Family, Friends Remember San Jose Shooting Victim Alex Fritch

Even as his life slipped away, Ben Lomond native Alex Fritch gave his wife Terra one final gift: a goodbye.

“It’s the biggest gift,” she told Good Times, describing how they got to embrace in the hospital. “He grabbed my hand. He cried. And then he took his last breath.”

Fritch, a 49-year-old father of three, was one of nine people killed in the mass shooting at the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority light rail yard in San Jose on May 26. Terra says the days since the shooting have been a blur of interactions with mental health professionals, union reps, press and the FBI. She’s also been planning for her 18-year-old son’s high school graduation. But she says she wants Alex’s “legacy to be accurate.”

“He was very much a Santa Cruz Mountain boy,” she says.

Now, San Lorenzo Valley friends are remembering the San Lorenzo Valley High School alumnus. “He was a quiet, sarcastic, funny dude,” says Ian Harris, who knew Fritch since they went to Quail Hollow Elementary School. “He was always the same guy.” Harris, a stand-up comedian who lives in Los Angeles, says even though the topic of gun violence comes up almost every week on his politics podcast, it didn’t make him any more prepared to deal with the loss. 

“I actually do expect it to happen to me or someone I know,” he says. “But when it actually does … it’s brutal.”

Luke Pabich, who works at a winery in Soquel, says he grew up on the same street as Fritch.

“I’ve just been processing it,” he says. “It comes in waves.” At first, 50-year-old Pabich—reached on his way to catch a flight to play a show with his band Good Riddance—was under the impression Fritch might recover. He decided to send a “long-winded” text anyways. “I really, really wanted to express to him what his friendship meant to me,” he says. He learned the bad news the following morning.

In the text, Pabich says, he reminisced about their growing-up years. “We would build forts—sorry, it’s a little bit hard,” he says, his voice breaking. “We would do just a lot of creative things together.” Like the time they broke into a sand quarry by where they lived. “We would bring skateboard decks, and we would basically try to ride down the sandhills on planks of wood,” he says.

An empty lot offered the perfect dimensions for a backwoods incarnation of a football stadium. So began the NFFL—the Neighborhood Field Football League. Fritch was the speedy, athletic one. Padric Fisher was the slightly pudgy one. Pabich was the starting quarterback on their real football team, the Ben Lomond Broncos. Harris taped together a makeshift trophy out of a paper cup and a plastic football. “He mighta made it, but I don’t know if he had the idea,” says Fisher, a 50-year-old who now lives in the Central Valley. They would also play a Capture the Flag-like game called “Army,” he says. Terra Fritch says she’s heard about the delights of playing “Army,” adding, as far as the NFFL is concerned, “He talked about that all the time.”

In high school, Alex Fritch met a Boulder Creek boy named Rick Tahira, now a 50-year-old Aptos resident. “My mom would drop me off because I didn’t have a car yet,” Tahira says. “We would just sort of warm up and hang out around these radiator heaters.” Chatting about music before school turned into jam sessions afterwards.

Pabich and Fritch, inspired by punk and thrash metal, had been learning to play guitar together. Danny Bauer set the rhythm on drums, as the friends practiced as a “joke” bedroom band called the Death Moshers. “We just made stupid songs about stupid things,” Pabich recalls, adding they never even tried to play a show. “We were horrible.” 

Fritch’s wife confirms she got an earful about the Death Moshers. “He loved it,” she says. “He was so happy about it.” 

Pabich would go on to play in hardcore band State of Grace, and later in Fat Wreck Chords group Good Riddance. But his first concert experience was an Iron Maiden show with Fritch, back in 1983.

Tahira says the picture he has in his head of Fritch is of him revving his 1967 Camaro RS to 100 miles per hour as they headed to all-ages metal club the Stone in San Francisco. Fritch long gave hints of a future with the public transit agency, all the way back to dissecting toys early on, says Fisher. “He always had a good mechanical aptitude,” he says. “He was a much better mechanic than I was.” Fritch even rebuilt the Camaro engine, but ultimately sold the car to support his first child, daughter Stephanie.

When he met his wife at a cowboy bar in San Jose, it was love at first sight. “I asked him to dance,” Terra says, noting he left swiftly, afraid he might say something awkward. “He was a little too intoxicated.” Their first real date began in Cupertino and continued all the way to Santa Cruz—sparking a relationship that lasted 20 years. They were supposed to renew their vows on the beach in Hawaii later this year. 

“We would have lasted another 20 if he was still here,” she says. “He was my best friend.” 

They had two children together: Atticus, now 18, who Fritch has been proudly supporting through his gender transition to male, and Justin, now 16, the stoic one of the family. “We’re surrounded by tons of friends that love us to pieces,” Terra says. “We’ve all been in counselling.”

Authorities have identified the shooter as Samuel James Cassidy, a 57-year-old San Jose resident who in the days after the deadly shooting has been described as a “highly disgruntled VTA employee.” Cassidy killed himself after the massacre. Santa Cruz resident Michael Rudometkin, 40, was also one of the victims.

Fritch’s wife feels like the authorities should have done more to halt the shooter before the mass killing. “He was red-flagged,” she says. “Let’s be honest, the ball got dropped.” But she embraces the idea that improving America’s firearm reality can be a nuanced affair. “Alex and I are very liberal people—we also believe people should have the right to own guns,” she says. “It doesn’t need to be all or nothing.”

Now, her son Atticus is writing a letter to California Gov. Gavin Newsom, in the hopes his dad won’t “become another statistic.”

Terra says she wants Rudometkin’s wife Gloria to know she’s there for her if she ever wants to talk. “It would be my pleasure,” she says. “This is a club that none of us want to be a part of.”

Terra Fritch has set up a GoFundMe account to help support the family. Visit bit.ly/3fCIBLX to donate.

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology: June 2-8

Free will astrology for the week of June 2 

ARIES (March 21-April 19): “There is ecstasy in paying attention,” writes Aries author Anne Lamott. That’s always true for everyone, but it’s extra true for you Aries people. And it will be extra, ultra, especially true for you during the next 20 days. I hope you will dedicate yourself to celebrating and upgrading your perceptual abilities. I hope you will resolve to see and register everything just as it is in the present moment, fresh and unprecedented, not as it was in the past or will be in the future. For best results, banish all preconceptions that might interfere with your ability to notice what’s raw and real. If you practice these high arts with exhilarating diligence, you will be rewarded with influxes of ecstasy.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Your guiding wisdom comes from Taurus author Annie Dillard. She writes, “I think it would be well, and proper, and obedient, and pure, to grasp your one necessity and not let it go, to dangle from it limp wherever it takes you.” I suspect that Dillard’s approach will enable you to maintain a righteous rhythm and make all the right moves during the coming weeks. If you agree with me, your crucial first step will be to identify the nature of your “one necessity.” Not two necessities. Just the single most important.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “All I want to be is normally insane,” said actor Marlon Brando. Yikes! I have a different perspective. I would never want to be normally insane because that state often tends to be sullen and desperate and miserable. My preferred goal is to be quite abnormally insane: exuberantly, robustly, creatively free of the toxic adjustments that our society tells us are necessary. I want to be cheerfully insane in the sense of not being tyrannized by conventional wisdom. I want to be proactively insane in the sense of obeying my souls’ impulses rather than conforming to people’s expectations. I bring this to your attention, Gemini, because I believe the coming weeks will be a fruitful time for you to be my kind of insane.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): “It’s one thing to make a mistake, it’s another to become wedded to it,” advised author Irena Karafilly. Let’s make that one of your key truths in the coming weeks. Now is a good time to offer yourself forgiveness and to move on from any wrong turns you’ve made. Here’s a second key truth, courtesy of composer Igor Stravinsky: “I have learned throughout my life as a composer chiefly through my mistakes and pursuits of false assumptions, not by my exposure to founts of wisdom and knowledge.” Third key truth, from Sufi teacher Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan: “Don’t be concerned about being disloyal to your pain by being joyous.”

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): According to my analysis of the astrological omens, the number of perfect moments you will experience during the next two weeks could break all your previous records. And what do I mean by “perfect moments?” 1. Times when life brings you interesting events or feelings or thoughts that are novel and unique. 2. Pivotal points when you sense yourself undergoing a fundamental shift in attitude or a new way of understanding the world. 3. Leaping out of your own mind and into the mind of an animal or other person so as to have a pure vision of what their experience is like. 4. An absolute appreciation for yourself just the way you are right now.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “There is strong shadow where there is much light,” wrote Virgo author Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832). That’s a good metaphor for you these days. Since I suspect you are currently shining as brightly as you possibly can, I will urge you to become acutely aware of the shadows you cast. In other words, try to catch glimpses of the unripe and unformed parts of your nature, which may be more easily seen than usual. Now, while you’re relatively strong and vibrant, investigate what aspects of your inner world might need improvement, care and healing.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): According to physicists, it’s impossible for a human being to suck water up through a straw that’s more than 34 feet long. So please don’t even try to do that, either now or ever. If, however, you have a good reason to attempt to suck water up a 33-foot straw, now would be an excellent time to do so. Your physical strength should be at a peak, as is your capacity for succeeding at amazing, herculean tasks. How else might you direct your splendid abilities? What other ambitious feats could you pull off?

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Scorpio poet Ezra Pound had character flaws that bother me. But he also had a quality I admire: generosity in helping his friends and colleagues. Among the writers whose work he championed and promoted with gusto were 20th-century literary icons James Joyce, T. S. Eliot, Marianne Moore, Hilda Doolittle, William Butler Yeats, Ernest Hemingway, William Carlos Williams and Robert Frost. Pound edited their work, arranged to get them published in periodicals and anthologies, connected them with patrons and editors, and even gave them money and clothes. In accordance with astrological omens, I encourage you to be like Ezra Pound in the coming weeks. Make an extra effort to support and boost your allies. Assist them in doing what they do well. To do so will be in your own best interest!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Poet Tess Gallagher praises those times “when desire has strengthened our bodies.” I want you to have an abundance of those moments during the coming weeks. And I expect that cultivating them will be an excellent healing strategy. So here’s my advice: Do whatever’s necessary to summon and celebrate the strong longings that will strengthen your body. Tease them into bountiful presence. Treasure them and pay reverence to them and wield them with gleeful passion.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “To live is so startling it leaves little time for anything else,” observed poet Emil Dickinson. That’s the truth! Given how demanding it is to adjust to the nonstop challenges, distractions and opportunities of the daily rhythm, I’m impressed that any of us ever get any work done. According to my astrological analysis, you Capricorns are now experiencing a big outbreak of this phenomenon. It’s probably even harder than usual to get work done, simply because life keeps bringing you interesting surprises that require your ingenuity and resourcefulness. The good news is that these surges of ingenuity and resourcefulness will serve you very well when the hubbub settles down a bit and you get back to doing more work.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Aquarius-born August Strindberg (1849–1912) was a masterful and influential playwright. He also liked to dabble in painting and photography. His approach in those two fields was different from the polish he cultivated in his writing. “I am an amateur and I intend to stay that way,” he testified about his approach in the visual arts. “I reject all forms of professional cleverness or virtuosity.” Just for now, Aquarius, I recommend you experiment with the latter attitude in your own field. Your skill and earnestness will benefit from doses of playful innocence, even calculated naiveté.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Which of the astrological signs feels the deepest feelings? I say it’s you Pisceans. You’re connoisseurs of deep feelings, as well as specialists in mysterious, multi-splendored, brushes-with-infinity feelings. And right now, you’re in the Deepest Feelings Phase of your personal cycle. I won’t be surprised if you feel a bit overwhelmed with the richness of it all. But that’s mostly a good thing that you should be grateful for—a privilege and a superpower! Now here’s advice from deep-feeling author Pearl Buck: “You cannot make yourself feel something you do not feel, but you can make yourself do right in spite of your feelings.”

Homework: Testify about how you redeemed the dark side: ne********@***************gy.com.

Equinox Wines’ Celebration-Worthy Reserve Cuvée Ultra Brut 2016

Opening up a bottle of fabulous sparkling wine usually means there’s something to celebrate. And with Father’s Day coming up on June 20, it’s an ideal time to pop the cork!

Barry Jackson is an absolute whiz when it comes to making vino, especially his famous Equinox sparkling wine. We would love to call it Champagne, but legally it has to come from the Champagne wine region in France. But as a generic term, Champagne is used for any sparkling wine.

Jackson’s Equinox 2016 Monterey Reserve Cuvée Ultra Brut consists of 49% Chardonnay, 47% Pinot Noir and 4% Pinot Meunier.

With decades of experience under his belt, Jackson is able to blend the ideal quantities and perfect varieties to make a superb “sparkler.”  

This beautiful Reserve Cuvée is aged “en tirage” (aging a sparkling wine “on the yeast”) for 32 months. It takes a good deal of time and effort to make a fine Champagne, and Jackson does not cut any corners.

Barry and his wife Jennifer run their successful business on the Westside of Santa Cruz in the Swift Street Courtyard complex. They are always gracious and welcoming, even when their tasting room is packed—both inside and outside. Barrels and wine crates are piled up to the rafters in the back part of the tasting room, imparting a corking good vino vibe to imbibing customers. 

At a recent tasting of Jackson’s sparkling wines, he also gave me some of his special tawny port to try. It was simply fabulous. And then there’s his other label, Bartolo Wines, so don’t miss tasting those when you visit.

Equinox Sparkling Wine, 334 Ingalls St., Santa Cruz. 831-471-8608, equinoxwine.com.

Dark Chocolate and Marzipan

Don’t feel guilty when you eat dark chocolate. It’s high in tryptophan, a mood-boosting amino acid proven to reduce the negative effects of stress. It’s also packed with antioxidants, magnesium and potassium, which improve cognitive functions. And marzipan, which I love, is high in magnesium, which reduces migraines, regulates blood sugar and fights depression.


Sid’s Smokehouse Offers Family-Friendly Sports Bar Vibe

Sid’s Smokehouse in Aptos is a neighborhood gathering place with a laid-back sports bar vibe that is also family-friendly.

Open every day except Tuesday from 11:30am-8pm, their food is barbecue-centric, and manager Brooke Lashlee describes the place as a fun little spot that is all about good times. She’s been there three years, and has a passion for hospitality and 20 years of experience in the restaurant industry. She spoke to GT recently about what makes Sid’s special and some standouts from their menu.

What sets Sid’s apart?

BROOKE LASHLEE: First of all, our chef is truly fantastic, and you’d be hard pressed to find anything that’s not delicious on our menu. His name is Luz Alvarez, and he has over 35 years of professional cooking experience in a wide variety of cuisines. Even though we are a barbecue place, we really have something for everyone. We also do wood-fired pizzas, burgers, excellent salads, and we have a great kid’s menu. All the meats are done in our in-house smoker, and we use white oak wood for a lighter smoky taste. We also have a great craft beer selection, some of which are local favorites. One crowd-pleasing beer on tap is the West Coast Green Flash Double IPA; it’s very full-bodied and really hits the spot after a long day. It’s been a real joy having guests back at the bar after the last year and being able to serve our community again.

What are some signature dishes?

I would definitely highlight our appetizer menu by mentioning our smoked bacon jalapeño poppers, stuffed with cream cheese and beer-soaked sausage and wrapped in bacon. They are phenomenal, and people really rave about them. Our customizable barbecue plates are a bestseller; guests can choose their favorite meats from our five offerings, which are pulled pork, beef brisket, smoked chicken, St. Louis pork ribs and Corralitos hot links. They are all delicious in their own way and come with two of over a dozen sides. I have a new favorite side every day; right now I’m obsessed with the Fuji apple slaw, which is lightly creamy and has a little cilantro. And I also really love our collard greens with bacon. Our signature dessert is our house-made banana bread pudding finished with caramel and candied pecans. It’s fantastic and is truly the best bread pudding I’ve ever had.

10110 Soquel Drive, Aptos. 831-662-2227, sidssmokehouse.com.

Westside Dining Spot Copal Evokes Mezcal Dreams

With two outdoor patios and a blazing color scheme, Copal is an inviting oasis right on the main drag of Westside Santa Cruz. But it’s the aromas of chile-chocolate mole and the smoky bite of mezcal that send the deeper message of this patron-friendly Oaxacan dining spot. 

Brought to us by the entrepreneurs of Lúpulo and armed with the mole magic of head chef Ana Fabian Mendoza, Copal is fully open once more and pulling in diners who, like me, treasure memories of Oaxaca’s complex cuisine. 

Visually, Copal delivers the goods. Brightly colored pottery and a friendly, well-trained staff started us off on our initial visit last week. Chips and salsa arrived quickly, as did our house margaritas ($12), festively ringed with lip-tingling red chile. From the appealing menu—lots of gluten-free and vegan options—we chose items we hoped would give us an overview of the kitchen’s stylings. 

A lavish antojito platter ($20) arrived bearing a fiesta of house appetizers. Handmade corn tortilla quesadillas were warm with melting cheese and mushrooms—the star of the entire meal! Gorgeously topped with black bean paste, guacamole salsa and queso fresco were slender taquitos, filled with potato. A plump masa fritter stuffed with potato and no detectable chorizo was strewn playfully with crisp sauteed chapulines (crickets) that were tasty and crunchy. Pretty radishes, salsa, guacamole, gorgeous shreds of brilliant purple cabbage and plump cubes of queso fresco all added to the party. 

We dipped everything into a side order of mole negro ($2) and quaffed with the margaritas. Curiously mild, both in alcohol and in flavor, the margaritas (made from mezcal, tequila and lime) were wonderfully thirst-quenching in the warm evening climate. The taste of mole negro was a quick trip back to the zócalo. Intensely rich and sweet with roasted ancho chiles, chocolate, almonds and yerba santa the mole was a sensory dream of chile, chocolate and smoke. 

Our other order was another nostalgia choice, Tamal en Hoja de Platano ($14), a banana leaf covered with mole negro and filled with house masa and pork. On the side came a side of nopales salad and a brilliant hand-painted bowl of black beans. Flavorful masa but little in the way of pork filled the satiny platano leaf. The colorful side salad was long on finely diced onions, tomatoes and cilantro, all of which overwhelmed the tiny pieces of cactus. Still, I’d walk a mile for a bite of nopales.

I look forward to sampling more from Copal, especially a chicken mole entree and more of those amazing quesadillas. Oh, and some samplings from the incredible list of specialty mezcals.

Copal, 1203 Mission St., Santa Cruz. 831-201-4418, copalrestaurant.com.   

Slow Coast Beauregard

Ace wine hosts Rachel and Ryan Beauregard have just opened their Slow Coast Wine Bar in Davenport, housed in the former Bonny Doon Vineyards tasting depot. Plenty of indoor seating is now available, plus a few tables on the charming front porch with a killer view of  the ocean. Charcuterie and cheese platters are available to enjoy along with an array of award-winning Beauregard Vineyards wines.

The estate winery tasting room, up the mountain a few miles in the middle of Bonny Doon, had gotten so busy that a second Davenport wine bar location was needed. Hours for the wine bar are Thursday-Monday, 1-8pm. Reservations are not required, unless you’re a large group and want to reserve the entire space! 

Slow Coast Wine Bar, 450 Highway 1, Davenport. 831-600-7402, beauregardvineyards.com/Visit-Us/The-Davenport-Wine-Bar

Downtown Shooting, Large Brawl Mar Memorial Day Weekend

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Santa Cruz police were busy responding to a shooting and a reported 30-person brawl in downtown over Memorial Day weekend.

At approximately 12:23am Monday, May 31, the Santa Cruz Police Department responded to several reports of multiple gunshots on the 100 block of Elm Street at Pacific Avenue. Upon arrival, SCPD cordoned off the area and found roughly 20 shell casings, according to a post on its Facebook.

As of now, there are no known injuries and no arrests have been made. Police are asking for anyone with information regarding the shooting to contact them as the investigation is ongoing.

“As of right now information is very limited and we are still following up,” says SCPD Sgt. Brad Burruel.

According to Taylor Posey, who was patronizing the Blue Lagoon half a block from the shooting, the police response was quick and efficient.

“Nobody knew something had happened until we looked out the door and saw all the cops,” he says, adding the police immediately cleared Pacific Avenue and made patrons go inside with the doors locked until the scene was safe.

“It was stressful but I felt pretty safe and thought it was handled well by the Blue [Lagoon] security and the police,” Posey adds. 

Roughly 48 hours earlier, SCPD responded to reports of a massive brawl outside of the Red Room sometime around 1:30am on Saturday.

“There were reports it was a large fight of roughly around 30 people,” says Sgt. Burruel who was on the scene.

According to Burruel, by the time SCPD arrived the fight had cleared. Again, no injuries were reported, no arrests were made and it is unclear if the suspects involved were locals or from out of the area.

After a year of shutdowns, closures and quarantines, there has been a 49% increase in violent crimes over the first quarter of the year when compared to the same time last year, according to the Santa Cruz Police’s Uniform Crime Report.

Burruel says SCPD is preparing for an increase in tourists this summer, which means an increase in heightened security as well.

“We are very aware and currently taking steps to prepare for a significant increase compared to last summer,” he tells GT. “But to what extent I cannot go into more detail.”

If you have any information about either of these incidents you can contact the Santa Cruz Police Department investigators at 831-420-5820 or leave information anonymously on the Crime Tip Line at 831-420-5995.

Officials Share Affordable Housing Plans for Santa Cruz County

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A new report from the California Housing Partnership showed that a lack of affordable housing continues to trouble communities in Santa Cruz County. Among other findings, the data suggests that renters in the county need to earn more than two-and-a-half times the state minimum wage in order to afford the average monthly rent of $1,909.

Housing Santa Cruz County—a coalition of individuals, businesses and organizations across the county—recently hosted a virtual discussion about how local governments plan to address the issue. The Zoom panel included Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors Chair Bruce McPherson, Watsonville Mayor Jimmy Dutra, Santa Cruz Mayor Donna Meyers, Scotts Valley Mayor Derek Timm, and Capitola Vice Mayor Sam Storey.

All of the panelists listed Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) as a major component of their affordable housing strategies. ADUs are secondary housing units on single or multifamily dwellings. Another common goal was expanding mixed-use, commercial and residential development, with a portion of the units designated as affordable.

Santa Cruz

The city of Santa Cruz expects a remodel of Pacific Station to help address affordable housing needs. The remodel includes around 165 very low- to low-income units and will connect to River Parkway. 

“We’re looking at providing approximately 170 units, part of which will be replacing some units and adding additional housing through a project at Jessie Street with our partner MidPen, and then providing 120 units of permanent supportive housing as part of the Housing Matters campus,” said Mayor Donna Meyers. 

She discussed plans to create housing at the current library site and the potential creation of a senior housing complex downtown. 

“We are literally creating a new neighborhood in downtown Santa Cruz, and we’re very excited about that,” she said. 

The city also recently worked with Santa Cruz City Schools to pass a workforce housing ordinance in May. “I believe we’re the first jurisdiction in the county to do that,” said Meyers.

Watsonville

In Watsonville, development in some new areas must include 20% affordable housing.  Currently, three projects focus on farmworker housing: Miles Lane, Eden Housing and Pippin Orchards Apartments. 

“We are trying to cover all aspects of our community,” said Watsonville Mayor Jimmy Dutra.

The city also plans to streamline the process for obtaining ADU permits.

“We have made that permitting process very simple and inexpensive. And, because the minimum lot size requirement was removed, it has been easier to get these permits,” he said. 

But for new developments, Dutra says the days of single-family housing are in the past. “A lot of our projects are going to be going upward,” he said.

One example of this—the Residence on Main Street—will be a four-story mixed-use commercial and residential building, with 20% of the units allocated to affordable housing.

The city also offers first-time buyers assistance, rentals assistance and a landlord incentive program. They’re working on an ADU loan program, which would help homeowners build units to rent to low income families.

Capitola

The city of Capitola doesn’t have much room for expansion, so affordable housing strategies revolve around remodeling existing developments and encouraging ADUs. 

“We have not seen as many ADUs being built in Capitola as we had hoped,” said Capitola Vice Mayor Sam Storey. To encourage additional developments, the city staff is creating four prototype ADU designs that will be available for free public use. 

Another goal is to protect mobile home parks. 

“One of my personal goals is to see that our last privately owned mobile home park … that we have the opportunity to assist those residents in being able to buy out the owner and be equity-share owners in their homes,” said Story.

There were also plans to develop 637 new apartment units on the mall property. Of those apartments, 95 units would have to be affordable, with the city able to negotiate a higher percentage. 

“We do not yet know, though, how this pandemic may have changed [the developer’s] designs,” Storey said.

Scotts Valley

In Scotts Valley, updating the inclusionary housing ordinance and ADU ordinances take priority. “We’re going to make it easier for homeowners to add those ADUs,” said Scotts Valley Mayor Derek Timm. “We’re streamlining that process, and that’s already underway.”

The city recently put out a request for an affordable housing administrator and plans to work on the existing mixed-use guidelines. 

“We also have a few large housing projects that are in planning right now,” said Timm, adding that “those are down the road a ways.”


Exhibit Pays Tribute to Santa Cruz High Students’ Pandemic Graduation

A new interactive exhibit honors the class of 2020 graduates from Santa Cruz High School and what they went through during the pandemic. 

The exhibit, called “Hats Off to Santa Cruz Grads,” includes photos and editorials collected by alumni Nick Morris and will be showcased at the Santa Cruz Art League June 17-July 24.

“I want people to take away how our young people were able to be resilient and still have a smile on their face even after going through a really sucky senior year that was nothing like they expected,” says Morris, 28. 

The exhibit will showcase photographs Morris took while the students of the class of 2020 had a “drive-in” senior celebration. He snapped pictures of the graduating students and their families during the senior celebration, which was held in vehicles on campus last summer. 

“Even though they were in their cars and couldn’t get out, they all came in caps and gowns and made an effort to make it a meaningful celebration,” says Morris. 

PHOTO: NICK MORRIS

After the student celebration, Morris was inspired to interview students and record the stories that went along with the faces and moments captured in the photos. 

“They shared their stories from their heart,” Morris says. He says he only meant to take a few shots to document history, but after being swept up in the emotions of the celebration he chose to do more for the class of 2020. 

“It’s a really unique circumstance that they were in, but how they handled it should be an inspiration to everyone,” Morris says. 

Along with Morris’ photos, the exhibit features personal stories from the graduating students about their senior year experience during the coronavirus pandemic and video, audio, and tactile displays from their graduation celebration.

“It was so uncertain when they left school that they never had the opportunity to say goodbye to their peers,” says Morris. 

PHOTO: NICK MORRIS

Through the exhibit, he wants to show the historical significance of graduating during a pandemic but, above all, he hopes it will be an opportunity for closure for the Santa Cruz High grads.

The exhibit is free and open to the public, but reservations are required due to a 12-person limit in the space. Learn more and reserve your spot at scal.org/plan-your-visit.

Film Festival Raises Funds for Two Local Bicycle Organizations

For 20 years the Bicycle Film Festival (BFF) has been celebrating bicycles through art, film and music. Originating in New York, it has popped up in 100 cities across the globe, from Paris and Tokyo to Istanbul and Mexico City.

And now the festival is coming to Santa Cruz County.

While the pandemic prevents organizers from holding in-person events, BFF will offer a virtual version of the festival hosted by two local organizations: Community Bike Collective (CBC) and Bike Santa Cruz County (BSCC).

“In a year of a global pandemic, economic strife, a contentious political period … the bicycle boom worldwide is optimistic news to celebrate,” BFF founding director Brendt Barbur stated in a press release. “We hope to offer a positive respite from all of this for people.”

The festival will be held June 11-20 and feature a curated list of short films for Santa Cruz County audiences. The festival is meant to be enjoyed by everyone, from avid cyclists to brand new riders and everything in between.

“It’s a way to celebrate all things bikes, and everything they can do for a community,” said CBC President Kymberly Lacrosse. “I think we realized that during the pandemic—bikes are a way to get to work, to exercise …. They offer freedom, are good for the environment and bring people together. I think Covid has made [that] message more poignant.”

The films selected for the Santa Cruz festival include topics such as: Jim Denevan, a Santa Cruz artist and chef who creates “land art” by bicycle, a bird’s-eye view of the Black Lives Matter protest ride in New York, the story of a young woman and her bike in Iran, and more.

“Expect films that are inspiring … that are rooted in the arts, about personal expression, and that represent experiences of bikes all over the world,” Lacrosse said.

The festival will act as a fundraiser for CBC and BSCC, who now share a space in Watsonville. CBC is a volunteer-run nonprofit aiming to provide access to quality bikes for youth, and offer them a safe, healthy experience through the sport. BSCC’s mission is to promote safe bicycling through advocacy, community building and education.

Together, the organizations are fundraising for a matching grant from the The Outride Campaign, launched by the Specialized Foundation, which aims to bring awareness of the benefits that cycling can provide to youth with ADHD. The funding will go directly to support youth programming, including the upcoming summer Bike Camp. 

Fernando Avalos, 16, has been involved with CBC for two years after a friend introduced him to the program. He said he appreciates the support and open-mindedness of the organization, declaring “they would never leave a person behind.”

“Riding makes me feel more appreciative of myself …. It expands my imagination, to go as far as I want,” he said. “To ride a bike, you need to have a clear mind. Your mind has to be on-point. Your body has to be stiff one moment and then flexible. After every ride, I feel amazing.” 

CBC and BSCC are still looking for additional sponsors and promotions for the festival. They are offering bulk tickets, where a sponsor can buy a large amount of tickets to be gifted to local youth. Individual tickets are offered on a sliding scale from $10 to $30. 

For information, to watch a trailer and to order tickets for BFF Santa Cruz, visit bicyclefilmfestival.com.


El Sistema Plans Summer Music Programs for Students

Since 2017, Pajaro Valley Unified School District (PVUSD) has partnered with nonprofit El Sistema Santa Cruz/Pajaro Valley to bring music education and performance to local students.

During the pandemic, El Sistema has continued its work both virtually and in-person, with small cohorts of students signed up through PVUSD’s Safe Spaces program. And soon they will be offering summer programs at various local schools.

“It’s really great to be working with students and giving them a sense of normalcy by providing in-person supervision and enrichment programs in a safe environment,” said El Sistema Executive Director Isabelle Tuncer. “That has been pretty rewarding, to see students we never had before starting with our program.”

El Sistema Santa Cruz was founded in 2012 at Gault Elementary School and has since expanded to Radcliff, Mintie White and Valencia elementary schools and Duncan Holbert School in Watsonville.

Students engage in daily practice and rehearsals and perform regularly throughout the community. It is mainly an Orff-based orchestra program; Orff instruments being things such as xylophones, glockenspiels and marimbas, which are considered versatile and adaptable for various skill levels. 

Instructors aim to teach students not only musical proficiency but also teamwork and the importance of becoming “responsible citizens” in their community.

“Most music is done as a group,” Tuncer said. “Listening to other students to form an ensemble, working together … it is a great skill to have.”

Originally El Sistema began in Venezuela in 1975 as a publicly financed music program by educator, musician and activist José Antonio Abreu. It continued to grow and now has programs in six other countries, including the U.S.

Instructor Juan Ospina said that he first taught through El Sistema in his home country of Columbia. When he came to Santa Cruz, he jumped at the opportunity to continue teaching with the program.

“I was surprised to see what they’d been doing here,” he said. “They approach music in a very different way. They really build relationships with these kids through music, through ensembles.”

This summer, El Sistema will be involved with two separate programs. The first is Camp Connect, organized by Extended Learning, which invites a select group of students from Aptos Junior High, Alianza Charter, Pajaro and Rolling Hills middle schools and Watsonville Charter School of the Arts.

The second will be open to students at El Sistema’s regular school locations.

Tuncer said that the close relationship with PVUSD has made it easy to jump in quickly when there’s an opportunity, or a great need such as last year’s school shutdowns. 

PVUSD Superintendent Michelle Rodriguez echoed the sentiment, saying the district has been “very fortunate” with the partnership.

“When the pandemic hit… all our partners met together and discussed how we can pivot and change,” Rodriguez said. “Many partners shifted their services, and El Sistema was one of them. This entire pandemic, they have been providing tremendous support.”

Rodriguez said that personally, she has always been supportive of music education and seen firsthand its benefits. District schools that have these types of programs are “highly outperforming” other schools in academics, she said, and students seem happier and more connected with their peers.

“What I know to be true is that when you focus on the whole child, their social and emotional needs, and to help them find school to be fun … they do better,” she said. “Especially for our most vulnerable students, this is their only access to music education.”

Added Ospina: “A lot of the kids I’ve met here, they didn’t have any contact with music before. That caught my attention. Being part of [El Sistema] is different than just music class. It’s not about curriculum … it’s about being part of an ensemble, a place where students can feel included, loved and successful.”

Tuncer said that while certain online El Sistema programming will still be used, she is very excited for more in-person practicing and performance.

“Everyone needs a people-to-people connection,” she said. “Going to school is not only to learn math or English, you go to forge relationships. Students were missing that the most. To bring music back into their life is bringing a sense of social connection that has been missing for the last year.”

Camp Connect will be held June 14-July 9. Students will be selected for the camp by the end of this month. The school program will be held July 14-Aug. 4. For more information, visit elsistemasantacruz.org, or contact participating schools.


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