Watsonville Votes to Keep RDA

Watsonville City Council has voted to keep its Redevelopment Agency, despite the new California law that dismantles all 400 agencies in the state and redirects their funding to cover the state’s budget deficit. According to the new law, cities that want to keep their RDAs will be required to pay what critics call a “ransom” to the state. In the case of Watsonville, this amounts to an initial payment of $3.2 million, due in January, and an additional $750,000 per year thereafter.

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PLATED: Santa Cruz Mountains of Wine

PLATED: Santa Cruz Mountains of Wine

Last Saturday saw the grand re-opening of Vinocruz, now the baby of Steve Principe and Jennifer Walker of Network Mortgage. Over the course of the afternoon some 150 guests streamed in and out of the cozy space next to the Museum of Art and History and lounged around tables on the petite outdoor patio, sipping the wines of Alfaro Family Vineyards courtesy the always-charming Richard Alfaro.

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Red-Legged Frogs Get Their Closeup

Sebastian Kennernecht's photos are at the SC Museum of Natural History thru Sept. 10.

“Smiley said all a frog wanted was education,” the long-winded raconteur says in Mark Twain’s “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County,” and sure enough, Dan’l Webster, the athletic amphibian of the title, just needs a little coaching to bring out his greatness. But biologists studying the threatened red-legged frog—long assumed to be Daniel Webster’s breed—would add one or two things to the list of the frogs’ needs. Like habitat, for starters, preferably without bullfrogs.

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A Writer’s Writer in Santa Cruz

Stephen Kessler reads from his newest book on Aug. 25. Photo by Dina Scoppettone

Essay writing is a sideline to Stephen Kessler’s life’s work: the “marginal yet essential” creation of poetry, the translation of Spanish verse and the editing of the Redwood Coast Review, a quarterly literary broadsheet. Kessler’s new collection The Tolstoy of the Zulus: On Culture, Arts & Letters  (El Leon Literary Arts, $20) on the whole looks backwards to older writers, artists and technologies: the little magazine, the postcard, the personal letter. The author, a longtime contributor to, and sometime publisher of, Santa Cruz’s many weekly newspapers since coming here to attend UCSC in the 1960s, looks at the scenes of his Southern California youth, at Disneyland and Watts Towers. He revisits Hollywood Boulevard, with its crap icons of Marilyn Monroe (“Marilyn is everywhere, lifeless, and sadder than ever”). There’s also a celebration of the typewriter many of us still have cached in case of worldwide computer crash.

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Blackbird Rock

Blackbird Rock

Years before the members of the folk-punk-jug-band Blackbird Raum played their first show, they were squatting in abandoned buildings in Santa Cruz, making art and music and staging political protests. It was the early 2000s and, with no electricity and little money, they picked up whatever instruments they could play around a campfire: banjo, mandolin, accordion, washtub bass, a washboard. “We all started playing those instruments because you could,” says mandolin player Mars.

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Santa Cruz To Canvassers: Save This!

Illustration by Mark Poutenis

It’s a sunny August afternoon in downtown Santa Cruz, and teenagers are strolling to the movies and eating ice cream cones while young mothers push baby strollers down Pacific Avenue. Ken Hietella, 49, is standing on the corner arguing with a college-aged man holding a clipboard about the specifics of Alaska’s fishing regulations. Apparently it was the question “Do you have a minute to save the environment?” that set him off.

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