August 14 – 20, 2019

Highlights this week:
BRATTON…MAH and mopping up money, district elections, Downtown Forward – a front? 15 women artists. GREENSITE…on the Coastal Commission rail/trail hearing. KROHN…Green New Deal, rental housing, Water Street bridge lynching, district elections, cell towers, new council work plan. STEINBRUNER…pleads for a fair trial, Soquel sewage water, Dream Inn Development. PATTON…5G Wireless technology. EAGAN…classic treasures. JENSEN…Reviews Mike Wallace is Here. BRATTON…I critique Mike Wallace is Here, Them That Follow. UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES… “Beaches”


                                 

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RORY CALHOUN VISITS SANTA CRUZ IN 50’S. Rory was born in Los Angeles, and lived and worked here (Boulder Creek) for a few years. He was the only actor to have made four films with Marilyn Monroe! With George Ow’s, the Nickelodeon’s and Rita Bottoms’ help we brought Rory back here in 1991. That’s when he signed the cement sidewalk at the Nickelodeon. The photo shows his then wife and movie star Lita Baron on the right, with Eunice and Leonard Sancher, plus Mary and H. Ersie on his left. Rory died in 1999. My daughter Jennifer and I went to his funeral. Lita Baron was there.                                         

photo credit: Fredda C. Carr of Boulder Creek

OH BROTHER WHEREFORE ART THOU? 
THE WASHBOARD SERENADERS. 

DATELINE August 12

MORE PHOTO FACTS. Scroll down to see last week’s historic photo of Julian Camacho and John Tunney at the Cooper House rally. Eric Fingal took that photo for Covello & Covello, and still works for them. He emailed saying: “The photo of Tunney and Camacho in front of the Cooper House is mine, not Covello and Covello’s. I believe that was from a series (there were also some of Cranston and Camacho too) shot on my last day of being a teenager — October 20, 1972. I turned 20 years old the next day! I couldn’t remember which series was shot in October. This one could very easily been shot on August 20, and the photos with Cranston shot on October 20. 

MOPPING UP MAH… We haven’t heard or read anything about it yet, but the MAH is in serious financial trouble. A major part of the problem is MAH financial data is no longer shared with the board or their largest donors. The MAH Finance Committee has been ordered by the former executive director not to disclose financial data on the Museum’s current fiscal status, despite repeated requests. The staff has kept these “internal affairs” quiet, but the problem is real and they’re working on a fundraiser to alleviate that imbalance. Somebody should demand “transparency”. More than that, there’s trouble afoot over finding a new director since Nina Simon left. It appears the present staff doesn’t want anybody new telling them what to do, and they want a voice in the selection of that new director. Many of the staff are challenging the board’s authority. A big part of the problem seems to be that the food court which destroyed Abbott Square isn’t bringing in the bucks. It’s usually inhabited by computer and cell phone users, not food court customers. Of course, as any Mindfulness follower will tell you, all of above are just words, opinions, and thoughts. But then again, what would happen if the folks involved with Nina Simon’s current job take a look at what’s been happening to the MAH project she rammed so long and hard to deliver to us?

DISTRICT ELECTIONS APPROACHING…AGAIN!!! So I received a document from The National Demographics Corporation. It says in part“you are sitting at your office on a Thursday afternoon, and the city manager sends you an email letting you know that the city received a demand letter about a voting rights issue. You review the demand letter and realize that it is a letter from a prospective plaintiff’s attorney, alleging that the city’s election system is in violation of the California Voting Rights Act (“CVRA“) and threatening litigation if the city does not voluntarily change its elections system. What do you do? At least 88 cities have made the change to by-district elections and two more, the City of Goleta and the City of Carpinteria, agreed to make the change for 2022. Other cities, such as the City of San Clemente have decided to put the matter on the 2018 ballot for voters’ approval. Approximately eighteen other cities are in some form of legal dispute but have not yet decided to make the change to by-district elections. For context, only 28 cities employed by-district elections prior to passage of the CVRA. Cities are not the only public entities susceptible to a CVRA challenge. Thirty two community college districts, over 165 school districts, and at least 12 other special districts have made the change to by-district elections”. 

District Elections are all about voting rights, protected classes, racially polarized voting, equal protection and the basic right to vote.  

Vallejo has — and has had — what looks like a wide spread of groups elected to their City Council. But no matter, they are going through deep, studies and plots and plans to determine IF district elections will change anything. At first and second glances, Santa Cruz also appears to have fair and just representative voices from all concerned. This is just a head’s up to start studying the pros and cons when IT comes our way…again.

Go HERE if you want more info re Vallejo’s problems.

DOWNTOWN FORWARD or BACKWARD
While Queen Mother Cynthia Mathews can’t vote on her plot to develop the library garage structure — because she owns the house next to the Nickelodeon — she’s been super busy teaching her Fairy Princess Martine Watkins how to sneak, plot and plan their library garage goal through the Downtown Forward group. Go to their home page and check out how many developers and money people are on their membership list.

LINK TO 15 WOMEN ARTISTS. I can’t remember how I came across this, but it’s an excellent document that shows us some wonderful and deserving art. It’s all from turn of the century Paris. Take a look.

August 12

TIMING IS EVERYTHING.
I’m willing to go the extra mile to protect nature. Even so, 345 miles seemed a long drive for a 3 -minute presentation before the CA Coastal Commission. All sorts of rationalizations to avoid a 7-hour each way road trip presented themselves but in the end, with a colleague willing to drive and participate, not going was not an option.

At issue was an appeal to the Coastal Commission of the city of Santa Cruz’s approval of Segment 7 Phase 2 of the Rail Trail project: that less than a mile segment of proposed rail/ trail from Bay and California Streets to the wharf roundabout. The proposed route follows the current rail, which dips into a ravine below the linear La Barranca Park on Bay St., enters Neary Lagoon and skirts the Wastewater Treatment Plant before spilling out bike riders, pedestrians and wheel chair users into the roundabout at the foot of the wharf. It has a price tag of $10 million, which seems high for a less than a mile multi-use trail. For comparison, that is the same amount of money the state allocated to the whole county to tackle homeless issues. 

The high cost reflects the need for thousands of cubic yards of soil to be removed, the removal of all vegetation, including 44 trees on the western side, the building of an up to 19 foot high retaining wall on one side (to shore up the now denuded embankment) and a 54 inch high fence on the other, to separate the trail from the rail, plus the installation of lights and security cameras, which suggests that security issues are anticipated. Users will basically be walking or biking in a 12 foot wide chute next to tourist trains running between the Boardwalk and Davenport. None of this (except the cost) bothers me except for one thing: the project area includes a wetland, protected under the Coastal Act. It also is home to a wide variety of bird species, other vertebrates and invertebrates including bats and embraces a monarch butterfly site, designated as such by a city plaque within the grove. 

The city twisted itself into knots trying to downplay or negate any environmental impacts. First they omitted any reference to the monarch grove. Then they used a non Coastal Act definition of “wetland” to claim it wasn’t one; they then claimed the monarch grove wasn’t really a habitat; that displaced birds would simply go elsewhere and so on. The mitigations for such habitat loss are inadequate (you have to recreate lost wetlands, not just plant replacement trees elsewhere) and alternative alignments of the trail (such as up on Bay St.) were overly quickly dismissed. No doubt eying the council chambers filled with rail trail advocates the council quickly approved the project.

Since the Coastal Commission staff had expressed some concerns about the project and since wetlands are protected under the Coastal Act, Save Our Big Trees decided to appeal the city’s approval to the Coastal Commission. Buoyed by a detailed biological assessment of the project area from a biologist with 30 years’ experience, including photographs of onsite wetland vegetation, standing water, bird species and monarchs, plus a legal interpretation from an environmental attorney of the Coastal Act vis a vis wetland protection, and mapping an ADA compliant alternative, we were fairly confident that commission staff would find the appeal raised a substantial issue, which is the first step in the appeal process. But they didn’t. I admit to a certain naiveté when it comes to civic institutions. I trust they are following their mandate rather than eying the potential political repercussions of their decisions. And so the Coastal Commission staff accepted and parroted the city’s position.  If there was any hope at all, it was in Eureka for the Friday the 9th meeting of the CA Coastal Commission.

We had submitted extensive documentation to be shared with commissioners within the stated deadlines. Unbeknown to us, as we drove north towards Eureka, the commission staff had shared our documentation with city staff, which wrote a 17- page rebuttal as an addendum for commission review at the 11th hour. The rebuttal refuted the wetland designation, calling it a drainage ditch with the standing water being from rainfall and run off, despite the fact the standing water was photographed in July, the dry season. This type of fluvial deception by the city has a long history but I’ll save that for a future column.

Arriving late Thursday night in Eureka, we decided to wake early, read the city’s addendum and craft a timed response to fit within the allotted 3 minutes. It’s a brutal time limit; not 3 minutes each person but 3 minutes total. Prune every extraneous word and highlight the main points. Since Friday’s agenda contained 22 items and our appeal was the last item we took the time to finish our prep and headed to the meeting in the Eureka Marine building expecting a wait for our item to be up. The meeting had started at 9am. We arrived to an empty room save the sound crew packing up their equipment.  “Where’s the Commission meeting?” I asked, with a foreboding of the answer. ” Oh, they finished the meeting at ten minutes past ten”, was the response. “They re-positioned most of the items under the consent agenda.”

Such moments test one’s fortitude. And humility. Only a swim in the Eel River on the return journey cleansed our spirits. One part of nature replenishing as another part awaits destruction.

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

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August 12

THIS WEEK ON THE CITY COUNCIL

The Good

Green New Deal
Okay city council, it’s been six weeks since your last meeting. You’ve had time to think it over and as in former House Speaker Tip O’Neill’s used to say, “All politics are local.” So, this week, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Ed Markey’sGreen New Deal,” is on the Santa Cruz city council agenda, item #6. Three councilmembers (not me) have signed on to supporting it for Surf City. Take a look at House Resolution 109, “The Green New Deal” here As it stands on the agenda, it’s a feel-good aspirational nod towards doing the right thing concerning the environment. It lays out several reasons for how the initiative came about and why it is needed now, but also discusses healthcare, job creation and links climate change as a threat to national security. If the initiative receives support here, the mayor will notify our Congress member, Jimmy Panetta who is already signed on as a co-sponsor, but it will not provide any real teeth to mandate or legislate anything in the city of Santa Cruz. If we were serious, what might a Green New Deal look like for Santa Cruz? Ban single-use plastic bottles? Refrain from building the proposed last century 5-story parking garage downtown? We could mandate that the city initiate a process to only purchasing or leasing non-fossil fuel vehicles. We could also hire 100 people to form a Climate Corps. They could be trained to teach homeowners, businesses and renters how to transition to a non-carbon, fossil-free economy. And perhaps most easily and essentially, we could begin planting trees. How about planting 2,020 trees in 2020?

Data Collection Related to Rental Housing
Just the facts Ma’am. We need data to figure out what can be done to ease the pain and suffering of renters who include the low-income, students, and families. This data would be public as it is in other cities and include tracking actual rent increases–amount, where, and previous rent–(not just average ones) and actual evictions. In addition, to get an overall and useful picture of renters and landlords in the city we need to include rented accessory dwelling units, bedrooms rented out in owner-occupied single family homes, new buildings for multiple dwellers including townhouses and condos, and mobile homes. All this would be useful data. This item will be before the city council on Tuesday, Aug. 13 at 7:30pm, right after Oral Communication.

Plaque on Water Street Bridge Remembering the May 2, 1877 Lynching
I am excited about Santa Cruzans getting behind historical remembrances. Forgetting history is a theme that looms large in our country (slavery, Hay Market Square, Women’s participation in US science achievement, and national immigrant history). George Ow is behind a project to name the bridge going over the San Lorenzo River that spans from River Street to San Lorenzo Park, Chinatown Bridge. In addition, Councilmember Drew Glover has been working with locals to place a plaque on the Water Street Bridge “memorializing the May 2, 1877 lynching” of two men from this same place while also acknowledging the history of racial discrimination that’s taken place right here in the city of Santa Cruz. Whew! These are exciting times for teaching, learning, acknowledging, and understanding our own history.

The Bad

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

“$70,000 a minute. $4 million per hour. $100 million per day. That’s how much the Walton family, the richest family in the world, made last year. I say to the Walton family: No more excuses. Pay your workers a living wage—at least $15 an hour.” (Aug. 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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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August 12

I WANT A FAIR AND IMPARTIAL TRIAL, PLEASE.
How can it be fair that a judge would rule multiple times on a case, then disqualify himself after the last judgment that imposes hardship on the plaintiff?  That is what I feel occurred last Friday in Judge John Gallagher’s court regarding my legal action against Soquel Creek Water District.  He had done legal work for the District for 23 years before becoming a judge in this County.  He voluntarily signed a Statement of Recusal in 2017 for a similar case, admitting “It would give the appearance of impropriety if I were to handle this case.”  I discovered this Statement of Recusal only after he issued an Order that imposes a very compressed schedule upon me for submitting a Record of the evidence that is now 70,000 pages and will require printing and binding in nearly 90 binders. Judge Gallagher refused earlier to allow me to provide this voluminous Record in electronic form, and therefore i must submit it in hard copy.  The attorney for the District has stipulated that all documents with color MUST be printed in color for the Record.  This needlessly imposes form over function, and adds great expense.

I filed two motions on July 12: to disqualify Judge John Gallagher, and to vacate and set aside the Order he imposed, requesting a new Case Management Conference.

On August 8, 2019, Judge Gallagher issued the following tentative ruling:

LAW AND MOTION TENTATIVE RULINGS DATE: AUGUST 9, 2019 TIME: 8:30 A.M. Case No. 19CV00181 STEINBRUNER v SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT et al.

MOTION TO VACATE AND SET ASIDE ORDER, AND TO SET NE CASE MANAGEMENT CONFERENCE

The motion is denied. Petitioner’s motion states that it is brought under CCP §§170.3(a). 170.4(c)(1), and 170.4(d). None of these code sections support Petitioner’s request that the court’s June 27, 2019 Order Following Case Management Conferences Setting Administrative Record Deadlines, Briefing Deadlines and Hearing Schedule be vacated or set aside. While CCP §170.4(c) provides for vacating orders made by a judge after a statement of disqualification has been filed, no statement of disqualification was filed prior to the court’s June 27, 2019 order.

As is required, I notified the Court and all parties by 4pm that I requested to present oral argument in Court on August 9.

On August 9, in Dept. 10 before Judge John Gallagher, I did so, outlining these issues:

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

STOP OVER-BUILDING SANTA CRUZ!
This crazy frenzy is happening all over the County, but the City of Santa Cruz is about to change so substantially that the quality of life as we know it will vanish forever.  Where is the infrastructure to support this madness???

Here is one opportunity to speak out:

Time To Get Active!
A major new development is proposed, right across from the Dream Inn. The Planning Commission is going to consider the development at a meeting this coming Thursday, August 15, 2019, at 7:00 p.m. at the Santa Cruz City Hall. The artist’s fantasy is below. A picture of actual traffic follows that. 
Traffic is not the only problem!
If you’d like to be involved, you can click this link to access information from the City Planning Commission. The complete agenda is available at the bottom of that page.

You can send a message to the Planning Commission by clicking this link

I always think it is interesting that so few vehicles are ever shown in these artist renderings, don’t you???

WRITE ONE LETTER (AND MAKE A COPY TO KEEP!). MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.  BUT JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK!Cheers, Becky Steinbruner 

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

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August  11
#223 / 5G Wireless? G-Whiz! And Watch Out!


If you would like to read an article titled, “Everything iPhone Users Need to Know About 5G Wireless,” please click that link. Just be aware that the article does NOT tell you “everything you need to know.” 
This article, and many like it, emphasize the “Gee Whiz” aspects of this proposed new 5G technology. How about complete movies downloaded in seconds? How about autonomous cars?

Gee Whiz, Mr. Science, that 5G wireless sounds really keen!

What people have NOT been told about 5G wireless is that there are potential health impacts that have not been fully evaluated. Here is a link to an informative video, for those who want to learn more. Remember, you won’t find out about any of the potential problems from Verizon, Comcast, and AT&T!
Here is another thing. What people have NOT been told is that the federal government is attempting to prevent any local or state government from interfering with the upcoming rollout of this new 5G wireless technology.

On this coming Tuesday, August 13, 2019, the Santa Cruz City Council is slated to adopt an ordinance governing the installation of 5G wireless hot spots throughout the City of Santa Cruz, massively increasing the number of these radiation-emitting antennas in the local community, and allowing them to be placed not high above the ground, but at street level, where human exposure will be greatest (this is what the federal government requires, not necessarily what our local elected officials want).

You can find a link to the City Council agenda right here. Materials relating to the 5G wireless issue are found as part of Agenda Item #25.

Local activists, and particularly a group called called EMF-Aware-Santa Cruz, are trying to persuade the Council to impose the maximum controls possible, and to make it easy to appeal any grant of a permit for a 5G wireless installation. If you think that would be a good idea, and would like to communicate with the Council on this matter (and that’s encouraged), you can send an email to the City Council by clicking this link

I continue to believe that the “precautionary principle” is the proper approach to proposed new technologies. That is not what is happening with the proposed rollout of 5G wireless. To the degree that our local government can stand up for the local community, as the federal government seeks to sweep possible objections under the rug, I’m in favor of local control! Those concerned can attend the City Council meeting Tuesday, or send the Council a message in advance!

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. Check it out just below…another classic Subconscious Comic.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s ” Extra superb taste” 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

MUNCHING WITH MOZART. Every third Thursday of almost every month there is a free concert held in the upstairs meeting room of the threatened Santa Cruz Public Library. This month the theme is Bach • Brahms • Massenet and it happens Thursday, August 15 from 12:10 – 12:50. It’s in the upstairs meeting room of the threatened Santa Cruz Public Library, Downtown Branch. 

Emma Arulanantham on violin and Kumaran Arulanantham at the piano. They’ll play Partita No.2 in d minor BWV 1004 by Johann Sebastian Bach and Violin Sonata No.1 in G Major, Op.78 by Johannes Brahms and close with Meditation (from Thais) by Jules Émile Frédéric Massenet.Remember… it’s free and at the Santa Cruz Library

Central Branch Meeting Room upstairs.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Santa Cruz Shakespeare tackles one of the Bard’s lesser-known plays, The Winter’s Tale, with typical vitality, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com ). Also, return to an era when journalism mattered and a free press was cherished in the doc Mike Wallace Is Here, reviewed in this week’s Good Times.” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975. 

 

MIKE WALLACE IS HERE. A very insightful documentary about this major player in our USA news reporting history. A showman, actor and gadfly turned into a brilliant interviewer who changed the way we can become informed. Wallace fights depression, alcohol, drugs and media bosses to unearth truth and the nonsense behind many of our most famous faces. See it ASAP. You’ll appreciate whatever source of news you watch a lot more.

THEM THAT FOLLOW. This is an extra dramatic voyeuristic peek into the snake-handling Pentecostal hillbillies in Appalachia. It sheds no light on why these folks are like they are, or why we should care about their way of life. Olivia Colman does her best (and it’s good) to add depth to this drama. A big secret carries the movie three quarters of the way, but it’s not enough to make it worth your time or admission.  CLOSES THURSDAY AUGUST 15

ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD. The more movies you’ve seen in your lifetime the more you’ll like Quentin Tarantino’s latest. With Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio in the leads and it all happening in L.A. in 1969 it almost can’t miss. Slightly under the cuteness of the relationship between Pitt and DiCaprio is knowing that the film ends with the Manson Family killings of Sharon Tate and four other characters at the house that she shared with her husband, Roman Polanski. Add Al Pacino for about two minutes to all of that and you’ll be forced to like it.

MAIDEN.  A very significient tribute to women’s empowerment. With a well deserved 97 audience score and a 98 Rotten Tomato meter score you can be sure this documentary is very well worth watching.  It’s the very detailed story and back story of how one woman gathered the all woman crew and won the Whitbread Round the World sailboat race in 1989. It’s also an example of a very well made documentary. With great camera work, and a super amount of tension it should be seen by anyone who cares about the arorementioned women’s empowerment.

YESTERDAY. Imagine if the entire world forgot who the Beatles were except for one pretty good guitarist and singer of Indian heritage. An excellent feel good movie that has a fun plot, the greatest Beatle songs and good acting. Go see it especially if you have forgotten how much those songs affected you when their albums were first released.

THE FAREWELL. Whew, 100% on the Rotten Tomato meter and 91% on their audience score. The cast is mostly Asian and handles the problem of how to tell Grandma that she’s dying of cancer. It’s funny, deeply sad, superior acting and will hold you to the unfolding story right to the unusual ending. Well worth seeing….and remembering.

LOST AND FOUND. This is a very unusual blend and criss cross of seven (7) different stories that take place in a small Irish town. Some of these stories work perfectly others will leave you cold. Many of the characters merge and blend into the next story. It is Irish humor, subtle,  vague, slap happy and it works slowly on you…until you catch on. CLOSES THURSDAY AUGUST 15

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. August 13 has Jane Mio talking about the San Lorenzo River, the issues, the birds, the events. She’s followed by activist Gillian Greensite discussing trees, UCSC Growth, and more community concerns. Bruce Van Allen will cover many area developments on August 20. Then Julie James alerts us to The Jewel Theatre’s exciting new season. The small intense Espressivo Orchestra’s new season is Michel Singher’s subject on August 26. On September 3 John Orlando talks about his Distinguished Artists 2019-2020 season. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com 

Gotta love some standup…

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts. Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011. 

    beaches

“The sea does not reward those who are too anxious, too greedy, or too impatient. One should lie empty, open, choiceless as a beach – waiting for a gift from the sea”. Anne Morrow Lindbergh 
“I pass my time in the open air on the beach when it is really heavy weather or when the boats go out fishing”. Claude Monet
“Every time we walk along a beach some ancient urge disturbs us so that we find ourselves shedding shoes and garments or scavenging among seaweed and whitened timbers like the homesick refugees of a long war”. Loren Eiseley


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com


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July 30 – August 5, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Only In Santa Cruz, Goodbye Harry Woodward. GREENSITE…on proposed development at 190 West Cliff Drive. KROHN…Rent Control, NYC, developers boom time, sites specific stories. STEINBRUNER…Our high fire risk area, Mid-county groundwater issue, 5 story hotel for Capitola, Nisene Marks parking. PATTON…Are Democrats stupid? EAGAN…classic Sub Cons and Deep Covers. JENSEN…Into The Woods, Lost and Found. BRATTON…I critique Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Maiden, Lost and Found, The Farewell. UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES… “August” 

                                 

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PACIFIC AVENUE & COOPER STREET. 1892. Once again we can see our iconic Town Clock in it’s original position, high atop the O.D.D. Fellows building. The classic building on the left is our Santa Cruz County Court House. Also note the trolley tracks that a long-ago City Council allowed to be sacrificed to the automobile.
                                                      

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

BOB DYLAN AND PAUL SIMON DUET
JUDY COLLINS AND LEONARD COHEN DUET.  1976

DATELINE July 29

ONLY IN SANTA CRUZ. The longer you live in Santa Cruz, the more local events strike you as meaningful. We’ve got the world famous Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music opening. We’ve got events going every which way. We now have the Gilroy Garlic Festival disaster to bring fear even closer. Chris Krohn adds a shortened list just below, of developers’ projects designed to exclude so many of our friends from staying here. UCSC is adding so many new students, and they will need so much by way of space and attention that we’ll all pay for it. The City Council recall goes on, dividing our progressives vs. home owners who fear for their investments. Bittersweet moments — and only in Santa Cruz.

FAREWELL HARRY WOODWARD. Such a kind heart, so sharing with his music, Harry Woodward left all of us with memories of some really great times. His playing with Warmth, his singing, plus the way he had with a nutty sense of humor. He’ll be missed even more as time goes by.


July 29

FACTA NON VERBA
All public schools in Australia have a Latin motto: a different one for each school. My high school’s motto is Facta Non Verba, which translates to Deeds Not Words. It’s not what you say it’s what you do that counts. 

This motto can be well applied to the planning and approval process for development projects in the city of Santa Cruz.  The city’s General Plan states the need for proposed developments to be compatible with surrounding established neighborhoods. When plans are drawn up and projects approved, the results show the opposite: a lack of attention for the impacts of projects that are out of scale, out of harmony, out of balance with the modest single family neighborhoods that they then dominate.  A few crumbs are scattered around, maybe a color change here, or a higher wall there, so the decision-makers don’t look completely indifferent or in violation of the General Plan but overall, it’s a big developers’ banquet table at city hall.


Open space view from West Cliff Bay St. intersection: to be lost.

Developers rendition from Bay St.: using figures in foreground to minimize scale of the project

The new proposed development at West Cliff and Bay Streets (190 West Cliff) has finally reached the two- step process for approval: first the Planning Commission and then City Council. The Planning Commission meeting is set for 7pm on Thursday August 15th.  I’m saddened at the prospect of losing yet another vista of the mountains to the sea (see photo) and the boxing in of West Cliff Drive with a 4-story structure, let alone the increase in traffic and the transformation of our once small town into a playground for the rich. If you want a comparison for scale, Walnut Commons, a 3-story structure across from the downtown fire station has 19 condominiums; 555 Pacific, near the first roundabout and recently built, has 94 luxury units ranging in price from $2,500 to $3,000 a month depending on square footage with the lower price being for a 440 square foot unit. This new West Cliff development is planned for 89 units so you know it won’t be small.

To be fair, the white 3 story condos on the other side of Bay St. are also out of scale, foisted on the surrounding neighborhood a few decades ago. I argued against the scale and impact of that project at that time but a progressive city council approved it. They justified it as providing a “buffer” from West Cliff Drive for the adjacent neighborhood. I guess one person’s buffer is another person’s loss of view and privacy.

The major losers, should the 190 West Cliff Development be approved will be the residents of the low-income trailer court directly behind the proposed 4 story development. Ironically named “Clearview Court” the only clear view remaining for the trailer park neighbors will be that of the backside of 89 high- rise condos. One of the aspects of Santa Cruz that I have always appreciated is the existence of modest, low impact, low- income trailer parks that house lower income workers or retirees. How long before the Clearview Court trailer park property owner decides the lure of big development money is too hot to resist? Developing the Dream Inn parking lot into luxury condos is a step in that direction.

Some planning commissioners and city council members may have a problem turning the project down, since the developer is asking for no variances, is meeting inclusionary requirements (15% below market rate) and the Zoning for that section supports development.  However, similar to the General Plan, the actual language of the Zoning Code under Purpose 24.10.617.1 states: The purpose of the Zoning is “to establish and control uses to ensure development that protects neighborhood integrity while supporting appropriate uses.” Is this just verba? Where’s the facta to match the verba? For the past year, neighbors, including but not limited to those living at Clearview Court, have said loudly and clearly that the project is too massive and given the size, the impacts too negative. This has become a rallying cry for neighbors on the eastside as well as the westside and downtown. We are not against all development: we are against high-priced, big scale developments that overwhelm the character, human-scale and the uniqueness of the various Santa Cruz long-time neighborhoods. 

If the city followed my high-school motto: Facta Non Verba, this development would be sent back to the drawing board to respond to the neighborhood’s calls for protection which is codified in the Zoning but so far has been given only lip service. 

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

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July 29 

WHO’S SANTA CRUZ and WHOSE SANTA CRUZ IS IT?

It Really Has Become All About Housing and Who Gets to Live Here
Visiting my daughter in New York City recently really hit home about what we are up against in Santa Cruz. In NYC, there are two kinds of rent control, and then there are “free market” rents. Most of what is getting built in “The City” is market-rate development similar to here, “show me the money.” What I’ve been finding anecdotally, is that many New Yorkers who reside in rent-controlled units often don’t know it and end up paying market-rate rents until they discover the discrepancy. While I was visiting, my daughter received a rent increase notice. She lives with two roommates and they pay $4400 per month–$1467 each–for a 3-bedroom apartment in what’s known as Alphabet City, a part of Manhattan. The rent increase was for $800, an 18% increase and came a month before their lease was to end. They have no idea who the owner is, just a nameless faceless corporation. When their heat went off for a month last year in the middle of winter they had to fight hard to receive any back rent. With this new rent demand, they knew they would not stay. For $5100, 3-bedroom apartment in NYC there are three important criteria needed (all new to me): close to the subway, an elevator, and a laundry room. Their apartment has none of these. As a creeping panic set in the three professional women with very good salaries scrambled. After looking at five places they found one in still uber-trendy Williamsburg. OnceTHE place for young people looking to make their way in NYC, it is fast being played out and many are now looking for that edgy art and culture thing elsewhere (ring a bell?)perhaps deeper into the borough of Brooklyn. All three work in Manhattan and Williamsburg is only one-stop on the L Train across the East River. They sort of lucked out since they were three professional women looking, and their application was one of twelve submitted.The big difference besides being near the subway and cheaper, the owner lives next door. No corporate management firm to interface for those owners who are only looking to maximize profit. I bring this story up only because the notion of community is big part of what tenants are looking for too. Now, let’s go visit Santa Cruz.

Cha-Ching!
The 12 years preceding the 2016 city council election were years of real estate good times,which presaged a developer bonanza-BOOM. It was a timethat witnessed a distinct shift in Santa Cruz political culture, one that turned away from no-growth and slow-growth pro-environment policies towards an embrace of market-rate development for wealthier folks who do not yet live here. Mantras were born: all housing is equal, and any housing is good housing. And so, a sign was slowly coming into view on Highway 1 just north of Schaffer Road and on Ocean Street too, just south of Highway 17. That sign now reads: Santa Cruz for Sale, Market-Rate Developers Come on in! First came the Broadway Hyatt hotel, then 555 and 1547 PacificAve.condo projects (no affordable rental units), and the 151-room Marriot took shape during these years and is now almost completed.This is not to mention the once affordable apartments that are now gone at the La Bahia site on Beach Street. They have found a hotel developer that will build soon. In fact, the Boardwalk’s nemesis to that project for so many years, a veteran Santa Cruz activist, is now moving to New Mexico (go figure!) having lost this battle for a community-oriented, saner project that would’ve placed historic preservation and lower rents front and center.

The New Normal (unless the community organizes for real affordable housing…)
So now, let’s turn to chapter 2 in the once politically unlikely, Surf City Development Boom.I write “political” because so often these same developers need variances, parking spaces, and city infrastructure improvements. The city council, acting as an agent for residents given the representative government we have, can get a better deal, simply say, no deal!, if the developers are not willing give up significant concessions in order to build here. So, what’s on the table as we look out on the next 3-5 years? Thanks for asking. It ain’t pretty if you are a teacher, barista, electrician, or student looking for something affordable in this town.

190 West Cliff Drive
This project is being pitched by Tyson Sales. He’s quite a pitchman too. After an earlier and well-attended public meeting kind of got messy, too many questions and not enough answers, he is pressing ahead with this 89-condo shopping center project across West Cliff from the Dream Inn on West Cliff at Bay Street. As you might imagine, neighbors ain’t too happy. It appears the project will adhere to the 15% affordable housing city policy, but that will leave 85% unaffordable units likely destined for the second home crowd, or sucking from the over-the-hill tech bubble. Lots of Google, Amazon, and Apple buses are already traversing Pacific Avenue. Look for their routes to incorporate West Cliff if this project goes in. The proposed traffic light at Bay, large buildings overshadowing the folks at Clearview Court mobile home park next door, and bringing retail above Pacific Avenue all appear to be flies in the development ointment. Stay real tuned: it should be going to the Planning Commission for approval sometime in August.

908 Ocean Street
Wow! This will be the mother (father?) of all development projects being proposed for Santa Cruz. It’s a 333-unit project planned for Ocean Street between Water Street  and Marianne’s ice cream. (The developer did promise to relocate the venerable Marianne’s.) The project’s development group has quietly assembled 19 parcels and plan to construct a 281,854 sq. ft. of “mixed use development with approximately 5,944 sq. ft. of commercial space…” The rub with this development is that it is called an SOU project, meaning “Small Ownership Units.” It’s never been done here before and it sounds like a project catering to tech workers. Of course, some might argue that the Santa Cruz tech sector is growing and perhaps this might satisfy that growth. Again, stay tuned, try to stay woke, and don’t mourn, organize.

Front Street and Soquel Avenue
This is a Barry Swenson project at the corner of Soquel and Front Street. It was originally talked about as being a boutique hotel, but has since morphed into a 6-story 170 apartment units rental project. Fifty-eight percent of the units from what I understand are planned to be studios (600sq. ft.) and “micro-studios” (400 sq. ft.). As yet, not a family-oriented 3-bedroom among any of the units. If state density bonuses are applied for and approved, this project could get higher and add 40-50 more units. They also need a permit from the Army Corps of Engineers to fill in the ditch that separates property from the San Lorenzo River bike path.

“Front and Riverfront Apartments”
This project will bring another 175 units, 20 affordable and 155 unaffordable, to the downtown across from the Metro station. This project also appears to require permission from the Army Corps of Engineers to fill in the ditch area that separates the river side of the property and might result in another modern-esque, 7-story behemoth shadowing the river and the bike path. (Whatever happened to Spanish colonial revival?) 

205-unit project at Laurel and Pacific Ave
This Owen Lawlor-Devcon project was approved by the last council on a 5-2 vote. Councilmember Sandy Brown and I voted no because it lacks any affordable units within the project and therefore, yields to the community 205 unaffordable rentals. It is currently mired in litigation because it is out of compliance with the city’s 15% inclusionary ordinance according to those suing. The developers argue that they are “giving” the city the old Tampico’s site in order to comply with the 15% rule, but it may be insufficient given the cost and length of time it would take the city to move a project forward.

1900 Ocean St. Extension
This project, not well-received by neighbors, appears to be on hold because of neighborhood objections. It will contain mostly unaffordable “residential” condos. Originally proposed at 40 units, it was brought down to 32 by the previous council on another 5-2 vote (Brown and Krohn objecting, mostly because of the unaffordability of units to locals and also the proximity to the venerable Santa Cruz Memorial Cemetery’s chapel.) What we know for now according to the Planning Dept. web site is that public comment period ended on July 7th…and now “the Community Development Director (Lee Butler) will take the public’s input into consideration in rendering a decision…”

Addendum
Please, do not take my word as the last one on any of these projects. Go to the Planning Dept.’s web page to see them for yourself. There is one affordable project taking shape on Jessie Street and anther at 350 Ocean Street. Both projects are needed and could offer some relief to renters. To paraphrase the French philosopher Albert Camus, I would like to support well-designed affordable housing and still love my government. As currently planned not very attractive. Low income housing does not have to be ugly. I’m confident we can get a better design for Mid-Peninsula’s project at 314 Jessie. It will be entirely affordable and that is wonderful. I have yet to see the 350 Ocean project. There’s much more on that city web site that I will take up in a future column, but at the end of the day, if the developers are to have their way and spend down our collective Santa Cruz seed corn, those of us who can afford to stay are witnessing an unprecedented era of market-rate apartment growth. If on the other hand, the voters of Santa Cruz push and prod their elected representatives into building only affordable housing until we’ve caught up with all the market-rate crapola that’s gone up; if residents stand up and demand a couple of hundred affordable units at the two major sites the city owns; if we stand up and say no parking garage, leave the Farmer’s Market where it is, and remodel the library at its current site on Church Street, then we will have a town of, by, and for the folks who reside here. Of course, we cannot take our eyes off the university growth machine for a single moment. The U is bringing in students much faster than we can build housing. In addition to scrutinizing all of the above projects, we must demand that UCSC sticks to the 2020 Long Range Development Plan. In other words, 19,500 students y no mas!

“Yes. People think of leadership as this glamorous, powerful thing. To be a leader is to come first, to set the agenda. But what people don’t realize is that leadership is also enormously difficult. Leadership is a responsibility. Leadership is not fun. Leadership is about doing things before anybody else does them. Leadership is about taking risks. Leadership is about taking decisions when you don’t know 100% of what the outcome is going to be.” (Guardian newspaper,

(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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 29

NEARLY ONE-THIRD OF RURAL SANTA CRUZ COUNTY IS IN HIGH-RISK FIRE ZONE
That information is quite amazing, but coincides with the significant number of people who raised their hands when asked during the State Insurance Compliance Officer, Peter Meza’s, presentations last week if their homeowner insurance policies were cancelled or whose rates had increased.  Many reported that they had been dropped and that the new carrier charged four or five times more than what they had been paying.  Some real estate agents in the audience reported they were having difficulty selling rural properties, because the new buyers could not afford the cost of the newly-written policies.

This is a big problem in many areas of California.  The State Insurance Commission investigated the issue and released a report in 2017, updating the Appendix D data showing an increase of 573% increase between 2010 and 2018 in policy drops for properties statewide, with 73% of those occurring in high-risk fire areas. The number of complaints regarding unreasonable premium increases rose 224% statewide with 63% of those complaints occurring in counties designated high-risk for fire.    Here is the State Insurance Commission website; the excellent Report and updated Appendix D are under “Fire-Related Reports”.

Mr. Meza recommended that anyone receiving notice of non-renewal or significant policy premium increases should file a complaint with the State Insurance Commissioner so that better data can be collected to support legislation to help solve this critical problem.  

He also recommended contacting the Ombudsman:

Office of the Ombudsman
The Ombudsman’s primary function is to ensure the Department provides the highest level of customer service to our consumers, insurers, agents, brokers, and public officials. The Ombudsman is responsible for ensuring that complaints about Department staff or actions receive full and impartial review.

California Department of Insurance
Office of the Ombudsman
300 Capitol Mall, Suite 1600
Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: 916-492-3545
Fax Number: 916-492-3649
E-mail: Office of the Ombudsman 

You can soon view Mr. Meza’s presentation to the audience attending the July 23 evening session at the County Government Building when it is posted on the Fire Safe Santa Cruz website.

SANTA CRUZ MIDCOUNTY GROUNDWATER SUSTAINABILITY PLAN NOW OPEN FOR PUBLIC COMMENT
The Plan for how much water you might be limited to using and how much you might be required to pay for it is now open for public comment.  I urge anyone who gets water from the Santa Cruz Water Dept., Soquel Creek Water District , Central Water District, a small water company or a private well to read as much of this document as possible and submit your comments and/questions.  You must do so in writing and here is the link to that information as well as the Plan

As I reported last week here, there is a well-crafted plan to assess ALL BASIN USERS by 2025, and the MidCounty Groundwater Agency administration budget could be $1million/year…for what?   Administration and reporting regarding all the criteria to prove that the Plan that is heavily-biased toward support of Soquel Creek Water District’s plan to injected millions of gallons of treated sewage water into the aquifer will actually fit the hypothetical model that the District has pretty much bought and paid for.  Hmmm…  It smells like a lot of money and resume-building prestige, doesn’t it?  

Make sure you take the on-line survey  

A 5-STORY HOTEL IN CAPITOLA VILLAGE ?
Make sure you attend the Community Meeting on August 1, 7pm at the Capitola City Council Chambers  to voice your opinion about a proposed  5-story hotel in Capitola Village in the spot where the Capitola Theater was before it got demolished in 2010

The 88-room hotel is being proposed by Swenson Builders, who own the land.   Here is a video of the project discussion 

Here is a letter to the Santa Cruz Sentinel editor on the matter:

“Well, Barry Swenson Builders is at it again. But this time it’s even bigger. Nine years ago Swenson approached the City of Capitola with plans for a 72-unit hotel. They were told in no uncertain terms that was too big. Forward to 2019. We are now looking at plans for an 89 unit hotel. Never mind that the city just finished the new general plan a couple of years ago. That was after many public hearings and considerable discussion at the Planning Commission and City Council about size and scale. It was codified that any development on the property owned by Swenson be of size and scale appropriate with the village’s quaint size and scale. I’m not sure what the powers that be at Swenson don’t appreciate about how passionate the citizens of Capitola are about the village, but obviously they don’t seem to care”— Bruce Arthur, Capitola 

What about traffic?  What about water?  What about conforming with the scale and character of the neighborhood?  What about the parking lot deal that would gobble up 25-50 parking spaces in the nearby municipal lot that serves the public needs for meetings at the City Council Chambers or events at the beach?

What about the predicted sea level rise?  

How ironic that Capitola was just voted high on the list of quaint small-town-feel places to visit in the U.S. 

NO PARKING IN NISENE MARKS STATE PARK…YET AGAIN
Once again, the sign went up on Aptos Creek Road last Saturday to warn park visitors “Parking Full”.  That has happened numerous times since the Aptos Village Project developers fenced off the dirt parking lot that people have been using for decades to park and run or bike into the Park.  It was also where the large Great American Music event used to stage their equipment trailers for the popular event in Aptos Village Park, but closed the event when the parking lot went away.  Traffic was gridlocked in the Aptos Village most of the weekend.  Contact the elected leader for the area and let him know your thoughts:

Zach Friend zach.friend@santacruzcounty.us  454-2200.  He says he loves to hear from you. 

“PUT ON YOUR TINFOIL HAT”
That is what the lady at the new Aptos Village Safety Center told me to do when I stopped in to report a suspicious person and vehicle in my rural community that had just experienced multiple vehicle break-ins and theft.  The vehicle and its license number had been reported to the emergency dispatch, but no sheriff deputy responded.  I asked if she could find out from dispatch if a deputy were en route?  NO, she said.  I asked if I could borrow a phone to call 911 to give updated critical information about the suspicious person?  NO, she said.  That’s when she told me “You should put on your tinfoil hat when you do this.”  

Wow. Stunned, i explained that it really was just a Neighborhood Watch Program at work, and left. So much for the new 3220 SF Aptos Village Public Safety Center, paid for by our Measure G sales tax money.  Supervisor Zach Friend must really enjoy his quiet new office space there. 

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  ATTEND ONE PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.  BUT JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK!Cheers,Becky Steinbruner 

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

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July 28
#209 / Are The Democrats Stupid?

The picture on the right, from the first Democratic Party 2020 Primary Debate, was used to illustrate a recent article. The headline on the article asked this question: “Are Democrats too stupid to beat Donald Trump?” 

You can probably figure out the thesis of the article, without having to read it, but I will provide you with an excerpt, below, to make clear why the author thinks, as Thomas Friedman so poignantly put it: “Trump’s Going to Get Re-elected, Isn’t He?” 

Here is what Martin Longman says, in his article in the Washington Monthly

Trump is not looking at potentially winning 49 states. He’s looking at trying to win twice while losing the popular vote.

But he does have a strategy and the strategy is correctly calibrated for the task at hand. He must racialize the electorate to maximize his vote in heavily-white communities and tap a wedge in between the urban and suburban Democrats so that the latter will defect in sufficient numbers for him to recover his losses. His problem is that efforts to maximize his white vote actually have the effect of pushing urban and suburban Democrats into a closer alliance. For this reason, he will fail unless the Democrats help ramp up his base numbers and depress their own.

This is where policies like free health care for undocumented people or abolishing all private health insurance are going to do damage. These things are not popular in general and are especially unpopular with the Democrats’ suburban base. A lot of the Democrats’ rhetoric on border issues is toxic not just in the sticks but also in the communities ringing our cities.

So, yes, the Democrats really could blow this election by running a non-strategic campaign based on abstract values against a campaign that is laser-focused on just the voters it needs to win.

An article in The Nation, “Pelosi Proves Triangulation Is Really Self-Strangulation,” advances an argument not unlike Longman’s argument, though reflecting a different priority. Both articles suggest that “the Democrats” must be united in how the party presents itself. All the bad feelings among Democrats in the Congress (and among their various supporters, in mutually warring camps throughout the country) have been generated by angst about whether the  party can in fact unify its approach, and can forge a common understanding about what the Democratic Party should stand for, and about what position(s) will help the Democrats win the presidency.

Both Longman and The Nation are suggesting that “the Democrats” will be divided, going into the 2020 presidential election, and that the result will be the reelection of Donald Trump, even though it is pretty clear that a majority of the voters in the country would rather have someone else. The way the campaign is shaping up, it’s a “person,” Donald Trump, against a party, “the Democrats.” 

I would like to point out that this is actually quite weird, when you consider that the United States of America does not have a parlimentary system, in which voters vote for the party, and the party leadership decides who the candidates will be in the various constituencies. That is not the way it is supposed to be on this side of the Atlantic.

Supposedly, voters in the various Congressional Districts (as to the House of Representatives) and in the various states (as to the Senate) vote for individual candidates, not the party with which a particular candidate may decide to identify. Our nation is very diverse. The voters in the Ocasio-Cortez District, in the Bronx, are quite different from the voters in San Mateo County, to take an example close to my home in Santa Cruz. The voters in San Mateo County have elected Anna Eshoo and Jackie Speier to Congress. Query whether they would elect AOC. However, all these women are “Democrats.” So is Nancy Pelosi, by the way, and she and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez are having a hard time getting along, as the article in The Nation explictly notes. 

I would like to suggest that “the Democrats” have a whole lot of different ideas about the way things ought to be, and that this is just fine. Let’s celebrate the different views, but get them attributed correctly. Members of Congress should represent and speak for their constituents and themselves, not some sort of unified party position. The legislative branch of government needs to be policy-focused, not party-focused. 

Make the president win re-election, if he can, running against an individual candidate, not “the Democrats.” 

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. Love and other hidden desires grace the seasoned Subconscious Comics and Tim’s focus. See below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Deep Cover”down a few pages. Now you’ll find a classic Deep Cover  ,from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog

THE CABRILLO FESTIVAL OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC. Now in its 57th year the festival is beyond any doubt Santa Cruz’s finest and most famous contribution to the world’s culture. With free and open orchestra rehearsals that started Saturday July 28,  a community night when you can pay what you wish, orchestra players from all over the earth…it’s huge, and still friendly and casual. There’s also more woman centered music this year. There are six main concerts Aug.2-4, and Aug. 8-11. Look them up at CABRILLOMUSIC.ORG 

“Find out why Cabrillo Stage’s splendid new production of Into The Woods is everything an audience could wish for, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com ). Also, catch up with the wry little Irish sleeper comedy Lost & Found, and read my review in this week’s Good Times!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975. 

ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD. The more movies you’ve seen during your lifetime, the more you’ll like Quentin Tarantino’s latest. With Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio as the leads — and it all happening in L.A. in 1969 — it almost can’t miss. Slightly undercutting the cuteness of the relationship between Pitt and DiCaprio is the fact that the film ends with the Manson Family killings of Sharon Tate, and four others at the house that she shared with her husband, Roman Polanski. Add Al Pacino for about two minutes, and you’ll be forced to like it.

MAIDEN. A very significient tribute to women’s empowerment. With a well-deserved 97 audience score, and a 98 Rotten Tomato meter score, you can be sure this documentary is worth watching. It’s the very detailed story and back story of how one woman gathered an all-woman crew and won the Whitbread Round the World sailboat race in 1989. It’s also simply an example of a very well-made documentary. With great camera work, and a super amount of tension, it should be seen by anyone who cares about women’s empowerment.

LOST AND FOUND. This is a very unusual blend and criss cross of seven (7) different stories that take place in a small Irish town. Some work perfectly, others will leave you cold. Many of the characters merge and blend into the next story. It is Irish humor, subtle, vague, slap-happy and it works slowly on you…until you catch on. 

THE FAREWELL. Whew, 100% on the Rotten Tomato meter and 91% on their audience score. The cast is mostly Asian, and handles the problem of how to tell Grandma that she’s dying of cancer. It’s funny, deeply sad, features superior acting and will hold you to the unfolding story right to the unusual ending. Well worth seeing…and remembering.

THE ART OF SELF DEFENSE. Jesse Eisenberg has always been good in the roles he’s featured in. This time the movie and he seem to be terribly confused. It’s been labeled a comedy yet the amount of pain, suffering, terror, fright, plus daily fear and a lack of laughs could make you wince as you watch Jesse get thrashed over and over again. Some critics have seen it as a parody on masculinity but I had few if any laughs while I watched it. It earned an audience score of 66 on Rotten Tomatoes.

YESTERDAY. Imagine if the entire world forgot who the Beatles were except for one pretty good guitarist and singer of Indian heritage. An excellent feel good movie that has a fun plot, the greatest Beatle songs and good acting. Go see it especially if you have forgotten how much those songs affected you when their albums were first released.

ECHO IN THE CANYON. Grand memories of the 1960’s popular music scene. Jakob Dylan (Bob’s son) and singer with the Wallflowers produced this documentary but is a full dud on screen. It’s also a huge tribute to the Beachboys and what they added to our culture. See it quickly. CLOSES THURSDAY JULY 31.

THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO. An excellent, touching film about two close buddies who face the changing city…and the world. Great footage of THE CITY and a story that will have you thinking about it for days or longer. It’s the story of love of an old San Francisco house, and everything that surrounds it. Don’t miss it.   ps. Lisa Jensen tells me that the director Joe Talbot is 1940’s-50’s movie star, bad guy Lyle Talbot’s grandson. . CLOSES THURSDAY JULY 31.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG.  . Dr. Rachel Abrams guests on July 30 to talk about her books and new workshops. She’ll be followed by Susanna Waddell from the Pajaro Valley Arts organization who will discuss their exhibits and current events.  OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com 

Check out all the different ways you can lace your shoes! 🙂

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts. Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011. 

QUOTES. “AUGUST” 
“Woodstock happened in August 1969, long before the Internet and mobile phones made it possible to communicate instantly with anyone, anywhere. It was a time when we weren’t able to witness world events or the horrors of war live on 24-hour news channels”. Richie Havens
“The pleasure of jogging and running is rather like that of wearing a fur coat in Texas in August: the true joy comes in being able to take the damn thing off”. Joseph Epstein
“One day you discover you are alive.
Explosion! Concussion! Illumination! Delight!
You laugh, you dance around, you shout.
But, not long after, the sun goes out. Snow falls, but no one sees it, on an August noon.”
? Ray Bradbury, Dandelion Wine  


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
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Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
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All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com


Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

July 24 – 30, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…IndyBay’s take on Stop the Recall, Protests on Mauna Kea and UCSC’s role, Democracy and our Recall, goodbye Anglo Grova. GREENSITE…on What Price Tourism? KROHN…is off this week — he will return next week. STEINBRUNER…PATTON…and Public Opinion. EAGAN…classic SubCons and Deep Cover. JENSEN…Reviews The Art Of Self Defense. BRATTON…I critique The Art Of Self Defense. UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES… “Statues”


                                 

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CAPITOLA BY THE SEA. The best photo date I can figure from Carolyn Swift’s book is 1928. The Capitola Hotel as shown above opened in 1895. Back then an electric railway ran from Capitola to Santa Cruz.                                                        

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

STILL MORE MOON WALK FOOTAGE…but weird!!!
TREE HOUSE LIVING IN SANTA CRUZ. 2015

DATELINE July 22

STOP THE RECALL NEWS re. INDY BAY. It was Santa Cruz Indy Bay’s July 11th issue that reported this revealing and somewhat surprising story. Thanks are due from all of us…read on…they list “multiple businesses are publicly supporting Santa Cruz United and the recall effort, including: Surf City Barber Shop, Union Foodie Truck, Stockwell Cellars, KSCO and Brooks Properties”. There are many more names and businesses and politicians listed here. 

“BOYCOTT BUSINESSES THAT SUPPORT THE SANTA CRUZ RECALL”. 

MAUNA KEA, Part 1. Thousands of Hawaiians are currently protesting the continuing development of enormous telescopes on the big island of Hawaii. Our media has done almost nothing to tell us of the inhumane and unrespecting treatment the governing management is responsible for. To make some sense of what the protests are fighting for, consider for a minute your reaction if, say, Google had plans to erect the world’s largest cell tower in the heart of our Arlington National Cemetery or the Golden Gate national Cemetery. I talked with Ruben Carrillo — the son of Eduardo Carrillo, the famed painter who taught at UCSC and painted that three dimensional Jesus painting in the hallway in our downtown. Ruben lives and works in Honolulu as a photographer, and follows the Mauna Kea protest closely.

To get a sense of the sacredness of Mauna Kea.

MAUNA KEA PART 2. UCSC is heavily involved in the growing groups of telescopes. From a UCSC publication: “A leading astronomer at UC Santa Cruz hailed the selection of Mauna Kea in Hawaii as the site for construction of the Thirty-Meter Telescope (TMT), which will be the largest and most advanced telescope ever built.

“This is exciting, because it means we can move into the next phase of the project,” said Michael Bolte, professor of astronomy and astrophysics at UCSC and director of University of California Observatories. UCSC is a managing partner of the W. M. Keck Observatory on Mauna Kea, which houses the world’s largest optical and infrared telescopes, the twin 10-meter Keck I and Keck II Telescopes.

“The TMT will be a great discovery machine,” added Bolte, who has been active in the planning and design of the TMT and is on the TMT Board of Directors. “I’m sure we’ll find things nobody ever thought existed in the universe.”

With the TMT, astronomers will be able to analyze the light from the first stars born after the Big Bang, directly observe the formation and evolution of galaxies, see planets around nearby stars, and make observations that test fundamental laws of physics. Jerry Nelson, professor of astronomy at UCSC, is the TMT project scientist.

Building the telescope on Mauna Kea–which is home to many of the world’s leading observatories and more than a dozen telescopes–will foster scientific collaboration, said Bolte. “Because the TMT partners operate existing observatories at Mauna Kea, it will be possible to integrate our planning much better in terms of scientific programs, the instruments we build, and possibly even sharing key technical staff,” he said. 

MAUNA KEA. PART 3. The size and plans of the telescope’s footprint. 

From Wikipedia…As of 2012, the Mauna Kea Science Reserve has 13 observation facilities, each funded by as many as 11 countries. It is one of the world’s premier observatories for optical, infrared, and submillimeter astronomy, and in 2009 was the largest measured by light gathering power.[14] There are nine telescopes working in the visible and infrared spectrum, three in the submillimeter spectrum, and one in the radio spectrum, with mirrors or dishes ranging from 0.9 to 25 m (3 to 82 ft).[15] In comparison, the Hubble Space Telescope has a 2.4 m (7.9 ft) mirror, similar in size to the UH88, now the second smallest telescope on the mountain.[15] Planned new telescopes, including the Thirty Meter Telescope, have attracted controversy due to their potential cultural and ecological impact.[16][17] The multi-telescope “outrigger” extension to the Keck telescopes, which required new sites, was eventually canceled.[18] Three or four of the mountain’s 13 existing telescopes must be dismantled over the next decade with the TMT proposal to be the last area on Mauna Kea on which any telescope would ever be built.[19] A leading astronomer at UC Santa Cruz hailed the selection of Mauna Kea in Hawaii as the site for construction of the Thirty-Meter Telescope (TMT), which will be the largest and most advanced telescope ever built.

Building the telescope on Mauna Kea–which is home to many of the world’s leading observatories and more than a dozen telescopes–will foster scientific collaboration, said Bolte. “Because the TMT partners operate existing observatories at Mauna Kea, it will be possible to integrate our planning much better in terms of scientific programs, the instruments we build, and possibly even sharing key technical staff,” he said. 

Click here to get live-now, immediate footage of the protest.

What can we do about this? Keep informed; go to the Facebook page “Manaikaleo”. We can also wonder about UC’s so-called financial problem. Check the links above, and learn about another site in Chile.

DEMOCRACY AND CITY COUNCIL RECALL. A seriously-involved friend and Santa Cruzan asked to have the following published from an anonymous “voice of reason”. Very happy to oblige.

Is it “democratic” to attempt to recall two City Council members in one fell swoop?

A Santa Cruz Sentinel letter-to-the-editor writer, name of Sean Livingston, says the recall definitely is democratic, unselfconsciously citing a general reference in an on-line dictionary. This is typical of the lowbrow reactionary element pushing recall petitions in Santa Cruz. Anybody who has ever published a university thesis, or even a passing high school research paper, would know better than to cite a single unauthoritative source when opining on a complex socio-political issue.

Livingston does touch one of his group’s talking points though, reciting the formula, “the recall is designed to ensure that an elected official will act in the interests of his constituency rather than in the interests of his political party or according to his own conscience.”

The recall backers say they are a constituency who ought to be able to remove City Council members Glover and Krohn from office because they disagree with them. They say every City Council member has to act in the interests of all residents, especially including them. Meanwhile, they feel there is a “war” being waged against them by another faction in the body politic, which elected Krohn and Glover. Ergo, a large number of us do not agree with them, either about the “war” or the recall.

I’m pretty sure that not one of the recall backers voted for Krohn or Glover. Most likely, they voted for other candidates, who lost. But the recall crowd’s present scapegoats were nonetheless duly elected by winning pluralities in recent elections. They were elected by constituents whose interests are aligned with theirs, and whom the recall backers consider enemies. The factions that opposed Krohn and Glover in their election campaigns are not their constituents in a political sense. They are instead, perhaps, constituents of three other City Council members, and they are a minority group in the electorate. The electorate is in fact sharply divided by conflicting socio-economic interests, and so is the City Council.

So, to claim a constitutional warrant for attempting to cause a recall election now is really pretty disingenuous. Just because a political power grab is possible doesn’t mean it is the right thing to do. 

In fact, it is the wrong thing to do. It would seek to overturn two recent legitimate elections and overthrow a duly elected local government. It is anti-democratic in that sense. Don’t do it.

Don’t sign the recall petitions.

MISSING ANGELO GROVA. Angelo Grova gave so much to our community, and we’ve started to appreciate just how much during forced pulling back lately to handle his illness. He created the once annual FashionArt Show at the Civic, he taught hundreds of UCSC students sculpture and painting… and he maintained one of the happiest, outgoing personalities I’ve ever known.

July 22

WHAT PRICE TOURISM?

On a cool Sunday afternoon I crawl along Center St. with beach bound traffic backed up from Laurel to the first roundabout. I am going home. Most are visitors from far away, coming to the beach, Boardwalk and other attractions of the brand, Santa Cruz. The half-mile takes 20 minutes. I could have walked while they could not. To pass the time I think about the insanity of directing beach tourist traffic onto the route used by locals to get to the westside, past two roundabouts, which are gridlocked, past the wharf entrance, creeping onto Beach Street and then to the Boardwalk parking entrance when a back entrance to the Boardwalk parking lot makes commonsense. I know the reasoning since I’ve heard it articulated by city staff and tourist- focused council members: “this will connect tourists to downtown!”  No it won’t. It never has and it never will. The beach-going tourists are a different demographic from the downtown seeking ones. Maybe the latter don’t like sand in their toes or maybe they are from higher income levels. Downtown is ever changing to attract tourists with money, perhaps a reflection of the ever-increasing rents charged to businesses by property owners. 

Many don’t realize, as I didn’t, that the people who own business property in Santa Cruz are on the whole not the same people as those who own local businesses. If you pay attention, you will notice how many of our long-time, small local businesses are going out of business. Why is that? If you ask, the most common reason is that the property owner, often located in a different county, is raising the rent to a level unaffordable for long-time, local businesses. In their place, chains or businesses catering to a wealthier clientele are solicited. The catalyst is the re-zoning approved by recently past city councils allowing for a higher, denser, more affluent town. Their various Development Plans (Corridors; Downtown) outline plans for outreach to business property owners to facilitate the selling of individual properties to permit increased size, consolidation and up scaling. This spells the end for small local businesses on Pacific and Front Streets, Soquel and Mission, Ocean and Water. Can the Municipal Wharf be far behind?

It was in this context that the article in the Sentinel (7/22/19) titled ” Capitola named one of the nation’s least spoiled vacation spots” caught my eye. According to the article, “an unspoiled vacation spot is defined as a place that doesn’t cater only to tourists but maintains its reputation and spirit.” Capitola ranked 4th in the country. Highlighted was that Capitola Village has “maintained its spirit the last 50 to 100 years; primarily occupied by locally-owned businesses…and no chain stores.”

Maybe there’s a lesson here for the city of Santa Cruz. A survey of locals with the question: “Do you think the city of Santa Cruz caters more to tourists than locals?” would, in my estimation receive an overwhelming “yes!” There are some standouts for locals such as programs from Parks and Recreation but the sway and direction is catering to higher-income tourists in order to make more money. For whom? Some will argue it trickles down to the city to pay for essential services but tourists put a strain on essential services from water to garbage to police to roads. And if the politics is to attract more affluent tourists, their consumption patterns demand even more underpaid service workers, further impacting truly affordable housing needs or long commutes. 

I reflect on Caernarfon and Capitola, both able to better balance tourism with local spirit: something our city leaders need to consider before approving policies that will erase yet another local landmark business. 

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

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July 22

Chris Krohn is off this week he will return 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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 22

SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT WANTS A LOAN FROM THE EPA TO INJECT TREATED SEWAGE WATER INTO MIDCOUNTY DRINKING WATER SUPPLY?
The federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) just released an announcement that there were 51 applications submitted requesting WIFIA loans for projects totaling $6.6 billion to improve the nation’s infrastructure supporting public health and environmental protection.  Soquel Creek Water District is among them.  Do you think their project to inject millions of gallons of treated sewage water with unregulated contaminants including low doses of pharmaceuticals will support public health and protect the environment?   I don’t.

When the Soquel Creek Water District Board of Directors approved application for a WIFIA Loan at last month’s meeting, I asked if they could provide more information about that action.  Although he did respond (a rare occurrence), Chairman Tom LaHue did not seem to know much about the issue.  “It’s just some federal grant that we’re applying for.” he said.  He did not invite staff to elaborate or to divulge the amount requested in the loan application.  The application was not included in the publicly-available agenda packet.  
Here is the link to the announcement featured on Maven’s Notebook, a great news source for water-related topics.
NEWS WORTH NOTING: New Yolo Bypass fish passage project approved; Attorney General Becerra weighs in on groundwater and the Clean Water Act; EPA receives 51 requests for WIFIA funding; Trump Administration agrees to revisit ocean salmon fishing impac  

CLARIFICATION ON LAST WEEK’S MEASURE S AND THE LIBRARY / PARKING GARAGE

Thank you to Jean Brocklebank for sending clarification about the use of Measure S and the proposed parking garage in downtown Santa Cruz.  She kindly pointed out:

“The multi-story parking garage (mixed-use) will be built using whatever general fund, parking fee, and /or grant funding the city can lay its hands on. The library will be a tenant in that structure. In other words, the shell will be provided, like any commercial building, with tenant improvements of the tenant paid for by the tenant. The foundation, walls and ceiling, plus other basic infrastructure of the shell (e.g., windows and probably some plumbing, etc.). The rest of the interior of the portion allocated to the library will be financed with Measure S money (the $27+ million). That will include all the soft costs also (public art, computers, furnishings, etc.). The garage is not dependent on the library or on Measure S money. It would be illegal and the city knows it to use Measure S money for building that structure. If, for some reason, there is a decision to renovate the existing library instead, then someone else (commercial? retail? even parking!) will use the 44,000 sf that a library would have used.”

Thanks, Jean. While I did not intend to claim that Measure S taxpayer money, meant to support libraries, would fund the entire parking garage, I think it would lend a stable funding source for the whole project to look more feasible and inviting to construction project lenders.

What I want to know is how quickly would the parking garage project progress without the solid financing of the Measure S-funded library as a reliable long-term tenant, rather than some retail enterprise that may struggle to pay the rent?  Who would determine the parking requirement for the library patrons that supposedly would use the parking garage when visiting the library (they would not all arrive on bikes or on the bus), which would also necessitate using Measure S funds?  

I would appreciate response from readers.  Becky Steinbruner ki6tkb@yahoo.com

DRAFT SANTA CRUZ-MIDCOUNTY GROUNDWATER SUSTAINABILITY PLAN INCLUDES A PLAN TO TAX ALL BASIN USERS
Buried at the very end of the Plan to sustain the groundwater levels for the MidCounty area is the Raftelis consultant’s report outlining how to make it legal to tax all private water pumpers in the Basin.  Private well owners using two acre-feet/year are de minimus users, and could be taxed under the Water Code 10730(a) but ONLY IF THEY ARE REGULATED.  Here is what Raftelis recommends to “Regulate” these water users in what I think is a very sneaky way: The act of noticing can equal “regulating.”  “At least one GSA that Raftelis consults for is considering this.  By corresponding with a de minimus user and requesting basic information, the agency HAS REGULATED the de minimus user and can legally impose a fee.”  WOW!

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

RANCHO DEL MAR CENTER NEARLY COMPLETE
The Rancho del Mar Center, in addition to the return of Erik’s Deli, now hosts Peet’s Coffee, Sutter Walk-in Clinic, Bay Federal Credit Union, and Anytime Fitness Center.   Long-time tenants Ace Hardware and Rite Aide (formerly Vessey Drugs) have endured a prolonged construction period, but now Rite Aide is also getting a remodel as well (still open, with construction working at night).   

It is a real relief to have Bay Federal Credit Union move out of Aptos Village location….the traffic there is becoming increasingly congested and it is a headache to access the center where Bay Fed has been for many years.  

HAVE YOU BEEN WONDERING ABOUT TRAFFIC COUNTS IN APTOS VILLAGE?
County Public Works Dept. staff recently was kind enough to forward to me the results of the traffic counts performed in the Aptos Village area last May.  The reports are attached.  

I think it is interesting that the numbers are already higher than what the Aptos Village Project traffic projections were supposed to be once the development is completely built and occupied.  Only Phase One has been built, with few occupants aside from New Leaf Market.  Phase Two would be even more dense and mostly three-story buildings……

Please contact me if you would like to see something different go in there…something for the youth would be nice, wouldn’t it?

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND ONE PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE. BUT JUST DO SOMETHING THIS WEEK!

Cheers, Becky Steinbruner

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

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 July 21, #202 / Public Option Politics

A column that appeared in the Sunday, July 7, 2019, edition of The New York Times addressed the “capitalism versus socialism” debate that seems to be attractive to at least some people who have already become actively engaged in the upcoming 2020 presidential race. 

Former Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper, for instance, who is a Democrat, seems to think that this is a key concern for the voters. Hickenlooper was apparently booed, recently, when he made a point of saying, at a California Democratic Party event, that “Socialism is not the answer.” In this, Hickenlooper agrees with President Trump, which is probably why Hickenlooper got booed.  Maybe he even wanted to be! Meanwhile, another Democrat in the race, Elizabeth Warren, who is generally acknowledged to be one of the more “progessive” candidates, and certainly has very little in common with Trump, has gone out of her way to profess a commitment to capitalism.

Maybe this “capitalism versus socialism” debate will turn out to be an important, in terms of “electability.” You can color me skeptical, however. Personally, I am not much of an “-ism” kind of a guy. I don’t care what the label is, I want to examine what sort of politics is being proposed, and I tend to think that I am not that different from most voters.

State ownership of the means of production, the classical definition of “socialism,” is definitely not something I’d like to adopt as my bottom line requirement for a good society. By the way, I don’t think Bernie Sanders would go there, either! 

Similarly, the idea that those who have “money” (i.e., “capital”) need to be free to make change by letting market competition between those capitalists lift all boats, which I believe is the basic argument for “capitalism,” is  pretty much what we have got now, and what we have now is not working. I am definitely not on the side of “capitalism” if that means more of the same.

Because of my skepticism about the debate of the “-isms,” I found that recent Times’ opinion piece to be quite refreshing. Law professors Ganesh Sitaraman and Anne L. Alstott suggest that our economy should always countenance, and perhaps even explicitly provide for, a “public option.” In other words, if “competition” is what makes capitalism great, and if concern for social and economic justice is what makes us want to be socialists, then we should let our public institutions (the government, representing the entire society) get into the economic ring with private business. That is essentially the idea rejected by the Congress when the Affordable Care Act was being debated, and while I, personally, think Medicare can outperform private health insurance, I’m willing to let it compete, and to “prove itself in the market,” as those capitalists always say is the best argument for “capitalism.” 

In fact, the “capitalists” generally use their money to make sure that there is never any fair competition in “the market,” because what they really prefer is “socialism for the rich and capitalism for the rest of us.” 

Think about that “public option.” Not a bad idea!

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. Love and other hidden desires Grace the seasoned Subconscious Comics and Tim’s focus. See below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Classic Deep Cover with Obama” 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

THE CABRILLO FESTIVAL OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC. Now in its 57th year the festival is beyond any doubt Santa Cruz’s finest and most famous contribution to the world’s culture. With free and open orchestra rehearsals starting Saturday July 28,  a community night when you can pay what you wish, orchestra players from all over the earth…it’s huge, and still friendly and casual. There’s also more woman centered music this year. There are six main concerts Aug.2-4, and Aug. 8-11. Look them up at CABRILLOMUSIC.ORG 

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Try to imagine  the movie Fight Club as interpreted by Woody Allen, and you might get an idea what to expect from The Art Of Self-Defense. Read my review in this week’s Good Times, and keep checking back at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com ) for more movie and summer theatre reviews!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975  

 

THE ART OF SELF DEFENSE. Jesse Eisenberg has always been good in the roles he’s featured in, but on this occasion both the movie and Eisenberg seem terribly confused. It’s labeled a comedy yet the amount of pain, suffering, terror, fright, plus daily fear and a lack of laughs could make you wince, as you watch Jesse get thrashed over and over again. Some critics have seen it as a parody on masculinity, but I had few if any laughs. It earned an audience score of 66 on Rotten Tomatoes.

WILD ROSE. Jessie Buckley is perfect in the role of a 20 + girl in Scotland who has two children, just did prison time, and wants to sing country music in Nashville and become a worldwide success. The Scot dialect makes it hard to understand at times and the ending makes it a feel good drama. Julie Walters and Sophie Okonedo are equally perfect in their supporting parts.

CLOSES THURSDAY JULY 25

MIDSOMMAR. Maybe devout Scientologists would like this horror movie, or folks who think sex and death dealing cults are really cool but forget you’ve ever even heard of this carefully directed evil attempt to sicken and redefine horror. Beautifully filmed in Sweden featuring almost all Swedes, it is beyond creepy. American tourists visit a cult and get very involved…but you need be warned that you’ll remember more of it than you plan on. CLOSES THURSDAY JULY 25

YESTERDAY. Imagine if the entire world forgot who the Beatles were except for one pretty good guitarist and singer of Indian heritage. An excellent feel good movie that has a fun plot, the greatest Beatle songs and good acting. Go see it especially if you have forgotten how much those songs affected you when their albums were first released.

ECHO IN THE CANYON. Grand memories of the 1960’s popular music scene. Jakob Dylan (Bob’s son) and singer with the Wallflowers produced this documentary but is a full dud on screen. It’s also a huge tribute to the Beachboys and what they added to our culture. See it quickly.

THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO. An excellent, touching film about two close buddies who face the changing city…and the world. Great footage of THE CITY and a story that will have you thinking about it for days or longer. It’s the story of love of an old San Francisco house, and everything that surrounds it. Don’t miss it.   ps. Lisa Jensen tells me that the director Joe Talbot is 1940’s-50’s movie star, bad guy Lyle Talbot’s grandson. 

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. Rick Longinotti and Bruce Van Allen members of Campaign for Sustainable Transportation give details on their current lawsuit against t Caltrans on July 23. Dr. Rachel Abrams guests on July 30 to talk about her books and new workshops. She’s followed by Susanna Waddell from the Pajaro Valley Arts organization who will discuss their exhibits and current events. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com 

Here’s a link to this guy’s mother’s website, in case you get curious… like I did.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts. Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011. 

QUOTES.  “STATUES”
“The great poet is a great artist. He is painter and sculptor. The greatest pictures and statues have been painted and chiseled with words. They outlast all others”. Robert Green Ingersoll
“I’ve searched all the parks in all the cities and found no statues of committees”. Gilbert K. Chesterton 
“In every block of marble I see a statue as plain as though it stood before me, shaped and perfect in attitude and action. I have only to hew away the rough walls that imprison the lovely apparition to reveal it to the other eyes as mine see it”. Michelangelo 


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

July 17 – 23, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Library lies and denials, Coastal Haven progress Good Times owners. GREENSITE…on Waving the Corporate Flag. KROHN…The real Trump from other views. STEINBRUNER…Election systems reliability, vegetation treatment questions, P.G.&E and new rules, Midecounty Water Issues and survey, Downtown developments and Downtown Forward questions and the main library battle. PATTON…about fights and battlefields. EAGAN…reveals our Subconscious. JENSEN…and Shakespeare and Wild rose. BRATTON…I critique Wild Rose.UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES…”WHALES”


                                 

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WAX FIGURE OF JAMES DEAN. Taken February 25, 1957. James Dean died September 30, 1955. That’s Brad Macdonald on the far right. He was the big time developer in and around Capitola. He started The Shadowbrook Restaurant and died in 1999. The Del Mar theatre opened August 14 1936.                                                       

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

HERE’S HOW THE ROVER GOT TO MARS. Ralph Davila found this gem of outer space exploration. 6:30 minutes of genius and beauty! 

LOS ANGELES BACK IN 1953.  What a place, what a time.

DATELINE July 15

DON’T  BURY THE LIBRARY’S RESPONSE TO FALSE ACCUSATIONS. Friends and members of DBTL (Don’t Bury The Library) were rightfully angered when John Mills the habitual Pacific Avenue Profit (sic) labeled a disturbed and vocal demonstrator as being a member of DBTL. They wrote…”Anyone who knows the respectful intent of Don’t Bury the Library organizers knows enough to dismiss a recent letter in the Sentinel which implied that a chronic disruptor of public meetings was in any way associated with their group when she started ranting at last week’s kick off of the group Downtown Forward.  DBTL would never sanction such unproductive hysteria“. 

Jean Brocklebank of DBTL also wrote…”It’s unfortunate that John Mills did not fact check his 7/13 LTE before making false accusations about Don’t Bury the Library (DBTL). The screaming woman who disrupted the Downtown Forward event is in no way associated with DBTL. She is neither a member nor a supporter of DBTL. Furthermore, Mills accuses “other Don’t Bury the Library folks” of screaming and “deplorable and undemocratic behavior” during the meeting. In fact, DBTL members repeatedly tried to reason with the screaming woman, and then spent considerable time reassuring others that she has no connection with DBTL whatsoever. A member of the DLAC, who knew the woman was not with us, acknowledged that DBTL has acted respectfully throughout the entire Downtown Library planning process”. Jean Brocklebank

COASTAL HAVEN FAMILIES PROGRESS. This pocket neighborhood up on the approach to Pogonip is being created by twelve families who have come together to create a place for their adult children with disabilities to live with one another, and others, in an intentional neighborhood. As previously reported they were fighting some very unreasonable property demands by developers John Swift and David Curry.

In what we might call a near bulletin they announced on Monday (7/15)…’After more meetings, more attorney time, and more community support, they finally reached an agreement on terms they feel they can live with.

The main part of the letter that they agreed to, reserves their right to fully participate in the future Golf Club Drive Area Plan and to protest any portion of it by any means, including legal if it comes to that.  Once a plan is agreed to and put into place, Coastal Haven Families pledge to abide by it. They made other small changes to what the city presented them with initially, but the main thing here is they have a no protest letter that explicitly protects their right to protest by any legal means. This was the main roadblock to their getting permits and they are hoping  to be able to break ground soon.

GOOD TIMES CELEBRATION. ‘Twas surprising news that our little old weekly Good Times bought out Watsonville’s Register Pajaronian and the Aptos Times. They bought them  from News Media Corporation. Nobody talks about it much anymore but Good Times was once owned and operated by Rupert Murdoch and his empire. Go HERE for a well done report by John Yewell of Santa Cruz Metro (July 16, 1998) on Good Times’ real history.

MARY KELLY’S KONTRIBUTION. Mary manages to find great and needed laughs online. She sent this…“Lexophile” describes those that have a love for words, such as “you can tune a piano, but you can’t tuna fish”,  “To write with a broken pencil is pointless.”  An annual competition is held by the New York Times to see who can create the best original lexophile.

This year’s submissions:   

  • I changed my iPod’s name to Titanic.  It’s syncing now.
  • England has no kidney bank, but it does have a Liverpool.
  • Haunted French pancakes give me the crepes.
  • This girl today said she recognized me from the Vegetarians Club, but I’d swear I’ve never met herbivore.
  • I know a guy who’s addicted to drinking brake fluid, but he says he can stop any time.
  • A thief who stole a calendar got twelve months.
  • When the smog lifts in Los Angeles U.C.L.A.
  • I got some batteries that were given out free of charge.
  • A dentist and a manicurist married.  They fought tooth and nail.
  • A will is a dead giveaway.
July 15, 2019

WAVING THE CORPORATE FLAG
With council on July break and most commissions not meeting this month, local political issues are in relative short supply. Behind the scenes, deals are probably being hatched and a public meeting (which, I was unable to attend) was held for the Bay and West Cliff (Dream Inn) development. Those of us on the lower westside know that the intersection of Bay with West Cliff can be gnarly. In more formal terms it is classified as E, just shy of a failing F grade. The project traffic engineer admits that the development will worsen the conditions while the city’s Assistant Public Works Director says a roundabout or signal will improve it to an A or B level. Really? There’s a contradiction worth exploring. The project will soon be at the Planning Commission. A four story, high-priced building for 89 apartments on the site of the old Sisters’ Hospital, blocking the last view of the distant hills from West Cliff and blocking the light for the lower income trailer court behind, is in my mind worth opposing. I’m sure the YIMBY’s (Yes In My Back Yard) love it even though it is NOT in their back yard. A more apt name for that group, although harder to say would be YIYBY (Yes In Your Back Yard).

A national issue caught my eye, more for what was not said than what was. I’m referring to the decision by Nike to pull its new shoe with the 13 five pointed-star Betsy Ross flag on and under the heel. Responding to concerns expressed by Colin Kaepernick, that the Betsy Ross flag is offensive since it is a symbol used by some white supremacist groups, and came from an era of slavery, Nike decided to take it off the market before the Fourth of July, which was the selling point in its release. Outrage ensued. Those defending the flag as representing the era of the War of Independence and therefore as patriotic as it gets, blasted Nike for buckling under to “political correctness.” Supporters of Nike pointed out that this country was founded on white supremacy. Opponents were apoplectic. Those were our founding fathers! (Misogyny is usually the last to be recognized). Sure we made mistakes (like slavery) but we have corrected such things, they argued. And the debates raged on until the next news cycle. 

What struck me as missing was any concern about using the flag, on the heel of a shoe no less, to sell and make money. Not one comment offered from the flag supporters that found commercial exploitation of their sacred symbol offensive. Not even a comment from the flag detractors who might have found such commercialization indicative of something else disturbing. Maybe there was a late night comedian who made fun of such shoe with its flag face down in dog poop or chewing gum, but I saw only acceptance of such commercialization as given. Worse, it was invisible. That means commercial appropriation of our national symbols (good or bad) is now as reflexive as the air we breathe. Just as we cannot feel the spin of the earth since we go along with it, we apparently cannot see or feel the commercialization of our everyday existence. 

Commercialization and its handmaiden, advertising, affect how we live, how we relate and how our children are raised. Consider the recent research that children, as young as 3 in some cases, can readily identify most corporate brands (Nike being #1) but cannot identify images of our large animal species, which not coincidentally are fast disappearing due to commercialization, poaching and loss of habitat.  One study found that children under the age of 8 could accurately identify Pokeman characters 80% of the time with a less than 50% rate for real species. 

On the bright side, there are educators and public officials who are trying to counter this trend but they are heavily outweighed by the wealth of the commercial sector. One can detect who has drunk the commercial Kool Aid when there’s a push for zip lines, pump tracks and steep downhill trails for mountain bikes with the explanation that young people, especially young people of color need enticing into nature: as though nature itself does not contain all the magic, mystery and beauty of the universe.  Yes, the commercial fast-track stuff may be fun for a while but it’s that slow moving banana slug or singing meadow-lark that is lasting, that is, if we allow it to penetrate our over-commercialized world and don’t kill it off in the rush to buy more “things.”

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

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July 15

TRUMP SAID WHAT?

Has It Come to this?

Donald Trump has done it, again, and with the zeal of someone leading a lynch mob like an Archie Bunker on steroids. No, I’m not talking about his risky rhetorical rants about Rocket-man, Little Marco,Half-Awake Jeb, or Lyin’ Ted, names which he used for his sometimes so-called, “friends.” Nor am I writing about his deranged policy of separating children and locking them up in US border detention facilities, although that pretty well should have ignited a Martin Neimoller-esqe, “First they came for the Jews” firestorm. It hasn’t yet. I’m not even referring to Trump’s daily hate-spews, or his dubious legal tax dodging dereliction, or even the now infamous Charlottesville comments on American White Nationalists vs. anti-hate protesters. “You had very fine people on both sides,” he said that day. And that coming with the death of Heather Heyer who died from injuries she suffered when a Neo-Nazi at the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally took his car ran her over. Trump’s presidential bar has been set pathetically low. He entered his 905th day as President of the United States this past week when he lashed out at the newly minted congressional women of color class of 2018. Trump told congress members Rashida Tlaib from Michigan, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar who represents parts of Minnesota, and Ayanna Pressley from Massachusetts to, “go back” to the countries they came from. Not that it even remotely matters, but only Rep. Omar was born outside of the United States. Trump’s people are from Germany and his family’s last name was originally, Drumpf, less we permit collective amnesia to perform its Orwellian digital erasure miracle and continue to allow history to be rewritten.  According to the New York Times, there are 52 members of the House, and 16 members of the Senate who were either were born outside of the US, or whose parents came here from another country.

What Was Said
In the age of Twitter everyone can have access to creating a press release. You don’t have to hire a press secretary. Hell, if the President’s vile and villainous tweets have no vet-venality insurance, then why would anyone hire writing help? Or is he the model of why everyone needs PR help? I’m convinced though that a good bit of vetting does happen to his tweets and some nuance is built into his keyboard habits. There has to be someone present, a couple people maybe, when he sends out his early morning blurt-outs? As the conventional media is by-passed, Trump has developed his own news agency, much better for him even than a state agency like a Tass or Agence France-Presse, or Associated Press. Way too many eyes pass over that copy, but Trump must surely have a couple of wary-eyed assistants helping with strategy and messaging, right? 

Here is some of what the “Real Donald” tweeted out after his “go back” message and responses from Nancy Pelosi and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

Donald J. Trump
@realDonaldTrump

So interesting to see “Progressive” Democrat Congresswomen, who originally came from countries whose governments are a complete and total catastrophe, the worst, most corrupt and inept anywhere in the world (if they even have a functioning government at all), now loudly……

Nancy Pelosi@SpeakerPelosi
I reject @realDonaldTrump‘s xenophobic comments meant to divide our nation. Rather than attack Members of Congress, he should work with us for humane immigration policy that reflects American values. Stop the raids – #FamiliesBelongTogether!

Donald J. Trump
@realDonaldTrump
So sad to see the Democrats sticking up for people who speak so badly of our Country and who, in addition, hate Israel with a true and unbridled passion. Whenever confronted, they call their adversaries, including Nancy Pelosi, “RACIST.” Their disgusting language…..
17,531 replies19,923 retweets102,385 likes

Nancy Pelosi
@SpeakerPelosi
When @realDonaldTrump?? tells four American Congresswomen to go back to their countries, he reaffirms his plan to “Make America Great Again” has always been about making America white again. Our diversity is our strength and our unity is our power.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
@AOC
Mr. President, the country I “come from,” & the country we all swear to, is the United States. But given how you’ve destroyed our border with inhumane camps, all at a benefit to you & the corps who profit off them, you are absolutely right about the corruption laid at your feet.

Earlier Dem Party Machinations
Trump’s comments came on the heels of a couple of weeks of Democratic party hand-wringing, and Twitter back-and-forths within the party over some comments House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said to New York Times Reporter, Maureen Dowd. Pelosi said something about the fabulous foursome’s votes–Pressley, Omar, Tlaib, Ocasio-Cortez–being just that, “four votes” in the house. The comment sounded more like a rebuke than stated fact. Bernie Sanders weighed in over MSNBC about Pelosi’s remark. “You cannot ignore the young people of this country who are passionate about economic and racial and social and environmental justice,” the Vermont Senator told NBC’s Chuck Todd on “Meet the Press.“You got to bring them in, not alienate them.” Ocasio-Cortez did some analysis of the old Dem party and the mainstream’s reliance on 24/7 fundraising throughout a member’s two years in office. She tweeted, “I find it strange when members act as though social media isn’t important. They set millions of $ on to run TV ads so people can see their message. I haven’t dialed for dollars *once* this year, & have more time to do my actual job. Yet we’d rather campaign like it’s 2008.”

AOC’s Chief of Staff
Looks like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s chief of staff, Saikat Chakrabarti is the most courageous person in Washington, D.C. this week. He’s the usual Harvard-educated house staffer, but most comparisons with other hill people end there. He is former digital director of Bernie Sanders’ 2016 campaign and one of the founders of the startup, Stripe. He also helped found, Justice Democrats, a group that takes on centrist Dems and helped elect the current target of Trump, the Fearsome Foursome. In addition, seems like Chakrabarti is one of those unusual staffers that has the trust and the okay from his boss to speak out about injustice whether domestic or international, and that includes criticizing the Democrats for caving to Trump on funding the border wall. Chakrabarti has taken on Pelosi various times, once writing, “Pelosi claims we can’t focus on impeachment because it’s a distraction from kitchen table issues. But I’d challenge you to find voters that can name a single thing House Democrats have done for their kitchen table this year.”

Read this New York Times article

Be on the look-out for more conservative and centrist Dems calling for Chakrabarti’s head. But you know what? If Ocasio-Cortez is worth her progressive soul, and I believe she is not the usual politico, she will not throw staff under the bus of the mainstream Dems. These folks are here to change the culture and mission of Washington, D.C. They don’t f**k around. Will history absolve the “Squad,” as Dowd calls them? Well, for now they will hang together…or be hung together. Stay tuned, it is an exciting time to be involved in electoral politics.

Our Work
This attack on elected members of Congress is a new Trumpian low and it should be called out for what it is: the deplorable declarations of a racist. He must be rejected at every level of our government. It used to be “the buck stops” with a President, every President. Now, the “buck” must stop with the American electorate. The followers must now lead, it’s time. We must spurn the vile hate speech and actions that emanate from this, the whitest of White Houses. The only mechanism to confront and defeat speech that you do not like is more speech. Speak up and speak out early and often and use your voice, and your vote, for change.

“It’s important to note that the President’s words Sunday, telling four American Congresswomen of color “go back to your own country,” is hallmark language of white supremacists. Trump feels comfortable leading the GOP into outright racism, and that should concern all Americans.” (July 15)
  

(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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 15

NEW ELECTION SYSTEMS VULNERABLE TO HACKING?
The Santa Cruz Sentinel featured an extensive report last Sunday, July 14, on page A2, titled “New election systems use vulnerable software” that should give us all cause for concern regarding the integrity of our 2020 elections for what Senator Ron Wyden termed a “looming election cybersecurity crisis.”

The AP report by Tami Abdollah states that the three largest vendors that control 92% of the new election systems that states are using for required system upgrades in response to the 2016 election hacking problems are also vulnerable because of old Windows 7 technology that will “reah the end of life on January 14, meaning Microsoft stop providing technical support and producing ‘patches’ to fix software vulnerabilities, which hackers can exploit.” 

I contacted the Santa Cruz County Election Department and learned that the new system this County chose is from Dominion Voting Systems, Inc., based in Denver, Colorado. Here is the text of the reply: 

“We are upgrading our Dominion Voting System, so therefore we are staying with Dominion Voting Systems.  Their current version that is approved and certified by the California Secretary of State and the upgrade that is currently going through certification at the Secretary of State both use Windows 10.”

While I think that is good news, the AP report states; “Of the three large vendors, Dominion’s newer systems aren’t touched by upcoming Windows software issues–though it has election systems acquired from no-longer-existing companies that may run on even older operating systems.”

The report further states that “Certification, which is voluntary at the federal level but sometimes required by state laws, ensures vendor software runs properly on operating systems they’re tested on.  But there is no cybersecurity check and the process often fails to keep up with rapidly changing technology.  Kevin Skoglund, chief technologist for Citizens for Better Elections, said county election officials point to EAC (the Election Assistance Commission) and state certifications as ‘rock-solid proof” their systems are secure, but don’t realize vendors are certifying systems under 2005 standards.”  The EAC has no regulatory ability, and can only make recommendations.

While we can take comfort in the good choice Santa Cruz County Elections Department made to contract with Dominion Vending Systems, rather that Hart InterCivic Inc. or Election Systems and Software LLC, which seem much more prone to hacking due to the antiquated Windows 7 software expiration problem, I think we all need to contact our representatives to demand legislation be passed to give the federal government authority to mandate basic cybersecurity election infrastructure to be tested now and put in place before the primary elections begin, and most certainly before November, 2020 elections.

The Sunday, July 14, 2019 article from the Santa Cruz Sentinel (page A2) is not yet online, but take a look at this article that states the basics but with less analysis of the problem and includes a quote from concerned Oregon Senator Ron Wyden at the end: (Interestingly, the version of this report published in Sunday’s San Jose Mercury News was a mere one-third of the good report provided by the Santa Cruz Sentinel

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

DON’T FORGET TO LOOK UP AND ENJOY THE WONDERFUL NIGHT SKIES!
I have really been enjoying the clear summer night skies and the views of stars and planets lately.  While a good pair of binoculars is often plenty of magnification for viewing dimmer stars, a good telescope adds a whole new dimension to night sky viewing.  

I just learned that the Santa Cruz Public Libraries have Orion StarBlast 4.5 reflector telescopes and astronomy kits to loan for up to three weeks to those 18 years of age and older.  Take a look at http://www.santacruzpl.org or call 831-427-7713. Sometimes, it really helps to just enjoy the beauty of all that is around and above….and replenish our spirits to enable us to do the sometimes- difficult work of just being a good citizen.

MAKE ONE CALL.  WRITE ONE LETTER.  ATTEND ONE PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.  BUT JUST DO SOMETHING! Cheers, Becky Steinbruner 

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

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July 13
#194 / Living On A Battlefield


“War” may be our favorite metaphor. We have the “War on Drugs.” We have the “War on Poverty.” We have the “War on Crime.” We have the “War on Terror.” Recently, I found my son reading a book called “The 33 Strategies of War,” by Robert Greene. My son had picked it up, he told me, at the Santa Cruz Public Library. Greene is noted as an expert on “strategy, power, and seduction.” He tells us that LIFE ITSELF is basically a “War.” I was only partly pleased to discover that General George S. Patton got a rather favorable mention in Greene’s book. Despite my name, I have resisted the idea that there might be a familial connection. 

Last Friday, I read a column by Paul Krugman, the retired Princeton economist who writes for The New York Times. “Trade War” was the topic, and Krugman contends that “Trump Is Losing His Trade Wars.”

Might I suggest (think about it) that “War,” itself, is a losing proposition in virtually every circumstance. The United States is engaged in many foreign wars. We are losing them all. We are also not winning any of those economic and political “Wars” listed above. I guess some might take Trump’s word over Krugman’s, and think we are winning the “Trade Wars,” but I think I’m going to go with the economist on this one. We are losing our “Trade Wars,” too. 

“Conflict” is inevitable. “War” is not. In the arenas of politics, economics, social policy and international relations, I suggest we drop the “War” metaphor. 

Let’s give ourselves a break and get off what Greene postulates as the “battlefield of life.”

Whenever we have differences, let’s work it out! I am really tired of the idea that to achieve what we want to achieve we need to kill someone else.

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S  SUBCONSCIOUS  COMICS. A genuine classic from the Eagan Archive. Scroll just a bit downward.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. Throwback Thursday with a Deep Cover from 2014. 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

MUNCHING WITH MOZART. Every third Thursday of almost every month there is a free concert held in the upstairs meeting room of the threatened downtown Santa Cruz Public Library. This month the theme is “Poulenc’s Last Sonatas”and it happens Thursday, July 18, 2019…12:10 – 12:50. Musicians will be Kathleen Purcell, flute Carol Panofsky, oboe & Marina Thomas on piano. The program contains… Sonata (1962) a la memoire de Serge Prokofieff Francis Poulenc (1899-1962) from Sept Gnossiennes Erik Satie (1866-1925) and Sonata (1957) a la memoire de Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Francis Poulenc (1899-1962).

Remember…it’s free and at the Santa Cruz Library, Thursday July 18, 12:10-1:00 Central Branch Meeting Room upstairs

LISA JENSEN LINKS. “Will Shakespeare meets Jane Austen as Santa Cruz Shakespeare launches its summer season with a crowd-pleasing production of Pride And Prejudice, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com ). Also, let me count the ways I’m still missing my Art Boy, and read my review in this week’s Good Times to find out why the country music melodrama Wild Rose doesn’t quite sing.” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975. 

WILD ROSE. Jessie Buckley is perfect in the role of a 20 + girl in Scotland who has two children, just did prison time, and wants to sing country music in Nashville and become a worldwide success. The Scot dialect makes it hard to understand at times and the ending makes it a feel good drama. Julie Walters and Sophie Okonedo are equally perfect in their supporting parts.

MIDSOMMAR. Maybe devout Scientologists would like this horror movie, or folks who think sex and death dealing cults are really cool but forget you’ve ever even heard of this carefully directed evil attempt to sicken and redefine horror. Beautifully filmed in Sweden featuring almost all Swedes, it is beyond creepy. American tourists visit a cult and get very involved…but you need be warned that you’ll remember more of it than you plan on.

YESTERDAY. Imagine if the entire world forgot who the Beatles were except for one pretty good guitarist and singer of Indian heritage. An excellent feel good movie that has a fun plot, the greatest Beatle songs and good acting. Go see it especially if you have forgotten how much those songs affected you when their albums were first released.

ECHO IN THE CANYON. Grand memories of the 1960’s popular music scene. Jakob Dylan (Bob’s son) and singer with the Wallflowers produced this documentary but is a full dud on screen. It’s also a huge tribute to the Beachboys and what they added to our culture. See it quickly.

THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO. An excellent, touching film about two close buddies who face the changing city…and the world. Great footage of THE CITY and a story that will have you thinking about it for days or longer. It’s the story of love of an old San Francisco house, and everything that surrounds it. Don’t miss it.   ps. Lisa Jensen tells me that the director Joe Talbot is 1940’s-50’s movie star, bad guy Lyle Talbot’s grandson. 

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. . John Sears and Sue Powell return on July 16 to update us on the devastating proposed development of the Garfield Park Errett Church Circle and the threat to the community. Then Ellen Primack exec. dir of the Cabrillo Festival of Music will discuss this year’s program which runs  July 28-Aug.11. Rick Longinotti and Bruce Van Allen members of Campaign for Sustainable Transportation give details on their current lawsuit on July 23. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com

A BBC documentary about Harvey Weinstein and his (well deserved) fall from grace.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts. Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011. 

QUOTES. “WHALES”

“Whales are killed today to supply the limited demand for whale meat or to be used in pet foods or as fodder for fur-bearing animals used in the fur trade”. Paul Watson
“Size isn’t everything. The whale is endangered, while the ant continues to do just fine”.
William E Bill Vaughan
“Consider the subtleness of the sea; how its most dreaded creatures glide under water, unapparent for the most part, and treacherously hidden beneath the loveliest tints of azure.” Herman Melville, Moby-Dick, or, the Whale


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com


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July 10 – 16, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Save the Herriman House, Sad shape of the Octagon,.GREENSITE…on the Recall Campaign against Krohn and Glover. KROHN…Chicago and Socialism 2019, progressive history of Santa Cruz, Progressives struggle. STEINBRUNER…Fire insurance in burn areas, Civil grand jury and Soquel Creek Water district, Other water solutions, plant 1 trillion trees. PATTON…new world leaders. EAGAN…Subconscious Matters JENSEN…getting ready for Shakespeare. BRATTON…I critique Midsommar and The Fall of The American Empire. UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES…”Heroes”


                                 

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 RAIL PLUS TRAILS IN DAVENPORT. 1948. The exact date on this was April 25, 1948. Trains were enjoyed and used daily. There’ll come a day…                                                      

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

KING KONG and

TARZAN AND HIS MATE (1934) Jungle nudity!!

DATELINE July 8

SAVE THE MERRIMAN HOUSE. Hopefully you read Becky Steinbruner’s plea here last week to save the Historic and valuable Merriman House. Becky wrote…” There is a large development planned for that spot at 1438 Capitola Road, (near the Live Oak Super market) and Mid Peninsula Housing wants to bulldoze the historic house where Robert Merriman spent part of his life. Robert Merriman became a significant volunteer to fight fascism in the Spanish Civil War, and was the role model for Ernest Hemingway’s protagonist Robert Jordan in “For Whom the Bell Tolls”. 

She talked to and used some of Joe Michalak’s historical wisdom. Joe is chair of the Historic Preservation Commission. Joe, being concerned, wrote to me (wanting to clarify some points) saying…  

“I read Bratton Online (July 1)  regarding Becky Steinbruner’s commentary on the Merriman house discussion at the July 1, County, Historic Resources Commission (HRC) meeting. I want to clarify that while I am a member of the City of Santa Cruz, Historic Preservation Commission, I never represented myself as such. I was asked by the Chair of the HRC to address the commission and my comments were given as a county resident, and stated as such for the record. The City of Santa Cruz, Historic Preservation Commission has no jurisdiction since the Merriman house is located about a mile beyond the city limits. The County Redevelopment Agency purchased the property in 1994. It is currently vacant.

My comments were the result of research that Judith Steen and I did in 2017 that were presented to the HRC in January 2018. Our comments were in response to an inaccurate and incomplete evaluation of the property prepared in 2004. 

John Kenneth Galbraith, classmate of Merriman’s at Berkeley, and later Harvard professor of economics, adviser to President John Kennedy, and U.S. Ambassador to India, commented that Merriman was, “the first hero of World War II.” Robert Hale Merriman, a 1925 graduate of Santa Cruz High School lived at 1438 Capitola Road from 1923 through 1928. He left the area in 1928 to attend college at the University of Nevada, Reno, graduating in 1932. That same year he became a graduate student at UC Berkeley studying economics. He often visited his friends in Santa Cruz while attending the university. In 1935 he received a fellowship to study agricultural economics in the Soviet Union. When civil war broke out in Spain in late 1936, Merriman seized the opportunity to join the anti-fascist International Brigades fighting to restore the democratically elected republic. With his college R. O. T. C. training, he quickly rose to command the volunteer Abraham Lincoln Battalion. While recuperating from war injuries in Madrid in 1937, he met with Ernest Hemingway, who was covering the war as a journalist. Hemingway was so impressed by Merriman that he later immortalized him as the fictionalized, heroic Robert Jordan, in his novel For Whom The Bell Tolls. Local, national, and international newspapers would later report on Merriman’s capture and death in April 1938. 

As a young man, the late Senator John McCain became mesmerized by the heroic character of Robert Jordan. At the end of McCain’s life, he remarked that Jordan was his lodestone.  “Jordan was his hero when he was young and his hero today. Nothing is better than the story of someone who sacrifices for causes greater then themselves and Robert Jordan was that.”

I think the Merriman house should be preserved as there is no other building associated with Merriman that is being considered for preservation in the United States at this time. The apartment building in Berkeley is not designated as a historic site and thus it has no protection and none is being considered. The proposed mural as mitigation is insufficient and impermanent. The late California historian Kevin Starr wrote, “Like his fictional counterpart [Robert Jordan], Robert Hale Merriman lost his life to fascism on the field of battle. Because he was so +must be given the first position in any roll call of Californians in battle against the ultra-Right.”

I recommend that people send an email to John Leopold, Supervisor, 1st District: john.leopold@santacruzcounty.us Indicate that comments should be part of the administrative record for CEQA purposes. Comments submitted after the CEQA review process begins won’t be considered. However, when the CEQA review is scheduled to begin is the great unknown, so any comments should be sent immediately. The Merriman house served as the Live Oak Family Resource Center for many years before the current project was proposed.

OCTAGON LOOKS TERRIBLE. The weather and my schedules have been lousy so I haven’t been able to maintain my almost weekly vigil/outpost for quite some time. Howsoever, my stop there a week ago was really depressing. Plaster or stucco or whatever cheap crap the county covered the front of the Octagon with has fallen or chipped off nearly everywhere they painted it. Doesn’t it seem like Nina Simon or Simon Sibley should be responsible for the upkeep to one of few remaining historical landmarks?  Do note too that the entire Abbott Square property is County Property…not the City of Santa Cruz’s. So I’m guessing that makes it all Supervisor Ryan Coonerty’s responsibility.  Then after completely destroying any and all traces of our unique and octagonal County Hall of Records a Roux Dat Cajun restaurant is slated to open in the Octagon sometime. It’s been years in the making. Roux Dat was going to open in front of Bookshop Santa Cruz but now it’s planning on the Octagon and continuing to operate next to Trader Joe’s in Capitola.  It’ll probably serve the same quick food.

July 8, 2019

“What do you think about the recall?” a voice behind me asked. Without looking back to see who was asking, I gave as complete an answer as I could manage on the steep downhill miles at the end of a daylong Sierra Club hike in Butano State Park. With a few ripe trailside thimbleberries to sweeten the tale, I launched into my take on the recall effort against Council members Glover and Krohn. 

0I don’t personally know any of the recall petition signers so I won’t speculate on their motivations or character but I do know that few expected Christopher Krohn and Sandy Brown to win two years ago and even fewer that Drew Glover could beat out top fundraiser Greg Larson and incumbent Richelle Noroyan this time around, forming a potential new majority with newcomer and top vote-getter Justin Cummings. Some still can’t quite believe it to be real. Predictably fingers are pointed at the influence of the student vote, perhaps forgetting it was the student vote that helped usher in the sea change in local politics with the 1979 election of Bruce Van Allen and Mike Rotkin, followed by Mardi Wormhoudt and John Laird in 1981, overturning a century of conservative rule at City Hall and beginning the loosely defined Progressive era of local politics. 

Back in 1979 and 1981 it was easier to distinguish progressives from conservatives. Progressives stood for environmental and neighborhood protection and a distrust of anything to do with the Chamber of Commerce. Conservatives stood for development and represented business interests. These days it seems everyone who runs for council self-labels as a progressive; believes in climate change and “affordable” housing, quality of life and neighborhood protection, so it is hard to spot the wolves in sheep’s clothing. Voting records help if they have been on council before. Those of us who regularly attend or watch city council meetings are aware that for the past two decades, the same people who pass as progressive also vote for every new high rise development (pick your favorite example), have no problem urbanizing our fast disappearing sweet spots of rural character (Ocean St. Extension), had no problem supporting the hugely unpopular Wharf Master Plan that promised to “upscale” the historic wharf with three 45 feet buildings and retail infilling, ignored repeated public requests to televise Planning Commission meetings like every other city in the county does, had no problem with the Corridors Plan that threatened to overwhelm established neighborhoods with out of scale development and they never ever voted to save a tree. But they pass as progressives and generate little controversy save from among those who pay attention. Then real change happened at the last election and those who had expected a seamless transition to the “business as usual” candidates got a wake up call and cried foul. 

A recall campaign is not undemocratic. But it does not require a serious transgression by a sitting council member to be initiated. The worst offences that the recall proponents can dredge up against Krohn and Glover are misleading, minor or hyperbolic. Glover is being charged with “introducing a culture of chaos, bullying and disruption to public meetings” and Krohn, with “refusing to treat fellow council members with respect.” Many who might be persuaded to sign the recall petition have probably never attended a city council meeting. I have attended or watched them all. I’ve never seen Krohn be disrespectful to anyone. He asks pointed questions and follows through to get answers. He doesn’t interrupt. He represents what he stands for and what he campaigned for. Glover is well-prepared, makes lengthy motions to get his agenda accomplished, frequently references Martin Luther King Jnr. and expresses his concern when others fail to support his attempts on behalf of the houseless and marginalized. If I had to be critical, I’d say he displays a newcomer’s impatience with how slowly government works and ignores the need to build alliances “across the aisle.” Yes, I was annoyed when both left the room during budget discussions but consider the context and turn our attention to the Mayor, who could also be accused of “introducing a culture of chaos, bullying and disruption to public meetings.”  In my 40 years of attending city council meetings, I have never heard a colder shut down of public comment than from the current Mayor. “Your time is up!” is snapped at every speaker who is not allowed to finish a word, let alone a sentence once the buzzer sounds at the two-minute or sometimes one minute Mayor-imposed public speaking time limit. At the last meeting, Mayor Watkins unilaterally imposed a 15-minute limit on discussion of consent agenda items.  If more time than 15 minutes is needed, it will be at the end of business, she declared. Consent agenda items sometimes number over 20 and often need discussion by council members and the public. Sometimes that takes a half-hour or longer and sometimes controversial issues are placed on the consent agenda as a way to push them through. Now, under Mayoral decree, democracy is further eroded.

The occasion for the walkout by Krohn and Glover was in the context of the Mayor’s stopping a council meeting, clearing the chambers, then locking the doors because she was unable to get an irate member of the public to stop interrupting the meeting by calling out. Not to condone such disruptive behavior (I have occasionally been guilty of the same thing) but a skilled Mayor would have handled the situation more effectively and brought order without aggravating the volatility of the moment. Chaos was allowed to continue and Glover and Krohn left the chambers.

If the fragile truly progressive majority is fractured as a result of the recall campaign then you should not be surprised to see a resurrection of the Wharf Master Plan, a re-emergence of the Corridors Plan, an end to televising Planning Commission meetings, a fast track for any and all large developments with the loss of local, small businesses and as for saving a heritage tree…forget it.

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

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July 8.

SUMMERTIME, AND THE LIVING IS EASY?
In the old days, certain Lefties would go somewhere, perhaps clandestinely, during their summer vacation to “pick up orders from Moscow” and proceed accordingly. Now with Putin in bed with his own 45 caliber brand of a President, and other pro-Trump authoritarian-friends like Duterte, Orban, and Kim gaining political ground each day, all self-respecting lefties had to go to the Heartland this year to receive “marching orders.” Chicago, Illinois was the place to be for those who fancy themselves to be “agents of social change” in 2019. The politics were hot, but the heat in City with Broad Shoulders was even hotter.

“Community Accountability is a process in which a community–group, friends, family, organization, workplace…


In Chicago last week more than 1700 registered for
Socialism2019

Socialism 2019
It was quite a leftward intellectual and political social space(s) created within the bowels of one of capitalism’s mighty temples, the Chicago Hyatt Regency. How ironic. I was expecting maybe four or five hundred socialist souls to be out looking for any kind of relief in the dystopic unreality of the Trump presidency. The announced gathering, over 1700 conference-goers, blew everyone away. Socialism, Democratic Socialism, the DSA (especially in Santa Cruz),along with Bernie, AOC, and the “Chicago City Council 6,” although still finding its way in a free-for-all DNC-less world, it is still quite the uphill climb. But what is it about that “arc of justice” Dr. King spoke of? It is bending. With the election of the great socialist-progressive-feminine Firepower Four to Congress–Alexandria Octavio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley, and Ilhan Omar–it is clear that a shared vision of sharing is still on the minds of many. Could a new political dawn be at hand? If judged by the usually cynical and psyched-out socialist mob attending this conference, the answer is a cautious, yes!

“…work together to commit to ongoing development of all members of the community, for the community itself, to transform the political conditions that reinforce oppression and violence.”

The Journey
What drew me to “Socialism 2019?” I’ve been following Bernie Sanders since he was mayor of Burlington, and Mike Rotkin at the same time was the self-identified “socialist-feminist” mayor of the People’s Republic of Santa Cruz. Municipal issues looked hopeful back then, around 1981. But Bernie himself was nowhere to be seen during these sultry–91 degrees and 100% humidity when the conference opened–politically-charged days of organizing haze (rage?). What took place here was four days of information exchange, facilitated conversations sometimes among groups of as many as 250, and shared visions of a more just political and economic way forward.

Provide safety and support to community members harmed that respects their self-determination and create and affirm values and practices that resist abuse and oppression and encourage safety, support and accountability. (This statement was developed by the “Women of Color Against Violence” group at the Socialism 2019 conference)

The Presenters
Several journalists of lefty note offered impassioned analyses of a Trumpian and post-Trumpian world. Amy Goodman, Naomi Klein, and David Barsamian all drew huge crowds. But what really raised the roof was Friday night’s announced center stage presentation of the six newly minted socialist Chicago city councilmembers. Yes, there are SIX. Okay, out of 50 city councilmembers, but there are six, and they’ve already been having an effect in reshaping the former Daley and Daley Jr. political machine of the Windy City. Also present were writers like Bhaskar Sunkara (The Socialist Manifesto) and super-intellect, David Harvey. They both easily filled large rooms filled to the brim with both the thoughtful and the wild-eyed. And in case you might think Socialists do not have any interest in sports, columnist and pod-caster Dave Zirin was present to discuss what must be a burning question for many, “What Would Sports Look Like in a Socialist World?”

Do not be deceived that the rich will allow us to vote away their money.
–Lucy Parsons, labor organizer (1853-1942)


Three of the six Chicago socialist city councilmembers
Rossana Rodriguez (ward 35), Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (ward 33), Jesse Sharkey
is President of the Chicago Teacher’s Union, and Jeanette Taylor (ward 20)

The Chicago 6 (Socialist Councilmembers)
Rossana Rodriguez and Carlos Ramirez-Rosa were elected to the Chicago city council running as self-proclaimed Socialists. They offered a wide-ranging, but intimate portrait of Chicago politics during a 2-hour give-and-take with over 100 conference attendees. What struck this Santa Cruz councilmember was their focus on tenants, migrants, and standing up to market-rate developers who are displacing residents by charging sky-rocket rents. Sound familiar? Ramirez-Rosa, the first openly gay man on the Chicago council was just reelected while Puerto Rican-born Ramirez won by fewer than 50 votes. Each Alder-person represents between 50,000-60,000 residents. Along with their four other comrades they’re choosing to focus not on serving downtown corporations, bankers, and for-profit developers like their predecessors, but instead  they’ve set their sights on 1) community-driven planning complete with town hall meeting “oversight,” 2) they’re demanding “CBAs” (Community Benefit Agreements, that is, extracting public benefits from developers) before approving developments, and 3) directing the $1.3 million each Alder-person receives to the economically depressed areas of their wards. They’ve already focused some of that money towards supporting tenants in court; organized a “deportation response network;” and opened city hall to all community groups seeking meeting space. In addition, their offices have sponsored “participatory budget” hearings, and civil disobedience trainings for those community members wishing to confront ICE.

Power of Green New Deal
The 4-day conference ended in the main Ballroom with over 700 in attendance. They came to listen to a conversation between Naomi Klein and Astra Taylor. Both are writers and film-makers. Canadian-born Klein focuses her energy on critiquing climate change and alerting people about the “eleven years we have left” to address the warming of planet earth. She not only interviews and critiques what climate change scientists say, but the claims of climate change deniers as well. Her book, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate, was a New York Times bestseller. Taylor’s busy too. Her recent documentary film, What is Democracy? and a book, Democracy May Not Exist, But We’ll Miss It When It’s Gone have both become important in the climate change and climate “barbarism” debate. Klein said FDR’s New Deal “was a way to rescue capitalism,” but the Green New Deal is out to rescue the planet. While Klein discussed the concept of “climate apartheid” with respect to the absence of federal help in aftermath of New Orleans flooding and the hurricane in Puerto Rico, Taylor addressed the questions of people wanting “to change without changing.” Can we “live the same life [style] and just sub out fossil fuels for renewables?” The answer to both questions was, probably not. Later the conversation turned to the children, and adults, locked up in ICE detention centers along the US border. Throughout these four days’ conversations often turned to the deplorable situation at ICE detention camps. What can we do? Both Klein and Taylor agreed on a “freedom of movement” and “freedom to stay” policies. In other words, Taylor said she’d support a “right to stay” policy as earnestly as a “right to move” program. In the final moments of the conference, Klein the activist pleaded with the large group, “None of us have the luxury of sitting back and critiquing (any longer). We are all in this together. Build a big tent? The (earth’s) atmosphere is our big tent…the more truth we tell, the harder it will be to change the subject.”

“It was 115 degrees Fahrenheit in France last week – the highest temperature they have ever recorded. Still think climate change is a hoax, @realDonaldTrump? You are delusional.” (July 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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 8

WHAT ABOUT INSURANCE IN FIRE-PRONE AREAS?
Some rural property owners in this County have begun to receive notice from their insurance carriers that they will soon be dropped from coverage.  If you or someone you know is in that floating ember, read on because the Santa Cruz Fire Safe Council and RCD will host Mr. Peter Meza, Associate Insurance Compliance Officer with the State of California Department of Insurance for four FREE presentations on July 23 and July 24.

Mr. Meza will present various aspects of homeowners insurance with a special focus on high risk areas, especially those that are fire prone. These events are free to the public and will have ample time for Q & A.   Please see the schedule below:

  • July 23  Highlands Park Senior Center  2pm-3:30pm  (San Lorenzo Valley)
  • July 23  Santa Cruz County Government Building, 5th Floor Supervisor Chambers  7pm-8:30pm (Santa Cruz/North County areas)
  • July 24  Corralitos Padres Hall/Community Center 2pm-3:30pm (Corralitos) 
  • July 24  Capitola City Hall  7pm-8:30pm (Capitola)

Registration is required as each location has capacity limits. 

Understanding Homeowners Insurance – Ben Lomond 

Information is also available on the FSSCC Facebook page. Please click the following link and share all the events: Fire Safe Santa Cruz County 

Phone 831-464-2950 ext. 28 with questions.

Given the recent increased seismic activity on the west coast, we should all be looking at our policy coverages and scheduling an appointment with our agents to review things.

COUNTY CIVIL GRAND JURY AND SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT
In reading some of the recent Civil Grand Jury Reports, which focus mostly on law enforcement related matters, I wondered if Soquel Creek Water District has ever been investigated.  That sure needs to be done.

I found two Reports relative. 

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

JUST PLANT ONE TRILLION TREES, PLEASE, AND SAVE THE HERITAGE TREES, TOO
That positive recommendation came out in the media last week as a simple solution to battling climate change.  Trees not only inhale carbon dioxide and exhale oxygen, thereby reducing greenhouse gas levels, they cool the planet, create habitat for all manner of birds and beneficial insects, produce edible fruits and nuts, and just make the world a beautiful and pleasant place.

Read more about that here: Want to Fight Climate Change? Plant 1 Trillion Trees.

There are plenty of songs about the world needing love. But according to a new study, what the world really needs…

So, along with planting a trillion new trees, how about saving the venerable heritage trees as well?  Many thanks to City Councilman Chris Krohn and his push to protect the urban canopy.  As reported in last week’s Good Times, the City has no inventory of its Heritage Trees, and only gives lip service to preserving them. Read about that here:  Chris Krohn’s Urban Canopy Crusade – Good Times Santa Cruz City councilmember part of push for Santa Cruz tree census

I personally have observed this before the City Planning Commission whenever a property owner pleads “unfeasibility” of saving a large healthy tree when revenue-enhancing developments come to the City’s table.  Many thanks to Sierra Club leader Gillian Greensite and others for always speaking up for the trees….the City just won’t listen unless there is a law suit involved.

Here is a link to the City’s Heritage Tree Ordinance…:  you can cut one down if you get a permit (easy to do and often free) 

Here is a link to the City’s Codes on the matter  

The County of Santa Cruz is even worse.  The County itself recently paid thousands of dollars to cut down over 100 trees on various publicly-owned locations, which included not only Simpkins Swim Center, the Sheriff Center on Chanticleer Avenue but also the 701 Ocean Street County Government Building, and no new trees have been planted to replace those lungs of the planet.  Why doesn’t the County have to follow its own laws??

Here is the County Code regarding Significant Trees

Please write a letter to the Santa Cruz City Council and support the Heritage Tree Count and preservation:  Santa Cruz City Council

Please write the County Board of Supervisors and Parks Director Jeff Gaffney and ask that the County’s Significant Tree Ordinance be better enforced and that the County itself replant trees in the areas where the 100+ were destroyed for solar panel projects, parking lot expansions, and reasons unknown to the public.  

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND ONE PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.    BUT JUST DO SOMETHING!

Cheers and Happy Summer,

Becky Steinbruner  

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

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July 6

#187 / World Leaders Pictured Below 

The Guardian has published an article that is nothing more than a discussion between Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Greta Thunberg. If you don’t know who these women are, you should definitely click those links. Even more, you should read that article. The article is about global warming, and here’s the theme: 

Hope is contagious!

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. The weekly rear view of those driving forces…we hope!! See downwards a bit.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s ” U.S. Border Patrol” ” 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

BOOMERIA, CATACOMBS AND ORGANS. 
Boomeria returns! Santa Cruz Baroque Festival’s yearly celebration of music, science, food and fun will take place Saturday July 13, from 1-5 pm. The Kingdom of Boomeria is a monument to physics and whimsy located in the redwood forest of Bonny Doon, and a treasure of our region. Containing a multitude of delights for all ages, it has been built and maintained by San Lorenzo Valley High science teacher Preston Boomer, AKA “Boom”, whose delight in aesthetics, physics, and fun is evident around every corner. A centerpiece of the festivities is the magnificent Baroque-style tracker organ built into a charming chapel. Santa Cruz Baroque Festival favorites Vlada Moran, William Visscher and others will perform on this unique instrument. Interested visitors will be invited to observe the workings of the organ, peering below the surfaceto see how its manuals and bellows work to create its glorious sound. A few brave individuals may be allowed to play after the official program. 

Tickets available at scbaroque.org .

MUSICAL SAW FESTIVAL. Festival of the Saws was started Sept. 1, 1978. Marghe McMahon, the young woman/student who created the statue of Tom Scribner, did most of the organizing. The International Musical Sawplayers Association established their website in 1994. They publish the sawplayer’s newsletter and also present the annual “Saw Player’s Picnic and Music Festival” on the 2nd full weekend in August, with a Saturday afternoon jam in Santa Cruz and the evening potluck/jam as well as the Sunday festival at Roaring Camp in Felton, California

Here are the details:

42nd Annual Saw Festival August 10-11, 2019

August 10, 2019

2:00 pm Open jam at the Scribner Statue, 1520 Pacific Avenue, Santa Cruz, CA
6:30 pm Potluck and jam at Roaring Camp outer parking lot in Felton, CA.

August 11, 2018

10:00 am – 5:00 pm Festival and contest at Roaring Camp in Felton, CA.
11:00 am Musical Saw Contest on the Main Stage.

The 42nd annual Saw Contest, the longest running saw contest in the world, will crown our 2019 champion.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: ” Sorry, folks, but I have nothing to declare this week. I opted for some down time before the launch of the new Santa Cruz Shakespeare season (opening with Pride and Prejudice on Friday) and next week’s new movies. But I’ll be back on the beat next week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com )!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975. 

MIDSOMMAR. Maybe devout Scientologists would like this horror movie, or folks who think sex and death dealing cults are really cool but forget you’ve ever even heard of this mess. Beautifully filmed in Sweden featuring almost all Swedes, it is beyond creepy. American tourists visit a cult and get very involved…but you shouldn’t!!

THE FALL OF THE AMERICAN EMPIRE. A French film about a mob burglary  and a delivery man that goes very wrong for 2 hours and 8 minutes. There are clever moments in it and you’ll become your own director as you work through the last half figuring how you would have directed it. It isn’t a terrible movie…it just could have been a lot better. Only go IF you’ve seen almost all, the other movies. CLOSES THURSDAY JULY 11

YESTERDAY. Imagine if the entire world forgot who the Beatles were except for one pretty good mguitarist and singer of Indian heritage. An excellent feel good movie that has a fun plot, the grestest Beatle songs and good acting. Go see it especially if you have forgotten how much those songs affected you when their albums were first released.

ECHO IN THE CANYON. Grand memories of the 1960’s popular music scene. Jakob Dylan (Bob’s son) and singer with the Wallflowers produced this documentary but is a full dud on screen. It’s also a huge tribute to the Beachboys and what they added to our culture. See it quickly.

THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO. An excellent, touching film about two close buddys who face the changing city…and the world. Great footage of THE CITY and a story that will have you thinking about it for days or longer. It’s the story of love of an old San Francisco house, and everything that surrounds it. Don’t miss it.   ps.Lisa Jensen tells me that the director Joe Talbot is 1940’s-50’s movie star bad guy Lyle Talbot’s grandson. 

LATE NIGHT. Don’t believe the “dramatic comedy” label the distributers put on this no-laugh drama with Emma Thompson as a failing late night tv host, and the always dependable John Lithgow as her husband and protector. Predictable, unrewarding, lack of direction. Emma is a favorite of mine but she just mugs her way through this one. CLOSES THURSDAY JULY 11

THE DEAD DON’T DIE. Jim Jarmusch has always been talked about as some sort of great director but not by me. Somebody could make a hilarious zombie comedy…the world needs one, and this isn’t it. Too much killing going on in our real world, is it because violence is too present now?  I’m not sure but even when you add a cast like Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Chloë Sevigny, Tilda Swinton, Iggy Pop, Steve Buscemi, and Tom Waits you have barely a few snickers. CLOSES THURSDAY JULY 11 

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. July 9 has Ken Koenig and Maryanne Campbell   talking about Santa Cruz Indivisible’s 7/12 rally “Lights for Liberty”. Then activist John Aird deals with UCSC, water, population, rent and other issues. John Sears returns on July 16 to update us on the devastating proposed development of the Garfield Park Errett Church Circle and the threat to the community. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com 

Eva Kor died last Thursday in hotel in Krakow, Poland. She was there conducting one of her annual summer tours of Auschwitz, talking to young people about Auschwitz and what she and others went through there. Eva, along with her twin sister Miriam, was one of Dr. Mengele’s twins. She did a lot of education on the subject of the Holocaust, and on the topic of forgiveness. Watch her documentary, “Forgiving Dr Mengele“, if you get a chance.

Here’s a link to her obituary in the New York Times

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts. Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011. 

QUOTES. “Heroes”
“I think of a hero as someone who understands the degree of responsibility that comes with his freedom”.   Bob Dylan
“What has violence ever accomplished? What has it ever created? No martyr’s cause has ever been stilled by an assassin’s bullet. No wrongs have ever been righted by riots and civil disorders. A sniper is only a coward, not a hero; and an uncontrolled or uncontrollable mob is only the voice of madness, not the voice of the people”. Robert Kennedy 
 “Luck is everything… My good luck in life was to be a really frightened person. I’m fortunate to be a coward, to have a low threshold of fear, because a hero couldn’t make a good suspense film”.  Alfred Hitchcock   


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
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Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

July 2 – 8, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…Save the Circle Church, save the community. GREENSITE…Gillian on the Trip to Wales. KROHN…City dark in July? , wireless facilities, Janus wages, rental housing, homelessness, Homeless study from year 2000 reviewed. STEINBRUNER…thanks Chris Krohn, Soquel Pure Water OR clean water? Save Merriman House, Cannabis Permits, County Budget Hearings, Grand Jury reports county problems. PATTON…the Fourth Amendment. EAGAN…Joe Biden and Trump & family ties. JENSEN…Reviews Yesterday and Beehive. BRATTON…I critique Echo in the Canyon and Yesterday. UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES…”Fireworks”


                                 

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SANTA CRUZ FOURTH OF JULY PARADE 1927.For quite a few years some folks believed that this was a photo of the Ku Klux Klan marching in our town parade. The KKK did march in one of our parades and then hightailed it back to San Jose but not this one. We don’t have nearly as many public or city sponsered  events as we didin the good old days. Fear of crowds, I guess. Has it ever dawned on you like it has on me that nowadays the police are as afraid of us as we are of them? 

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

FIREWORKS GONE WRONG. This one looks faked to me.

FIREWORKS UNDER ICE. A first for everything!

DATELINE July 1

SAVE THE CIRCLE AND THE CHURCH. Neighbors far and wide are getting it together in many new ways. They are trying to prevent the bucks up wanna be developers who call themselves The Circle of Friends llc. These money grabbing people bought the property for $3.3 million dollars and plan on tearing down the historic Errett Circle Community church. They plan on dividing the circle into pie shaped lots to build their huge houses.

The latest newsletter from the concerned neighbors group calling themselves Friends Of The Circles tell us that they now have more than 852 signatures and will get together and plan on a website, develop financial plans and add to their social organizing. Reach them and join them at FriendsoftheCircles@gmail.com .

To read their entire newsletter, go here. 

Never missing a chance to preserve our local history and community  Historic Preservation Commissioner and historian Ross Gibson has written a 59 page “Neighborhood Context Statement” all centered on Errett Circle. The would be developers state that they are starting weekly information meetings. The word “information” should be changed to sales-promotion meetings.


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July 1st 

NEWID TEULU CYMRU WALES FAMILY REUNION


Rees Family plus Mayor and other dignitaries

Presentation to Mayor of Caernarfon of a painting of Lionel Rees VC

The Rees family home within the castle walls

Caernarfon Castle, built by King Edward 1 in the 13th century to oppress and conquer the Welsh, was the site of a far more pleasant piece of history on June 21st. 2019.  

At the direction of the Royal Air Force, an RAF BAe 146 aircraft of Number 32 Squadron, was to be named after Group Captain Lionel Brabazon Rees VC, the first fighter pilot in World War 1, awarded the Victoria Cross in 1916 for bravery under fire, born and raised in Caernarfon in a 3-story stone house that still stands within the castle walls and who in 1932 sailed single-handedly in a 32 foot ketch to the Bahamas, where he eventually settled, married and had 3 children. Lionel was my great uncle and his children, my cousins, whom I had never met until this trip of a lifetime, made possible by the Royal Air Force and Welsh historian, Alister Williams.

Racism plays a central theme in the story. Lionel was undoubtedly shunned by other members of the Rees family, including my own, for marrying a black Bahamian woman. Growing up in Australia, I never heard my family speak of Lionel, despite his many honors and achievements. I previously wrote about the 2006 trip to Nassau in a single-engine Cessna my son and I made on a whim, to locate and pay our respects at Lionel’s gravesite, after reading Alister William’s book on Lionel, Against The Odds. We failed to locate any family members while in the Bahamas so were full of excitement with a touch of nervousness as we approached the Caernarfon museum where an exhibit commemorating Lionel’s life was on display. Three generations of the Rees family, fourteen in all attended. Hugs quickly erased any formalities and we found ourselves chatting like old friends.

The naming of an RAF aircraft for an individual is a rare honor. The last one was in 1968 so for this event, especially for a Caernarfon boy, the town was alive with anticipation. As I remarked on the natural beauty I was seeing across the straits to Anglesey from the top of the ancient Welsh Yacht Club, a local man explained that the view had not changed in a hundred years; in other words, no modern development. There had been attempts at development but they were stopped. So much for “change is inevitable.”  

The day of the naming of the plane dawned with blue skies and sunshine, a somewhat rare event for northern Wales. Also rare is my getting spiffed up for a formal event. A hat seemed in order so what luck to find a fascinator in a thrift shop in Caernarfon, even if I was the only Rees to wear one! The event was very moving, held in a hangar at the RAF base in Anglesey, across the Menai Straits from Caernarfon. Bilingual in Welsh and English, attended by the Mayor of Caernarfon and Group Commander of the Number 32 Squadron RAF (who happens to be a + woman) and other dignitaries. We were the guests of honor, and honored we felt. 

The second part of the day’s events included a fly-over in Caernarfon of the now newly named plane plus the telling of the story of Lionel’s life and extraordinary bravery. Then a short walk to visit the family home, which has been preserved and which now houses government offices. A singular feeling to be within the walls of the house where my great, great grandfather, James Rees lived, a successful publisher of an English and then a Welsh language newspaper and as I learned, quite a radical of his time, who twice served as Mayor of Caernarfon. 

Growing up with no extended family, no cousins, I feel blessed to connect at long last. To confront the divisive racism of the past and bring the family full circle into a loving wholeness suggests that, “people make history, though not under circumstances of their own choosing,” as another radical has written.  

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

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July 1

“THE CITY GOES DARK IN JULY”
I remember when I first heard that phrase. It was just an off-the-cuff response to a question I posed about a planned neighborhood meeting and what we might do to prepare for it. No, I can’t do that before August, she said, because, you know, the city goes dark in July. I am still mildly stunned that such a phrase is employed inside of city hall. The city going “dark” presumably means that the city council will have no scheduled meetings during the month. It is perhaps a welcome respite too for both city staff and councilmembers. A time to catch up on all those unread emails and consultant reports; maybe brush up on the city’s General Plan, re-read the Brown Act and the Parks Master Plan, and plan to go to a conference or two to see how other cities do it. But believe me, the city will not be dark my friends. There is plenty to do and it is likely the job of the council to light a few candles too.

Last Council Meeting
There were some really fine discussions and votes at the June 25th Santa Cruz City Council meeting. One was a presentation by students from our Italian seaside sister city, Sestri Levante, which I visited several years ago. This city of 20,000 is 35 miles from Genoa. It’s balmier than Santa Cruz, the buildings stand closer to each other, and it crowds around the Mediterranean like a small municipal castle. Small boats dot the harbor and many aged,taller broad-shouldered structures have been built, unlike Santa Cruz, right up to edge of its narrow beach. But like Santa Cruz, the weather and mellow inhabitants make it relaxing and a fun place to be. Then, there was the “Small Cell Wireless Facilities” discussion in which the city council verbally pushed back on the wireless industry, but felt there was little we could do in the policy arena. We will enforce the 1500-foot separation between “facilities,” but it still will cost a member of the public $645 to appeal any of these antennas. This issue is fraught with great local, regional, and national implications. It is being fought out in Congress and will hopefully be revisited soon by the city council. There was unanimous support for better pay and working conditions for Janus of Santa Cruz workers as they move forward in their contract negotiations. They work in difficult conditions (no restroom for employees, for example) and many are paid abysmal wages. Some Janus staff are paid less than $14 an hour to counsel, console, and assist the most vulnerable members of our community, many who are dealing with drug and alcohol addiction and while others are experiencing mental health crisis’. These employees recently organized to join the National Union of Healthcare Workers We as a community can do better by these workers. The city council stands behind the Janus workers. The tenant community of Santa Cruz was again supported by a majority of councilmembers in passing the Recommendations for Data Collection Related to Rental Housing resolution. City staff received direction from Council and will now go out and collect data related to housing such as amount rent paid, rent increases, numbers of tenants and landlords, number of actual rental properties in the city, and maybe we can even get an estimate of the number of students living off the hill and inside of the city. Good luck, it seems like an exhausting and tedious task, but one that may yield valuable results as we continue to move on in our local brave new world of an SF Mime Troupe earlier production called, City for Sale. (By the way, mark your calendars because the Mime Troupe is coming to Santa Cruz on September 7 and 8 and will perform on the San Lorenzo Park benchlands. This year’s show is called, Treasure Island, and is written by Michael Gene Sullivan.)

Response to Homelessness
The evening session was dedicated to city council’s response to homelessness, aka another “task force,” and this one on top of the 2000 task force findings and the 2015 city council subcommittee work, not to mention the Housing Blueprint subcommittee’s report because after all, it is really all about the extreme cost of housing in Santa Cruz. All those results and recommendations are available and many have yet to be implemented. Do we need another task force? Maybe. Do we need to get up our courage and implement the findings and past recommendations of other taskforces? Yes. The stars are now aligned: the city and county have a grand opportunity to work together, to forge a real partnership, in addressing our historic houseless issues. Why? The state already sent over $10 million this past year to address the homelessness, mental health, and the addiction crisis. And guess what? Gov. Gavin Newsome just approved at least that much more for next year. So, this nine-member taskforce has its work cut out, not necessarily in bringing more recommendations, but in trying to compel and convince city council and city staff of the necessity and profound crisis we must address. Go taskforce, go! There was an unusual rub within the selection process of the current taskforce. There are currently zero homeless people directly involved in designing and carrying out a work plan for the taskforce. A long-ish discussion ensued on the council concerning this omission. Direction was finally given to the taskforce to appoint two people who are currently experiencing homelessness, but only if you want to. Three members of the city council said it was imperative to place houseless folks on the committee at the very beginning. The final vote was 4-3, the maybes won that one, but I think the taskforce will get it, and immediately appoint two more members from the homeless community.

Addendum

Here are the Homeless Taskforce 2000 recommendations still waiting to be implemented. Also, note below the members of that long-ago taskforce. Recognize any names? As you read the recommendations I ask you to consider, what has changed in 20 years?

The charge of the taskforce was:

The Homeless Issues Task Force was formed by the City Council to study homeless issues and to develop recommendations to ameliorate the conditions and conflicts relating to the homeless. Generally, our charge has been described in these terms: 

  1. 1)  the development of permanent year-round shelter for all segments of the homeless community; and
  2. 2) opportunities for improving currently provided services; and
  3. 3) the rights and responsibilities of homeless persons.

Interim Recommendations of the Task Force 

  • Shelter, housing and places to sleep 
    • We recommend that the Council acknowledge that camping and vehicular sleeping will not stop because of laws. We suggest that the City move to an approach that regulates camping and vehicular sleeping, while minimizing negative impacts. Some examples of this approach include development of programs for expanding vehicular sleeping, including: 
      • Creation of a modest, staffed program to match vehicular sleepers with legal locations in church and business parking lots.
      • Selection of legal parking areas on public streets or parking lots away from residences for overnight parking.
      • Creation of a system of permits for sleeping in vehicles which is simple, free for those in need and avoids labeling anyone homeless.
      • Extension of the 3-day time limit for sleeping in a vehicle parked in a driveway with permission from the permanent residents there.
      • Creation of a conventionally managed public campground in the City of Santa Cruz which would exist for both tourist and homeless campers. Revenue from tourists would help to allow subsidy of very low-income campers.
      • We recommend that the City work toward year-round availability of the Armory with zero or low rent, recognizing that Armory-style emergency shelter has many limitations. This would begin with an emphasis on working at the state level to make it possible to use the armory year-round.
      • We suggest that the City work toward creation of a shelter for families with children. 
      • We recommend that the City work toward creation of an additional shelter site for the ISSP program that would be available 24-hours a day, 365 days a year, to be used flexibly by the program to meet special needs not currently met by church and Armory sites.
      • We recommend that the City help create a home-matching program for homeless families and households willing to accommodate them.
  • Substance abuse treatment?
    • We recommend that the City, with other entities, work to develop a new residential substance abuse treatment facility geared specifically to meet the needs of homeless persons with a history of chronic substance abuse. The recent loss of two long-time homeless residents due to the effects of substance abuse, one of whom had been seeking treatment in vain in the last days of his life, underline the desperate need for these services. The task force will be providing information on models, potential funding sources, and potential collaboration partners, and also recommendations on the preferred features of such a treatment program.
    • We recommend that the City work to expand opportunities for treatment with a goal of treatment on demand, so that “windows of opportunity” are not lost.
    • We recommend that the City work to provide a small “safe haven” drop-in shelter for those not able to enter more structured shelter programs, with tolerance for active substance users. This project would include explicit outreach to high-risk individuals.Supportive Services 
    • We recommend that the City help create an independent “ombudsperson” position for homeless people to receive, document and assist with complaints related to homeless services (both agencies and governmental). The person in this position would also refer homeless people to appropriate services and/or agencies and document service shortages when there is no referral available.
    • We recommend that the City help create a homeless persons day labor program located at the Coral Street site.
    • We recommend that the City help assist in the creation of a small job training and employment enterprise for homeless people. 
  • Legal and Law Enforcement Issues 
    • We recommend that the City work with other jurisdictions to reconcile differences between the Camping Ordinance provision related to community service for violations and existing Court practices. These differences preclude violators from performing community service for camping violations. 
    • We wish to inform the City of our successful involvement in upgrading the hourly calculations used by the court referral program, Community Options, from five to seven dollars per hour. 
    • We recommend that the Police Department make an effort to eliminate the appearance of selective enforcement of the “downtown ordinances” and other ordinances which are often enforced against persons who appear to be homeless but not enforced against people who appear to be well-dressed and affluent. 
    • We recommend the Police Department adopt a consistent policy of not citing or arresting people for typically homeless-related violations when they approach the police to report violent crimes. 
    • We recommend that the Police Department adopt a method of gathering specific data and tracking of crimes against homeless people. 
    • We recommend revision of laws which prohibit scavenging of recyclables since this is often a source of income for homeless individuals. 

Finally, we would like to note the enormous magnitude of issues contained in the assignment given to the task force. There is no way a group such as this can do justice to the assignment in a six-month period, with part-time staffing. We respectfully request that the City Council consider extending the life of this task force and creating a permanent advisory body dedicated to the hardest issues. 

Respectfully submitted by: 

Linda Lemaster, Nancy Anecito, Sherry Conable, Lucy Kemnitzer, Don Lane, Ken Cole, Paul Brindel, Peter Eberle, Thomas Leavitt, Tom Nedelsky, Timote Peterson, Christine Sippl, Marilyn Weaver, Mel Nunez, Laura Tucker

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (on her visit to the migrant detention camps along the US-Mexico border)

“9,500 CBP officers sharing memes about dead migrants and discussing violence and sexual misconduct towards members of Congress. How on earth can CBP’s culture be trusted to care for refugees humanely? PS I have no plans to change my itinerary & will visit the CBP station today.” (July 1)

note: CPB is Customs Border Protection.
  

(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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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July 1

THANK YOU CITY COUNCILMEMBER CHRIS KROHN
Many thanks to Councilmember Chris Krohn for pulling Consent Agenda Item #24 on last Tuesday’s City Council agenda to support government transparency and good public discussion of a very controversial issue: Soquel Creek Water District’s plan to inject millions of gallons of treated sewage water into the MidCounty residents’ drinking water supply.  Had it not been pulled and publicly discussed, the 35-year agreement between the District and City Wastewater Treatment Facility that is necessary for the Pure Water Soquel Project would have been silently approved, even though the full Water Commission and Transportation & Public Works Commission would have never seen the final draft of the proposed agreement, because it was all “worked out” behind closed doors. 

Soquel Creek Water District staff showed up in full force, with 10 or more staff and three Directors in the audience.  There were also some unknown attendees that were obviously there to help push the agreement through.  Most of the written correspondence in support of the agreement were from a local service group that the District General Manager, Ron Duncan, frequents.  There were some oppositional letters as well, asking for postponement to August to allow full public vetting by the two City Commissions. 

As the Petitioner who has filed Pro Per legal action under citizen standing for the public benefit as a Petition for Writ of Mandate (just asking the District to follow the CEQA law, please), I thought it interesting that the attorney for Soquel Creek Water District, Mr. Robert Bosso, assured the Council that “Ms. Steinbruner is the only one who has filed a complaint about this Project.”  Well, I suppose that is true, but I speak for perhaps thousands in the MidCounty Basin who are opposed to the District injecting treated sewage water into their drinking water.  

I also speak for the voiceless habitats that would be destroyed with the 18 stream crossings, necessitating relocation of endangered species within 100 feet of the clearing for equipment staging, as well as the health of the Purisima Aquifer itself.  Once it is fouled, there is no going back. Because the meeting agenda was so full, the Council took public comment on the item then postponed action on the item until the end of the afternoon’s agenda….nearly four hours later.  Without any discussion, the Council approved the agreement. 

At least there was public comment….and hopefully let the Council know this controversial issue is not going away. 

HISTORIC PRESERVATION GETS TWISTED TO SUIT PROJECT APPLICANTS
The County Historic Resources Commission met Monday to discuss the fate of the historic Merriman House in Live Oak.  There is a large development planned for that spot at 1438 Capitola Road, and Mid Peninsula Housing wants to bulldoze the historic house where Robert Merriman spent part of his life. Robert Merriman became a significant volunteer to fight fascism in the Spanish Civil War, and was the role model for Ernest Hemingway’s protagonist Robert Jordan in “For Whom the Bell Tolls”. 

MidPen Housing wants to bulldoze that history.   At the request of the County Historic Resources Commission, ARG Consultants (on contract with the County), reviewed the historic significance of the house and property.  Because there is another location in Berkeley (2517 Virginia Street) that Mr. Merriman also lived, it is allowable to bulldoze the Santa Cruz home. 

Luckily, Commissioner Carolyn Swift asked the question about the status of this Berkeley property.  Planner Ms. Annie Murphy said the property is not historically protected.  The Chairman of the Santa Cruz City Historic Preservation Commission, Mr. Joe Michalak, was in the audience, and testified that he had investigated the status of the Berkeley property, a 9-unit apartment building that has been modified and would most likely not meet criteria for historic preservation. 

The real issue, Mr. Michalak and the Commission discussed, is WHEN WILL CEQA PROCESS BEGIN ON THE PROPOSED MIDPEN HOUSING PROJECT?  It is critical that the public know when to submit comment that can be included in an administrative records of the proceedings of the Project, and under Public Resources Code 15064.5, the lead agency (which most likely would be the County) has the discretion to change historic designation of structures impacted by a project. 

I also spoke about the agricultural significance of the property, in that it established the small “ranchettes” of the Live Oak area that lead to Santa Cruz County becoming the second-most-significant poultry producing county in the State in the early 1900’s, with Petaluma leading.
The MidPen Housing representative that spoke assured the Commission that there would be an interpretive panel, size unknown, that would relay the historic significance of the property to the public.  Hmmmmm….. 

The Commission took no action on this matter, but asked to be kept informed of any environmental review on the property.

Here is a link to the July 1 County Historic Resources Commission agenda and documentation

Here is a link to what the Berkeley apartment building looks like, with modern windows and other alterations 

Here is a link to Public Resources Code 15064.5 regarding California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and historic preservation 

Here is a link to the public comments re: this Project 

Given the County has authorized $400,000 to hire a consultant to do an EIR on the Sustainable Santa Cruz County Plan, I think we all need to be learning about the CEQA process and what we can do to preserve our historic and cultural resources.  As Supervisor John Leopold recently said “The Santa Cruz County Plan will enable us to look at development in the County in ways that are different than what has been done in the last 40-50 years.”  

Watch out….here come the bulldozers.

NEWS ABOUT CANNABIS CULTIVATION LICENSES
The Santa Cruz Planning Department has issued the first permit for an outdoor cultivation operation in the county.  A level 3 Administrative permit for 115,000 sf of outdoor cultivation on a CA zoned property near Corralitos was granted to a client of the land use planning firm, Swift Consulting Inc. according to Ken Hart.
It has taken a very long time for the County to issue this FIRST PERMIT, which has encouraged the black market trade, and discouraged those who paid a lot of money and stepped forward to get a license to cultivate cannabis.  The County budget really depended on getting at least $1 million in revenue from this industry alone.  

A STUNNING FINALE TO COUNTY BUDGET HEARINGS
The County Board of Supervisors approved the $827 Million County Budget on the final Budget Hearing day last Tuesday, June 25.  The approved adding $15.2 Million in supplemental reports, $4 Million in Last Day Reports, and $1 Million in Concluding Reports.  The Board authorized the County Administrative Officer (CAO) Carlos Palacios and Auditor-Controller, Edith Driscoll, to move things around pretty much as they please to make it all balance….we hope.

Despite the passage of a new half-cent countywide sales tax last fall, the County budget still faces a $6-$12 Million deficit in 2020-2021.  Is it wise to bump up the expenditures now by an additional $20+Million? 

Here is the link to the Final Day Budget Report, and the link to the final budget hearing agenda is here  

 GRAND JURY REPORTS LOCAL GOVERNMENT ISSUES
The County Civil Grand Jury is now releasing the reports of their investigations into various issues of governmental problems. 
Take a look here and read them when you can

The report “How Complex Public Defense Contracts Misled County Leaders” looks especially interesting  

Write a letter to the Editor of the Santa Cruz Sentinel, and let others know your thoughts.  There is strength in numbers, you know.

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

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

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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June 30 #181 / Good Faith And The Fourth Amendment

Timothy Carpenter robbed a lot of banks, but no one in any of the banks he robbed could ever identify him. Those who saw him just knew Carpenter as “some guy” who was involved in the robberies. In view of that, how did the authorities know Carpenter was involved, and ultimately pin the crimes on him? 

Well, and there is a lesson here for all of us in Carpenter’s story, Carpenter had a cellphone (maybe you have one, too). As you may or may not realize, cellphones work by maintaining frequent and automatic contact with cellphone towers, and the phone companies that provide cellphone service maintain a record of the contacts that every cellphone has with every cellphone tower with which it is ever in communication. Thus, any individual who uses a cellphone (including you and me), and who carries it around, is providing his or her cellphone company with a complete and documented map of where the cellphone user has been, and at what times. This map is pretty accurate, too, and this is the information that allowed law enforcement officers to pin the bank robberies on Carpenter. When the banks were being robbed, Carpenter’s cellphone records proved he was in the immediately vicinity. It couldn’t have been a coincidence, either, since there were LOTS of banks in what was an ongoing robbery spree, and Carpenter was there in every case!

Here is where the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution comes into the story. As you may remember, the Fourth Amendment protects us from “unreasonable searches and seizures.” Generally speaking, if law enforcement wants to use evidence in a criminal prosecution, that evidence must have been obtained after an impartial magistrate has issued a search warrant, based upon probable cause. In Carpenter’s case, there was obviously no probable cause to arrest him until AFTER law enforcement officials reviewed his cellphone itinerary, and law enforcement didn’t get any search warrant to obtain those cellphone records; they just asked the phone company, which turned over the records to them.

Carpenter sought to exclude the evidence obtained from the cellphone companies on the basis that asking the phone companies for this data, without a warrant based on probable cause, was an “unreasonable search and seizure.” When evidence has been obtained without a warrant, and is based on an unreasonable search and seizure, the courts will exclude the evidence. In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court decided that that the cellphone record evidence should be excluded. So, case over! At leasrt, that is what I thought when I read the Carpenter decision, which was handed down by the Supreme Court in June 2018.

A recent New York Times opinion editorial has provided an update, reporting that a Federal Circuit Court recently decided that the cellphone evidence can be used against Carpenter, after all, despite the 2018 Supreme Court ruling, because law enforcement officers were acting in “good faith” when they obtained the cellphone evidence from the phone company. In other words, until the Supreme Court ruled, law enforcement officers had every reason to think it was just fine to ask the phone companies, as “third parties,” to provide the evidence that could be used against Carpenter. Implicitly, the court ruled that the Supreme Court’s decision was prospective only.

The so-called “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule has been expanding. More and more, the courts are deciding that illegally-obtained evidence can, in fact, be used against accused persons, because the law enforcement officers didn’t really know that they were obtaining evidence illegally. If law enforcement acts in “good faith,” the failure to follow constitutional requirements isn’t a bar to using the evidence.

Frankly, I don’t find that “good faith” exception to show much “good faith” to citizens, who shouldn’t be incarcerated for life (Carpenter’s fate, apparently) when the evidence used to convict then has been obtained contrary to the protections provided by the Fourth Amendment.

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. More inside peeks that keep us exactly who we are. Scroll lower down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Trumps’ Type” 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

BOOMERIA, CATACOMBS AND ORGANS. 
Boomeria returns! Santa Cruz Baroque Festival’s yearly celebration of music, science, food and fun will take place Saturday July 13, from 1-5 pm. The Kingdom of Boomeria is a monument to physics and whimsy located in the redwood forest of Bonny Doon, and a treasure of our region. Containing a multitude of delights for all ages, it has been built and maintained by San Lorenzo Valley High science teacher Preston Boomer, AKA “Boom”, whose delight in aesthetics, physics, and fun is evident around every corner. A centerpiece of the festivities is the magnificent Baroque-style tracker organ built into a charming chapel. Santa Cruz Baroque Festival favorites Vlada Moran, William Visscher and others will perform on this unique instrument. Interested visitors will be invited to observe the workings of the organ, peering below the surfacet o see how its manuals and bellows work to create its glorious sound. A few brave individuals may be allowed to play after the official program. 

Tickets available at scbaroque.org.

MUSICAL SAW FESTIVAL. Festival of the Saws was started Sept. 1, 1978. Marghe McMahon, the young woman/student who created the statue of Tom Scribner, did most of the organizing. The International Musical Sawplayers Association established their website in 1994. They publish the sawplayer’s newsletter and also present the annual “Saw Player’s Picnic and Music Festival” on the 2nd full weekend in August, with a Saturday afternoon jam in Santa Cruz and the evening potluck/jam as well as the Sunday festival at Roaring Camp in Felton, California

Here are the details:

42nd Annual Saw Festival August 10-11, 2019

August 10, 2019

2:00 pm Open jam at the Scribner Statue, 1520 Pacific Avenue, Santa Cruz, CA
6:30 pm Potluck and jam at Roaring Camp outer parking lot in Felton, CA.

August 11, 2018

10:00 am – 5:00 pm Festival and contest at Roaring Camp in Felton, CA.
11:00 am Musical Saw Contest on the Main Stage.

The 42nd annual Saw Contest, the longest running saw contest in the world, will crown our 2019 champion.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “The ’60s are having a moment right now, at least, the music of the ’60s, with the Beatles-themed movie Yesterday and the Cabrillo Stage season opener, Beehive. Will your mind be blown? Find out this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com )!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

YESTERDAY. Imagine if the entire world forgot who the Beatles were except for one pretty good mguitarist and singer of Indian heritage. An excellent feel good movie that has a fun plot, the grestest Beatle songs and good acting. Go see it especially if you have forgotten how much those songs affected you when their albums were first released.

ECHO IN THE CANYON. Grand memories of the 1960’s popular music scene. Jakob Dylan (Bob’s son) and singer with the Wallflowers produced this documentary but is a full dud on screen. It’s also a huge tribute to the Beachboys and what they added to our culture. See it quickly.

THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO. An excellent, touching film about two close buddies who face the changing city…and the world. Great footage of THE CITY and a story that will have you thinking about it for days or longer. The story of love of an old San Francisco house, and everything that surrounds it. Don’t miss it.  

P.S. Lisa Jensen tells me that the director Joe Talbot is 1940’s-50’s movie star bad guy Lyle Talbot’s grandson. 

LATE NIGHT. Don’t believe the “dramatic comedy” label the distributers put on this no laugh drama with Emma Thompson as a failing late night tv host, and the always dependable John Lithgow as her husband and protector. Predictable, unrewarding, lack of direction. Emma is a favorite of mine but she just mugs her way through this one.

THE DEAD DON’T DIE. Jim Jarmusch has always been talked about as some sort of great director but not by me. Somebody could make a hilarious zombie comedy…the world needs one, and this isn’t it. Too much killing going on in our real world, is it because violence is too present now?  I’m not sure but even when you add a cast like Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Chloë Sevigny, Tilda Swinton, Iggy Pop, Steve Buscemi, and Tom Waits you have barely a few snickers. 

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. Listen on July 2 when Laura Bishop exec dir. of the 418 Project discusses the proposed development on Front Street. She’s followed by Anita Webb who’ll cover the problems of that monstrosity being proposed by, and across from, the Dream Inn. July 9 has Ken Koenig and friend talking about Santa Cruz Indivisible’s 7/12 rally “Lights for Liberty”. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com 

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts. Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011. 

QUOTES. “Fireworks”
“And she learned that you couldn’t stockpile anything that mattered, really. Feelings, people, songs, sex, fireworks: they existed only in time, and when it was over, so were they.” Garth Risk Hallberg, City on Fire 
“There should be fireworks at last, when a dream dies.”  Kirby Larson 
“One example of a solid but inexplicable fact, ruling all human affairs – your fireworks won’t go off while the crowd is around.”J. K. Jerome, Second Thoughts of an Idle Fellow 


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
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Posted in Weekly Articles | Leave a comment

June 24 – 30, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…about Common Roots farm threats from developers Curry and Swift, Judge Ari Symons unfit for office, more jokes from Mary Kelly. GREENSITE… Still in Caernarfon, Wales. KROHN…deadlines, planning sessions, top ten council accomplishments. STEINBRUNER…County budget murky, County Fire Department budget decrease!, Soquel Creek Water and S.Cruz City meeting behind closed doors. UCSC Mission bell in wrong location. PATTON…about Elizabeth Warren and Green Imperalism. EAGAN…The Trump Flu. JENSEN…The Last Black Man in San Francisco. BRATTON… I critique Non Fiction (it leaves Thursday, June 27) see it ASAP! And  The Last Black Man in San Francisco. UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES…”RAILROADS”


                                 

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PACIFIC AVENUE, SOUTH END.With a bit of squinting you can make out the original Santa Cruz City clock on the Odd Fellows hallHoly Cross Church and the Theraputic Bath  house. There are train tracks and horses and buggys…I have little or no clue to what year this was…you have any ideas?                                        

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

“What’s wrong with these photos” compilation from Ellen

Everybody loves a blooper reel! This one’s a classic, from Young Frankenstein, 1974

DATELINE June 24

GRAPEVINE GOSSIP. ABOUT COMMON ROOTS FARM. 
IF you listened to Universal Grapevine last Tuesday (6/18) you heard manager Philippe Habib talk about how developers Dave Curry and John Swift are trying to stop Common Roots Farm (formerly Coastonoa Commons) from building “a pocket neighborhood for disabled children”. Swift and Curry want to build 400 or more expensive houses near where Common Roots has just about all the approvals and plans to create five small houses for residents and visitors. Curry and Swift are trying to force Common Roots to pay for projects in their development that have no connection to the Common Roots project. Our City Planning Dept. has been making it even more difficult for Common Roots. It’s become very complex, very expensively legal. To get in touch with Common Roots go to their weekly Saturday farm stand and get the freshest handpicked produce possible. Go to their website at commonrootsfarm.org support them, they are very worthy of your time and love.

JUDGE ARIADNE J. SYMONS…CONCERNING STIPULATION FOR DISCIPLINE. How many times and how many “screw the law” scenes do we have to put up with before Ari Symonds is taken off her bench? Over and over we read and hear neighbors tell of her illegal and totally improper actions involving decisions that affect our lives? AND she’s running for re-appointment!!! So far only a few folks know about the link between her and Dan Coyro‘s photos. I almost forgot that she was born and raised in Canada. Lastly here’s from an article in Internet Defamation Blog  from this month’s issue…” The trial was assigned to Judge Ariadne Symons, who by her own admission was probably not the best choice for this case, confessing that she knew nothing about the internet and computers”. Time will tell I’m sure if her bench mates support her OR our community.

MARY KELLY JOKE DEPARTMENT. Mary has some secret way of keeping happier than lots of folks. She sent this….see if it works for you. Click here for a laugh or two.

Still in Caernarfon, Wales.

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

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June 24

Deadlines
Deadlines are tough, but we all have them in life and somehow, they have a way with getting you organized. The deadline for BrattonOnLine is Monday at noon. I strive to make it. I usually do, but sometimes it’s just not possible given the weekly stresses and duties of the triple life–city council, UCSC job, and family life. Some weeks, something’s gotta give. Of course, when I’m under more stress it is probably better to write to not only relieve stress, but to get information out before it languishes on page 14.3 of a staff report (where is the $115k coming from and is that only .25 FTE for that position?), or buried on the city’s web site (for example, all of the past city “strategic” plans and at least two previous homeless task force list of recommendations. What do they really mean?), or some causal remark made at a public meeting (like the city of Santa Cruz spends less than 1.5% of its General Fund budget on social services. Oh, really?). Well, almost didn’t make it this week.

Hidden Away
So, given that the city council had a Saturday “planning” session from 8a to 5:30a and I have a Public Safety Committee meeting today and a city council meeting starting at10:30a tomorrow, this week’s Report may be less than usual, but I’m a big fan of less often being more. Looking at this week’s agenda, I notice the Mayor has placed a “Public Employee Performance Evaluation” for the City Attorney (Tony Condotti) and City Manager (MartínBernal) on closed session for the June 25th city council meeting. The city calendar has been moved to the beginning of the agenda from its usual last agenda item on the afternoon position. It has yet to be set in stone how a councilmember gets an item on the council’s agenda. If you remember from past columns, when the mayor rejects a councilmember’s item, or when an issue is topical and pressing in the community (like homelessness, housing, or wages) councilmembers have an opportunity at this point during the meeting to decide on whether to place an item on the very next city council meeting agenda by garnering four votes to do so. For example, this is how item #35 “Recommendations for Data Collection Related to Rental Housing” made it on to this week’s agenda. It is simply an item to directing city staff to gather more information about the crazy SC rental market. This information was seen as critical in moving forward in addressing this ugly market, i.e. it’s an emergency.  Four members of the council voted to get this information sooner than later. But the issue here remains, why has the “calendar” item been unceremoniously moved to the beginning of the agenda? Perhaps councilmembers will forget to use it? (I’m not sure.) And finally, the only item on the evening agenda is “Response to Homelessness: Community Advisory Committee on Homelessness (CACH) Nominations and Work Plan.” I suspect, if you go back and look at the previous two homeless committees, one a task force and the other a council subcommittee, and look at their recommendations that were never implemented, but come back in implement them now because little has changed for the homeless and houseless, then we would not need a new committee. Just sayin’.

Work Done and Work on the Horizon
I’m going to play it safe and list what this council has accomplished over the past six months and then what work we have laid out before us. Make no mistake, there have been some big issues like rent control, homelessness, and worker salaries confronted, but still needing continuing attention. There are other issues that have been successful and have opened doors towards a new day in Surf City. Your votes have meant new ideas and actions on the city council.

Top Ten List of Accomplishments

  1. Transportation
    • Free bus passes and Jump Bike credit for all workers in the Downtown
    • Held a special study session on transportation and parking
  2. Homelessness
    • City staff commitment to establish campground at 1220 River Street & the purchase of a property for a 24/7 indoor homeless shelter and day-use center
    • Funding for additional toilets, refuse pickup, and staffing services
  3. Tenant protection
    • Direction to staff to carry out a rental data collection information effort
    • Increased funding for tenant legal services
  4. City Advisory Commission appointments on Planning, Parks, Downtown, Transportation and Public Works resulting in potentially opening up the city’s General Plan with questions related to over-development; sending the Parks Master Plan back for an EIR; and commission members supporting for more pedestrian and bicycle amenities
  5. Approved a city worker contract (SEIU) with significant pay raise (not enough, but better)
  6. The regular agenda “oral communication” was moved from a floating time and put back put back to its former time-certain at 7pm
  7. Planning Commission meetings are now televised
  8. City declared a “Climate Emergency,” and will place greater emphasis and care on the issues of the environment and our changing climate.
  9. This city council did not cut the “Community Programs” budget, and found money in other places to avoid hurting the most vulnerable in this community.
  10. Confronting UCSC growth. Partnered with SC County Board of Supervisors to hire a full-time person to work with UCSC, the state legislature, students, staff, faculty and the community to limit growth without first sending the requisite resources from the UC Regents to mitigate past growth.

What do we have left? Plenty.

  • Resolve the question of “how to get something on the agenda?” Support the concept that any councilmember can place an item on the agenda and it must appear within a reasonable, council agreed upon, time period. 
  • Change to threshold for staff bringing items to the council from the current $100,000 to $50,000. 
  • Explore the creation of a police review board.
  • Improve Environmental Review procedures and follow existing environmental guidelines.
  • Explore the creation of both a Human Rights Commission and a Climate & Biodiversity Commission.
  • Make Santa Cruz a “Fair Trade” city.
  • Create policy that begins phasing out diesel and gasoline vehicles in favor of a city policy of only purchasing electric and hybrid ones. In addition, establish a policy in which the city council has to approve all gasoline or diesel vehicle purchases.
  • Expedite and support the installation plan for electric plug-in stations across Santa Cruz.
  • Reduce greenhouse gas emissions to “net zero” for the entire city by 2030.
  • Increase market-rate developer in-lieu fees to 33% as San Francisco has done.
  • Revisit the General Plan in order to resolve the conflicts that exist pertaining to land use protection vs. development. 
  • Review anew the Front Street, Corridors, and Golf Club Dr. plans.
  • Explore how all new construction in the city can be carbon-neutral; this includes the use and purchasing of asphalt.
  • The golf course in DeLaveaga Park must pay for itself through course fees by 2020.

Please let me know what I’ve left off this to-do list? ckrohn@cruzio.com

“-45% of college students report struggling with hunger 
-56% report struggling with housing costs 
-17% say they experienced homelessness 
In the richest country in the history of the world, students shouldn’t have to starve to get an education. 
And another bright light in congress, Primila Jayapal adds:
“Tax payers bailed out Wall Street. They can help us #CancelStudentDebt. Proud to introduce #CollegeForAll with my colleagues today!”
(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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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June 24

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY BUDGET IS MURKY
I went to great effort to attend the evening session of the County Board of Supervisor Budget Hearing in Watsonville last week where I learned that the budget in 2020/2021 will have a $6-$12 MILLION DEFICIT.  There were no handouts for the public.  There was no copy of the actual new two-year County budget for the public to look at, and not even an agenda for the public to review.  County Administrative Officer, Carlos Palacios, gave a very quick summary of tables and figures, moving from one PowerPoint slide to the next without really giving anyone much time to absorb what he was discussing.   “There are challenges,” he said, and predicts a recession.   The Parks Department, even though the Measure G half-cent sales tax supported that Department heavily, will be in trouble, and Behavioral Health care will be in trouble.  County roads will be difficult to maintain due to lack of funds.  

I spoke during public comment, asking for clarification of certain informational items presented.  During mid-sentence of my questioning about lack of funding for County Fire Department, Chairman Ryan Coonerty cut me off, declaring that my “three minutes are up.”  I asked for more time.  “No.  Send us an e-mail,” was his reply.  

I WAS THE ONLY MEMBER OF THE PUBLIC THERE.  ALL THE REST WERE COUNTY STAFFERS.  Do you think this is responsive or respectful government?  I don’t.

On Thursday, I was able to attend the final portion of the budget hearing regarding County Fire Department.  The information on the website showed a 13.7% decrease in that budget, followed by another 8.2% decrease the next year.  I wanted to know why.  I wanted to know why the County is allocating ZERO in the Measure G sales tax monies that were sold to the public as a way to fund fire and emergency responders?  I wanted to know why the Board of Supervisors continues to give ZERO to County Fire Department from the statewide Prop. 172 monies that totaled $18 MILLION to the County last year (law enforcement gets 99.5% of it, with a .5% getting passed through the County Fire account and sent to County Fire Chiefs Association)?  

Will the Board of Supervisors be liable if there is a large wildland fire in Santa Cruz County that escalates because they continually REFUSE TO FUND County Fire’s Budget???   

Well, Supervisor Friend stopped Mr. Michael Beaton, Director of General Services, from explaining anything after my comment. Is this respectful or responsive government?  I do not think so.

Take a look at the week’s hearing calendar, and listen in on the recordings for Departments that concern you…..what about fixing the County roads????  Look at last Wednesday’s calendar to see why we can expect a 5.5% decrease in that budget next year, and a 20.4% decrease the next.  

Here is the link to the Sentinel’s report on the County Budget

JUST SLIP THIS IN ON THE CONSENT AGENDA, OKAY?
Why is an agreement that was crafted behind closed doors and will not be vetted by a Commission that has expressed reservations being placed before the City Council for approval as a Consent Agenda item that will not be publicly discussed?  Look at Consent Agenda Item #24 for June 25  

Soquel Creek Water District and the City of Santa Cruz have been busily crafting behind closed doors the language for the 35-year agreement that would allow the District to design, build and start-up operation of a tertiary sewage treatment plant on the City’s wastewater treatment facility site. The District brought a vague version to the City Transportation and Public Works Commission on May 20 (I didn’t even know such a commission existed), and to the City Water Commission on June 3, imploring both to quickly bless the agreement and shove it before the City Council for approval on June 25 before they go on vacation.  

The Water Commission had many concerns about the proposed agreement, but bowed to the pressure of District Manager Ron Duncan to get the deal approved because, he said, every month of delay to the Pure Water Soquel Project costs ratepayers $400,000.  Really? The Commission agreed to form a subcommittee to work out something that would address the concerns voiced, and approved the agreement in concept.   So, that led to a flurry of behind-the-scenes meetings and a much larger document (19 pages instead of 13).  That agreement WILL NOT HAVE BEEN VETTED BY THE FULL WATER COMMISSION before going to the City Council on June 25. 

MIDCOUNTY GROUNDWATER AGENCY DRAFT PLAN TO SUSTAIN THE BASIN IS COMING NEXT MONTH
The Santa Cruz MidCounty Basin Sustainability Plan will be released for public viewing next month at the Board meeting.  The Advisory Committee for the effort held it’s final meeting last week, approving the Sustainability Indicators that the Board asked them to approve.  Public Comment will begin July 18, with an Open House on July 20 and July 22, and a Question and Answer Session on August 28.  Public Comment closes on September 19 after the Board meeting that evening.  Find more information here 

I am very grateful for the work the Advisory Committee volunteers did and for the Board to agree to add an extra Q & A session in August, after the Plan is unveiled, but before the public comment closes at the September Board meeting.

CALIFORNIA BILL WOULD REDUCE BALLOT MEASURE TRANSPARENCY
I saw this article in the June 19, 2019 Mercury News “California bill would reduce ballot measure transparency”.  It is a sneaky trick to do away with the requirement of AB 195 that requires local governments and school districts to tell voters how proposed bond and tax issues would affect our tax bills…..Santa Cruz County Measure H on the November, 2018 ballot violated it!  Now, Senator Scott Wiener has introduced SB 268 after a “gut-and-amend” trick, removing the contents of the original bill that had dealt with welfare benefits and already had passed the Senate.  He stripped the bill’s contents and inserted a new bill that would allow local officials to remove the required information about tax consequences from the ballot summary that voters read before casting votes, and bury it somewhere else where it would be less likely to get attention. Here is the  link to the article:  https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/06/19/walters-bill-reduces-ballot-measure-transparency/  This is unacceptable.  Please let others know about this, and write letters to the editor. https://www.santacruzsentinel.com/submit-letters/ 

WIPING AWAY HISTORY? 
I read the news report about the removal of the California Mission Bell from the UCSC Campus last weekend and pondered the significance of learning history. I am glad this particular bell is being removed from an incorrect location.  I want to be clear that I support the Native Americans, and all people, but have a problem with wiping away history that is there to remind us all of the mistakes made and not to be repeated.  The other problem is that the bell removed was not in the correct location….it had been stolen years ago from the correct location along the El Camino Real leading to the Santa Cruz Mission, and somehow placed on the UCSC Campus.

I know a bit about this and the other three bells that were gifts to the City of Santa Cruz many years ago by a philanthropic group interested in preserving history. I think the two other bells that are correctly placed at the Santa Cruz Mission and along the El Camino Real (now Soquel Avenue) should stay, but the one in the Shadowbrook Restaurant parking lot that has been altered to serve as a light should be taken down.  I think all four bells, given to the City as gifts to help interpret an historic dirt road travelled by many as California was settled, need to be correctly placed and educational signage added.  

If we do not understand where our society came from, and the mistakes made, we will surely repeat them.   That would be a real tragedy.

What do you think?  I welcome your comments.

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND ONE PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.    BUT JUST DO SOMETHING! 

Cheers, Becky

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

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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June 18
#169 / Green Imperialism

One might think that a publication supporting progressive policies would be delighted that a presidential candidate is demanding that the United States military start taking action to help reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that are putting all life on the planet in harm’s way. That includes human life, too, just in case that might have escaped your notice.

Elizabeth Warren, sometimes called Elizabeth (“I have a plan for that”) Warren,  does have a plan for how the U.S. military can “help lead the fight against climate change.”

Truthdig calls Warren’s plan “Green Imperialism.” That strikes me as just a tad unfair.

I do think that the United States acts with an imperialistic hubris that assumes that the United States should be the last arbiter of what happens on Planet Earth. I would like to hope that the next President of the United
States might start redirecting current military efforts into more positive channels. Our country should start taking steps to eliminate expenditures on military activities aimed at destroying things, and redirect such expenditures into activities that would have a positive impact on the natural environment and on human beings. Current spending patterns are aimed at this: Spending billions to develop (and then use) weapons to kill and destroy is not what our country should be doing. I totally agree with Truthdig on that point.

BUT…. all of our national activities, whatever they are, should also be aimed at eliminating, or reducing to the greatest degree possible, contributions to the greenhouse gas emissions that have led to the global warming that imperils our future, and the future of all living things.

I am happy that Elizabeth Warren is making clear that she wants to do more than “say” the right things, and that she has some ideas about how to make concrete and specific changes that might actually reduce our greenhouse gas and global warming footprint.


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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. Go ‘subbing” with our favorite duo deep down inside….a few scrolls below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s ” The Trump Flu ” 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. Eaganblog contains another view of Joe Biden abilities.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Look out for the remarkably assured and absorbing The Last Black Man In San Francisco, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com ). Directed by Joe Talbot from a story concocted with star Jimmie Fails, it’s an atmospheric meditation on home and identity in a rapidly-evolving city. Find out why they ate it up at Sundance!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975. 

NON FICTION. I wish I could demand that everyone who likes books, or enjoys writing, loves bookstores, or is involved with ebooks, texting, tweeting, publishing books and the future of reading see this completely involving tribute to intelligent cinema. Juliette Binoche is one of the best actors on screen today and she’s perfect in this one as a tv heroine married to a publisher. It’ll remind you of scenes, parties, and conversations you’ve had for years. Better hurry to see it…it’s too good to last long here and I knew it Monday noon Landmark announced that it …. CLOSES THURSDAY JUNE 27. 

THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO. An excellent, touching film about two close buddys who face the changing city…and the world. Great footage of THE CITY and a story that will have you thinking about it for days or longer. The story of love of an old San Francisco house, and everything that surrounds it. Don’t miss it.   ps.Lisa Jensen tells me that the director Joe Talbot is 1940’s-50’s movie star bad guy Lyle Talbot’s grandson. 

LATE NIGHT. Don’t believe the “dramatic comedy” label the distributers put on this no-laugh drama with Emma Thompson as a failing late night tv host, and the always dependable John Lithgow as her husband and protector.Predictable, unrewarding, lack of direction. Emma is a favorite of mine but she just mugs her way through this one.

THE DEAD DON’T DIE. Jim Jarmusch has always been talked about as some sort of great director but not by me. Somebody could make a hilarious zombie comedy…the world needs one, and this isn’t it. Too much killing going on in our real world, is it because violence is too present now?  I’m not sure but even when you add a cast like Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Chloë Sevigny, Tilda Swinton, Iggy Pop, Steve Buscemi, and Tom Waits you have barely a few snickers. 

GODZILLA: KING OF THE MONSTERS. Many, many evil monsters in this version. The meanest is a three headed monster named CynDonnaMar who lives only to kill humans.

Godzilla freaks will tell you that more than 35 Godzilla movies have been made so far and the ending of this newest one hints that Godzilla will not be so pro humanity in the next one. That next one is probably the King Kong Godzilla production they promise in 2020. This one’s absolutely zero fun from any perspective. It’s serious, ¾ of it takes place on desktops, inside offices on computer screens…very few wide screen anything. It’s moralistic, and then too it contains Vera Farmiga and a little Sally Hawkins and they are always good but wasted here. 

BOOKSMART. A surprising 98 on RT. This comedy about two smart high school girlfriends on their last night before graduation escaped me completely. I’m so removed from high schoolers today that I couldn’t relate or follow any part of their adventures. It’s feminist, brave, clever, even sexual and rapid moving. CLOSES THURSDAY JUNE 27.

AVENGERS: ENDGAME. Over 2 billion dollars at the opening weekend box office!!! A world record-shattering Marvel-Disney experience. It’s too much for me to critique. Even if I could accept all the other world characters that inhabit this Marvel–Disney franchise, Rocket the wise talking raccoon would be a step too far. The rest of the cast could be — and are — contained in Wagner’s Ring operas, Greek and Roman legends and dozens of comic books throughout the last 60 years. Like most successful movies today, this one is full of violence, hatred, bloodshed. I’m sorry I saw it, and you know if you’ll like it, so there you are!!! I should add that there are cameos by Benedict Cumberbatch, Tilda Swinton, Natalie Portman, Michelle Pfeiffer, Robert Redford, Tom Hiddleston and probably more but it doesn’t matter. Oh yes, it got a 95 on RT. 

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. June 25 has UCSC Math Professor Emeritus Ralph Abraham talking about his brand new and revised Hip Santa Cruz book, volume 1. Then Barry Scott from Rail AND Trail discusses how necessary it is to have both rail AND trail.

Listen on July 2 when Laura Bishop exec dir. of the 418 Project discusses development on Front Street. She’s followed by Anita Webb who’ll cover the problems of that monstrosity being proposed by the Dream Inn. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com 

Trevor Noah interviews his 91 (and 9 months) old grandmother in South Africa.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts. Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011. 

QUOTES. “Railroads”
“I believe in Liberty for all men: the space to stretch their arms and their souls, the right to breathe and the right to vote, the freedom to choose their friends, enjoy the sunshine, and ride on the railroads, uncursed by color; thinking, dreaming, working as they will in a kingdom of beauty and love”. W. E. B. Du Bois
Top of Form
If we are indeed nostalgic for the weight of clock time, it is worth remembering that the standardized time that most of us know has only been around since the mid-nineteenth century. It was invented for the railroads“. Stacey D’Erasmo 
“Railway termini are our gates to the glorious and the unknown. Through them we pass out into adventure and sunshine, to them, alas! we return”.– E. M. Forster 
“The only way of catching a train I have ever discovered is to miss the train before”.
Gilbert K. Chesterton 


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Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

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

June 18 – 24, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…The Dreaded Dream Inn Project, Highway 1 projects and city budget, Simon Kelly died, Ugly Building contest. GREENSITE…still in Wales. KROHN…Big visitor weekend, city two year plan, police review board.STEINBRUNER…Mid County Groundwater, County budget balanced!, Community colleges and student housing, Soquel Creek Water District and KSCO. PATTON…Civil Disobedience. EAGAN…The Underlying Crime. JENSEN…The Dead Don’t Die. BRATTON…I critique All Is True, Late Night, The Dead Don’t Die and Tomorrow Man. UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES…”Debates”


                                 

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CHICKEN VILLA. April 4, 1950. My feeble research only hints that this might be Doc’s and Monica’s Chicken Villa drive in.. Located at Front and Laurel, which would probably be where Walgreens is located today. I believe I still have the waitresses’ names someone sent me years ago…any help on this puzzle?                                                       

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

MUSICAL SAW FESTIVAL. Thomas Spearance our most active Santa Cruz Saw Player posted this clip.

SANTA MONICA PIER COLLAPSE IN 1983. Couldn’t ever happen here…could it?

John Lithgow is in two new movies this week (see below). I played musical saw, jug, washboard and slide whistle on an album he sang on. That’s us with me seated because I was a bit taller than he was.

DATELINE June 17

DREAM INN PROJECT. The Dream Inn developers are gearing up with their supposed “community” meetings and quickly before we know it their plots and plans will be floated before the city council. The Save Santa Cruz Westside organization has kept on top of this threat to our city and sent out many important notices. I’m re-“printing” most of their latest one here…stay tuned, it’ll affect all of us for generations.

“It is imperative we express our concerns about this project: the massive size, the height (56′ including stairwells and decks), the increased traffic (cars, pedestrians and bicycles) to an already congested intersection, slower response time for emergency vehicles, excavation for a 2 story underground parking garage that might cause destabilization of cliffs, the addition of commercial/retail to an area currently zoned motel/residential, only 10 affordable condos out of 89, loss of viewshed and heritage trees, as well as increased noise and air pollution

Every one should be informed about 3 very important meetings that have been scheduled for the Dream Inn project (aka 190 West Cliff).

There is a Community Meeting (by the Dream Inn Developer) tentatively scheduled for Wednesday, July 10 at the Cruzio Building located at 877 Cedar St.. It is important to attend this meeting to see what changes the developers have made to the project and express our concerns with this massive development

The project is expected to go before the City of Santa Cruz Planning Commission on Thursday, August 15.  It could go forward to the Santa Cruz City Council 2-3 weeks later (possibly in early September).  

It is important to get as many people as possible to these meetings to show our opposition and express our concerns! Please help get the word out to the community! We will post updates on these critical meetings on our website:  savesantacruzwestside.org

For more information on the developers plans, google 190 West Cliff, City of Santa Cruz.

Thank you for your continuing efforts!

And especially, we must insist on a full EIR!  

There are many objections to holding this “community” meeting so far away from the community affected – it will pose great difficulty for our CVC elderly population to attend. If it’s in the same room at Cruzio as the 6-story project was held last year, it is far too small a room, and parking during the summer downtown will be a challenge – I’m sure part of the strategy.. 

We will be sending in a request – and hope others do too – to hold the meeting IN the neighborhood of the project (St Joseph’s church room, SCPD Community Room or Louden Nelson option, or Circles church room for example – assuming their Dream Inn conference rooms are not available) and that there be a Q&A format! We hope hundreds of Santa Cruzans and others can attend! Spread the word.

REMOVE HIGHWAY ONE PROJECTS FROM CITY BUDGET. Rick Longinotti from the Campaign for Sustainable transportation has some, not just good, but necessary city financial and environmental concepts. Read the campaign’s latest newsletter.

Reducing Traffic Injuries Begins with Santa Cruz City Council budget Tuesday, June 25th  
Action: Sign an email to City Council .
The City of Santa Cruz budget contains two big projects that would increase auto capacity and take us farther from our goal to reduce fossil fuel consumption:

  • Replacing the four-lane Hwy 1 bridge over the San Lorenzo River with a seven-lane bridge.
  • Expanding the intersection at Hwy 1 and River St.

The City Council can remove these projects from the budget at its next meeting on June 25.

There’s another important reason to remove these projects. The projects would undermine the safety of pedestrians and bicyclists on our streets in two ways:

  1. Expanding intersections almost always results in making them more intimidating for bicyclists and pedestrians. The plans for Hwy 1/River St. call for unprotected bike lanes on River St. of the minimum legal width of four feet. A bicyclist in that lane will be vulnerable to speeding traffic in the additional sweeping right turn lane from Hwy 1.
  2. The opportunity cost of these “improvements” is a human cost. Santa Cruz is consistently at or near the top of the list of injuries to bicyclists and pedestrians of 103 California cities of similar size. Spending limited local funds on making our streets safe should be our priority. Instead we’re targeting $15.5 million for bridge replacement and $8.5 million for Hwy 1/River St. intersection expansion, with over $5 million in City funds to be spent in the next fiscal year.

Vision Zero, the international movement to reduce traffic injuries, urges us to stop thinking about traffic collisions as “accidents”. Would you agree with me that our City’s high rate of injuries to bicyclists and pedestrians is not accidental?  If so, please Sign an email to City Council

SIMON KELLY DIED. Simon died last Friday. His sons were with him. Among many, many achievements Simon was a staunch member of UCSC’s Dickens Players, and played many roles in productions here and in the Bay Area. He and I go back to our student years at U.C. Berkeley. We hung out during jazz, lsd, folk music, weed, opera, and the Monterey Jazz Festival’s earliest years. We’ll all miss him.

UGLY BUILDING CONTEST. Peter Scott UCSC Physics professor emeritus, and co founder of The Campaign for Sustainable Transportation has a great idea. He asks..

“How about a viewer poll: What’s the ugliest building now under construction in Santa Cruz? He says, “I would vote for at least two: (a) Swenson’s condo block (1547 Pacific Ave?) (b) The Hilton Hotel at Mission & King (west end of King)”.

Let’s go for it. Send any all entries to the usual  bratton@cruzio.com

June 17

“Apologies for my absence from this column…I’ll be back soon”. ( July 1)

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

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June 17

HOME SWEET HOME.
I love this town. This past weekend was arguably the busiest of the year: 14 UCSC graduation ceremonies over three days and the usual Boardwalk madness, including the free Friday night beach concert. The traffic…fuhget-about-it! Locals know to stay far from High and Bay, and Beach Street and Pacific, but Mission and Ocean also functioned as alternative Seaside parking lots at various times during the weekend. Downtown was a pretty safe bet to try and get away from the bumper to bumper traffic elsewhere. Walking was the best mode of transit. And with all those graduations we should be proud to show off Santa Cruz. It’s a special place, one that it is pretty nice to show to all the parents, relatives, family and friends who visited.

ENVS Graduation
In my other life, many of you know that I believe deep into my soul that theory without practice misses a lot of life. Our 650-plus ENVS interns every year not only put out an enormous number of labor-of-love hours in this community, they also get a helluva an education on local farms, in an assembly member’s office, learning to teach kids at Life Lab or the Marine Sanctuary Center or at Natural Bridges State Park. It’s a great program that I am lucky to be a part of because it is the inquiring mind of undergraduates that can light a fire under the older generation’s trend toward cynicism and discomfort. So, back to the graduating culture…our Environmental Studies graduation brought close to seven hundred friends, family, and graduates to this year’s ceremony last Friday morning. Vice-mayor Justin Cummings was one of two keynote speakers and he hit it out of the park with undergrads when he said he never expected to get a PhD and be vice-mayor 15 years ago when he was sitting where the class of 2019 sat that day.  It was an improbable and wonderfully overcast morning at the remodeled UCSC Hay Barn near the base of campus. The other keynote, retiring Sociology Professor, Andy Szasz connected with students most when he described looking for the ideal job as they might look for the ideal relationship: it takes time and many false starts, which might even include one or two divorces along the way too.

Strategic Planning
I love this town too because there are more dedicated activists, volunteers, and politically involved denizens than in most other towns our size in all of America. This past Saturday morning dozens of Surf City’s finest activists gathered at a local union hall to discuss what could be contained in the next city of Santa Cruz Strategic Two-Year Plan. But this year’s biennial strategic plan is only going to be a “six-month” one, and nobody can figure out why. (You can access the past two city strategic plans here.) The last one, crafted in 2017 by a 5-2 council in which Councilmember Sandy Brown and me were in the minority on most big issues, focused on three over-arching themes: “housing, public safety and well-being, and infrastructure.” Pretty broad themes, right? So broad that it was difficult to parse city councilmember hopes and desires from staff’s penchant to keep on keepin’ on with the practices of the past. In the past, housing seemed to mean ‘all housing is good housing,’ instead of ONLY build housing if it is affordable for “low and very low” incomes and if it is focused toward the people who live here now, not second homes or tech housing for those living over the hill. And public safety and well-being basically aimed to hire as many sworn officers as possible without a plan, and without adequate police review in place or even planned. Infrastructure meant paving streets and moving cars as quickly as possible in a town famous for overbearing traffic and intersections at LOS–level of service–ratings at or near the “F” mark. But there was an election, as there often is in western democracies, and new people came into power.

A Progressive Strategic Plan
What about this as the beginning of a strategic plan? One that might more accurately reflect the progressive values and aspirations of our town.

Dr. James Hansen, 1988: “The greenhouse effect has been detected, and it is changing our climate now.”

Hansen, 2017: “The simple thing is, I’m sorry we’re leaving such a fucking mess,” he said.(New Yorker interview) 

NOTE: 1988 turned out to be the hottest year since modern instrumental records began in the 19th century. That mark has since been broken, in 1990, 1998, 2010, 2014, 2015 and 2016.)

  1. Climate
    • over-arching theme-message for today, of Santa Cruz, is the Climate and climate change is the central issue that every other strategic goal and action ought to flow through, i.e. the climate lens.
    • Actions:
      • Reinstate 2015 climate goal as outlined in Strategic Plan
      • set greenhouse gas emissions to “net zero” by 2025
  2. Infrastructure, Traffic, and Housing
    • All new construction must be carbon neutral
    • Actions:
      • Remodel the library on the site of the current library with the bond money that has been approved by voters
      • No purchases of non-emergency diesel and gasoline vehicles, e-vehicles only
      • Expedite installation plan for electric plug-in stations across Santa Cruz
      • Pursue backlog of $19 million in accumulated grant funds for bicycle and pedestrian projects as supported by the Public Works and Transportation Commission
      • Make 25% the inclusionary of low and very low as specified by HUD     as the requirement for developers to undertake housing projects in the city
      • Grandfather in unpermitted ADU units that do not affect health and safety of occupant

      • Support housing that favors our workers with Santa Cruz salaries  ver over commuter housing
      • Reform and restructure the “rental inspection ordinance” program and make it a tenant protection and tenant rights safety net program.
      • Identify bike and pedestrian projects that can be substituted for the $8.5 million going to the intersection widening project at Hwy. 1 and 9 (“traffic impact fees.”)

      • The golf course in DeLaveaga must pay for itself through course fees
  3. Homelessness, Social Justice, Quality of Life, and Public Safety
    • Actions:
      • Create a police review board

      • Commit to using Quimby funds to provide the requisite amount of park space for every new housing development
      • Bring forward a wireless cell ordinance that contemplates the seismic shift(s) on the horizon with the coming of 5G technology and protects the health, safety of consumers and complies with ADA requirements
      • Build a 24/7 homeless shelter and navigation center now. It is needed, it’s necessary; we cannot wait another two years.
      • Create a plan to convert existing temporary workers to permanent worker positions.
      • Revamp and enforce the “local hire ordinance.”
  4. Public Process and Council Process
    • Recommit ourselves to working with and serving the residents of this city by expanding our outreach efforts
    • Actions:
      • We will solve the age-old question of “how to get something on the agenda?” Support the concept that any councilmember can place an item on the agenda and it must appear within a reasonable, council agreed upon, time period.

      • Revisit the General Plan in order to address the conflicts that exist pertaining to land use protection vs. development (especially with respect to Golf Club Dr. coming development, Front Street development, Hwy. 1 and 9 intersection widening, and the Corridors Plan.

      • Full Disclosure ordinance. Develop a policy in which city councilmembers have to disclose all meetings they’ve attended wi       with interested individuals before deciding an item in which the council sits a          as a quasi-judicial body.
      • Change to threshold for staff bringing items to the council from the current $100,000 to $50,000

“Mr. President, you’re from Queens.
You may fool the rest of the country, but I’ll call your bluff any day of the week.
Opening an impeachment inquiry is exactly what we must do when the President obstructs justice, advises witnesses to ignore legal subpoenas, & more.
Bye” (June 17)
  

(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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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June 17

ADVISORY COMMITTEE WILL VOTE THIS THURSDAY (6/20) ON DRAFT WATER PLAN FOR MIDCOUNTY’S FUTURE
This Thursday, June 20, will be the final time the MidCounty Groundwater Advisory Committee will meet.  Their final action will be to vote on the Draft MidCounty Groundwater Sustainability Plan that will then be sent to that agency’s Board for consideration on July 18.  The Advisory Committee was hand-picked by members of the Board to represent the interests of various stakeholders in the MidCounty Groundwater Basin, but with the exception of Central Water District’s May 30 well-attended outreach event, there has been no effort to actively involve members of the public in the process of creating this Plan that will dictate, once approved by the State, how much water might be used by whom and how much respective jurisdictions will have to pay to monitor the implementation and monitoring of the Plan.

Attend this Thursday’s MidCounty Groundwater Agency Advisory Committee meeting if you are able.  It is at the Simpkins Swim Center in Live Oak, and begins at 5pm.  Here is the link  

ABRACADABRA….A BALANCED COUNTY BUDGET!
This week, the County Board of Supervisors are meeting daily to examine the County Budget that has been promised by County Administrative Officer Carlos Palacios to be a balanced one, and, for the first time in the County history,  will stretch ahead for the next two years. Take a look at the proposed budget and see what you think  

It is a massive document, but I wonder how the CAO can support  claims that the CAO Office needs a 7.6% increase in their budget of $4.3 Million for next year.  The County Debt Service Budget will increase $7.2 Million, up 3.7% from last year.  The Board of Supervisors will have to tighten their belts  next year with only a  1.2% increase (well, they got a raise of 8% last year, after all) but will get a budget increase of 4/7% in 2020/2021.  Whew.  The piece that has me worried is the proposed Dept. of Public Works budget decrease (to be considered on Wednesday morning as Item #36): a 5.5% DECREASE  in expenditures next year, and a 20.4% decrease in expenditures the following year.  Hmmmm…that does not seem supportive of the infrastructure needs of the County.  For the next two years, there will be countywide traffic counts conducted, just to see what the numbers are for prioritizing the crumbs.  

Meanwhile, as a consent agenda item #42, the Live Oak Library Annex near the Simpkins Swim Center will get $7 Million and break ground in the fall of 2021.  This space, which promises to have “a small collection of books”, is brought to you by Measure S tax funds meant to support the library system. Attend any of these meetings that you can.  You can also watch them live stream.

SHOULD COMMUNITY COLLEGES START BUILDING STUDENT HOUSING?
That is an interesting question recently addressed in the news.  Santa Cruz County Planning Dept. is currently looking at changing zoning ordinances to allow such housing projects as well as at public schools and hospitals.  Here is the link to the article.   

WE CHERISH PUBLIC COMMENT
That is what Soquel Creek Water District General Manager Ron Duncan and Board President Tom LaHue said Saturday afternoon on KSCO “Think Local”.  I nearly lost my lunch, because they sure do not treat people who come to their meetings well. Listen to that podcast for June 15 here. It was nothing more than an advertisement for the Soquel Creek Water District’s plan to inject millions of gallons daily of treated sewage water into the drinking water supply for the MidCounty residents.

URGE THE SANTA CITY COUNCIL TO JUST SAY “WAIT”
The City Council will consider an agreement on June 25 to approve an agreement with Soquel Creek Water District that will not have been vetted by the City Water Commission.  Do you think that is good governance?  The City Water Commission did not like the agreement that Soquel Creek Water District tried to shove through, but bowed to the District’s insistence that it be on the final Council agenda in June.  The real driver for the urgency is that the District has to spend all money by February 29, 2020 that might get reimbursed by possible grant money they desperately want to get from state and federal agencies.  Why such a rush?  What if the people rise up, just as what happened in 2013 with the DeSal Alternatives, and submit petitions to put the issue on the ballot???  Does Soquel Creek Water District listen or care?  NO.   Is the Council mindful of that?  You had better write them with your thoughts….  City Council citycouncil@cityofsantacruz.com

BICYCLE AND PEDESTRIAN OVERCROSSING COMING SOON IN LIVE OAK AREA….AND SOMEDAY IN APTOS
I enjoyed attending the Regional Transportation Commission Bicycle Advisory Committee meeting last week.  There was considerable discussion about the proposed Chanticleer Avenue Bike/Pedestrian overcrossing that will link the Live Oak area to the Dominican Hospital area.  I was more interested in finding out when the same sort of crossing that has been promised to the Aptos area might actually happen. Here is the link to that project, which might happen in the next five years

The location of this overcrossing completely disregards the public input that clearly stated the access would be better if located on the edge of the Cabrillo College athletic fields.  That would be better for the Mar Vista Elementary School kids, and would better serve Cabrillo College.  Instead, it looks like the crossing is planned for Mar Vista Drive, which is closer to State Park Drive, and is a narrow road with no room for bike lanes. The Chanticleer Avenue overcrossing is closer to happening, being built in conjunction with the Highway One widening work that has already begun….here is the link.  

Contact Ms. Sarah Christensen at the RTC with your thoughts:  Sarah Christensen schristensen@sccrtc.org

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE.    BUT GET SCRAPPY AND JUST DO SOMETHING!  Cheers,

Becky

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

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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June 13, 2019
#164 / One More Sunbeam (That’s Our Problem)

The latest edition of The Sun magazine showed up in my mailbox recently. You can, by the way, get a free trial issue, if you’d like, by just clicking this link and going from there. 

I often turn to the “Sunbeams” section of the magazine first. That section comes right at the end and has various quotations that both energize and inspire. 

This time around, readers heard from Howard Zinn (among other persons). What Zinn had to say is worth passing along: 

“Civil disobedience . . . is not our problem. . . . Our problem is civil obedience. Our problem is the numbers of people all over the world who have obeyed the dictates of the leaders of their government. . . . Our problem is that people are obedient while the jails are full of petty thieves, and all the while the grand thieves are running the country. That’s our problem”. 

Howard Zinn

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. Just a peek will do it for our wild and wooly deeper thoughts. Scroll below…just a bit.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s ” The Underlying Crime” 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.

MUNCHING WITH MOZART. Every third Thursday of almost every month there is a free concert held in the upstairs meeting room of the threatened Santa Cruz Public Library. This month the musicoians areThe Fourtes and it happens June 20, 12:10-1 p.m. The program contains… Miles Crawford • Alexander Lee • Olivia Kang • Hannah Kuo on VIOLINS.

They’ll be playing works by Telemann, Lachner, Mozart, Hiller, Bacewacz and Piazzolla.

Remember…it’s free and at the Santa Cruz Library, April 18, 2019 12:10-1:00

Central Branch Meeting Room upstairs.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “In some circles, the words “Jim Jarmusch zombie comedy” would be all the PR you’d need to sell a movie titled “The Dead Don’t Die” Especially when you factor in a cast that includes Bill Murray, Steve Buscemi, and Tilda Swinton (among many others). Find out why it never quite comes to life this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com/).” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

ALL IS TRUE. Who better to bring William Shakespeare’s life after his leaving the theatre than Kenneth Branagh , Ian McKellen ,and  Judi Dench ? Scholars know a lot about Shakespeare and this is maybe how he dealt with the death of his son Hamnet after the Globe theatre burned down. Sticking in as many quotes as possible which keeps reminding us how monumental and important his plays were and are to the world today. Yet, it’s boring in spots or as he said, “Speak on, but be not over-tedious.”  CLOSES THURSDAY, JUNE 20

LATE NIGHT. Don’t believe the “dramatic comedy” label the distributers put on this no laugh drama with Emma Thompson as a failing late night tv host, and the always dependable John Lithgow as her husband and protector. Predictable, unrewarding, lack of direction. Emma is a favorite of mine but she just mugs her way through this one.

THE DEAD DON’T DIE. Jim Jarmusch has always been talked about as some sort of great director…but not by me. Somebody could make a hilarious zombie comedy…the world needs one, and this isn’t it. Too much killing going on, violence too present? I’m not sure, but even when you add a cast like Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Chloë Sevigny, Tilda Swinton, Iggy Pop, Steve Buscemi, and Tom Waits you have barely a few snickers.

TOMORROW MAN. John Lithgow is paired up with Blythe Danner as two old geezers (he’s really 74 and Blythe is 76) Blythe Danner is also Gwyneth Paltrow’s momma! I added these facts because they are more absorbing than the movie. The boring plot involves how these oldsters plan on the future. The ending is seriously beyond belief and should be outlawed from Hollywood movies. CLOSES THURSDAY, JUNE 20

GODZILLA: KING OF THE MONSTERS. Many, many evil monsters in this version. The meanest is a three headed monster named CynDonnaMar who lives only to kill humans.

Godzilla freaks will tell you that more than 35 Godzilla movies have been made so far and the ending of this newest one hints that Godzilla will not be so pro humanity in the next one. That next one is probably the King Kong Godzilla production they promise in 2020. This one’s absolutely zero fun from any perspective. It’s serious, ¾ of it takes place on desktops, inside offices on computer screens…very few wide screen anything. It’s moralistic, and then too it contains Vera Farmiga and a little Sally Hawkins and they are always good but wasted here.

BOOKSMART. A surprising 98 on RT. This comedy about two smart high school girlfriends on their last night before graduation escaped me completely. I’m so removed from high schoolers today that I couldn’t relate or follow any part of their adventures. It’s feminist, brave, clever, even sexual and rapid moving.

AVENGERS: ENDGAME. Over 2 billion dollars at the opening weekend box office!!! A world record-shattering Marvel-Disney experience. It’s too much for me to critique. Even were I to accept all the other world characters that inhabit this Marvel–Disney franchise, Rocket the wise talking raccoon would be a step too far. The rest of the cast could be — and are — contained in Wagner’s Ring operas, Greek and Roman legends and dozens of comic books throughout the last 60 years. Like most successful movies today, this one is full of violence, hatred, bloodshed. I’m sorry I saw it, and you know if you’ll like it, so there you are!!! I should add that there are cameos by Benedict Cumberbatch, Tilda Swinton, Natalie Portman, Michelle Pfeiffer, Robert Redford, Tom Hiddleston and probably more but it doesn’t matter. Oh yes, it got a 95 on RT.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. On June 18 Phillippe Habib from Coastal Haven Families and Common Roots Farm talks about the issues and plans the groups are dealing with. Then Kara Meyberg Guzman and Stephen Baxter from “Santa Cruz Local” news organization reveal their ideas about local news and today’s politics. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com

Some really neat ideas here!

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES.   “DEBATES”

“The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum….” Noam Chomsky, The Common Good
“If you’ve got the truth you can demonstrate it. Talking doesn’t prove it.” Robert A. Heinlein, Stranger in a Strange Land
“Don’t raise your voice, improve your argument.” Desmond Tutu
“You can sway a thousand men by appealing to their prejudices quicker than you can convince one man by logic.” Robert A. Heinlein, Revolt in 2100/Methuselah’s Children


COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Subscribe to the Bulletin! You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!), and the occasional scoop. Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com


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June 11 – 17, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…About Nina Simon and MAH, UCSC’s new chancellor, East Meadow Update, Re-call reflections. GREENSITE…leaves for Caernarfon in Wales. KROHN…will be back next week. STEINBRUNER…Sustainable Santa Cruz EIR, Traffic lights cause accidents, County budget problems, new voting machines, Soquel Creek Water District issues. PATTON…about Pelosi and attitude. EAGAN…and looming logos. JENSEN…Reviews All Is True. BRATTON…I critique Godzilla: King of the Monsters and Souvenir.  UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES… “Elections”.


                                 

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CALIFORNIA ADMISSION DAY PARADE September 9, 1888 at 11:27 am. In case you forgot, California achieved statehood in 1850 without becoming a territory first. This is now Church and Walnut streets, where we now find Verizon, Hotel Palomar, The Hat Company and Artisans.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

MUSICAL SAW DUET. Just a reminder that our very own Santa Cruz Musical Saw weekend is coming soon!

RICHARD PRYOR…37 MINUTES. Pryor has been pronounced the greatest stand-up comic of all time. Here’s proof of that greatness, from 1977.

DATELINE June 10

NINA SIMON COMMUNITY CENTER. With all the big ceremonies and tributes to Nina Simon’s leaving Santa Cruz, I think there’s an idea no-one’s brought up yet: change the name from MAH Museum of Art and History to the NINA SIMON COMMUNITY CENTER. It’s the least we could do. She made it an amazingly successful community center, and it is no more an Art and History Museum than it is an Aquarium or Zoo. Back in the day, artists who needed to see and display art would be inspired, moved and motivated. Historians who cared about preserving our local history had a focus. That’s gone now. So many of those artists and historians would tell me their stories and concerns, and wanted to save MAH the way it had grown… but it was not to be. Nina took the reins and created a very active, ongoing Community Center instead. Let’s name it after her.

NEW CHANCELLOR PHOTO. Quite a surprise to see Cynthia Larive‘s photo last week, as the new UCSC Chancellor. I think we sort of expected an Elizabeth Warren lookalike or maybe a Pete Buttigieg. It’s hard to picture Cynthia hugging a tree, or raising her fists to stop the destruction of the East Meadow. Doesn’t she look more like Janet Napolitano’s best friend? Eleven chancellors can’t be all wrong.

EAST MEADOW UPDATE. June 10. James Clifford, and the UCSC stalwarts who are devoting every minute to defending UCSC’s East Meadow, sent this update. “It’s been six weeks since the last update that announced our lawsuit to prevent the University from building prefab housing in the iconic East Meadow. The legal process is moving forward, slowly.  

Meanwhile, the meadow remains untouched, except for a row of wooden markers along the northern boundary of the intended building site. The stakes are now submerged in tall grass — the sweeping horizon line unbroken. From green to brown, the transition has been accomplished, as it is every April and May. 

We are fairly confident that litigation can keep the University from digging up the meadow this summer. A new Chancellor and Interim Provost/Executive Vice Chancellor will assume their duties on July 1st. This is a time of transition, bringing fresh visions and strategies to UCSC’s administration. As they settle in, we urge as many people as possible to contact our new leaders, urging them to reconsider the plan that sacrifices our campus gateway and long-standing design traditions for so little new housing.

Cynthia Larive, Chancellor. chancellor@ucsc.edu
Lori Kletzer, Interim Provost/Executive Vice Chancellor. cpevc@ucsc.edu

Financial contributions from many people are making our litigation possible. Details on how to help can be found at our website: eastmeadowaction.org

RE-CALL, REFLECTIONS ON. Since the late 60’s Santa Cruz has been an unusual town. Consider the fact, for example, that the two biggest attractions here are (a) an amusement park, and (b) a university. Our city grew from a quiet Republican zone to one where politics rears its sometimes ugly reactionary head, and sometimes a beautiful progressive head, and the latest RE-CALL effort against Krohn and Glover certainly highlights that ugly divide. It’s the money-focused home owners against the renters. The newcomers vs the homeless. Silicon centered gentry vs. the weekly Food Bank….it’s sad to see all this division in print. The re-call will cost big bucks, take time, and probably come out being close to the next 2020 election. As I keep reminding folks, we did have 22,438 Trump voters in the county. We don’t need more trouble. Krohn and Glover are impetuous, lack decorum, and are non-traditional — but they are both caring, kind hearted, generous and protectors of the needy. We need them in office. We need to adjust, and so do they.

June 10

UP UP AND AWAY!
For the next two weeks I will be in Caernarfon in Wales. With no reliable computer access nor much quiet time to write, my next column for BrattonOnline won’t be until the first week of July.

Why Wales? I have been invited by the Royal Air Force to attend a ceremony in Caernarfon in northern Wales where an RAF plane will be dedicated to a long ago cousin, Lionel Wilmot Brabazon Rees who was a pilot in World War 1, as was my father. Lionel was awarded the Victoria Cross (the highest military honor in Britain) and his life story recorded in a book by Welsh historian Alister Williams. During a late night bored Google search, on a whim, I looked up Lionel’s name and discovered that a book had been written of his life. One copy left on Amazon and a few days later, having purchased and read the book I learned that after the war Lionel had sailed solo in a 24 foot boat from Wales to The Bahamas and that he died there in 1955 with his gravesite in the RAF cemetery in Nassau. After much searching I found the author who confirmed my relationship to Lionel. He and my father were first cousins. My birth name is Gillian Rees.

On another whim, I suggested to my son, who is also a pilot, that on my next visit to central Florida where he lives, that we fly to the Bahamas to find the gravesite and pay our respects. He suggested we fly in his two-seater Cessna 152.  Up for the adventure I agreed. As we flew on the first leg over the Everglades with the Atlantic Ocean up next, I did manage a small voice saying that I admitted to being nervous. My son retorted that unlike Lionel, we had GPS and no German planes firing at us, which did help a bit.

After many wrong turns by local buses we did find his gravesite, paid our respects and watching the weather, a few days later (it was July and hurricane season) flew back in two legs to central Florida. (One photo is the two of us on our way to The Bahamas. The other is on landing back in Florida and happy to be on firm ground again)

That was a decade ago. A few weeks ago I received an email from an RAF officer telling me about the ceremony and as relatives of Lionel’s, inviting me and my son to attend. Also attending will be Lionel’s grown up children whom I have never met. They are cousins and as someone whose family had emigrated to Australia from Britain in 1948, completely separated from any extended family, this will be a special occasion. What makes it even more special is that Lionel married a local Bahamanian woman and given the racism of the time, was probably excommunicated from the rest of the Rees family in England. His name was never mentioned in my household growing up in Australia. When I bought the book and was leafing through the photos, the last one was a picture of his wife, who was of course black. I exclaimed, “so that explains why we never talked about Lionel Rees!” So this will be a meaningful journey on many levels.

My great great grandfather, James Rees was Mayor of Caernarfon and the current Mayor will be attending the ceremonies. The old family home is still within the 11th century Caernarfon Castle walls and the RAF is going to give the whole family a private tour of the War Museum in London. I have never been to Wales so lots of stories to share upon return.

Apologies for my absence from this column…I’ll be back soon.

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

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Chris Krohn is away this week. He 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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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June 10

SUSTAINABLE SANTA CRUZ COUNTY PLAN WILL FINALLY GET AN ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW
The County Board of Supervisors will most likely approve Consent Agenda Items #64 and #65 (that means the issues will not be publicly discussed or questioned, and are by definition, “non-controversial”) to award Dudek consultants nearly $400,000 to do the required Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for the Sustainable Santa Cruz County Plan, approved in concept in 2014.  Since then, the Planning Department has piece-mealed it, approving certain zoning changes to support whatever project came through waving a dollar under their nose….such as the Nissan Dealership at 41st Avenue in Soquel.  Every year at County Budget Hearings, the Board of Supervisors would ask Planning Director Kathy Molloy when the Sustainable Santa Cruz County Plan might have the required environmental review completed???  She had lots of reasons, but mostly, just that there wasn’t staff or money to do it. 

Well, taxpayers will now have to pay yet another outside consultant, Dudek, to get the work actually done.  Dudek will do this required work for a mere $399,385 and get the show on the road for creating dense mixed-use development throughout the County, regardless of whether we have the infrastructure to support it or not. Here is the link to the item; see what you think.

The Planning Dept. staff will have to report to the Board on or before September 24, 2019, according to the staff report for Item #65.  The associated issue, Consent Agenda item #64, will approve application for a SB 2 Planning Grant from the state Department of Housing and Community Development to get funding for paying Dudek. Here is the link for that item.

Just in case you have forgotten what the Sustainable Santa Cruz County Plan means for your neighborhood (it has, after all, been many years ago that there were public meetings to gather your ideas), here is the link to that document.

In Seacliff, for example, the wonderful Manuel’s Restaurant area would be essentially bulldozed and replaced with two-story mixed-use dense development.

DOES A TRAFFIC LIGHT MAKE AN INTERSECTION SAFER?
I asked that question regarding the Trout Gulch and Soquel Drive intersection traffic light that replaced the four-way stop signs.  The County is preparing to put a second traffic light at Aptos Creek Road and Soquel Drive this summer.  I filed a Public Records Act request with CHP for the reports of all accidents at the intersection.  Before the light went in, there were two or three accidents, but sometimes none.  Since the light has been installed, there have been eight….maybe more by now.  I see people speeding through, trying to “make the light” when before, the stop signs caused people to pause and acknowledge pedestrians and other motorists at the intersection. 

What will a second traffic light at Aptos Creek Road and Soquel Drive do for the flow of congested traffic in the Aptos Village area???

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

WRITE ONE LETTER.  MAKE ONE CALL.  ATTEND A PUBLIC MEETING.  MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE. BUT GET SCRAPPY AND JUST DO SOMETHING!

Cheers, Becky

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

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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June 10 #161 / Crossing The Line

The San Francisco Chronicle is Nancy Pelosi’s hometown paper. Generally speaking, the Chronicle strongly supports her positions. Not on Saturday, June 8, 2019, however. 

On that date, the paper ran a short editorial statement with this headline: “Pelosi crosses the line with ‘prison’ comment.” I am reprinting the entire statement, below, because I think it provides a warning to all of us. We are facing a politics that seems to be spinning out of control, and keeping “steady as she goes” is a political virtue not to be underestimated. Those who would like to return some basic decency to our national politics properly deplore calls to “Lock Her Up” (meaning Hillary Clinton). These are part of the standard agenda at rallies promoted by our current president, Donald Trump. The Chronicle suggests that those who feel this way should not be imitating him:

Pelosi crosses the line with ‘prison’ comment 
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been steadfastly strategic in her restraint amid a growing clamor within the Democratic ranks to begin impeachment proceedings. Pelosi has insisted “nothing is off the table,” but House committees should first proceed with their investigations and gather the evidence that could produce a “very compelling case to the American people.” 

So it was disturbing to learn from Politico, citing “multiple sources,” that Pelosi told a group of senior Democrats, “I don’t want to see him impeached, I want to see him in prison.” There may or may not be a case for criminal prosecution after President Trump leaves office, but for the speaker to advocate for it out loud, even behind closed doors, undermines her efforts to keep the impeachment talk at bay. It’s hard to argue that a president who belongs in prison should stay in office for another minute. 

Even worse is the notion — so cavalierly practiced under tin-pot dictatorships or expressed by the 45th president of the United States — that locking up one’s political opponents is an acceptable exercise of power. Let the congressional investigations proceed with vigor, fearlessness — and toned-down rhetoric.

What Diaz is saying, the way I read him, is that Trump is not a good role model, and that there is another way to get rid of that guy. It’s called an election. Of course, not everyone agrees with Diaz, as a letter to the editor from Eleanor Fischbein, printed in today’s Chronicle, makes clear.

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. See Eagan’s  hree dimensional inside look at our realist selves!!! Scroll below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s ” Loving Logos” 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.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Celebrate the start of Shakespeare Season in Santa Cruz with Kenneth Branagh’s witty, tender cinematic ode to the Bard, All Is True, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com ). And some thoughts on dismantling an archive, now that my Art Boy has been gone for over a year. (Can you believe it?)” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

NEW FEATURE — NEXT WEEK.

Watch this space. Folks have been asking for it…I’m more than excited about bringing “IT” to you.

GODZILLA: KING OF THE MONSTERS. Many, many evil monsters in this version. The meanest is a three-headed monster named CynDonnaMar, who lives only to kill humans.

Godzilla freaks will tell you that more than 35 Godzilla movies have already been made, and the ending of this one hints that Godzilla will not be so pro-humanity in the next. That next one is probably the King Kong Godzilla production, promised in 2020. This one’s absolutely zero fun from any perspective. It’s serious, moralistic, three quarters of it takes place on desktops, inside offices on computer screens…very few widescreen anything. It contains Vera Farmiga and a little Sally Hawkins — and they are always good — but wasted here.

THE SOUVENIR. Tilda Swinton’s daughter Honor Swinton Byrne, and Tilda, both star in this cinematic enigma. It’s mostly about a young woman falling in love. It’s told in flash backs and future foretelling and is really hard to follow. There’ll be 10 to 20 minutes stretches where you won’t know what’s happening or why. They claim it’s new wave movie scripting, but do be very aware. CLOSES THURSDAY, JUNE 13

WHITE CROW. Rudolf Nureyev has got to be the most famous male ballet dancer (danseur noble, ballerina) of all time. Well, there’s also Baryshnikov (still alive) and Nijinsky of course. But Nureyev appears to be a nasty jerk in this movie from a book. The big deal is/was he defected from Russia (1961) where he lived and trained all his life and moving to fame and fortune in England and the USA. That defection took more than courage. The movie lacks the intensity to bring you into it, and to give the care and curiosity Nureyev deserves. I can’t find any info on the Nureyev documentary that Landmark had shown us for a few weeks. They must have pulled it when this one became available first. It’s gotta be better than White Crow. CLOSES THURSDAY, JUNE 13

BOOKSMART. A surprising 98 on RT. This comedy about two smart high school girlfriends on their last night before graduation escaped me completely. I’m so removed from high schoolers today that I couldn’t relate or follow any part of their adventures. It’s feminist, brave, clever, even sexual and rapid moving.

AVENGERS: ENDGAME. Over 2 billion dollars at the opening weekend box office!!! A world record-shattering Marvel-Disney experience. It’s too much for me to critique. Even were I to accept all the other world characters that inhabit this Marvel–Disney franchise, Rocket the wise talking raccoon would be a step too far. The rest of the cast could be — and are — contained in Wagner’s Ring operas, Greek and Roman legends and dozens of comic books throughout the last 60 years. Like most successful movies today, this one is full of violence, hatred, bloodshed. I’m sorry I saw it, and you know if you’ll like it, so there you are!!! I should add that there are cameos by Benedict Cumberbatch, Tilda Swinton, Natalie Portman, Michelle Pfeiffer, Robert Redford, Tom Hiddleston and probably more but it doesn’t matter. Oh yes, it got a 95 on RT.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. . Julie Phillips will be telling us about threats to the Tule Elk and how we need educating re their challenges. Then flag waver Becky Steinbruner talks about area issues mostly water . On June 11. Kara Meyberg Guzman and Stephen Baxter from “Santa Cruz Local” news organization are guests on June 18. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com

This is interesting…

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES“Elections”

“It is enough that the people know there was an election. The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything”.  Joseph Stalin
“Winning the election is a good-news, bad-news kind of thing. Okay, now you’re the mayor. The bad news is, now you’re the mayor.” Clint Eastwood
Democracy is not something that happens, you know, just at election time, and it’s not something that happens just with one event. It’s an ongoing building process. But it also ought to be a part of our culture, a part of our lives”.   Jim Hightower


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

May 29 – June 4, 2019

Highlights this week:

BRATTON…About UCSC Student issues, Dream Inn Development. GREENSITE… on UCSC Stadium lights’ impact on the community. KROHN…Kitchen cabinet support, cannabis tax, $60k federal dollars, City Budget, City Council help. STEINBRUNER…Retiring the American flag, Central Water district, treated sewage water. PATTON…Experts about Trump winning. EAGAN…First step for women. JENSEN…The White Crow. BRATTON…I critique Photograph, The White Crow, Booksmart. UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE GUEST LINEUP. QUOTES… “June”


                                 

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CAPITOLA’S “GAY 90’S” CELEBRATION. This was July 2, 1950. Remember when communities had so many parades, celebrations, festivals? Those were better times. Now it’s too dangerous to bring us together!                                             

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Trip to Santa Cruz 1938. A repeat but well worth it!

A walk down Pacific Avenue in 2011. Michael Schmidt shot this one.

DATELINE May 27

UCSC’S REAL PROBLEMS. There is a terrible gulf between UCSC and the Santa Cruz community — and I’m pointing at both students and faculty. It’s the same at most of the other campuses. Last week (May 23) CITY ON A HILL PRESS created a special issue titled BASIC NEEDS. These needs, seven in all, were headed by State of Student Mental Health. #2. Waiting for Water. #3. Managing your money. #4. Increased Demand, decreased quality #5. Houselessness and hygiene #6. Self-care tips, and #7. Party like a slug. Here’s a link to the special issue. It’s not easy to find all the topics… and you’ll learn a lot about our current student’s issues as they face “higher education”. Here’s the general link to all the other campus coverings…

What it’s really talking about are today’s students facing very overcrowded classrooms, poor connections with their teachers, lousy food conditions, miserable transportation problems, jammed up study areas, and then there’s facing an almost lifelong tuition debt. A major point to think about is NOT to project our student lives and times onto today’s student scene…they’ve got it much more difficult.

DREAM INN DEVELOPMENT. The Save Santa Cruz Westside Organization is up in arms about whether or not an EIR be required for the Dream Inn project (at West Cliff and Bay)? They say this is critical, and are very concerned that the City is NOT requiring an EIR on such a massive project. The project has still not moved forward to the Planning Commission but could soon….no-one seems to know much on it, or what the delay is. Their Facebook page says: Did you know that the owners of the Dream Inn, Ensemble, a Southern California developer, are proposing a 2 story underground garage as a part of their project at West Cliff and Bay Streets? We are concerned about disrupting the ground that close to the cliffs, as well as the high water table at that location! According to their reports, the water table starts at 12 feet below the surface there and they are planning on excavating over 25 feet! Go here to catch up and keep up with the Dream Inn disaster in the making.

May 27

FIAT LUX

Members of the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA (International Dark-sky Association) recently met with the UCSC director of OPERS (Office of Physical Education, Recreation and Sports) regarding the severe, negative, impact of the new stadium floodlights lit up at night until 9pm on the lower East Field, projecting massive beams of light throughout the community for a relative handful of students.

I was one of the two IDA representatives to meet with the director. We came away with the distinct feeling that we had not been heard; that the impact of the lights on the community was of little concern; that the impact of the lights on nocturnal owls and other forest creatures was noted but not persuasive. Not too different from the administration’s reaction to the massive outpouring of opposition to the proposal to build on the pristine East Meadow for a total of 140 housing units plus daycare.

These portable stadium lights, powered by diesel fuel (8.5 gallons per hour) were donated in 2017 by an alumnus. This past year they were used for approximately 13 hours a week in the fall, serving a total of 526 students and 6 hours a week in winter, serving 78 students, all members of either the rugby club or two intramural sports.

Although the lights have been in operation only since 2017 and photos of the far-reaching impact of their glare made available to the director, her parting words and written statement were, “We must be able to offer programs and accommodate clubs after dark especially during the winter months.”  This, despite the fact that students have had no such stadium lights since the campus opened over 50 years ago ( and none wanted) and have managed until now to arrange their schedules to practice and play club sports during daylight hours. This, despite the director’s own observation that OPERS’ east fields are deserted in the morning hours, since students tend to be late risers unless they have early classes. Perhaps the lights make it more convenient but at what cost to the wildlife and the broader Santa Cruz community that lies at the feet of the campus?

As is evident in the photographs, the lights impact the whole community from the westside of Santa Cruz to Capitola, to Highway One coming from Watsonville. Their glare from 3 miles away is similar to a car’s headlights at 20 feet away. Were this only aesthetic that would be bad enough. But light pollution in the form of glare and sky-glow affects more than losing our ability to see stars and planets. Evidence is growing that such light pollution affects our health, our ability to sleep, disrupts the hormones across a spectrum of fauna and affects the growth of vegetation and trees. Despite knowing this science and professing to love the natural environment, the director is planning to increase the usage of the lights for a future kickball league on Friday nights.  She was upfront that our concerns and photos are being used to make the case for permanent high stadium lights on the lower East field. Since stadium lights are exempt from Title 24 that mandates state compliance with set lighting standards, and IDA recommendations are only that, if the money can be raised, stadium lights will join fraternities and building on an iconic meadow as the new UCSC, abandoning its original philosophy of providing a world class education while caring for the land and the creatures that live there.

These stadium lights contradict the goals of the campus Sustainability Plan, which aims for carbon neutrality by 2025. It includes a quote from the Chancellor: Sustainability is in our DNA here at UC Santa Cruz. It is integral to our research, teaching and public service mission, and essential to our future.” So much for that.

Fiat Lux takes on a whole new meaning. Take a look at bigger versions of these photos on our Facebook page.

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

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May 27

Community Support Group
I don’t know what I would do without a “kitchen cabinet.” They are the eyes, ears, and hands that assist me in most aspects of my city council life. This steering committee is comprised of 33 local residents from a variety of backgrounds including teaching, law, journalism, healthcare, accounting, business, and former councilmembers. Collectively they probably have close to 400 years of experience in Santa Cruz politics. About half that number–various groupings of the 33–usually attend our Saturday afternoon pre-Tuesday city council meeting review of the council agenda. Interests in this group vary widely, but usually reflect the overall agenda thrust of Councilmembers Sandy Brown and myself. That is, our views and votes on the environment, traffic problems, advocacy for affordable housing, and support for labor do not simply come out of recent dream therapy treatments, or the latest Sentinel editorial. These issues–eco bus passes for all downtown employees, separating the library from the garage, increasing pay to those at the bottom, making UCSC contribute significantly for the city-wide effects it’s growth machine has on our residents before accepting more students–all do not emanate from our own interior thoughts. They come through a continual process of checking-in with the community, making sure that when you’re barreling up a difficult hill and look behind you there are actually friends, neighbors and political comrades providing rearguard support. Without a kitchen cabinet, there is a tendency for an elected official to become unmoored to the principles and ethics of serving, and that might just lead to becoming unhinged as well.

What Happened Around the Real Kitchen Table?
This past Saturday’s “sensational seventeen” showed up around a real kitchen table on the Westside, and went to work. Did the “Bay and King streetlights project” conform to International Dark-sky Association guidelines? Did we even need a left-turn signal at that intersection? With respect to the “Emergency Sewer Repair at Chestnut and Laurel,” is the city using “climate clean” building materials? There’s a new state bill being put forward listing these products and recommending (mandating?) their use by cities. Why was the “Sole Source Vendor and Power Purchase Agreement for Corporation Yard Solar Upgrade Project” sole source? Seems like our current solar projects are a boon to the city’s electric power purchases, but what if purchasing is better than leasing, or vice versa? What to do with the extra CDBG (Community Development Block Grant) $60k Fed dollars that were added to the half million grant the city already possesses? Why not lower the Cannabis tax even more than the currently recommended rate of 8% to 5%…perhaps we could go to 3% and that would be more in line with helping the local business owners of this nascent industry? These are just some of the city issues our kitchen cabinet helped us wrestle with in preparing for the May 28th city council meeting, but in all seriousness, city councilmembers also need even more analytical assistance.

Budgets
The City of Santa Cruz proposed budget this year is $262.6 million (2019 proposed) and funds more than 800 employees. The proposed budget for the County of Santa Cruz is $777 million (2018) (http://www.co.santa-cruz.ca.us/Visiting/AboutSantaCruzCounty.aspx ) and it supports almost 2500 employees. Then, the overall budget of UC Santa Cruz is $722 million(2015-16, most recent on-line version, likely more now) with the total number of academic and non-academic employees at 8,832.  In addition, each Supervisor has a budget for two assistants and along with their own salaries, including benefits, it costs about $400,000 according to figures for 2017 at the Transparent California web site. Now, I won’t even get started on the budgets of the UCSC Chancellor, and the one dozen vice chancellors and their staffs. They are enormous. But my point here is that paying people to do research, field phone calls and answer emails, look into constituent issues, and generally make the elected official more visible and available to the public is usually a wise investment in shaping effective public policy. Currently, each city councilmember is without such help. Therefore, in comparing my time on the city council from 1998-2002 up until now, I can safely say that the workload for councilmembers has changed. The number of issues has grown and the expectations of residents have also grown, not to mention the total number of people living in Surf City has also grown during that time.

Real City Council Assistance
Currently, the city’s “Principle Management Analyst” position is vacant. The person who occupied that position was paid $152,000 in salary and benefits in 2017. When it was filled, this person, with the best intentions, sought to do public policy analysis for six councilmembers and the mayor, an impossible job on the face of it, right? What I am calling for in the current budget is to not re-hire this position and use the savings to fund assistance to each councilmember. That is, put this money into a fund and have councilmembers draw on it and hire both professional policy and clerical help. Currently, councilmembers are trying hard to keep their heads above the incoming emails, new bills coming out of Sacramento weekly, attending community meetings they are asked to be present at, and also participating and being in attendance at the various committees and subcommittees we are assigned to. Providing actual council assistance in this form would be a real game-changer as one of my Kitchen Cabineteers remarked recently. It surely would not make that group of volunteer advisors any less valuable. In fact, it would strengthen every aspect of the councilmember’s task list and help achieve a more manageable workload.

“5 Principles in the Green New Deal: 1. Go Big 2. Be Specific 3. Set Deadlines 4. Let Them Sue (aka, “Don’t Flinch”) 5. Make Floors, Not Ceilings.” (May 27)

  

(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 the the city council again in November of 2016, after his kids went off to college. His current term ends in 2020.

Email Chris at ckrohn@cruzio.com

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May 27

HOW DOES ONE RESPECTFULLY RETIRE THE AMERICAN FLAG? THE MEANING OF DECORATION DAY

I spent some time over the Memorial Day Weekend cleaning up the World War I Veteran Memorial marker on Freedom Boulevard in Aptos.  I respect the courage of those who have given their lives defending this great country, and all the freedoms afforded by the Constitution.  In this society of lifestyles based on disposable items, I wondered how I should respectfully dispose of the faded and torn American flags that I removed from the Memorial Garden?

I found it interesting that the recommended method is to respectfully cut the flag into four pieces, preserving the star-filled blue field that signifies the importance of union of all 50 states, and burn the pieces in a private and dignified way.

Memorial Day, formerly called Decoration Day, began after the Civil War, to pay tribute to all those military personnel who perished.   It was first observed on May 5, 1866, then moved to May 30 in 1868 by proclamation of General John Logan, leader of the Northern Civil War Veterans, to strew flowers upon the graves of those who died in military service during the battles and “whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village and hamlet churchyard in the land.”  The first Decoration Day (termed such as it did not mark the anniversary of any particular battle) at Arlington National Cemetery brought forth 5,000 people who decorated the 20,000 graves of Union and Confederate soldiers buried there.    The Civil War claimed more lives than any conflict in US history.

In 1968, Congress declared Memorial Day to be observed on the last Monday of May in order to create a federal three-day holiday for federal workers.  It became an official federal holiday in 1971.  

Don’t forget to also thank those veterans who are still here with us…many of them homeless and on the streets.

GOOD PUBLIC OUTREACH BY CENTRAL WATER DISTRICT THIS WEEK 
Thanks to the Central Water District General Manager, Ralph Bracamonte, and the Board of Directors, all residents of the MidCounty area can learn more this Thursday about the Groundwater Sustainability Plan (GSP) that will soon be rolled out as a “done deal” to the public.  Mark your calendar for Thursday, May 30, 5pm-7pm at the Central Water District Office (400 Cox Road in Aptos).  This event is open to everyone, and will provide an opportunity for you to provide your input on the GSP that will dictate how much water gets used, and who will pay.  While the GSP is supposed to be unbiased, modeling for the Plan has been strongly biased to support the Soquel Creek Water District’s project to pump millions of gallons of treated sewage water into the aquifer (aka Pure Water Soquel Project). 

Learn more about the MidCounty Groundwater Agency here. Note that the final chance for residents to weigh-in on the GSP is at the June 19 meeting for the Advisory Committee….aside from Central Water District efforts, there will be no other outreach before the Plan is voted upon!

ANOTHER ATTEMPT BY SOQUEL CREEK WATER DISTRICT TO PUSH TREATED SEWAGE WATER 
Also on May 30, 6:30pm-8:30pm, at the Live Oak Grange on 17th Avenue, the District will attempt to make up for lack of public outreach to the residents of Live Oak when the Pure Water Soquel Project EIR was underway.  Now the Project is approved, the EIR certified, AND THE DISTRICT IS BEING SUED.

Attend if you can, and protest! Cheers, Becky

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

Email Becky at KI6TKB@yahoo.com

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May 25, 2019 #145 / The Experts Say 60%

According to Joe Garofoli, who hosts a podcast and writes the “It’s All Political” column in The San Francisco Chronicle, one “expert” political observer says that “President Trump could easily win re-election.” The “expert” cited by Garofoli is Matt Morrison. Because The Chronicle has a formidable paywall, it’s not certain that a reader of this blog posting will be able to see Garofoli’s May 24th column by clicking this link, but that link is where Garofoli’s column can be found. Here is a brief excerpt:

Matt Morrison has spent a lot of time over the past two years talking to working-class voters in Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania, and he’s got a message for those who don’t get out of the West Coast blue bubble much: President Trump could easily win re-election. 

“If nothing were to change from today, I would give him a better-than-likely probability of being re-elected and winning pretty clear majorities in places like Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin,” said Morrison. He leads the labor-funded Working America, a group that advocates for and has done deep research on working-class voters, including interviewing 5,000 people in focus groups in those states and elsewhere. 

Morrison believes that despite Trump’s tough-talking rhetoric, he hasn’t been good for working-class voters. While the stock market gains have benefited wealthier Americans, wage growth for most workers hasn’t kept pace with the rise in the economy. Yet Trump remains popular among white voters in Rust Belt states.

Garofoli also quotes Massachusetts Democratic Representative Seth Moulton to the same effect. Moulton puts Trump’s current chances at 60%.

Why do I mention these “experts?” I mention them because I believe that amost everyone who is hoping that President Trump will not be reelected next year has vastly underrated him, and it’s irritating. I truly believe that it is critically important to beat Donald Trump when he runs for reelection in 2020. But to do that, I believe a candidate (and that candidate’s party) has to express some admiration for our current president. Just as a “concession” in an argumentative essay almost always strengthens the argument of the person who makes the concession, so conceding that Trump is doing some things that the people want is an important part of running a campaign against him.

The “political class” is out of favor with the American people (and for good reason). To capture the presidency, a successful candidate will have to be “against” the political class (not of it). That’s my view. Trump’s strength is that he is on the side of those who “deplore” the political class. That’s his main appeal to the voters.

Running against the personal and political failings of our current president will not be enough.

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

Email Gary at gapatton@mac.com

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EAGAN’S SUBCONSCIOUS COMICS. Hidden Surprises galore, check out the classic Subconscious Comics just below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s ” One large step for women” 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.

HIDDEN VALLEY STRING ORCHESTRA. This magnificent 16 piece orchestra gets up our way from Carmel Valley about twice per year. Don’t miss them.  The program is as follows: Air and Dance by Delius, Romance by Finzi, Nocturne by Dvorak, Adagietto by Mahler, Slow movement from quartet by Zimbalist and Serenade by Karlowicz. They’ll be playing June 1st at 2:30 at Hidden Valley Music Seminars in Carmel Valley and locally June 2nd at 2pm at Peace United Church 900 High Street in Santa Cruz. Please buy tickets in advance at hiddenvalleymusic.org

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Suffering post-partum angst after Game of Thrones? Enter the less brutal, but no less epic fantasy books of Robin Hobb, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com ). On the movie front, Ukranian dancer Oleg Ivenko doesn’t quite have the same fire, but he captures the questing artistic spirit of the legendary Rudolf Nureyev, the role he plays in The White Crow, reviewed in this week’s Good Times!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

WHITE CROW. Rudolf Nureyev has got to be the most famous male ballet dancer (danseur noble, ballerina) of all time (well, there’s also Baryshnikov (still alive) and Nijinsky of course). Nureyev appears to be a jerk in this movie from a book, but the big deal is/was that in 1961 he defected from Russia, where he lived and trained all his life, and moved to fame and fortune in England and the USA. That took more than courage. The movie lacks the intensity to bring you into it, however, or to inspire the care and curiosity that the story deserves. I can’t find any info on the Nureyev documentary that Landmark had shown us for a few weeks, and I guess they must have pulled it when this one became available. It’s gotta be better than White Crow.

PHOTOGRAPH. An intense inter-family drama set in the street lives of Mumbai. A photograph leads the plot through religious family problems and the challenges of existing in today’s world. Slow moving but you’ll stay with it.

BOOKSMART. A surprising 98 on RT. This comedy about two smart high school girlfriends on their last night before graduation escaped me completely. I’m so removed from high schoolers today that I couldn’t relate or follow any part of their adventures. It is, however, feminist, brave, clever, even sexual and rapid-moving.

TRIAL BY FIRE. Once again Laura Dern turns in an excellent performance as one of the few who believe the innocence of a young stud who was accused of setting the fire that killed his children in their beds. It’ll be near impossible to not know the outcome of this sad but true story but plan on seeing it and NOT reading the reviews. (additional note) I could drive you nearly nuts but try watching the Netflix documentary “Ted Bundy Tapes” the same day you watch Trial by Fire. Let me know what your reaction was.

TOLKIEN. On major disappointment watching this film is that we still don’t know how to pronounce “TOLKIEN”. Is it Toll-keen, Toll-kine or Toll-kin? The various actors all seem to pronounce it in at least those 3 ways. Probably it’s Toll-kin because that’s the way Nicholas Hoult (who plays TOLL-kin) says it. More than that, we do learn — as some of us suspected — that Tolkien was strongly influenced to create the Hobbit or Lord Of The Ring world by watching Wagner’s Ring Cycle as a young man. Do go warned…the film contains absolutely none of his Hobbit creations. It’s all about his life before he’s famous. Also note that the all English cast speaks British much of the time and is hard to understand

RED JOAN. Dame Judi Dench (now a very active 85 years old) plays the real life Joan Stanley. Joan decided back in WWII days to give the atomic bomb secrets to the Russians. She thought that it would stop every country from actually using the bomb. Obviously she was wrong, and we (the USA) used it to kill millions. Dench is of course great in this small part, but the film drags on and on, with many, many flashbacks and time jumps — which get boring.  

LONG SHOT. Pairing Charlize Theron with Seth Rogen is as improbable as having Rogen play the part of a presidential advisor/speech writer in the first place. This movie is full of “fuck you’s”, masturbation topics, and just gross filth. Theron plays the role of a presidential candidate and the movie is merely gross, not clever…or funny.

MUSTANG. It’s a simple minded movie about some Nevada State prisoners who turn wild mustangs into saddle broken riding horses to sell at an auction every year. It’s apparently factual. It stars Bruce Dern at his cranky, snarly best teaching the boys/men how to handle themselves and their steeds. Predictable, corny, and will remind you of My Friend Flicka or any other old horse movie.

AMAZING GRACE. Sometime in the mid 50’s three friends and I went to a church in the darkest part of Los Angeles to hear Mahalia Jackson, an amazing experience I’ve never forgotten. Watching Aretha Franklin sing gospel songs in this 1971 documentary doesn’t come close. Gospel is it’d own art form and Aretha is and was one of our greatest singers but there’s something lacking in this film.

AVENGERS: ENDGAME. Over 2 billion dollars at the opening weekend box office!!! A world record-shattering Marvel-Disney experience. It’s too much for me to critique. Even were I to accept all the other world characters that inhabit this Marvel–Disney franchise, Rocket the wise talking raccoon would be a step too far. The rest of the cast could be — and are — contained in Wagner’s Ring operas, Greek and Roman legends and dozens of comic books throughout the last 60 years. Like most successful movies today, this one is full of violence, hatred, bloodshed. I’m sorry I saw it, and you know if you’ll like it, so there you are!!! I should add that there are cameos by Benedict Cumberbatch, Tilda Swinton, Natalie Portman, Michelle Pfeiffer, Robert Redford, Tom Hiddleston and probably more but it doesn’t matter. Oh yes, it got a 95 on RT.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. The three top winners from Bookshop Santa Cruz’s annual Short Story Contest read their works on May 28. No BrattonOnline issued the week of June 3…my birthday and a trip to Mar Vista instead. Julie Phillips will be telling us about threats to the Tule Elk on June 11. Kara Meyberg Guzman and Stephen Baxter from “Santa Cruz Local” news organization are guests on June 14. OR…if you just happen to miss either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttps://www.radiofreeamerica.com/schedule/kzsc   You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always and only at bratton@cruzio.com

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES.   “JUNE”

“In June as many as a dozen species may burst their buds on a single day. No man can heed all of these anniversaries; no man can ignore all of them”. Aldo Leopold
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And what is so rare as a day in June? Then, if ever, come perfect days”.  James Russell Lowell
“How did it get so late so soon? It’s night before it’s afternoon. December is here before it’s June. My goodness how the time has flewn. How did it get so late so soon?”  Dr. Seuss


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
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