Santa Cruz’s Best Bites of 2019

Calamari is so easy to loveโ€”and so hard to cook perfectly.

Itโ€™s turned up in quite a few of my favorite dishes of the year. A platter of tender grilled squid adorned with English peas and bits of rich pork belly made one lunch at Avanti Santa Cruz an enduring memory. But perhaps the most memorable calamari of the year was a tapas dish at Barceloneta in downtown Santa Cruz filled with succulent morsels of grilled Monterey squid, fideos pasta and finely diced chorizo, all bathed in black squid ink with spicy little peppers and piquant aioli. I could eat three plates of it right now.

At the chic bookshop-cafรฉ Bad Animal, a glass of one of the house bubblies, Crรฉmant de Bourgogne from Cรฉline & Laurent Tripoz, was a lively partner to an earthy and authentically French patรฉ served with dijon mustard, cornichons and outstanding sourdough bread. This dish made sense of a crazy world. And the sparkling wine didnโ€™t hurt.

Bantam is always welcoming, a serious restaurant disguised as a neighborhood pizza joint. On one of my trips to the intimate barโ€”for something with gin in it, plus an appetizerโ€”I found culinary salvation. An elegant creation of a single plump, grilled scallop arrived astride a miniature landscape of black lentils surrounded by avocado cream. The scallop was perfectโ€”tender inside, golden and crisp outside. Crimson Jimmy Nardello peppers joined the shellfish, and everything shimmered with an intense citrus oil. A spectacular constellation of flavors and textures.

The Kitchen at Discretion Brewing offers plenty of gastronomic seduction, but it was that plate of tempura eggplant with a soy-citrus reduction and aioli all dusted with red pepper togarashi that had us well and truly enchanted. Thanks Santos Majano! I would drive from the Westside, even during rush hour, for this dish.

From chef Tom McNaryโ€™s kitchen at Soif came a gorgeous small plate of Vietnamese-style grilled quail accompanied by rosy butter leaf lettuce, pickled onions and slices of spectacularly ripe tomatoes. The glazed quail was tender-chewy wonderful, especially dipped into a tart and fiery vinegar sauce laced with chilis and shallots.ย 

From La Postaโ€™s kitchen came an elegant dessert of barely sweet ricotta pear tart, embedded with almonds and glazed pear and served with a housemade Meyer lemon gelato. An adult dessert made with flair, filled with dazzle.

At the Homeless Garden Projectโ€™s Sustain Supper last autumn, I swooned over an ensemble of desserts from chef Laci Sandoval of Wind & Rye. All were beautiful, but for sheer sex appeal, nothing topped her densely creamy chocolate espresso tart inflected with candied orange zest and sea salt. Brilliant combination of sensations.

The ethereal GF Carrot Cake from Manresa Breadโ€”available at Verve locations throughout Santa Cruzโ€”always knocks me out. Light and addictively flavorful, this buttery little tea cake is shaped into a miniature round studded with carrots, spices and walnuts. A spectacular achievement in gluten-free sin.

At Oswald, the drinks are perfection and the bar food sophisticated. Along with an evening special gin cocktail with pomegranate juice, blood orange and lime, I was transported (and not for the first time) by an appetizer of Dungeness crab layered with avocado and lemon zest. Great service, great food, and the chance to see everybody in town. One of the great dining moments of 2019. I look forward to many more in the New Year!

5 Things To Do in Santa Cruz: Dec. 18-24

A weekly guide to whatโ€™s happening

Green Fixย 

Holiday Lights Train

Canโ€™t get a ride on Santaโ€™s sleigh? Donโ€™t worry, get a lift to the North Pole the next best way. And by โ€œNorth Pole,โ€ we mean the amazing Santa Cruz Mountains. Itโ€™s the Santa Cruz Holiday Lights Train, with spiced cider and holiday carols to spark up the cheer. Kids, neighbors, grandmas, friends, friends we havenโ€™t met yetโ€”all aboard!

INFO: 5 and 6:30pm through Monday, Dec. 23. Leaves from the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, Neptuneโ€™s Kingdom, 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz. roaringcamp.com. Adults $34/children $28.

Art Seenย 

Toy Trainsย 

Destined to delight both the young and young at heart, the MAHโ€™s annual Toy Trains exhibit is a marvel of astonishingly lifelike trains and landscapes to inspire any age group this holiday season. The event showcases model trains through history, from the 1920s to today, and includes steam engines, electric trains and all of the bells and whistles to boot. Members of the Golden State Toy Train Operators will be on hand to help young engineers master the controls and answer questions. Bring your own toy train to put on the track.ย 

INFO: Show runs Friday, Dec. 20-Sunday, Dec. 29. Museum of Art and History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. Free.

Saturday 12/21ย 

โ€˜Christmas with the Choraleโ€™

The Santa Cruz Chorale will open this season with their traditional December holiday concert Christmas with the Chorale. As always, the Santa Cruz Chorale will be joined by the Monterey Bay Sinfonietta. The centerpiece of the concert will be Dietrich Buxtehudeโ€™s Magnificat for choir and instruments, presented alongside a cappella โ€œMagnificat,โ€ with settings by Anton Bruckner, Max Reger and Arvo Pรคrt, whose famous โ€œMagnificatโ€ was composed especially for Christian Grube and his Berlin boysโ€™ choir. A special treat in the program is the world premiere of a piece by Estonian Pรคrt Uusberg. Conductor Christian Grube has also selected a variety of pieces that express the many meanings of Christmas, from composers like Kodaly, Vaughan Williams, Tavener, and Paminger. The Christmas program will close with carols from around the world.ย 

INFO: 8pm. Holy Cross Church, 126 High St., Santa Cruz. 427-8023, santacruzchorale.org. $30.ย 

Thursday 12/19ย 

Dem Debate Watch Partyย 

The sixth of 12 Democratic presidential debates will be broadcast live from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. The Santa Cruz County Democratic Central Committee is hosting a special Dem debate watch party, which is also a good place to go to commiserate about that one time you stood in line for hours to see Bernie in Santa Cruz and didnโ€™t actually get into the venue.

INFO: 5-8pm. Santa Cruz County Democratic Party, 740 Front St. #165, Santa Cruz. 427-2516, cruzdemocrats.org. Free.ย 

Saturday 12/21ย 

Oberufer โ€˜Shepherdsโ€™ Playโ€™

This special show has been performed every year since medieval times by people around the world. An annual holiday tradition, the Oberufer Shepherdsโ€™ Play is a unique community Christmas event that tells the Christmas story from the point of view of the shepherds in a unique, humorous and warm-hearted way. Featuring amateur and professional local actors and musicians, this yearโ€™s play will be one night only. The cast is drawn from the Santa Cruz Waldorf School, the Anthroposophical Branch and the Camphill Communities California.ย 

INFO: 6pm. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. 212-1947. $12 general/$8 children.

Opinion: December 18, 2019

EDITOR’S NOTE

Our art director Tabi Zarrinnaal was reading over this weekโ€™s Year in Review cover story when she suddenly looked up from one of the items and said, โ€œWait, did this really happen?โ€ For the GT writers that put this together every year, thatโ€™s music to our ears. Because yes, every story we included did really happenโ€”we promise. But in a lot of cases, we picked them because we ourselves still canโ€™t really believe they did, so if we can write about them in a way that effectively conveys that quality of sheer head-shaking, face-scrunching defiance of reality, weโ€™ve done our job. Do you believe in crazy squirrel? Do you believe in the flier bandit? Do you believe in Highway 17 goats? Well, you should, because theyโ€™re all real, even if they have no right to be.

Of course, weโ€™ve also gathered Santa Cruzโ€™s strangest political news stories into our rundown, too, but honestly, none of that stuff even surprises us anymore.

Just one more holiday surprise: we are soooo close to our Santa Cruz Gives goal of raising $300,000 for local nonprofits this year. Read about some of our participating groupsโ€”like how Second Harvest Food Bank, Food What?!, and Mesa Verde Gardens are helping local residents left behind by the ever-more-ridiculous rules of government food-assistance programs (page 11) and what drives Grey Bears volunteers to bring healthy food to seniors each week (page 60)โ€”and then go to santacruzgives.org and be part of the solution to our areaโ€™s biggest problems.

Oh, OK, one more holiday surprise: itโ€™s Best of Santa Cruz voting time. Your local favorites need your vote; go to goodtimes.sc and give it to them!


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Read the latest letters to the editor here.

A BOLD VISION?

I just got home, sat down and read the story โ€œSex, Booze and Downtown Streets Teamโ€™s Toxic Cultureโ€ (GT, 12/11). It isnโ€™t possible to register the shock I felt about the cavalier tone of what GT probably thought was an exposรฉ of โ€œsex and boozeโ€โ€”but inadvertently revealed a story of unfair labor practices that should be labeled โ€œslave labor.โ€ Eileen Richardsonโ€™s project should not be held up as an example of โ€œbest practicesโ€ or โ€œinnovation.โ€ Weโ€™ve done this before in this countryโ€”it was called slavery!

Described as โ€œa successful venture capitalist … Richardson brought her change-the-world ethos to the charitable sector.โ€ Me thinks itโ€™s the other way aroundโ€”Richardson brought the rapacious capitalist ethic to the charitable sector.

The stunning revelation is the claim that โ€œunder the DST model, local governments and business associations hire a team of homeless people to clean up streets in exchange for gift cards and case management.โ€ That the writer did a bit of eliding, too, and just barely revealed slavery right here in Santa Cruz raises my eyebrows.

The article says clearly that โ€œDSTโ€™s โ€˜win-win-winโ€™ system of hiring the homeless, cleaning up trash and benefiting the broader community garnered renewed acclaim for the elder Richardson. Since its inception, DST has blossomed from a cash-strapped experiment in Palo Alto to a burgeoning enterprise spanning a dozen cities in two states with an $8 million annual budget.โ€ It adds that โ€œRichardson … makes upward of $200,000 in base pay as president and CEO of DST,โ€ and that DST is โ€œlike a high-tech startup rather than a social serviceโ€”action-oriented versus service-oriented.โ€ To that end, she said, โ€œWe improvised, tried new ideas and constantly corrected our course.โ€

What kind of course correction is needed? You have slave labor, and you are making a profit! Did they have health care benefits, dental benefits, social security deduction from the โ€œgift certificatesโ€ they got?

Presumably the other employees who boozed it up and are suing will get good lawyers or simply file with the Industrial Welfare Commission, but maybe they got their comeuppance for participating in a venture that essentially used slave-like labor, and took advantage of homeless people who likely have no understanding that they as employees of this nonprofit could have filed with the Industrial Welfare Commission or gotten a labor lawyer to sue this scandalous venture. The photo of the boozing employees says something about themโ€”something best left to readers. The word โ€œcomplicityโ€ should be somewhere in here for their part in exploiting the homeless.

I cannot even begin to say what I think and feel about city officials, here and elsewhere, who actually thought this use of economically vulnerable people as unpaid laborers (gift certificates are not pay) was a good idea. They ought to be voted out of office at the next election.

Chris Nunezโ€จ | Santa Cruz

An Artistโ€™s Gift

Wallace Baineโ€™s piece on Jory Post (12/11) gave us a glimpse into the spirit, wit, and heart of a remarkable human. For many reasons, our community is grateful for the reminder that education takes many forms, and our approach to self-discovery evolves over time. This piece continues to be a gift to us all, as does Jory himselfโ€”just as he was to all of his former Happy Valley students, parents, and families.

ย Les Forster

Capitola


PHOTO CONTEST WINNER

Submit to ph****@*******es.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

Local Chinese-medicine school Five Branches University announced last week that Professor Janice Walton-Hadlock, DAOM, may have found the underlying cause of intrinsic asthma, also known as non-allergic asthma. The Journal of Chinese Medicine published the results of Walton-Hadlockโ€™s preliminary research on asthma patients in October. The acupuncturist looks to further her findings by hosting free asthma clinics on Tuesdays from Jan. 7 to April 14, from 4:30-7:30 p.m., at Five Branches University, 200 7th Ave, Santa Cruz.


GOOD WORK

Las Posadas is a Latin American Christmas-time tradition of reenacting Mary and Josephโ€™s search for a place to stay. Local activists are celebrating it this year in Santa Cruz with an eye toward the global refugee crisis, every night at 6:30pm until Monday, Dec. 23. The event will be at the downtown Boys and Girls Club on Wednesday, the Hub for Sustainable Living on Thursday, Sycamore Street Commons on Friday, in the Canfield neighborhood Saturday, at Nueva Vista Community Resources on Sunday, and at Beach Flats Park on Monday.


QUOTE OF THE WEEK

โ€œBad news travels fast. Good news takes the scenic route.โ€

-Doug Larson

Loma Prieta Wineryโ€™s Mountain-Top Pinotage

Itโ€™s well worth the drive to Loma Prietaโ€™s mountain-top tasting roomโ€”if only to taste their award-winning Pinotage. There are very few wineries worldwide making Pinotage, a grape most people havenโ€™t heard of, says Amy Kemp, proprietor of Loma Prieta Winery.

Her late husband Paul Kemp became obsessed with making it when he discovered it in a Lodi vineyard when he was sourcing Viognier. Pinotage lovers now flock to Loma Prietaโ€™s tasting room in the Los Gatos hills because they know they will find gold โ€ฆ well, at least gold-medal-winning Pinotage!

The 2015 Pinotage ($45) is from Karma Vineyard in Lodi. Rich, ripe and robust, it possesses great texture. โ€œItโ€™s packed full of flavors of red plum, soy, smoked duck, prosciutto, brown-sugared ham, and even sarsaparilla,โ€ say the winemakers. This luscious 2015 Pinotage won three silver medals from California to Florida.

โ€œMost people have never heard of Pinotage,โ€ says Kemp. So donโ€™t fall into that category and head to the tasting room to try some.

Loma Prieta Winery, 26985 Loma Prieta Way, Los Gatos. 408-353-2950, lomaprietawinery.com.

Tasting of Sante Arcangeli Wines at Seascape Sports Club

One of the best winemakers in the area is John Benedetti, owner of Sante Arcangeli Family Wines. Donโ€™t miss a tasting of his winesโ€”complete with heavy hors dโ€™oeuvresโ€”from 6-7:30 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 20, at Seascape. Cost is $20, and event is open to non-members. Should you miss it, Benedetti has opened a tasting room in the new Aptos Village complex. Your cup runneth over!

Seascape Sports Club, 1505 Seascape Blvd., Aptos. 688-1993, seascapesportsclub.com and santewinery.com.

Grey Bears and the Perks of Giving Away Free Food

For five years now, Paula Selsted has been driving bags of fresh groceries to seniors in need.

We caught up with her this past Thursday, just after she finished her deliveries. Selstedโ€™s spirits were high. On her route, she had, for the first time, met an elderly woman who sheโ€™d been delivering to for six months. The womanโ€™s son was pushing her wheelchair as the two got ready to take a stroll. โ€œThey were out, and he was getting ready to take her for a walk and push her in a wheelchair,โ€ Selsted says. โ€œI love meeting people for the first time.โ€ย 

Grey Bears is participating in GTโ€™s Santa Cruz Gives community giving campaign.

How much time do you spend volunteering a week?

PAULA SELSTED: I usually get there between 7:30 and 8:00 on Thursday morning. It varies. I can be done by 12, or sometimes Iโ€™m not done until 2 or 3. It depends on if the people Iโ€™m delivering to are up and about, and if I go in and chat with them and talk or do a puzzle or find out whatโ€™s going on in their life. Then, it can take me all day.

Why do you do it?

I donโ€™t care what anyone tells you, itโ€™s not really altruistic. You always get something back, and I have discovered that I love seniors. Now, Iโ€™m about to turn 65 next yearโ€”so Iโ€™m considered, quote, โ€œa seniorโ€โ€”but I have had the pleasure of getting to know and become friends with people in their ninetiesโ€”97, 99. I had a delivery go to someone who was 101. People have such wonderful life stories, and they become your friends. Who doesnโ€™t need extra friends?ย 

Do you have a favorite fruit or vegetable?

It would have to be peaches. I have a degree in fruit industries. And I always wanted to become a farmer, but back when I was going to school, women werenโ€™t allowed to manage farms. I at least got the nickname โ€œPeaches.โ€

To learn more about Grey Bears, visit greybears.org. To learn more about the 37 nonprofits participating in Santa Cruz Gives, visit santacruzgives.org. Donations accepted through Dec. 31.

The Year in Review: 2019

Our Year in Review issueย takes onย ninja squirrels, Google money, PG&E blackout madness and more

JANUARY

ARSONIST GYM EMPLOYEE PRACTICES SPRINTING FROM COPS

A 24 Hour Fitness employee was arrested after allegedly starting a fire in the gym early one Tuesday morning. He also threw a fire extinguisher through the window and ran away from responding officers. At a gym as grimy as 24 Hour Fitness, this is actually the most reasonable way to burn calories.

G.O.A.T. AT STOPPING TRAFFIC: GOATS!

january 2There are many annoying causes for traffic jams on Highway 17โ€”reasons like landslides, fallen trees, protesters, and crashes due to Tesla owners zipping around like theyโ€™re Dale Earnhardt Jr. on meth. But the cutest reason for backed-up traffic on Santa Cruz Countyโ€™s mountainous four-lane highway this year was definitely goats, and namely the two that pranced around with their adorable little horns, wooing commuters who spent 15 minutes of their time corralling the fuzzy animals and tying them to a guard rail. Note to protesters: Next time you block traffic in the name of choking off the arteries of capitalism, try bringing a couple goats with you. All the haters will be like, โ€œโ€˜ARRRRR!โ€™ I mean, โ€˜Awwwww.โ€™โ€

FEBRUARY

FEDS BUST FRESHMAN FOUNDER OF WORLDโ€™S GROSSEST-SOUNDING APP

february 1A UCSC freshman from Sunnyvale was selling cocaine, meth, shrooms, MDMA, and โ€œspecial requestsโ€ through his Banana Plug mobile app, which was available in Appleโ€™s App Store. Unsure if they had the resources to arrest an 18-year-old on their own, UCSC Police decided to call in Homeland Security officers, who arranged four meetings through the app and on Snapchat to buy cannabis, cocaine and more than 5 grams of methamphetamine. A federal grand jury indicted the student on drug distribution and possession charges. We still donโ€™t know what a banana plug is, nor do we want to.

RECALL NEWS: PLEASE MAKE IT STOP

Mayor Martine Watkins called out fellow councilmembers Drew Glover and Chris Krohn, acknowledging โ€œperceptionsโ€ that the two men had been bullying her. Honestly, to anyone who had witnessed the way Krohn and Glover mansplained their way through City Council meetings, this sounded plausible. It helped kickstart an investigation in which Krohn and Glover were each found to have violated the cityโ€™s Respectful Workplace Conduct policy, due to complaints from other employees. Watkinsโ€™ complaints werenโ€™t substantiated. Regardless, a recall campaign had begun, so a bunch of Glover and Krohn apologists started playing defense by attempting to justify everything that Glover and Krohn had ever done. Recall supporters, for their part, started exaggerating Krohn and Gloverโ€™s violationsโ€”allegedly spreading outright lies and pretending that the two politicians had committed heinous crimes. After the report on the matter came out, Glover held a meeting with a staffer that escalated quickly and got quite heated. A subsequent memo stated that Glover was no longer allowed to talk to the vast majority of city staffers. Glover violated the cityโ€™s conduct policy again in November, and on and on. Why do we get the nagging sense that the recallโ€”no matter its outcomeโ€”wonโ€™t make Santa Cruz any better off?

MARCH

ย THIS IS โ€˜USโ€™

march 1The shortest-titled hit movie since Oliver Stoneโ€™s W. burst into American theaters, and the biggest star (other than the magnificent Lupita Nyongโ€™o) was the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk. Us, director Jordan Peeleโ€™s horror-movie follow-up to his landmark Oscar-winner Get Out, suggested that the Boardwalk was a mysterious nexus of enslaved doppelgangers, at the same time paying subtle tribute to the last movie that portrayed Santa Cruz as a supernaturally creepy place, 1987โ€™s The Lost Boys. Us quickly became the biggest box-office draw in the country, but the Boardwalk had to endure lots of social media buzz, and a feature story or two, declaring that the film would scare tourists away. Turns out, the opposite was true. The film ended up grossing more than $255 million worldwide, the Boardwalk got a big pop-culture boost, and locals learned a valuable lesson: donโ€™t go underneath the Boardwalk, because your Tether doppelgรคnger is just waiting to pull the olโ€™ switcheroo on you.

ITโ€™S WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE

Margaret Bruce, who had served on the San Lorenzo Valley Water District board for seven years, resigned after a bizarre controversy the previous month that saw fellow board member Bill Smallman censured for saying that anyone who used glyphosate pesticides โ€œis both really stupid and lazy, and probably gay.โ€ That class of pesticides has been banned by the SLVWD. Bruce publicly criticized Smallmanโ€™s homophobic comment, for which he later apologized, saying he had become โ€œaddictedโ€ to online debate and would undergo diversity training. Bruce did not indicate whether her resignation was related to Smallman, who also resigned three months later.ย 

APRIL

ROSS CAMP REIGNITES โ€˜PUBLIC SAFETYโ€™ CULTURE WARS

For a fleeting moment this spring, it seemed like there might be another path forward on homelessness. After years of shuffling tents from park to park, organizers of a central encampment between the Ross discount store and the mouth of Highway 1 filed a civil rights lawsuit that demanded local officials provide a humane alternative before they dismantled the camp criticized for drug sales and poor sanitation. Finally, an end to reactionary Band-Aids like issuing camping fines to people with no money? Nah. The court injunction passed and occupants were evicted, with witnesses reporting ugly instances of groups in cars throwing rocks at people in the camp.

BACKYARD BEEKEEPERS FLY INTO BUREAUCRACYโ€™S CLUTCHES

april 1At long last, in the spring of 2019, Santa Cruz seized the opportunity to confront the cityโ€™s many vexing social issues by cracking down on โ€ฆ backyard beekeepers. In April, Midtown resident Donna Gardner spoke with GT about her ordeal after eight years of maintaining an active hive, when she was suddenly fined around $700 and told she needed some expensive new permits. โ€œI spent at least the first two weeks crying and not sleeping at night,โ€ Gardner said. OK, weโ€™re not sure why sheโ€™s so into bees, but we can say that as long as those stingers arenโ€™t terrorizing unassuming passersby, the city would probably be better served by buzzing off.

MAY

WAVE, GOODBYE

Douglass Thorneโ€™s amazing Santa Cruz life came to a close in May at 90 years old. He was an educator who served at all three of Santa Cruzโ€™s high schools, and as a U.S. Navy reservist for 40 years. But the local surf community will forever remember him as one of the last surviving members of the Santa Cruz Surfing Club, the Big Bang of Santa Cruzโ€™s now world-famous surf culture. Thorne was surfing the local breaks as a kid in the years leading up to World War II and spent a significant portion of his life in, on and around the ocean. He was a founding member of the Surfing Clubโ€™s Preservation Societyโ€”which, among other things, came to the rescue of the Santa Cruz Surfing Museum at Steamer Lane when it was on the verge of closing. At a memorial service on West Cliff Drive, Thorneโ€™s body was driven past his favorite surf spots one final time, per his request.

CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK

Santa Cruz never had A-listers like Cher or Bono or Madonna, and now weโ€™re not even scraping the bottom of the one-name-celebrity barrel, thanks to the departure of Chip, the longtime executive director of the cityโ€™s Downtown Association. In May, the weird guy who everyone had to pretend they wanted to say hi to as he aimlessly wandered the downtown streets every day announced he was leaving his position in Santa Cruz for a similar position in another hipster-friendly college town: Boulder, Colorado. Chip emerged in Santa Cruz 20 years ago from the local theater community, and as head of the DTA, he had been one of Pacific Avenueโ€™s most recognizable faces for a decade, sadly.ย 

JUNE

THINGS ARE LOOKERING UP

Nerds of Santa Cruz rejoiced in June, when Google announced a 10-figure acquisition of local โ€œbusiness intelligenceโ€ startup Looker. What does that even mean? Thatโ€™s not really for normals to know, but all the hype about Big Data was enough to help drive the price of selling out to Silicon Valley up to $2.6 billion. Another thing the deal inspired among local luddites: anxiety about what the official arrival of Google moneyโ€”on top of Amazon and othersโ€”might mean for non-techies looking to hang onto housing and office space. Oh, and lots of sick burns about man buns.june 1

BOOTS AND REBOOTS

Way up in the Santa Cruz Mountains, where pretty much everyone is either unnervingly knowledgeable about crystals or an aspiring Amerciana musician, this summer brought yet another big change to the local entertainment scene. After a weird and expensive stint as steakhouse-meets-music venue Flynnโ€™s Cabaret, the former Don Quixoteโ€™s was bought and reopened by longtime Catalyst booker Thomas Cussins and his Ineffable Music Group. The newly rechristened Felton Music Hall is booking a wide range of roots, reggae and rock music at a time when the mountain towns are seeing major growth, thanks to that more affordable, salt-of-the-Earth land.

JULY

GODDAMN CRAZY SQUIRREL IS CRAZIER THAN WE THOUGHT

july 1It was almost cute at first. Almost. The problem was that Emily the squirrel would not stop biting whomever walked past the Maple Street tree she called home. (Is this what Take Back Santa Cruz members mean when they say they donโ€™t feel safe going downtown anymore?) After Emily nipped at six victims, Santa Cruz got fed up and sent two fire engines, an animal-services officer and a wildlife handler to haul her away. The eastern gray squirrel landed in the custody of the Native Animal Rescue, only to chew her way out of her plastic blue box of a jail cell and escape. She ran across 17th Avenue and bolted along fences lining the Live Oak Grange garden. Weโ€™re eagerly awaiting Emilyโ€™s forthcoming memoir about her travels, which we hope will either be titled On the Rodent or The Electric Kool-Aid Rabid Test.

POTENTIAL PIZZAGATE DEFEATED BY COMMON SENSE AND TASTY MUFFINS

When Whale City Bakery was tagged in a social media post thatโ€”without a shred of evidenceโ€”accused it of being complicit in a human trafficking scheme, Outrage Twitter immediately went on the attack. But the backlash from supporters was swift, as they pointed out the story had more holes than a box of bagels. Within 48 hours, the controversy had gone stale, and everyone went back to enjoying their eggs Florentine and mimosas. Incredibly, the original tweet received 12,800 likes before the accuserโ€™s Twitter account was justly deleted.ย 

AUGUST

WE LIKE AFFORDABLE HOUSING; JUST DONโ€™T PUT IT THERE OR THERE OR THERE, OR DEFINITELY NOT HERE!

Santa Cruz City Councilโ€™s โ€œliberalโ€ majority took flak for voting down an environmentally friendly process to allow for increased housing density along Santa Cruzโ€™s busiest streets. Councilmember Chris Krohn wrote a letter to GT in which he renamed the plan โ€œBonzo,โ€ a weird Ronald Reagan reference that we still donโ€™t understand the intended meaning of in this context. Is this where we say โ€œOK, boomer?โ€

august-meme

ITโ€™S NOT ABOUT THE MONEY, WE SWEAR

Some Santa Barbra lawyers filed a draft legal complaint arguing that Santa Cruzโ€™s elections arenโ€™t providing for adequate Latino representation. The evidence was less than overwhelming, but lots of cities have been getting hit with these casesโ€”which are expensive to fight, so city councils often settle quickly. If Santa Cruz had folded, the prosecuting lawyers would have made an easy $30,000 and forced a big election change, without ever having to prove that district elections will make Santa Cruz, its residents or Latinos better off. The lawyers eventually pumped the brakes, though, because their chosen plaintiff, a local Latino โ€œvoter,โ€ wasnโ€™t actually registered to vote here.

SEPTEMBER

WE HEAR HE HAS SOME LEADS ON A PLACE THEY COULD MOVE INTO

A โ€œflier banditโ€ spent months grabbing every home-listing flier that he could from around Santa Cruz, and emptying out brochure boxes in the process. The police got involved in Septemberโ€”not because the man was doing anything illegal, but because the cops actually show up whenever rich people call. The bandit informed authorities that he was in a cult and participating in a contest through the end of October that involved collecting fliers, so that he could win the biggest prize: his very own bride.

WEโ€™RE ONLY WRITING ABOUT INTERNET INFLUENCERS FROM NOW ON

YouTuber Louie Castro put Santa Cruz County on the social-media map, when our Sept. 4 cover story about him became the most popular story of the year on goodtimes.sc. Hey Louie, wanna plug our City Council coverage?

OCTOBER

LOCAL GOOD SAMARITAN FULFILLS JUMP BIKEโ€™S LIFELONG DREAM OF SWIMMING WITH DOLPHINSย 

october 1They say you can park a Jump Bike anywhere when youโ€™re done with it, but guess where you canโ€™t park it? The ocean! Thatโ€™s what one woman discovered when she was arrested early in the morning of Oct. 26 on Cliff Drive, after throwing her Jump Bike into the sea. Deandra Perez was booked on a vandalism charge and released on $5,000 bail. The Jump Bike was later recovered after Percy Jackson, son of the Greek god Poseidon, was spotted riding it to a Santa Cruz Warriors game.ย 

PG&E IS DUMBย 

Sure, the โ€œPublic Safety Power Shutoffsโ€ in October were a dystopian nightmare, but if there was one good thing that came out of them, it was that after all the criticism Pacific Gas & Electric received, you can rest assured that there wonโ€™t be a sudden blackout when youโ€™re typing on your computer and youโ€™ve almost finished your sen

THIS IS NOT THE WORST RASH YOU CAN GET IN COLLEGE

UCSC police announced on Halloween that they were seeking the publicโ€™s help in the investigation of a โ€œrash of theftsโ€ that took place from mid-to-late October on campus. The rap sheet included burglaries in the campus facilities parking lot, grand theft from the McHenry Library and a half-dozen other locales, as well as several incidents of petty theft around campus, including the College 8 Dining Hall. Instructors report that for a minute there, โ€œa series of microaggressions against my backpackโ€ briefly eclipsed โ€œmy dog ate itโ€ as the number one excuse for not turning in homework.ย 

NOVEMBER

30 FREE OR ITโ€™S MINUTES

november 1Order those organic edibles and CBD dog treats now, unless you want toโ€”gasp!โ€”drag your ass to a dispensary to buy your own weed accoutrement. In November, Californiaโ€™s Secretary of State jumped into a legal battle between Santa Cruz County and Salinas dispensary East of Eden about whether the company (and others without a local license) should be allowed to deliver their wares to locals who prefer cannabis delivery to in-person shopping. Donโ€™t worry: The internet says that as of now, I can still get that cartridge of Island Sweet Skunk delivered to my door in under an hour.ย 

DECEMBER

SO ITโ€™S JUST A COINCIDENCE THAT I DO HAVE SEVERAL WARRANTS OUT FOR MY ARREST?

Earlier this month, the Santa Cruz Countyโ€™s Sheriffโ€™s Office warned residents about a phone scam targeting locals that went something like this: You get a call from someone claiming to be a Sheriffโ€™s deputy telling you that you have several warrants out for your arrest, including a $2,000 fine. No doubt this helpful deputy would love to assist you in taking care of that last item right there on the phone, but at least one smart cookie who reported the scammer to the Sheriffโ€™s Office ended the conversation there and reported the incident instead. When deputies put in a follow-up call to the (local) number given out, they heard a voice message telling them that they had reached the Santa Cruz County Sheriffโ€™s Office, but their first clue that that was untrue was the fact that they themselves were calling from the Santa Cruz Sheriffโ€™s Office. So meta! The VOIP number couldnโ€™t be traced, but all of the deputies want to remind you that they do not call people with warrants and ask for payment or personal information. In other news, you do not have a relative who has had an accident in a foreign country and needs you to wire money immediately; the IRS does not need your social security number, because they already have it; and Nigeria does not have a prince.

december-meme

NO RESIGNATIONS WERE FORTHCOMING

Itโ€™s only been 143 years since Santa Cruz swore in its first mayor, and already we have an African American man in the office. If that sounds sarcastic, itโ€™s because it totally was! But Justin Cummings was sworn in at the Dec. 10 meeting of the Santa Cruz City Council, and the discussion leading up to his selection produced our favorite GT tweet of the year, from the previous City Council meeting: โ€œRobert Norse doesnโ€™t like Cummings. Elise Casby says she doesnโ€™t like Meyers or โ€˜fascism.โ€™ Dave Willis doesnโ€™t like anyone except Drew Glover, who he says should be mayor. He calls on the rest of council to resign. He says he never sees Cummings at cmmty meetings, saw him @ bar once.โ€

Hungry in Santa Cruz County: Food Stamp Cuts Loom in 2020

In the flatlands of south Santa Cruz County, winterโ€™s short days and blustery cold have already taken their toll on the areaโ€™s famous farmland. Fields that just weeks ago offered a bounty of lettuce, tomatoes and strawberries are picked-over, muddy and mostly dormant.

The lean season has arrived, and this year, it may be felt more acutely inside hundreds of local homes where residents already struggle to find enough to eat.

Upwards of 600 households in Santa Cruz Countyโ€”many including children, seniors or disabled individualsโ€”could see their monthly government food assistance benefits wiped out early next year if a new federal rule to alter work requirements for food stamp recipients goes into effect as expected, county officials tell GT.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been looking at whatโ€™s coming out and the impacts on our community,โ€ says Joel Campos, director of community outreach for Second Harvest Food Bank Santa Cruz. โ€œItโ€™s excluding people.โ€

The so-called โ€œable-bodiedโ€ work rule change, which would require food stamp recipients to be employed at least 20 hours per week year-round, targets adults age 18-49 and is expected to hit seasonal workers in industries like agriculture and construction particularly hard, Campos says.ย 

Itโ€™s also just one of several proposed changes to food stamp programsโ€”known in California as CalFreshโ€”that have tested the countyโ€™s social safety net in recent months. Nonprofits like the food bank and food justice group Food What?! say that other proposals to increase immigration status checks and alter enrollment rules for those receiving other government benefits are already having a chilling effect.

Nationwide, estimates are that as many as 5 million people could see food stamp benefits reduced or cancelled as a result of changes currently winding through federal bureaucracy. In Santa Cruz County, where the local 27% child poverty rate is already second-highest in California, the effects could be dire for residents scrambling to keep up with rising costs of living and stagnant wages.

โ€œItโ€™s a huge issue, because food stamps in this county are no different,โ€ says Kayla Kumar, development director of Food What?! โ€œItโ€™s the number one way the government kind of addresses poverty.โ€

Kind of, Kumar says, because nonprofit groups like Food What?!, Mesa Verde Gardens and others already help many residents left behind by government benefit programs grow or buy their own food at reduced rates.ย 

Santa Cruz County residents skipped about 21.5 million meals in 2017, even after local food assistance programs provided about 28.2 million meals, according to a recent joint report by UCSC and Second Harvest Food Bank. Government programs including CalFresh provided 72% of those meals, while Second Harvest and other community groups served the rest.

As it stands, some 645 households in the county could join the ranks of the hungry, since their current monthly CalFresh benefits could be denied or discontinued if the new federal rules are fully implemented, says Leslie Goodfriend, senior health services manager for the county. Those households include 413 children and 263 seniors or disabled adults, she tells GT.

Any decrease in federal dollars to support CalFresh, Goodfriend warns, could also have local economic ripple effects. With more local businesses and farmerโ€™s markets now accepting payment by food stamps with EBT cards, cuts would also be passed onto vendors.

โ€œIt does more than just offer food assistance,โ€ Goodfriend says. โ€œWhen you spend your CalFresh dollars at a grocery store, that directly helps that grocery store. It helps our economy.โ€

BEYOND BAND-AIDS

More than 1 in 10 U.S. households ran out of food in 2018, according to federal estimates. While long-term studies have shown that child development, academic performance and adult health can all be negatively impacted by food scarcity, many households who might qualify for government assistance do not apply.ย 

In Santa Cruz County, a single person making $2,024 or less per month may be eligible for food assistance, or up to $4,184 for a family of four. Still, in an example of what researchers call the โ€œSNAP gap,โ€ itโ€™s rare, even in areas of the county where the majority of residents are low-income, for more than 20% of people who are eligible for food benefits to apply for them.

โ€œThese rules donโ€™t make any sense on purpose,โ€ Kumar says. โ€œItโ€™s not for lack of education. Itโ€™s deliberately confusing.”

One big problem, says Campos of Second Harvest, is that local residents who have family members with legal temporary U.S. residency or mixed immigration statuses have been increasingly wary of seeking food assistance in the current anti-immigrant political climate. Walk-in traffic for residents inquiring about government assistance at the food bank has already plummeted to about half the usual level, he says, thanks to fear and confusion about the future of food stamps.ย 

โ€œItโ€™s dropping off on the CalFresh program, but that means it increases here at the food bank,โ€ Campos says. โ€œWe donโ€™t ask them any questions.โ€

About 20% of the countyโ€™s nearly 275,000 residents go to the food bank for help each month. The nonprofit provides tens of thousands of meals and bags packed with groceries for Santa Cruz County residents.

PUTTING DOWN ROOTS

While Second Harvest focuses on immediate hunger, Food What?! employs dozens of local youth each year to grow food on two plots at UCSC and in Watsonville. Participants get to take home a share of produce each week, and the long-term goal is for marginalized communities to build their own sustainable food systems.

โ€œYes, food stamps are helping as a Band-Aid, but also what food stamps really do is subsidize businesses to pay lower wages,โ€ Kumar says. โ€œWeโ€™re more interested in combating poverty directly.โ€

One example is the nonprofitโ€™s new โ€œprescriptive produceโ€ program, where doctors at the clinic run by fellow nonprofit Salud Para La Gente (Health for the People) can prescribe vouchers for healthy food to patients struggling with diet-related issues, such as diabetes. Those prescriptions can be redeemed at a Food What?! farm stand outside the clinic. Since it started over the summer, the program has distributed some 3,000 pounds of food, Kumar says.

Other ingrained dynamics may be harder to change. While Santa Cruz County routinely ranks highly on national lists for the most expensive places to live, itโ€™s also a hub for low- and middle-wage jobs in hospitality, agriculture and construction with income swings that can be hard to weather. Itโ€™s these seasonal workers that stand to be hit especially hard by changes to food stamps, Campos says.

โ€œOnce they stop working, they will start asking them to continue finding work,โ€ he says. โ€œEspecially farmworkers; they might be off work five months.โ€

The irony of locals growing the nationโ€™s food only to be left hungry themselves isnโ€™t lost on Kumar.

โ€œItโ€™s a particularly heartbreaking paradox,โ€ Kumar says. โ€œItโ€™s not acceptable.โ€

Second Harvest Food Bank, Food What?! and Mesa Verde Gardens are among the 37 local nonprofits participating in this yearโ€™s Santa Cruz Gives holiday fundraising drive. Donate through Dec. 31 at santacruzgives.org.

Music Picks: Dec. 18-24

Santa Cruz County live entertainment picks for the week of Dec. 18

WEDNESDAY 12/18

CHRISTMAS

HOLIDAY HITS SINGALONG

Music is therapeutic. Thatโ€™s why in 1985, Sean Seman founded Young At Heart, a local organization that brings live music to senior citizens. Many of them have memory disorders and experience cognitive stimulation by enjoying music from their youth. You can help keep this project funded by going to this all-star local Christmas jam that features Carolyn Sills, Tammi Brown, Tom Fedele, Sean Seman, and others. All proceeds benefit Young At Heart and the good work they do for the seniors in our community. AC

7:30pm. Michaelโ€™s on Main, 2591 Main St., Soquel. $10. 479-9777.ย 

JAZZ

SPANISH HARLEM ORCHESTRA

Still buzzing after taking home a third Grammy Award for the album Anniversary, pianist Oscar Hernandezโ€™s Spanish Harlem Orchestra is a top contender for the salsa dura throne. Inspired by the stiff standards established by bandleaders like Tito Puente, Machito and Eddie Palmieri, heโ€™s turned the SHO into a swaggering beast of an ensemble stocked with fiery players like Venezuelan timbales master Luisito Quintero, Nuyorican conguero George Delgado, San Francisco trumpeter Mike Olmos, and East Bay-reared trombonist Doug Beavers. The tour features a repertoire of hard-grooving salsa and holiday favorites. ANDREW GILBERT

7 and 9pm. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $36.75-52.50. 427-2227.

 

FRIDAY 12/20

COMEDY

ELIOT CHANG

Eliot Chang has a lot he wants to tell youโ€”and itโ€™s not all funny. Technically, heโ€™s a stand-up comedian, but heโ€™s also a really opinionated YouTuber that just likes to flip on his video camera and teach guys how to โ€œnot be nervous around pretty women,โ€ or how to โ€œovercome shyness.โ€ He thinks about everything, and he believes in his heart that thereโ€™s a solution to every problem. His comedy has the same optimistic spirit, and heโ€™s treated his career with the same ambitious drive. Heโ€™s appeared on HBO, Showtime, โ€œChelsea Lately,โ€ and Comedy Central. AC

7 & 9:30pm. DNAโ€™s Comedy Lab, 155 S. River St., Santa Cruz. $20 adv/$25 door. 900-5123.ย 

FOLK

LAUREN NAPIER

Repatriated expat Lauren Napier takes inspiration from everywhere. A writer and world-traveler, Napier has written for NPR Berlin and been covered by Afropunk. Sheโ€™s performed punk rock on acoustic, and folk songs with punk ferocity. On her Void of Course EP, the singer-songwriter mixed mysticism and wolf howls with folk and soul, creating a set of spare, vulnerable and vaguely pagan bedroom-pop songs. Appropriate, then, that her follow up was Bedroom Recordings, a haunting 25-track album combining all her varied interests, from nature and medieval literature to cigarettes and the city. MIKE HUGUENOR

8pm. Lillie Aeske, 13160 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek. $20. 703-4183.

 

SATURDAY 12/21

ELECTRONIC

SAQI

Itโ€™s easy to imagine SaQiโ€™s trance-y beats pulsating over a Burning Man documentary. The classically trained musicianโ€™s perfect blend of organic and synthetic sounds conjures vivid emotional landscapes, like dust storms and lightning-filled skies. In the belly of the beast of generational angst and everyday mysticism, thereโ€™s a fulcrum of potential dripping with effortless sexuality. SaQiโ€™s music is the ideal backdrop for finishing a creative endeavor or nodding rhythmically on the dance floor, lost in thought and time, looping back to your own opening credits. AMY BEE

9pm. Moeโ€™s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $15 adv/$20 door. 479-1854.

HIP-HOP

BONE THUGS-N-HARMONY

Everyone has their own holiday traditions. For some, itโ€™s carolling. For others, itโ€™s that first sip of a peppermint mocha latte. In Santa Cruz, it never feels like the holidays until Bone Thugs-N-Harmony rolls through the Catalyst on a wave of the sticky-ickiest of clouds. This year, the group will play on the (20) first of the month, getting you higher, higher baby with an array of hip-hop and smooth R&B jams. MAT WEIR

9pm. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $30 adv/$35 door. 423-1338.

REGGAE

GROUNDATION

You think you know your reggae? Groundation knows reggae. Playing passionate roots music with elements of dub and jazz, the group takes its name from the Rastafarian high holy day of Grounation (the day Haile Selassi visited Jamaica). The bandโ€™s singer taught Sonoma Stateโ€™s first-ever course on reggae music history, and its harmony vocalist sang onstage with the Original Wailers and Toots and the Maytals. The bass player has worked with Sean Paul and Queen Ifrica. Shall I go on? OK, one more. Groundation also features jazz-organ heavyweight Wil Blades, a Down Beat โ€œRising Starโ€ for 15 years and counting. MH

8pm. Felton Music Hall, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $20 adv/$25 door. 704-7113.

 

SUNDAY 12/22

PUNK

CHRISTMAS WITH THE MISFITS

Now in its seventh year of going where eagles dare, โ€œChristmas With the Misfitsโ€ gathers local bands, and a few from throughout the state, to cover their favorite Misfits songs. All proceeds go to the Santa Cruz Animal Shelter and the childrenโ€™s wards of a local hospital. Prizes like merchandise, skate decks and gift certificates for local businesses will be auctioned off throughout the night, and patrons can either purchase raffle tickets or bring a sealed, unwrapped toy for five free tickets. Grab your favorite hellhounds and make a night of the loving dead. MW

8:30pm. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $10. 423-1338.

LATIN

OZOMATLI

Did you know L.A. Latin-fusion all-stars Ozomatli made a kids album? Ozomatli Presents Ozokidz is cute and educational, with a They Might Be Giants quirkiness. Like the rest of the bandโ€™s catalog, itโ€™s full of infectious dance beats ala cumbia, reggae and hip-hop, all in Spanglish. Itโ€™s an album parents wonโ€™t mind having to listen to in the car 1,000 times. In fact, theyโ€™ll be singing โ€œThereโ€™s a moose on the loose!โ€ right along with their cherubic little angels. Not sure whether the award-winning multicultural genre-bending band will play these songs live, but you in the audience should try and request a few! Just yell, โ€œExercise! Hey! Hey! Hey!โ€ and see what happens. AB

8pm. Felton Music Hall, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $34 adv/$37 door. 704-7113.ย 

Love Your Local Band: Mike Renwick

0

Every August, Mike Renwickโ€™s annual obsession begins: Mike Renwickโ€™s Holiday Deluxe.

For the past 17 years, heโ€™s gathering his musician friends to play a local holiday concert. It started at Boulder Creekโ€™s Coffeetopia and has migrated to various venues over the years. This year, itโ€™ll be at Felton Music Hall. Regardless of where heโ€™s going to perform, once the calendar says August, he starts preparing for the show.

โ€œI start thinking about material in August,โ€ย  Renwick says. โ€œI usually get the tickets in September. Then all of my friends run when they see me. They know Iโ€™m going to want them to buy a ticket.โ€

Even though itโ€™s a holiday show, he usually only plays a couple Christmas tunes. This year, he plans on โ€œWinter Wonderlandโ€ and โ€œHave Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.โ€ Mostly, heโ€™s cherry-picking his favorite old-school soul, R&B and rock songs.

โ€œItโ€™s essentially my taste in music, and I just want to fill the place up and have a holiday party with my friends,โ€ he says.

Renwick has been part of the Bay Area music scene since the early โ€™70s, and many of his friends join him for these shows. This year, heโ€™s got former Santana players Tony Lindsay and Andy Morales, as well as Tower of Power lead saxophonist Tom Politzer. His core rhythm section David Perper (drums) and John Rooff (bass) have played with him since he was in his 20s. They can practically read each othersโ€™ minds.

โ€œWe have a whole nest of old soul music,โ€ Renwick says. โ€œWe can pull those tunes out and do them in our sleep.โ€ย 

7:30pm. Wednesday, Dec. 18. Felton Music Hall, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $20. 704-7113.

County Approves New Shelter Pick-up Near Jail

The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors last Tuesday approved a proposal to temporarily move a shuttle pickup spot for homeless people to the parking lot of the Main Jail.

The plan, which was approved for six months, is expected to take up about 25 parking spaces in the already crowded lot.ย 

Currently, homeless riders are shuttled from a pick-up spot at Front and Laurel streets to the 55-bed shelter at 1721 Laurel St.ย 

The move came in part at the request of the Community Advisory Committee on Homelessness (CACH), whose members say that the new spot has room for a rain shelter, as well as a temporary restroom and a storage facility. It will also include a security guard.

Raphael Sonnenfeld, founder of Friends of Depot Park, was one of two people to speak in favor of the plan during the meeting.

โ€œItโ€™s going to help improve the ability for health and human services to potentially serve a vulnerable population, and makes our Laurel Street shelter program more accessible,โ€ he said. โ€œIf we can keep this program going and locate it to a place that reduces impacts on the greater community, and serves the population better, I think our community will be better off overall.โ€

County employees displaced from the parking lot will get parking passes at no cost, or be given other options.ย 

The approval came despite objections from Santa Cruz County Sheriff Jim Hart, who said that the plan is not compatible with the facility.

โ€œThe county jail is the most critical piece of infrastructure we have, in that we house 400 people there every single day,โ€ he said. โ€œThereโ€™s prison buses, thereโ€™s county jail buses from all over the state coming and going, 10,000 bookings a year, 20,000 visitors per year.โ€

Hart also expressed concern that the plan will be a burden for county employees who depend on the lot.

โ€œAll of our staff that help us run county government use that parking lot to get to work every day,โ€ he said. โ€œTo expect them to walk from River Street or some other location to get to work is asking too much of our staff. That parking lot was built for our staff so that they could support all of us to run their departments.โ€

Hart also said that he was not consulted about the plan.

Sheriffโ€™s Sgt. Travis Huntsman, who represented the Deputy Sheriffโ€™s Association, said he is worried about the safety and security issues that could come with the change.ย 

โ€œIt is not the proper location for this community service,โ€ he said. โ€œHomelessness is certainly not criminal in nature. However, many of the homeless populace in Santa Cruz County is impacted by nefarious activity, such as drug use, violent crime and suffer from mental health issues.โ€

These problems, he said, create unpredictable, violent and irrational behavior.

โ€œThis raises significant safety concerns for the public, as well as individuals utilizing public services,โ€ Huntsman said.ย 

Serg Kagno, who serves on CACH, rejected the comparison.

โ€œIt hurts me a bit for people to talk about the safety of employees, and assuming homeless are dangerous to them, and nobody talks about the safety of the homeless people,โ€ Kagno said. He added that the current intake site is unmanaged, and can require the homeless people who use the service to wait in the rain.

Issues such as parking, Kagno said, can be worked out.

โ€œLetโ€™s move forward for city and county working together to design something, and not every time we have a space we say, โ€˜Yes, but not this space,โ€™โ€ he said.ย ย 

The proposal, which was on the consent calendar, passed with only Supervisor Greg Caput in opposition.

The details of the plan are still being worked out.

Santa Cruz’s Best Bites of 2019

Best Bites Avanti
The countyโ€™s top dishes of the year, from tapas to a killer chocolate-espresso tart

5 Things To Do in Santa Cruz: Dec. 18-24

holiday lights
Holiday lights, toy trains and beyond

Opinion: December 18, 2019

Plus letters to the editor

Loma Prieta Wineryโ€™s Mountain-Top Pinotage

Loma Prieta
Loma Prieta Winery has built a reputation for producing rare Pinotage

Grey Bears and the Perks of Giving Away Free Food

Its scope has expanded over the years, but Grey Bears was founded in 1973 to give seniors healthy, fresh food.
What volunteers get out of food distributions for the needy

The Year in Review: 2019

Year in Review 2019
The good, the bad and the weird this year in Santa Cruz County

Hungry in Santa Cruz County: Food Stamp Cuts Loom in 2020

Food Stamp Cuts
How federal rule changes could hurt struggling locals

Music Picks: Dec. 18-24

Eliot Chang
Santa Cruz County live entertainment picks for the week of Dec. 18

Love Your Local Band: Mike Renwick

Mike Renwick
Mike Renwick plays Felton Music Hall on Wednesday, Dec. 18.

County Approves New Shelter Pick-up Near Jail

Shelter Pick-Up
Sheriff expresses concerns about location
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