Inside Arden February 2024

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PATRICIA PA P ATTR AT RIIC CIIA AP PRENDERGAST RE R EN ND DE ER RG GA AS STT KATHRINE LEMKE WASTE

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EVERY DAY IS A GOOD DAY TO MAKE YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD A BET TER PL ACE. 28 S

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PA PATR PAT PATRIC PATRICIA P ATRICIA A ATR AT ATRIC TTR R RIC ICIA IC CIA C IIA A PRE P PRENDERGAST PR R RE EN NDER NDERGA NDERGAS NDERGAST DERGAS DERG DERGA D ERGA ER S ERGAS ERG STT SHIRLEY HAZLETT

KATHRINE LEMKE WASTE

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3104 O ST. #120 • SACRAMENTO, CA 95816

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COVER ARTIST

3104 O St. #120, Sac. CA 95816 (Mail Only)

info@insidepublications.com

KATHRINE LEMKE WASTE Kathrine Lemke Waste is a Sacramento artist with a national presence. Her work celebrates the light and abundance of California's Central Valley. She is a past president of American Women Artists and a leader in its national effort to get the work of women artists into the permanent collections of America's art museums. Shown: “Strawberry Tart,” watercolor, 28 inches by 22 inches. Visit lemkewaste.com.

PUBLISHER Cecily Hastings EDITOR Cathryn Rakich editor@insidepublications.com PRODUCTION M.J. McFarland DESIGN Cindy Fuller PHOTOGRAPHY Linda Smolek, Aniko Kiezel @anikophotos AD COORDINATION Michele Mazzera DISTRIBUTION Info@insidepublications.com or visit insidesacramento.com ACCOUNTING Daniel Nardinelli, COO, daniel@insidepublications.com

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NEW ACCOUNTS: CALL 916.443.5087

info@insidepublications.com EDITORIAL POLICY Commentary reflects the views of the writers and does not necessarily reflect those of Inside Sacramento. Inside Sacramento is delivered for free to more than 80,000 households in Sacramento. Printing and distribution costs are paid entirely by advertising revenue. Inside Sacramento welcomes readers’ comments. Letters to the Editor should be submitted via email to editor@insidepublications.com. Please include name, address and phone number. Letters may be published as space permits and edited for brevity. No portion may be reproduced mechanically or electronically without written permission of the publisher. All ad designs & editorial—©

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FEBRUARY 2024 VOL. 23 • ISSUE 1

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Publisher's Desk Out & About Giving Back Let's Get Personal City Beat Meet Your Neighbor Building Our Future Book Smart Sports Authority Animals & Their Allies Garden Jabber Spirit Matters Farm To Fork Restaurant Insider Open Studio To Do


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Comeback Story

LET’S MAKE A MARSHALL PLAN FOR DOWNTOWN’S RECOVERY

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By Cecily Hastings Publisher’s Desk

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ith March primary elections in full force, Sacramento needs a plan to repair the damage from recent years. Problems include homelessness, crime and the effects of destructive COVID-19 lockdown policies. We need solutions. Before the pandemic, the city was on its way to becoming a sought-after location. Between 2016 and 2018, I published two editions of our Inside Sacramento book highlighting the most interesting restaurants and shops in America’s farm-to-fork capital. The books were a hit. I was optimistic.

Today that optimism is gone. City life is worse, not better. A national survey of major cities ranks Sacramento as No. 2 in growth of homeless populations. From 2020 to 2023 Sacramento’s unhoused numbers exploded by 68%. Only Long Beach outranks our city with a 69% increase. Los Angeles is up 12%, Oakland and Seattle both up 20%. San Francisco decreased its homeless population by 7%. You can guess where they went. Our commercial real estate market struggles. Crime rates are rising. Enforcement of existing laws is piecemeal. Small businesses fight to

stay afloat. Blight consumes many Downtown streets. Some of this is attributable to draconian pandemic lockdown policies in California. States and cities that reopened sooner enjoyed faster recoveries. When I interviewed the four main mayoral candidates, I asked whether they would support a mayoral commission to promote a Downtown renaissance. History buffs recall the Marshall Plan after World War II. The Marshall Plan was an American initiative to aid Western Europe in 1948. The U.S. transferred $13.3 billion ($173 billion in 2023) in economic recovery programs. The goals were to rebuild wartorn regions, remove trade barriers, modernize industry, improve prosperity and prevent the spread of communism. The plan worked. Here’s why: The best and brightest people were brought together to solve an international crisis. The program’s leader, Gen. George Marshall, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1953. I’m proposing we find a Gen. Marshall figure to lead our city in a renaissance. The plan might be best built around a civic committee with more autonomy. A less attractive option is a city-led commission. Members must include Downtown interests—commercial property owners and developers, and state workplace policymakers from the Department of General Services. Small business interests and people who live Downtown need to be at the table. Also included should be business improvement districts. And the District Attorney’s office and Visit Sacramento. As state assemblymember and mayoral candidate Kevin McCarty tells me, “City governments can’t do everything. We can’t control interest


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rates, can’t control labor costs, and don’t control the cost of food and materials, steel and wood. But we can control whether to incentivize outside dining, the music scene, tourism. We can celebrate our Downtown and look for ways to evolve. I absolutely support the idea.” Another mayoral candidate, former City Council member Steve Hansen, says, “The central city isn’t just a playground for people to come and go from. It’s the greatest producer of revenue for our city. If we allow it to fall apart, if we don’t have a plan for the next economy, then the city will likely go bankrupt. Investors across the country will make a decision on this region based on the central city’s look, feel and quality of life. It determines our city’s financial health, our psychological health and our morale.” Former state senator and mayoral hopeful Richard Pan notes, “With 40,000 state employees being permanently furloughed, that created a vacuum. How do you get them back? They need to feel safe coming back. I would strongly encourage them to come back, including city employees.” Mayoral candidate Flojaune Cofer agrees with the idea of a commission, but adds the city also needs an LGBTQ

commission. She completely misses the point. Please keep the idea of a Downtown renaissance leadership group in mind when you vote for mayor in the March primary. The new mayor should play a leadership role in appointing the best people and creating the best structure for recovery. The job requires wisdom to keep the committee small, focused and on track. For everyone’s sake, can local media, academic, civic and business leaders please discuss this idea? Goals are rarely met without a plan on how to get there. Readers ask how they can contribute to Inside Sacramento. Here’s how. Consider a paid supporting membership starting at $19.95 a year. Use the QR code and help support our mission to deliver local news. Sign up for our weekly newsletter at insidesacramento. com. Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n


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Changes in the New Year are good! 2 years ago, I made the MAJOR decision to move to another real estate office — TIM COLLOM/HOUSE REAL ESTATE. It’s been 2 years of fun, much success and great joy. Unfortunately, new photos were required. This photo was taken AFTER the shoot. The photographer snapped the picture, put the caption on it and sent it to me...it definitely says it all! If you want to make changes in the new year, take a chance and move forward with it! Make it happen! And if buying your dream home is one of your wishes, call me! After 45 years in real estate, I can make your dream a reality!

Call or text Carmah Hatch 916.765.6210 DRE#00761003

(916) 288-1985 | www.gischarter.org 900 Morse Avenue, Sacramento, CA 95864 IA n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM

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The Art Of Food

NEW COOKBOOK CELEBRATES LOCAL ARTWORK AND RECIPES

“Savoring Sacramento: An Artists’ Cookbook” features cover art “Forks and Spoons” by Anthony Rogone.

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he Sacramento Fine Arts Center has released “Savoring Sacramento: An Artists’ Cookbook,” a 300-page compendium of food and art. The cookbook contains recipes from dozens of individuals alongside foodand dining-related artwork by artists celebrating local culinary and visual arts sectors. “We are dedicating this beautiful art cookbook to our Sacramento area community with its incredible diversity of languages and cultures,” says Angelia Gordon, the center’s executive director. “Many of the recipes reflect

JL By Jessica Laskey Out & About

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the richness of the Sacramento area, as well as its history in its art and recipes.” Cookbooks are available in the gallery store for $45. Sacramento Fine Arts Center is at 5330 Gibbons Drive in Carmichael. For information, visit sacfinearts.org.

PARKS APP There’s a new way to explore Sacramento County regional parks—a free mobile app. Visitors can use the app to plan a visit, navigate within a park, discover new places, and locate parking, restrooms, picnic areas and other amenities. They can access information about ecological, geological and historical points of interest, share experiences and photos, and more. “From the Dry Creek Parkway to the American River Parkway and down into the Delta, this app is a new and innovative way for us to help park visitors explore and connect with our parks and other park visitors,” says Director of Regional Parks Liz Bellas.

For information, visit regionalparks. saccounty.gov.

SINGING VALENTINE If you’re looking for a Valentine’s Day gift, consider a singing valentine from two local singing groups—Voices of California and Stay Tuned. The groups offer a choice of two love songs sung by a quartet and delivered in person to your special someone in the greater Sacramento area. Cost is $55 standard delivery, $25 for phone delivery or $250 for corporate delivery. For information, call (530) 621-1904.

SEEKING SINGERS The Capital Chorale seeks singers of all voice types to join rehearsals for the spring concert, “Handel Beyond Messiah.” The concert features a full orchestra and takes place Friday, April 26. Rehearsals begin Thursday, Feb. 29, at 6:30 p.m. at Pioneer Congregational United Church at 2700 L St.

To be included in the roster of singers, email Music Director Elliot Jones at musicdirector@pioneerucc.org.

SUTTER MURAL A new mural at Sutter Medical Center on Capitol Avenue celebrates the hospital’s century of service. Sutter Hospital opened kitty-corner to Sutter’s Fort in December 1923 and was touted as “the most modern hospital to be found in the state.” One hundred years later, Sutter Health has grown into a 24-hospital health system serving more than 3 million Californians. Rebecca Denna, a neonatal intensive-care registered nurse who has worked at Sutter for 40 years, proposed the idea of a mural. Local artist (and former Sutter employee) Uli Smith created the artwork. Find the mural, “Sutter on the Scene,” on the second floor by the check-in station and chapel, near the skywalk across 29th Street.


Classic... Cl assic...

Sutter Medical Center celebrates 100 years of service with new mural “Sutter on the Scene” by Uli Smith.

HABITAT HOMES Nine families have received keys to their new homes at Cornerstone, a first-of-its-kind collaborative affordable housing community by Habitat for Humanity and Mutual Housing of California. Cornerstone is 18 single-family homeownership opportunities, plus wrap-around services in education, job skills, workforce development training, financial stability and more. Each family put in 500 hours of sweat equity alongside hundreds of volunteers to build their homes. Through Habitat for Humanity’s affordable mortgage solutions, they purchased their homes with a 30-year, 0% interest equivalent mortgage. “As a mother with the responsibility of raising my girls on my own, I want to experience a forever home with them,” says Jessica, a single mother who grew

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up in foster homes and now has the “family home” she dreamed of.

DREAMER FINALISTS Five business concepts have been named finalists in Downtown Sacramento Foundation’s 2023-24 Calling All Dreamers competition. Capital Tuk-Tuk, Ecojoyous, Nouvelle Healing, Planted Foods and The Dreamland Cinema are eligible for a cash prize of up to $5,000 each if they open a storefront Downtown. One finalist will win $20,000 and a startup package valued at $100,000 with in-kind services. Second place receives $10,000. Finalists work with Capital Corridor SCORE mentors to refine their business plans and prepare for a final pitch to the selection committee. Winners will be announced around Feb. 20. For information, visit downtownsac.org.

TRADITIONS FOR THE FUTURE EST. 1926

LYON VILLAGE

2580 Fair Oaks Blvd. Ste 30. Sacramento 916.487.7853

ALHAMBRA PLAN An extensive landscaping revitalization and beautification project along Alhambra Boulevard has wrapped up. Midtown Association’s $87,000 effort began in 2018 to enhance the Alhambra corridor with murals, landscape improvements and mobility infrastructure. The area is home to nearly 20 restaurants, a historic retail center, grocery store and The Cannery. The project’s final flowers were planted in front of the Limelight Bar & Café. “The Alhambra corridor connects East Sacramento with Midtown and serves as a key entrance to the central city,” says John Mikacich, Limelight owner and chair of the Alhambra Committee. “We are excited to invite the community to rediscover the Alhambra corridor.”

SCHOLARSHIPS Applications are open for more than two dozen scholarships of $500 to $1,000 through the Sacramento Region Community Foundation for students pursuing higher education. Criteria for each scholarship is unique, but most aim to support

students with specific financial need or career goals. Many are open exclusively to students with ties to the region. The foundation has awarded more than $225 million in scholarships and grants to the community since its inception in 1983. For information, visit sacregcf.org/students.

NORCAL CHAMPIONS East Sacramento Youth Soccer Club’s under-13 boys team won the Norcal State Cup for the first time in club history. In the final game against Madera United in Modesto, the team won 4-1 in what coach James Boyle calls “a brilliant performance. The boys have transformed themselves this season and have been rewarded with the biggest trophy of them all—State Cup winners.” Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Submissions are due six weeks prior to the publication month. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram:@ insidesacramento. n

East Sacramento Youth Soccer Club’s under-13 boys team wins Norcal State Cup.

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Kitty Whisperer Barbara Dow Photo by Linda Smolek

SPCA VOLUNTEER IS A FRIEND TO ALL FELINES

JL By Jessica Laskey Giving Back: Volunteer Profile

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arbara Dow is in her happy place, a chair in the cattery at the Sacramento SPCA, playing with two 8-year-old stray cats who are being socialized. “Rowdy has eye problems, but he knows my voice,” Dow says. “He’s not up for adoption right now, but they did take him to UC Davis to see what they can do for him. The other one, Rachel, is shy, but she loves me and lets me rub her tummy.” Dow has volunteered at SSPCA since 2018 and is lead mentor at the cattery.

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She trains other volunteers to work with the shelter’s felines, among the 6,000 stray or surrendered animals the nonprofit receives each year. Dow spent 17 years at Happy Tails Pet Sanctuary as an adoption counselor when she decided to check volunteer opportunities at SSPCA. She was impressed with the organization and its “amazing people.” She started as a cat socializer and worked up to lead mentor. “It’s very important for (volunteers) to understand what’s going on with

each cat before they just dive in and start petting away,” Dow says. “You have to understand the cat’s body language, when it’s approachable and when it’s not.” Dow spends most of her time in “teaser rooms,” where she sits with cats and learns their behaviors and preferences to pass along to other volunteers. “My job is to try to relax the cats and get them to not be so fearful,” Dow says. “The paperwork on each cat stall tells us who the cat is, where it came from, its age, intake type, as well as any medical problems. After we’ve gone in and evaluated them, we write the date and what we were able to do with them and what we observed.” Each cat is assigned a color code to designate friendliness—key information as volunteers come and go when schedules allow. “Orange means approachable and friendly, which is where volunteers start,” Dow says. “Green is in between, sometimes it might be friendly, or it might hide, so go slow. Pink is a hissy kitty that does not want to be bothered. “Sometimes I’ll just sit there with them and sing a song or talk in a mommy voice to them. I make a total fool of myself, but sometimes it relaxes them.” When Dow isn’t busy cooing to the kitties, she paints them. An artist trained in watercolor and oil at American River College, Dow paints all kinds of subjects, but pet portraits are among her favorites. She helped orchestrate cat-paw paintings for Happy Tails’ “Painting for Paws” fundraisers when she volunteered there. Though she used to keep a studio, Dow says the pandemic made selling art harder than ever. So she focuses on volunteering. “Being retired for years now, this gives me a purpose besides my painting to do something special for the animals as best as I can,” she says. “The people here are so amazing and so devoted to the animals, it’s like one big family. I’m never afraid to ask a question. There’s nothing to complain about.” For information on volunteering, adopting or donating, visit sspca.org. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n


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Let’s Get Personal MAYORAL CANDIDATES DEFEND PAST DECISIONS

Flojaune Cofer

Third of three parts

I

nside Sacramento interviewed the four candidates for mayor in the March 5 primary election—Flojaune Cofer, Steve Hansen, Kevin McCarty and Dr. Richard Pan. The top two finishers will advance to a runoff in November if no candidate receives at least 50.1% of the March vote. The election is nonpartisan. Cofer is policy director for Public Health Advocates, a nonprofit that promotes community health care. This is her first run for public office. Hansen is a managing partner for Lighthouse Public Affairs, a corporate consulting firm. He served as a City Council member for eight years. McCarty is a five-term state assemblymember and former City Council member, serving 10 years. Pan, a pediatrician, is a former state senator and assemblymember, serving two terms in each house. This is his first campaign for city office. Our final questions were specific to each candidate. Interviews were edited for clarity and length. Cofer: Since 2020 you have repeatedly and publicly called for defunding police. Since then, crime has risen dramatically. Will you defend your position as mayor?

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Steve Hansen

What’s always missing from the context of that question is what I asked for us to fund. From 2017 to 2020, we had no youth homicides in the city. We did that by funding and networking violence prevention and intervention. People who were maybe on the high risk of doing shootings were part of this network and were part of the prevention. It’s shortsighted to just say, ‘Oh, look, we don’t care about public safety.’ No, we’re trying to make sure we’re investing in prevention. I’m a public health professional. I’m a woman who has lived alone in this city, who understands the importance of safety. What I want to do is fund what works. Your defense of your alleged violation of campaign finance rules is that the law itself was wrong when it was updated. Shouldn’t you follow the law and take a responsibility, or at least returned any money? I’m not alleging that the law is wrong. I’m alleging the law as it’s written is right. It says that the primary election period starts on April 1, and goes until March 31. This year there’s a March election, and I didn’t even open my campaign committee until April 13. I am in compliance with the law as it’s written. We followed the letter of the law and even reached out to city staff

Kevin McCarty

Richard Pan

to confirm that that was the correct interpretation.

fund. The arena was built, and we need to make sure it succeeds.

Hansen: In recent years you favored fences to prevent public access on the Sac River Parkway. Do you regret opposing public access to the river and levee? I support public access to the river and the levee. I want to make sure that we’re smart about how we do it. And that we continue to prioritize the on-street safety of people. But I will commit to continuing to work with the community to eventually create that access. That’s always the position I’ve had. We just didn’t align policy and practice.

Pan: You pushed and voted for the passage of AB 2098, which was repealed a year later. Do you regret that vote? Note: Signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2022, AB 2098 said that a doctor who spread false or misleading information about COVID prevention and treatment or questioned the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines could have his or her license suspended, placed on probation, or revoked. I don’t regret the vote. The purpose of the bill was to address a very real problem of a small handful of physicians who basically were not providing accurate information to patients. There’s an argument to be made that that the Medical Board of California already had the power to do that. But they wanted us to send a signal that yes, the legislature wants them to be able to do that. It’s important that the health providers you go to give accurate, truthful information.

McCarty: You voted against funding Golden 1 Center and were part of a lawsuit to stop it. Do you regret those votes? I voted against the subsidy because I thought the people should have a chance to weigh in, like for school bonds. And I wasn’t convinced that it properly protected the general fund. Unfortunately, my fears are materializing. The general fund is now paying that debt service. But the arena did a great job and saved a dying mall. Thirteen years later, I still have those concerns about protecting the general

Please submit reader comments to Cecily Hastings at publisher@ insidepublications.com. n


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City Council candidate Phil Pluckebaum. Councilmember Katie Valenzuela did not respond to request for a photo session.

Fresh Start PLUCKEBAUM STEPS UP WHERE VALENZUELA STUMBLES

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any years ago, Ray Kerridge, then city manager of Sacramento, invited me to lunch. Between his salad and my cheeseburger, he asked a profound question. If I were on City Council, where would my loyalties stand—with the district that elected me, or the entire city? I fumbled for an answer and made up something diplomatic. If I didn’t look after people in my district, nobody else would. But my

RG By R.E. Graswich City Beat

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City Council decisions would impact everyone in town, not just one council district. My loyalty goes to the city. Ray’s question has been on my mind as I think about the City Council District 4 election between Katie Valenzuela and Phil Pluckebaum. Ballots are in the mail for the March 5 primary. With only two serious contestants, there shouldn’t be a runoff. If Pluckebaum wins, the community will judge how he answers Ray’s question—whether he puts the city or district first. Pluckebaum served on the planning and design commission but never had to worry about the impact of a City Council vote. Valenzuela is another story. She was elected to City Council in March 2020, nine days before COVID-19 lockdowns. She beat a two-term

incumbent and arrived with zero municipal experience. But Valenzuela had something priceless—the opportunity to lead her community through two generational crises, a pandemic and homelessness. Success would depend on her answer to Ray’s question. Valenzuela could have chosen to put the city first. Or she could have concentrated on the disgrace illustrated by tent villages across her district. She picked a third option. She decided to represent herself. There’s nothing unusual about politicians who represent themselves and ignore the people who elect them. Some politicians go to selfish extremes. They accept bribes or secure civil service jobs for family members and friends. Others set themselves up for higher offices or lobbying jobs.

Valenzuela is different. Her selfrepresentation took a philosophical path. As a strident democratic socialist, she decided to serve as a proselytizer for her faith. She made decisions based on radical political beliefs, not caring what constituents thought. She knew few of the 40,000 or so people in District 4 shared her extreme views. But that didn’t matter. She won the election. She knew best. Valenzuela, who stopped speaking to me more than a year ago, is easy to like. She began her political career by ignoring political pros who told her to forget her challenge to Steve Hansen. She campaigned mostly alone. She knew nothing about City Hall. She ran because she felt the city wasn’t doing enough to support new housing and reasonable rents for young middle-class residents with


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Now she’s running for reelection with a massive disadvantage. The 2021 reapportionment disaster orchestrated by City Attorney Susana Alcala Wood stripped Valenzuela of much of her distinct. The new map pushed her into neighborhoods where, if residents know her at all, they hate her. Valenzuela can’t play energetic newcomer in East Sacramento and River Park. People in those neighborhoods heard her monologues on the evils of public safety budgets. They saw her defend homeless camps. They realize she’s an ideologue, a party of one, ready to force her political views on everybody in District 4. This time you know what you’re getting. R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us at Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Allons Au Cinéma!

Cecile Mouette Downs Photo by Aniko Kiezel

FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL CONTINUES TO DELIGHT

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crime drama. A comedy featuring an animated inner voice. A romantic comedy about an undocumented nanny in Paris. A drama that explores the Bataclan concert hall terrorist massacre of 2015. These are just a few plotlines from movies that will be featured at this year’s French Film Festival in June at the Tower Theatre. Now in its 22nd year, the event is the perfect way for Francophiles, cinephiles and anyone looking for a good time to enjoy new films from France. “We choose films we like and think our audience would enjoy,” says festival co-founder, executive director and artistic director Cécile Mouette Downs. “We have a good mix of perspectives. Not all French film is super intellectual. We like to present

JL By Jessica Laskey Meet Your Neighbor

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comedies, but even if the film is funny, it’s thoughtful, too.” In 2001, Downs arrived in Sacramento by way of New York, where she worked in the film department of the Cultural Services division of the French Embassy. Before that, she was a press officer in her native Paris for the Conseil Supérieur de l’Audiovisuel (the French federal communications commission). She realized Sacramento was ripe for an injection of cinéma thanks to the Crest and Tower historic movie houses and an appetite for new cultural experiences. Downs went to work creating the inaugural event in 2002. “My dad loved film, so I grew up watching classic films,” says Downs, who lives with her husband and two sons in Curtis Park. “He’d let me stay up late if there was going to be a particularly good one on TV. I studied history in school and ended up putting the two things I like most together.” Thanks to the work of Downs, cofounder Connie Georgiu and a team of volunteers, as well as media attention from the Bee’s then film critic Joe Baltake, the first festival sold out. Over the next two decades, the festival grew to include live discussions

with directors, a Winter Shorts Fest that features brief films nominated for the César Awards (French Academy Awards), a Minifest one-day festival in the fall, and other special events in partnership with organizations such as M5 Arts, Crocker Art Museum, Verge Center for the Arts, Sacramento Public Library and Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra. Downs and her selection committee—managing director Jane Berner and board president Kevin Elstob, known to festivalgoers as “Le Professeur,” plus Paris contacts Stéphanie Vasseur and Richard St. Ofle—keep the festival balanced. For example, the 2023 festival included films with an equal number of men and women directors, equal number of comedies and dramas, two films made by North African directors and four directors making debuts. All films feature English subtitles and are available to American audiences only through the festival. “Most of the films we show have no U.S. distribution, so this is the only chance for people to see them,” Downs says. While COVID rocked the festival’s world, the show went on. It just moved online. The festival was hosted on a

virtual streaming platform until inperson festivities resumed this year. Downs says the group plans to present its fall Minifest virtually and then phase out the platform, hoping they’ll never need it again. She was heartened to see audiences return in person and hopes it’s a bellwether for the future. “I want people to know how fun it is,” Downs says. “There’s no need to be intimidated by foreign films. If the story is good, you forget the subtitles are there after two minutes. It’s all about presenting good human stories.” The Sacramento French Film Festival is June 7–9 at the Tower Theatre. The Winter Shorts Fest, featuring shorts nominated for a 2024 César (French Academy Awards) is Feb. 22. For information, visit sacramentofrenchfilmfestival.org and the streaming platform at virtual. sacramentofrenchfilmfestival.org. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n


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‘A’ Winner TRANSPORTATION INITIATIVE REALLY PAYS OFF

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he idea that government can do things well is a tough sell in some circles. But I’ll go out on a limb to argue Measure A, the half-cent sales tax for transportation approved twice by local voters, is a success story. Don’t confuse this with the so-called “citizens’ initiative” Measure A that went down in flames in 2022. That Measure A was opposed by goodgovernment groups such as the League of Women Voters, who denounced it as “the product of developers, business organizations and labor advocates” rather than sound and balanced transportation planning.

GD By Gary Delsohn Building Our Future

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The Measure A I’m talking about is administered by the Sacramento Transportation Authority, an independent local government agency overseen by a 16-member board of directors. Elected officials from cities in Sacramento County, along with county supervisors, comprise the board. Measure A generates about $170 million a year in revenues. Between 2009 and 2019, it pumped more than $3.5 billion into the county’s economy, including matching and assorted monies from state and federal sources. Sure, we still have too many potholes. Traffic is a major headache. There are local bottlenecks that drive us all crazy. We don’t do enough to encourage people to drive less. But think about where we would be if voters rejected Measure A in 1989. Or again in 2004, when an astounding 75% of the electorate approved the measure and allowed it to continue until 2039. “Measure A has improved the quality of life for all of those that live, work and visit the county of Sacramento and its seven cities,” Kevin Bewsey, executive director of the Sacramento

Transportation Authority, tells me. “This continued investment has created a truly multimodal transportation system with the ability to make further improvements over time.” If anything, Bewsey, an affable executive with years of experience in the public sector, may be understating Measure Kevin Bewsey A’s impact. Money raised by the sales tax expanded light rail, paid elected officials—with real community for renovation of the multimodal participation—rather than developers train station Downtown, financed eager to improve access to their new improvements to the Highway 50-Watt subdivisions, call the shots. The defeat Avenue Interchange, supported mass of the 2022 Measure A extension drove transit, fixed potholes, and accelerated home that point. economic development and job creation And while some people are anxious with transportation investments. to nail down another extension, Rich I would rather see more Measure A Desmond, the Sacramento County funds go for projects that encourage supervisor who chairs the Sacramento cycling and cycling safety and other Transportation Authority, is wise to non-automobile uses. But the list of counsel patience. projects funded by Measure A serves “Measure A contributes on so many many interests. different levels,” Desmond says. The list will never make everyone “Obviously, in providing us more happy, but it’s best when accountable resources to fix our roadways but also


WE’RE OPEN

to upgrade our roadways to make them more friendly to pedestrians and cyclists and make them safer. “And while doing that, it really opens up economic investment opportunities in areas that make our transportation network more accessible to people.” Desmond believes 2024 isn’t a good time to press for a Measure A extension, given economic and other uncertainties. He says, “I think we need to get a lot of stakeholders together from all the cities in the county, obviously the county supervisors and Regional Transit, environmental organizations, bike advocacy groups, and talk about an initiative possibly in 2026. We have to have a lot of people at the table because we have to strike the right balance to really make it work.” He’s right. Desmond has a strong, experienced executive director in Bewsey. Voters have shown they’ll support a local tax increase at the right time for the right projects if the right people are part of the planning. Gary Delsohn can be reached at gdelsohn@gmail.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Andrew, Jim (seated) and Carlin Naify Photo by Linda Smolek

Book Smart BEERS FINDS KEY TO KEEPING READERS COMING BACK

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s a kid, I spent hours at Beers Books. I made a beeline for animal books. Mom perused the art section. Dad skimmed remainders on a sidewalk sale cart. I recently found a Beers Books bookmark while going through some boxes. Instantly, I floated back to those book-filled days. My experience is not unique. Beers Books has been a beacon for book lovers for nearly 90 years. Early days are murky, but the shop began around 1936 when Nellie Beer worked as a clerk for L.H. Mytinger Books at 1125 Eighth St. At some point

JL By Jessica Laskey Meet Your Neighbor

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the shop became Beers Books. A legacy was born. Beers has occupied five locations under four ownerships. After Nellie Beer came Frank Azevedo, who owned the store from 1941 to 1967. He sold to Harvey Shank, a retired Aerojet engineer responsible for the store’s metaphysical section. Shank sold to current owners Jim and Carlin Naify in 1985. The Naifys bought the building at 14th and J streets, and with it, the store. “It’s unusual for a small business to last that long,” Carlin says. “Jim and I consider the store a civic amenity. We’re its stewards.” As good stewards for 39 years, the Naifys kept the shop open through several moves, including 14th and J, 15th and L, Ninth and S, and, as of last August, 712 R St. When longtime manager Bill Senecal retired, the Naifys turned to family to continue the legacy. As a youngster, son Andrew Naify worked summers at

Beers. After graduation with a history degree from Lewis & Clark College, he worked at Powell’s Books in Portland for five years. He’s managed Beers for the past decade. “People are so loyal to the historic Beers, the only thing I really did was try to standardize the labeling for ease of browsing,” Andrew says. “It obviously had a solid foundation for a 90-year-old bookstore, so there was no need to reinvent the wheel.” Not reinvent, but modernize. Under Andrew, inventory was digitized, social media engagement expanded. With digitalization, social engagement and online sales, Andrew accomplished three key goals. He also nudged Beers into antiquarian and rare books. He makes scouting missions and examines book boxes brought in by customers. “We’ve bought and sold books from the 1500s, the 1600s. It’s incredibly fascinating to see the old inscriptions of previous owners. It definitely taps

into my appreciation for history,” he says. Since the store reopened on R Street, Andrew hosts more events. A front section accommodates gatherings of around 50 guests. He wants to improve the kids’ section to make the store “more inviting for families to post up and hang out and look at books.” He says, “We’re hoping to anchor this section of R Street. We kind of feel like we’re on the frontier of the R Street corridor. Folks are still finding us for the first time, even those who have been in Sacramento their whole lives. We want to make our presence felt.” For information, visit beersbooks.com. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n


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DEAL KILLER

Photo by Aniko Kiezel

MCCARTY’S VOTING RECORD: NO ON ARENA, NO ON KINGS

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evin Johnson was elected mayor twice without talking about basketball. An NBA All-Star for the Phoenix Suns, Johnson downplayed his sports legacy on the campaign trail. He wanted to be known as a business and education leader from Oak Park. He saw himself as a local success story and visionary, not an old jock. This year’s mayoral election brings another Kevin with basketball history.

RG By R.E. Graswich Sports Authority

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The candidate is Kevin McCarty, state assemblymember and former City Council member. McCarty wasn’t a basketball player. But during his City Hall tenure, basketball was a big part of his life. McCarty did his best to kill Golden 1 Center and hustle the Kings off to Seattle. For 40 years, most Sacramento City Council members tripped over themselves showing love for the Kings. They brag about attending games. They wear purple. Councilmember Katie Valenzuela produced a campaign video from a Downtown rooftop last year when the Kings made their brief playoff appearance. She stopped just short of taking credit for the season. Never mind that she has nothing to do with Golden 1 or the Kings. McCarty is another story. He was lead agitator in efforts to stop the City

Council from partnering with Kings ownership 10 years ago. He didn’t want city dollars spent on Golden 1 Center. He voted against the Kings every chance he got. McCarty wanted the arena subsidy placed on the ballot. Let voters decide, he said. Based on previous arena ballot measures, McCarty knew there was an excellent chance voters would say no. I’m not sure an arena ballot measure would pass today. Most people who attend Kings games live outside the city. Residents of Carmichael, Folsom, Roseville or Elk Grove don’t worry about their local tax dollars backstopping bond payments for a Downtown arena. They can’t vote in city elections. McCarty played political games. He knew the City Council had authority to sell bonds for arena construction. He knew the City Council’s job was to make tough decisions.

He knew a public vote was unnecessary. It’s an escape hatch for politicians who lack courage to do their jobs. Today McCarty doesn’t apologize for his attempts to kill the arena. He tells Inside, “Unfortunately, my fears are materializing because the general fund is now paying that debt service.” He’s right. Debt service on the city’s $273 million arena bonds is anchored by parking revenues. Dollars collected from garages and meters shrank, but not because of anything McCarty anticipated. The pandemic and permanent remote status of public employees broke the model. Today the general fund covers the shortfall, almost $3 million a year. The money comes from an emergency account the city created in 2015. I worked for Johnson in the mayor’s office when McCarty started causing


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trouble with the Kings. We considered him an annoyance. We knew he lacked City Council support to kill the arena. I was sympathetic to McCarty, but knew he missed the point. As a columnist for the Bee, I argued against several arena iterations. They were money grabs by wealthy team owners. The Golden 1 Center deal was different. Downtown was devastated by the recession. Businesses closed. State workers were furloughed. Westfield prepared to shutter its shopping mall at Seventh and K streets and walk away. The Kings abandoned their fans and packed their bags, first for Anaheim, then Seattle. At City Hall we envisioned Johnson being ridiculed as the All-Star mayor who lost his city’s team. Vivek Ranadive and his financial supporters brought unprecedented

opportunities. The new Kings owners agreed to pay for about half the arena and build a hotel and entertainment center on Westfield’s footprint. Making the deal was easy for all but two members of the City Council, Darrell Fong and McCarty. Now McCarty wants to be mayor. He recognizes the importance of the Kings and arena. But he can’t change history. If he had been mayor a decade ago, the Kings would have left town. Golden 1 Center and Downtown Commons wouldn’t exist. He never apologized. Which tells me he’d do the same thing all over again. R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

MCCARTY DID HIS BEST TO KILL GOLDEN 1 CENTER AND HUSTLE THE KINGS OFF TO SEATTLE.

IA n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM

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Markie

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You've Got A Friend NONPROFIT HELPS SHELTER ANIMALS AND BEYOND

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uggles, a pit bull mix with a tongue-forward smile, had skin infections across his face and body. Lilo faced death without immediate medical care. Markie’s new family received free dog food and preventive medicine after adopting the easygoing mutt. All three stories reflect the work of Friends of Front Street Animal Shelter, a nonprofit established in 2001 to help animals at the city shelter. Last year, Friends brought in $750,000, mostly from individual donors.

CR By Cathryn Rakich Animals & Their Allies

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Friends pays for specialized services, such as orthopedic surgery, for Front Street shelter animals— around $69,000 last year. In 2020, the group expanded its support to community members who can’t afford urgent medical care for their pets. “The cost of veterinary medicine is staggering,” says Jim Houpt, board president of Friends, which spent nearly $280,000 in 2023 helping companion animals in Sacramento and beyond. “Friends does not limit ourselves to the city of Sacramento. It’s open to anybody who needs it. They don’t even need to live in Sacramento County.” Through the vet support program, Friends has funded care for more than 500 pets and families. “If they are on any kind of public assistance, they are going to qualify automatically,” Houpt explains. “If not, they have to have a good reason why they need the help.” Last year, funding for the vet support program included $156,000

to assist animals owned by unhoused people. The magnitude of the vet support program is a primary reason why Friends recently hired two paid staff—an executive director and administrative assistant—to oversee the program. In addition to funding urgent and lifesaving care, Friends supports no-cost monthly vaccination and microchip clinics offered through Front Street. “We’ve paid for a veterinarian in the past, vaccines in the past. We’ve made sure we get breakfast out there for volunteers,” Houpt says. “When you show up at the monthly clinics, they don’t ask where you came from, if you need the help,” he says. “If they are there, we figure they need it.” Houpt reports that a one-time Petco Foundation grant supports a significant portion of the vaccination and microchip clinics. “When that money runs out, we’ll be back to supporting it again,” he says.

Front Street’s weekly pet food pantry is funded by Friends when community food donations fall short. Friends recently purchased a $7,000 Tuff Shed where food gets repackaged for distribution. The hospice program is “a favorite of mine,” Houpt says. Friends funds hospice care for fostered Front Street animals who need medical care for the remainder of their lives. A veterinarian recommends an animal for the hospice program. Friends pays the monthly cost of the pet’s ongoing medical care. To reduce the number of feral cats (also called community cats), Friends sponsors spay and neuter surgeries for 50 felines every Monday at the Community Spay Neuter Clinic on Bradshaw Road. “The clinic works with larger trappers in the area,” Houpt says. “We pay for everything,” often more than $10,000 per month. Last year, Friends gave close to $100,000 in cash grants to nonprofit rescue groups that took difficult-


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CALL US TODAY! to-place animals. The majority of grants are attached to individual pets with behavior or medical issues. For behavioral issues, rescue groups can use the funds to hire a consultant or trainer. Friends also sponsors yearly fundraisers for area animal rescue groups, such as Rotts of Friends and Fat Kitty City. The group donated $5,000 to last year’s Coalition for Community Cats Walk-A-Thon. “We’ve done sponsorships for Sacramento Valley Crime Stoppers because they’ve been very helpful with our animal control officers and animal abuse cases,” Houpt says. Friends holds the annual Paws to Party fundraiser for Front Street, with help from shelter volunteers. This year’s Brewfest, with beer tastings and food trucks, will be in April. On the Big Day of Giving, Friends has more individual donors than any other nonprofit in the Sacramento area, Houpt reports. “I like to say a lot of what we do helps all area shelters by helping people avoid the need to surrender animals to shelters or avoid animals

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being abandoned. I think that’s a really big part of our need to exist,” he says. To donate or for information, visit friendsoffrontstreet.com.

‘DEATH TRAP’ UPDATE As reported in the January edition of Inside Sacramento, birds are entering the public art structure at the Franklin Light Rail Station, becoming trapped and dying. Sacramento Regional Transit reports that temporary “safety netting” has been added to the structure to prevent birds from entering the structure. The artist, David Best, is scheduled to make permanent changes this month. Cathryn Rakich can be reached at crakich@surewest.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Home Remedies WHY SHOP WHEN YOU CAN GROW YOUR OWN

y millennial son asked if it’s possible to grow summer vegetables indoors. A large, rambunctious dog roams his backyard, which resembles Road Warrior terrain. It wasn’t the site question that intrigued me, but his reason for growing his own food for the first time—nutritional and health benefits. He and my daughter-in-law are workout fanatics. They’re extremely particular about ingredients they use in meals. It was only a matter of time before they stopped “borrowing” my fruits and vegetables and explored their own home garden. A National Gardening Association study found more than 18 million new gardeners spawned during the pandemic. Millennial gardeners increased 65%, Gen Z gardeners 44%.

M

DV By Dan Vierria Garden Jabber

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Both groups are interested in the environment and healthy living. These were children who pushed peas under the last bite of mashed potatoes when Mom looked away. Now they grow peas. Sacramento benefits from a long summer growing season and relatively mild winter. An extended summer of warmth and sunlight results in sweeter and better tasting produce with higher, nutrient-rich yields. Our home gardens are tiny pharmacies, bottles of supplements and mini med clinics to help balance out jelly donut consumption. Eating well revolves around choices. Peppers are among the most nutritious veggies, along with spinach, carrots, kale, garlic, collard greens and sweet potatoes. Peppers are loaded with essential vitamins, antioxidants and fiber. They are low-calorie, with around 30 calories in a bell pepper. Lucky for us, peppers are easy to grow. The little guys love warm weather. Research studies and less scientific polling always place tomatoes as the overwhelming favorite summer garden treat. Tomatoes are stuffed with Vitamin C and antioxidants, especially lycopene. Lycopene helps combat heart disease and some cancers. Behind the revered tomato in popularity are peppers, cucumbers, green beans and squash.

Blueberries, apples and citrus fruit are healthy additions to gardens. Blueberries have been elevated to the “superfood” category, along with peppers, tomatoes, avocados, spinach, garlic, onions, kale and a few other home garden choices. A superfood has an abundance of nutritional benefits, including antioxidants, minerals and vitamins. Spanning all age groups, vegetables still fall under two categories, yuck or yum. Taste buds are notorious tricksters. People instantly decide personal winners and losers. Kale and cilantro are a couple of love ’em or spit ’em hall of famers. Both are cool weather vegetables. Eggplant is a polarizing choice. Several varieties of eggplant are gorgeous to behold. But try to give one away. “I don’t eat eggplant” or “What do you do with it?” are common refrains. Grow what you or your family enjoy eating and what neighbors find palatable. There’s no nutritional value in uneaten produce. As we contemplate which edibles to buy and plant, consider other healthful aspects. Some folks feel more comfortable knowing they prepared the soil themselves. Home gardeners eliminate or greatly reduce pesticide use and monitor applications of what and how much fertilizer. Market

produce is apt to be loaded with pesticides and fertilizers. Environmentally conscious gardeners consider carbon emissions connected to growing food. Growing at home eliminates a fraction of transportation energy concerns. Grocery store produce suffers reduced nutritional value and flavor because of time spent in storage and transit. It was bred to look pretty, but not necessarily to have an attractive taste. Bite into a supermarket tomato for proof. Choose garden fruits and vegetables wisely. Buy seed packets and nursery plants for good health and divine flavor. Nurture your produce and respect its value. Should you decide to forego growing edibles this year, our wonderful farmers markets can fill needs. Yes, we are truly blessed. Dan Vierria is a University of California Cooperative Extension Master Gardener for Sacramento County. He can be reached at masterg29@gmail.com. For answers to gardening questions, contact the UCCE Master Gardeners at (916) 876-5338, email mgsacramento@ucanr. edu or visit sacmg.ucanr.edu. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n


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Heavenly Appeals REDISCOVERED PRAYER JOURNAL DISTILLS HOPE

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efore my retirement as a health care chaplain, I was privileged to hear the prayers of patients who were hurting, sick and discouraged. They were heavenly appeals I wanted to share with you, but patient privacy prevented publication. In other cases, patient families recorded their prayers in the public journal of our hospital chapel. The journal was a spiral notebook on the altar where visitors wrote anonymous requests. I recently rediscovered some of those requests. Now I feel comfortable sharing them. As you read these collected prayers, I encourage you to do two things. First,

NB By Norris Burkes Spirit Matters

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recall situations where God answered your prayers and granted grace. Second, offer your own prayer for these writers. Some prayers are simple one-liners, like the child who asked, “Lord, help me to be a football player.” But most are deeply moving entreaties searching for healing, acceptance and understanding. One writer searched for meaning: “God, or whoever, “I don’t know if there is a Creator/ God. I only know that my day to leave this life will come. I just hope that the memories of my mother and father will be with me just like my parents were with me the day I was born. If there is a Creator/God, he/she will know that I tried to live my life with a clean heart.” Some petitioners were scared: “Dear Lord, “I need your guidance now. I don’t have my mom anymore, so my dad and I are lost. My son and his wife have a sick baby girl. I need you to help us. Please hold my family tight. I love you, dear Father. “In the name of the Father and Holy Spirit.”

Other revealed a struggle no one wants to face: “Dear Lord, “Mom’s accident crossed your desk and you approved it. Now we have to turn off the ventilator. It’s the hardest decision this family has ever made. My sister is hanging on with vain hope. Please help her see the truth and let Mom go. “Mom is your child, Lord. I know she has a mansion waiting for her. The rest of us have peace about letting her go. Please pass that peace on to my sister. Time is a factor, Lord. Finances are a factor, too. “The life she’s living now isn’t life. It isn’t fair to Mom to have to be like she is. Please help my sister to understand that we are all suffering. Give our family the strength to cross this bridge and give Mom a peace that only you can give. “Amen.” One writer, apparently a caregiver, compared her pain to that of her patients. She expressed guilt many of us feel when seeing our problems in the light of tragedy experienced by others: “Dear God,

“No one I know is dying or suffering, so I need to stop being a baby about my problems. I should be praying for those who truly need love and support. I’m going through a divorce, and I feel depressed all the time. However, I’m grateful for my health, friends and family. “Please help me overcome this feeling of anguish, loss, anxiety and jealousy. It’s not good for my health, and I’m unable to help my patients who truly need it. “Thanks for listening. “Amen.” Finally, the last page offered a benediction for this column: “To anyone who reads this: “I hope God answers all your prayers in the New Year. The Lord is good! “Amen.” Norris Burkes can be reached at comment@thechaplain.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. Burkes is available for public speaking at civic organizations, places of worship, veterans groups and more. For details and fees, visit thechaplain.net. n


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6152 VIA CASITAS 6400 SOLITARY LN #A 5037 VERDANT LN 4230 YOUNGER WAY 3008 PARAGON WAY 6541 MILES LN 3049 CALIFORNIA AVE 4633 MEYER WAY 4432 MARBLE WAY 2632 STAMP MILL CT 6215 TENNY CT 5542 WOODLEIGH DR 5008 MELVIN DRIVE 5250 WYNDHAM OAK LN 4701 BELLUE ST 5989 CAMRAY CIR 4949 THOR WAY 4445 JAN DR 6012 ROSWITHA CT 4849 ALEXON WAY 3648 MARSHALL AVE 4735 MINARET WAY 4749 OAKFIELD CIR 4713 OLIVE OAK WAY 4960 OLIVE OAK WAY 2554 LOS FELIZ WAY 3101 OAK CLIFF CIR 4315 KILCHER CT 1421 ELSDON CIR 6224 VERNON WAY 5445 HALSTED AVE 1217 MACAULAY CIR

95815

565 ARCADE BLVD 2940 CONNIE DR 2220 CANTALIER ST 985 SONOMA AVE 80 REDONDO AVE 945 ALAMOS AVE 2758 ELLEN ST 3305 OFARRELL DR 1118 ACACIA AVE

$274,000 $326,000 $360,000 $415,000 $425,000 $450,000 $500,000 $510,000 $540,000 $541,000 $550,000 $555,000 $555,000 $595,000 $600,000 $605,000 $620,000 $625,000 $630,000 $640,000 $646,000 $665,000 $689,995 $696,600 $716,000 $730,000 $750,000 $768,000 $810,000 $815,000 $825,000 $840,000

$261,000 $300,000 $317,000 $337,000 $345,000 $346,000 $350,000 $360,000 $387,000

95816

846 27TH ST 639 39TH ST 2305 G ST 2215 E ST

95817

2761 SANTA CLARA WAY 3333 43RD ST 2833 32ND ST 3435 TRUCKEE WAY 4101 S 4TH AVE 3417 V ST

$671,000 $755,000 $1,100,000 $1,110,000

$350,000 $390,000 $420,000 $440,000 $463,000 $535,000

95818

2120 24TH ST $403,000 2711 V ST $545,000 1118 TENEIGHTH WAY $685,000 1230 ALBRIGHT WALK $760,000 2230 MARSHALL WAY $776,000 1226 ALBRIGHT WALK $805,000 2787 MARTY WAY $880,000 2675 MONTGOMERY WAY $1,525,000 1413 11TH AVE $1,575,000

95819

5251 B ST 1035 51ST ST 4327 T ST 5030 TEICHERT AVE 147 MEISTER WAY 1243 RODEO WAY 5424 SPILMAN AVE 4460 C ST 5404 SPILMAN AVE 749 41ST ST 535 42ND ST 937 45TH ST

95821

2616 BALL WAY 2245 EDISON AVE 2510 KENT DR 2101 BLUEBIRD LN

$635,000 $639,950 $680,000 $685,820 $705,000 $710,000 $771,500 $825,000 $830,000 $888,000 $888,000 $1,550,000

$320,500 $380,000 $405,000 $415,000

3318 CHENU AVE 4513 WYMAN DR 3236 EASTWOOD RD 4400 ELIZABETH AVE 3401 CHENU AVE 3956 ROSEMARY CIR 3069 SAND DOLLAR WAY 4420 PARK GREEN CT 3430 HARMONY LN 2860 AURORA AVE 2400 LESLIE LN 3271 POTTER LN

95822

7528 LEMARSH WAY 2030 MANGRUM AVE 1428 STODDARD ST 87 PULSAR CIR 2325 52ND AVE 6132 25TH ST 1416 ATHERTON ST 7573 LEMARSH WAY 7534 SKELTON WAY 1940 65TH AVE 7559 THORPE WAY 4925 ESMA JANE LN 4913 HELEN WAY 4949 ESMA JANE LN 5626 CAPSTAN WAY 1048 WOODSHIRE WAY 5524 DANJAC CIR 7045 CROMWELL WAY 4940 FLORA VISTA LN 1225 41ST AVE 1461 BIRCHWOOD LN

95825

2294 WOODSIDE LN #8 2478 LARKSPUR LN #173 1537 HOOD RD #E 2478 LARKSPUR LN #174 535 WOODSIDE OAKS #2 523 WOODSIDE OAKS #2 528 WOODSIDE OAKS #1 1519 HOOD RD #C

$415,000 $415,000 $437,150 $450,000 $455,000 $460,000 $499,000 $520,000 $525,000 $530,000 $555,000 $555,500

$260,000 $285,000 $310,000 $320,000 $370,000 $385,000 $399,900 $415,000 $415,000 $435,000 $440,000 $569,900 $575,000 $608,000 $610,000 $636,040 $640,000 $680,000 $769,000 $950,000 $995,000

$210,000 $210,000 $260,000 $270,000 $280,000 $295,000 $300,000 $300,000

2290 WOODSIDE LN #5 3219 CASITAS BONITO 605 WOODSIDE SIERRA #3 3248 CASITAS BONITO 1612 CLINTON RD 2140 ETHAN WAY 2033 JOAN WAY 2101 CORTEZ LN 2286 SIERRA BLVD #G 2501 EXETER SQUARE LN 2508 LAREDO RD 2910 EL PRADO WAY 1425 COMMONS DR 2012 FLOWERS ST

95831

11 PARK PLACE CT 809 HARVEY WAY 7805 PARK RIVER OAK CIR 7328 FLOWERWOOD WAY 780 PARKHAVEN WAY 51 SHADY RIVER CIR 7040 WAVECREST WAY 6243 FORDHAM WAY 70 LAS POSITAS CIR 355 RIVERTREE WAY 301 RIVERGATE WAY 6330 N POINT WAY 918 COBBLE SHORES DR 7791 DUTRA BEND DR

$310,000 $325,000 $325,000 $345,000 $365,000 $370,000 $385,000 $392,000 $408,500 $439,000 $455,000 $493,000 $644,500 $720,000

$409,000 $435,000 $455,000 $575,000 $575,000 $610,000 $635,000 $685,000 $760,000 $775,000 $960,000 $962,000 $990,000 $998,000

95864

1308 GLADSTONE $290,000 1155 RIVARA CIR $325,000 3433 WEMBERLEY DR $370,000 3137 BERKSHIRE WAY $410,000 3013 MAISON WAY $415,000 1209 GREENHILLS RD $420,000 4369 VULCAN DR $515,000 1201 CARTER RD $800,000 4510 AMERICAN RIVER DR $1,018,000 1450 LAS SALINAS WAY $1,080,000 809 LAKE OAK CT $1,175,000 2933 ROYCE WAY $1,450,000

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Pit Crew

FARM FAMILY TURNS ITS TALENTS TO OLIVE OIL

O

ur region is perfect for olive trees. Drive from Sacramento in any direction and you encounter olive groves unfolding away from the roadside, their branches reaching for the sun, standing tall in orchards. Each year, local olive ranchers practice harvest preservation by curing olives or pressing them into gold-green oil. As a devotee of extra-virgin olive oil, I’m always searching for the area’s best orchards and olive mills. For several years, I’ve headed south on Interstate 5 and driven to the tight and trimmed rows of the Coldani family Calivirgin Winery and Olive Mill on North Thornton Road. On a recent visit to the ranch, tasting room and gift shop, I met Julie Coldani and learned the history of her husband’s family.

GM By Gabrielle Myers Photography by Aniko Kiezel Farm To Fork

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The Coldanis came from Italy’s Piedmont and farmed row crops around Lodi for more than 85 years. They cultivated alfalfa, corn and tomatoes, and raised cattle. The newest generation decided to concentrate on olives and wine grapes. With innovative practices, such as planting olive trees in tight rows and keeping them trimmed for mechanical harvesting, the Coldani olive ranch grew from its first planting in 2005. The Calivirgin brand was formed in 2007 as a way to sell olive oil from robust harvests. The family mechanically harvests Arbequina and Koroneiki olives at peak with speed and efficiency. Olives are pressed within hours of leaving the trees. This is important because olives degrade quickly after harvest. Calivirgin’s Olio Nuovo, with its buttery, herbaceous tongue-coat and vibrant flavor, showcases the preservation of the olive more than any other oil I’ve tasted in our region. With tiny olive fragments at the bottom, this unfiltered oil captures the soil’s true Delta fertility. The Coldanis conserve water with drip irrigation. After milling, olive pits and pastes are spread in orchard rows and turned over to help next season’s olives grow to full potential.


READERS NEAR & FAR

1. Murray and Margie Ng at Crater Lake National Park. 2. Steve Mills and Jeff Hallsten on safari in Shangani, Zimbabwe. 3. Chris Baumann at Gerle Creek in Eldorado National Forest. 4. Joe and Lauren Schmitt at a Rugby World Cup game in Nice, France.

Take a picture with Inside and email a high-resolution copy to travel@insidepublications.com or submit directly from our website at InsideSacramento. com. Due to volume of submissions, we cannot guarantee all photos will be printed or posted. Find us on Facebook and Instagram: InsideSacramento.

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The Calivirgin and Calivines brands have expanded to include multiple varieties, including infused olive oils, balsamic vinegars, cured olives and several wines. Infused olive oils are distinguished from other flavored oils because the fruits, vegetables and herbs get pressed with olives in the last two phases of production. Local produce is mostly used in the blends, including lemons, oranges, limes, habanero and serrano peppers, garlic, basil and rosemary. When asked what motivates the family to continue farming and production, Coldani says, “When you have a healthy product you feel good about what you’re giving to your customers. We know everything from tree to bottle, and we feel good about the product we’re providing.”

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The recently expanded Calivirgin winery, tasting room and gift shop offers wine and olive oil tastings, small bites and produce from other local farmers. “We have all grown up here in Lodi, so to work and live here, provide jobs, and give back to the community are important for us,” she says. Calivirgin Winery and Olive Mill tasting room is open daily, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., 13950 North Thornton Road, Lodi. For information, visit calivirgin. com or phone (209) 210-3162. Gabrielle Myers can be reached at gabriellemyers11@gmail.com. Her latest book of poetry, “Too Many Seeds,” can be ordered from fishinglinepress. com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

THE COLDANIS CAME FROM ITALY’S PIEDMONT AND FARMED ROW CROPS AROUND LODI FOR MORE THAN 85 YEARS. THE NEWEST GENERATION DECIDED TO CONCENTRATE ON OLIVES AND WINE GRAPES.


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INSIDE

OUT

Best of Carmichael

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The Carmichael Chamber of Commerce staged its 2023 “Best of Carmichael” gala at La Sierra Community Center. A prom-night theme filled the venue with poodle skirts and cheerleaders. Online voting decided winners, which included 25 businesses, agencies, parks, churches, entertainers, nonprofits and entities that serve Carmichael and neighboring communities.

PHOTOS BY SUSAN MAXWELL SKINNER


Lyon Real Estate

MARKET LEADERS. NEIGHBORHOOD EXPERTS.

Remarkable elegant & modern eco-friendly home. Stunning pool. 4 Bed/4 Baths & 3,521 sq ft $2,800,000 Kathy Applegate #01471361 916.997.7795

Spacious home. Beautiful large lot. Pool. 4 Bed/3 Baths & 2,565 sq ft $660,000 Michelle Gallagher #01382218 916.536.3948

Lovely home in beautiful gated community. Lots of natural light. 2 Bed/2 Bath & 2,521 sq ft $650,000 Vivian Daley #00475888 916.849.7314

N PE

N PE

D

D

IN

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G Renovated 2015. Open ȵoor plan. Covered patio. Great outdoor space. 3 Bed/2 Bath & 1,614 sq ft $500,000 Rachel Siemering #01049891 916.838.7594

Charming home. Extra large lot. Original hardwood ȵoors. 3 Bed/1 Bath & 1,415 sq ft $479,000 Kathy Dunnigan #00591860 916.208.9536

Charming single-level end unit. Refreshed with new ȵooring. 2 Bed/2 Bath & 1,054 sq ft $299,950 Mimi Scherber #00554570 916.595.1597

Single story gem on peaceful tree lined street. Freshly painted.3 Bed/2 Bath & 1,385 sq ft $485,000 Kareen Newman #01806429 916.677.9932

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IN

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G Updated single level. Beautiful view of greenbelt. Private rear patio. 2 Bed/1 Bath & 1,072 sq ft $520,000 Barbara Frago #00580837 916.425.3637

Lyon Sierra Oaks is hiring. What is your next step? May we suggest to the forefront? If you want to expand and enrich your real estate career, look to the forefront - look to Lyon Real Estate. We set you apart, add to your strengths, sharpen your technical skills, and provide industry-leading training and support for both seasoned and newly licensed agents. Visit JoinLyonSierraOaks.com to learn more or call/text me at 916.838.4585 to set up a meeting.

Updated downstairs corner unit. Private deck. Beautiful views. 1 Bed/1 Bath & 642 sq ft $225,000 Cindy Kaiser #01368472 916.247.1882

Jim Pojda Branch Manager Lic# 01451673 916.838.4585

SIERRA OAKS OFFICE | 2580 FAIR OAKS BLVD., SUITE 20, SACRAMENTO | 916.481.3840 | GOLYON.COM The information in this advertisement, including, but not limited to, square footage and/or acreage, has been provided by various sources which may include the Seller, the Multiple Listing Service or other sources. Lyon Real Estate has not and will not investigate or verify the accuracy of this information. Prospective buyers are advised to conduct their own investigation of the Property and this advertised information utilizing appropriate professionals before purchasing this Property.

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All photos taken at Sampino’s Kitchen at Joe Marty’s by Linda Smolek

La Dolce Vita TWO ITALIAN KITCHENS SERVE THE SWEET LIFE

S

ampino’s Kitchen at Joe Marty’s offers a traditional Italian American experience, spaghetti and meatballs included, on Broadway. Across the grid, newcomer

Willow presents Italian food through a fine-dining lens. Both are special places.

GS

Joe Marty was a legend when he opened his bar at the Tower Theatre in 1951. A former major league baseball player and star for the minor league Sacramento Solons, Marty parlayed his recognition into a successful saloon and eatery.

By Greg Sabin Restaurant Insider

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SAMPINO’S KITCHEN AT JOE MARTY’S

Marty died in 1984 and new owners moved in. A fire in 2005 closed the joint for a decade. When Bill and son Michael Sampino took over restaurant operations in 2017, they aimed to honor Marty’s legacy and do what they do best, cook family-style Italian food. They succeeded. Today the place is known for packed houses, a convivial bar and one of the best meatball subs this side of Chicago. The menu is the star, along with raucous laughter that never seems to diminish.

You can sit beneath a framed jersey of San Francisco Giants great Juan Marichal while tucking into a plate of cheese tortellini and bolognese sauce. Or you might be parked underneath a portrait of Frank Sinatra while enjoying fettuccine alfredo. Where some “red sauce joints” skimp on the finer points, Sampino’s emphasizes the little things. Each recipe is built with care and expertise. Every entrée comes with a complimentary salad. The meatball sub is slyly sophisticated. The combination


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of house-made meatballs with pepperoncini, provolone, tomato, garlic aioli and balsamic is a dish greater than its parts. I’ve yet to find an equal. Whether it’s spumoni ice cream at the end of a meal, a handshake from the owner or the mob movies playing on TV, Sampino’s brings a smile.

WILLOW In another dining universe, Willow offers southern Italian as haute cuisine. The dining room, attached to The Exchange Hotel by Hilton, is subdued and elegant. The service is as fine as you will get anywhere in town.

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A short walk from Golden 1 Center, Willow feels like a quiet retreat at Fourth and J streets. The 1914 building, former home to the California Fruit Exchange, provides a stately edifice. Inside, the comforting weight of soft fabrics and plummy hues feels miles from the thoroughfare just beyond the door. Service at Willow cannot be improved upon. The polite and attentive waitstaff see to every need. Whether it’s a wine top-off or a refolded napkin, no detail is ignored. Opened since last September, the kitchen delivers elegant presentations and creative recipes with a little

unevenness, which one might expect from a new restaurant. The gnocchi are a must. Big, pillowy dumplings are served alongside delicata squash and blistered tomatoes and topped with goat cheese and sage. It’s a seasonal exploration that hits the mark. The small but elegant bar is a gorgeous place to grab a drink or small plate before a game or at the end of a Downtown visit. Check out the happy hour menu. Meatballs and prosciutto are fantastic small plates. Old school to new school, down home to high-end, Sampino’s and Willow

satisfy your desire for Italian food. Buon appetito! Sampino’s Kitchen at Joe Marty’s is at 1500 Broadway; (916) 3829022; joemartys.com. Willow is at 1005 Fourth Street; (916) 938-8001; willowsacramento.com. Greg Sabin can be reached at saceats@gmail.com. Previous reviews can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n


Now more than ever, personalized advice matters

The Deelstra Group Steven J Deelstra, CFP® Senior Vice President Wealth Management Advisor Senior Portfolio Manager 916.648.6219 or s_deelstra@ml.com

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Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated (also referred to as “MLPF&S” or “Merrill”) makes available certain investment products sponsored, managed, distributed or provided by companies that are affiliates of Bank of America Corporation (“BofA Corp.”). MLPF&S is a registered broker-dealer, registered investment adviser, Member SIPC and a wholly owned subsidiary of BofA Corp. Investment products: Are Not FDIC Insured Are Not Bank Guaranteed May Lose Value The Bull Symbol and Merrill are registered trademarks of Bank of America Corporation. CFP Board owns the marks CFP®, CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™, and CFP® (with plaque design) in the U.S. A Senior Portfolio Manager can help clients pursue their objectives by managing on a discretionary basis [his/her] own Personalized or Defined Strategies, which may incorporate individual stocks and bonds, Merrill model portfolios, and third-party investment strategies. A Senior Portfolio Manager may make their strategies available to clients working with other Merrill advisors. © 2023 Bank of America Corporation. All rights reserved. MAP5272720 Vault-BA1N98 | MLWM-242-AD | 470944PM-0123 | 01/2023

INSIDE CROSSWORD will be back next month.

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Divine

Inspiration PAINTING IS AKIN TO PRAYER FOR ELK GROVE PRIEST

P

ainting is not just painting for the Rev. Sylvester Kwiatkowski. As a priest at St. Maria Goretti Catholic Church in Elk Grove, Kwiatkowski sees painting as a form of prayer and a connection to himself, his community and God. “Art helps me communicate and have contact not only with Christian people, but also people of different faiths and non-believers about universal values: love, compassion, hope, friendship, unity,” Kwiatkowski says. Kwiatkowski has always been drawn to art, even before being ordained in 1989 in his native Poland. He loved drawing as a small child. When he went on vacation to Paris, Madrid, London and Moscow, he visited museums to study his favorite artists, among them Salvador Dalí and Vincent van Gogh. “My dream was always to somehow at some point in my life grab the palette, acrylic and brushes and do whatever my heart tells me to do,” he says. The dream took time. Kwiatkowski left Poland for California in 2000 to work with Polish immigrants who were part of Solidarity, the Polish social movement. He worked as a chaplain for a small Polish Catholic chapel in North Sacramento. At a 30-day silent retreat in Massachusetts in 2012, divine inspiration struck. “On the third day of the retreat, an unknown power brought me to the art room, and through my feelings and emotions, I started drawing on a piece of paper,” he writes in his artist’s

Sylvester Kwiatkowski Photo by Linda Smolek

JL By Jessica Laskey Open Studio

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statement. “When I presented my artwork to my spiritual director, he strongly encouraged me to continue my emotional outlet through art. On that day, I was not aware that it would be the beginning of my new creative journey towards art.” His calling to “describe the movement of God’s grace through the Holy Spirit with colors and shapes” led him to an art supply store in Grass Valley, where he bought what his heart told him. In October 2012, he “threw everything on the floor and started to paint.” Kwiatkowski was practicing intuitive painting, where an artist removes self-judgment from the equation and paints what comes to mind. For the priest, riotous color and movement and shapes came pouring out through various mediums, including watercolor, acrylic and collage. He began incorporating his artwork into Mass, painting a particular piece as a way to enrich the readings and gospel. His congregations in North Sacramento and Elk Grove, where he moved in 2019, responded well. “They didn’t know how powerful paintings could be,” he says, until they saw them up on the dais alongside their priest. “My friend (artist) Kathy Dana said to me once, ‘If you are using

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words to evangelize people, why not colors and shapes and paintings?’” Kwiatkowski recalls. It’s tough to make time to paint, but Kwiatkowski finds 15 minutes late at night or early in the morning to create. The silence allows space to “be connected with yourself, with God, with eternity, and then the colors and shapes flow,” he says. His paintings grace his office and the church. His nearly 6-foot painting of a monstrance—a vessel in which the consecrated eucharistic host is carried or displayed—is on view in preparation for the 10th National Eucharistic Congress in 2024. He donates paintings to fundraisers to help local organizations and ministries. “Painting brings you to a completely different reality,” Kwiatkowski says. “It can heal your trauma, increase your creativity and intuition. It brings hope and the joy of life.” To view Kwiatkowski’s work, visit his Instagram @skwiat.art. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacrameto.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n


Homes Our Clients Fell In Love With In 2 23 SOLD

BEAUTY IN FAB 40s Charming 3BR/2.5BA w/Pool and an ADU with an additional full bath and BR. $1,650,000 ANGELA HEINZER 916.212.1881 CalRE# 01004189

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EAST SAC CHARMER 3BR/1BA/1,330 Sq.Ft. Single-story bungalow with a sparkling pool. $765K CHRISTINE BALESTRERI 916.996.2244 CalRE# 01511288

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ON TOP OF THE WORLD 4BR/3BA Custom built MCM in the heart of Wilhaggin with beautifully terraced landscape. $955K ANGELA HEINZER 916.212.1881 CalRE#: 01004189

SIERRA OAKS LIVING 5B/3BA/3,002 SqFt. Outdoor kitchen. Pool. $1,210,000 CHRISTINE BALESTRERI 916.996.2244 CalRE# 01511288

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ARDEN PARK GEM w/GUEST QUARTERS 3BR/2BA. Updates w/style and so much charm. SS Kitchen appliances. PLUS 600 SqFt Casita! $1,100,000 TIM COMSTOCK 916.548.7102 CalRE# 01879462

SACRAMENTO METRO OFFICE 730 Alhambra Boulevard #150 | 916.447.5900

FANTASTIC GEM IN ARDEN 3B/2BA/1,954 SqFt. Updated kitchen w/SS appliances. Sparkling pool. Separate 1 Bd/1BA guest quarters. Large lot. $1,100,000 TIM COMSTOCK 916.548.7102 CalRE# 01879462

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Phillip Joseph Rocamora and Eugene Obille in “Cinderella” at SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center. Photo by Tony Nguyen

TO DO

THIS MONTH'S CULTURE & ENTERTAINMENT HIGHLIGHTS By Jessica Laskey Calendar Editor

LIVE PERFORMANCE Cinderella Sacramento Ballet Feb. 16–18 SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center (1301 L St.); sacballet.org Tickets: $35–$99 Sergei Prokofiev’s playful ballet gets a modern update with choreography by Nashville Ballet’s Paul Vasterling and music by Sacramento Philharmonic & Opera.

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Memoirs of Boyhood Stories on Stage Sacramento Friday, Feb. 9, 7 p.m. The Auditorium at CLARA (1425 24th St.); storiesonstagesacramento.org Tickets: $15 Hear funny and touching stories of boyhood by authors Josh Fernandez, Frank Gioia and Philip Jacques read aloud by professional actors Jacob Gutiérrez-Montoya and Elio Gutiérrez. For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf Celebration Arts Feb. 2–25

Guild Theater (2828 35th St.); celebrationarts. net Tickets: $10–$25 This groundbreaking fusion of poetry, music and dance follows seven women through a world of racism, oppression and sexism with passion, humor and raw honesty. Presented in partnership with St. Hope for Black History Month. Love Letters Hey Day Quintet Saturday, Feb. 10, 5 p.m. & 7 p.m. Twin Lotus Thai (8345 Folsom Blvd.); twinlotusthai.com

Groove to your favorite jazz love tunes with Susan Skinner, Del Gomes, Joe Gilman, Shelley Denny and Tim Metz. No cover charge. Reservations required. Frozen & Encanto Disney on Ice Feb. 15–19 Golden 1 Center (500 David J. Stern Walk); golden1center.com Tickets: $15–$140 Sing along to your favorite Disney songs while enjoying world-class ice skating, aerial acrobatics and more.


Spring 2024 Donald Kendrick Artistic Director

EUROPEAN MASTERWORKS

Stabat Mater – Antonin Dvořák A powerful work that speaks to universal themes of loss, compassion and hope, transcending religious boundaries and resonating with listeners of various backgrounds.

2

SATURDAY | MARCH | 3PM Projected s le it t r e Sup Olivia Smith, Soprano Salvatore Atti, Tenor Maggie Renée, Mezzo

David Soar, Bass

WEEKEND ONE LIVE! Saturday, March 9 & Sunday, March 10 Veterans Memorial Theatre, 203 E. 14th St., Davis WEEKEND TWO LIVE! Saturday, March 16 & Sunday, March 17 The Center at 2300 Sierra Blvd., Sacramento STREAMING! March 11–24 Virtual films from the comfort of your home

Full Schedule, Tickets & Passes available online Smith

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SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center 1301 L STREET, SACRAMENTO SAFE CU PAC Box Office | 916.808.5181 or Ticketmaster.com

Homeownership is within reach. We can make your dream of homeownership wnership a reality. Buying a home can sometimes seem like an unreachable achable goal. When e Mortgage Loan you work with Tri Counties Bank, your local Home ources designed for Specialist will walk you through products and resources nt to helping our local aspiring homeowners. It’s part of our commitment communities grow and thrive through the power of homeownership. Low or zero down payment programs Affordable mortgage options Low to moderate income programs e Borrowers with low credit scores may be eligible

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2024 Advertiser Hall of Fame PLEASE SUPPORT THESE FINE BUSINESSES.

WE THANK THEM FOR BRINGING THE BEST OF OUR NEIGHBORHOOD TO YOU EVERY MONTH! 28 YEARS

10 YEARS

• Elise Brown, Realtor®

• Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Drysdale Properties • Paloma Begin, Realtor® • UC Davis Health • Univeristy Medical Imaging

26 YEARS • Coldwell Banker, Sacramento Metro • D & J Kitchens & Baths. • El Dorado Savings Bank • Pet Pals • Rich Cazneaux, Realtor® • Sutter Terrace Dental

9 YEARS

EAST SAC + LAND PARK/GRID + ARDEN + POCKET

24 YEARS • Tim Collom, Realtor

22 YEARS • Coldwell Banker Sierra Oaks • Dignity Health • Dunnigan Realtors® • SMUD

21 YEARS • Jeanine Roza, Realtor® • Rio Del Oro Raquet Club • Sacramento Country Day School

20 YEARS • Downtown Sac Partnership • Fremont Presb. Church • Lyon Real Estate • Sacramento Ballet • Sellands, Ella & The Kitchen

19 YEARS • 57th Street Antique Mall • Angela Heinzer, Realtor® • Bella Bru • Reid and Price, Realtors®

18 YEARS

15 YEARS

13 YEARS

• Bertolucci’s Collision Shop • Cheryl Nightingale, Realtor® • EPY Center • St. Michael’s Day School

• Avid Reader • Friends of East Sacramento • Brian Wyatt Law Offices • Chris Little Real Estate • Fugina Construction • Jesuit High School • The Jewish Federation • Our Lady of Assumption • St. Ignatius School

• Broadway Sacramento • Destination Aesthetics • East Sac Dental • East Sacramento Chamber of Commerce • Jamie Rich, Realtor® • Nothing Bundt Cakes • Tom Phillips - Realtor®

17 YEARS • Christian Brothers High School • David Kirrene, Realtor® • Fulton Ave. Association • St. Francis High School

16 YEARS • Sacramento Turn Verein

14 YEARS • Artisan Window & Sash • City of Sacramento • Crocker Art Museum • Donahue Schriber • Mercy McMahon Terrace • Race For The Arts • Relles Florist & Gifts • Sacramento Choral Society & Orchestra • Sacramento SPCA

12 YEARS • Arden Village Service • Capital Confections • CSUS College of Continuing Education • Temple Coffee • Wenelli’s • Willo Salons

11 YEARS • Brookfield School • Grebitus Jewelers • Law Office of Mark J. Lamb • Steffan Brown Realtor®

• Craig Diez, Realtor® • Old Sugar Mill • Pedro Gomez - Porta Realty • Rio City Café • The Plant Foundry

7 YEARS • Edward Jones - Jeff Fletcher • EZ Living Cleaning • New York Life Insurance Company • Renee Catricala, Realtor® • Sara Raudelunas, Realtor®

6 YEARS • Dentistry of East Sacramento

5 YEARS • A Therapeutic Alternative • Girl Scouts of Central California • Laura Miller, Realtor • Leatherby’s Family Creamery • Mr. Moulding, Mouldings & Doors • The Hearing Solution

4 YEARS • Exotic Plants • That Guy Eyewear • Timothy Scott • Tri-Counties Bank • Yolo Cares

INSIDE CELEBRATES 28 YEARS!!! SHOP 100% LOCAL STAND With Our Small Businesses SUPPORT Your Neighbors 50

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Revel in stunning landscapes, street scenes and more by prolific local artist Patris. INK Archival Gallery Feb. 1–24 Second Saturday Reception Feb. 10, 5–8 p.m. 3223 Folsom Blvd.; archivalgallery.com This exhibition features drawings and collages using oak gall and specialty inks on Yupo paper by Al Farrow, Craig Frazier and Drew Frazier.

“Sunshine Alley” by Patris at PBS KVIE Gallery.

Teagarden Jazz Festival Sacramento State Saturday, Feb. 10, 8 a.m.–8 p.m. 6000 J St.; teagardenjazzfestival.org Tickets: $15 for adults, free for students Enjoy traditional jazz music with special guest artist Adrian Cunningham on reeds and the all-star festival band, plus performances by student jazz combos. Heathers the Musical: Teen Edition Sacramento Theatre Company Feb. 16–25 1419 H St.; sactheatre.org Tickets: Start at $23

Follow the darkly delicious story of Veronica Sawyer, a brainy, beautiful teenage misfit who hustles her way into the most powerful and ruthless clique at Westerberg High.

ART Patris PBS KVIE Gallery Feb. 1–March 29 Artist’s Reception Feb. 8, 5–7 p.m. 2030 W. El Camino Ave.; kvie.org/gallery

The Red Dress Challenge Art Show The Art Studios Saturday, Feb. 10, 4–8 p.m. 1727 I St.; theartstudiossacramento.com Enjoy paintings, illustrations, drawings, watercolors, glass, sculptures and ceramics with a “red dress” theme by more than 40 local artists to celebrate Heart Month and Valentine’s Day. Planes, Trains, Automobiles and High Desert Hi-Jinks Twisted Track Gallery Feb. 2–24 First Friday Reception Feb. 2, 6–10 p.m. Second Saturday Reception Feb. 10, 5–8 p.m. 1730 12th St.; (916) 639-0436 This playful, transit-oriented exhibit features the work of mixedmedia artists Jerry Cagle and Michael Schaffer and acrylic painter Sue Graef. Hollow Veil: Mirabel Wigon Axis Gallery Feb. 2–25 Artist Talk Saturday, Feb. 10, 4:30 p.m., Reception 5–8 p.m. 625 S St., axisgallery.org Wigon’s landscape paintings question experience, immersion and separation in an encapsulated world situated within the confines of the canvas. Celebrating the Figure Sacramento Fine Arts Center Feb. 27–March 16 Second Saturday Reception Feb. 10, 5:30–8 p.m. 5330 Gibbons Drive; sacfinearts.org See a variety of art featuring the human form from the center’s popular Friday Morning Figure Drawing open studio.

Belle Cooledge Library (5600 S. Land Park Drive); gensac.org Learn how to use the General Land Office records website for genealogical research with guest speaker Lisa Gorrell. Words Take Wing: Honoring Diversity in Children’s Literature Sacramento Public Library Tuesday, Feb. 27, 6–8 p.m. Tsakopoulos Library Galleria (828 I St.); saclibrary.org In partnership with UC Davis School of Education, this free event features a conversation with award-winning authors Thanhhà Lại, Pam Muñoz Ryan and Grace Lin, moderated by Dr. JaNay Brown-Wood. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Submissions are due six weeks prior to the publication month. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Arden’s Best Neighborhood Pizza for 31 Years!

4215 Arden Way (Arden and Eastern)

916-482-1008

SPEAKERS

“Bayonne Bridge” by Sue Graef at Twisted Track Gallery.

Using the General Land Office Records Website Genealogical Association of Sacramento Wednesday, Feb. 21, noon

Open 7 days a week Mon - Sat 11am-10pm; Sun 12-9

Dine in,Take Out or Delivery

IA n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM

51


Happy Valentine’s Day

Looking for a TOP Agent? #1 TOP PRODUCING INDIVIDUAL AGENT (SALES VOLUME FROM 2019-2022)

OVER 18 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE 129 5-STAR CLIENT REVIEWS

Jill Davis

NMLS# 2061997 VP of Mortgage Lending 916.580.9171 Jill.Davis@Grarate.com

SHARON D’ARELLI | REALTOR® CERTIFIED GLOBAL LUXURY PROPERTY SPECIALIST

916.716.1246 | SHARONDARELLI@GMAIL.COM CalRE #01516830

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Reach out today to learn more about what Coldwell Banker has to offer.

4851 Paisley Way Carmichael $1,195,000 Jackie Merchant Broker Associate Global Luxury Specialist 916-205-8921 CalRE #01322198

Sierra Oaks Ofjce 916.972.0212 Jennifer Robinson | Branch Manager Jennifer.Robinson@cbnorcal.com CalRE #: 01307572 Crystal Lopez | Assistant Branch Manager Crystal.Lopez@cbnorcal.com CalRE #: 01978732

Jennifer Berry Global Luxury Specialist International Diamond Society CalRE #02097085 | 916.508.0098 homesbyjenniferberry.com jennifer.berry@cbnorcal.com

2286 Sierra Blvd Unit G Sacramento, CA 95825 $408,500

Tom & Nancy Harvey

Patti Delgado, REALTOR®

Don’t Let Uncertainty Hold You Back… Let us bridge the gap with facts & advice to help you realize your real estate dreams. TomandNancyHarvey.com

Seller Representative Specialist (SRS) Global Luxury Specialist 916.505.1012 patti.delgado@cbnorcal.com CalRE#: 01098280

Call 916 599-3018 | CalRE# 01864883

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©2024 Coldwell Banker. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker logos are trademarks of Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. The Coldwell Banker® System is comprised of company owned ofŰces which are owned by a subsidiary of Realogy Brokerage Group LLC and franchised ofŰces which are independently owned and operated. The Coldwell Banker System fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. CalRE #01908304


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