October 14 – 20, 2020

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…state proposition correction, no more You tubes, don’t bury the library, Cabrilho College board candidate, Wharf Impact report, our special bubble, many movies, streamers, and screamers. GREENSITE…on More Wharf Tall Tales. KROHN…Money and politics, state government and money, city council and money. STEINBRUNER…Purewater Soquel Creek project, local control of water, governor to take your land, homeowner insurance. Fire districts consolidate. PATTON…People and Percentages. EAGAN… evergreen Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”flies” 

...

OPENING DAY SANTA CRUZ MUNICIPAL WHARF (PIER) 1914. You can just barely make out the Boardwalk and their much shorter pier in the background. Note also there’s already a car for hire at this celebration. The bend in the wharf which is so prominent here is what has protected the wharf all these years by being angled into the approaching waves.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email photo@brattononline.com

DATELINE October 12
 
NO MORE YOU TUBES IN THE CORNER!  Almost forever I’ve been linking all of us to You Tubes in this upper right hand corner. No More. You Tube is too big a giant, too many ads, and not enough of the uniqueness and charm that I used to find every week. Wikipedia reports.. “YouTube and selected creators earn advertising revenue from Google AdSense, a program that targets ads according to site content and audience. The vast majority of its videos are free to view, but there are exceptions, including subscription-based premium channels, film rentals, as well as YouTube Music and YouTube Premium, subscription services respectively offering premium and ad-free music streaming, and ad-free access to all content, including exclusive content commissioned from notable personalities. 

As of February 2017, there were more than 400 hours of content uploaded to YouTube each minute, and one billion hours of content being watched on YouTube every day. As of October 2020, YouTube is the second-most popular website in the world, behind Google, according to Alexa Internet.[2] As of May 2019, more than 500 hours of video content are uploaded to YouTube every minute.[7] Based on reported quarterly advertising revenue, YouTube is estimated to have US$15 billion in annual revenues. 

PROPOSITION CORRECTION. It’s embarrassing but somehow last week the Friends Committee on Legislation recommendations on how to vote for our state propositions got messed up here on BrattonOnline. [20 and 21 ended up in the wrong order. Mea culpa! ~Gunilla]  Thanks to so many folks for letting us know about that. Here again is Friends Committee on Legislation of California link, and below how they suggest you vote.

Prop 14 NO
Prop 15 YES
Prop 16 YES
Prop 17 YES
Prop 18 YES
Prop 19 NO
Prop 20 NO
Prop 21 YES
Prop 22 NO
Prop 23 NO
Prop 24 NO
Prop 25 YES

With all the zillions of big bucks spent by those hidden industries to sell us their products and fill their portfolios it’s hard enough to ferret out the truth. The Friends Committee has been doing that for generations.

MOVIE THEATRE THOUGHTS. As avid a movie goer as I am and always have been I am surprised that neither of our two print purveyors The Sentinel and Good Times have printed any news at all about the opening of the Del Mar theatre and the closing of our Regal Cinema 9. I was anxious to see two of the films at the Del Mar and was again puzzled that Landmark was allowing NO PASSES for any films there. That usually happens when they don’t want critics to see and maybe ruin a film before the general public attends in possible droves. But now I’m thinking and so far avoiding going to the Del Mar. I think about the Covid up turned sneezes and coughs in the dark, the many door handles, the popcorn handled by at least two employees before I get mine. I wonder how many times the theater employees get pandemic tested…daily, weekly, before they hand us our tickets, our candy, and again, our open bagged popcorn. As I’ve mentioned elsewhere in my movie section down below most of the films being shown at our Del Mar and other open theaters are available online.

DON’T BURY THE LIBRARY ISSUE. Jean Brocklebank and friends sent this update.

Here’s a City Council Meetings History

The October 13 City Council meeting agenda still does not contain an item on the financials report that was requested of staff by Council way back at its June 23 meeting, to be reported “no later than three months.” 

Three months meant Council’s September 22 meeting. At that meeting, with no such information, staff tried to convince Council that staff first needed a $240,000 contract with a consultant, to have the consultant derive the financing information. With the public weighing in and asking how a quarter of a million dollars could be committed before they had the information requested in June, Council wisely agreed and didn’t approve staff’s request. Instead, after almost 3 hours of discussion, including the public comments, the Mayor made a motion, which passed unanimously and required staff to return in October with said financial information. That unanimously passed motion meant either the October 13th or 27th Council meeting. 

It is not happening this coming Tuesday Oct. 13, and that does not surprise us, because there is so much unknown about financing the complicated project. One might think that after almost four years of pushing this project, someone somewhere somehow would have pulled this funding stuff together so decision-makers (the City Council) could know what the project will likely cost and not have to rely on staff’s constant faith-based (we believe, we think, we hope) statements that all will be okay.

Tuesday’s  (Oct. 13) Council Agenda 

Although there is no financial information agenda item, there will be a City Manager’s report — but we doubt Bernal will have anything to say on the Mixed-Use Project’s financing information. That said, after years of surprises with this Taj Garage project, we’ll still be tuning in to the meeting on the 13th … just in case! If anyone is also interested in doing so, click HERE to view the agenda, including instructions on how to “attend” virtually.

On the agenda, the City Manager’s report should be about 12:30 pm. Also, note that Oral Communications will be held at or around 5:30 p.m. If anyone has any ongoing thoughts about the wise and sensible return to plans for a renovation of the existing library before we lose more Measure S funding (which diminishes as every month proceeds) then Oral Communications is a good place to say so! Especially as the city is in dire budget difficulties and no one knows how it will be able to manage a behemoth multi-storied project. After almost four years, the library continues to be held hostage to the mixed-use project. It is time to set it free”!

CABRILHO COLLEGE GOVERNING BOARD TRUSTEES. Not easy to read and decipher who’s best for the Cabrilho College Board of trustees. Reading through the list of endorsements is even more confusing.  I contacted folks I know who care a lot about and for our community college…they all support Diana Alfaro. Her website… https://www.diana4cabrillotrustee.com Such people as Donna Meyers, Cynthia Mathews, Carol Fuller, Zach Friend, George Ow, Teresa Thomae and Mark Mesti-Miller endorse her opponent for Area 4. That makes it easy!!!  

WHARF IMPACT REPORT. Carmella Weintraub sent the following last minute notice…”I have been interested in the Wharf Plan for quite some time and it looks like it is moving ahead like so many other “Master (?) Plans in Santa Cruz. (Perhaps if we had more Mistress Plans it might retain more of a balanced outcome!)  BUT, this week on Wed, the 14th of Oct. and Thursday, the 15th there are two important meetings about the SC WHARF FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT and its acceptance by the two so called Advisory Commissions related to the Wharf.

On Wed, the Historic Preservation Commission Meets to certify (or not) the Final EIR and CEQA Findings re everything they plan to do to essentially take the whole look and feel away from the Wharf. This meeting starts @ 7:00 and can only be attended by teleconference only..  (We already know how fun that is). 

Public comment is welcome by phone, email or letter from 10/12 to 10/17 and  the numbers to call during the actual meeting (and the agenda) are here

On Thursday, the SC Planning Commission meets on the same issue @7:00 pm. and can also be attended only by teleconference, but you can actually see them LIVE for this meeting. 

The input numbers and agenda are here 

Again, public comment can be made in advance by mail or email or at the meeting.  Instructions are given on this link. 

A COPY OF THE EIR AND FINAL PLAN IS HERE

ONCE AGAIN, WE CAN STILL HAVE INPUT AND… KNOWING THE CITY AS WE DO, WE MUST SHOW UP AT THESE Zoom MEETINGS (WHICH I NOW CALL “FAST-FORWARD SECRET SUMMITS”) 

This is basically a show up and speak up effort.  I love our town and it s quirky character and like all of us, it deserves kind attention”. Carmella Weintraub.

OUR SPECIAL BUBBLE. According to Gail Pellerin, our County Clerk our county now has 168,000 registered voters. While it seems easy to relax about that figure and our near self imposed left leaning tendencies we need to remember that in 2016 22,438 voters OUT OF 132,165 VOTED FOR Trump !!! 

STREAMERS, SCREENERS, CRIES & CRITIQUES.
The big news is that The Del Mar theatre opened last Thursday…and on the very same day our local Regal Theatre 9 (along with their entire chain) closed until further notice.

CALL MY AGENT. There might be a problem in finding this one under that title on Netflix, if so try “Dix Pour Cent”. Billed as a comedy it centers on the lives of the talent agents and stars who work at a famous show biz agency in Paris. Tempers, jokes, love affairs, and much talent all get very mixed and still it’s almost riveting.

OCTOBER FEST: BEER AND BLOOD. Set in Munich, Germany in 1900 this focuses on a plot from a wealthy brewmeister to take over the stalls, stands and profits that another brewmeister has held for decades at the Octoberfest. Families get in fights, daughters fall in love with the wrong people and it’s a major film. Great acting, photography, and effects.  

DICK JOHNSON IS DEAD. A no holds barred documentary by the documentarian/photogrtapher who’s father is dying from Alzheimer’s and dementia. I’m not sure if it’s cruel or empathetic but if you’ve ever had to live and/or care for a relative/ friend with these ailments you know how painful it can be. No laughs, no solutions just a sharing of the negative dread of old age. Go warned.   

I said it before and will repeat….I still haven’t been to a movie theatre. The  reviews of current films read poorly, and dealing with the seating, lines, and the improving quality of what’s online hardly makes it seem worthwhile


Here’s last week’s visions and beyond 

THE GLORIAS. This bio-pic of Gloria Steinem is a good one. Julianne Moore, Alicia Vikander and two more women/girls play her in this near dream like history of the womens’ movement and her part in it. Julie Taymor directed it and does portray Gloria as her real mini-skirt, long nails gorgeous self. Timothy Hutton is in it too nut he shouldn’t have been. It has much fantasy, dreams, animation and oddly placed moves that obscure the important view of women’s equality fights that Steinman was an integral part of. Bette Midler plays Bella Abzug. Watch it, and don’t snicker at the odd ball parts

EVIL. The ongoing battle between church and the devil is the point here. A young woman chases ghosts, demons in her dreams as she tries to outwit her dream like killer fears. Better than average and might even get more serious as the series develops.

EMILY IN PARIS. Lily Collins is Emily. Emily is from Chicago and is sent to Paris as a company rep. The Paris group doesn’t like her and Emily has a rough time adjusting to France. Cute, clever, time consuming, charming, and I imagine the series will be the same.

TEHRAN. It has a 93 on Rotten Tomatoes!! An international spy killer-thrill series. It mixes Iran, Tehran, Jordan, Israel’s internal wars with a young woman’s attempt to steal government high tech secrets. Complex, well acted, and if you can keep up with identities, you can continue forgetting about movie theatres.

FREAKS.  Definitely NOT the classic Tod Browning black and white genuine carnival freaks backstage lives. This new film (2018) is a silly science fiction teen age adventure about a 17 year old girl who has superhuman powers. She searches for her mom and runs into lots of trouble. Not a great film by any means…but it might take your mind away from the here and now. 

THE ARTISTS WIFE. Bruce Dern and Lena Olin take on the heavy lead roles in this painfully, near true story of how parts of the Dolby Sound family dealt with the dementia and Alzheimers of old man Ray Dolby. If you’ve ever had to deal with these age old afflictions you know how deep the pain goes. 

CRIMINAL. This is an unusual series that consists of four different story lines on four different websites. There’s Criminal: United Kingdom, Criminal: Germany, Criminal: Spain and Criminal: France. All episodes were filmed in Spain and center on criminals each being questioned and interviewed in exactly the same interrogating room with a very important two-way mirror separating them from the cops and legal team. I’ve watched almost all of the four series, they are clever, well acted, puzzling in a good way and well worth your time.

ENOLA HOLMES. From a series of new books this is a fable about Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes little sister Enola. Enola spelled backwards is of course Alone. Millie Bobby Brown plays Enola and is super, couldn’t be better. It’s light clever, mildly absorbing and if you’ve nothing else going on….go for it.

THE INVISIBLE MAN. This got an amazing 91 on Rotten Tomatoes and I must admit I’m still remembering the tension, the scares, and surprising talents of Elisabeth Moss in the lead. She’s the ex-girlfriend of an optical genius who invented an invisible suit. It sort of looks like a wetsuit with knobs. So basically, he haunts her. The police don’t believe her so she takes matters into her own hands and fights him, wherever he is supposed to be. It’ll take your mind off all the stuff that’s haunting you nowadays, watch it.

THE VOW. 82 ON Rotten Tomatoes is just about what I’d give this documentary. NXIVM is the name of a self awareness, mindfulness group. It has masters and slaves and even branding women members in private places. It’s a documentary but not your average documentary. If you’ve ever belonged to or have thought about joining one like maybe Scientology don’t miss this partial opening of their secret doors.

LAUNDROMAT. How could a movie directed by Stephen Soderbergh and starring Meryl Streep, Antonio Banderas be so bad? Don’t waste your time trying to figure it out. Rotten Tomatoes gives it a 41! The plot focus is on tax evasion, off shore investments, insurance rip offs, and is way too complex and silly at the same time.

CHALLENGER: THE FINAL FLIGHT. We’ve never heard much about this 1986 NASA shuttle flight disaster. This is a  four part documentary with J.J. Abrams doing the producing. The NASA flight was done for much needed social approval and a brilliant, pretty, school teacher was included among the astronauts. The Challenger blew up in less than two minutes after it was launched and all the crew perished. The film shows NASA’s faults, details all the worlds  reactions and will teach you some necessary features involved in our space programs.

RATCHED. Named and promoted as a back story to the famed Nurse Ratched played by Louise Fletcher in Jack Nicolson’s and Ken Kesey’s  “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” book. For some reason the hospital is changed from a military rehab center in Menlo Park where Kesey did time to a spacious retreat in Lucia, which is near Big Sur. Judy Davis, Sarah Paulson, Cynthia Nixon and believe it or not, Sharon Stone are in it. It’s a gruesome movie with such scenes as a doctor hammering an ice pick into a patient’s eye or being given a severed head as a present. The lesbian sub plot is very insensitive, so is the sodomy story…don’t bother.

THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME. This is a Netflix thriller set in the town of Knockemstiff, Ohio (a real place). Robert Pattinson (of Twilight fame) plays a knockabout country minister who does bad things to good people. Tom Holland and Bill Skarsgard, and Mia Wasikowska do fine jobs of acting but the plot is predictable, stodgy, and adds nothing to cinema history 

ALIVE. This Korean zombie thriller has absolutely nothing new, exciting or creative in it. People become Zombies by catching a virus (duh!!!). They act and look and stagger like every zombie we’ve ever seen on screen. They bleed a lot and smear the blood on walls, windows, everywhere. A sweet young girl is found by a nice young boy across the huge patio in their apartment building. You know the rest, trust me. 

COAST ELITES is HBO’s masterful so called comedy that centers on our very present trials and tribulations caused by Trump, fires, and solitary confinement in our own homes. Bette Midler starts the series of 5 monologues. It’s new, innovative and immensely thought producing. Watch it, think about it. 

THE SOCIAL DILEMMA. This one hour and 20 minute documentary a Netflix original is so important, good, and timely. It focuses on the control the internet has over us now and the inevitable growth it will take as time goes by. The control goes much deeper than your searching for a toaster on Amazon and seeing toasters pop up on the next 20 screens you open. It’s about how Facebook, Twitter, Google, You Tube and many more. Are controlling how long we watch and how often we click on any site, then selling the data from our views to advertisers. They work hard to change our groups of friends to bring people with similar views together politically, religiously and change our lives in the process. My notes while watching say things like…the future an Utopia or oblivion,  causing a civil war, ruining a global economy, prioritizing what keeps us on our screen, election advertising, existential threat, can’t agree on what is truth, assault on democracy and on and on. Do see this documentary and think about it and us and yourself. … 

RAKE. I’m still enthralled with watching RAKE. It’s one of the most consistent brilliant funny, curious, serious, series I’ve ever seen. It’s a Netflix feature from Australia back in 2010. This week Netflix introduced Charlie Kaufmann’s newest movie “I’m Thinking of Ending Things”. You need warnings about Kaufmann’s films. Remember “Being John Malkovich”, “Synecdoche, New York” and especially “Eternal Sunshine of the Eternal Mind”. “I’m Thinking” is one of his impressionistic, dreamlike. Psychological adventure voyages. It’ll stay with you for days after

...

More Wharf Tall Tales

West side of the Wharf

There’s nothing like a City of Santa Cruz Agenda Report to get your blood boiling. 

This time it’s the Agenda Report on the Wharf Master Plan (WMP) and EIR prepared for the Historic Preservation Commission (HPC) meeting, which may be over as you read this. Why write about something that’s over? Because the same staff hyperbole, distortions and omissions are likely to dog this issue all the way to city council vote at the end of the month. 

The Agenda Report, submitted by the city’s Asset and Development Manager, approved by the Director of Economic Development and the Director of Planning and Community Development, contains the following entries:

“It has been said many times that the one constant on the Wharf is change”.

“The reality is that the Wharf has always changed. Life in the Pacific Ocean is hard and requires adaptation to survive.” 

“The Pacific Ocean is unforgiving and the Wharf is approaching a slow boil.”

This hyperbole is not as bad as the city’s lying to the Federal Government to gain almost a million dollars in grant monies to fund the Wharf Master Plan but it is deceptive. It flies in the face of the Engineering Report, which found 91% of the 4,450 current pilings of the Wharf in excellent condition and concluded that:

“Because of its location and deck elevation (+23 ft., MLLW) Santa Cruz Wharf should continue to function well into the future, as it has for the past 100 years with continued maintenance and strengthening. With a sea level rise of 3.5 ft., the deck of Santa Cruz Wharf would be approximately at the same present elevation of Capitola Wharf.”

The Wharf road needs re-surfacing due to the heavy traffic load, not due to the Pacific Ocean or sea level rise. Replacing Wharf pilings as needed is nothing new. 

Contrast the above Engineering Report with the Agenda Report entry:
“In making its decision whether to recommend approval of the Wharf Master Plan to City Council, staff urges the HPC to consider the long term sustainability of the Wharf itself. The unprecedented challenges already apparent from climate change, COVID-19, as well as the Wharf’s mounting infrastructure backlog, harsh environmental and regulatory setting, and the fiscal solvency of the Wharf in light of the City’s now acute and structural budget shortfalls are all factors that impede the City’s ability to effectively steward the Wharf. These underlying conditions reinforce the immediate need for Wharf Master Plan approval.”

Staff is exploiting the pandemic, the fiscal crisis and climate change to urge approval of an unpopular Master Plan that is all about gentrifying the Wharf and changing its character. Replacing the small percentage of pilings and fixing the road surface does not need a Master Plan. That is a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

And,

“Without significant reinvestment soon, parts of the Wharf may reach a tipping point and begin to fail. Correcting the infrastructure backlog problem is a level of investment that the City does not currently have resources for and that the Wharf Crew cannot manage alone. The City must attract additional investment and outside grant funding. To do so, the City needs an approved Master Plan and EIR.”

The cost for road re-surfacing and minimal piling replacement can be obtained from a number of sources including Measure H funds, especially earmarked for city streets of which the Wharf road is one. It does not need an approved Master Plan and EIR. 

The Agenda Report urges support for the WMP due to the current Wharf businesses that are struggling due to the coronavirus. This is true, although probably no more than other city small businesses. Given the disruption that new construction will generate, it’s likely that Wharf businesses will suffer even more. Without an economic analysis to demonstrate that the WMP will be a moneymaker, it is just as likely that it will be an economic failure.  If the city is so concerned about Wharf businesses why did it refuse to renew the lease for Andy’s Bait Shop that has now stood empty for 5 years?  Why did it refuse to grant Gilda’s previous owners a favorable lease? Why say: When lifeguards and marine rescue are included, the Wharf has been struggling financially for four of the last six years” when both are under the Fire Department? 

The Agenda Report intones that: “Without an approved EIR however, the City has been mired for nearly two years in state and federal permitting for critical repairs and has paid significant consultant and filing fees for emergency permits as well.” 

Who took from 2016 until 2020 to complete an EIR, which can usually be completed within a year? The city did.

While acknowledging that the historic integrity of the Wharf is largely reflected in its wooden piles, in the list of proposed physical alterations to the Wharf structure, staff omits inclusion of the Western walkway which, being 8 feet below deck will horizontally bisect the piles on the western side, altering the character, look and feel of the Wharf. This is perhaps the most critical issue for the HPC to weigh in on and it is not listed except in passing for another entry. 

As a final sop, the Agenda Report reassures that the WMP is only a suggestion, a guide and other than the Wharf entrance and the eastern expansion, there will be plenty of opportunity for public input on the other “improvements.” We have seen how that plays out with other big projects and it doesn’t. The Program EIR is always used to justify specific project EIR’s. That the 3 new buildings have been reduced to 40 feet in height and the new south landing will not be used for tenders from cruise ships is a small step in the right direction. That the Agenda Report omits reference to the Environmentally Superior Alternative from the EIR that gets rid of the Western Walkway is a more reliable guide to the city’s intentions.

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

...

October 12

MONEY

It is pretty obvious that there is a great deal of money being spent nationally, state-wide, and locally in order to fashion particular political outcomes. Jaime Harrison, Senate candidate in South Carolina, has raised a mind-numbing $87 million to unseat repugnant, self-deceiving and nation-deceiving incumbent, Lindsey Graham. Harrison’s run is a righteous cause, but the amount of money involved is still unseemly. Of course, Republican troglodyte Graham said last year he would never take a vote on any Supreme Court nominee this close to a Presidential election. NOT! He is the chair of the senate judiciary committee overseeing the nomination of conservative Amy Coney Barrett who just might replace Ruth Bader Ginsberg. Graham, trying to move with all deliberate speed, is now standing in for the once lonely Labor government poodle, Tony Blair, who was called George Bush’s poodle in the run-up to the misguided US invasion of Iraq in March of 2003. Graham is not only now a Trump suck-up, but he’s gone so far as to politically shave his butt and walk it backwards into a wind turbine of Democrat cash blowing right across the sitting Senator’s 2020 hopes of keeping South Carolinians shackled to a future without healthcare for all. Everything is coming down to the corporate-backed, take-no-prisoners lobbying effort in the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizen’s United v. FEC decision that reduced cash on the barrel, as my grandfather would say, to a modern conservative definition of free speech. The cash haul by South Carolina’s Harrison is but one example of how even good people can get caught up into the bad politics of raising money to pummel your opponent. My experience is that many who put money on Harrison did so only to curry influence and receive favors after he’s elected. But Jamie Harrison is the best candidate running for Senate in South Carolina, and make no mistake, I support Harrison over Graham.

  1. MONEY

The political money cesspool is currently wide and deep here in the Golden State too. Proposition 22, the Uber, Lyft, Instacart, DoorDash-funded initiative will likely be the most expensive in state history. Already more than $185 million has been raised and more is on the way as the sprint to Nov. 3rd is underway. (BTW, this does not include the money spent on signature-gatherers to get it on the ballot in the first place.) This money is a Las Vegas-style bet, mostly by the “ride-share” industry and with the odds in their favor. The Gig-economy titans seek to overturn Assembly Bill 5, which was signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom last year. (https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201920200AB5 ) It calls for these same companies to make drivers official employees, instead of independent contractors. Without being an “employee” there is no chance of unemployment insurance, disability care if injured on the job, or health insurance being paid by these corporations. It is pure capitalist rhetoric–we are all free agents–vs. the notion that workers have rights and ought to be able to collectively bargain (since 1935) and be at the same bargaining table as the owners. Uber argues that workers want more flexibility and should be essentially free agents, but current law does not prohibit these large corporations from paying fair wages and offering flexible hours to their soon to be, employees, if Prop. 22 is defeated at the polls.

IS BIG MONEY BUYING THE COUNCIL?  

Now, keeping the notion in mind that when larger entities–companies, corporations, and individuals–act as agents of realtors and developers and contribute to city council campaigns, they usually want something. They generally wish to see fewer obstacles in their way in maximizing their present and future investments in Surf City. Of course, many locals contribute to city council campaigns because they hope for an overall change in government policies, or a continuation of the status quo. Voluntary campaign spending limits are set at around $40,000 for each council candidate. Periodic statements, called Form 460, are required to be submitted periodically during the campaign to show where a candidate’s money originates. Are there bundles of donations from certain sectors like real estate interests, for-profit housing developers, or labor unions? If so, that would might indicate as to what interest group a candidate would end up beholden to? Again, if you accept the limit of $400 per person in donations during the campaign and $40k overall, one would think this might not be enough to buy a councilmember’s vote, but my experience is that it certainly opens sitting councilmembers doors a whole lot easier and creates a subtle sort of you owe me attitude among certain donors. I would argue that some economic players–local and out of towners–donate with the expectation of impacting local zoning, taxing, and property initiatives that any particular city council may take up. For example, Santa Cruz witnessed perhaps the biggest money coming to town in the form of the CAA, the California Apartment Association’s shameless behavior in leading the $1.2 million campaign to defeat Measure M, rent control, in 2018. They had enough left over to spend lavishly in the later recall campaign of two city councilmembers and then install their 4th vote (out of 7 councilmembers) onto our city council this past March. Big money bought the council, and a lot of the largesse spent on stopping rent control and enacting recall came flowing in from outside of Santa Cruz. And guess what? These same interests are doubling down in the 2020 city council elections. Candidate campaign donations and expenditures can be found here: https://public.netfile.com/pub2/?AID=CRUZ 

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 an outside 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 property-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 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.

To see entire list, go here 

On the first day of Supreme Court Nominee Amy Coney Barrett hearings AOC tweeted:

“Sick and tired of Republicans who co-opt faith as an excuse to advance bigotry and barbarism. Fact is, if today Christ himself came to the floor of Congress and repeated his teachings, many would malign him as a radical and eject him from the chamber.” (Oct. 12)

(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 14 years. He was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His term ended in April of 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

...
October 12

IS PUREWATER SOQUEL PROJECT REALLY NECESSARY?  DISCUSSION AND CANDIDATE FORUM THIS THURSDAY
Please join the conversation this Thursday at 7pm with Mr. Rick Longinotti, leader of Desal Alternatives and member of the Santa Cruz Water Supply Advisory Committee (WSAC), along with Soquel Creek Water District Board Candidates Mr. Corrie Kates and Ms. Maria Marsilio.  

The WSAC developed a set of recommendations to address regional water supply needs that listed conservation and regional water transfers as the top solutions.   In his endorsement of Kates and Marsilio as candidates for the Soquel Creek Water District Board, Rick noted:

  •  “In a well-intentioned effort to address a serious aquifer overdraft, the Soquel Creek Water District turned to highly expensive and energy intensive solutions: first desalination and now recycled waste water. The recycled wastewater project would commit water customers to high water rates and high energy use. Before considering such a commitment, the District should optimize water conservation and water transfers with Santa Cruz.”

Please join the discussion this Thursday at 7pm on Zoom.  Access information is in the “Events” 

The following Thursday’s Zoom meeting will host Dr. Karl Maret…”Is the PureWater Soquel Project plan to daily inject millions of gallons of treated wastewater into the drinking water supply safe?  Will the water be safe to drink in the future?”  

Mark your calendar and tell your friends and neighbors.

THE STATE IS NOT THREATENING TO TAKE AWAY LOCAL CONTROL OF WATER IN MIDCOUNTY
The Soquel Creek Water District incumbents sent out a campaign mailer this week that really made me shake my head because the claim that the State is chomping at the bits to take over the local water supply is simply not true. 

I attended a Santa Margarita Groundwater Agency workshop on March 9, 2019 where Mr. Erik Ekdahl, State Water Resources Control Board Deputy Director discussed the role of the State regulatory intervention actions and groundwater management agencies.  The bottom line is that the State does NOT want to take over the water management in overdrafted basins, and would provide multiple opportunities for the local agencies to correct issues.  

The greatest trigger to having the State take control of local water resources is not having submitted a Groundwater Sustainability Plan.  The MidCounty Groundwater Agency, which includes Soquel Creek Water District, did submit this draft plan in January, 2020.  The State may take two years to evaluate the Plan.  If the groundwater situation were dire in 2025, it could trigger State Intervention.  Recent News | Santa Cruz Mid-County Groundwater Agency 

But that is unlikely, as Mr. Ekdahl discussed last year.  Whats more, groundwater monitoring reports show that by and large, the groundwater levels are rising or stable.

So, should we believe the Soquel Creek Water District incumbents’ fearful campaign ads that State takeover is imminent if PureWater Soquel Project is not imposed?  I just don’t think so.

Remember, the State made the determination in the 1980’s that the Mid County’s Soquel Valley Basin was in critical overdraft at the request of the City of Santa Cruz and a County Supervisor.

(see last week’s Blog information)

Here is the official State intervention policy:

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

LOCAL FIRE DISTRICTS MOVING FORWARD TO CONSOLIDATE BY EARLY NEXT YEAR, BUT WITH QUESTIONABLE REPRESENTATION PROCESS
The Aptos / La Selva Fire and Central Fire Protection Districts are consolidating, and the new large agency will be called “Central Fire Protection District”.  I support the consolidation, but worry about the governance.  Here is why: 

  1. New Board members will be swept out of office upon consolidation, with no disclosure made at the time of their election that the seats were soon to disappear.  
  2. The Ad Hoc Committee that chose the Board members during meetings closed to the public will exclude the new Board members just elected, unbeknownst to the new Board members.  
  3. While the consolidated District will, in 2022, change from at-large elections to district elections, the large area will be carved up into five districts that, based on equal population, cannot possibly provide equitable representation to the rural areas of the District.

The Ad Hoc Committee, whose meetings are not open to the public, decided last summer that the Board for the new agency would consist of three existing Aptos/La Selva Board members and two existing Central Fire Board members.  They thought the consolidation process would be wrapped up by July 2020, but it wasn’t, due to disparity in Union benefits disparities.  

Because of the delay, the incumbent seats for those who were NOT chosen to serve on the consolidated Board had to  be offered for re-election.  The incumbents did not file for re-election, so the five seats stayed open an extra week.  Interestingly, five members of the public did file for the seats and will now be seated in early December as new Board members for the respective Districts.

But wait a minute…LAFCO published a classified ad October 8 in the Sentinel that it will hold a public hearing on November 4 to consider the consolidation.  

The October 8, 2020 Aptos / La Selva Fire Board agenda packet (page 37) states the following timeline:

Update on Consolidation Process:

Next steps in the consolidation process: · 

Submit final Plan for Service and other documents to LAFCO · 
November 4, 2020: LAFCO hearing. ·
 December 4, 2020: 30-day Reconsideration Period ends. · 
December 8, 2020 first meeting for new CFPD Directors · 
December 10, 2020 first meeting for new A/LSFPD Directors · 
January 1, 2021: AB 1140 (Retirement protections) becomes law. · 
January 6, 2021: LAFCO Protest Hearing to receive Protest Petitions. · 
February 3, 2021: LAFCO Protest Hearing to adopt Protest Results. · 

Date to be Determined (February/March): Consolidation effective after all Terms and Conditions satisfied. LAFCO records the completed Consolidation with the County and the State Board of Equalization · 

Date to be Determined: New Directors of Consolidated District seated at first Board meeting.

I attended the October 7 LAFCO meeting and heard discussion of the consolidation.  The Plan for Service document had already been submitted, even before the two Fire Boards approved them, enabling the matter to be scheduled for the next Commission meeting.   
I raised the issue of governance in the future, asking why there cannot be a seven-member consolidated Board  composed of randomly-drawn names from the two agencies’ combined 10 members?   This would provide an opportunity for the new Board members, one of which is a woman, to serve on the consolidated Board .  

LAFCO Director Joe Serrano stated it would be up to the two Fire Districts to make those recommendations.

Last week, the Aptos/ La Selva Fire Board wanted nothing to do with this suggestion, even though it was supported by the woman who has been elected to serve on the Board. 

It is curious that so many things seem to be rushed, that the five-member Board chosen in meetings closed to the public includes two brothers, and that the large area comprising the future district elections cannot possible provide equitable representation for the seven areas of Day Valley, La Selva Beach, Aptos, Rio del Mar, Capitola, Soquel, and Live Oak when the district lines will be drawn to have equal population numbers.  While the quick retort is that a seven-member Board would be unwieldy, that is not the case with the City of Watsonville’s Council,  the Pajaro Valley Unified School District’s Board, or the Cabrillo College Board, all of which include seven members.

Please write to the LAFCO if you are concerned about the governance issues or future level of representation in the soon-to-be-consolidated Aptos/La Selva Fire and Central Fire Districts…whose name will be “Central Fire District”.  

Does it seem right that a woman would be edged out of serving the public in order to allow two brothers to keep their seats?   

Santa Cruz LAFCO Director Joe Serrano , and Clerk Debra Means

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A VIRTUAL TOWN HALL MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING SOMETHING.

Cheers and Happy Autumn,

Becky
831-685-2915 (I welcome your discussion)

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.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

...

October 11
#285 / People Versus Percentages

Heather Cox Richardson, pictured above, writes a daily bulletin, distributed widely under the title, “Letters From An American.” If you click the link, you can sign up to get her daily bulletins sent to you by email. I, personally, think that they are both informative and motivating!

In her September 1, 2020 letter, Richardson says this: 

I try to write these Letters as if they are sort of a flowing report on the news. But I just can’t flow over this number once again. We have lost almost 185,000 people to Covid-19. That number is a 9-11 attack every day for two months. It is flying a full 737 airplane into a mountain every single day for more than two years. I cannot fathom why combatting this disease is not an all-hands-on-deck national emergency.

On September 1, 2020, the population of the United States of America was over 331,347,000. As of September 1st, in other words, speaking in terms of percentages, we have lost 185,000 / 331,347,000 people to Covid-19.

When you do the division, this is the number you get: .000558327071016. I am not good enough at math to know exactly how to express this percentage in words. Clearly, though, 185,000 people is not a very big percentage of our total population. The number of those who have died from Covid-19 is much, much, much less than 1%. This may be the reason that the national government is not treating the pandemic as an “all-hands-on-deck” emergency. “All hands” don’t seem to be threatened. The fact that the government has not developed a clear and effective response to the pandemic, and to its manifold health, social, and economic impacts, may also be attributed to the fact that the percentage of people actually dying from Covid-19 is small. Thinking in percentage terms, the pandemic is just not that big a deal. Lots of people do make that argument. 

Of course, this approach raises a question. Should we really be using the percentage of the population affected by something to decide what the government should do? I believe that this specific example – the pandemic, and the government’s response to it – illuminates a fundamental question about what sort of role we should expect the government to play in our lives. 

One approach, founded on the undeniable fact that we are all “individuals,” is to decide that we should all deal individually with our own problems and possibilities, to the greatest extent possible. The basic idea is that people need to work things out on their own. Government doen’t need to get involved, really, unless the issues start affecting a large percentage of the population.

The other approach to government is much more “personal.” That view of government is premised on the idea that “we’re all in this together.” That approach means that we should always be thinking about whether or not we, collectively, might be able to do something to be of assistance to those who have individual problems. This way of thinking about things suggests that the government should take action when “persons” start getting impacted, whatever percentage of the total population those persons may be. “Their” problems – the problems of individual persons in trouble – are actually “our” problems, if we genuinely consider ourselves to be “in this together.”

Under its current management, the national government is not really that interested in assisting individuals with their problems – and when you start looking at it in terms of percentages, you can come to the conclusion that the pandemic really isn’t that important. Clearly, our current president seems to take that approach. He keeps insinuating that the pandemic really doesn’t exist, and I get the impression that he is quite irritated by those, like Richardson, who seem to think that the government should be doing far more than it is doing, and responding much better than it has responded so far. 

As far as the president is concerned, the pandemic isn’t that big a deal. To quote him: “it is what it is.”

Billionaires, of course, can generally take care of themselves, so they don’t usually think too much about what “their country can do for them.” They don’t need to! Similarly, those with a narcissistic personality disorder are, by virtue of their narcissism, particularly immune to thinking much about anyone but themselves. The kind of empathy that leads directly to a concern for other people can go missing in action when someone is ultra-rich, or when someone is a pathological narcissist. I would say that both those factors are currently in play at the highest levels of the national government. I think they help explain what has happened, as we ponder Richardson’s question about why the government has not responded to the Covid-19 pandemic in an all-hands-on-deck manner. 

More than anything else, this pandemic demonstrates, at least to my mind, that we have not, as yet – and speaking collectively – really mastered what it means to think of the government as “our” government, instead of “the” government. 

When we have a government that is actually “our” government, and not just “the” government, then we will expect the government to respond positively and helpfully to each and every one of us. After all, it belongs to “us.” It is “ours.” When that understanding truly prevails, “empathy” will be the government’s middle name. 

But to make “the” government become “our” government, let’s not forget that we need to be involved ourselves. To the degree we think “the government” is someone else, so that we don’t take personal responsibility for the government on an individual basis, we won’t see much need to get personally involved. If that is how we structure our relationship to government, we leave ourselves open to the situation we have today. The pandemic shows us what that is like. 

In November, we are going to be making a major decision on how we proceed from here. Are we “all in this together,” or not? 

I would like to think we are. That is my view. I think “empathy” does need to be our government’s middle name.

Do I need to remind everyone that the very minimum way we get personally and individually involved in “our” government is by keeping ourselves fully informed and voting? 

No? I don’t need to remind you? Great! But voting is just a first step; do let me remind you of 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

...

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.

    “Flies”

“Time flies over us, but leaves its shadow behind”.
~Nathaniel Hawthorne.

“Laws are spider webs through which the big flies pass and the little ones get caught”.
~Honore de Balzac

“As my Sicilian grandfather used to say, you get more flies with honey than with vinegar, right?”
~Andrew Cuomo


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

...

Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

October 7 – 13, 2020

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Imagine Santa Cruz, City council candidates, Felix Street development, State propositions, streamers and films. GREENSITE…Will be back next week. KROHN…Trump and Walter Reed, Council candidates, heart and soul of Santa Cruz, endorsements. STEINBRUNER…Mid County water supply, Soquel Creek management plan, Board Of Supes consent agenda, Safe drinking water? PATTON…Oculus and reality. EAGAN…evergreen Subconscious Comics and Deep Cover. QUOTES…”PANDEMIC”.  

...

SANTA CRUZ’S SEA BEACH HOTEL. This glorious structure stood high atop the hills near our main beach. It was designed to draw those pesky tourists away from Carmel and Monterey. It didn’t work. It burned down in June of 1912.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email photo@brattononline.com

SANTA CRUZ MACKEREL FISHING.

PIER /WHARF FISHING IN SANTA CRUZ. 2020.

DATELINE October 5      

REIMAGINE SANTA CRUZ. This group of forward-thinking locals has produced a grand video that says it all about our City Council and the election. It lays out very clearly that Sandy Brown, Kayla Kumar, Kelsey Hill and Alicia Kuhl are the four candidates that will make the proper choices and work hard to keep our city on the right track. Watch it once or twice. Hear what Rick Longinotti and John Hall have to say. Go here… 

THE OTHER COUNCIL CANDIDATES. I wrote last week about Sonja Bruner and many of her Cynthia Mathews supporters. Take a few minutes to check out the websites of Elizabeth Conlan, Maria Cadenas, Shebreh Kalantari-Johnson and Martine Watkins. You’ll see the same pro-growth, to-hell-with-renter’s names. You’ll also see the same pro Taj Library Garage names these are the Chamber of Commerce, Business Council candidates: our community can’t afford to support their way of thinking or voting.

FELIX STREET DEVELOPMENT, BACK AGAIN!! Neighbors and environmentally concerned citizens sent this urgent message last week…

Don’t let developers ram this down our throats. 

Currently over 2,400 + units are proposed (or already approved) in the City of Santa Cruz.  

Planning Department & City Council on a building spree that is not sustainable! 

During the August 25, 2020 City Council Public Hearing many of you made public statements to oppose the project. With a vote of 3 – 2 City Council members (thank you: Cummings, Brown & Beiers) voted to deny an amendment to the City General Plan – which in turn denies the project. 

More than 3,000 people have weighed in to oppose the plan to develop an additional 80 units to already existing 240 at Cypress Point Apartments. 

But, It’s NOT over! Another Public Hearing is scheduled for October 13, 2020.

We are questioning if this is even legal – a vote and action has already been taken – making it even more important for you to attend the meeting (time To Be Announced) on Tuesday Oct. 13 and speak again.

We need to write to the City Council again and let them know that we want the denial vote to stand.    

KEEP SANTA CRUZ DEMOCRATIC

– PLEASE WRITE TODAY –

In addition to above remember that Cynthia Mathews didn’t vote because she owns property in that area. Now we need to watch and see what the Council vote will be on October 13. Additionally ask those pro developer candidates where they stand on the Felix Street farce…let that be just a hint of what they would bring to our oft threatened environment.

STATE PROPOSITIONS. These tricky, often two-faced possible laws baffle me on a regular basis. The secret powers and monies behind them are rarely revealed. N. Wolfe and S. Zunes posted …. “I/we  much appreciate the work of FCLCA (Friends Committee on Legislation of California)    – they explain their reasoning for each one.

FCLCA is a nonpartisan, statewide public interest lobby founded by Quakers in 1952 to advocate for California state laws that are just, compassionate and respectful of the inherent worth of every person.

Prop 14 NO
Prop 15 YES
Prop 16 YES
Prop 17 YES
Prop 18 YES
Prop 19 NO
Prop 20 NO
Prop 21 YES
Prop 22 NO
Prop 23 NO
Prop 24 NO
Prop 25 YES

Over the many decades of voting I can’t recall ever deviating from the Friends committee…so there we are!!!

...

I still haven’t been to a movie theatre. The  reviews of current films read poorly, and dealing with the seating, lines, and the improving quality of what’s online hardly makes it seem worthwhile

THE GLORIAS. This bio-pic of Gloria Steinem is a good one. Julianne Moore, Alicia Vikander and two more women/girls play her, in this near dreamlike history of the women’s movement and her part in it. Julie Taymor directed, and portrays Gloria as her real mini-skirt, long nails gorgeous self. Timothy Hutton is in it too, but he shouldn’t have been. It has much fantasy, dreams, animation and oddly-placed moves that obscure the important view of women’s equality fights that Steinman was an integral part of. Bette Midler plays Bella Abzug. Watch it, and don’t snicker at the oddball parts

EVIL. The ongoing battle between church and the devil is the point here. A young woman chases ghosts and demons in her dreams, as she tries to outwit her dream like killer fears. Better than average and might even get more serious as the series develops.

EMILY IN PARIS. Lily Collins is Emily. Emily is from Chicago and is sent to Paris as a company rep. The Paris group doesn’t like her and Emily has a rough time adjusting to France. Cute, clever, time consuming, charming, and I imagine the series will be the same.

TEHRAN. It has a 93 on Rotten Tomatoes!! An international spy killer-thriller series. It mixes Iran, Tehran, Jordan, Israel’s internal wars with a young woman’s attempt to steal government high tech secrets. Complex, well acted, and if you can keep up with identities, you can continue forgetting about movie theatres.

FREAKS.  Definitely NOT the classic Tod Browning black and white genuine carnival freaks backstage lives. This new film (2018) is a silly science fiction teenage adventure about a 17 year old girl who has superhuman powers. She searches for her mom, and runs into lots of trouble. Not a great film by any means…but it might take your mind away from the here and now. 


Here’s last week’s visions and beyond 

THE ARTISTS WIFE. Bruce Dern and Lena Olin take on the heavy lead roles in this painfully, near true story of how parts of the Dolby Sound family dealt with the dementia and Alzheimers of old man Ray Dolby. If you’ve ever had to deal with these age old afflictions you know how deep the pain goes. 

CRIMINAL. This is an unusual series that consists of four different story lines on four different websites. There’s Criminal: United Kingdom, Criminal: Germany, Criminal: Spain and Criminal: France. All episodes were filmed in Spain and center on criminals each being questioned and interviewed in exactly the same interrogating room with a very important two-way mirror separating them from the cops and legal team. I’ve watched almost all of the four series, they are clever, well acted, puzzling in a good way and well worth your time.

ENOLA HOLMES. From a series of new books this is a fable about Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes little sister Enola. Enola spelled backwards is of course Alone. Millie Bobby Brown plays Enola and is super, couldn’t be better. It’s light clever, mildly absorbing and if you’ve nothing else going on….go for it.

THE INVISIBLE MAN. This got an amazing 91 on Rotten Tomatoes and I must admit I’m still remembering the tension, the scares, and surprising talents of Elisabeth Moss in the lead. She’s the ex-girlfriend of an optical genius who invented an invisible suit. It sort of looks like a wetsuit with knobs. So basically, he haunts her. The police don’t believe her so she takes matters into her own hands and fights him, wherever he is supposed to be. It’ll take your mind off all the stuff that’s haunting you nowadays, watch it.

THE VOW. 82 ON Rotten Tomatoes is just about what I’d give this documentary. NXIVM is the name of a self awareness, mindfulness group. It has masters and slaves and even branding women members in private places. It’s a documentary but not your average documentary. If you’ve ever belonged to or have thought about joining one like maybe Scientology don’t miss this partial opening of their secret doors.

LAUNDROMAT. How could a movie directed by Stephen Soderbergh and starring Meryl Streep, Antonio Banderas be so bad? Don’t waste your time trying to figure it out. Rotten Tomatoes gives it a 41! The plot focus is on tax evasion, off shore investments, insurance rip offs, and is way too complex and silly at the same time.

UTOPIA. A big confession here…I turned this on off after about 12 minutes. It’s a teen age space comics attempt at comedy. Poorly acted, no name stars, maybe funny for a nine year old but any nine year olds I’ve ever known

CHALLENGER: THE FINAL FLIGHT. We’ve never heard much about this 1986 NASA shuttle flight disaster. This is a  four part documentary with J.J. Abrams doing the producing. The NASA flight was done for much needed social approval and a brilliant, pretty, school teacher was included among the astronauts. The Challenger blew up in less than two minutes after it was launched and all the crew perished. The film shows NASA’s faults, details all the worlds  reactions and will teach you some necessary features involved in our space programs.

RATCHED. Named and promoted as a back story to the famed Nurse Ratched played by Louise Fletcher in Jack Nicolson’s and Ken Kesey’s  “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” book.For some reason the hospital is changed from a military re hab center in Menlo Park where Kesey did time to a spacious retreat in Lucia, which is near Big Sur. Judy Davis, Sarah Paulson, Cynthia Nixon and believe it or not, Sharon Stone are in it. It’s a gruesome movie with such scenes as a doctor hammering an ice pick into a patient’s eye or being given a severed head as a present. The lesbian sub plot is very insensitive, so is the sodomy story…don’t bother.

THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME. This is a Netflix thriller set in the town of Knockemstiff, Ohio (a real place). Robert Pattinson (of Twilight fame) plays a knockabout country minister who does bad things to good people. Tom Holland and Bill Skarsgard, and Mia Wasikowska do fine jobs of acting but the plot is predictable, stodgy, and adds nothing to cinema history 

ALIVE. This Korean zombie thriller has absolutely nothing new, exciting or creative in it. People become Zombies by catching a virus (duh!!!). They act and look and stagger like every zombie we’ve ever seen on screen. They bleed a lot and smear the blood on walls, windows, everywhere. A sweet young girl is found by a nice young boy across the huge patio in their apartment building. You know the rest, trust me. 

COAST ELITES is HBO’s masterful so called comedy that centers on our very present trials and tribulations caused by Trump, fires, and solitary confinement in our own homes. Bette Midler starts the series of 5 monologues. It’s new, innovative and immensely thought producing. Watch it, think about it. 

THE SOCIAL DILEMMA. This one hour and 20 minute documentary a Netflix original is so important, good, and timely. It focuses on the control the internet has over us now and the inevitable growth it will take as time goes by. The control goes much deeper than your searching for a toaster on Amazon and seeing toasters pop up on the next 20 screens you open. It’s about how Facebook, Twitter, Google, You Tube and many more. Are controlling how long we watch and how often we click on any site, then selling the data from our views to advertisers. They work hard to change our groups of friends to bring people with similar views together politically, religiously and change our lives in the process. My notes while watching say things like…the future an Utopia or oblivion,  causing a civil war, ruining a global economy, prioritizing what keeps us on our screen, election advertising, existential threat, can’t agree on what is truth, assault on democracy and on and on. Do see this documentary and think about it and us and yourself. … 

RAKE. I’m still enthralled with watching RAKE. It’s one of the most consistent brilliant funny, curious, serious, series I’ve ever seen. It’s a Netflix feature from Australia back in 2010. This week Netflix introduced Charlie Kaufmann’s newest movie “I’m Thinking of Ending Things”. You need warnings about Kaufmann’s films. Remember “Being John Malkovich”, “Synecdoche, New York” and especially “Eternal Sunshine of the Eternal Mind”. “I’m Thinking” is one of his impressionistic, dreamlike. Psychological adventure voyages. It’ll stay with you for days after

AWAY starring Hillary Swank on HBO. Is a series of Hollywood tripe at its corniest about five very mismatched astronauts on their way to Mars from the moon. The first episode is taut at times when they do some space walking outside their space ship but it’s downhill from there. 

Every Friday morning on KZSC (88.1 fm or live online at KZSC.org) from 8:10 am-8:20 am or thereabouts I present my “B Movie Bratton” segment of short critiques (not reviews) of what’s on our screens of any size. Dangerous Dan Orange hosts the rest of the Bushwhackers B. Club. Tune in this Friday and listen to my critiques 

...
October 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.

...

October 5

“Ilsa, I’m no good at being noble, but it doesn’t take much to see that the problems of three little people don’t amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world. Someday you’ll understand that.” (Rick speaking to Ilsa in Casablanca)

ON MEANING AND MEANINGLESSNESS.
By most standards, the Cuban missile crisis, Nixon and Watergate, and 9/11 were public affairs touch points in modern political intrigue and catastrophe. By those standards, we have entered into an even more disturbing era with Trump and a daily earth-shattering, near-tragic vignette, often with theatrical overtones. But sometimes real people die like former presidential candidate Herman Cain who passed away after attending a Trump rally in Tulsa, OKLA., while others get infected, as dozens of Trump aids and Secret Service people now pass their days in quarantine. This all begs the question, how many times can we do a double-take during the 24-hour news cycle? How many times can you be startled, baffled, or mystified? How many times can you scrunch up your face and yell, “WTF,” at the TV or computer screen? It is now appearing that the chaos Trump engenders is all part of his plan to remain President. The latest scenes from the Trumpian dystopic reality completely fit his four-year pattern of table-turning on the most vulnerable Americans. His tax-payer financed ride to the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center recently, and then two days later he leaves the hospital to limousine past a few cheering supporters waiting outside the hospital grounds is just part of a bad, and dangerous, movie script. How do you spell b-a-f-f-l-i-n-g?

Low-Key City Council Election Campaigns
Now turning from that Trump “crazy world” to our community’s “hill of beans.”Santa Cruz elections are usually a hot-bed of candidate public speaking, door-to-door campaigning, street corner flyer-ing, and campus dorm-storms, but not this year. Covid-19 has upended almost every aspect of our public life. In fact, up until now this has been a rather tepid political campaign season, but by the looks of the biannual yard sign wars, the current Santa Cruz city council campaign is more polarized than any other in recent memory. There are two distinct candidate trios and I have not yet seen any mix ‘n match front lawn sign configurations as in years past. In this unprecedented of years–pandemic, racial justice reckoning, economic melt-down, Trump nastiness–there are nine women candidates all under 50 years-old running for city council. That is also without precedent. There is an either/or atmosphere in town too…SandyBrown-Kelsey Hill-Kayla Kumar vs. BrunnerW**t***s-Kalantari-Johnson.There are four newcomers and two political veterans. If you see any other mix, please let me know, I haven’t. These slates are hard-core. It is the upper Westside real estate, developer, and Take-Backer interests vs. the renter, working-class, environmentalist, Save Santa Cruz big tent progressives. The fight is on.

The Battle is on for the Heart and Soul of this Town
What will Santa Cruz become over the next decade? Silicon Beach, or a thriving village that puts climate and racial justice at the forefront in developing our post-coronavirus economy? Without the students on campus voting as a solid progressive block, it appears that the election is for the real estate conglomerate-types to lose. The ball’s in their court, plain and simple. The REAL progressives will have to pull an election rabbit out of the pandemic hat, and it’s only possible if we vote in numbers that represent our presence here in Surf City. Just like Democrats and progressives nationally, there are simply more students, renters, and working people, than there are of them–realtors, boardwalk owners, and out of town developers. Voting began this week and continues every day until November 3rd. So, get out and VOTE.

A Clear and Present Dangerous Candidate Contrast
Perhaps there has also never been such contrasting endorsements, labor vs. real estate, developer vs. the environment, and CA Apartment Association vs. renters–as there is in the present version of this made by Zoom election known as the Santa Cruz Political Struggle. Just look at who’s endorsed each side, then you decide.

Brown, Hill, and Kumar are endorsed by:

  • SC4Bernie
  • Monterey Central Labor Council
  • UCSC College Democrats
  • Sierra Club
  • Campaign for Sensible Transportation
  • Democratic Socialists of America, SC chapter
  • People’s Democratic Club
  • National Union of Healthcare Workers
  • SEIU 521
  • Mayor Justin Cummings
  • Former Mayors: Jane Weed-Pomerantz, Tim Fitzmaurice, Katherine Beiers, Bruce Van Allen, Chris Krohn, and Celia Scott

Brunner, W*t***s, and Kalantari-Johnson Slate. 

Okay, and here are those who are supporting the candidates representing the owning-class of Santa Cruz:

  • Santa Cruz Together (reactionary astro-turf group that spent over $200k on the recall)
  • Santa Cruz United (step child of SC Together and SC “Forward,” real estate$$$)
  • POA, Police Officer’s Association
  • LOBA, Locally-owned Business Alliance
  • Real Estaters including: Plumlee, Ow, Karon Properties, Cook, Renshaw, et al (they want “their” city back!)
  • Bad “Behind-the-Scenes” Political Actor including: Singleton, Brereton, Renshaw, Reyes, Polhamus, Karon, Dann, they’re all supporting the Brunner, W*t***s, and Kalantari-Johnson slate

Follow the Money…If these lists of supporters for each side aren’t enough, go to the candidate web sites and see 1) who donated, and 2) how many donors live outside of Santa Cruz. Similar to our national scene, local politics is a rather polarized affair and in Santa Cruz those lines of division are pretty clearly the haves vs. everyone else.

The Fourth Candidate
Santa Cruz city voters have FOUR votes for city council. So, who should my fourth vote be? Of the remainder candidates, there’s also a trio of also-rans. In the almighty sign wars, Alicia Kuhl appears to be ahead of both Maria Cadenas and Elizabeth Conlan. But I would not vote for Kuhl just because of that. She is experienced and knowledgeable on issues of housing, houselessness, the environment, and lived experience. While both Conlan and Cadenas are YIMBY-ites (Yes in My Backyard, code for Yes, More$ in the Developers Bank Account), Kuhl fights for housing the most vulnerable. I have been hearing YIMBY’s all-housing-is-equal argument for a few years now, when in fact Santa Cruz does NOT need to build any more market-rate housing for years to come. We need only HUD affordable housing for those living here now, those making less than $70.000 a year. Even with a mandate on developers to include 20% “affordable” units in each development, it still means there will be 80% sky-high unaffordable in the rest of the project. The poor Yimbys who rent become public relations spokespeople for the Swenson-Ley-Devcon development slot machine now looking to ATM-ize our community. By the way, Kuhl has been endorsed by the Sierra Club and the Campaign for Sustainable Transportation, so she also has real bona fides in the area of greening Santa Cruz with respect to the environment and transportation. Vote Brown-Hill-Kumar-Kuhl for Santa Cruz city council!

“To voters in Michigan, and all across this country: Yes. Your vote matters. In fact, it can be decisive in determining the future of our entire country. Please vote.” (Oct. 5)
(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 14 years. He was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His term ended in April of 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

...
October 5

IS THERE REALLY A CRITICAL OVERDRAFT EMERGENCY IN THE MIDCOUNTY WATER SUPPLY?
If there is a groundwater overdraft problem, why hasn’t the County declared an emergency, as Soquel Creek Water District did in 2014?  Maybe there isn’t a critical overdraft emergency.  What if the determination set in the 1980’s by the State, never really supported by scientific analysis, was made to curb growth?  Maybe Soquel Creek Water District wants to keep that “sky-is-falling” mantra, to enable them to rake in higher fees and qualify for grants.  A recent Letter to the Editor in the Sentinel echoed the questions of many in the community: if there is a groundwater overdraft problem, why does Soquel Creek Water District continue to sell new service connections for development projects? (see Letter | Water users added to burdened water system

On the same day, the Sentinel featured a Guest Commentary by Ron Duncan, General Manager for Soquel Creek Water District, responding to that letter,  in which he stated:

“The District is working diligently to address the overdrafting of our groundwater supply and the resulting seawater contamination through our many water conservation programs and our Pure Water Soquel groundwater replenishment project. It is important to note that recent development has not caused the overdraft (created in the 1980s) but could exacerbate it.”

Guest Commentary | Pure Water Soquel addresses water woes

Ron Duncan went on to praise the Water Demand Offset program, but did not divulge that after the District declared the “Groundwater Emergency” in 2014,  the Board approved increasing the Water Demand Offset fees for new hook ups from $18,000/anticipated Acre Foot demand to a whopping $55,000/Acre Foot.  He did not divulge that last year, the Board approved a new smoke-and-mirrors calculation that by installing Smart Meters everywhere, the District could claim unverified water savings of 176 Acre Feet/year, and thereby opened the door to sell even more new hook-ups without any real measurable water reduction.

Hmmmm….

Well, is there really a critical overdraft problem?  What is the basis for that State determination, known a Bulletin 118?  I have been asking that question for a long time, and getting no answers, not even from a Public Records Act request of the State Department of Water Resources, the agency making the determinations.  A hydrologist for Montgomery & Associates mentioned at a MidCounty Groundwater Agency meeting that “the State just accepted what Soquel Creek Water District said was the status.”  

That got me digging.  I found the answer here:

SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT AND CENTRAL WATER DISTRICT GROUNDWATER BASIN MANAGEMENT PLAN 2007 

page 14 of Report states:

“Bulletin 118 (DWR, 1975) defined a basin called the Santa Cruz Purisima Formation Highlands which included the area overlying the aquifers from north and east of Santa Cruz to a boundary with the Pajaro Valley as well as a separate basin named Soquel Valley. The 1980 update of Bulletin 118 (DWR, 1980) identified the Santa Cruz-Pajaro Basin, which included both the Sa itnta Cruz Purisima Formation Highlands and Soquel Valley, and was classified as subject to critical conditions of overdraft. This finding, according to Bulletin 118-80, was “at the request of the City of Santa Cruz and a Supervisor of Santa Cruz County”. 

DWR revised Bulletin 118-80 again in 1992 and better defined the boundaries for Soquel Valley, Santa Cruz Purisima Formation Highlands and the Pajaro Valley Basins. It also cited that the Soquel-Aptos area was not subject to critical conditions of overdraft. This finding was primarily based on the Groundwater Management Program and Monitoring that was implemented by SqCWD in 1981. Bulletin 118 was most recently updated in 2003 and includes a written report and supplemental material consisting of individual hydrogeologic descriptions, maps, and GIS compatible data files of each delineated groundwater basin in California. Bulletin 118 (2003), however, still does not clearly and accurately describe the hydrogeologic conditions of the Soquel-Aptos area.” 

[Steinbruner Editorial note: You had better quickly download this Report because it will likely disappear from the District website soon…see further discussion about alteration of website materials]

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

WATSONVILLE WETLAND CURBSIDE NATIVE PLANT SALE

Well, there is nothing like working in your garden to help boost one’s spirits and improve health of all.  Go check out this wonderful plant sale, and support the Watsonville Wetlands stewards at Pajaro Valley High School.

Curbside Native Plant Sale

WRITE ONE (OR TWO) LETTER(S).  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A VIRTUAL MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE THIS WEEK BY JUST DOING SOMETHING. 

Cheers, Becky Steinbruner 685-2915….  I welcome your discussion.

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.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

...

October 1, 2020
#275 / Better Than Real?

The Wall Street Journal says that Facebook has “a virtual reality hit on its hands.” At least, that is what a recent article is prognosticating in one of its “comments on capitalism,” as I tend to think of the articles that appear in The Journal

Pictured above is a Star Wars fan using an Oculus headset. To be clear, Oculus does not market a light saber, just the headset. According to The Journal, that may be enough. The most recent Journal article hyping the Oculus headset ran on Tuesday, September 29, 2020. It includes a seven-minute video demonstration by a Journal columnist Providing you can slip past the paywall (difficult for me to tell, since I subscribe), you, too, can live in virtual reality. Just click to leave real life behind!

Facebook bought Oculus for $2 billion in 2014. As we all know, Facebook markets a social media platform, defined by software. Oculus markets a piece of physical equipment, the kind of Virtual Reality (VR) headset pictured above.

Why did Facebook buy Oculus? For six years, market analysts have been wondering. The Journal now provides the answer. The latest edition of the Oculus headset is no longer “tethered,” meaning that the headset no longer needs to be attached by a wire to some piece of computing equipment as you use it. That will make a big difference in the appeal of these headsets, says The Wall Street Journal. Facebook/Oculus is going to sell a lot of headsets!

I don’t prognosticate the markets, but I do think that the “untethered” version of a VR headset now does point to something that I am afraid may be transformative – and not in a good way. As we know, from either personal experience of from reading about it, many Facebook users start defining their life and their “friendship” relationships by what happens on Facebook, rather than by what happens IRL (“in real life”). Commentators are rightly concerned about this phenomenon, which is helping to transform our shared social and political world into an individual and private “social media” experience. Reality is being transformed into a “mediated” version of what we used to experience directly, with our physical senses. 

Soon, looking ahead, we will be able truly to “live” outside what we now know as IRL, using the Oculus headset as a replacement for our human eyes. We will walk around looking like bugs. But the eyes of bugs are a mechanism by which insects can perceive the “real” world. Using a VR headset, we humans will be “improving” reality, by mediating what our eyes might otherwise see IRL to a version of reality mediated by Facebook/Oculus.

I, personally, think that the most serious challenge facing us, as human beings, is the challenge of understanding our true place in the “real world.” The World of Nature preexists our existence and activity, and we are, ultimately, completely dependent on the World of Nature. 

Despite this fact, we humans do also inhabit a world that we create for ourselves, a “Human World,” a world that, in the end, is created by what I call “politics.” 

When we start “living” in a world that no longer allows us to experience the World of Nature directly, when we see everything through mediated, digital “eyes” that enhance and transform what is “real” into what we “really” want to see, I think we’re gone.

Yosemite, or a “perfect picture” of Yosemite: which is better? 

I think we need to live IRL/100% – which means we need an accurate understanding of what is happening in the World of Nature, and an understanding of the immense possibilities we can create in our Human World. Headset life attempts to replace that “Natural World” part of reality with a completely human-generated substitute. Take care!

You don’t need to spend $400 and buy a VR headset to experience the reality of both of the two different “worlds” that we simultaneously inhabit. I want to suggest to you that the World of Nature, and our political and social reality, are actually going to be “better,” and better for us, when we experience them directly, rather than through our Facebook/Oculus headsets!

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

...

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”

“I think it’s very healthy to spend time alone. You need to know how to be alone and not be defined by another person.”
~Oscar Wilde

“Without great solitude, no serious work is possible.”
~Pablo Picasso

“To lose patience is to lose the battle.”
~Mahatma Gandhi

“If you don’t like something, change it. If you can’t change it, change your attitude.”
Maya Angelou 


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

...

4 Key takeaways from the vice presidential debate, by Robert Reich. Please vote. I’m not a citizen, so I can’t.

...

Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

September 30 – October 6, 2020

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…News and Views on Council candidatesState propositions and voting, latest streamers and screeners. GREENSITE…on the Wharf hearings. KROHN…back next week. STEINBRUNER…Soquel Water District $$$ election pamphlets, Pure Water Soquel management plan, County budget looks bad, CZU fire costs, Fred Keeley and The Great Park. PATTON…Wagner and Facism. EAGAN…Deep Cover and ever lasting Subconcious Comics. QUOTES…”OCTOBER”

...

HIP POCKET BOOK STORE & STATUE. This statue of two naked humans by sculptor Ron Boise was placed around September 10, 1964. The Hip Pocket Bookstore was in front part of the St. George Hotel on Pacific Avenue while the original Catalyst was in the Front Street backside of the hotel. Bookshop Santa Cruz now occupies that space. The Boise Statue was later placed in the Steam Beer Brewery owned by Fritz Maytag. Our Goodtime Washboard 3 trio played at the brewery and I became good friends with Ron Boise. He in turn introduced me to the joys of Wood roses!!!                                                        

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email photo@brattononline.com

RUSSELL BRUTSCHE’S “NOWHERE PLAN”. Watch Brutsche’s very clever and thoughtful Beatle’s cover to remind us to vote for Sandy Brown, Kelsey Hill, Kayla Kumar and Alicia Kuhl for Santa Cruz City Council. But also to stop the City Council from building a Taj Garage/ Library where our Farmers market is and should be.

DATELINE September 28

SOME CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATES. Much maile and many questions about who to vote for and against in the City Council race. Well it’s obvious from her mailer where Sonya Brunner stands or sits. She’s a closely tied follower of the Cynthia Mathews organization. Look at her endorsers… Robert deFreitas (close admirer of Mathews for decades) Matt Farrell, Caleb Baskin, Kris Reyes (Boardwalk emissary), Robert Singleton (failed candidate), Greg Larson (another failed candidate ). These represent the pro development, anti renter groups in our Silicon Beach community. 

It’s been quite clear that Sandy Brown, Kayla Kumar and Kelsey Hill are the clear choices of the environmentalists and progressive community. But many are asking what about Alicia Kuhl? Alicia, according to reports has been very occupied with helping Food Not Bombs face their current eviction. She emailed back to my question re who are your supporting groups and endorsers…” Campaign for Sustainable Transportation, the Sierra Club, The National Union of the Homeless, Food Not Bombs, Ernestina Saldana, Keith McHenry and hundreds of people living without homes”. There’ll be more to this topic, obviously. 

STATE PROPOSITIONS, HOW TO VOTE!!
Fred Geiger and Susan Martinez are two very active political people , I’ve known them for decades. They worked hard to produce this list of our State Propositions and what to do with them in November. They also added…” Remember if u see a lot of expensive ads on an issue then there are big bucks behind the ads spending huge amounts to protect their interests and what they say doesn’t even have to have any resemblance to the truth! If you agree ( or make unwise changes, ha, ha!) you could share this analysis with your friends – or enemies, even. Happy election, – We hope. And also hope to see you next year when it’s safe!

Subject: Propositions 2020 – our recommendations

PROPOSITIONS 2020 – VOTE!!!! EVERY VOTE COUNTS!!!
14 NO Stem cell research:  expensive giveaway to Corporations and Universities when the Feds are already funding studies. 2 therapies have already been approved.
15 YES Reverses Prop 13 ONLY for Big Businesses and multi-million $ property owners. NOT small businesses, NOT small property owners, NOT seniors. Put schools and communities first – make Big Corps pay their fair share of their property taxes. Don’t overlook the fact that biz paid 2/3 of all property tax when Prop 13 went into effect and now their share has gone down to only 1/3. This Prop restores that balance that used to work just fine for everyone in the State! 
16 YES Reinstates Affirmative Action for State schools and jobs.
17 YES Gives people with felony convictions ON PAROLE the right to  VOTE. They have served their time why should their citizenship rights be infringed – a voter suppression tactic used by Conservatives! 

STREAMERS, SCREENERS, CRIES & CRITIQUES.
I still haven’t been to a movie theatre. The  reviews of current films read poorly, and dealing with the seating, lines, and the improving quality of what’s online hardly makes it seem worthwhile

THE ARTISTS WIFE. Bruce Dern and Lena Olin take on the heavy lead roles in this painfully, near true story of how parts of the Dolby Sound family dealt with the dementia and Alzheimers of old man Dolby. If you’ve ever had to deal with these age old afflictions you know how deep the pain goes. 

CRIMINAL. This is an unusual series that consists of four different story lines on four different websites. There’s Criminal: United Kingdom, Criminal: Germany, Criminal: Spain and Criminal: France. All episodes were filmed in Spain and center on criminals each being questioned and interviewed in exactly the same interrogating room with a very important two-way mirror separating them from the cops and legal team. I’ve watched almost all of the four series, they are clever, well acted, puzzling in a good way and well worth your time.

ENOLA HOLMES. From a series of new books this is a fable about Sherlock and Mycroft Holmes little sister Enola. Enola spelled backwards is of course Alone. Millie Bobby Brown plays Enola and is super, couldn’t be better. It’s light clever, mildly absorbing and if you’ve nothing else going on….go for it.

THE INVISIBLE MAN. This got an amazing 91 on Rotten Tomatoes and I must admit I’m still remembering the tension, the scares, and surprising talents of Elisabeth Moss in the lead. She’s the ex-girlfriend of an optical genius who invented an invisible suit. It sort of looks like a wetsuit with knobs. So basically, he haunts her. The police don’t believe her so she takes matters into her own hands and fights him, wherever he is supposed to be. It’ll take your mind off all the stuff that’s haunting you nowadays, watch it.

THE VOW. 82 ON Rotten Tomatoes is just about what I’d give this documentary. NXIVM is the name of a self awareness, mindfulness group. It has masters and slaves and even branding women members in private places. It’s a documentary but not your average documentary. If you’ve ever belonged to or have thought about joining one like maybe Scientology don’t miss this partial opening of their secret doors.

LAUNDROMAT. How could a movie directed by Stephen Soderbergh and starring Meryl Streep, Antonio Banderas be so bad? Don’t waste your time trying to figure it out. Rotten Tomatoes gives it a 41! The plot focus is on tax evasion, off shore investments, insurance rip offs, and is way too complex and silly at the same time.

UTOPIA. A big confession here…I turned this on off after about 12 minutes. It’s a teen age space comics attempt at comedy. Poorly acted, no name stars, maybe funny for a nine year old but any nine year olds I’ve ever known

BEEN HERE, SEEN THAT. Here’s last week’s visions and beyond.

CHALLENGER: THE FINAL FLIGHT. We’ve never heard much about this 1986 NASA shuttle flight disaster. This is a  four part documentary with J.J. Abrams doing the producing. The NASA flight was done for much needed social approval and a brilliant, pretty, school teacher was included among the astronauts. The Challenger blew up in less than two minutes after it was launched and all the crew perished. The film shows NASA’s faults, details all the worlds  reactions and will teach you some necessary features involved in our space programs.

RATCHED. Named and promoted as a back story to the famed Nurse Ratched played by Louise Fletcher in Jack Nicolson’s and Ken Kesey’s  “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” book.For some reason the hospital is changed from a military re hab center in Menlo Park where Kesey did time to a spacious retreat in Lucia, which is near Big Sur. Judy Davis, Sarah Paulson, Cynthia Nixon and believe it or not, Sharon Stone are in it. It’s a gruesome movie with such scenes as a doctor hammering an ice pick into a patient’s eye or being given a severed head as a present. The lesbian sub plot is very insensitive, so is the sodomy story…don’t bother.

THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME. This is a Netflix thriller set in the town of Knockemstiff, Ohio (a real place). Robert Pattinson (of Twilight fame) plays a knockabout country minister who does bad things to good people. Tom Holland and Bill Skarsgard, and Mia Wasikowska do fine jobs of acting but the plot is predictable, stodgy, and adds nothing to cinema history 

ALIVE. This Korean zombie thriller has absolutely nothing new, exciting or creative in it. People become Zombies by catching a virus (duh!!!). They act and look and stagger like every zombie we’ve ever seen on screen. They bleed a lot and smear the blood on walls, windows, everywhere. A sweet young girl is found by a nice young boy across the huge patio in their apartment building. You know the rest, trust me. 

COAST ELITES is HBO’s masterful so called comedy that centers on our very present trials and tribulations caused by Trump, fires, and solitary confinement in our own homes. Bette Midler starts the series of 5 monologues. It’s new, innovative and immensely thought producing. Watch it, think about it. 

THE SOCIAL DILEMMA. This one hour and 20 minute documentary a Netflix original is so important, good, and timely. It focuses on the control the internet has over us now and the inevitable growth it will take as time goes by. The control goes much deeper than your searching for a toaster on Amazon and seeing toasters pop up on the next 20 screens you open. It’s about how Facebook, Twitter, Google, You Tube and many more. Are controlling how long we watch and how often we click on any site, then selling the data from our views to advertisers. They work hard to change our groups of friends to bring people with similar views together politically, religiously and change our lives in the process. My notes while watching say things like…the future an Utopia or oblivion,  causing a civil war, ruining a global economy, prioritizing what keeps us on our screen, election advertising, existential threat, can’t agree on what is truth, assault on democracy and on and on. Do see this documentary and think about it and us and yourself. … 

RAKE. I’m still enthralled with watching RAKE. It’s one of the most consistent brilliant funny, curious, serious, series I’ve ever seen. It’s a Netflix feature from Australia back in 2010. This week Netflix introduced Charlie Kaufmann’s newest movie “I’m Thinking of Ending Things”. You need warnings about Kaufmann’s films. Remember “Being John Malkovich”, “Synecdoche, New York” and especially “Eternal Sunshine of the Eternal Mind”. “I’m Thinking” is one of his impressionistic, dreamlike. Psychological adventure voyages. It’ll stay with you for days after

AWAY starring Hillary Swank on HBO. Is a series of Hollywood tripe at its corniest about five very mismatched astronauts on their way to Mars from the moon. The first episode is taut at times when they do some space walking outside their space ship but it’s downhill from there. 

Every Friday morning on KZSC (88.1 fm or live online at KZSC.org) from 8:10am-8:20am or thereabouts I present my “B Movie Bratton” segment of short critiques (not reviews) of what’s on our screens of any size. Dangerous Dan Orange hosts the rest of the Bushwhackers B. Club. Tune in this Friday and listen to my critiques. 

September 28

WHEN IS A LIE NOT A LIE

A further piece on the Wharf is necessary. Dates of hearings have been changed and mistakes in the city’s Environmental Impact Report (EIR) Alternatives section have been corrected. 

The city has decided to run the Wharf Master Plan (WMP) EIR past the Historic Preservation Commission for its review, at the Commission’s request. Not for a vote but for a look-see. This step in the process should have been a given from the start. The Wharf is 106 years old, is the longest wooden pier on the West Coast, is listed in the city’s Historic Building Survey with a rating of excellent and is eligible for listing in the CA Register of Historical Resources. This 11th hour inclusion of the city’s Historic Preservation Commission is indicative of a process fraught with subterfuge. The city makes clear is does not HAVE to run it by said Commission but the city wants to be fully transparent, it says. 

If the city wants to be fully transparent it would fess up that it lied to the Department of Commerce in order to secure grant monies to pay for the expensive Wharf Master Plan. If you are going to roll your eyes at Trump’s latest lies you should roll your eyes at the city’s lie which pre-dates Trump’s election by two years. To claim that the Wharf was severely damaged by the 2011 tsunami was a lie. That lie was used to obtain almost a million dollars of taxpayers’ money for a city project that is widely unpopular. Do we just shrug that off?

The date for the Historic Preservation Commission hearing is Wednesday October 14th, followed the next night, Thursday October 15th by the Planning Commission hearing. Although the date is not yet set, a reasonable guess is that the Council hearing on the Wharf Master Plan EIR will be Tuesday October 27th.  All will be remote, online hearings. 

As I wrote last week, I spotted a contradiction in the Alternatives section of the EIR and alerted the city. The entry that had the 45 feet tall new “Landmark Building” removed under this Alternative was a mistake according to the response to the city from the consultants. That’s quite a big mistake. Out of all the changes/additions to the Wharf, this proposed massive new building covering the sea-lion viewing holes and towering over the Dolphin restaurant at the south end of the Wharf is probably the most detested, if written public comments are any measure of the community’s sentiments. When I checked to see how this correction is captured on the Economic Development’s webpage, it did not surprise me that it is buried. What did surprise is that it is described as a “minor correction.” That is the equivalent of saying that the parking garage will be removed from the library relocation project, then correcting the mistake to say that the parking garage is not being removed, it is being lowered 5 feet. Then labeling that, a minor correction. 

All this suggests that the consultants and the city top staff are playing the community for fools. For 40 years I’ve read city documents riddled with distortions, inaccuracies and lies in order for staff to push through pet projects. Occasionally a lawsuit or legal letter will rein in the worst offences and occasionally an unpopular project such as DeSal or weakening the city’s Heritage Tree Ordinance will be stopped. It should not require such massive effort to achieve the people’s will. Too often elected officials are seduced into staff recommendations, genuflecting to show where the power lies. With direct challenges to staff interpreted as rudeness and policies put in place to dampen such criticism, it is no wonder a lie by the city to fraudulently obtain Federal funds is so easily accepted as a minor transgression.

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

...
...

September 28

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 14 years. He was elected to the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His term ended in April of 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

...

STEINBRUNER STATES.

September 28

HOW MUCH DID THAT GLOSSY PROPAGANDA COST THE SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT CUSTOMERS?
Last week, many people contacted me regarding the glossy, full-color 12-page propaganda that Soquel Creek Water District mailed out to all customers.  Ratepayers are disgusted with the expensive fluff that provided nothing more than  a sales job for the PureWater Soquel Project and a veiled campaign stunt to support the incumbents who are shoving the Project forward. 

Customers with families and on fixed incomes are really struggling to pay their high water bills, yet the District has no qualms about hiring at least two consultants to help them make a glossy colorful ad that says nothing about the water quality  or the extremely high rates.

Take a look at the attached “Community Report 2019-2020”.  What was the goal of sending this very expensive mailer out two weeks before the November 3 election ballots arrive?  It is no secret that the incumbents support the Project to inject millions of gallons of treated sewage water into the drinking water supply for the area, but hundreds of people are strongly opposed to that happening.  

Candidates Corrie Kates and Maria Marsilio are running for the two available seats on the District Board of Directors, and want to put the brakes on this bloated and unnecessary Project that has now tripled in cost to $182,000 or more. Corrie and Maria instead favor more timely conjunctive water use with the City of Santa Cruz, and not damage the environment. 

Here is some interesting information to ponder regarding the matter. 

Re: data used in the Community Report 2019-2020:

I found the Survey Results presented to the Board by FM3 Survey at the June 16, 2020 meeting, in Item 7.2 (page 65) of interest.  The “73% of Customers are Comfortable with PureWater Soquel” was a consolidated number that had only 32% feeling very comfortable with the Project, but the surveyor added in the 41% who were “somewhat comfortable” with the project.

06-16-20 Board Packet

The survey sample was 427 registered voters from the District.  Only 52% of the surveys were conducted by phone, the rest were via online.(see page 85)

I think it is notable that of those surveyed, 16% drink bottled water at home. (page 83)

In the September 15, 2020 Board agenda packet, documents in Item 7.3 provide information related to PureWater Soquel Project as submitted in the $89 million Low-Cost Loan agreement with the EPA.  Page 194 includes a basic funding itemization: (I have copied and pasted the language as it is in the agreement…with many typographical errors)

09-15-20 Board Packet

Current CIP (Fiscal Years 2020-21 to 2029-30). 

The District is currently focused on initiating construction of the treamen anc conveyand components for Pure Water Soquel. The budget for Pure Water Soquel totals $181,580,409. The District will finance Pure Water Soquel with a $88,974,400 loan through U.S. EPA’s Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) program, a $50,000,000 grant for the California State Water Resources Control Board, a $36,000,000 loan from the California State Water Resources Board, and $6,606,009 from revenues and fund balances. 

In addition to Pure Water Soquel, the capital improvement program (“CIP”) for the Water System includes $69,148,435 as summarised in the following table. Though Fiscal Year 2029- 2030, the District expects to fund 62.9% of these additional CIP projects with revenues and fund balances and 37.1% with with debt and grants. 

Information on page 187 is slightly different:

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

APTOS LIBRARY VIRTUAL TOUR RESCHEDULED TO OCTOBER 5

RESCHEDULED TO 10/5: A new Aptos Branch Library is on the way! Aptos Branch Library – Virtual Open House/:
RSVP Online
Reserva

A new Aptos Branch Library is on the way!

The Santa Cruz Public Library, County of Santa Cruz Department of Public Works, Anderson Brule Architects (ABA), Bogard Construction and Second District Supervisor Zach Friend invite you to the Aptos Branch Library Virtual Open House. Learn about the design, ask questions and share comments.

The Aptos Branch of the Santa Cruz County Public Library System has outgrown its current facilities. The County has completed a feasibility study, selected a design-build team, and begun the design process. The design concept has been developed based on input gathered from four community meetings during the study. Bogard Construction and ABA, the design-build team, is now ready to share the design concept, answer questions, and hear your comments.

Come see the exciting results of the hard work and collaboration of the community and the County at a virtual open house event. The discussions will focus on:

  • Site and Architecture
  • Interior Layout

RSVP Online
Casa abierta virtual de la sucursal de la biblioteca de Aptos Reserva

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  ATTEND A VIRTUAL MEETING AND SPEAK UP.  JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK, AND MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.

Cheers, 

Becky Steinbruner

831-685-2915 (I welcome your discussion)

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.

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

...

September 28
#272 / Aw Shucks Fascism

As far as I know, this New Yorker Article on “How Wagner Shaped Hollywood” should be accessible to those who click the link. Having had a chance to watch the entire Ring Cycle twice, and as someone who is hoping that I may be able to see it at least one more time (before my time runs out), I was fascinated by how author Alex Ross (a comic book writer and artist) documented the deep penetration of Wagner’s music into American culture.

Wagner’s music, of course, is often associated with Fascism and the rise of the Third Reich in Germany. Ross’ article begins with an evaluation of “Birth of A Nation,” a 1915 silent movie credited with having stimulated a renaissance of the Ku Klux Klan. He considers how Charlie Chaplin employed Wagner, and then moves on to our modern superhero literature. You will be particularly interested in this article if you are a movie buff, or a fan of various television series that have apparently employed Wagner’s music in unexpected ways. Many of the film and television references were way beyond the boundaries of my personal knowledge.

The picture at the top of this blog posting, of course, is a scene from Apocalypse Now, picturing American helicopters on their way to destroy a village in Vietnam. That is a film with which I am familiar. The kicker in the film, as Ross notes, was that Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries” was portrayed as an explicit part of the American assault. If you haven’t seen the movie, or if you need to refresh your recollection, you can watch a brief video clip, below. Turn up the sound for the full effect!

Ross says that George Lucas and his original “Star Wars Trilogy,” ends with an “aw shucks” appropriation of Fascist style, based on the use of Wagner’s music. The question Ross wants us to explore is whether or not Hollywood films and other forms of popular culture are complicit in the exercise of American hegemony.

“The urge to sacralize culture, to transform aesthetic pursuits into secular religion and redemptive politics, did not die out with the degeneration of Wagnerian Romanticism into Nazi kitsch,” says Ross. We are still facing that, today. It is a feature of our contemporary politics.

To the degree that using Wagner as “background music” assists in the perpetuation of American hegemony, in all its “chauvinist exceptionalism, its culture of violence, [and] its pervasive economic and racial inequities,” we need to make some changes!

Bratton editor note…Gary didn’t mention but author Ross did …that Richard Wagner died about 6 years before Hitler was born.\

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