When Covid-19 began to sweep the U.S.—and brought with it a recession—Cabrillo College officials expected a jump in enrollment that typically comes with a battered economy.
But the college is now seeing a significant drop in those numbers, which it pins on the double calamity of the pandemic and the CZU Lightning Complex fire, along with a lower birth rate that affected the current generation of incoming college students.
The enrollment numbers are expected to improve somewhat after the winter semester begins on Jan. 25, Cabrillo spokeswoman Kristin Fabos said.
Still, according to Cabrillo President Matt Wetstein, enrollment in the current semester is down 18% from last year, which he said is similar to what happened during the fall 2020 semester. That’s when the CZU Lightning Complex displaced hundreds of residents from their homes in the Santa Cruz Mountains, affecting an estimated 30% of Cabrillo’s students.
“We went from about 10% down to 18% down in the course of a week.” he said.
Wetstein worries that some of those numbers might not rebound. Sonoma County lost about 2,000 residents after the 2017 Tubbs Fire.
“I would anticipate that we’re going to lose 100 to 200 students permanently, based on the patterns I’ve seen,” he said.
The downward trend is the same for both two- and four-year colleges across the U.S. According to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, community colleges showed a nearly 19% drop in enrollment in the fall, while public four-year colleges saw a 10.5% drop.
A recent survey of Cabrillo students who dropped classes showed that 27% said it was because they don’t like online classes, while 19% said it was concerns over Covid-19. Meanwhile, 14% listed the fire as a reason.
The decline is affecting nearly every discipline, particularly in the college’s Visual and Performing Arts department. Adult education and ESL classes have also taken a hit, as residents affected by the Covid-19 crisis struggle to make ends meet, Wetstein said.
“If you’re choosing between going to school or putting food on the table or buying medicine or whatever it is, I think understandably people are making economic choices for their economic survival and their household survival,” he said.
At the same time, the college’s science classes are showing higher-than-average enrollment, particularly in biology and chemistry. Wetstein attributes this in part to increased interest in health careers.
He also said the subjects gained more popularity after Dr. Anthony Fauci—the nation’s top infectious disease expert who served on President Donald Trump’s Coronavirus taskforce—famously sparred with the president over the importance of Covid-19 safety measures such as mask-wearing. Wetstein called this “the Fauci effect.”
Compounding all of this, Wetstein said, is that the college was already looking at declining enrollment before the fires and the pandemic hit. Numbers of students have steadily dropped, from 17,252 in the 2016-17 school year, to 16,173 in 2019-20.
“We’re entering a period in Santa Cruz County, and pretty much nationally, where there is a slight downward trend in high school graduations that are expected anyway,” he said.
That means that Local Control Funding Formula based partially on enrollment could take a commensurate hit, which could lead to “catastrophic” cuts within two to three years, Wetstein said.
“We’re not alone,” he said. “We’re in a statewide and a national downward slope in community college enrollment across the board. Ours is just a little more significant.”
However, there was some good news announced Jan. 14, as Cabrillo said it would receive $8.8 million in federal funding thanks to the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act.
A minimum of $2.013 million must be used to provide direct emergency grants to help students defray the costs of attending college. Cabrillo said it will work to disburse individual grants of roughly $500 to students as soon as possible, and that students could receive the money as early as February.
“This relief package will go a long way to providing some immediate economic relief to students and to our College,” Wetstein said.
Evacuation orders for the Freedom Fire have been lifted, the Cal Fire San Mateo-Santa Cruz Unit announced Wednesday afternoon.
Cal Fire CZU also announced that most, if not all, fires in Santa Cruz County are expected to be contained by this evening.
More than 100 acres burned across the Santa Cruz Mountains. No homes were destroyed, and there have been no injuries reported.
For people affected by power outages, PG&E will have a community resource center from 5-9:30pm Wednesday at the Enterprise Technology Center in Scotts Valley.
Story posted Jan. 19, 2021:
Heavy winds pummeled the Central Coast Monday night and into Tuesday, causing downed power lines, numerous power outages, and several fires, including one just north of Watsonville.
Dubbed the Freedom Fire by Cal Fire’s San Mateo-Santa Cruz Unit, the 40-acre blaze has forced people in about 100 homes to evacuate from various roads in the Aptos-Larkin Valley area. That includes Nunes, Gillette and Halton roads and Bens Way off White Road, along with nearby Willow Heights off Freedom Boulevard.
Cal Fire announced Tuesday around 3:19pm that the fire, first called the Nunes Fire, was 20% contained. No structures have been reported damaged.
The Red Cross and Santa Cruz County have established a temporary evacuation center for residents displaced by ongoing fires, including the Panther Ridge Fire, which is burning in Boulder Creek. That fire had charred around 10 aces as of Tuesday afternoon and was 55% contained.
Located at Corralitos Community Church, at 26 Browns Valley Road in Corralitos, a temporary evacuation center will provide residents with refreshments, resources and links to services including longer-term shelter, if necessary.
As of 10am Tuesday there were more than a dozen fires sprinkled around Santa Cruz County and around 10 reports of power lines down. Numerous roads have been closed due to downed power lines and fallen trees. Several trees crashed into homes around the county.
By 8am Tuesday, Central Fire called for all available fire personnel to report to duty due to the overload of calls.
In Corralitos off of Day Valley Road, a utility pole transformer exploded, alarming residents in the area.
A tree fell over Vega Road near San Miguel Canyon Road, forcing fire crews to close Vega Road around 7:30am.
At least three fires opened up in the burn zone of the CZU Lightning Complex fire in the Santa Cruz Mountains.
Never tasted Charbono? Fortino Winery makes a good one.
They also produce more unusual wines such as Carignan, Maribella (Fortino’s house red blend), and Montonico—a dessert wine aged for 24 years in oak barrels. Or there’s a wonderful sparkling wine infused with almond oils; and their fruit wines—blackberry, pomegranate, raspberry, and apricot—are brimming with fruity goodness.
Fortino’s 2018 Santa Clara Valley Charbono ($48)—a silver medal winner in the 2020 San Francisco Chronicle wine competition—has abundant flavors of roasted plums, red cherries and cloves. “It’s a full-bodied, bold and powerful red wine that is rare to California with only 100 acres in the United States,” says owner and winemaker Gino Fortino. This easy-drinking wine pairs with many different foods, especially grilled steak or prime rib. Grapes are grown on Fortino’s San Martin estate and aged in French oak barrels.
The Fortino family goes all-out to make the tasting-room experience a good one. This family-run winery, in business since 1970, has Austin Fortino as wine club director, and Nicolas Fortino as assistant winemaker.
Due to ever-changing Covid-19 rules, check online for opening times.
I love a good cup of coffee! And let’s thank our lucky stars that we have so many excellent coffee shops in the Santa Cruz area. Local Verve Coffee is one of my favorites. From small beginnings they have expanded to many outlying areas. Japan chose Verve to serve its coffee at main locations, including downtown Tokyo and Shinjuku Station—the world’s busiest railway station.
Steeped Coffee also originated in Santa Cruz, and specializes in a single-serve coffee bag with a variety of blends. All you need to do is add water. Their Sunrise Blend is a delicious early-morning brew, and an easy wake-up call when you’re in a hurry for that first shot of caffeine. There’s an excellent decaf called Eventide, too—prepared with a Swiss water process. And all Steeped Coffee’s bags are nitro sealed.
BANFF CENTRE MOUNTAIN FILM FESTIVAL VIRTUAL FESTIVAL This year, bring the adventure home! Fluff up your couch cushions, grab a snack of choice, and make sure you have a good internet connection, because the Banff Centre Mountain Film Festival World Tour is going virtual! For the first time ever, travel to breathtaking destinations, embark on daring expeditions, and celebrate some of the most remarkable outdoor achievements, all from the comforts of your living room. The Covid-19 pandemic has created extraordinary circumstances around the world, and many of our live World Tour screenings have been postponed or canceled. While we can’t replicate the experience of seeing the Banff films on the big screen of your local theatre, surrounded by friends and your community, these curated programs of amazing outdoor films will inspire you to live life to the fullest, however that looks these days! Please visit riotheatre.com for more information about the online programs and how you can support your local screening.
CALL FOR COLLABORATION: MLK DAY JUSTICE JOURNAL Share your dreams and submit a page into a community journal in celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. You can write and draw your responses by hand or digitally. Written responses can be of any language. Submitted pages must fit within 10 inches by 10 inches. Per submission, please include a note with your name, address, email or phone number, and selected prompt available on the event page. At the end of February, all the submissions will be compiled and pieced together. The completed journal will be displayed the week of March 1 as a close to Black History Month and continuation of a Black future. Submissions accepted through Feb. 19. Guidelines can be accessed on the event page: santacruzmah.org/events/justice-journal.
VIRTUAL FAMILY DAY: ART AND HEALING Grab your craft supplies and creative kiddos for our new series of virtual family-friendly events with the Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History (MAH). Hop on Zoom as MAH Learning and Engagement Manager Jamie Keil takes you through a hands-on art activity alongside featured artists from our upcoming exhibition “In These Uncertain Times.” For our first edition of Virtual Family Day we’ll be making collages. We have all been through a lot this past year, so this Family Day Series is starting with some reflective and healing art. Featuring artists from “In These Uncertain Times,” this event will include different projects and activities focusing on processing our feelings through art. Good for all ages, we recommend bringing paper, coloring utensils, scissors, magazines, old books, news clippings, stickers, tape, dried flowers, or any other items you want to collage plus tape or glue. $5 per household, free for members After registration, a Zoom link will be sent to access the event. Saturday, Jan. 23, 10-11am.
COMMUNITY
EIGHT-WEEK VIRTUAL PARENTING GROUP: FOR FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN 2-12 YEARS OLD January is Positive Parenting Awareness Month! Join us for an eight-week virtual Triple P Group for families with children 2-12 years old, held Thursdays, Jan. 7 – Feb. 25. Individuals, couples, and any friends or family members who are helping raise children are welcome to attend. Participants will meet other families and learn simple strategies to help you strengthen relationships in your family, encourage positive behaviors, teach your child new skills and behaviors, handle disruptive or challenging behaviors with greater confidence, and take care of yourself as a parent. Presented in English on Zoom by Cori Burt, of Community Bridges’ Mountain Community Resources. To register contact Cori Burt at 831-335-6600, ext. 6605, or visit bit.ly/TripleP-Group-Jan2021. Participants must register and attend the second session on Jan. 14 in order to participate in the group. If the group is already in session and you would like more information about another upcoming eight-week Triple P group, please contact First 5 at 831-465-2217. Thursday, Jan. 21, 5-6:30pm.
PARENTING WORKSHOP SERIES This is a free series of workshops to support parents during these difficult times. There will be a Kids Zoom Hour run at the same time so that you can attend the workshop. Each Kids Hour will be sponsored by a different organization, such as the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, Santa Cruz Children’s Discovery Museum, and Santa Cruz Public Library. All workshops will take place on the dates indicated via Zoom. Register for Parenting in Uncertain Times Part One at: santacruz.k12oms.org/1284-191087. Providing reassurance to children during the Covid-19 pandemic. Adapting and maintaining everyday family routines. Keeping children engaged in interesting activities at home. Wednesday, Jan. 20, 3pm.
SALSA SUELTA FREE ZOOM SESSION 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+. Contact to get the link. salsagente.com. Thursday, Jan. 21, 7pm.
SUICIDE CRISIS LINE VOLUNTEER TRAINING Training begins Jan. 21! Suicide Prevention Service is a program of the Family Service Agency of the Central Coast dedicated to providing suicide prevention, intervention, and postvention services that support the life, health, and safety of those at risk of suicide throughout Santa Cruz, San Benito, and Monterey Counties. Suicide Prevention Service of the Central Coast is looking for new suicide crisis line volunteers. Our crisis hotline serves the tri-county area of Monterey, San Benito, and Santa Cruz. Join us for volunteer responder training and participate in a rewarding experience while learning active listening skills, self-care, and suicide and crisis intervention techniques. The volunteer training sessions begin on Jan. 21 and conclude on March 11. Training conducted by video conferencing. Early registration is required. For more information, please visit our website at suicidepreventionservice.org. No experience is necessary—only a willing and an open heart. Ages 18 and up. Thursday, Jan. 21, 5pm.
VIRTUAL BILINGUAL PARENTING WORKSHOP: ENGAGING ACTIVITIES FOR FAMILIES January is Positive Parenting Awareness Month! Triple P Workshops cover practical tips and strategies for handling specific parenting questions and challenges. Attend this free virtual parenting workshop with your kids to learn how providing safe, engaging activities helps promote children’s learning, development, and well-being, get tips and share ideas for indoor and outdoor engaging activities for kids of all ages, participate in an indoor family scavenger hunt! Presented in English with Spanish interpretation on Zoom by Cori Burt, of Community Bridges’ Mountain Community Resources. Register to get the Zoom meeting link for this virtual workshop bit.ly/Scavenger-Hunt-Jan25. Attend Triple P classes in January to receive a gift bag and be entered into a raffle drawing. More classes means more chances to win prizes! Got questions? Contact Cori Burt at 831-335-6600, ext. 6605. Los talleres de Triple P ofrecen consejos prácticos y estrategias para manejar las preguntas y desafíos de crianza específicas. Asista a este taller crianza virtual gratis con sus hijos para aprenda cómo proveer actividades seguras e interesantes que ayudan a fomentar el aprendizaje, desarrollo y bienestar de los niños, reciba consejos y comparta ideas para actividades interesantes para hacer dentro de la casa y afuera para niños de todas las edades. ¡Participe en una búsqueda de tesoros dentro de la casa! Presentado en inglés con interpretación en español por Zoom por: Cori Burt, Puentes de la Comunidad – La Montaña Recursos Comunitarios. Inscríbase para conseguir la información para participar en este taller por Zoom: bit.ly/Scavenger-Hunt-Jan25. ¡En enero celebramos el Mes de la Crianza Positiva! Asista a clases de Triple P en enero para recibir una bolsa de regalo y su nombre también será incluido en una rifa. ¡Más clases = más oportunidades para ganar premios! Monday, Jan. 25, 2pm.
VIRTUAL PARENTING SEMINAR: THE POWER OF POSITIVE PARENTING January is Positive Parenting Awareness Month! This seminar is the first in a series of three for families with children 2-12 years old. These Triple P Seminars are free and open to all families in Santa Cruz County. The Power of Positive Parenting provides an introduction to the Triple P program. Seminar participants will learn key principles and strategies to create safe, interesting environments for children, provide positive learning environments for children, use assertive discipline and more. Presented in English on Zoom by Dr. Heather Thomsen, PhD. To register: bit.ly/Positive-Parenting-Jan24. Got questions? Contact First 5 at 831-465-2217. Sunday, Jan. 24, 1-3pm.
GROUPS
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS All our OA meetings have switched to being online. Please call 831-429-7906 for meeting information. Do you have a problem with food? Drop into a free, friendly Overeaters Anonymous 12-Step meeting. All are welcome! Sunday, Jan. 24, 9:05-10:15am.
COMPLEMENTARY TREATMENT FORUM Complementary Treatment Forum is an educational group, a safe place to learn, for women with a cancer diagnosis. Meets every fourth Saturday, currently on Zoom. Registration required: Call WomenCARE at 831-457-2273. Saturday, Jan. 23, 10:30am-12:30pm.
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, Jan. 22, 6pm.
WOMENCARE ARM-IN-ARM Cancer support group for women with advanced, recurrent, or metastatic cancer. Meets every Monday at 12:30pm via Zoom. All services are free. Registration required. Contact WomenCARE at 831-457-2273 or online at womencaresantacruz.org.Monday, Jan. 25, 12:30pm.
WOMENCARE TUESDAY SUPPORT GROUP WomenCARE Tuesday Cancer support group for women newly diagnosed and through their treatment. Meets every Tuesday at 12:30pm via Zoom. Registration required by contacting 831-457-2273. Tuesday, Jan. 26, 12:30-2pm.
WOMENCARE: LAUGHTER YOGA Laughter yoga for women with a cancer diagnosis. Meets every Wednesday at 3:30 via Zoom. Registration required by contacting 831-457-2273. Wednesday, Jan. 20, 3:30-4:30pm.
OUTDOOR
COMMUNITY PERMACULTURE CALLS WINTER 2021 Practice permaculture each week at our ‘village campfire’ of ongoing interactive group calls. Hosted by experienced permaculture mentors including Santa Cruz Permaculture founder David Shaw, Lydia Neilsen of Rehydrate the Earth, and John Valenzuela of Cornucopia Food Forests. The goal of this program is to create thriving and resilient individuals and communities by supporting people to connect with nature, community, and themselves more deeply through permaculture. Each call includes a keynote talk on a relevant and seasonal topic. This is followed by a small group conversation for reflection, and a whole group conversation and Q&A. We close the calls with invitations for how you can apply what you’ve learned in your home and community. The next call begins with a check-in about how you applied what you learned. Learn more about and register for the 10-week call series at santacruzpermaculture.com/communitypermaculture. $25 per call/$250 for the series. The series begins Tuesday, Jan. 5, and runs for 10 weeks.
INTRO TO EBIKES VIRTUAL WORKSHOP Are you curious about making your transportation trips easier? Want to learn more about how eBikes can help conquer your commute, saving you both time and money? Maybe you’ve thought about biking to work, but you’re concerned about hills, distance, or the extra time it will take you. Perhaps you’d love to ride, but you are a busy parent with kids to transport and errands to run. Ecology Action staff will provide an overview introduction of eBikes. Topics will include frequently asked questions, different eBike technologies, cost, environmental benefits, and investigate if eBikes can really replace cars. Register today for this free event: bit.ly/2MJjkDO. Free bike lights and helmets for all attendees. Note: You must be an employee of a business in the Downtown Santa Cruz Parking District and enrolled in Go SC on my.cruz511.org/s/gosantacruz. Thursday, Jan. 21, noon-1pm.
The family-owned Carpo’s just off Highway 1 in Soquel has been serving up fresh seafood and classic American favorites for the last 40 years.
They are currently open daily for takeout only, including beer and wine, from 11:30am-8pm (8:30pm on Friday-Saturday). Co-owner Indy Todd says the key to maintaining a strong following and reputation is serving high-quality, consistent food. He shared his thoughts with GT on the ongoing struggle of the pandemic, and about the food that keeps multiple generations of locals continuing to come through the door year after year.
What are a few of your flagship menu items?
INDY TODD: Our burgers for sure. We have two different options: a regular six-ounce burger that comes on a sesame seed bun, and our popular Carpo’s Burger, which is larger and comes on a francese bun from a local bakery. Guests can then add any condiments or additions that they like. We’re also known for our fish and chips. We always use fresh Pacific rock cod dipped in a house-made beer batter and served with tartar and cocktail sauce. The fish is just so fresh, and the batter is super light and crispy. We also make our own fresh fruit pies and desserts, which not many places do. The top seller and everyone’s favorite is the olallieberry pie. We always use fresh berries, and make a good apple pie and cherry pie. Our carrot cake is also made in-house; it’s a huge chunk that is really dense, soft, and moist. We sell a ton of it; people really love it.
What has been the hardest part of navigating the pandemic?
The loss of revenue has been really difficult. We’ve had to let go of some staff, and we hope they come back once we can fully reopen, but it has definitely been tough losing some great longtime employees. Also, just the uncertainty of it all—we’re 10 months into this and back to takeout only. Not knowing when we can return to normal business is just really taking a toll on the business and our staff. We’ve been doing pretty good with just takeout. Lunches have been slow, but the dinner rush is usually pretty strong. Even though the orders often all come at once and it can be difficult to properly fulfill them all, we always try our best.2400 Porter St., Soquel. 831-476-6260, carposrestaurant.com.
“Mucus” is the gooey substance itself. A “mucus membrane” could be a thin sheet of the stuff, but that’s not what the tissues in one’s nose are called. Those are “mucous membranes.” I would’ve expected a Science Communication student to have taken more care with technical terminology.
Andrew Daniels | Santa Cruz
This letter does not necessarily reflect the views of Good Times.
To submit a letter to the editor of Good Times: Letters should be originals—not copies of letters sent to other publications. Please include your name and email address to help us verify your submission (email address will not be published). Please be brief. Letters may be edited for length, clarity and to correct factual inaccuracies known to us. Send letters to le*****@go*******.sc.
In the transit debate comparing rail transit with BRT, one rarely hears how much better rail is for the passengers. I rode the bus to UCSC nearly every day for 30 years. Nobody loves the bus. They pitch, yaw and roll. Rail transit is a nice ride. That’s an empirical fact. Our public right-of-way deserves the best option for passengers, let’s remember that.
Linda Rosewood | Santa Cruz
This letter does not necessarily reflect the views of Good Times.
To submit a letter to the editor of Good Times: Letters should be originals—not copies of letters sent to other publications. Please include your name and email address to help us verify your submission (email address will not be published). Please be brief. Letters may be edited for length, clarity and to correct factual inaccuracies known to us. Send letters to le*****@go*******.sc.
When I read a few years ago that David Lowery—guitarist and vocalist for one of Santa Cruz’s all-time great bands, Camper Van Beethoven—had led a successful multi-million-dollar lawsuit against Spotify to recover unpaid songwriter royalties, I felt a certain amount of civic pride, for sure. And some hope—it seemed like it might be a turning point for Spotify’s notoriously terrible treatment of the musicians off of whom it makes billions of dollars.
However, as Mike Huguenor’s cover story this week reveals, the situation has only gotten worse. Spotify is only one of the many services paying next to nothing to artists for the music they stream. Lowery, Huguenor reports, has continued to keep watch on the industry, even while he’s crafted a new model of distributing his work. And the industry numbers, which are thoroughly detailed within, are downright shocking.
There is arguably some hope, even within the brutally anti-artist world of streaming, thanks to a Bay Area company that pays out as much as 90% of its revenue to musicians: Bandcamp. But can it make a meaningful difference? I highly recommend Huguenor’s story.
Also, in this issue, Johanna Miller writes about the final totals for our Santa Cruz Gives campaign—which were incredible. Thanks to all of our partners and of course to our readers for making it successful beyond our wildest expectations.
Lastly, time is running out to vote for the Best of Santa Cruz County. Go to goodtimes.sc and support your favorite local businesses today!
Fact is, there is overwhelming public dissent against rail. Mark Mesiti-Miller claims (Letters, 1/13) there were 255 pro-rail responses. He falls to mention the 10,000+ signatures collected by Greenway in favor of trail-only. He also fails to mention how Measure L was passed by Capitola to preserve the trestle for a trail and the sound defeat of John Leopold in the 2nd district last November. It’s time to get real that rail is dead and we need to concentrate on active transportation on the abandoned corridor and revitalized bus system and ADA transport now! If he truly believes there is overwhelming support for rail, let’s stop with the made up numbers and bring it to an actual vote.
— Jack Brown
Trains are a heavy hammer, a robotic bull you would not want running through the sweet china shop which is Santa Cruz. Running train service will change the Santa Cruz environment, and not for the better. Some sweet places will become quite undesirable. Why would you implement that kind of heavy mass transit a half-mile from the ocean? Dystopia.
And for all that, the freeway traffic will NOT lighten up. It won’t happen. The freeway pipe will always fill to the limit of tolerable capacity. There are plenty of studies going back at least to the 1980s on that.
— Eric
Re: Homeless Sweep
This senseless pushback is infuriating! Close this dangerous crime magnet now! The Dakota Avenue neighborhood community has been negatively affected and at the mercy of camp transients for a year! We were finally about to receive help from the city, when this small group of self righteous “protesters” decide to berate police with an opinion that is not shared by the neighborhood it directly affects!
This encampment is not simply people down on their luck living in tents.
Our community knows from first-hand experience that every single reason for the park closure due to health and safety concerns is 100% factual. Anyone who claims otherwise does not live here and has no right to speak for those of us that do.
— DJ
PHOTO CONTEST WINNER
Join us to learn more about the diversity of your San Mateo County Parks!
About this Event
Join us to learn more about the diversity of your San Mateo County Parks! We are teaming up with the California Academy of Sciences, and Sequoia Audubon Society to bring you our first virtual Countywide BioBlitz! This bioblitz is in celebration of California Biodiversity Day!
Attend this free webinar with a tutorial on how to use iNaturalist and safe practices to take when visiting parks during the pandemic. This is a self-led BioBlitz with a webinar tutorial to begin. You will be emailed the Zoom link as the event gets closer.
Be sure to join the Project page on iNaturalist and download the free iNaturalist App: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/bioblitz-2020-san-mateo-county-parks
Join us Saturday, September 12th at 9 AM for the free webinar tutorial on Zoom and then proceed to any of our open San Mateo County Parks at any point during the weekend to take a trail and explore and document all that you can find with the iNaturalist app. If you feel so inclined, see how many parks in our department you can visit and BioBlitz over both Saturday and Sunday! Please only visit by yourself or with persons in your household and follow all regulations regarding social distancing and face covering usage.
After your personal Bioblitzing adventure you can upload your observations and watch other BioBlitzer observations pile in over the course of the weekend. We look forward to seeing all the amazing finds you discover in your San Mateo County Parks!
Submit to ph****@go*******.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250dpi.
GOOD IDEA
ESSENTIAL DONORS
Messiah Lutheran Church will be hosting a communal blood drive for the Stanford Blood Center from 9am to 3pm on Friday, Jan. 22, at 801 High St. in Santa Cruz. Blood banks are an essential part of hospital services. A single donation can be used to save the lives of up to three patients. Donors are encouraged to book a one-hour appointment at bit.ly/mlc0122 or by calling 888-723-7831.
GOOD WORK
MITES ABOVE
Pest mites are one of the biggest threats to strawberry growers in California. Farmers commonly use predatory mites, who feed on their strawberry-loving kin, to protect their berries. Now, Parabug and Biotactics Inc. are taking pest control to the next level by using drones to deploy predatory mites in the fields, and bringing the technology to fields on the Central Coast—where 90% of the country’s strawberries are produced. These bugs are usually spread by hand, but drones could be better at accurately targeting pest mites. For more information, visit parabug.solutions.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“What Spotify pays me is not even enough to pay the musicians playing with me or the people working on the discs. It’s not working. Something is going to have to give.”
Last July, as the local economy scrambled to survive the third month of the coronavirus pandemic, Spotify CEO Daniel Ek took to Twitter with some economic figures of his own.
“Excited to announce our Q2 numbers showing strong growth across the board,” Ek tweeted on July 29.
Linked in the tweet was an infographic touting the company’s 299 million monthly listeners, recent expansion to Russia, and exclusive podcasts with former First Lady Michelle Obama and bro-losopher Joe Rogan.
Published elsewhere were the company’s staggering earnings for the second quarter of 2020: roughly $2.22 billion.
That same day, in an interview with UK-based Music Ally, Ek, fresh from his financial fluffing, set about addressing a certain “narrative fallacy” he claimed to have observed in musicians: “You can’t record music once every three or four years and think that’s going to be enough,” the billionaire decreed.
The same month, a company right here in the Bay Area issued a very different message to its users. In an article titled, “Support Musicians Impacted by the Covid-19 Pandemic,” Bandcamp co-founder Ethan Diamond touted some of his company’s recent accomplishments.
“On March 20, 2020, we waived our revenue share in order to help artists and labels impacted by the pandemic,” Diamond wrote. The amount paid out to musicians on that day alone: $4.3 million. “On May 1, 2020, we did it again,” he continued, “and fans paid artists $7.1 million—amazing!”
Throughout 2020, Bandcamp held nine of these Bandcamp Days, in which for 24 hours they waived their standard cut of 15% on all music sales, and 10% on all merch. In just nine days, the company paid their musician users a reported $40 million.
For listeners and investors, Spotify offers that eternal promise of capitalism: infinite growth for one low, low price. For musicians, it offers something else entirely: a gamed system that favors that already successful. Thankfully, in 2020 Bandcamp was there to funnel some money back into musicians’ pockets. But in the face of an increasingly dominant streaming industry, is it enough?
Rich Band, Poor Band
When discussing Spotify, there is always an elephant in the room: the company’s royalty rate. As famously low as it is famously hard to pin down, Spotify’s payouts have provoked public complaints not just from indie artists, but huge industry players as well. In 2014, Taylor Swift pulled her music from the service over the issue, stating in an op-ed that “valuable things should be paid for.” When she came back three years later, it was the result of a years-long pressure campaign from Ek himself—the CEO personally traveled to Nashville several times to convince Swift to return.
Each year, David Lowery of Santa Cruz’s pioneering indie rock band Camper Van Beethoven, and later the alt-hitmaker Cracker, publishes his annual Streaming Price Bible, which uses his band’s streaming data to help break down royalty rates across the industry’s top 30 streaming services. By his estimation, Spotify’s current rate equates to roughly $0.00348 per song.
“In other words, Spotify is paying out about $3,300 – $3,500 per million plays,” Lowery wrote.
However, that number isn’t entirely accurate. The reason why everyone seems to disagree on what exactly Spotify’s royalty rate is, is because the company doesn’t actually pay musicians per stream at all.
“What Spotify does is decide the total sum overall that they’re paying out in royalties, then your payment as an artist depends on the percentage of the total streams you are in all of Spotify,” says entertainment lawyer Cameron Collins.
Collins regularly teaches a course on the music industry at Seattle University, and is an adjunct professor at Seattle University School of Law. He makes the point that 10,000 streams on Spotify doesn’t actually equate to 10,000 royalty payments.
“If there are one billion plays and you only get 10,000, you actually only get a very small percentage of the whole. So the large artists, the Macklemores of the world, are going to get paid a ton of money, and your local indie band is not going to get very much,” Collins says.
Worse still, as reported by Rolling Stone in September, the top 1% of artists on Spotify make up for 90% of the platform’s streams. A blue badge affixed to Macklemore’s Spotify page shows he is currently the No. 291 artist in the world. Collins, then, is likely correct: The system is working comparatively well for Macklemore (and, it must be said, even better for Taylor Swift, the platform’s No. 10 artist).
New Models
In 2015, Lowery filed a class action lawsuit against Spotify, alleging at least $150 million in unpaid mechanical royalties to artists. Twice, the streaming behemoth made moves to dismiss, but Lowery’s suit was soon combined with three similar, concurrent lawsuits against the company (including one from the estate of Weather Report bassist Jaco Pastorius), and, in 2017, Spotify agreed to allocate $43.5 million to the creation of a new fund for artists and publishers “whose compositions the service used without paying mechanical royalties,” a functional admission of the charge Lowery and others had levied against them.
Tired of the system not working for him, Lowery has been developing a new model for releasing his music. On New Years Eve, he released his fourth solo album Leaving Key Member Clause via his label Pitch-a-Tent Records, which also released Camper’s first albums in the ’80s. Though the album is currently for sale on Bandcamp, Lowery says that under his new model, that platform would normally come second.
“I modeled it on the movie business, how they treat demand,” he tells me. “First I have the theatrical window, which is to sell the album at shows—we didn’t have that this time. Then, we have the DVD or video on-demand window, which is Bandcamp or direct website sales and shipping them through the mail.”
Only at the very end, after the tour is done and the Bandcamp orders have been shipped, does Lowery put his music onto the major streaming services like Spotify, Pandora, or YouTube—the latter two of which actually pay even lower royalties (Pandora: $0.00203; YouTube: $0.00154).
“It’s not that there isn’t a place for streaming, it just needs to be farther down the road after a record is out,” Lowery says. “They’re basically just designed to suck all the value out of everything.”
In 2018, the Music Modernization Act (MMA) was passed and signed into law. Though the MMA made some strides towards addressing long-festering music industry problems (such as the fact that virtually every song written before the year 1972 was out of copyright) and even created a government body to manage the distribution of royalties, it had no effect on Spotify’s pool royalty system.
Busting The Stream Syndicate
It’s worth noting that Spotify had one intended goal upon founding, and it was not to bring people music (or, for that matter, podcasts). It was to combat piracy.
“I realized that you can never legislate away from piracy,” Ek told the Daily Telegraph in 2010. “The only way to solve the problem was to create a service that was better than piracy, and at the same time compensates the music industry. That gave us Spotify.”
In Ek’s words, compensating the music industry was somewhat incidental to Spotify’s primary goal of combating piracy—the former, apparently, an effect of the latter. (Importantly, Ek doesn’t even mention the musicians themselves.)
Bandcamp, on the other hand, set out with a very different goal in mind. In a 2016 interview with Marketplace’s Kai Ryssdal, Bandcamp founder Ethan Diamond described the landscape of online music hosting in the MySpace era as akin to “sharecropping:”
“You gave them your content and then it was their logos, their advertising—it was their URL, it was their traffic. It was their entire identity,” Diamond said.
Inspired by the simplicity of blogging platforms like WordPress and Blogger, Diamond set out to correct what he saw as a lack in the available online resources for musicians.
“We built Bandcamp to address that problem,” he told Marketplace.
Since premiering in 2008, Bandcamp has been steadily growing, and has evolved into a robust nexus for music lovers of all stripes.
The company’s true strength, however, has been its resistance to the Silicon Valley myth of scaling. Still privately owned, Bandcamp has managed to turn a profit while giving 80-90% of their revenue to artists every year since 2012.
Bandcamp appears to be the rare music industry player informed first and foremost by the musicians. In interviews, Diamond regularly uses words like responsibility, and insists that the company’s “core metric” is the money it pays out to its musicians.
“It can’t be that music is a commodity, or content to use to sell advertising or a subscription plan. Artists have to come first,” he told the Guardian in June.
One lesson the company seems to have learned from musicians is that there is power in staying small. Bandcamp’s 37 million visitors in December 2020 (according to analytics website SimilarWeb) may be a speck next to Spotify’s reported 286 million monthly users, but the company has managed to grow on its own terms—and entirely through the sale of music—every year since 2008.
While Spotify has found market success with its “good, predictive algorithms,” according to CFO Barry MacCarthy, and is currently making an aggressive push to become the top dog in podcasts, Bandcamp hinges on the bet that maybe, just maybe, you actually care about music.
Lost in the Algorithm
The song that originally exposed Spotify’s paltry royalty rate was far from a smash hit. “Tugboat,” by the Boston shoegaze band Galaxie 500 is a dreamy little dinghy of a song, a sassy snippet of a melody floating in a sea of reverb, and hinging on the lyric “I don’t want to vote for your president / I just want to be your tugboat captain.”
Galaxie 500 only existed for 3 years, but their dour, ramshackle earnestness had a palpable influence on the shape of ’90s indie rock. Originally released as a 7” in 1988, “Tugboat” became an indie rock flashpoint by passing through the underground via word of mouth and mixtape. Uploaded to Spotify in the 2010s, it became more fodder for the endless churn of the algorithm.
In an article published by Pitchfork in 2012, Damon Krukowski, the band’s drummer, broke down the royalties “Tugboat” had earned in the first quarter of the year. Streamed 5,960 times, the song had earned the band $1.05. By his calculations, in order to make the same money as one physical album sale to one fan, the band would need 47,690 plays on Spotify.
“Here’s yet another way to look at it,” Krukowski wrote. “Pressing 1,000 singles in 1988 gave us the earning potential of more than 13 million streams in 2012. (And people say the internet is a bonanza for young bands …).”
On the one hand, Krukowski’s anecdote about “Tugboat” plays right into Daniel Ek’s narrative about musicians’ unrealistic expectations: Surely, no one can expect to live in 2020 on the profits of a single indie rock song from 1988, right? But even for active bands with sizable fan bases and critical acclaim, the algorithm manages to turn thousands into pennies.
Hardcore Reality
Last summer, San Jose hardcore band Gulch ran a wall of death on heavy music fans with the release of the punishing Impenetrable Cerebral Fortress, the “hardest album of this shit year 2020,” according to one Bandcamp reviewer.
Closed Casket Activities, the band’s record label, owns the digital rights to Impenetrable Cerebral Fortress, so the band only gets a portion of that album’s streams. But ever since releasing that album in July, their earlier, self-released EP Burning Desire to Draw Last Breath has also experienced a significant bump in listens. According to Gulch guitarist Cole Kakimoto, in the last three months Burning Desire has been streamed on Spotify more than more than 150,000 times. The revenue for those hundreds of thousands of streams?
“Around $700,” he says. “The amount that we make in three months streaming we probably make in a couple days of face-to-face interactions.”
Santa Cruz hardcore band Drain has received about $200 per member per year from Spotify for their 2016 EP ‘Over Thinking’—which has been streamed hundreds of thousands of times. COURTESY PHOTO
Santa Cruz hardcore band Drain is in a similar situation. Though their label, Revelation Records, owns the digital rights to 2020’s thrash-y and exhilarating California Cursed, the band still owns their back catalog, including 2016 EP Over Thinking. Looking back through the figures, singer Sam Ciaramitaro says that after four years and hundreds of thousands of streams, that album has brought in roughly $3,200 through Spotify—divided up, $200 per band member per year.
“Not a ton of money haha,” he texts me.
As for Gulch, Kakimoto says that they’re lucky: They all have full-time jobs. Gulch play hardcore for the love of it, not because they’re trying to survive on it.
Days later, it dawns on me how messed up the streaming era has to be for a musician to feel lucky to have a full-time job.
The Swindle Continues
When UCSC History of Consciousness professor Eric Porter was researching his book What Is This Thing Called Jazz? he had the opportunity to examine bassist Charles Mingus’s papers at the Library of Congress.
“I was blown away looking at them to see how little money he actually made from some of these classic recordings,” Porter says.
If there was ever a counterexample to Ek’s chimerical musician-who-only-works-once-every-three-or-four-years, it was Charles Mingus. Between the years 1956 and 1966, Mingus recorded almost 30 albums, virtually all of which have made vital, transformative contributions to the sound of American music. Yet, for almost his entire life, Mingus struggled. The deck was stacked against him.
“History is rich with examples where working-class musicians, Black musicians, were cheated out of what is owed them,” Porter says.
Notoriously, the contract drawn up for Little Richard’s “Tutti Frutti” netted him only $50; long before the Kingsmen covered it, Richard Berry got paid only $175 for writing what is arguably the most famous rock song of all time: “Louie, Louie.” Like Mingus, their songs were singular in shaping the sound and tenor of American music. Yet, for decades, they received next to nothing for their contributions. The deck was stacked against them, too.
“Because of their lack of power in the industry and their needs to survive, musicians end up selling their songs at less than market value, through a transaction that seems open—and the terms are followed through on—but there still isn’t fair compensation given the amount of money that’s made on their labor,” Porter says.
In the chaos of 2020, when musicians were most in need, Bandcamp proved itself an anchor for the workers who are its lifeblood. But the harsh truth is that in the era of (approximately) $0.00348 royalties, Bandcamp alone isn’t enough to support working musicians.
“As far as sales go, Bandcamp is really not that significant yet,” Lowery says. “But I like the model, so I’m supporting it.”
Kakimoto similarly says that Gulch’s sales on Bandcamp are nothing like the band’s true bread and butter: selling merch in person at shows.
“It’s not even comparable,” he says.
Certainly, musicians have expressed their frustration even with the comparatively artist-friendly Bandcamp. This December, the exuberant ska musician JER of We Are the Union and Ska Tune Network raised some hackles when they tweeted: “I deadass make more money from streaming revenue than people buying my music…”
They went on to post a receipt from Bandcamp showing a $2.00 sale. After revenue share (-$0.20), payment processing fee (-$0.15), and an “applied to your revenue share balance” deduction (-$1.60), the total amount JER earned from the sale of their song: $0.05.
As for Spotify—currently valued at $60.8 billion—in November, the corporation announced a new service, soon to be unveiled, and summed up in a Guardian headline: “Spotify to Let Artists Promote Music for Cut in Royalty Rate.”
For the past six years, Good Times’ annual holiday fundraising campaign Santa Cruz Gives has helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for local nonprofits by creating a network of donors and shining a spotlight on the organizations.
And in this latest year, the results have far exceeded expectations.
“We weren’t sure how things would go this time,” says Santa Cruz Gives co-founder and organizer Jeanne Howard, who led the campaign in partnership with the Volunteer Center of Santa Cruz County. “With the pandemic and lots of people out of work, we were concerned we’d only raise half of last year.”
Instead, the campaign surpassed 2019’s donations of $413,000, raising a total of $709,617, an increase of 72%. That kind of jump from one year to the next is almost unheard of in the charitable sector—especially this year. Last July, the Association of Fundraising Professionals reported that more than half of the charitable organizations in the U.S. were expecting to raise less money in 2020 than they had in 2019.
The Santa Cruz Gives campaign also saw an increase in the total number of donors, from 1,022 to 1,200, and in the average donation amount, from $189 to $259.
“It’s amazing, really,” Howard says. “The community really stepped up to help.”
Each nonprofit chosen to be part of the campaign (40 in total for 2020) had its own page on the Santa Cruz Gives website, detailing the mission of the organization and how many staff and volunteers are involved. It laid out the group’s “Big Idea”—what they hope to do with the funds they raise—with a leaderboard tracking the donations made to each.
Howard feels Santa Cruz Gives’ model of fundraising is key to its success and surprising growth, as donors often report giving to multiple groups that they learn about on the site after going there to give to a specific organization.
“As I like to say, this platform allows us to seemingly create money out of thin air to meet the community’s needs,” Howard says. “Donors of all sizes tell me that they give to a few more organizations than originally planned because the work is so important. The analytics show that they are reading the profiles. Most of the larger donors are giving to five to 10 or more nonprofits. I also see some of the larger donors give $500 or more, but in $20- to $40-dollar amounts to 20 to 30 groups, so they might seem like a small donor to a nonprofit, but they are a significant donor overall.”
The organization coming out on top for 2020 was the Santa Cruz County Animal Shelter, which brought in more than $105,000. Runners-up were the Coastal Watershed Council ($60,000) and Farm Discovery at Live Earth ($31,000).
Nonprofits apply to be part of Santa Cruz Gives each year. Howard says it’s hard to turn down any, but they have to make sure they’ve “divided the pie” between different organizations. Especially for 2020, it was important to choose projects relevant to the huge crises facing the county—the pandemic and the CZU Lightning Complex fire, both of which upped the demand for safety-net services significantly.
“I wish we could include more, and maybe someday we will,” Howard says. “But we’re not a huge county. Hopefully [the campaign] will keep growing.”
Santa Cruz Gives officially ended on Jan. 1, and Howard says there was a big surge in donations on New Year’s Eve, with 15% of donors giving that day.
“Dec. 31 is our biggest donation day,” she says. “Nonprofits will often take to social media and get people interested in doing last-minute donations.”
Good Times and the Volunteer Center of Santa Cruz County received support for Santa Cruz Gives from the Community Foundation of Santa Cruz County, the Joe Collins Fund, the Applewood Fund, Santa Cruz County Bank, Wynn Capital Management, Oswald Restaurant, The Pajaronian, Press Banner and Swenson Builders.
Good Times Editor Steve Palopoli contributed to this story.