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LAND PARK • CURTIS PARK • HOLLYWOOD PARK • SOUTH LAND PARK • THE GRID • OAK PARK Our Other Editions Serve: East Sacramento • Arden/Carmichael • Pocket
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3041 – 10th Avenue - $749,900 MARVELOUS CURTIS PARK TUDOR 3 bed 2 bath, big yard, detached bonus room with fireplace and 2-car garage. Stunning owner’s bedroom with walk-in closet, many updates STEPH BAKER 916-775-3447
6063 – 36th Avenue - $350,000 CHARMING FRUITRIDGE MANOR HOME 2 bed plus den, 1 bath with large pretty yard. Beautiful new luxury vinyl floors throughout. Pretty fireplace, updated bathroom MONA GERGEN 916-247-9555 DRE-01270375
PENDING
2458 Laurel Clark Avenue - $599,000 CONTEMPORARY NATOMAS COTTAGE 4 bed 2½ bath, new in 2019 featuring 9’ ceilings and large open spaces. Kitchen island, granite counter tops, vehicle charging. STEPHANIE GALLAGHER 916-342-2288 DRE-01705253 88 DRE 01705253
PENDING
9039 Newhall Drive - $399,000 CONVENIENT ROSEMONT AREA HOME 3 bed 2 bath with big backyard, fantastic covered patio. Enclosed garage storage, updated HVAC and 2018 roof. Close to schools, shopping CINDI CERECERES-ANDERSON 916-743-4142 DRE-02053825
SOLD
5051 Knightswood Way - $1,130,000 CLASSIC BEAUTY TUCKED AWAY IN ASHLEY WOODS GRANITE BAY 4 or 5 Bed 4 Bath. John Popp built custom home next to a serene greenbelt. Kitchen hutch and center island JULIANNE PARK 916-541-8403 DRE-01999740
The Dunnigan Difference DunniganRealtors.com 2
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4413 Adriatic Sea Way - $569,000 NATOMAS CENTRAL VILLAGE HOME 3 bed 2½ bath with ceilings and lots of windows. Open concept first floor, spacious kitchen, pantry, granite and island. Upstairs family room NATHAN SHERMAN 916-969-7379 DRE DRE-01875980 01875980
PENDING
1123 Lochbrae Road - $449,000 ENCHANTING WOODLAKE COTTAGE. 2 bed, 1 bath home cherished by long time owner. Original hardwood floors, cove ceilings, large picture window. Big lot with alley STEPHANIE GALLAGHER 916-342-2288 DRE-01705253
SOLD
449 Lug Lane - $495,000 WELCOME HOME TO THE MILL AT BROUDWAY 2 bed 2 bath Newly constructed community, modern living, convenient location. Upstairs primary suite. Nice kitchen KELLIE SWAYNE 916-206-1458 DRE#01727664
Land Park (916) 454-5753 DRE#00707598
916.612.4000 | Jamie@JamieRich.net DRE No. 01870143
LAND PARK • CURTIS PARK • MIDTOWN DTOWN EAST SACRAMENTO • HOLLYWOOD OOD PARK
Listed at $1,200,000
SOLD AT $1,312,000
“Jamie Rich knew exactly how to market my house and made everything happen seamlessly for me. It was a busy time for her professionally and personally but she made me feel like I was her top priority. On the market for only a week, we got multiple offers over the asking price, with a fourteen day close, allowing me to quickly attain my dream home in another city. Even after the sale Jamie went out of her way to make sure both me and the buyers had what they needed for a smooth transition.” –Elaine S.
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EVERY DAY IS A GOOD DAY TO MAKE YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD A BET TER PL ACE. 26 S
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EAST SACRAMENTO • McKINLEY PARK • RIVER PARK • ELMHURST • TAHOE PARK • CAMPUS COMMONS
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Our Other Editions Serve: East Sacramento • Land Park/Grid • Pocket VISIT OUR WEBSITE: INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM 3104 O ST. #120 • SACRAMENTO, CA 95816
Our Other Editions Serve: East Sacramento • Arden/Carmichael • Pocket
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Our Other Editions Serve: East Sacramento • Land Park/Grid • Arden/Carmichael
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SAMANTHA BULLER Samantha Buller is a Northern California artist who paints full time in her home studio, teaching workshops whenever possible. Originally from the Bay Area, her work reflects the area’s beautiful light and modernism. Her love of color drives her work, and she paints simplistic objects to create a clean, strong design, sharing interest with the negative space. Shown: “Purple Cups,” oil, 16 inches by 20 inches. This piece is in a private collection. Visit samanthabuller.com. She is represented locally by efgallery.com.
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MAY 2022 VOL. 25 • ISSUE 4
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Publisher's Desk Let Us Vote! Out & About Giving Back Inside The County Ready For Progress City Beat Building Our Future Stepping Up Open House Nowhere To Go Getting There Animals & Their Allies Garden Jabber Spirit Matters Sports Authority Farm To Fork Open Studio Restaurant Insider To Do
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GETTING HOME SAFE LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS EMBRACE BRAZILIAN JIU-JITSU
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aw enforcement is perhaps the highest risk profession in our country. With the goal to make it home safe each day, officers face danger and risk from the unpredictability they encounter with every call. As a mother of a former police officer, I know the worry doesn’t end with the officer. It extends to family and friends. Placer County Deputy Paul Solbos founded Warriors Always Ready, a nonprofit that provides high-quality physical and mental training for first responders and veterans through his Code3 Brazilian jiu-jitsu program. Solbos’ inspiration was a call for service that put him in serious doubt
CH By Cecily Hastings Publisher’s Desk
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he would make it home safe. His story begins like so many tragic law enforcement stories. “It was a routine call for service, the type of call I’d been on many times before,” Solbos says. When he arrived, the situation quickly escalated. He had to go hands-on to defend himself. “Everything went through my mind. I fought intensely for my life for several minutes until I was able to call for help on my radio. I was physically exhausted, and extremely uncomfortable that I didn’t have the level of training to overcome this opponent, who obviously did,” he says. “It really got into my head. I was very lucky I finally got control of him.” Shaken by his experience, Solbos realized getting home safe isn’t enough. He had to shift the odds in his favor— and for his colleagues. The most effective training he found is Brazilian jiu-jitsu, a martial art focused on getting the opponent to the ground and gaining control by offsetting physical strength with technique. The meaning of jiu-jitsu translates from Japanese to the “gentle art.”
California’s Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training requires officers to update their training during two-year cycles. Part of that training involves arrest control tactics. At a Synergy Jiu-Jitsu Academy class, Placer Deputy John Tannarome explains arrest control “teaches techniques that work for compliant or semi-compliant subjects. It falls short when it comes to very combative, noncooperative subjects. (Brazilian jiujitsu) fills that gap in training.” He says tasers and other equipment are useful but can malfunction, so it’s important for an officer to know what their bodies can do. Solbos agrees: “If I must go up against the biggest, meanest
person, I want them to know I’m in the fight. If they’re going to take me, they’re going to have to work for it. This class absolutely gets me there.” On the value of practicing Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Placer Deputy Dan Cunningham says, “I’d rather lose a thousand times in here than to lose once while on patrol.” The local Code3 team is not alone in seeing the benefit of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. Two years ago, the police department in Marietta, Georgia, began requiring newly hired officers to attend a minimum of one Brazilian jiu-jitsu training session per week while in field training.
BRAZILIAN JIU-JITSU DOES NOT EMPLOY VIOLENT TACTICS AND HELPS DE-ESCALATE CONFRONTATIONS.
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The stats in Marietta back up the program’s success. In the jiu-jitsu trained group, Marietta reported a 48-percent reduction of injuries to officers using force, a 53-percent reduction of injuries to the person being arrested when force was required, and a 23-percent reduction of taser use. Stats from a similar program in St. Paul show a 25-percent reduction
of injuries to officers using force, a 44-percent reduction of injuries to persons being arrested when force was required, and a 39-percent reduction of taser use. St. Paul reports police misconduct settlements have fallen to their lowest in a decade. Sacramento Sheriff’s Academy coordinator Sergeant Jeff Bell spent 11 years learning Brazilian jiu-jitsu
and has incorporated it into academy curriculum. “The biggest benefit is the calmness I experience in situations that previously could have brought a less mindful response,” Bell says. Academy coordinator Sergeant Tyrone Carey says, “We need to keep up with the times. A lot of people understand how to fight, train or box. Transitioning to this new approach will keep us and the public safer.” Tannarome notes Brazilian jiu-jitsu does not employ violent tactics and helps de-escalate confrontations. The technique “reduces both the need for us to use our weapons and from injuring ourselves and others,” he says. “Anyone who says otherwise is ignorant.” Brazilian jiu-jitsu training is a winwin for our vulnerable law enforcement officers and their families, and a way to keep our communities safer. Let’s hope all local law enforcement agencies encourage this approach. Visit c3bjj.org or on social media @ c3bjj. 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
Here for you, no matter what the future holds. In these uncertain times, Sacramento real estate remains strong. There are excellent opportunities for sellers and buyers in East Sac, Land Park and Midtown. If you are considering a move, let’s talk.
Dave Kirrene Realtor
916.531.7495 DRE 01115041
Sacramento Writers’ Workshop phasis on “With an em itivity, ent and pos m e g ra u o c n ty e rovides plen p h c a ro p p the a and g feedback n ti it h rd a h f o at are ts of view th 0 various poin - Lori B., 202 .” g in n te h g li en Participant
Calling All Writers! Taug ght by author and English teacher Jason Hinojosa, the Sacramento Writers’ Workshop is an n intensive manuscript development prog gram for adults, hosted on the campus of S a acramento Country Day School. Polish a ˣ˔ ˔˥˧˜˖˨˟˔˥ ˣ˜˘˖˘ ˢ˙ ˪˥˜˧˜ˡ˚ʟ ˥˘Ѓˡ˘ ˬˢ˨˥ ˖˥˔˙˧ʟ ˜ con nnect n with other writers, and have some fun! • Ju uly 18-29, 2022 • In person at Sacramento Country Day Sc chool • $5 515 (save 25% if you apply by May 15)
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Let Us Vote! CITY LEAVES EAST SAC WITHOUT A VOICE
Jeff Harris
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’d love to blame the mayor and City Council for the fiasco that left about 40,000 East Sacramento residents without an elected council representative until 2024. But this time, the mayor and council’s hands are clean.
RG By R.E. Graswich
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The guilty parties are City Attorney Susana Alcala Wood, her staff and the city’s Independent Redistricting Commission. Despite administrative complexities inherent in reapportionment, the city’s lawyers blundered into the redistricting thicket seemingly oblivious to state election law. Such monumental negligence deserves examination by the State Bar. The result is a bad joke on democracy. A majority of voters in one of the town’s eight City Council districts will spend the next two years without a councilmember. As a cheap consolation
prize, the mayor will lord over East Sac by titular decree. That’s six years between council elections for East Sac residents, a crime that violates the spirit if not the letter of federal and state laws and the city charter. The easiest way to repair the damage is with a special election that lets voters choose their representative. Hardly a novel concept, but local and state rules make a special election impossible. The trouble started last December, when the Independent Redistricting Commission revealed its new City Council map and obliterated Councilmember Jeff Harris from his district. Harris was twice elected to represent East Sac, River Park, portions of Downtown and South Natomas. His term expires in December. He planned to run for a third term this year. He probably would have won. But he lost his district by administrative whim. Under advice from the city attorney, the redistricting commission swooped in and replaced Harris in East Sac with Katie Valenzuela. Goodbye, election. The motive to wipe out Harris remains a mystery. This much we know: Valenzuela was elected in 2020 to represent Land Park, Downtown and Midtown. Fixated on homelessness and housing, she exhibited zero interest in East Sac and River Park. To show they weren’t messing around, the redistricting commissioners and city attorney declared the new districts effective immediately. This meant voters in East Sac woke up one week before Christmas and learned Valenzuela was their new councilmember for the next three years. Surprise! When East Sac voters realized their right to pick their City Council person was removed, they got mad. They did what voters do when faced with political malpractice. They organized a recall campaign against Valenzuela.
Backpedaling on defense, spluttering gibberish to protect her credibility, the city attorney said East Sac voters couldn’t recall Valenzuela because, uh, they didn’t elect her. The city attorney further theorized that, despite what she said in December, those new council boundaries wouldn’t exactly take effect until, uh, there was an election. Or maybe they would take effect somewhere but not everywhere. Which means Harris is still East Sac’s councilman—at least until his term expires in December. After that, East Sac will languish without a councilmember until the next election in 2024, though the City Council recruited the mayor as a guardian. Asked to clarify the situation, City Attorney Alcala Wood demonstrated epic befuddlement, saying, “It’s inaccurate to say that information was in error. The multiple effects of it is what you’re now asking.” It’s obvious the city attorney can’t provide coherent advice on election law. Nothing Alcala Wood and her associates say can be trusted. Meantime, the City Council shouldn’t wait until 2024 to let East Sac exercise its right choose a representative. A special election would resolve the situation. But the city charter doesn’t allow it. Valenzuela was elected to a four-year term ending in 2024, not before. She can be recalled, but only in Land Park, Downtown and Midtown. And there can’t be a special election just for East Sac and River Park. If East Sac residents act like victims of legal malpractice, here’s why: they are. R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
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Shop 916 GIFT CARD PROMOTION SUPPORTS DOWNTOWN BUSINESSES
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Valerie and Abe Sanchez of Article Consignment participate in the Shop 916 gift card program. Photo by Linda Smolek
he city of Sacramento is offering a new limited-time promotion for Shop 916: Buy an electronic gift card and get a free bonus gift card. The Shop 916 gift card, launched by the city last December, can be used at any participating business within the city and helps support local storefront retailers negatively impacted by the pandemic. A combined value of more than $110,000 from gift and bonus cards was spent in the city of Sacramento during the previous two-month promotional program. Nearly 100 small businesses are signed up to participate in the program, with new retailers joining daily. “The card is very user-friendly, especially on the retailer side, which is amazing,” says Valerie Sanchez, co-owner with husband Abe of Article Consignment. “The people I've seen use it are also first-time customers, so it's given us exposure to new clientele we may not have reached otherwise.” Under the current promotion, buy a $25 gift card and get a $10 bonus gift card for free; buy a $50 gift card and get a $25 bonus gift card for free; buy a $100 gift card and get a $50 bonus gift card for free. This offer is available until June 30. Regular consumer-purchased gift cards do not expire, but bonus gift cards must be used by July 17. To purchase gift cards, visit shop916local.com.
JL By Jessica Laskey Out & About
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ROSE GARDEN PHOTO CONTEST Get your cameras out. Friends of East Sacramento is sponsoring the 10th annual McKinley Rose Garden photography contest, open to amateur and professional photographers. “We are looking for some general overall shots of the garden showing the variety of beds, as well as close-up portraits of individual roses and the other plants in the garden,” says Lisa Schmidt, co-founder of Friends of East Sacramento. The garden, a popular wedding spot located at the corner of H and 33rd streets, is maintained by volunteers and managed by Friends of East Sacramento. Photos must be taken during the month of May. Email high-resolution photo entries (limit of three per person) to friendsofeastsac@aol.com by June 1. Winners will be featured in Inside Sacramento and displayed in the lobby of the Clunie Community Center.
CHORAL CONCERTS The Sacramento Choral Society & Orchestra is celebrating its return to in-person performances after a two-anda-half-year hiatus due to the pandemic. SCSO’s 26th season kicks off with a performance of Giuseppe Verdi’s “Requiem” on Saturday, May 14, at 8 p.m. at the SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center with soloists Jennifer Forni, Linda Baird, Robert Breault and Timothy Jones. The concert will also include guest chorus Schola Cantorum of Sacred Heart Church, as well as a tribute to celebrated restaurateur Biba Caggiano and the singing of the Ukraine national anthem. “We have missed the excitement and real joy that our audience experiences when they are seated in the theater, and the lights are dimmed and the music
Photographers are invited to enter this year’s McKinley Rose Garden photography contest. unfolds beautifully for them,” says Music Director Dr. Donald Kendrick. “This concert will be unlike anything we have experienced in the last 26 years and we are all ready for a sonic feast.” For tickets and more information, visit sacramentochoral.org.
Let’s swap cars for handlebars during Bike Month! It’s not about riding the farthest—it’s about riding to help make the world a cleaner, healthier place to live. Throughout May, riders across the Sacramento region are forming teams of friends, family and co-workers to have fun and win prizes. Our region provides many great opportunities to ride, including the American River Parkway stretching from Discovery Park to Folsom. For more information, including how to register your team, visit lovetoride. net.
it constructed an 8,000-square-foot sanctuary. The church offers many programs and services, as well as a large clothes closet in the basement. Last year, more than 7,000 articles of clothing were given to more than 1,400 individuals. When longtime pastor Les Shelton, who spent 28 years at the helm of First Church, resigned in 2018 due to health issues, his associate pastor, Rev. Marcia Hull, took over as interim senior pastor. Hull was officially brought on as First Church’s 16th pastor—and its only female lead pastor—in 2019. “It is an honor to serve this rich historical neighborhood of Midtown Sacramento with its diversity and charm,” Hull says. “We have a church of loving people who seek after the things of God and reach out to people in need of spiritual nourishment.” The church office is open Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more information, call (916) 452-6171 or visit sacfirstnaz.org.
CHURCH CENTENNIAL
HABITAT DONATION
Sacramento First Church of the Nazarene at 28th and S streets celebrates its 100th year this month. The church first met in the Pythian Castle at 9th and I streets in 1922. It then purchased two lots at its current location and built a wooden tabernacle under the original name Gospel Tabernacle Church of the Nazarene. In April 1945, the board voted to reincorporate the church and change the name to First Church of the Nazarene. Over the years, the church expanded its footprint, purchasing the neighboring Frank Fuller property in 1964, where
Habitat for Humanity of Greater Sacramento has received $4.5 million— the largest single donation in the organization’s 36-year history. The gift is part of $436 million donated by philanthropist Mackenzie Scott to Habitat for Humanity International and an additional 83 local Habitat-affiliate organizations across the country. “Ms. Scott’s donation, made during a local and national housing crisis that is exacerbated by historic racial inequities, represents a huge vote of confidence in Habitat Sacramento—not only in our mission but in our leadership, efficiency, proven financial accountability and
BIKE MONTH
impact,” says Habitat for Humanity of Greater Sacramento President/CEO Leah Miller. Since 1985, Habitat for Humanity of Greater Sacramento has built or repaired more than 300 homes for lowincome families, seniors and veterans in the region. In recent years, the region has become one of the least affordable places to live in the country thanks to skyrocketing rents and high home prices. Last year, the local Sacramento Habitat for Humanity received 7,000 pre-applications for only 12 available Habitat homes. With a variety of new developments and projects coming down the pipeline, the gift could not have come at a better time. “Her gift highlights the urgency and critical need to devote significant resources to increasing the development of affordable homeownership and equitable revitalization of underserved communities in Sacramento and across the country,” Miller says. “We look forward to utilizing this gift to build capacity and accelerate our rate of construction.” For more information, including ways to give or volunteer, visit habitatgreatersac.org.
PROHOUSING The city of Sacramento is the first jurisdiction in California to earn a Prohousing Designation, which is based on how a jurisdiction scores on competitive housing, community development and infrastructure programs.
To be eligible for a Prohousing Designation, a jurisdiction must receive a minimum score of 30 on its application—Sacramento earned 64. The score is based on the city’s prohousing efforts, such as waiving fees for affordable housing construction, allowing housing by right in commercial corridors, speeding approvals for accessory dwelling units, and reducing or eliminating parking requirements for new housing, among many other policies. “I’m proud to see Sacramento recognized for being a state leader when it comes to eliminating the barriers to building the affordable, transitfriendly housing we so desperately need in our city and all over the state,” Mayor Darrell Steinberg says. “This designation signals to the development community that we stand ready to work with you and find creative ways to house more people.”
BUDGETING PROGAM A new Participatory Budgeting Pilot Program launched this spring for city of Sacramento residents to propose spending ideas and vote on proposals. The program is funded through Measure U. Idea collection is April to May 2022, when any Sacramento resident can submit an idea for funding consideration. Proposal development is May to July 2022, when volunteer proposal delegates review ideas for feasibility with city staff and develop the highest priority ideas into fully fledged proposals.
Sacramento First Church of the Nazarene celebrates 100 years.
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Rancho San Miguel Market is now open in Oak Park.
Donald Kendrick, Music Director
Overwhelming drama Monumental virtuosic brilliance
Verdi
REQUIEM Saturday, May 14 at 8 pm Début concert in the new SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center WORLDCLASS SOLOISTS
Jennifer Forni, Soprano Robert Breault, Tenor Linda Baird, Mezzo Timothy Jones, Baritone GUEST CHOIR
Schola Cantorum
Honoring Sacramento Restaurateur
Biba Caggiano
Performance dedicated to the people of Ukraine SCSO Verdi CD sales will support the UNICEF Ukraine Children’s Fund
CONCERT SPONSORS Angelo K. Tsakopoulos Rahimian Family Foundation Sacramento Office of Arts & Culture
BOX OFFICE 1301 L St. | 916.808.5181 or
SACRAMENTOCHORAL.ORG The vote will be in August, when final proposals are placed on a ballot. Winning projects will be implemented beginning September 2022. More information is available at cityofsacramento.org/pb.
CLARA TOURS One of Sacramento’s best-kept venue secrets, The Auditorium at CLARA, is now offering Open House Tours to explore the space. The Auditorium, a multi-use performing arts and rental facility in Midtown, features hardwood floors, high ceilings and large windows. The space
Sacramento Choral Society & Orchestra returns to in-person performances.
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comfortably accommodates an audience of 120 with social distancing. “We hold space for a variety of gatherings, from meetings, classes and workshops to performances,” says Amanda Prince-Lubawy, CLARA rentals and events coordinator. “Open House Tours are a low-pressure way to explore the space and learn more. See this beautiful, historic building, learn more about how the auditorium supports the local creative community, and take the measurements and photos you need to imagine your event here.” Tours take place the second Saturday of each month from 9–11 a.m. and the third Thursday from 4–6 p.m. The Auditorium entrance is at 1425 24th St. For more information, visit claramidtown.org.
OAK PARK MARKET Rancho San Miguel Market—a 100-percent employee-owned company—is now open in Oak Park. Two years ago, the City Council approved a $1.1 million loan for the renovation of the space to support underserved communities and improve food access. The space previously housed a Food Source grocery store, which closed in March 2020. The new 51,000-square-foot grocery store offers a full-service bakery, meat and seafood departments, freshly made Hispanic grab & go items, salsa and ceviche bars, and more. “Communities of color in South Sacramento have watched grocery stores disappear from their neighborhoods, creating food deserts,” Councilmember Eric Guerra says. “I am thrilled for the opening of Rancho San Miguel Market, which will bring fresh, nutritious and affordable foods back into the community, along with local employment opportunities.” PAQ, Inc., which operates 22 Rancho San Miguel Markets across the Central Valley and Central Coast,
created 93 jobs for the new store. Seven of the positions were advancement opportunities from within the company and 86 employees were hired locally through partnerships with the Sacramento Employment and Training Agency and local community-based providers.
SHINE GRANT The Carmichael Parks Foundation has received a $21,000 SMUD Shine Grant to replace the 21 original woodframe, single-pane windows in the Veteran’s Memorial Building, which was built in 1951. Additional improvements include landscaping funded by the Rotary Club of Carmichael, replacing outdated heating and air infrastructure, and giving the North Room a facelift. The hall is used for veterans groups, senior exercise classes and preschool programs, and can be rented for community events, such as weddings and birthdays. For more information, visit carmichaelpark.com/veteran-smemorial-building.
SPRING LEAGUES If you’re looking for a good time this spring, the Carmichael Recreation and Park District offers a variety of adult sports. Activities include adult volleyball and basketball leagues at La Sierra Community Center, coed softball on Friday nights at Carmichael Park, dropin pickleball on Tuesday and Thursday mornings in the Johnson Gym at La Sierra Community Center, and more. Registration is open for all spring leagues. Register online at recpro. carmichaelpark.com/default.aspx or through the La Sierra Community Center Recreation Office at 5325 Engle Road.
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California State Railroad Museum opens “Crossing Lines: Women of the American Railroad” exhibit.
RAILROAD RIDES
CLEAN CA GRANT
The California State Railroad Museum and its foundation announces a new season of popular weekend excursion train rides on the Sacramento Southern Railroad. Guests can ride in open-air gondolas or enclosed coach cars behind an authentic, historic locomotive for a 6-mile, 50-minute roundtrip excursion along the Sacramento River. Train rides operate on weekends at 11:30 a.m., 1 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. Masks are required on all excursion train rides. Weekend excursion trains depart every 90 minutes from the Central Pacific Railroad Freight Depot on Front Street between J and K streets. Tickets are $15 for adults, $8 for youth ages 6–17 and free for children 5 and younger. First-class tickets are $25 for adults, $18 for youth and free for children. All California State Railroad Museum Foundation members receive free regular/coach train rides based on availability. After your train ride, check out the museum’s new permanent exhibit, “Crossing Lines: Women of the American Railroad,” the result of a graduate student internship and master’s thesis of Sacramento State student Nicole Allison. The exhibit was written, designed and curated entirely by women to discuss the lives and roles of women associated with the railroad industry. For train tickets and more information, visit californiarailroad. museum.
Five projects were recently chosen to receive a total of $16 million in new Clean California grants administered by Caltrans. The projects include alley cleanup and beautification in North Sacramento’s Dixieanne neighborhood; art installations and new public spaces along Florin Road; funding for public art along the planned Del Rio Trail; improvements to Robert T. Matsui Park and the planned Hanami Line cherry blossom park along the Sacramento River; and new sidewalks, shade trees and other amenities at Ethel Phillips Elementary School. “In partnership with community partners, local artists and our Meadowview residents, we have the opportunity to make a difference and uplift our community,” says Councilmember Mai Vang, who represents Meadowview, which is receiving $1.22 million to clean up Florin Road and create new public spaces showcasing the culture and diversity of the community. “This investment—in one of Sacramento’s most under-invested areas—will make a huge impact on the nonprofits, minority-owned small businesses and residents that make Florin Road an incredibly vibrant and diverse community.”
BETTERMENT PROJECT The Sacramento Metro Chamber Foundation’s Leadership Sacramento 2021 (LS21) class recently completed
WeLiveSacramento.com
their community betterment project, the renovation of the Mack Road Valley Hi Community Center grounds. Last summer, LS21 chose ReIMAGINE Mack Road Foundation as their class project beneficiary. In partnership with project sponsors and donors, LS21 raised approximately $100,000 to renovate and enhance the community center grounds, which serve as a safe haven for at-risk youth and families living in the underserved neighborhoods of Mack Road, Valley Hi and Center Parkway in South Sacramento. “Despite the ongoing uncertainty of the pandemic, the Class of 2021 forged ahead in their civic responsibility to identify a need and execute on a solution,” says Andrea Ollanik, executive director of the Metro Chamber Foundation. “Beautifully aligning with the mission of Leadership Sacramento, the renovation of the outdoor area of the Mack Road Valley Hi Community Center reflects the intersection of vision and action.”
YOUNG FILMMAKERS Two local siblings, Kayleen and Colsen Nguyen, have won a $350 first
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ARTIST DRAWING
DISABILITIES ADVISORY
The Artists’ Collaborative Gallery in Old Sacramento will hold a drawing at the end of each month for a piece of art created by one of the gallery’s 30-plus member artists. Visitors can enter once a day, so increase your chances by visiting 129 K St. often. At the end of the month, a winner will be chosen and notified by email and/or phone. For more than 40 years, the Artists’ Collaborative Gallery has unified artists and given them a space to connect, as well as display and sell their artwork, including paintings, photographs, pen and ink drawings, jewelry, ceramics, fabric art, sculpture, woodwork and more. For more information, visit artcollab.com.
Earlier this year, the Sacramento Disabilities Advisory Commission launched the Tim Haley Recognition Award, named after former Commissioner Tim Haley, who passed away in 2020. “The Sacramento Disabilities Advisory Commission is honored to present the Tim Haley Recognition Award to our Sacramento neighbors who go above and beyond to support our local disabled community,” says Commissioner Will Cannady. “Tim was a shining example of a community member who supported the needs of Sacramento’s disabled residents.” Award recipients have included Marc Laver, Cid Van Koersel, Vanessa Bieker, Russell Rawlings, Phillip Sinclair, Joe Xavier and Meena Kalyanasundaran. Formed in 2002, the commission provides advice and recommendations to the city on strategies and policies designed to ensure and enhance compliance with federal and state disability laws. Nine commissioners serve on the advisory board, each appointed by the mayor with approval by the City Council.
SOLAR CENTER
Kayleen and Colsen Nguyen win first prize in One Earth Young Filmmakers Contest. prize at the high school level in the annual One Earth Young Filmmakers Contest. Kayleen is a junior at John F. Kennedy High School and Colsen is an eighth-grader at Sutter Middle School. The Young Filmmakers Contest asks people from third grade through age 25 to create a three- to eight-minute environmental film that inspires change or action. Prizes are awarded at the elementary school, middle school, high school, college and post-grad levels, with additional prizes for animation and creativity. The contest is part of the One Earth Film Festival, the Midwest’s premier environmental film event. Using stop-motion paper cutouts, the Nguyens created the six-minute dystopian film “The Apocalypse,” where people live in bunkers because of extreme flooding, wildfires, hurricanes and tornadoes. Bucolic scenes before “The Apocalypse” are shown over Kayleen’s narration, then Colsen lists facts and figures about present-day weather extremes. The news is grim but the film ends on a note of hope—Kayleen concludes that we can make a difference by building awareness and electing leaders who will make changes to save the planet. Each contest winner received a matching grant to donate to a nonprofit that supports the theme of their film. The Nguyen siblings donated their $350 match to The Sierra Club.
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WATER USAGE The spring-summer cycle for water usage has begun. Here are the current guidelines for city and county water customers. City customers with even-numbered addresses can water on Wednesday and Sunday. Customers with odd-numbered addresses can water on Tuesday and Saturday. Watering is allowed before 10 a.m. and after 7 p.m. Watering is not allowed 48 hours after one-eighths inch of rain. When there are two or more days of temperatures at or above 100 degrees, city residents are exempt from watering schedule restrictions. For the county, addresses ending in even numbers can water Wednesday, Friday and Sunday. Addresses ending in odd numbers can water on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Irrigation times are between 8 p.m. and 8 a.m. Wasting water is not allowed, including water running off properties onto sidewalks or down gutters. Checking soil moisture with a moisture meter before turning on sprinklers saves 80 gallons of water per day. For more information, visit cityofsacramento.org/utilities/water/ conservation/residents/residentialwater-wise-services and waterresources. saccounty.gov.
The Food Literacy Center’s new building at Leataata Floyd Elementary School is going solar. Construction teams recently completed prep work for solar panels on the roof, which will allow the center to be a zero net energy building (which means that the total amount of energy used by the building on an annual basis will be roughly equal to the amount of renewable energy created onsite). Staff members have already moved into the new center and are getting the building ready for this summer’s expanded programs, including new gardening classes where students get to experience where food comes from and how it grows—all while having fun in the garden. For more information, visit foodliteracycenter.org.
DREAM IT, BE IT Last month, high school students from Community Collaborative Charter School worked with artist Shane Grammer to create a stunning mural in the east parking lot of OBO’ Italian Table & Bar and Kru Contemporary Japanese Cuisine in East Sacramento. The artwork was part of Soroptimist International’s Dream It, Be It Mural Education Project. Through a partnership with Soroptimist International of Metropolitan Sacramento and the Hope Through Art Foundation, students
New East Sac artwork is part of Soroptimist International’s Dream It, Be It Mural Education Project.
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learned “the art of being an artist” by working hands-on for four days. The mural’s public dedication in April recognized the contribution and talents of the students.
ZOO UPDATE
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After receiving a feasibility study for a new regional zoo, the Elk Grove City Council extended the term of the exclusive negotiation agreement for 60 days to work with the Sacramento Zoological Society on a memorandum of understanding that would guide the next level of work. Next steps include issuing a request for proposals to several top zoological park design firms; drafting and formalizing an official MOU between parties; and moving toward the creation of a phase-one master plan for the new zoo. “Building a new regional zoo is a rare and time-intensive process that we welcome,” says Sacramento Zoo Executive Director Jason Jacobs. “The new zoo will be a series of experiences that benefit our animals and zoo visitors. Our goal is to create a zoo that educates and inspires over a million guests a year to make a difference for wildlife.” For updates and more information, visit saczoo.org/about-us/new-zoo.
MIRASOL VILLAGE Mirasol Village, a mixed-income housing development that began accepting families this month, has received funding for an Early Childhood Development Center. The 427-unit housing development is bounded by Richards Boulevard, 12th Street and Dos Rios Street in Sacramento’s River District. In addition to the Early Childhood Development Center, the village includes community rooms, a fitness center, business center, swimming pool, playground, spacious garden, barbecue areas and secured bicycle parking. Transit-friendly features include a light rail station next door, on-site EV charging stations, access to the Car Share Program and close proximity to a bike lane connected to the American River trail. For more information, visit mirasolvillage.net.
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MOBILE PET CLINIC 3001 P St. Sacramento, CA
The Bradshaw Animal Shelter’s mobile pet wellness clinic is back in
action as part of the Bradshaw Animal Assistance Team’s veterinary outreach. The program offers free basic veterinary services to low-income and unsheltered pet owners in Sacramento County. Prior to the pandemic, the volunteer-run program provided critical care to more than 9,200 pets in our community between 2016 and 2019. The mobile clinic’s free services include vaccinations, microchipping, deworming, engraved ID tags and collars, flea prevention and treatment of some minor medical conditions. For more information, visit the shelter’s Facebook page @ BradshawAnimalShelter.
STUDENT HONORS American River College student Brianna Huynh is one of 20 college students who has been named to the prestigious Phi Theta Kappa All-USA Academic Team. She was also named a Phi Theta Kappa 2022 New Century Transfer Pathway Scholar based on the score she earned in the All-USA Academic Team competition. Phi Theta Kappa is the premier honor society recognizing the academic achievement of students at associate degree colleges. Nominations to the All-USA Academic Team were evaluated on academic achievement, leadership, service and significant endeavors. Huynh received the highest score in California out of more than 2,200 nominees. At ARC, Huynh is Associated Student Body director of finance, Phi Theta Kappa president, Women in STEM Club treasurer, Pacific Islander Southeast Asian Club president, Student Senate for California Community Colleges STEM Caucus vice chair, Design Hub intern, Beacon tutor, MESA student and a member of the track team.
GHOST INK TATTOO Ghost Ink Company, a tattoo studio owned by queer Latinx couple David Ramses and Gerardo Cabral, is now open on Freeport Boulevard—thanks in large part to the Sacramento Hispanic Chamber of Commerce’s #JuntosSacramento, a grassroots program that provides resources tailored to the needs of small businesses. Ramses, an experienced tattoo artist and Honduras native, is committed to creating a safe, welcoming and comfortable tattoo experience. Cabral is a passionate community
select community parks and library greenspaces. For dates and locations, visit saclibrary.org/outdoorstorytime.
STREET FOOD GRANTS
Tattoo artist David Ramses opens Ghost Ink Company. connector, art enthusiast and creative entrepreneur. After participating in #JuntosSacramento, the couple gained the knowledge and confidence to launch their business. “Although the work is far from over, the SACHCC applauds the investments made to support Hispanic small businesses owners, especially those in the creative economy,” says Cathy Rodriguez Aguirre, SACHCC president/CEO. “We are encouraged by our Sacramento City Council and Sacramento Board of Supervisors’ strategic approach to ensure equity is at the forefront of the recovery from the pandemic.”
and led 10 Big Days of Giving, which raised millions of dollars for hundreds of area nonprofits. She elevated the foundation’s total assets to $200 million and brought the foundation’s annual grantmaking from fundholders and foundation-based grants to an all-time high of nearly $20 million annually. “Linda’s leadership has been transformative,” says board Chair Kate Stille. “She has faced challenges head-on and identified and acted on opportunities that have resulted in the foundation’s ability to make an even greater impact.”
FOUNDATION CEO
The Sacramento Children’s Chorus is looking for boys and girls entering second through 12th grade to audition for its upcoming season. SCC will hold informational meetups Tuesday, May 24, from 4:30–6:30 p.m. To schedule a time, email info@ sacramentochildrenschorus.org. For more information on SCC, visit sacramentochildrenschorus.org.
After 10 years of service, Sacramento Region Community Foundation CEO Linda Beech Cutler will step down at the end of the year. During her tenure, Cutler worked closely with the Board of Directors and senior leadership on the development of two multi-year strategic plans
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The Midtown Association has chosen three new Street Food Sacramento grant recipients to continue celebrating and amplifying Sacramento’s diverse street food culture while reducing entry barriers to historically underrepresented populations. The 2022 awardees are Fernando Ponce of Chido’s Restaurant & Bar, which offers traditional seafood dishes from Southern Mexico; the Mak Family (Hong, Minh, Yen and Ashlee) of Mak & Grille, which features authentic Iu Mien cuisine with a fusion of Chinese, Vietnamese and American foods; and Geronimo Escobar of Steady Smokin’ BBQ, which cooks up classic barbeque cuisine, as well as dishes with a Mexican influence.
In addition to coveted booth space at the Midtown Farmers Market for one year, the grant package includes booth infrastructure, marketing, insurance support and startup funds to purchase products. Participants also have access to technical assistance, a mentor and workshops through the Sacramento Metro Chamber of Commerce’s MetroBusiness Center. “The entire region wins when diverse new food offerings are introduced into our collective culinary culture,” says Emily Baime Michaels, executive director of the Midtown Association. “We look forward to watching our three new winners bring their food products to market and the delicious new offerings that await.” Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Submissions are due six weeks prior to the publication month. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n
KIDS CHORUS
OUTDOOR FAMILY STORYTIME Sacramento Public Library's Outdoor Family Storytime program returns to neighborhood parks this spring through May 28. The 30-minute program is designed for children 6 years or younger and their caregivers to build on early learning foundations that develop prereading skills and a joy of reading that lasts a lifetime. Families with young children and their older siblings are invited to join for songs, rhymes and stories at
Linda Beech Cutler leaves Sacramento Region Community Foundation.
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Sharing is
Caring
HOME-SHARE SERVICE MATCHES NEED WITH OPPORTUNITY
Lynn Nelson Photo by Linda Smolek
JL By Jessica Laskey Giving Back: Volunteer Profile
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L
ynn and Virgil Nelson have had 17 different people live in their home over the past several years. They don’t run a boarding house. They are home sharers, people who offer unused space to those who need a place to
stay. “It’s not a weird idea, it’s a proven model,” Lynn says, citing 47 home-share organizations across the U.S. “We’ve had the personal experience of how enriching it can be.” The Nelsons have always been ready to help others. Virgil is a retired American Baptist pastor and the couple traveled
the world as missionaries. When they settled in Roseville seven years ago to be closer to grandchildren, they saw the need for affordable housing and realized they could make a difference. Lynn, Virgil and nonprofit cooperative housing expert Justin Ellerby brainstormed ideas for a home-share platform to match people like the Nelsons with locals looking for housing. HomeShare American River started last June, but Ellerby and the Nelsons put years of planning into the project. Ellerby and Virgil devised a detailed written application that prospective guests and hosts fill out to identify needs and preferences. Applicants go through background checks. Then comes Lynn’s shining moment—the matchmaking. With her experience as a former director of tutoring centers matching up mentors and kids and working with Habitat for Humanity, she’s the perfect person to identify potential matches. “Both people have to be a little flexible,” Lynn says. “Sometimes it’s a close match, but we have to encourage a little flexibility. For example, one (guest applicant) didn’t feel like she had anything to give, but the (potential match) host needed help with devices and a presence in the evening when she’s lonely. The guest said she could definitely help with that, so the match worked out.” When Lynn, Ellerby and a third volunteer identify a potential match, they conduct separate interviews with host and guest to assess compatibility. If all seems positive, the match is made and the home share enters a two-week trial “before great objects are moved from one place to another.” If all is well, the guest moves in. Participants sign a household agreement that details exactly how the sharing will work, including costs such as utilities and mortgages, and duties like yard work and cleaning. Lynn says hosts can be any age, but most of HomeShare American River’s clients are seniors who need companionship and services. That’s why the nonprofit is considering contracting with an organization to train interested guests in caregiving skills. But she says home sharing is ideal for college students, renters, people transitioning through divorce, aging out of the foster care system and veterans. “There are 77,000 empty bedrooms just in Placer County,” Lynn says. “Home sharing is a more immediate way to address the need for low-rent, affordable housing and creates informal employment in exchange for low rent for people who need new skill sets. It’s a win-win situation for both guest and host.” HomeShare American River needs volunteers to assist with matchmaking. Matchmakers interview, screen, assess and suggest matches, conduct home visits, negotiate household agreements, follow through to make sure matches work out and help resolve conflicts. The group needs people all over the region—territory includes Sacramento and Placer counties and the rest of the Greater Sacramento area. “It’s very enriching to have a new perspective, a different person with different eating habits sharing your kitchen,” Lynn says. “It’s actually very comfortable. We’ve learned lots of new things. The inconveniences are minor compared to the blessing of sharing a home.” For more information, visit homeshareamericanriver.org. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail. com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n
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Alana Matthews
Thien Ho
Legal Options VOTERS TO DECIDE PROSECUTOR’S PRIORITIES
W
ith incumbent District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert vacating her office to run for state attorney general, voters in June will make a choice on the direction of law enforcement prosecutions in Sacramento County.
HS By Howard Schmidt Inside The County
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The contest is between current Assistant Chief Deputy District Attorney Thien Ho and Alana Matthews, a former member of the district attorney’s office who now works for Prosecutors Alliance of California. The winner will determine whether Sacramento County retains its reputation for law and order or embarks on a journey toward progressive criminal justice reform. Ho served as Schubert’s chief prosecutor on the Golden State Killer case. He has her endorsement, along with support from law enforcement. Matthews has support from criminal justice progressives. The Prosecutors Alliance is committed to criminal justice reform
and has endorsed Matthews. The group’s advisory board includes San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin and his Los Angeles counterpart George Gascon. Boudin implemented a progressive platform that essentially reduced criminal prosecutions. He faces a recall election in June. Gascon is another self-described progressive. The union representing deputy district attorneys in L.A. County sued Gascon over his directive to stop sentencing enhancements. A recall petition is being pursued. Ho and Matthews are both Democrats and graduates of McGeorge School of Law. Ho fled Vietnam as a child refugee with his family. He
attended UC Davis and has been a prosecutor for 20 years. Matthews attended Spelman College in Atlanta, one of the nation’s historic Black universities. After eight years with the district attorney’s office, she worked for the California Energy Commission and state Legislature before embarking on criminal justice reform. The candidates would take different approaches as district attorney. Matthews says, “From the time of arrest through charging and sentencing, the criminal justice system is plagued by systemic racism.” Ho disagrees and says he “has never encountered a prosecutor who made decisions based on race.”
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Ho says the district attorney’s office makes decisions based on facts and law. He calls Matthews’ campaign insinuation about the office’s policies and procedures a “political statement.” Matthews says if elected she would not pursue the death penalty. Ho believes death is an appropriate remedy that should not be abandoned in certain rare situations. The state’s death penalty requires a thorough review for each applicable case, Ho says. The issue is moot for now as Gov. Gavin Newsom suspended the state’s death penalty in 2019. Ho supports a bail policy that is equitable to all communities. He explains bail shouldn’t be based on one’s bank account but stresses it must be assessed on risk to public safety. Progressives advocate a no-bail approach based upon social equity, increasing the odds for offenders to repeat criminal acts as they revolve through the system. The Sacramento County Deputy Sheriff’s Association endorsed Ho. Other endorsements come from Crime Victims United, former District Attorney Jan Scully, and former sheriffs Lou Blanas and John McGinness.
Ho has the backing of the Sacramento Police Officers Association and California Association of Highway Patrolmen, plus Sacramento County Supervisor Rich Desmond of Carmichael, a retired CHP officer. Matthews’ endorsements include the California Legislative Black Caucus and Indivisible Sacramento, a grassroots organization “working to oppose the Trump agenda,” plus the Wellstone Progressive Democrats of Sacramento. Additional supporters for Matthews are Mayor Darrell Steinberg and progressive City Council members Katie Valenzuela and Mai Vang. Basically, the contest comes down to retaining current prosecutorial values or diverting to a progressive social justice agenda as practiced in San Francisco and Los Angeles counties. Howard Schmidt worked on federal, state and local levels of government, including 16 years for Sacramento County. He can be reached at howardschmidt218@aol.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
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Ready For Progress HOMELESS BALLOT MEASURE ONE PART OF MANY BY JEFF HARRIS
O
ver the last seven years, the city has spent millions of dollars and embarked upon many projects to address homelessness. After housing hundreds of people, it looked as though we were meeting needs and lowering the homeless census. Then the pandemic hit. Under county health orders, we were forced to let people “shelter in place.” Jails were emptied for the same reason. Bail schedules were reduced to zero. The homeless population grew and addiction rates skyrocketed. Camps expanded, crime increased and cheap methamphetamine circulated on our streets. We were losing the battle to reduce homelessness. Once the health order was lifted, a proliferation of camp vehicles appeared.
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Other jurisdictions enforced their parking laws. But Sacramento did not, and many homeless people took up residence in vehicles. Today the City Council is divided over how to approach the melee. I asked our code enforcement department to start clearing camp vehicles, and we relocated 162 campers and cars. Some City Council members cried foul. The muddled redistricting process exacerbated the discord. The business community, recognizing intense anger and frustration across the community, began a ballot petition drive that would compel the city to create as many as 6,400 shelter spaces. The initiative spelled out a pathway to remove unlawful camps once alternative spaces were available. There were flaws with the initiative. It would be hugely expensive, and core services would have to be cut. We lack
space for 6,400 shelter beds. And there isn’t enough staff in the region to support those expectations. City Manager Howard Chan negotiated with the business community. Together they created a ballot proposal that would compel the city to take action. Chan’s compromise is more realistic and cheaper than the original proposal. The City Council agreed to put Chan’s compromise on the November ballot. The business community agreed to stop its initiative signature drive. Even before the homeless initiative agreement, the city purchased 103 acres for shelter and housing. We have triage space at the old Science Center and are collaborating with the county to buy a building where we can open a tiered service center, similar to Haven for Hope in San Antonio.
I recently visited Haven for Hope with County Supervisor Rich Desmond. We have funded Coordinated Access and HMIS, basic data tools needed to efficiently operate all homeless programs. Together with Wellspace, city staff, the mayor’s office and myself, we opened the Substance Use Respite and Engagement Center to deal with addiction. Now we are poised to make significant progress on homelessness. If Gov. Gavin Newsom follows through with his Care Court idea and we collaborate with the county on behavioral health strategies, we have a real shot to clean up our city. Jeff Harris is City Council representative for District 3. He can be reached at (916) 808-7003 or jsharris@ cityofsacramento.org. n
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Deadly Sins CITY HALL CAN’T DUCK DOWNTOWN HORRORS
T
hey needed to say something with six bodies scattered around the sidewalk at 10th and K streets. So Darrell Steinberg and Katie Valenzuela took shelter in the safest place they knew. They blamed guns. With an actor’s studied passion, Steinberg spoke of broken hearts and school shootings. Valenzuela, newer at this sort of performance, tearfully described a phone call at 2:30 a.m. and waded into the weeds of the nation’s fascination with armaments. What the mayor and City Council member didn’t discuss were strategies to keep Downtown streets safe. They
RG By R.E. Graswich City Beat
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offered no ideas about preventing future massacres like the one that sent 18 casualties to local hospitals and the county morgue on a dark Sunday morning in April. Even more insulting, Steinberg and Valenzuela pretended the mayhem shocked them. Really? Nothing has become more predictable in Downtown Sacramento than the occasional deadly shootout. Even a dense politician can’t feign surprise about the routine. One week before Christmas at 20th and K streets, several men left a bar, fell into disagreements, retreated to their cars, secured artillery and began shooting. When police arrived, one man was lying in the street, bleeding from a gunshot wound. He was pronounced dead. Cops described the scene as “some type of disturbance between two groups that escalated into the shooting.” The participants were gang members, authorities concluded. Last July, police rushed to the Old Sacramento Waterfront and found
six people bleeding in the street. Two were dead, four wounded. Using amorphous language that has become boilerplate—a cut and paste job—cops explained, “There was some type of altercation between two groups before the shooting and multiple firearms have been recovered at the scene.” Sound familiar? The December and July fusillades were preliminary bouts to the murderous main event witnessed in April on 10th Street. But other than crowd size and victim counts, these three tragedies were identical. The mayor and City Council should have seen the horrors coming. They took no serious action. Here’s how the violence comes together: Start with crowded streets in entertainment districts. Add gang members and their friends out for a good time, mixing with civilians. Suddenly, a fight starts, followed by a mad dash to vehicles where gangsters store their weapons. Shots fired. People dead and wounded, often not because they were involved but
because they were in the wrong place (Downtown) at the wrong time (when bars are crowded or closing). As casualties grow, patterns become inescapable. Resolution is defiant. The mayor and City Council have no easy options, so they search for distractions, deflect the blame and point to weak gun laws, even though California has some of the toughest in the nation. “This senseless epidemic of guns violence must be addressed,” Steinberg says, neatly absolving himself and his city from responsibility. Coincidentally, the mayor is a champion of mental health expenditures. Here he finds another opportunity. Steinberg wants more dollars for mental health outreach to young people, a reasonable segue because only an insane person would shoot into a crowd. “It is a sickness in our culture, and we have to do everything we can to cure that sickness,” he says. Realities crush the mayor’s musings. He knows guns won’t disappear. Regardless of the destruction they bring, guns are embedded in our laws and psyche. As for mental health, it’s foolish to believe a frayed bureaucracy can succeed where society failed. Which leaves the mayor and City Council with tough choices about matters they can control: entertainment licenses and hours, security requirements, police budgets and deployments. Steinberg avoids those choices. “We don’t want to shut down, that would be the wrong response,” he says. Maybe so, but the City Council must take serious, thoughtful steps to make Sacramento safe. Responsibility for the horrors of April, December and July rests with the men who pulled the triggers. This doesn’t mean the city should make it so easy for them. R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
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Voters Weigh In HOMELESS PROPOSAL MOVES TO BALLOT
I
f you’re searching for hope in California’s homeless crisis, look no further than recent comments by Gov. Gavin Newsom about his proposal to create mental health courts in every county of the state. “There’s no compassion stepping over people in the streets and sidewalks,” Newsom said. “We could hold hands, have a candlelight vigil, talk about the way the world should be, or we could take some damn responsibility to
GD By Gary Delsohn Building Our Future
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implement our ideas, and that’s what we’re doing differently here.” Newsom’s plan would allow California courts to order people with debilitating psychiatric issues into treatment, whether they want it or not. Since a growing number of homeless people are chronic drug users or suffer from mental health issues, that would get a lot of people off the streets, assuming we beef up treatment programs to accommodate them. When America’s most liberal governor adopts a harder line on the homeless crisis, it’s a big deal. It’s even more noteworthy since Newsom was mayor of San Francisco from 2004 to 2010, where the more money the city throws at the problem, the worse it seems to get. Despite persistent efforts of Mayor Darrell Steinberg and others, the same
can be said of Sacramento, where estimates show the homeless population has doubled the past few years. None of this dismal record has been lost on the public. Its attitude seems to have hardened, too. That helps explain why Michael Shellenberger’s strident book, “San Fransicko: Why Progressives Ruin Cities,” has found a sympathetic audience. Shellenberger has announced plans to run for governor against Newsom this year. In Sacramento, a recent poll of likely voters found 71 percent cite homelessness as the most important issue facing the city. Not surprisingly, the same poll showed 57 percent have little or no confidence in local government’s ability to address it. The poll by Hart Research Associates from early 2022 registered overwhelming support for a ballot
measure that would compel the city to enforce its ban on outdoor encampments. Daniel Conway, a chief of staff to former mayor Kevin Johnson, was behind the proposal. He and several supporters from the business community convinced the City Council to put a slightly watered-down version on the November ballot. “People are frustrated, angry and totally cynical about government’s ability to effectively address this issue,” Conway tells me. He calls his proposal “a first step toward a larger solution rather than a total solution in and of itself.” “It basically says that in Sacramento we don’t let people live and die outside while the city gets its act together,” he says. “That’s no longer acceptable. It says there are safe places to go, they just aren’t Chavez Park or the parkway.” Under the ballot initiative, the city would have to provide shelter for 60 percent of the homeless population based on the latest federal “pointin-time” count. Any city resident could sue if the measure passes and is not enforced, as is usually the case with Sacramento’s existing ban on encampments. There’s little doubt a new strategy is needed that combines empathy with accountability and enforcement. Homelessness should not be a crime, as Steinberg has maintained, but camping illegally, defecating wherever you choose and openly shooting up hard drugs in public can’t be accepted behavior. I’ve talked to business leaders who believe the city’s response has been woefully ineffective and misguided. Despite all the good intentions, investment in shelters, new housing and other projects, they say serious harm is being done to the city and many neighborhoods, particularly Downtown, and not enough chronic homeless people get the help they need. One such business leader told me Sacramento is being “destroyed” by our failure to make a visible dent in the problem. That may seem like a harsh assessment. But if a big, messy, dangerous encampment shows up in your neighborhood, you will probably agree. Gary Delsohn can be reached at gdelsohn@gmail.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
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Anne Marie Schubert
Stepping Up A PROSECUTOR’S BID TO SUPPORT CRIME VICTIMS BY ANNE MARIE SCHUBERT GUEST OPINION
A
s I prepare to step aside after nearly eight years as Sacramento County district attorney, I am proud to say our office is on solid ground. Our teams of prosecutors, investigators, forensic analysis experts and essential support staff are unified and focused. We are unwavering in our commitment to protect the public and ensure justice for crime victims. Beyond the courtroom, we have built partnerships with community organizations and everyday citizens. With each relationship, our work becomes more effective. Tasked with handling thousands of criminal cases annually, the district attorney’s office endured unprecedented challenges over the past two years. Crime didn’t stop during the pandemic. On many days, our resilience was tested. But with extraordinary cooperation, flexibility and ingenuity, the wheels of justice continued to turn. Despite our success, as county voters prepare to elect a new district attorney, my replacement faces significant challenges. Public safety has become a
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partisan issue. The Legislature and local governments have adopted laws and policies that weaken accountability for people who do harm to others. We have seen early releases of violent inmates, rampant theft and fraud, a flood of illegal guns and a sharp increase in violent crime. Bad laws and policies created a tsunami that endangers public safety. These rules limit the consequences for criminals and leave inadequate time for rehabilitation, support and oversight for offenders. The next district attorney will inherit this environment of partisanship and misguided laws. They must be prepared to raise the alarm, inform the public and oppose policies that prioritize criminals over crime victims. It’s critical that county voters support a real prosecutor as the next district attorney. That’s why I support Thien Vu Ho, a career prosecutor who has brought justice to some of our most violent criminals, including East Area Rapist-Golden State Killer Joseph James DeAngelo. With integrity and passion for justice, Thien will serve the county with honor and distinction as he leads a district attorney’s office that holds offenders
accountable, protects the public and stands up for victims. My decision to step away from the district attorney’s office was not easy. For 31 years, I prosecuted some of California’s worst people—murders, rapists and child molesters. I grew up in the trenches of our justice system. From my earliest days, I knew the job meant more than putting criminals into prison. Equally important was advocacy—in the courtroom and community—for crime victims and public safety. I built a career trying to protect kids from sexual predators and human traffickers. I worked to take illegal guns off the streets and out of the hands of felons and prohibited persons. I witnessed the toll and devastation that crime has on people and our neighborhoods. At the same time, I saw the problems caused by politicians who seek votes by avoiding discussions about crime victims and public safety. I saw the devastation caused by elected officials who promote laws and policies that ultimately promote more crime and violence. Residents of every community in California live with the results of
these policies. In Sacramento, they see the epidemic of drug addiction, mental health crises and homelessness. They worry about becoming victims to skyrocketing violent crime. I’m a prosecutor, not a politician. From my perspective, the politicization of public safety serves no one except people who break the law. That’s why I decided to step away from my work as district attorney and run for California attorney general. I know there’s a better way than what we have seen from reckless district attorneys in California who support criminals over crime victims and public safety. Their policies will further destroy the safety of residents across our state. This is chaos. We must do better. As California attorney general, I can and will step in when a local district attorney doesn’t do his or her job. I will stand up for victims of crime, bring order to the justice system, and work relentlessly to end the chaos. Anne Marie Schubert is Sacramento County district attorney and running for California attorney general. She can be reached through her campaign website at annemarieforag.com. n
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Never Too Late RETIREE FINDS LIFE BEGINS IN SACRAMENTO
A
nn Huntsman made a bold, life-changing decision in 2017. Turning 80, she decided to uproot from Cupertino and move to Sacramento to be near her only grandchild. “I had lived for decades in a two-story, six-bedroom Spanish-style home where we raised our family,” Huntsman says. “It was very traditional, a job to maintain, and I had accumulated years of possessions. But it was time for me to start again in a whole new style of living.” Huntsman is a retired nurse and investor in health care technology. Her daughter and family live a mile away. She could not be happier.
CH By Cecily Hastings Photography by Aniko Kiezel OPEN HOUSE
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Ann Huntsman
Her condominium group in McKinley Village is called The Alders, the only condos in the development. Hers was the first unit built. The Alders face the community clubhouse and Burnett Miller Park. Village developer Phil Angelides and his wife Julie live across the street. The condo is 2,100 square feet, with three bedrooms and two bathrooms. It’s all located on the first floor with an attached two-car garage. “It was exactly what I dreamed of finding here in Sacramento,” she says. “All the finishes of this home, including the flooring, cabinets and tile, were selected by another buyer who backed out at the last minute,” Huntsman says. “Fortunately, they had exquisite taste and it was designed exactly as I would have done it myself.” Since she was starting from scratch with lighting, furniture and accessories, Huntsman interviewed three interior designers. “I selected Elizabeth Lake because she was thoughtful, talented and had extensive experience with lighting design,” Huntsman says. Lake had worked as a lighting consultant for Lumens Light + Living and was starting her own interior design company. She helped Huntsman select a color scheme with shades of blue, including her favorite color, teal.
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The interior design is sleek, polished and bold, with earthy touches, including a textured wool rug in the great room. The lighting is dramatic. Sconces, pendants and floor fixtures are different but coordinate beautifully. To manage the natural light, Lake helped Huntsman select custom soft drapes and shades for every room. Art spotlights were installed to highlight Huntsman’s new local art collection. Her daughter gave her two large paintings by Maren Conrad that became the focal point of the great room and compliment a glossy black grand piano. The artworks feature large black on white, and white on black goldfish drawings, each with a glass-like shiny
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surface. Other landscapes and abstracts by local artists fill the home. The bathrooms are unique with metallic wallpaper and decorative lighting to personalize the spaces. Mirrored cabinets help open the rooms. The master bedroom has a custom wooden headboard that incorporates custom side tables, built by a local woodworker. Huntsman says the backyard patio— the only unit that has one—started as a mud puddle. She created an outdoor living room with a firepit, an outdoor dining area and built-in barbecue station. Trees and shrubs have grown to create privacy. “The filtered shade is cool and comfortable even on hot days,” she says.
“I always wanted an all-white garden and that is how I selected plant materials,” Huntsman says. Her collection includes iceberg roses, gardenias, crepe myrtle trees, liriopes, agapanthuses, daisies, hydrangeas and more. The concrete patio is topped with beautiful soft gray, large limestone pavers. “It feels like an extension of the house, and that’s how I use it.” Some might think adjusting to a new community would be difficult for an octogenarian. This was not the case for Huntsman. “I’ve always enjoyed music and I found great live performances, including the wonderful philharmonic, here in Sacramento,” she says.
And Huntsman found outdoor activities, including daily aqua aerobics at Rio del Oro Sports Club, and the community’s exceptional golf courses. Huntsman’s recipe for creating an enriched life has been realized. She has a new modern home, a location close to family and a small garden to tend. She’s making new friends and finding fun activities to keep her young. Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications.com. To recommend a home or garden, contact editor@insidepublications. com. More photography and previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
Rich Desmond Photos by Mark Rakich
Katie Valenzuela
Nowhere to Go I
expected a crumpled candy wrapper here, an empty beer can there, a smattering of trash to pick up on a clear morning along the American River Parkway. What I got was the sad and staggering refuse of abandoned homeless camps. Mattresses, sleeping bags, glass bottles, food containers, bicycle tires, tarps, tents, toiletries, children’s toys, shoes, clothing and more, some half buried, most covered with muck from high and low river tides. Sacramento Picks It Up! and the American River Parkway Foundation hold several volunteer cleanup events every week along the Sacramento and American rivers, creeks and waterways. The work is strenuous, exhausting and filthy. Everyone wears long pants and heavy work gloves. Some don masks to mitigate the dust. Many carry buckets and trash-grabber sticks, which don’t work on broken, half-buried lawn chairs. You have to use your hands. The task is seemingly endless. But the reward comes later, looking out over one small expanse of unspoiled
CR By Cathryn Rakich
landscape, no longer burdened by manmade debris. While the cleanups focus on abandoned encampments, an increasing number of occupied camps pose environmental and safety issues to the parkway. In January, ARPF sent a letter to Sacramento city and county representatives, demanding local leaders address the “growing concern of illegal camping along the American River Parkway.” The letter cites “fire danger, diminished water quality and hazardous materials resulting from intravenous drug use.” Among the demands, ARPF wants at least 750 illegal campers removed from the parkway this year and a detailed plan on how this will be accomplished. The foundation calls for funding to restore damage, such as burn scars, caused by illegal camp fires. The letter seeks healthy water for wildlife and humans, and additional testing for “E. coli and other bacteria attributable to human waste,” along with specific plans to mitigate outbreaks. “Over the years, we have seen the effects of illegal camping get worse and worse,” says Dianna Poggetto, ARPF executive director. While 13 miles are in the city’s jurisdiction, the county owns and manages the 23-mile parkway. “The goal is for the city and county to work together in getting the unhoused the services they need.”
ILLEGAL CAMPING THREATENS AMERICAN RIVER PARKWAY
ARPF invited city and county leaders to participate in a cleanup and witness firsthand the devastation. Sacramento County Supervisors Rich Desmond, Patrick Kennedy and Don Nottoli, and City Council member Katie Valenzuela joined parkway representatives, agency staff and media to view and clean trails near Northgate Boulevard. This was not Desmond’s first cleanup. “The last time we were here, I probably picked up 200 needles,” the District 3 supervisor says. Addiction issues throughout California, including Sacramento, “make this crisis so much more difficult to get a handle on.” Desmond supports ARPF and its work to protect the parkway. “I am glad the parks foundation wrote that letter,” he says. “I love the political pressure they are applying and I think they should keep doing it. “As far as removing all the campers in one fell swoop, we would not do that until there are more resources.” Park rangers estimate 2,000 people live along the 23-mile parkway. “That will take time and an organized effort,” Desmond says. “And ideally a location where we can direct these folks, where they can get the help they need, they can get connected to treatment, job training, housing.” Councilmember Valenzuela believes the city and county “are all pretty earnest in working together to figure this out. We are earnest to work with
the county to scale up services we need. Earnest to help identify locations that can work.” COVID made everything worse, Desmond says. “The public health order said, as a result of CDC guidelines, do not disrupt homeless encampments because we don’t want to increase the spread of the disease. That resulted in a lot of camps getting entrenched over the last couple of years.” Another challenge Desmond cites is Martin v. Boise, a 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that people cannot be punished for sleeping outside on public property when there is no home or shelter available. But Martin v. Boise “does not prevent us from moving campers from the parkway,” Desmond says. “It did not say you can camp anywhere in public, any time, in any way. It just says you cannot criminalize homelessness.” The bigger challenge, he says, “is having more capacity for folks,” from car camping areas and permanent housing to addiction and mental health treatment. “We need to have capacity so when we do clear an encampment there is a place for people to go.” Cathryn Rakich can be reached at crakich@surewest.net. Previous stories on local homelessness issues can be found and shared at InsideSacramento. com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n
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Keep Moving TO LIVE LONGER, BETTER STAY ACTIVE
hat’s better than a long life? A long, active and healthy life. Here’s where transportation policy and health policy work together. People are living longer. There have been dramatic increases in lifespan over the last century, but increases in healthspan have not kept pace. Healthspan is the portion of your life spent in good health, free from chronic disease and the disabilities of aging. Clearly, it’s desirable to be robust rather than frail as we age. There are significant personal, familial and social costs when someone becomes so frail or bewildered that they need help with ordinary activities. Being unable to perform routine tasks represents a lack of function that puts a burden on loved ones and society.
W
WS By Walt SeLfert Getting There
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The sad fact is age is a risk factor for many conditions, including cancer, diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, osteoporosis, high blood pressure and dementia. Age is a risk that can’t be avoided. Currently, about 20 percent of a person’s life is lived with morbidity, that is, having a disease or medical condition. Today we’re living not just with a pandemic. We’re also in the midst of chronic diseases. This reality so concerned oncologist and bioethicist Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel that he wrote a 2014 article (when he was 57) in The Atlantic magazine titled, “Why I hope to die at 75.” He expressed fears about a non-vigorous, nonproductive, non-creative life. His notion, greatly simplified, was: Give me health, or give me death. Many baby boomers have entered their 70s. Most probably disagree with Emanuel. Still, they are likely experiencing the physical deterioration that often accompanies aging. Despite America’s wealth and enormous outlays for health care, we fare poorly in outcomes compared to other developed countries. Even worse are our disturbing differences in lifespan and healthspan among different socioeconomic groups.
The best approach to health is through a healthy lifestyle. We know not smoking, maintaining a good diet, social networks and physical activity increase lifespan and healthspan. Making positive changes in those areas shorten the gap between the end of a healthy life and the end of life. Though public health has historically not been factored into transportation decisions, the two are bound together. Transportation causes air pollution, fatalities and injuries from traffic crashes. On the flip side, biking and walking for transportation (not just for recreation) are simple, cost-effective ways to incorporate physical activity into daily life. Walking or biking for a trip to a grocery or drug store, restaurant, post office or workplace can be just as convenient as driving—and more pleasurable. It’s not possible to correct all the consequences of a lifetime of poor eating, but it’s never too late to reap the benefits of increased physical activity. Start right now. Research indicates bicycling increases both lifespan and healthspan and reduces the risk of dementia. A New Zealand study found those who biked to work had a 13 percent reduction
in mortality. A British study showed bicycling improved the immune system. Carlijn Kamphuis of the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands observes, “You could say that for every hour you cycle, you get an hour back in return. So, it adds to your life actually.” And it adds to a healthier life. Bicycling helps avoid the four common diseases (among others) that account for 80 percent of chronic disease related deaths: diabetes, cardiovascular disease, respiratory disorders and (some) cancers. The World Health Organization designated 2021-2030 the decade of healthy aging. Prevention and delay of disease make economic and moral sense. We can focus not just on preventing death, but prolonging health. Longterm poor health doesn’t have to be inevitable. Moving our bodies needs to be a movement. Walt Seifert is executive director of Sacramento Trailnet, an organization devoted to promoting greenways with paved trails. He can be reached at bikeguy@surewest.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
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Smart, Loyal, Energetic TRAINING IS KEY TO KEEPING GERMAN SHEPHERDS OUT OF SHELTERS
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alk through the county’s animal shelter on Bradshaw Road. The highceiling entryway opens to a spacious roundabout surrounded with glasswalled condos, each holding one or two large dogs, many pit bulls and German shepherds, and their mixed counterparts.
CR By Cathryn Rakich Animals & Their Allies
38
ILP/GRID MAY n 22
Stroll through the back door to an open-air corridor. Large windows allow visitors to view groups of small dogs housed together. Chihuahua and chihuahua mixes run back and forth, yelping with excitement. Further down are hallways lined with kennels housing medium and large dogs. Again, pit bulls and German shepherds dominate. When did German shepherds start keeping pace with pit bulls and chihuahuas, which have been the prevailing breeds in shelters for years? “There is definitely an increase in German shepherds up and down the state,” says Bradshaw’s director, Annette Bedsworth.
Last year, the Bradshaw Animal Shelter took in 452 German shepherds and German shepherd mixes. The Sacramento SPCA took in 420. German shepherds ranked No. 2, behind pit bulls, at the city’s Front Street Animal Shelter, which took in 466. “Unaltered German shepherds can give birth to up to 15 puppies—with eight puppies the average litter size,” says Dawn Foster, SSPCA marketing and communications director. “This means the population can grow very quickly if they are not spayed or neutered, overwhelming families and shelters.” German shepherds are often used as guard dogs to protect property.
“In many cases they are primarily outdoor dogs in yards that are not properly secured or they are living on a property that is not inhabited and their owners are unaware they are loose,” says Allison Harris, Sacramento County public information officer. For Cindy Williams, founder of El Dorado County German Shepherd Rescue, the reason for the increase is threefold: popular movies, COVID and lack of training. For example, the 2015 movie “Max” stars a military dog that helps American Marines in Afghanistan. The 2021 movie “Dog” takes viewers on a road trip with an Army ranger and his mischievous canine. In
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both movies, the dogs are Belgium Malinois, which look like German shepherds. “People get them mixed up all the time,” Williams says. “They want anything with perky ears standing up that looks wolfish.” Plus, dogs in movies appear well trained. “They don’t realize that training for the Malinois can be 10 hours a day, solid every day.” Bedsworth agrees. “Belgium Malinois are beautiful dogs—and they’re smart,” she says. “But with the wrong type of home environment, they are going to end up in shelters because they are extremely highenergy dogs. You can’t just put them in the backyard and expect them to thrive. It’s not going to work.” German shepherds are known for their intelligence, loyalty and strength. They are a herding or working breed. Without physical and mental exercise, they are prone to anxiety and nervous aggression. “German shepherd puppies are incredibly cute and adopters are often attracted to the breed because of their appearance and intelligence,” Foster
says. “However, not every family is prepared to provide the mental and physical stimulation needed to keep this breed happy and healthy.” If they don’t receive training at an early age, as well as regular exercise, they can become destructive and difficult to manage, Foster says. “These behaviors often result in them being surrendered to a shelter.” The pandemic didn’t help. Due to the COVID lockdown, people were not getting professional training for their new four-legged family members or taking them out for socialization. “It was a kick in the pants for everybody,” Williams says. “Now you have these dogs who are going on 15 months to 2 years old who didn’t get socialized. ‘My dog is reacting to other dogs.’ Well of course he is. He never got out. He doesn’t know what to do.” With more people working from home with extra time for a pet, shelter adoptions were up. Some saw a chance to capitalize on the craze. “I think people were breeding German shepherds to make money,” Bedsworth says.
In addition, large dogs have longer lengths of stay in the shelters. “Mom and Dad want a little lap dog. They fly out the door,” Bedsworth adds. “German shepherds and pit bulls take longer to adopt out.” German shepherds, who have a lifespan of 9 to 13 years, are also prone to hereditary issues, such as hip dysplasia, that can be expensive to treat. Williams wants people to know there are resources to help families keep their animal companions, whether the problem is behavioral, medical or financial. “If you are having any issues or challenges with your dog, reach out to a reputable trainer. Call a rescue group. We can tell you where to go, what to do and give you tips.”
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Going Buggy FROM BEES TO BEETLES, THEY’RE BENEFICIAL
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ardening is fertilizer for the soul. Admire a flower. Inhale a patch of lavender. A few minutes with nature bring obvious benefits. Less obvious and underappreciated are creatures that live in our soil, on our plants or drop by Sacramento gardens for a visit. Gardens teem with both pests and, hopefully, beneficial creatures. Beneficial, in a gardening sense, means critters that help in pollination and control pests. They also can improve soil. As a lad, I learned to appreciate honeybees. Dad was a honeybee hobbyist who tended hives and extracted honey. Guess who was conscripted to help. Bees are fascinating insects and essential pollinators. Observe them as they dart from flower to flower, collecting pollen and transferring it from anther (male plant reproductive part) to stigma (female). Bees forage
DV By Dan Vierria Garden Jabber
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ILP/GRID MAY n 22
for nectar and water. My pool net has rescued dozens of struggling bees. More than 100 million years on Earth and bees still have not learned to swim. Earthworms generally are garden gold. Turn garden soil and if you spot earthworms, you have the type of soil plants love. Earthworms will not stick around poor growing conditions. They flee if soil is too dry or wet, too acidic, too hot or cold. Earthworms aerate soil when they burrow, allowing better air and water penetration, and they eat organic matter and add more with castings (poop). The wigglers are self-contained recyclers. Solarization is the process of using clear plastic sheets and intense summer heat to raise soil temperatures, kill harmful organisms and weed seeds. Earthworms are smart enough to sense the danger and will dive deeper into cooler soil. They return when it’s safe. Lady beetles are the most recognized member of the Garden Good Guys Club, although one species could be mistaken for the voracious cucumber beetle pest. Once you spot aphids on roses, lady beetles will likely join the feast. One lady beetle can consume 100 aphids a day and 5,000 during its lifetime. Whiteflies, mealy bugs and spider mites are among other pests preferred by lady beetles.
Avoid using broad-spectrum insecticides that kill everything, including lady beetles! A strong spray of water will dislodge pests and there are safer alternatives such as insecticidal soap. Should you spot an alligator-looking bug on your plants, don’t kill it. Lady beetle larvae look entirely different from adults, and have a raging appetite for plant pests. They eat as much and as often as a teenager. While I don’t want to discourage anybody from buying and releasing large populations of lady beetles on plants, be aware that our friends will only stick around for a day or two. More feared than respected, spiders are beneficial insects in the garden, preying on pests. Did you celebrate National Save a Spider Day on March 14? Spiders are arachnids, not insects. Gardeners often have a skin-crawling tale of walking into a massive spider web that popped up overnight. Spiders are not as cuddly as lady beetles, but if you can tolerate them, please do. Most are harmless. Birds are beneficial because they aid in pollination, disperse seeds (not always a positive) and are adept at insect and rodent control. A tomato hornworm’s final act is often to serve as bird breakfast.
Ground beetles, solider beetles, assassin bugs, hoverflies and parasitic wasps are beneficial insects. The praying mantis eats pest insects and beneficial insects, including bees and butterflies. Mixed reviews for the praying mantis. Butterflies are much loved. Graceful and colorful, butterflies flutter about pollinating plants. However, in its caterpillar larval stage, it eats your plants. Mostly, we forgive the bad behavior. How do you distinguish good bugs from bad bugs? Visit sacmg.ucanr. edu and in the left-side column click on “Beneficials” or “Insects” for photos and information. Included is a comprehensive list of garden plants that attract beneficial insects. Now, go hug a good bug! Dan Vierria is a University of California Cooperative Extension Master Gardener for Sacramento County. He can be reached at masterg29@ gmail.com. For answers to gardening questions, contact the UCCE Master Gardeners at (916) 876-5338, email mgsacramento@ucanr.edu or visit sacmg.ucanr.edu. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
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41
Untie Me
FANCY DRESS DOESN’T WORK IN THIS JOB
I
’m hoping whoever reads this is looking for a job, specifically a hospice chaplain position. I currently hold the title, but am eager for my employer to hire a replacement so I can retire—again. The right candidate must be an approachable and caring person, unlike the man I interviewed some years ago. He arrived wearing a suit and became offended when I told him our hospice chaplains leave their clergy trappings at home. “Why?” he asked. “That level of dress can be a bit overstated when you sit with dying people. This job can’t be about maintaining your pastoral appearance. It has to be about who the patient is.” “I’ve never had an employer disapprove of my neckties,” he answered.
NB By Norris Burkes Spirit Matters
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ILP/GRID MAY n 22
I understood his protest, as we’d come from similar backgrounds. I too had once pastored a conservative congregation where the business suit was the uniform of the day. My padre dress became a problem during my first days as a chaplain intern at UC Davis Medical Center in 1992. The training quickly intensified as I found myself sucked into the trauma and drama of the emergency department. One day, an ER nurse approached me in the hallway and said, “I think the man in room No. 3 could really use a chaplain.” Did I detect sarcasm in the request? No, I thought as I scurried off to see the patient. Hopefully the wisdom imparted from a well-dressed chaplain would bring a healing effect. As I approached the room, I stopped the exiting orderly and asked, “What is that repulsive odor?” “Maggots, lots of them.” My expression told him I suspected a prank, so he offered more information. “Our patient is a homeless man who arrived with an infected leg laceration. He spent the last several nights sleeping on the ground, so maggots entered the infected wound.” I cringed. “Maggots probably saved his leg,” he said cheerfully. “How’s that?”
“Since maggots only eat dead skin, they likely kept the infection from moving up his leg.” I shot the orderly a repulsed look as I entered the patient’s room. The odor was intense and unforgettable. I looked the man over, head to toe. This shriveled lump of a human was malnourished and covered with overgrown matted red hair. He was cooked brown from the neck up. I stared at the poor man’s gnarled toenails and fingernails, noticing particularly the scratches that whipped around his body. The patient returned my gaze and looked me up and down. It was hard for him not to see my crumpled expression. But more than that, he saw the trappings of privilege, from my tasseled loafers to my pinstripe suit and dark blue tie. My silver-plated wristwatch, Bible and oversized college ring proclaimed our overstated differences. “I’m Chaplain Burkes,” I said. No first names when you’re trying to keep that pastoral distance. “The hell, you say!” He continued with expletive-laced directions that suggested I turn around and go to a fiery eternal destination. I’m ashamed to admit, I was glad to go anywhere rather than remain in that room.
Anywhere, that is, except into the path of the smirking nurse who sent me there. She offered counsel to the newbie chaplain intern. “You might want to lose the suit,” she said. “Why,” I asked. “I’m guessing that our patient probably considered your suit as repulsive as you found his maggotinfested leg.” Eventually, her mentorship taught me to shed the trappings of Sunday-goto-meeting clothes and don the more approachable short sleeves and Dockers. Sadly, my neckties took a little longer to die. In the meantime, we are still looking for a fulltime chaplain at Hospice of the Foothills in Grass Valley. Requirements are posted on indeed.com. Suits need not apply. Norris Burkes can be reached at comment@thechaplain.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. Burkes is available for public speaking at civic organizations, places of worship, veterans groups and more. For details and fees, visit thechaplain.net. n
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7121 STELLA LN #23 3944 OAK VILLA CIR 5610 NORTH AVE 3926 OAK VILLA CIR 5439 KENNETH AVE 5125 VON WAY 5249 MARCONI AVE 4109 RUTLEDGE WAY 5909 SARAH CT 6237 TEMPLETON DR 5954 ASHWORTH WAY 4037 CHAMPLAIN LN 5340 GREELEY WAY 5417 EDGERLY WAY 4900 HEATHERDALE LN 4624 PEDERSEN 2222 GUNN RD 2909 GARFIELD 4951 KURZ 4920 FOSTER WAY 3205 MAYER WAY 6052 DENVER DR 5215 SIRBUCK WAY 5932 RANGER WAY 4743 MELVIN DR 4812 KENNETH AVE 3609 ORANGERIE WAY 2721 GARFIELD AVE 5140 NORTH AVE 2522 LOS FELIZ WAY 4663 LADERA WAY 3949 MAUDRAY WAY 4946 THOR WAY 5109 WALNUT GARDEN CT 5416 BRANINBURG CT 4800 NORTH AVE 6935 LINCOLN CREEK CIR 3640 KIEKEBUSCH CT 3328 PARKS LANE 6310 SAMOA WAY 5940 SARAH CT 2101 HAMLET PL 1500 DEL DAYO DR 1724 WOODACRE CT 6237 PALM DR 1500 KINGSFORD DR 6549 STANLEY AVE 1930 CENACLE LN 6456 LANDIS AVE
95815
217 ARCADE BLVD 2623 CLAY ST 1080 SONOMA AVE 2605 CROSBY WAY 1015 SONOMA AVE 3015 DEL PASO BLVD 1078 GLENROSE AVE 2742 NORWOOD AVE 2856 BRANCH ST 470 LAMPASAS AVE 424 LEITCH AVE 615 LEE DR
$320,000 $350,000 $360,000 $371,000 $385,000 $395,000 $427,000 $460,000 $465,000 $470,000 $495,000 $500,000 $505,000 $510,000 $515,000 $515,000 $520,000 $529,000 $530,000 $535,000 $545,000 $555,000 $555,000 $560,000 $560,000 $560,000 $572,182 $590,000 $605,000 $620,000 $625,000 $640,000 $650,000 $695,000 $704,000 $705,000 $715,000 $738,000 $750,000 $760,000 $799,000 $803,000 $810,000 $810,000 $850,000 $1,500,000 $1,700,000 $2,295,000 $3,000,000
$145,000 $162,000 $225,000 $232,000 $245,000 $290,000 $313,000 $345,000 $350,000 $355,000 $370,000 $398,700
2932 GROVE AVE 1045 SONOMA AVE 2497 BEN ALI WAY 2047 CANTERBURY ROAD 166 SOUTHGATE RD
95816
3117 B ST 1510 33RD ST 3114 N ST 2706 N ST 3341 FORNEY WAY 1412 27TH ST 42 FONSECA ST 3135 SERRA WAY 801 36TH ST 2120 G ST
95817
3520 SAN JOSE 3972 1ST AVE 3018 44TH ST 3541 38TH ST 3311 V ST 3520 9TH AVE 6301 3RD AVE 3645 4TH AVE 10 MIDWAY CT 3424 40TH ST 2751 KROY WAY 3265 11TH AVE 2809 63RD 6183 4TH AVE 3717 6TH AVE 3530 MULE ALY 2486 41ST ST 4116 U ST 3 JUPES CT 2425-2431 33RD ST
95818
432 TAILOFF LN #80 2605 CLEAT LN #30B 2665 SAN FERNANDO WAY 2168 6TH AVE 2107 7TH AVE 932 FREMONT WAY 808 FREMONT WAY 2574 18TH ST 2764 RIVERSIDE BLVD 2315 W ST 2429 BINNEN LN 1807 5TH AVE 2920 25TH ST 1861 CARAMAY WAY 972 SWANSTON DR 2762 26TH ST 2789 LAND PARK DR 3601 LAND PARK DR 1759 8TH AVE 2924 MARTY WAY 1576 9TH AVE 1830 10TH AVE
$405,000 $430,000 $435,000 $646,000 $805,000
$590,000 $619,000 $630,000 $640,000 $700,000 $745,000 $755,000 $765,000 $1,000,000 $1,600,000
$332,000 $350,000 $382,000 $389,000 $421,000 $430,000 $475,000 $480,000 $480,000 $490,000 $517,000 $550,000 $560,000 $570,000 $579,000 $580,000 $728,200 $735,000 $758,000 $1,035,000
$335,000 $510,000 $550,000 $562,500 $575,000 $680,000 $690,000 $710,000 $725,000 $780,000 $795,000 $800,000 $810,000 $860,000 $927,000 $1,015,000 $1,175,000 $1,215,000 $1,235,000 $1,312,000 $1,340,000 $1,400,000
2374 5TH AVE 2366 5TH AVE
95819
1644 51ST ST 3950 BREUNER AVE 1116 49TH ST 700 42ND ST 1449 51ST ST 516 SANDBURG DR 5270 L ST 5254 MINERVA AVE 4100 FOLSOM BLVD #6A 1511 54TH ST 5311 AILEEN WAY 1056 56TH ST 1542 CHRISTOPHER WAY 47 LUPINE WAY 1548 50TH ST 1108 57TH ST 1135 JANEY WAY 1047 47TH ST 76 COLOMA WAY 817 50TH ST 941 45TH ST 1355 41ST ST 450 45TH ST 1128 43RD ST 904 SONOMA WAY 1230 40TH ST
$1,484,240 $1,604,825
$575,000 $589,900 $595,000 $600,000 $665,000 $680,000 $685,000 $700,000 $730,000 $750,000 $775,000 $775,000 $800,000 $810,000 $815,000 $910,000 $930,000 $960,000 $990,000 $1,150,000 $1,207,000 $1,300,000 $1,310,000 $1,325,000 $1,350,000 $1,700,000
95821
3625 LARCHMONT SQUARE LN$299,000 2107 WHIPPOORWILL LN $325,000 2233 EDISON AVE $360,000 2213 SHAW ST $400,000 2342 GRANITE WAY $445,000 3933 LORETO WAY $455,000 3008 HAMPSHIRE DR $465,000 2904 JADE COVE CT $475,000 3305 CLUB LN $480,000 2621 PARK HILLS DR $510,000 3631 MULHOLLAND WAY $515,000 3205 MONTCLAIRE ST $525,000 3016 FAIRWAYS CT $525,000 2841 AVALON DR $525,000 3912 KINGS WAY $550,000 3324 LYNNE WAY $557,000 3261 SAINT MATHEWS DR $602,000 3560 MIAMI ST $605,000 2232 RALSTON RD $630,000 4417 BRIARWOOD DRIVE $705,000 3010 TIOGA WAY $718,000 2824 LIENO LN $740,000 4116 BIG LIVE OAK LN $780,000 3402 HUNNICUTT LN $840,000 3240 BEN LOMOND DR $865,000 3131 POPE AVE $1,500,000
95822
18 PULSAR CIR 42 QUASAR CIR 5905 GLORIA DR #7
$240,000 $323,000 $345,000
2000 QUINCY AVE 7351 19TH ST 7573 TWILIGHT DR 5660 NORMAN WAY 2521 MEADOW WOOD CIR 7565 TAMOSHANTER WAY 2160 57TH AVE 2184 68TH AVE 7441 CARELLA DR 1624 68TH AVE 5680 JAMES WAY 7317 TILDEN WAY 2224 18TH AVE 1960 QUINCY AVE 2601 ENCINAL AVE 1632 WAKEFIELD WAY 7523 EDDYLEE WAY 2511 BRENTLEY DR 3214 TRENTWOOD WAY 7061 HOGAN DR 1428 FRUITRIDGE RD 2304 GLEN ELLEN CIR 7054 REMO WAY 2501 YREKA AVE 7421 TROON WAY 4760 DEL RIO RD 6517 HOGAN DR 5608 NOLDER WAY 3228 TORRANCE AVE 5620 JOHNS DR 7019 AMHERST 5121 DANA WAY 5012 GILGUNN WAY 5712 DORSET WAY 1274 NOONAN DR 5807 13TH ST 949 SEAMAS AVE
95825
2360 ALTA GARDEN LN #B 2270 WOODSIDE LN #3 637 WOODSIDE SIERRA #6 2200 WOODSIDE LN #2 1326 OAK TERRACE CT #16 2280 HURLEY WAY #76 1019 DORNAJO WAY #207 2406 LARKSPUR LN #251 706 WOODSIDE LN #12 2208 WOODSIDE LN #7 1019 DORNAJO WAY #222 1019 DORNAJO WAY #247 1528 HOOD #A 528 WOODSIDE OAKS #2 2024 ROBERT WAY 2016 ROBERT WAY 265 MUNROE ST 2529 EXETER SQUARE LN 2515 EXETER SQUARE LN 2031 ETHAN WAY 1315 BELL ST 2326 SWARTHMORE 2314 AMERICAN RIVER DR 3020 LA VIA WAY 908 VANDERBILT WAY
$350,000 $360,000 $375,000 $375,000 $385,000 $386,000 $392,000 $400,000 $420,000 $430,000 $430,000 $435,000 $435,000 $436,000 $440,000 $446,000 $450,000 $450,000 $460,000 $465,000 $465,000 $480,000 $485,000 $495,000 $500,000 $500,000 $500,000 $515,000 $530,000 $545,000 $550,000 $558,000 $660,000 $710,000 $744,000 $765,000 $782,000
$219,500 $235,000 $240,000 $243,000 $245,000 $252,000 $260,000 $265,000 $266,000 $280,000 $295,000 $299,000 $301,500 $320,000 $345,000 $411,000 $420,000 $420,000 $444,000 $450,000 $479,000 $510,000 $515,000 $532,500 $543,500
735 COMMONS DR 911 VANDERBILT WAY 2072 UNIVERSITY PARK DR 615 COMMONS DR 400 ELMHURST CIR 124 E RANCH RD 1269 VANDERBILT WAY 1100 COMMONS DR
95831
303 ROUNDTREE CT 908 ROUNDTREE CT 1239 SPRUCE TREE CIR 7661 WINDBRIDGE DR 555 RIVERGATE WAY 6611 14TH ST 6757 FRATES WAY 1265 SILVER OAK WAY 505 LITTLE RIVER WAY 22 WINDUBEY CIR 67 GREENWAY 45 MOONLIT CIR 6654 S LAND PARK DR 84 MOONLIT CIR 7408 RIO MONDEGO DR 14 GALLEY CT 6709 13TH ST 7335 PERERA CIR 6511 HARMON DR 9 MEADOWMONT CT 530 SHAW RIVER WAY 30 LOS GATOS CIR 6456 S LAND PARK DR 7287 RIVERWIND WAY 1330 GAGLE WAY
95864
2911 MAISON WAY 3225 WEMBERLEY DR 1340 GREENHILLS RD 3109 HEMPSTEAD RD 3112 WEMBERLEY DR 1004 SINGINGWOOD RD 3213 CHELSEA RD 3437 BARRINGTON RD 1721 MERCURY WAY 4619 LAURELWOOD WAY 4004 LUSK DR 2312 BRIDLE PATH LN 2333 GILA WAY 1927 MARYAL DR 2354 CATALINA DR 2109 EDITH ST 4404 PINEWOOD CT 2221 ROCKWOOD DR 1099 STEWART RD. 830 SIERRA OAKS VISTA LN 2920 AMERICAN RIVER DR 3748 LAGUNA WAY 2833 LATHAM DR 4010 AMERICAN RIVER DR 4011 RANDOM LN 2071 ROCKWOOD DR 3770 RANDOM LN
$549,000 $552,000 $580,000 $610,000 $630,000 $667,900 $694,000 $715,000
$300,000 $305,000 $460,000 $470,000 $535,000 $544,000 $560,000 $580,000 $600,000 $620,000 $620,000 $634,200 $665,000 $675,000 $683,000 $720,000 $736,000 $779,888 $810,000 $825,000 $851,000 $930,000 $936,000 $976,000 $1,325,000
$390,000 $390,000 $413,500 $448,000 $460,000 $463,000 $487,500 $500,000 $520,000 $545,000 $545,000 $572,000 $580,000 $587,100 $602,500 $625,000 $650,000 $799,000 $850,000 $855,000 $975,000 $1,199,500 $1,480,000 $1,520,000 $1,650,000 $1,675,000 $2,225,000
VISIT INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM FOR COMPREHENSIVE NEIGHBORHOOD REAL ESTATE GUIDES WITH 6 MONTH HISTORICAL SALES DATA
* BASED UPON INFORMATION FROM METROLIST SERVICES, INC, FOR THE PERIOD MARCH 1, 2022 THROUGH MARCH 31, 2022. DUNNIGAN, REALTORS DID NOT PARTICIPATE IN ALL OF THESE SALES.
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Loss Recovery KINGS SCORE BIG WITH PRIVATE EQUITY BUCKS
Photo by Aniko Kiezel
S
ome NBA teams don’t worry about balancing the books. Their owners swim in deep green seas of personal wealth. They treat league membership as an extension of their entitlement, a bragging right with benefits of ballooning equity. The Kings are different. Their owners are rich, relatively speaking, but can’t matchup against billionaires. A welterweight bank account is a big disadvantage in a game played by heavyweights. NBA players and their agents recognize the Kings’ financial anxiety. Nobody wants to waste time and talent on a tourist-class franchise. The Kings are tourist class: no legroom, extra fees for a sandwich and baggage, best to avoid. The welterweight bank account almost sank the Kings under the
RG By R.E. Graswich Sports Authority
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pandemic. While NBA teams are guaranteed to grow in value, they demand significant cash flow to keep the doors open. Suddenly, the Kings had zero cash flow and serious problems. To compensate for canceled games, the NBA and players union allowed teams to withhold about 25 percent of salaries. The Kings went further. They laid off staff and used a loophole in their city lease agreement to skip payments on Golden 1 Center. They rented out old Arco Arena as an emergency COVID hospital. They tapped an internal NBA charity fund to help struggling teams survive financial convulsions. The NBA is sympathetic toward poorer owners, but generosity has limits. Financially soft ownerships eventually have to go. Many have been pushed out as the game became more expensive. Historically, the Kings have languished among the league’s lowbudget operations. Fiscal distress clouded the Cincinnati and Kansas City eras. After moving to Sacramento in 1985, the team sweated to pay bills. Players sprinted to the bank to cash paychecks, fearing the paper would bounce. Vendors were stiffed, team credit cards canceled.
Today, things are different—not because managing partner Vivek Ranadive swims in money (by NBA standards, he just wades), but thanks to new investment rules to accommodate financially weak teams. The new rules allow private equity groups to buy into NBA clubs. The embrace of private equity is a big policy shift for pro sports. It means teams don’t have to constantly tap their stockholders when stars demand pay raises. Capital calls can wreck small-time owners and their partners, especially the Kings. Until recently, private equity money was barred from the NBA. The league’s stockholder model relied on car dealers, real estate guys and eventually tech moguls—the local business community. The Kings are a good example of the old ways. Unable to purchase the team on his own, Ranadive corralled Bay Area fitness club operator Mark Mastrov and a bunch of buddies in 2013. He sold stock to several local businessmen, including Mark Friedman and Kevin Nagle. The group bought the Kings and quickly expanded into Downtown real estate, which helped reduce the pain of a loss-making basketball team.
Eight years and one pandemic later, with no end to the ruinous cost of running the Kings, Ranadive turned to private equity. The timing was perfect. Major League Baseball was first to welcome passive professional investment in 2019. The NBA soon followed. Last June, the San Antonio Spurs sold shares to equity investors. The Kings jumped in months later. Mastrov, Friedman, Andy Miller, Brad Jenkins and Shaquille O’Neal sold out to Arctos, a private equity firm that manages $3 billion in assets. Nagle dumped most of his Kings stock. Can private equity dollars improve the Kings? Not likely. Arctos can’t get involved with basketball operations (unfortunately). But institutional investors don’t care about courtside seats. They care about profits, which arrive only when the team is sold. Until then, Arctos brings something more important than a playoff invitation: cash. R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
THEATRE GUIDE CLUE: The Musical
Tootsi
May 4 – May 22 Sac Theatre Company 1419 H St, Sac 95814 Sactheatre.org
May 17 – May 22 Presented by Broadway Sacramento SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center 1301 L St, Sac Broadwaysacramento.com
Based on the internationally popular board game, this fun-filled musical brings the world’s best-known suspects to life and invites audience members to pick the who, what, and where cards and then play along to help solve the mystery: who killed Mr. Boddy, where in the mansion, and with what weapon. There are over 200 possible solutions but only one hard-nosed female detective is qualified to unravel the merry mayhem. Comic antics, interactive fun, and a possible surprise twist await you in this clever who-dunnit! Subscriptions are currently on sale for our 2021-2022 in-person Season of WHO, WHAT & WHERE. Single tickets go on sale September 7th. The ASL Interpreted performance will take place on Friday, May 20th at 8:00pm
The Barber of Seville May 7 Presented by Sacramento Philharmonic and Opera SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center 1301 L St, Sac Sacphilopera.org
Call it “musical comedy heaven” (Rolling Stone). Call it “the most uproarious new musical in years!” (The Hollywood Reporter). Call it TOOTSIE! This laugh-out-loud love letter to the theatre tells the story of a talented but difficult actor who struggles to find work until one show-stopping act of desperation lands him the role of a lifetime. “In these turbulent times, when the world seems out of balance, we need a place to let the good times roll,” raves Rolling Stone. “TOOTSIE is it!”
Livin’ Fat
“ R E G I O N ’ S B E S T R E S TA U R A N T ” – S AC R A M E N TO B E E
JOIN US! LUNCH, DINNER & HAPPY HOUR FOR RESERVATIONS 916.443.3772 WWW.ELLA DINING ROOM AND BAR.COM 11 3 1 K S T R E E T • D O W N T O W N S A C R A M E N T O
SUMMER at JESUIT
May 6 – May29 Celebration Arts 2727 B St, Sac Celebrationarts.net LIVIN’ FAT, directed by Michael Benjamin. Set in the 70s, the Carter family is guaranteed to warm your heart and make you smile.
Many years ago, two great composers once met in Vienna. “Rossini, I congratulate you. The Barber of Seville delights me. It will be played as long as opera exists,” Ludwig van Beethoven excitedly told him! The Sacramento Philharmonic & Opera presents Rossini’s masterpiece, The Barber of Seville. Fully staged, with costumes, lighting, and sets – at the new SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center. The Barber of Seville will truly be a performance to remember!
SUBMIT EVENTS TO ANIKO@INSIDEPUBLICATIONS.COM
Multiple sessions: WEDNESDAY, JUNE – FRIDAY, JULY 1 ACADEMICS PLUS Boys | Grades 5–8
ACADEMY CAMPS Boys & Girls | Grades 4–8
SUMMER SCHOOL Boys & Girls | Grades 9–12
SPORTS CAMPS Boys & Girls | Grades 1–9
To learn more and to register today go to SUMMERatJESUIT.com ILP/GRID n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
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From The Ashes O THEIR RANCH BRINGS LIFE TO CHARRED LAND
ver the last year and a half, I have become intimately involved with how farmers and ranchers work to rejuvenate land burned by fire. My partner, Jarrod McBride, bought a 10-acre ranch bounded by Mountain Ranch, Railroad Flat and Mokelumne Hill in Calaveras County that had been devastated by the Butte Fire in 2015. He calls the land Pasture Works. While many are scared off by these charred areas, we were attracted to Pasture Works because we saw enormous potential in the less expensive mountainous terrain and felt that once land burns, it will not catch fire for quite some time. When we started visiting the ranch on weekends from our house in Midtown, our five chickens and two ducks rode with us in a large dog crate. Peeper frogs sang from ponds below. Crickets churned out their chorus and burned pines stood as sentinels of future rejuvenation.
GM By Gabrielle Myers Farm to Fork
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The “ladies,” as we call the birds, responded to the rich soil and tasty grasses, producing multi-colored eggs with bright, reddish-orange yolks and firm whites. When I met Jarrod several years ago, I was moved by his excitement as he talked about his youth on the Central Coast living on a ranch with cattle, pigs, sheep and hay. He loved caring for animals, especially his dogs. His devotion to ranch life, deep passion for animal welfare and technical knowledge from years spent studying electrical and security systems drive his work on the ranch. Soon after moving to Pasture Works, Jarrod ordered meat birds and practiced incubating dozens of our little ladies’ offspring in the small cabin. We studied YouTube videos by Joel Salatin, Greg Judy and Justin Rhodes, and learned how to raise and butcher birds. In the fall, we practiced our skills on 15 Cornish Cross and 15 Red Broiler chickens, five Kaki Campbell and five Rouen ducks, plus two turkeys. Jarrod purchased five sheep and moved them around the land several times a day. We learned how to slaughter the sheep and get them packed at a local butcher shop with USDA certification. Now the three remaining ewes are open grazers, running to meet us as we descend the front porch, hovering
around at the storage sheds for grain snacks. Last week we brought a ram to the ranch to create a self-sustaining flock. Our two Kunekune pigs, Thelma and Louise, enjoy a large rotating pasture. Their noses and hooves aerate the soil. Their grunts fill our mornings as we meet them with supplemental feed and hellos. Living fulltime at Pasture Works, I see little transformations in the land. I sense the forests healing themselves and how the animals’ grazing allows for more water retention in our pastures, their waste like golden nuggets to the Gold Country’s charred lands.
Jarrod McBride
Photos by Aniko Kiezel
Are you sick of all the political fighting?
So are we. Help us do something about it. Braver Angels Sacramento We bring Reds and Blues together to talk, listen and learn about each others’ views. We are more on the same page than we think! Come to a Braver Angels event and learn the skills to understand others and express your views with passion and civility.
Learn more at: www.braverangelssac.org
Gabrielle Myers
The chickens, turkeys and ducks have pecked their way through melted metal and glass fragments from the Butte Fire, enabling us to see the fragments and pick them up, in essence filtering the land through their beaks. The little ladies, now joined by at least 20 other hens and several roosters, follow after the sheep and pigs, enjoying free-range of the 10 acres, culling and fertilizing. While our well has run dry several times over the last year, green pastures now span across our small valley, replacing the withered stalks and star-thistle needles of last spring. As we graze the land, we retain water and our land is less likely to burn. We also produce nourishment for others by selling our eggs and lamb meat in halves and quarters. We are just starting, but hope to raise more sheep and pigs for on-farm sales. We hope to find the right variety of meat birds to raise and sell. We hope to have a robust vegetable garden and food forest. We hope to build our infrastructure in irrigation and fencing since all was thoroughly burned in the fire. We hope to host ranch dinners with meat and produce raised and grown at Pasture
Works. We hope to develop active composting, permaculture, vermiculture, biogas, solar and biochar systems. Our goal is not to feed the world, but to nourish those we can and show others what partnerships among soil, water, animal, burned forest and human can do for our connected selves. For more information on Pasture Works, visit capastureworks.com. Gabrielle Myers can be reached at gabriellemyers11@gmail.com. Her latest book of poetry, “Too Many Seeds,” can be ordered a fishinglinepress.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento. com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n
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‘We Are Here’
SCIENTIST-ARTIST PORTRAYS WOMEN OF COLOR IN STEM
A
s she lists her proudest achievement, Semarhy Quiñones-Soto doesn’t mention her Ph.D. in microbiology or her published coloring book depicting diverse women in science, tech, engineering and math. She doesn’t even cite her job as a biological sciences lecturer at Sacramento State. Instead, she returns to when she was a teenager and her mother allowed her into a lab at the University of Puerto Rico and let the youngster
JL By Jessica Laskey Open Studio
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clean the autoclave—an expensive sterilization machine. “My mother wouldn’t allow anyone to touch that autoclave, but she taught me how to clean it at 15,” Quiñones-Soto says. “I’m very proud of that particular achievement.” There’s no doubt that spending time in her parents’ labs as a child influenced Quiñones-Soto’s career path. But she notes her brother grew up in the same home and pursued a creative career. Quiñones-Soto has bridged the two: She’s a respected bacterial geneticist who earned her doctorate studying the origin of mutations under stressful conditions, and she’s an artist who uses digital illustrations to celebrate women of color in STEM. Her self-published coloring book, “Types of Scientists: A Coloring Book for All Ages,” has sold more than 1,100 copies on Amazon. “I made the book with the intention to increase visibility of women of color as STEM professionals,” says Quiñones-Soto, whose book
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Treat drug addiction as a public health problem. My Hope California bill prioritizes drug treatment over incarceration—helping people recover and not just cycle through our jails. Let’s clean up the American River Parkway. Offer shelter and services for those in need, and stop illegal camping.
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includes beautiful drawings and information about different types of scientists. “I hope this information helps younger adults or undergrads who are still exploring. When I taught a freshman seminar a few years ago, I asked my students what their career of interest was. Twenty-four out of 25 of them wanted to go into medicine. I asked why. They said, ‘That’s what we know.’ It’s not necessarily what they want, but they don’t know that they have all these other options that could potentially be of interest.” When Quiñones-Soto isn’t drawing or teaching, she works as associate project director for the California State University Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation, which serves all 23 CSU campuses. She also serves as research coordinator for the Stokes Alliance and the Research Initiative for Scientific Enhancement. She benefitted from similar programs as an undergraduate in Puerto Rico and wants Sac State students to have the same opportunities. The initiatives help underrepresented students obtain doctorate degrees, Quiñones-Soto explains, adding, “When I participated in those programs, they opened doors
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for me and prepared me to apply to graduate programs.” Quiñones-Soto sees her artwork as another way to help underrepresented people enter the sciences. According to the National Science Foundation, Black women represent 12.2 percent of the U.S. female population but hold only 4.2 percent of doctoral degrees in science. Latinx women represent 13.7 percent of females but hold only 5.8 percent of science doctorates. Maybe a coloring book can help turn the tide. “When I was first posting the drawings online, women would say to me that they wish they’d had these as a kid, that, ‘I see myself in here,’” she says. “The message that I want to give is to let other women know that we are here as STEM workers and you can be too. It’s an affirmation that yes, we exist and you can join us. Even though we’re not portrayed as much, we are here. And we are working.” For information, visit semarhyquinones.com. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be read and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
Semarhy Quiñones-Soto Photo by Aniko Kiezel
ASPARAGUS
This perennial is one of the first plants of spring. Its tender young shoots are delicious when steamed, roasted or grilled. Nutrient dense, it’s rich in B vitamins, vitamin C, calcium and iron. Eat it: Toss the spears in olive oil and balsamic vinegar, then roast outdoors on a hot grill until charred.
FAVA BEANS
A member of the pea family, these beans have a nutty taste and buttery texture. Look for sturdy green pods with velvety fuzz. They need to be shelled and peeled before ree eating. Favas are high in n protein and dietary fiber. Eat it: Steam them until tender and serve with olive oil, salt and lemon.
ENDIVE
Sown in spring, chicory seeds produce a root that’s harvested and placed in a dark, humid “forcing room.” The result: endive, the second growth of a chicory root. Crisp, with a sweet, nutty flavor, it’s a good source of potassium. To eat: Separate the leaves and top each one with a spoonful of chicken salad or edamame with miso dressing.
Monthly Market A LOOK AT WHAT’S IN SEASON AT LOCAL FARMERS MARKETS IN MAY
GREEN GARLIC
ARUGULA
This edible annual plant, sometimes known as rocket, belongs to the same family as mustard greens and kale. Its peppery green leaves are green in salads. Arugula is a rich source of certain phytochemicals as well as vitamin A. Eat it: Tossed with extra-virgin olive oil and freshly squeezed lemon juice and topped with shaved Parmesan.
ENGLISH PEAS
Also known as shell peas or garden peas, these sweet legumes enjoy a short season in late spring and early summer. Their pods aren’t edible, so shell them immediately before cooking. High in protein, they’re also low in fat. To eat: Boil them briefly until crisp-tender, then add to a pasta salad.
Also known as spring garlic or baby garlic, this young plant is a highlight of the spring farmers market. It looks like an overgrown scallion and has a mild yet garlicky flavor. Plants in the garlic family are known to lower blood pressure and cholesterol. Eat it: Use it raw in a salad or cooked in a frittata.
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Seventh Heaven DOWNTOWN’S NEW STANDARD HITS HIGH NOTES
Photos by Linda Smolek
GS By Greg Sabin Restaurant Insider
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I
n jazz parlance, a standard is a tune everyone knows and every musician can play. An artist plays a standard to put their stamp on it, toy with it or mold it to their personality. Downtown’s new restaurant The 7th Street Standard at the Hyatt Centric doesn’t get its name by coincidence. Chef Ravin Patel takes common food
constructs and makes them his own. Familiar recipes play with unfamiliar rhythms. He juggles flavors from multiple continents, often in the same dish. Improvisation feels like an ingredient, yet it’s born of intense study and years of perfecting his craft. Patel worked at Michelin-starred kitchens and lent his skill to the
Selland restaurant group. His knowledge of local, national and international cuisine is on display in a menu that is tight, approachable and titillating. The braised lamb sums up the chef’s talent. It’s a signature tune. A 12-hour braise lets spices infuse every corner of the meat. Notes of cumin, anise and chili play throughout the generous
Thank you Sacramento
for supporting your neighborhood, independent restaurants to ensure the uniqueness of our community!
chunk of locally raised lamb. While the flavors reach from the Americas to the Middle East, the plate comes straight out of Patel’s legacy. Spread beneath the lamb is a significant portion of biryani. The rice dish originated in India but is found on tables throughout the world. Patel’s version has nods to England’s Indian diaspora (gin-soaked raisins), the Levant (za’atar spice) and Italy (gremolata). The fluffy bed of rice and touches of spice meet in harmony. Other dishes show influences from Vietnam, Japan and an Iowa truck stop. No kidding, the chicken and dumplings are a down-home version of the classic, beautifully rendered. It’s the country tune played by a jazz ensemble to show how hip they are. Speaking of a band, Patel has chosen mates with their own unique visions, such as chocolatier and pastry chef Ramon Perez. Perez’s cream puffs are worth the visit, marrying hazelnut praline ice cream with chocolate and caramel, and wrapping it in a dense, flaky puff shell. Each element within the new restaurant swings with a musical theme. Newspaper clippings decorate the walls, telling the story of the Clayton Club, a jazz and entertainment lounge that stood on the same footprint. The Clayton was a Downtown fixture. One clipping heralds a six-night run by Louis Armstrong and his band.
A trumpet sits on a shelf above the bar, paying mute attention to the scene below. The cocktail scene jumps. A frosty glass overflows with pebble ice and wets the whistle with bourbon, ginger, lemon, soda and apple juice. “Them Apples,” it’s called. The “MXOF” combines unlikely ingredients of tequila, spiced agave and chocolate mole. Each drink from the commodious bar sizzles. Much like the main menu, the bar succeeds by drawing in the customer with the familiar and taking a sharp turn with unexpected preparation or ingredients. A single glyph emblazons the front door, is stamped on the menu and finds its way into a number of spots within the lushly decorated dining room. The casual observer sees the glyph as a “7.” But, if you know musical notation, you’ll recognize the symbol as an eighth rest. It’s a clever wink toward the musical past and to the fine show the team at The 7th Street Standard produces every night. It’s a show not to miss.
Mon-Fri: 11a-9p | Sat: 10a-10p | Sun: 10a - 9p
1110 Front Street | 916.442.8226 | riocitycafe.com
The 7th Street Standard is at 1122 Seventh St.; (916) 898-1100; the7thstreetstandard.com. Greg Sabin can be reached at gregsabin@hotmail.com. Previous reviews can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
Patel juggles flavors from multiple continents, often in the same dish.
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TO DO THIS MONTH'S CULTURE & ENTERTAINMENT HIGHLIGHTS
Robert Breault in “Requiem” by Sacramento Choral Society & Orchestra.
Dancers Ana Konovaloff and Jaynica Dacuycuy in The Unicorn Fountain. Photo by Lina Yun
Giuseppe Verdi’s Requiem Sacramento Choral Society & Orchestra Saturday, May 14, 8 p.m. SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center, 1301 L St. • sacramentochoral.org This dramatic performance features soloists Jennifer Forni, Linda Baird, Robert Breault and Timothy Jones, and guest chorus Schola Cantorum of Sacred Heart Church, a memorial tribute to restaurateur Biba Caggiano and a performance of the Ukrainian national anthem. Tickets are $44–$64.
The Unicorn Fountain
JL By Jessica Laskey
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Sacramento Civic Ballet Company and Deane Dance Center Saturday, May 7, 7 p.m. Sunday, May 8, 2 p.m. Veterans Memorial Theatres, 203 E 14th St., Davis • deanedancecenter.com Don Schwennesen’s stunning ballet The Unicorn Fountain features a large cast and beautiful music with lead dancers David Bier as Prince Fredrick, Ana Konovaloff as the Unicorn, Jaynica Dacuycuy as Charity and Grace Hanson as Dahlia.
It’s a Grand Night for Singing Sacramento Master Singers May 19, 7 p.m., and May 22, 3 p.m. Location TBD • mastersingers.org The choir performs hit show tunes, including selections from “Hamilton,” and choral favorites that will be included in the singers’ Europe tour this summer. Tickets are $35 for adults, $10 for students.
Stories on Stage Stories on Stage Sacramento Friday, May 27, 7 p.m. CLARA Auditorium, 2420 N St. • storiesonstagesacramento.com This award-winning literary performance series presents excerpts from authors Gina Frangello’s “Blow Your House Down” and Annabelle Gurwitch’s “You’re Leaving When?” read aloud by professional actors followed by a Q&A with the authors. Tickets are a $10 suggested donation. Luke and Joel Smallbone of For King & Country at Golden 1 Center.
CAMP: Hack the Woods Square Root Academy May 20–22 Grizzly Creek Ranch, Portola • squarerootacademy.com/camphackthewoods In partnership with Sierra Nevada Journeys and Black Youth Leadership Project, Square Root scholars connect, learn STEAM-based education and promote social justice in an outdoor setting. Participants must be 13–17 years old (18 if still in school) and attend school or live in the city of Sacramento.
What Are We Waiting For? Tour For King & Country Sunday, May 8, 7 p.m. Golden 1 Center, 500 David J Stern Walk • forkingandcountry.com This concert presents music from the Grammy Award-winning progressive pop duo For King & Country, with music from their new album and a performance by Dante Bowe of Bethel and Maverick City Music. Tickets start at $29.99.
Artists for Amensty John Natsoulas Center for the Arts May 4–June 4 Opening Night Reception May 7, 7–10 p.m. 521 First St., Davis • natsoulas.com This exhibition features art from around the world to benefit Amnesty International’s humanitarian efforts to raise funds for victims of human rights abuses, with global artists presenting their perspectives on peace and understanding. Opening night includes live bands and refreshments.
“Peace is a Human Right” by Emmy Lou Packard at John Natsoulas Center for the Arts.
“Dreaming in Color” by Leslie McCarron at Archival Gallery.
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Children’s Book Week Fairytale Town May 2–8, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. 3901 Land Park Drive • fairytaletown.org Celebrate a week of literary fun! A different book is featured each day with story time and craft activities inspired by the selected book. A Scholastic Book Fair has books and more for sale. Weekday admission is $7 for adults and children 2 and older. Weekend admission is $8 for adults and children 2 and older. Members and children 1 and younger are free.
Open Garden UC Master Gardeners of Sacramento County Saturday, May 14, 9 a.m.–noon Wednesday, May 18, 4–7 p.m. Fair Oaks Horticulture Center, 11549 Fair Oaks Blvd. • sacmg.ucanr.edu Learn how Master Gardeners create a model wildlife habitat for the home with plantings and bee and bird houses at this free event. Master Gardeners are available in all areas of the garden—bring your samples and questions on pests and diseases. “Dystopian Transformer Mask” by Rasa Vilcinskaite at Blue Line Arts.
Books and Brews Fairytale Town Friday, May 6, 6–8 p.m. 3901 Land Park Drive • fairytaletown.org Plan to attend this book fair for grownups! Walk through the park, grab a brew or glass of wine, check out the vendors and stroll through the Scholastic Book Fair located in the Children’s Theater.
Craft Nouveau Blue Line Arts Through May 28 Third Saturday Reception May 21, 4–8 p.m. 405 Vernon St., Roseville • bluelinearts.org This biannual exhibition features fine craftwork with 97 pieces from across the U.S., as well as Canada, Lithuania and Russia. Artworks and award winners have been selected by Ariel Zaccheo, curator at the Museum of Craft & Design in San Francisco.
BizX: Minding Your Business and the Future of Technology Sacramento City and County Tuesday, May 3, 11:30 a.m.–1 p.m. Online • cityofsacramento.org/bizx Entrepreneurs, small business owners and industry professionals are invited to explore the latest technologies changing the way you “Mind Your Business.” BizX is presented by the city of Sacramento’s Office of Innovation and Economic Development and Sacramento County, in partnership with Sacramento State’s Carlsen Center and Business Environmental Resource Center. “Cats Cradle” by Amy Vidra at Elk Grove Fine Arts Center.
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The Maifest Sacramento Turn Verein Sunday, May 1, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. 3349 J St. • (916) 425-4398 This family-friendly event features dancing, singing, crafting and playing to celebrate the arrival of spring in the German tradition. German food and drink are for sale. Performances include the Alpentänzer Schuhplattler, a German dance troupe. Admission is $5 for adults and free for children 17 and younger. Proceeds support the STV German Language School.
Flora Sparrow Gallery May 14–June 3 Second Saturday Opening Reception May 14, 5–8 p.m. 1021 R St. • sparrowgallery.com This “Lotusland” exhibit features paintings by Jill Estroff, who was inspired by the lotus blossoms in Land Park. Local emerging artist Nikki Carson joins with her first gallery showing.
Art Show Paris Preview Sparrow Gallery May 14–June 3 1021 R St. • sparrowgallery.com After winning the Prix De L’Originalité at Art Show Paris VII in 2020, artist Michael Schaffer returns to Art Show Paris this September. This exhibit is a preview of those works.
“Kitchen Talk” by Michael Schaffer at Sparrow Gallery.
World Premiere Choral Concert
Sacramento Children’s Chorus Saturday, May 7, 7 p.m. St. John’s Lutheran Church, 1701 L St. • sacramentochildrenschorus.org This spring concert explores universal themes of joy, love, peace, death, friendship and faith in the choral styles that have conveyed these themes throughout history.
Sacramento Valley Concert Choir Tuesday, May 17, 7 p.m. Center for Spiritual Awareness, 1275 Starboard Drive, West Sacramento • svcchoir.org This free concert features the world premiere of the song “Love Beyond Love,” written by Sacramento singer/songwriter Kristi Matal and arranged by international composer Mark Hayes. The concert includes performances by the Sacramento Gay Men’s Chorus and Empire Pop Choir. Proof of COVID vaccination and masks are required.
Dreaming in Color
Beer & Ballet
Why We Sing—The Traditions of Choral Music
Archival Gallery May 5–28 Second Saturday Reception May 14, 5–8 p.m. 3223 Folsom Blvd. • archivalgallery.com This solo exhibition features paintings by Northern California native Leslie McCarron, who incorporates bold brush strokes and rich colors to enhance her landscape paintings and still life compositions.
Sacramento Ballet May 6–21 James Hargrove Outdoor Stage at Sac Ballet Studios, 2420 N St. sacballet.org This performance, choreographed by Sac Ballet company members, features stunning choreography, beverages and—new this year—food trucks! Tickets are $60 and include a craft beer, glass of wine or soft drink. A choreographer Q&A follows each performance.
Open Fine Arts Competition Swell by Amy Vidra
Star Wars Weekend
Elk Grove Fine Arts Center May 7–26 First Saturday Reception May 7, 4–7 p.m. 9683 Elk Grove Florin Road • elkgrovefineartscenter.org This annual competition presents regional and national artists in drawing and pastel, sculpture and mixed-media, oil, acrylic, water media, and photography. In the Foyer Gallery, artist Amy Vidra’s collection represents the swell of tides, emotions and movements of the world. Vidra gives a free talk to the public Saturday, May 21, at 5 p.m.
Stage Nine Entertainment Saturday, May 7, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Sunday, May 8, 11 a.m.–6 p.m. 102 K St. • stagenine.com Stop by to meet artist Monte Moore, who paints The Mandalorian™ Star Wars Series for Thomas Kinkade Studios. The weekend includes a scavenger hunt throughout all five Stage Nine retail stores on the Old Sacramento Waterfront. Guests are encouraged to dress in Star Wars attire. Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Submissions are due six weeks prior to the publication month. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n
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ACROSS 1 It’s made in the morning 4 Threaded fastener 9 The “Star Wars” movies, for one 13 A super long time 15 Samuel of the court 16 Pony’s gait 17 Not wear boxers, say (In this clue’s answer, note letters 5, 7 & 9) 19 Baptism or marriage 20 Defendants’ outs 21 Where the Mekong River flows 22 Palindromic songbird 24 Existed temporarily (... letters 3, 5 & 7) 28 Feels it after CrossFit 30 Jeers for the other team 31 Cider season 32 Theresa of “Long Island Medium” 35 John Grisham’s subject 38 How the needy live (... letters 4, 6 & 8) 41 Kyoto cash 42 Getting the job done 43 If not 44 ___ gel (soothing stuff) 1/6
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45 Cold-blooded 46 Meaty lunch option (... letters 3, 5 & 7) 52 Once around a track 53 Historic times 54 Get some air 56 “Let’s chat privately,” on Insta 57 Furious, or a theme hint 61 Bunches 62 Extra life, in video games 63 Mixer with whiskey 64 Greek god with a bow 65 35-Across school subjects 66 Gesture of comprehension DOWN 1 Pretzels’ package 2 Praise may boost it 3 Literally, “ten contests” 4 Dance that originated in Rio 5 Insurance request 6 Lather, ___, repeat 7 Takeoff guess, for short 8 Try to win over 9 They’re stuck in juice boxes 10 Become evident 11 Was accepted
12 Gave no peace to 14 Sun, in Spanish 18 Rap battle devices 22 Saltwater treat 23 “It matters to me” 25 Is adjacent to 26 “That’s so uncool!” 27 Modern prefix with “scrolling” 29 Street of horror 32 Camera brand whose name sounds like something that takes shots 33 Started a poker pot 34 Smooching on the subway, e.g. 35 Athleisure company
36 Whale watching, say 37 Puppy 39 “Hey,” in Honduras 40 “___ the fields we go ...” 44 Take stock of 45 “Eternals” star Gemma 46 Wall of some mazes 47 Set of plates? 48 Dance in a Lou Bega hit’s title 49 Car part that moves in arcs 50 Two cents, idiomatically 51 Fish and ___ 55 Some TVs 57 Trending 58 Plastic ___ Band 59 Commotion 60 “Pops”
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Josh Pane for Assembly &KDUDFWHU &RPSHWHQFH &RPPLWPHQW &RPPXQLW\ ³6WHIIDQ LV WKH EHVW +H DOZD\V PDNHV XV IHHO OLNH KLV WRS SULRULW\ QR PDWWHU ZKDW LV JRLQJ RQ 6WHIIDQ¶V NQRZOHGJH RI ORFDO KRPHV DQG WKH UHDO HVWDWH PDUNHW DUH WRS QRWFK +LV H[SHUW JXLGDQFH KHOSHG XV VDYH WLPH DQG PRQH\ FRPSHWH VXFFHVVIXOO\ LQ FRPSHWLWLYH VLWXDWLRQV DQG VHOO RXU KRPH HIILFLHQWO\ 7KDQNV 6WHIIDQ ´ ~Michelle and Paul
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COLDWELL BANKER PENDING
LAND PARK BEAUTY! Beautiful 4 bedroom 2 bath home on corner lot. SUE OLSON 916.601.8834 CalRE#: 00784986
SOLD
CLASSIC 1950’S STYLE RANCH This 4br/3ba home features bkyd patio w/ built-in pool & spa! SUE OLSON 916.601.8834 CalRE#: 00784986
AMAZING LAND PARK LOCATION! 4br/2ba featuring fully remodled bkyd w/ pool. $1,300,000 GEOFF WILLIAMS 530.574.0517 CalRE#: 01460174
SOLD MID-CENTURY MODERN CHARMER Lovely and livable 3 bed/2bath single story on a tree-lined in Walnut View Estates. SABRA SANCHEZ 916.508.5313 CalRE#: 01820635 UPDATED BUNGALOW IN MIDTOWN! 3br/2ba home with updated kitchen, off street parking, and potential for creating 4th bedroom. ELISE BROWN 916.715.0213 CalRE#: 01781942 PENDING TAHOE PARK CUTIE! 2br/1ba home on large lot with a cozy dining area in kitchen and a massive backyard! $419,950 RICH CAZNEAUX 916.212.4444 CalRE#: 01447558 PENDING MED CENTER GEM! This 3br/2ba appox. 1,725 sq/ft cottage presents formal living and dining rooms, an open Kitchen, a generous Family room, and a private backyard! $549,950 RICH CAZNEAUX, CHRIS KUNZ 916.212.4444 CalRE#: 01447558, 01994094 SOLD WELCOME HOME! 3br/2ba Contemporary boasts an inviting great room concept, a gracious primary retreat with a sitting area, a generous walk-in closet, outdoor access and an en-suite bathroom, and an updated backyard. RICH CAZNEAUX, CHRIS KUNZ 916.212.4444 CalRE#: 01447558, 01994094 POTENTIAL ABOUNDS! Greenhaven home with 4 bds/2.5 baths on a gracious sized lot. $595,000 LIBBY WOOLFORD 916.502.2120 CalRE#: 01778361 GARDENER’S PARADISE Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with tons of potential in Golf Course Terrace. CHIP O’NEILL (916) 341-7834 CalRE#: 01265774
ELEGANT TUDOR IN CURTIS PARK! 4br/3ba home w/ hrdwd koors & renovated kitchen. $1,150,000 STEFFAN BROWN 916.717.7217 CalRE#: 018827873
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ENTERTAINER’S DELIGHT! 2 or 3 bedrooms, Stunning Gourmet Kitchen & Pool! $895,000 STEFFAN BROWN 916.717.7217 CalRE#: 018827873
SOLD
ADORABLE ALHAMBRA TRIANGLE CRAFTSMAN! Updated for Modern Living! $765,000 STEFFAN BROWN 916.717.7217 CalRE#: 018827873
DESIREABLE SOUTHPORT LOCATION! 3br/2ba is located on a quiet cul de sac and features a spacious open koor plan with a private backyard and sparkling pool! GEOFF WILLIAMS 530.574.0517 CalRE#: 01460174 BEAUTIFUL UPDATED BROWNSTONE 3br/2ba SOLD FANTASTIC CORNER PENTHOUSE! Crocker Village treasure w/ 2 car garage. $860,000 Spectacular 2br/2ba at the L Street Lofts in the VERONICA HUNTER 916.398.0128 CalRE#: 01905685 heart of Midtown! $1,700,000 MICHAEL ONSTEAD 916.601.5699 CalRE#: 01222608
SOUTH LAND PARK RANCH 3br + ofjce, 2.5ba, 1945 sf, updated kitchen, pool. CHIP O’NEILL (916) 341-7834 CalRE#: 01265774
STEP BACK IN TIME! This 2br/1ba Alkali Flats Victorian is on the National Historic Registry and overlooks a tree jlled park and community garden! $599,000 GEOFF WILLIAMS 530.574.0517 CalRE#: 01460174 WELCOME TO SIERRA OAKS VISTA! Charming ranch style home on huge corner lot. Massive 3/4-acre yard feels like your own private park. Detached garage, car port and shed. RV/boat storage too. Fully landscaped. Lots of trees. $1,125,000 CINDY LEATHERS 916.803.5481 CalRE #02014889
THE RESIDENCES AT THE SAWYER Enjoy private lounge, gym, pool, hotel amenities & services, high above DOCO with expansive views. Exceptional homes from 1bd/1ba to 3bd/3ba Penthouse starting at $875,000 MICHAEL ONSTEAD 916.601.5699 CalRE#: 01222608
EAST SAC DARLING! This 2-bedroom beauty lives large with over 1390+ SF and a fabulous koor plan with 2-car garage. ROZA & KIRSCH GROUP 916.730.7705/916.548.5799 CalRE#: 01483907/01365413 CALL IT HOME! Enjoy the East Sac vibe in this 2bedroom 1 bath cottage style home remodeled in 2010. ROZA & KIRSCH GROUP 916.730.7705/916.548.5799 CalRE#: 01483907/01365413
SACRAMENTO METRO OFFICE 730 Alhambra Boulevard #150 | 916.447.5900
CAPE COD COTTAGE 2br/1ba w/ remodled kitchen in great location! $749,900 MARK PETERS 916.600.2039 CalRE#: 01424396
SOLD
CLASSIC DUTRA BEND 2-STORY 4bd/3ba, huge bonus rm, stately bkyrd, 3-car grg. SABRA SANCHEZ 916.508.5313 CalRE#: 01820635
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