The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously approved a plan to purchase properties on Westridge Drive in Watsonville, and to relocate several county services there.
The move, which will consolidate five separate departments into a building at 500 Westridge Drive, is expected to save the county $1.7 million annually in combined rent. It will also reduce the county’s annual long-term lease payments, which are currently $2.8 million.
The move is also intended to reduce the number of car trips by county employees who live in South County, thus reducing traffic and greenhouse gas emissions.
The building currently serves as the headquarters for West Marine. It is not clear where that company plans to move. Representatives did not return a request for comment.
The 121,491-square-foot building will eventually hold the Human Services Department, the Department of Child Support Services and the Agricultural Commissioner. It will also include the Adult and Juvenile Probation Department, which is currently housed at the County-owned Freedom Boulevard campus.
The Auditor-Controller and Planning departments will also be located there.
In addition, it will feature a service counter offering several high-demand services.
“Once fully operational, this new facility will serve as a one-stop center for South County residents accessing county services,” Supervisor Greg Caput said. “Not only will we be able to make existing services more accessible, but we will also be able to bring additional critical services to residents of the Fourth District.”
County spokesman Jason Hoppin said that the move will be complete by the end of 2023 to allow current leases to expire.
County Administrative Officer Carlos Palacios said the plan is a culmination of several months of work.
“This purchase meets the county’s Strategic Plan objectives by making it easier for residents to access essential services, while assuring that those services are equitably distributed between North and South County,” he said. “It also assures we are providing our own workforce with an improved and updated work environment, while saving taxpayer dollars in the long run.”
The purchase for the 500 Westridge Drive location will cost just over $15.6 million, while the parking area at 355 Westridge will cost $810,000. The county will pay for the properties with two series of tax-exempt lease revenue bonds, which will be payable over 30 years.
Supervisor Zach Friend praised the move, which he said will make a “huge difference” in the way the county serves the Watsonville area.
“This is the most significant investment in South County that’s been made in decades,” he said.
After a particularly hard start to the season, commercial Dungeness crab fisheries closed several weeks early on June 1. June 7 marks the start of the Lost and Abandoned Gear Program, which incentivizes retrieving and turning in leftover fishing gear.
Both the closure and the gear removal program aim to protect migrating humpback whales and other marine life from getting tangled in fishing equipment.
The Center for Biological Diversity sued the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) after a fishing season with 71 whale entanglements in 2016. New regulations imposed after the settlement allow officials to shut down the season when the risk of whale or leatherback sea turtle entanglements is high.
This year’s season began over a month late. Extremely low catch numbers further challenged fishermen. The new closure shortens the season by four weeks on the Central Coast and six weeks in Northern California.
“It has been a very difficult year for many in our fishing communities, and I recognize that every day of lost fishing further impacts families and small businesses,” said CDFW Director Charlton Bonham. “I acknowledge the sacrifices and resilience of California’s fishermen and women and look forward to continuing to work with the fleet and the Dungeness Crab Fishing Gear Working Group to minimize entanglement risk while maximizing opportunities.”
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM BALLET LIVE Agape Dance presents a beautiful rendition of A Midsummer Night’s Dream Ballet on a fantastic new stage at Green Hills Redwood Grove in Scotts Valley! Stunning costumes, beautiful original choreography and majestic music by famous composers Felix Mendelssohn and Leo Delibes. Don’t miss this amazing summertime dance event. Tickets available at agapedance.com. For more information call 831-359-0850. $20 general admission. Friday, June 11, 6:30pm. Saturday, June 12, 1:30pm and 4:30pm. Green Hills Redwood Grove Stage, 1500 Green Hills Road, Scotts Valley.
BANFF CENTRE MOUNTAIN FILM FESTIVAL VIRTUAL FESTIVAL All the programs! If you’ve been too busy getting after it outdoors, or just haven’t made the time yet, now’s your chance to catch all our Virtual World Tour Programs. Join us online for a mixed program of award winners from the 2020, 2019 and 2018 Banff Centre Mountain Film and Book Festivals. Catch up on missed films or relive some of the best that Banff has to offer. For more information and tickets, visit riotheatre.com or call 831-423-8209. Wednesday, June 9-Tuesday, June 15.
OCEAN FILM FESTIVAL WORLD TOUR Designed to mesmerize and enthrall, the Ocean Film Festival World Tour showcases a virtual celebration of our oceans comprised of sublime footage taken above and below the water’s surface. Evade border closures and quench your thirst for international travel at the 2021 Ocean Film Festival World Tour. This sublime collection of short ocean-themed films will take you free diving in the Coral Sea, sailing north to Alaska, exploring remote Russian Islands and surfing in Spain. Immerse yourself in the wonders of the world’s oceans without getting your feet wet as the Ocean Film Festival World Tour makes a splash. This unique collection of short films from around the globe documents the beauty and power of the ocean, and celebrates the divers, surfers, swimmers and oceanographers who live for the sea’s salt spray; who chase the crests of waves; and who marvel at the mysteries of the big blue. A portion of ticket sales benefits Save our Shores. For more information and tickets, visit riotheatre.com or call 831-423-8209. Screenings run through Monday, June 21.
COMMUNITY
CAPITOLA BRANCH LIBRARY GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION You’re invited to the grand opening celebration of the Capitola Branch Library! The festivities will begin virtually with an online ceremony from 10am-12pm. After the virtual ceremony, tours of the branch in small groups will be available to the community by appointment between 1-5pm. To attend the virtual ceremony, register to receive the Zoom information. Tour appointments are available at 10-minute intervals through an online signup sheet located at bit.ly/tourcapitola. For those without internet access, please call 831-427-7713 and library staff will schedule your appointment. These tours will offer a short visit, no library services or book checkout will be available on the day of the Grand Opening. Tours will continue for two weeks after the branch opens for active browsing service beginning on Tuesday, June 15. Saturday, June 12, 10am-5pm.
DEMENTIA CONVERSATION WEBINAR When someone is showing signs of dementia, it’s time to talk. Often, conversations with family about changing behaviors can be challenging and uncomfortable. This program provides tips for breaking the ice with your family so you can address some of the most common issues that are difficult to discuss: going to the doctor for a diagnosis or medical treatment, deciding when to stop driving, and making legal and financial plans for future care. To register or for more information call 800-272-3900. Friday, June 11, 1-2:30pm.
GRAB AND GO STEAM: MAKE YOUR OWN MINI FLASHLIGHT We provide the materials and directions – you pick them up and make them at home! Light up the dark with this simple flashlight while illuminating the very basics of electric circuits. Also a great introduction to measurement. These kits are suggested for children over age eight. Choking hazard: this kit contains small pieces and is not suitable for young children without adult supervision. Adult assistance may be required for some children. Registration for a kit is required. To request a kit, visit https://santacruzpl.libcal.com/event/7763567. First come first served. Registration will close when all kits are claimed. Kits will be ready to pick up at a requested branch on June 9. Santa Cruz Public Libraries, 117 Union St., Santa Cruz.
GREY BEARS BROWN BAG LINE If you are able-bodied and love to work fast, this is for you! Grey Bears could use more help with their brown bag production line on Thursday and Friday mornings. As a token of our thanks, we make you breakfast and give you a bag of food if wanted. Be at the warehouse with a mask and gloves at 7am, and we will put you to work until at least 9am! Call ahead if you would like to know more: 831-479-1055, greybears.org. Thursday, June 10, 7am. California Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz.
SALSA SUELTA FREE ZOOM SESSION Keep in shape! Weekly online session in Cuban-style Salsa Suelta for experienced beginners and up. May include mambo, chachacha, Afro-Cuban rumba, orisha, son montuno. No partner required, ages 14 and older. Contact to get the link; visit salsagente.com. Thursday, June 10, 7pm.
TENANTS’ RIGHTS HELP Tenant Sanctuary is open to renters living in the city of Santa Cruz with questions about their tenants’ rights. Volunteer counselors staff the telephones on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays from 10am-2pm. Tenant Sanctuary works to empower tenants by educating them on their rights and providing the tools to pursue those rights. Tenant Sanctuary and their program attorney host free legal clinics for tenants in the city of Santa Cruz. Due to Covid-19 concerns, all services are currently by telephone, email or Zoom. For more information visit tenantsanctuary.org or follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/tenantsanctuary. 831-200-0740. Thursday, June 10, 10am-2pm. Sunday, June 13, 10am-2pm. Tuesday, June 15, 10am-2pm. Tenant Sanctuary, 703 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.
TWO BIRDS BOOKS HALF-BIRTHDAY EVENT Two Birds Books, the eastside’s new and used book store, celebrates six months in business this June! Please join us for freebies, new store swag, and half-off all used books. Friday, June 11, 10am-6pm. Saturday, June 12, 10am-6pm. Two Birds Books, 881 41st Ave., Santa Cruz.
GROUPS
CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP VIA ZOOM Support groups create a safe, confidential, supportive environment or community and a chance for family caregivers to develop informal mutual support and social relationships as well as discover more effective ways to cope with and care for your loved one. Who may benefit from participating in the support group? Family caregivers who: care for persons with Alzheimer’s disease or another dementia, those who would like to talk to others in similar situations, those who need more information, additional support and caregiving strategies. This meeting is held via Zoom and telephone. To register or for more information call 800-272-3900. Wednesday, June 9, 2pm.
COMPASSIONATE FRIENDS OF SANTA CRUZ Parents of a child who died at any age, from any cause, any length of time ago, are invited to join The Compassionate Friends of Santa Cruz for our monthly grief support meeting. Opening circle followed by smaller connection groups. Sharing is optional. Grief materials are available. Bereaved grandparents and adult siblings also welcome. Non-religious. Monday, June 14, 7-8:30pm. Quaker Meeting House, 225 Rooney St., Santa Cruz.
ENTRE NOSOTRAS GRUPO DE APOYO Entre Nosotras support group for Spanish-speaking women with a cancer diagnosis. Meets twice monthly. Registration required: Call Entre Nosotras at 831-761-3973. Friday, June 11, 6pm.
WOMENCARE ARM-IN-ARM WomenCARE ARM-IN-ARM Cancer support group for women with advanced, recurrent, or metastatic cancer. Meets every Monday at WomenCARE’s office. Currently on Zoom. Registration required: Call WomenCARE at 831-457-2273. All services are free. For more information visit womencaresantacruz.org. Monday, June 14, 12:30pm.
WOMENCARE TUESDAY SUPPORT GROUP WomenCARE Tuesday Cancer support group for women newly diagnosed and through their treatment. Meets every Tuesday currently on Zoom. Registration required: Call WomenCARE 831-457-2273. Tuesday, June 15, 12:30-2pm.
WOMENCARE WRITING CIRCLE Writing Circle for women with a cancer diagnosis. Meets on the second Saturday every other month. Registration required, call WomenCARE 831-457-2273. Saturday, June 12, 10am-1pm.
WOMENCARE: LAUGHTER YOGA Laughter yoga for women with a cancer diagnosis. Meets every Wednesday, currently via Zoom. Registration required: Call WomenCARE at 831-457-2273. Wednesday, June 9, 3:30-4:30pm.
OUTDOOR
NORCAL BATS NorCalBats is dedicated to the rescue, rehabilitation and release of bats throughout Northern California. Live bats will be presented along with a slide show geared to dispel myths and prejudices against bats that can lead to the destruction of their roosts and colonies. Saturday, June 12, 1-2pm. Santa Cruz Public Libraries, 117 Union St., Santa Cruz.
SUNSET BEACH BOWLS Experience the tranquility, peace and calmness as the ocean waves harmonize with the sound of Crystal Bowls raising your vibration and energy levels. Every Tuesday one hour before sunset at Moran Lake Beach. Call 831-333-6736 for more details. Tuesday, June 15, 7:15-8:15pm. Moran Lake Park & Beach, East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz.
VIRTUAL YOUNGER LAGOON RESERVE TOURS Younger Lagoon Reserve is now offering a virtual tour in both English and Spanish. This virtual tour follows the same stops as the Seymour Marine Discovery Center’s docent-led, in-person hiking tour, and is led by a UCSC student! Virtual Younger Lagoon Reserve tours are free and open to the public. Part of the University of California Natural Reserve System, Younger Lagoon Reserve contains diverse coastal habitats and is home to birds of prey, migrating sea birds, bobcats, and other wildlife. See what scientists are doing to track local mammals, restore native habitat, and learn about the workings of one of California’s rare coastal lagoons. Access the tours at seymourcenter.ucsc.edu/visit/behind-the-scenes-tours/#youngerlagoon. Sunday, June 13, 10:30am.
YOU PICK ROSES We are growing over 300 roses, deeply fragrant, lush and in every color, and we want to share them with you! Get out of the house and enjoy cutting a bucket of roses for your own pleasure or to share with family and friends. Once you have made a purchase, you will be sent a calendar link to pick a time for your reservation and directions to our farm in Watsonville. Visit birdsongorchards.com/store/you-pick-roses for more information. Friday, June 11, 11am. Sunday, June 13, 11am.
You might not notice it, but Santa Cruz’s Maia Rowan had a cold when she recorded her new album Fantasy. It’s not that she planned to sing with a cold—she didn’t plan the recording at all. It was a surprise Christmas present from her parents. Rowan’s voice coach Charlee Graham found an opening at Music+Arts Studio in Memphis and got her in.
“I happened to have an opportunity to record stuff on really short notice,” Rowan says. “My voice coach has a connection with a studio. My parents and that voice coach talked, and that [it would be] a Christmas present and birthday present and basically an entire year of gifts to fly to Memphis and record an album.”
So on New Year’s Eve of 2019, she flew out to Memphis to record several songs, even though she was feeling a little under the weather.
It was an intense, emotional experience recording these songs. When she performed “Woman,” a song that vents her frustration about sexist laws that restrict access to abortion, Rowan’s vocal coach met her at the door with tears in her eyes. Not just because of the profound lyrics, but also because of Rowan’s raw performance.
“I heard about abortion laws in Alabama and Georgia and I got mad,” Rowan says. “I don’t think that a courthouse full of old white men should be deciding what women do with their bodies.”
Rowan has been writing songs since she was 9. Before that, she’d been playing music for as long as she can remember. She recalls a story of being little and going to the library with her parents. They had some sticks set up that you could hit to create rhythms. She didn’t want to stop hitting the sticks, so her parents had to bring them home to get her to leave.
The songs really started to flow when she was 13, after she spent considerable time messing around on a really old keyboard. The more she learned how to play the keyboard and piano, the more competent she felt as a songwriter.
Of the eight songs she recorded at the Memphis studio, she decided to release six.
“It was never like, ‘I’m making an album,’” Rowan says. “It’s just like I’m writing songs.”
The album is raw and affecting as it veers from the personal to the political—“Fireworks” is about thinking someone is cute, while “Standing There” is about the Parkland shooting.
“That freaks me out because, as a student, I don’t want to be in that situation. I deal with fear a lot of the time by writing about it. That song is just, ‘We need to do something about school shootings,’” Rowan says.
Shortly after she finished the record, live music stopped due to the pandemic. So she held on to it for a while, but ultimately wanted to release it before her 17th birthday. Some of the songs on the record go as far back as when she was 14.
“I still connect with them,” she says. “And a lot of these songs I’ve definitely improved or would have done differently, but I think the songs worked. One of the songs I cut, it’s too old for me to connect with. It felt angsty almost. It didn’t feel like where I am now. But all the songs that I put out, I feel connected to.”
I am not a vegan myself, but as a longtime vegetarian, I’ve certainly considered it. DNA, who wrote the cover story this week, describes himself as “veganish”—he’s vegan four days a week and vegetarian the other three. I know it’s been an interesting journey for him—this is the guy who put together Santa Cruz’s “Vegan Comedy Show” for several years, after all. Even when he pitched me this story, he started with, “You know how everybody hates vegans?”
Maybe it’s just because I’ve known him for a long time, but I can almost feel him working through his own issues around veganism in this week’s cover story. There’s the personal history he includes, of course, but it’s more than that. His piece is about an interesting trend in the comedy world, as more comics adopt the vegan lifestyle, but it’s also just about letting some of them talk about the experiences and reasoning that brought them to veganism. When thinking about our own lifestyle choices, most of us want to hear what smart, critical thinkers have to say on the subject. And comedians are perfect for this—it’s their job to look at life from a perspective that undermines our assumptions and (excuse the pun) sacred cows, and make us laugh when they do.
OK, I won’t put any more words into DNA’s mouth about his motivation for writing this story; if you want to hear him talk about it himself, you can tune into KSQD tomorrow at 3pm for the Cruz News and Views show, where he’ll be discussing it.
Thank you for publishing this article, but the heavy emphasis on the perspective of Cruzio is problematic. The reality for us in the mountains is that we don’t have other options, at least until Starlink is a reality, and Cruzio is unwilling to work with us. They told us that it’s not worth it. It’s not because they care about their customers, we are simply too much hassle. I’ve been a customer of Cruzio for almost 20 years. When internet went down, they didn’t have a problem continuing to charge us. Now we’re simply not important enough, and don’t make them enough money for them to bother.
Scotts Valley should not get any funding until they start building low-income housing.
We need to make them accountable and start questioning why they don’t have to help with our housing crisis. The “not in my backyard” mentality needs to stop and so does the funding they receive.
Like Chad, Laurie hired me for my first professional radio job out of college in 2002. We connected because we were both Dave Morey fans and Giants fans. While she was my boss, she was a teammate you respected. I appreciate the many opportunities she gave me.
I will miss her.
P.S. I hope Will Clark knows about Laurie’s passing. He was her favorite ball player.
This “resort kiosk” in Felton served from 1923 to 1975 as the gateway to the paddle boat and swimming activities available at Shingle Mill Creek. The structure was restored in 2005 by the Land Trust of Santa Cruz County. Photograph by Brett Chulada.
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GOOD IDEA
Deep Thoughts
The Resource Center for Nonviolence and Save Our Shores will present the California Ocean and Climate Justice Summit on Thursday, June 10, from 4pm-6pm. The free virtual event will examine issues such as environmental racism and “sacrifice zones” as part of a larger discussion about meaningful solutions to the problems in our oceans and the world’s climate crisis. Go to saveourshores.org for more information, and to register.
GOOD WORK
Have a Ball
The Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History (MAH) is celebrating 25 years of being a cultural portal for Santa Cruz County—promoting local creativity, exploring all corners of local history and bringing in new ideas. This week brings a couple centerpieces of their year-long celebration: the RedBall Project (see story, page 28) and an invitation-only anniversary brunch on Saturday, June 12, honoring the founders, visionaries and benefactors of the MAH. Go to santacruzmah.org for more details.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“When you feel the suffering of every living thing in your own heart, that is consciousness.”
I speak here not as a rep for Cabrillo, or representing the Board of Trustees, only myself.
Our POTUS Joe Biden said it: two years of free community college tuition nationwide. Twelve states are already doing this. At his State of the Union address, he put Dr. Jill Biden, an adjunct community college English professor in Virginia, in charge of the effort to make it happen.
We had this before 1970. Ronald Reagan eliminated it.
When I entered El Camino Community College in July 1971, the tuition was $3 a unit. I could afford it. I was able to pay for my books and tuition from my earnings as a night school custodian through the end of 1973. I was able to transfer to Cal State Dominguez Hills, to later get my BA and first teaching credential.
This is highly unlikely today.
We need to return to the days of no tuition for community college.
Community college helps those who are not in the middle class become part of it. For purposes of equity, diversity and inclusion, it is a clear solution.
During the past year, too many students have dropped their classes at Cabrillo due to the expense, and the need to go to work full time. And our nation, and Cabrillo College, are suffering for it.
It is time to do the right thing again. Make community college affordable to everyone. I shall do everything within my power as a trustee of the college to make it happen.
Steve Trujillo
Watsonville
This letter does not necessarily reflect the views of Good Times.
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Myq Kaplan holds the title of funniest vegan. I made up that title, so you’ll have to prove me wrong. Just give a listen to the combination of smarts and funny on his groundbreaking album Meat Robot. Kaplan was also part of Santa Cruz’s first Vegan Comedy Show in 2016.
“I became vegetarian in college when I was 19,” he says. “In high school I had the first inkling that I would want to live my life killing fewer animals, but I didn’t have the knowledge or resources or tools to implement that.” In college, Kaplan found there were different eating options in the dining hall. He found a vegetarian station, but he still lacked the psychological and emotional choices to stop eating meat.
“I read some Peter Singer, and that resonated and supported my goals to stop eating animal products. I learned the meat and dairy industries were inextricably linked, so I thought if it was harmful the way animals were treated to eat meat there was no way to separate the dairy,” Kaplan says.
No matter where you travel in America, there’s a well-worn sentiment you hear across all socio-economic cross sections that brings this divided country together, which is this: everybody hates vegans. But what is it about people who choose veganism or it’s less-militant sister lifestyle vegetarianism, which annoys people across the board?
According to Kaplan, “Meat eaters get upset by the word ‘vegan’ because they know the truth about how animals are harmed and of their complicit nature in it. There is suffering in the world and we are all connected. People don’t want to watch the documentaries that are full of images and information that they are aware of because they want to keep a remove, because they know if they saw it they would have to do something. It’s a reactive nature in that it comes from a place of knowledge and perhaps shame.”
Kaplan started touring America in 2006 and had no trouble finding vegan food on the road. “There are almost always Asian restaurants where you can get a vegetable dish, or a supermarket where you can buy some produce or a local park where you can graze on the grass,” Kaplan jokes.
Meat: It’s What’s Inside You!
What is it that has so many comedians turning vegan? From “Weird Al” Yankovic to Sarah Silverman to Bobcat Goldthwait to Tig Notaro, it seems to be a growing trend. Perhaps it’s because comedians, so used to exploring the complexities of life while holding out hope for humanity, find refuge in trying to bring more kindness and tolerance into the world.
Just as comedians challenge their audiences’ assumptions to get a laugh, vegans challenge the way we look at what we put in our mouths, the way we relate to animals and others and the way our diet contributes to climate change and animal cruelty.
Sometimes it’s for health reasons, or to support the ethical treatment of animals, or concern about the environment—or, in my case, a devastating dose of psychedelics.
My parents lived through the Great Depression and World War II. For them, meat was a sign that they had made it—they had achieved a level of success inching the family that much closer to the Boss Level of the American dream. Serving meat to their children was sharing the fruit (so to speak) of their labors—and besides, according to every commercial with James Garner throwing away a tomato, beef was “what’s for dinner.” To them, meat was the greatest and most important source of protein, next to milk, cheese and eggs.
And so we would eat meat three times a day. One time my mom made fish for dinner and my father dramatically pushed it away and said, “Bring me red meat.” But she was no less enthusiastic. If she could have cut off her arm and served it, she would have.
My parents might not have acknowledged it, but they were acting out a tradition that started a couple of million years ago when Paleolithic humans would leave the cave to hunt for dinner and return with slabs of wild bison. Meat is also intrinsically tied up with gender identities. Eating meat is a socialized part of masculine behavior. So it’s no wonder that vegans are as heavily stigmatized as weak intravenous drug users, according to an article written for the BBC.
So in 1977, when I took a dose of LSD too early in the day and found myself staring at a plate of duck that my mom had just served me, it was evident that the damn thing had previously been alive. I mean, it was still moving. The hairs on the duck were swaying like palm trees in a hurricane. That night, I became a vegetarian.
In suburban New Jersey, being vegetarian had no safety net. There was no Enchanted Broccoli Forest or Boca burgers. My sensitive sister bought me a How To Cook Lamb cookbook. She said in the back were a couple of vegetarian recipes.
Six years later, as my dad lay in the hospital with tubes going every which way, my parents had conspired to have the nurse greet me as I walked in the ICU door. Waiting to hear the second leather shoe drop, the nurse said that my parents were worried about my diet. My diet! My dad would drink shots of bacon grease that were still warm. The nurse asked where I got my protein from, and I told her I ate beans, a lot of beans. She said, “That’s totally fine, I have a brother in California who does that.”
Introducing Morrissey
In high school in Texas, Los Angeles comedian Virginia Jones used to go out on dates as a chaperone with her best friend who was gay. “His mom thought I would somehow keep him from having sex with men.” says Jones. “One night I’m sitting in the front room of a gay guy’s apartment as my friend is having sex with him in the next room and there was a copy of ‘Meat is Murder’ by the Smiths and I listened to it. It’s a terrible song, but until that moment I had never really thought about where meat comes from,” Jones said.
The next day, Jones became a vegetarian—who slowly moseyed into veganism. “As time goes on it became a lot easier to become a vegan as technology and accessibility grew. The only vegan I knew in Dallas, Texas would regularly eat a plate of fried tofu with soy sauce. We ate a lot of cheese pizza and French fries. I ate garbage, which led to a vitamin deficiency in high school. We didn’t have veggie burgers—we would make falafel burgers and fry it up,” Jones recalls.
With abundant low-budget college comfort food like Taco Bell, it’s easy to be a junk-food vegetarian. That changed when Jones went vegan. “It was only when I went vegan that it was pretty easy to see that whole grains, vegetables and a protein source made me feel best. I became more aware of making healthier choices when I went vegan,” Jones points out.
PALATE ABLE
As a Buddhist practitioner, Bay Area comedian Dhaya Lakshminarayanan identifies culturally but not religiously as Hindu. Some 680 million Hindus eat a vegetarian diet, and growing up in a non-meat-eating household made it very confusing for her when it came time to rebel.
“When your parents take away the thing you can rebel against, it’s not that great,” says Lakshminarayanan. “So if you have vegetarian parents and they say, ‘You do whatever you want,’ then being a teenager isn’t fun anymore. Telling your kids to make their own decisions is actually great reverse psychology. Sometimes parents have alternative beliefs. I have a friend who is a gay man who was raised by lesbian parents, and he ended up becoming Republican. All kids want to rebel.”
In this case, though, the lure of incredible smells and tastes at home made it hard for her to rebel. “Vegetables and lentils taste amazing, except for people who hate flavor. Outside of the home, I was eating pepperoni pizza and McDonald’s and the food was not as good. It wasn’t delicious,” says Lakshminarayanan. “Early on, I learned to have a palate that appreciated vegetables and spices. I grew up in the South, just going into the Cracker Barrel it was obvious so many people were going to fall over dead based on their food choices. There’s a direct correlation between cholesterol and animal fat. For all those reasons, I’m vegetarian and try to eat vegan for several meals a week.”
Weak Stereotypes
The stereotypical idea of vegans being “weak” is changing, with athletes like free agent and activist Colin Kaepernick and MMA fighter James Wilks going vegan. From Ironmen to long distance runners to weight lifters and figure skaters changing their diet, our culture seems to be embracing new ideas about what diet means.
Matt Gubser is a 3D sculptor and a vegan comedian based in the Bay Area. Gubser is also a tall, classically handsome human—picture Jesus, but funnier. It’s incongruent in our culture to see somebody who looks like the epitome of a meat-eater and find out they’re a vegan.
“It was my brother’s fault,” says Gubser. “I grew up in Salinas, and we would go on field trips to the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Also, my grandparents would always take us to Sizzlers for the all-you-can-eat popcorn shrimp. Well, on one field trip, my brother saw what real shrimp looked like and he went vegetarian.”
As Gubser got older, he began thinking about his family’s health history. “There’s a lot of heart disease in my family. Going back three generations, the men all died at 50 of a heart attack. So originally, I just wanted to get ahead of that and stay healthy and stopped eating meat,” he says. “One year into being a vegetarian I realized I was still eating a lot of dairy and cholesterol. It wasn’t very popular. I had a subscription to Vegetarian Times and other than that, I would look online. I didn’t have a community. My in-laws at the time were cattle ranchers and they couldn’t get it through their heads of why anyone would, or could, be vegan.”
The Meat Mafia
Ardail Smith is a 60-year-old Silicon Valley techie and comic. He spends his days working on computers, and on weekends rides a motorcycle in rallies to raise awareness about men’s health issues. Growing up in Alaska, meat was a constant reassuring pleasure, and Smith had no idea there was an alternative.
“I started out as a typical meat eater,” he says. “In my 50s I was dating a woman who was transitioning into being a vegan. I had an attitude about vegans, but I started eating less meat, because I could see that it was really bothering her,” says Smith. It was when Smith started considering the reality of factory farming that he had a realization: “I did a math problem and calculated out how many animals died just so I could have a hamburger or chicken and I got disturbed by those numbers.”
Even McDonald’s admits that a hamburger contains the pieces of over 400 cows. Smith began to consider the deeper implications. “My ancestry involves slavery and we were treated as cattle. We were looked at as subhuman. So I started to think how could I look at animals that were basically slaves and treated cruelly and inhumane as less than me? Because we can’t communicate? I didn’t like the idea of what happened to my family. I’m pretty sure pigs and cows don’t like what happens to their families. So, I stopped eating meat,” Smith says.
Animal Farm
Husband and wife team Helbard and Camilla Alkhassadeh run Watsonville’s Little Hill Sanctuary, dedicated to creating a kinder world through rescuing animals from cruelty. They also were co-creators of Santa Cruz’s VegFest, an all vegan event. Their vision of a cruelty free world isn’t a joke.
Helbard became a vegetarian 25 years ago. Like so many, he was in a relationship with a person that wanted to eat less meat. He tried it and it actually made him feel better physically and mentally. It changed the way he felt, but it was a personal experience that opened his eyes. “I had a couple of run-ins with animals where I witnessed them suffer. One was with a dog that is considered a ‘pet’ and one with a wild boar that is considered a ‘pest,’” Helbard says. He saw the spark of intelligence in their eyes and how they reacted to death the same way when taking their last breath. He connected the two and started rethinking the way people think about animals.And it was this experience that led Helbard and Camilla to rescuing animals and starting a sanctuary.
With her husband Helbard, Camilla Alkhassadeh runs Watsonville’s Little Hill Sanctuary, dedicated to rescuing animals from cruelty. They also co-created Santa Cruz’s VegFest.
“There is a way of thinking in this country where people say, ‘I have a dog, I have a cat, I love animals.’ And then they eat a burger or go to KFC and have chicken. But they insist they love animals. If you ask them if they love animals so much, why do they eat them? The answer is those animals are ‘food.’ So we have a way of categorizing animals as either food or pets, and we don’t find anything wrong with that. It’s not a stretch then to extend that philosophy to people. I like some people, but some people are a problem. To a vegan, the philosophy is to fight for all living creatures. That includes humans. If we can segregate people, we can segregate animals. If we can segregate animals, we can segregate people. They blend together. Your opinion on animals blends into your thought process and politics on how we treat people,”Helbard explains.
“Our philosophy is being a liberationist, having a consistent anti-oppression approach where you’re against all oppression for all beings, human, non-human and whatever species that might be,” Camilla says. “Speciesism is the idea that you can’t pick and choose. A pig and a dog are both sentient living beings that feel, that care and want to play, just as we do. It’s wrong to justify the destruction of their lives because of what I want, because at this point we know that eating meat is not a necessity, we can survive and be vegan without sacrificing animals.”
“There’s a bunch going off tonight that they didn’t find,” one person wrote on Facebook in response to an article.
The booming explosions and pretty aerial displays that typically ring in celebratory moments and bring smiles to onlookers’ faces, have become a noisy plague on South County residents who are calling on city government to step up its enforcement of illegal fireworks and possibly outlaw the sale of the “safe-and-sane” variety.
City officials say that this year the thundering pyrotechnics have started earlier and are being fired up with more frequency—sometimes even brazenly during the middle of the day—but they have no plans to halt the sale of legal fireworks within city limits. Watsonville Mayor Jimmy Dutra says that their removal would do little to curb the illegal fireworks that are putting annoyed residents on edge, and are becoming more prevalent.
“There are a handful of issues that I say, ‘I wish I could have a magic wand to fix the issue,’ and this is definitely one of them,” Dutra says.
The sale of “safe-and-sane” fireworks, those that do not explode or leave the ground when ignited, serves as a major fundraiser for more than 20 local nonprofits and youth sports teams in Watsonville, the lone city in Santa Cruz County that allows their sale. Removing that annual income, Dutra says, would be a devastating financial blow for many of those organizations.
The Watsonville City Council has previously discussed how it could crack down on illegal fireworks, but those talks have usually turned ugly. That’s because those debates have wrongly pitted the nonprofits running the fireworks booths against the residents that are fed up with the racket, says former City Councilwoman Trina Coffman-Gomez.
Coffman-Gomez, who termed out of office last year, says that there needs to be more education about the issue so that residents can ban together to go after the illegal fireworks, rather than try to eliminate the “safe-and-sane” ones. She highlights that many residents do not know that the money the city makes on sales tax from the firework booths pays for overtime costs accumulated by the Watsonville police and fire departments on the Fourth of July.
In her last year in office, Coffman-Gomez, after an annual report on “safe-and-sane” fireworks, passed a motion to further discuss the item. But the city “dropped the ball,” she says, and the item has yet to return to the City Council. Mayor Dutra says there are no plans to make changes to the city’s ordinance on fireworks this year.
The city, for its part, has tried to cut back on illegal fireworks by hosting an annual fireworks show at the airport, but even with that event in place, Watsonville’s skies still ignite on Independence Day and the weeks leading up to it.
Blast Radius
Watsonville Police Department Sgt. Bryan Fuentez agreed with Dutra and Coffman-Gomez that banning all fireworks would not reduce the use of illegal ones. Fuentez lives in another part of the county in which all fireworks are outlawed, and says he still hears illegal fireworks nearly every night. The issue, he says, even extends beyond the county line.
“No matter where you go, you talk to somebody in Gilroy, someone in Hollister, someone in Morgan Hill, they’re all going to say the same thing: ‘It’s like a war zone out here,’” he says. “That’s everyone’s line, but it’s true. I saw things last year that I never would have seen previously. It was pretty spectacular … but when they’re going off at all hours of the night and then several days before, it’s like, ‘enough already.’”
Fuentez says that WPD—as it does every year—will increase the number of officers available to respond to illegal fireworks calls in the week leading up to the Fourth of July, which this year lands on a Sunday. The Watsonville Fire Department on July 4 will also cruise around the city handing out citations of up to $1,000 per violation.
Not far away, in Capitola—the only other city in the county that allows “safe-and-sane” fireworks on private property—Chief of Police Terry McManus says that his department will also increase the number of officers available to respond to reports of illegal fireworks starting on the Friday before the holiday. McManus did not have data readily available on whether calls for illegal fireworks had risen since last year, but he did say that his officers take the reports seriously.
“The illegal fireworks … are a complete nuisance,” McManus says. “Talking to Mayor [Yvette] Brooks, she’s concerned about the impact of those illegal fireworks on families, on disturbing individuals in their homes and the effect they have on animals and the environment.”
Santa Cruz County Animal Shelter General Manager Melanie Sobel says the illegal fireworks often make pets panic and run away from their homes. Sometimes, she adds, they hurt themselves in their frantic dash to find shelter from the booms.
“July 4, the week before and the week after, shelters, in general, are inundated with pets,” she says.
But Sobel says that she has also seen an uptick in the number of illegal fireworks being set off throughout the year in Santa Cruz. Those explosions are also getting closer to the Rodriguez Street shelter in Live Oak, she says, as people will often set off illegal fireworks in the school behind that location.
“These poor shelter animals have to deal with this fear and anxiety without an owner to comfort them,” she says.
Bang-Up Job
Last month’s massive illegal fireworks bust by Santa Cruz County’s Auto Theft Reductions Enforcement (SCARE) Task Force was not the result of a lengthy investigation or a tip from a resident. Fuentez says that, to the best of his knowledge, the SCARE team stumbled upon that monstrous pile of fireworks by coincidence—they were investigating that property for a different reason.
“That’s really how we get the big captures,” Fuentez says. “When we’re doing something else and we see all this stuff. ”
Everyday enforcement of illegal fireworks is a much different and more difficult task. Typically, when a resident calls in to report that illegal fireworks are being set off, they do not have an exact location of where it was fired from, Fuentez says. The power of some large fireworks will make it feel as if they exploded just a few feet from their home, he adds.
“But those fireworks are probably several blocks away,” he says.
McManus adds that even if one of his officers is dispatched to an exact address of where the fireworks were allegedly set off, they are put in the tough situation of determining if there’s enough probable cause to knock on a resident’s door. Capitola and Watsonville police usually only hand out a fine if they catch someone with the lit match in hand.
“We need to always respect the individual’s rights before we do some investigative follow up [on a report] that might have limited information,” McManus says.
Coffman-Gomez says Watsonville needs to move past that “whack-a-mole” policing of illegal fireworks, and look at what other cities are doing to successfully silence the aerial explosions.
Some communities, such as nearby Seaside, have hiked the fines for illegal fireworks, and used drones to catch perpetrators in the act on the Fourth of July. Others, such as Pacifica, Redwood City, Sacramento and San Jose, are now turning to a “social host” ordinance, which empowers law enforcement to hand tenants and property owners hefty fines for illegal fireworks set off on their land, regardless of whether they lit the match. But ordinances only do so much, and the root of the issue, says Coffman-Gomez, is the unchecked influx of illegal fireworks from outside of California.
“We’ve tried a sundry of different options [to stop illegal fireworks], but the true discussion that needs to happen is, legislatively, what can we do to better criminalize this as a problem that we have here chronically,” she says.
She’s not the only one urging state lawmakers and law enforcement officials to take action on illegal fireworks. A Los Angeles County Supervisor last month called on the feds to address the issue ahead of the Fourth of July. Her plea to the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives and U.S. Customs and Border Protection came two months after an illegal stockpile of fireworks exploded in a city just east of Los Angeles, killing two men and causing $3.2 million in damage.
According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission’s annual fireworks report from 2019—the latest report available, at least 12 people died while using fireworks that year, and there were an estimated 10,000 injuries associated with fireworks, including roughly 7,300 between June 21 and July 21.
Dry County
For many, the Fourth of July will be the first time they gather with friends and family since the start of the pandemic, and Chief McManus says he’s worried that illegal fireworks use could skyrocket as a result. In addition, there are no local professional fireworks shows scheduled for the Fourth of July, so pyrotechnic enthusiasts might take matters into their own hands.
“Is there likely to be an even larger July 4 type of celebratory activity because of the joy of getting out of this Covid period? There probably is,” McManus says. “We have to factor that in, too.”
That is troubling, says Mayor Dutra, because of the current drought-like conditions throughout Santa Cruz County and the greater state of California. Local Cal Fire officials have said this fire season could be “very active” because of those dry conditions.
“We really need to consider the state of our environment right now,” Dutra says.
Sobel says that ordinances and legislation are a good step to cut down on illegal fireworks, but emphasizes that education is also key. She says that many people who are setting off these fireworks are not aware of the negative effects their actions have.“It’s educating the people that maybe this isn’t the best way to recreate and spend my time because I’m upsetting veterans, I’m keeping people up at night and I’m terrifying animals as well,” she says. “It’s kind of like spay and neuter. Nobody got their animals spayed and neutered 30 or 40 years ago, and then it became part of the vernacular. [Bob Barker] on The Price Is Right always said, ‘Spay and neuter your pets.’ People didn’t even know what spayed and neutered was, and now people know what it is … it takes time.”
Six weeks after Santa Cruz County Supervisor Ryan Coonerty announced that he wouldn’t seek reelection in 2022, the race to replace him has its first candidate.
Santa Cruz City Councilmember Shebreh Kalantari-Johnson was as surprised as anyone to learn that Coonerty wouldn’t seek a third term. The idea of running for supervisor to try and be his replacement someday wasn’t a new concept to her. It’s just that the opportunity came sooner than she expected, and she’s ready to run now.
“I’ve thought about it for a long time,” says Kalantari-Johnson, who has a passion for public health and who first won election to the council this past November. “It brings together a lot of the things that I care about and that I’m knowledgeable about.”
Over the years, Kalantari-Johnson, a grant writer by trade, has worked on health-oriented campaigns across Santa Cruz County—to reduce childhood obesity, encourage healthy eating, cut alcohol use in the community and limit cannabis use among youth. She explains that elected office at the county level lends itself well to public health policy, given that it’s a sizable chunk of the county budget.
Kalantari-Johnson has begun securing endorsements, including from Mayor Donna Meyers and fellow Councilmember Renée Golder—both of whom briefly considered running for the supervisor seat themselves before deciding against it.
“She’s a great lady, and super smart, and cares so much about the community,” Golder says, of Kalantari-Johnson. “I’m so excited she’s throwing her hat into the ring.”
Santa Cruz Councilmember Justin Cummings, who served as mayor last year, is also strongly considering a run, while he does outreach and connects with community leaders. He thinks he could be a great fit for the job.
“Given the complexities with what the city had to deal with last year, I was doing a lot of work with county supervisors and feel I could be effective in that position,” he says.
Santa Cruz Councilmember Martine Watkins, another former mayor, says she would be honored to serve as supervisor, but she doesn’t currently live in the 3rd District. This year is a redistricting year, meaning that the boundaries could shift, but she says it’s unlikely that she’ll be living in the district when all is said and done. Watkins and her family probably wouldn’t be interested in moving, either, she adds, which means she probably won’t run.
Right now, it’s still early, with the 2022 primary election about a full year away.
Nonprofit development director Kayla Kumar is exploring a run for the supervisor seat. Kumar, who narrowly missed out on a bid for the Santa Cruz City Council in November, says she’s been having conversations with community members and is working to learn more about the community’s needs, as well as about how she might be able to meet them.
If Kalantari-Johnson were elected to the Board of Supervisors, she would leave the City Council mid-way through her term. According to Santa Cruz’s City Charter, the council would be allowed to either call a special election to fill the seat or fill the seat by appointment. (In either case, the new councilmember would serve out the remainder of the term, through 2024.)
There are other changes afoot in Santa Cruz’s electoral landscape right now. The city of Santa Cruz is transitioning to district elections, with its new City Council map set to go into effect next year. In 2024, there will be an open Assembly seat, when Assemblymember Mark Stone terms out.
The city of Santa Cruz makes up the bulk of the 3rd District, which also stretches into Bonny Doon, Davenport and the community of Last Chance. But Kalantari-Johnson says that, ideally, supervisors should view their constituents as the entire county—not just the voters in their isolated district. She says that she’s gotten to know South County from her time serving on the Community Health Trust board.
Kalantari-Johnson won’t make her formal election announcement for another couple months, but she isn’t hiding the fact that she is running. “It’s not a secret. I’m letting people know,” she says.
Although she’s relatively new to Santa Cruz city government, Kalantari-Johnson says she already has a strong familiarity with local land use from her work getting involved in the siting of liquor stores and cannabis operations. If elected to the board, she says she would plan to prioritize workforce development and fostering a green economy.
With an eye toward public health, Kalantari-Johnson says that she would work to improve communication between the county’s various health agencies and programs. The county is on the right track with its response to the region’s homeless crisis, she says, but there’s always room for improvement.
“How can we increase our capacity, bring in resources from state and federal levels, so we can do more of what we’re doing in a bigger way?” she says. “I know I’m speaking big-picture, but that’s the approach I want to take.”
In general, Kalantari-Johnson says she’s excited by the prospect of trying to create a healthier Santa Cruz County.
“That’s what makes me want to do this. It’s going to be a year and a half of hard campaigning,” she explains. “Should the voters select me and I’m chosen, it’s going to be a lot of hard work, and the hard work doesn’t scare me. It excites me, because I know, together with partners in the community, I really can impact our community well-being.”
The group leading the drive to recall Pajaro Valley Unified School District Trustee Georgia Acosta planned to file its petition last week, and organizers predict they will soon begin gathering the signatures needed to get the issue on the ballot.
“We’re primed and ready, we’re in this for a good election contest, and we think the community deserves to know how they’re not being represented. And they deserve better representation,” Carol Turley, a member of the Committee to Recall Georgia Acosta, said in an interview on June 2.
In addition, Acosta has submitted a response that will be included with the official campaign literature if the item does go before voters. The 198-word statement, filed with the Santa Cruz County Clerk on May 24, was the first time Acosta responded to several allegations outlined by the recall committee.
“My primary focus has always been to benefit the students, families, employees and taxpayers of the PVUSD,” Acosta wrote.
In her response, Acosta also states that she has battled cancer for the past few years, and that she has attended more than 85% of the meetings during her time on the board. A May 13 Pajaronian investigation found that Acosta has missed a total of 28 out of 135 possible meetings, which is a little more than 20%.
PVUSD Trustee Kim De Serpa, who has served on the board since 2010, said that Acosta’s cancer disclosure came as a surprise.
“In all the years we have served on the board together, she never let on that she was ill,” De Serpa stated in a text message. “To my knowledge, she never provided notice to the superintendent’s office, nor to a sitting president, that she would be absent. She simply wouldn’t show up. Similarly, her late entrances and early departures were always unexplained. The trustees are a group of caring individuals and I know we all wish her well.”
Fourth District Santa Cruz County Supervisor Greg Caput and District 7 Watsonville City Councilwoman Ari Parker were listed as supporters in Acosta’s response as well as various South County community organizers and business owners.
Acosta also says that she has been an “independent voice in education,” and that she protested “financial improprieties” in the district. In addition, Acosta wrote that she has been subject to intimidation and bullying against dissenting opinions. Acosta also says she has been outspoken about improper hiring practices by the district, and fought against hiring unqualified teachers. The response also states that Acosta objected to “inappropriate PVUSD relationships with District Leadership/Superintendent.”
Acosta did not respond to a call, text message and email asking her to expand on these statements.
The statement ends with Acosta calling on the public to “Stop the Witch-hunt [sic] that could Cost Taxpayers up to $100,000!”
It is not likely to cost that much for the special election, which organizers hope to bring to voters in March 2022. Santa Cruz County Clerk Tricia Webber says it will cost between $5 and $9 per registered voter in Acosta’s trustee area, which is roughly 8,592. That would make the possible cost between $42,960 and $77,328.
The committee will have 90 days to gather roughly 2,500 signatures needed after the County Clerk verifies its petition.