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Healdsburg
March 19, 2026

Foss Creek Pathway Wins Award from Bicycle Coalition

While the Great Redwood Trail continues to inch along toward its goal of linking San Francisco and Arcata with a 320-mile bike path, a more local project has earned a regional award as the best bike infrastructure project in the county. The Foss Creek Pathway,...

‘Healdsburg Ciclovía’ Cycling Event Proposed Downtown

Healdsburg city leaders approved a new, comprehensive event policy at their meeting last week, replacing the outdated one that's been in place for the past decade. And during their discussion, we learned that AVFilm — the local film org that's opening a movie theater downtown —...

Council pulls growth amendment from ballot

In a surprise move Monday night, the Healdsburg City Council decided not to put an amendment to the Growth Management Ordinance on the November ballot. 

Flags flying afoul of code

Old glory is starting to show her age.

Letters to the Editor 10-8-15

Planning ahead

Holiday celebrations ahead

Churches, nonprofit organizations, and business associations are

Jam’s Joy Bungalow offers free food twice a month

From her perch in her tiny kitchen on the plaza, Jamilah Nixon of Jam’s Joy Bungalow has a good view of the daily struggles of Sebastopol’s homeless population, many of whom spend the day in the plaza. But she knows that these days it’s not only the homeless who are struggling financially and may be in need of a good hot meal.Nixon has always been generous with food, offering sandwiches to those in need, but this month, she made it official by announcing that she’d be offering free food to anyone who needs it on the second and fourth Wednesdays of the month between 3 and 5 p.m.On those days, she makes a big pot of something luscious and dishes it up for anyone who needs it, be they the unhoused, laid off workers or even those who she said “just need to feel that something good happened to them that day.”In these times, that line could get pretty long.“I live in Sebastopol, and I’m a single mom raising a daughter,” Nixon said. “If I was out of work right now or was furloughed or had a business that wasn’t doing well, I know that it would be really tough for me to make ends meet, and give her a sense of normalcy and be able to go out and kind of feel like you’re part of the community.”She launched the first food giveaway on Christmas Day, serving gumbo and cornbread. Then on Jan. 12, she put out the word on social media.The next day, roughly 25 people showed up to take her up on her offer.She was a little disappointed in the turnout because she’d made enough food for 50 — black eyed peas with chicken and andouille sausage chili with cornbread, but she realizes it may take a while for people to catch on that it’s happening.“It’s just gonna have to grow by word of mouth,” she said. “And we have a couple guys in the homeless community that are spreading the word.”But the food isn’t meant solely for the homeless.“I also really want to reach out to restaurant workers and other workers that are furloughed and that are barely making ends meet or have families that they’re trying to feed,” she said.“There’s no questions asked,” Nixon said. “We’re just offering everybody a bowl of food … and if they have a family at home, and they need three or four bowls, that’s fine too. We’ll pack it up to go,” she said.Though she’s not soliciting donations for this effort, she’s be happy to accept them, noting people can just leave money in the tip jar.“We’re putting everything in there toward buying food,” she said. “All that money is being funneled back into feeding people, either when they come up and they need a sandwich, or when they come to one of these Wednesday events.”“We have so much abundance in Sonoma County,” Nixon said, “that it’s important to recognize that not everybody in our community is thriving right now.”Townsy is a recently-launched Sebastopol community app, offering local news, online shopping at local stores, a local event guide, local volunteer and job boards and more. 

Community briefs

City meetings this week

Are coastal changes coming?

A lot is happening along Sonoma County’s 35 miles of Pacific Ocean coastline these days. And this time we’re not talking about the migrating gray whales or the disappointing closure of the dungeness crab season. We’re talking about actions and proposals by the dominant coastal species — humans.

The new normal

Things that would have once given us pause become commonplace in the aftermath of the fires
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