Inside Land Park-Grid Oct 2024

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3028 – 24th Street - $850,000

CURTIS PARK BRICK TUDOR 3 bed 1 bath with spacious bright remodeled kitchen with new cabinets, quartz counters and breakfast nook. Living room with coved ceiling and built-ins NATHAN SHERMAN 916-969-7379 DRE-01875980

436 Hopkins Road - $2,375,000

AMAZING SIERRA OAKS TUDOR 4 bed, 3½ bath, 5115 sf with lush gardens, gorgeous pool, secret garden/koi pond. Temperature controlled wine room, spacious library/office, more! MONA GERGEN 916-247-9555 DRE-01270375

2109 Gerber Avenue - $550,000

CLASSIC ENGLISH COTTAGE STYLE HOME 2 bed 1 bath. Kitchen with granite counters, industrial cook top with pot filler faucet. Spacious basement and laundry room. Big attic! LES LOCKREM 916-835-0383 DRE-02004121

3522 D Street - $660,000

EAST SAC BUNGALOW WITH CHARIM INTACT 2 bed, 1 bath, hardwood floors, delightful kitchen and dining nook. Tranquil backyard oasis and patio. Dual pane windows and more! NATHAN SHERMAN 916-969-7379 DRE-01875980

9195 Los Lagos Circle - $1,950,000 EXCEPTIONAL LIVING EXPERIENCE IN LOS LAGOS. 4 bed, 3 full and 2 half baths with dedicated office. On sprawling 1-acre lot with pool, spa and BBQ area. Gourmet kitchen JULIANNE J PARK 916-541-8403 DRE-01999740

3512 – 2nd Avenue - $599,000

SWEET 1922 CALIFORNIA BUNGALOW 3 bed, 1 bath. Kitchen with quartz countertops and stainless-steel appliances. Custom bar area wine fridge. Spacious yard, patio STEPHANIE GALLAGHER 916-342-2288 DRE-01705253

4720 Attawa Avenue - $399,000

HOLLYWOOD PARK CHARMER STARTER 2 bed 1 bath with updated kitchen and bath. Energy efficient dual pane windows. Spacious backyard with covered patio, shed and fruit trees LINDA WOOD 916-802-8042 DRE-01129438

44 Metro Lane - $619,000

GORGEOUS COURTYARD HOME IN DOWNTOWN 2 bed, 2½ bath, wonderful floor plan and attached garage. Separate living and family rooms. Beautiful patio for relaxing. MONA GERGEN 916-247-9555 DRE-01270375

4440 Francis Court | $1,499,000

A magical storybook Tudor on coveted Francis Court awaits its next steward. This special home boasts enormous character that offers traditional style perfectly integrated with the most desirable modern comforts. From the moment you arrive, the exterior exudes charm and has whimsical dormers surrounded by a wavy pattern of shingles on the roof that fills you with excitement to enter. Upon entry, your eyes wander to all of the vintage details like hand carved beamed ceilings, stained glass windows, walls of French doors and warm hardwood floors. The beautiful light-filled parlor is a perfect place for morning tea and conversation. The large dining room leads to the gorgeous re-designed kitchen with stainless steel countertops and a Wolf range to meet the needs of any chef. Upstairs has a total of 4 bedrooms and 2 full bathrooms. The 4th bedroom can be accessed from both inside and outside of the home creating potential income or private guest quarters. Previously featured on the Land Park garden tour, the grounds include mature trees, heated swimming pool, spa, deck, babbling stream and charming studio that’s perfect for entertaining or a home office. Every inch of this property makes you feel nostalgic and happy. Tandem garage and large basement for storage. This home has it all!

proudly serving the greater sacramento region

LAND PARK • CURTIS PARK MIDTOWN • EAST SAC

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EDITORIAL

This piece was awarded a 2024 Inside Publisher’s Award in the California State Fair Fine Arts Competition. “After gaining valuable knowledge from esteemed instructors at Sacramento State College, American River College and Sacramento City College, I painted horse portraits, which was my goal at the time. Gradually, my interests shifted to abstract art. This piece is made up of multiple glazes, each of which takes a day to dry. This technique not only enhances the aesthetic qualities of my work but also reflects a personal and introspective engagement with the art-making process.” Shown: “Quadrilogy,” oil with medium on canvas, 36 inches by 24 inches. This piece is for sale at $750. Visit annhendericksonartist.com or rustyartgal@gmail.com.

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Decision Time

MAYORAL CANDIDATES ANSWER QUESTIONS ON CITY’S FUTURE

Inside publisher Cecily Hastings interviewed mayoral candidates Kevin McCarty and Flojaune Cofer, and recorded their responses to important questions facing the city. Interviews were separate, but both candidates responded to the same questions. Views on homelessness, business retention and Proposition 37 appeared in September editions of Inside Sacramento.

The city’s budget was balanced with one-time backfills after years of workforce pay raises and other unsustainable financial decisions by the City Council. Next year’s budget looks worse. What cuts do you foresee, knowing that the city’s biggest expense is public safety?

McCarty: I’m deeply troubled by our budget. When I was on the City Council 12 years ago, I supported the Measure U sales tax to support restoring city services after the Great Recession. The fact that we need to make these tough cuts and one-time backfills is very disturbing.

Our biggest expense is public safety—representing 80% of the discretionary city budget (general fund)—with another 10% for parks. All the core things that constituents count on. Our only way out is to grow and create new jobs, lower the regulatory processes, and focus on clean and safe neighborhoods by addressing public safety and homelessness.

Cofer: A lot of the deficit we have this year is based on staff pay increases that were approved in December 2023, two weeks before the city manager’s office announced the $66 million deficit. Why did it play out this way? I have lots of questions.

One of my goals for the council is to establish goals for the city departments to manage their budgets and staff. Secondly, before we get cuts, I also make sure we maximize our revenues.

That’s a conversation that our city should be having regularly. How do we get more money? And it is also important to see how many times a dollar turns over in Sacramento.

Every time I’m at Golden 1 Center and I see people spending $17 on Budweiser or Heineken, I think to myself, couldn’t you be spending that money on a local brewery that would then reinvest in our community and turn that dollar over one more time?

But we have more than $1 billion in deferred maintenance, and so we have real challenges with long-term solvency and how we’re going to build up the funds and where we’re going to spend money now.

While I do not want to contract out city services, I do want us to regulate employee overtime. I’ve been clear I do not want to lay any city staff off, but we must spend our labor dollars efficiently towards public safety outcome goals.

Cities across the U.S. report increased traffic fatalities and traffic-related injuries coinciding with lower levels of traffic enforcement by police. How can Sacramento make streets safer with decreased levels of traffic enforcement?

McCarty: I support an increase in traffic enforcement. I also support technology and smart and thoughtful street design that creates more pedestrian and cycling safety.

But it must be noted that most of the fatalities occur in parts of the city where people need to walk or cycle to

work, not by choice but because they cannot afford to drive a car.

Cofer: Traffic enforcement is very similar to law enforcement. As a preventative, we need to use traffic safety measures in the design of our streets that encourage safety to pedestrians. Not wait until an accident happens.

We need to invest in the things that yield better safety outcomes. We must better use our city dollars to leverage grants on the state and federal levels.

Mayors Kevin Johnson and Darrell Steinberg believed the city needed a “strong mayor” charter amendment to give them executive authority over the city. Will you pursue a “strong mayor” initiative in the next four years?

McCarty: I opposed all the previous strong mayor measures. I don’t see the voters wanting that, either. Some strong mayor cities have experienced corruption and cronyism. We need to use a collaborate approach to help solve our challenges. I’ve been successful over the years working with my colleagues and will be successful as your mayor.

Cofer: I opposed the last efforts for a strong mayor put forth by Mayor Steinberg. I reject the framing of strong mayor vs. weak mayor. I think it’s better described as an executive mayor vs. a collaborative mayor. Collaboration

Flojaune Cofer
Kevin McCarty

Big Art, Bold Ideas

David Černý (Czech, born 1967), Albert Einstein light, 67 x 63 x 4 in. Photo by Pablo Quezada, courtesy of Centro Cultural Tijuana (CECUT). This exhibition

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means we must work together to get things done. And when you do that, more people have buy-in.

With so much Downtown real estate controlled by the state and mothballed since the pandemic, what’s your plan to activate state buildings or move them into private or city hands to revitalize the Downtown core?

McCarty: More than 50% of our Downtown buildings are on the state tax rolls and they pay zero property tax. So, in the best of times, Downtown only created revenue because the workers generated revenues with their sales tax at lunch and happy hour and going shopping at the mall. Now we have neither and it is an existential threat to the core of Sacramento.

The first thing we need to do is get the state-owned real estate off the government rolls and into the private sector to be developed for housing and other uses. Gov. Newsom signed into law a bill I authored to make it easier to turn state property into housing. But we also need to streamline our development process to make the process more efficient and less costly. But it’s just a piece of the puzzle. We need to focus on bringing more activity, such as a campus with programs and

housing that can benefit being near the Capitol.

Cofer: We need to turn Downtown into a campus, one that is full of thriving college dormitories. We also need to create Downtown as the entertainment center for the region and as a great place for people to come and have lots of fun.

What are the businesses that we need to attract to the area so we’re taking advantage of how people want to engage with Downtown—but also making sure that we’re meeting the needs of our region? The future of our Downtown is one that is full of young people, open and available and with good public transit.

Mayors Joe Serna and Kevin Johnson created education initiatives and ran candidates for school board, knowing the city’s future depends on its children. How will you make an impact with Sac City Unified and its superintendent and board?

McCarty: I’ll see that the city partners with our school districts, not only Sac City, but the others in the city as well. I’ll support candidates for school board as I have done in the past. I want to elect school board members who will make tough and important

decisions for our schools and our kids. Sometimes I’ve supported teacherunion backed candidates. Other times, I’ve supported candidates who are independent.

Having vibrant programs to support and develop our youth is one of my three top priorities as mayor.

Cofer: I’m the daughter of two public school teachers. Education is obviously incredibly important to me. I’m really excited about the potential for partnerships with our city. We need to work with the libraries because we have issues with our third-grade reading levels. I want a citywide book club. We need to partner with businesses and the unions and others to recruit young people as they’re getting ready to graduate from high school. We need to partner with Regional Transit on transportation passes.

Rio City Café recently closed after 30 years of service in Old Sacramento. The city is the landlord and refused to pay for repairs to the outdoor dining deck, erasing 70% of the cafe’s revenues. How will you reconcile the closure of this iconic restaurant with the city’s decades-long attempts to revitalize Old Sac?

McCarty: It’s a total shame. It’s a black eye for the city. We have a Major League Baseball team coming next year, and this is one of our marquee blocks on the river. We can’t have a vacant hole on our Old Sacramento riverfront.

This is on both Mayor Steinberg and City Manager Howard Chan. We needed to fix this and find money in the city budget to do it months ago. By not fixing this situation, the city will be losing money every month.

Cofer: This is one of those awful situations where again, as a city, we are speaking out of both sides of our mouth. On the one hand, we are trying to attract business and we’re trying to make Downtown and especially our waterfront a destination. But on the other hand, we have more than $1 billion in deferred maintenance.

Now we’re seeing an iconic restaurant close. And that’s on the city. We should be apologizing and creating a plan so this never happens in the future.

Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Celebrating Colley Colley

2 FILMS EXPLORE LEGACY OF SACRAMENTO’S FIRST BLACK ATTORNEY

Two short films exploring Nathaniel S. Colley’s legacy fighting racial discrimination in public housing will be shown Thursday, Oct. 17, at Sierra 2 Center in Curtis Park.

“Desegregating Sacramento: Celebrating Nathaniel S. Colley, Sr.’s 75th Anniversary Fighting Segregation” features work by local filmmaker Chris Lango.

Colley, the city’s first black attorney, fought racial discrimination at New Helvetia Public Housing on Broadway and Muir Way in 1952. His practice included civil rights litigation and criminal defense.

The screening, hosted by the Nathaniel Colley Civil Rights Coalition and Sierra Curtis Neighborhood Association, is free but an RSVP is suggested. Visit sierra2.org/activities/ upcoming-sierra-2-events.

SOCIETY FOR THE BLIND

Society for the Blind celebrates its 70th anniversary with a program and dinner showcasing the nonprofit’s work to promote independence and ensure people with vision loss have access to programs and eye care.

products to businesses, government agencies, schools and individuals.

Retinal Consultants Medical Group will be honored with the 2024 Briggs Award for its contributions to community eye care.

The anniversary event is Thursday, Oct. 24, from 5:30–8:30 p.m. at the Center at 2300. For information, visit societyfortheblind.org.

ROCK THE BLOCK

ZOO ADDITIONS

If you haven’t been to the Sacramento Zoo lately, fall is a good time to visit and meet some new denizens.

The zoo welcomed a third okapi, a female named Kivuli, that staff hope to pair with a male okapi named Mo.

The zoo celebrated the birth of an endangered mongoose lemur—a milestone considering there are approximately 100 in human care.

The flamingo flock has grown by four chicks. Check out the renovated flamingo habitat across from the new southern white rhinoceros habitat.

Sacramento Zoo is at 3930 W. Land Park Drive. For information, visit saczoo.org.

MUSEUM EXHIBITS

California State Railroad Museum and its foundation have partnered with Sacramento Public Library to host two exhibits created by Parks and Tranquility Grant awardees.

“Chókim bètana wéeye (It Comes from the Stars)” is a sound and multi-media installation by Amy Melissa Reed, a descendent of people indigenous to the Sonoran Desert. The exhibit shows how water moves through the landscape and connects us all.

“Fieldnotes: California State Railroad Museum,” a video installation, was created by local artists and curators Chris Christion and Jessica Wimbley. The exhibit centers on Black railroad laborers and riders through archival materials and images.

“Public art is a powerful way to help connect people to each other and to our shared history,” Museum Director Ty Smith says.

For information, visit californiarailroad.museum.

MERCY VOLUNTEERS

Mercy General Hospital Guild wants volunteers.

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Founded in 1954, Society for the Blind provides blindness skills education and training. Services include a Low Vision Clinic, Aids to Independence Store and CareersPLUS Youth program helping children learn non-visual skills and techniques to achieve academic success and develop independent living skills.

The society operates a mobile Low Vision Clinic, donated by VSP Global, to bring eye care to remote areas of Northern California, and a Braille Production program to provide braille

St. Michael’s Episcopal Church joins Habitat for Humanity of Greater Sacramento for a “Rock the Block” workday to help new homeowners in the Bryte and Broderick area.

Volunteers will perform home repairs, rebuild fences, plant community gardens, restore landscapes and help revitalize this underserved community of low-income families, seniors and veterans.

“Rock the Block” is Oct. 11–12 from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. For information, visit habitatgreatersac.org and stmichaelscarmichael.org.

Duties include working at the information desk in the main lobby, keeping families informed of loved ones’ surgery progress, staffing the gift shop and clerical work in the guild office.

Volunteers work four-hour shifts, with two shifts per month. The yearly membership fee is $20. Mercy General Hospital is at 4001 J St. For an application, call (916) 453-4699.

Film screening honors the late Nathaniel S. Colley.

Readers ask how they can contribute to Inside Sacramento. Here’s how. Consider a paid supporting membership starting at $19.95 a year. Use the QR code and help support our mission to deliver local news. Sign up for our weekly newsletter at insidesacramento.com.

SINGERS WANTED FOR HOLIDAY SHOW

If you’d like to sing holiday music with a live orchestra, here’s your chance. The Capital Chorale is looking for singers of all voice types to join rehearsals starting Oct. 24 at 6:30 p.m. at Pioneer Congregational Church at 2700 L St.

The concert, “A Festival of Lessons and Carols,” will be Friday, Dec. 20, at 7 p.m.

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

HISTORIC LANDMARK

A Colonial Revival house in Midtown has been designated a historic landmark by the City Council and added to the Register of Historic and Cultural Resources.

The home at 2025 P St. is an example of early 20th-century design with its hipped roof, symmetrical massing, fluted two-story pilasters capped by Ionic capitals and an open front porch with square fluted columns.

Levi Vandercook, a carpenter and amateur photographer, built the house in 1907, shortly after marrying Gertrude Mary Fraser. The Vandercooks were among the founding members of Westminster Presbyterian Church, where Levi served as an honorary life deacon.

“Levi Vandercook’s photo collection is a valuable record to the visual history of Sacramento and Northern

California during the first half of the 20th century,” says City Historian Marcia Eymann, who manages the Center for Sacramento History. For information, visit cityofsacramento.gov/communitydevelopment/planning/preservation.

Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Submissions are due six weeks prior to the publication month. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

Sacramento Zoo celebrates the addition of an endangered mongoose lemur and four flamingo chicks. Courtesy of Sacramento Zoo

Change Theory

IF ANYONE THINKS COFER IS COACHABLE, THEY’RE WRONG

Some business owners I know want Flojaune Cofer to win the mayor’s race. That’s crazy, I say, a vote against the city’s future.

Whatever qualities voters might attribute to Cofer, alignment with the business community is not among them.

As a neighborhood activist, Cofer made no secret of following a democratic socialist political agenda that treats businesspeople as a trope— greedy capitalists, agents of commerce who conspire against common folk.

Anti-business agendas are foolish, at least in Sacramento, where most business operators are small, overworked and often transplanted from distant lands. In other words, common folk.

Still, progressive politicians embrace the anti-business angle. It sounds righteous and certifies the candidate as supportive of residents whose daily frustrations include paying too much for groceries, rent and insurance.

As a mayoral candidate, Cofer downplays her radical side. Her opponent, Assemblymember Kevin

McCarty, learned decades ago to steer a middle course when appealing to voters.

Cofer often sounds like she’s mimicking McCarty, without McCarty’s legislative substance.

Here’s where business support for Cofer gets interesting. Several businesspeople tell me they like Cofer despite knowing she’s not business friendly.

They think they can change her. They believe they can convince Cofer that mayoral success requires working with the business community.

My business friends think once Cofer settles in as mayor, she will choose pragmatism over global ambitions and democratic socialist dreams.

Really? Probing deeper, I learned the real reason behind business support for Cofer has little to do with her. It’s about McCarty.

Some of my business friends have history with McCarty, disagreements dating back 15 years when he was on City Council.

They know McCarty is more progressive than he presents at election time, a common feature among local politicians from Darrell Steinberg to Roger Dickinson. Sacramento voters are overwhelmingly Democrats, minus the socialist appendage.

River Parkway levee, I tried to help his opponent, an unknown novice named Katie Valenzuela.

I met with Valenzuela a couple of times and explained how City Hall worked based on my experience as special assistant to Mayor Kevin Johnson.

I wrote nice columns about her and emphasized her support for levee parkway access. My goal was to see Hansen gone. Valenzuela became the vehicle when nobody else had the guts to run against him. Somehow, she won.

Several political friends, old pros from my days in the mayor’s office, said I was stupid to support Valenzuela. They said she was a naïve and reckless progressive who would create four years of havoc at City Council. I told them they were wrong.

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The strategy I describe here means my business friends are gambling they can rehabilitate Cofer. They know they can’t change McCarty.

As betting strategies go, coaching Cofer is a loser. I’ve played this game before. It won’t work.

In 2020, eager to see Steve Hansen ejected from City Council because he didn’t support access to the Sacramento

Katie is smart and coachable, I said. She wants a political career. She may stumble, but she’ll learn to work with people beyond the political fringe. She seeks respect from everyone.

Turns out my political friends were right. I was stupid. Entranced by her electoral success, Valenzuela leaped into the frigid waters of radicalized politics.

After just one term, voters bounced Valenzuela from City Hall. They replaced her in the March primary with a sensible, moderate alternative, Phil Pluckebaum.

Valenzuela is smart and passionate but not coachable. Her political career is dead.

In the mayor’s race, I don’t want my business friends to make the same mistake I made four years ago with Valenzuela. If they think they can work with Flo Cofer, I present my experience with Valenzuela to say they are crazy.

Cofer is smart and charismatic. She filibusters when asked details. She softens her positions. But when she talked about defunding police and supporting homeless camps, she meant it.

On the other hand, McCarty is a political pro. Transactional and result oriented. He means business, if you know what I mean.

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

Kevin McCarty
Photo by Aniko Kiezel

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Bridge Out

CITY COVERED UP PROBLEMS WITH NEW DEL RIO SPAN

There’s big trouble with the bike and railroad bridge that crosses Interstate 5 and Riverside Boulevard near Sutterville Road. Here’s how the city tried to hide the story.

Word spread this summer about concerns with concrete that holds the new bridge together. Those concerns were serious enough for the city to tell the company that built the bridge to tear it down and start over.

That’s bad enough. But authorities at City Hall figured they could bury the facts and cover up the details.

City officials stonewalled my questions about the bridge, a highprofile structure that arches over the freeway and connects the new Del Rio Trail with the Sacramento River Parkway bike path.

City spokesperson Gabby Miller told me: “The city is currently assessing the work performed by the contractor and

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will provide updated information at the appropriate time.”

I’ve heard hundreds of deflections over the decades. This stands tall among the worst. The “appropriate time” brushoff elevated the bridge story to No. 1 on my journalistic priority hit list.

The city wasn’t finished. It blundered into full-coverup mode when my friend Jim Geary, a retired lawyer who enjoys bike trails and running paths in Pocket and Land Park, emailed City Hall with a public records request for the bridge.

Geary sought documents, contracts, emails and texts—a routine request under the California Public Records Act. The city responded in 48 hours— warp speed—but said it was instantly closing his inquiry. No documents.

The city pointed Geary to a website that explained while the bridge “may look finished, there’s additional testing that needs to take place which can be a lengthy process.”

The dismissal left Geary stunned into rare silence. “I’ve made probably 30 public record requests in the last dozen years, and I’ve never seen anything like this,” he says.

A day later, the city “reopened” Geary’s request. He promised to save anything worthwhile for future columns.

4.8 miles from the I-5 bridge to Bill Conlin Youth Sports Complex on Freeport Boulevard. Del Rio opened in May. It cost $23 million.

The I-5 bridge is a gateway. It connects two ambitious bike paths, celebrates the region’s agriculture history and crosses California’s quintessential interstate.

But like me and Jim Geary, many people suspected there was something wrong. Rumors about inferior concrete took flight.

Speculation swirled around lampblack added to new concrete on the bridge’s bike and pedestrian addition. Too much lampblack can weaken concrete. This might explain the “additional testing that needs to take place.”

The bridge over I-5 and Riverside is really two bridges, old and new. The original railroad bridge was built 50 years ago with the freeway. It’s doing fine.

The interstate required realignment of the Walnut Grove Branch Line of Southern Pacific, a train that carried ag products north through the Delta from 1912 into the 1970s.

Del Rio Trail follows the branch line behind homes in Land Park, South Land Park, Freeport Manor and Meadowview. Large sections of track remain as historical artifacts.

When Del Rio was planned, California State Parks officials wanted the option to run excursion trains from Old Sacramento to Land Park’s zoo. The rail bridge and tracks were incorporated into Del Rio’s design.

In the last two years, a new bridge for bikes and pedestrians rose alongside the train bridge. The bridges present as one structure, but two spans exist, new and old.

When Del Rio opened, enthusiasts such as Jim Geary expected the removal of construction materials that formed the new bike bridge over I-5. But the timbers stayed up.

“The bridge was obviously finished,” Geary says. “Then one day, they put fences back up on the trail portion of the new bike bridge. They clearly don’t want anyone up there.”

We understand. Litigation beckons. City Attorney Susana Alcala Wood no doubt demanded silence.

But a civic embarrassment looms across I-5. Rather than say “we’re fighting for everyone’s safety,” the city hoped nobody would notice.

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

Del Rio Trail runs
Barricades greet cyclists at city’s new Del Rio Trail bridge over Interstate 5.

Leadership Matters

BIG CHOICE AWAITS VOTERS IN NORTH SAC

Do you feel good about Sacramento?

Consider the declining state of Downtown, the impact of homelessness, the degradation of parks and infrastructure, and lack of safety many residents feel.

The city needs a leadership change—a clearer vision about what makes the community livable.

Thankfully, Mayor Darrell Steinberg and Councilmember Katie Valenzuela will soon leave City Hall. Their policy decisions (with complicity by council colleagues) led to a record deficit during a period of all-time high revenue.

Another deficit involves the lack of fiscal responsibility within city leadership.

City Council needs a balance between ideological ambitions and the dollars available to implement those

goals. Ambitions are fine, but the council must maintain robust services and safety for residents.

The way to achieve balance is by electing people to City Council with better sensibilities than those currently seated.

In East Sac District 4, there’s hope with incoming Councilmember Phil Pluckebaum. He’s moderate in policy and understands the dire financial situation. He replaces Valenzuela in December.

In North Sac District 2, there’s a November runoff between Stephen Walton, a community advocate and real estate professional, and Roger Dickinson, a former county supervisor and state assemblymember. Dickinson lost his last election bid in 2014.

Walton grew up in District 2, graduated from Grant High School and joined Forward Together, the city’s Marysville and Del Paso boulevards advisory committee. His family has been community anchors for more than 90 years. His father is a pastor.

and budget. He stood with District Attorney Thien Ho when Ho announced his lawsuit against the city over Camp Resolution, a homeless camp on Colfax Avenue in North Sac.

Walton was eloquent about Camp Resolution. He spoke about balances between the needs of homeless people and the need to keep the community safe.

He recognized the campsite was untenable and understood occupants lacked a reasonable model for selfgovernance.

Camp Resolution was dismantled by police in August, a failed experiment. Crews collected 1,100 needles, 5 pounds of illegal drugs and a mountain of trash.

The camp was supported by Steinberg, Valenzuela and former Councilmember Sean Loloee, under federal indictment for fraud and employment violations at his grocery stores.

I attended Walton’s campaign kickoff. Attendance was good, the spirits high. Walton knows success depends on energizing the community and getting out the vote.

His concern for North Sac, Del Paso Heights and Woodlake, and keen sense of fiscal reality set him up for success on City Council. Walton embodies the balance the city needs in leadership.

MAVIGLIO CAMPAIGN

Inside Sacramento contributor and political consultant Steve Maviglio is running for American River Flood Control District Board. Maviglio is endorsed by U.S. Rep. Doris Matsui, State Sen. Angelique Ashby, County Supervisors Phil Serna and Patrick Kennedy, and City Council Members Eric Guerra and Phil Pluckebaum. The flood district handles levee maintenance along the American River.

I asked Walton about his knowledge of city functions, budgets, homelessness, parks and youth initiatives, and his desire for improvement.

I was impressed. Walton knew granular details about the city charter

Walton supports Proposition 36, a state initiative to reinstate criminal penalties for theft offenders and drug sellers. It includes provisions for mandated rehab for repeat drug offenders. It’s an important measure on the November ballot, but Dickinson was undecided at press time.

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 and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

IPlaying For

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f you’re looking for Jonathan Lum, check the soccer pitch.

As vice president of the Sacramento Soccer Alliance, Lum says he has “no specific duties” for the nonprofit that provides communitybased competitive soccer to area youth. No specific duties mean he really does everything.

He runs tryouts. He coaches three teams—62 kids—five days a week with games every weekend. He recruits

“I was a late bloomer,” Lum says, “and a lot of the boys I coach now are also late bloomers, kids that got overlooked the first time around. That’s why I teach soccer—for perseverance.

Keeps

VOLUNTEER SOCCER COACH HELPS YOUNGSTERS BLOOM

“It’s a taught trait. That’s what I want all these boys to do: keep on trying. That’s life. I had so many doors slammed in my face, I wouldn’t be here today if it weren’t for that.”

Lum’s wife played soccer through high school. Their three sons followed mom and dad into the game. The eldest, Evan, absorbed the lessons of perseverance.

Lum joined the soccer alliance when Evan was in fourth grade. “I used to get dirty looks about him,” Lum says. “He’s a late bloomer like me, but he’s a hard worker. After (a star player) left, Evan started running 3 miles a day and doing two-hour workouts a day. Now he’s a leader in the back.”

Lum prides himself on finding ways to connect with players on all three of his teams, age groups 11–14. It works. His 2010 team, the Lightning Boltz, won 11 championships.

“The 2010 team is a top seven team in Sacramento,” Lum says.

Lum’s coaching reputation attracts players from around the region, including East Sac, West Sac, Elk Grove, South Sac, Land Park and Greenhaven. Kids and parents want high-quality, competitive play without the high price tag of year-round competitive clubs. The alliance keeps fees down and offers scholarships.

Along with the kids, the soccer community keeps Lum inspired. He often finds himself coaching against people who coached him in his youth or who played on the same team. One example is Tim Wehling, a longtime teammate who became a co-coach with Lum.

Lum fields phone calls from local high school coaches who ask how many alliance players they can expect when freshman year starts.

players and coaches. He orders uniforms and manages equipment. He runs meetings.

“I am nobody, but I am the glue that keeps it together,” he says.

And he does it for no money. The soccer alliance is run by volunteers, plus two paid coaches. Lum wouldn’t trade it for anything.

“My wife is always asking me why I do this,” the Pocket native says. “Because I want to bring good soccer to

the area and teach these kids the right way to play.”

Lum started playing soccer in kindergarten in Greenhaven. As his skills improved, he sought more competitive outlets such as Capital Valley Futbol Club. He played at John F. Kennedy High School and for Cruz Azul in an adult league. He ran summer soccer camps at Cosumnes River College.

But the game never came easily.

“I like giving kids, just regular kids from the area, the opportunity to play at this level,” Lum says. “It’s really neat to see these kids grow and play.”

For information, visit sacramentosocceralliance.com.

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

Giving Back: Volunteer Profile
Jonathan Lum
Photo by Linda Smolek

Clinic coordinators

Tiffany Van Hook and Van Hook and Carol Mefferd with two two feline patients feline patients.

It started in the Galapagos 20 years ago. The first spay/neuter clinic was on Isabela Island. The first patient was a dog named Luna.

Today, Animal Balance deploys high-volume temporary MASH clinics (Mobile Animal Sterilization Hospitals)

MASHUp

MOBILE SPAY/NEUTER CLINIC GOES WHERE NEED IS

in 10 countries, including the United States.

In March, Sacramento hosted its first three-day MASH in partnership with Sacramento County’s Bradshaw Animal Shelter, converting a county-owned building at McClellan Park into a spay/ neuter hospital.

“People were absolutely desperate for the free service,” says volunteer Hilary Bagley Franzoia, who scheduled the MASH appointments. “They seemed fully aware that spay and neuter costs are exorbitant.”

More than 200 people called for appointments in the first 10 minutes, Franzoia says. Hundreds waited for the next MASH in May.

The third clinic in July targeted owned and feral felines (also called community cats). Carriers and humane traps littered the floor. Cats and kittens were assigned a MASH number written on duct tape and stuck to the feline’s head.

“We’ve tried many things, like paper collars,” Clinic Coordinator Tiffany Van Hook says. “Tape on the head works best.”

Registered veterinary technicians prepped the felines for surgery. Two veterinarians worked surgery tables, while a third examined post-surgery incisions, checked gum color and watched for alertness. Animal Balance staff and volunteers kept recovering

patients warm while monitoring body temperatures.

Bradshaw volunteers assisted with checking in and checking out patients, scrubbing and wrapping surgical instruments. “It’s a process,” says Megan Gram, Animal Balance’s Pacific region director.

Over the three-day clinic, 195 cats were spayed and neutered—at no cost to pet owners. They also received free vaccinations, flea treatment and microchips.

Partner organizations, such as Bradshaw Animal Shelter, secure the location. Animal Balance ships the supplies. Most MASH are two to three days, four days if necessary, altering 200 to 250 dogs and cats at each clinic.

Cats and kittens recover recover following spay/neuter surgery spay/neuter surgery.

Since deploying to Sacramento County, four MASH clinics have spayed and neutered nearly 1,000 dogs and cats. Two more clinics are scheduled for October and November. The city’s Front Street Animal Shelter plans to launch MASH clinics in 2025.

MASH focuses on communities without accessible or affordable veterinary services.

“The No. 1 ZIP code of unaltered animals entering the shelter is in the Florin area,” says Annette Bedsworth, director of Bradshaw Animal Shelter. The second is North Highlands.

“I believe in targeted spay and neuter,” she adds. “If I can ultimately show that spaying and neutering these ZIP codes makes a difference in the number of animals entering the shelter, it’s going to speak volumes.”

Animal Balance has no headquarters. Staff travel from across the country to run three to five clinics a month, primarily in Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and California (so far, Sacramento, Fresno, San Jose, Solano County and Santa Cruz). Community cat trap-neuter-return projects have been held in Hawaii.

In the Bahamas, Animal Balance set up a clinic in a metal shed with no air conditioning. “We made it work,” Van

Hook says. More than 3,400 dogs and cats were spayed and neutered.

From remote islands to Sacramento suburbs, “we can make a MASH clinic anywhere, as long as we have the people, the supplies and the community to bring in the animals,” Van Hooks says. “We go where the need is.”

To donate, volunteer or for information, go to animalcare. saccounty.gov and animalbalance.org.

FERAL CAT WALK

In honor of National Feral Cat Day, join the Coalition for Community Cats at its annual 5K Feral Cat Walk on Sunday, Oct. 13. Meet at the California Automobile Museum, 2200 Front St. Registration begins at 9 a.m.; the walk begins at 10 a.m. Registration is $40 and includes an event T-shirt. Proceeds benefit community cat spay/neuter programs. To register, visit c4ccwalk. eventbrite.com.

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

Out Of Commission

REALTORS RIDE OUT ROUGH SEAS, HOPE FOR CALM FUTURE

The National Association of Realtors is on a losing streak. They need some wins.

The largest trade association in America with 1.5 million members, the Realtors’ group began its downward spiral in August 2023. That’s when The New York Times published allegations of sexual harassment by the association president.

It was a classic “Me Too” scandal. President Kenny Parcell allegedly engaged in years of inappropriate behavior toward multiple women with no accountability. He denied the complaints but resigned soon after the story broke.

Other problems lurked with the potential for even greater impact. Those troubles burst into public view on Halloween 2023 when a federal jury in Kansas City ordered the association to pay nearly $1.8 billion in damages

G D GD

for artificially inflating commissions paid to agents.

Laura Kusisto, national legal affairs reporter at The Wall Street Journal, covered the story. In a podcast, she said, “The essence of this case is that the current system for commissions, one in which the seller’s agent pays the buyer’s agent’s commission, is an antitrust violation. It amounts to a collusion, a conspiracy between real estate agents around the country to keep fees high and to hurt consumers.”

A few months later, Bob Goldberg, who served as the association’s CEO, resigned. This January, the Realtors announced Tracy Kasper, who was president for just a few months, received a threat to disclose a past personal matter unless she “compromised her position.” She reported the threat to law enforcement and stepped down.

In March, the Realtors announced settlements in a slew of lawsuits about commissions. The association agreed to pay $418 million in damages.

The American University Business Law Review says, “The $418 million settlement upends long-standing industry practices that allowed sellers to set buyers’ agent fees, taking the bargaining power away from these buyers and keeping commissions in the United States higher in comparison

to most of the developed world. This settlement has the potential of driving down commission rates and shrinking the number of real-estate agents.”

John Pope, a Folsom Realtor for more than 40 years, tells me the organization’s legal troubles are “all we’ve been talking about on a daily basis for months and months in our industry.”

New rules took effect Aug. 17. Realtors who represent buyers now must sign a contract with their client, something California was already doing, Pope says.

For nearly 30 years, sellers typically paid agents on both sides of the transaction and decided how much each agent would receive, usually 5% or 6% of the sale price. The agents then split the fee. When a home went on sale, the listing showed the percentage the buyer’s agent could expect.

Under new rules, multi-listings no longer disclose whether the seller has offered to pay the buyer’s agent or how much. Buyers sign agreements explaining how much their agents receive before they tour homes with an agent.

Buyers now negotiate directly with their agents, rather than letting the seller set both cuts. This doesn’t guarantee commissions will decrease. That’s up to buyers and their agents.

“It’s too early to say how this will change things for consumers and brokers,” Pope tells me. “For a lot of them, it won’t change things that much. But there will be a group of consumers who say, ‘Maybe this is an opportunity to negotiate for what I want in a broker and how much I am willing to pay them.’”

If commissions get smaller, buyers may benefit by paying lower home prices. Or sellers may benefit by keeping more profit. It depends on local market dynamics.

Recent news reports say higher interest rates, a surplus of brokers and new rules caused thousands of Realtors to quit.

“For a while, I didn’t want to pick up a newspaper because the coverage was so bad,” Pope says. “Time will tell what exactly this will mean. But I think in the very near future we will have gotten used to this new way of doing things.”

Another reminder that one constant in business and life is change.

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

Grieving a loved one’s death is never easy, as I learned 20 months ago when my husband Jim passed away.

Loss Leader

SHE HELPS MANAGERS COPE WITH HEARTACHE

focused on how to support an employee who loses a loved one.

Fowkes knows about grief. Her son Jimmy died of cancer in 2014. He was 21.

“Our family went through an eightyear journey battling his cancer, which was diagnosed at age 13,” Fowkes says. “Both my husband and I struggled with our careers as we juggled work and the time needed for our family.”

The book provides guidance for leaders on what to do when a grieving employee returns to work. “I wanted it to be practical and user-friendly,” Fowkes says.

Researching the book, she spoke with executives and managers locally, nationally and internationally for perspective.

“Leaders often believe that they should know what to do and how to make it better for a bereaved employee who’s coming back to work,” she says. “Instead, they need to allow themselves to be guided by what their employee says they need, because everyone’s grief is different.”

“What I kept hearing was, ‘I went back to work and the silence was deafening,’” she says. “Most feel ignoring the situation is not helpful at all, and even hurtful.

“I wanted to write something that was broader and richer than just my own experience. I drew upon the experiences of 25 different people in a lot of different industries and with a lot of different losses.”

She continues, “Of people who have lost loved ones, probably 80% are working. Only retired and elderly folks would be exempt from this situation.”

She calls the book “a path forward during an experience that no one ever wants to go through.”

In 2016, Fowkes started Salt Water (findyourharbor.com), an online community for people dealing with grief and loss.

“So much of it is simply saying, ‘I am so sorry this has happened to you,’” she says. “The hard part is that you are talking to someone whose life has shattered.

My biggest challenge was managing my publishing business alone. Jim retired several years earlier, but he was my business partner for more than two decades.

My focus was off, my employees unsure how to deal with me. No one wanted to deliver bad news. I struggled with decisions. It took time, but we all adjusted.

During that time, a friend gave me “Leading Through Loss,” a book by local author Margo Fowkes. I read several books on grief, but this was different. It

The book addresses how to handle grief while teleworking, and what to do if you are grieving. Appendixes offer resources, a sample bereavement policy and what a workplace grief support group looks like.

Fowkes continues to interact with workforce leaders through her management consultancy, OnTarget Consulting.

Woven into the book are stories about people who returned to work after a death. Some experiences were positive, others not so much. The stories prompted Fowkes to write the book.

“Salt Water is for those who have lost someone they can’t live without—a child, sibling, a spouse, parent, close friend—and the people who love them. We provide a safe harbor where you can find comfort support, and tools to survive your loss and rebuild your life.”

“Leading Through Loss” is published by Find Your Harbor Press and is available from Amazon and other booksellers.

Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

Margo Fowkes
Photo by Aniko Kiezel

916-739-0878

NEW CENTER OFFERS INSTRUCTION IN MUSIC AND LIFE

Daniel Owens has a theory. He says, “In every art form, there are envelope pushers and archivists. Both play very important roles. But it’s been very helpful for me to figure out which one I am.”

All That Jazz

music industry and gain performance experience through group practice sessions.

Throughout his career as a musician and teacher, Owens pushed. He was halfway through a degree in classical trombone performance at San Jose State when he realized he didn’t fit the classical world. He transitioned to jazz and salsa, composing and performing his own work.

His decision to study trombone was unconventional. Raised in a musical family and playing piano, in middle school he craved the community of a band. He switched from piano to trombone and “caught the bug,” joining every band possible.

In college, he studied classical trombone instead of jazz. Classical students got an hour of music instruction per week instead of 30 minutes. He knew practice was key to a musical lifestyle—a message he instilled in students he taught in San Jose, New York and Sacramento.

Owens sees the center as filling a void in music instruction.

“Music education has some fundamental flaws,” he says. “It’s very much about how to play an instrument and very little about making a living as a musician—taxes, contracts, understanding how to take on students, which is all part of the art form.”

Owens is pleased by the “really beautiful, budding music scene” in Sacramento, and support from the city’s Office of Arts and Culture. But he notes, “From a jazz-centric point of view, there’s a voice missing. I wanted a place that had more to offer, a gathering place and a microcosm of the music industry for beginners to professionals.”

“The lifestyle creates the art,” Owens says. “I always ask my students, ‘Are you sleeping right? Making yourself meals? Exercising? Do you find yourself getting frustrated (when you practice)? What are your tools for dealing with that?’”

A new crop of students has access to Owens through The Center for Musical Arts, a hub of lessons and performance Owens founded in July with four friends at 21st Street and Broadway.

The center offers instruction in strings, brass, woodwinds, piano, percussion, guitar, bass and voice. There’s space for students to explore the

“CMA is about the music, the community and growing the scene here from an empathetic place with patience, upping the standards across the board,” he says of his arts center.

The center has six practice rooms. Two fit small ensembles. A bigger room hosts large groups, workshops, live performances and events such as the weekly Shed Sessions Owens leads with Joey Archie.

While “sheddin’” (a jazz term for practicing), students work on fundamentals as a group, focusing on one jazz standard per month. A public jam session the last Monday of the month pulls everything together.

“I’ve found a great deal of joy around teaching the fundamentals,” Owens says. “I might not be playing a gig in front of a crowd every night, but if my job is to have my horn with me and talk about music, then I’m living a pretty great life.”

JL JL

For information, visit centermusicalarts.com. The Center for Musical Arts is at 2564 21st Street.

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

Daniel Owens
Photo by Aniko Kiezel

Cultural Feast

FARMER HONORS HER ANCESTOR’S TECHNIQUES AND SEEDS

Kristyn Leach is a farmer and seed producer with a mission. She wants to spread seeds from her Korean heritage and share stories from the Asian Diaspora, enriching our connections to locally grown, culturally significant food.

The journey carried Leach from farm fields around Winters, Sunol and Sebastopol to South Korea. She grew Korean-based crops for San Francisco restaurateur brothers Dennis, Daniel and David Lee, whose modern Korean cooking captivated the Bay Area before the pandemic.

“They really helped me get started,” Leach says of the Lees. “We worked directly with each other, and we started growing exclusively for them.”

The brothers provided seed money for Leach to sublease an acre of farmland in Sunol, where she grew food for the Lee’s Namu Gaji and Namu Stonepot restaurants, now closed.

After several growing seasons, Leach worked with Kitazawa Seed Company, an Oakland firm founded in 1917. With guidance from Kitazawa owner Maya Shiroyama, Leach did field trials for the company.

A trip to South Korea in 2014 brought an awakening for Leach.

“That trip really changed my perspective,” she says. “Before going to Korea, I did not realize how much diversity there was in the crops. There’s a wealth of genetic diversity, and that diversity is tied to culture and food, in the different ways that plants and human cultures evolve with each other.”

The journey made Leach believe contemporary practices of big agriculture were pushing aside the biodiversity found in cultural foods. With such practices, she decided, “Then we are going to have a reductive view of what we can grow and will only have access to a handful of crops.”

After her trip, Leach asked Shiroyama if she could develop a collection of Korean heirloom seeds for Kitazawa. From there, Leach started her own company, Second Generation Seeds.

“People would send in their own stories of their relatives who had passed away and who were the last in the family keeping the seeds in tiny

Photography
To Fork
Drying leaves at Second Generation Seeds.

Kevin McCarty FOR MAYOR

Experience to Lead Sacramento Forward

SERVICE TO SACRAMENTO

Kevin McCarty has worked for Sacramento for the past two decades – ten years in the State Assembly and ten years on the City Council.

THE MCCARTY PLAN

NO MORE CAMPING ON OUR STREETS

“We must clean up our streets. We need to move homeless out of our neighborhoods and into shelters where they can get services. I will audit all programs dealing with the homeless. I will work with the neighborhoods and businesses to find real solutions. This is my #1 priority.”

NO CUTS FOR OUR POLICE AND FIRE DEPARTMENTS

“Our Police and Fire Departments are still not back to pre-recession levels. Now is not the time to make more cuts to our vital services.”

INVEST IN OUR CITY

“Cut red tape for small businesses to thrive. We will direct resources for violence prevention and programs for our youth.”

MORE Paid for by McCarty for Mayor • FPPC#14609 • 1809 S Street, #101-368, Sacramento, CA 95811

gardens or in pots on a balcony,” Leach says. “We would receive letters hearing those stories and people would share the seeds with us.”

Leach recently shifted her farm operation from Winters to Sebastopol. She practices Korean “natural” agriculture, which she describes as related to biodynamics and permaculture. Her approach focuses on minimal tillage to cultivate fungal populations. It even involves fermented seaweed and lactobacillus cultures.

Second Generation Seeds has a network of farmers in Northern California and Washington state who strive to preserve the genetic diversity

of heritage crops from Asia, Southwest Asia, North Africa and Palestine.

On the cultural front, Leach works with UC Davis in the Student Collaborative Organic Plant Breeding Education program.

She helped pilot a project that joined the Asian American Studies and Plant Sciences departments in seminars about Asian American contributions to U.S. agriculture and the economy.

These days, Leach works on stem lettuce, a Chinese vegetable that can be eaten like asparagus. Leach produces crosses of stem lettuce and distributes it to farmers nationwide to collect ag data and feedback from growers and their customers.

The program coordinates with UC Davis Assistant Professor Ga Young Chung, whose students capture the cultural perspectives of each crop.

The work reminds us how the region’s ethnic diversity and our ancestor’s stories about food and family can be preserved and celebrated.

Gabrielle Myers can be reached at gabriellemyers11@gmail.com. Her latest book of poetry, “Break Self: Feed,” is available for $20.99 from fishinglinepress.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

LEARN

Imposter Syndrome

STEINBERG’S CURSE WAS OBVIOUS: HE REPLACED A SPORTS STAR

Too bad Darrell Steinberg followed a sports legend into the mayor’s office. Chasing Kevin Johnson’s shadow for eight years, Steinberg stumbled and fumbled, doomed from the start.

Homeless counts rose from 2,700 to 10,000 under Steinberg. City budgets shifted from austere and balanced to disaster zones filled with temporary fixes. The City Council patched a $66 million deficit this year. Expect worse in 2025.

On the sports front, Steinberg tried to snare Major League Soccer. He lacks a team, league, stadium and financing plan. But he’s optimistic.

Contrast these failures with the arena and cultural gathering place at Seventh and K streets built on Johnson’s watch. I was Kevin’s special assistant during his first mayoral term and know how this happened.

Primary credit for Golden 1 Center rests with the late NBA Commissioner David Stern. But Stern and Johnson produced a generational win for the city.

Stern and Johnson worked as a team. The commissioner devised the strategy. The mayor ran the plays. Together they kept the Kings in town and created a sports and entertainment district.

Absent Stern and Johnson, a boarded-up shopping mall would intensify Downtown’s troubles today.

The lack of victories and coherence over the last eight years at City Hall wouldn’t surprise Johnson. He never liked Steinberg. Kevin considered Darrell just another politician.

The disdain was mutual. Steinberg took office in 2016 eager to distance himself from his predecessor. The new mayor made homelessness his crusade. He figured his legislative connections would generate support to reduce the legion of people living on sidewalks.

But Steinberg never produced like Johnson. Sacramento Steps Forward, the nonprofit that coordinates regional homeless services, was Johnson’s creation. Steinberg leaves nothing of similar weight. Homeless camps and despair ballooned on his watch.

Steinberg brought no improvement to the unhoused crisis until his eighth year, when homeless numbers slightly shrank. The decline was likely a blip caused by new data protocols.

his showmanship and star power. The city survived with tough decisions and layoffs.

By contrast, the City Council welcomed Steinberg. He faced the pandemic supported by millions of federal and state dollars, then squandered much of the money.

Steinberg is the first Sacramento mayor to follow an NBA star. But he’s not the first to misunderstand the civic importance of sports.

For 40 years, public sports passions confused mayors and pushed them into unfamiliar positions. Sports can humiliate a politician.

In 1985, when Mayor Anne Rudin attended her first Kings game, the crowd booed. Rudin tried to explain how she supported the team’s move from Kansas City and worked to resolve zoning restrictions on land for Arco Arena.

But her fear of sprawl in North Natomas—a legitimate concern—made her an enemy of sports fans.

Sports burned Rudin again in 1989. She led the City Council in a unanimous vote to pay a $50 million relocation fee to move the Los Angeles Raiders to Sacramento.

The deal collapsed when local investors clashed over stadium ownership percentages. Raiders owner Al Davis concluded Sacramento wasn’t serious. He moved back to Oakland. The $50 million went toward neighborhood projects.

Mayor Joe Serna Jr. tried to enlist regional governments to help build sports facilities. City and county officials from Woodland to Auburn laughed him out of their offices. Frustrated by sports, Mayor Serna watched idly as West Sac grabbed the River Cats.

Mayor Heather Fargo met with David Stern at City Hall to discuss strategies for a new arena. The meeting went nowhere. Stern visited the State Capitol. He got a cigar from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Several arena plans died before Johnson became mayor.

Steinberg wasn’t a total loser. He twice persuaded voters to raise sales taxes. Johnson would not have bothered. As a rich sports star, he never liked taxes.

Steinberg’s legacy also comes up short from economic perspectives.

Kevin Johnson arrived in 2008, the depths of the Great Recession. He met a hostile City Council jealous of

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

Kevin Johnson
Photo by Steven Styles

Neighborhood Real Estate Sales

95815

95819

95816

95817

95821

2632 BALL WAY

2842 CLAIRE CT

3632 ARDMORE RD

2470 CARLSBAD AVE $430,000

3629 WHITNEY AVE $430,000

4604 WHITNEY AVE $449,900

3400 SHADY LN $450,000

3231 EDISON AVE $450,000

3300 ARBOR WAY $475,000

2555 CASTLEWOOD DR $480,000

3404 TOLEDO WAY $498,000

3300 HARMONY LN $515,000

3438 MONTCLAIRE ST $560,000

3833 DURAN CIR $589,900

4412 ELIZABETH AVE $620,000

4527 WOODSON AVE $630,000

95818

3930 IRELAND ST $650,000

3808 LASUEN DR $680,000

3203 NORRIS AVE $817,000

3133 BECERRA WAY $820,000

3045 POPE AVE

$1,350,000

95822

7514 LOMA VERDE WAY $290,000

7449 WILLOWWICK WAY $380,000

5612 NOLDER WAY $390,000

2001 KIRK WAY $400,000

7520 THORPE WAY $408,000

2801 SWIFT WAY $420,000

7519 COSGROVE WAY $425,000

2009 WAKEFIELD WAY $430,000

2121 48TH AVE $430,000

2131 ARLISS WAY $435,000

2961 TRENTWOOD WAY $439,000

7549 LOMA VERDE WAY $440,000

7054 HOGAN DR $448,000

2760 HING AVE $450,000

7320 PUTNAM WAY $450,000

5609 BRADD WAY $459,970

5652 NORMAN WAY $470,000

5121 25TH ST $489,000 1176 25TH AVE $491,000

TISDALE WAY $520,000

WOODSHIRE WAY $541,000

HENRIETTA DR $546,000 1645 WAKEFIELD WAY $552,000 5417 ROSITA WAY $700,000 5856 13TH ST $706,000 916 ROEDER WAY $795,000 1267 43RD AVE $875,000 4850 MONTEREY WAY $975,000

95825

963 FULTON AVE #557 $190,000

734 WOODSIDE LN #9 $200,000

728 WOODSIDE LN EAST #4 $200,000 637 WOODSIDE SIERRA #5 $210,000

901 FULTON AVE #404 $249,000

1117 BELL #11 $253,000

2420 LARKSPUR LN #223 $260,000 2202 WOODSIDE LN #1 $266,000

841 WOODSIDE LN #9 $271,000 1019 DORNAJO WAY #215 $274,000

800 WOODSIDE LN #8 $295,000 3272 VIA GRANDE $305,000 1413 HOOD RD $318,000 2336 SANTA ANITA DR $410,000

Anything’s Possible

HOME NEEDED WORK, BUT THIS COUPLE WAS READY

Monica Hernandez is proud of her hometown. She went to McClatchy High School, City College and Sacramento State. It’s no coincidence she and husband Kevin Flanagan ended up homeowners in Curtis Park.

Flanagan grew up near Monterey, attended Sac State and returned home after graduation. He met Hernandez a few years later. They were together for eight years before getting married in 2015.

“Our first house was much smaller and located in the Med Center neighborhood of Oak Park,” Hernandez says. “The house was built in 1914, and we took on many

Open House
Photography by Aniko Kiezel
Monica Hernandez and Kevin Flanagan

‘old home’ projects as do-ityourselfers in the 11 years we lived there.”

But the couple had grander plans.

“We found this Curtis Park Tudor home in 2020, just before the pandemic lockdowns,” Flanagan says. “We were attracted to the neighborhood, but also the great bones of this home.” The layout is 2,460 square feet on two floors with four bedrooms and two bathrooms.

The couple assumed the neighborhood was unaffordable. But this house was in original condition with some 1970s remodeling. It needed love from two do-it-yourselfers. “The price was right,” Flanagan says.

“We love this neighborhood, and this street in particular, and we have wonderful neighbors and the walkability to the park and other places. I bike to work,” says Hernandez, a former teacher who works for the state.

While the couple makes progress on long-term renovation plans, they call the home a “work in progress.”

First order was a new roof and updated plumbing. Next came air conditioning.

Design-wise, they agreed to stay true to the vintage look and appeal while adding contemporary touches.

“Before we even purchased the home, we pulled up the worn carpets and found gorgeous wood floors,” Hernandez says. “Refinishing the floors and totally repainting everything really revealed the classic bones of the home. The exterior paint job instantly made the home feel like it was all ours.”

Changes to the kitchen and dining area are most dramatic. They interviewed several designers and hired Ashlee Sherzad of Nar Design Group.

Now the dining room opens to the kitchen and connects with an island that has counter seats for two. Deep

blue color on the island cabinets contrasts with white kitchen cabinetry. White trapezoidal tile with black grout covers the walls floor to ceiling, a seamless look.

A dramatic dark grey plaster hood— it looks like raw steel—and black steel range provide a dramatic contrast.

The original front door is arch topped. The new back door has the same shape. The island’s pendant fixtures reflect a similar arch. A coffee and appliance bar replaced space originally for a washer and dryer.

“Kevin is the family dishwasher, so we moved the kitchen sink to have a full view of the backyard and pool,” Hernandez says.

A spot of color comes from leaded stained-glass windows installed decades ago. The windows add bright accents to the dining and living rooms.

“Our wish list includes new, upgraded double-pane windows so we hopefully will be able to incorporate some (stained glass) in the replacement process,” Hernandez says.

Both bathrooms were remodeled with vintage-style tile, fixtures and subtle blue and gray paint. Bedrooms and office spaces are original with upgraded paint and modern lights.

The couple say the neighborhood and neighbors are the best ever. The point is made for Hernandez whenever

she sits at the kitchen island, drinking coffee and organizing her day as residents walk past with kids and dogs. To recommend a home or garden, contact cecily@insidepublications. com. More photography and previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

Gardening is a labor of love, but also choice. Some plant in spring and are burned out by fall. For this group, fall and winter are for cleanup, tucking a few pansies and violas into pots, and holiday hibernation until roses demand pruning in January and February.

The more energetic group plants a winter garden of leafy greens and root crops—kale, chard, carrots, beets, garlic, shallots, lettuce and other coolseason edibles. The reward is gardengrown produce year-round. In cool months there are fewer pests and rain helps irrigate. Workload and chance of failure are reduced.

Those revitalized and energized after the long, hot summer can plant trees, perennials and shrubs. All will benefit from still warm soil and surprise you with significant root and top growth when spring rolls around.

If you still have lawn, October is perfect for reseeding bare areas and fertilizing. Directly sow seeds of stock and sweet peas, and swap out the dead and dying summer annuals for calendula, snapdragons and primrose.

Installing drip irrigation or repairing or expanding systems is easier with temperatures in the mid-60s. So is spreading bark and wood chip mulch under trees and in flower beds.

Fall Forward

SEASON MAY BE SHORT, BUT IT’S TIME TO GET BUSY

The Big Leafy too often transitions from blistering hot to chilly and wet, allowing minimal days of local autumn color. Our magnificent trees should not be denied the opportunity for extended applause and encore performances.

Eventually, the heat concedes, and Sacramento is blessed with orange and crimson leaves, but for how long?

Gardeners have an elevated appreciation of the city’s leaf canopy. Shade, beauty and finally wonderful

composting material are welcome perks.

Gardeners also relish comfortable fall temperatures to refresh and reflect on what transpired and what awaits. We can accomplish much when granted an overcast day and a hoodie.

Somehow, you and the garden survived yet another summer. July was hottest on record. Our gardens were parched and scorched from brutal triple-digit days. An unseasonably cool handful of August days renewed hope vegetables would again set fruit and ornamentals could shed survival mode and generate blooms.

So here we stand, dirty fingernails, hand pruner in back pocket, anticipating seasonal change. There’s hope we will not be deprived of our fall rewards.

Grant us fallen leaves cartwheeling in the breeze, enough time to jumpstart carrots and beets, cure pumpkins

and winter squash, and divide day lilies. And please grant us a long stretch of spectacular fall color.

Fall color begins earlier in the Sierra and gradually descends to the foothills and valley. Some years Sacramento hits its color peak as late as November.

Three things determine fall color: leaf pigment, temperature and shorter periods of daylight. Once the production of chlorophyll (green pigment) ceases, other pigments emerge in crazy hues of yellow, orange and red. It’s a chemistry thing.

If temperatures remain unseasonably high, the fall color period is shorter. That can and does happen here. Cooler, cloudy days extend the show.

A fall season of some length allows gardeners time to adjust and prepare for the next planting and summer garden cleanup.

Plant bulbs, too. Narcissus and daffodil perform especially well, but don’t dismiss ranunculus, sparaxis, tulips, freesia and iris. Planted in containers and beds in fall, the spring show will be camera-worthy.

It’s easy for gardeners to be distracted in fall. Children return to school, youth sports demand time and, before you know it, Halloween screams “Boo!” Garden planning and chores may sink to low priority.

No need to stress. Make a short list. Prioritize the important tasks. Tackle one at a time. Allow time to visit Apple Hill, shop a fall plant sale, sip a pumpkin spice latte or dive into a pile of leaves. If Mother Nature cooperates with a true fall, do not squander the gift.

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 UCCE Master Gardeners at (916) 876-5338, email mgsacramento@ucanr.edu or visit sacmg.ucanr.edu. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

1.

READERS NEAR & FAR

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

Norman and Sulai Meder at Machu Picchu in Peru.
Natalie Melvin in front of the Louvre museum in Paris, France.
Vanessa Pettit, Elaine Nakata, Sharon Robles-Yee and Maria Ho at Lion of Lucerne in Switzerland.
Donica and Terri Stiles on their hotel rooftop overlooking the Acropolis in Athens, Greece.
Kathy and Walt Menda at the Nishi Hongwanji in Kyoto, Japan.
Chuck Halnan at Canyon de Chelly National Monument in Arizona.

Good Grief

FEELINGS OF LOSS ARE SOMETHING WE ALL CAN SHARE

Iwas 28 when the Air Force sent me to Air University at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama, to complete Chaplain Basic Training.

For three weeks, I was elbow-toelbow with other young chaplain wannabes.

On my left sat the first of many chaplain priest friends. Yet from the beginning, Father Frank found me disturbing on two levels.

First, he couldn’t believe I didn’t drink. Second, he suggested, “A good drink could fix your akathisia.”

“What’s that?” I asked.

“Akathisia describes a complete inability to sit still.”

Within a few days, I was able to win Frank over without alcohol.

We shared laughs, giggled during lectures, passed notes and kicked each other under the table to keep quiet. I began to feel Catholic priests would

likely go to heaven. He learned Baptist teetotalers could be fun.

The classmate seated to my right wasn’t as sociable. Bobby kept to himself, looking straight ahead, volunteering little more than name and religious denomination.

Finally, during a lecture on grief, Bobby dropped a bomb. He said, “I know you probably think I’ve seemed detached these past several days.”

A chorus of “No-duh” rippled through our student body.

“My mother died the day after we arrived.”

Suddenly, it became quiet enough to hear a chaplain cuss.

Our class said a prayer for Bobby. The course director offered him emergency leave, but Bobby refused, holding tight his military bearing.

After class, a few of us invited Bobby to a nearby bar. He declined, so we went without him.

Inside the bar, I stuck with Pepsi while we commiserated on Bobby’s behalf, noting how tragic it was to lose a family member while so far from home.

After a few drinks, Frank slammed his hand on the table.

“Bobby didn’t trust us,” he said. “We sat shoulder-to-shoulder with him all month and he was locked up too tight to share with his clergy brothers.”

“Perhaps we could have helped him,” said one chaplain.

“How could we?” asked Frank. “He didn’t trust us to help him.”

“We could have carried his class assignments,” suggested one lieutenant.

“I would have given him my phone card to call his family,” I said.

To each idea, Frank pushed back, “If only he had trusted us.”

A few years later, I saw Frank at a chaplain’s conference in Denver.

“How you doing, Baptist?” he asked.

The word “fine” came to mind, but thinking back to Bobby, I didn’t lie. I trusted Frank more than that.

“Not good,” I said as I began to cry.

Some readers know the story I told Frank.

A few months prior, I’d rushed to give solace after a mass shooting at Cleveland Elementary school in Stockton. I was the chaplain who told six parents their child had been killed.

I fell into the arms Frank extended. He held me and wouldn’t let go.

That night, he invited me to join him and two other priests at a local bar— the same opportunity he offered Bobby years before.

As we talked in that dark, private space, I sipped my Pepsi and felt a restoration budding in my soul.

During the next few hours, my priestly friends told stories of grief. They taught me grief can’t stay in the dark. It must come out or it never heals.

Why did I choose now to tell this story? Because my 90-year-old mother died recently and I won’t keep that a secret.

She was the most wonderful mother who taught me faith, laughter and love. I want you to know I feel grief and so should you.

By the way, that night in Denver I finally took Frank’s advice and accepted his offer of a Colorado Bulldog. It’s a White Russian cocktail, with Pepsi. I drank three that evening.

When we stood to leave, the ceiling seemed to move.

“Don’t worry. We got you, Baptist.” Frank promised. And they did. They walked me back to my room, arm in arm, like the brothers they’d become.

Norris Burkes can be reached at comment@thechaplain.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. Burkes is available for public speaking at civic organizations, places of worship, veterans groups and more. For details and fees, visit thechaplain.net. n

For more information, you can meet with me or attend one of my Kaiser Permanente Medicare Health Plans seminars. Please call:

GracyHernandez

916-281-8548 mykpagent.org/gracyh

Learn more at kp.org/medicare

Kaiser Permanente Medicare specialist (TTY 711) Please recycle. 446781680 CA February 2020

You must reside in the Kaiser Permanente Medicare health plan service area in which you enroll. For accommodations of persons with special needs at meetings call TTY 711. Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc. 393 E. Walnut St. Pasadena, CA 91188-8514 Y0043_N00015450_C Is your Medicare Coverage still right for you?

Yes on Measure E to keep our libraries open tention voters in t

Measure E will not incease taxes. Measure E

Measure E money can only be used for Sacramento city Libraries. It simply renews the existing current funding for our 12 city libraries. is a simple renewal of existing funding. will not increase taxes while still ensuring that Sacramento libraries receieve the funding they need to stay open and serve the community.

Hours: M-Th, 12-4pm Email Dee at BeniteD@scc.losrios.edu for info.

Collection On view through October 17, 2024 Join us for our Closing Reception: Saturday, October 12th 4pm - 7pm

Showcasing pieces from the Sacramento City College Permanent Art Collection including works by Chris Daubert, Darrell Forney, Michael Stevens, Patricia Tool McHugh, and Wayne Thiebaud, as well as new works recently added to our collection by artists Beth Consetta Rubel and Mercy Hawkins

SCC - Fischbacher Fine Arts Building, 3835 Freeport Blvd., Sac, CA 95822
Image:
Fred Dalkey, Annunciation ,

No Boundaries

ARTIST-EDUCATOR LOVES MEDIUMS OF ANY SHAPE, STYLE

My earliest memory of Maureen Gilli is from fourth grade at Sacramento Country Day School.

She wheeled her art cart into the classroom and showed us an example of that day’s project: bird masks made from paper.

I marveled at her work. The detail of feathers. The expressive owl face. All from simple pieces of cut paper. I stared in awe. I thought, maybe someday my work will be that beautiful.

Thirty years later, the awe has not diminished. Today I’m in Gilli’s Citrus Heights home. Her work graces the walls, staircase, ceiling and tabletops in every medium you can imagine.

“I’ve made art my entire life. It’s never been a choice. I have to make things,” Gilli says. “I’m on this earth to make stuff.”

As a young person in Phoenix, art was an escape for Gilli. Her mentor, Barbara Bailey, recognized the youngster’s skill and entered her work in art contests. When Gilli moved to Sacramento, she embarked on a more formal artistic career.

Coincidentally, when Gilli arrived with husband Dino and their children, she discovered her one-time mentor had also moved to the area. The two reconnected. Gilli shared her desire to earn a credential to teach art in schools.

Bailey, an arts educator, offered to let Gilli shadow her. Gilli soon landed a job as an art resource teacher at Deterding Elementary School in Carmichael.

Gilli taught art at several public schools over the next several years. She worked as an art docent for the San Juan Unified School District in a program to introduce students to art history.

“Arts are basic to your life. They teach life skills, confidence and a sense of self,” Gilli says.

During this time, Gilli used her art skills in a new way, as a storyteller,

JL JL

Open Studio

Maureen Gilli
Photo by Linda Smolek

performer and mask maker for Mask, Movement and Mime, an arts program she created with fellow teacher Cookie Mackenroth.

Gilli and Mackenroth traveled all over Northern California performing with handmade masks, teaching children to express themselves

for kindergarten through fifth grades before moving into sixth and seventh grades.

“I always started in clay and then introduced different mediums to help students find their niche,” Gilli says. “Contour drawing is also great for children because they learn to use their eyes, which makes it so much more fun to look at things. That’s what’s so exciting about creativity.”

Gilli’s own creativity has taken her on explorations through various mediums. She loves cultural research. She finds a technique, color scheme she wants to try and dives in. She’s taken several art classes at Sierra College to learn the basics of new art forms.

nds a co

through visual and performing art.

Gilli landed at Country Day in 1997 to fill in for an art teacher on maternity leave. She enjoyed the job and stayed, teaching art

o r m e dium she wan dive take classe

This has led to work that includes polymer figurines to metal sculpture. She often combines several mediums at once, as in her series of paintings with copper incorporated onto the canvas. She makes jewelry inspired by amulets. Her handmade cards sell quickly at High-Hand Art Gallery in Loomis, where she’s a permanent artist.

“It’s very spur-of-the-moment,” Gilli says of inspiration. “I love to work spontaneously. In the moment, every medium is my favorite to work in.”

For information, visit Gilli’s website at artandeye.net. High-Hand Art Gallery is at 3750 Taylor Road, Loomis. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

Recovery Mode

EAST SAC CLASSIC STAGES GRAND COMEBACK AFTER FIRE

On Jan. 26, 2023, James Takashiba woke in the early morning to a fire notification from his alarm company. His family’s restaurant, Hana Tsubaki, was burning.

The fire department was on scene and quickly subdued the fire, but not before the kitchen suffered major damage.

For many longtime residents, Hana Tsubaki, a Japanese restaurant in East

Sacramento, had been there forever.

The butterfly roof and red and black paint stood out on J Street almost unchanged since 1978.

But that’s too simple. To keep a restaurant open for nearly 50 years, an operator must push through adversity.

The Takashibas pushed hard.

Like most restaurateurs, the family pivoted when COVID-19 closed dining rooms in 2020. The family adopted a curbside pickup model and stayed afloat. When restrictions lifted, it seemed the worst had passed.

Then came the fire.

For longtime patrons and neighborhood regulars, the concern was palpable. Other classic eateries such as Sam’s Hof Brau succumbed to fire and never returned.

Eighteen months after the blaze, Hana Tsubaki reopened. With packed tables and unrestrained smiles, generations of fans are delighted.

To understand the experience at Hana Tsubaki is to appreciate a different time, an era before strip-mall sushi restaurants dotted the landscape and ramen shops were as ubiquitous as burger counters.

The dining room encourages relaxed, contemplative eating. The space is elegantly paneled in wood, with rice paper shoji screens covering the windows. From the ceiling hangs streamers of linen, ethereal and warm, creating a sense of a cozy cocoon.

I finally figured out the subdued atmosphere on my latest visit. Hana Tsubaki has no television. Flat screens seem obligatory in many modern

Japanese restaurants, but the lack of screens in this classic room makes for serene dining.

What also sets Hana Tsubaki apart is its expansive menu. While sushi is present, it’s not the focus.

Family recipes for sesame chicken and broiled mackerel with teriyaki sauce take top honors. Simple and exact preparations create special dishes at Hana Tsubaki. Sauces sing. Presentations thrive on minimal flourishes.

Whether preparing sesame chicken, tempura shrimp or tonkatsu pork cutlet, the kitchen’s deep fryer performs at impressive levels. Dishes so simple and common bring the gift of familiarity.

But these fried delicacies are anything but common. They balance

Chirashi
Photos by Linda Smolek

between crispy exteriors and moist middles.

Udon noodle bowls are comforting and homey with thick, chewy noodles and rich broth. Hot pots (nabemono) include classics such as sukiyaki, a sweet and savory stew with sliced beef and plenty of veggies.

The sushi menu is no afterthought. If anything has changed in Hana Tsubaki’s four-plus decades, it’s the expansion of sushi to fit modern tastes and expectations. Newer sushi styles

with fish, fish eggs, fried bits and sauce are well executed.

The sushi bar shines with small traditional sushi dishes, nigiri and sashimi. A paper-thin piece of flounder (hirame), draped over a tangy morsel of sushi rice, topped with a dot of siracha and a single sliver of green onion is as good a bite as you will get at any local restaurant.

Recognizing classics in your own town can be hard. They feel as if they have always been there and will never

leave. It’s with relief to say Hana Tsubaki is back—like it never left.

Hana Tsubaki is at 5006 J St.; (916) 456-2849; hanatsubakirestaurant.com.

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

Sesame chicken and tempura combination

TO DO

THIS MONTH'S CULTURE & ENTERTAINMENT HIGHLIGHTS

FESTIVALS & FUNDRAISERS

Midtown Halloween Festival & Pooch Parade

Midtown Sutter and Midtown Association

Saturday, Oct. 26, noon–3 p.m.

James Marshall Park (915 27th St.); exploremidtown.org

Watch costumed canines strut their stuff at this free, family-friendly festival.

Community Book Sale

Friends of the Arden-Dimick Library

Members-Only Sale Oct. 17, 2–5:30 p.m.

Oct. 18 & 19, 10 a.m.–5:30 p.m.

Arden-Dimick Library (891 Watt Ave.); saclibrary. org

Stock up on reading material for adults and children to help fund library programs.

Semi-Annual Toy Train Show

Sacramento-Sierra TCA Train Club

Saturday, Oct. 5, 10 a.m.–3 p.m.

Elks Lodge (5631 Cypress Ave.); tcatrains.org

Admission: $10; free for children 12 and younger

Peruse 100-plus tables of trains for sale, operating layouts, food and more.

Fall Sale

Shepard Garden & Arts Center

Saturday, Oct. 5, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 6, 10 a.m.–3 p.m.

3330 McKinley Blvd.; sgaac.org

Learn about SGAC’s many clubs, and shop for plants, arts, crafts and more.

Trunk or Treat

St. Michael’s Episcopal Church

Thursday, Oct. 31, 6–8 p.m. 2140 Mission Ave.; stmichaelscarmichael.org

Wear your best costume for this fun event in the church parking lot.

Totally Pawsome 80s Prom

Sacramento SPCA

Saturday, Oct. 26, 6–10 p.m.

6201 Florin Perkins Road; sspca.org/gala

Tickets: $175

Dust off those shoulder pads and tease up your hair for this fall fundraiser.

Vive la Liberté

Alliance Française de Sacramento

Saturday, Oct. 19, 4–7 p.m.

The Auditorium at CLARA (1425 24th St.); afsacramento.org/events/vive-la-liberte

Tickets: $65

Celebrate the 80th anniversary of the Allied liberation of France with swing dance lessons, French food, period costumes and more.

Harvest & Health Festival

Community Wellness Forum

Saturday, Oct. 19, 11 a.m.–2 p.m.

City Church Sacramento (3860 4th Ave.); thecommunitywellnessforum.org

Check out health and wellness vendors, exercise demonstrations, hayrides, food trucks and more.

Sudesh Bhosle

Sohini Sangeet Academy

Sunday, Oct. 20, 5 p.m.

Midtown Halloween Festival & Pooch Parade at James Marshall Park at Park.

Rosemont High School (9594 Kiefer Blvd.); sulekha.com/sohinisangeet

Tickets: Starting at $45

Renowned Indian singer and impersonator Bhosle comes to Sacramento to perform the hits of Hindi cinema star and singer Amitabh Bachchan.

Oktoberfest

Sacramento Turn Verein

Friday, Oct. 11, 6 p.m.–midnight

Saturday, Oct. 12, 3 p.m.–midnight 3349 J St.; sacramentoturnverein.com

Tickets: $25 online, $30 at the door

Enjoy German bier, wine, music and dancers, plus the Rockbierfest band.

Día de Los Muertos Fiesta

California Museum

Saturday, Oct. 12, 6–10 p.m.

1020 O St.; fiesta2024.eventbrite.com

Tickets: $10 (plus fee) in advance through Oct. 11

Celebrate the museum’s new exhibit, “Arte de Inspiración: Dia de Los Muertos 2024,” with exhibits, food, performances, workshops, pop-up shops and more.

National Feral Cat Day 5K Walk

Coalition for Community Cats

Sunday, Oct. 13, 10 a.m.

California Automobile Museum (2200 Front St.); c4ccwalk.eventbrite.com

Registration: $40

Take a Downtown stroll to raise funds for community cat spay/neuter programs.

Open Trail Day

Bufferlands

Saturday. Oct. 19, 7:30 a.m.–5 p.m.

Sacramento Area Sewer District, Elk Grove; sacsewer.com/bufferlands

Walk at your own pace along several miles of riparian forests, woodlands and wetlands with biologists and docents answering nature-related questions.

LIVE PERFORMANCE

Literary Death Match

Stories on Stage Sacramento

Friday, Oct. 11, 7 p.m.

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

Tickets: $25

The international competitive reading and performance series returns to Sacramento for the second year.

Crumbs from the Table of Joy Celebration Arts

Oct. 11–Nov. 3

2727 B St.; celebrationarts.net

Tickets: $25 general, $20 seniors, $15 students

This charming, funny and moving play follows 17-year-old Ernestine Crump as she adjusts to life after the passing of her mother.

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets™ in Concert

Sacramento Philharmonic & Opera Friday, Oct. 4, 7:30 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 5, 2 p.m.

SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center (1301 L St.); sacphilopera.org

Tickets: $93–$175

Relive the magic of Harry Potter accompanied by a live performance of John Williams’ score.

Long Ago and Far Away

Sacramento Symphonic Winds

Sunday, Oct. 6, 2:30 p.m.

Capistrano Hall at Sac State (6000 J St.); sacwinds.org

Tickets: $15 general, $10 student, free for 8th graders and younger

Listen to the “Star Wars Trilogy” by John Williams, “The Washington Post” by John Philip Sousa and more.

The Hey Day Hop

Hey Day Quintet

Wednesday, Oct. 2, 6 p.m.

The Annex at Twin Lotus Thai (8375 Folsom Blvd.); twinlotusthai.com

Tickets: $10

Get your toes tapping with mixedtempo music designed for those who love to dance. Reservations required.

Aftershock Festival

Danny Wimmer Presents Oct. 10–13

Discovery Park (1000 Garden Hwy); aftershockfestival.com

Tickets: Start at $189

Don’t miss one of the region’s biggest music festival with headliners Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Mötley Crüe and more.

ART

Fall Sale

Art by Fire

Saturday, Oct. 19, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Shepard Garden and Arts Center (3330 McKinley Blvd.); artbyfire.org

Shop for handmade pottery, glass, sculpture and other art made with fire.

The Night Lights: Brian Seek Viewpoint Photographic Art Center

Oct. 9–Nov. 2

2015 J St.; viewpointphotoartcenter.org

This solo show features a series of low-light, long-exposure photographs.

Latitude/Longitude: Brad Morlock

ARTHOUSE Gallery

Oct. 11–Nov. 4

Opening Reception Oct. 12, 5–8 p.m. 1021 R St.; arthouseonr.com

Explore large-format pieces made with brick charcoal and printmaking paper.

TAROT

Archival Gallery Oct. 3–26

Second Saturday Reception Oct. 12, 5–8 p.m. 3223 Folsom Blvd.; archivalgallery.com

This group show features a study of the arcana in all art forms.

Because I wanted to: Kathy Dana Twisted Track Gallery Oct. 4–27

First Friday Reception Oct. 4, 6–9 p.m.

Second Saturday Reception Oct. 12, 5–9 p.m. 1730 12th St.; (916) 639-0436 or (916) 769-2700

Explore landscapes and the artist’s venture into abstract “hardscapes.”

Trinity Art Show

Lexis Gallery at Trinity Cathedral Oct. 2–Nov. 3

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

This national juried exhibition showcases work related to the theme “And God said, ‘Let there be light’....”

Looking Back, Moving Forward

Kondos Gallery at Sacramento City College Through Oct. 17

Closing Reception Saturday, Oct. 12, 4–7 p.m. 3835 Freeport Blvd.; scc.losrios.edu/about-us/ kondos-gallery

This exhibit showcases the college’s permanent collection of art by students, professors and artists working in the region, as well as new acquisitions.

Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Submissions are due six weeks prior to the publication month. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

Art by Fire Fall Sale at Shepard Garden and Arts Center.
“Reflects II” by Brad Morlock at ARTHOUSE Gallery.

Fishing Magician

THIS EXPERT ANGLER SHOWS HOW TO CATCH YOUR LIMIT

Ileft home at 3:45 a.m. to go fishing with Alan Fong. The Pocket resident is a fishing guru. If it swims, Fong knows how to catch it.

We headed to New Bullards Bar Reservoir, where Fong said conditions were right for kokanee salmon. On

the water by 6 a.m., I sat back for a relaxing morning of fishing. I was wrong about relaxing.

Lessons started right away. Fong promised by the end of our “catching trip,” he would know if I had a future with rod and reel or should try another sport.

The days of sticking a worm on a hook and aimlessly casting are over. Fishing boats are high tech, with electronic systems such as fish finders, depth sounders, VHF radios, engine monitors and GPS charts.

Fong has fished the Delta for more than 60 years. As a youngster, he accompanied his father. Over the decades, Fong caught every type of fish in the U.S. and competed in 100-plus

tournaments, often placing in the top 10.

He recently retired after 30 years of managing Fisherman’s Warehouse. Fong gave seminars about gear essentials, tackle, weights and lures. He designed rods and swimbaits and provided catch and cook demonstrations.

Fong’s YouTube channel, Alan Fong Outdoors, features more than 300 fishing videos, with 12,000 subscribers and a million views. He says, “I know what works and, more importantly, what doesn’t. I love the sport and sharing my knowledge with others.”

His knowledge evolved into a business, where Fong takes clients out on the water and teaches how to

finetune equipment based on the type of water.

Clients want to learn different techniques and strategies. Fong says it’s important to know everything about your target species—where they live, what they eat, where their food choice lives, how they bite.

He’ll take bass lovers out on his 20-foot Ranger boat. Clients learn to identify where bass hide and how to read contour maps. Fong explains tidal waters, boat positioning and weather. “These can make or break one’s fishing trip,” he says.

Expertise matters but fishing still involves superstition. It’s bad luck to bring bananas on Fong’s boats. And please, no sunscreen on the hands.

Alan Fong
Photo by Aniko Kiezel

Despite my novice status, we each caught our limit of 10 kokanee. Fong said we would have been home earlier if I hadn’t lost four fish (must have been the sunscreen).

I got an upper-body workout reeling in the catch. When I asked for an overall grade, Fong said I should stick to pickleball.

Find information at alanfongoutdoors.com.

HALLOWEEN DANCE

A Halloween dinner-dance comes to Elks Lodge No. 6 Friday, Oct. 25. Activities run 5–9:30 p.m. Dr. Rock & The Stuff provide entertainment. Tickets are $40 per person, available at the lodge or (916) 422-6666, ext. 2.

TRUNK OR TREAT

Bring the kids to the season’s final classic car show at Device Brewing Company on Friday, Oct. 25. Car owners hand out treats at 4 p.m. Check with Ben Valencia at (916) 698-7507 for details.

HOLIDAY SHOPPING

It’s never too soon to start holiday shopping. An Arts & Crafts Fair takes place Saturday, Oct. 19, at Elks Lodge No. 6. Vendors offer handmade arts and crafts from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

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 and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

COLDWELL BANKER

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PRIME LOCATION IN SLP HILLS 3B/2BA w/original hdwd oors, saltwater pool $779,000 TOM LEONARD 916.834.1681 CalRE# 01714895

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THE RESIDENCES AT THE SAWYER 2BR/2.5BA w/ panoramic views. $1,785,000 MICHAEL ONSTEAD PHONE: 916.601.5699 CalRE# 01222608

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