Volume 3, Issue 35, March 10, 2023 View as Webpage

Rally today demands that the city of Santa Cruz open 24/7 emergency shelters during the current atmospheric river. Contact Santa Cruz City Council and tell them to open emergency shelters for our local houseless residents. In the last Point in Times Homeless report for 2022, it was recorded that 89% were local residents before losing their homes.  Mayor Fred KeeleyVice Mayor Renee GolderSandy Brown, Sonja BrunnerShebreh Kalantari-JohnsonScott Newsome and Martine Watkins.

All we are saying, is give trees a chance.

All We Are Saying Is, Give Trees a Chance

CONTRIBUTED BY SAVE SOME TREES COALITION


Help save two liquid amber trees in downtown Santa Cruz. Please join us at the London Nelson Center, room 1, March 11, 11:30-12:30, for speakers and music from Russell Brutsché. For a sample of Brutsché's music and an explanation of the photo, click on the Youtube arrow above.


The original location of the event at the Santa Cruz Farmers' Market has been changed because of rain. For more information click here. Click Santa Cruz City Council to send them an email.

Jimmy, We Hardly Knew ‘Ya

By LARRY BENSKY


The Governor of Georgia was waiting on the front steps of his mansion as our vehicles approached. You wouldn’t have guessed that he was the Governor of Georgia, as he was dressed in white pants, an open-collar blue shirt, and loafers without socks. His face was ear to ear with his famous “shit eating“ grin, as my Brooklyn childhood buddies would put it.


 “Hi, I’m Jimmy Carter. This is my wife, Rosalynn.”


“Glad to meet you,” we mumbled, as our line stretched down the long stairway.  


Jimmy passed us to Rosalynn, a tall graceful woman who was also glad to meet us. She shifted from shaking one hand to the other, keeping the line moving towards the tall doors, open wide on this cold January night.


Inside, down a long hallway, we could see a large room, with a pianist tinkling light jazz. Tubs of ice held beer, wine and soda bottles. Plates of nibbles abounded. Waiters in red coats circulated with more food. Only if you had experience in such a setting (I certainly didn’t) would you be able to balance the offerings.


“What the f…. are we doing here?” whispered one of my companions. It was thanks to her that I was here; she managed a small Atlanta night spot, where Carter’s sons sometimes partied.  My partner/ housemate and I, on a cross-country road trip, had stopped in Atlanta, where we knew exactly one person, and heard a promo for the club on a station that played jazz and rock. So we thought we’d give it a try.


As a small band prepared to begin, there was an announcement from the stage asking if anyone knew how to fix a sound system? I was barely able to try, having gotten used to frequent electronic breakdowns at the community radio station, KPFA in Berkeley, where I had been a newscaster, talk show host, fund-raiser, meeting chair, and eventually station manager. Just about everyone there was deeply into whatever they were deeply into. Music (classical, folk “world” blues, rock, jazz) politics, poetry and the vast areas of creative interface among all these.


A few nights and a few sound system defects later, the Atlanta club owner rewarded we volunteer workers with tickets for that night’s “Big Arena” concert. The headliner, unbelievably, was Bob Dylan. He wasn’t yet big in Atlanta, but was huge back home in California.


We had VIP seats. Further down our front row was the Governor of Georgia, whose cautious trajectory as an anti-segregation white politician in the rigidly racist South, was definitely on our radar screens.


Dylan killed it. The audience went nuts. But by the time he arrived at Carter’s mansion for the afterparty we had left. Later we learned that Dylan stayed for hours, as Carter played records from his large collection for his young musician friends, including guys from Macon, called “The Allman Brothers.”      


Those born when Carter was last President (1981) would be 42 years old today. Their parents and grandparents might remember President Carter, The Allman Brothers, and Bob Dylan. For younger generations what’s known of them comes from history books. Or web sites, nowadays, more likely.


After his Governorship and Presidency, Carter courted solitude, away from meetings, committees, and social obligations. But he was hardly idle.  He took up carpentry and became adept. He painted. He wrote poetry.  He hiked at home and abroad. He spent time gabbing and gossiping at country stores near his inherited farmland. And he wrote pages and pages on subjects ranging from the Middle East to the use and abuse of religion - 30 books in all.          


Jonathan Alter’s exhaustive (and exhausting) 750-page book, “His Very Best: Jimmy Carter, A Life” (2020) makes one stagger at the breadth and depth of the man and his energies.   


One thing he did not do much of is take advantage of his experiences and become a quotemeister for the ever thirsty media.  He did not take calls from celebrity reporters, even to discus those he liked (Obama) or those he hated (Trump). He didn’t collect the legalized investments and bribes (euphemistically called “campaign contributions”) that deform and disgrace electoral politics. He didn’t run around the country collecting praise and portraits  And he didn’t use his post-Presidential years as so many other Presidents (including Obama) have done, to amass enormous wealth.


What he did instead was to work as hard as he could to help the least fortunate on the planet.


“Habitat for Humanity,” was originally a small “intentional community” in rural Georgia, meant to provide a refuge for weary Christians. Jimmy and Rosallyn made it their headquarters for their life’s work.


“Habitat,” eventually incorporated into The Carter Center that has built over 100,000 homes. Dwellings that are not the pathetic little structures being grudgingly provided by corporations and governments. Habitat’s residencies are built to last. They’re  owner-occupied, by people who had been renters (or homeless) all their lives. Probably a million people have lived, or are living, in them. The impetus was the religious faith that both Carters had grown up with and are deeply committed to.


As the Miami Times recently said, (2/22/2023), in a pre-obituary tribute:

“Carter doesn’t just talk the talk; he has always walked the walk. In James 2:14-17 it is written: "What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? … Can that faith save him? If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you says to them, 'Go in peace, be warmed and filled,' without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that? So a faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.”  


Sixteen years after my memorable night with Jimmy Carter in the Governor’s mansion, I encountered him again, in very different circumstances, ones which might have tried his faith as a younger man.  But he and Rosalynn had not only grown Habitat for Humanity in the United States, they also visited 140 countries to initiate projects. Countries with millions of poor people. Countries with autocratic, sometimes murderous, governments. 


The country where our paths crossed again was Nicaragua. Carter had never been there. I had, eight years earlier, as the producer of a PBS documentary about the rise and victory of the Sandinistas, and the beginnings of a progressive government. Carter, as President, had helped facilitate that government. When Reagan defeated Carter, foreign policy radically changed.  Not only did the United States and its powerful overt and covert military establishments not help the young revolutionaries, they funded an armed rebellion against them, and set about undermining them commercially and financially. The overthrow of the Somoza dictatorship was seen as nothing more than a hiccup in the long illness that had kept Nicaragua and other Central American countries impoverished, subservient, and helpless. 

 

Daniel Ortega was the leader of  the new ruling group, the Sandinistas. It was a movement before it was a political party. (Sandino had been a rebel leader opposed to U.S. dominance sixty years before.) Now its essence as a popular based party was about to be tested in an election.


As an ex-President, Carter had pipelines and friendships deep in Washington’s endless bureaucracies. All the polls indicated he was going to lose to Ronald Reagan. But he had developed an appetite for political involvement ever since first campaigning for the Georgia State Senate at the age of 36. He lost.     


So, in addition to Habitat for Humanity’s domestic focus, the Carters would  create an entity which worked for world peace which the Carters’ deep religious faith told them should be everyone’s goal.  Even if history seemed to say that for abundant reasons only a few countries, for limited periods of time, had ever gotten there. And in a nuclear armed world where dictatorships and fake “democracies” abounded, they were unlikely to get very far down that road.


The second and last time I saw the Carters close up was when he and his small staff were creating the conditions for what had never happened in that particular country before, a free and fair election, with high citizen participation, and a universally accepted outcome.


I had gotten there a month before the Carters arrived just before election day.


The conditions were dire not just for an election, but for human life itself. Food was scarce, fuel and water were rationed, politicians were thought to be pitiful or at best ineffectual. Daniel Ortega was much less popular as President than he had been as a rebel leader. Leaders are often held responsible for things that aren’t entirely their fault, if at all.  


Aside from active war zones – of which Nicaragua, thanks to the Reagan administration by then had developed plenty --  there could have been few more challenging circumstances for the few people – including me – who were trying to bring  Nicaragua’s situation to distant audiences.


Electricity outages and shortages of things like batteries and tapes meant our already insufficient audio equipment could not be recharged. Money was hard to get; most banks had closed, and those who owned and ran them had sent tens of thousands of dollars to Miami and Madrid. Telephone service was spotty. Transportation was rare and undependable  And the air was often unbreathable, with a cloud of smoke pollution hanging over Managua many days. In the absence of oil, cut off or limited by U.S. embargoes, people burned wood.


To survive, everyone had to depend on the asset Nicaragua had in abundance – friendly, savvy people. All neighborhoods had many of these. From individuals to large, multi-generation families, most everyone offered help to everyone. Especially strangers who obviously meant no harm.


We Yanquis depended on fellow Americans who had volunteered to come to Nicaragua to provide the assistance which the U.S. and international bodies pressured by the U.S. had ceased to provide. Medical workers, including doctors and nurses. School teachers. Musicians. Poets. People who knew how to repair cars, bicycles and wheelchairs. 


Every day I woke up hungry, tired, anxious from another sleepless night of hearing dogs barking, rats scratching, what sounded like guns but were possibly fireworks, and radios buzzing when electricity intermittently came on. Six of us Americans had rented, for almost nothing, a formerly middle-class house in a formerly somewhat prosperous neighborhood.  


Even before dawn, there was always a noisy racket of children shouting, parents calling children, roosters screaming, crows squawking, and vehicle motors trying to come to life with watered-down gasoline in their tanks.


Kids and adults appeared at our doors and windows offering green bananas, fresh bread, bottled water and shelled nuts. But mostly they offered their services. So, after eating almost nothing I would pack my little shoulder bag (backpacks were ill-advised and never worn on backs, to foil robbers), and venture out.  I was usually met by a teenage boy, sometimes with a sister or brother, and taken to one of several nearby houses where someone with a functioning vehicle was in residence.  


Often the vehicle was in ghastly condition: rotting floors, cracked windshields, broken wipers. (It rained a lot there, unpredictably, sometimes for minutes, sometimes thunderstorms, sometimes for whole days.)


My destination was usually somewhere in what had been the center of town before the 1972 earthquake which had killed an estimated 5,000 people, damaged or destroyed hundreds of buildings, destroyed roads and traumatized everyone. Thousands left the country, following the transfer of whatever money they were able to gather. Dictator Somoza and his cronies had stolen most of the money contributed worldwide for rebuilding, of which there was very little. The tropical jungle had grown over the city center.  And since homes had become vacant lots, displaced people in improvised structures inhabited the jungle.


How much of this did Jimmy Carter see in his few days as chief monitor of the elections? We’ll never know. But he and his cohorts had access to statistics on employment, disease, and death. His staff, which included many Nicaraguan support workers, certainly knew how bad things were. For the Carter Center, many of whose workers had been to Nepal, Bosnia, Haiti, and Bangladesh, it was different in Nicaragua but not new.


Would voters keep a revolutionary government in power that had presided over the deterioration of their country? Would they trust further the charismatic, outspoken young man, who rode into large Sandinista rallies on horseback?  Or would they vote for a decidedly uncharismatic older woman whose coalition partners included former business and land owners who had tacitly backed the dictator who had preceded Daniel Ortega?


Jimmy Carter didn’t so much care who won the election.  For him it was the  process, not the politicians, who mattered. 


If the process was corrupt, he concluded in his 1992 book, “Turning Point” which he was finalizing during his trip to Nicaragua, then the result was corrupt. Carter’s book was about how, thirty years before, America’s essential flaw, racism, had begun to be attacked. Through spurious legal means and election rigging, and officially sanctioned violence, bigotry and white  superiority ruled the South (and big parts of the rest of the country as well.). These, Carter wrote, had to go. In Nicaragua, hunger, crime, unemployment and ignorance had to go. It was a much smaller country, with only about 5 million people. But from what Carter had experienced, and what he knew about the world, its problems had to be confronted just as they had been in his homeland.


I asked him at a press conference, his first Managua appearance, if he was satisfied with what he had seen of the runup to that week’s election.  He looked at those seated to either side of him. And answered in his drawling, poorly pronounced but grammatically correct Spanish, he stated, “These are  honorable people.”  He knew them.  Many of them – including President Ortega and Foreign Affairs Minister Miguel d’Escoto, a Catholic priest - had met with him in Washington when he was President. The elections would be closely monitored by folks like him from around the world. He said, “If you trust me, you should trust them.”


To everyone’s surprise (including mine), Ortega lost the election. The day after, to everyone’s surprise (including mine) there were no riots in the streets. The large international monitoring crew began to leave. The international media decamped as well, after bringing the news of the startling election results to the world. Carter stayed up with Ortega as the vote count mounted. He may have told him how badly he wanted to win when he first ran for office, and lost twice before narrowly winning.


For the last time I got to the airport for a vital part of my job. I had two FedEx envelopes, one with the typescript of my post-election story, one with cassette recordings of post-election interviews (including a brief one with Carter). I found an American looking guy and asked him if  he would drop them in the first FedEx box he saw after landing (Fed Ex and UPS were among the last businesses the Reagan crew ad coerced into closing.). He did, I found out from a Berkeley guy I knew who brought me the East Bay Express when he arrived in a few days. 


My exhaustion was total. I left most of what I had with me to our friends and neighbors, the few clothes I wasn’t wearing, a few pads of paper, and pens.  My precious Olivetti typewriter and spare ribbons. Ill with fever, thirty pounds lighter than I had been on arrival, I caught the first available plane to the U.S.  As I staggered down the airplane stairs and reached the tarmac, in Houston, I wanted to kiss the ground.  But I didn’t. I was afraid I wouldn’t have the strength to stand up.


Larry Bensky reported from Nicaragua for Pacifica Radio and the East Bay Express. He was the producer of “Nicaragua: These Same Hands” in the PBS Independent Lens Series. This essay was written as President Carter, age 98, entered home hospice care in late February, 2023.

Imagine Making All Votes Actually Count

By STEPHEN BOSWORTH


The traditional voting methods used in the city of Santa Cruz prevent about half of all votes cast from being represented in its council. The 2018 to 2022 council was elected by only 46% of the votes cast, needlessly allowing a minority of voters to exclude 54% from being represented. The current council excludes 51%. This means the deciding majority in the current council is supported by only 28% of all citizens’ votes.


The good news is there’s a voting method that allows every voter to be represented equally in the council: proportional ranked-choice voting (PRCV). This method is used in Albany, CA and many other places in the world. In Santa Cruz, it would guarantee that at least 88% of all our votes would be represented in the council. However, in its most democratic form, this method guarantees that 100% of us would be equally represented in the Santa Cruz City Council.


Despite the opposition of the current council majority, this change just might be brought about quickly if the existing vote-wasting can be successfully challenged under the California Voting Rights Act - the sooner the better. Otherwise, we must organize and campaign by political action during future elections and/or by initiating a referendum to achieve this goal.


Please register your support for any of these actions by emailing Nancy Krusoe of the Peoples’ Democratic Club of Santa Cruz County (PDC). Also, ask for a copy of our proposed email to the State Attorney General about these concerns. You might want to add your name to it. For more details, please feel free to contact Stephen Bosworth, Ph.D. 

Contributed by WFF

Santos: Skin to Skin, is one of the last films being shown Saturday in the Watsonville Film Festival.

Movies About Activist Musicians Play in Last Days of the Watsonville Film Festival

By SARAH RINGLER


Living in Exile: Carlos Mejía Godoy by filmmaker Jon Silver about Carlos Mejía Godoy, a legendary musician and poet of Nicaragua’s Sandinista Revolution of the 1970s and 1980s, is showing at 4pm, March 11at the Mello Center in Watsonville, 250 E. Beach St. Godoy was forced into exile and is now living in California. He will be present at the event. Click here for more information.


Also showing on March 11 at 4pm at the Mello Center is Santos: Skin to Skin, the story of seven-time Grammy nominee John Santos, a "keeper of the Afro Caribbean flame." For more information, here.


The 11th Annual Watsonville Film Festival, with live and virtual screenings ends 12. Go to their website here.

Photo by TARMO HANNULA 

A black turnstone in winter plumage strolls by two elephant seals on the beach near Cambria in late February.

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 in the county. There were no new deaths in the county over the past week. The last death recorded was Dec. 15.


Active cases however are still appearing. The county's Effective Reproductive Number is now below 1.0. See the second chart below. Numbers above one show the spread of the virus is increasing. Below one means the spread is decreasing. To view the distribution of cases around the county, look here.


The Health Department is collecting data for Covid and Mpox 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. The fourth chart below shows wastewater projections.

The third graph below shows hospitalizations. Click to see more information on hospitalizations HERE.



The vaccination data for the county is divided the data into three categories with the percentages inoculated: Primary Series, 77.2%, Primary Series and Boosted, 68.7 from 61%, and Bivalent Boosters, up 33.2% from 32.3%. Vaccination rates are slowly climbing.


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.


To order free at-home COVID-19 test kits, go HERE. You can make an appointment for a Rapid Antigen Test HERE.

Deaths by age/276:

25-34 - 5/276

35-44 - 8/276

45-54 - 10/276

55-59 - 4/276

60-64 - 15/276

65-74 - 49/276

75-84 - 64/276

85+ - 121/276


Deaths by gender:

Female - 136/276 

Male - 140/276 

Deaths by vaccination status: 

vaccinated - 39/276

unvaccinated - 237/276


Deaths by ethnicity:

White - 163/276 

Latinx - 90/276

Black - 3/276

Asian - 16/276

American Native - 1/276

Unknown - 0

Photo by TARMO HANNULA

Fashion Street - Las 3 Sisters catering truck rolls through Riverside, CA.

Labor History Calendar - March 10-16, 2023

a.k.a Know Your History Lest We Forget


March 10, 1906: Coal dust explosion kills 1,060 workers in Courrieres, France sparking a 55-day strike.

March 10, 1913: Harriet Tubman dies. 

March 11, 1811: Luddites smash 63 looms.

March 11, 1930: Gandhi begins Salt March to Delhi. 

March 11, 2010: Greek general strike demands bosses, not workers, pay for crises.

March 12, 1912: IWW winds Lawrence strike.

March 12, 1982: 300 women workers slow down at Control Data in Korea to protest firing of union president.

March 12, 2011: 100,000 rally in Madison, Wisconsin to support workers’ rights.

March 13, 1938: Labor attorney Clarence Darrow dies.

March 13, 2015: General Strike against austerity in Northern Ireland.

March 13, 2020: Strikes seeking Covid protections sweep across Italy forcing bosses to agree to safety measures.

March 14, 1988: 8 million strike against austerity in Spain. 

March 14, 1991: Brazil government workers, unpaid since November, seize governor’s palace.

March 15, 1877: Birth of Ben Fletcher, black IWW organizer of longshoremen in Philadelphia. 

March 15, 1917: Supreme Court approves 8-Hour Act under threat of national rail strike.

March 16, 1899: Lake City, Louisiana free speech fight. 


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


"What the woman who labors wants is the right to live, not simply exist - the right to life as the rich woman has the right to life, and the sun and music and art. You have nothing that the humblest worker has not a right to have also. The worker must have bread, but she must also have roses, too. Help, you women of privilege, give her the ballot to fight with."

Rose Schneiderman, 1912


Photo by TARMO HANNULA

Noah's Pudding

By SARAH RINGLER

  

Although this recipe is a Turkish dessert, once I tasted it, I wanted to eat it for breakfast, lunch and dinner.  And, I did. It’s a delicate sweet mixture of grains, fruits and nuts that is traditionally served on the tenth day, Day of Ashura, during the first month, Muharram, on the Islamic calendar. This year it falls around the July 28 in North America. It is a national holiday in many places in the Middle East and in India.  What exactly is mourned or atoned on this day with this wonderful dish depends on different interpretations by the various sects of Islam, and I lack the expertise to fairly describe it.


The dish is also called Noah’s Pudding. The myth is that when Noah’s Ark hit land after the flood on Mount Ararat - now in northeast Turkey - there was only grain, beans and fruit aboard. This was then was cooked together to make this pudding.


This recipe has a lot of flexibility and is usually made in large quantities so it can be shared. This recipe is from Watsonvillian, Amy Newell, who brought it back from her travels to Turkey. It is for a half batch, but still makes enough to share with a large group. 


One tradition is to use ten ingredients in keeping with the theme of the tenth day. Mainly, you need to use beans, grains, fruit, nuts, citrus zest, a sweetener and water. Buy them in bulk if you can so you can get just what you need. I really liked the garbanzo beans in Amy’s recipe.  Beans need to be soaked and cooked separately than the grains, but the rice and wheat can be done together. 


Although the Day of Ashura is in July this year, it is a pleasing winter dish. Pomegranates add a nice crunch.


Ashure or Noah’s pudding


¼ cup dry garbanzo beans or ½ cup canned

½ cup whole hulled wheat or farro

½ cup Arborio rice                                                    

¼ cup dried apricots, chopped into small bits 

¼ cup orange peel, zested into strips or chopped

¼ cup chopped dried figs or tart dried cherries

¼ cup golden raisins

½ to ¾ cup sugar

¼ cup blanched and slivered almonds

¼ cup pistachios 

¼ cup pine nuts

½ teaspoon vanilla

1 tablespoon rosewater


Optional toppings:

Cinnamon

Hazelnuts, roasted and chopped

Pomegranate seeds


Start this pudding the night before you plan to serve it. The rice and wheat should be thoroughly rinsed and soaked overnight. If using dried beans, wash soak them overnight in a separate bowl.


Drain the soaked beans, cover them with cold water, and boil gently until just tender, about an hour.  While they cook, boil some water and cover the chopped dried figs (or dried cherries), chopped dried apricots and chopped orange peels. Let soak until cool. Drain and reserve the soaking liquid; stir in the raisins and set aside.  Drain the beans and set aside.


Bring 1 and ½ quarts of water to a boil in a large pot. Add the drained wheat and rice mixture and simmer gently.    Cook as with a risotto, stirring frequently and adding more boiling water as needed to keep the mixture soft and velvety, until it is tender.  


Add the garbanzo beans (if using canned garbanzo beans, rinse them well to remove any added salt).  Then stir in the reserved soaking liquid, the sugar, the slivered almonds, pistachios and pine nuts and bring to a boil over medium heat, stirring constantly. 


Simmer until it resembles a thick soup.  Add more boiling water, if necessary. Then, add the vanilla and the dried fruit and orange peel mixture and cook for another 20 minutes, stirring constantly. You may need to add more water to keep it soupy.


Turn off the heat and blend in the rosewater. Spoon into separate desert bowls and let cool to room temperature.  Garnish generously with cinnamon, roasted hazelnuts and pomegranate seeds before serving.

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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