927 and 1941 this is the story, a romantic story of the relationship between two young women who are cousins. It’s light, airy, diverting and a big change from all the violent screeners we are offered nowadays. Underneath it all there’s a clever satire about the “upper class”  and their virtues. When you’re feeling down this one will definitely work.

 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, 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.  

A FORTUNATE MAN. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (86RT). This is one fine movie. It’s from Denmark and has a deep enough sub plot centering on Christians and Jews that will keep you very attached. It’s a love story, a social commentary of that period in history, and a portrait of a young man with a destiny…at least he thinks so. Go for it.

THE PURSUIT OF LOVE. (AMAZON PRIME SERIES).(84RT) Covering the period between 1927 and 1941 this is the story, a romantic story of the relationship between two young women who are cousins. It’s light, airy, diverting and a big change from all the violent screeners we are offered nowadays. Underneath it all there’s a clever satire about the “upper class”and their virtues. When you’re feeling down this one will definitely work.

LET HIM GO. (HBO MAX, PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). (84RT). In every sense of the words this movie stars Kevin Costner and Diane Lane and that means something nowadays. It means good (not great) acting. So many of the movies in the last two years especially, are cheap, amateur, thrown together productions just for the online streaming. This movie has a plot that takes place in the 1960’s in Calgary, Canada. A grandmother tries to get her grandson back from a cruel, unlikable, mean, bloody family. Not a great film but a treat to see a genuine motion picture production instead of the eyewash we subscribe to. Go for it.

A STONE IN THE WATER. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). (60RT). A demented woman kidnaps a pregnant woman in order to steal her baby…and that’s not all…it’s in Oregon and the plot jumps to 35 years later plus a car crash, a disappearance, a retarded young boy now in his manhood. For some reason I noted that the script was bad, and it is , or was but the movie is too convoluted the acting even with Bonnie Bedilia is just not anything that will take your mind off anything lately.

THIS LITTLE LOVE OF MINE. (NETFLIX SINGLE). It’s a cheap Australian version of White Lotus (which I like). A woman attorney who can’t act goes to another beach town, with another over developed beach community. Both actors work at having American accents and fail miserably. A zero plot, great photography but not worth your time or rental monies.

DOM. (AMAZON PRIME VIDEO SERIES). It’s a long fight between father and son in Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro. The son is an addict and dad is a military agent. It’s sad, violent, and will keep you involved. Rio looks like a very developer friendly city by the beach. It’s how Santa Cruz would look if Barry Swenson and Bud Colligan had even more power. Not great abut time consuming.

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Gillian will be back here next week.

Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild.

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August 9, 2021

TOUGH TO KEEP UP.
If you are like me, you read a lot, listen to even more, and still are overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of development coming down in Surf City. Take a look at the city of Santa Cruz Planning Department’s web site and you will see the climate disruption issue on full parade. It is not somewhere out there in China or India or even Los Angeles, but right here ready to rip out the soul of our community if we stand by and throw our hands up. The United Nations climate report was released today, as I write this, and the prognostication is not a pretty one if we keep building the way our Planning Department, with direction of the current city council, is calling for. All the green buildings in the world will not put our humpty-dumpty planet together again. Santa Cruz developers will be pouring cement, lots of it, and they will be cutting down trees, heritage trees. And for what? To build some $800k condos for those who already have a home? Or for those who want to relocate to Santa Cruz so they can work from their near-the-beach villa? We need to stop. Stop the “Cruz Hotel” bait and switch ruse on Front Street where a hotel will replace the credit union building; stop the 233 “single room residencies” and 209 parking spaces (!!!) on Center Street; stop the Soquel-Front 172 condo project (why is 172 parking spaces called for?). All we have to do is look at what is taking place at Laurel and Pacific…a 205-unit condo complex and NOT one affordable unit will be integrated into what appears to be an upscale project, to comprehend what is taking place. There’s more, unfortunately, but it’s tough to keep up. Are these forces larger than the sum of our collective community angst, activism, and stamina? I guess we will find out soon.

What We Know
The UN Report looks to be only 41 pages, so I hope you will take a look at it. Here is where it begins: “It is unequivocal that human influence has warmed the atmosphere, ocean and land. Widespread and rapid changes in the atmosphere, ocean, cryosphere and biosphere have occurred.” It’s all here, have a read.

Replacement Development
Okay, if we do not proceed with the luxury condo, second-homer, let’s fix up dingy Santa Cruz plan that Swenson, Lay, Lawlor, Carr, Meyers, and out-going Bernal have wrought, then what? We come together for a community-wide discussion, an on-going series of workshops and charrettes with the over-arching purpose of addressing climate change. We begin with the recently-released UN report and move to a community solution to our community housing and homeless/houseless crisis. Not easy stuff, I know, but it is time to develop and nourish the leadership needed now, integrating old and new ideas, and face up to what is in front of us: rising sea levels, less predictable temperatures, and challenging weather patterns, drought and fire in our case. This report is sobering, and yes, we have both a responsibility and the agency here in Santa Cruz to address climate change. Pouring more cement and building more parking spaces are the antithesis to what’s actually needed. The emperor has no clothes, not even a toothbrush, but the community has agency and education. Now, we need to find our way beyond allowing the greed machine, aka read this list of moneyed interests, to walk over us. Ready?

Watch Out Status-quo: Brown and Filippini Loom Large
I like to highlight the work of others, in this case, Sandy Brown and Lira Filippini recently posted outstanding work. Our local city council hero, Councilmember Brown wrote eloquently about why she could not vote for a sales tax increase if it did not place city workers first when it comes to budgeting the new money. Ms. Filippini’s work is quite important too. She questions the legitimacy of SB 35, which looks to supersede the democratic rights of locals. Have a read.

Sandy Brown Stands with SC Workers…(Her statement)
Recently, I cast the lone “no” vote to declare a fiscal emergency in the city of Santa Cruz. A unanimous vote was needed to place a half-cent sales tax on the ballot outside of the usual process of a consolidated general election.

In Spring 2018 I reluctantly supported a similar proposal, in spite of my concerns about the regressive nature of a sales tax, which disproportionately burdens those with the least ability to pay (though it does apply this same tax on visitors who place pressure on city services when they visit).

City leaders insisted that critical issues could only be addressed after passage, and that a sales tax was the only option. The tax passed in 2018, bringing the city much needed revenue for a variety of critical needs. Since then, city leaders have continued to underinvest in critical services and the essential workers who perform them and to prioritize consultants, studies, and expanded staffing at the top of the pay scale, those farthest away from on the ground realities that our community faces.

There are consequences to these choices. Public services, including maintaining our parks, open spaces, civic center, and other public spaces, are undermined; worker morale declines; recruitment and retention challenges increase. I consistently hear from city workers about the struggles they face due to low pay, from housing insecurity, to taking pay day loans, to becoming seriously ill due to COVID-19 exposure, and other hazards on the job. They are understaffed, overburdened, and paid far less than their counterparts at comparable public agencies. Many classifications continue to earn less than the city’s prescribed “living wage” (currently $18.10-$19.74/ hour, depending on health insurance provision). When the city adopted a living wage policy in 2000, it excluded its own workforce, committing instead to address the issue through labor negotiations. Since then, city leaders have refused to fulfill that promise. Twenty years on, it’s time for the city to finish what it started and raise the floor for its own workforce. This year, I asked my colleagues to make a meaningful commitment to address low pay and understaffing prior to a vote on the fiscal emergency. I also wanted to see more than a theoretical commitment to tackle affordable housing and homelessness response, the issues that voters told us were of the highest priority in a recent poll conducted by the city. What we’ve been doing is clearly not working. While the pandemic did reduce city revenues, workers stepped up by agreeing to furloughs and other measures to maintain core city functions. Money can be found in the city’s opaque budget, if one looks hard enough, including salary savings from unfilled positions, placeholder line items, and funds set aside for labor negotiations.

Additional revenue would surely help the city recover from pandemic-related revenue losses. It would provide resources for critical services performed by essential workers, support affordable housing investment, assist in city buildout of homelessness response, enabling parks maintenance and other workers to productively and safely do their jobs.

For the past month, I have done all I could to do right by the city residents who rely on these services and the people who do that work under challenging conditions. I worked with two council members to try to find ways to take some of the small steps that would give our community confidence that city leaders do value the workforce. Sadly, city leaders opted to foreclose the possibility of raising up to $7 million in sales tax revenue in the coming year because they refuse to address the underinvestment in city workers and services our residents need.

Sandy Brown can be reached at: sbrown@cityofsantacruz.com

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Lira Filippini Calls for Local Democratic Decision-making

Whether you want Santa Cruz to be an eccentric beach town or a buzzing high-rise city, don’t you think we – as a community – should retain an ability to influence how it changes?

Right now, our city is assessing its first ever Senate Bill 35 application for a large development at 831 Water Street. There is one great thing about Novin Development’s massive development application: 50% of the units will be set at “affordable” rates.

Unfortunately, there are also a number of major issues with this application that bring up substantiated concerns over public health, public safety, inequitable segregation, and the probable destruction of very important underground historical adobe foundations and artifacts from our intriguing Villa de Branciforte heritage. But more on all that another time; right now, what is most concerning is that our community is facing unprecedented loss of any meaningful input on developments that achieve SB 35 approval. And no one seems to know about it. SB 35 is a law passed in 2017 that had commendable “intent” in that it promotes affordable housing in areas that have not produced enough.

The state keeps track of our housing production and annually reports which cities and counties will be subject to SB 35. Santa Cruz has worked hard on this front and fulfilled all market rate and affordable housing development categories, except one: the “very-low income” category.

This single deficiency, makes our city subject to SB 35 and what is called “ministerial streamlining” for developments that set 50% of their units as affordable housing. Ministerial streamlining means that the city will fast-track the approval and permitting process without public hearings, taking away your voice. You might think we could benefit from removing barriers to building affordable housing, and build it fast. But let’s look at the implications in more detail. For instance, a developer can get SB 35 streamlining by only providing housing in the form of tiny studio apartments … and lots of them. A land of little boxes made of modular building sections in the “brutalism” architectural design. Sound appealing? Where’s the responsibility to provide for low-income families in that? And imagine sheltering in place in a tiny concrete box.

Quality of living, not requiring housing for families, and pandemic implications aside, SB 35 means no CEQA. The California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) is an important law that dictates our need to be stewards for the health and safety of our built environment and our natural environment; it has been painstakingly set up for decades — by professionals in many industries — to ensure we don’t do irreparable harm when we create substantial changes to our infrastructure, including housing developments. But who needs environmental responsibility? 

Also, who needs assurance that the due diligence has been put in to make sure health and public safety are considered in the development’s permitting process? Does it make sense to throw all that CEQA work out the door because we need affordable housing? How about that the entire project — including the expensive, market-rate units, at about the same size and packed density — will be geared almost entirely toward singles? What effect on the overall expense of living here per square-footage will that have? We can talk about AMI (Average Median Income) and how what’s technically deemed “affordable” is disastrously affected by all this another time, but I’ll just say for now — it’s not looking good.

That brings us to the final straw, the nail in the coffin for an engaged and equitable process for developing our community. If you identify ways in which an SB 35 development will harm you, your family, the environment, or community — too bad. SB 35 and city staff tell us we will have no say. But stay tuned, because our elected representatives, our City Council, have more power than they think in this process — and we’ll have to demand they use it.

Lira Filippini can be contacted at: lirafilippini@gmail.com

 Addendum: And please don’t forget what my colleague, Gillian Greensite wrote last week:
Senator John Laird is waffling on SB 10 and Assembly member Mark Stone, who has not taken a position on SB 10, voted for its evil twin SB 35 last time around. Both need to hear from you. Go to Lairds and Stones websites and email them your views. Request a zoom meeting. The bills still have to pass the Assembly.  August 16 is the deadline.  The future of Santa Cruz cannot be further ripped from local control and dictated to by a clueless Sacramento.

“I’ve heard a lot from the punditry as to why Nina Turner lost her race in Ohio. Well, maybe it had something to do with drug companies, Wall Street and the fossil fuel industry spending millions trying to defeat her. Is that the kind of Democratic Party we want? I don’t think so.” (Aug. 7)

I am running this picture again because these 15 progressive members of the US House of Representatives have the power to implement real change. Changes like Medicare-of-All and free state college tuition, if they decide to stick together and vote together as a bloc. It’s time.

(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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August 9

PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD NOW OPEN FOR DRAFT WATER PLAN IN SANTA MARGARITA BASIN
If you are interested in how the San Lorenzo Valley and Scotts Valley areas will address water supply issues into the future, please take the time to review the Santa Margarita Groundwater Agency’s Draft Groundwater Sustainable Plan (GSP).  It will be out for a 60-day public comment period, having been noticed on July 22, 2021.  

The Agency Board will review public comment and ultimately submit the final document to the State Water boards by January 31, 2022. [Groundwater Sustainability Plan]

PUBLIC MEETINGS ABOUT BUILDING A BAR ACROSS FROM FOUR SCHOOLS
This five-story twin tower at proposed for the cornier of Water Street and Branciforte would put a large bar on the rooftop….smack in the middle of a quiet historic neighborhood and directly across the street from the Branciforte Small Schools Campus in which three of the four schools include high school students. Does this make sense to you? Not me.

The Santa Cruz City Council will weigh in about this stupid project on Tuesday, August 10.

You may or may not be aware that the developer of the proposed 831 Water Street project will hold an online “Community Meeting” on Thursday, August 12, AT 6pm. Here is a link to more information

Zoom in and make your voice be heard!

2021-22 State Budget Act Includes Historic Increase for University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources

On July 12, Governor Newsom signed the 2021-22 State Budget Act, which includes a historic increase for the University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources (UC ANR). In addition to restoring UC ANR’s budget to pre-COVID levels of FY 2019-20, the division’s budget was augmented with an additional $32 million in ongoing funding, bringing total state support to $107.9 million. UC ANR, which includes the county-based UC Cooperative Extension, Integrated Pest Management and 4-H Youth Development programs, is expected to use the budget augmentation to fill scores of vacancies throughout the division, including the several dozen vacant positions at UC Extension.

Over the past 20 years, state funding for UC ANR decreased by almost 50% (adjusted for inflation), resulting in a significant reduction of UC ANR’s Cooperative Extension advisors and specialists – from 427 positions in 2001 down to only 269 in 2021 – creating vacancies in many critical positions.

With this new funding, UC ANR will begin recruiting for 20 UC Cooperative Extension academic positions and prioritizing many more critical positions for hiring during the next several months. 

To learn more about how UC ANR contributes to economic prosperity, protects natural resources, develops an inclusive and equitable society, safeguards food, develops the workforce, builds climate resilience, and promotes the health of people and communities in California, see the stories in its 2020 annual report here 

LAFCO REVIEW OF FIRE AGENCIES IN THE COUNTY 
At the August 4 LAFCO meeting, Director Joe Serrano announced that his Service and Sphere of Influence Review of all Fire Agencies in the County is complete and on the desks of all Fire Chiefs.  The administration will have until mid-September to comment, then the Report, with modifications, will go before associated Boards and Commissions for public review.

Mr. Serrano said it is the most comprehensive review he has ever done, and chose to use ISO ratings (related insurance and the ability of fire departments to respond and protect) as the common denominator among the jurisdictional evaluations, to allow an “apples-to-apples” analysis of effectiveness and how well the public is being served.

ISO Rtings for Fire Departments

We can all look forward to this excellent report.

THERE IS NO ISSUE HERE?
Why would the Director of County Public Works make a special point of photographing a hazard and proclaiming there is no hazard to cyclists??? That is exactly what Matt Machado, Director of Public Works and the Deputy County Administrative Officer did when I filed multiple requests with the Regional Transportation Commission (RTC) Bicycle Committee and County Public Works tthat the shoulder be cleared for safety reasons.

Since last December, I have continued to report a vegetative hazard for bicyclists on eastbound Soquel Drive as they approach Spreckles Drive and the Aptos Creek Bridge. County Public Works staff sometimes has responded that they will “look into it”, but nothing has ever happened to clear the nasy thorns of the HImalayan blackberries and ivy that really chockes the area and forces cyclists into the lane of fast-moving and distracted vehicle traffic.

I used to ride a bicycle exclusively, and still see the roadways through that lens. More shoulder room is always better than less, especially when there is broken glass and other hazards that can cuase a crash. Take a look at the attached photos and let me know what you think…should the County Public Works Dept. get out the mowers and clear this area for safer bicycle travel?

In my opinion, this is a simple thing to help improve public safety. Mr. Machado recently looked me in the eye and informed me that my concerns bring “no value added” and are “toxic”. I was shocked then and continue to be when I think about it. I guess he has an agenda to keep, but one that disregards safety for bicyclists in the Aptos Village area.

THE WORST TRASH PROBLEM IN THE COUNTY
The Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds Manager gets  a first-prize ribbon for having the worst trash problem in the County, creating a rodent hazard and a stench that is unbelievable.  Despite County Recycling Staff appearing at multiple Fair Board meetings since 2018, pleading for the Fairgrounds to become compliant with local and state rules,  CEO Dave Kegebein is not willing to take measures that would address the violations…or the rats and stench.

Take a look at the nearly-overflowing dumpsters.  The problem could be addressed, according to the very patient County staff, by replacing the two large dumpsters with four or five smaller dumpsters that would be emptied more regularly.  CEO Kegebein is unwilling to do anything, other than berate the County staff after they have left the Board meetings.

What can you do?  Call the County Recycling Dept. staff (Tim Goncharoff  831-454-2160 or Tim.Goncharoff@santacruzcounty.us and urge them to start imposing fines for these public health and safety violations, as well as local and State laws regarding waste reduction rules.  CEO Kegebein is nothing but disrespectful when staff and members of the public try to plead for compliance.

Santa Cruz County Code reads:

7.20.110 Garbage containers—Removal and disposal.
Garbage containers on all premises shall be emptied and garbage shall be collected and properly disposed of not less than once a week. Such collection and disposal shall be by the authorized collector, except that the premises’ occupants may dispose of garbage in such manner and place as may be prescribed by the enforcement officer. More frequent collection or disposal may be required by the Enforcement Officer of premises where garbage is produced in such quantities, or is of such nature, that such increased frequency is necessary to prevent the occurrence of rodent and insect infestations or odor nuisances. [Ord. 4441 § 1, 1996; Ord. 4337 § 2, 1994].


Putrid odors?  You cannot imagine how disgusting the stench is at the Fairgrounds near these large, overflowing dumpsters.

  • Any putrescible waste needs to be in a covered bin and emptied at minimum once per week.
  •  AB 341: Mandatory Commercial Recycling (they do separate their cardboard and bottles but they are not capturing the many other recyclable materials collected by our hauler. If they were in compliance with this law, their trash will greatly be reduced and this would save them money.
  • AB 1826: Mandatory Commercial Organics Recycling- food waste collection
  • AB 827: Commercial and Organic Waste: Recycling Bins- They must provide their customers access to a three steam system throughout the fairgrounds, clearly market and adjacent to one another

Here is what staff is asking CEO Kegebein to do:

“It is very important that the fairgrounds management educate and inform any vendors or rentals of our Environmentally Acceptable Packaging Ordinance which mandates all take-out ware to be compostable or recyclable and this waste can go into the commercial organics bin and it will be composted.
Ideally, this is what we would like to see:

  • Regular 1-2x/week pickups year-round with our hauler GreenWaste Recovery – especially for the many long term trailer residents (trash, recycling, organics).
  • Scheduled daily pick ups for large events for trash, recycling and food waste.
  • Secure monitors for the waste management areas at events
  • Provide signage and on-going education to the residents, vendors, renters and customers that attend the fairgrounds” 

Write the County Fair Board and let them know you want them to do a better job of recycling and trash removal at the County Fairgrounds:  Fair Board info@santacruzcountyfair.com they meet next on August 24, in person.

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  ZOOM IN ON A PUBLIC MEETING.  JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK, AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

Cheers, Becky

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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August 9

#221 / Public Service

Elizabeth Spiers’ column in the August 8, 2021, edition of The New York Times is titled, “How Cuomo Nearly Got Away With It.” For those not following this story, Andrew Cuomo, Governor of New York, pictured above, is accused of sexual harassment (plus being, generally, an overbearing and unsympathetic human being). A comprehensive investigative report, undertaken at Cuomo’s own request by the New York State Attorney General, has substantiated the sexual harassment accusations against Cuomo, and has documented a pattern and practice of sexual predation on his part. The report also confirms that Cuomo is an overbearing and unsympathetic human being. 

If Cuomo doesn’t soon resign, he will likely be impeached. That’s the prediction, anyway, and lots of people have called for his resignation, including the President of the United States. However, neither a resignation nor an impeachment has yet occurred. Thus, The Times’ headline seems just a bit premature. 

Spiers, the author of the column, is described by The Times as a “Democratic digital strategist.” Wikipedia reveals that Spiers was also the founding editor of Gawker, a Manhattan-based gossip blog that was driven into bankruptcy “as a direct result of the monetary judgment against it related to the Hulk Hogan sex tape lawsuit.” This lawsuit, brought against Gawker, “was bankrolled by the billionaire investor Peter Thiel who held a deep grudge against Gawker for outing him” as gay. Spiers, in other words, definitely knows how much the public enjoys and revels in salacious gossip about prominent people. This is of course, not news. 

My commentary in this blog posting is motivated not really by the salacious gossip about Cuomo (although that is interesting). Rather, I was struck by one phrase that Spiers uses as she discusses Cuomo’s situation:

All of these things have given people around Mr. Cuomo — and often, the general public — a sense that he operates like a macho Machiavelli who views other people as instruments for accumulating power and that he believes he is entitled to that power regardless of what the public thinks or wants. It is his political birthright, and public service appears to be a secondary consideration (emphasis added). 

While she doesn’t say so directly, Spiers seems to imply that if Governor Cuomo’s primary motivation had been “public service” that might have provided at least some excuse for a number of the sins of which he is accused. I would like to take exception to the idea that politicians who say their goal is to pursue “public service” are the right kind of politicians, the kind we ought to be trying to elect. I would like to advance the idea that when any politician suggests that his or her motivation in doing the job is somehow related to a commitment to “public service” the public should be immediately suspicious of that politician.

You do hear that a lot – that thing about politicians having dedicated their lives to “public service.” I think it is a bogus claim. It is a claim that is intended to distract. Many politicians are in it for the power, the glory, the money (and the sex), and that is one extremely good reason that so many members of the public don’t have a high opinion of politicians. 

But aren’t there some good politicians? Absolutely! Maybe even more than the other kind. The good ones, however, don’t claim that “public service” is their life’s goal. I was a politician for twenty years (at the local level, admittedly), and I would never have said that I did that job because I was dedicated to “public service.” 

Why then did I do the job? Why was I a politician? 

I was a politician because I was supported by and represented members of the public who wanted to achieve a certain kind of public policy objective. While I voted on hundreds of items each week, and had general responsibility for the conduct of Santa Cruz County government, I was first elected (and then re-elected four more times) because of my commitment to controlling and managing growth in Santa Cruz County, and because I wanted to provide local resources (money) for community-based human service programs. More than a majority of the people who could vote for me supported those objectives. I was a politician because I, like those who voted for me, wanted to have our local government deal, successfully, with those two issues – growth management and environmental protection, and a commitment to community-based human service work. The other things I did were part of my responsibility as an elected official, but the reason I ran for office (and was elected five times) was because I wanted to advance a specific political agenda, and the majority of the voters in the Third Supervisorial District in Santa Cruz County wanted that, too. That is, in fact, “the way it’s spozed to be.”

Let’s start understanding “government” for what it really is, and not try to idealize politics as some kind of general pursuit of “public service.” Politics is our way of deciding (among many alternatives) what we, collectively, will do about key issues of concern. Individuals who get involved in government – and we do call them “politicians” – should be there to accomplish particular public policy objectives. If a politician says something else, be careful. “Public service” is an “all things to all people” kind of phrase. The voters should not be looking for some general statement about devotion to “public service.” The voters should be asking themselves what is this person, this politician, actually going to try to do, specifically!

Any statement by a politician that he or she is devoted to a “life of public service” is almost always meant to district the voters. When you hear a politician say that, my advice is to run the other way (and to find someone to support who wants to advance the political agenda to which you are dedicated). 

Politicians who say they are seeking office, or are in office, because of their dedication to a life of “public service” are probably in it for the power, the glory, and the money (and the sex). 

My opinion – but an informed one! 

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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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

Railroads

“As a child I found railroad stations exciting, mysterious, and even beautiful, as indeed they often were”
~Paul Johnson

“Black people lived right by the railroad tracks, and the train would shake their houses at night. I would hear it as a boy, and I thought: I’m gonna make a song that sounds like that“.    
~Little Richard

“The close relationship between railroad expansion and the general development and prosperity of the country is nowhere brought more distinctly into relief than in connection with the construction of the Pacific railroads”. 
~John Moody

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Myles Weber is a stand-up comedian, and here’s a set of his from Drybar Comedy. Enjoy!


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

August 4 – 10, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Swenson’s new Calypso high rise development, Credit Union and Hotel news, Greenway Fraud, movie critiques. GREENSITE… on the need to act now! against Senate Bills 9 & 10 KROHN…will be back next week. STEINBRUNER…County misled voters, Supervisors reduce $for fire protection, Kaiser Clinic questions, Swenson and fire safety in Aptos Village. PATTON…Solving the Housing-Homelessness Crisis. EAGAN…Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Olympics”

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FREDERICK A. HIHN MANSION 1872. This was the only full Italian Villa style house ever built in Santa Cruz, according to John Chase’s book The Sidewalk Companion to Santa Cruz Architecture. Like so many architecturally important structures, it was torn down to be replaced by our present city hall. The mansion was designed by Charles Davis.                                       

photo credit: courtesy of Neighborhood Moving Services…see below
Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE August 2

SWENSONS NEW CALYPSO 6 STORY PROJECT. 130 Center Street, 6 story mixed use 233 single room…..etc. etc. Folks who live in the affected area (I’m one) got a notice last week referring to a meeting to be held on August 3 online with Zoom about Barry Swenson’s proposed “Mixed use” building on 130 Center Street. Barry’s son, Case Swenson, will be the principal pusher. It comes with 233 Single Room residential units and only 209 parking stalls. There’ll be 305 bicycle parking spaces, 2 commercial spaces and 27 public bicycle parking racks. It’ll be a six story “mixed use” building probably due to the 2 commercial spaces. If you go to Google maps and look it up, you’ll see that it is the Hertz Rental Car lot, an Auto Body shop and The Blackburn House apartments that will be closed or heavily affected. Santa Cruz Local stated that “there will be twenty-three units for very-low income households, based on area median income and eight units for moderate income households”. Watch for fallout! 

COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION SALE AND HOTEL UPDATE… One very well informed reader (and longtime friend) wrote… “I don’t know how long SCCCU has wanted to sell our downtown branch. CEO Beth Carr said it’s been over a year since there was an agreement and the membership was told. We were unable to verify this. We are unable to get any Minutes of Board meetings, as Beth Carr says they’re confidential.  

As far as I know, Owen Lawlor has been putting a project together since day one. Originally I believe the site was for a “mixed use” development, but about 3 years ago the Planning Commission approved General Plan changes that allowed for a hotel. I’ve heard third hand that Bonnie Lipscomb, City’s Economic Director, has greased the wheels for the luxury hotel. It appears Owen Lawlor is totally behind a hotel. There’s a guy, Stephen Chen of Eagle Point Hotels, who is the formal applicant for the project. Here’s Owen Lawlor’s front group legal filing for the luxury Hotel Cruz.

Also, we believe the parcels Owen Lawlor has assembled from city and The Santa Cruz Community Credit Union are all in the “Opportunity Zone”.

CASE AGAINST GREENWAY IN SANTA CRUZ. OR… DO NOT SUPPORT THE GREENWAY FRAUD!  
Jim Weller, expert land title consultant, sent the following report about Rail and Trail and Greenway to a few outlets including BrattonOnline. He states…

“We got trouble, my friends. Right here in River City, with a capital G, and that stands for Greed, and that rhymes with Green — as in Greenway.

(The municipality of Santa Cruz, California has been called “River City,” because it is at the place where the San Lorenzo River flows into Monterey Bay. I intentionally invoke the libretto of the 1957 musical stage play, “The Music Man.” Read on.)

Here we are, now, in 2021.

You see, in the County of Santa Cruz, California (home to some 275,000 people) it is unfortunately the present case that a small, shadowy special-interest group, who are organized as a 501(c) 4 “dark money” political action committee, having cleverly adopted the euphemistic name, “Greenway,” are threatening the public good and our local civil order with disruptive, paid-for propaganda and misinformation.

Just like a bunch of damned Trumpite Republicans.

In my well-informed opinion, if I do say so myself, this despicable Greenway con game needs to be exposed for what it is — a fraudulent scheme aiming to privatize the single most important piece of Santa Cruz County’s public transportation infrastructure — for their personal financial gains.

Yes, I said fraudulent. I meant it. Political fraud. Are you ready to look at the anatomy of a shameless attempted public rip-off of massive proportions? Dig.

The back story:
Around 2002, the Santa Cruz County Regional Transportation Commission (RTC) began negotiating to purchase the existing 32-mile long Santa Cruz Branch railroad from Union Pacific Railroad Company. It was a complex transaction. It took a while to conclude. The RTC finally closed escrow in 2012, for a purchase price of $14.2 million (a good deal at twice the price). Tens of millions more public dollars have been invested since then, improving the public rail infrastructure.

RTC is an instrumentality of the State of California. Its functions are to plan for and allocate funding for state highway and public transportation infrastructure. Every county has such an agency. The RTC is funded by the state, separately from the County general fund, as an independent public authority. The commissioners of the RTC include the five members of the County Board of Supervisors, one representative each of the four incorporated cities, and representatives of the Metropolitan Transit District, which provides local bus and paratransit services, some of whom are also City Council members.

The Santa Cruz Branch railroad corridor was purchased with state funding, pursuant to the 1990 California Proposition 116 public transit bond measure. Its purpose was, and is, explicitly for a future public passenger rail transit system to be implemented in due course, when fully planned and funded. Early in 2021, the RTC commissioners adopted their staff’s “preferred alternative,” a concept involving advanced electric passenger rail technology, not yet in the design phase but in the planning process.

Meanwhile, the plot thickened.

Since around 2014, led by a famed high-tech philanthoper, a group of very wealthy local investors, agricultural and commercial land owners, and their lackeys, have organized to carry out a hugely well-funded political campaign with intense propaganda designed to permanently prevent any use of the publicly owned railroad corridor for public transportation purposes. “Greenway” is their brand.

Why? What for? Their objective is as plain as it is bizarre. The Greenway gangsters say openly and shamelessly that they want to commandeer control of the public railroad corridor and repurpose it for private recreational use. They say they want to redevelop the entire 32 miles of real estate as a so-called “linear park,” repaving the entire width of the corridor with two lanes of divided expressway for bicyclists and a separate lane for pedestrians. And no public transit, ever.

The “Greenway” scheme these bozos are pushing would not be a public transportation asset at all — the corridor would most likely be owned by a parks agency, or a recreational organization — maybe even for profit, if they can somehow force the RTC to transfer the land into the private sector.

That’s a pretty ballsy objective, isn’t it? A gang of a dozen or so rich white guys, sniffing opportunity, teams up, in the guise of a public-spirited grassroots group, doing the old AstroTurf Shuffle, and proceeds to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars (at least that much — who knows — it’s dark money) over a period of years, with no public accounting, and with the goal of privatizing the local public sector’s most valuable transportation asset.

Awesome, eh? What bold market disruption! What entrepreneurial initiative!

The Greenway gangsters, and their accomplices, have been incessantly meddling in local politics, contemptuous as they are of public authority, and the public interest, and the integrity of public institutions.

They don’t give diddly-squat about anyone but themselves and their class of elites.

In 2018 Greenway foisted a ludicrous ballot initiative (Measure L) on the itty bitty City of Capitola (population, 10,000) – a campaign they billed as “Save the Trestle,” but which ended up simply forbidding the town to direct pedestrian and bicycle traffic using the railroad corridor around the antiquated railroad trestle over Soquel Creek, and instead routing travelers a short distance along city streets. In other words, Capitola supposedly now has to force users of a pathway someday to be built in the RTC’s corridor to cross directly over the ancient rickety railroad trestle, where there is not enough width for both a pedestrian/cyclist path and a rail transit system — even though Capitola has no authority over the use of the corridor, or the trestle, even though the City of Capitola sued Greenway to stop the initiative, and even though the RTC’s near-term planning involves a redesigned new crossing for both rail transit and trail users. (Get it? No room for public transit on the old trestle now, so Trail Only — Forever!)

Who supports this? I know who the Greenway gangsters are, for the most part. I know where they live and what they own. They could be served as defendants tomorrow, if they made the wrong move and got caught. I could name them, but they have a propensity for threatening punitive lawsuits against anyone who criticizes them, and I don’t want to give them the opportunity. That’s what kind of people they are. They’re filthy rich, they’re merciless, and they have moneyed interests at stake.

The Greenway gang even bought themselves a County Supervisor last year. They funded a brash young upstart who was, by the way, their paid operative and their Greenway Executive Director, to run for election against the incumbent, who was an honorable, three-term Supervisor who happened to be one of the leading local advocates of public passenger rail transit as a member of the RTC. The Greenway gangsters hated him. They demeaned him. They demonized him. The then-incumbent is Jewish, and they targeted him with scurrilous anti-Semitic cartoon images. They were determined to knock him off in the election no matter how much money it took. They succeeded. Their golden boy had only one actual campaign issue — the “Trail Only” objective of Greenway. Other than that, their puppet candidate was pretty much all shuck and jive, with grinning billboards of his fresh face all over town — placements paid for by the usurpers.

Since then, the Greenway gang has managed to compromise six of the twelve RTC commissioners in support of their anti-public transit objective. Along with their bought Supervisor, they have, by a combination of promises and threats, influenced in their favor two Capitola City Council members serving on the RTC, one delegated paid staffer appointed to the RTC by another County Supervisor whose conflict of interest kept him off the RTC, followed by an outright member of the Greenway gang who was appointed as an RTC alternate by that Supervisor, and yet another member of the Board of Supervisors, who is elderly and facing re-election next year. The Greenway gang has thereby stalemated the RTC’s progress in planning for passenger rail transit. They brought progress by the professional RTC staff in the public interest to a dead stop by corrupting the RTC commissioners. Cumshaw rules the day. (See how they did that? Money equals clout. See why I call them a gang?)

Functionally, Greenway is nothing more than a privately-owned political propaganda mill, a dis-information machine designed to confuse public sentiments and to propagate a deptive narrative in community discourse. Their goal is to reify the false dictum that “we can’t afford public transit,” and to promulgate the idea that private recreational uses of the publicly owned railroad corridor are preferable. They also have donated big money to their favored candidate, and they promise to sponsor opposition candidates against incumbents who don’t play their game.

One irony of Greenway’s “Trail Only” campaign is that it posits a false dichotomy. For them, it’s all about “rail” versus “trail” — one thing or the other. But the RTC’s well developed plans include a protected, paved pathway for bikes and pedestrians, within and alongside the railroad corridor, adjacent to the tracks. And eventually, a public passenger rail transit system. The RTC plan is for “rail and trail,” and segments of the trail are already completed; others are under construction. It’s all planned, designed, and funded. But Greenway hates the RTC’s “rail trail” because it doesn’t preclude public transit, and that’s their main goal. Greenway wants something completely different. No public rail transit. Ever.

Now. Today, July 21, 2021, Greenway has publicly announced its intention to circulate an initiative petition they hope will accomplish the first step in their master plan to privatize the railroad corridor. This is their Measure L on steroids. In substance, their proffered countywide “YES GREENWAY” initiative would simply delete any and all references to possible future passenger rail service from the County General Plan. (Get it? Squelch. Slam! Case closed. No way.)

It sure looks like the Greenway gangsters are plotting to seize control of the public railroad corridor for themselves. Maybe they will permit the general public to walk or bike or scoot or buzz or zip along their Greenway highway by the California coast. But there will never be public transportation there if they have anything to say about it. Forget it.

These Greenway gangsters are enemies of the public interest. They hate public administration, except when it enriches them. I know these people. They’re privateers. They worship Money, and above all else, they look out for number one. Screw everybody else. Believe me, I couldn’t make this up.

The upshot:
If you live in Santa Cruz County and you happen upon some clueless shill hustling a “YES GREENWAY” petition for signatures, give them the cold shoulder. Tell them to get lost.

These clipboard meisters will be paid well in cash by Greenway for voters’ signatures. These hapless hustlers may be ordinary poor schmucks busting a living for ten bucks a pop getting signatures, and maybe you’ll feel sorry for them and want to help, but you must remember they’re being paid by a gang of rich anti-public interest schemers who deserve nothing but our opprobrium. Don’t sign!

The Greenway stooges will lie enthusiastically. They’ll say something like, “Do you want to have a nice trail along the coast for biking and walking?” They’ll say nothing about their paymasters’ real game: to kill any prospect of public transportation in the public railroad corridor.

Do the right thing. Defend the public good and the public interest.

DO NOT SUPPORT THE GREENWAY FRAUD!

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.

A FORTUNATE MAN. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (86RT). This is one fine movie. It’s from Denmark and has a deep enough sub plot centering on Christians and Jews that will keep you very attached. It’s a love story, a social commentary of that period in history, and a portrait of a young man with a destiny…at least he thinks so. Go for it.

THE PURSUIT OF LOVE. (AMAZON PRIME SERIES).(84RT) Covering the period between 1927 and 1941 this is the story, a romantic story of the relationship between two young women who are cousins. It’s light, airy, diverting and a big change from all the violent screeners we are offered nowadays. Underneath it all there’s a clever satire about the “upper class”and their virtues. When you’re feeling down this one will definitely work.

LET HIM GO. (HBO MAX, PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). (84RT). In every sense of the words this movie stars Kevin Costner and Diane Lane and that means something nowadays. It means good (not great) acting. So many of the movies in the last two years especially, are cheap, amateur, thrown together productions just for the online streaming. This movie has a plot that takes place in the 1960’s in Calgary, Canada. A grandmother tries to get her grandson back from a cruel, unlikable, mean, bloody family. Not a great film but a treat to see a genuine motion picture production instead of the eyewash we subscribe to. Go for it.

A STONE IN THE WATER. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). (60RT). A demented woman kidnaps a pregnant woman in order to steal her baby…and that’s not all…it’s in Oregon and the plot jumps to 35 years later plus a car crash, a disappearance, a retarded young boy now in his manhood. For some reason I noted that the script was bad, and it is , or was but the movie is too convoluted the acting even with Bonnie Bedilia is just not anything that will take your mind off anything lately.

THIS LITTLE LOVE OF MINE. (NETFLIX SINGLE). It’s a cheap Australian version of White Lotus (which I like). A woman attorney who can’t act goes to another beach town, with another over developed beach community. Both actors work at having American accents and fail miserably. A zero plot, great photography but not worth your time or rental monies.

DOM. (AMAZON PRIME VIDEO SERIES). It’s a long fight between father and son in Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro. The son is an addict and dad is a military agent. It’s sad, violent, and will keep you involved. Rio looks like a very developer friendly city by the beach. It’s how Santa Cruz would look if Barry Swenson and Bud Colligan had even more power. Not great abut time consuming.

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, PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.  

THE LAST LETTER FROM YOUR LOVER. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (53RT). A genuine love drama. It stars Felicity Jones and Shailene Woodley. I mean to say it’s a real weeper and full of twists in time and in emotions. Two sets of lovers set about forty years apart and the search for happiness by a journalist who is determined to find out why neither relationship worked. It’s a tear jerker of the first class and if you like weepers go for it. Yes, I liked it.

EXIT PLAN. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). An insurance investigator checks in to a very special hotel in Denmark exclusively inhabited for patients who make their own plans on dying. Then he too realizes that he’s dying from a tumor. It’s an excellently told and deep and depressing story about assisted suicide. Full of time and personality shifts you’ll be transported into moments thinking about your own demise. Watch it when you’re in a good mood only.

JOLT. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). Kate Beckinsale and Stanley Tucci are the leads in this almost comic book, action, sci fi thriller. It’s fun to watch as Kate has electric chargers strapped to her chest to shock her into proper behavior in case she gets too violent.(35RT). It’s a B-movie and diverting if you need it nowadays but you’ll forget 98% of it in minutes.

GUILTY. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (60RT). An Indian flick in many ways. They use the #MeToo theme and I’m not sure why. It’s about a young girl who accuses her lover of sexually abusing her. It’s how she handles the reporting and going public with the sex charges that make up the plot. Ultimately it lacks focus and purpose but it is sincere. Watch it only when “necessary”.

THE COOK OF CASTAMAR (or) LA COCINERA DE CASTAMAR.  (NETFLIX SERIES). A 12 episode Spanish extravaganza about a young maid who, in the 1720 Barcelona works her way up from lowly kitchen help to a loving position helping the lord of the castle in every way. She has claustrophobia but manages to change her entire world. Fascinating, well-acted, beautiful photography and worth your time.

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August 2

Pocket-lining

There are two Senate Bills, 9 and 10, fast approaching final approval in the State Assembly and then headed to the Governor’s desk. These bills spell the end of single-family neighborhoods. They mandate ten units on single parcels that meet certain conditions and they override local zoning initiatives. 

Senate bill 9 rezones R1 (single-family) neighborhoods to allow lot splits that can accommodate 4 units, not counting an ADU and a Junior ADU, which adds up to a potential 8 units on what is currently zoned for a single house plus ADU’s. 

This is on top of state-mandated density bonuses that give developers twice the zoned height, ending the ability of local elected officials to amend the projects.  Hence the slew of 80 feet tall mixed-use buildings approved for downtown, along the river levee and south to the first roundabout. We will soon see the first example at Laurel, Pacific Avenue and Front streets.  

Senator Scott Wiener, one of the lead authors of both bills has called backyards and single-family homes “immoral.” He is heavily funded by the real-estate industry. He and other supporters exploit social justice jargon as a selling point, but organized communities of color, particularly in San Diego and Los Angeles strongly oppose these bills. They see speculators waiting in the wings to snap up single-family homes and develop market rate dense housing, further marginalizing renters and homeowners of color. A recent Investors trade magazine writes that $5 billion is now available for speculators and investors to buy up single- family rental homes across the sun-belt. There’s big money in the wings.    

There are no requirements in either bill that such new housing include any affordable units. Our local inclusionary law applies only to projects over 10 units. If SB 10 passes, even that local initiative can be overturned by a majority vote of the council if a developer friendly council considers it stands in the way of increased housing. Our greenbelt may not be protected from development under SB 10.

SB 10 gets rid of all environmental review. Approval of a multi-housing development in your neighborhood will be ministerial, not discretionary. What that means is approval is automatic. No public hearings, no public input.

The smokescreen for this real estate bonanza and state lawmakers’ promotion is the myth that more housing equals lower cost housing. If you repeat a myth often enough it masquerades as truth. Nothing could be further from the truth.  Absent rent control and mandated truly affordable controls, all this new housing under SB 9 and 10 will be market rate, which means expensive, given today’s construction costs and inflated land values.  We do not need more housing at all income levels. Santa Cruz city has fulfilled its state-mandated housing provision in all categories except Very Low Income. That is where the need is and that is the opposite of what is contained in these Senate bills.

If a one-bedroom, 400 square feet unit rents for just shy of $3,000 a month as is the case with new downtown developments, imagine what one of the 4 new houses on a single-family lot will rent or sell for? Land value is based on what can be built on that land. A single house at current inflated values is worth over a million dollars. Four houses on one lot, each over a million dollars means that the same square footage is worth four times as much, a dream for real estate speculators and absentee landlords, a nightmare for someone looking to buy a house, other than the wealthy, displacement and a long commute for low income workers. 

Although SB 10 disallows a current single-family house to be demolished if a renter has lived there for 3 years, imagine the incentive to get rid of that renter should the absentee landlord wish to take advantage of this new law, should it pass?

One analysis of SB 9 concludes that the effect of re-zoning single- family neighborhoods will be felt only slowly since most current homeowners won’t immediately sell. They obviously aren’t talking about the city of Santa Cruz where 54% of single-family homes are non-owner occupied, meaning they are rentals with the property owner living somewhere else. SB 9 is a huge incentive for such property owners to sell at the new higher land value driven by the re-zoning. 

Senator John Laird is waffling on SB 10 and Assembly member Mark Stone, who has not taken a position on SB 10, voted for its evil twin SB 35 last time around. Both need to hear from you. Go to Lairds and Stones websites and email them your views. Request a zoom meeting. The bills still have to pass the Assembly.  August 16 is the deadline.  The future of Santa Cruz cannot be further ripped from local control and dictated to by a clueless Sacramento.

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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August 2.

Chris will be back next week.

(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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August 2.

THE COUNTY HAS MISLED VOTERS WITH FALSE CLAIMS OF INDEPENDENT CITIZEN OVERSIGHT ON MEASURE G SALES TAX FOR FUNDING FIRE PROTECTION
There is no “Independent Citizen Oversight” as promised for the countywide Measure G sales tax, sold to voters in 2018 to fund “fire” as well as other “critical unmet needs”, and in fact, ZERO dollars have gone to support fire response efforts.

When I recently quizzed Ms. Edith Driscoll, County Auditor Controller and Tax Collector, about the status of the Measure G “Independent Citizen Oversight” committee, here is her shocking reply:

Ms. Steinbruner,

The language for Measure G states the funds are subject to citizen oversight, not an separate oversight committee. All County funds are subject to citizen oversight as the financial information is reported in Annual Financial Reports that are audited by an external audit firm annually. Regarding an audit of the funds, any funds received by the County is included in the County’s Annual Financial Reports. Measure G funds were general purpose revenues and are therefore not audited separately. I have pasted the link to the County’s financial reports. The financial records for fiscal year 2020-21 will close very shortly and the final financial reports will be presented to the Board of Supervisors and posted on the website in late December or early January 2022. 

I recall Christina Mowrey provided to you the Measure G funding amounts in a separate email previously. I would double check and follow-up with you on that item.  

Best Regards,

Edith Driscoll
Auditor-Controller / Treasurer – Tax Collector
County of Santa Cruz
701 Ocean St., Rm 100, Santa Cruz CA 95060
831.454.2683
Edith.Driscoll@santacruzcounty.us

Dear Ms. Driscoll,

I wonder if you could please provide me with information about the Measure G countywide sales tax Citizen Oversight Committee and the audits of that revenue?

According to the 2018 Measure G ballot language (see below), both must occur. How much money did Measure G generate annually for the County to date?

Thank you for your help.

Sincerely,

Becky Steinbruner

Ballot question
The ballot question was as follows:[1]

“To continue funding 9-1-1 emergency response, paramedic, sheriff, fire, emergency preparedness, local street repairs, mental health services, homelessness programs, parks, economic development and other general county services, shall the County of Santa Cruz be authorized to increase by ordinance the sales tax on retail transactions in the unincorporated area of the County by one-half cent for twelve years, providing approximately $5,750,000 annually, subject to annual audits and independent citizens oversight?[2]

Santa Cruz County, California, Measure G, Sales Tax

Ms. Driscoll was mistaken in that I received NO specific information from the County Budget Manager, Ms. Christina Mowrey, regarding Measure G revenues, other than “The Measure G actual revenues and expenditures will be included in the Adopted Budget so we can represent the total actual revenues and costs.”   

She did provide information about the Proposition 172 statewide Public Safety permanent 1/2 cent sales tax intended for fire and law enforcement, but that the County allocates ZERO DOLLARS for fire protection.  See more about that below.

But I digress…

We all need to remember that in November, 2018, the County Board of Supervisors authorized the ballot initiative Measure G for a new 1/2 cent countywide sales tax that would pay for “critical unmet needs”.   They promised it would have “independent citizen oversight”, which is what had been promised for other similar new broad taxes, such as Measure D transportation tax that had passed just two years previous.

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SWENSON NEGLECTS PUBLIC SAFETY IN APTOS VILLAGE FOR FIRE DEFENSIBLE SPACE

When all Californians are working hard to reduce wildfire risk by improving fire defensible space on our properties, why is Swenson Builders NOT cleaning up a glaring fire hazard in Aptos Village???  Although I have twice written Fire Marshal DeMars of the Central Fire District about this nuisance and public safety hazard, the tall dry grass fuel ladders on the hillside bordering the Phase 2 subdivision development and the homes above on Mattison Court persists.  (see photo)


Swenson’s Phase 2 maps posted in the area show this as the “Park Parcel”.  At some point in the future when the lot is no longer of use to the construction project, Swenson is supposed to offer this “Park Parcel” to the County for a park, but does not have to make any improvements at all.

Write Central Fire Marshal Mike DeMars and ask that this public safety fire hazard be abated immediately.  Mike DeMars mike.demars@centralfiresc.org (831) 479-6842

AND QUICKLY…..

1) Car accident in Nisene Marks blocked ingress / egress for nearly 90 minutes last week.  Luckily, the driver was not hurt and the car did not catch fire.

What is State Park’s plan for emergency evacuation of the Park, in the event of a wildland fire?  I wrote State Parks to ask, but have received no response.


2) The Bayview Hotel is in line to receive some TLC, beginning with fumigation tenting last weekend. (see photo attached)  We all look forward to seeing the Hotel and restaurant re-opening!  Built in 1870, it is the oldest hotel in Santa Cruz County.

3) The Draft State Low Income Household Water Assistance Program comment period ended last Friday, but continue to ask local municipal water suppliers to keep this on their radar, and keep it on yours, especially if you are burdened by Soquel Creek Water District’s outrageously expensive rates that have been designed to pay for the disgusting plan to make the MidCounty area residents drink treated sewage water.

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A ZOOM MEETING FROM THE COMFORT OF YOUR PATIO.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK AND JUST DO SOMETHING.

Cheers, Becky

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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August 2

#214 / Solving The Housing-Homelessness Crisis

Online, the opinion column from which this picture came is titled, “It’s Hard to Have Faith in a State That Can’t Even House Its People.” In the hard copy version of the column, which appeared on the editorial page of The New York Times on July 30, 2021, the headline was a bit more upbeat: “California Can Solve Its Homelessness Crisis.”

I was pleased that Ned Resnikoff, the author of the column and the policy manager for the Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative at the University of California, San Francisco, didn’t call out so-called NIMBYs, and their supposed opposition to new housing developments, as the sole or major cause of the the state’s homelessness problems. Resnikoff’s column included the following observation, which I think is right on target: 

As economic inequality has threatened the nation’s political system, it has most likely worsened homelessness in California. In a recent paper, researchers presented evidence that income inequality may fuel homelessness in regions where housing supply fails to keep up with demand. The authors theorized that this may be because the wealthiest households in an unequal city bid up the cost of housing for everyone else, making it increasingly unaffordable to lower-income residents.

This appears to be exactly what happened here the Bay Area, where the unfathomable wealth generated by the tech boom has been mostly captured by those at the top of the income distribution. Because Bay Area cities have failed to produce enough supply to keep up with population increases, lower and middle-income residents now have to compete for housing with the super-wealthy, whose ability to outbid everyone else continually forces prices up. 

In order to deal with our homelessness crisis, we (collectively) have to deal with our crisis of “wealth inequality,” and provide housing (both rental and for-sale housing) at prices that average and below-average income persons can afford. Simply building “more” housing doesn’t solve the problem, because if we are looking for “the market” to provide housing, we will never be able to build enough housing to meet genuine community needs at the lower end of the income scale. 

In our current capitalistic system, a “market-based” approach to providing necessary housing will never succeed, since the whole purpose of the market it to make sure that sellers of goods and services get the highest prices that purchasers are willing to pay. When there are lots of people with the economic ability to buy housing (a very scarce commodity) those people will end up owning or renting what’s available. Those with lower incomes will lose out. There is no “market” solution to our housing crisis.

There are, however, two or three ideas that could help address the problem: 

  • First, we could enact legislation to require large businesses (like Facebook, and Google, and Netflix, for example) to provide housing for all the new workers that the company will need, when the company expands and hires new workers. Currently, the companies expect local communities and others to provide housing for their new workers, and since their new workers often receive very handsome salaries, they outbid ordinary income persons, and make the homelessness problem worse. This is, in essence, what Resnikoff was saying, in what I have quoted from him, above. This is certainly something that residents of Santa Cruz County know about, firsthand.
  • Second, the state government could enact a statewide program of inclusionary housing, requiring housing developers to restrict the price of, perhaps, 25% of all the new housing they construct, making that housing available at a rental or for-sale price that is affordable to persons with average or below average incomes. Such inclusionary housing should also come with a resale restriction, insuring that those who buy such housing, at the restricted price, cannot turn around and then sell that housing into the “market,” but will be required to sell the house, if and when they do sell, to another person of average or below average income. 
  • Finally, the state could also enact a rule that would require all new housing, specifically including market rate housing, to be sold with a resale restriction that would require a person who buys a new home to sell it, when and if they do sell it, at a price that is no larger than the price for which they bought the home, plus verified inflation. That would help, a lot, in taking speculation out of housing prices.

There are, undoubtedly, other things that we could do (collectively) to provide adequate housing. Spending public money to provide housing to those who need it is an obvious example of a very simple solution to the housing crisis. Publicly-produced or subsidized housing, sold into the private market with resale restrictions, as discussed above, could directly deal with the problem. That would take a lot of money, of course, to provide the amount of housing that is needed, but I’m with Resnikoff (in the hopeful headline version of his column): California Can Solve Its Homelessness Crisis. 

We would have to spend our own money to do it, and that would mean higher taxes on those with higher incomes. That’s where we would get the money to spend. California could do that, and so could the federal government. Higher taxes on upper income people would mean less consumption by those upper-income people, whose money would have been committed to address the homelessness problem. 

The extremely wealthy wouldn’t like that, of course, but Resnikoff is right. We can solve the problem. The question is whether we will!

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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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

Olympics

“Arguing is the Olympics of talking”
~Stewart Stafford.

 “It was not the money that was my main motive; it was the challenge and the thrill where I got my kicks. Armed robbery to me was like a sport. To take on an armored vehicle with two armed security guards—it was like an athlete attending the Olympic Games.”
~Drexel Deal

“It hurts my heart that doing what I love has been kind of taken away from me to please other people. I wanted it to be for myself. But I was still doing it for other people”
~Simone Biles 

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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is a powerhouse, and we need more like her in government.


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

July 28 – August 3, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Update on Rail plus Trail news, Circle Church Property plea, Grandson’s room?, Moving Storage recommendation. GREENSITE…Paying Lip Service to the climate crisis. KROHN…. End of Fiscal Year, part 2. STEINBRUNER…Goodbye Zach Friend?, No Water for farmers, no cleanup at 1500 Capitola Road! PATTON…Laser guided bombs. EAGAN… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Gravity”.

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ESTIVAL FESTIVALS 1988 (above) & 1989(below). As marketing director for the Downtown Association back three or more decades ago (and just before our 1989 earthquake) I put together two Estival Festivals. (Estival is an adjective meaning “summer”). These were free afternoon performances from 1-5 pm.In 1888 the Estival stage was in middle of Cathcart Street about where Toadal Fitness is now. In 1989 we blocked off Cooper Street and held it there. It was designed to bring folks to downtown as per the Association’s function. It would take paragraphs and column inches to identify the performers in the two photos. Look for entertainers from the Cabrillo Music Festival, Warmth, Shakespeare Santa Cruz, Kuumbwa Jazz center, Santa Cruz County Symphony, Mountain Community Theatre, New Music Works, Rainbow Ensemble, Santa Cruz Youth Ballet, Tandy Beal Dance Company, Miriam Ellis, Lile Cruse, Ross Gibson, Michael Horne, Michael Stamp, Don McCaslin, me with my clipboard, and so many more.                                                 

photo credit: courtesy of Neighborhood Moving Services…see below
Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE July 26

RAIL AND TRAIL UPDATE. The ongoing debate between the forces who want Rail AND Trail versus the trail only group seems to get more complex and detailed every week. I asked Barry Scott one of the leaders of the pro Rail and Trail community to give us an easy to understand where and how the situation stands now. He wrote… 

What now, Greenway?  
Backstory: The Greenway idea has lost every single battle in the form of reasoned public study comparing a recreational trail to actual public transit, most notably the Transit Corridor Alternatives Analysis.

So what did Greenway do? 
Last year they put ran their Executive Director Manu Koenig against John Leopold to become Supervisor of District One, making for one of twelve votes on the RTC.

District 2 Supervisor Zach Friend is recused from making decisions related to the rail corridor because his Seacliff home is a couple hundred feet from the rail line. 
For years, RTC votes for District 2 have been made by Patrick Mulhearn, Zach’s alternate, but this month Patrick moved to take a position in North Carolina, and early this month the Board of Supervisors approved the appointment of Dr. Robert Quinn as Mulhearn’s replacement.  Quinn was until recently a member of the Greenway Board of Directors.  

Now two of twelve RTC votes will be made by Greenway insiders but Greenway still has a problem:  Their proposal for a trail-only conversion of the rail corridor is entirely inconsistent with local and regional long term transportation plans to which the rail line is essential.

What to do?  Rewrite the County General Plan and to this using the ballot initiative process.  Enter the “Yes- Greenway” petition, circulating now and advocating for rewriting rail transit right out of our guiding and properly created public documents.

Launched at a time in our state and nation’s history when rail transit stands to see significant funding, and two months before the planned battery-electric streetcar demonstration, Greenway is choosing the nuclear option: tear up years of planning.

12,000 signatures might put this measure on the ballot and if successful the Santa Cruz County General Plan would be drastically modified to serve Greenway’s agenda and kill any hope of public transit on our rail line.

Petitions for ballot initiatives are notorious for their deceptive language and the Yes-Greenway petition being circulated is no exception.

The initiative summary claims that the initiative will preserve future rail options through “railbanking”, but they don’t tell you that they’ll gut future rail options from our county documents.
Approval of this measure would rewrite the County General Plan and remove all of the sections that preserve our invaluable rail line and encourage development of public transit plans for the county and the region.

Say goodbye to these essential regional transportation plans and policies if the initiative is adopted:
“To preserve and protect the Santa Cruz and Monterey Bay Railway (owned by RTC), for availability to carry freight, for possible future passenger rail transportation.”

“Identify land use policies which will support future passenger rail use and prepare recommendations for General Plan and LCP Land Use Plan amendments at such time passenger rail use is approved and funded.

“Participate in planning and consider funding for fixed guideway/rail service in the Santa Cruz/Watsonville corridor.”

“If initiated by the RTC or other agencies, participate in a Santa Cruz to Los Gatos rail study and an around the hill recreational and commuter or passenger rail service study.”

Not only does this initiative kill the rail line and rail transit possibilities, it would likely result in costly delays in implementation of the Coastal Rail Trail, already under construction.

Want to help?  Say NO to the Yes-Greenway petition and initiative and alert your friends and family to keep the rail transit plans alive and reject the no-transit plans of Greenway.
Sign up with FORT and Coast Connect, join them in opposition to the Greenway Initiative here.

If you want even more clarification than Barry’s views and news go here.

DEMOLISHING THE CIRCLE CHURCH. A last minute plea was emailed 7/26 from the Save the Circles group. It says…
“We’ve been offline for a while, but we’ve got a plan to move forward with buying the church. The owners have submitted their final plan to the city and demolition looks set to commence this autumn.

We have a few groups that would like to partner with the community to make an offer to the church. Each of the groups would like to keep the church property as is, i.e. rent to a small congregation and a few small community groups. In order for those groups to make a large offer to the owners we need to show our support in terms of pledges.
Click here to open the Save the Circles Pledge Form

If you would like to make an anonymous pledge please email savetheheartofthecircles@gmail.com . There is no obligation for you to fulfill your pledge, but please only submit amounts that you intend to support if the property purchase goes through. Feel free to share the form with anyone you know in the community that can make a pledge, BIG or SMALL.

HEART OF THE WESTSIDE NEWS. Demolishing the Church at Church Circle is a near possibility. Freya Sands who also lives near there wrote this plea to the developers/realtors…

“Dear Realtors, I saw that there is a house for sale near my house.  Please read the following:
It has come to my attention that there are various homes for sale on the Westside of Santa Cruz. Some are very close to the Circle Church at 111 Errett Circle.  If the plans that have apparently been approved go forward, the church will be demolished and there will be some degree of disruption of the neighborhood for an undetermined about of time.  If I understand properly, the sellers of properties on the Westside should disclose this situation to prospective buyers. It will have an effect on the quality of life here for a long time and it will certainly change the feeling of open space at the center of our neighborhood forever.  In addition, it may have an impact on property values.  Please use this as a note of consciousness about quality of our area and our city”.  

GRANDSON’S FUTURE ROOM? Yet another plea/request for my grandson Henry’s need to find a room. He’s been accepted to UCSC and will major in environmental Studies, and he’s quiet, well-mannered and trustworthy. Let me know ASAP. Or call him at (650) 804-6842.

NEIGHBORHOOD MOVING & TRANSPORT. All of the above photos and historical data were given to me from Mike Carballo. Mike owns and operates Neighborhood Moving &Transport Services. As he says he generates work from the referrals of clients who have benefited from my services and tell their friends. He also receives work from businesses that refer him to their clients as a trusted in house moving service. He’s been in Santa Cruz for decades and likes to work with seniors too. He’s honest, responsive and knows what to do with all those things you’ve been trying to find the best place to move them to or from. Call him at (831) 588-1741 or email at neighborhoodmovingsc@gmail.com  

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.

THE LAST LETTER FROM YOUR LOVER. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (53RT). A genuine love drama. It stars Felicity Jones and Shailene Woodley. I mean to say it’s a real weeper and full of twists in time and in emotions. Two sets of lovers set about forty years apart and the search for happiness by a journalist who is determined to find out why neither relationship worked. It’s a tear jerker of the first class and if you like weepers go for it. Yes, I liked it.

EXIT PLAN. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). An insurance investigator checks in to a very special hotel in Denmark exclusively inhabited for patients who make their own plans on dying. Then he too realizes that he’s dying from a tumor. It’s an excellently told and deep and depressing story about assisted suicide. Full of time and personality shifts you’ll be transported into moments thinking about your own demise. Watch it when you’re in a good mood only.

JOLT. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). Kate Beckinsale and Stanley Tucci are the leads in this almost comic book, action, sci fi thriller. It’s fun to watch as Kate has electric chargers strapped to her chest to shock her into proper behavior in case she gets too violent.(35RT). It’s a B-movie and diverting if you need it nowadays but you’ll forget 98% of it in minutes.

GUILTY. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (60RT). An Indian flick in many ways. They use the #MeToo theme and I’m not sure why. It’s about a young girl who accuses her lover of sexually abusing her. It’s how she handles the reporting and going public with the sex charges that make up the plot. Ultimately it lacks focus and purpose but it is sincere. Watch it only when “necessary”.

THE COOK OF CASTAMAR (or) LA COCINERA DE CASTAMAR.  (NETFLIX SERIES). A 12 episode Spanish extravaganza about a young maid who, in the 1720 Barcelona works her way up from lowly kitchen help to a loving position helping the lord of the castle in every way. She has claustrophobia but manages to change her entire world. Fascinating, well-acted, beautiful photography and worth your time.

100 FOOT WAVE. (HBO MAX. SERIES). Even if you never touch the ocean, surfing is a part of our lives in Santa Cruz. This documentary exposes the business of professional big wave surfing. They’ve found a place in Nazare, Portugal where the waves actually reach 100 foot heights. These professionals show us the many serious techniques involved in tow-ins, rescues, and just the art of riding these monsters. It details how the surfers dealt with the political powers in Nazare so everyone would make serious money. Go for it you’ll learn a lot about surfing no matter how good or indifferent you are. 

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, 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.  

McCARTNEY 3, 2, 1. (HULU SERIES). If you have ever enjoyed anything by The Beatles you’ll love this perfectly produced 6 episodes of interviews with Paul McCartney by music producer Rick Rubin. (95RT) How the Beatles began, how they created some of their greatest hits. Their business and fun times, their influences such as The Beach Boys, Roy Orbison, Little Richard. McCartney’s very nice, unaffected and friendly. Watch it and be ready to sing along. 

SCHMIGADOON! (APPLE TV+ SERIES). Alan Cumming is fun to watch in this parody of the 1940’s musicals. Numerous ensemble dance numbers all “inspired” by Oklahoma, South Pacific, and the greatest MGM spectaculars. Watch it just for fun, there’s no comparison to the originals and no depth to the plot of two people in love on a hiking trip being trapped in this musical kingdom. (88RT) 

PEARL. (PRIME VIDEO.SINGLE). (57RT). Anthony LaPaglia plays the mysterious father that has to take care of his newly found 15 year old daughter. Her mother was shot by her boyfriend so she has to give up a way of life and also take charge of her grandmother who drinks too much. It’ll keep your attention, not the greatest acting but it still works.

MANDALORIAN. (DISNEY +) SERIES. It’s been nominated for an Emmy series award so I watched three episodes to see what the fuss is/was about. (8.8 IMDB) It’s Star Wars carried far beyond the original intent. We see the new Yoda baby who we learn is not the same as old Yoda in later/newer Star Wars sagas. It’s full of great effects, middling plot lines and centers on the ongoing mission of the Mandalorian to find the best place for baby Yoda. If you need escape and loved Star Wars go for it, by all means.

GUNPOWDER MILKSHAKE. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (69RT). It isn’t promoted as a comedy but it’s a semi funny parody of Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill, and Pulp Fiction. Angela Bassett, Michelle Yeoh and Carla Gugino are librarians who run a gun filled library. But it’s really a mother and daughter saga with Mom teaching the daughter how to be a surviving hit woman for top gangsters. The acting is stylized, dramatic and odd. Go warned if you rent this one.

LAST SUMMER. (NETFLIX SINGLE). This film takes place in 1997 and in Bodrum which is in Turkey. Bodrum is a well to do beach town, more expensive than Santa Cruz. Teen age love in all its cuteness, wildness, jealousies, and of course sex are the topics for almost two hours. I’ll spoil the ending by saying that there isn’t one!!! But it’s a diverting flick to waste your time on.

HASEEN DILLRUBA. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (50RT). A very Indian production complete with Bollywood songs and dances and silliness. There’s a wife who is suspected of murdering her husband. The police are convinced and it drags on dealing with the problems of arranged, traditional Indian marriages. The husband was a jerk as we watch, but then come an ending which will knock you off your sofa. All in all watch it IF you like movies from India. 

click here to continue (link expands, click again to collapse)

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July 26

FELLING OUR FUTURE 
If ever there was an example of the city of Santa Cruz leaders paying lip service to the climate crisis it is evidenced in last week’s felling of the grove of eucalyptus trees pictured below, at the Highway 9- Highway 1 intersection to make way for highway widening. A lone redwood on the south side was also sacrificed on the altar of the automobile. 

Also sacrificed is Central Home Supply, a local business in that spot for the past 45 years.  While this is a Caltrans project, it had to go before the city council for approval. At the council hearing in March 2019, CHS co-owner Rusty Santee strongly objected to the city’s destroying his business through forced eminent domain. With Krohn and Glover absent from the meeting, the vote was unanimous to move forward with the eminent domain process. 

The issue came before council again in May 2020. The vote was 5-2 with Council members Katherine Beiers and Sandy Brown voting against approving the project. Council member Beiers captured the sentiments of community members present with the words: 

“This project never made sense to me. We talk about following the data all the time as it relates to the corona virus, but we do not pay attention to the data when it comes to these projects and the climate.”

At a time when every large tree should be regarded as critical to the survival of life on earth, city leaders treat them with as much concern as a used Kleenex. These trees, now gone, didn’t rate a mention from the project advocates. The widening of the highway, the destruction of the trees, the forced removal of a long-time local business, all subsumed under that Orwellian term “improvements.”

A large tree sequesters approximately two tons of carbon and adds to that each year. The same tree expels oxygen which, it should be obvious is critical for our survival.  Trees and humans share a beautiful symbiosis: we inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide: trees inhale carbon dioxide and exhale oxygen. A sapling planted today will take around 80 years to reach the size of some of the trees in this grove and in the process will sequester a fraction of the carbon that was stored in the grove and added to each year. The positive effects of the 500 saplings planted by the city over the past 2 years under a Caltrans grant have all but been wiped out with the felling of this grove of trees.

The grove was a favorite for raptors and a variety of nesting birds. Bird nesting season lasts until September 1st.  Various agencies had to sign off on this project.  How was approval given to cut in the middle of nesting season? And if a biologist did inspect the grove, even with the best of binoculars, was every branch of every tree visible and accurately evaluated for nests, including the tiny ones? And in the unlikely event that there were no nests present now, what about next year when the birds return to find no trees but only more cars, trucks and asphalt? They can’t just move nearby. Birds are territorial.  At least Central Home Supply got some money as compensation for forced removal. The birds get nothing. 

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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July 26 

END OF FISCAL YEAR, PART II.
Last week, if you remember, I was able to retrace last year’s city fiscal money trail only up to November, simply because the trail is so wide and the money so plentiful. Yes, lots of money for fences, police overtime, city gas-guzzling vehicles, asphalt, and $200k-plus salaries for all department heads. When it comes to making inroads into the climate emergency, the homeless crisis, the affordable housing catastrophe, or the opaque nature of city council deliberations and decision-making, our city is not faring well, fiscally or otherwise. While the number one issue, the climate, is a minor lip-service one-off for this city bureaucracy, talk of building a parking garage, spending $500k consulting fees to rezone downtown to make it larger, and turning the current Santa Cruz Community Credit Union property into a boutique hotel, well, those are all within reach for a compliant city council. When the seemingly intractable capitalist road projects wear down the best of our Santa Cruz activists, may I remind you, we have been here before. Perhaps, we have not seen the sheer number of market-rate behemoths coming our way before, nor the dire effects of climate change which were not as far along, but we have faced long odds before. Remember, we have a greenbelt around the city; there are not 10,000 homes on Wilder Ranch or a convention hotel on Lighthouse Field; there is Tannery Arts housing and studio spaces; the Del Mar theatre did not go the way of luxury housing; we have a bicycle lane on Pacific Avenue; and we have successfully done public-private housing that included more than 25% affordable at 1010 Pacific Ave. and at 1240 Shaffer Road. We can turn back the current forces of greed and shape a more livable and environmentally respectful community. We must not let up.

Last December I reported:
The law firm, “Atchison, Barisone & (Tony) Condotti, A Professional Corporation,” handles city attorney services for the city of Santa Cruz. They scored big in the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan world this past year. They received $275,200, for 16 employees, from the Feds according to a July report by Gerben Law. [Law firms that received PPP loans]  I have to wonder if the city is paying them any less than the $1 million-plus they shelled out last year for “legal services” to fight the Ross Camp lawsuit and politically tar and feather Drew Glover among other expenses. Remember the now discredited attorney Reed Gallogly’s remarks on Drew Glover, “drug lover” in court? I doubt Covid-19 affects that contract. To city attorney Condotti’s credit, he did quickly dispense of Gallogly’s services. [Embattled Deputy Santa Cruz City Attorney to resign]. On another side note, Penrose, Chun, & Gorman LLP, a Santa Cruz firm, also received PPP loans totaling $166,282 according to the same web site. Grunsky Law Firm PC of Watsonville received $520,484 covering their 27 employees. These were three firms among the 14,363 law firms receiving PPP loans of $150,000 or more.

Update:
Tony Condotti still leads the law firm that represents the city of Santa Cruz. The same law firm John Barisone and his father-in-law, Rod Atchison, have owned for 57 years. They’ve represented the city since 1964. That’s longer than UCSC has been around; longer than Bookshop Santa Cruz; even longer than Robert Norse has been getting under the political thin skin of Santa Cruz city councilmembers. The city budget passed in July. This city attorney’s budget, Tony Condotti’s budget, says nothing, zero, nada on what tax-payer money is spent on. Condotti’s been asked multiple times in the past by councilmembers to include information about what he spends money on, to itemize spending items, to inform the council and public on where the precious tax-payer dollars go. So far, he has not complied. Only the city manager and city attorney answer to the seven members of the city council, a majority has the power to hire and fire these two positions. In Fiscal 2020, the adopted budget was $1.47 million, but the city attorney received $1.81 million. In fiscal 2021, the adopted budget was $1.6 million, but real spending on the city attorney’s office was again, $1.81 million. Why the overspending? Clearly, more city council oversite is needed with respect to the city attorney’s lax budget preparations and overspending.

Owen Who? Back in December of 2020 I also wrote the following tidbit: “Mr. Owen Lawlor (self-employed/Real Estate, (Zip code: 95060) $250 to Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee Inc. on 06/30/2007″ 

Update:
Owen Lawlor is riding high and continues to mastermind the “Selling of Santa Cruz.” He has evidently been instrumental in doing the bait and switch housing into a boutique hotel on the site of the current Santa Cruz Community Credit Union. Plainly, someone has no shame. Santa Cruz, we are being played by upstart real estate fixer.

Just sayin’!

Campus Growth Machine
In April, the UC Regents rejected the East Meadow Action Committee’s request not to build on the iconic East Meadow. But bulldozers will not be out in the meadow anytime soon as a law suit is currently precluding any construction on that site. While this project is on hold, what is the university administration doing to house its new students? UC recently issued a press release stating that the largest number of new students ever will be coming to campus, and therefore coming to the community of Santa Cruz, this fall, some 6,100. Weather report for fall: blue skies and warm with a nary a chance of finding rental housing.

“We’ve got 10 days, Ohio!

Time to get to work: Nina Turner for Congress. (July 24) 


I am going with my December 2020 pic of the week because nothing has changed…we can still get Medicare for all if these 15 House of Representative members decide they will withhold all their votes until it is done. They all supported it, now they need to bring it forward and vote on it. 

(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 26

BIG CHANGES IN STORE FOR SECOND DISTRICT SUPERVISOR REPRESENTATION?
Last week, news announced the departure of Tina Friend, the newly-hired Scotts Valley City Manager and wife of Second District County Supervisor Zach Friend, to take a job in southern California.  Such fanfare causes me to predict this will soon lead to an early departure by Supervisor Zach Friend, for family reasons, before his term is up in 2024.  

Coronado names Tina Friend as new city manager

Patrick Mulhearn, long time and very capable analyst to Supervisor Zach Friend, left that job in June.  The new analyst is Mr. Kieran Kelly, who apparently came with experience in serving as analyst in Santa Clara County Supervisor Ken Yeager’s office.  

Maybe Zach Friend wants to exit before another election and suffer the embarrassment former Supervisor John Leopold did with defeat at the polls.  Maybe he wants to exit politics for a while to enable his hiring with the likes of YardArm Technology, which he already serves as an advisor on the Board.

Whatever the case, I predict big changes in the County’s Second District Representation.  

According to my understanding from a discussion awhile back with Santa Cruz County Elections Manager, if Supervisor Friend were to exit before the end of his term, the Governor would appoint a replacement to act as Supervisor until another Special Election could take place.

Consider the information below:

The Foundation For Ethical Behavior
Executive Order 12674

Thomas Jefferson enunciated the basic principle of public service.  “When a man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself as public property.”  This sentiment has been expressed by numerous others, over time becoming the familiar principle “Public service is a public trust.”

To ensure public confidence in the integrity of the Federal Government, Executive Order 12674 (as amended) forms the framework for the ethical behavior required and expected of all Federal employees.  As a condition of public service, you are expected to adhere to these fundamental principles of ethical behavior:

  • Public service is a public trust, requiring you to place loyalty to the Constitution, the laws, and ethical principles above private gain.
  • You shall not hold financial interests that conflict with the conscientious performance of duty.
  • You shall not engage in financial transactions using non-public Government information or allow improper use of such information to further any private interest.
  • You shall not, except pursuant to such reasonable exceptions as are provided by regulation, solicit or accept any gift or other item of monetary value from any person or entity seeking official action from, doing business with, or conducting activities regulated by your agency, or whose interests may be substantially affected by the performance or nonperformance of your duties.
  • You shall make no unauthorized commitments or promises of any kind purporting to bind the Government.
  • You shall put forth an honest effort in the performance of your duties.
  • You shall not engage in outside employment or activities, including seeking or negotiating for employment, that conflict with your official Government duties and responsibilities.
  • You shall disclose waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption to appropriate authorities.
  • You shall satisfy in good faith your obligations as citizens, including all just financial obligations, especially those such as Federal, state, or local taxes that are imposed by law.
  • You shall adhere to all laws and regulations that provide equal opportunities for all Americans regardless of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, or disability.
  • You shall not use your public office for private gain.
  • You shall act impartially and not give preferential treatment to any private organization or individual.
  • You shall protect and conserve Federal Property and shall not use it for other than authorized activity.
  • You shall endeavor to avoid any actions creating the appearance that you are violating the law, the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch (5 C.F.R. § part 2635), DOI Supplemental ethics regulations, or Executive Order 12674.

https://www.doi.gov/ethics/basic-obligations-of-public-service

Think about this for a while, then watch what happens in the Second District (and Third District, as well).  For those who may be curious, I do not plan to run for County Supervisor.

NO WATER FOR FARMERS THIS YEAR IN PRIME CALIFORNIA FOOD-PRODUCING AREAS
The State Water Resources Control Board voted last Friday to curtail all agricultural water extraction in the San Joaquin Valley in order to preserve domestic water supplies for Southern California.  The Board will officially vote on this drastic measure August 3, so they need to hear from you now.

California moves to cut off water to thousands of farmers, as drought dries up rivers

What about conservation measures?  You can take a look at the Water board Conservation data dashboard and see for yourself what various water municipalities are reporting: Water Conservation Portal – Conservation Reporting | California State Water Resources Control Board

Since 2014-2015, the State Water board has required all water providers with over 3,000 customers to report conservation data.  In the 2014-2015 drought, Southern California residents actually increased their water usage while others in the State conserved significant amounts, and mostly have not returned to pre-2014 water usage levels.

That may still be the case now: The Truth About the California Water Crisis – CounterPunch.org

What will farmers do this summer as their crops wither and no food goes to market?  What will we do with less food available?  Do you think the price of food will go up?  

Contact the State Regional Water Resources Control Board and participate in their August 3 meeting: [State Water board August 3-4 virtual meeting agenda]

Here is something interesting to think about:

“Per capita daily water consumption was 108 gallons in 2014. It was 92 gallons last year.

Water use had been slowly improving since the 1975-76 drought ended in all sectors in California from farming and industrial uses to residential. The biggest gains have been from more targeted water applications in agriculture were scarcity and cost are driving factors to residential use.

The residential tricks have been everything from mandating low-flow shower heads to more efficient toilets and washing machines. Those efforts picked up steam in part thanks to the two subsequent drought periods between 1976 and 2012.

What made the biggest impact the last time around is a movement toward native landscaping that is more drought tolerant as well as other forms of xeriscape landscaping.  In Southern California alone 160 million square feet of grass was replaced with less thirsty landscaping.

Turf removal — specifically of non-functioning grass at office complexes, in landscape areas around the entrance streets to subdivisions, and even in front yards where lawns are for looks and no other purpose — represents the biggest potential source of water use reduction without slashing farm output needed to feed people or forcing urban water rationing.

To understand why this is a big issue for the Central Valley all you have to do is look at the numbers.

Based on the latest numbers, the Bay Area per capita residential daily water use is 72 gallons, it’s 86 gallons in Southern California, and in the Central Valley stretching between Redding and Bakersfield depending upon the city or town it’s between 125 and 136 gallons.

The difference is clearly driven by climate and development patterns.”

They’re ‘moo-ving’ from California as drought continues to tighten its grip

“In Los Angeles, people have been hearing about the dangers of drought for decades. But in this land of infinity pools and backyard putting greens — better suited for rattlesnakes and scrub — water never seems to run out.”

Water shortages: Why some Californians are running out in 2021 and others aren’t.

For an interesting discussion about farms vs. lawns, take a look at this: [10 Things to Know About California Water Use]

Meanwhile, take pride in the stellar water conservation practices in Santa Cruz County…and contact the State Water Resources Control Board soon.

AND QUICKLY….
Work continues at breakneck pace to build the new medical and dental clinics at 1500 Capitola Road, without any sign of cleaning up the serious contamination in the soil or groundwater.  Here are some photos.

Ask Supervisor Manu Koenig about why no clean-up is happening here.  The PCE contaminant is volatile and carcinogenic.  Manu Koenig manu.koenig@santacruzcounty.us  

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A VIRTUAL MEETING WITHOUT HAVING TO LEAVE THE COMFORT OF YOUR HOME OR THE BEAUTY OF THE BEACH.  JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK, AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

Cheers,

Becky

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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July 22

#203/Laser-Guided Bombs

Pictured above is a laser-guided bomb. If you click this link, you can see a ten minute tutorial on how to launch a laser-guided bomb. Good luck with that! I didn’t much understand any of the instructions, but I was suitably impressed with the destructive impact of the bomb once it was released. 

You might wonder why I was scouting out how to launch a laser-guided bomb (LGB for short). Basically, I was following up on a recent article in Consortium News, which was titled, “Arms Sales: What Americans Know About Bombs Dropped in Our Name.” 

I knew nothing! But here is what I learned: 

At some point before the summer of 2018, an arms deal from the U.S. to Saudi Arabia was sealed and delivered. A 227kg laser-guided bomb made by Lockheed Martin, one of many thousands, was part of that sale. 

On Aug 9, 2018, one of those Lockheed Martin bombs was dropped on a school bus full of Yemeni children. They were on their way to a field trip when their lives came to a sudden end. Amidst shock and grief, their loved ones would learn that Lockheed Martin was responsible for creating the bomb that murdered their children…. 

While Lockheed Martin profited from the death of 40 Yemeni children that day, top United States weapons companies continue to sell weapons to repressive regimes around the world, killing countless more people in Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and more. And in many cases, the United States public has no idea this is being done in our name to benefit the largest private companies in the world. 

Now, the newest $735 million in precision-guided weapons that are being sold to Israel are destined to have a similar fate. The news about this sale broke in the midst of Israel’s most recent assault on Gaza that killed over 200 Palestinians. When Israel attacks Gaza, it does so with U.S.-made bombs and warplanes…. 

According to our own law, the United States should not be sending weapons to countries like Israel and Saudi Arabia (among others). Technically, doing so goes against the Foreign Assistance Act, which is one of the main laws governing weapons sales. 

Section 502B of the Foreign Assistance Act says that weapons sold by the United States cannot be used for human rights violations. When Saudi Arabia dropped that Lockheed Martin bomb on those Yemeni kids, no argument could be made for “legitimate self defense.” 

When the primary target of Saudi airstrikes in Yemen are weddings, funerals, schools, and residential neighborhoods in Sanaa, the United States has no legitimate justification for their use of U.S. manufactured weapons. When Israel uses Boeing joint direct attack munitions to level residential buildings and international media sites, they are not doing so out of “legitimate self defense.” 

In this day and age where videos of U.S. allies committing war crimes are readily available on Twitter or Instagram, no one can claim that they don’t know what U.S.-made weapons are used for around the world.

The article in Consortium News spends a good bit of time discussing how arms sales might be disallowed on an individual basis. It is hard to do it that way, that’s clear, so the article mentions how procedures might be changed, to let Members of Congress have a better chance to intervene to prevent individual arms sales.

Good idea, sure, but how about a more direct solution?

NO international arms sales, period. How’s that for an idea?

Professing its commitment to peace (as the United States government so often does) is not really consistent with allowing American arms manufacturers to provide sophisticated weapons that end up blowing apart wedding, funerals, and school field trips. 

NO international arms sales, period. Seems like a simple solution. I think I remember a Bob Dylan song about that! 

Gary Patton is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney for individuals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. You can read and subscribe to his daily blog at www.gapatton.net

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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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

    Gravity

“You can’t blame gravity for falling in love”.
~Albert Einstein

“Because there is a law such as gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing”. 
~Stephen Hawking

“The theory of evolution, like the theory of gravity, is a scientific fact”.
~Neil deGrasse Tyson

“I defy gravity”.   
~Marilyn Monroe

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If you’ve paid attention to my little video tips, you’ve seen Mark Rober before. Here’s his latest (ad)venture!


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

July 21 – 27, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Latest Rail Trail section completed and celebrated, 831 Water Street planning disaster, unearthing early Santa Cruz, anti-doubling highway 1 lanes picnic. GREENSITE… on gender and pronouns. KROHN…Looking Back at the Fiscal Year. STEINBRUNER…Soquel Creek Water District issues, City Water rates going up, Newsom’s new water rulings. Fire risk area changes. PATTON…The Biggest Threat to America. EAGAN… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Pandemic Times”.

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SOQUEL AVENUE AND DAKOTA STREETS, February 11, 1961.  This is now the long established location of The Hindquarter Restaurant. Riverside Electric is right across the street.

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

DATELINE July 19
    

WATSONVILLE STRETCH OF RAIL/TRAIL COMPLETED. The Santa Cruz Sentinel reported this on July 16. I re-wrote parts of it to bring it up to date…

WATSONVILLE — Segment 18 of the Coastal Rail Trail has been open to the public for approximately a month. That didn’t stop enthusiasts from throwing a ribbon-cutting event in its honor Saturday July 17, complete with booths and prizes.

From 10 a.m. to noon at 800 Ohlone Parkway in Watsonville, there was an opportunity for attendees to walk the new loop after speeches. Attendees also found booths with local groups who have sponsored activities and were handed a map that can be stamped as booths are visited. Just before the event ended, a Santa Cruz Branch Railway locomotive will pass by so that people can take pictures with it in the background, Watsonville Principal Engineer Murray Fontes teased. “It’s for little kids and big kids alike,” he said.

Paperwork necessary for the completion of permitting requirements ultimately delayed the official opening, according to Fontes. Fontes said that despite signs that were put up to discourage the trail’s use, people continued to utilize it.Other than securing permits, the construction of the project that connects the rail trail to the Monterey Bay Sanctuary Scenic Trail Network was on schedule until crews encountered poor soil quality.

“The pandemic didn’t help … but there were some soil contamination issues to address and it took more work than we thought,” Fontes said. “There were utilities we had to work around or move, which pushed us into the winter. We did get some rain which is good, but not for construction. It just caused (further) delays.”

Fontes and his colleagues anticipated some problems around the site, such as the fact that a finding around soil quality may add to the project cost.

“We usually allow for the worst but hope for the best,” he said.

Segment 18, a one-mile continuous paved bicycle and pedestrian trail, features fencing on the side adjacent to Watsonville’s active freight line — a consideration that was top-of-mind for the entire process, even leading to everyone on-site taking rail-safety training.

“You will see, for much of the trail, a retaining wall as the trail is higher than the adjacent ground. There is a second railing there so that people won’t step off the trail and fall over the retaining wall,” the engineer said of the rail side of the trail.

On the other side, crews provided a ground cover. Unfortunately, it didn’t take, Fontes said.

Bigger plans

The city of Watsonville was able to secure a $600,000 Active Transportation Program grant because much of the jurisdiction is considered to be disadvantaged, Fontes confirmed. The criteria around that type of grant, which is becoming more frequent, involves income, the number of students eligible to receive free or reduced lunches, local water quality and pollution levels and more.

“Watsonville is the one part of the county that qualifies in many of those categories,” the engineer said. “That makes us eligible for funding. That is just one source we used to pay for this project.”

City staff plans to continue seeking out equity-driven grants in order to strengthen its trail network that weaves through the city. Today, there are 10 miles of trail, including the Watsonville Slough trail system, that provide residents additional transportation opportunities, Fontes explained. Segment 18 links to the slough trail system and has the potential to, in the future, connect to the rest of the Coastal Rail Trail going toward Davenport and Santa Cruz County Land Trust’s Watsonville Slough Farm property set to break ground next year.

“Not only is this going to be linked into 10 miles of existing trail in the city, but it is part of the network of trails the city is currently developing that will extend west toward the ocean and go beyond the highway,” Fontes said. “Then it will follow Lee Road … and head back toward Pajaro Valley High School, giving alternative access to students who bike or walk.”

Additionally, the network could expand in coming years as the city of Watsonville recently secured an $11.7 million grant to build a pedestrian bridge over Highway 1 at Harkins Slough Road. This, Fontes said, will help high school students get to and from Pajaro Valley High in a safer manner.

“I’m excited about this addition to our trail network that we are developing. I see the rail trail as just one component of it,” Fontes said.

GARY PATTON ABOUT BRANCIFORTE AND 831 WATER STREET DEVELOPMENT.
I asked Gary if I could re-“print” his FB statement about the proposed development at 831 Water Street, he assured me it was fine with him….” There was a garage sale Saturday, July 17 for a cause – namely to defeat the massively out of scale project proposed at the corner of Branciforte and Water Streets. The idea is for an outsized six floor structure, with a rooftop bar, on a seriously dangerous intersection with geologic and fire access problems to boot. The developer wants this project to be treated as a “ministerial” project. That means NO environmental review; NO Planning Commission hearing; NO opportunity for the public to raise concerns to be addressed; NO CITY COUNCIL VOTE. This is to be an “over the counter” permit for a six-story, massive new development. Check out the picture. It would dwarf even most of the Santa Cruz downtown. This development is in the vicinity of Belvedere Terrace, which would be overwhelmed by this horrible proposal”.

Go here to see the official take on it.

Be sure to read Gary’s daily blog at www.gapatton.net and his weekly opinions and news just a few knuckle twists further down this page.

HIGHWAY 1…DOUBLING THE LANES and a PICNIC!!! Here’s what The Campaign for Sustainable Transportation says…. “We’ve been at it since 2002. We’ve stalled, but haven’t yet stopped the RTC’s plan to double the lanes on Highway 1. But the expansion plans could grind to a halt if our lawsuit wins at trial in January. In our fundraising for the lawsuit and in our advocacy work for transit and safe streets, we’re part of a larger social transformation towards keeping the planet livable and prioritizing social equity. We want to thank everyone we know who has been a part of this effort. Let’s celebrate our persistence”. So they are having a picnic
Sunday, Aug 15, 2-4pm. The Buckeye Picnic Area is the first picnic area across from the baseball diamond at Harvey West Park .

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.

McCARTNEY 3, 2, 1. (HULU SERIES). If you have ever enjoyed anything by The Beatles you’ll love this perfectly produced 6 episodes of interviews with Paul McCartney by music producer Rick Rubin. (95RT) How the Beatles began, how they created some of their greatest hits. Their business and fun times, their influences such as The Beach Boys, Roy Orbison, Little Richard. McCartney’s very nice, unaffected and friendly. Watch it and be ready to sing along. 

SCHMIGADOON ! (APPLE TV+ SERIES). Alan Cumming is fun to watch in this parody of the 1940’s musicals. Numerous ensemble dance numbers all “inspired” by Oklahoma, South Pacific, and the greatest MGM spectaculars. Watch it just for fun, there’s no comparison to the originals and no depth to the plot of two people in love on a hiking trip being trapped in this musical kingdom. (88RT) 

PEARL. (PRIME VIDEO.SINGLE). (57RT). Anthony LaPaglia plays the mysterious father that has to take care of his newly found 15 year old daughter. Her mother was shot by her boyfriend so she has to give up a way of life and also take charge of her grandmother who drinks too much. It’ll keep your attention, not the greatest acting but it still works.

MANDALORIAN. (DISNEY +) SERIES. It’s been nominated for an Emmy series award so I watched three episodes to see what the fuss is/was about. (8.8 IMDB) It’s Star Wars carried far beyond the original intent. We see the new Yoda baby who we learn is not the same as old Yoda in later/newer Star Wars sagas. It’s full of great effects, middling plot lines and centers on the ongoing mission of the Mandalorian to find the best place for baby Yoda. If you need escape and loved Star Wars go for it, by all means.

GUNPOWDER MILKSHAKE. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (69RT). It isn’t promoted as a comedy but it’s a semi funny parody of Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill, and Pulp Fiction. Angela Bassett, Michelle Yeoh and Carla Gugino are librarians who run a gun filled library. But it’s really a mother and daughter saga with Mom teaching the daughter how to be a surviving hit woman for top gangsters. The acting is stylized, dramatic and odd. Go warned if you rent this one.

LAST SUMMER. (NETFLIX SINGLE). This film takes place in 1997 and in Bodrum which is in Turkey. Bodrum is a well to do beach town, more expensive than Santa Cruz. Teen age love in all its cuteness, wildness, jealousies, and of course sex are the topics for almost two hours. I’ll spoil the ending by saying that there isn’t one!!! But it’s a diverting flick to waste your time on.

HASEEN DILLRUBA. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (50RT). A very Indian production complete with Bollywood songs and dances and silliness. There’s a wife who is suspected of murdering her husband. The police are convinced and it drags on dealing with the problems of arranged, traditional Indian marriages. The husband was a jerk as we watch, but then come an ending which will knock you off your sofa. All in all watch it IF you like movies from India. 

THE PARISIAN AGENCY / L’AGENCE. (NETFLIX.SERIES). “Exclusive Properties”. An unusual genuine French reality style drama/comedy!! It about a French family with four sons plus father and mother and they have formed a real estate business for wealthy Parisians. They tour through some of the mostly costly homes and apartments in Paris. Plus the drama of family life makes this thoughtful, intelligent and restful to watch

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, 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.  

SILVER SKATES. (NETFLIX SINGLE). This is a zillion ruble Russian production that is great fun to watch. No violence, no blood, just a costumed fantasy taking place in 1900 Moscow. It’s a fairy tale and a genuine break from all the brutal movies we produce and watch here in the states. The skating is wonderful and the story of a poor boy meeting and wooing the daughter of a rich power father is traditional and fun to watch for a change. Only 40RT, but what do they know?

XTREME. (NETFLIX SINGLE). The opposite from Silver Skates…this mess is violent, bloody, and pointless. It happens in Barcelona and when there’s a lead character who is as evil, ruthless, judo savvy, and talented…you have wasted even more of your time. Find any other movie to watch.

SOMOS. (NETFLIX SERIES).This is a confusing series that contains stories about a teen age girl football player, a handicapped boy, prostitutes and more all happening in the Mexican border town Allende around the year 2011. The movie tries to make real the lives of the hundreds of locals killed by a cartel that ruled that part of Mexico. It lacks depth and we are left with almost a documentary of this true story. Don’t tell anyone I sent you to it.

HOW TO BE A TYRANT. (NETFLIX SERIES). Narrated by Peter Dinklage this documentary series shows how evil dictators throughout history have used the same tactics to win and maintain control. Such demons as Hitler, Stalin, Saddam Hussein, Mao Zedong and everybody but TRUMP are carefully explained. You’ll compare TRUMP tactics about every ten seconds while watching this “how to” lesson book. It’s a bit too cutesy to be classic but it’ll surprise you when you realize where the USA is headed with TRUMP being able to do what he is still doing. Watch it and take notes.

SUMMER OF SOUL. (HULU). (99RT) is such a great documentary and reminder, that I want to be sure folks view it as soon as possible. It’s a fast-moving and very well done record of the little-known 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival that took place in the Marcus Garvey Park over a period of six weeks. It stars Mahalia Jackson, Nina Simone, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Max Roach, The 5th Dimension, Stevie Wonder and my ages-old favorites The Edwin Hawkins Singers. Over 300,000 people attended the concerts. It’s a great and positive view of our early history that we either ignored or never knew about. View it and then go dancing!!

SOPHIE: A MURDER IN WEST CORK. (NETFLIX SERIES). (100RT)This brilliant and suspenseful documentary deals with a murder of a well-known French woman in a little far off town in remote Ireland. It happened in 1996, the Irish police/Gardi are involved from the beginning. The main and really the only suspect is a news correspondent and what is shocking is that the case isn’t solved yet! Accusations, confessions, suspicions, fly everywhere but the courts in France and Ireland can’t work together so the main suspect is still free and selling books about the case on the streets. A well worth your while way to wonder about the Irish Police. 

PRIME TIME. (NETFLIX SINGLE). It’s a Polish film about a wild-near crazed 20 year old kid in 1999 on New Year’s Eve/ Millennium night who bursts into a TV studio demanding to be put on the air to get his message out. The studio goes crazy, cops deal with him, (56RT) he takes hostages and it drags on bit by bit. The kid has a troubled past which is obvious but the ending and his message to the world will leave you guessing. Mildly approved. 

 THE LITTLE THINGS. (HBO SINGLE). Denzel Washington returns to the screens along with Rami Malek and Jared Leno in this cop versus cop versus a maybe criminal drama. Denzel is a cop in Bakersfield who gets sent to LA in 1990 where he has to deal with fellow cop Malek who is solving, chasing, shadowing, and beating a very suspicious, devious local jerk. (6.3 IMDB). Washington has to live with a sad and mysterious past that haunts him while he works to solve this serial murder case. Not a great film but Denzel does make it worth watching…at least up to the ending, which is nearly a cop-out.

THE TURN OUT. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). A very depressing but effective view of the sex lives of teenagers and truck drivers…especially in West Virginia. There’s a mix of religion, AA, and the main character is called “Crowbar”. This is a very real issue and more help is needed to change their worlds and their opportunities. No fun, but illuminating.

THE TOMMOROW WAR. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). (53RT). A science fiction fantasy starring Chris Pratt that has time travelers coming back to us from 2051 to help us change our future. The problem with 2051 is that monsters/10 foot lizards have pretty much taken earth over and they can only be stopped by a vial of special fluid. I recommend it if you like what you’ve read. It’s escapist, suspenseful, excellent special effects….go for it, with that proviso.

NO SUDDEN MOVE. (HBO MAX SINGLE). A very classy new film directed by Steven Soderbergh (88RT) starring Don Cheadle, Benicio Del Toro, Jon Hamm, Kieran Culkin, Ray Liotta and more. It’s about Detroit and secrets between auto manufacturers and is mostly true according to the closing credits. It is involved, well thought out, exciting, perfectly acted according to the Soderbergh style. Watch it ASAP and enjoy all the deep moments.

AWAKE. (NETFLIX SINGLE)  If you haven’t been terrified (or bored) by the covid pandemic this movie won’t help. (27RT). It’s actually a science fiction drama where something happens that causes almost all earthly electricity go shut down. Then it turns out that no one can sleep anymore. They go crazy, wear masks, and try various ridiculous tricks to remain sane. You’ll have the same problem only in how to stay awake during this mess…avoid it.

SAFER AT HOME. (HULU SINGLE) only (7RT) so far but I predict that this one could catch on. Some friends get together on at least four Zoom cameras and celebrate the Covid pandemic by taking Ecstasy pills. The characters aren’t that well developed, and their actions aren’t too credible but just the filming with different cameras from unusual vantage points makes some interesting possibilities even when it’s set in the year 2022. 

THE ICE ROAD. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (44RT) Liam Neeson takes on the super dangerous job of driving trucks on ice roads that can and do collapse into the freezing lakes in Northern Canada. So does Laurence Fishburne but he’s killed off very quickly in the race to get lifesaving equipment to miners trapped underground. It’s hokey, typical, even boring and amounts to just another action thriller that goes no place.

 GONE GIRL. (Prime Video Single) (87RT). Rosamund Pike never had it better than her role in this dissection of what’s behind or hidden in a marriage. Ben Affleck is her husband and Neil Patrick Harris is an ex who has never given her up. She disappears and the husband gets the blame. Whodunit is the theme and the ending will surprise many viewers Go for it.

POSSESSIONS. (HBO MAX SERIES). A very traditional Jewish wedding in Israel and just at the moment the beautiful French bride slices the wedding cake, the lights go out and the husband is bloody and dead. She’s helped in proving her innocence by a cross-eyed official from the French Consulate General’s office, which makes it all the more mysterious. After three episodes I’m still curious and watching.

KATLA. (NETFLIX SERIES) A volcano erupts in Vik, Iceland and strangers and family members who disappeared return covered with black ashes. How or why have they survived or did they survive? Great Iceland photography, fine acting, very original plot and views of Iceland’s volcano territory you probably have never seen. Go for it. (100RT)

FALSE POSITIVE. (HULU SINGLE) Pierce Brosnan goes against his James bond type character and is a pregnancy doctor/ fertility specialist. He supervises/controls one woman’s pregnancy and has a secret relationship with her husband. It’s controlling, creepy, and will keep you guessing about the truth until the end which was very disappointing. (52RT)

HOTEL COPPELIA. (HBO MAX SINGLE). There’s a civil war in The Dominican Republic in 1965. The hotel is really a brothel and the “girls” are strung out in many, many ways. The locals are fighting the war’s battles but the American troops take over and everything gets challenged, including loyalties. Odd plot gaps, not the greatest acting ever but watch it anyways.

PHYSICAL. (APPLE SERIES) Rose Byrne plays a 1980’s housewife with some very bad dreams. It’s a comedy, and so there’s a few laughs as she faces food binges, a miserable husband, some strange fitness classes and has trouble with reality.(63RT). What it really exposes is our obsessions with body weight, mental problems, even political residue. I don’t watch many comedies but definitely offers some funny moments, and some serious introspection. 

RUN. (HULU SINGLE). (88RT) You’ll experience a mother like no other in this internal horror story. A teen-aged daughter who can’t walk, has diabetes, paralysis and more, finally realizes that her mother is not what she believed she was. This terrifying story reaches a climax a bit later than you’d think, but it’s still worth watching.

SECURITY. (NETFLIX SINGLE) In an Italian beachside small town much like Santa Cruz, a young girl accuses a man of power and political holdings of rape. She has a father who is, or was, a pedophile. Complex, involving, and well directed, it’s a wakeup call to think about our own security including our CCTV cameras and iPhones.

LUPE. (HBO MAX SINGLE). A serious movie centered around and focusing on a transgendered young boxer from Cuba who comes to NYC looking for his sister. Much nudity, some odd moments of joking, all centered on a transgendered world. He thinks his sister may be prostituting herself, and he finds support from a prostitute friend of hers. Not the greatest film ever, but it’ll give you a chance to think about that transgendered world.

LUPIN. (NETFLIX SERIES). I critiqued this first series episodes a few months ago, and now that the New Yorker wrote such a laudatory piece about Omar Sy’s starring role I’ve watched many more episodes….and they’ll all good. A neatly-twisted robbery plot of Marie Antoinette’s necklace from the Louvre, there’s revenge, politics (French politics) and many, many Louvre scenes. The plot is complex enough to keep you glued to your viewing device for the two seasons so far. What is outstanding is that the acting is excellent and believable. Omar Sy is the “new” Black star, and has everyone talking about him and his fabulous acting style. This is one of the finest detective shows I’ve ever seen….don’t miss it. 

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July 17

GENDER AND PERSONAL PRONOUNS
In certain circles it is now commonplace to add one’s chosen pronouns after one’s name.  Or to say what pronouns one uses when speaking to a group. For example I might write or say Gillian (she/her/hers) or Gillian (he/him/his) or Gillian (they/ their) plus a variety of alternatives such as ze/hir, xe/xem, hy/hym, co/cos. 

This inclusion of pronouns is an effort to support transgender people to have their   gender respected in a world that is often cruel to those who don’t conform to the expected gender norms. And to acknowledge those who don’t identify with the gender binary of male or female. As such it is fully supportable. However, the contradictions of using gendered pronouns to escape a gender binary have not been fully explored and those who have questions or opinions are targeted for hostility and if well-known, cancelled. Such was the case with author JK Rowling.

This intolerance to even discuss the issue is troubling. Recently someone posted an article on Facebook titled Gender is Not a Spectrum by a professor of philosophy at the University of Warwick in the UK. I read it and found it incisive and an important contribution to what should be able to be discussed. One follower said she would not read it but knew it would be awful or words to that effect. You can read it here.

I first encountered the practice of adding pronouns after one’s name at an environmental conference a number of years ago. It struck me at the time as rather strange but having worked in gender issues for years I soon figured it out. Later in a small group and going around to introduce our selves plus pronouns I said why I was not adding pronouns. My explanation went something like this: “I’m no stranger to gender issues having worked in rape prevention education for 30 years. I hope for a world where gender is not used to subjugate half the human race.  We are not there yet. For me to stress that I’m female by adding female pronouns just invites those who disrespect females to dismiss what I’m saying. ” The response was: “get with the program.” I understood right away that this was not an easy terrain on which to have a conversation.  Sure, I could play with it and use male pronouns or “they” but that misses and proves the point. 

Rigid, hierarchical binary gender roles first appear centuries ago with patriarchy and private property. Control of female sexuality was crucial for upper class males to ensure that their property would be passed down to the rightful male heir. No bastard babies wanted and no females included. Myth and religion as well as socially and legally enforced gender roles normalized these practices. It wasn’t until 1971 in the USA that a woman could open her own check account.

Collective, matriarchal cultures had more fluid gender roles. Androgyny or gender fluidity is an ancient practice and pre-dates Christianity in Siberia and Central and SE Asia. In Indigenous or Native American cultures, over 150 tribes had alternative gender roles for males and over 70 tribes, alternative ones for females. No stigma attached. All this changed with patriarchal European conquest, which introduced rigid, hierarchical gender roles enforced by violence including rape.

Rape and violence in intimate relationships are still largely committed by males against females even with the inclusion of violence against transgender people, same-gender violence and female on male violence. To limit gender to an identity issue destroys our ability to better understand male violence in general and male violence against women in particular. To replace the term “women” with “people with uteruses”, to argue against “women-only” safe places in a world where male violence against women is rampant is to prematurely bury gender before understanding its impact. It took decades of resistance to acknowledge the centuries of male violence against women, particularly in war. We still avoid naming the subject when we talk about “violence against women.”

A recent, local, sad case brought this issue to the fore for me. As reported in the Good Times (July 14-20) Rachel “Elias” Maisenheimer was murdered by their ex-partner who turned himself in and confessed to the crime.  The murder was committed after he had violated numerous restraining orders obtained by Maisenheimer and had been released on his own recognizance awaiting trial for inflicting corporal injury on Maisenheimer. When sentenced to 88 days in jail for the assault charges, the judge suspended the remainder of the sentence and released him with 36 months’ probation and a new restraining order on June 25th. He murdered Maisenheimer on June 28th.  Despite the legal requirement to alert victims in such circumstances, no such warning was given by SCPD to Maisenheimer. Maybe they were hard to locate, living in an RV.

The “they” in this case is Maisenheimer who chose to use that pronoun. I’ve respected that choice and used it here. However it confuses what was clearly a crime committed by a male against a female. That erasing of gender is furthered by the co-executive director of the local non-profit Monarch Services, who is quoted as saying: “Every case and situation is unique and has a variety of circumstances.”  Yes, except for the common thread that the overwhelming majority of gendered violence involves males as perpetrators and females as victims.

If we bury gender before unraveling and transforming its impacts, we run the risk of allowing it to fester but without a name. It should be possible to both respect gender non-conformity and acknowledge male violence. In the current climate, even that conversation is cancelled.    

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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July 19

LOOKING BACK AT THE FISCAL YEAR.
Gary Patton: “Everybody who had sort of assumed there was nothing that could be done, decided, wait, maybe if we got involved in local politics, we could change the way things are happening.” 

End of the Fiscal Year

Well, I’m a bit late. The “fiscal year,” for most municipalities across the country, ended June 30th. That’s why in June there are usually slews of retirements, or mad-capped spending sprees by individual departments if there is money left in its own budget. It must be spent by the June 30th deadline. The Santa Cruz City Council “goes dark” in July as many of its careerist employees are fond of saying. In other words, the end of the fiscal year heralds in a month-long break away from council for the city staff. They do not have to put up with council requests, speeches, or haranguing for a whole month, and there are no city council meetings during the month of July either. In this column, I look back at the fiscal year of columns and try and pull out the salient issues that have not been confronted, discarded, or still waiting for Godot to take them up. This is Part I, as I was only able to get through November of last year. Remember November? Seems so long ago.

From Fiscal Year July 2020

“Defund the Police”

“Defund the police” means reallocating or redirecting funding away from the police department to other government agencies funded by the local municipality. That’s it. It’s that simple. Defund does not mean abolish policing. And, even some who say abolish, do not necessarily mean to do away with law enforcement altogether. Rather, they want to see the rotten trees of policing chopped down and fresh roots replanted anew. (by Rashawn Ray, Brookings Fellow, What does defund the police mean, and does it have merit?“Reducing prison and police budgets is a critical vector in the fight against structural racism because those systems perpetuate discrimination while diverting funds from the things people actually need to thrive.”(David Segal and Astra Taylor)  Police Budgets, Austerity, and Tax Cuts for the Rich Are Colliding in Democratic States and Cities

Update: Where is the “defund” movement at today in Santa Cruz? There was NO community refund in the city of Santa Cruz. In fact, the FY(fiscal year) 2022 budget increase by more than a million dollars over the FY 2021. Nowhere in PD’s budget is there a line for mental health counseling or homeless relief funds, or a Cahoots-style physical and mental health program. We have not passed the police refund-defund test bequeathed to all of America from the Black Lives Matter movement. We had a chance. A black Santa Cruz mayor knelt along with a white police chief and that image rippled across the country and so far, the city of Santa Cruz has gained little in terms of changing PD culture. Maybe next year? Watch Trevor Noah interview some of the leaders in the “defund the police” national conversation

City Attorney Tony Condotti stated last year: “To the extent that a parking district generates revenue in excess of what’s required in order to provide and maintain parking facilities that are in existence, and to the extent the City Council makes a policy determination that those revenues are not needed to improve or increase parking facilities with the use of the revenues, then under the Parking District law of the State of California, you are able to put those funds into the General Fund.” That’s right, the parking fund is part of the city’s general fund. And where are we at now? The city council 5-2 majority has doubled-down on moving the library and building it next to, or inside, a five-story parking garage. More general fund good money after bad. While we cannot house our homeless residents (witness the withdrawal of the “done deal” purchase of the Seaborg property to house a 24/7 navigation center on Coral Street), we now stand prepared to figure out how to house automobiles at $75k per space?

Update: We can still use the parking fund to build affordable housing on Lot 7 (behind Chianti’s restaurant), keep the library where it is, and preserve the heritage trees on Lot 4 as pillars of a downtown central park. This struggle continues.

Jimmy Panetta voted for the National Defense Authorization Bill, H.R. 6395, on Tuesday, July 21st [2021]. 

Update: As I write this, the National Defense Authorization Bill, or War Budget, is set to be debate this week in Washington. For 2022, the bill provides funding of $705.939 billion, a modest 1.4 percent increase over the current budget for 2021. It is likely our Congress member again give his yes vote to this year’s increase in the military budget.

From Fiscal Year 2020 September

What’s on the Table?

  • 190 West Cliff. It will contain 89 condos and two levels of underground parking, which will be dug into the west cliff of Santa Cruz. It will be a development that will shadow neighbors living in the mobile home park next door. It squeaked by on a 4-3 city council vote and was vehemently opposed by several neighbors in the area. The neighbors’ pleas now wait for a Coastal Commission decision on the project. Status: Approved.
  • 908 Ocean Street. The project will combine 20 parcels along Ocean Street between Water and Marianne’s Ice Cream in order to build 408 “small ownership units.” Is this the largest housing project ever undertaken in Santa Cruz? I think so. The Planning Department web site says the city’s Planning Commission will meet this Thursday, Sept. 17 at 7pm, but this project is not on their current agenda.
  • 1930 Ocean Street Extension. Originally 40 units, but scaled back to 32-unit “residential condominium project.” The property sits across from the Santa Cruz Memorial Cemetery. Status: Approved, but as I understand may be facing a law suit by neighbors.
  • 428 to 508 Front Street (along the San Lorenzo River). This is proposed to be a “seven-story, mixed -use building with 175 residential condos.” Funny thing is the developer is proposing building 20 units of affordable housing, but the current city inclusionary ordinance calls for 20% of the units to be affordable, which is a total of 35. What gives? Status: Plans submitted.
  • 101 Felix Street. Cyprus Point Apartments’ out of town owners seek to expand the 240-unit mistake at the end of Felix Street. The management is arguably one of the most egregious in town and the owners want add 100 more units to a riparian corridor. This project was turned down at the last city council meeting, but I have heard the Planning Director, Lee Butler, desperately wishes to bring it back to council and get it approved. So neighbors, please stay vigilant on this one. Status: Not out of the water yet.
  • 530 Front Street. This project will be “170 residential condominiums (to be made available as rental apartments) with frontage on Front Street, Soquel Avenue, and the San Lorenzo River levee…” Status: Plans submitted.

Update: Now add a hotel to the SC Community Credit Union site at Front and Laurel…and, a behemoth 200plus studio-only complex at 130 Center Street. Santa Cruz is more For Sale than ever!

From Fiscal Year November 2020

City Council MONEY Trail
Developer and real estate interests are funding at least three local candidates in the lead up to the Nov. 3rd election. It’s an election that actually began on Oct. 5th when locals began receiving their official mail-in ballots. It is clear that real estate interests are trying to buy another city council. The overwhelming amount of money put up by the real estate industry and certain individual realtors for three candidates, is clear. There are three candidates that the realtors are seeking to not just influence, but to buy as was seen during the rent control and recall campaigns. It’s not just speculation on my part about where the realtor’s money is, but the three candidates even trumpet on all their mailings and web site the support of a pro-real estate Political Action Committee (PAC), Santa Cruz Together.  It is no surprise that developer and real estate interests are NOT supporting Sandy Brown, Kayla Kumar, and Kelsey Hill, but labor unions are and the donations are lopsided with hundreds of dollars coming from labor, but thousands from the multiple properties-owning class. Labor’s efforts are dwarfed by the large donations Santa Cruz Together, and the candidates themselves, have received from real estate interests. These entities, they often hide behind LLC’s, are investing money into candidates in whom and they will expect a return. Remember, while many of these folks have maxed out the $400 individual limit per candidate, there are no limits on what they can donate to the SC Together PAC…and donate they are…From SCT’s 460 form it looks like “total expenditures made” was $78,108 this calendar year. Here is a list of what just a few of these donors (not to mention, but not listed, are donors from San Jose, Oregon, San Mateo, and San Francisco) have given this year:

  • Ken Carlson, realtor, $2,250
  • Peter Cook, Lighthouse Realty, $2,500.
  • Richard Moe of Soquel, developer and realtor, $4,000
  • Robert Williams at 134 McCormick St. is a property manager, $1,500
  • Hallie Richmond, real estate agent, Live Oak, donated $2,501 on Sept. 23, 2020.
  • Kenneth Rilling property owner of Prunedale, $800.
  • Alan Ramadan, of Scotts Valley, who brings together “entrepreneurship and venture capital,” $2,500.
  • Doug Ley of Redtree Properties (His Front Street properties up for city permitting) (Karl Rice president of Boardwalk is also on this board.), $1,000.

Update: Yes, the real estate and developer class bought the election, bought themselves a compliant city council, and are proceeding to pillage Surf City and trample on any sort of good will there was in the Santa Cruz electorate for the dire need of affordable housing.

“Abolishing ICE isn’t a radical thing to do, it’s a humane thing to do.” (July 31, 2020)

Update: Well, ICE still has a federal budget. Congress could “abolish” that budget if it had the cajones, but muddle on it likely will.

The rallies and marches have diminished, but the mood to “defund” and produce a “community refund” continues in a more tactical and strategic approach by local community groups.

(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 19

THIS IS ONLY THE BEGINNING OF A DISASTEROUS AND OUTRAGEOUSLY EXPENSIVE SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT PROJECT

Last week’s loss of over 100,000 gallons of water when Soquel Creek Water District’s construction accident on California Street was the third time such a needless waste of water has happened during construction of the Modified PureWater Soquel Project!  This information is according to residents who live on California Street and have been adversely affected. [Article in the Sentinel]

How can this happen if the construction crew is experienced in such work and the City has clearly marked where the existing water lines are?  Needless wasting water in a drought is unthinkable, and will make it difficult for the City to adhere to the Governor’s mandated 15% water use reductions.

Write Soquel Creek Water District Board and demand accountability.  Is Soquel Creek Water District going to pay the City for this wasted water?

Soquel Creek Water District Board of Directors bod@soquelcreekwater.org   

SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT HAS NO FISH & WILDLIFE DEPT. PERMITS FOR RIPARIAN WORK FOR PUREWATER SOQUEL PROJECT
According to State Fish & Wildlife staff, as of last week Soquel Creek Water District has not even applied for any permits necessary for the Modified PureWater Soquel Projects’ many riparian crossings: 

 “To date CDFW has not received a permit application (notification per FGC 1602) for work related to this project. If work may require a CDFW permit such as riparian vegetation removal, it would be at the risk of the entity conducting the work if the permit process is not followed. My understanding is CDFW staff provided this information verbally to the project representatives via past phone communication.”

The Project Mitigation Monitoring & Reporting Plan must address the mitigations necessary for minimizing the adverse impacts to the potential 18 stream crossings identified, including the San Lorenzo River.  See pages 33-34 of the Project EIR 

In compliance with Mitigation 4.1.1, the District must work with CDFW to address the adverse impacts to riparian areas, but the District does not seem willing to do this.  Furthermore, the EIR completely fails to address the operational impacts of this Project, and included no new mitigations to address the potential adverse and significant impacts brought about by the many Project modifications.

Call the Regional CDFW Office and demand that Soquel Creek Water District follow the law and consult with that agency regarding the significant and adverse impacts of the Modified PureWater Soquel Project.

(707) 428-2002

SANTA CRUZ CITY WATER RATES WILL GO UP AGAIN SOON
City of Santa Cruz water customers are in for a huge average 10.8% rate hike in their water rates again, continuing annually for five years, all based on a “Reliability Benefit”, the need to show ample revenues to support investor confidence in the $300 million bond sales funding capital improvements projects, including two new intertie connections with the Modified PureWater Soquel treated sewage water supply.   The average water bill will be about double what it is now by the end of the rate increases spanning 2022-2027.

Because the rate increases are tied to the bond sale and construction projects, the actual amount of rate increase Financial Plan will fluctuate wildly over the five-year period: 6.9% increase in 2023, 15.6% increase in 2024, 18.3% increase in 2025, 3.5% increase in 2026, and 9.6% increase in 2027, but the average increase over the five-year increase period would be 10.8%.

(See page 71)

Will you have a chance to vote on this?  Not really.  The Commission accepted the Raftelis rate consultant’s recommendations that a Prop. 218 procedure be instituted, which means that 50% + 1 of the City’s property owners representing the 98,000 people served would have to file a PROTEST AGAINST the five-year annual rate increases, in order to stop it or cause the action to go to general ballot approval.

Last week’s City Water Commission meeting included a lengthy presentation and discussion about how to raise rates for all City water customers with the focus on creating a reliable revenue level to support investor confidence in the City’s Bond sale that will finance capital improvements.  The presentation by Raftelis Rate Consultants (the same crafty group who, in 2019, slipped the five-year annual rate increases by the Soquel Creek Water District customers without them realizing what was really happening) offered a palette of options for the Commission to consider.  The recommendations were based on responses of a hand-picked single-family residential customer panel that included no landlords(see item #5)

Take a look at the graph on page 91 (Item #6).The options for rate increase methods included a lump-sum billing on annual property tax payments, fixed rate fees across the board for all customers regardless of amount of water used, and maintaining the existing four-tiered volumetric use fees.  

The Commission rejected the more legally-defensible flat fee/unit of water because those customers who use very little water would suffer significant billing increases. The option to include a large sum on property tax bills was favored by many on the Commission, but they were later dissuaded because landlords would likely have legitimate reason to raise tenant rents to accommodate the financial burden.  

Ultimately, the Commission voted to recommend the four-tiered rate model for approval by the City Council.  That issue will likely come to the Council in August or September…moving on the fast track to support the Bond sales.  Raftelis rate consultant will develop a slick report and five-year rate increase schedule for a Prop. 218 procedure that may or may not clearly let rate payers know the purpose of and calculations supporting the rate increases, as is required by the California Constitution Articles XIIIC and XIIID.

Changes in financial revenues include removing the Inside vs. Outside City limits surcharges, thanks to former Commissioner Linda Wilshusen’s good work.  Rates for agricultural customers on the north coast were not available for the presentation.

It is interesting that Tom Burns, former Santa Cruz Planning Director and now consultant to the Modified PureWater Soquel Project, is now serving on the City Water Commission…but refuses to recuse himself so far when issues regarding that Project relationship with the City come up.

SANTA CRUZ CITY WATER RIGHTS PROJECT PUBLIC COMMENT ENDS NEXT WEEK

You have until next Monday, July 26, to comment on the EIR addressing how the City of Santa Cruz can expand where the water from existing water rights to the San Lorenzo River and Loch Lomond Reservoir can be sent. [LINK HERE]

All comments must be in writing, and this site includes useful tips on how to submit them.

This is important because it would allow the City to share water with Soquel Creek Water District and the City of Scotts Valley when the water is plentiful, allowing those jurisdictions to reduce pumping and let groundwater levels rise naturally.  It could also allow the city to store water in the aquifers of those jurisdictions, potentially improving groundwater levels without the need to use high-energy and technology-dependent processes to inject heavily chemically-treated sewage water that likely would still contain pharmaceuticals and hormones into the aquifer.

Now, doesn’t that just make sense???  

Why is there no purple pipe for recycled water irrigation use outside the Pajaro Valley?  Raftelis rate consultant’s report to the City Water Commission that since 2016, City water use for irrigation has increased while domestic consumption has decreased, due to stellar conservation practices.  So, why not use recycled water for irrigation, rather than contaminate the aquifer, and allow the City to sell potable water to other areas instead?

Here is more useful information to help you regarding the Water Rights Place of Use EIR:

Santa Cruz Water Rights Project | City of Santa Cruz

GOVERNOR NEWSOM DECLARES DROUGHT STATE OF EMERGENCY ALLOWING BROAD STATE REACH AFFECTING WATER SUPPLIES

The Governor declared a Drought State of Emergency in California on April 21 with a five-page Proclamation. Take a look at what it allows

Item #6 is of interest locally:

  1. To increase resilience of our water systems during drought conditions, the Water Board shall
  1. Use its authority, provide technical assistance, and where feasible provide financial assistance, to support regular reporting of drinking water supply well levels and reservoir water levels where the Water Board determines that there is risk of supply failure because of lowering groundwater levels or reservoir levels that may fall below public water system intakes.
  1. Prioritize the permitting of public water systems that anticipate the need to activate additional supply wells where water quality is a concern and treatment installation needs to proceed to relieve a system’s potential supply concerns. 
  1. Provide annual water demand data, information on water right priority, and other communications on water availability on its website. 
  1. Identify watersheds where current diversion data is insufficient to evaluate supply impacts caused by dry conditions, and take actions to ensure prompt submittal of missing data in those watersheds. 

Does this mean that the State can insist on certain projects being built, such as the PureWater Soquel Project disaster, or the interties that would send that treated sewage water to other jurisdictions, and thereby allowing Soquel Creek Water District to make other jurisdictions help pay for the expensive Modified Project?  

Does it mean that the State will force Soquel Creek Water District, the largest pumper in the MidCounty area but with Junior Water Rights to significantly reduce their pumping with a possible moratorium? Junior Water Rights allow the District to sell only the excess water available in the area after the Primary/Senior Water Rights holders demands are met.

Write Ms. Eileen Sobeck, Executive Director for the State Water Resources Control Board and ask: Eileen Sobeck eileen.sobeck@waterboards.ca.gov 

ALL PROPERTY SALES IN HIGH AND VERY HIGH FIRE RISK ZONES NOW REQUIRE FIRE DEFENSIBLE SPACE DOCUMENTATION

On and after July 1, 2021 when you sell property that is located in a high or very high fire hazard severity zone, you’ll need documentation of a compliant Defensible Space Inspection.  

This now includes properties in the Local Responsibility Areas (LRA), not just the State Responsibility Areas (SRA).  According to CAL FIRE staff at Felton, their inspections in the SRA are free, but the wait is long.  The new law requires that the seller either produce this Inspection document, or simply disclose the fire severity level and status of fire defensible space when listing their property for sale, and the buyer MUST obtain and file the Inspection document within six months after purchasing the property.

Here is a link to the CAL FIRE site for information: Welcome to Wildfire Hazard Real Estate Disclosure

The Fire Risk Assessment Plan (FRAP) for the State of California was initially done in 2003, with an update in 2017.  It is supposed to be updated every seven years, but no one seems to have information about whether this year’s required update is happening or not.  Here is a link to that map.  FHSZ Viewer

You can to locate your property by clicking on the binocular icon on the side, and entering your address.  

Here is a link to the self-survey to help you determine what work to do for improved fire defensible space and home hardening:  ArcGIS Survey123

AND QUICKLY…..

1) Public Comment Open re: CAL TRANS storm water permit and water quality

Wouldn’t it be great to have storm water recharge stations in the freeway interchanges that would allow that water to be cleaned naturally in the soils and help recharge aquifers?

2) UCSC Urban Gardens Ecology teams are out surveying the status of native pollinators in Santa Cruz and Santa Clara County this summer.  https://www.urbangardenecology.com/There are over 1600 species of native bees in California Beyond the honey bee: Learn more about California native bees

While the greatest majority of them are solitary ground dwellers, you can encourage those who nest in wood to visit your garden by building a native bee house.  Here is information about that

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A ZOOM MEETING IN YOUR PAJAMAS.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK AND JUST DO SOMETHING.

Cheers, Becky 

(Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).

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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July 17

#198 / The Biggest Threat To America

Nicholas Kristof, pictured above, is an opinion writer for The New York Times. He places himself on the “progressive” side of the political spectrum. 

On Thursday, June 24, 2021, Kristof wrote a column about the “biggest threat to America.” Kristof identifies that “biggest threat” as “America itself,” and specifically America’s “creeping mediocrity.” 

America is not back. In terms of our well-being at home and competitiveness abroad, the blunt truth is that America is lagging. In some respects, we are sliding toward mediocrity.

Greeks have higher high school graduation rates. Chileans live longer. Fifteen-year-olds in Russia, Poland, Latvia and many other countries are better at math than their American counterparts — perhaps a metric for where nations will stand in a generation or two.

As for reading, one-fifth of American 15-year-olds can’t read at the level expected of a 10-year-old. How are those millions of Americans going to compete in a globalized economy? As I see it, the greatest threat to America’s future is less a surging China or a rogue Russia than it is our underperformance at home.

We Americans repeat the mantra that “we’re No. 1” even though the latest Social Progress Index, a measure of health, safety and well-being around the world, ranked the United States No. 28. Even worse, the United States was one of only three countries, out of 163, that went backward in well-being over the last decade.

Another assessment this month, the I.M.D. World Competitiveness Ranking 2021, put the United States No. 10 out of 64 economies. A similar forward-looking study from the World Bank ranks the United States No. 35 out of 174 countries.

So it’s great that we again have a president respected by the world. But we are not “back,” and we must face the reality that our greatest vulnerability is not what other countries do to us but what we have done to ourselves. The United States cannot achieve its potential when so many Americans are falling short of theirs.

In his comments in his June 24th column, Kristof is focused on the “American Dream,” which he identifies as “upward mobility,” and which is what Kristof says brought his refugee father to the United States in 1952. If “upward mobility” means an ability to consume more, each year, than the year before – and that is how many would define it – this kind of “dream” might turn out to be more like a nightmare, given the realities of the global warming crisis that we want to ignore, but ultimately can’t ignore. More pertinent, I think, is the following observation from Kristof: 

“America’s chronic failure to turn its economic strength into social progress is a huge drag on American influence,” said Michael Green, chief executive of the group that publishes the Social Progress Index. “Europeans may envy America’s corporate dynamism but can comfort themselves that they are doing a much better job on a host of social outcomes, from education to health to the environment (emphasis added). 

Rather than MORE (more things, more money, and more of everything, always), “social progress” ought really to be the measure of our success. Living better with less. That, really, should be the new form of the “American Dream.” 

Kristof places his commentary in the context of an international competition: How is the United States doing vis a vis other nations in the world. We may not be “Number 1,” as Kristof notes, but he implies that we ought to be.  

Well, if “social progress” is the measure of our “American Dream,” I have to agree that it would be nice to have our country be a world leader in achieving that. For my part, though, I think that the international “competition” framework isn’t the correct one to measure success. I like the very last line of Kristof’s column:

To truly bring America back, we should worry less about what others do and more about what we do to ourselves. 

And what we “do to ourselves” needs changing. 

Big Time!

Gary Patton is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney for individuals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. You can read and subscribe to his daily blog at www.gapatton.net

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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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

    Pandemic Times

“These so-called bleak times are necessary to go through in order to get to a much, much better place.” 
~David Lynch  

“Fear not, get your shot.”
~Abhijit Naskar 

“We want change, change not from body or mind of mine but from this pandemic rulers.”
~ipi (human_bot)

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Here’s a new stand up comedian who just debuted on Colbert 🙂 Enjoy!


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

July 14 – 20, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Community Credit Union For Sale, St.George Hotel Not for sale, Rail with Trail news. GREENSITE…on light pollution. KROHN… UCSC and the way it used to be.  STEINBRUNER…1500 Capitola Road contamination, Newsom’s money and fire risk, Live Oak Library and addition issues, septic system rules, local state of emergency. PATTON…Critical Race Theory. EAGAN… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Stars”

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CATHCART AND FRONT STREETS 1959. Now the home of Crazy Crab, Ocean City Buffet and Sesame Korean Grill. Many name changes at this location. It was also the Pontiac Grill.
                                       
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.
Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE July 12

SANTA CRUZ COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION FOR SALE. I remain firmly in the middle of all the shouting, booing, and general hoopla centering on whether or not the Community Credit Union should sell their building to the hotel developers. Their board of directors will be talking about it soon. Like any other business that becomes and remains successful, the credit union wants to grow and add new smaller branches, plus more ATM machines. For comparison, what if Bookshop Santa Cruz fell into a huge financial bonus and wanted to open new and smaller branches around the county….is that bad? I do not want any more hotels in Santa Cruz. We need low income/affordable housing, but developers, like Owen Lawlor and Barry Swenson and son, see big dough and a very easy/encouraging City Council that allows such detracting development. The Credit Union says,  “The Santa Cruz Branch building is quickly becoming obsolete in the context of changes in the financial services industry, customer/member preferences and the pending loss of all current parking spaces due to redevelopment projects planned and underway in Downtown Santa Cruz”. They also state, “The credit union will maintain a presence in Downtown Santa Cruz through lease or purchase of a smaller space”. 

If any locals think stopping a hotel in this space will change anything, please realize and admit that the money and power behind this hotel location will just be shifted to another nearby and close location. And yes, I’m a very longtime member of the Credit Union and was a good friend of Margaret Cheap who was a major player in creating the Credit Union. Matter of fact she and a friend were my overnight guests at my former Swanton Road home back in the day. 

Competition? Bay Federal Credit Union has grown into our area’s three counties, and still there’s Wells Fargo, Bank of America, CITI, and many more. They all compete for new money; who do we want to support? 

SAINT GEORGE NOT FOR SALE. After all the hustle, bustle and fuss about the future of the St. George last week, apparently it was for naught. I talked with Christin Coffin, the property manager, and she said that the change in ownership is just a paper move. That means that developer Barry Swenson (operating as Green Valley Corporation) the present owner, has given the property rights over to his son who works under the title of Baron Ranches, Inc. Christian said the residents have nothing to fear about moving, etc.

RAIL WITH TRAIL. Coast Connect and Friends of Rail and Trail released more good news. Their newsletter included… 

“Survey of Active Voters Shows 74% Support Passenger Rail! The independent data collection firm FM3 Research did a survey of randomly-selected Santa Cruz County voters to find out their opinions on passenger rail. They talked to a selection of voters taken from the county voter registration lists. FM3 Research found that 74% of the county supported moving forward with the rail and trail project! Check out all the details here

The TRANSIT CORRIDOR ALTERNATIVES ANALYSIS Study for Electric Light Rail has been completed!
The recently released TCAA business plan has some pretty great news for electric passenger rail service in Santa Cruz County.

  1. There are now many all electric trains and street cars available today that we can implement, ensuring a sustainable, quiet and traffic free option along our branch line. In fact, the TCAA indicated that adding rail will reduce our local GHG emissions by 1482 metric tons annually, the equivalent of planting 24,500 trees and growing them for 10 years every year, year after year.
  2. We will be a part of a regional transit system, connecting to the state rail lines and Monterey rail line at the Pajaro junction. Imagine traveling stress free between where you live and San Francisco, Sacramento, Santa Barbara, Los Angeles or anywhere else in CA or the USA.
  3. There are current funding possibilities for more than 57% of the total projected cost, this is fantastic at this stage of the project development. 
  4. Our neighborhoods will be safer and more walkable, the neighborhood traffic reduction achieved by adding electric rail transit is projected to reduce vehicle, bike and pedestrian accidents by 346 collisions every year.
  5. One thing is clear, light rail transit is an increasing priority in our community. Support has grown dramatically. There have been new endorsements from two city councils, several Democratic community clubs, local labor representatives, and many business and community leaders.

Unfortunately, the Regional Transportation Commissioners are currently split in a 6:6 impasse and have not authorized RTC staff to move forward with applying for funding for initial engineering and design work! The commissioners need to hear from us. Please click here to tell the commissioners you support taking the next steps to add zero-emissions passenger rail to our public transportation system.

For more information and connections go to coastconnect.org  

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.

SILVER SKATES. (NETFLIX SINGLE). This is a zillion ruble Russian production that is great fun to watch. No violence, no blood, just a costumed fantasy taking place in 1900 Moscow. It’s a fairy tale and a genuine break from all the brutal movies we produce and watch here in the states. The skating is wonderful and the story of a poor boy meeting and wooing the daughter of a rich power father is traditional and fun to watch for a change. Only 40RT, but what do they know?

XTREME. (NETFLIX SINGLE). The opposite from Silver Skates…this mess is violent, bloody, and pointless. It happens in Barcelona and when there’s a lead character who is as evil, ruthless, judo savvy, and talented…you have wasted even more of your time. Find any other movie to watch.

SOMOS. (NETFLIX SERIES).This is a confusing series that contains stories about a teen age girl football player, a handicapped boy, prostitutes and more all happening in the Mexican border town Allende around the year 2011. The movie tries to make real the lives of the hundreds of locals killed by a cartel that ruled that part of Mexico. It lacks depth and we are left with almost a documentary of this true story. Don’t tell anyone I sent you to it.

HOW TO BE A TYRANT. (NETFLIX SERIES). Narrated by Peter Dinklage this documentary series shows how evil dictators throughout history have used the same tactics to win and maintain control. Such demons as Hitler, Stalin, Saddam Hussein, Mao Zedong and everybody but TRUMP are carefully explained. You’ll compare TRUMP tactics about every ten seconds while watching this “how to” lesson book. It’s a bit too cutesy to be classic but it’ll surprise you when you realize where the USA is headed with TRUMP being able to do what he is still doing. Watch it and take notes.

SOPHIE: A MURDER IN WEST CORK. (NETFLIX SERIES). (100RT)This brilliant and suspenseful documentary deals with a murder of a well-known French woman in a little far off town in remote Ireland. It happened in 1996, the Irish police/Gardi are involved from the beginning. The main and really the only suspect is a news correspondent and what is shocking is that the case isn’t solved yet! Accusations, confessions, suspicions, fly everywhere but the courts in France and Ireland can’t work together so the main suspect is still free and selling books about the case on the streets. A well worth your while way to wonder about the Irish Police. 

PRIME TIME. (NETFLIX SINGLE). It’s a Polish film about a wild-near crazed 20 year old kid in 1999 on New Year’s Eve/ Millennium night who bursts into a TV studio demanding to be put on the air to get his message out. The studio goes crazy, cops deal with him, (56RT) he takes hostages and it drags on bit by bit. The kid has a troubled past which is obvious but the ending and his message to the world will leave you guessing. Mildly approved. 

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, PBS) you can find it on. You can also go to Brattononline.com and punch in the movie title and read my take on the much more than 100 movies.  

THE LITTLE THINGS. (HBO SINGLE). Denzel Washington returns to the screens along with Rami Malek and Jared Leno in this cop versus cop versus a maybe criminal drama. Denzel is a cop in Bakersfield who gets sent to LA in 1990 where he has to deal with fellow cop Malek who is solving, chasing, shadowing, and beating a very suspicious, devious local jerk. (6.3 IMDB). Washington has to live with a sad and mysterious past that haunts him while he works to solve this serial murder case. Not a great film but Denzel does make it worth watching…at least up to the ending, which is nearly a cop-out.

THE TURN OUT. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). A very depressing but effective view of the sex lives of teenagers and truck drivers…especially in West Virginia. There’s a mix of religion, AA, and the main character is called “Crowbar”. This is a very real issue and more help is needed to change their worlds and their opportunities. No fun, but illuminating.

THE TOMMOROW WAR. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). (53RT). A science fiction fantasy starring Chris Pratt that has time travelers coming back to us from 2051 to help us change our future. The problem with 2051 is that monsters/10 foot lizards have pretty much taken earth over and they can only be stopped by a vial of special fluid. I recommend it if you like what you’ve read. It’s escapist, suspenseful, excellent special effects….go for it, with that proviso.

NO SUDDEN MOVE. (HBO MAX SINGLE). A very classy new film directed by Steven Soderbergh (88RT) starring Don Cheadle, Benicio Del Toro, Jon Hamm, Kieran Culkin, Ray Liotta and more. It’s about Detroit and secrets between auto manufacturers and is mostly true according to the closing credits. It is involved, well thought out, exciting, perfectly acted according to the Soderbergh style. Watch it ASAP and enjoy all the deep moments.

AWAKE. (NETFLIX SINGLE)  If you haven’t been terrified (or bored) by the covid pandemic this movie won’t help. (27RT). It’s actually a science fiction drama where something happens that causes almost all earthly electricity go shut down. Then it turns out that no one can sleep anymore. They go crazy, wear masks, and try various ridiculous tricks to remain sane. You’ll have the same problem only in how to stay awake during this mess…avoid it.

SAFER AT HOME. (HULU SINGLE) only (7RT) so far but I predict that this one could catch on. Some friends get together on at least four Zoom cameras and celebrate the Covid pandemic by taking Ecstasy pills. The characters aren’t that well developed, and their actions aren’t too credible but just the filming with different cameras from unusual vantage points makes some interesting possibilities even when it’s set in the year 2022. 

click here to continue (link expands, click again to collapse)

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July 12

A GLARING EXAMPLE
Rarely does a bank get singled out for praise but praise is due to the property and project managers of the US Bank Branch at 110 N. Morrissey Blvd. When a member of the International Dark-sky Association (IDA), Santa Cruz Chapter (of which I am a member) brought to the bank’s attention the light pollution blasting from the numerous wall pack lights on the bank’s periphery, the project manager bought replacement, properly shielded wall pack lights, and the difference is captured in the before and after photos below.


Andy Kreyche: IDA Santa Cruz

Andy Kreyche: IDA Santa Cruz

Eliminating light pollution is not simply an aesthetic preference. It is increasingly being recognized as a significant source of human sleep deprivation, human health problems documented by the AMA; a disruptor of avian migration; a killer of migratory birds; a cause of the rapid decline in insect populations as well as negatively affecting the life cycles of plants. To quote from the IDA website, which is an excellent resource for learning about light pollution:

“For billions of years, all life has relied on Earth’s predictable rhythm of day and night. It’s encoded in the DNA of all plants and animals. Humans have radically disrupted this cycle by lighting up the night. Plants and animals depend on Earth’s daily cycle of light and dark rhythm to govern life-sustaining behaviors such as reproduction, nourishment, sleep and protection from predators. Scientific evidence suggests that artificial light at night has negative and deadly effects on many creatures including amphibians, birds, mammals, insects and plants.”

Not only does light pollution negatively impact all life, in less than 100 years, the bright starry night sky including our own galaxy, which was previously visible with the naked eye, has been lost to over 99% of people in the USA and Northern Europe. This brightening of the night sky with artificial light is termed “skyglow.”  For children born today it essentially is the night sky; featureless, with a yellowish glow that never really gets dark.  

The good news is that it is one of the easiest pollutions to fix and reverse. Just turn off the switch! Of course nothing involving humans is ever quite that easy.

We have become conditioned to believe that light equals safety so the more the better. Perhaps there is an evolutionary sense of safety around a night fire but we have gone a bit too far in that direction by trying to erase all darkness. Corporate interests capitalize on light to display and persuade. Poorer communities are often the most impacted by light pollution but it is largely a product of greater affluence.

As is documented on the IDA website, overly bright lights, especially LED’s, if not properly shielded make it difficult to see due to the glare and create adjacent deep shadows where a person with bad intentions can remain hidden. Forty years ago as a new staff at UCSC and in charge of Rape Prevention Education, I intervened to dissuade the administration from changing the lights in the small wooden bus shelters from the soft low wattage to a brightly lit alternative. The logic was obvious, at least to me.  A brightly lit person in a bus shelter is an easier target for someone to evaluate and surprise. The person in the bus shelter cannot see out into the darkness due to overly bright lights within. I was successful and the lights were not changed, at least during my 30 years, nor were there ever any reports of attacks on women at night while waiting at bus shelters.  Much of the education I did with new students was to reassure them that the dark woods and softly lit paths on campus were not the sites of sexual assaults. Those sites were parties, usually well lit, loud and populated. It was difficult then to overcome the myths associated with the dark and that hasn’t changed. What has changed is far more light pollution emanating from the City on a Hill, something that IDA Santa Cruz is trying to address. With the return of students will come the return of the rugby field lights that create a massive source of glare for the town and can be seen from 4 miles south along Highway 1. UCSC’s motto of Fiat Lux: Let There Be Light should not extend beyond the metaphor of learning and education. Or maybe the educators need educating.

There are many examples of light pollution in the city of Santa Cruz and far more skyglow than in previous decades. Car lots, ball fields, bridge lights, businesses, private homes, even city hall are all sources. This, despite the fact that the city’s General Plan mandates the city take steps to reduce light pollution and create a Dark-Sky Ordinance. Other cities have adopted such ordinances with good effect. Our reputation as an environmentally aware city is questionable in this regard. 

Hopefully there is light at the end of the tunnel, well shielded, with dimmer and off-switch. IDA Santa Cruz recently worked with city Public Works to ensure that the new lights planned for both sides of the San Lorenzo River levee, the area that currently has no lights, be properly shielded, of warmer color temperature and equipped with adaptive controls. While not everything we suggested was adopted, there was progress achieved. Next focus is the bridge lights.

Rather than community members taking on one source of light pollution at a time, as with the U.S. Bank, far more progress could be made if the city council adopted a model Dark-sky Ordinance and enforced it.  If you would like to get more involved, or share a light pollution example, or find out how to get the city to better shield your street light, you can reach IDA Santa Cruz at: www.santacruzdarksky.org   

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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July 12

UCSC AND THE WAY IT USED TO BE.
The not so big secret up on The City on a Hill these days is that many (most?) graduate students prefer to work and live remotely because of the high cost of housing in Surf City.  According to the UCSC administration web site, there were 1,954 graduate students out of a total campus population of 19,161 (2020). The fact is, lots of grad students simply will not be physically present when September rolls around and classes begin, in-person, this fall. Of course, talk is also around will it be safe? Will everyone be vaccinated? Will campus be fully operational and open? The short answer from the UC administration is yes, you must be vaccinated and classes will be in-person, but many graduate student teaching assistants will likely attend their seminars and teach remotely, on Zoom presumably. There seems to be support among faculty for this too, as on-line learning seemed to go well from a UC bureaucracy perspective during this past year of pandemic learning. Teaching assistantship salaries were increased slightly following the February 2020 wildcat strike, but the extra cash still disadvantages grad students when compared to much lower rent regions like Merced or Ann Arbor, or even Chicago. Fellowships and teaching assistantships do not go very far in Santa Cruz when studios go for $1500-$1800 and one-bedroom apartments can be $2500 per month. The current TA salary should be around $2500 per month this year. So, at least for the fall quarter, graduate students on campus may be scarce. No one seems to know how many undergrads may choose to live at home and attend remotely either. Everyone I’ve talked to acknowledges the inferior quality of education students receive via zoom. Some students say they prefer Zoom, but the vast majority do not and long to get back to live campus classes. The silver lining here may be that if enough students stay away, apartment rents may become more stable, but still will likely not be coming down anytime soon. Supply and demand is not working in Santa Cruz because as supply increases, rents have actually gone up. Explain that Mr. Adam Smith! Building thousands more apartments may be beneficial for those looking for a second (or third!) home, but it does nothing to actually help the financially-strapped student, let alone the struggling family seeking to stay in Santa Cruz.

Housing Refugees, Santa Cruz to Chicago

This past week I was in Chicago and ran into a couple of Santa Cruz housing refugees working at the Trader Joe’s in Hyde Park, right down the street from the University of Chicago campus. I was as surprised to encounter them, as you might be reading this account. I casually said to the cashier, Ethan, “Most Trader Joe’s employees where I live in California are still wearing masks.” (as he was not). He asked, “What part of California do you live in?” I said, “Santa Cruz”. “Really? I’m from Santa Cruz!” he replied. “Where?”, I asked. “Scotts Valley.” 

Ethan moved here last September because of the high cost of housing. He couldn’t get out of his parents’ home so he decided to take his chances on the Chicago housing market. He said he now lives in a studio, “almost as big as a one bedroom, for $700 a month, and that includes the heating bill.” He introduced me to another employee, Sarah (both did not want to offer their last names), also from Santa Cruz. She said, along with her boyfriend also from Santa Cruz, they had been paying $1650 for the master bedroom in a shared house with students in Felton. The couple began paying $1350 for a downtown one-bedroom apartment next to the Trump hotel in downtown Chicago when they first arrived. It was a kind of luxury apartment she said. The couple more recently decided to move to a $1000 per month large one-bedroom apartment to be closer to her Trader Joe’s job where she earns $16 an hour. I asked if she could pay the rent on her TJ’s salary. “It would be tight if my boyfriend was not also working, but I could pay it, but now I can save something.” Ethan had some advice for those still living in the Cruz. If you’re breaking even, or even going into debt in Santa Cruz you should leave. It’s not worth it. It can be better elsewhere, he said.

Santa Cruz, Before
I was looking for a summer read for the long train ride to Chicago last week and came across an ancient text, The Underground Guide to the College of Your Choice. It was published by Signet Classics in 1971 and the author is Susan Berman. I remembered finding it in a scrum of books at one of our neighborhood reading kiosks you now see all over town, but I had never really looked at it. Written inside the cover it says, “To Anne, Isn’t college fun????” It is an eye-opening account of college coming out of the 1960’s, not just for its dated language, sections are titled “Sergeant Pepper Section,” and “Academic Bullshit,” along with one on “Bread” (how much it costs), but also for the bygone era it describes. Eight UC campuses are covered in the book in about two pages each. Berman writes that “UCLA is the school of clean hippies,” and “[E]veryone wants to be cool and they try but their clothes are the newest hip and their mind is the plastic hip. When they visit Berkeley they are afraid of picking up germs.” (p. 63) Of Santa Cruz she says, “Santa Cruz is highly experimental unstructured campus just ten years old. No grades are given. The school is located on the coast of California on 2,000 wooded acres. Flowers, woods and meadows abound. ‘Power to the imagination’ describes the campus which is modeled after the Oxford system of ‘cluster colleges.'” I excerpt a good portion of Berman’s description here about UCSC as it helps to reflect on some of the ideals and way of life that used to be, what we have become, and where we might be going as a college town and California beach community. Berman’s writing is like finding notes in a bottle, washed up onto Main Beach and found while jogging.

Sergeant Pepper Section:
Admission is highly selective for 3,000 students; the average board’s scores of incoming freshmen are 630. Less than 5% are Third World and foreign students. 65% of students live in dormitories.

Academic Bullshit:
The “cluster college” system makes for an intense course of study. There are six colleges, each with a specialty such as Social Science, or Performing Arts. The graduate school is miniscule although a Ph.D. in the “History of Consciousness” is offered…Several undergraduate courses are favorites including “Wine Appreciation” and courses in ethnic studies…Students can teach and initiate courses within the system…No grades are given and the academic environment is highly responsive to student desires…

Bread:
Since most students live in the plush, colorful dorms, it is an expensive place to learn. Dorms run $1200 a year, have few regulations. Off-campus housing is cheaper and students are beginning to group together and rent farms. 7-15 students can go in together on this–it’s a very groovy idea. Cars aren’t necessary as an orange tram called the “elephant train” transports students around campus. Hitching is popular. Date costs are miniscule–coffee or nature dates in the woods are the usual. Old, sloppy clothes are worn. The work-study program is severely limited. Loans and scholarships are scarce. No community jobs.

Brothers and Sisters
Ratio cats: chicks–1 : 1.
Most are backwoods, hip, into natural environment, hiking, health foods and the outdoors. A full set of hair (head and face) is necessary for a cat. Hand-me-downs and ponchos for chicks. Kilo cleaning parties are preferred to powderpuff football.

Dating and going together aren’t the most popular alternatives. Most people prefer doing things in small groups of around six…Greeks are nonexistent…It’s a suitcase school–a lot of weekend traveling…There is a highly vocal movement…No one has ever been arrested (it’s true) and local pigs have not yet been noted on campus. It’s radical but apathetic because of location. Santa Cruz struck against Nixon’s Cambodia policy.

Survival:
A lid goes for $12, a cap of acid or a dose of mescaline is $2.50. No birth control devices are available as there is no Planned Parenthood in the area. No mental health counseling–progress is hurting in these areas. Abortion referrals are through the grapevine only. Draft counseling through The Resistance…Pets are all about…Local hangs are the “Bookshop” and the “Catalyst” in the city of Santa Cruz…The school has an underground paper,”Stevenson Libre” in addition to a community underground paper, “Free Spaghetti Dinner.” Foreign flicks and art flicks are at the Nickelodeon.

Environment:
Mental–The environment is heavy with nature-loving types. They are into growing things and wood sculpture. Read seed catalogues, Autobiography of Malcolm X and Buckminster Fuller before you come.

Physical–The campus is the most beautiful one in California…The rainy season is heavy with a little fog but just serves as a refreshing element…No noise or pollution.

Wow, have things changed…

“Tell ‘em loud and proud girl! GOP will strip your unemployment protections and dismantle any semblance of a public safety net we have left! Then make working people pay way more for everything on low wages while Wall St gets a meal ticket! Good ol conservative values baby!” (July 10)

(By the way, if you want to know what the Alexandria Ocasio Cortez vision is, go to this Vanity Fair article from Dec. of 2020.)


I was not aware of this Warhol until last week when I encountered it at the Art Institute in Chicago. “A Little Race Riot” by Andy Warhol, 1964.

(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 12

STATE WATER QUALITY CONTROL BOARD ADVISES 132 PROPERTY OWNERS NEAR 1500 CAPITOLA ROAD NEIGHBORHOOD TO DO THEIR OWN TESTING FOR CONTAMINATION
If you live or work near the affordable housing project at 1500 Capitola Road, which will include a low-cost medical clinic and Dientes clinic, beware of possible soil and groundwater contamination problems.  The State is asking that people pay “out of pocket” to do their own testing so the State can get better data???  Strange but true, and the State mailed notices to advise such

Those impacted should receive a physical notice in the mail, which was sent out Tuesday, according to the state board.
To check if your home or workplace may be impacted, review the water board notices at bit.ly/3d9cBgD and navigate to site maps/documents. If a resident’s home or business is located within the notice’s “Site Location & Investigation Area” map, its possible dry cleaning solvent contamination could be present.

The notices, in total, were sent to 132 entities, including landlords, tenants and residents, as well as homeowner’s associations, according to Dan Niles an engineering geologist with the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board, who’s overseeing the investigation.

Contact Supervisor Manu Koenig with your thoughts: Manu.Koenig@santacruzcounty.us

COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION TO CONSIDER LIVE OAK LIBRARY ANNEX, PAID FOR BY MEASURE S LIBRARY MONIES TO FUND NEW RECREATION DEPT. ADDITION
When voters approved Measure S to fund libraries, we thought it would fund libraries, but that is not proving to be the case!  Consider the current plan to dump $5,750,600 in Measure S monies to remodel the Parks Dept. space at Simpkins Swim Center.

Make sure you weigh in on this matter when it is considered by the County Planning Commission this Wednesday, July 14

Consider this…..

From the Parks Dept. website: Park Projects

From the Board of Supervisor Agenda Packet of December 10, 2019   which included  excellent public correspondence re: Measure S funding most  of the Project, with vague disclosures, no library staff planned, and poor attendance at community meetings.

“Financial Impact
This action will add $591,625 to the existing agreement for professional services. The source of funding for the Live Oak Library Annex Project is the Santa Cruz Libraries Facilities Financing Authority, Measure S for Libraries ($5,750,600) and the County Library Fund ($302,340) with sufficient funds available in GL Key 191405. The project funding total is $6,052,940.”  Elsewhere it is stated the total project cost would be $7,050,000.

Indeed, why are Measure S funds being used to seemingly remodel the Parks facility?

“The proposed library annex would be added to the existing recreation facility and community center as part of the Simpkins Swim Center facilities.”

Also, it will remove handicap parking that I see used heavily during swim hours and community meetings that happen at the Swim Center.  It will remove 11 trees, but only replace 8.

“Grading of approximately 570 cubic yards (cut) and 420 cubic yards (fill) is proposed to prepare the site for the project. The existing circular driveway is proposed to be modified to remove the circular component and seven adjacent parking spaces to accommodate the proposed addition and hardscape improvements at the new front entry to the swim center building. Adequate parking will remain in the main parking area, with sufficient parking for the swim center, library annex, administrative offices, and the adjacent Schwan Lake trails.”

Here are the plans for the proposed Live Oak Library Annex at Simpkins Swim Center

COMMENT ON SEPTIC SYSTEM RULES THAT WILL MAKE RURAL LIVING OUT OF REACH FOR MOST
Here is a summary of the significant changes to the County’s septic system rules.  Many areas would become unbuildable…isn’t that called “a taking”?

Write Environmentalhealth@santacruzcounty.us with “LAMP COMMENT” in the subject line right away.

COMMENT ON COUNTY LOCAL HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN BY JULY 23

WHAT IS A VENDORLESS VENDOR?
This term appears many, many times in the County’s Budget, and often involves hundreds of thousands of dollars.  This seems incredibly vague to me, and makes the County Budget lack public transparency.  Here is the reply I received from County Auditor-Controller Ms. Edith Driscoll, when I inquired about the matter: 

Ms. Steinbruner,

A vendorless vendor is listed for contracts that require multiple vendors to fill the needs of the contract. So, one larger amount can be encumbered for the contract with multiple contractors/vendors. When the various contractors submit their invoice, the dollar amount is extracted from the contract and then the vendor number is changed to pay against that vendor.

Best Regards, Edith Driscoll

BOARD OF SUPERVISORS EXTEND LOCAL STATE OF EMERGENCY ONE LAST TIME

Keep that money flowing in…..

DOC-2021-563 Adopt resolution extending for thirty (30) days the proclamation of a Local Emergency by the County Administrative Officer and declaration of a Local Health Emergency by the County Health Officer related to the CZU August Lightning Compl

On the Consent Agenda Item #29 on June 29, 2021

Debris removal under the Government Program began in late 2020. As of June 24, 2021, CalOES and their contractors have removed debris from 652 parcels. Soil sampling has been approved at 648 of these parcels and erosion control has been implemented at 638 parcels. A small number of the remaining parcels were deemed ineligible for participation because they did not have a qualifying structure or qualifying trees, etc.

As of June 24, 2021, EH has certified the clearance of 594 parcels under the Government Program and 166 parcels under the Private Contractor Program, for a total number of 760 cleared properties to date.

This will be the last extension necessary for the local emergency and local health emergency, as Phase II work is nearly completed and CalOES will be concluding their work at the end of June. Progress on Phase II cleanup conducted by CalOES can be found here.

COUNTY GETS EVEN MORE MONEY THAN ANTICIPATED

Background

On April 13, 2021, the Board approved the County of Santa Cruz ARPA Recovery Plan using an estimated $52.99 million of ARPA funds to recover $28.4 million in lost revenues and $24.6 million in COVID-19 related costs associated with the COVID-19 emergency. The Board also directed the County Administrative Office to return to the Board with an update on the ARPA Recovery Plan each month from May through December 2021.

Additional direction was given by the Board to increase the ‘Board Directed COVID Response’ line item within the ARPA Recovery Plan from $1.0 million to $1.2 million and to develop a framework to use this line item for three uses: $500,000 for expanding broadband access, $300,000 for supporting local apprenticeship programs, and $400,000 for local business support for woman and minority-owned businesses.

Update on FEMA Claims and Reimbursements

Staff estimates roughly $55 million of FEMA eligible costs have been or will be incurred since the inception of the public health emergency through September 2021. However, in reviewing the nature of these costs, staff has concluded that about 20% or about $11 million is at risk of being disallowed by FEMA. Should this occur, disaster operations may need to be reduced or ARPA funds would be needed to support continued County disaster operations.

Since the last update, no changes in the FEMA claims process have been made. Through May 2021, the County has submitted to FEMA approximately $25 million in eligible claims, of which $5.08 million has been approved. Of that $5.08 million, $2.2 million has been received by the County. 

A key component of the County’s ARPA Recovery Plan is the reinvestment into operating reserves. However, U.S. Treasury interim final rules now forbid the use of ARPA funds to be directly used to replenish reserves. In Attachment A, staff is proposing to eliminate the use of ARPA funds for reserves and instead use ARPA funds to offset the full cost of eliminating the County furlough.

AND QUICKLY……

WILL GOVERNOR NEWSOM’S $1 BILLION HELP COMMUNITIES REDUCE FIRE RISK?

It is looking more and more problematic for those who have lost homes in wildland fires will face mounting difficulty and opposition from the State Board of Forestry:  

Rural areas ask for help as California fire season heats up

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

Cheers, Becky

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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July 9

#190 / CRT

Critical race theory is an intellectual movement and loosely organized framework of legal analysis based on the premise that race is not a natural, biologically grounded feature of physically distinct subgroups of human beings but a socially constructed (culturally invented) category that is used to oppress and exploit people of colour. Critical race theorists hold that the law and legal institutions in the United States are inherently racist insofar as they function to create and maintain social, economic, and political inequalities between whites and nonwhites, especially African Americans.

Encyclopaedia Britannica   

“Critical Race Theory” (CRT) is in the news. It is also quite controversial. It is not a topic I find easy to address. However, as difficult as it may be to address Critical Race Theory, it seems pretty clear that we do need to address it. We do need to try to solve the puzzle that it propounds. In doing so, it is necessary to address the issue of exactly who this “we” is that “we” often mention as we discuss social, political, and economic issues. In other words, when I say that “we” need to address Critical Race Theory, who is this “we” that I am talking about?

One of my favorite phrases is the claim that “we are all in this together.” I think of this statement, first, as one that speaks to the profound truth of our mutual interdependence. Second, I think of this statement as a unifying way to urge all of us to engage in collaborative and cooperative efforts to address the challenges and opportunities we have in common. However, any claim, explicit or implicit, that there is an inclusive “we,” particularly if made by someone who is white, is subject to rebuttal by Critical Race Theory. At least, that is how I am understanding the situation.

Derrick Bell, pictured above, is sometimes called the “Godfather of Critical Race Theory.” Click on that link, for instance, to read a Wall Street Journal book review by Adam Kirsch, which calls Bell exactly that. Bell’s book, reviewed by Kirsch, was published in 1992 and is titled, Faces at the Bottom of the Well. According to the review, Bell’s book “blends the genres of fiction and essay to communicate [a] powerfully pessimistic sense of ‘the permanence of racism,’ [a phrase which is] the book’s subtitle.” As the review puts it:

Are Black people at home in America, or should they think of themselves as sojourners in a land that will never belong to them? Is racism a social problem that can be solved, or is it a permanent condition like mortality, which can only be met with defiance?

As I am understanding Kirsch’s review (since I have not read Bell’s book myself), Bell basically says that the separation of whites and blacks in this country into two different groups, never to be reconciled, is, in fact, a “permanent condition.” The review sums up the message of Bell’s book as follows:

In the conclusion to “Faces,” Bell argues that the struggle for racial equality is worthwhile even though it will never succeed. Like the French existentialist Albert Camus, who saw Sisyphus’s eternal effort to roll a boulder uphill as a symbol of human endurance in an absurd world, Bell demands “recognition of the futility of action” while insisting “that action must be taken.”

To the journalist and historian James Traub, who profiled Bell for the New Republic magazine in 1993, this amounted to a recipe for paralysis: “If you convince whites that their racism is ineradicable, what are they supposed to do? And what are blacks to do with their hard-won victim status?”

For his supporters and critics alike, Derrick Bell remains a central figure. Nearly three decades after the publication of his most widely read book, his stark vision of the racial divide in American society and history has retained its power to provoke debate and activism across the political spectrum. 

Kirsch’s review of Bell’s book prefaces the concluding statements I have just cited with the following discussion, illuminating the fact that Critical Race Theory tends to strike people quite differently, depending on whether they are white or Black.

Faces is, significantly, a series of essays based in “science fiction,” with Bell’s fictional stories helping to convey the points he wants to make: 

Not every story in “Faces” has a dark ending, but most do—especially the last and most famous, “The Space Traders.” In this tale, aliens arrive on earth and make the U.S. government an offer: In exchange for miraculous technologies that can heal the environment and ensure prosperity, they demand to carry off the entire Black population of the U.S. in their spaceships. When a referendum is held on whether to accept the aliens’ offer, “yes” wins with 70% of the vote.

Since the U.S. population was about 12% Black in the 1990 census, Bell is suggesting that the overwhelming majority of white Americans would agree to send their Black fellow citizens to an unknown fate. This conclusion reflects his theory of “interest convergence,” which says that white Americans will only act in the interests of Black people if it also serves their own interest. When the interests of whites and Blacks are opposed, Bell argues, whites will always choose to put their own interest first.

For Bell, this is the lesson of American history. As he observes in “The Space Traders,” “Without the compromises on slavery in the Constitution of 1787, there would be no America.” Similarly, after the Civil War, whites in the North and South sacrificed the rights of former slaves for the sake of sectional reconciliation. Bell suggests that the same thing would happen in the alien scenario, and the story ends with a nightmarish vision of Black Americans being herded onto spaceships: “Heads bowed, arms now linked by slender chains, black people left the New World as their forebears had arrived.” 

The image suggests that 400 years of American history have changed nothing in the relationship between Blacks and whites. At the heart of the debate over critical race theory, then and now, is whether such a view is justified. Ms. Alexander, author of the 2010 bestseller “The New Jim Crow,” wrote in the foreword to a 2018 reissue of “Faces” that “As a law student, I read nearly every word Bell wrote; as a civil rights lawyer, I was haunted by his words and ultimately forced to admit the truth of them.”

Other commentators have strongly disagreed. The political scientist Adolph Reed, Jr., whose work focuses on race and inequality, wrote about a conference he attended at Harvard Law School in 1991, where “I heard the late, esteemed legal theorist, Derrick Bell, declare on a panel that blacks had made no progress since 1865. I was startled not least because Bell’s own life, as well as the fact that Harvard’s black law students’ organization put on the conference, so emphatically belied his claim.” Mr. Reed dismissed the idea as “more a jeremiad than an analysis” (emphasis added).

With these long quotes, you are reading almost the entirety of The Wall Street Journal review. If Kirsch is properly articulating Bells’ message, as I think he probably is, then that message is very definitely a “powerfully pessimistic sense of the permanence of racism.” Other recent discussions reinforce this conclusion. 

Esteemed author Michelle Alexander, for instance, is quoted as saying that Bell is regrettably right in arguing that “nothing has changed” over 400 years in the relationship between Blacks and whites. This means, as I read it, that Alexander agrees with Bell that there is no common cause between whites and Blacks – and that there won’t ever be one, no matter how much whites may want to claim there is. In this view, CRT asserts that there is not, and never will be, an inclusive “we” that includes us all. When a white person says, for instance, that “we” must work to eliminate racial injustice, CRT would seem to label such an assertion as an effort to deflect attention from any real commitment by whites to do something that would result in actual equality. 

This is, for instance, what seems to be a major claim of Catherine Pugh, a Black attorney. She reinforces a pessimistic message about Critical Race Theory in her online article: “There Is No Such Thing As A White Ally.” For Pugh, white-Black contention and opposition is baked right in at the most profound level of our human interactions. Pugh’s companion piece, “Humor Me: Let’s Play “Spot the White Supremacist,” is withering in its conclusion that white efforts to denounce “White Supremacy” are really an effort (implicitly insincere) to distract attention from “everyday racism,” which is omnipresent in our contemporary society, and which none of the white people standing strong against “White Supremacy” have any intention of giving up. 

Pugh is writing on the “popular” level. Tommy J. Curry, now a professor at the University of Edinburgh, writes on the academic level. His article, “Will The Real CRT Please Stand Up?” warns readers that white academics are infiltrating Critical Race Theory, and diluting its essential message. It is critically important, he says, not to “cuddle white associations [in an effort to] advance the ideals of peaceful racial coexistence.”

Critical race theory is best construed as being a relentless and restless advocate for justice such that, to the extent that race remains a permanent feature of social reality, there must be constant vigilance for justice. There can be no determination of the absolute arrival of true racial justice; its advent forever deferred, its pursuit reaches no termination. Consequently, the insomniac career of critical race theory is one without end. 

Efforts to ban the teaching of Critical Race Theory, particularly in the South – now a major political ambition of “conservatives” – can certainly be seen as a way that whites can avoid having to confront the endemic racism that has permeated almost every aspect of our political, social, and economic life. These efforts reinforce the idea that whites simply don’t want to admit the truth of the racism that characterizes our society. The Atlantic has a pretty good article on this topic, titled, “The GOP’s ‘Critical Race Theory’ Obsession.” 

Chase Iron Eyes, who proclaims his admiration for what Catherine Pugh has to say about purported white “allies” (namely that there aren’t any), nonetheless urges all of us to make an alliance with those striving for racial justice. His powerful appeal that “We Must Teach Critical Race Theory” is heartfelt: 

So what is CRT, exactly? CRT is not a curriculum; it is a lens and a practice. Simply put, “In the K-12 classroom, CRT can be an approach to help students understand how racism has endured past the civil rights era through systems, laws, and policies — and how those same systems, laws, and policies can be transformed.” 

Practically, including CRT in the classrooms means tearing out racism, patriarchy, and colonization — root and stem — before they have a chance to blossom. All Americans were raised under these systems and we continue to be affected by them today. 

It’s time to start teaching history from a place of truth. We have to be brave enough to lean into our discomfort. Right now we can deepen our allyship for our Black relatives and honor the next seven generations, not just by creating a “holiday” that acknowledges the enslavement of Black People, but by including CRT in our K-12 public school classrooms (emphasis added).

oooOOOooo

“It’s time to start…from a place of truth.”

This is the advice of Chase Iron Eyes, urging that we start teaching Critical Race Theory in our schools. That certainly seems like good advice. Starting from a place of truth is always good advice, whatever the subject to be addressed. However, without starting to sound too much like “Pontius Pilate,” what is the truth? What do we think is that “place of truth” from which we can address Critical Race Theory?

A profoundly pessimistic view of our situation is advanced by Derrick Bell, the “Godfather” of Critical Race Theory, whose views are seconded, in various ways, by the others I have mentioned in this blog posting: Michelle Alexander, Catherine Pugh, and Tommy J. Curry. These Black voices, all of which I came across quite accidentally, and independently, tell us that there is no inclusive “we,” and that the essence of Critical Race Theory is to understand this truth, and to admit that whites have constructed a politics, economy, and society that is unremittingly oppressive and unfair  to Blacks, and that there is no common humanity or common cause that can ever overcome this fundamental reality, and that can bring Black and white together in a place of racial justice. 

The “Dream” of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was, apparently, just that, a dream. 

The most extreme statement of this view suggests that claims by whites that they want to achieve racial justice and reconciliation are either intentionally or unintentionally simply ways to perpetuate a world that has been constructed of, by, and for white people, and that white people’s interest is making themselves feel better, as opposed to changing the world to be more just. To repeat a quote from the review of Bell’s book: 

When the interests of whites and Blacks are opposed … whites will always choose to put their own interest first.

Is this “the truth?” Is it impossible for either a white person, or a Black person, to say “we,” and in saying “we” sincerely and genuinely to include everyone, Black and white together? The readings I have been doing seem to say that my statement that there is such an inclusive “we” should be suspect. Such statements, in fact, may be counterproductive. 

Because I continue to believe that “the truth” is that “we” are “in this together,” Critical Race Theory is making me think. And what I am thinking is that when I talk about the social, political, and economic issues related to racial justice, I had better not assert that “we” should do this or that

Where racial justice is concerned, in other words, it’s time for some “I” statements. What “I” will do, not what “we” must do, needs to be the focus of our policy prescriptions. There is a long therapeutic tradition that says that this is an important insight

If CRT helps to get us to such insights, it will be doing some good! 

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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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

    STARS

Remember here in Santa Cruz about ten years ago when we could see the Milky Way and galaxies?

“Dwell on the beauty of life. Watch the stars, and see yourself running with them.”
~Marcus Aurelius

“Trust your heart if the seas catch fire, live by love though the stars walk backward.”
~E.E. Cummings 

“We all shine on…like the moon and the stars and the sun…we all shine on…come on and on and on…” 
~John Lennon

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The narration is just a tad annoying, but all the clips make up for it. Pay attention around the 5:40 mark for a glimpse of San Francisco 4 days before the 1906 quake…


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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July 7 – 13, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…St. George Hotel Sold Again, Summer of Soul, critiques. GREENSITE…is off this week, she’ll be back next week. KROHN…I will trade you one Credit Union for a boutique hotel. STEINBRUNER…Soquel Creek Water Pipes under the San Lorenzo River, treated sewage in mid County water, new septic System install costs. PATTON…Pruned? A Sad story about Trees. EAGAN… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Sand”

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PACIFIC AND CATHCART, DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ. JANUARY 29, 1963. Old School Shoes is now where we see Johnny’s Sporting Goods in this photo. Then there’s the Catalyst, now where the Santa Cruz Bowl stands. J.C. Penney’s (on the immediate right) went down with the 1989 quake.
                                       
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.
Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

                                                        
DATELINE July 5

SAINT GEORGE HOTEL SOLD (AGAIN). Developer Barry Swenson (aka Green Valley Corporation) sold the St. George Hotel as of July 1 last week. Residents received a note from the local women managers Renee Culver and Christin Coffin stating that the new owners Baron Ranches, Inc. will be taking over all property management responsibilities. As most Santa Cruzan’s know, the St. George has an important local place in our history, dating back to 1894 and its rebirth after that fire, and again after the 1989 earthquake. It has 122 rental units. I cannot locate any relevant internet connection or information about Baron Ranches, Inc. If anyone knows anything about them, and what they do with their properties, please let me know. I’m very concerned/fearful that – with our present pro-development city council and the condo building boom happening now – that we’ll see another silicon valley high-rise balloon in its place…we need to stay on top of this. One well-informed citizen tells me Baron Ranches is probably just a legal switch of Barry Swenson’s titles, and even though he’s getting old it’s an only-on-paper deal. I’m sure we’ll hear more.   

SUMMER OF SOUL. (HULU). (99RT) Usually I’d put a critique in the movie section, but SUMMER OF SOUL is such a great documentary and reminder, that I want to be sure folks view it as soon as possible. It’s a fast-moving and very well done record of the little-known 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival that took place in the Marcus Garvey Park over a period of six weeks. It stars Mahalia Jackson, Nina Simone, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Max Roach, The 5th Dimension, Stevie Wonder and my ages-old favorites The Edwin Hawkins Singers. Over 300,000 people attended the concerts. It’s a great and positive view of our early history that we either ignored or never knew about. View it and then go dancing!!

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.

THE LITTLE THINGS. (HBO SINGLE). Denzel Washington returns to the screens along with Rami Malek and Jared Leno in this cop versus cop versus a maybe criminal drama. Denzel is a Bakersfield cop who gets sent to LA in 1990, where he has to deal with fellow cop Malek — who is solving, chasing, shadowing, and beating a very suspicious, devious local jerk. (6.3 IMDB). Washington has to live with a sad and mysterious past that haunts him while he works to solve this serial murder case. Not a great film, but Denzel does make it worth watching…at least up to the ending, which is nearly a cop-out.

THE TURN OUT. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). A very depressing but effective view of the sex lives of teenagers and truck drivers…especially in West Virginia. There’s a mix of religion, AA, and the main character is called “Crowbar”. This is a very real issue and more help is needed to change their worlds and their opportunities. No fun, but illuminating.

THE TOMORROW WAR. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). (53RT). A science fiction fantasy that has time travelers coming back from 2051 to help us change our future. The problem with 2051 is that monsters in the shape of 10 foot lizards have pretty much taken over, and they can only be stopped by a vial of special fluid. I recommend it if you like what you’ve read. It’s escapist, suspenseful, excellent special effects….go for it, with that proviso.

NO SUDDEN MOVE. (HBO MAX SINGLE). A very classy new film directed by Steven Soderbergh (88RT) and starring Don Cheadle, Benicio Del Toro, Jon Hamm, Kieran Culkin, Ray Liotta and more. It’s about Detroit, and secrets between auto manufacturers, and is mostly true according to the closing credits. It is involved, well thought out, exciting, perfectly acted in Soderbergh style. Watch it ASAP and enjoy all the deep moments.

AWAKE. (NETFLIX SINGLE)  If you haven’t been terrified (or bored) by the covid pandemic, this movie won’t help. (27RT). It’s a science fiction drama where something happens that causes almost all earthly electricity go shut down. Then it turns out that no one can sleep anymore. They go crazy, wear masks, and try various ridiculous tricks to remain sane. You’ll have the same problem ,only in how to stay awake during this mess…avoid it.

SAFER AT HOME. (HULU SINGLE) only (7RT) so far but I predict that this one could catch on. Some friends get together on at least four Zoom cameras and celebrate the Covid pandemic by taking Ecstasy pills. The characters aren’t very well developed, and their actions aren’t too credible, but just the filming with different cameras from unusual vantage points makes some interesting possibilities even when it’s set in the year 2022. 

THE ICE ROAD. (NETFLIX SINGLE). (44RT) Liam Neeson takes on the super-dangerous job of driving trucks on ice roads that can – and do – collapse into the freezing lakes in Northern Canada. So does Laurence Fishburne, but he’s killed off very quickly in the race to get lifesaving equipment to miners trapped underground. It’s hokey, typical, even boring… and amounts to just another action thriller that goes no place.

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, 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.  

GONE GIRL. (Prime Video Single) (87RT). Rosamund Pike never had it better than her role in this dissection of what’s behind or hidden in a marriage. Ben Affleck is her husband and Neil Patrick Harris is an ex who has never given her up. She disappears and the husband gets the blame. Whodunit is the theme and the ending will surprise many viewers Go for it.

POSSESSIONS. (HBO MAX SERIES). A very traditional Jewish wedding in Israel and just at the moment the beautiful French bride slices the wedding cake, the lights go out and the husband is bloody and dead. She’s helped in proving her innocence by a cross-eyed official from the French Consulate General’s office, which makes it all the more mysterious. After three episodes I’m still curious and watching.

KATLA. (NETFLIX SERIES) A volcano erupts in Vik, Iceland and strangers and family members who disappeared return covered with black ashes. How or why have they survived or did they survive? Great Iceland photography, fine acting, very original plot and views of Iceland’s volcano territory you probably have never seen. Go for it. (100RT)

FALSE POSITIVE. (HULU SINGLE) Pierce Brosnan goes against his James bond type character and is a pregnancy doctor/ fertility specialist. He supervises/controls one woman’s pregnancy and has a secret relationship with her husband. It’s controlling, creepy, and will keep you guessing about the truth until the end which was very disappointing. (52RT)

HOTEL COPPELIA. (HBO MAX SINGLE). There’s a civil war in The Dominican Republic in 1965. The hotel is really a brothel and the “girls” are strung out in many, many ways. The locals are fighting the war’s battles but the American troops take over and everything gets challenged, including loyalties. Odd plot gaps, not the greatest acting ever but watch it anyways.

PHYSICAL. (APPLE SERIES) Rose Byrne plays a 1980’s housewife with some very bad dreams. It’s a comedy, and so there’s a few laughs as she faces food binges, a miserable husband, some strange fitness classes and has trouble with reality.(63RT). What it really exposes is our obsessions with body weight, mental problems, even political residue. I don’t watch many comedies but definitely offers some funny moments, and some serious introspection. 

RUN. (HULU SINGLE). (88RT) You’ll experience a mother like no other in this internal horror story. A teen-aged daughter who can’t walk, has diabetes, paralysis and more, finally realizes that her mother is not what she believed she was. This terrifying story reaches a climax a bit later than you’d think, but it’s still worth watching.

SECURITY. (NETFLIX SINGLE) In an Italian beachside small town much like Santa Cruz, a young girl accuses a man of power and political holdings of rape. She has a father who is, or was, a pedophile. Complex, involving, and well directed, it’s a wakeup call to think about our own security including our CCTV cameras and iPhones.

LUPE. (HBO MAX SINGLE). A serious movie centered around and focusing on a transgendered young boxer from Cuba who comes to NYC looking for his sister. Much nudity, some odd moments of joking, all centered on a transgendered world. He thinks his sister may be prostituting herself, and he finds support from a prostitute friend of hers. Not the greatest film ever, but it’ll give you a chance to think about that transgendered world.

LUPIN. (NETFLIX SERIES). I critiqued this first series episodes a few months ago, and now that the New Yorker wrote such a laudatory piece about Omar Sy’s starring role I’ve watched many more episodes….and they’ll all good. A neatly-twisted robbery plot of Marie Antoinette’s necklace from the Louvre, there’s revenge, politics (French politics) and many, many Louvre scenes. The plot is complex enough to keep you glued to your viewing device for the two seasons so far. What is outstanding is that the acting is excellent and believable. Omar Sy is the “new” Black star, and has everyone talking about him and his fabulous acting style. This is one of the finest detective shows I’ve ever seen….don’t miss it. 

IN THE HEIGHTS. (HBO MAX) (96RT).The huge, lavish, much-talked-about musical from Lin-Manuel Miranda, who became famous doing Hamilton. I loved the classical musicals, both onstage like Oklahoma and South Pacific, and the classic Hollywood musicals like Wizard of Oz, Annie Get Your Gun, Gigi, West Side Story, White Christmas, Carmen Jones, Oliver and dozens more — but Heights didn’t touch any of those high standards. It’s the story of a young girl of Puerto Rican heritage who went to Stanford, and was subjected to racial prejudice. Does she go back to Stanford, does her boyfriend go back to his Dominican Republic home? Who did win the lottery at the very last minute and how?  Go for it IF you like musicals… because there’s way too much music and not enough plot in this one. 

TRAGIC JUNGLE. (NETFLIX SINGLE) Set in the very deep, dark jungles of Belize in the 1920’s – and the Mexican border – we watch the workers strip the trees of chicle to make chewing gum. Then there’s two teenage girls who switch identities, and one of them is a very haunting witch who drives and kills the workers one by one. The plot goes everywhere and overly complex. You’ll wonder where the story is going for about ¾ of the movie then after that, you won’t care.

PANIC. (AMAZON PRIME SERIES) A teenage high school action thriller that has mostly 20 and 30 year olds playing the parts. The “kids” create a (literally) death-defying night of dangerous stunts. It all happens in Carp, Texas (a fictional town) and some of the stunts are genuinely scary. Each episode ends right at the critical moment when the teen is about to do the stunt. You won’t learn anything, but you’ll stop thinking about masks for a while. (68RT) 

HERSELF. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). A distraught mother of two daughters splits from her abusive husband, and works hard to build herself a new house from ground up. So it’s her story, a very Irish story (filmed in Ireland) touching, heartfelt, well-acted, not too significant… but go for it. 

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July 5. 

Gillian will be back next week! 

Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild.

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July 5 

I WILL TRADE YOU ONE CREDIT UNION FOR A BOUTIQUE HOTEL.

Credit Union , Hotel NO!

The once-venerable Santa Cruz Community Credit Union (SCCCU) is planning to sell out, literally, to an hotelier. Is it because they have fallen on hard times? No, there are more members than ever. As of March of 2021 according to CreditUnions.com, the Santa Cruz Community Credit Union has 13,905 members and assets totaling $179.5 million with $135 million out in loans.  The original plan, which most members may have been down for, was to put affordable housing at their site, which is the building at the corner of Laurel and Front Street. This idea may have also kept a scaled down SCCCU office on the new site. Members (I am one) get it that the building is very large for the kind of banking that now goes on, but a hotel?!? You heard that right, and the city is even selling a couple of remnant parcels to the hotel group in order to help make the deal work. As crazy as this sounds, the sale seems to be nearing completion, but it is hard to tell, as President and CEO Beth Carr is being anything but transparent. She’s refused to turn over the meeting minutes from the annual membership meeting when requested by members. That meeting took place this past May. CEO Carr is also refusing to make public the details of the hotel swap. The only thing we know is that the deal is wending its way toward completion and may likely be sped up now that the pending sales cat is out of the bag. The nature of the deal originally was to be affordable housing for low and very-low income people, but now, it seems like they’ve found a New York hotelier who’s talking upscale “boutique” hotel. Yes, there is a local Simon Legree involved here who goes by the well-deserved title in this narrative as the Santa Cruz Fixer, none other than Owen Lawler. Because transparency is a problem, as it is in most for-profit real estate deals, I’m assuming the SC Economic Development Director, who’s not turned in her resignation just yet like so many others at city hall have already (City Manager, fire chief, and water, library, and finance directors), Bonnie Lipscomb, looked to Lawlor once again to cut a development deal for the city.

Stop the Sale
A group, calling itself something like, Please Don’t Turn the Credit Union into a Hotel, or Stop the Hotel for short, has now collected over 700 signatures from credit union members to force an emergency membership meeting. That meeting, according to the SCCCU’s by-laws, must be scheduled within 35 to 90 days by the board of directors for the credit union. Shortly after the signatures were turned in last week, a letter went out to members notifying them that an Emergency Board Meeting would take place, but with no time, place, or day disclosed. And to be clear, it was apparently to be a meeting of the board and not the membership. Again, is there a transparency problem at perhaps the largest membership organization, after Costco, in town? There is an on-line petition for credit union members-only to sign and it states in part:

“Such a sale is incompatible with the Mission, Vision, and History of the SCCCU. The SCCCU is a “member-owned…not-for-profit financial cooperative that promotes economic justice… [and] positive social and economic change… Our primary mission is to strengthen our community. We are environmentally conscious in all our practices.”

If you agree with that sentiment of this petition and are a member of the credit union, please sign the petition and also send CEO Carr a message at Beth.Carr@SCCCU.org  stating your disappointment in the board-proposed decision to sell the community credit union building to an outside hotel developer. This is the epitomal “11th Hour,” and Santa Cruzans have banded together to stop bad decisions before. This is clearly one of the I-can’t-believe-they-will-do-this! kind of projects that we’ve turned back before, ones including: the Dream Inn on steroids, 10,000 homes formerly planned for Wilder Ranch, and the Saving of the Pogonip for community open space. The growth machine is on the move in Santa Cruz and even though each of us have only 10 fingers to put in the endless dike holes, the community has thousands of fingers to stop the luxury condo projects and boutique hotels while advocating for affordable housing and human scale development that includes bike lanes, pedestrian areas, and more not less, public spaces. We can do this, but we can only do it together!

What I’m Listening To
On the MediaBob Garfield recently left the show, but Brooke Gladstone is one of the most competent and capable journalists NPR-like shows has to offer. They are always on the edge of breaking stories offering common sense insight and wry humor.

Le ShowHarry Shearer (voice of several Simpson’s characters) does a weekly comical news show…not unlike John Oliver’s HBO show, Last Week Tonight, but with more song and dance. At times, it is very funny.

Democracy NowAmy Goodman’s daily news show remains an anchor among progressive political news shows. She covers the cutting edge of progressivism, even if she leaves some of the democrats like Barack Obama and Joe Biden alone. She is still steady, consistent, and informative, like finding an old friend on a stormy day. Now that Trump is not around, Goodman should get back to naming names and calling out mainstream Dems for their narrow vision of what is possible.

John Miller, when he is doing Giants games, has one of the most soothing and knowledgeable voices around summer-time baseball. Listen to this all-star voice now because he’s getting on in years and might not be around much longer. Seems like he’s been doing the last three TV innings if you want to catch his act. He surely belongs up there with other mellifluous sports voices like Marv Albert, Vin Scully, Chick Hearn, Bill King, Ken Korach (A’s radio) and yes, Doris Burke (NBA). Kelenna Azubuike is an up and coming Warriors’ analyst who provides spirited and informed commentary, so watch out for him next season before another team scoops him up!

Shows on TV that I listen to once in a while, but are definitely worth a listen, are Rising with Crystal Ball, The Jimmy Dore Show, Dave Zirin‘s podcast, and The View because Whoopi Goldberg is that good.

“What other countries are doing and what we must do is make clear that taking care of children is one of our major priorities. The time is now to finally provide quality child care for all working families.” (July 3)

Now, after Taco Bell, Community TV, The Tampico Restaurant, and SC Glass have all been felled by these nasty mechanical beasts, the Santa Cruz Community Credit Union (behind fence) on Front Street is at risk too. Will the community allow a boutique hotel to take its place?
(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 5

STATE WATER QUALITY CONTROL BOARD DENIED SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT APPLICATION FOR PIPES TO CROSS UNDER THE SAN LORENZO RIVER
Because the Soquel Creek Water District Board is not transparent with the public regarding their expensive and potentially-risky PureWater Soquel Project, changes to and the status of the Project are always very murky.  Because of that problem and my great concern about the toxic nature of the effluent the Modified Project would send under the San Lorenzo River, I asked the State Water Quality Control Board staff the status of the District’s application to do so, submitted last August.  Here is his reply:

“I asked staff for an update on this project and learned that we issued a denial without prejudice on Sept. 11, 2020, because supplemental information we requested was not forthcoming. The District then withdrew its application because they changed their stream crossing methods enough so that they are not taking action in waters of the state. They are trenching either above a culvert through a roadway cover, hand mining below a culvert that is through a road, or are mounting the pipeline onto a pipe bridge. So the Water Board will not be involved in the permitting of the pipeline project.”

So, will the Water Board be examining any potential mitigations to prevent toxic effluent leaks from those pipelines crossing over the San Lorenzo River and the other multiple streams they will cross between the City’s Sewage Treatment Plant on California Avenue and Live Oak’s Treatment Plant?  

I asked, but no one responded.  The State Water Board staff was also unresponsive regarding my query as to what information the District failed to provide, hence compelling the denial of their permit application.

Maybe they will answer your letter.  Write Matthew Keeling: matt.keeling@waterboards.ca.gov  

THIS TREATED SEWAGE WATER INJECTION PROJECT HAS CHANGED, WITHOUT MITIGATIONS APPROVED BY DEPT. OF FISH & WILDLIFE
Soquel Creek Water District is now regularly changing the Project to inject treated sewage water into the aquifer that supplies drinking water for the entire MidCounty area, including Cabrillo College and several other private well owners and small water systems.  But they keep those changes quiet…for a bad reason.

Unless you know to watch the State California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) document Clearinghouse website, you would never know that Soquel Creek Water District has significantly changed the PureWater Soquel Project.  

[Public Portal to View Changes to EIR]

The real problem is that the District Board fails to let the public know that they are filing Notices of Determination to acknowledge significant changes to the expensive Project that will potentially cause significant and adverse environmental impacts, and often fail to clearly describe the full extent of the changes or analysis of their impacts.

One would never know by reading the multiple Resolutions the Board rubberstamps as agenda items that generally appear near the end of the meetings, and make no mention of posting further Determinations on the Project scope and impacts.  Doing so with transparency might alert people to legal opportunities to appeal the changes…the only action the general public has available.  

One would hope that the Board would be responsive to public comment and requests at the time of their meetings’ discussions, but sadly, they are an arrogant lot, and abuse and dismiss the concerns of the public.  

If you care about transparency to the public regarding the significant and adverse environmental impacts of the Modified PureWater Soquel Project changes, please write the Board<bod@soquelcreekwater.org> and ask that they improve public process.  Why didn’t the District’s glossy “What’s On Tap” newsletter to ratepayers mention any Project modifications?

PUBLIC COMMENTS DUE THIS WEEK ON THE PROPOSED NEW SEPTIC SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS THAT WILL FORCE MANY TO PAY $50,000 – $80,000 TO INSTALL AND WILL AFFECT THE CZU REBUILD PERMITS
You have until July 11 to send your thoughts in writing regarding the County’s Draft Local Area Management Plan (LAMP) that will affect many who own rural property and/or want to rebuild after the CZU Fire.

Are there any exceptions to the LAMP standards for CZU properties? 

“Under current code and the LAMP, rebuilt properties must meet repair standards, or upgrade standards if they are adding more bedrooms. This allows for rebuilding even if a lot is substandard, but septic systems are required to meet repair standards for setbacks from streams, groundwater, etc. Most insurance policies provide funding for meeting new code requirements and that could be applied to the septic improvements. 

It is expected that the LAMP standards will go into effect upon adoption by the State Regional Water Quality Control Board, anticipated for October 15, 2021. Presently the State Tier 1 standards are in effect, which are similar or more stringent than the proposed LAMP standards. 

  • The LAMP is expected to take effect on October 15, 2021. The related code upgrades will be completed in 2022.”

Local Area Management Plan (LAMP)

PLEASE SEND YOUR COMMENTS IN RIGHT AWAY.

ATTEND THE VIRTUAL PUBLIC MEETING TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE EIR TO ALLOW SANTA CRUZ CITY TO EXPAND WATER SHARING RIGHTS
The Draft Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for the Santa Cruz Water Rights Project has been released for a 45 day public review period from June 10, 2021 – July 26, 2021. Please visit the project’s environmental documents webpage to view the document and for information on how to comment on the Draft EIR.

Two public information meetings regarding the Proposed Project and Draft EIR will be held, and the content provided at both meetings will be the same.

  • Wednesday, July 14, 2021 from 5:00 – 6:00 PM.
  • Tuesday, July 20, 2021 from 6:00 – 7:00 PM.

Meeting log-in information will be made available on this webpage before the meeting.

Water rights control how the Santa Cruz Water Department operates. Because they were granted more than 50 years ago, they are out-of-date with current needs and lack flexibility that would ensure the Water Department can provide supply reliability, protect fish populations and partner with neighboring water agencies to improve regional water supply reliability. 

New!Guide to the Santa Cruz Water Rights Project (SCWRP)

Learn more…  

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE, AND JUST DO SOMETHING.

Cheers, Becky 

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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June 29

#180 / Pruned? A Sad Story About Trees

I have previously written in this blog of my love for The Trees Of Santa Cruz. As I am walking around the city, I am taking pictures of especially notable specimens. If you click the link above, you can see a small sample of some of the lovely trees I have found as I have taken my walks. 

When I wrote my “Trees of Santa Cruz” blog posting, back on the last day of December, 2020, I noted that the City of Santa Cruz is not as protective of our heritage trees as I think it should be:

Santa Cruz is blessed with some very lovely trees, and from my point of view, the City doesn’t do enough to protect and preserve them. Hopefully, the tree photos that are displayed in this blog posting will help inspire local folks to make sure that we honor trees by insisting that property owners and developers preserve and protect the truly extraordinary ones. That is, actually, what the City’s “Heritage Tree Ordinance” is supposed to require. But too many loopholes have let too many property owners and developers chop down way too many trees. That is my opinion, at least, and this may be considered a bona fide editorial comment.

I am sorry to report that I can now confirm this judgment from my recent personal experience, since a nearby neighbor has just extirpated a magnificent black walnut tree, and has severely damaged a formerly lovely redwood tree, all for no especially good reason. This is, obviously, my personal view. Not everyone in the neighborhood saw it that way. Lots of people believe that “property owners” should be able to do whatever they want on their own property. Those who want to consider the “legalities” might want to read this book by Christopher D. Stone: Should Trees Have Standing?

In fact, the “legalities” do allow local governments to protect and preserve significant trees located on private property. But, of course, the local governments actually have to do that! As much as I deplore what that neighbor did, the responsibility for what I illustrate below is really on the City of Santa Cruz. The city’s Heritage Tree Ordinance is without strong standards, and the City Forester/Arborist is not an advocate for trees, but routinely acts as a facilitator for the desires of the property owner or the developer.

Here is what happened to the redwood tree (see the picture below). NO permit was obtained for what was done to this tree, and no penalty was imposed for what was done to this tree, either: 

Then there is that Black Walnut tree, no longer gracing my neighborhood. Here are the before and after pictures: 

There WAS A PERMIT allowing work to be done on the Walnut tree – but there was no permit for what was actually done to it. The permit was to “prune” the tree, which means “to cut off branches from a tree, bush, or plant, especially so that it will grow better in the future.” 

Extirpate has a different meaning: “to destroy completely: wipe out.” That is what happened to this heritage Black Walnut. 

The City Forester/Arborist was informed. 

No penalty was imposed.  

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

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

    Sand

“In every outthrust headland, in every curving beach, in every grain of sand there is the story of the earth.”
~Rachel Carson 

“I ignored your aura but it grabbed me by the hand, like the moon pulled the tide, and the tide pulled the sand.”
~Talib Kweli 

“The sands bury everyone, with or without our help.”
~H.S. Crow

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Funny moms who have just had it…


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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Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
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Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

June 30 – July 6, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Leaf Blowers in Santa Cruz, Don’t Bury the Library, Researching your house’s history, GREENSITE…on city’s Sales Tax Ballot Measure. KROHN…Sandy Brown to the Rescue. STEINBRUNER…Read the Grand Jury Report. PATTON…”Slow Growth Gamble”. EAGAN…Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Fireworks”

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DAVENPORT TRESTLE 1906. This is the Ocean Shore Railroad filling in the trestle near Davenport. It would lead past Davenport up the old Highway One to the little town of Swanton.
                                       
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.
Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

                                                        

DATELINE June 28

LEAF BLOWERS IN SANTA CRUZ? Whatever happened to the once energetic drive to rid Santa Cruz of gas leaf blowers? Today’s (6/28) San Francisco Chronicle has an excellent article titled, “Cities Weigh regulations, bans for gas leaf blowers”. [Here is a link, but it’s behind a paywall.] It talks about a statewide ban if an Assembly bill passes. Novato and Hayward are almost ready to ban the “noisy, smoke belching nuisances”. Oakland bans them so does Berkeley, Los Gatos, Carmel, Mill Valley, Sonoma, and Los Angeles bans them within 500 feet of residences. Davis bans their use by homeowners for more than 10 minutes. “Twenty other cities in California have outlawed their use out right and 80 cities have enacted restrictions”. So that sure seems like Santa Cruz should get back onboard and outlaw them completely. Who and what groups were fighting gas blowers a few years ago and what happened to that energy?

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MONTHLY-ISH PITCH

Bratton Online is a work of passion; the writers don’t get paid for all the time they put in. There are costs associated with running a website, however. If you feel so moved, you can make a donation for the running of BrattonOnline. Every little bit helps, and is most appreciated!

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Thank you!

LIBRARY UPDATE. Jean Brocklebank of Don’t Bury the Library organization stated some very poignant and purposeful facts and figures in reacting and following up on a recent radio interview she did. She stated,”Not only is Martín Bernal leaving (retiring), as is Susan Nemitz (resigning to focus on her health), so is are City Finance Director Kim Krause, principal management analyst for the entire Library Mixed Use project, Amanda Rotella (a key staff person at the Economic Development Department under Bonnie Lipscomb. Amanda was the principal management analyst for the entire Library Mixed Use project Oh, also the Fire Chief (Hajduk) is leaving but I don’t know if it is retirement or transfer to another city. Why so many all at once? Bailing from a sinking ship? Change of perspective about life in general?  Need to reduce stress (like Nemitz)?” Jean continued on some news and notes on the library history…

  1. At its present location since 1904 the downtown library has been an integral part of the Civic Center, right across the street from City Hall and nearby other city departmental offices, plus a block from the other civic center anchor, the Civic Auditorium.
  2. The decisions about the location of the downtown library were made by three different City Councils:
    • Decision to approve (2016)
    • New Council elected in November 2018
    • Decision to halt the project until a City Council Ad Hoc Subcommittee could look again at the controversial project (established in May 2019)
    • New City Council (due to Recall election) approves the project once more (2020)
  3. During its tenure, the Ad Hoc Subcommittee asked the City Council (CC) to issue an RFP for renovation of the downtown library. The CC did so. The result was really not a renovation but rather a rebuild. Still, it showed how a library could be rebuilt for the $27 million Measure S budget. It resulted in a 30,000 sf library, with the entrance moved to face City Hall.  It was called the Jayson Architecture proposal, as shown on our web site.

    Then the Subcommittee had another RFP for the Library-Garage proposal done, which pleased us because we knew that escalated costs meant there most probably could not be a 44,000 sf library in the mixed-use structure. We were right! The Library-Garage proposal (by Group 4) resulted in a 29,060 sf for $27 million. 

    Both were going to cost more than $27 million. 

    When I said that we would never know what a “renovated” library would cost, I meant that the Jayson proposal was predicated with everything inside the existing structure being tossed. That is, taking the structure down to its bones and rebuilding. Or, as Abe Jayson described it “imagine turning the existing library upside down … everything that falls out will be replaced.”

Don’t Bury the Library

RESEARCHING YOUR SANTA CRUZ HOUSE. Joe Michalak and Annette Hagopian gave a talk to the Genealogical Society of Santa Cruz County on June 1st. They talked about researching your house’s history. Joe stated “researching one’s house is a relatively easy way to get to know your neighborhood and its people, past and present. This project grew out of a desire to demystify the process of researching the history of a property. Judy Steen and I have been researching local properties for the past few decades and now access to critical sources of information is much easier and more extensive thanks to the availability of vast repositories over the Internet. Here’s a copy. People can find it at the Genealogical Society by clicking here.

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.

GONE GIRL. (Prime Video Single) (87RT). Rosamund Pike never had it better than her role in this dissection of what’s behind or hidden in a marriage. Ben Affleck is her husband and Neil Patrick Harris is an ex who has never given her up. She disappears and the husband gets the blame. Whodunit is the theme and the ending will surprise many viewers Go for it.

POSSESSIONS. (HBO MAX SERIES). A very traditional Jewish wedding in Israel and just at the moment the beautiful French bride slices the wedding cake, the lights go out and the husband is bloody and dead. She’s helped in proving her innocence by a cross-eyed official from the French Consulate General’s office, which makes it all the more mysterious. After three episodes I’m still curious and watching.

KATLA. (NETFLIX SERIES) A volcano erupts in Vik, Iceland and strangers and family members who disappeared return covered with black ashes. How or why have they survived or did they survive? Great Iceland photography, fine acting, very original plot and views of Iceland’s volcano territory you probably have never seen. Go for it. (100RT)

FALSE POSITIVE. (HULU SINGLE) Pierce Brosnan goes against his James bond type character and is a pregnancy doctor/ fertility specialist. He supervises/controls one woman’s pregnancy and has a secret relationship with her husband. It’s controlling, creepy, and will keep you guessing about the truth until the end which was very disappointing. (52RT)

HOTEL COPPELIA. (HBO MAX SINGLE). There’s a civil war in The Dominican Republic in 1965. The hotel is really a brothel and the “girls” are strung out in many, many ways. The locals are fighting the war’s battles but the American troops take over and everything gets challenged, including loyalties. Odd plot gaps, not the greatest acting ever but watch it anyways.

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, 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.  

PHYSICAL. (APPLE SERIES) Rose Byrne plays a 1980’s housewife with some very bad dreams. It’s a comedy, and so there’s a few laughs as she faces food binges, a miserable husband, some strange fitness classes and has trouble with reality.(63RT). What it really exposes is our obsessions with body weight, mental problems, even political residue. I don’t watch many comedies but definitely offers some funny moments, and some serious introspection. 

RUN. (HULU SINGLE). (88RT) You’ll experience a mother like no other in this internal horror story. A teen-aged daughter who can’t walk, has diabetes, paralysis and more, finally realizes that her mother is not what she believed she was. This terrifying story reaches a climax a bit later than you’d think, but it’s still worth watching.

SECURITY. (NETFLIX SINGLE) In an Italian beachside small town much like Santa Cruz, a young girl accuses a man of power and political holdings of rape. She has a father who is, or was, a pedophile. Complex, involving, and well directed, it’s a wakeup call to think about our own security including our CCTV cameras and iPhones.

LUPE. (HBO MAX SINGLE). A serious movie centered around and focusing on a transgendered young boxer from Cuba who comes to NYC looking for his sister. Much nudity, some odd moments of joking, all centered on a transgendered world. He thinks his sister may be prostituting herself, and he finds support from a prostitute friend of hers. Not the greatest film ever, but it’ll give you a chance to think about that transgendered world.

LUPIN. (NETFLIX SERIES). I critiqued this first series episodes a few months ago, and now that the New Yorker wrote such a laudatory piece about Omar Sy’s starring role I’ve watched many more episodes….and they’ll all good. A neatly-twisted robbery plot of Marie Antoinette’s necklace from the Louvre, there’s revenge, politics (French politics) and many, many Louvre scenes. The plot is complex enough to keep you glued to your viewing device for the two seasons so far. What is outstanding is that the acting is excellent and believable. Omar Sy is the “new” Black star, and has everyone talking about him and his fabulous acting style. This is one of the finest detective shows I’ve ever seen….don’t miss it. 

IN THE HEIGHTS. (HBO MAX) (96RT).The huge, lavish, much-talked-about musical from Lin-Manuel Miranda, who became famous doing Hamilton. I loved the classical musicals, both onstage like Oklahoma and South Pacific, and the classic Hollywood musicals like Wizard of Oz, Annie Get Your Gun, Gigi, West Side Story, White Christmas, Carmen Jones, Oliver and dozens more — but Heights didn’t touch any of those high standards. It’s the story of a young girl of Puerto Rican heritage who went to Stanford, and was subjected to racial prejudice. Does she go back to Stanford, does her boyfriend go back to his Dominican Republic home? Who did win the lottery at the very last minute and how?  Go for it IF you like musicals… because there’s way too much music and not enough plot in this one. 

TRAGIC JUNGLE. (NETFLIX SINGLE) Set in the very deep, dark jungles of Belize in the 1920’s – and the Mexican border – we watch the workers strip the trees of chicle to make chewing gum. Then there’s two teenage girls who switch identities, and one of them is a very haunting witch who drives and kills the workers one by one. The plot goes everywhere and overly complex. You’ll wonder where the story is going for about ¾ of the movie then after that, you won’t care.

PANIC. (AMAZON PRIME SERIES) A teenage high school action thriller that has mostly 20 and 30 year olds playing the parts. The “kids” create a (literally) death-defying night of dangerous stunts. It all happens in Carp, Texas (a fictional town) and some of the stunts are genuinely scary. Each episode ends right at the critical moment when the teen is about to do the stunt. You won’t learn anything, but you’ll stop thinking about masks for a while. (68RT) 

HERSELF. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). A distraught mother of two daughters splits from her abusive husband, and works hard to build herself a new house from ground up. So it’s her story, a very Irish story (filmed in Ireland) touching, heartfelt, well-acted, not too significant… but go for it.

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June 28

THE CITY’S SALES TAX BALLOT MEASURE 
If you’ve ever participated in a Santa Cruz city council or commission meeting via zoom you know it can be a frustrating experience. Mayor and chairs often omit important public access instructions and the most common plea from a caller whose turn is up is “can you hear me?”  At a Planning Commission meeting the chair failed to have the call-in numbers posted on the screen after stating it was public comment time. I was following the meeting on Community TV and had sat through almost two hours of staff presentation and commission questions for a chance to speak on final approval of the Wharf Master Plan. Realizing the chair’s error and knowing that public comment time can be brief depending on how many are calling in, I scrambled to find the meeting on my computer where I knew the numbers would be posted. As the minutes ticked by I frantically willed my computer to hurry, located the numbers, followed the agonizingly slow prompts and crossed fingers that public comment had not ended. I was lucky.

Not so lucky for last week’s city council meeting. One item on the agenda was the proposed Ballot Measure for a half-cent increase in the city’s Sales and Use Tax. I have long been opposed to any sales tax increase since it is a regressive tax, disproportionately impacting low-income workers and families. This time I was following the meeting on my computer. When the Mayor called for public comment I was ready. Already dialed in, had followed the prompts and pressed *9 to indicate I wanted to speak. I listened to the other speakers, mainly union members and reps and waited for the last four digits of my number to be called with a finger ready to press *6 to un-mute myself. I waited in vain. I was not recognized. The public comment period was declared over and the Mayor returned the meeting to council for deliberation and action. Later I followed up to try to find out why my hand was not recognized. The response was there were no more hands up.  


Council member Sandy Brown taking a stand against the sales tax Ballot Measure

This item was a rare event in council proceedings. In order to get a sales tax increase on the ballot as an emergency measure, as was the case here, the council had to vote unanimously to do so. Council member Sandy Brown was the sole hold out and for good reason. For a ballot measure to pass with a vote of 50% +1 it has to be limited to a General Purpose tax, meaning it goes into the big pot of the General Fund; it cannot be earmarked for specific uses. To achieve the latter, a two-thirds vote of the public is required. Council could have chosen this option but were probably advised against it by the consultants since the danger is that it might not pass at the higher level. 

If you read the Ballot Measure language you would not know this distinction. Calculated to be misleading it is filled with specifics that the augmented General Funds will be used for: “affordable housing, reduce wildfire risk, maintain City facilities and essential infrastructure, fix streets, support transit, maintain parks and recreation facilities for youth and seniors, fight climate change and prevent reductions in important city services.” What’s not to like? This language may be on the slim side of legal but any new monies can just as easily and legally be used for more consultants, office makeovers or pay increases for top management. There was no hesitation from the council majority recently to increase the pay of a new City Manager by $5000 a month. The city was in no less of an “emergency” when that vote was taken. Fifteen million dollars is being pumped into the city coffers from the Federal Government and by all measures, tourists are returning in droves. 

Councilmember Brown had a clear position. She had worked hard to get a Livable Wage Ordinance passed in the city yet there were city workers (custodians, some maintenance workers, lifeguards etc.) currently earning less than a livable wage. She had supported sales tax increases in the past with the expectation that such workers’ pay would be increased to bring them up to a livable wage but this had never been supported by a council majority and she had no trust that this time would be any different. If there were a willingness to meet and discuss this issue before a vote on the Ballot Measure, depending on that conversation she would be willing to be supportive.  Two council members were willing to meet and have that conversation but not before a vote on the Ballot Measure.  Given that her vote was the only leverage she had to guarantee a meaningful discussion, Brown held to her position. She faced considerable guilt tripping from some council members who accused her of standing in the way of democracy and hurting those she professed to care about. The question was called and the vote was 6-1. A door was left open for the Mayor to call a special meeting and depending on conversations in the meantime, a new vote may be forthcoming before the deadline of August 6th. 

I hope council member Brown stands firm. Even if there is the unlikely commitment from council members to fully fund a livable wage from the General Fund, something they have not cared to do previously, there is still the issue that a sales tax is a regressive tax. There are many other workers in Santa Cruz earning below even the lowest paid city worker. For them every dollar counts. Even with most groceries, medicines, diapers and feminine hygiene products exempt from a sales tax, that leaves children’s clothing, furniture, car repairs and much more that will be just that more expensive. Our sales tax at present is 9.25 percent. A half- cent would take it to 9.75 percent. As for “letting the voters decide” and the Mayor’s comment that Brown was cutting off democracy, this it should be noted is also a class issue. Those who earn good money won’t notice the increase while those at the bottom pay scales will. The former are likely to vote yes, especially if they have bought the city’s propaganda of where the money will be spent. The latter are likely to vote no with a few others such as myself included. A well-off majority ignoring the impact on a low-income minority is more an example of class self-interest than true democracy.

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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June 28 

BROWN TO THE RESCUE!

The Power of One Vote
That was an ugly Santa Cruz city council meeting last week. An emergency vote was called for by a revenue subcommittee’s recommendation. The issue of putting before voters a half-cent increase in the current 9.25% sales tax rate turned into an hours-long bully-fest as Councilmember Sandy Brown, the lone holdout, became the object of so much council angst and derision. She stood tall, which is difficult inside the Zoom screen, and did not back down. It was clear that unless the council approved a bonus for frontline city workers, and immediately brought the lowest paid up to the city’s approved living wage, Councilmember Brown would be voting no.

What Was the Problem?
You could cut the zoom room with a knife, the tension was leaking out from my computer screen. When Brown was attacked for not trusting other councilmembers, she took a deep breath and calmly explained, “There is a systemic lack of interest on this council in supporting our lowest wage workers,” which there is. Her argument was not about a lack of trust for individual councilmembers, it was projecting a much more inclusive and life-sustaining vision of the city workforce. The vote to raise the sales tax had to be unanimous because it was an emergency measure and state law dictates that the entire city council has to vote affirmatively to place it on the ballot. If passed, it would raise around $6 million, but other members of the council were not in a mood to compromise any of their tax monies because of Brown’s love affair with workers.

The Tyranny of the Majority
Alexis de Tocqueville, French diplomat, political scientist, and aristocrat traveled for nine months in the year 1831, ostensibly on a mission to examine prisons and penitentiaries in the US, but he became involved in conversations around politics and the democratic practices of the nascent American regime. Those travel journals resulted in an historic 1835 book, Democracy in America. In it, he discussed a concept that is relative to the current state of decision-making on the Santa Cruz city council. Tocqueville sums up our city council’s take no prisoners style like this: the tyranny of the majority. It is when a majority crushes all dissenting views, but according to Tocqueville, there may be a resulting political price to pay. This council’s tyranny of the majority certainly looked heavy-handed to those watching the meeting on Community TV, but Sandy Brown was not about to knuckle under. The tyranny of the council’s 5-2 majority came to reflect their ham-fisted, steam-roller approach to locals as they seek to appease all manner of realtors and market-rate housing developers they encounter. But on this night, it would be Dr. Brown who would prevail while invoking her relentless advocacy for the downtrodden. She sought only compromise while the rest of the council was looking for a knockout blow. But then it was too late. As one councilmember invoked, “calling the question,” in order to cut off debate and rush a vote, seemingly wanting to see Brown squirm and finally succumb to the hours-long haranguing by some colleagues, but she held veto power and was forced to use it when no one would support a resolution that incorporated her pleas for higher wages for low-paid city workers. With the majority not responding, voting NO was the only sensible thing she could do to ensure city workers would continue to have a voice at the municipal table.

What Else Was on the Table?
Perhaps Councilmember Sandy Brown was also reacting to a pandemic crisis that has been full with city bureaucratic incompetence and fellow councilmember overreach on a long post-2020 recall election wish list they had compiled. The absence of a transparent and open public process during the pandemic made the task of pushing through their shopping list of market-rate housing projects much easier. Maybe Councilmember Brown was also saying no to the thousands of market-rate units already permitted, or being planned, and that these same low-wage workers, for which she is hoping to win a salary bump, will never be able to occupy? Or possibly, it was a no vote against moving the library to a parking garage on top of the Downtown Farmer’s Market site while also axing several heritage trees? Or was it a no vote against putting the municipal wharf on steroids and placing a hotel where the Community Credit Union now sits on Front Street? It’s hard to tell, but there was Brown yet again advocating for low-wage workers. 

A Populist Seeking to Unleash Santa Cruz’s Better Angels
Sandy Brown’s message is simple. She represents constituents who want affordable, not luxury, housing; a downtown central park and permanent home for the Farmers Market; a remodeled library as the cornerstone of a downtown municipal plaza; and maybe most importantly, fair and just wages for city workers. Brown also made the point that a sales tax increase is regressive. Why not put before voters a hotel tax increase that affects tourists with disposable income, or an empty homes tax which asks those with second and third homes to pay if they leave their places vacant, or a real estate transfer tax so the city can cash in as well as the homeowner, on our ridiculous sky-high home prices? Here’s a wild idea, why not put all these taxes on the Newsome-recall ballot and see which one receives the most votes. What I heard at the council meeting was Councilmember Brown calling for a wider, more in-depth, post-covid community conversation around revenue-raising. I heard her saying why not tax the folks who can afford it most? Perhaps Brown’s vote was a vote of no confidence too. This city is hemorrhaging city staff and may soon be on life support: the fire chief, city manager, library, water, and finance directors are all bailing. Instead of passing this tax, maybe the city council ought to do some sober reflection and in-depth analysis of where city government is and where it should be going. Passing a regressive sales tax increase is not the answer for creating good and responsive local government.

“We’re working to win a Civilian Climate Corps in the reconciliation package. The last time the US did this, we employed 2M people and had record success in wildfire suppression – one the most rapid peacetime mobilizations in US history. We can revive it to fight climate change.” (June 23)

Santa Cruz Political Report on KSQD’s Talk of the Bay Every Tues at 5pm
Oakland, Vancouver and Washington, D.C. all have one, come 2022, Santa Cruz may have one as well. This week’s, Talk of the Bay, features Cyndi Dawson and Josh McCallister from the group, Empty Homes Tax. They are seeking to place a vacant, or empty, homes tax on the 2022 ballot. Joining them will be Maine’s Rep. Chris Kessler explaining how Maine is enacting one as well. If you miss it, go to our archive where all the past 26 episodes are located.

Absurd “preacher-man” absurdly tries to block musical offerings by the marimba band, Kuzanga, by amplifying his doom and gloom message over the band’s hopeful sounds. The Saturday night scene turned into mayhem at times and reflects a broken free speech policy on Pacific Avenue. 
(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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June28

HOLDING LOCAL GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABLE FOR THE CZU FIRE RESPONSE…READ THIS GRAND JURY REPORT

Last week, the Santa Cruz County Grand Jury released this report that is a must read: 

“The CZU Lightning Complex Fire – Learn…or Burn? Board Oversight – An Obligation to our Community”

“Nothing is yet published about the performance of our government leadership in holding Cal Fire accountable for past actions and ensuring readiness for the next event. 

The Grand Jury received complaints from residents angry over not fully understanding how everything went so wrong, and frustrated about feeling unheard by their local government leaders. Many are afraid that the county is unprepared for the next event.”

[AFTER CZU REPORT]

Why didn’t CAL FIRE conduct an After Action Review of the CZU Lightning Complex Fire, as is standard procedure for assessing what went right, and what needs to be done for future events?  CAL FIRE/ County Fire Chief Ian Larkin assured me that “no such document exists” when I submitted a Public Records Act request for it.

Why did the Santa Cruz County Administrative Officer Carlos Palacios recommend to the Board of Supervisors that the full-time position of County Office of Emergency Services Manager, held by the incredibly competent Ms. Rosemary Anderson at the time, be erased, instead delegating the critical work of planning emergency responses to whichever CAO staff might have time at the moment???  Why did the Board of Supervisors even accept such a ridiculous idea?  Supervisor Zach Friend stated he felt that other jurisdictions should help pay for funding the re-instatement of the job, but nothing ever happened to follow up on that further-ridiculous notion.

Everyone in this County needs to read this Grand Jury Report, and contact the Board of Supervisors.   We all have seen that, given the devastating fire in Santa Rosa, even those living in the suburban areas are at risk of wildland fire if the conditions are just so.  The Grand Jury has released a report this year regarding that risk for the City of Santa Cruz: City Wildfire Report

Write CAL FIRE and ask why there has been no After Action Review for the CZU Lightning Complex Fire.  Here is a sample of other major Fire After Action Reviews, to give you an idea of what our County is missing:

[TUBBS NUNS FIRE AFTER ACTION REVIEW]
[THOMAS FIRE AFTER ACTION REVIEW]
[CARR FIRE AFTER ACTION REVIEW]
[PGE THE CAMP FIRE PUBLIC REPORT]

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

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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June 21

#172 / Slow Growth Gamble

William Galston, writing in the June 2, 2021, edition of The Wall Street Journal, suggests that President Biden is making a “Slow-Growth Budget Gamble.” Given the paywall protection that might well prevent non-subscribers from reading Galston’s analysis, I am providing an excerpt from his column at the bottom of this blog posting. 

Galston sees the “gamble” in the fact that the Biden Administration is not doing more to increase the growth of the economy. Our current two-percent annual growth rate is unacceptably low, from his perspective. 

From my perspective, the “gamble” is trying to increase economic growth at all, given that economic growth, as currently defined, is absolutely linked to an increase in the greenhouse gas emissions that are bringing us hurricanes, flooding events, droughts, immigration crises, wildfires, and heat deaths, with crop failures and food scarcity expected to arrive soon. 

The preceding list, of course, does not mention the species extinctions which are proceeding apace. We focus very little on anything that does not directly affect human beings (with the emphasis on “directly”). Despite our failure to pay attention, however, the “indirect” impacts of the Sixth Mass Extinction that is now underway profoundly affect humans, not just those living things we don’t notice, and don’t even know about. We are, as all living things are, dependent on the overall health of our planetary environment, and on all the various other species that inhabit it. What is bad for the butterflies, coral reefs, and the polar bears is bad for us, as well.

In a debate about what is most important for our future – the protection of our global environment or the growth of the national economy – I am not big on “betting.” Less growth, not more, seems like the safest – in fact, necessary – course for us to pursue. 

oooOOOooo

Biden’s Slow-Growth Budget Gamble
William A. Galston 

President Biden’s proposed budget would represent a sea change in American fiscal policy. If enacted, outlays over the next decade would increase by about $8 trillion and revenues by $6 trillion, bringing the deficit to $14.5 trillion from $12.3 trillion projected under current policy. The share of the economy flowing to the federal government would rise to about one-quarter, up from one-fifth, and the budget deficit would average about 5% of gross domestic product. By 2031 national debt held by the public would stand at $39 trillion, a record 117% of GDP….

But commentators have mostly overlooked the biggest surprise, and core conundrum, of the president’s proposal: Despite trillions of dollars of additional expenditures—some of which are investments, others not—the projected rate of economic growth increases only modestly, and most of the bump comes in the early years before tapering off.

During the next two years, Mr. Biden’s spending surge would help return the economy to full employment faster than staying at the status quo. This is a good thing. But between the beginning of fiscal 2024 and the end of fiscal 2031, the administration’s projections show GDP rising by $8.9 trillion, barely distinguishable from the $8.8 trillion in CBO’s baseline.

The bottom line: The economy will stay stuck at 2% growth, extending the period of slow growth that began early in the 21st century. Even during the first three years of the Trump administration, large spending increases and an enormous tax cut yielded growth averaging 2.5%, well below the 3.5% level of the 1990s….

Getting America back to faster growth will take resources and focus. But if growth remains slow, Mr. Biden’s honorable effort to improve the lives of working- and middle-class families may end up hobbled by the well-known difficulties of zero-sum politics.  

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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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

    FIREWORKS

“All architecture is great architecture after sunset; perhaps architecture is really a nocturnal art, like the art of fireworks”.
~Gilbert K. Chesterton

“During my first open ocean dive, I went down to 800 feet and turned out the lights. I knew I would see bioluminescence, but I was totally unprepared for how much. It was incredible! There were explosions of light everywhere, like being in the middle of a silent fireworks display”.
~Edith Widder

“I love movies where the explosions and fireworks are happening inside someone’s heart and mind instead of outside”.
~Marielle Heller

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The quote above from Edith Widder got me curious, and I went on a hunt for some video. It wasn’t hard to find! Please enjoy this Ted talk, it’s great 🙂


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

June 23 – 29, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…New Santa Cruz history book, new movie critiques. GREENSITE…on whose future for Santa Cruz? KROHN…If I Had A Hammer! STEINBRUNER…Supervisors raise their benefits and pay, new cameras for fire detection, parking spaces in new commercial developments. PATTON…Hello Neighbors. EAGAN… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”Summer”

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SANTA CRUZANS FOR STEVENSON, 1952. These local stalwarts went to Sacramento that day to support Adlai Stevenson – who ran against (and lost to) Dwight Eisenhower. Harry Truman decided not to run for reelection. Eisenhower carried every state outside the south!                                                    
              
                                       
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.
Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE June 21

NEW SANTA CRUZ HISTORY BOOK. Stanley Stevens, librarian Emeritus of UCSC and fabled historian, has just finished a rare and unusual book containing some in-depth facts, figures and dates for Santa Cruz County. Technically it’s about Impeachment charges against Honorable Lucas Flattery Smith, that took place from February to March 1905. It’s available on line and it’s free! 

You’ll read many, many references to F.A. Hihn, Charles Younger, William Waddell, Howard Trafton, the Big Creek Power Company, and dozens of prominent former citizens. Over and above to the main testimonies centering on the impeachment, the biographical sketches of the people named in the transcripts are important to any who want to delve deeper into our historical past. Amongst the legalese are stories of murders, thefts, and all sorts of other historical data. It’s odd to think that we had an impeachment trial here: be sure to read all about it. 

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.

PHYSICAL. (APPLE SERIES) Rose Byrne plays a 1980’s housewife with some very bad dreams. It’s a comedy, and so there’s a few laughs as she faces food binges, a miserable husband, some strange fitness classes and has trouble with reality.(63RT). What it really exposes is our obsessions with body weight, mental problems, even political residue. I don’t watch many comedies but definitely offers some funny moments, and some serious introspection. 

RUN. (HULU SINGLE). (88RT) You’ll experience a mother like no other in this internal horror story. A teen-aged daughter who can’t walk, has diabetes, paralysis and more, finally realizes that her mother is not what she believed she was. This terrifying story reaches a climax a bit later than you’d think, but it’s still worth watching.

SECURITY. (NETFLIX SINGLE) In an Italian beachside small town much like Santa Cruz, a young girl accuses a man of power and political holdings of rape. She has a father who is, or was, a pedophile. Complex, involving, and well directed, it’s a wakeup call to think about our own security including our CCTV cameras and iPhones.

LUPE. (HBO MAX SINGLE). A serious movie centered around and focusing on a transgendered young boxer from Cuba who comes to NYC looking for his sister. Much nudity, some odd moments of joking, all centered on a transgendered world. He thinks his sister may be prostituting herself, and he finds support from a prostitute friend of hers. Not the greatest film ever, but it’ll give you a chance to think about that transgendered world.

LUPIN. (NETFLIX SERIES). I critiqued this first series episodes a few months ago, and now that the New Yorker wrote such a laudatory piece about Omar Sy’s starring role I’ve watched many more episodes….and they’ll all good. A neatly-twisted robbery plot of Marie Antoinette’s necklace from the Louvre, there’s revenge, politics (French politics) and many, many Louvre scenes. The plot is complex enough to keep you glued to your viewing device for the two seasons so far. What is outstanding is that the acting is excellent and believable. Omar Sy is the “new” Black star, and has everyone talking about him and his fabulous acting style. This is one of the finest detective shows I’ve ever seen….don’t miss it. 

IN THE HEIGHTS. (HBO MAX) (96RT).The huge, lavish, much-talked-about musical from Lin-Manuel Miranda, who became famous doing Hamilton. I loved the classical musicals, both onstage like Oklahoma and South Pacific, and the classic Hollywood musicals like Wizard of Oz, Annie Get Your Gun, Gigi, West Side Story, White Christmas, Carmen Jones, Oliver and dozens more — but Heights didn’t touch any of those high standards. It’s the story of a young girl of Puerto Rican heritage who went to Stanford, and was subjected to racial prejudice. Does she go back to Stanford, does her boyfriend go back to his Dominican Republic home? Who did win the lottery at the very last minute and how?  Go for it IF you like musicals… because there’s way too much music and not enough plot in this one. 

TRAGIC JUNGLE. (NETFLIX SINGLE) Set in the very deep, dark jungles of Belize in the 1920’s – and the Mexican border – we watch the workers strip the trees of chicle to make chewing gum. Then there’s two teenage girls who switch identities, and one of them is a very haunting witch who drives and kills the workers one by one. The plot goes everywhere and overly complex. You’ll wonder where the story is going for about ¾ of the movie then after that, you won’t care.

PANIC. (AMAZON PRIME SERIES) A teenage high school action thriller that has mostly 20 and 30 year olds playing the parts. The “kids” create a (literally) death-defying night of dangerous stunts. It all happens in Carp, Texas (a fictional town) and some of the stunts are genuinely scary. Each episode ends right at the critical moment when the teen is about to do the stunt. You won’t learn anything, but you’ll stop thinking about masks for a while. (68RT) 

HERSELF. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). A distraught mother of two daughters splits from her abusive husband, and works hard to build herself a new house from ground up. So it’s her story, a very Irish story (filmed in Ireland) touching, heartfelt, well-acted, not too significant… but go for it.

 SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, 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.  

TENTACLES. (HULU SINGLE). So there’s this homeless guy in LA who gets his girlfriend Tara to move into his parent’s old house. And she’s really a monster who makes snakes crawl out of his ears and mouth. There are so many of these women turned monster movies I’m surprised there isn’t more rejection of the basic plot. Skip this one too as long as you are at it.

THE CONJURING: THE DEVIL MADE ME DO IT. (58RT) Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson have made careers out of Conjuring movies. This one (of three) actually has some very scary scenes even though we’re watching at home. Somebody said it’s like The Exorcist with more ghosts. It sticks to the investigating of ghosts as usual and there are not many twists and turns, but it’ll take your mind of your masks and being in public again.

LISEY’S STORY. (APPLE TV SERIES) (55RT). This brand new series is from Stephen King’s best seller and stars Julienne Moore plus Clive Owen. He’s a famous novel writer who was shot in a crowd scene and Julienne keeps remembering past events that have curious twists. It’ll remind you of John Lennon’s death and I’d predict that the remaining series will be well worth watching.

DOMINA. (PRIME VIDEO SERIES). (86RT) This was actually filmed in Rome in July 2020.It’s all about the friends and enemies of Julius Caesar and what happened after his assassination. They are all there in 44BC, Nero, Cicero, Cassius, Antigone, and more. It lacks any dignity that a Roman Government would have had plus they use the fuck word every 20 seconds, which is more than odd and out of date. Language authorities tell us that the word fuck was not used until 1475 AD. It could have been another Game of Thrones which it tries hard to copy but fails in its contemporary language and acting.

WHITSTABLE PEARL. (PRIME VIDEO SERIES) Another mysterious death/maybe murder involving a woman detective. (88RT). Filmed in Whitstable, England. She runs a restaurant plus a detective agency. A much loved guy is found drowned and mysteriously tied to a boats anchor. The detective faces all kinds of odds and obstacles as she works to find out who actually did murder him. I’ll again predict that this new series works out well. Go for it

PANIC. (AMAZON PRIME SERIES) Teen age high school action thriller that has mostly 20 and 30 year olds playing the parts. The “kids” create a literally death defying night of dangerous stunts. It all happens in Carp, Texas ( a fictional town) and some stunts are genuinely scary. Each episode ends right at the critical moment when the teen is about to do the stunt. You won’t learn anything but you’ll stop thinking about masks for a while. (68RT) 

HERSELF. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). A very distraught mother of two daughters splits from her very abusive husband and works hard to build herself a new house from ground up. He’s a genuine psycho and he’ll never change, probably!! So it’s her story, a very Irish story (filmed in Ireland) touching, heartfelt, well-acted, not too significant but go for it.

UNDINE. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). Based on a mermaid type myth this love story gone wrong takes place in Berlin. Undine is a guide in a city institution and is in love with a guy who can’t ever leave her without dying. It rambles on and on underwater and on land but goes nowhere worth watching. It got an undeserving 89RT. You choose but I’ll bet you won’t stay with it all the way though.

THE LAST THING HE WANTED. (NETFLIX SINGLE). Ben Affleck has a small part in this boring saga. Anne Hathaway and Willem Dafoe help carry the plot which comes from Joan Didion’s novel. Anne is a secret reporter working in Costa Rica in 1984 trying to get the goods on a big time power figure. Loose script, and obvious ending. Avoid it. 

SHE. (NETFLIX SERIES). A beautiful and unhappily married Hindi woman in Mumbai (formerly Bombay) is a part time police employee. She’s pressured to pose as a prostitute to trap a big time drug king. Her sister is a college student and her husband is a drunk. She gets into much trouble and then begins to realize that she’s very human and capable of falling in love. It’s twisted and complex and develops slowly over the episodes but watch it anyway. 

TO THE LAKE. (NETFLIX SERIES). It has a rare 100RT rating!!! A terrible and almost familiar pandemic hits Moscow. The city is blocked off and victims have eyes that are white! We follow a very split family that goes through many relationship issues as well as trying to escape the white eyed victims. There’s an autistic son, an extra cute daughter all running and avoiding their enemies. They end up in a refuge ship!! You’ll think constantly about the Covid scene we are living in. Go for it.

I’M YOUR WOMAN (AMAZON PRIME SERIES). A double dealing husband brings home a new baby and then he disappears. The wife then has to go on the run with some thug to hide from husband’s would be killers. The plot thickens and thins and twists beyond belief. Not a great series and I lost track after about three episodes. (81RT)

TREEHOUSE (HULU SINGLE). Remember that you have to watch or skip ads on HULU.
A hugely successful chef/restaurateur is also a womanizer. One of his “dates” committed suicide and her sister and women friends give him drugs and they become witches. They do almost drive him permanently insane. It’ll remind you of the Windsor Mayor Foppoli and his Winery and all the sexual charges against him. And it’s very poorly acted too.

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June 21.

A SIGN FOR THE FUTURE
When asked in a recent radio interview the reason for such controversy over the city’s plan to demolish the downtown library and rebuild in a new location under a parking garage, including the removal of multiple heritage magnolia trees and the loss of the current Farmers’ Market site, the library director replied, “Well that’s Santa Cruz.” 

This pejorative opinion that Santa Cruzans are knee-jerk reactionaries is not uncommon within the ranks of the city’s upper management as well as within pro-development circles including at UCSC. I’ve heard it expressed in a number of contexts. “It’s Santa Cruz, people sue the city over anything” opined one senior staff to another who vigorously agreed. This, in my presence, prior to a meeting to find common ground to avoid a lawsuit going to court. My thoughts at the time were: “well if the city produced valid EIR’s (Environmental Impact Reports) rather than skewing them to fit an a priori agenda there would be no reason to sue.” Nobody and no group I know like to sue. It’s expensive, time consuming, exasperating as well as having no guaranteed favorable outcome. That the outcome is frequently favorable to the plaintiffs should give the city pause for thought. They might consider that they are wasting public monies in trying to advance their agendae at the expense of proper environmental review.

None of the city leaders understands the emotional attachment that many long-time residents feel for familiar buildings such as the downtown library, which together with the Civic Auditorium and City Hall creates the nearest we have to a Civic Center. To sever one of these three public anchors, to forge a new one in a different location under a parking garage and to remove significant heritage trees is a pot not sweetened by throwing in a dollop of “affordable” housing after the fact. It leaves many feeling adrift. Our sense of place is rapidly being fractured by a combination of clear-eyed speculators, compliant city upper management and like-minded council majority.  That the city’s Parks and Recreation approved budget removed staffing positions for the Civic Auditorium and shifted monies to two new part-time staff positions for youth sports suggests where things are headed.

It is truly alarming the scale at which this transformation of Santa Cruz is being orchestrated.  As you read this, city council will have voted on two clearly contradictory items. One is to approve the expenditure of $508,812 to pay consultants to complete the Downtown Plan Extension Project. This project is a plan to extend the downtown boundary from the current edge at Laurel Street to a new boundary at the first roundabout and the river levee. If approved, this will permit new buildings south of Laurel to be up to 85 feet in height as contrasted to the current zoning height limits of 35 feet. I don’t recall any public hearing to discuss this concept, only a last minute council item to move ahead with drafting a RFP. Consultant-directed public hearings are planned for the future so the die is cast. 

At the same meeting council will vote on whether to approve a ballot measure for a one half of one percent sales tax increase due to the apparent dire straits of the city’s current and future budgets. If approved by a public vote in November the increase would put the city’s sales tax at the maximum allowed by law.  Never mind that a sales tax is a regressive tax, disadvantaging lower income earners. In this context, a half million dollars in consultants’ fees for a project that seems to have by-passed public scrutiny should be out of the question.

A small symbol of where we are headed is contained in the new sign (below) at the stair entrance to Cowell Beach and repeated at the ramp entrance to the beach in case you missed it the first time.

The current city leadership apparently sees nothing out of place with erecting this large sign depicting a photograph of the Dream Inn between you and the view of Monterey Bay. Such a lack of sensitivity for place and aesthetics is a harbinger for what we can expect for Santa Cruz unless far more of the community becomes massively political. 

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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June 21

IF I HAD A HAMMER
Each time the city manager’s office weighs in and attempts to act on, and not for, this community’s most vulnerable residents, it reminds us of the aphorism: The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. But yet, there they were this past Monday morning, the Santa Cruz police sent six cops and half a dozen vehicles (for what?)–two were parked in the river bed of the San Lorenzo River, and at least five CalTrans workers and their three vehicles, all descended upon the latest large encampment. One of the Caltrans vehicles was actually equipped with what looked like a snow removal device. Other assorted contractors with dumpsters and a tiny skip-loader were at the ready and upon the signal from an orange-vested Caltrans employee, began moving in on the camped. It was yet another army of workers on another mission to extirpate homeless people from public lands. We’ve seen this movie before.

Journalist Janet Malcolm, a long-time New Yorker staff writer, died last week. She was 86. Malcolm stirred the journalist bedrock foundation principal of objectivity, in her damning and compelling 1989 literary-knifing of writer Joseph McGinniss’ ill-gotten gains relationship with convicted killer, Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald. It was a two-part essay called, “The Journalist and the Murderer.” The piece kicked off a decades-long conversation about the notions of truth, objectivity, and what non-fiction writers owe to readers, and themselves, about telling a story and sticking to the facts. Malcolm seemed to be questioning truth itself. She wrote in her article, “Journalists justify their treachery in various ways according to their temperaments.” Either Malcolm is severely jaded by events following the publication of her many essays, or she is simply speaking about what she’s learned in a life in the writing trenches. “He (the journalist) is a kind of confidence man, preying on people’s vanity, ignorance, or loneliness, gaining their trust and betraying them without remorse.” Ouch. Malcolm’s perspective reminded me of Santa Cruz city manager, Martin Bernal and his bureaucratic buffoonery, yet symbiotic relationship in addressing homeless people. Is Bernal part of an industry, at first menacing and then preying upon those most in need, mainly because it’s easy?

If All You Have is a Hammer–

Bringing in the Cavalry
Every homeless person still looks like a nail to the city manager’s office these days, and that hasn’t changed much since the years of former city manager, Dick Wilson. What’s changed are the sheer numbers of houseless people, and Bernal now lacks the budget to round-up the homeless and either give them bus tickets to Humboldt county or set them in front of the Santa Cruz sign on the northbound shoulder of Highway 1 like they would with Jerry’s Kids back in the 80’s and’90’s who followed the Dead to the next show. Social workers, transitional housing, mental health counseling, and food distribution be damned in this city manager’s world view. His office is going full-steam ahead on sweeping up homeless people the old-fashioned way, with police truncheons and garbage trucks. There are just too many people living outside in tents for the city bureaucrats under Bernal’s direction to win the former whack-a-mole houseless game they once were able to control through camping ordinance citations and trespassing fines.  No wonder Bernal’s retiring. He used to be able to keep the issue out of sight and therefore out of the minds of many locals, but this is 2021. The current para-military incursion I witnessed taking place this week at the end Felker Street, not far from Denny’s, was a battle for a portion of the San Lorenzo riverbed and a small ravine along Highway 1. Since the war has been lost, the only victory that could be claimed by the forces of bureaucracy was just pushing the vulnerable a little bit deeper into the river watershed and out of sight. It’s likely the two Santa Cruz Sentinel reporters I saw exiting from the camp that once was, will likely portray the mounds of garbage in pictures, and assign descriptions to camp denizens as disempowered and perhaps not just a little bit guilty for being poor and destitute.

The Hard Work
On another hand, what I see at the Benchlands below San Lorenzo Park, is a delicate process of human organization being played out, albeit within the capitalist system. I’m convinced that the numbers of homeless keep growing because the gap between rich, poor, and very poor has grown exponentially, at a similar rate perhaps to Jeff Bezos’ burgeoning fortune during the pandemic. There is a growing organization amongst campers, a sharing of food and what few resources they possess. There are at least two kitchens, regular garbage clean-ups, and group meetings at around 5pm. Of course, this is unsustainable in the long run. The camp is more political and social statement than a long-term cooperative living arrangement. My fear is that the resources needed to house, counsel, and provide job-training will not come, not because community and state resources do not exist, they do, but it is a lack of creativity and priority. Policy-makers must allow those with good ideas to implement their good ideas, and local law enforcement must be cut back and allow those monies to be redirected to the actual needs of the unhoused. Treatment over arrests, job-training not jail time, and counseling instead of simply telling people to move along must all occur simultaneously. It is surely not rocket science, but it is going to take a lot longer to address this human-made tragedy than it did to get to the moon, so let’s roll up our sleeves, realize the enormity of the task before us, and get started.

“Every year, 20 million people are displaced from their homes as a result of climate-fueled disasters. How do you go forward right now in this moment in history and not address the terrible climate crisis that we face and fundamentally transform our energy system?” (June 20)

The Great Morgani, aka Frank Lima was performing downtown this past weekend, as he has for more than 25 years. He will be my guest on KSQD’s Talk of the Bay, Tues. June 22 at 5pm. If you miss the broadcast, you can go to the KSQD’s archive  
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(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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June 21

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS APPROVES 7.9% SALARY AND BENEFIT INCREASE FOR THEMSELVES
Somehow, when so many in our County have lost their jobs and businesses in the past year, the Board of Supervisors would have taken a cut themselves.  I thought this might happen, considering recent County Code changes to tie Supervisor salary increases to that of Superior Court judges.   NOPE!!!

This week, the Board approved a 7.9% salary and benefit package increase for the 17 full time Board staff.  It averages $13,296/person.  

Approve the 2021-22 Proposed Budget for the Board of Supervisors, including any supplemental materials, and take related actions, as outlined in the referenced budget documents, and as recommended by the County Administrative Officer

[Board of Supervisor Budget Increase]   June 21 agenda, Item #15

“The Board of Supervisors Proposed Budget includes $3,103,325 in expenditures, no revenues and $3,103,325 in General Fund contribution, reflecting a total increase of $226,036 or 7.9 percent from the fiscal year 2020-21 budget.”

COUNTY FIRE TO PURCHASE 10 NEW THERMAL IMAGING CAMERAS AND NEW CHIPPER
On the backs of the CZU Fire property owners and others in the rural County areas, it seems large purchases are in store.  The County Fire Proposed Fixed Asset Purchases for the coming year total $1.536, 710, and include 10 new thermal imaging cameras ($90,000) and a new chipper ($70,000).  Where will these cameras be positioned and who will monitor them?  Who will run the chipper to best help the rural property owners who need help clearing fire defensible space?

Also planned is $75,000 for a pod runner (cell on wheels)???  The budget also states two Type 3 engines will be purchased at $1.1million.  At the last County Fire Dept. Advisory Commission meeting, County Fire Chief Larkin announced he had ordered two Type 1 engines…not Type 3 engines, for Davenport and Corralitos stations.  Type 3 engines are excellent for wildland fire response on mountain roads, but Type 1 fire engines are for urban fire response, and are known as “pavement queens”.  What did Chief Larkin really do and how will the rural people be best served?  

See page 474 of the County Budget Fixed Assets

PUSHING PEOPLE OUT OF THE RURAL AREAS OF CALIFORNIA
It is shocking to read reports such as that just published by Next 10. The State’s efforts to push people out of rural areas is now palpable.  Consider the recent “Rebuilding for Resilient Recovery” report that concludes it is just too risky and expensive to continue to allow people to live in rural areas of California.  

Next 10

“Researchers analyzed three rebuilding scenarios in line with each community’s physical and socioeconomic characteristics and identified the economic, climate, workforce, future fire risk, and resident displacement impacts each of those scenarios were likely to have. The scenarios included:

  • Rebuilding as usual, in which existing recovery plan and historical growth trends guide the anticipated development patterns;
  • Managed retreat and urban density, in which disaster survivors are incentivized to move to lower-risk locations, while land use planning and incentives promote infill development in existing urban nodes; and
  • Resilience Nodes, in which communities rebuild some housing in high-risk areas but incorporate robust wildfire mitigation features, including development clusters surrounded by defensible space.

The report finds that pursuing either the “Managed Retreat” or “Resilience Nodes” pathways can reduce fire risk and household costs for residents, when compared with the “rebuilding as usual” scenario, while also helping to meet housing and climate goals. While the “Managed Retreat” scenario provides the largest safety and climate benefits, it presents new displacement risks for residents. The “Resilience Nodes” scenario offers the most potential for economic growth, with fewer social equity impacts, but also delivers less of a guarantee of lower future fire risks.”

Fire rebuilds look more dismal everyday, due to Board of Forestry new Rules (public hearing June 22), the State’s onerous new septic requirements (public hearing June 23), and denial of insurance to areas the State deems “too risky”.  If you care about being able to live in the rural areas in the future, and help take care of them, join in these hearings if you can.  

NO PARKING SPACES REQUIRED IN FUTURE RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENTS?
If AB 1401 legislation is approved, no city or county could require new developments to provide any minimum number of parking spaces in most cases.  Introduced by Assemblywoman Laura Friedman, here is the hammer to Government Code for local control over developers:

“65863.3.
 (a) A local government shall not impose a minimum automobile parking requirement, or enforce a minimum automobile parking requirement, on residential, commercial, or other development if the parcel is located within one-half mile walking distance of public transit.”

Think about what that could mean in downtown Santa Cruz and the unincorporated County neighborhood areas.

And quickly,….

Slavery continued after Juneteenth…maybe changing the date of our Country’s celebration of the end of slavery is worth examining?

Tracing Center | Where in the U.S. did slavery still exist after Juneteenth?

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A PUBLIC HEARING ON ZOOM.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK AND JUST DO SOMETHING.

Happy Summer Solstice! 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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June 15

#166 / Hello, Neighbors

The heartfelt appeal below comes from a posting on the web-based application Nextdoor

Hello Neighbors, I have a question. What is driving up home prices in Santa Cruz? What is driving prices up 30%-50% over the past two to three years? Who is buying these homes? … I keep a close eye on houses and have a great real estate agent, but now that I am in a position to buy a house the prices keep going up with multiple offers over the asking price and I wonder how anyone from Santa Cruz County can keep up. A standard raise at work is between 5%-and 8% each year – nowhere near the increase in home prices. Several houses on Zillow on the market now are priced above 50% of what they sold for a few years ago. Congratulations to all the people who bought homes and are making a 50% profit in such a short period of time, which is great for you. And I don’t blame anyone for taking the advantage of increased demand and making such a handsome profit on their investment. My rent is more than many mortgages (over $5K a month) and I am grateful I can afford this but am losing hope that I’ll be able to buy a house in my hometown. My young adult daughters were born and raised here and I always thought Santa Cruz would be our home that I would have a home base for them to return to. I would like to know though, where sellers are going and who is able to afford to pay $1,500,000 for a modest home? Thank you for your answers and insights.

Over a hundred comments were promptly posted in response. They included the following: 
 

  • Wealthy workers from Silicon Valley (and elsewhere) are buying second homes in Santa Cruz and outbidding local people. 
  • Wealthy workers from Silicon Valley, who can outbid local residents for housing, are moving over here because they can now work remotely and who wouldn’t rather live in Santa Cruz?
  • Wealthy workers from Silicon Valley, who can outbid local working families for housing, are choosing to buy in Santa Cruz because the prices here are less than in the Silicon Valley, and who wouldn’t rather live in Santa Cruz?
  • Wealthy workers from Silicon Valley are cashing out stock, and think Santa Cruz real estate is a good investment. It’s a great place to park their money. With all those dollars, they can easily outbid local residents.

 
My sense is that all of these responses are right on target. The common element is that in a “market economy,” which is where we live, those who can pay more than others get the goods that are available. Those who can’t pay more don’t get the goods! With few exceptions, Santa Cruz residents trying to buy a home in Santa Cruz are simply unable to outbid those from the Silicon Valley (and elsewhere) whose incomes are vastly greater than the incomes of Santa Cruz workers. A working family relying upon a Santa Cruz income will almost inevitably be unable to purchase a home here. They will simply be outbid. This is what gave rise to the heartfelt appeal I have reprinted from Nextdoor.

Is there anything to be done? 

As many, if not most of us, have noticed, our economy does not distribute its economic benefits anywhere near equally. Though we are definitely “all in this together” where our economic system is concerned, a very small percentage of the population gets almost all of the money that the economy produces. Others get hardly anything. Since we do live in a market economy, it’s natural that those with more money get to buy what they want, while others are not able to buy even what they need. The only real solution to this problem is to change the massive income inequality that makes it impossible for ordinary working families to buy a home. I support national legislation to accomplish just that. That’s what it will take.

Unfortunately, the Santa Cruz City Council is trying to solve the problem by placing faith in what is often called the “law of supply and demand.” That is another “market solution.” If we just build a lot more new housing, the Council reasons, there will be more supply, and surely that will bring the price down. The census bureau tells us, however, that Santa Cruz County has a total population of about 273,000, and that the median income of Santa Cruz County residents is about $82,000 per year. Given this, there is simply no way to provide a supply of housing that could let Santa Cruz County residents, with their rather modest incomes, outbid the 7,000,000+ residents of the Silicon Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area, many of whom have incomes far greater than $82,000 per year. 

In fact, trying to lower prices by letting the developers build more (and the State Legislature, like the City Council, is trying to advance this agenda) does not mean appreciably more affordable housing for local residents. Instead, it means more local impacts on water, traffic, parking, and public services, more local costs for taxpayers to absorb, and more existing neighborhoods made less congenial. And the kicker is that these new developments quite often demolish existing, modest single family homes, to make way for housing that will be sold to non-Santa Cruz residents, those from the Silicon Valley (and elsewhere) whose incomes let them outbid working families with Santa Cruz level incomes.

When I think of the massive challenges that we must face and overcome, global warming always comes to my mind first. I next think of the massive wealth and income inequality that is undermining national unity, and that is destroying our local communities from within. 

Including my own local community. 

The heartfelt appeal from Nextdoor is a cry of anguish. We need to make that cry of anguish resound from the lowest to the highest levels of our politics and government, and we need to deal with the wealth and income inequalities that are not only driving Americans apart, but that are helping to destroy our local communities.  As with global warming, the extent of the changes we must make are daunting. 

But that is what we need to do!

And in the meantime, let’s stop destroying our neighborhoods in the false hope that “market solutions” for our affordable housing crisis will work. For-profit developers are the problem, not the solution. When developers want approval for a new development, here’s what I think the rule should be. For nonprofit developers planning to produce new housing units – housing that will be permanently price-restricted, and that can be rented or purchased by local residents who have local incomes – I think the answer should probably be “yes.” Build it.

When for-profit developers ask for approval, urging on their mega-projects, designed for the market economy (the economy in which those with the most money will get the goods) I think the answer should probably be “no.” 

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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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

SUMMER

“And so with the sunshine and the great bursts of leaves growing on the trees, just as things grow in fast movies, I had that familiar conviction that life was beginning over again with the summer.”
-F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby 

“I almost wish we were butterflies and liv’d but three summer days – three such days with you I could fill with more delight than fifty common years could ever contain.”
-John Keats, Bright Star: Love Letters and Poems of John Keats to Fanny Brawne 

“Summer will end soon enough, and childhood as well.”
-George R.R. Martin, A Game of Thrones 

“A man says a lot of things in summer he doesn’t mean in winter.”
-Patricia Briggs, Dragon Blood 

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Technology is frickin’ amazing! This is “A Day at the Beach” from circa 1899, upscaled and enhanced. The jerky movements of early film are gone, and this looks like actual people! I am absolutely floored.


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

June 16 – 22, 2021

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…North Coast Ocean property for sale, Santa Cruz Fire Issues, Goodbye Scott MacClelland. GREENSITE…on tourism: Juneau and Santa Cruz. KROHN… keep fighting to preserve the downtown Farmer’s Market STEINBRUNER… Big new Kaiser medical facility PATTON…Legacy: Help Wanted. EAGAN… Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES… “Oceans”

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“GAL USHERETTES” AT SANTA CRUZ’S WRIGLEY PLANT. The old photo credit calls them “Gal Usherettes”. It was taken April 26, 1955. The plant was built in 1955 and operated until 1996. It was located next to the rail line where it received and shipped its 40 million sticks of gum daily.                     
                                       
photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.
Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE June 14

NORTH COASTAL PROPERTY FOR SALE.
I’d planned for months to ask if anyone thinks the current County Board of Supervisors and our Santa Cruz City Council would today approve the 10,000 homes and full development of The Wilder property that we prevented back in 1969 and was then turned into Wilder State Park. Now we have a similar threat. The Dreyfus Group headed by Michael Dreyfus has put 214 acres of our North Coast up for sale. This coastal property lies between Wilder Ranch and the Long Marine Lab (Seymour Discovery Center). It’s right there with DeAnza Mobile Home Park, Natural Bridges, and Grey Whale Ranch. Its only one hour from Silicon Valley where Dreyfus is based. Go to the website, watch the video, it’s called California Coast Retreat…  

Note the appeal to use the property as an “entertainment center”! Maybe that means a heliport for Jeff Bezos or a new Beach Boardwalk? At any rate, I did some research about the California Coastal Commission and found “The Coastal Commission’s jurisdiction regulates land use within a defined “coastal zone” extending inland up to five miles, it has the authority to control construction of any type, including buildings, housing, roads, as well as fire and erosion abatement structures, and can issue fines for unapproved construction. It has been called the single most powerful land-use authority in the United States, due to its purview over vast environmental assets and extremely valuable real estate”.

No matter what, we need to keep abreast of what’s happening to this part of our County and community. The Land Trust should be aware, bike groups who use bike trails should watch out, we all need to be very ready for just about anything. Look again at the Dreyfus/Sothebey projects around the USA….would we want to be any part of those? 

SANTA CRUZ FIRE ISSUES. Becky Steinbruner wrote about the Grand Jury report on our city’s fire issues last week. For anyone who missed it… go here to read it. We’re facing a big and threatening fire season and need all the info we can get. 

GOODBYE SCOTT MacCLELLAND. Scott was a longtime friend, we met way back in the early ‘70’s at dozens of musical events. He got me the role of program host at KBOQ back in 1985. His official obituary says, “Michael Scott MacClelland took his final breath the afternoon of June 6, 2021. His wife of 53 years, Judy, his daughter, Rebecca, and son, Joshua, were by his side. Born in Los Angeles in 1942 and spending his youth there and in San Diego, Scott found his love for classical music as a teen. He met Judy, who had arrived in Coronado from Kansas to teach high school French, at a lecture and the rest is history. They were married with Judy’s father, an Episcopal priest, officiating and enjoyed a reception at the Hotel del Coronado. From there they spent a short time in Redwood City then landed on the Monterey Peninsula in 1972 where Scott made a career in classical music and the arts as a radio announcer, program director, critic, teacher, writer, and publisher”. All of the Arts and Music in the Monterey Bay area will miss him very much. 

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.

TENTACLES. (HULU SINGLE). So there’s this homeless guy in LA who gets his girlfriend Tara to move into his parent’s old house. And she’s really a monster who makes snakes crawl out of his ears and mouth. There are so many of these women turned monster movies I’m surprised there isn’t more rejection of the basic plot. Skip this one too as long as you are at it.

THE CONJURING: THE DEVIL MADE ME DO IT. (58RT) Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson have made careers out of Conjuring movies. This one (of three) actually has some very scary scenes even though we’re watching at home. Somebody said it’s like The Exorcist with more ghosts. It sticks to the investigating of ghosts as usual and there are not many twists and turns, but it’ll take your mind of your masks and being in public again.

LISEY’S STORY. (APPLE TV SERIES) (55RT). This brand new series is from Stephen King’s best seller and stars Julienne Moore plus Clive Owen. He’s a famous novel writer who was shot in a crowd scene and Julienne keeps remembering past events that have curious twists. It’ll remind you of John Lennon’s death and I’d predict that the remaining series will be well worth watching.

DOMINA. (PRIME VIDEO SERIES). (86RT) This was actually filmed in Rome in July 2020.It’s all about the friends and enemies of Julius Caesar and what happened after his assassination. They are all there in 44BC, Nero, Cicero, Cassius, Antigone, and more. It lacks any dignity that a Roman Government would have had plus they use the fuck word every 20 seconds, which is more than odd and out of date. Language authorities tell us that the word fuck was not used until 1475 AD. It could have been another Game of Thrones which it tries hard to copy but fails in its contemporary language and acting.

WHITSTABLE PEARL. (PRIME VIDEO SERIES) Another mysterious death/maybe murder involving a woman detective. (88RT). Filmed in Whitstable, England. She runs a restaurant plus a detective agency. A much loved guy is found drowned and mysteriously tied to a boats anchor. The detective faces all kinds of odds and obstacles as she works to find out who actually did murder him. I’ll again predict that this new series works out well. Go for it

PANIC. (AMAZON PRIME SERIES) Teen age high school action thriller that has mostly 20 and 30 year olds playing the parts. The “kids” create a literally death defying night of dangerous stunts. It all happens in Carp, Texas ( a fictional town) and some stunts are genuinely scary. Each episode ends right at the critical moment when the teen is about to do the stunt. You won’t learn anything but you’ll stop thinking about masks for a while. (68RT) 

HERSELF. (AMAZON PRIME SINGLE). A very distraught mother of two daughters splits from her very abusive husband and works hard to build herself a new house from ground up. He’s a genuine psycho and he’ll never change, probably!! So it’s her story, a very Irish story (filmed in Ireland) touching, heartfelt, well-acted, not too significant but go for it.

 SPECIAL NOTE….Don’t forget that when you’re not too sure of a plot or need any info on a movie to go to Wikipedia. It lays out the straight/non hype story plus all the details you’ll need including which server (Netflix, Hulu, 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.  

UNDINE. (PRIME VIDEO SINGLE). Based on a mermaid type myth this love story gone wrong takes place in Berlin. Undine is a guide in a city institution and is in love with a guy who can’t ever leave her without dying. It rambles on and on underwater and on land but goes nowhere worth watching. It got an undeserving 89RT. You choose but I’ll bet you won’t stay with it all the way though.

THE LAST THING HE WANTED. (NETFLIX SINGLE). Ben Affleck has a small part in this boring saga. Anne Hathaway and Willem Dafoe help carry the plot which comes from Joan Didion’s novel. Anne is a secret reporter working in Costa Rica in 1984 trying to get the goods on a big time power figure. Loose script, and obvious ending. Avoid it. 

SHE. (NETFLIX SERIES). A beautiful and unhappily married Hindi woman in Mumbai (formerly Bombay) is a part time police employee. She’s pressured to pose as a prostitute to trap a big time drug king. Her sister is a college student and her husband is a drunk. She gets into much trouble and then begins to realize that she’s very human and capable of falling in love. It’s twisted and complex and develops slowly over the episodes but watch it anyway. 

TO THE LAKE. (NETFLIX SERIES). It has a rare 100RT rating!!! A terrible and almost familiar pandemic hits Moscow. The city is blocked off and victims have eyes that are white! We follow a very split family that goes through many relationship issues as well as trying to escape the white eyed victims. There’s an autistic son, an extra cute daughter all running and avoiding their enemies. They end up in a refuge ship!! You’ll think constantly about the Covid scene we are living in. Go for it.

I’M YOUR WOMAN (AMAZON PRIME SERIES). A double dealing husband brings home a new baby and then he disappears. The wife then has to go on the run with some thug to hide from husband’s would be killers. The plot thickens and thins and twists beyond belief. Not a great series and I lost track after about three episodes. (81RT)

TREEHOUSE (HULU SINGLE). Remember that you have to watch or skip ads on HULU.
A hugely successful chef/restaurateur is also a womanizer. One of his “dates” committed suicide and her sister and women friends give him drugs and they become witches. They do almost drive him permanently insane. It’ll remind you of the Windsor Mayor Foppoli and his Winery and all the sexual charges against him. And it’s very poorly acted too.

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June 14

NORTH TO ALASKA
The old saying that you can take the person out of politics but you can’t take politics out of the person came to mind on my recent trip to Alaska’s Inside Passage. Delighted to escape at least for a while the endless local political battles, the mountains of environmental documents, the tedious city council zoom meetings, I looked forward to 7 days of internet-free adventures on a small boat with 45 passengers and crew exploring fiords, seeing glaciers while they last, surrounded by nothing except nature at its most wild and spectacular. I was not disappointed. 

With mandatory full Covid vaccinations and a negative test 3 days prior to sailing for all passengers and crew, we were a Covid free bubble and soon enjoyed the simple pleasures of maskless conversation and close encounters of the human kind.


Leaving Margerie Glacier, Inside Passage, Alaska

The trip started and ended in Juneau, the capital of Alaska although you would not expect that given its population of 32,000, about the size of Santa Cruz when I arrived here in 1975.  

The first indication of a political battle in progress was signs in shop windows exclaiming “Don’t Sign the Petition! Curious about what people were being exhorted to not sign it did not take long to discover that a group of locals was circulating a petition to limit the size, capacity and time in port of cruise ships in Juneau. The group, named Cruise Control had a few days left out of a 30-day time limit to gather 3,000 signatures in order to qualify for the ballot in this Charter city. I already felt at home. 

I was mindful at every turn of how blessed I was to have had this trip postponed from last year due to Covid. This year, for the first time ever and probably never again, it was possible to explore Juneau and experience the Inside Passage with a complete absence of large cruise ships and all that they entail. The wharf that runs the length of the Juneau waterfront was un-crowded. The shops that were open had few customers. Many restaurants were closed. The hikers on the trails into the mountains were locals. At sea we saw no other boats except one small fishing boat since it was too early for salmon season. I could only imagine the difference that over a million additional visitors in massive cruise ships would make. 

An argument can be made that it is selfish to want fewer people just as it’s a bit bizarre to complain about “all this traffic!” when one is also in a car. However, numbers matter. One cruise ship can unload two thousand passengers whereas the boat I was on unloaded forty-five. A UCSC of ten thousand students, or even the current nineteen thousand, has a different impact than the University’s projected growth to twenty eight thousand students. Size matters. I felt less sympathetic towards the Juneau local shopkeepers for their lack of buying customers when I learned that the ones closed are owned by the Cruise Lines.

The Juneau petition failed to gather the necessary signatures by the due date. The tourist industry and the Cruise Lines breathed a sigh of relief. Most locals who engaged with me on the topic sided with the tourist industry. They bought the line that the economy depended on big cruise ships. When I pushed a bit and said that it’s a question of balance…that maybe a few less would still maintain a healthy economy while not losing the charm of Juneau they granted that point. Juneau’s economy is still fairly diversified with a robust fishing processing industry and as the capital, a robust (one might claim bloated) employment in civil service. 

Having experienced Juneau and the Inside Passage with no cruise ships, plus the beauty of the snow covered mountains after a record winter snowfall I probably would not make a return visit after the cruise ships return. 

As I sat in Santa Cruz’s beach-bound traffic on Saturday with all roads jammed with visitors I wondered how much more the tourist industry, the Chamber of Commerce and the city’s Economic Development Department can cram into this small town before the law of diminishing returns comes into play. Certainly the impact on locals is of no concern to them. While not at all begrudging the hard-working folks from over the hill wanting to come to the beach, I note it’s the affluent tourists that are being courted and the working class discouraged. Turn the Wharf into an eco-tourist destination; end support for Woodies on the Wharf; bulldoze the funky old familiar restaurants and shops; upgrade with mixed-use high-rise developments along the river selling craft beers and high-end edibles. How long before cruise ships shatter the unbroken line of the blue horizon? 

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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June 14

IF YOU WANT A FRIEND IN WASHINGTON, GET A DOG.

Dog-Day Afternoon

My dog, Jester, was part-Dachshund, part-Chihuahua, and part Chocolate Lab, but we settled on calling him a San Francisco Retriever shortly after retrieving him as a stray from an animal shelter in the Mission.  On a warm, windy, clear-blue Sunday morning this week he left us. It was at the beginning of his nineteenth year, quite a run for such a carefree spirit and small dog who enjoyed impersonating a much larger one. Jester was quite a prize for two young girls, one about the same size as he when we got him. They adored the SF Retriever, perhaps too much sometimes, running their hands over and over his brow and banging their heads against his snout. At times, it seemed tormenting, but Jester seemed to like it all, his tail wagging constantly like a propeller starting up on one of those WWI planes. Is he about to take off I wondered? Through holiday parties dressed up as Santa, to the Halloween pumpkin costumes and being pushed along Pacific Avenue in our old stroller, he was quite the sight. Jester also attended neighborhood meetings, a few city council meetings, and was even allowed into closed session one time when he was sick and couldn’t stay home. Oh, the state secrets contained in that canine’s head when it touched down Sunday for the final time atop his favorite blanket! He simply refused to eat or drink anything in the closing days of his demise. Should we take him to the animal hospital? He whimpered only once or twice, but showed no outward signs of physical pain, while his last functioning eye still blinked his own brand of dog love. He knew what that was, and I and the rest of the family knew too. While it was difficult to watch, it was the right place for Rachel and me to be, next to Jester. It had been a good run, but passing his empty bed these last couple of days, and him not there, well, that’s been tough. Longing, through habit, now gives way to loneliness. He was a member of the family, a friendly face when the world had turned sour, a Covid-less being you could cuddle with when fears of the disease were too overwhelming. He listened well, and on occasion barked back advice, and if I understood his bark I blinked my eyes and he would blink back reflecting that sense of, ‘okay, he finally gets it,’ without rolling his eyes as some fellow humans might do. We buried Jester under our pomegranate tree wrapped in a white sheet and lying in a US postal box. Rachel remarked that we were mailing him off to a better place.

Real Marvel Heroes to the Rescue:

Campaign for Sustainable Transportation (CFST), Downtown Commons Advocates (DCA), Don’t Bury the Library (DBTL)

These groups are formidable, in and of themselves, but when joining forces, they can cause the powers that be–the city manager, public works director, planning director, and economic development director–to lose a bit of sleep. Those combined municipal forces have begun a search and destroy mission like few I have seen before in this town. It’s an unrelenting, take-no-prisoners approach in the world of bureaucratic-political Jiu jitsu. The vision these three community groups have laid before the community appears to be three-fold. DBTL‘s simply demands that Measure S funds approved by Santa Cruz voters to remodel the existing downtown library that has been at the Church and Locust site for more than one hundred years be used for that purpose. The remodel could open up its front door to city hall across the street and form anchors on a great small-town civic plaza, both would in-turn be shouldered by the civic auditorium and the stately columns of the Prophet Elias Greek Orthodox Church. CFST is opposed, as I believe most Santa Cruzans are, to any more last century cement garages, and the group is advocating for at least 150 units of affordable housing on Lot 7, behind Chianti’s restaurant on Front Street. Finally, DCA has a grand vision of a downtown park–preserve the heritage trees and create a permanent home for the Farmer’s market. Altogether, it is quite a grand vision that these three groups, along with the Sierra Club and SC Climate Action Network have been fighting pitched political battles with city staff requesting a more transparent process that allows the community to be first in the planning process. The struggle to preserve history, protect heritage trees, and save our Farmer’s Market’s current location continues.

Empire Strikes Back
On June 8th, Elizabeth Smith, Communications Manager for the city of Santa Cruz issued a press release: “City Selects Affordable Housing Partner for Library Mixed Use Project and Double Units to Up to 107.” This big, bad opposition has had an effect. The city keeps upping he number of affordable units, which means they are finally getting the point, but it’s where they want to build them that’s the problem. Another, huge bright spot in this press release is that there is no mention of the 5-story garage. It would appear the city has heeded the climate change community’s admonitions as well as the goals of their own Climate Action Plan, and they are abandoning the idea of building a garage on Lot 4. Or are they? Is it another PR move to placate some, while deemphasizing the housing for automobiles? Mayor Donna Meyers, fake housing advocate Tim Willoughby who touts market rate under guise of affordable, and non-profit Eden Housing are all prominently featured in the city’s press release. No comments from public works or economic development were included as they have been most identified with the calamitous garage project. Could some city staff finally be getting it and are moving away from cars and towards designing projects for the people who live here now? Stay tuned.

No More Garages: The Initiative Process
Let’s ask the voters what they think. Pretty soon, a ballot initiative may be gathering signatures for a Nov. 2022 ballot measure that advocates for what many Santa Cruzans favor: saving the current location of the Downtown Farmer’s Market; keeping the library in its existing space along Center and Church streets; not building any new multi-level parking garages; and finally, ask voters to approve using any excess parking revenue funds to assist in the development of affordable housing. Now that’s a tall order, but this town has gone BIG before. We defeated a costly desalination proposal; approved acquisition of greenbelt lands including the Pogonip and the Moore Creek Uplands; and voted to tax ourselves to support public schools more than once. Vote yes on the Green Initiative and sign the petition!

“We have an obligation to do the most we can for working people, civil rights, and the planet with the power people have entrusted to us. We should lower the age for Medicare, roll back voter suppression, and create millions of jobs w/ infrastructure that combats climate change.” (June 13)


(Chris Krohn is a father, writer, activist, and was on the Santa Cruz City Councilmember from 1998-2002. Krohn was Mayor in 2001-2002. He’s been running the Environmental Studies Internship program at UC Santa Cruz for the past 16 years. Krohn was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. That term ended when the development empire struck back with luxury condo developer money combined with the real estate industry’s largesse. They paid to recall Krohn and Drew Glover from the Santa Cruz city council in 2019.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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June 14

COUNTY PARKS …ANY MONEY IS GOOD MONEY, EVEN IF IT MAKES NO SENSE AND VIOLATES COUNTY CODE PROTECTING COASTAL PRAIRIE HABITAT?
Sadly, the County Parks Commission was not allowed to vote on the proposed Regional Transportation Commission (RTC) off-site mitigation tree planting at the Anna Jean Cummings Park that would convert precious Coastal Prairie habitat (protected by County Code) into a riparian area that will require irrigation.  The item was before the Parks Commissioners at the request of Supervisor Manu Koenig, but Parks Director Gaffney made it an informational item, not an action item.  When Commissioners and the public expressed concern and frustration that the deal had all been made without their knowledge, Mr. Gaffney explained that former Supervisor John Leopold and his Parks Commissioner Mariah Roberts had known about it all along. 

Ms. Roberts, now leading the Friends of Santa Cruz County Parks, spoke that any money for parks is good money and was grateful for the $40,000 annual payments that the RTC will make for five years to the Parks Dept. as part of the Highway 1 mitigation of widening in the Arana Rodeo Gulch riparian area.  

Contact Supervisor Manu Koenig with your thoughts.  manu.koenig@santacruzcounty.us,  831-454-2200

PUBLIC COMMENT NOW OPEN FOR NEW LARGE KAISER MEDICAL COMPLEX AND FOUR STORY PARKING GARAGE IN LIVE OAK
How will a four-story medical facility that will be open 8am-8pm but with certain services offered during longer hours affect the traffic on the Soquel Avenue Frontage Road, which is already heavily congested during commute hours with Live Oak residents and businesses trying to avoid 41st Avenue snarls?  

Take a look at the Draft EIR, now available for public comment until August 9, and weigh in with your thoughts.

CEQA Documents Open for Public Review

Start with the Executive Summary, which lists Impacts and Mitigations; (my comments are bolded)

Page ES-18 and ES-19: 
Impact GEO-7. The project site overlies Pleistocene-era marine terrace deposits, a geologic unit with high paleontological sensitivity. Ground disturbance has the potential to disturb intact fossils. This impact would be less than significant with implementation of mitigation to identify and preserve potential fossil resources.  

Paleontological Monitoring. All grading and excavation that would involve disturbance below the existing grade, in areas where native soils would be encountered, shall be monitored on a full-time basis by a qualified paleontological monitor. Should no fossils be observed during the first 50 percent of such excavations, paleontological monitoring could be reduced to weekly spot-checking under the discretion of the qualified paleontologist. Monitoring shall be conducted by a qualified paleontological monitor, who is defined as an individual who has experience with collection and salvage of paleontological resources.

This is good news, if the paleontological monitor pays attention, rather than staring at a cell phone all the time at a distance…think Aptos Village Project and Swenson’s mess.

PAGE ES-20:
Impact GHG-1. The project would not generate new, ongoing sources of GHG emissions that would have a direct or indirect significant impact on the environment. This impact would be less than significant.  Not mitigation required.

What??? How can installing a four-story 700+ parking garage not be anticipating any increase to Greenhouse Gas Emission???  Wouldn’t adding in local bus service to the new medical facility be a good idea, and a reasonable mitigation??? Dig into the EIR further at page 341 to see the bad news that does not appear to get any better with mitigations.

Page ES-20:  
Impact HAZ-2. Construction and operations on the project site could cause exposure to existing contamination on site. Impacts would be less than significant with mitigation incorporate

HAZ-2 Mitigations: 
HAZ-2c Site Remediation. Prior to construction of the project, additional hazardous material site evaluations shall be implemented, per the recommendations included in the Phase II ESA dated October 25, 2018, by Terracon, following removal of existing barriers to full site access: Conduct further evaluation of the location and conditions of the suspected drain and sump. Access the interior portions of the site with hand sampling / limited access equipment to facilitate soil sampling of TPH, VOC, and lead within the site tenant operation areas. Conduct additional surface soil sampling in the vicinity of boring SV10 and inaccessible portions of the site, including tenants who perform landscaping operations, to evaluate the presence or absence of organochlorine pesticides. Evaluate groundwater for the presence of petroleum hydrocarbons and solvents. Advance a minimum of two deep soil borings using hollow-stem auger drilling equipment to a depth of 75 feet below ground surface. Investigate soil vapor in the interior of the tenant operation areas. 

I am glad Kaiser is paying attention.  Soquel Creek Water District Board member Lather raised this concern about PureWater Soquel Project’s wastewater treatment facility that will be a couple of blocks away from the medical facility…she was ignored, and the EIR lacked any attention to it.

Page ES-22:
Impact HAZ-3. The project site is located within one-quarter mile of an existing school, and demolition of existing uses could emit airborne asbestos or lead. Impacts would be less than significant with incorporation of mitigation.  

Implementation of mitigation measure HAZ-2a, below, is required. 

HAZ-2a Asbestos and Lead. Pursuant to Cal/OSHA regulations, each structure constructed before 1978 within the project site shall inspected by a qualified environmental specialist for the presence of ACMs and LBPs prior to obtaining a demolition permit from the County of Santa Cruz Planning Department.

I am glad Kaiser cares about following the law regarding notification of nearby schools…Soquel Creek Water District’s PureWater Soquel Project a couple of blocks away arrogantly did not notify any such school, and will have multiple large storage tanks of hazardous chemicals on site.

Page ES-23:
Impact HWQ-1. Project operation could result in polluted runoff and contamination of downstream waterbodies and thus violate water quality standards or waste discharge requirements. Impacts would be less than significant with mitigation. 

HWQ-1 Operations and Maintenance Agreement. Prior to completion and issuance of the certificate of occupancy for the proposed project, an Operational and Maintenance Agreement with the County of Santa Cruz shall be prepared. This agreement shall be recorded against the property with the County Recorder’s Office and shall be binding on all subsequent owners of the property. This Maintenance Agreement shall remain in place for the life of the project. The maintenance agreement shall set forth a schedule of maintenance tasks, to be performed by the medical building maintenance staff, which are required for safe and efficient function of the on-site stormwater treatment and detention facilities. It shall also specify procedures for yearly inspections and record keeping of inspections, maintenance and repairs performed. Operation and Maintenance Agreement shall conform to all the requirements outlined in the County of Santa Cruz Design Criteria.

Page ES-24:
Impact LU-2. Based on the current project, if approved by the County the proposed project would be substantially consistent with applicable land use policies of the County of Santa Cruz 1994 General Plan, and would not conflict with land use policies that are in effect to avoid or mitigate environmental effects on environment and natural resources. Therefore, impacts would be less than significant.

Really?  What about the impact of erasing a previous Affordable Housing Overlay District on the site that was supposed to provide 102 affordable residential units?  Where will those be built now?  Shouldn’t that be discussed in Mitigations??

Page ES-29:
Impact UTIL-4. The proposed project would not generate solid waste in excess of State or local standards, or in excess of the capacity of local infrastructure, including the Buena Vista Landfill. The proposed project would not impair the attainment of solid waste reduction goals and would comply with Federal, State, and local statutes and regulations related to solid waste. Impacts would be less than significant.  No mitigation required.

Really??? What about all the medical waste???

Page ES-29:
Cumulative Impacts. Collectively, reasonably foreseeable future development and growth in the water service area would generate demand that exceeds supply such that the City would need to develop new or additional water supplies. The development and timing of new or additional water supplies are unknown at this time. Development of water supplies could result in significant environmental impacts. Accordingly, the cumulative impact would be potentially significant and unavoidable. The proposed project would contribute to total water demand, and thus potential water shortages in the future alongside other development and growth in the service area. Therefore, the proposed project would contribute to the significant and unavoidable cumulative impact.

No mitigation is available or feasible to implement.  Impact is significant and unavoidable.

Really?? What about double-plumbing to recycle water internally, or rainwater catchment for landscaping?

NOW ABOUT THOSE TRAFFIC PROBLEMS???

Take a look at the study in Section 4.14, and begin on page 4.14.24 of the document (page 341):

No study intersections would degrade from acceptable LOS to unacceptable LOS under the Existing Plus Project conditions. 

However, as shown in Table 4.14-6, the following intersections would continue to operate at an unacceptable LOS based on applicable standards under Existing Plus Project conditions:

  • Soquel Drive & Paul Sweet Road/Highway 1 On-Off Ramps (AM & PM Peaks) 
  • Soquel Avenue/40th Avenue & Gross Road (PM Peak) 
  • 41st Avenue & Gross Road (AM & PM Peaks) 
  • Brommer Street & 30th Avenue (PM Peak)

As previously noted, the Existing Plus Project conditions presented in Table 4.14-6 do not account for proposed roadway and intersection modifications. The conditions in Table 4.14-6 also do not account for other future planned roadway improvements and modifications that are separate and not associated with the proposed project. 

As described in Section 2.5.7, Roadway and Road Frontage Improvements, the proposed project includes installing a diagonal diverter at the intersection of Soquel Avenue/40th Avenue & Gross Road. The diverter would extend from the northwest corner of the intersection to the southeast corner. The diverter would be designed to prevent cut-through traffic on Gross Road through the residential neighborhood to the east along Gross Road. The diverter would also eliminate the congestion caused by the four-way stop currently in place at the intersection. With the diverter, all movements at the intersection would be uncontrolled; therefore, no delay would be attributed to this intersection. 

According to the Transportation Impact and Operational Analysis, with the proposed intersection improvement, traffic deficiencies at the intersection resulting from the proposed project trips would be eliminated.  (Really?? You can make anything work on paper, right?)

Additionally, according to the Transportation Impact and Operational Analysis, with the proposed intersection improvement, the travel time from Soquel Drive and Rodeo Gulch Road to the southbound Highway 1 on-ramp would decrease by approximately 44 percent. (Huh?? That intersection is on the other side of Highway 1 and would seemingly not apply to the Kaiser Medical traffic.)

As described in Section 2.5.7, Roadway and Road Frontage Improvements, the proposed project includes installing overhead signs and roadway markings at the intersection of 41st Avenue & Gross Road. The signs and markings would improve lane selection and use on the eastbound approach of Gross Road. The lane selection would be for southbound Highway 1 and northbound Highway 1 movements. A physical barrier would be installed between the limit line, which is the white line that appears across the street before an intersection or crosswalk, and the divergence of the Highway 1 southbound on-ramp on 41st Avenue to prevent vehicles from jumping the queue for southbound on-ramp traffic. 

In addition, the City of Capitola received a grant to install an adaptive signal system along 41st Avenue and this intersection is included in its implementation plan. The adaptive signal system would provide better coordination of traffic flow along the corridor because it measures real time vehicular demand and proportions/adjusts signal timing. (But what will the developer do to mitigate those 700+ cars and supply trucks associated with this massive development?)

Read this important EIR and submit your comments and concerns

PUBLIC MEETING JUNE 23 RE: NEW COUNTY SEPTIC SYSTEM PLANS AND EXPENSIVE NEW REQUIREMENTS 
The second draft of the Santa Cruz County Local Area Management Plan (LAMP) for Onsite Wastewater Treatment Systems is available for public comment. This matters tremendously to rural dwellers on septic systems, especially those rebuilding in the CZU Fire area.  Nearly all new building would require alternative mound systems costing $50,000 – $85,000 and annual County inspections and large fees.

A virtual public meeting will be held Wednesday, June 23, 5:30 – 7:00 pm. This meeting will be conducted as a video conference with a call-in option. A link and call-in information will be posted on this web site

Comments are due on July 11, 2021. 


CRANE ACCIDENT AT SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT’S PUREWATER SOQUEL PROJECT SITE CLOSED THE ROAD BUT WENT UNREPORTED
Last Friday, June 11, Soquel Creek Water District’s construction contractor building a new sewage lift station on Soquel Avenue Frontage Road tipped a crane over and blocked the road.  I was shocked to learn that neither the construction crew nor the Water District reported the accident, failing to address a fuel spill at the site or to provide traffic control for those who had to detour at the closure points of 17th Avenue and also Chanticleer Avenue.  Take a look at the attached photos.  

How can the public trust that Soquel Creek Water District will be transparent and accountable about other problems that arise as this three-year Modified PureWater Soquel Project progresses?  The District itself is in charge of making sure that the mitigations are met, monitored and enforced.  What could go wrong?  

The problem is that none of the mitigations regard the actual operation of the disgusting project that will cause multiple large tanks of hazardous chemicals to be transported, stored and used near three schools (but the District  failed to notify them), and will send effluent containing toxic chloramine that would likely kill all aquatic life if it leaks into the San Lorenzo River and multiple other stream crossings between the four-mile pressurized pipe journey to the Chanticleer wastewater treatment plant.

How can anyone trust Soquel Creek Water District or their contractors to do the right thing?

Contact the Board with your thoughts: <bod@soquelcreekwater.org> and copy Emma Olin <emmao@soquelcreekwater.org>

No traffic control here…

click here to continue (link expands, click again to collapse)

AND QUICKLY…..

What will these local Mayors discuss???  Will it be Woke?

Four Mayors Joint Town Hall Meeting

Thursday, June 17, 2021 – 6:00pm

(link is external)

Join Capitola’s Mayor Brooks, along with Santa Cruz Mayor Donna Meyers, Watsonville Mayor Jimmy Dutra, and Scotts Valley Mayor Derek Timm for a virtual town hall meeting and regional community update! We are pleased to announce that this event is hosted by Thomas Sage Pedersen of the Speak for Change (link is external) podcast. 

Watch on FaceBook Live *you do not need a Facebook account for this option*

To Join Zoom: 

follow this link.
Meeting ID: 837 3683 5797
Passcode: 846437
-OR-
Dial by your location
+1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)
+1 408 638 0968 US (San Jose)
Meeting ID: 837 3683 5797
Passcode: 846437

MAKE ONE CALL. WRITE ONE LETTER.  ATTEND A VIRTUAL MEETING AND ASK QUESTIONS (NO, IT’S NOT COMPLAINING…IT’S HOLDING PEOPLE ACCOUNTABLE).

MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE BY JUST DOING SOMETHING.

Cheers, Becky

Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes. She ran again in 2020 on a slightly bigger shoestring and got 1/3 of the votes.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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June 13

#164 / Legacy: Help Wanted! 

Recently, I visited an old college friend who now lives, during the winter months, in Sonoita, Arizona. During the rest of the year my friend lives in Duluth, Minnesota, where his children are located. Given the connections that Duluth has to Bob Dylan, I think I’ll have to make a visit up there, too, but I went down to Arizona for a few days, at the end of May, just to keep my friend company during the last part of his Winter sojourn this year.

Vegetation is sparse in Sonoita (and so is water, even more so than in California in this year of our mega-drought). In Sonoita, the winds blow, ferociously, for extended periods, and the total population is something like 800 people. Most of those who live in Sonoita are ranchers of one sort or another, or work in the few restaurants, motels, and retail stores – or are Border Patrol agents. Attending a woman’s barrel-racing event was the major entertainment on tap. Dinner was pizza at the “Velvet Elvis” restaurant in nearby Patagonia. Our main expedition was a visit to the “Trump Wall” in Nogales, which is right on the Mexican border, and which is the county seat of Santa Cruz County, Arizona. The picture below shows what that “Trump Wall” looks like. I will make no personal comment on what our former president said was “that beautiful wall.” Like Fox News puts it: you decide:

There are not too many people in Sonoita who want to discuss the “Great Decisions” questions or other such topics. My friend was pretty much starved for good discussion, and he produced an agenda of suggested discussion topics for my visit that contained thirty-three listings. One of these was “legacy.”

As I indicated at the outset, my friend is an “old” friend – and that is in both senses of the word. At this stage in our lives we are both “old,” chronologically, and my friend is thinking about the implications of that. He’s not trying to “duck” the issue, and neither am I. “Legacy” means what will we leave behind us, when we’re gone. Children and grandchildren figure significantly into the picture, of course, but so do questions about who will remember us, and for what reasons. My friend has had a notable career, and remains very active in work with the Friends Committee on National Legislation, and with the Quaker Universalist Fellowship – and with Voices From The Border. What about my legacy, he asked. 

Well, I said, I am hoping to be remembered for my time on the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors (twenty years, from 1975 to 1995), during which time I think Santa Cruz County exemplified what is possible when locally-based democratic self-government is alive and active. I donated 120 file boxes of my supervisorial records to the University of California, Santa Cruz Library, and an index to these records is available, online, under the following title: “The Gary Patton Political Papers.” I have a few other “legacy” type offerings available online, too, listed in the lefthand column of this blog. I told my friend that my hope was that someone, sometime, would write up a history of the politics of Santa Cruz County, from 1970 to the end of the 20th Century, because what happened in our community was truly extraordinary. 

At this point, my friend suggested that I should actively seek out someone to do exactly that. I said I thought I really couldn’t pay for that work! He suggested (being a great volunteer himself) that I should look for a volunteer. 

Well, that is an idea, and while I have no great expectations, why not? Getting a qualified person to volunteer to do that history is a long-shot idea that could work out – given that anything is possible, as I am fond of saying. 

Readers should consider this blog posting as a “help wanted” bulletin. Anyone who wants to do a great graduate thesis, ultimately publishable, I am sure, or who would otherwise like to write up the history of this extraordinary period in our local history, with lots of lessons applicable elsewhere, please don’t hesitate to get in touch. There is an important story to be told, I am certain of that. 

As an alternative, I suggest subscribing to this blog. In a way, I am trying to do that “legacy” thing on my own account, right here!

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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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

    Oceans

Humanity is like an ocean; if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty.
~Gandhi 

Advice from the Ocean:
Be shore of yourself.
Come out of your shell.
Take time to relax and coast.
Avoid pier pressure.
Sea life’s beauty.
Don’t get tide down.
Make waves!

~Author Unknown 

The sea is a desert of waves, A wilderness of water.  
~Langston Hughes

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I MEANT TO DO THAT!!! 😀 This one is my favorite, so many awesome saves in one little video!


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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