From the Library: Improvements
Our excitement about what we will be able to do to improve the library and our services for our community continues to grow as we sort out what will happen over the next several months before the Measure Y funding is in place. Amidst the budgeting and scheduling considerations, we’re still providing programs. What follows are some of the interesting events coming up.
Main Street: Aftermath
Dissonance is not a new feeling for me and I find myself conflicted in the aftermath of the local and national elections.
Local Dirt: Who will grow our munchies
Quaint as our rural countryside may seem, the history of Sonoma County agriculture is that of constant and dynamic change.
Stubborn Facts
Did we all just wake up this morning in a brave new world that some are calling the “post-truth era?” The Oxford Dictionary says this is so. It has named “post-truth” as the new word of the year. It defines it as “relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.”
Cultivating Community
It’s Christmastime in California. You can tell by all the potted poinsettias popping up around grocery store doors. The holiday’s standard bloomer is actually a tropical plant that originated in Mexico and Guatemala. It was introduced to the United States by diplomat Joel Roberts Poinsett, appointed in 1825 as the first U.S. Envoy to Mexico. In addition to being a diplomat, Poinsett was also a physician and an
Screenings: Disney’s Moana
The flawless diamond of an ocean sparkles in the sunlight and caresses the pearlescent shell and coral sand on the beaches of volcanic islands that are so real you can smell the lush frangipani and plumeria blossoms wafting on the trade winds. On one of these islands, little Moana (voiced by Louise Bush) is a wide-eyed toddler in a class of Polynesian preschoolers learning their lessons from the self described “village crazy woman,” Gramma Tala (Rachel House).
Guest Commentary: Pension reform is simple
The solution to the county’s pension problem is simple, it’s just not easy to implement. Implementation will require political courage, a commodity often in short supply. The fact there is a serious problem with the county’s pension cost was acknowledged by the Board of Supervisors in 2011. The recent report by the Independent Citizen Advisory Committee on Pension Matters further documented that the problem is far from being solved five years after reforms had begun. More importantly, as a result of the committee’s work, we now fully understand why pension costs are so high, and we know a way to fix that problem.
Guest Commentary: Protect residential areas from marijuana cultivation
Zoning serves to protect residential areas from incompatible land uses. The Cannabis Land Use Ordinance approved by the Sonoma County Planning Commission (sonomacounty.ca.gov/CAO/
Castles under attack
The saying “a man’s home is his castle” is so old it predates gender correctness. It means that no matter how humble, unadorned or unesteemed a man’s (or woman’s) house might be, it is his to call her own. It is his to satisfy the needs for safe shelter, desired comfort and life’s big investment. No matter the physical address, it is where he is king (or queen.)
Arts & Entertainment
Yale Whiffenpoofs to land on Raven stage Sunday
The very name “Whiffenpoofs” is whimsical, but followers of the collegiate music space know that the repertoire and reputation of this Yale University a cappella group is anything but laughable. Sure there are old Yale drinking songs, certainly a bit of jazz-era energy, as well as more modern pop. But are they classical? And what exactly is a “whiffenpoof” anyway?