Letters: Support Measure P

Measure P, Sonoma County’s proposed ordinance to make IOLERO (Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach) more effective, does not take a single penny from the Sheriff’s budget. And there was only one signature-gathering effort, which had to be suspended because of the Covid-19 quarantine and, therefore, the Board of Supervisors stepped in to place the ordinance on the ballot.

On its signs and in its voter-guide counter-arguments, the Sheriff’s Office and the Deputy Sheriff’s Association claim otherwise. Both the Board of Supervisors and the County Counsel can prove the Sheriff’s claims are false. It’s that simple.

Seems to me that, if the truth worked, why would the opposition rely on falsehoods? Might it be that the truth lies on the side of Yes on Measure P?

And it’s sad to see the firefighters damaging their incredible goodwill with the community by signing on to the deception. But they have an excuse. They’ve been very busy lately (thank you!) and may not have adequately researched the issue. I don’t know what the Sheriff’s excuse is. You’d think that with $6.6 million in legal settlements in one year alone, $2 million in legal fees and a $2.7 million increase in insurance premiums, he’d be eager for the changes that will make both his officers and the public safer at a much smaller cost.

$1.9 million for IOLERO or $11.3 million for business-as-usual. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

Susan Collier Lamont

Santa Rosa

Dining Al Fresco

0

We have all noticed the “parklets” popping up in front of restaurants throughout the county.  Decorative wood lattice, elaborate custom-made planter boxes and strings of twinkly lights now bedeck many a Marin eatery that deftly pivoted to meet these changing Covid times. Here is a roundup of some favorites. Of course there are others—and many that are already known for their comfortable outdoor digs; however, most of these favorites were not previously known for their al fresco option.

Insalatas

This beloved San Anselmo institution has created a haven of greenery and calm that wraps around the north side of the restaurant’s parking lot and on either side of the entrance to the restaurant. The always-reliable upscale Mediterranean cuisine can now be enjoyed beneath twinkling lights amidst plenty of foliage—even space heaters are now keeping diners comfortable and warm while they enjoy fattoush salads and tasty entrees. 

120 Sir Francis Drake Blvd, San Anselmo. 415.457.7700, insalatas.com

PizzaHacker

Open for barely two months, PizzaHacker (the flagship is in SF) brings a spacious beer garden and 14-inch blistered Neapolitan pies to Tam Junction. Arguably one of Marin’s hippest locales, this area manages to hold onto its low-key, hipster local vibe in spite of the fact that it draws most of its business from out-of-county weekend revelers. Finding the entrance is a bit tricky—and it’s best to enter through the back garden. A selection of 12 pizzas—with witty names such as Rocketman, Get a Room and Yo Vinny—are topped with fresh, inventive ingredients. There are also plenty of beer options to enjoy, with the pizzas, on well-spaced picnic tables. A fire pit, bike rack and string lights complete the al fresco décor. Even the neighboring business has created a large eating area that customers can enjoy. It’s important to remember that this is a cashless-only business. Yes, that is right: NO CASH ACCEPTED.

226 Shoreline Hwy, Mill Valley. 415.662.3212 Tj.thepizzahacker.com (note: they ask that you order online).

Jerry’s Delicatessen & BBQ

On Sept. 1, Jerry’s Delicatessen opened up in a space that was previously home to Perry’s Deli in Novato. With a massive menu, very friendly staff and reasonable prices, this refreshing new spot will likely have something for everyone. While barbecue is the focus here—brisket sandwich, smoked tri-tip, ribs and BBQ combo plates are popular—salads and breakfast items including chicken and waffles are also on the menu. Wine barrels, orange tables and grey fabric umbrellas fill the adjoining one-time parking lot, and a live-music stage has been erected. Servers wear black t-shirts that include the words “Smoke, Eat, Repeat” on their backs. It’s safe to say this lively new spot is all about tasty barbecue and live music, and perhaps the deli shares the namesake of a well-known musician—Jerry Garcia—whose photo graces an indoor wall.

7380 Redwood Blvd, Novato. 415.895.5592, jerrysdelibbq.com.

Farley Bar

Truth be told, the outdoor porch connected to Farley Bar has always been the preferred dining option over the indoor bar and the formal dining room Murray Circle at Cavallo Point. Despite the oft-chilly Sausalito sea air (blankets are provided), this special spot rates as an all-time Marin favorite. Well-made burgers and fresh California fare—including oysters, of course—are always on this reliable American menu. 

Cavallo Point Lodge 601 Murray Circle, Sausalito. 415.339.4751 cavallopoint.com.

Longway

Longway is the veritable “renaissance woman” of San Anselmo’s local business scene. Formerly known as neve & hawk, the recently re-branded Longway is a fashion brand, a meticulously-curated retail experience, cafe, iced-coffee delivery service and now an outdoor dining experience. Longway offers their signature coffee drinks as well as poke bowls, salads and other sundries to enjoy on their beautifully crafted downtown parklet.

641 San Anselmo Ave, San Anselmo. 415.306.7657, neveandhawk.com.

Santa Rosa Symphony Exceeds Expectations in Debut Virtual Concert

0

The Santa Rosa Symphony, the resident orchestra of the Green Music Center, is among the many arts and music organizations that has changed it’s production model in the face of a pandemic that makes live performances impossible for the time being.

In reimagining their planned 2020-2021 concert season, the Santa Rosa Symphony presented its first ‘SRS @ Home’ virtual concert on Oct. 11, recorded on the Weill Hall stage at the Green Music Center and available to view for free on YouTube.

The decision to move the performance online and to make the concert free of charge proved to be a success, and the symphony is reporting that their inaugural virtual presentation exceed expectations and drew nearly 3,000 unique viewers when it premiered.

“We are so thrilled at the response to these virtual concerts,” SRS President and CEO Alan Silow says in a statement. “The challenges of implementing appropriate health and safety protocols and obtaining approvals, which spanned months, has paid off with an unprecedented dividend.”

The Oct. 11 virtual concert was enhanced for the at-home audience with live pre-concert talks and post-concert Q&As with the symphony’s conductor and music director, Francesco Lecce-Chong, as well as introductions of the pieces from the musicians.

“What an absolute joy to be on stage again with my fine colleagues, making music together and sharing it freely with the world,” Lecce-Chong says in a statement. “This model affords our audiences a closer look at our exquisite hall and the programming beautifully showcases the tremendous talent within our orchestra. I’m so very grateful to all of the musicians, everyone in our organization and to our loyal patrons for making this successful event possible and helping to pave the way forward.”

The Santa Rosa Symphony’s next ‘SRS @ Home’ concert is schedules to air on YouTube on Sunday, Nov. 15. The upcoming concert will feature classical selections such as Beethoven’s Second Symphony and works by American composers Scott Joplin, Chen Yi, Gabriela Lena Frank and Max Bruch.

“I am delighted to showcase several of our own musicians as soloists on this program, violinists Jay Zhong and Michelle Maruyama, and cellist Adelle-Akiko Kearns,” Lecce-Chong says.

The Nov. 15 virtual concert will again feature a live pre-concert talk by Lecce-Chong at 2pm. The music starts at 3pm, and the concert is followed by a live post-concert Q&A.

All three elements of this event will be free, though donations to support the ongoing music and outreach programs of the symphony will be gratefully received during the event. The Santa Rosa Symphony’s comprehensive music education programs serve nearly 30,000 youths annually, and the symphony has gained national attention for its work in collaboration with Sonoma County schools and organizations.

Get details on the ‘SRS @ Home’ virtual concert series at srsymphony.org or facebook.com/srsymphony.

Fright Nights: North Bay Theaters Get Spooky

0

The North Bay just marked seven months since the region and the state moved to shelter-in-place to curb the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic.

In those seven months, local nonprofits that depend on social gatherings to operate scrambled to find ways to stay afloat until large groups can come together once again. This is especially true for local theater companies, who need an audience to perform to.

In the wake of Covid-19, nonprofit theaters throughout the region transitioned to online venues to perform for at-home crowds and to raise funds, and with Halloween approaching, several local companies offer spine-tingling showcases.

On Saturday, Oct. 24, the nonprofit Novato Theater Company presents a live-streamed fundraiser, Fright Night, featuring magic and musical performances on YouTube. This is NTC’s second virtual endeavor; the company held its centennial celebration online back in May.

“What NTC is trying to do is stay alive until we can reopen,” says Marilyn Izdebski, President of NTC’s Board of Directors. “Unfortunately, our 100-year season ended on March 12. We rely on our members and supporters regularly, but now we need them more than ever.”

NTC’s Fright Night promises to be a high-spirited show with appearances by magicians Jay Alexander and Cousin OTiS, and Halloween-themed musical numbers by NTC stars such as Anna Vorperian (pictured), Amanda Morando Nelson, Dani Innnocenti Beem and others. From the NTC stage, Izdebski—a veteran actor and director—hosts the mayhem on Oct. 24, starting at 7pm.

“Because it is a virtual performance, what the performers and the virtual designers have been able to create is delightful,” Izdebski says. “What can be done with a green screen is just so much fun. We’re all used to the creativity on the stage with the lights and the sets, but this is just something completely different.”

In addition to the streaming performances, NTC’s Fright Night offers other ways to donate to the company, such as the “Buy a Song” promotion and an online auction with over 40 items that can be bid on now at NovatoTheaterCompany.org.

Elsewhere in the North Bay, Santa Rosa’s nonprofit 6th Street Playhouse is also going online, opening its virtual season with live-streaming performances of the classic ghost story The Turn of the Screw, Fridays to Sundays, Oct. 23–25 and Oct. 30–Nov.1, at 6thstreetplayhouse.com.

Director Jared Sakren will use five cameras to capture the two-actor show, based on the 1898 horror story about a young governess caring for two children in a seemingly haunted manor house. Gillian Eichenberger and Andre Amarotico star in the production, Eichenberger as the governess, and Amarotico as all the other characters. The two actors both starred in Sweeney Todd, 6th Street Playhouse’s last production, in March 2020.

Additionally, the Raven Players—the resident theater company of the nonprofit Raven Performing Arts Theater in Healdsburg—will spend Halloween with horror-icon Edgar Allan Poe, streaming the Raven Poe-Palooza on Saturday, Oct. 31 at 7pm on Facebook.com.

The Raven Poe-Palooza will feature filmed performances, by the Raven Players, of Edgar Allen Poe stories and poems such as “The Tell Tale Heart” and (of course) “The Raven.”

Over 100 Gather in Roseland to Celebrate Andy Lopez’s Life

0

On Saturday, Oct. 17, about 120 people gathered to memorialize Andy Lopez, a 13-year-old who was killed by a Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputy nearly seven years ago, and to support a Sonoma County ballot measure aimed at strengthening oversight of the Sheriff’s Office.

The memorial began with a car caravan around Santa Rosa and concluded in Roseland with performances by local Latinx and Black musicians, many of whom knew the teen. Measure P, the ballot measure which attendees supported, would strengthen and add funding to the county’s Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach (IOLERO), which arose out of the work of a county task force established in response to Lopez’s death.

The event, which was organized by Love and Light in collaboration with Raizes Collective, featured “performers chosen to share the light of Andy,” according to Love and Light founder Tavy Tornado.

The audience gathered throughout the parking lot at 777 Sebastopol Rd., which is now home to a mural of Lopez. The lineup included Anette Moreno, Kayatta, Los Rascuaches, Richie Bridges, Kurupi and DJs Chill-E and Chiquita. Attendees lit candles surrounding a flower arrangement that formed Lopez’s initials.

Tornado says that she could not have organized the event without the collaboration of Concepción Dominguez, whom she calls the Mama Bear of Roseland.

“Concepción leads with love and intent and a lot of times we forget that activism starts with community and community members like her,” Tornado explained.

Dominguez, who is a friend of the Lopez family, tends to Andy’s Unity Park, which opened in 2018 to commemorate the teen.

Karym Sanchez of North Bay Organizing Project spoke to the crowd and performed with his band Los Rascuaches. He pointed out that Lopez’s friends are of voting age now.

“Let’s show [the county] what we can do,” said Sanchez. “Let’s show them that Yes on P is something that the community wants. We want the police to be held accountable and to be transparent when they’re doing messed up things to our community. Literally killing our babies.”

Regarding Measure P, Tornado told the Bohemian, “I think the youth are hopeful but tired. A lot of the young people who showed up to the first few protests for George Floyd this year were Andy’s friends. And they’ve been intimidated. They’ve been silenced.”

“Yes on P” signs were distributed during the memorial and supporters were encouraged to volunteer in support of the measure by signing up to call voters.

‘Day of the Dead’ Exhibit Moves Outdoors in Santa Rosa

Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), celebrated each fall throughout Latin America and especially in Mexico, is a joyous remembrance of family members and loved ones who have passed over the last year. The holiday, which traditionally takes place on November 1 and 2, features a wide range of activities; cemeteries are cleaned and decorated, special food and candies are cooked, and home altars are designed with offerings to the dead.

The Day of the Dead is a popular fixture in the North Bay, with traditional altar decorations and parties popping up in Sonoma and Napa County throughout October and leading up to the holiday in November. For more than two decades, the Museum of Sonoma County in downtown Santa Rosa has marked the occasion with its annual “Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead)” exhibition. This year, in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic, the museum is moving the exhibition outdoors for the the first time ever, presenting the artistic and historical event in the Sculpture Garden from October 22 to November 8.

The outdoor exhibition adapts to the safety and health protocols that the Museum of Sonoma County is committed to following, and the outdoor setting will also parallel the many Day of the Dead observances that take place in Mexican cemeteries and in public community spaces. The exhibit will feature altars and artwork designed and created by acclaimed artists such as Liz Camino-Byers, Scott Daniel Braun, Peter Perez, Mario Uribe, and Martín Zúñigain addition to contributions from community participants.

“The event has been taken back to its original roots and the celebration will be more traditional than ever,” says artist Peter Perez.

While the exhibition includes traditional elements, the altars and artworks created each year often reflect current themes, and this year is no exception. Perez’s installation will include an 8-foot tall mask (pictured), with layers of imagery and meaning, a statement about the current COVID-19 pandemic and a tribute to those who have lost their lives to the virus.

Other artwork on display in the outdoor garden includes Mario Uribe’s existing “Peace Tree” sculpture that Uribe has incorporated into his new altar design. Uribe created “Peace Tree” in 2013 through a collaborative project with students from South Korea and Elsie Allen High School, and the work draws comparisons between gang conflicts in Northern California with the Demilitarized Zone in Korea.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has brought added meaning to everything we do, especially this day,” Uribe says. “Using my ‘Peace Tree’ sculpture as a site for this altar is very appropriate; it was created originally as a collaborative prayer between young people of diverse backgrounds trying to overcome injustice and inequality. In the past, I have created altars that honor specific people whose lives have touched me significantly, Andy Lopez is one of them. This altar is interactive, and people can come and add to it if they feel so moved – out of support and respect for his memory, and as an added prayer for justice and peace.”

In partnership with the Children’s Museum of Sonoma County, the “Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead)” exhibit also includes handouts for at-home activities such as making paper monarch butterflies and candles. These at-home creations are welcome to be brought to the Museum of Sonoma County to be hung in the Sculpture Garden or placed on the community altar. The exhibit also displays special works made in past years by the museum’s Youth+Art students.

This year, artists of all ages are encouraged to submit memory portraits to the exhibit, which will be displayed on the museum’s website. Visitors are also invited to participate in the exhibition by contributing miniature altars in a box. The altars can contain copies of photos, traditional offerings such as flowers, LED lights, and other traditional items that contributors are willing to part with or can be exposed to the outdoor environment. Get details on how to submit portraits or altars online.

The Museum of Sonoma County presents “Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead)” from Thursday, Oct. 22 to Sunday, Nov. 8. Regular hours, 10am to 1pm; Oct. 31 to Nov. 2 includes evening hours; 4pm to 7pm. 425 Seventh St., Santa Rosa. 707.579.1500. Museumsc.org.

Marin Musician Stays Busy with New Single, Online Concert

West Marin world music artist Jai Uttal–best known for his heartfelt renditions and upbeat adaptations of the classic Indian call-and-response chanting practice called Kirtan–has not let the Covid-19 pandemic or North Bay wildfires slow him down in 2020.

In fact, Uttal–who has released more than 20 albums that blend elements of reggae, jazz, Indian, samba and rock ’n’ roll–has been busier than ever making music, running virtual Kirtan music camps and performing virtual concerts over Zoom.

Uttal’s 2020 musical output includes his ambient instrumental album, Gauri’s Lullaby, released this past May. This summer, Uttal unveiled a new single, “Behind the Walls,” that addresses the ongoing Covid-19 outbreak at San Quentin State Prison, where Uttal has worked with inmates as part of an interfaith program. Now, Uttal is releasing another new single, “Time and Again,” the first single release from his next album, Songs of the Mystics, which will be out next year.

“Time and Again” was composed by Uttal and his wife Nubia Teixeira, based on a song of the 16th-century Indian Bhakti poetess, Mirabai. On his website, Uttal explains that the details of Mirabai’s life are “intertwined with legends, miracles and mystery.” Her journey began as a princess of a wealthy Rajasthani Kingdom, though she left the palace and wandered through India as a holy person, writing hundreds of songs along the way. Today, Mirabai is revered throughout India as a folk hero and a Bhakti saint.

Uttal’s upcoming Songs of the Mystics album will include re-imaginings of songs and poems by many of the Bhakti saints, and Uttal was compelled to release this single first.

“I decided to release this song now because it seems that at this moment in history, more than ever, we are being called upon to act as well as to pray, each in our own way, that spirit will come and lift the mountain of chaos and division and divisiveness and pain from the world so that we can all breathe and our hearts can freely love once again,” Uttal says in a statement.

Uttal’s entire recording process has changed during the Covid-19 pandemic, though he has adapted to social distancing to make his music and this recording uses musical elements from various sources.

“The lovely background voices by the Pagan Love Choir were from a live concert I did of this song in February, which was multi-tracked. The accordion was recorded two years ago over a guitar demo I had at the time of the song. The rest of it was produced in Ben Leinbach‘s little studio that is now divided by huge plexiglass walls. Awkward, but we got the job done. I couldn’t let the pandemic squash creativity. Creativity is medicine,” Uttal says.

In addition to Covid-19, Uttal has musically adapted in the face of recent wildfires in West Marin and throughout the North Bay.

“2020 has, indeed, been a year full of challenges, but it has also been a year of deep healing, personal growth and more intimate family interaction,” Uttal says. “It’s also been a time of deep connecting with my extended family and greater Bhakti community. I’ve been doing weekly live stream concerts and Kirtans, that have been a great point of focus for myself in terms of preparing and creating new songs and practicing my older songs, as well as bringing our extended Bhakti family and community together over Zoom.”

Uttal’s next Zoom concert is an online Kirtan concert on Friday, Oct. 23 at 4pm.

“These ancient chants contain a transformative power and healing energy,” Uttal says of Kirtan. “By singing these prayers we join a stream of consciousness and devotion that has been flowing for centuries.”

Listen to “Time and Again” and register for Uttal’s online concerts at Jaiuttal.com.

HALL Wines Hosts Napa Valley Firefighters for Virtual Happy Hour Benefit

As the North Bay assesses the damage and cleans up the mess left by the Glass Fire, the latest wildfire to hit the region since fires became an annual tradition in 2017, many residents and businesses are incredibly grateful to the first responders who bravely fight each year to save homes and lives in the Napa and Sonoma Valley.

One of those businesses is HALL Wines, which credits Napa Valley firefighters for keeping its employees and winery safe from damage during the Glass Fire.

Today, Friday, Oct. 16, at 4pm, HALL Wines vintner Kathryn Hall, who runs HALL, WALT and BACA Wines with five tasting room locations in Napa, Sonoma and Healdsburg, is launching a fundraising campaign during HALL’s regularly scheduled virtual “Happy Hour” series on Facebook Live to aid in fire relief.

HALL Wine’s virtual “Happy Hour” series, which has aired on social media each week since Covid-19 halted gatherings this past spring, regularly invites celebrity guests to try new release wines. Past guests have included actors like Julia Luis-Dreyfus and the cast of Emmy-winning television show “Schitts Creek.”

This week’s fundraising Happy Hour welcomes extra-special guests from the Rutherford Fire Department, who will share wine and laughs with Kathryn Hall and another special guest, comedian Tom Dreesen. In addition to raising a glass in support of the Napa Valley firefighters, Hall will also announce the winery’s new Fire Relief Fund campaign, which is launching this week in collaboration with the Redwood Credit Union.

To date, HALL Wines has helped raise millions of dollars for the community through events and other local efforts as part of the Strength Together fundraising campaign the winery spearheaded during the 2017 fires. Now, HALL is partnering with Redwood Credit Union to contribute to their Redwood Credit Union Community Fund. One hundred-percent of the money raised goes to help those in need, and the the Hall Foundation will match gift dollars up to $25,000.

Additionally, Hall has set aside $50,000 in funds for employees to share what organizations they would like to nominate to receive funds to a diverse selection of non-profits are being supported. Hall’s luxury hotel based in Napa, SENZA, offered free hotel accommodations including complimentary breakfast to anyone affected by the fires including staff and first responders.

All HALL Tasting Rooms are open for business and include all required safety protocols to ensure the safety and wellbeing of staff and guests and HALL welcomes visitors to the Valley. Safety information can be found at hallwines.com/safety.

Napa Valley Groups Raise Funds for First Responders with Custom Cycling Kit

In the wake of Napa Valley’s latest brush with wildfire, three local organizations are teaming up to support the first responders who have helped the region survive the recent Glass Fire and other disasters.

Working together, Napa Valley’s CLIF Family Winery, Northern California and Italy-based Capo Cycling Apparel and North Bay cycling event producers Ride Napa Valley have launched the custom California Love cycling kit.

The cycling kits include jerseys and shorts for both men and women that are designed specifically to raise funds for North Bay-based nonprofit organization First Responders Resiliency, Inc.

“Cycling and activism go hand-in-hand,” says Rebecca Kotch, owner of Ride Napa Valley, in a statement.

Ride Napa Valley first teamed up with CLIF Family Winery and Capo in 2018 to launch the fundraising #NapaStrong cycling kit. That endeavor raised nearly $13,000 for local nonprofits in Napa County. After the 2019 fires, the three groups once again prepared to support the community, this time focusing on nonprofits that work to benefit those with mental health needs and first responders.

“When you see that your entire state is burning up, you know that just about every firefighter or police team is actively involved in managing these disasters, and that’s as just as much mental energy as it is physically energy,” Kotch says.

In researching first responder-related benefits, Kotch discovered First Responders Resiliency, Inc. through Congressman Mike Thompson, an avid cyclist himself, who had worked with FRRI through the Tubbs, Paradise and Kincade fires.

“Yet again, our district and our region are being battered by fires. But I know that we will come together to help each other rebuild, recover and come back even stronger. I am so proud to support this effort that will benefit our incredible first responders and show the true colors of strength and community that have held the Napa Valley together through tough times,” says Congressman Thompson in a statement.

First Responders Resiliency, Inc. is a group for first responders and by first responders, and the nonprofit was established by paramedics, firefighters, dispatchers, and other law enforcement and medical professionals. FRRI is dedicated to treating Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and related injuries in first responders and their families.

“Our motto is ‘Putting PTSD Out of Business™’ and every day, even virtually, we are doing the hard work to make sure we give the first responders (and their families) the support and tools they need to cope with the stress of both their professional and personal lives,” says Susan Farren, FRRI Executive Director and Founder, in a statement.

This new California Love cycling kit was initially created after the 2019 Northern California fires, though the venture was put on hold when the Covid-19 pandemic hit Europe and shut down Capo’s Italian production house in early 2020. That Italian production house is now fully back in operation, and Capo is committed to moving into production for a late fall or winter release.

“We know that many of our fellow cyclists are also police, firefighters and EMTs, and producing this kit is just one small way we can give back to them,” says Gary Vasconi, co-founder of Capo, in a statement.

While the 2018 #NapaStrong kit was unveiled at a large group ride event at CLIF Family Winery, the California Love cycling kit will be launched with virtual events to be announced at a later date. To order a kit, visit capocycling.com.

Letters: MALT Views

The tendentious nature of Peter Byrnes’ article (“Malted Millions,” News, Sept. 30)—assuming illicit practices, painting MALT as somehow elitist and secret—chooses to slight the cause for which MALT was created, the preservation and viability of agriculture and protection of open land. 

One might think Byrne actually favors more L.A.-type development, but in any case, he asserts, but does not prove, that there is an actual conflict of interest. Boards typically are made up of people dedicated to their missions. 

MALT’s transactions have been a matter of public record for years. Byrne clearly sides with the Slayen lawsuit, the merits of which have yet to be adjudicated.

Thomas Wood

Nicasio

Peter Byrne’s exposé is excellent and long overdue (“Malted Millions,” News, Sept. 30). Board members/land owners who have been helping themselves to generous cash payments for overvalued easements and massive property tax reductions are another swift kick in the backside of taxpayers. 

At the same time, we have the National Park Service about to sign off on a new “plan” to give a couple dozen endlessly entitled and subsidized ranchers on the Pt. Reyes National Seashore even more latitude to graze livestock, pollute water, degrade land, add slaughterhouses and kill off native tule elk. 

Please, if you are sick of these nonstop handouts to “family farms” on our public lands, write to the National Park Service NOW before this sub rosa “plan” is finalized.

Nancy Hair

Sebastopol

Letters: Support Measure P

Measure P, Sonoma County’s proposed ordinance to make IOLERO (Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach) more effective, does not take a single penny from the Sheriff’s budget. And there was only one signature-gathering effort, which had to be suspended because of the Covid-19 quarantine and, therefore, the Board of Supervisors stepped in to place...

Dining Al Fresco

We have all noticed the “parklets” popping up in front of restaurants throughout the county.  Decorative wood lattice, elaborate custom-made planter boxes and strings of twinkly lights now bedeck many a Marin eatery that deftly pivoted to meet these changing Covid times. Here is a roundup of some favorites. Of course there are others—and many that are already known...

Santa Rosa Symphony Exceeds Expectations in Debut Virtual Concert

The symphony performs online again on Nov. 11.

Fright Nights: North Bay Theaters Get Spooky

Online theatrical productions and fundraisers feature Halloween-themed entertainment.

Over 100 Gather in Roseland to Celebrate Andy Lopez’s Life

On Saturday, Oct. 17, about 120 people gathered to memorialize Andy Lopez, a 13-year-old who was killed by a Sonoma County Sheriff’s deputy nearly seven years ago, and to support a Sonoma County ballot measure aimed at strengthening oversight of the Sheriff’s Office. The memorial...

‘Day of the Dead’ Exhibit Moves Outdoors in Santa Rosa

Museum of Sonoma County opens the show in the Sculpture Garden on Oct. 22.

Marin Musician Stays Busy with New Single, Online Concert

Jai Uttal performs over Zoom Oct. 23.

HALL Wines Hosts Napa Valley Firefighters for Virtual Happy Hour Benefit

Hall winery's fire relief fund launches in collaboration with Redwood Credit Union.

Napa Valley Groups Raise Funds for First Responders with Custom Cycling Kit

In the wake of Napa Valley's latest brush with wildfire, three local organizations are teaming up to support the first responders who have helped the region survive the recent Glass Fire and other disasters. Working together, Napa Valley's CLIF Family Winery, Northern California and Italy-based Capo Cycling Apparel and North Bay cycling event producers Ride Napa Valley have launched the...

Letters: MALT Views

The tendentious nature of Peter Byrnes’ article (“Malted Millions,” News, Sept. 30)—assuming illicit practices, painting MALT as somehow elitist and secret—chooses to slight the cause for which MALT was created, the preservation and viability of agriculture and protection of open land.  ...
11,084FansLike
6,976FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow