Arden-Carmichael News

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September 7, 2018 | www.valcomnews.com September 11, 2020 | www.valcomnews.com

Arden-Carmichael News — Bringing you community news for 29 years —

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w w w. va l c o m n e w s . c o m Wishing Well Puzzle................................ 6 Home Improvement ...................................7 Classifieds................................................... 8

Chalk it Up! 30th anniversary went “around the town” See page 2

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E-mail stories & photos to: editor@valcomnews.com Editorial questions: (916) 267-8992 Arden-Carmichael News is published on the second and fourth Fridays of the month. Newspapers are available in stands throughout the area. Publisher ..................................................................David Herburger

Vol. XXVIIII • No. 17 1109 Markham Way Sacramento, CA 95818 t: (916) 429-9901 f: (916) 429-9906

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Chalk it Up! 30th anniversary went “around the town” Photos by Stephen Crowley The 30th Annual Chalk It Up Chalk Art & Music Festival came to life Labor Day weekend on sidewalks, parking lots and driveways throughout the Greater Sacramento region. With Covid-19 restrictions on public gatherings, the festival transformed into Chalk It Up! Around The Town. In lieu of the annual art & music event held at Fremont Park in midtown Sacramento, Chalk It Up! All Around Town sought volunteer chalk artists dispatched to locations throughout the greater Sacramento region to bring their passion to the pavement all to increase support for critical Youth Art Education! First established in 1991, Chalk It Up! is best known for the three-day chalk art festival held over Labor Day weekend. From Saturday to Monday, Fremont Park typically turns into an explosion of chalk art masterpieces, the best of Sacramento live music, interactive art activities and crafts for artists of all ages, local crafts, food and drink. The number of visitors to this free event has grown exponentially to over 60,000 festival attendees in 2019. This year social distancing has been necessary in order to stop the spread of Covid-19, so Chalk It Up! Around The Town offered art fans, sponsors and just about anyone the unique chance to have a Chalk It Up! Art Masterpiece created at any location around

town. The fees paid for these personal art creations will directly strengthen the mission of Chalk It Up! to empower and support the next generation of Sacramento artists through targeted art grants for young artists and the programs that inspire them. Over the past 29 years, Chalk It Up has supported K-12 art programs by awarding over 200 grants in excess of $100,000 to local youth projects and programs to benefit Sacramento Youth Art Education. Past grants have been awarded to a wide variety of projects including: the creation of an art gallery at El Camino High; clay and glazes for the ceramics class at Will Rogers Middle School; a silk screen press for Sacramento New Technology High School; and the WaZoBia Arts project at Washington Elementary which introduced students to methods used in creating traditional African batik. What about the music? Sacramento musicians supported Chalk It Up’s mission by creating a 3-day live music stream of sets from their quarantine locations. Bands included Dog Party, Kevin and Allyson Seconds, Kepi Ghoulie, Honyock, Californios, Richard March, Jig Monkeys, Ryan Thompson, Gabe Nelson, Killer Couture, Jessica Malone, Mallard, Short Trip, Skyler’s Pool, Jayson Angove, Girls Rock, Sam Elliot & Spiritual Disco, Sea of Bees, Landline, J Ross Parrelli.

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Get your free trees: Soon it will be tree planting season By Devin Lavelle We’re all spending a lot more time at home these days. That inevitably gets us thinking about the things we could do to make our homes nicer, more pleasant places to spend our time – how to make our yards a cool, relaxing retreat that we really love. My favorite part of our backyard is the big redwood tree shading our home and yard. It almost feels like I’m in a forest, shadier, cooler and more relaxing than the suburban neighborhood that lies just on the other side of our house. If you already have great trees at your home, you probably know what I’m talking about, but if not, there is a great opportunity to transform your yard – for free! I spoke with Victoria Vasquez from the Sacramento Tree Foundation about their shade tree program and the important role trees play in making Sacramento a wonderful place to live. Devin: Hi Victoria, thanks for taking the time to chat with me. Can you start by telling me a little about yourself? Victoria: I’m the NeighborWoods organizer for South Sacramento, working to address air pollution and inequities in South Sacramento and the way we do that is with trees.

I’m the mother of two daughters, both of whom has asthma, so the work is really important to me. I’ve lived in Sacramento for most of my life, grew up along the river, spent my childhood playing there and built the foundation for a lifelong love of trees. Working for a nonprofit is really important to me, especially because it allows my girls to see the impact of the work that I do. I’m a nine year Girl Scout troop leader, teaching young women about the environment and their community and how to be active members of society. Devin: That’s really fantastic. You’re clearly a great role model. So as neighbors are spending time thinking about home improvement, what would you recommend they think about? Victoria: When we’re sequestered in our homes and thinking about how we can improve our backyards, trees are a great option. Planting trees brings a lot of important value in terms of shade, clean air and neighborhood beauty. The Sacramento Tree Foundation can provide up to ten free shade trees for your home. It’s totally free of charge, we are just looking for areas to expand our urban forest in the City of Trees. Devin: I thought you might say that! So just order a tree, dig a hole and we’re done? Victoria: Well it’s a little more

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complicated than that, but not by that much. Probably the most important service we offer is a free professional consultation to ensure that you are planting your trees in the right location to ensure that they grow in a way that provides great shade but doesn’t interfere with sidewalks, solar generation or other infrastructure. All of the trees that are offered are specifically and strategically chosen because they grow well in the region. They will use the appropriate amount of water for your yard and be the hardiest species of tree for your personal location. Often time people think that they like their neighbor’s tree and want the same one. But that leads to issues with biodiversity. If all the trees are the same species, a disease can come through and wipe out the whole block. We’ll make sure the place you plant the tree doesn’t lead to roots destroying your entire backyard, they’ll pinpoint the exact spot for your tree. It can even be done virtually using GoogleEarth. We’ll encourage you to call 811 before you dig because you never know what’s under the ground right there. It’s super important and you’ll suddenly know where everything is under your house. They’ll all come out within just a few days. It’s a

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wonderful free service as well. The tree that arrives will be a 5 gallon tree. It will seems small, but we know that the smaller the tree, the hardier it will grow. Don’t be discouraged if it seems small when it comes to your door with consistent deep watering you will see growth. We’ll even leave a laminated booklet with easy instructions on caring for the tree. It’s a lot easier than people may think. Just call us at 916-924-TREE (8733) to get started. Devin: Absolutely, we’ve worked together on several tree plantings in District 7 parks and, although I started as a complete amateur, it was easy to learn – so easy my 4-year-old Henry can do it! There’s a tree at Seymour Park that we consider “his” tree. It was the first one he helped plant. He’s very proud of it. It’s a great project to share with kids or grandkids. Victoria: Definitely, my girls help out sometimes too. They love to point out the trees they’ve planted when we drive through town. I know a lot of people are scared of planting trees, because they are concerned that the tree will damage the sidewalk or other infrastructure leading to higher costs in the future. But that can really be alleviated by a free consultant with a professional, ensuring the right tree is

planted in the right spot. Also, the hole is never more than 18 inches deep, it’s not very labor intensive. Devin: That’s great, when you’re putting in a tree that will live and grow for decades, you definitely want to make sure you do it right. Speaking of doing it right, it seems like there’s huge variation in the number of trees in different neighborhoods. Victoria: That’s right. Decades ago when the city was built, the City decided which neighborhoods were going to get planting strips and which did not. Neighborhoods that do not have large front yards or planting strips have had decades of inequity. When you think of neighborhoods that are more lush like Land Park or East Sac, what you may not realize is that the city owns those trees and maintains those trees. After Prop 13, the city bought easements in wealthier neighborhoods to allow them to continue that maintenance. Lower income neighborhoods don’t typically have trees maintained by the city and today we see a direct effect on the residents who live there. They have the most asthma in the region, the highest temperatures, higher rates of heat death and lower birthweights, even more allergies. The heat island see TREES page 5

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Happy 100th birthday Barbara Crockett Sacramento legend, Barbara Crockett, will celebrate her 100th birthday on September 19, 2020. The following day, Sunday, September 20, between the hours of 4 and 6 pm, in front of Deane Dance Center, located at 3385 Lanatt Street in East Sacramento, there will be a drive-by open house for friends and admirers to drive by and show their appreciation to Ms. Crockett.

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Cards are welcomed and there will also be intermittent individual ballet solos performed on an outside stage by some of the current members of the Sac Civic Ballet Company. Barbara Crockett was both a dancer and teacher at the San Francisco Ballet Company, the first ballet company in the United States. While with the company, Ms. Crockett met and married Deane

Arden-Carmichael News • September 11, 2020 • www.valcomnews.com

Crockett, also a teacher and dancer with the San Francisco Ballet. In 1945 they moved to Sacramento to begin a dance school and company. Thus was born the Crockett Dance Studio and the Sacramento Civic Ballet Company. Through the outstanding leadership and efforts of Barbara and Deane Crockett, the first professional ballet company in the area finally came

to fruition in 1985, the Sacramento Ballet Company. Ms. Crockett has been an outstanding member of the arts community. She has served on the Board of Directors of the Sacramento Regional Arts Council and was an active participant over numerous years in the California Arts Council’s Dance Panel. She has won countless awards and recognition for her service to the arts

community, including Community Service Award from the Sacramento Regional Arts Council, Women in History award from the Sacramento History Center, Arts Education award from the Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission, as well as being awarded a California State Senate Resolution recognizing her achievements and contributions to see CROCETTE page 5

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Crockett:

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the arts in Sacramento. Ms. Crockett was also instrumental in establishing Regional Dance America/Pacific, an organization of pre-professional ballet companies throughout the Western states. Dancing has been in Barbara Crockett’s blood her whole life. Her brother, David Wood, and her sister-in-law, Marnie Wood, were dancers with Martha Graham Company. David Wood headed the UC Berkeley dance department for 20 years. Both she and her husband, Deane Crockett, were professional dancers and teachers for decades. Mrs. Crockett was still teaching ballet students well into her 90s. There is no doubt that her dancing legacy is wellestablished. Both of her daughters, Leslie and Allyson, danced together at the San Francisco Ballet Company, where their parents danced before them. Leslie Crockett later became a successful and well-regarded dance teacher at the San Francisco Ballet School and then at Marin Ballet. Both daughters were trained by their mother, Barbara, at the Crockett Dance Studio as young girls and teenagers. Allyson went on to have a highly successful career with

the San Francisco Ballet, where she was a principal dancer for many years. There she met her husband, Don Schwennesen, a soloist with the company. Eventually, they found their way back to Sacramento, founding the Deane Dance Center and continuing to run the Crockett-Deane Apprentice Company and the preprofessional, Sac Civic Ballet Company, with the enthusiastic support and assistance of Ms. Crockett. Their students have continued to be successful in dance companies over the years, including Joffrey Ballet, American Ballet Theater, Carolina Ballet, and Pacific Northwest Ballet, as well as many others. In addition, their students have been accepted at the most prestigious ballet intensives and college dance programs in the country. The arts community thanks Ms. Crockett for her incredible life and devotion to dance and the arts in in general. Allyson Deane and her husband Don Schwennesen, are hoping the community will swing by in their cars and wave their support to Ms. Crockett on Sunday, September 20 between 4 and 6 pm in front of the Deane Dance Center, 3385 Lanatt St., Sacramento. If unable to attend the drive-by party, one can join via zoom at https://us02web. zoom.us/j/86011976223. Meeting ID: 860 1197 6223.

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Trees:

continued from page 3

effect is a serious issues in many neighborhoods without shade canopies but the hot air doesn’t stay in those neighborhoods and heats the surrounding neighborhoods in the region as well. Instead of having city maintained trees in planting strips, these lower income neighborhoods are expected to pay to plant and care for their own trees. Devin: That hardly seems fair. The city doesn’t care for my trees. Victoria: The long term goal is to raise the tree canopy in a socially equitable way so that all Sacramentans can enjoy cleaner air and better health. Can I tell you an interesting story? Devin: Please do!

Victoria: The indigenous residents of this area’s whole lives depended on the oak tree. They used it for shade, jewelry, food, everything. The song rock a bye baby comes from this area, which was really about the trees. They made their cradles from the young branches and tied them into the trees when the children began to walk, watching the baby and the tree grow together. The song ends, as the bow breaks, the cradle will fall. This is talking about the life cycle of the trees, which is an important thing to think about. Trees have long lives, but they still need to be replaced and that’s our responsibility. We have often lost that connection with nature. We have grocery stores and buildings and pushed the trees away. We went from completely depending on trees, to pushing them away to replace them with hardscape. Now we’re starting to understand the

benefits of trees and understanding that trees are a nice, holistic way of improving the environment, capturing air pollution, improving public health. Standing next to a tree can even lower our blood pressure. Right now, as we’re stuck at home, if we’re lucky enough to have our own yards, by planting trees we’re doing our part, cleaning our air, cleaning our neighbor’s air, it’s really a team effort. Since we have more time at home with our children now, we’re showing them how we’re investing in their future and caring about them by planting trees that will help fight climate change and showing them how to care for their own futures. Devin: That’s so true, thanks for your time Victoria. Victoria: Thank you and be sure to call us at 916-924-TREE (8733) or visit sactree.org to learn more.

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UC Davis Health to enroll participants for major COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial UC Davis Health announced last week a partnership with Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE to participate in a global study of an investigational vaccine against COVID-19, adding a significant component to the university’s response to the deadly coronavirus pandemic. As part of the partnership, UC Davis Health in the coming days anticipates enrolling as many as 200 participants for a clinical trial that involves roughly 30,000 people around the world. “We’re excited to be collaborating with our partners in this important clinical trial for a COVID-19 vaccine,” said David Lubarsky, vice chancellor of human health sciences and chief executive officer for UC Davis Health. “We are uniquely positioned to help with a possible breakthrough due to our clinical trials expertise, ability to recruit for clinical trials quickly, and track record of outreach to minority communities.”

Ideal candidates for the COVID-19 vaccine study are those who are at risk of being infected with the virus, such as health care employees and those who work in businesses with a high volume of customers, including restaurants and retail stores. Essential workers who spend a lot of time outside their homes would be also considered ideal candidates. Candidates should be healthy and between the ages of 18 and 85. Those from ethnic and racial groups that have shown to be disproportionately affected by getting COVID-19, such as Latinos and Blacks, are especially encouraged to participate. The UC Davis Health effort is led by principal investigator Timothy Albertson, chair of the UC Davis Health internal medicine department and leading expert in pulmonary and critical care medicine, and co-principal investigator Angela Haczku, associate dean for translational research.

Vaccine candidate has shown promising results thus far “UC Davis and our research group are pleased to be part of this global trial, which is a testament to our long history of working with our pharmaceutical partners to improve the lives of not only our patients, but people around the world,” Albertson said. “Although there are a number of COVID-19 vaccine candidates worldwide, this one differs because it utilizes a novel modified mRNA (messenger ribonucleic acid), which includes a piece of the genetic code of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19,” Haczku said. “We are very excited, as this is the first time in history that mRNA-based vaccines are used against an infectious disease. Based on the promising results of preliminary trials, we expect to see protection of vaccinated individuals against COVID-19,” Haczku said. The research trial, known as a phase 2/3 study, seeks to determine the efficacy and side effects of a single nucleoside-modified messenger RNA (modRNA) candidate from their BNT162 mRNA-based vaccine program. The vaccine candidate has undergone rigorous evaluation in the United States and Germany and has previously shown significant positive results. UC Davis has played an active role in seeking solutions to

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Arden-Carmichael News • September 11, 2020 • www.valcomnews.com

combat the coronavirus disease since UC Davis Medical Center providers diagnosed and treated the first apparent case of COVID-19 in the United States acquired by community spread in February. UC Davis’ current efforts involve an intensive collaboration between pulmonologists and infectious diseases specialists in the medical center’s intensive care units, clinical laboratory pathologists, virologists from medical microbiology, the California National Primate Research Center and the Center for Immunology and Infectious Diseases. The university seeks to better understand the biology and infectious pathology of this new virus and collaborate on new treatment and diagnostic approaches. The pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, which has teamed up with the smaller BioNTech of Germany, selected vaccine study sites known for their world-class research experience, infrastructure, and nearby concentrations of known and anticipated positive COVID-19 cases.

Historic opportunity for UC Davis Health

“This upcoming COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial is a historic opportunity for the UC Davis School of Medicine and our community at large to directly have a hand in preventing the spread of COVID-19 and potentially save lives across the globe,” said Allison Brashear, dean of the UC Davis School of Medicine. “Our academic medical center is well equipped and staffed to take on this critical role and we are eager to take an active role in helping develop a vaccine.” UC Davis Health serves a geographical region populated with multiple races and ethnicities, which increases the chances of identifying clinical trial candidates from more di-

verse backgrounds than other communities in the United States. The pandemic has been especially challenging for Blacks and Latinos who are getting infected and dying at a rate higher than other groups. “As we have demonstrated throughout this pandemic, our role as the region’s only academic medical center is to move science forward and share what we discover in the interest of greater public health,” said Lubarsky, the CEO of UC Davis Health. “In doing so, we can help eliminate health disparities in underrepresented communities when new therapies and treatments arise.” Pfizer and BioNTech announced their entry into the late-stage phase 2/3 study on July 27, when they enlisted the first group of the 120 sites that are committed to enrolling participants at risk of contracting the virus, known in the science community as SARS-CoV-2. The phase 2/3 trial is designed as a 1:1 investigational vaccine candidate to placebo, randomized, observer-blinded study to obtain safety, immune response, and efficacy data needed for regulatory review. The trial’s primary goal is preventing COVID-19 in those who have not been infected by SARS-CoV-2 prior to immunization and preventing COVID-19 regardless of whether participants have previously been infected by SARS-CoV-2. A secondary goal is preventing severe COVID-19 in those groups. If the vaccine candidate’s success continues, Pfizer and BioNTech have stated they are on track to seek regulatory review as early as October. If regulatory authorization or approval is obtained, the companies plan to supply up to 100 million doses by the end of 2020 and approximately 1.3 billion doses by the end of 2021. Valley Community Newspapers, Inc.


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456-7777 rooneysplumbing.com License #683668

Check out the Home Improvement Guide Call Melissa at 429-9901 for ad rates.

YOUR AD HERE RESERVE YOUR SPACE IN THE CLASSIFIEDS! CALL 916-429-9901

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