Opinion: April 15, 2020

EDITOR’S NOTE

As we go into our second month of shelter-in-place in Santa Cruz County, the foremost questions on most people’s minds are “When will it end, and how?” Answers have been scarce, but in this week’s cover story, Jacob Pierce examines the question from several different angles and explains the possibilities that are being considered—some hopeful, some hard. It’s a thorough and insightful look at what lies ahead, and I urge you to read it ASAP.

Last week, I mentioned how you can support reporting like this in Good Times by donating at supportyourlocalnewspaper.com/gt. This week, I’m happy to relay that we’ve added another way to help keep local news alive in Santa Cruz County and get your weekly GT fix: subscribe, and have us delivered to your front door every Wednesday! Go to simplecirc.com/subscribe/goodtimes for details.

I also wanted to mention that Santa Cruz poet Ellen Bass will be doing a virtual reading from her new book of poetry, Indigo, on Tuesday, April 21, at 6pm (go to bookshopsantacruz.com or ellenbass.com for more information). Bass was named Best Local Poet by readers in our Best of Santa Cruz County balloting this year; you can see all the winners in the Best of Santa Cruz County magazine out on stands now, and Bass herself will be featured in next week’s issue of GT

Lastly, a correction: in announcing GT’s first-place win in the General Excellence category of the California Journalism Awards, I wrote that it was the first time the paper had won that highest of honors. Not quite! GT also took first place back in 2006, back when the awards were called the Better Newspapers Contest.

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Read the latest letters to the editor here.

STORM WARNING

Re: “Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office Will Enforce Shelter-in-Place Order” (GT online, 4/9): Our cytokines are part of our immune system that perform what may be likened to a controlled burn to thwart fire danger. A cytokines storm occurs when they are deployed so aggressively they attack and kill even the body’s own healthy tissue in a disproportional attack on a virus, a “scorched earth” approach. This is what made the Great Influenza in 1917-18 so deadly, it was the result of a cytokines storm.

There are many instances lately where otherwise young healthy individuals have died of COVID-19 and it was said to have been the result of a cytokines storm, too. This is a serious pandemic.

But I have to wonder if the recent closure of beaches, parks and other economic and social restrictions aren’t also akin to a cytokines storm? Fear can become an even greater scourge than the disease itself. 

CHUCK HARMON | SANTA CRUZ

 

BRIGHT SPOT

I am married to a Starbucks barista. He left his profitable tech job and moved to Santa Cruz to pursue some long lost hobbies and a lifestyle that was completely different from the Silicon Valley world in which he was enmeshed. He has been working for Starbucks for 12 years now, declining any managerial post, but enjoying the aspect of a community coffee shop and offering hospitality and friendship as well as the coffee.  

Starbucks has now had to close its stores—hopefully temporarily—due to the coronavirus crisis.

I was so impressed to find out that in this time of crisis, anxiety, instability, that the company offered its employees, whom they call partners, ongoing health benefits. As well, the choice to continue work with a $3 raise, or stay at home with ongoing pay, called disaster relief. They are also offering a free drink and food item daily for the employee and their family. This continues for a month, thus far. The manager personally called my husband at home to discuss which option would be best-suited to his needs, and the company’s Benefit Centre thanked him for his service, and was very helpful.

Really, in this time of uncertainty, to receive this sort of grace from a corporation feels extraordinary—and, unfortunately, unusual. I am so impressed by this humane behavior, what a bright spot in a gloomy landscape.

Linda Joshua, RNNP | Santa Cruz

 

CORRECTION

In GT’s Best of Santa Cruz County 2020 magazine, the category of Best Veterinary Clinic was mistakenly omitted. The winner in the category was Adobe Animal Hospital, with Coast Veterinary Services and Scotts Valley Veterinary Clinic the runners-up.

 


PHOTO CONTEST WINNER

The photographer shot these flowers near Water Street and Branciforte Avenue whole on one of her daily “virtual talk/walks” with her 86-year-old mom in Wisconsin. Photograph by Linda Weyers.

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

SAFE TRAVELS

Santa Cruz Metro has been cutting back service in response to the COVID-19 crisis. Now, Santa Cruz’s bus agency has reduced Highway 17 commuter service from its weekend schedule down to a new modified weekend schedule. Bus capacity is limited to a total of five to 14 passengers. Metro encourages passengers to wear face coverings. For more information visit scmtd.com or call 425-8600.


GOOD WORK

WHEEL IMPRESSIVE

Santa Cruz resident Dave Andrade went on Wheel of Fortune on Wednesday, April 8, and he could do no wrong, with his fearless play and his impressive word puzzling. The self-described full-time corgi dad and singer in the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus took home $113,000 in cash and prizes, including a trip to Barbados and a BMW X2 SUV.


QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“Everyone is in need of a shelter from the storm, be the shelter, be kind.”

-Luffina Lourduraj

Things To Do (Virtually) in Santa Cruz: April 15-21

Because in-person events across Santa Cruz County have been canceled or postponed following the shelter-in-place order, Good Times is compiling a weekly list of virtual events hosted by local artisans, artists, fitness instructors and businesses. To submit your virtual event, send an email to ca******@go*******.sc

ARTS 

BOOKSHOP SANTA CRUZ PRESENTS: ‘THE POWER OF POETRY’ Online with Zoom, Bookshop Santa Cruz presents a poetry event with Ellen Bass. In Indigo, Ellen Bass deepens her mastery of the praise poem, exploring the duality of loss and exquisite tenderness that lives at the heart of almost everything. Bass plumbs the miraculous from the stuff of life—the grit of oysters, taking an old dog out to pee in the night, shopping at Ross. In a series of aching love poems, the mandanity of marriage gives way to vivid sensuality, even under the weight of age and illness—Eros bends its neck to grieve what will be lost. A lifelong advocate for those who might otherwise go without a witness, Bass shows her compassion in these pages. She offers the ragged, beautiful world her steady attention, her devastating precision. Graceful in their melding of the narrative and the lyric, gorgeous in their complexity, these are poems to be savored. This event with Ellen Bass is part two of The Power of Poetry. To view the event description for Patrice Veccione and her book, visit the page here: bookshopsantacruz.com/ZoomEllenBass. 6pm. Tuesday, April 21. To RSVP visit mailchi.mp/ellenbass/bookshopsantacruz.

VIEWABLE VIA SOCIAL MEDIA: CABRILLO GALLERY EXHIBIT ‘SIX YEARS SMITTEN: OBJECTS OF ADORNMENT.’ We miss seeing you take your time so generously with the artwork in our gallery. But this too shall pass, and we will be able to gallivant around to different venues again someday and bump elbows. In the meantime, we hope you are making the most of hunkering down at home; tidying up, being creative, or continuing work remotely. Since there are more than 150 pieces in the show, we are posting regularly on Facebook and Instagram so you can get a daily inspirational dose of the artwork. You don’t even have to join Facebook to just tune in and see the images. They are available to everyone; you can sidestep the prompt that comes up to join or log in. 

DNA’S COMEDY LAB VIRTUAL COMEDY Who says comedy has to be in-person to be funny? We can still laugh over the internet. DNA’s Comedy Lab is hosting live standup (sit down?) in online Zoom meetings, plus their open mic and Sloth Storytelling Show, all online. Visit dnascomedylab.com for more information.

CLASSES 

PARADIGM SPORT LIVESTREAM CLASSES LIVE While we are sheltering in place, one of the best things we can do for the health of our minds is to move our bodies. When we move together as a community, connected by the desire to inspire and promote wellness, we encourage, motivate and lift each other beyond what we might think is possible. Every day at noon. 426-9500. paradigmsport.com.

TOADAL FITNESS ONLINE CLASSES Toadal Fitness is streaming live classes and workouts that don’t require much if any, workout equipment. You must be a member, so visit toadalfitness.com to sign up. Members can get access to classes at toadalfitness.com/online-classes to take a class. 

KIDS EXERCISE CLASS Stuck at home? Don’t let that stop your kids from getting quality exercise. Tune in for a fun, creative way to exercise at home! This class meets state curriculum guidelines for children’s physical education. Classes taught by bilingual trainers (English and Spanish). Our collective health is critical now more than ever! We all need to be healthy to boost our immune systems and fight this virus. We may all have to socially distance in the physical sense of the word, but we do not have to be entirely separated and isolated. All you need is a streaming device, water, Wi-Fi, and a positive attitude. Tune in to our online fitness and education sessions. Pay what you can, and together we will make a stronger, healthier, more resilient community of wellness. We hope to partner with you on your journey to optimal health to keep this going as long as possible. Please RSVP, then use this link to join our sessions: zoom.us/j/344330220. Contributions are via: Paypal: ja***@sa***********.com. Venmo: @santacruzcore. Every day at 11am. 425-9500. 

HEALTH

PSYCHEDELIC SCIENCE 2020 WEBINAR SERIES In this all-new online course, we’ll explore the latest advancements in psychedelic research, medicine, and policy and find out how to apply those lessons to our lives now and in the near future. In the Psychedelic Science 2020 Webinar Series, you’ll join host Bia Labate, Ph.D., and leaders of the psychedelic renaissance for insights into the latest research into the medical and therapeutic uses of MDMA, psilocybin, ketamine, and more. We’ll also get a sneak peek at key issues affecting the wider availability of psychedelics for healing and spirituality and explore the role of psychedelics in healing trauma. In seven sessions from April 9 through May 21, you’ll learn directly from key players in psychedelic research, therapy, and advocacy about the hottest topics in the field. You’ll also get a chance to ask your questions and have them answered in real-time. The online sessions will include 60 minutes of presentations followed by 30 minutes of Q&A from the audience. Thursdays noon-1:30pm. maps.org/webinars2020. $35 single session, $150 full series. 

GROUPS 

RESPONSE AGILITY: LEADING IN TIMES OF CRISIS WEBINAR Magi Graziano has been reflecting on how many leaders, herself included, have been thrust into the turbulence of a global health crisis and hold an immense responsibility to protect their organizations, teams, families and themselves. So, during this challenging time, she wants to offer help and guidance as everyone navigates these uncharted waters because what’s required right now is strong leadership. Specifically, attendees learn how to respond to adversity, stress, and pressure with power and ease, navigate change thoughtfully and effectively, take ownership of their experiences and recalibrate as needed. We’ll spend 45 minutes in highly impactful training and the final 15 minutes will be reserved for Q&A and connecting as colleagues to support one another. 1-2pm. Thursday, April 16. web.santacruzchamber.org/events/Response-Agility-Leading-in-Times-of-Crisis-Webinar-4209/details

VIRTUAL GUIDED MEDITATION Reduce stress with meditation and maintain a healthy lifestyle during social distancing. Join us for a free virtual session. It’s been a tough week. In our lifetimes we have never faced a public health crisis like this one. As a locally owned small business, this situation is particularly overwhelming and stressful. Yet, we are also grateful. Grateful for our amazing cohort of practitioners that want to help as many people as they can. Grateful for our dependable back office and administrative support team. And, most of all, grateful to you, our community who has helped my dream of co-creating a community of wellness become a reality. Without you, there is no Santa Cruz CORE! Please RSVP, then use this link to join our sessions: zoom.us/j/344330220. Contributions are via: Paypal: ja***@sa***********.com. Venmo: @santacruzcore. Every day at noon. 425-9500.

FOOD & DRINK 

THE TRUE OLIVE CONNECTION CURBSIDE PICK UP The True Olive Connection is offering curbside pick up two days a week. Two ways to make this happen, call in an order to 458-6457 or use web order, and select local pickup. Your items will be ready on the next available pickup day. 10am-2pm every Wednesday and Saturday. 

VIRTUAL WINE TASTING WITH INTEGRITY WINES Local winemaker Mark Hoover is hosting a “More Than Virtual/In-Home Tastings Series” at 1pm each Sunday until the tasting room reopens. To participate, order an in-home wine tasting kit ($30 each/$45 couples) for pick-up or delivery, then join Hoover via Zoom as he explains the different types and answers any questions. For more information, visit integrity.wine

OUTDOOR

EARTH WEEK WITH THE SEYMOUR CENTER Learn more about the big blue planet called Earth during the Seymour Center’s 2020 Earth Week celebration! Special at-home activities and fun arts and crafts will be available for download during the week. Runs through Sunday, April 26. seymourcenter.ucsc.edu.

MAH FILM NIGHT ‘RADICAL FUTURISMS PART I RESCREEN’ Join curator TJ Demos for a virtual introduction and (re)screening of films originally shown last month at the Del Mar Theater that seek to offer points of light in a dark world. How are visual artists imagining radical futures? How can the traditions of oppressed peoples become the foundation of the future? How can social justice and ecosystems flourish going forward? How can we escape our current climate of catastrophe and anxiety and instead transform the present into a radical future by asking what is “not-yet”? This will be screened online via Zoom, visit santacruzmah.org to RSVP for the link. 7-9pm. Wednesday, April 15. 

LIVE FEED FROM THE AQUARIUM It’s not recommended to go outside a lot at this time, but that doesn’t mean the outside can’t come to you. The Monterey Bay Aquarium has its live feeds up and running, from the jellies to the aviary. Log on to montereybayaquarium.org for more information.

NOON IN THE PARK Tune in to our livestream at noon! facebook.com/countyparkfriends. Walk a walk with us; we host virtual storytimes, special guests with yoga, music and more. Every day at noon.

What Comes After Shelter-in-Place for Santa Cruz?

Daniette West and her boyfriend took a walk with West’s dog along Sunny Cove Beach on Wednesday, April 8. The tide was low that breezy evening, exposing a rocky shoreline where seabirds swarmed as large waves crashed into the surf. This was the day before Santa Cruz County’s beaches and parks were scheduled to close, in light of the growing COVID-19 pandemic that has gripped the world.

After climbing up the cliff from the beach, West and her boyfriend stopped on a park bench to rest. They sat for about four minutes, West says, before a sheriff’s deputy rolled up behind the two of them, got out of her car, and told them they were being detained. The officer wrote them each a misdemeanor citation in violation of the county’s shelter-in-place order, which is aimed at curbing the spread of the coronavirus. The health order, issued by county Public Health Officer Dr. Gail Newel, requires that residents stay in their homes and only leave for “essential” activities, like picking up takeout from a restaurant or making trips to the grocery store, bank, gas station, hardware store or pharmacy.

Residents are allowed to exercise, so long as they keep six feet from those not in their own household. West thought a quick breather would be permitted. The deputy disagreed.

“I’m writing you a ticket because you’re resting on a bench,” West, a realtor, remembers the deputy telling her. “And you’re not allowed to rest right now.”

West’s boyfriend, a South African native who asked only to be identified only as Christian B., is employed in Silicon Valley on a work visa. When West and Christian checked in with Christian’s employer to find out what a misdemeanor would mean for his employment status, the company’s reps told them that Christian would likely be fired before the case reached a judge—thereby taking away his visa and prompting his almost certain deportation. In order to stay, Christian would need for the charges to be dropped, and quickly. West frantically took to Instagram to get the word about the predicament. She started sending out emails. She made calls to the sheriff’s department and pleaded with officers to drop the charges. West felt the citations were unduly harsh. “You’re giving people criminal records when we’re in three weeks now of shelter-in-place, and they’re trying to get exercise,” she says.

One day later, a sheriff’s lieutenant called West to apologize and explain that the deputy had interpreted the orders too strictly. But West knows that her situation was an especially high-stakes one. Law enforcement is working hard these days, she says, and leaders may not have time to revisit every case. West worries about those with fewer connections or less time on their hands. A busy single mother, for instance, may not have the resources to advocate for herself or the flexibility to appear in court when her hearing comes due. According to the ticket, failing to appear in court could result in up to 90 days in jail and a $1,000 fine.

The same evening that West was cited, a sheriff’s deputy wrote up another couple (who requested anonymity for this story) while they were sitting on a different bench on East Cliff Drive. The boyfriend had just gotten out of the hospital after recovering from kidney stones. The couple lived in Santa Cruz for years, but they’ll soon be moving back to North Dakota, where they attend school, so they were worried about making it to their court hearings in Santa Cruz in August. The sheriff’s office ultimately dropped the charges against that couple, as well, after they complained.

Sheriff Jim Hart notes that anyone with a citation against them will still get their day in court to argue their case before a judge—that is, assuming that the district attorney even files the charges. In general, Hart says that enforcing this new health order has taken some getting used to for everyone, including himself and his deputies. 

“This is new for everybody. I’ve been working at the Sheriff’s Office 32 years. I’ve lived here my whole life. This is the first time that any of us have been through a pandemic,” Hart says. “We’re trying to find that middle ground that’s not overbearing but we’re also enforcing enough to keep people away. We started out, for the first seven days, just warning people, and that had zero impact in terms of people going to the beach and things like that, so we had to go into more of an enforcement mode. We don’t like doing this. Our agency, for many years now, has used arrest as the last tool in our tool belt. So citing people and arresting people—it’s not in our culture. It’s a learning curve. Everyone from myself on down is learning from this process. We’ve written over 200 citations so far, so of course there’s going to be people who aren’t happy with those citations or think that they have mitigating circumstances.”

PARKING PERMIT

Last week, on top of the shelter-in-place order, Newel announced a seven-day closure of all the parks and beaches in the county, partly on Hart’s recommendation.

That order expires at the end of the night on Wednesday, April 15, and Newel has signalled that she won’t extend it, although some popular hotspots could stay closed. Hart tells GT that he doesn’t think that an extension would be necessary, but he hopes the Santa Cruz County Health Services Agency (HSA) takes other measures to limit the influx of out-of-town visitors packing into Santa Cruz County’s parks and beaches. 

The current shelter-in-place order expires May 3, and Newel says that she will likely extend a version of the order, while allowing for new exemptions to low-risk outdoor activities, including some construction projects, landscaping, gardening, and possibly golf.

Experts say the measures are working. The rate of disease spread, they say, is not as severe as it would have been without such interventions. Newel boasted last week that, when it comes to disease growth, Santa Cruz County has one of the flattest curves in the state of California, and she gave credit to residents for diligently following the shelter-in-place orders. As of Tuesday morning, Santa Cruz County had announced 91 confirmed COVID-19 patients, 37 of whom had recovered from the disease and two who died. Due to limited testing, the infection totals represent an undercount and the real number of cases could be several times higher.

Hart is relieved to see signs that the county’s infection rate is flattening. Some of the county’s recent projections for the impact of the virus, he says, put the death rate somewhere in the low hundreds. 

Several weeks earlier, the projected deaths were in the thousands, he says.

“The numbers they were coming up with, originally, were frightening,” says Hart—who, in addition to being sheriff, serves as the coroner and jail administrator, and is working to prevent the potential spread of the virus through local correctional facilities. “I didn’t sleep well for a few nights, after hearing what the initial assessment was going to be.”

SHUTTER TO THINK

UCSC disease ecologist A. Marm Kilpatrick knows county health leaders are working around the clock to ready local health institutions for a coming possible surge in cases, due to the virus. 

But Kilpatrick has been saying that it would be helpful for the HSA to share those plans more publicly—and tell everyone, for instance, if there is a timeline for ending shelter-in-place or a plan for what might come after.

On Tuesday, that future began to come more into focus. In addition to announcing some possible changes for outdoor gatherings and other minor tweaks, Newel revealed that she’s been collaborating with the 12 other member counties in the Association for Bay Area Health Officers to develop a new regional strategy going forward. The county won’t ease off shelter-in-place before the conditions come under control, she said. Similarly, at a press conference on April 2, Newel said that the county would “need to see a significant decline in the number of cases before” she and her colleagues consider lifting the current restrictions. She added that between the Health Services Agency and the County Administrative Office, the county has nearly 200 people working on the pandemic response. 

Newel mentioned at another press conference last week that the county has models showing different scenarios for how the outbreak might play out. Newel has shown those models to the county Board of Supervisors in closed session, but her office hasn’t yet shared them with them with the public, for fear that some of the models would alarm residents, while others might provide a false sense of comfort, she said.

In order to meet the potential surge in patients, the county is prepared to deploy alternate care sites, with hospital overflow beds ready at Simpkins Family Swim Center in Live Oak and at Scotts Valley’s 1440 Multiversity. The HSA’s more recent efforts to protect the county from disease have included everything from calls for personal protective equipment donations to a county ban on vacation rentals. Newel said last week that the county wants to make sure Airbnb hosts are only hosting “essential” workers, like those in health care.

Over the past few months, the county leadership’s disease-fighting measures have escalated steadily, starting in early March. That’s when the county switched from a strategy of containment—meaning that leaders were trying to stop its spread into the community—to one of mitigation, which prompted more extreme measures like the closure of non-essential businesses.

Shelter-in-place orders aimed at slowing disease spread have proven a popular concept among not just public health experts but also economists. A Chicago Booth School of Business poll released March 27 found widespread support among the nation’s top economists for lockdown-type measures. A plurality of respondents “strongly agreed” with the sentiment that lifting such strict measures quickly would backfire—inflicting more economic damage than good. Some felt more strongly than others, but none of the experts surveyed disagreed with that view.

But now that shelter-in-place remains the law of the land in California and across much of the world, there is little clarity on how governments should actually manage their policies over the next several weeks—let alone over the next year and a half, while we wait for a widely available vaccine.

Last week, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signaled that he would like to start opening up businesses again. Meanwhile in Sweden, the Scandinavian government’s lead health agency never fully implemented a shelter-in-place order of its own. Swedish officials have instead been pushing a more lax version of social distancing, although some experts worry that the approach could backfire, creating a bigger outbreak there. Last month, Ezekiel Emmanuel, a doctor who served in President Barack Obama’s administration, wrote a New York Times op-ed arguing that if the federal government were to act swiftly and crack down on limiting the spread of the virus, the economy could mostly open up again by June.  

California has been more cautious. In a press conference Tuesday afternoon, Gov. Gavin Newsom issued a list of six criteria that would need to be met before he lifts his statewide shelter-in-place health order. But he said it was too early to give timelines. “I know you want a timeline, but we can’t get ahead of ourselves and dream of regretting,” he said. “Let’s not make the mistake of pulling the plug too early, as much as we all want to.”

Over the next several months, the strict orders may alternately grow tighter and looser, based on the status of the pandemic at any given time, but the silver lining is that Californians can start imagining the light at the end of the tunnel, even if they can’t quite see it yet. Newel says the county may start allowing events of less than 10 people, evaluate, and possibly allow events of up to 50 people if all goes well.  

Even before the county made its recent announcements, Kilpatrick was optimistic that the county could start easing off its shelter-in-place measures before too long. That could allow the community to switch from a strategy of mitigation back to one of containment. If he’s right, residents might get to eat out at restaurants again in the coming months. More non-essential businesses could slowly start reopening.

But even Kilpatrick doesn’t think anyone will be attending events of more than 50 people before a vaccine is available. Similarly, Newsom indicated at his press conference Tuesday afternoon that there will likely have to be a vaccine before mass gatherings are allowed in California, at least based on the current guidelines, noting that “things could change radically.” 

The vaccine could still be 16 months away, Kilpatrick estimates, meaning that concertgoers and event organizers could be waiting until late in the summer of 2021 before they hit the dance floor again.

It’s a thought that troubles music industry leaders like Thomas Cussins, CEO of Ineffable Music. Ineffable manages a diverse portfolio—handling the booking for certain venues, like the Catalyst, while owning other spots like Felton Music Hall and managing artists and music festivals as well. Cussins, a UCSC alum, says he already can’t help dreaming about his first post-coronavirus concert. If the ban on events lasts past the summer, though, he predicts that many small venues will start to close. 

If it drags on longer than that, the pain will be more profound.

“If we’re talking about 10 months, if we’re talking about 16 months, a lot of us will have to switch lines of work,” Cussins says. “Obviously, entertainment is second to public health. But what does the world look like with no music? It’s a sobering reality. We’re going to do everything we can to weather the storm and come out stronger. I don’t want to get a real job. I want to do music forever.”

STEP LADDER

On Monday, Newsom jointly announced with Oregon Gov. Kate Brown and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee that the West Coast states would work together on when to reopen their economies. 

Resuming semi-normal life, of course, involves much more than simply flipping a switch. The novel coronavirus doesn’t only have a much higher fatality rate than the flu—it’s also far more contagious. That means that lifting the orders too abruptly would likely worsen the outbreak. 

Nationwide, epidemiologists—including Kilpatrick and Emmanuel—agree that the one prerequisite for lifting shelter-in-place should be a drop in the number of confirmed active cases, just as Newel indicated. Other requirements include more readily available test kits, increased lab testing capacity, and a better understanding of the coronavirus itself. 

Some of the details in the competing high-level strategies to reopen the economy are complex, but most concepts share one other notable feature—robust contact tracing. Contact tracing is a term for the practice of following the spread of a disease. The HSA already does contact tracing whenever it confirms a new coronavirus infection. Once a patient’s test results come back positive, HSA employees talk to the new patient and then reach out to all of their recent known contacts. Health workers ask those contacts to self-isolate, monitor their symptoms and see a doctor if they get sick. As more test kits become available, perhaps all the contacts in this scenario could seek out testing immediately.

There is more than one way to do contact tracing. Singapore has a phone app that tracks the movement of its citizens, and the app notifies an individual if they came in contact with someone who tested positive for the coronavirus. That resident may then go get tested themselves. This process takes the guesswork out of contact tracing. (Imagine instead trying to produce the names and contact information of anyone who came within six feet of you within a week, based purely off your memory.) Singapore’s strategies have proved successful. Schools and businesses are still open there.

As it happens, Google and Apple have begun collaborating on a Bluetooth feature to let their phone systems interact, in the hopes of helping to track the virus, but it’s unclear exactly what shape the project will take. It’s possible public local health agencies could use Google and Apple’s forthcoming feature to launch new apps of their own, although the idea has already stoked fears about new government surveillance technologies. Therein lies the uncomfortable reality about the methods of closely tracking the path of a dangerous virus—the systems inevitably involve surveillance of people, as well.

Kilpatrick says that if Americans want to see some of their favorite businesses reopen and more people employed, that may be exactly the kind of tradeoff they’ll have to start weighing.

“The challenge,” he explains, “is we have to ask ourselves, ‘Do we want to trade a little bit more privacy—or a little bit more tracking of us—for more businesses getting to be open and more people getting to have jobs?’”

Domestic Violence Calls Rise During Shelter-in-Place

Health officials across the globe have implemented shelter-in-place orders to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, requiring most people to stay in their homes.

But four weeks into Santa Cruz County’s shelter-in-place advisory, advocates of domestic violence victims say that, for some, these measures aimed at improving public safety and public health could have the opposite effect. Unable to leave their homes to seek help, victims are more likely to suffer further abuse, says Laura Segura, executive director of Monarch Services. Worse yet, the order makes it easier for abusers to isolate victims from their families and stop them from seeking help, Segura says.

“With this shelter-in-place, it makes them more vulnerable because of the isolation that they are already experiencing,” she says. “They are not able to access the networks that they typically use to seek help.”

Since Santa Cruz County Public Health Officer Dr. Gail Newel issued the order on March 16, calls to the organization’s help line have increased “significantly,” Segura says.

The organization’s crisis line has experienced a 45% increase in total calls, while its own calls for service have gone up 60%, she says.

Monarch’s emergency shelter is at capacity, and advocates are providing hotel vouchers for people who need to escape their homes. One client who asked not to be named told advocates she would rather get the coronavirus than stay in their abusive relationship.

“It’s all-hands-on-deck right now,” Segura says. “Everyone is working 24 hours, and we’re all available on call. We’re as busy as can be, but we’re grateful to be able to provide this service for people that are in crisis.”

On top of all that, Segura says that the organization is worried about funding, and Monarch is looking to apply for grants.

Julie Macecevic, executive director of the Walnut Avenue Family and Women’s Center, says that her call lines have been “eerily silent.” This can be just as ominous as a flood of calls, she says, since it can mean that victims are unable to seek help. (Neither the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Department nor Watsonville Police Department reported an uptick in domestic violence calls.)

Macecevic adds that many victims need an excuse to leave their homes—such as taking their kids to school or going to the grocery store—to be able to seek help. 

“Domestic violence victims are super controlled by their abusers,” she says. 

Macecevic predicts that domestic violence organizations will get flooded with calls for help once the shelter-in-place order lets up.

Katie Ray-Jones, chief executive officer of the National Domestic Violence Hotline, says calls, texts and chats to the hotline remain in the average of 1,800-2,000 per day.

But advocates are seeing an increase in the number of survivors who say their abusive partner is using COVID-19 to further isolate, coerce, or increase fear in the relationship, Ray-Jones says.

Victims’ advocates are also bracing for the financial repercussions of the coronavirus.

With an economic recession on the horizon, victims will be financially less able to leave an abusive situation, Segura says.

“When there are difficult economic times,” she says, “we see people struggling financially and it creates more stressors in the family to an already vulnerable situation.”

Advocates saw a similar fallout during the economic recession of 2008.

In those situations, victims are frequently left with few options, Macecevic says.

“The biggest reason that survivors return to the homes of their abusers is that they have no means to support themselves,” she says. 

Like Macecevic, Segura says that her organization is likely to see more domestic violence calls as the recession drags on.

The most important message, both Macecevic and Segura say, is that confidential help is available 24 hours a day from advocates trained to give advice, offer help and create a safety plan.

“We can walk them through the process,” Segura says.

Anyone who hears or sees a suspected domestic violence situation can also call those numbers for advice.

“This is going to continue on for a while,” Segura says, “so it’s really important that we come together as a community to get through this and support each other.”


Resources

Walnut Avenue Family and Women’s Center 

Main line: 426-3062

Hotline: 866-2my-ally (866-269-2559)

Monarch Services

24-hour confidential, bilingual crisis line: 888-900-4232 

National Domestic Violence Hotline

800-799-7233

Chat: thehotline.org or text “loveis” to 22522

Business Dries Up After Initial Rush of Cannabis Panic Buying

First, there was the New Green Rush. In the early days of coronavirus panic buying last month, cannabis dispensaries in Santa Cruz County and around the country were doing brisk business. Then the rush dried up, and dispensaries found themselves staring down the same bleak economic realities that so many businesses are right now.

The crazy thing is that the mainstream media’s message hasn’t changed with that new reality. They’re still reporting on long lines outside dispensaries, even though those lines are now due to social distancing rather than record sales, says Colin Disheroon, president and CEO of Santa Cruz Naturals.

“Here’s what I saw, and I think most of my colleagues would agree: There was a panic buy, a big rush. People were freaking out and bought a bunch. Then that calmed down, and our sales declined pretty dramatically,” Disheroon says. “Media has been pumping it up that dispensaries are crushing it, but all dispensary operators are saying the same thing: Sales are down 20% at least. And the lines out the door are because people have to have six-feet separation.”

There were a number of factors that led to the shift in dispensaries’ fortunes, he says.

“People were stocked up, that was part of it. People were also getting real about, ‘I’m not going out.’ And people who can’t figure out online ordering are frustrated. So there’s kind of this triple whammy going on,” Disheroon says.

Changing how they operate—in the case of Santa Cruz Naturals, going from less than 5% online sales to more than 90% online sales—has been just one of many challenges in a month that also saw shifting orders from the county on how dispensaries could conduct business and emergency implementation of new cleaning and distancing protocols. Like health care and grocery store workers, dispensary employees suddenly found themselves on the front lines of an industry deemed “essential” during the COVID-19 pandemic.

It’s been rough and pretty stressful,” says Jenna Gallant, marketing director for Treehouse Dispensary. “The primary thing we worried about was the safety of our staff.”

“Whether we remain open all depends on the health of our staff,” says Cole Hembree, owner of Curbside Exchange. “None of us can get tested right now. We have a very small staff. For now, we seem to be OK. But who knows?”

Of course, there’s a certain irony to cannabis dispensaries’ designation during the coronavirus era: They’re still considered illegal by the federal government. Recently, in fact, Disheroon wrote to Assemblymember Mark Stone to lay out how federal measures like Section 280E of the tax code—which prohibits deductions for any business that “consists of trafficking in controlled substances”—are crippling the cannabis industry.

“And now we’re considered ‘essential’ businesses all over the U.S.,” Disheroon says. “So we’re essential business for the state, we’re generating all this tax revenue, and yet at the same time the federal government is still punishing us.”

Deputy County Administrative Officer Melodye Serino grasps the irony, especially at a time when businesses across the country are seeking money from the federal government—money that dispensaries can’t get, which makes their situation all the more precarious.

The cannabis industry is very unique—they don’t have access to any federal stimulus money,” Serino says. “Dispensaries can’t get small business loans or access any other funds that are available to most other small businesses. They are dependent on customer transactions to survive. If customers stop coming to them, that’s a big problem.”

Disheroon says he is now starting to see sales rebound somewhat, but it’s clear that the cannabis industry is in for a wild ride. He’s getting a lot of calls from customers with questions about the safest way to get their weed. Incredibly, many dispensaries are still seeing clients coming in for very small orders like a single pre-roll (basically a pre-rolled joint). Part of their job now is teaching people how to rethink an established culture in a time of crisis.

“People still see the cannabis experience as a social opportunity,” Disheroon says. “But we’re really encouraging people to stock up and reduce the number of visits—to spend more, and then stay home.”

Click here for a guide to how every Santa Cruz dispensary is operating in the wake of the shelter-in-place mandate.

Santa Cruz Police Cite Seven Out-of-Towners at 7-Eleven

Now we know what the “seven” in 7-Eleven stands for.

A group of seven Fremont residents got hit with $7,000 in fines—$1,000 each—on Friday, April, 10 for hanging out at the convenience store chain’s Ocean Street franchise, in violation of the shelter-in-place order, according to a Facebook post from the Santa Cruz Police Department (SCPD).

“If you are not from Santa Cruz and you put our community at risk, you will get a ticket,” the post read, along with a photo of seven men sitting on a curbside.

That same caption added that the pandemic crisis is no time for a fun hangout—especially under shelter-in-place orders in effect from both Santa Cruz County Health Officer Gail Newel and from Gov. Gavin Newsom.

As of midday Monday, the post had garnered 9,000 shares.

In a comment on the post, Michael Torres framed the crackdown as an instance of government overreach.

“That’s not police work. That’s not something to be proud of. Sounds like you guys are giving out citations to anyone out getting a walk or minding their own business,” wrote Torres, who added that he does love SCPD and so much of the work that the department does. “Police departments should be the ones protecting our people, not enforcing unruly and ridiculous.”

Commenter Malia Murillo had less sympathy. “What aren’t people getting about this?” she asked, also in the comments. “There shouldn’t be any reason people are just hanging out … especially if you’re living in an area where it’s considered a hot spot for a virus that is sweeping our nation.”

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology: April 15-21

Free will astrology for the week of April 15, 2020

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries artist Vincent van Gogh got started on his life’s work relatively late. At ages 25 and 26 he made failed attempts to train as a pastor and serve as a missionary. He didn’t launch his art career in earnest until he was 27. During the next ten years, he created 860 paintings—an average of 1.7 every week—as well as more than 1,200 additional works of art. For comparison, the prolific painter Salvador Dali made 1,500 paintings in 61 years. During the coming twelve months, Aries, you could achieve a van Gogh-like level of productiveness in your own chosen field—especially if you lay the foundations now, during our stay-at-home phase.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Most authors do their writing while sitting on chairs in front of desks. But long before there were standing desks, poet Rainer Maria Rilke and children’s author Lewis Carroll wrote their books while standing up. Novelist Henry James had eight desks, but typically paced between them as he dictated his thoughts to a secretary. And then there have been weirdos like poet Robert Lowell and novelist Truman Capote. They attended to their craft as they lay in their bed. I suggest you draw inspiration from those two in the coming weeks. It will be a favorable time to accomplish masterpieces of work and play while in the prone position.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): While sleeping, most of us have more than a thousand dreams every year. Many are hard to remember and not worth remembering. But a beloved few can be life-changers. They have the potential to trigger epiphanies that transform our destinies for the better. In my astrological opinion, you are now in a phase when such dreams are more likely than usual. That’s why I invite you to keep a pen and notebook by your bed so as to capture them. For inspiration, read this testimony from Jasper Johns, whom some call America’s “foremost living artist”: “One night I dreamed that I painted a large American flag, and the next morning I got up and I went out and bought the materials to begin it.” (Painting flags ultimately became one of Johns’ specialties.)

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ford Madox Ford (1873–1939) was a renowned author who wrote The Good Soldier, a novel that has been called “one of the 100 greatest novels of all time.” Yet another very famous author, Henry James (1843–1916), was so eager to escape hanging out with Ford that he once concealed himself behind a tree so as to not be seen. You have astrological permission to engage in comparable strategies during the coming weeks. It won’t be a time when you should force yourself to endure boring, meaningless, and unproductive tasks.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): I hope that during the coronavirus crisis you have been entertaining wild truths and pondering the liberations you will initiate when the emergency has passed. I trust you have been pushing your imagination beyond its borders and wandering into the nooks and crannies of your psyche that you were previously hesitant to explore. Am I correct in my assumptions, Leo? Have you been wandering outside your comfort zone and discovering clues about how, when things return to normal, you can add spice and flair to your rhythm?

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): I like this quote by the author Jake Remington: “Fate whispers to the warrior, ‘You cannot withstand the storm.’ The warrior whispers back, ‘I am the storm.’” Although this passage is more melodramatic than necessary for your needs in the coming weeks, I think it might be good medicine that will help you prevail over the turbulence of the coronavirus crisis. Getting yourself into a storm-like mood could provide you with the personal power necessary to be unflappable and authoritative. You should also remember that a storm is not inherently bad. It may be akin to a catharsis or orgasm that relieves the tension and clears the air.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran rapper and activist Talib Kweli says, “You have to know when to be arrogant. You have to know when to be humble. You have to know when to be hard and you have to know when to be soft.” You Librans tend to be skilled in this artful approach to life: activating and applying the appropriate attitude as is necessary for each new situation. And I’m happy to report that your capacity for having just the right touch at the right time will be a crucial asset in the coming weeks. Trust your intuition to guide you through every subtle shift of emphasis.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Scorpio artist Marie Laurencin (1883–1956) enjoyed a colorful fate. One of the few female Cubist painters, she was a prominent figure in the Parisian avant-garde. She was also the muse and romantic partner of renowned poet Guillaume Apollinaire. But there came a turning point when she abandoned her relationship with Apollinaire. “I was twenty-five and he was sleeping with all the women,” she said, “and at twenty-five you don’t stand for that, even from a poet.” Is there a comparable situation in your life, Scorpio? A role you relish but that also takes a toll? Now is a favorable time to re-evaluate it. I’m not telling you what you should decide, only that you should think hard about it.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Sagittarian sculptor and architect Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1596–1680) was a prodigious, inventive creator. One scholar wrote, “What Shakespeare is to drama, Bernini may be to sculpture.” He designed and built public squares, fountains, and buildings, many in Rome, which embodied his great skills as both sculptor and architect. Unlike many brilliant artists alive today, Bernini was deeply religious. Every night for 40 years, he walked from his home to pay a devotional visit to the Church of the Gesù. According to my reading of the astrological factors, now would be an excellent time for you to engage in reverential rituals like those—but without leaving your home, of course. Use this social-distancing time to draw reinvigoration from holy places within you or in your memory.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): As I understand the current chapter of your life story, you have been doing the unspectacular but yeoman work of recharging your spiritual batteries. Although you may have outwardly appeared to be quiet and still, you have in fact been generating and storing up concentrated reserves of inner power. Because of the coronavirus crisis, it’s not yet time to tap into those impressive reserves and start channeling them into a series of dynamic practical actions. But it is time to formulate the practical actions you will take when the emergency has passed.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Aquarian poet Jacques Prévert offered a variation on the famous Christian supplication known as the Lord’s Prayer. The original version begins, “Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name.” But Prévert’s variation says, “Our father who art in heaven: Stay there.” Being an atheist, he had no need for the help and support of a paternal deity. I understand his feeling. I tend to favor the Goddess myself. But for you Aquarians right now, even if you’re allergic to talk of a divine presence, I’ll recommend that you seek out generous and inspiring masculine influences. According to my reading of the astrological omens, you will benefit from influences that resemble good fathering.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): How skillful are you in expressing what you want? Wait. Let me back up and reformulate that. How skillful are you in knowing what you want and expressing the truth about what you want to the people who might ultimately be able to give it to you or help you get it? This is the most important question for you to meditate on in the coming weeks. If you find that you’re fuzzy about what you want or hazy about asking for what you want, correct the problems.

Homework: For three days, uphold your highest ideal in every little way you can imagine. Report results at freewillastrology.com.

Frootie Flavors Adapts to the Times with Livestreamed Album Release

In 2004, local queer dance band Frootie Flavors was approached by a friend with an unusual request: their three-year-old child wanted the group to do a live set at her birthday party.

Actually, a lot of their friends’ kids were big fans of Frootie Flavors’ highly infectious music. But most of the band members’ friends stopped playing the band’s music in front of their kids once they were old enough to understand the lyrics. Songs like “Pussy Chugger” and “Quiffe” are not exactly kid-friendly, after all.

Frootie Flavors played the show of course, but they changed all the lyrics to be age appropriate. “It’s Yer Butt,” became “It’s My Bike.” The song “Butt Pirates” became a fun song about playing pirates with your friends in the backyard.

“The kids had a blast and danced their little butts off. It was a great show,” says drummer and vocalist Vnes Ely. The rest of the band includes Stu “Dirt” Doogan on guitar and vocals and Valerie Atha Andromacha on bass and vocals. “The parents cracked up when they heard the different lyrics. Their laughter made us laugh really hard.”

This show got them thinking that they should really put a kid’s album out someday. It was a conversation that came up every once in a while but never came to fruition. But now the long-awaited kid’s album is finished and they plan to release it this summer. Called simply The Kids Album, it is going to be just like that concert—pre-existing Frootie Flavors songs, but with brand new lyrics. Fun for the whole family!

But for fans looking for some brand-new and not-so-kid-friendly Frootie Flavors tunes, they’ll also be releasing their official sophomore album Poon Tunes on April 17. It’ll have a lot of the new music the group has written since their 2012 debut album, We Love To Party With Everybody

“We’re finally getting all of these documented and gifting them to our community who wants to hear these things,” Ely says. “So it’s fun.”

The record is fun, which has been the Frootie Flavors’ modus operandi since they formed back in 1995. One new song pays homage to local burlesque performer Balla Fire, and another celebrates Santa Cruz’ plethora of punk rock parents. There are also a few serious tunes, like album opener “They/Them,” which the group hopes will educate people on gender-neutral pronouns—and more importantly, how to deal with a situation where they accidentally misgender someone they meet.

But plenty of the songs are naughty. For example, “Quiffe,” which is not only about quiffes, even has a live quiffe track in the mix. As shocking as some of their songs can seem, the silliness of the music makes it inclusive, even for people in the straight world not used to such open discussions about queer topics.

“We’ve definitely played some places where it’s a very straight audience. People were not knowing anything about us, and they hear our wacky-ass lyrics, and they laugh. They have a good time. By the end of the night, they’re having the best time, and they feel like part of the big queer family,” Ely says. “The queer family is not just about homosexuality, or trans or anything. It’s about diversity. True diversity, which means all of us.”  

The group originally planned to do a big queer dance party release show at the Poet and the Patriot on April 17, but due to the coronavirus-quarantine orders they are bringing the public a livestream Frootie Flavors album release party. It might be a little different than what they were planning, but it’ll be just as fun and important for Santa Cruz.

“When I speak to people about queer issues, I look to them and I include them. In my mind, they are part of this queer family. I feel like that’s how we are as a band,” Ely says. “This is us, and if you relate to this, you’re going to jump on, and if you don’t, you might either find yourselves starting to relate to it or move on. We’re playing not just for the queer world, but we’re playing as the out queer people that we are. We’ve always been queer leaders for our community.”  

Frootie Flavors will livestream the release of their album ‘Poon Tunes’ on Friday, April 17, at 7pm at facebook.com/FrootieFlavors

The End of Woe: Risa’s Stars April 15-21

Esoteric astrology as news for the week of April 15, 2020 

The Great Invocations invoke the appearance of a Divine Intermediary, sacred messenger to guide humanity through our present isolation. Energy, its descent from above, responds to appeal and demand. When reciting the Invocations, we become part of the “precipitation” of invisible energies, the purpose of which is to aid and assist humanity in times of need. These energies wait for humanity to call them forth.

During widespread differences and disputes, the Three Great Invocations create the healing and illumination humanity needs. As I wrote before, these Invocations when recited create the “thought-form of solution to world problems.” Should we penetrate into the vital meaning of the words, we discover they embody a formula of livingness created at the founding of the Earth itself.

These stanzas are offered because humanity, in crisis, is now able to comprehend their deep mantric meanings. The Invocations summon a synthesis of light, love, power, intelligence and creativity within humanity. All lines of life (above and below) meet in humanity. The New Group of World Servers invites everyone to join the daily recitation of the Three Great Invocations. When we do so, our lives become resonant, responsive, useful, purposeful and meaningful. Our light within then touches all lives everywhere. The world harmonizes. And the raincloud of knowable things appears.

Great Invocation Two: Let the Lords of Liberation issue forth. Let them bring succour to the sons of men. Let the Rider from the Secret Place come forth. And coming, save. Come forth, O Mighty One. Let the souls of men awaken to the light. And may they stand with massed intent. Let the fiat of the Lord go forth: The end of woe must come! Come forth, O Mighty One. The hour of service of the saving force has now arrived. Let it be spread abroad, O Mighty One. Let Light and Love and Power and Death Fulfill the purpose of the Coming One. The will to save is here. The love to carry forth the work is widely spread abroad. The active aid of all who know the truth is also here. Come forth, O Mighty One, and blend these three. Construct a great defending wall. The rule of evil now must end. Om.

ARIES: Your true calling comes forth. No longer just a burning ground of aspiration, as the world begins to reorient everywhere, your initiating abilities appear, you gather philosophical beliefs and goals. Now at the highest level in terms of world work, you begin to see your career emerging in terms of how you serve the culture, build the new civilization, how you serve humanity so their gifts come forth, too. You’re at the doorstep.

TAURUS: So often you remained in the shadows, didn’t speak up, thought others would do a better job. This gave you time to develop needed strength and stamina, awareness and abilities. Now remaining behind the scenes is no longer advisable. It’s time for you to communicate, teach, lead, facilitate, and make the transition from dark room to lighted world. You offer hope to humanity, illuminate their minds with the “waters of life.”

GEMINI: Much of your life has been about observing the needs of others and stepping into the field of service. This has been good. However, there comes a time when your focus must shift from other to self. That time is now. You need new study, new people, new information. However, something within you hesitates. What is it? Have you lost your way?

CANCER: Who you’ve been will no longer be who you are. What you’ve been asked to do is no longer what you can do. All the responsibilities you’ve assumed for so long will begin to annoy and irritate you. You will gradually want fewer tasks and more time for solitude and contemplation. Your creative gifts come forth seeking to be acknowledged. What are they? You need more edible flowers.

LEO: Over and over you’ll review plans, agendas, and rituals in your daily life. And over and over these will continue to change. They concern your work, health and all environments you find yourself in. Old concepts turn to new; discoveries break the mold of previous belief systems; your health needs change. You’ll seek new settings that allow for freedom as well as protection. Later you pursue people, places and the very things your heart desires.

VIRGO: Three words: creativity, opportunity, options. These will be meaningful in certain areas of life. Gates will open, the sun will shine in your garden, and a new creative impulse appears making you feel not so alone. You’ve made adjustments while living on hope. Soon, new times will come, a new self-expression, too. And a new philosophy takes you on a new journey. You’ll need sturdy shoes.

LIBRA: All that’s important to you, all that formed your beliefs and foundations, will be revised. This is a part of growing up. You took a path into a new world long ago. You learned new understandings, eliminated all that restricted your identity. You seek to build a new path now, based upon a change of values, a sense of self-assurance, and knowing that the coming brave new world will support you. As you change, the world changes. Do turn back to something left behind. Embrace it.

SCORPIO: You will find the need to speak the truth in many situations. Usually you stand aside, allow others to be the voice of society. However, these times call for your voice of reason, allowing no false information to pass you by. You are aware of the impact of untruthfulness and of speaking in ways hurtful to others. Your work becomes a response to world events. Destiny calls. It’s within your heart, written in the stars. You are the truth and it sets you free.

SAGITTARIUS: Usually one thinks of Sag as philosophically minded. However, recently you’ve become security minded—wondering, as you age, how to prepare and build a strong system of resources for later times. It feels like destiny has arrived. You sense this and attempt to bring forth purpose, energy and passion to whatever you believe in. And so, the question is what do you believe in? What is most important to you now? The answers, when contemplated, may surprise you.

CAPRICORN: You have stepped into power, a most interesting situation.  Authority figures, not understanding the energy of relationship or astrology, may feel you’re challenging them. At times, your presence challenges previous beliefs of those in authority. You bring revolutionary change. And so, what does this mean for you? A call to leadership requiring you to display your ability to lead with both love and will, as you stand within the center of power. You’ll be learning this. It’s not easy. You can do it.

AQUARIUS: As outer world events continue to change, you turn inward, in order to understand events and requirements of the coming new era. It will only be your inner environment that can provide context to the outside world, as only your inner world understands the truth of all matters, including right direction and right attitude and how to shine a bright new light on all business matters. Life calls you forth into greater humanitarian endeavors. You will understand more of this later.

PISCES: New opportunities and decisions will present themselves concerning your work in the world, your career, and how you’re recognized. You seek an expansion, a greater impact on humanity, so a larger humanitarian picture can unfold. You are affected by the needs of humanity and will call forth new purpose, new endeavors, and the outworking of a dream and vision held for generations. Hold on. It’s almost time.  

Farmers’ Markets Adopt Practices to Survive the COVID-19 Era

The folks who get it together for our bountiful farmers’ markets have worked creatively and smartly to keep the markets safe, functioning, and open. 

It’s a challenge responding to the current shelter-in-place order. Our markets have increased staffing and adapted operating systems so local patrons can access the freshest foods. But there’s another major consideration here in addition to the public welfare. And that’s everybody’s desire to keep our small, regional farms alive. 

“Farmers are a scarce resource in modern times, and we cannot bear to lose them under the weight of this economic hardship,” says Santa Cruz Farmers’ Markets’ Events Coordinator Nicole Zahm

Before the shutdown last month, organic growers had important alliances with local restaurant kitchens. Farm to table dining has long been a fixture for us and a cash flow for growers. But a closed restaurant orders no produce. Certified farmers’ markets are considered essential food outlets and as a result the Downtown, Westside, and Live Oak markets are continuing to operate each week under a new set of market protocols. 

Vendors use gloves, masks and a hand washing station. Gone is the sampling of gorgeous produce. Gone are seats and tables, music, and kids zones. Customers can no longer squeeze every lemon and handle each artichoke. Social distancing requires that vendor stands are spaced farther apart with clearly marked customers lines to help maintain six feet of separation. 

We need to adapt to this new reality, which is definitely not the social event that shopping the farmers’ market has always been. But we can do this. And if we do, they’ll stay in business and we’ll all wake up together and move on with our freshly harvested lives.

santacruzfarmersmarket.org.

Some savvy growers are converting most of their operations to online. Dirty Girl Produce for example offers amazing pickup boxes of veggies including beans and jarred tomatoes ($40), and salad makings ($20)—free home delivery with a $40 minimum. Or pick up your order on Wednesday at Downtown Farmers’ Market, Thursday at Home restaurant in Soquel, or Sunday at the Live Oak Farmers’ Market. 

dirtygirlproduce.com.

Live Earth Farm offers grab and go $20 produce boxes at farmers’ markets, with plans for a customized CSA delivery option on Fridays. Check online with your favorite growers and see if they’re expanding to offer online orders for pickup or delivery.

liveearthfarm.net.

Love Apple Farm and the New Victory Garden

Join the growing number of foodies who crave the freshest vegetables. Plant a spring tomato garden so that you’ll be able to fuel great salads, sides, and pasta sauces all summer long. Love Apple Farm has streamlined the process for you, from online ordering to having your order brought out to your car. First you preorder from the website. Then you make an appointment to pick up your plants. This limits the shoppers coming in to just six per hour. Only one person can enter to pick up. No couples, kids, or dogs. Stations are eight feet apart to avoid social contact. There is lots to choose from. 

Love Apple Farm, 5311 Scotts Valley Drive, Scotts Valley. growbetterveggies.com

Bittersweet Bistro in Aptos has set up a mini market for the community loaded with essentials like milk, eggs, pastas & sauce, paper products, wine and lots of other dinner items. Check out your options as well as Bittersweet’s takeout menu items and half-price wines. 

Bittersweet Bistro, 787 Rio Del Mar Blvd, Aptos. 662-9799, bittersweetbistro.com/bittersweet-mini-market

Lend a Helping Hand  

Woodstock’s Pizza has a “double your dough-nation” fundraiser to help provide food to people in need. Woodstock’s will match every dollar donated. The partnership with the Salvation Army will provide free pizza to people who are sick, health care workers, people who have lost their jobs, and people experiencing homelessness. The goal is to provide at least 800 meals and the community is already halfway toward meeting that, Business Development Manager Emiley Stake says. 

gofundme.com/f/double-your-doughnation-woodstock039s-pizza-cruz


Check out our continually updating list of local takeout and delivery options.

Opinion: April 15, 2020

Plus letters to the editor

Things To Do (Virtually) in Santa Cruz: April 15-21

Wine tasting, Earth Week celebrations, film screenings, and more things to do virtually

What Comes After Shelter-in-Place for Santa Cruz?

Experts assess options for how and when to ease off shelter-in-place measures

Domestic Violence Calls Rise During Shelter-in-Place

Monarch Services’ emergency shelter for domestic violence victims is at capacity

Business Dries Up After Initial Rush of Cannabis Panic Buying

Cannabis dispensaries are considered ‘essential’ in California but can’t get federal stimulus money

Santa Cruz Police Cite Seven Out-of-Towners at 7-Eleven

Cops fine Fremont residents for violating shelter-in-place orders

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology: April 15-21

Astrology, Horoscope, Stars, Zodiac Signs
Free will astrology for the week of April 15, 2020

Frootie Flavors Adapts to the Times with Livestreamed Album Release

Local queer dance group debuts second album ‘Poon Tunes’

The End of Woe: Risa’s Stars April 15-21

risa's stars
Esoteric astrology as news for the week of April 15, 2020

Farmers’ Markets Adopt Practices to Survive the COVID-19 Era

Santa Cruz Farmers’ Markets continue providing fresh foods
17,623FansLike
8,845FollowersFollow