Volume 3, Issue 19, Nov. 4, 2022 View as Webpage

Community Groups Make Formal Legal Request to Monterey Agricultural Commissioner to Stop Pesticide Spraying Near Public Schools 

By YANELY MARTINEZ AND MARK WELLER

 

The Monterey County Agricultural Commissioner received a formal legal request Oct. 12 from a coalition of community groups asking for review of restricted materials permits approving the use of numerous pesticides within one mile of Ohlone Elementary, Hall District Elementary, and Pajaro Middle schools in northern Monterey County. The groups ask that the Commissioner stop all spraying authorized by these improperly issued permits until the required review of health and environmental impacts occurs. 


The Monterey Bay Central Labor Council, Watsonville-based Center for Farmworker Families, Pajaro Valley Federation of Teachers, the local pesticide reform coalition Safe Ag Safe Schools, and the statewide coalition Californians for Pesticide Reform, represented by Earthjustice, warn that the application of pesticides like highly toxic fumigants 1,3-dichloropropene (1,3-D) and chloropicrin, without proper review, poses serious health risks to the farmworkers, children, teachers, and other community members of Monterey County. 

 

Ten years of air quality monitoring data from Ohlone Elementary School confirm that pesticide drift at cancer-risk levels is rampant at this school site. Levels of the restricted fumigant 1,3-D measured here have exceeded the safe harbor level recently set by the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment every year going back to 2012.  

     

The Commissioner’s routine approval of restricted materials, a designation given to pesticides that are more harmful or prone to drift, disproportionately impacts the Latino community living and working in the Pajaro Valley. The legal request cites sections of permit applications that should detail environmental review but instead contain meaningless filler text or nothing at all and also provide no evidence of independent review by the Commissioner. The request also shows a pattern of approving unreviewed fumigation permits submitted at the last minute, right before fumigation season. A 2019 report from UCLA confirms that Ag Commissioners throughout California are in violation of state law by failing to analyze cumulative health impacts and safer alternatives when approving pesticide permits. 


This permit challenge builds upon ongoing efforts by community groups to obtain larger buffer zones between schools and pesticide application sites, and to improve the lack of transparency in the permitting process by requiring advanced public notification of all sprayings.

 

“The children at these three schools are 99% Latino. That the County Ag Commissioner allows for the use of highly hazardous pesticides around these schools without following his legal obligation to analyze for safer alternatives and cumulative impacts is an outrageous case of environmental racism,” said Dr. Ann Lopez, Executive Director of the Center for Farmworker Families.

 

Francisco Rodriguez, former President of the Pajaro Valley Federation of Teachers and Secretary-Treasurer of the Monterey Bay Central Labor Council said, “How can the Ag Commissioner tell us we’re safe from fumigants, when they don’t account for extra dangers posed by combined applications? Fumigants are applied together or close to each other hundreds of times a year in Monterey County, so this is a serious community health issue that must be addressed immediately.”


Yanely Martinez, Monterey County organizer of Safe Ag Safe Schools adds, “We know that State law requires that government approval of pesticide registration and use must involve evaluation of safer alternatives to the pesticide in question. Our Ag Commissioner is not doing that. We’re demanding that he does his job and protects the health of farmworker communities from pesticide harms.”


“The Monterey County Agricultural Commissioner is not following the California Environmental Quality Act or the Food and Agricultural Code. These laws were designed to protect communities from the direct and indirect effects of pesticide exposure, including the cumulative impacts associated with the use of many different pesticides routinely approved in the same area. It’s long past time to stop rubber-stamping the use of toxic chemicals,” said Elizabeth Fisher, Earthjustice senior attorney. 


Environmental review must be conducted to ensure safety of children, farmworkers, and teachers

 

Contacts: Mark Weller, Californians for Pesticide Reform, mark@pesticidereform.org, 831-325-1681

Miranda Fox, Earthjustice, mfox@earthjustice.org, 415-283-2324 

Stop Pesticide Secrecy in California

By YANELY MARTINEZ AND MARK WELLER


The California Department of Pesticide Regulation (DPR) is designing a statewide, advance notification system to alert communities about upcoming agricultural pesticide applications. If done properly, this system will allow people to take precautions to protect their health.


But DPR’s draft notification system is seriously flawed. Worst of all, it doesn’t provide the location of the field where the application is going to take place, even though DPR has this information. It also limits where people can monitor for hazardous pesticide applications to only the area around a specific address. And it doesn't provide a public website where people can get information without registering with their personal information.


Please join us in calling for an effective, inclusive and robust notification system that will truly serve all Californians. Click HERE to take quick and easy action. 

"Lunar Eclipse at Seabright Beach" by Elizabeth Williams ewilliamsart@att.net  831 722 3068

Russell Brusché's video,The Final Act.

Election Tidbits from My Inbox 


From Yes on Empty Home TaxFund affordable housing - Katie, Lisa and Kayla

Word on the street is that early voter turnout has been low so far this election. Only 12% of ballots have been turned in within the City of Santa Cruz. Voters over 65+ are leading the charge but we need ALL people who care about affordable housing, especially young voters, to step up and Vote Yes on N to secure millions for affordable housing. If you need info about how to return your ballot or same day registration, visit www.votescount.us!


From Yes on O - John Hall and Lira Filippini

Fact Wars - Arm yourself with the most accurate and current information. The City's proposal is very far from 'ready-to-go' but it doesn't stop the opposition from blasting that false claim from the rooftops — along with many other tricky claims. Even Don Lane admitted recently that the City's project is NOT a bird in the hand. But what WE have in hand is the Fact Check part of our website.


Please join us for Yes on Measure O's Election Night Party at Woodstock’s Pizza, 710 Front Street, from 8pm to 10, Tuesday.


We likely will not know the results of any local election that night but we can celebrate the terrific, civic-minded and community-oriented campaign that we have conducted. All of us volunteers and donors have done so much. Please count on coming for a slice of pizza and gathering with us. Until then, let’s give it all we’ve got this last week.


Santa Cruz4Bernie - Jeffrey Smedberg

A lot hangs in the balance for the future of our city (Santa Cruz) after next Tuesday. You don't want to be looking back and saying, "if only I had done a little more." Here's your chance to help the truly progressive campaigns' get-out-the-vote effort. Distribute some doorhangers to our supporters on the final weekend. Sign up at sc4b.org/walk.


Campaigns promoted are those endorsed by Santa Cruz for Bernie: Justin Cummings, Joy Schendledecker, Héctor Marín, Sean Maxwell, Yes on N - Empty Home Tax, Yes on O - Our Downtown, Our Future.


Letters to the Editor

Dear Editor,


One hundred California cities host a population density greater than Watsonville’s. City Council members cry our community is landlocked, that Pajaro Valley’s unequalled farmlands must be fair game for urban development, namely housing. However, Watsonville’s council-approved Downtown Specific Plan promises some-4,000 new housing units in just this small proportion of the city’s total geography. Following this plan, and similar redevelopment citywide, can supply Watsonville’s housing needs for decades to come. Greater density will make additional housing more affordable to lower income citizens. Our Pajaro Valley’s fertile soils, mild Mediterranean climate, and well-managed aquifer allow the cultivation of high-value specialty crops grown in few places on this planet. Vote “yes” on Measure Q to protect our unequaled farmland from urban sprawl. Vote “no” on Measure S, a wolf in sheep’s clothing, that will allow farmland to be paved over at the whim of any future city council.

Tom Willey              

Watsonville


Dear Editor,

A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing: Read the Language


Read the language of ballot Measures Q and S. Measure S is a wolf in sheep’s clothing that claims to maintain the existing growth restrictions but in fact opens up the Urban Limit Line and makes it meaningless with eleven words: “…with the exception of any property identified by the City Council…”  That means that a single City Council vote could put any of our farmland fields up for annexation. Riverside Drive? The Nugent Ranch? However, Measure Q gives Watsonville 18 years to concentrate on infill development on existing vacant and under-utilized sites within city limits. The highest and best use of these world-class soils is to grow food, not houses or big box stores. No one wants us to turn into the urban sprawl of San Jose. S is for Sprawl: Annexing our farm soils is not the answer to housing issues. Vote Yes on Measure Q.


Sam Earnshaw

Watsonville, CA  95076


Dear Editor,


Save Climate - Save Farmland

With every acre of farmland we lose around Watsonville, we lose the ability to store carbon and produce world-class, cool-season fruits and vegetables. Every acre of farmland developed puts pressure on remaining lands that grow the food we need—making it harder to use that land to help reverse climate change. Agriculture is already climate stressed because of unpredictable droughts, searing heat, severe storms and invasive pest species.


Farms that incorporate cover crops and compost build soil carbon and biodiversity, making them more resilient to climate extremes. Hedgerows and restored riparian areas help to draw carbon into their woody branches and also support beneficial insects and birds that are declining because of climate change and other factors. Farms that employ these practices also reduce their use of toxic pesticides.


Watsonville needs to strive for walkable neighborhoods within its Urban Limit Line – the kind that Felipe Hernandez speaks of, where we build housing along transit corridors, so people live where stores and other amenities are located, the need for cars is less, and easily used public transportation can be available for longer trips. Building buyable condominiums instead of apartments will help residents build generational wealth. Attached dwelling are also more energy efficient. Reducing carbon emissions from transportation and building designs are some of the biggest ways that communities like ours can reduce our carbon footprint. Infilling Watsonville with climate friendly housing helps to conserve farmland which we need to cool the planet. Please join me in voting yes on Measure Q!

Jo Ann Baumgartner

Watsonville, CA 95076

Mailbox, Ballot Box

By LARRY BENSKY


The deluge seems to be over.


At this writing, there are still ten days until November 8. So, finally, it’s safe to throw into recycling the still growing daily pile of election-oriented mail.


There’s been an unprecedented tonnage this year.


Who directs it to my modest dwelling? By volume, the victor has to be something called “C.A.R.B.”  Its slickly produced, four color stiff paper broadsides implore us to vote “Yes on L.”


“L” poses as a Berkeley ballot measure dealing with housing.  “Housing,” is a big buzzword, coast-to-coast this year. There doesn’t seem to be enough of it.  But little or none of the hundreds of thousands of “units’ being discussed are directed to those in most dire need of it. “Housing,” after all, is mostly lacking for poor and homeless people.  Poor and homeless people are most often non-white.  Many of them are immigrants, whose native countries are class-stratified, environmentally ravaged, corrupt, and violent. 


In our land of wealth and opportunity, “housing,” as proposed, ranges from “tiny” one-room shacks with hot plates, toilets, and fold-down beds, to McMansions on entire floors of skyscrapers.  Or multi-acre “estates” with water-guzzling lawns and pools.  


“C.A.R.B.” is listed as the sender of these well-printed in vivid color “housing” appeals. But C.A.R.B. is the California Air Resources Board, a government agency. It doesn’t seem to have either donated or endorsed Measure L. (inquiries to C.A.R.B’s Sacramento headquarters were not returned.)


Those listed on C.A.R.B’s pro-Measure L mailings include 43 “Community Leaders.” As someone who has lived and worked in this community for over 40 years, I don’t recognize the names of 41 of them. Another list on the mailers of “elected officials” includes the caveat that those accompanied by a * have their “organizations” listed for identification only.  One whose name I recognize actually came by our house to ask us to vote NO on Measure L, and give us a window sign with “NO on L in big letters. Yet she’s listed as an “elected official" on the “Yes on L” mailer.


Whoever they are, they’ve raised $260,000 to support Measure L.  Their largest donor, a realtor, has donated more than all opponents combined, according to incomplete statements filed so far.


The non-representative Berkeley City Council and Mayor having already presided over the destruction and transmogrification of a once vibrant city center for “housing,”  now seek to use Measure L for further destruction.  Permits are granted.  Variances and tax concessions bestowed.   There are no publicized community meetings for people and neighborhoods to voice objections.


The first step for  creeping “housing”  is to destroy existing structures. These often contain moderate, rent-controlled units.  Then these sites lie empty, as the owners trade them for paper increases in value.  Which they can do for years, meaning more displaced people wait for “housing” which, if built, they will not be able to afford.


Half of Berkeley’s voters won’t bother to cast votes. Our ballots are poorly laid out and hard to sort out.  A completely indecipherable separately mailed “voter guide,” (there are two of them!) doesn’t help. Even though voting by mail is not hard, it takes time to find out where on the ballot candidates or issues you may want to vote for appear.


Not only are there deceptive “mailers”  deluging us, those who watch TV will be further discouraged and confused by two slickly produced  Native American  Casino measures, Propositions 26 and 27. Neither is for the benefit of Native Americans, though each would be enormously profitable for  gambling interests behind them.  But happily for the gambling “industry,” (one of California’s biggest “industrial” entities) this year’s election coincides with some of TV’s biggest audience programs.  Sports!


The World Series!  The N.F.L.!  The N.B.A.!  College football! “Bowl Eligible Big Games!!”  The N.H.L.! Fox, ESPN, and ABC. now even show during games their own betting “cutaways” featuring jackpot prizes promoted by Sports announcers, and screen crawler subtitles with gambling odds and results.


With “housing” being hopelessly mired in electoral muck, the other big buzzword this November  is “The Economy.” And its subset, “Jobs.”  


Daily statistics on numbers of people employed and the “price at the pump” are said to be on millions of minds.  


No matter how many people have “jobs,” courts and politicians have done little or nothing to protect workers, specifically through those collective associations known as unions.  Executive officeholders, from Presidents to Governors, don’t work to enhance the dignity of work, rather than to increase the number of “jobs.”


Workplace safety. Collective possibilities for advancement. Elimination of discrimination. Have we seen real progress here? Or are real accomplishments – like “diversity” – all too often praised as outcomes, rather than way stations?   A “diverse” work force of underpaid, underprotected people, stuck at lower employment  levels with nonexistent future careers – Is this something to be proud of? Do these “jobs” provide  satisfaction? Or are they merely a way to try to get enough money to keep the bills paid?


It is no wonder that the employed as well as the unemployed are depressed, sad and sometimes suicidal.  If your only option to feed and house and clothe yourself and your family is noisy, dirty daily drudgery for money insufficient to fund your needs, much less your wishes, what can your “mental health” be?  


Even New York Times conservative columnist David Brooks recognizes a “Rising Tide of Global Sadness.”  “The emotional health of the world is shattering,” concludes Brooks, after looking at startling increases in poll respondents' degree of anger and disillusion at their work and at their communities(NY Times 10/30/2022). 


And how can politicians navigate the brackish waters in which their constituents survive?


What they mostly come up with are not laws, regulations, and policies.  What they center on instead is “messaging.”   Much as the Berkeley elected officials vaunt Measures L,M, and N as solutions for “housing,” national Democrats “shift gears.”  (“Shifting Gears, Democrats Now Emphasize economy” NY Times, 10/25/2022).  


Leading “liberal” thinkers want Democrats running for office to tell voters loudly that it is their Republican opponents who do things like block controls on the price of insulin.  That it is Republicans who, if they get control of Congress, will continue and extend Trump’s tax cuts for the wealthy, meaning less money for those on Medicare and Medicaid.  


Unfortunately, Democrats, tend to focus on reality, not abstractions.  How many are affected, or even know anything about, insulin and its pricing?  Versus how many can tell you within a penny the price of gasoline?


Yes, it makes sense and could be of economic assistance to tax the windfall profits of Chevron, Exxon  and their fellow oil oligopolists.  But that would mean those oil oligopolists would create and purvey lies and distortions of the same kind that back Berkeley’s “housing”- drunk politicians. More junk in your mailbox. More crap on TV! (Viewer alert: it’s  World Series time! If it goes seven games, it might end three days before the election! And many states still have lots of in-person ballots cast on election day, or mailed around that time.  So get set for lots of splash, flashy TV ads.)


‘Twas not always thus.


Back in my long ago (late 1950’s!) college years we used two seminal textbooks in American  History classes. “Middletown” and “Middletown in Transition.” (1929-1935).  The authors, Robert Lynd and Helen Merrell Lynd, wrote what is still one of the most thorough and prescient studies of a small midwestern city, Muncie, Indiana.  


Before World War I and the early depression years, Middletown/Muncie (they changed the name to avoid issues of Copyright, Governmental rights etc.) was a white, working class community of 50,000.  Jobs were facilitated through apprenticeships and passed on through families and unions.  Crafts and skills were taught.  Wages were high enough so that home ownership was common.  Homes were comfortable.  The economic elite existed, but they tended to be “hands on,” not isolated in corporate offices.  Banks were funded by workers’ deposits, and revenues from low-interest mortgages.  Municipal services (fire, police, street maintenance, education) were funded by affordable taxes.  Governing bodies (city council, mayor) mostly were elected by and from workers and people known in the community (doctors, clergy, small business owners.)


All of this disappeared by the time the Lynds restudied Middletown after World War 1. Worker satisfaction had declined.  Unions were suppressed and disempowered by federal and state legislation and judicial rulings.  Massive industry created to fuel the war against Germany, which a pacifist and isolationist (and bigoted racist) President, Woodrow Wilson, turned control of business over to extremely wealthy people. This meant that crafts and artisans and locally funded manufacturing  shrank almost totally.


Life changed with it, in a way the “virtual” life of business and crafts is changing today.  


Gone were Workingmen’s Clubs and free libraries. Gone were massive outings and picnics for workers and their families. Gone were easily accessible shops and stores where people without cars could buy locally grown and manufactured products.


The media (radio and newspapers) were bought out by wealthy families and became publicists and propagandists for a new economic era.  The national Chamber of Commerce was blunt, “The American citizen’s first importance to his country is no longer that of citizen but that of consumer.”


Where previously “unions brought tangible pressure for a weekly pay law, standardized wage scales, factory inspection, a Workingman’s Library and reading rooms, and meeting halls, now all these disappeared.”  As did the Workingman’s Party, whose Presidential candidate, Eugene V. Debs, campaigned five times, the last from prison where he had been sentenced on false charges. He got more than a million votes.   


With millions and millions of those eligible to vote discouraged or indifferent to whatever they thought the outcomes might be, “progressive” Democrats retreated into urban governments. These became headquarters for isolated political “machines” of job seekers and job holders out for themselves.


The current Democratic Party looks more like what locally based governments looked like in the 1920s. Nationwide Democrats continue to get millions more votes than Republicans. But Republican control of state governments means districts are designed to elect Republicans while Democrats are packed into their smaller districts.


A new, Republican reinforcing tactic has come with the rise of the virtual.  “Voter Analytics” measures tens of millions of people using consulting, analytics, media, marketing and advertising software. The resulting “voter scoring” shows Republicans which streaming video sources, podcasts websites, and apps, to use for messages, which are not monitored for accuracy. By transmitters like Google and Twitter. Nor are respondents monitored for “Q Anon” scores, measuring whether and how much they believe a “deep state” is behind Democrats fictitious involvement in fictitious things like an Obama--led (!) child trafficking ring.


Resistance to monitoring such messaging is led by none other than Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, who just bought the world’s most omnipresent messaging platform, Twitter. Within nanoseconds of his acquisition, Musk’s new toy had seen thousands of messages about Democrats stealing votes, Blacks being disillusioned with Democrats, and of course every vicious nutcake’s favorite trope, Jews behind all that’s bad. (The deranged man arrested while attempting to kill House Speaker Nancy Pelosi but instead seriously injuring her husband was a follower of Q-Anon.)


Satirist songwriter (and public school math teacher) Tom Lehrer knew about this about the time I was reading the Lynds in college:


“National Brotherhood Week”

By Tom Lehrer (1965)


“Oh the white folks hate the Black folks

And the Black folks hate the white folks

To hate all but the right folks

Is an old established rule


Oh the poor folks hate the rich folks

And the rich folks hate the poor folks

And all of my folks hate all of your folks

It’s as American as apple pie


Oh the Protestants hate the Catholics

And the Catholics hate the Protestants

And the Hindus hate the Muslims

And everybody hates the Jews


But during National Brotherhood Week

It’s National everyone Smile at One Another Week…


Elon Musk says he’s going to have a “content monitoring” body in place. He doesn’t say when. Or who’ll be on it.  Or how they will be chosen.  Apple and Facebook also say they’ll be vigilant.  But also have no procedures in place.  The government?  Well, it’s maybe going to do something some time while being careful not to abridge “freedom of speech.”


And after all, misinformation and disinformation has characterized our blessed Republic since even before its formal formation (for a thorough review of two recent books about this, see Adam Gopnick, “Finding the Founders: How Samuel Adams helped foment a revolution.” New Yorker, 10/31/2022)


What to make of this mess?  And what goes into what voters can make of it?  


Takes time to figure that out.  Time is what media says it doesn’t have, given what they hope is your anxiety to “find out.”  If you’ve done all you can before Election Day, take the night off.  Go see “Tar” or “Descendant” or “The Banshees of Inishirin” or “Till” if they’re available to you.  Which they no longer are in Berkeley, all downtown movie theaters having been closed, thanks to those who would continue the disembowelment of the city.


Larry Bensky welcomes your comments, praise and condemnation: LBensky@igc.org

Photo by TARMO HANNULA 

A wood duck cruises the waters of the Duck Pond in San Lorenzo Park in Santa Cruz. 

Santa Cruz County Covid-19 Report 

By SARAH RINGLER


The Santa Cruz County Health Department regularly releases data on the current status of Covid-19 and monkeypox in the county. Bivalent Covid-19 boosters are now available. Go HERE for details. 


There were no new deaths in the county this week. Click to view a graph of hospitalizations here.


Because of the availability of home testing, I will no longer report on changes in the active cases in the county. The Health Department is now collecting data for Covid and monkeypox from wastewater at the City Influent for the city of Santa Cruz, and from the Lode Street pump stations for the county. See webpage HERE. The first chart below shows the latest county data.



Here are details on the county's vaccination data. Vaccination data has not changed much and doesn't include the boosters. Bivalent Boosters are now available for children 5 and up. 


This webpage also has a link where you can get a digital copy and scannable QR code of your vaccination record. Keep track of your four-digit code because that is your access to the site.


The county's Effective Reproductive Number is below one. See the second chart below. Numbers above one show the spread of the virus is increasing. Below one means the spread is decreasing. The chart, released from the California Department of Public Health below shows several predictions from different agencies. For information, click here.


The government is issuing free Antigen Rapid Tests here. If you have not ordered tests or have only ordered one set, you are entitled to a full 12 boxes. Order now while supplies last. To get information of COVID-19 testing locations around the county visit this site. You can make an appointment for a Rapid Antigen Test here.


Any Californian, ages six months and older can get vaccinated for free. For information on getting vaccinated, click here.

11/4/22 

Deaths by age/274:

25-34 - 5/274

35-44 - 8/274

45-54 - 10/274

55-59 - 4/274

60-64 - 15/274

65-74 - 49/274

75-84 - 63/274

85+ - 120/274


Deaths by gender:

Female - 135/274 

Male - 139/274 

Deaths by vaccination status: 

vaccinated - 37/274

unvaccinated - 237/274


Deaths by ethnicity:

White - 161/274 

Latinx - 90/274

Black - 3/274

Asian - 16/274

American Native - 1/274

Unknown - 0

Photo by TARMO HANNULA

Fashion Street -  Brilliant marigolds shine from the graves at Valley Catholic Cemetary on Dia De Los Muertos in Watsonville.

Labor History Calendar - Oct. 28 - Nov. 3, 2022

a.k.a Know Your History Lest We Forget


Nov. 4, 1956: Hungarian revolt crushed by soviet troops in Budapest.

Nov. 5, 1855: Eugene Debs, Socialist leader, born.

Nov. 5, 1916: Everett, Washington massacre, at least six IWW’s killed.

Nov. 5, 1984: Anti-apartheid general strike in South Africa.

Nov. 6, 1918: Revolt in shipyards in Kiel & Hamburg and creation of Workers’ Councils in Germany.

Nov. 7, 1912: First appearance of IWW Ernest Riebe’s “Mr. Block” comic strip. See cartoon below.

Nov. 7, 1917: Bolshevik Revolution launched in Russia.

Nov. 8, 1892: 20,000 Black and White workers stage general strike in New Orleans, Louisiana. 

Nov. 8, 1924: Australian dockers strike against overtime until Dec. 13.

Nov. 9, 1935: Congress of Industrial Organizations founded. 

Nov. 9, 1988: Military kills three strikers and wounds dozens at Companhia Siderurgia Nacional in Brazil.

Nov. 9, 1989: Berlin Wall falls. 

Nov. 10, 1816: The word “scab” first used in print to describe a strikebreaker.

Nov. 10, 1933: Sit-down strike begins at Austin, Minn. Hormel plant.

Nov. 10, 1992: General strike against anti-union laws in Australia. 

 


Labor History Calendar has been published yearly by the Hungarian Literature Fund since 1985.


Ernest Riebe’s “Mr. Block” comic strip from the early 1900s 


Photo by TARMO HANNULA

Wild Greens Sardinian Style Soup

By SARAH RINGLER


When wild nature was our grocery store, we would go out and search for edibles that we would have learned about from others in our families and communities. Spring is clearly here now and there is an abundance of wild greens that with stock and some other ingredients can make a wonderful soup. Dandelion leaves are easily identifiable but other wild edible greens can be discovered locally with a little research like purslane, young nettles and plantain. Just make sure they haven’t been sprayed or treated with poisonous chemicals. 


The varied textures and flavors make what can easily be called a hearty soup. The choice of ingredients also allows for a lot of creativity. Wild greens explode with vibrancy and are calmed by the beans and pasta. Pancetta and cheese add richness. Garlic, white wine, tarragon and fennel add accents that give the soup a special flavor. 


This recipe was sent to me by Amy Newell, local gourmand and Chair of the Pajaro Valley Water Management Agency. She got the recipe from Christopher Kimball of the Milk Street cooking show. He presents this as an authentic Sardinian version using fregula, a pea shaped Sardinian pasta that is similar to pearl couscous, and ricotta salata. Ricotta salata is an Italian cheese that is similar to Mexican Cotija and Greek Mizithra. I also recommend using large white beans like Italian cannellinis.


S’erbuzzu, Sardinian Soup with White Beans and Fregula


2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more to serve

3-4 ounces pancetta, chopped 

1 bunch stems and leaves flat-leaf parsley

1½ teaspoons fennel seeds

½ cup dry white wine

Kosher salt and ground black pepper

2 quarts chicken broth

¾ cup fregula, pearl couscous or bite size pasta 

15½ ounce can large white beans like cannellini, rinsed and drained

3 medium garlic cloves, minced

¾ cup salty Italian cheese like ricotta salata, Pecorino Romano, asiago or Parmesan

4 ounces (6 cups) baby arugula or other greens,  roughly chopped

½ cup lightly packed fresh tarragon, chopped


In a large saucepan, heat the oil and pancetta over medium heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the pancetta is browned in 6 to 8 minutes. Chop the parsley stems and stir into the pancetta with the fennel seeds. Add the wine and 1 teaspoon pepper. Stir and scrape up any browned bits that stick to the bottom of the pan. Bring to a simmer over medium-high and cook, stirring, until most of the moisture has evaporated in 2 to 3 minutes.


Add the broth and bring to a boil over high heat. Stir in the pasta and lower heat to a simmer for about 10 minutes. Stir occasionally. 


Add drained beans, garlic, parsley leaves and half of the ricotta salata. Continue to cook, stirring occasionally and adjusting the heat to maintain a bare simmer, until the fregola is fully tender, in about 10 minutes.


Remove from the heat and stir in the arugula, tarragon and other greens. Taste, and then season with salt and pepper. Serve sprinkled with the remaining ricotta salata and drizzled with a little olive oil.

Send your story, poetry or art here: Please submit a story, poem or photo of your art that you think would be of interest to the people of Santa Cruz County. Try and keep the word count to around 400. Also, there should be suggested actions if this is a political issue. Submit to coluyaki@gmail.com

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Thanks, Sarah Ringler

Welcome to Serf City Times Our county has problems and many people feel left out. Housing affordability, racism and low wages are the most obvious factors. However, many groups and individuals in Santa Cruz County work tirelessly to make our county a better place for everyone. These people work on the environment, housing, economic justice, health, criminal justice, disability rights, immigrant rights, racial justice, transportation, workers’ rights, education reform, gender issues, equity issues, electoral politics and more. Often, one group doesn’t know what another is doing. The Serf City Times is dedicated to serving as a clearinghouse for those issues by letting you know what is going on, what actions you can take and how you can support these groups.This is a self-funded enterprise and all work is volunteer. 

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