Inside East Sacramento October 2023

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STUNNING SOUTH LAND PARK HOME 3 bed, 3 bath with 2011 sf on a spacious ¼ acre lot. Kitchen remodeled in 2017, two bedrooms with en-suite baths. Vaulted ceilings

HILARY BUCHANAN 916-397-7502 DRE-01359213

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EVERY DAY IS A GOOD DAY TO MAKE YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD A BETTER PLACE.

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COVER ARTIST

RUTH HOLTON-HODSON

Ruth Holton-Hodson is a retired health and consumer policy advocate—and artist. She loves the challenge of capturing light in her vibrant watercolor still lifes and pastel landscapes. Shown: “Suncatcher,” watercolor on paper, 16 inches by 29 inches. This piece is for sale framed at $800 and was awarded a 2023 Inside Publisher’s Award in the California State Fair Fine Arts Competition. Giclee prints and cards available. Visit rhhstudio. com or contact the artist at rholtonhodson@gmail.com.

8 IES OCT n 23
10 Publisher's Desk 14 Out & About 16 City Beat 18 Giving Back 20 City Realist 22 County Supervisor's Report 24 Meet Your Neighbor 26 Pocket Life 28 Building Our Future 30 Animals & Their Allies 32 Open House 36 Garden Jabber 38 Spirit Matters 40 Sports Authority 42 Farm To Fork 46 Restaurant Insider 48 Open Studio 50 To DoOCTOBER 2023 VOL. 28 • ISSUE 9 @insidesacramento
THE MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE, PLACES, NEWS & VIEWPOINTS IN AMERICA'S FARM-TO-FORK CAPITAL OCTOBER 2023 EAST SAC SACRAMENTO EAST SACRAMENTO McKINLEY PARK RIVER PARK ELMHURST TAHOE PARK CAMPUS COMMONS NSIDESACRAMENTO.COM 3104 O ST. #120 SACRAMENTO, CA 95816 2 7 THE MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE, PLACES, NEWS & VIEWPOINTS IN AMERICA'S FARM-TO-FORK CAPITAL OCTOBER 2023 ARDEN SACRAMENTO ARDEN ARCADE SIERRA OAKS WILHAGGIN DEL PASO MANOR CARMICHAEL NSIDESACRAMENTO.COM 3104 O ST. #120 SACRAMENTO, CA 95816 JENNIFER RUGGE: CALIFORNIA STATE FAIR 2 7 YEARS LAND PARK CURTIS PARK HOLLYWOOD PARK SOUTH LAND PARK THE GRID OAK PARK NSIDESACRAMENTO.COM 3104 O ST. #120 SACRAMENTO, CA 95816 OCTOBER 2023 LAND PARK/GRID SACRAMENTO THE MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE, PLACES, NEWS & VIEWPOINTS IN AMERICA'S FARM-TO-FORK CAPITAL LORI CURRAN: CALIFORNIA STATE FAIR 2 7 YEARS THE MOST INTERESTING PEOPLE, PLACES, NEWS & VIEWPOINTS IN AMERICA'S FARM-TO-FORK CAPITAL OCTOBER 2023 POCKET SACRAMENTO GRIGOR MALINOV: CALIFORNIA STATE FAIR POCKET GREENHAVEN SOUTH POCKET LITTLE POCKET RIVERLAKE DELTA SHORES NSIDESACRAMENTO.COM 2 7 YEARS

She really WORKED for us and made the stressful process of both selling and buying feel easier.

We found Elise through the Sacramento Rainbow Chamber of Commerce and are so glad that we did.

We worked with Elise on both the sale of the condo and for the purchase of our home. She was an absolute pleasure to work with. She really WORKED for us and made the stressful process of both selling and buying feel easier. It feels really great to have worked with someone like Elise, who is not only a consummate professional but also made me and my partner feel like we could bring our whole selves to every single meeting and every open house. We found what seems to be our forever home but if we ever decide to sell and buy again, we will

Current Listings…

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Kind Of Easy K i n d O f E a s y

Agood life is achieved with habits that bring happiness and wellbeing. Eat healthy. Move your body. Sleep well. Develop meaningful relationships. To those time-tested strategies I’ll add another. Cultivate kindness.

Three years of pandemic and lockdowns didn’t help a society well on its way to being far less connected and more self-absorbed.

One way out of this mess is for each of us to reconnect with the idea

BEING THOUGHTFUL AND NICE REALLY HELPS

of shared kindness. It’s all about being aware of your impact on the world.

Some people are born with a sense of kindness. Others have to work at it. One thing to keep in mind is that kindness is about giving of yourself. There’s no expectation of reciprocity.

Kindness isn’t always about being nice or friendly. It’s about being aware of others and knowing your interactions have a profound impact. Spreading kindness has a positive ripple effect.

When you are kind to someone with no expectation of anything, you experience the “helper’s high.” Serotonin rises. Blood pressure drops. As your body releases oxytocin—the love and bonding chemical—the effect is a boost to your cardiovascular system. As a bonus, your body makes endorphins, natural painkillers.

If you tend toward anxiety, kind acts can help. Your mood becomes more positive, your confidence increases. Kindness shifts you from a singlepoint perspective, where it’s easy to be consumed by personal problems and obstacles, into a more shared experience.

Experiencing grief after my husband Jim died in January left me isolated

and depressed. A small group of friends and family showed kindness at every turn. Phone calls, cards, flowers, visits and invitations—they held me together.

To pick myself up in those dark times, I mailed cards to friends and loved ones who offered kindness in my grief. I expressed gratitude. When I took the cards to the mailbox, my mind was transformed to a better place. Days later, their responses were heartwarming.

Every morning a neighborhood gentleman tosses my Wall Street Journal from the sidewalk up onto my porch mat. One morning I caught him in the act and thanked him. He said he loved to start each day helping someone out. Each day I think of him.

Kindness is a universal language, one of the easiest to exchange. No backstory, explanation or social dance. When you commit an act of kindness, you live in the moment, don’t think about the past or future. It’s a powerful gesture when loneliness is rampant.

When Jim could no longer drive, just before 2020 lockdowns, I had to fit much more into my schedule. I realized how much he did to keep our household and small business

humming. The first few weeks were miserable. Our business was at risk of meltdown.

After one complicated shopping trip, I came home exhausted. Jim stood on the porch, ready to empty the car and put everything away. “I’m so envious that you get to do the shopping now,” he said. Why? “Because every errand is an opportunity to cheer up the poor clerks that have to work through this damn pandemic.”

I instantly reframed the task and began to savor the job. I now call clerks by name. I smile and look them in the eye. Jim always did! I channel his energy and return from errands to a far better emotional place.

Kindness is contagious. Acts of kindness stimulate feel-good chemistry in others. Imagine if everyone embraced kindness every day. We’d have a kindness pandemic.

Nelson Mandela said, “There can be no greater gift than that of giving one’s time and energy to help others without expecting anything in return.” To which I add, kindness is a muscle. The more you exercise it, the stronger it becomes.

We all have challenges. There’s no need to add to anyone’s difficulties with

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Evelyn & William De Morgan

harsh words or behavior. The ancients said, “Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting some type of a battle.”

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COMMIT TO DAILY ACTS OF GOOD NEIGHBOR KINDNESS

•Smile and make eye contact with people you meet. Your act of acknowledgement and appreciation may be the highlight of their day.

•Make someone’s day with an authentic compliment, a simple but powerful act of kindness, humanity and connection.

•Look to help an elderly neighbor or someone struggling with health or loss.

•Shop locally to help the small business community.

•Pick up trash. A friend carries a vinyl glove for this purpose. It’s an act of kindness for your community.

•When eating out, add a little extra to your tip. It’s still rough times in the service industry.

•If your grocery cart is piled high, invite the person behind you to go ahead.

•Hold the door for others.

•Say please and thank you.

•Take in a neighbor’s trash can. Or remind them if their can isn’t out on trash day. n

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Celebrating 75 Years

UNIVERSITY ART IS STILL VITAL PART OF COMMUNITY

University Art celebrates its 75th anniversary of providing art supplies, custom framing, creative gifts and stellar customer service to people of all stripes.

The store was started by two sisters, the late Laurie Cappiello and Ginny Biondi, and their father Anthony, in

Palo Alto on University Avenue, which gave the business its name. As success ensued, they expanded across Northern California, eventually owning five locations. The Sacramento and Redwood City stores remain.

The Sacramento location at 26th and J streets opened in 1997, when the Cappiellos bought out Taylor’s Art Center. The art supply and framing store has been a hub for the local arts community ever since.

“What we’ve always been known for is customer service,” says Cornelia Pendleton, Biondi’s daughter and company CFO. “Our sales people and framers are artists themselves, so they’re very knowledgeable and always have ideas.”

GROUNDBREAKING

The first phase of the new state-ofthe-art PS7 Elementary School campus in Oak Park has finally broken ground.

As a kid, I spent some of my favorite afternoons perusing the store with my mom, a painter. We’d pick out a new tube of oil paint or cool paintbrush and, most importantly, get some great advice from one of the many longtime University Art employees.

The staff have kept University Art at the top of its game. Many employees have been with the business for decades. COO Todd Ayers has been with the company for 48 years. CEO Charlie Affrunti was first hired at age 16 and just turned 74.

“I’ve always felt like part of the family,” Affrunti says. “We’ve lived through a lot together, but we’re still here.”

University Art is at 2601 J St. For information, visit universityart.com.

“This project is a long time coming,” says Cassandra Jennings, board chair for St. HOPE Public Schools, which runs PS7. “It means that the scholars at PS7 Elementary School will now have the campus they deserve.

“Our facilities here are old and in need of attention and improvement—a kind of ‘hug.’ This investment in a new school for our scholars will finally bring the quality of facilities up to meet the high quality of education they are receiving inside their classrooms.”

The renovation project includes constructing additional classrooms and

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University Art celebrates 75 years of serving the Sacramento community.

an administration building, expanding the school kitchen, renovating the multipurpose room, reconfiguring the front entrance for added safety and reduced traffic, and installing new landscaping.

Against the dramatic backdrop of a giant earthmover at the groundbreaking, Jennings said, “What you see behind me … is a testament of what we can do when we all work together.”

For information, visit elementary. ps7.org.

AARP VOLUNTEERS

The Sacramento Chinese Community Service Center seeks volunteers for the AARP Foundation Experience Corps, a group of volunteers ages 50 and older who provide reading tutoring to K–3 students at 10 schools in the Sacramento City Unified School District.

Experience Corps volunteers give an average of four hours of support each week in person during afterschool hours. No teaching experience is required, but volunteers undergo a screening process.

For information, visit sccsc.org/ experiencecorps or email volunteers@ sccsc.org.

SPANISH CLASSES

Hoping to improve your Spanish language skills? Practice in a lowpressure environment with Roberto H. Romero, a former research librarian for The Sacramento Bee.

“I always like to do something special for my neighbors—this is a great community and we help one another,” says Romero, who started

as a copy boy at the Bee as a new immigrant from Chile and ended up teaching Spanish to reporters, editors and other employees.

After 41 years at the paper, he retired and earned a license to teach Spanish and English as a second language, and has been teaching free group classes, as well as private, ever since.

“Anybody with a desire to learn is welcome,” Romero says. “There is no age limit or required language level, just show up ready to learn.”

Classes are every Tuesday at 6 p.m. at 6925 Havenhurst Drive in Greenhaven. For information, email Romero at rhrg18@yahoo.com.

SINGERS WANTED

If you’ve always wanted to sing Christmas music with a live orchestra, now’s your chance.

The Capital Chorale is looking for singers of all voice types to join rehearsals starting Thursday, Oct. 26, at 6:30 p.m. at Pioneer Congregational Church at 2700 L St. Rehearsals will culminate in a concert, “A Festival of Lessons and Carols,” on Friday, Dec. 15, at 7 p.m.

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

EXPRESSIONS

On the last Friday of every month, musicians, painters and poets from every walk of life come together to present art in various modalities at “Expressions.” The event takes place at Lion’s Roar Dharma Center.

“The ‘Expressions’ showcase is where verbal art intertwines with visual and acoustic art, expressing the aesthetic spirit,” says Clemón Charles, a local singer/songwriter. Charles teamed with the center’s spiritual director, Lama Yeshe Jinpa (aka Stephen Bryant Walker), to host the monthly event as a way to bring awareness to the lack of access to mental health care.

“Expressions” supports the Middleway Health Foundation, where Lama Jinpa works as a licensed marriage and family therapy counselor. The foundation’s mission is to close the access gap by providing free one-onone psychotherapy, social work and consulting for low-income individuals.

The next “Expressions” is Friday, Oct. 27, at 7 p.m. Lion’s Roar Dharma Center is at 3240 B St. For information, visit lionsroardharmacenter.org.

COMPLETE STREETS

The first phase of the $21 million Broadway Complete Streets project recently broke ground.

The project turns the 2-mile section of Broadway between Third and 29th streets into a less “terrifying” corridor, as described by Megan Johnson, senior engineer for the city of Sacramento.

New buffered bike lanes and reduced car lanes will make it safer for travel on foot, bicycle and transit. The enhancements link up with other Broadway improvement projects at Fifth, 10th, 19th and 21st streets to create an extensive connected bikeway network in the Downtown grid.

For information, call the project hotline at (279) 236-3799 or email broadwaycompletestreet@gmail.com.

TOWEL DONATIONS

Before you chuck those old towels, consider donating them to the Sacramento SPCA to keep the animals in their care clean and cozy while waiting for their fur-ever homes.

Drop off your old towels at the donation station at 6201 Florin Perkins Road during business hours. For information, visit sspca.org.

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, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Cassandra Jennings (fifth from left) with St. HOPE Public Schools joins others at groundbreaking for PS7 Elementary School in Oak Park. Photo courtesy of Arrows Digital

to perform their duties. Civic life should never reach a point where depositions and document discovery precede clean streets and political accountability.

Motivations are important here. Ho fulfilled his oath to uphold the law. Steinberg and the City Council were called out for breaking their oaths and lying to voters.

Imagine if Steinberg told the truth during his campaigns of 2016 and 2020. Imagine if he said:

To The Rescue

DISTRICT ATTORNEY IS CITY’S BEST HOPE FOR RECOVERY

For reasons I don’t understand, some people have a hard time figuring out Thien Ho. They think the district attorney wants homeless people thrown in jail. Or they think he enjoys “going to war” with city officials, an unfortunate exaggeration while real warfare compounds elsewhere.

Disingenuously, they claim he’s behaving like a politician.

For me, there’s nothing mysterious about Ho and his entanglements with Mayor Darrell Steinberg and other sinners on City Council. Ho wants to do his job. And he wants Steinberg and friends to do their jobs.

Ho has better ways to spend his time than jousting with Steinberg

and eight City Council members. But negligence on the homeless front, a disease that metastasized since the mayor’s 2016 election, forced the district attorney to take action.

The steps Ho took followed three basic escalations of law enforcement familiar to every police cadet: You ask for compliance. Then you tell them. Then you make them.

First, Ho laid out the problem in a letter to city officials. He described how Sacramento must proceed with enforcement of camping regulations. He laid out a roadmap to compassionately deliver clean, safe streets.

The mayor and City Council ignored the letter.

Next, Ho sued the city. He listed 14 homeless camps where unhoused people terrorize neighbors, brandish weapons, brutalize animals, start fires, sell drugs and commit violence against other homeless people.

In each case, Ho describes the city’s failure to act. The examples end with police or City Hall telling victims, “Nothing can be done.”

There’s the problem Ho wants to resolve. For seven years under Steinberg, the city ignored its own laws. Civic authorities made homeless people exempt from rules. As a result, the homeless population grew by 250% since Steinberg was elected.

On Sacramento streets, anything goes. Word gets around. Mayhem thrives.

Ho asked and is now telling the mayor and City Council to do their jobs. To force compliance, the district attorney went to court.

Ho doesn’t want money from the city. He’s not asking for damages. He’s not trying to embarrass Steinberg and colleagues. He wants city authorities to live up to their responsibilities.

Next will come subpoenas to expose the actions city officials took to prevent police and code enforcement from writing citations, making arrests and clearing homeless camps.

Now we have the spectacle of one elected official trying to force others

“I will make Sacramento the homeless capital of California and encourage tent communities to flourish on sidewalks across our city. I will ignore violence, drug sales, drug use, open fires, crime and antisocial behavior. I will work to ensure no homeless person gets prosecuted for violating city ordinances or state laws involving health and safety, civil and penal codes.”

The mayor didn’t say those words. He didn’t tell the truth. Neither did City Council members Katie Valenzuela, Mai Vang and Caity Maple. They told other stories. In 2016, Steinberg promised to resolve homelessness.

Once sworn into office, stories shifted. Officials fought against enforcement. They created environments where the tragedy of being unhoused carries immunity from society’s laws, where living in a doorway or sidewalk or vacant lot is supported by city authorities.

The mayor and City Council wrecked local businesses and drove residents to despair. They made Sacramento a national example of how not to run a city.

When Thien Ho arrived to help the mayor and council recover their civilization, they accused him of playing politics.

If Steinberg and Valenzuela, Vang and Maple are smart, they will follow their rescuer home. My bet is they stay lost and lose a landmark lawsuit.

R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Thien Ho
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When the Sacramento Greek Festival returns for its 60th year Oct. 6–8 at the Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation across from McKinley Park, it won’t just be

All In The Family

GREEK FESTIVAL KEEPS TRADITIONS GOING FOR GENERATIONS

smoothly. She remembers the early days with fondness.

“My mother and aunt would go to my aunt’s vineyard and pick grape leaves for the dolmathes,” Theodore recalls, fingering the pages of a festival recipe book from 1972 and an apron from 1984 she dons every year. “They would bring the leaves back to the church hall to be boiled, then a group of ladies would roll hundreds of dolmathes for the festival.”

Theodore has deep roots in the community. Her father was born in Crete, her mother on the Greek island of Skopelos. They met in California. Theodore’s father owned a bar at Second and K streets, the old West End. The family lived in Alkali Flat.

Theodore was introduced to her future husband, Regos, because “he was also Greek,” and was already familiar with her father’s bar.

in raising money for the church’s new 43,000-square-foot complex at 616 Alhambra Blvd., which was completed in 2017 after nearly three decades of planning.

The festival has also grown and changed. It was held at the old church on N Street for many years before it outgrew the space, then moved to the convention center, with one year at Cal Expo. Now it’s found a permanent home at the beautiful new complex on Alhambra.

“The festival is so special because the food is amazing, obviously, but also because it addresses the religious portion, the orthodoxy—people can go into the church and hear the choir sing—and also shows what true traditional folk dances look like in Greece and teaches people about Greece itself,” says Theodore-Pasco.

a celebration of Greek food, music and culture.

It will be a celebration of decades— and generations—of community.

“Everyone has something to do,” says Sophie Theodore, one of the festival’s longest-serving volunteers. “Some people make the sweets, some do the main dishes, someone makes sure the rice isn’t mushy. We even have the teenagers clean the tables.”

At 95, Theodore has helped behind the scenes every year of the festival, cooking, preparing pastries and making sure the three-day event runs

They married in 1952 and followed Regos’ military career to far-flung locations. They settled back stateside in the late 1950s in East Sacramento near McKinley Park. The neighborhood has been home to their large extended family ever since.

“I remember riding bikes to other family members’ houses all the time,” says Theodore’s daughter Zoe Theodore-Pasco, who grew up working the festival with a Greek dance group from age 12 to 20.

Over the years, the Theodores have seen the Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation grow and change. Theodore’s parents were instrumental

“I didn’t realize how special that was until I was older. Sometimes traditions are lost and people go looking for their roots. But here, they’re celebrated on a regular basis.”

The Sacramento Greek Festival will be held Oct. 6–8 at the Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation at 616 Alhambra Blvd. For information, visit sacramentogreekfestival.com.

Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

18 IES OCT n 23
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Sophie Theodore with her daughter Zoe Theodore-Pasco Photo by Linda Smolek
19 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM Dave Kirrene Realtor 916.531.7495 DRE 01115041 Time to move up? Whether you are starting out, looking for that next home or sizing down, I’m here to help make the transition seamless. Life changes. Your realtor shouldn’t. Phil Pluckebaum “I’m running for Sacramento City Council to provide the real leadership for our neighborhoods that is currently missing. My mission is to bring trust, responsiveness, and experience to the city council. Our community deserves honest answers and serious solutions to our problems.” p Sacramento is facing many challenges. Families no longer feel safe, businesses are struggling or have closed, and homelessness continues to skyrocket with little progress. We can and must do better. Paid for by Phil Pluckebaum for City Council 2024, FPPC ID# 1457535 FB.com/philpluckebaum @Phil4Sacramento @Phil4Sacramento www.PhilPluckebaum.com info@PhilPluckebaum.com We Can Build a Better Sacramento Together Learn more about my campaign and how you can help build a brighter future for Sacramento. PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT

Can a gas station that never got built cost taxpayers more than $28 million? Yes, when that unbuilt gas station involves Crocker Village.

Turning an industrial site into a neighborhood of homes, shops, parks and offices is never easy. Crocker Village was no exception—a difficult infill project from inception two decades ago.

The village sits atop a former polluted rail yard. It required deep, expensive environmental remediation.

Some residents opposed Crocker Village from the start. When developer Paul Petrovich introduced the idea of a gas station within the development, opposition became more intense.

The fueling station was not allowed under the project’s zoning rights. That meant a conditional use permit from the city was necessary.

HOW SCHENIRER, COUNCIL COST CITY $28 MILLION

Petrovich applied for the permit, and won approval from the planning and design commission.

The Sierra Curtis Neighborhood Association appealed the decision, forcing the City Council to consider the matter. Councilmember Jay Schenirer, who represented the area, got busy in discussions with neighbors and the development team. He got too busy. Schenirer’s actions led to years of litigation. While making his rounds, Schenirer advocated to stop the gas station. He didn’t uphold his duty to remain unbiased in a quasi-judicial hearing.

At a meeting that proved more staged than objective, the City Council overturned the planning commission and denied the gas station permit. Schenirer made the motion to deny. He followed a script of how the hearing would unfold.

That script became evidence when Petrovich sued the city, claiming he was denied a fair and unbiased hearing. The script indicated the council’s vote was predetermined—a backroom deal worked out in advance by several councilmembers.

JHWhat followed was an expensive, humiliating loss for the city.

In finding for Petrovich, Superior Court Judge Michael Kenny wrote, “Councilmember Schenirer’s assistance to opposition to the gas station in obtaining the City Council’s vote against the project was

not a mere technical error that can be deemed harmless or nonprejudicial, but rather a fundamental flaw in the process.”

Kenny continued, “In the days preceding the hearing, Councilmember Schenirer was no longer a neutral, unbiased decisionmaker… There was evidence that Councilmember Schenirer was counting—if not securing—votes on the City Council against the gas station and communicating an ‘update’ on that score to Mayor (Kevin) Johnson… Petrovich did not receive a fair hearing.”

The judge said Schenirer prepared “talking points” for the Sierra Curtis neighborhood group and Johnson. That’s not all. Schenirer coached opponents to advocate for denial of the gas station. The court documents are exhaustive and fascinating.

They make you wonder about other deals, other decisions.

The City Council, led by a newly elected Mayor Darrell Steinberg, a close friend of Schenirer, decided to appeal the court’s decision—an expensive process unlikely to succeed.

The state appellate court denied the city’s appeal. A new hearing was ordered for the conditional use permit. Schenirer recused himself, but history repeated. The City Council voted down the gas station a second time.

Again, Petrovich sued, this time for damages, financial and personal. The Sierra Curtis neighborhood group successfully defeated the gas station with Schenirer’s help, but taxpayers must pay millions of dollars for the victory.

Under a settlement, Petrovich will receive $26 million from the city, in retribution for Schenirer’s actions. In addition, the city spent more than $2 million in legal fees.

Luckily, the city doesn’t have to cover the full settlement in cash. City Manager Howard Chan negotiated a deal for the city’s purchase of a building owned by Petrovich at 827 K Street.

The building accounted for $18.5 million, leaving the city on the hook for $7.5 million in cash. Petrovich received an apology from the city, plus a park named for his family.

The moral of the story? Elected officials must keep their actions and words within the law. To do otherwise is an abuse of power. As usual, taxpayers got stuck with the bill.

Jeff Harris represented District 3 on City Council from 2014 to 2022. He can be reached at cadence@mycci. net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

20 IES OCT n 23
21 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM

S t e p B y S t e p Step By Step

COUNTY MAKES PROGRESS ON HOMELESSNESS

Homelessness is more than a housing crisis. It involves mental illness, drug addiction and criminal behavior, often committed by homeless individuals against others in encampments. While unsheltered individuals suffer, so does the quality of life in some of our neighborhoods.

Sacramento County takes a balanced approach using what I call the “four C’s”—compassion, coordination, capacity and consequences.

We must have compassion for troubled souls living on our streets. Causes of homelessness are complex, with many factors. The county has an obligation to help people overcome housing, employment and other barriers to a productive life. Treatment for drug addiction and mental illness must be part of the equation for most.

Homelessness isn’t confined to specific jurisdictions. That’s why we improved coordination with Sacramento and other cities. We approved a partnership agreement with

RD

the city to help guide county obligations and outline city efforts.

We consolidated our homeless efforts under a new County Department of Homeless Services and Housing. We supported Sacramento Steps Forward with the development of a new Local Homeless Action Plan that creates a road map for concrete measurements to gauge progress.

Of course, coordination means nothing if we don’t increase shelter and housing capacity.

The county recently opened 100 tiny homes near Power Inn and Florin roads under our Safe Stay Communities program. The location has services and 24/7 management. Another 45 cabins will open this fall on East Parkway at the county Department of Health Services parking lot.

In the design phase are 200-plus tiny homes for North Highlands. We will open 30 “Safe Parking” spots at the site. These shelters don’t include the several hundred new permanent supportive housing beds recently opened or approved.

Expanding shelter and housing must be linked to services, which are provided directly at shelters and permanent supportive housing locations. The county added hundreds of new residential treatment beds for people suffering from acute mental illness and addiction.

Outpatient services are expanding. We are near the point where we can offer treatment and services immediately to people in need.

Some homeless individuals are reluctant to accept services. Why? Lifestyle choice, opposition to rules, not wanting to give up pets or belongings, and insisting they are “OK” physically and mentally.

Adding more shelter will provide the leverage to get people off the streets. We must insist they accept the services offered.

While we continue to make progress with better coordination and capacity, it’s important to make sure there are consequences for people who break the law or disrupt our communities.

The Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance last year that bans camping around shelter sites because it disrupts lives and reduces the success of those we’re trying to help.

The ordinance, and a companion rule focused on the American River Parkway, bans encampments that pose a threat to critical infrastructure. The county also bans encampments that impact public safety by obstructing roadways and sidewalks.

Enforcing these bans demonstrates good faith to the community that we understand our obligations. Helping the homeless is balanced with our duty

make sure communities are clean and safe.

The board funds the Sheriff’s Homeless Outreach Team to make sure county ordinances are enforced and criminal activity related to encampments or individuals is addressed.

The sheriff’s office recently released findings on 926 contacts during the first half of the year. Data show 402 homeless individuals were sexually assaulted. Of those, only 162 incidents were reported. We must not criminalize someone for being homeless. But homelessness isn’t an excuse to commit crime.

Sacramento County still has much work to do. Progress is far too slow. I’m frustrated by the pace, but also confident our approach will help people become productive members of society and ensure our neighborhoods are protected and safe.

For information on Sacramento County’s homelessness efforts and the Local Homeless Action Plan, visit www.schs.saccounty.gov and www. sacramentostepsforward.org

Rich Desmond represents District 3 on the County Board of Supervisors. He can be reached at richdesmond@ saccounty.gov. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento. com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

22 IES OCT n 23

Exercise your well power.

The life you live and the people you love are a magical mix of chance and choice. When it comes to health care, the choices you make can really make a difference. If you’re comparing health plans this season, consider the advantages of a plan that connects you to Dignity Health’s award-winning doctors. And your choice of where to see them, from virtual care to medical complexes with on-site primary and specialty care, labs and imaging all in one location. All backed by nationally recognized hospital programs for heart, stroke, cancer care and other specialties.

Learn more about the Dignity Health difference and the plans we accept at DignityHealth.org/OpenEnrollment.

23 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
This Open Enrollment, choose a plan that gives you access to Dignity Health.

Shared Sustenance

NONPROFIT HELPS FAMILIES ACCESS DONOR HUMAN MILK

Everyone should be given the option to feed their baby human breast milk,” says Janel Silva, a lactation consultant and co-founder and director of Human Milk Connection, a new nonprofit that helps families access pasteurized donor human milk.

“There’s a knowledge gap that exists. People don’t know about (donor milk) and think the only option is formula,” she continues. “We’re working on getting the word out.”

Silva spent years in the health care industry working with parents and infants, first as a birth doula, then as a lactation consultant.

“My real love is lactation,” says Silva, a San Francisco native who moved to Curtis Park in 2000. “There’s an innate need to care for your offspring—or any child you come into contact with who needs you—and you need to feed them.

“Breastfeeding is the biological norm but not everybody can do it. Sometimes they need help. Women are very vulnerable during this time. They need support, encouragement, knowledge, empowerment, kindness.”

During a UC San Diego externship, Silva met Debbie Albert, a Natomasbased nurse lactation consultant. They realized how much education was lacking around the benefits of donor human milk—breast milk expressed by one person and donated for use by someone else who needs it, mostly through milk banks.

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Hospitals use donor human milk often to help supplement premature infants. Once a baby goes home, access to donor human milk becomes tricky and costly. Silva and Albert decided to do something about that.

Human Milk Connection was founded this year as “a fundraising and educational arm of milk banks in the state of California,” Silva says. “If someone qualifies for Medi-Cal, they may be eligible to get a large portion of the cost of donor human milk covered, but not all of it. We’re working to make that access more expansive.”

She explains donor milk costs $3.75 an ounce. The average baby at two weeks consumes 25 ounces a day, or roughly $2,800 a month.

The nonprofit built a relationship with the Mothers’ Milk Bank of San Jose to help get donor human milk to families in need. The goal is to raise enough money to fund as many California milk banks as possible.

“We really want this to be a state where this is accessible to everyone,” Silva says. “Informal milk sharing is done all over the world, but it’s much safer to use pasteurized donor human milk (through a milk bank).”

Women interested in donating breast milk can apply directly to the milk bank. Those who seek donor milk must obtain a prescription and apply to the bank to buy milk or, in some instances, have it donated.

“There are great lactation resources out there, but our organization wants people to know that this option is out there, too,” Silva says. “Many families would be ecstatic to have the choice to use human milk. We want people to know they have that choice.”

For information, visit humanmilkconnection.org.

Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. n

24 IES OCT n 23
Janel Silva Photo by Aniko Kiezel
25 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM 95608 5915 CASA ALEGRE $315,000 4748 WHITNEY AVE $400,000 6613 MARKLEY WAY $407,000 5132 EL CAMINO AVE #108 $430,000 3435 CALIFORNIA AVE $460,000 6113 COYLE AVE $470,000 4909 DONOVAN DR $475,000 4104 SCRANTON CIR $485,000 4920 SAN MARQUE CIR $485,000 6301 SUTTER AVE $485,000 5115 JANELL WAY $490,000 4918 COTTAGE WAY $506,000 4637 OAKBOUGH WAY $510,000 2426 FALLWATER LN $530,000 5727 PARKOAKS DR $530,000 2909 EASY WAY $535,000 4806 OAKFIELD CIR $555,000 5525 BARBARA WAY $590,000 6324 HILLTOP DR $590,000 4825 PATRIC WAY $610,000 2809 ROYAL PALM WAY $630,000 6255 RAMPART DR $649,000 1520 GARY WAY $665,000 4348 GALEWOOD WAY $665,000 34 RIVERBANK PL $675,000 3001 VALASSTRADA CT $678,000 5444 AGAPI LN $680,000 1248 GARY WAY $695,000 4900 THOR WAY $699,000 4512 LADERA WAY $719,000 4127 HOLLISTER AVE $770,000 5248 ADELAIDE WAY $776,000 5144 LOCUST AVE $820,000 4236 CLOVER KNOLL CT $825,000 1208 GENESEE CT $833,000 2622 JAVAN LN $839,900 4425 STOLLWOOD DR $881,000 4907 SECLUDED OAKS LN $882,000 1601 ARDEN BLUFFS LN $1,030,000 4700 MARLBOROUGH WAY $1,104,500 1969 CENACLE LN $1,239,000 95815 2745 PLOVER ST $245,000 2455 PRINCETON ST $299,000 850 DIXIEANNE AVE $320,000 2908 TAFT ST $325,000 1014 ELEANOR AVE $340,000 583 ARCADE BLVD $350,000 3263 O'FARRELL DR $388,000 1924 JAMESTOWN DR $405,000 2020 WATERFORD RD $410,000 2208 WATERFORD RD $415,000 1949 BOWLING GREEN DR $430,000 180 SOUTHGATE RD $625,000 95816 3232 S ST $540,000 3153 CARLY WAY $551,500 2230 G ST $562,500 3701 T ST $710,000 2620 D ST $725,000 2820 C ST $852,000 632 38TH ST $855,500 3557 P ST $874,000 3337 FORNEY WAY $915,000 3317 MCKINLEY VILLAGE WAY $1,350,000 95817 2842 39TH ST $195,000 3131 37TH ST $215,650 2810 42ND ST $240,000 4124 4TH AVE $240,000 3509 38TH ST $248,500 2845 32ND ST $260,000 3201 4TH AVE $260,000 2957 43RD ST $275,000 3030 SAN CARLOS WAY $325,000 3481 38TH ST $340,000 3327 38TH ST $349,500 3124 42ND ST $349,500 3241 42ND ST $350,000 3621 43RD ST $350,000 3225 MARTIN LUTHER KING JR BLVD $352,500 3514 12TH AVE $360,000 3820 9TH AVE $360,000 3125-3127 3RD AVE $370,000 2200 52ND STREET $385,500 2320 32ND STREET $390,000 3045 39TH ST $390,000 3891 12TH AVE $395,000 4236 12TH AVE $395,000 3131 37TH ST $410,000 3219 38TH ST $430,000 3322 W ST $430,000 3516 34TH ST $430,000 3409 12TH AVE $432,000 2927 SAN JOSE WAY $432,000 4885 V ST $440,000 3248 10TH AVE $440,000 6243 TAHOE WAY $450,000 2912 33RD ST $460,000 2940 43RD ST $460,000 3142 W ST $460,600 2928 43RD ST $465,000 3266 10TH AVE $475,000 3633 7TH AVE $477,000 3972 2ND AVE $485,000 3416 7TH AVE $490,000 3441 38TH ST $490,000 2015 61ST $497,500 2501 52ND ST $500,000 3307 12TH AVE $500,000 3440 41ST ST $501,000 3404 TRIO LN $505,000 3488 38TH ST $505,000 2624 57TH ST $510,000 2140 35TH ST $520,000 5508 2ND AVE $527,000 3265 10TH AVE $540,000 4129 12TH AVE $540,000 2120 59TH. ST $550,000 2630 32ND ST $568,000 3972 1ST AVE $573,600 2003 59TH ST $575,000 2957 34TH ST $575,000 4045 2ND AVE $575,000 2367 39TH ST $599,000 5124 U ST $600,000 4824 U ST $607,000 2500 37TH ST $610,000 4908 U ST $645,000 2049 35TH ST $648,000 2231 52ND ST $670,000 6221 3RD AVE $682,500 1 DECLAN CT $693,000 3025 8TH AVE $712,500 3964 DOWNEY WAY $730,000 2555 52ND ST $775,000 2224 50TH ST $950,000 2961 34TH ST $985,000 3991 4TH AVE $1,250,000 95818 2616 SAN FERNANDO WAY $320,000 198 LOG POND LN $450,000 3319 23RD ST $511,000 1026 U ST $532,000 2022 20TH ST $580,000 2224 23RD ST $585,000 2752 21ST ST $671,000 2400 CURTIS WAY $676,000 2509 DONNER WAY $728,000 322 TOMATO ALY $760,000 2848 MARSHALL WAY $930,000 1770 9TH AVE $1,050,000 3027 BALDWIN ST $1,070,307 1151 ROBERTSON WAY $1,325,000 3009 BALDWIN ST $1,495,000 95819 5500 AILEEN WAY $549,000 4420 D ST $600,000 5328 H ST $610,000 5541 STATE AVE $625,000 5351 MONALEE AVE $665,000 4309 H ST $682,000 511 41ST ST $700,000 4850 C ST $750,000 4700 H ST $800,000 558 LAGOMARSINO WAY $805,000 1849 50TH ST $925,000 510 53RD ST $1,055,000 501 46TH ST $1,250,000 95821 2581 FULTON SQUARE LN #79 $249,000 3622 LARCHMONT SQUARE LN $310,000 2520 ETHAN WAY $356,000 2205 JULIESSE AVE $373,000 2535 CAMBON WAY $410,000 3535 RONK WAY $460,000 4112 WHITNEY AVE $480,000 2509 ANNA WAY #2509 $515,000 3800 WILLIAM WAY $526,000 3412 LEATHA WAY $542,000 4121 BOONE LN $555,000 3029 SAND DOLLAR WAY $571,000 3468 SOLARI WAY $585,000 2608 GREENWOOD AVE $631,000 4000 COPPERTREE WAY $639,900 4506 WOODSON AVE $675,000 3904 ADELHEID WAY $705,000 4841 HOPE LN $740,000 95822 1416 ATHERTON ST $250,000 51 QUASAR CIR $310,000 6113 MCLAREN AVE $355,000 6006 BELLEAU WOOD LN $360,500 1448 MATHEWS WAY $380,000 2188 50TH AVE $385,000 1461 66TH AVE $400,000 7323 TAMOSHANTER WAY $400,000 2301 TURNESA AVE $430,000 1511 ARVILLA DR $440,000 2424 37TH AVE $445,000 1842 68TH AVE $449,900 5636 24TH ST $460,000 2121 15TH AVE $489,000 4901 ESMA JANE LN $630,000 812 SKIPPER CIR $650,000 6360 PARK VILLAGE ST $690,000 5309 DEL RIO RD $796,000 4120 S LAND PARK DR $815,000 1040 CASILADA WAY $976,000 4500 FRANCIS CT $1,900,000 95825 2280 HURLEY WAY #15 $220,000 780 WOODSIDE EAST LN #1 $228,500 536 WOODSIDE OAKS #3 $253,900 2141 CORTEZ LN $270,000 903 FULTON AVE #406 $273,000 1019 DORNAJO WAY #237 $281,000 546 WOODSIDE OAKS #1 $290,000 605 WOODSIDE SIERRA #2 $305,000 524 WOODSIDE OAKS #1 $310,000 13 COLBY CT $409,100 2901 ARMSTRONG DR $441,000 2318 MEADOWBROOK RD $455,000 Closed August 1 - 31* Neighborhood Real
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SALES. 2267 MONTE CASSINO LN $465,000 1306 GANNON DR $470,000 2325 LLOYD LN $475,000 626 HARTNELL PL $505,000 2032 UNIVERSITY PARK DR $520,000 27 ADELPHI CT $520,000 1212 VANDERBILT WAY $525,000 314 ELMHURST CIR $530,000 126 E RANCH RD $575,000 1110 DUNBARTON CIR $575,000 1014 COMMONS DR $609,000 2236 EHRBORN WAY $689,000 2231 EHRBORN WAY $720,000 1114 COMMONS DR $835,000 95831 7260 RUSH RIVER DR $462,000 1134 CEDAR TREE WAY $500,000 1235 SPRUCE TREE CIR $505,000 6825 HAVENHURST DR $510,000 7743 WINDBRIDGE DR $564,000 6855 WATERVIEW WAY $575,000 7286 RUSH RIVER DR $577,500 6841 GREENHAVEN DR $588,000 7010 WAVECREST WAY $595,000 1182 SILVER RIDGE WAY $599,000 7040 WARBLER WAY $602,000 90 GREENWAY CIR $640,000 74 LAS POSITAS CIR $660,000 6819 HAVENSIDE DR $716,000 6925 WATERVIEW WAY $735,000 66 HIDDEN COVE CIR $785,000 95864 3124 BERKSHIRE WAY $302,000 3530 BODEGA CT $325,000 3452 WEMBERLEY DR $333,000 4325 MORPHEUS LN $451,000 2410 BRIDLE PATH LN $500,000 1522 ROWENA WAY $650,000 4337 ALDERWOOD WAY $670,000 3560 LOS ALAMOS WAY $675,000 460 WYNDGATE RD $702,000 3800 LAS PASAS WAY $720,000 751 LA SIERRA DR $800,000 11 SABLE CT $835,000 1213 EL SUR WAY $885,000 3011 LATHAM DR $910,000 3535 LAS PASAS WAY $949,900 880 LA SIERRA DR $988,000 748 SANTA RITA WAY $1,015,075 2845 LATHAM DR $1,215,000 534 WILHAGGIN DR $1,398,722 3337 AMERICAN RIVER DR $1,725,000 1441 LAS SALINAS WAY $1,850,100 2630 SIERRA BLVD $2,200,000 3641 WINDING CREEK RD $2,985,000 3187 BARBERRY LN $3,000,000
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Maui Now?

LOCALS ADVISE ON HOW TO VISIT AND HELP

Should you vacation in Maui? Simple question, no simple answer. Residents displaced by summer wildfires need hotels and condos for housing. And Maui needs tourist dollars.

The island’s destruction is personal. My family resides on Oahu. My extended ohana and longtime friends live on Maui. All my loved ones are safe. They mobilized in the relief efforts, collected supplies for the “kanaka Costcos” set up in Maui churches, cooked and delivered food, and fought small fires.

To the kanaka maoli (native Hawaiians), Maui is not Disneyland. It’s not a place to come for two weeks of golf and beach time. It’s an ancestral home, a sacred place. Everyone feels the pain, even those who left for the mainland.

Ana Manzano Fairbairn was born in Lahaina and graduated from Baldwin High School. She’s been in Sacramento since 2010 and belongs to the Ohana Dance Group in Pocket. Her father still lives on Maui.

“I’m not kanaka, but I support their beliefs. It’s kuleana to care for and protect the community where I was born,” Fairbairn says. “I have conflicted feelings about what to say to mainlanders. If they decide to travel, I hope they take the time to educate themselves about the history of the islands before they board the plane. Come with the best of intentions and a pure heart. Reallocate some vacation funds towards relief efforts.”

Similar thoughts come from Serge Jaimes-Vigaray, owner of Stay Rooted Kava, a beverage business. He shares aloha with the Elk Grove community. You can find him Fridays at A Seat at the Table Books, where he reads Hawaiian stories to children.

He graduated from Lahainaluna High School. His mother and other family

members lost homes and jobs to the fires. He says, “Physically, they’re OK. But spiritually, they’re hurting. Their lives have been upended. It’s heartbreaking to see my old neighborhood is only ashes now.”

Jaimes-Vigaray believes longtime residents should join the rebuilding discussions. Elected officials should prevent land grabs. He says, “I don’t want the area to be filled with high-rise resorts. Lahaina should be an affordable, residential community that honors the kanakas and their history.”

If you visit Maui, don’t enter the disaster zones. Don’t fly a drone or snorkel near Lahaina to take photos. Be respectful, kind and sensitive. Respect the aina and leave only your footprints in the sand. Return the aloha spirit in every way possible.

You can support Hawaii from Sacramento. Purchase Maui products online, send donations to Hawaii-based groups such as Maui Rapid Response and Maui Strong Hawaii Community Foundation. Monies go directly to Maui organizations.

ARTS & CRAFTS

The Elks Lodge hosts its fall Arts & Crafts Festival on Saturday, Oct. 28, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Local artists and craft vendors are inside and outside the lodge. Food is available for purchase. For information, email Pam Zanze at elks6craftshow@ gmail.com.

TRUNK OR TREAT

Bring the kids to Device Brewing Company’s classic car show Thursday, Oct. 26, from 4–8 p.m. Car owners will hand out Halloween treats. The event takes place in the Promenade Shopping Center parking lot on Windbridge Drive.

Corky Mau can be reached at corky. sue50@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, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

26 IES OCT n 23
Ohana Dance Group Photos by Aniko Kiezel Serge Jaimes-Vigaray and Ana Manzano Fairbairn Body painting for celebration

Lyon Real Estate

MARKET LEADERS. NEIGHBORHOOD EXPERTS.

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Lyon Downtown is looking to partner with you! If you are an experienced or new agent, we want to help you grow your business. We have the coaching, tools, and support to get you there. I am personally committed to helping my agents reach their goals. Give me a call, and I’ll share the exciting things that are happening at Lyon Real Estate.

Learn more about us at JoinLyonDowntown.com.

David Falcone

Branch Manager

Lic# 01402640 916-479-2789

27 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
DOWNTOWN OFFICE | 2801 J STREET, SACRAMENTO | 916.447.7878 | GOLYON.COM
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Bee Gone

In every city with a decent daily newspaper, historic decisions swirled around the building where journalism was conceived, produced, printed and distributed.

That was certainly true at 21st and Q streets. For seven decades, the Bee reported on political scandals, natural disasters, athletic achievements, social shifts and horrific crimes. Stories from the paper’s Midtown headquarters impacted generations.

In my 16 years at the Bee, I was fortunate to work with many talented journalists at 21st and Q. I covered elections, earthquakes, floods and murders—endless human accomplishments and failings. It’s natural that I feel melancholy when I

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HISTORIC NEWS BUILDING AWAITS DEMOLITION

see the Bee building today, silent and empty.

As the Bee continues to shrink—its offices and newsroom moved in 2021 to The Cannery business development on Alhambra Boulevard—the home of the once-proud flagship of regional journalism will soon be demolished. A densely packed housing project will remove any trace of the newspaper’s historic presence.

On a Facebook site for former Bee employees, there is nothing ambiguous about how they feel about the building’s demise.

“Losing an institution and losing character,” one former Bee employee posted. “Market-rate apartments. Great,” another comment read.

“Desecration of an historic site… not to mention the congestion and other traffic-related problems that will accompany this latest example of greed,” a former staffer wrote.

It would be wonderful if the paper were still healthy, adding circulation and continuing its role as the region’s conscience and watchdog. But too much has changed for that to be the story.

There are still talented journalists at the Bee doing good, important work.

But most newspapers can’t keep pace with transitions brought by technology. The Bee is no exception.

Our region is worse off as a result. A strong local daily newspaper is a point of pride and a tremendous community asset. But for many reasons, we no longer create new readers of newspapers. We haven’t for decades.

When I was growing up in Chicago, my dad came home from work each day with four Chicago dailies, two published in the morning, two in the afternoon. I couldn’t wait to read the latest stories about my favorite sports teams.

Soon I was captivated by the rest of the news. In Chicago, that often meant scandals about local corruption and chicanery. I was hooked. Now most of us scroll our phones while daily newspapers shrink and close.

Midtown Sacramento is changing, too. Striving to come back from the

pandemic and civic unrest, the area booms with new housing. The old Bee plant is a prime location, especially with its proximity to light rail.

So prime, in fact, that when it was purchased by Shopoff Realty Investments for a reported $56.75 million in 2017 from McClatchy, the Bee’s then-owner, Shopoff touted the 6.3 acres as “the largest infill development site in Sacramento.”

Shopoff says it plans to sell the property once it gets approval from the city to build more than 500 apartment units where the newsroom and printing presses stood. The investors say they will seek to add another 48 townhomes just to the south.

At that scale, the Bee will become one of the central city’s largest residential projects. New homes will erase any trace of the activities that once took place there.

28 IES OCT n 23
NEW HOMES WILL ERASE ANY TRACE OF THE ACTIVITIES THAT ONCE TOOK PLACE THERE.
Renderings courtesy of Shopoff Realty Investments

That’s what happens in cities. Old uses run out of steam. Something more lucrative arrives. Before the Bee moved into 21st and Q in 1953, the site was the Buffalo Brewery.

Sacramento needs more housing, especially of the affordable variety. With the Bee gone from a neighborhood mostly residential already, 21st and Q is a prime location.

When he built a 277-unit apartment building a few years ago on the site of the Bee’s old parking garage, developer Sotiris Kolokotronis paid homage to the newspaper by naming his project The Press. It was a nice gesture.

I wouldn’t expect anything similar from the current owners, based in Orange County. They bought the property as an investment. Its value will only increase if the city approves the housing plans.

The Press apartments will still exist across 21st Street, but the memories and history that inspired the name will be long gone.

Gary Delsohn can be reached at gdelsohn@gmail.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Fight For Ferals For Ferals

WHERE IS FRONT STREET IN CARE FOR COMMUNITY CATS?

The temperature hovered around 100 degrees in August when feral cat trapper Maria Calderon took three homeless kittens to the city’s Front Street Animal Shelter.

Calderon trapped the 6-week-old felines earlier that day. “One had an upper respiratory infection— discharge coming from his eye. I wanted to get them off the street,” says Calderon, who has been trapping in Sacramento for two years.

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With Front Street’s policy to take only ill and injured cats, Calderon expected the shelter to give the kittens a safe haven and medical treatment.

That was not the case.

“They are not sick. They are not injured. They are not less than 8 weeks old. So we will not be taking them in,” Front Street staff told Calderon. The eye discharge was not severe enough to qualify as an illness.

“The girl was saying they are healthy and big enough to fend for themselves,” Calderon says. “No, they are not. They are babies. It’s 100 degrees outside and they want me to return these kittens to where they were. They don’t deserve to live their lives outside.”

Feral cats—also called community cats—face starvation, disease and injury. Yet Front Street turned the kittens away—aware of the dangers, aware they would eventually add

to the overpopulation of homeless, unwanted animals.

“If we are beyond our capacity, young kittens under 12 weeks should be returned where found so their mother can continue to care for them,” Front Street Manager Phillip Zimmerman says. “If they are over 3 months, the kittens are generally able to fend for themselves and should also be returned where found.”

Calderon walked through the city shelter. “There were only five cats in the cattery,” she says. Subsequent visits confirmed numerous empty cages.

Calderon also traps cats in the county and relies on Bradshaw Animal Shelter. “This would never happen at Bradshaw,” she says. “I’ve taken several kittens in with URIs, just like these kittens. They take those kittens—no questions asked.”

Zimmerman established Front Street’s reduced intake policy—

refusing to accept healthy stray cats and kittens—at the onset of COVID. It continues today.

“Aside from the closure from COVID, there is a legal burden on animal shelters to accept animals and care for them,” says attorney Hilary Bagley Franzoia, who headed the Sacramento County District Attorney’s Animal Cruelty Unit and Animal Cruelty Task Force.

Senate Bill 1785 (Hayden’s Law) passed in 1998, provides it’s better for public and private shelters, rather than private citizens, to take in animals. Accepting animals is important for public health and safety, aiding in the return of animals to owners and preventing inhumane conditions for lost or roaming animals.

Bradshaw partners with the Community Spay Neuter Clinic to help reduce the number of community cats in the area. Trappers can book appointments for trapped cats three days a week.

The Sacramento SPCA holds a community cat spay/neuter clinic the first four Sundays of every month, free to local trappers, altering 80 to 100 feral cats every Sunday. Monday through Saturday, the SSPCA accepts up to 10 trapped cats each day without an appointment for cats trapped in Sacramento County, also at no cost.

“Spaying and neutering is the most effective way of reducing pet overpopulation and the number of pets entering our region’s shelters,” SSPCA CEO Kenn Aline says. So far this year, the SSPCA has altered more than 4,000 community cats, 500 more cats than this time last year.

Both clinics also provide vaccinations, flea prevention and treatment for ear mites, tapeworms and minor wounds.

The system is not perfect. Appointments at the Community Spay Neuter Clinic go fast. At the SSPCA, trappers line up as early as

30 IES OCT n 23
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Feral cat Mama Goose is the 300,000th animal spayed at the Sacramento SPCA since 2007.

3 a.m. to snag one of the 10 slots. But it’s something.

Front Street Animal Shelter provides no funding or programs to spay and neuter community cats.

Under former manager Gina Knepp, the city shelter dedicated funds to community cats. “Gina didn’t care if cats were feral,” says a Front Street volunteer not authorized to speak for the shelter. “She said, ‘Get them all spayed and neutered.’ Now, it’s a completely different mindset about spay and neuter.”

With a shelter budget of $7.3 million, Zimmerman says funds aren’t the problem. It’s lack of high-volume, low-cost spay/neuter services. Yet local animal advocates have identified various spay/neuter surgical teams that will work within Front Street’s budget. Those resources have been ignored.

“Front Street wants as few animal intakes as possible,” Calderon says. “It should not be a fight to get kittens into Front Street.”

For information on spaying/ neutering community cats, visit

animalcare.saccounty.gov, under “Services,” and sspca.org, under “Programs & Services.”

Support the SSPCA’s Feline Spay and Neuter Fund by visiting sspca. org/donate. Under “Please use my gift:,” select “Community cat clinics” on the dropdown menu.

FERAL CAT WALK

In honor of National Feral Cat Day, join the Coalition for Community Cats for its annual 5K Feral Cat Walk, 9 a.m. to noon, Sunday, Oct. 15, beginning at the California Automobile Museum. Registration is $35 and includes an event T-shirt. Children 12 and younger are free. For information, visit coalition4cats.org.

Cathryn Rakich can be reached at crakich@surewest.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Family Ties

HOME HAS NEW OWNERS, BUT LEGACY LINGERS

Robert Puleo and Dan Gentry purchased their San Antonio Way home from the original owner in 2018. It was built in 1923.

Puleo went to school with the owner’s granddaughter. The couple bought the home from her grandmother, who was born in the house. When new, it was the only residence on the street.

“We wanted to live in a charming East Sac neighborhood, and we got it,” Gentry says.

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“It was interesting because the first time we came through, we realized that one had to have a lot of vision to see the possibilities, because the walls were drab and dirty with ugly curtains and old Venetian blinds,” Puleo says.

The home is a high-water bungalow. It sits about 5 feet higher than typical homes in the neighborhood. The original owners turned the flood space into a basement.

“The woman we bought it from remembered her father digging out the dirt to create a cooler summer living space for the family,” Puleo says. “It has a full living space, including a living/dining space, bathroom, kitchenette and bedroom. The family just moved downstairs when it was hot.” Now it’s space for hobbies and storage.

The home is 920 square feet, with two bedrooms and two bathrooms, but Puleo and Gentry love the feeling of the openness and light. There was one Jack and Jill bathroom, but the new owners closed one side and added a master bath suite, replacing a screened porch.

32 IES OCT n 23
Photography by Aniko Kiezel Robert Puleo and Dan Gentry

“Our home is deceptively large. Since there are no hallways and now a large opening between the kitchen, dining and living areas, the home feels much larger,” Gentry says.

“When you stand in the middle of the house, you can see out all the windows.”

Basking in the light are original maple floors, refinished to golden blonde.

For years the couple lived in Rancho Cordova with a pool. They spent years remodeling. Nine years ago, they sold to Puleo’s sister and rented an apartment Downtown so they could travel. The dark apartment grew depressing. Time for a change.

Puleo is a retired state employee. He and Gentry moonlighted in the antique and vintage business, and established Puleo Gentry Gallery at the 57th Street Antique Row. The shop closed in 2018, and retirement beckoned, just in time to embark on remodeling their new East Sac home.

The couple chose white Shakerstyle cabinets for the kitchen and bathroom. The countertops are quartz with a gray and white marble pattern. The spaces feature accents of decorative tiles that reflect Moroccan and Venetian aesthetics. Each room has vintage art hung in studio gallery style.

“We saved two leaded glass windows from a china cabinet we removed and used them in the new kitchen cabinets as an ode to the original home,” Puleo says.

The compact house is nearly surrounded by generous gardens. Puleo works the land like a county gentleman. The couple replanted nearly every tree and shrub. They saved a huge lemon tree and built a back porch around its trunk.

The backyard focal point is an enormous wooden trellis that supports dense wisteria vines. The trellis shades a rectangular dining table. “We can easily entertain groups of up to 20 for dinner,” Gentry says.

33 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM

The couple loves gardening, especially growing food. The south side yard is dedicated to vegetables. My visit found cherry and heirloom tomatoes, zucchini, eggplant and peppers in raised beds. Herbs thrived in pots.

A fig tree and carefully pruned Italian grapevine highlight the side yards. The back has fruit and citrus trees, plus miniature Italian cypress. Behind the garage is a greenhouse created from the home’s recycled windows.

They relandscaped the front yard, keeping only the original camellia bushes, planted when the home was new.

„Gentry says best of all are the wonderful neighbors. Puleo agrees, but also highlights the light and bright interior spaces.

“But to me this property feels somewhat sacred,” Puleo says. “Knowing the family and their Italian history, I just feel that I belong here.”

Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications.com. To recommend a home or garden, contact publisher@insidepublications. com. More photography and previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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HARDSCAPE CAN MAKE, NOT BREAK, A GARDEN

Stone is not fragrant. It doesn’t bloom or sway in the breeze. Bees and butterflies treat it like a flyover state, settling on flowers. It’s not plucked and tucked in a vase, and rarely photographed. Moss and lichens find it, but gardeners too often ignore it. Yet it commands that other indispensable garden design group, hardscape.

Hardscape is any structure or feature unrelated to plants. Gardens stir conversations about trees, shrubs, perennials and grasses. Stone, should

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you look beyond plants, is stacked, mortared and set into patios, pathways, retaining walls, water features and dry stream beds, or placed for decorative purposes. Stone serves garden whims and fundamental needs.

My interest in rocks and stones began in my mother’s rock garden. Mom’s weekend trips yielded more interesting rocks and crevices to start low-growing plants. The old station wagon served two purposes, grocery and rock hauler.

In college, I enrolled in a geology course. The final was identifying 50 rock samples in paper cups placed around the lab. I rocked it and exited with an appreciation for all rock family members sedimentary, igneous and metamorphic. Later, gardening with stone became seamless.

Is a rock the same as a stone?

Generally, rocks are large masses and stones are smaller and more suitable for gardens. For simplicity, stones and rocks will be considered the same “hard stuff.”

“Rocks, especially boulders, add important accents in the garden,” says landscape designer Roberta Walker of Sacramento’s Roberta Walker Landscape Design (robertawalker. com). “They create focal points and also height, which breaks up the plantings and adds interest.”

Walker has designed more than 1,000 gardens and is known for her sustainable, drought-tolerant gardens of year-round color. Before designing gardens, she was an artist and graphic designer. She speaks at home shows and gardening events and has been featured in national magazines and home and garden television programs.

She emphasizes the easiest and most affordable path to drought-tolerant landscapes and breaks landscape rocks into four categories:

Cobble, a mixture of small, medium and large cobble, for dry stream beds that should meander and flow with bends and curves.

Boulders, no more than 2 feet high or wide, for accents and standalone

sculptures. Any larger boulders may be too heavy and expensive to position and move.

Crushed rock for walkways, patios or top dressing (instead of bark mulch). If crushed rock is used for a pathway, she recommends borders to keep the rock in place. Walker uses various colors of lava rock for top dressing. Bark mulch moves when blowing off leaves and debris. Lava rock stays put.

Flagstone for pathways and patios. Flagstone, set in decomposed granite or concrete, can be used for a new pathway to the front door once lawn is removed.

A single stone can become a garden focal point. A long stone can be laid flat in a bed. Use it upright and it’s a spire to draw the eye. One large boulder can hide a utility meter, cable box or irrigation valves. Walker once drilled through a 12-foot-high wall of rock to plumb an outdoor shower. And, wait for it, rocks do not require water, fertilizer, pesticides or maintenance.

36 IES OCT n 23
Garden design and photo by Roberta Walker

TIMOTHY SCOTT

FOR MEN AND WOMEN

Like all landscaping material, the cost of stone has increased, but not as much as other materials.

“It is up, but nothing like lumber, pools and labor,” Walker says. “Labor costs reflect the inflation that has occurred over the last couple of years. Rock is still a relatively cheap way to dress up landscapes, all things considered.”

However, she adds flagstone and larger boulders have become more expensive to buy and install.

Walker cautions against the dreadful all rock garden, resulting in a moonscape front yard neighbors hate.

Remember, a well-designed garden is a combination of plants and hardscape, a balance of depth, color and interest. Great garden design is art.

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, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

37 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
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Where To From Here?

FOCUS ON RESILIENCY IS THE FACE OF TRAGEDY

On April 4, 1991, I was halfway finished with a yearlong chaplain training program at UC Davis Medical Center when a social worker approached me with news.

“Our team is on standby tonight,” she whispered. She meant our Critical Incident Stress Debriefing Team, which was specially trained to debrief people who witness horrific incidents.

“Why?” I asked.

“You better catch the news,” she said, pointing toward a waiting room of people watching television. The special report conveyed the early hours of what is still the largest hostage crisis on American soil.

After botching a robbery of the Good Guys! electronics store at 65th Street

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and Stockton Boulevard, four young men, ages 17 to 21, used hostages as human shields, laying them in front of windows in view of news cameras. They threatened to execute hostages if not given safe passage to Thailand.

Eight hours into the crisis, sheriff’s deputies attempted to end it with a sniper, concussive grenades and tear gas. The barrage killed three robbers and wounded the fourth, but not before the suspects killed three hostages and wounded 11 more.

The seriously wounded were taken to our trauma unit. After they received medical care, our debriefing team tried to get them to talk about their trauma. Doing this within 24 hours was supposed to help victims more quickly return to normal living.

With that in mind, I approached a young man who lay on a hallway gurney awaiting X-rays. I introduced myself to him and his wife.

As it turned out, he was a Baptist seminary student from my alma mater. We had the same theology professors, so I wasn’t surprised when his survivor’s guilt took a theological twist.

He told me he felt divine protection while mayhem exploded around him. He was thankful God saved him, but asked, “Why hadn’t God saved everyone?”

“I don’t know,” I said, trying to delay his theological analysis. “I can only consider what will happen now.” I wanted to redirect the conversation off the circular path of “why” to the more constructive question, “Where to from here?”

I wanted him to focus on his resiliency as a future minister. To do that, he had to look past this day and see a time when he would complete his training and pursue his calling.

“Where to from here?” is the question we all must ask ourselves when tragedy strikes. What will I become from here? Will I become so mired in this tragic moment that my whole life is defined by it?

Will people always know me as the guy whose home was lost in the flood? Or the one whose child died? Or the man who was shot in the store? Or will I become the person who overcame?

The future pastor would have to answer those questions another day. At

that moment, I could only hint at what was coming in his chosen career.

I wrapped up our talk with the scripted debrief question: “What was the worst part of your ordeal?”

“The worst part was when the robber stuck a gun in my face and asked if I wanted to die,” he said.

“That’s a hard thing to hear from your husband,” I said to his wife.

She didn’t answer. She simply looked at the ceiling and fainted into my arms.

Fortunately, like her husband, she was resilient. She recovered quickly and remained with her husband throughout the night. I wasn’t so lucky.

I ignored hospital training to never catch the dead weight of a fainting person. I wrenched my back and was out of work the rest of the week.

Norris Burkes can be reached at comment@thechaplain.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter 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

38 IES OCT n 23
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39 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM

The Bear Truth

WRESTLERS HAD NO EASY NIGHTS AT MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM

Earlier this year, when kick boxing ate pro wrestling for breakfast, I wondered what Red Bastien would make of the meal.

Bastien was the last promoter to book monthly wrestling shows at Memorial Auditorium. He was also a champion pro wrestler. He could hold his own against Rocky “Soulman” Johnson, Kinji Shibuya, Pepper Martin and Pat Patterson, but not all at once.

Pro wrestling was a weekly, biweekly or monthly attraction at Memorial Auditorium since before World War II. The mayhem ended in 1986, when the building closed for 10 years while authorities contemplated seismic repairs.

New promoters tried to revive Memorial Auditorium as a pro wrestling cathedral in 1997–1998 with five shows called “Superstars of Wrestling.” The ring shook with thunderous leaps from the steel turnbuckles. Seats stayed mostly empty. Blame Vince McMahon.

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McMahon flattened the profitability of local wrestling in the late 1980s, when he built the World Wrestling Federation into a cable TV monster. McMahon hired the game’s biggest stars. He bulldozed local traditions like the one at 15th and J streets.

I thought about those old shows when I learned McMahon was finally swallowed by a smarter, younger promoter, Ari Emanuel, a Hollywood agent. Emanuel bought McMahon’s wrestling operation and combined it with the mixed martial arts

Ultimate Fighting Championship. The marriage produced a $21 billion machine of staged TV brutality.

Red Bastien, who died in 2012 at age 81, would be impressed by Emanuel’s ambition. As a 48-year-old pro wrestler turned Sacramento promoter, Red complained about paying $1,000 rent at Memorial Auditorium. The steep overhead left him with crumbs.

In the 1960s and 1970s, Bastien, Pepper Gomez, the Masked Interns, Dr. Ken Raimey and many others grappled their way through town. They choreographed their matches under rules of “kayfabe,” carnival slang for theatrics carried to the edge of plausibility, at least in the audience’s mind.

Here was kayfabe: battle royals ending with an elbow smash, atomic

drop or Boston crab. Heels and faces, villains and good guys. Top showmen known as workers. Workers threw good bumps. They launched opponents skyward. Spectacular climaxes were called finishes. Once finished, workers, faces and heels, showered fast, iced their bumps and carpooled to Stockton. Bastien swore he could still wrestle when he became a promoter in 1979. His body disagreed. His decline began four years earlier when he was blindsided by Vern Stevens during ring introductions at Memorial Auditorium.

Sneak assaults were not unknown in pro wrestling, but this one hurt. Stevens didn’t realize Bastien was in pain from a weight-lifting injury. Red tried to defend himself, but couldn’t move. He was hauled from the canvas on a stretcher.

Pro wrestling was territorial. Promoters carved up geographic swaths and avoided competing against each other. Sacramento was serviced by two Northern California promoters, Roy Shire and Louie Miller.

40 IES OCT n 23
The wrestling bear add appeared in Sacramento newspapers in December 1972. The ad with the photo of Kinji Shibuya appeared in Sacramento newspapers in July 1973.

In the late 1970s, Shire and Miller feuded. The partners became competitors. Bastien saw an opportunity at Memorial Auditorium. He booked two shows a month, Wednesdays at 8:30 p.m., wrestling time.

The Shire and Miller battle ignited over a bear. As deranged as this sounds today, bears sometimes joined wrestling shows 50 years ago at Memorial Auditorium. They were audience favorites. They often subdued their human opponents.

In 1974, Victor the Wrestling Bear was booked into Memorial Auditorium by Shire and Miller. Thousands of tickets were sold. Full house! But hours before showtime, Shire and Victor’s owner argued over payment.

The owner refused to produce the bear.

Shire panicked. He ordered ring announcer Hank Renner to tell the crowd Victor was killed in a car crash traveling from Arizona to Sacramento.

Miller sued Shire. The plaintiff alleged the defendant’s bear fiasco ruined wrestling’s local reputation. Bastien tried rebuilding that reputation, but the damage was done.

I can’t find the judicial outcome of Miller v. Shire. But I know three facts about Victor.

First, she was not male as advertised. Second, Victor was not her real name. Third, she was not killed in a car crash in 1974.

She wrestled in Oakland as recently as 1978, under an alias. I want to say she won.

R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Dirt Rich

SOIL BORN FARMS GROWS NOURISHING LESSONS

Soil Born Farms is the farm in the farm-tofork capital.

Walking the farm at American River Ranch, off Chase Drive in Rancho Cordova, the bounty and its possibilities present themselves in powerful ways.

First, let’s admire the farm beds, prepared a year or two in advance with cover crops that promote carbon sequestration. Next, here’s an area soon to be planted in tall oaks. Nearby is a restored creek, cleared for salmon and steelhead spawning.

A walkway features hundreds of California native plants. An outdoor classroom is shaded by hanging grape clusters. At the demonstration garden, children find runner beans, sunflowers, peppers and tomatoes flush for picking.

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Soil Born Farms, founded by Shawn Harrison and Marco Franciosa in 2000, and joined two years later by Janet Whalen Zeller, is a nonprofit teaching farm. Lessons include how to be responsible land stewards and nourish ourselves with food we grow. The organization has a permanent home next to the American River.

Through a collaboration with nearby Cordova High School and the Folsom Cordova school district, Soil Born is building a barn for cows, pigs, sheep, goats and other animals for students to raise, study and show.

Soil Born helped develop school gardens in Sacramento and Rancho Cordova. The farm supplies greens for students to enjoy at lunch. Seeing the cycle of nourishment helps young people become invested in their health and wellness, Harrison says. He notes, “Through this relationship, they will make better decisions about what to eat.”

Between Sacramento City and Folsom Cordova school districts, about 60,000 students are served. When those students become adults, the impact of early healthy eating will help transform how our community manages its environment and food.

Harrison describes his passion for agricultural as rooted in his family’s struggles with health. “On the health side, we’ve had a lot of diet-related disease in my family,” he says. “Soil Born brings

42 IES OCT n 23
Photography by Aniko Kiezel Farm To Fork Shawn Harrison

BUTTERNUT SQUASH

This long squash is one of the tastiest winter squashes, with a subtle flavor similar to pumpkin. Eat it: Roast the flesh and use in a simple risotto.

SUNCHOKE

Also known as a Jerusalem artichoke, this tuber has a fresh, nutty taste. Eat it: Roast in the oven with other vegetables, or puree for a soup.

QUINCE

This leafy green can be used as an herb, a salad or a vegetable. It has a peppery, spicy flavor. Eat it: Dress lightly with fresh lemon juice and serve on top of grilled steak or chicken Milanese.

Monthly Market

A LOOK AT WHAT’S IN SEASON AT LOCAL FARMERS MARKETS IN OCTOBER

BLOOOMSDALE SPINACH

This old spinach variety (from the 19th century) has a crinkled leaf and a deep, interesting flavor. Eat it: Sautee in olive oil with garlic and hot red pepper flakes.

This knobby golden fruit looks like a pear and is generally too hard and sour to eat raw. Eat it: Stew in water or wine, then bake in a tart.

HEIRLOOM TOMATO

Summer may be over, but you can still find heirloom tomatoes at the farmers market. They come in a variety of shapes, sizes and colors.

Eat it: Slice and drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper.

43 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
ARUGULA

two passions together of caring for the earth and caring for ourselves.”

He continues, “Let’s put a farm in the city, and bring these issues together. Literally put a farm front and center in the urban environment and heavily program it to show people how

intimately food, the environment and our health are connected.”

At Soil Born, young adults work as counselors for summer camps, farmworkers, produce packers and culinary team members in Phoebe’s Tea & Snack Bar.

While some teens and young adults are interns receiving credit, most are paid. Many are from lower-income areas. The farm hosts more than 100 classes a year for adults and youth to learn how to garden and farm.

Soon visitors to Soil Born will immerse themselves in an agroforestry planting of 3 acres of valley and live oaks for acorn flour. There will be native elderberries and wildflowers for medicinal value, a program the farm is developing with United Auburn Indian Community.

Saturday is the busiest time, with Soil Born open to the public from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Visitors are encouraged to pick up online produce orders, visit the snack bar for homemade scones and pastries, wander through the aisles of Mille’s Mercantile for local

and sustainably raised dry goods, participate in classes, and visit the demonstration garden and restored American River creek habitat.

Like most nonprofits that survive on donations and grants, Soil Born always seeks financial support. Volunteers with culinary and gardening expertise are welcome to help.

For information, visit soilborn.org. 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, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

44 IES OCT n 23

INSIDE

OUT

Happy Halloween!

45 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
PHOTOS BY LINDA SMOLEK Homes around Sacramento celebrate Halloween with spooky decorations for all to enjoy.

River Dance

OLD FAVORITE REMAINS CONSISTENTLY GOOD

Scott’s Seafood on the River is a hidden gem for some, an old standby for others. Tucked away near Riverside Boulevard between Land Park and Pocket, Scott’s has delighted locals and travelers for 15 years.

Attached to the Westin hotel on the river, Scott’s hides in plain sight. Some readers may not think of heading to a hotel restaurant for a nice local meal. However, Scott’s Seafood on the River is independently owned by husband and wife Sigrid and Alan Irvine. They are independent from Westin and separate from other Scott’s in Folsom and the Bay Area.

46 IES OCT n 23

The riverside location brings great views and Delta breezes to the dining room and patio. Earlier this year, it also brought the Army Corps of Engineers.

As part of levee fortifications, Corps contractors commandeered the restaurant parking lot and built a wall along the frontage. The river view was blocked. Some business owners would have flipped. Alan Irvine took it in stride.

He did two things I admire. One, he asked local muralist and fellow restaurant owner, Stephanie Taylor (Willie’s Burgers on Arden and Fair Oaks), to paint a river-themed mural along the temporary wall. Taylor’s bright fish, clever quotes and watery vibe turned a drab view into a cheeky vista.

Then Irvine wrote an op-ed in The Business Journal, describing his situation and emphasizing that if he needed to sacrifice some business for the betterment and safety of the community, that’s OK.

“The levee restoration has seriously disrupted a significant segment of our business,” Irvine wrote, “but we remain proud to be part of the project.” I admire the grace and community spirit of this approach.

The good news is that if all goes according to plan, the wall should be gone when you read this review. Parking may still be valet only, but those Delta breezes will whistle once again.

Despite the construction, Scott’s kitchen remains consistent. Many dishes have been available for years

and still work. Clam chowder and crab bisque are two of the best in town. The chowder is light, creamy and wellseasoned. The bisque is punchy with pepper and bright with tomatoes, yet still supports the crab.

Ahi poke nachos have been on the menu since Scott’s had its Loehmann’s Plaza location in the mid-1990s. Still delightful. Poke is pungent with ponzu and tobiko. Wonton chips are crisp and fun. Regardless of age, these are crowd pleasers.

Petrale sole and cioppino are two standouts, classic preparations, San Francisco-style. Sole, lightly battered and topped with a lemon-caper sauce, arrives gorgeously flaky. Cioppino messes up clean shirts with fishy bits and spicy tomato broth. Scott’s extrasour sourdough bread soaks everything up.

Service is chipper and casual. Friendliness comes through. On a night where three parties of 10 dominated the room, our server and the manager checked in and made sure things went smoothly for the rest of us.

It’s easy to overlook old favorites, especially when there’s a wall blocking the view. I’m glad I re-engaged with Scott’s, wall or not.

Scott’s Seafood on the River is at 4800 Riverside Blvd.; (916) 379-5959; scottsseafoodontheriver.com.

Greg Sabin can be reached at saceats@gmail.com. Previous reviews can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

47 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
Photos by Linda Smolek
THE RIVERSIDE LOCATION BRINGS GREAT VIEWS AND DELTA BREEZES TO THE DINING ROOM AND PATIO.

Artfully Sustained

CREATIVE SOLUTIONS DRIVE THIS INNOVATION CENTER

48 IES OCT n 23
Shira Lane Photo by Linda Smolek

Next time you’re strolling Front Street in Old Sacramento, stop at the Art Café at Atrium 916.

You won’t be served food. You’ll be served art—a ball of clay or a canvas and paints to bring out your inner artist.

“I wanted there to be a place where people can come and just hang out and make art and connect with others,” says Shira Lane, the Israel-born, Australia-raised founder of Atrium 916. “Art can be isolating and intimidating, so the Atrium is designed to be zero-barrier and as accessible as possible. Just walk in and ask a question. We’re like the atrium of the heart: As you go through us, you get more oxygen.”

Lane didn’t intend to open a full-service creative, innovation center for sustainability, but that’s what she built. The documentary filmmaker worked in Los Angeles and San Francisco before arriving in Sacramento in 2016. She saw the local talent and was inspired to create Upcycle Pop, an artistically oriented recycle market.

“I thought it would be a one-time thing for my own happiness, but the artists really liked it and the landlord really liked it and asked if I’d consider creating a coworking space in the building until it was sold,” Land says. “At first it seemed like too much work, but the artists really wanted it, so I said as long as it was completely zero-waste and could host art installations educating people on sustainability, then I’d be interested in putting in the effort.”

Lane focuses on organic sustainability. In 2006, she worked on a feature documentary about the dairy industry—inspired by her own dairy allergy—and she “fell down the rabbit hole.” She learned how unsustainable the food industry is.

That led to work with organizations such as Bono’s (RED) and Earthjustice to “do everything that I can to help drive us (to more sustainability),” Lane says. “We all dream of that beautiful future, but how do we get there? When I take my last breath, I want to know I did all that I could.”

Atrium 916 is a big part of how Lane realizes her dream. The coworking space on Folsom Boulevard grew into a hive of 18 community organizations, so Lane incorporated as a nonprofit in 2019 with a name inspired by the building’s light-filled atrium.

When COVID-19 hit, city officials asked Lane if her artists would sew masks for free to distribute to the public. Lane suggested they set up a marketplace where the masks could be sold for a modest price to make sure artists were fairly compensated.

That grew into a $35,000 operation. Lane expanded to include other items made in Sacramento. There are now more than 115 makers represented in the Atrium’s online marketplace, Sacramento.Shop.

Atrium 916 moved to Old Sacramento at the height of the pandemic when the Folsom Boulevard building was sold and inperson marketplaces were shut down. It’s one-tenth the size of the previous building, which means the studio spaces are full, but Lane says there are expansion plans afoot and that Sacramento.Shop is still a great way to support creatives. Atrium’s staff provides mentorship.

Atrium is home to a gallery of rotating exhibits, plus open mic nights, jam sessions, workshops and business roundtables. During the pandemic, Atrium was the lead advocacy group on securing CARES and ARPA funds for local artists. They hosted creative economy meetings for the city “to make sure they could actually hear the creatives.”

Lane’s plans include a TV series highlighting local artists, a mobile art café and creative recycling solutions throughout Old Sacramento.

“We’re constantly piloting these programs intersecting art, sustainability and economic development,” Lane says. “We’re exposing people to the fact that, hey, sustainability is possible. It’s not as hard as you think.”

Atrium 916 is located at 1020 Front St. For information, visit atrium916.com.

Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacrmamento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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ART

Barbara Kempe

PBS KVIE Gallery

Oct. 17–Dec. 15

Artist Reception Thursday, Oct. 26, 5–7 p.m.

2030 W. El Camino Ave.; kvie.org

More than 20 colorful paintings recall the artist’s global travels, as well as gorgeous island botanicals. Kempe won the First Place Landscape Award in the 2022 PBS KVIE Art Auction.

ABC–123: Fletcher Benton’s Sculptural Alphabet

Oct. 1–March 24, 2024

AI Am I?: Artificial Intelligence as Generated by Alexander Reben

Oct. 22–April 28, 2024

Drawn to Beauty: Fifteen Years of Acquisitions for the Crocker Art Museum

Oct. 22–April 28, 2024

Crocker Art Museum (216 O St.); crockerart.org

Check out three new exhibitions: steel geometric letter by American sculptor Fletcher Benton; work emphasizing human-machine symbiosis by multimedia artist Alexander Reben; and highlights from the Crocker’s collection of European drawings.

TO DO

THIS MONTH'S CULTURE & ENTERTAINMENT HIGHLIGHTS

Fall Show & Sale

Art by Fire Sacramento Potters’ Group

Saturday, Oct. 28, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Shepard Garden & Arts Center (3330 McKinley Blvd.); artbyfire.org

Start your holiday shopping early with handcrafted treasures made by skilled local artisans who use fire or extreme heat to produce work in clay, glass and metal.

Cuba: After the Revolution Viewpoint Photographic Art Center

Oct. 11–Nov. 4

Second Saturday Reception Oct. 14, 4–7 p.m.

Artist Reception Sunday, Oct. 15, 1–4 p.m.

2015 J St., Suite 101; viewpointphotoartcenter.org

This exhibition features more than 30 photo-based encaustic artworks by artist John Angell inspired by his trip to Cuba in 2015.

Expressive Autumn

The Art Studios Sacramento

Saturday, Oct. 14, 4–9 p.m. 1727 I St.; theartstudiossacramento.com

Explore acrylics and watercolors by studio members Lori Franz and Adele Ohs, and abstract acrylic landscapes by guest artist Jason Richardson. Resident artist studios are also open.

Late Night Double Feature Picture Show

Archival Gallery

Oct. 5–28

Costume-Optional Second Saturday Reception

Oct. 14, 5–8 p.m. 3223 Folsom Blvd.; archivalgallery.com

Delight in the macabre, mysterious and magical at this show inspired by scary drive-in movies and, of course, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.” Featured artists include Athena Alber, Glen Hettrick, Cynthia Hipkiss, Bill Maul, Corey Okada and more.

Trinity Art Show

Art Gallery at Trinity Cathedral

Oct. 14–Nov. 5

Opening Reception Oct. 14, 5–8 p.m. 2620 Capitol Ave.; trinityartshow.org

This annual national juried exhibition features art providing a unique perspective on the Christian view and experience in contemporary life.

LIVE PERFORMANCE

Stained Glass Concert: Music of the Spheres Sacramento Choral Society & Orchestra Saturday, Oct. 28, 7:30 p.m. Fremont Presbyterian Church (5770 Carlson Drive); sacramentochoral.org

Tickets: $40 general; $50 reserved; 50% student discount

Enjoy music by Handel, Vivaldi, Gjeilo, Zelenka and Forrest performed under conductor Donald Kendrick and featuring organist Ryan Enright and soloists Sarah Sy, Ken Dulay, Joshua Simka and Chris Mackey.

Friday the 13th Horror Night

Stories on Stage Sacramento

Friday, Oct. 13, 7 p.m.

The Auditorium at CLARA (1425 24th St.); storiesonstagesacramento.org

Tickets: $15

Hear eerie tales from SOSS Artistic Director p joshua laskey and reporter, filmmaker and horror writer Jonathan Mumm read aloud by professional actors.

FAMILY FRIENDLY

60th Annual Sacramento Greek Festival

Greek Orthodox Church of the Annunciation

Friday & Saturday, Oct. 6–7, 11 a.m.–10 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 8, 11 a.m.–8 p.m. 616 Alhambra Blvd.; sacramentogreekfestival.com

Admission: $5 ages 13–64; $3 ages 65-plus; free if you bike over

Be Greek for the weekend at this annual celebration of traditional homemade food, music, dance and culture in a village-style atmosphere.

5K Feral Cat Walk

Coalition for Community Cats

Sunday, Oct. 15, 9 a.m.–Noon

California Automobile Museum (2020 Front St.); coalition4cats.org

Registration: $35 ( 12 and younger walk free)

Put your best paw forward at this annual fundraiser to create awareness of the thousands of abandoned community cats in the Sacramento area, promote responsible pet ownership and support a monthly spay/ neuter clinic.

50 IES OCT n 23
“Street in Nazare, Portugal” by Barbara Kempe at PBS KVIE Gallery.

Bufferlands History Tour RegionalSan

Saturday, Oct. 7, Noon–2 p.m. & 2:30–4:30 p.m.

Nicolaus Dairy, Elk Grove; regionalsan.com/ bufferlands

Learn about the history of Bufferlands, a 2,150-acre wildlife habitat surrounding the wastewater treatment plant, then take a tour of the restored farmhouse and barns. The event is free, but registration is required the week prior. To register, contact Roger Jones at jonesro@ sacsewer.com or (916) 875-9174.

WORKSHOPS/MOVIES

Finish Your Book in Three Drafts with the Book Architect

California Writers Club Sacramento

Sunday, Oct. 8, 9:30 a.m.–3:30 p.m. Cattlemen’s (2409 Folsom Blvd.); cwcsacramentowriters.org

Cost: $149

This workshop with ghostwriter, independent editor and writing coach

Stuart Horwitz introduces writers to a process for organization and revision that includes in-depth exercises throughout the day.

“The Great Lowrider Tradition” Screening California Museum Saturday, Oct. 21, 1 p.m. 1020 O St.; californiamuseum.org

Tickets: $15

View the first Northern California screening of the award-winning documentary “The Great Lowrider Tradition” by high school custodian and self-taught director Martin Torrez, followed by a panel discussion and Q&A.

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, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

STAINED GLASS CONCERT

SOLOISTS

Sarah Sy, Soprano Ken Dulay, Countertenor Joshua Simka, Tenor Chris Mackey, Bass

INSTRUMENTALISTS

Ryan Enright, Organist SCSO Chamber Ensemble

SEASON 28

FALL 2023

Kendrick

Music of the Spheres

Sat, October 28 at 7:30 pm

Fremont Presbyterian Church

5770 Carlson Drive, Sacramento

Jubilate – Handel

Magnificat – Vivaldi

Luminous Night of the Soul–Ola Gjeilo

ADDITIONAL WORKS BY Jan Dismas Zelenka, Dan Forrest

FREE

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“Habana Rooftops 3” by John Angell at Viewpoint Photographic Art Center.
Scottish
Buy tickets online SACRAMENTOCHORAL.ORG
PARKING –
Rite Temple

READERS NEAR & FAR

52 IES OCT n 23 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.
1. River Park Little League 11U All Star team in Fallon, Nevada, for the regionals tournament. 2. Robyn Jensen at Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa. 3. Ben, Stella and Daphne Molin in Manchester, England. 4. Ema Gluckmann in Glendalough, located in County Wicklow, Ireland.
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writer Aimee

4 Lunchbox sandwich holders

5 Part of MYOB

6 “Please, eat!”

7 Composer’s numbered work

8 Gym set

9 Backpedals

10 Football’s Manning

11 Performance focusing on hip and torso movements

12 Arthur Ashe’s alma mater

13 Stick around 18 “Field of Dreams” state

22 Bull markets

25 Apple you might find in a produce market’s office

27 Sushi fish that is poisonous if uncooked

28 Because of

29 “Keep it together, everyone!”

30 Seasoned rice dish

31 Nile vipers

32 Plains tribe

33 Keeps after taxes

34 Layered hairstyle

36 Catch some waves

39 Pointer at a crossroads

40 Cuisine with holy basil and galangal

43 Cellular messenger

45 “Hit me with your questions!”

47 Propel through the water

49 Thin cut 51 Molten rock

52 Gigantic 53 Burn balm

55 Way, way off 56 Backgammon equipment

58 63,360 inches

59 Bowl over 60 Resistance units

62 Wet or dry cleaner 64 She/___

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

54 IES OCT n 23 Get A New INSIDE CROSSWORD Delivered to Your Inbox Each Week! Sign Up For Our Weekly 100% LOCAL Newsletter InsideSacramento.com ACROSS 1 Two-syllable poetic unit 5 Carbon monoxide’s lack 9 Problem with a picture? 14 Final Four org. 15 Clean with a cloth 16 Vote into office 17 Getting off the line OR putting on the line? 19 Fancy home 20 Australian canine 21 It’s debatable 23 Put down, as tile 24 “Victory is mine!” 26 Insect, to a Venus flytrap 28 “It was all a ___ ...” 30 Ensured the continuation of OR rejected? 34 Takes to court 35 “No returns” 37 Fill with delight 38 Alter, in a way 39 Carves a relief, say 41 “Psych!” 42 Maker of the 2600, 5200 and 7800 game consoles 44 Ill-considered 45 Gets 100 on 46 Starting, as an alarm OR stopping, as an alarm? 48 Beasts of burden 50 Grandma 51 Oat product at a coffee shop 52 Wet/dry cleaner 54 “The Devil Wears ___” 57 “You are not!” comeback 61 Memorable battleground 63 Battle alongside OR battle against? 65 Flies unaccompanied 66 Pinnacle 67 Class reunion attendee, for short 68 Offer bait to 69 Patoot 70 Desires DOWN 1 Like a 1080p broadcast 2 Purple superfruit 3 Singer/song-
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What’s

Home Equity Line of Credit Loan

NMLSR ID 479256

800.874.9779

of an Index and Margin. The Index is the weekly average yield on U.S. Treasury Securities adjusted to a constant maturity of 10 years and the margin is 3.50%. The current APR for the repayment period is 7.625%. The maximum APR that can apply any time during your HELOC is 15%. A qualifying transaction consists of the following conditions: (1) the initial APR assumes a maximum HELOC of $200,000, and a total maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) of 70% including the new HELOC and any existing 1st Deed of Trust loan on your residence; (2) your residence securing the HELOC must be a single-family home that you occupy as your primary residence; (3) if the 1st Deed of Trust loan is with a lender other than El Dorado Savings Bank, that loan may not exceed $300,000, have a total maximum loan-to-value (LTV) of 65% and may not be a revolving line of credit. Additional property restrictions and requirements apply. All loans are subject to a current appraisal. Property insurance is required and ood insurance may be required. Rates, APR, terms and conditions are subject to change without notice. Other conditions apply. A $525 early closure fee will be assessed if the line of credit is closed within three years from the date of opening. An annual fee of $85 will be assessed on the rst anniversary of the HELOC and annually thereafter during the draw period. Ask for a copy of our “Fixed Rate Home Equity Line of Credit Disclosure Notice” for additional important information. Other HELOC loans are available under different terms.

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