Inside East Sacramento March 2024

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S AC R A M E N TO STAT E
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COVER ARTIST

BUD GORDON

Sacramento artist Bud Gordon’s artistic impulse stems from a desire to record and comment on the rich and varied landscape of his environment. This work is part of Gordon's solo show

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“EXTRAORDINARIES” on display March 1–30 at Twisted Track Gallery at 1730 12th St. First Friday reception is 6–10 p.m. March 1. Second Saturday reception is 5–8 p.m. March 9. Shown: “Parking,” oil on paper, 9 inches by 12 inches. This piece is for sale at $1,000. Visit twistedtrackgallery.life or contact Nisa Hayden at (916) 769-2700.

8 IES MAR n 24 EVERY DAY IS A GOOD DAY TO MAKE YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD A BETTER PLACE. 10 Publisher's Desk 14 Out & About 16 City Beat 18 Giving Back 20 City Realist 22 Animals & Their Allies 24 Building Our Future 26 Crowded House 28 Open House 32 High Style 34 Garden Jabber 36 Spirit Matters 38 Sports Authority 42 Farm To Fork 44 Restaurant Insider 46 Open Studio 48 To Do MARCH 2024 VOL. 29 • ISSUE 2 @insidesacramento
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Dignified Ending

HOW HOSPICE CARE DELIVERS PEACE AND COMFORT

Early last year, I needed hospice care for the end of my husband’s long life. I asked Jim’s doctor for YoloCares hospice. He said it was a good choice. He heard good reviews about YoloCares, especially in grief support services.

My decision was personal. It was a tribute to how Jim and I built our

business for 27 years. Yolo was our largest advertiser. I learned about their services from ads. Jim always wanted to support businesses that supported us.

Jim’s hospice care was less than five days. He was 93 and suffered four years of worsening dementia after a car accident that caused a brain injury. His wishes were clear. He was ready to go.

Still, I underestimated what hospice care offers. And I was grateful that YoloCares is a leader in wrap-around grief support. My year of grieving brought much insight.

I recently sat down with YoloCares CEO Craig Dresang to learn more.

“Both my mom and my first partner were both diagnosed with terminal cancer the same year. She was in her 50s and I was 28. She was first diagnosed when I was 8. My partner was 34,” Dresang says. “My career in Chicago at the time had nothing to do with health care or hospice, so it was a total shock to me.”

Dresang endured completely different experiences when his mom and partner died.

“My mother wanted no extreme intervention and yet it was forced on her,” he says. “All they did was in fact counter to her wishes. She died in a hospital room pumped up with devices and not one bit of peace.”

In contrast, Dresang’s partner Danny died according to his own plans.

“He died comfortably and peacefully at home and holding my hand. And it was really a beautiful and meaningful way for him to transition out of this world,” Dresang says. “And I remember that year thinking someday I want to do something for this program called hospice.

“Many years later, when the president of the university I was working for was retiring, I took a call from a headhunter. The position he offered me was in hospice.”

Dresang took the job and built a new career around his deeply personal experiences.

Hospice and palliative care are similar. Hospice begins when a person’s diagnosis leaves them six months or less to live. If patients live

longer, palliative care keeps them as comfortable as possible, without medical intervention to extend life.

Many hospital chains have financial motives not always aligned with the best interests of the dying patient. Dresang explains, “My mom died in a hospital, and my partner died in independent hospice. That’s why their experiences were so different.”

Doctors need to better understand end-of-life decisions and offer patients options, from aggressive care to comfortably closing their lives.

“Not enough doctors clearly and compassionately convey the negative side of continuing life-saving treatments,” Dresang says. “Only when tradeoffs are openly discussed will quality of life at the end truly improve.”

Jim made his end-of-life decisions when first diagnosed with dementia. I found a dementia advanced care directive that let Jim decline life-saving treatments. He believed it was in everyone’s best interest to let his body go peacefully when his mind could no longer function.

10 IES MAR n 24
Craig Dresang

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Jim’s brief hospice was a beautiful experience for our family. It gave Jim time to say goodbye and let us return the love and gratitude for what he brought to our lives.

Jim’s coffee group came by one morning. I’ll never forget the laughter coming from the bedroom as they shared memories, inspiration and gratitude for a life well lived.

YoloCares professionally prepared us, then took the hands-off approach we requested. They were a phone call away when we had questions.

When the time came, Jim departed this world with a huge smile. And with his family and beloved dog by his side.

After Jim died, YoloCare’s grief program came into my life. There were phone calls, cards and emails with gentle invitations for counseling, grief support groups and more. I felt they cared as much about those who survive as the patient who passes.

“As much as we love regulation in the state, they never regulated hospice,” Dresang says. “We have 1,200 hospices in California, more than the rest of the country combined.”

“While I run a business that needs to generate revenue, I also believe that there are certain sectors of our life that should be hands off in terms of

greed,” he says. “And providing hospice is one of them, and that’s why I’m so passionate about what we do.”

Our community should be grateful to have an innovative, well-run hospice such as YoloCares.

I hope sharing my experience will inspire friends and neighbors to consider end-of-life decisions early. Six months ago, I was blessed to find a new partner to love. Steve and I have already made our end-of-life decisions clear to each other.

Please help loved ones do the same. Only through open and honest dialogue will we receive the end-of-life care everyone deserves.

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Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications. com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento. com. Follow us on Facebook and on Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Mural Alley

BEAUTIFICATION PROJECT BRIGHTENS EAST SAC

Sacramento Mural Alley is an East Sacramento beautification project designed to elevate blank walls, doors, fences and other outdoor spaces with public artwork by local artists.

The alley is between 32nd and 33rd streets, just off Folsom Boulevard, and bordered by Archival Gallery, which partnered with home and business owners on the project.

The alley displays murals by artists Robert Bowen, Davy Fiveash, Miles Hermann, Dawn Pedersen, John Stuart Berger and Carrie Cottini. “I am very glad to be able to contribute to public art in my city,” Fiveash says. “I wanted to make a space that would brighten someone’s day.”

In recognition of this public art project, the East Sacramento Chamber

of Commerce presented Sacramento Mural Alley with its 2023 Special Place Award. For information, visit sacramentomuralalley.com.

SQUARE DANCING

Want to try square dancing? Capital City Squares, Sacramento’s LGBTQ square dance club, will host two free introductory nights of modern western square dancing in April.

Unlike traditional square dancing, modern western square dancing doesn’t require a partner. Singles are welcome and dress can be casual street clothing with comfortable shoes.

Established in 1981, Capital City Squares is a founding member of the International Association of Gay and Lesbian Square Dance Clubs. Membership is open to all adults.

The free introductory nights are Wednesday, April 3 and April 10, from 6:30–8 p.m. at the Fruitridge Community Center at 4000 Fruitridge Road. Classes are $75 and include club membership and unlimited club night dancing. For information, visit capitalcitysquares.org.

last year—one of only 23 public library systems in the world to do so.

The library provides readers 24/7 access to free ebooks and audiobooks through library reading apps like Libby and Hoopla. It first exceeded 2 million digital items in 2019.

Through the Libby app, library cardholders can check out ebooks, audiobooks and magazines, and find free online classes on how to play musical instruments, decorate cakes, sew and more.

“We’re often met with surprise and delight when people learn what they can do with their library cards,” Library Director and CEO Peter Coyl says. “Last year, we added e-trikes to our collection and the Library of Things to two more locations. Our community has come to expect the unexpected from their library.”

For information, visit saclibrary.org or download the Libby app.

WAYFINDING SIGNS

LIBRARY CHECKOUTS

The Sacramento Public Library surpassed 3 million digital checkouts

Have you spotted some brightly colored signposts popping up around Midtown? The Midtown Association installed a wayfinding system to help visitors and residents navigate the area.

The system has 71 navigation posts throughout the district to give suggestions on places to explore, such

as dining and entertainment, or locate parking and public transit.

The wayfinding posts are linked to an interactive website that provides information on the project’s 15 destination centers: Alhambra District, Fremont Park, Golden Hub, Governor’s Mansion, Handle District, Lavender Heights at Midtown Central, Marshall Park, Midtown Sutter, Muir Park, Sacramento Memorial Auditorium, SAFE Credit Union Convention Center, Sutter’s Fort, Truitt Bark Park, Winn Park, and 29th and R streets.

For information, visit exploremidtown.org/yourway.

EVENTS CENTER

Sacramento State is getting a new events center that will house the university’s men’s and women’s basketball teams, women’s volleyball and gymnastics teams, and intramural and club sports competitions.

The center also will be a venue for entertainment, arts and guest speakers, with retractable seating that can be rolled out to accommodate large crowds. The center is expected to begin hosting events this fall.

The project will be funded with up to $5.2 million from Union WELL Inc. (the nonprofit that oversees the University Union and The WELL fitness and health facility), and

14 IES MAR n 24 J
L JL
“Spirit of California” by Miles Hermann is at Sacramento Mural Alley.

$300,000 from Sac State for the project design.

“Sacramento State is the only public university in the capital of the state with the fifth-largest economy in the world, and we are acting like it,” Sac State President Luke Wood says. “I’m grateful that the Union WELL board supported our vision to position our university to better support student intercollegiate athletics, club sports and recreation sports, and arts and culture.”

RESIDENT ARTIST

Local ceramic artist Marsha Godoy Schindler has been named the Susan Cooley-Gilliom Artist in Residence at Blue Line Arts in Roseville.

Blue Line’s SCG Artist in Residence & Teaching (ART) Program develops and enhances the visual arts through short-term residencies and workshops taught by nationally established artists. Schindler will offer special workshops, lectures and an exhibition at Blue Line over the next several months.

“I remain deeply connected to my early training and the world of flora and fauna,” says Schindler, a biologist. “Science and art, though different paths, operate in similar ways. In each you observe deeply, find patterns and behaviors, and then interpret

your observation into a narrative. We are inseparable from the natural world and its stories.”

Schindler’s own East Sac studio, clayARTstudio814, welcomed its first artist in residence, Susan Herre. Check out her work at 814 Alhambra Blvd. For information, visit bluelinearts.org and clayartstudio814. com.

PHOTOGRAPHY MONTH

Now is the time to get involved in Photography Month Sacramento, a monthlong series of events in April, led by Viewpoint Photographic Art Center, that celebrate the art of photography.

Businesses can highlight their photorelated activations, such as special exhibits, receptions, photoshoots, workshops, lectures and field trips. Individuals or groups can launch their own work by asking coffeehouses, wineries, breweries or restaurants to host an exhibit and reception.

Once concepts are confirmed, participants post information about the events on a community-curated calendar supported by Sacramento365. com. For information, visit photomonthsacramento.org.

RIVERFRONT ART

Beautiful new art installations by artist Joshua Sofaer now grace the Sacramento waterfront.

As part of the public art project “River Crossing: I want to communicate with you,” the community submitted nominations to have a public dock in Sacramento or West Sacramento named in their honor. After receiving more than 650 nominations, the two docks were named after local grandmothers Isabel S. Naranjo (Old Sacramento) and Etenesh Zeleke (West Sacramento).

The culmination of the project is Sofaer’s two large-scale light box installations that spell out the docks’ new names in maritime signals. Sofaer says his piece represents “our collective

need to honor the people who are most meaningful to us.”

NORCAL CHAMPIONS

The Sacramento Alliance Soccer Club’s Silver Cup under-12 girls team has won the NorCal State Cup.

In the final game against the Marin FC in Modesto, the local team won 5–3 on penalty kicks in what coach Ron Gayton calls a “gutty performance.” The team also won the 2023 spring

and fall leagues and can proudly call themselves NorCal champions.

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 and Instagram: insidesacramento. n @

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Sacramento Alliance Soccer Club’s Silver Cup under-12 girls team wins NorCal State Cup.

Amateur Hour

COFER BRINGS ROOKIE CHAOS TO MAYOR’S RACE

There’s something wonderful and worrisome about a political novice running for mayor. A rookie brings fresh ideas and perspectives. Trouble is, what happens if the rookie wins?

This year’s wonder and worry is embodied by Flojaune Cofer, a farleft progressive in her first run for office. Her newcomer status wouldn’t matter if Cofer sought a smaller job, maybe school board. But Cofer wants to start at the top.

Her decision comes at a precarious time. Mayor Darrell Steinberg departs after eight years of disappointment. He promised to solve the homeless crisis and failed. There were 2,700 homeless people in town when Steinberg was elected. Now there are 10,000.

Steinberg is an old pro, a career politician always in search of a backroom. But his deal-making tricks from the state Legislature didn’t align with the street-level demands of municipal governance. He promised too much, delivered too little.

The mess he leaves requires cleanup by someone who knows City Hall and understands the gravitational pulls of neighborhood priorities and influential players. Local politics is bottom up, not top down.

The next mayor must navigate a charter system that grants the mayor

significant influence but limits the boss to one vote, same as other City Council members.

Two candidates, Steve Hansen and Kevin McCarty, qualify. Both served lengthy sentences as City Council members. Both understand the budget. They know how city staff operate, led by the city manager.

A third prospect, Dr. Richard Pan, spent 12 years in the state Assembly and Senate, but zero in local government. He would need time to learn. Not as easy as it sounds.

16 IES MAR n 24
Flojaune Cofer

Keep Your Original Wood Windows

When I worked for Mayor Kevin Johnson during his first term, we wasted three years trying to comprehend the mysteries of City Hall and city bureaucracy. There’s no guide called “Mayoral Success for Dummies.”

My big concern about Pan becoming mayor is he’ll wake up one morning in 2025 and realize he hates the job. After success in the Legislature, he should practice pediatrics, teach medicine and leave noxious, soul-sucking City Council meetings to people who didn’t graduate from medical school.

Which brings us back to Flo Cofer. Her campaign is not the worst in city history, but carries the hallmarks of an amateurish affair, full of gaffes and errors.

If by some miracle she becomes mayor, her cavalier attitude toward rules and minimal grasp on the gears and levers that make local government function will paralyze City Hall.

She opened her campaign by breaking city laws on campaign

financing. An independent report to the city’s ethics commission said, “(Cofer’s) receipt of contributions in excess of the aggregate contribution limitation is a violation of Municipal Code.”

Those words should have bounced Cofer from the ballot.

But the investigator, perceiving a spineless City Council, recommended no punishment. The investigator suggested Cofer was merely confused. Her “violation was understandable and perhaps excusable.” The city let her off with no consequences.

Cofer caught a break over those illegal contributions. Worse, she learned nothing from the experience.

Despite being caught violating city code, she pretends she did nothing wrong. She told Inside, “We followed the letter of the law.” Except when she didn’t.

Given her views on local ordinances, it’s no surprise Cofer dislikes cops. In an interview with Sacramento State journalism students for the Sacramento Observer, Cofer ridiculed Police

Chief Kathy Lester’s belief that the department is not systemically racist.

“Chief Lester knew that was nonsense the moment it hit the tip of her lips,” Cofer said. “It’s like the dog in the meme with a fire: ‘Everything is fine.’ No, it’s not. It’s literally on fire.”

Mayor Cofer would cut the police budget and reduce patrol officers, with disastrous results.

As for homelessness, Cofer wants city parks opened for tent communities. She thinks unhoused people shouldn’t be guided into housing or services they don’t want. “All services are not equal,” she told Inside.

Neither are mayoral candidates.

The election is March 5. Absent a majority winner, the top two finishers meet again in November.

R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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KUnlocking Potential

says Nancy Pryor, Meristem’s grants specialist.

Monthly visits by Only Sunshine animals are part of the “Meristem Method,” a five-stage learning process based on a European model that uses experiential learning to unlock a person’s potential.

For three years, students engage in activities that encourage skills to enter the workforce or pursue higher education, transition to independence, enhance social capacity and gain a strong sense of self.

FAIR OAKS CAMPUS HELPS NEURODIVERSE ADULTS THRIVE

risty Venrick-Mardon brings bunnies and goats from Only Sunshine Sanctuary, her Elverta animal rescue, to interact with students at Meristem. But it’s not just playtime.

It’s a way for Meristem’s young adults with autism and other neurodiversity to master new skills.

“The students learn how to interact calmly and not stress out the animals,” says Venrick-Mardon, who founded her animal sanctuary in 2018. “At first, every student wanted to touch every

animal. Now, they’re more patient and check in with the animal to make sure it’s comfortable.”

Venrick-Mardon didn’t intend to start a sanctuary. When she bought her house 11 years ago, she just wanted it filled with animals.

After rescuing a pig named Harold from the Sacramento SPCA, her menagerie grew. Today, Only Sunshine has 40 permanent residents and up to 65 animals, mostly rabbits.

Venrick-Mardon nurses them back to health for adoption and brings her boarders to educational meet-andgreets at programs such as Meristem.

Founded in 2015, Meristem focuses on adults ages 18–26. The 13-acre campus in Fair Oaks has 60 dorm rooms and apartments, multiple classrooms, a performance hall, café, dining hall, student lounge, bookstore and biodynamic organic garden.

Some students live off-campus and participate in day programs. Most choose to live on-campus and take advantage of an independent living program.

Meristem provides classes on topics that include visual arts, culinary arts, work experience, land stewardship, job readiness and hospitality.

the Eggert family to establish an endowment at the Sacramento Region Community Foundation in honor of their daughter Caroline, a Meristem graduate who went onto full-time employment.

The program hopes to raise $2 million over four years with matching donations.

“Meristem changed our daughter Caroline’s life,” Pam and Steve Eggert said in the donation announcement. “With your help, Meristem will change the lives of other young adults right here in our own local community.”

For information, visit onlysunshinesanctuary.org and meristem.pro.

Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

“Animals are so therapeutic, and it pairs well with our program that has a unique focus on working with the land and taking care of animals and crafting or working with your hands as part of our therapeutic educational model,”

Courses are supplemented with outings and visits from Only Sunshine Sanctuary’s rescue animals, therapy dogs from Lend a Heart Animal Assisted Therapy and more. Organizations and friends give time and skills. REY Engineers helped rebuild the chicken coop. An Eagle Scout built picnic tables for meals and socializing.

Meristem is supported by donations. In December, the organization received a $1 million matching pledge from

18 IES MAR n 24
J L JL
Giving Back: Volunteer Profile Kristy Venrick-Mardon Photos by Linda Smolek
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more on homelessness, the fact remains we have no resources available for reaching these goals, even with substantial tax revenues coming in.

I asked candidates about their awareness of the deficit, what they would be willing to cut, priorities of their constituents, ideas about using emergency reserves to balance the budget, and whether they would be willing to end binding arbitration in negotiations with public safety unions.

Steve Hansen said he wants to preserve core services as a priority, and that public safety was a main concern. Kevin McCarty indicated budget cuts should be a “last option” and we should explore new revenue options.

Budget Busters

CITY COUNCIL PAINTS ITSELF INTO CORNER ON DEFICIT

The City Council is in a bind. It must pass a balanced budget in June. Revenues are not keeping up with expenses, though our tax rate is the highest in the region. The council faces a $50 million deficit.

At recent hearings, City Manager Howard Chan had department leaders make presentations about staffing, operations, needs and costs. It was eye opening, especially for newer City Council members.

Our roads are degrading. Utilities infrastructure needs replacement.

Parks are not maintained. Departments lack resources to provide basic services.

With the deficit looming, Chan asked department leaders to identify cost reductions of 15%. That’s a lot. We already have a backlog of $2 billion in unfunded repairs.

City employees are the biggest cost. Wage and benefit expenses rise every year. Since 2021, the council voted to increase that burden by $80 million annually.

At the same time, the council adopted new social programs and pet projects that broke the budget.

The City Council failed at its most important job—sound fiscal management.

City workers are our most valuable asset. We need quality staff, paid well enough to stay long term. But recent pay raises created a structural deficit that must be addressed.

The city has an Economic Uncertainty Reserve, a rainy-day fund for emergencies. The fund may be tempting to use to close the gap. But using the reserve puts the city at grave financial risk if revenues fall in the future, as they did in the pandemic and Great Recession.

Mayor Darrell Steinberg declared his willingness to use “one-time funds” to balance the budget in 2024. But he told me he didn’t want to tap the reserves. He hinted he may have an undisclosed source of money.

Even if that’s true, it only stalls the pain of making budget cuts until 2025, when the deficit will be higher. Spending emergency reserve money now shifts the burden onto the shoulders of the new mayor and councilmembers being elected this year.

Despite campaign speeches about creating affordable housing, bolstering public safety and spending

Flojaune Cofer hopes to use efficiencies spelled out in a report on cost savings generated by Management Partners in 2010. Those savings are achieved largely by contracting work out to private companies and turning Sacramento into a contract city with far fewer employees.

The rest of the candidates did not respond.

Running a campaign is difficult. Most candidates avoid straightforward answers to difficult questions. They prefer to answer in general terms.

As a former candidate and elected public servant, I learned being upfront and detailed was the most effective way to succeed. Constituents liked that approach.

It’s imperative that we elect people knowledgeable and realistic about our city budget, not candidates who vote for programs to increase the deficit and lead to service reductions.

Editor’s Note: Jeff Harris endorsed Steve Hansen for mayor and Phil Pluckebaum for City Council District 4.

Jeff Harris represented District 3 on City Council from 2014 to 2022. He can be reached at cadence@mycci. net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento. com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

20 IES MAR n 24

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Advisory Void

ANIMAL CARE COMMITTEE FALLS SHORT

Front Street Animal Shelter killed 1,132 animals in 2023. This year, more than 150 dogs and cats have lost their lives.

These numbers are important. Hayden’s Law, enacted in 1998 to move California toward a no-kill state, says “no adoptable animal should be euthanized if it can be adopted into a suitable home.” This includes animals who “could become adoptable with reasonable efforts.”

“Killing adoptable animals is easier than putting in the effort to save them,” says Julie Virga, a local animal advocate who campaigns against what she calls Front Street’s mismanagement. “This is a complete failure of leadership.”

The Sacramento Animal Care Services Citizens Advisory Committee was established to provide strategy and policy recommendations to the City Council to help improve animal care services.

The committee’s 2023 annual report—its first report in two years— makes no mention of the number of dogs and cats killed at Front Street.

Instead, the report makes three recommendations: improve the response rate of animal-related 311 calls; conduct a needs assessment for renovating or relocating the city shelter; and review the committee’s scope.

C R CR

All well intended. But where is stop the killing?

Committee Chair Leah Morris says the advisory committee is not about operations. “The charge of the committee is to look at things around education, things around policy, things around quality of service,” she says.

Policy is the key word.

At recent meetings, time is taken up to discuss things like a Front Street marketing brochure—content, format, quality of paper. In his monthly update, shelter manager Phillip Zimmerman reports on staff vacancies, vaccine clinics, free adoptions, fundraising events.

Zimmerman makes no mention of the number of animals killed. Committee members don’t ask.

The annual report ignores the shelter’s policy to turn away friendly healthy cats and kittens who face starvation, death and an endless cycle of reproducing.

The policy disregards state law that says taking in animals “is important for public health and safety, to aid in the return of the animal to its owner, and to prevent inhumane conditions for lost or free roaming animals.”

The advisory committee is required to increase “awareness of the importance of spay/neuter.” Hayden’s Law calls for shelters to “aggressively promote spay and neuter programs to reduce pet overpopulation.”

Nearly 8,000 stray animals entered Front Street last year. Yet committee recommendations to the City Council are void of strategies to bolster spay/neuter.

At last November’s committee meeting, Zimmerman reported on applying for a PetSmart Charities spay/neuter grant. He would know

by January. At the January meeting, he made no mention of the grant (which Front Street did not receive). Committee members didn’t ask.

Front Street has nearly 200 cats and more than 500 dogs in foster care, many via “foster-to-adopt”—a practice that allows adopters to take home animals before being altered. Hayden’s Law says “shelters should not adopt out animals that are not spayed or neutered.”

Yet, the advisory committee ignores policy that skirts the law and can lead to pets reproducing prior to spay/neuter or not being altered at all.

Front Street encourages “community sheltering,” a practice promoted by UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program and embraced by Zimmerman, who says shelters are “scary places.”

Euthanasia numbers look better when dogs and cats are diverted away from the shelter through reduced intake and “surrenderprevention programs.”

Hayden’s Law says, “It is better to have public and private shelters pick up or take in animals than private citizens.”

“The Koret Shelter Medicine Program is housed in a renowned veterinary school,” says committee Chair Morris, a retired registered nurse whose background is in human health policy. “I believe that their work and academic research and policies are based on sound thinking.”

Maybe so, but Front Street policies, such as turning away stray animals and killing hundreds of adoptable pets, should be scrutinized.

“California state laws were and are violated openly and arrogantly by director Zimmerman with the full knowledge and complicity of city leaders,” Virga says.

The advisory committee is charged with providing “a forum for public discussion on the city’s efforts to bring about positive change” at Front Street.

Virga and other residents speak at monthly advisory committee meetings, meet with city leaders, reach out to Zimmerman. Their pleas are ignored. Requests to add items to meeting agendas fail.

“As far as the annual report, absolutely none of the public feedback was taken into consideration,” says Elyse Mize, a local advocate calling for changes.

22 IES MAR n 24
Leah Morris

Working

Sacramento

The annual report acknowledges the failures of the committee’s Community Participation Workshop held last March.

Committee members sat on the dais away from the public. The facilitator stood with her back to the audience. Public comments were cut short. Questions by community members went unanswered. Zimmerman gave prepared responses to questions rehearsed by the facilitator.

Two months later, the committee approved a second workshop—this time called a Community Conversation—to correct its mistakes. A year later, no “conversation” has been rescheduled.

“It remains incredible to watch advocate after advocate, some extremely experienced in shelter work, advocacy, rescue work, etc., be snubbed repeatedly and cut off after two minutes of speaking by people

with no experience,” says animal advocate and former Sacramento County Deputy District Attorney Hilary Bagley Franzoia.

Virga, Mize and Bagley Franzoia, who headed up the DA’s Animal Cruelty Unit and Animal Cruelty Task Force, applied to be on the advisory committee in 2021. All were declined.

Virga’s response to the annual report: “After all those meetings, all the things we have brought up, all the animals who have lost their lives—this is it?

“What’s really sad? If that committee was an independent body that cared about animals—think of the good they could do.”

Cathryn Rakich can be reached at crakich@surewest.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

The advisory committee is required to increase “awareness of the importance of spay/neuter.”
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Self-Inflicted

WHO CREATES HOUSING AFFORDABILITY CRISIS? WE DO

Last year, a report from the California Association of Realtors told a disturbing story. Just 15% of California households can afford to buy a house.

That’s less than half the historic average over the prior three decades, when the Realtors said 33% of Californians could afford homes.

In March 2012, the rate was 56%, inconceivable today.

These numbers are more than alarming. They are unsustainable for a state that prides itself on having just four nations in the world generate more economic activity. If our children and grandchildren can’t afford to live here, how will our economy attract workers and keep thriving?

Even with inflation dropping, everything feels more expensive these days. But in California, where Gov.

G D GD

Gavin Newsom calls high housing costs our “original sin,” there are steps we can take to build more affordable homes.

A recent Wall Street Journal article with the headline, “California is desperate for affordable housing but can’t stop getting in its own way,” suggests we are our own enemy.

The article focused on a 49-unit apartment project in East Los Angeles planned as affordable. With public subsidies, tenants could rent an apartment considerably below market rate. But it’s taken 17 years just to start construction.

Such extreme delays are not typical. But during years of false starts, neighborhood opposition and other obstacles, the cost of the apartments skyrocketed.

Builders who wish to develop affordable housing face many hurdles. In addition to fees passed to consumers for roads, parks, water and sewage, builders must pay construction workers prevailing wages if the project receives public dollars.

Those development costs—fees, labor, energy efficiency standards and more—get folded into a developer’s budget. At some point it becomes tough to build affordable housing.

I’m not suggesting construction workers shouldn’t be paid enough to make a decent living. But developers I talk with say prevailing wage requirements add about 30% to an apartment project’s cost. If cities cut red tape to get arenas and sports stadiums built, can’t they change requirements to build more affordable homes?

Since housing grew so expensive, a lot of California cities, Sacramento included, often require developers to set aside a percentage of units as affordable. Market-rate neighbors subsidize those costs.

“We’ve created this system where the high cost of government requirements prices everybody out of the market, and then we say, ‘Oh my God, we have to fix this, so let’s force developers to build the affordable housing as a condition of building new housing,’ which makes it even less affordable,” local developer Mark Friedman tells me.

“It doesn’t mean we can’t do things to address the problem. But instead, we’re going off in the opposite direction because we’re animated by a really misguided sense of who’s responsible for solving a problem that all of us own. And it continues to get worse.”

John Vignocchi, another local apartment developer, agrees with

Friedman. But Vignocchi mentions another concern: how to attract external capital to Sacramento for the “attainable” multi-family projects he specializes in. His developments don’t include a public subsidy and can be built at reasonable cost.

But for one apartment project he’s trying to finance, Vignocchi said 60% to 70% of the investor groups he contacted report they no longer invest in California.

“We have a lot of pro-housing politicians. Everyone is pro-housing these days,” he says. “But policy doesn’t build housing, capital does. When you bring potential investors in and drive them around and they see rotting buildings Downtown and people living on the street, all the retail crime we’re seeing, it’s really hard to get these people to invest.”

There’s no one answer to California’s affordable housing crisis. We need to try everything that might work. And we need a greater sense of urgency and concentrated effort than we’ve seen.

Gary Delsohn can be reached at gdelsohn@gmail.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

24 IES MAR n 24
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Crowded House

ASSEMBLY RACE GIVES VOTERS LOTS OF CHOICES

While attention is focused on mayoral and City Council races, there’s another bruising election battle underway in town, this one is for state Assembly.

The 6th District includes the city of Sacramento, Rio Linda, Antelope, Elverta, parts of North Highlands and Carmichael. It’s solid blue. Democrats enjoy a 51% to 21% registration advantage.

Yet because of the top two primary system, where the first two finishers advance to the November election regardless of party, a Republican could reach the general election if the flock of Democratic candidates split the vote March 5.

Ten candidates filed for the seat when Assemblymember Kevin McCarty decided to run for mayor. The result is a political free-for-all.

None are household names. All share similar ideologies. The campaigns are well financed, with several helped by big spending from special interest independent expenditure committees.

Here’s a rundown of contenders:

Sean Frame is a filmmaker, Democratic activist and union leader with the California School Employees Association. He’s the most progressive candidate in the contest, with endorsements from the Sierra Club and several unions. Frame was a trustee on Placerville’s school board before moving to Sacramento. He’s running as a “corporate free” candidate.

Rosanna Herber is a 40-year Sacramento resident and president of the SMUD Board. She’s endorsed by state Sen. Angelique Ashby, Mayor Darrell Steinberg and more than a dozen community leaders. Herber was one of the first LGBTQ leaders elected in the region. She’s focused on climate, homelessness and fiscal responsibility, staking out center-left positions.

Maggy Krell is a deputy attorney general and former Planned Parenthood lawyer. Her attention to public safety won endorsements from fellow Democrats Sheriff Jim Cooper and District Attorney Thien Ho, along with police and fire unions. Business groups such as the Metro Chamber of Commerce and housing developers support her. Her coalition includes progressives that cite her work

protecting abortion rights and fighting sex trafficking.

Carlos Marquez was vice president of the California Charter Schools Association. That group is spending heavily for Marquez through its independent expenditure committee. Marquez’ background includes work as executive director of ACLU in California and president of the Sacramento LGBT Community Center. He has progressive credentials and support across the political spectrum, including former Sen. Barbara Boxer and the Metro Chamber, which endorsed both Marquez and Krell.

Evan Minton was the first openly transgender person to work in the Capitol. His campaign is backed by Democrats including Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, former state Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones and former Assembly Speaker John A. Perez. Minton stresses equity, environmental justice and housing.

Preston Romero is the Republican Party’s favored candidate. Before moving to Sacramento, he was the youngest county chair in Arizona Republican Party history. Romero is a legislative staffer and another of

several LGBTQ candidates in the race. His chances to advance to November were hurt when another unknown Republican, Nikki Ellis, filed at the last minute.

Paula Villescaz, former assistant secretary for the California Health and Human Services Agency and former president of the San Juan Unified School District board, has support from much of the Democratic establishment. She’s backed by labor unions, including the California Teachers Association and SEIU, and City Council member Katie Valenzuela. Villescaz takes a progressive stance. She lost a bid for the state Senate to Roger Niello (R-Fair Oaks).

Winnowing the field in the March election has long-term consequences. The ultimate winner will possibly serve a dozen years in the state Assembly, casting votes on housing, state budget, abortion rights, homelessness and public safety.

This race is pivotal for Sacramento’s future. Choose wisely.

Steve Maviglio can be reached at steven.maviglio@gmail.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram @insidesacramento. n

26 IES MAR n 24
Top row, left to right: Carlos Marquez, Evan Minton, Rosanna Herber, Maggy Krell. Bottom row, left to right: Paula Villescaz, Preston Romero, Sean Frame.
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Magnificent Mansion

HISTORIC HOME IS A 12,000-FOOT LABOR OF LOVE

Adecade ago, Ryan Heater set his sights on a historic circa 1900 home in Boulevard Park that he now calls home. The magnificent mansion was lovingly preserved by earlier owners.

Heater’s goal is to take the house to another level. Using top local craftspeople, he studies every detail and explores every resource.

“Years back, I had the pleasure of hosting a 90th birthday party for Jim Betson, one of the previous long-term owners,” Heater says. “It meant the world to him and his family. That’s a part of the intergenerational beauty of this home.

C H CH

“After falling in love with this home I decided to work slowly and carefully to restore it. But also create a modern and livable home for me, and for the entertainment I love to do.”

The 12,000-square-foot mansion is about 30% restored. There are four levels: three floors plus a full basement with a ballroom complete with springloaded dance floor. His work began on the first floor.

“The first floor is for entertainment,” Heater says. “I had to figure out how they were originally used and then modify them for my style.”

The entry is a center hall with a dramatic curving staircase. Woodwork is extensive with hard and soft woods in natural and dark stains. Quarter-sawn oak is generously displayed.

Windows feature original hand-blown and stained glass in the style of Austrian Arts and Crafts architect Josef Hoffmann. Pockets doors open and close rooms as needed.

To the right is a huge formal living room with a massive Arts and Crafts tile fireplace, plus several seating areas and an octagonal window well. To the left is a music room with a 1971 Baldwin concert grand piano that belonged to Heater’s father.

28 IES MAR n 24
Ryan Heater

painted mural highlights the walls. The theme blends light, airy colors of American River flora and fauna. Heater hires a pianist for parties. The room’s openness lets the music flow.

Beyond the music room is a comfortable, cozy lounge with an oversized contemporary tufted leather sofa, marble plinth coffee table, Moroccan tribal rug and large classical European painting. Heater purchased the painting at an East Coast auction and had it shipped to California, no small feat.

Behind the living room is a dining room with seating for 12. It includes built-in buffets, displays and storage for Heater’s crystal and China collections.

Next comes a walk-in bar with a mural of golden tones, stylized rose trees and flying herons. It floats above oak wainscoting.

The kitchen and butler’s pantry occupy the back half. The kitchen has all the modern conveniences, but the design is sparer, more like period cooking areas might have been. A large La Cornue gas stove was restored with brass accents and black frame.

Heater built a curvaceous stove hood that reaches the ceiling. Subway tile covers the walls. The room is centered with a

29 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
A

marble-top table. It’s easy to imagine scones being turned out daily by family cooks.

A bright, sunny breakfast room is bathed by greenhouse-style windows.

Lighting fixtures have been carefully curated by Heater. Some were original, others imported from around the world. Favorites are blown-glass shades in the manner of Tiffany and Steuben.

The home has nine bedrooms and baths. “But I use them for many other things than their original purpose.

I have a couple offices, a guest suite and I even use different bedrooms in different seasons,” Heater says.

“I was lucky that the original and subsequent owners kept everything when they made changes. It’s like I

have a museum cum storage spaces to shop from when working on individual rooms.”

Heater considers the home a lifetime project. “I constantly have something to work on,” he says. “It’s not just a house. It’s a house wrapped up as both a hobby and a passion.”

Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications.com. To recommend a home or garden, contact cecily@insidepublications. com. More photography and previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

30 IES MAR n 24
Another reason to have the right living trust: Your granddaughter, Nancy

• She has danced her way into your heart.

• She dreams of adoring crowds and fragrant bouquets.

• But will she have what she needs to live the happiest life?

• Will what you pass to your children make it to her safely?

• Or might divorce, creditors and other threats limit her future?

Call me for a free consultation. Learn how your living trust can be updated to protect the “Nancy” in your life. Or visit my website, www.wyattlegal.com.

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BHigh Style

WOMEN RULE THE ROAD AT ‘LADIES IN LOWRIDERS’

eautiful, colorful rolling works of art are attracting long lines of ticket buyers to the California Automobile Museum’s “Rucas y Carruchas: Ladies in Lowriders” exhibit.

Many cars on display are heirlooms, worked on by generations of families and cherished by women in a culture historically regarded as male dominated.

Museum exhibits manager ShaVolla Rodriguez exemplifies the involvement of women in the lowrider community. She named her lowrider Adeline.

“If you come to any of our events or see us in the streets, we’re always out with our kids doing family things,” she says. “We want people to come up and ask us about our cars. We love telling stories.”

Adeline, a 1939 Buick, was a gift from Rodriguez’s husband. But she credits her father with introducing her to the lowrider community decades ago. “This culture and lifestyle never leaves your blood,” she says.

The couple built the car about three years ago. Sometimes Rodriguez goes to her garage, sits in Adeline and thinks, “Wow, this is really my car.” She considers the lowrider a rolling canvas of herself.

Rodriguez isn’t alone. Elisha Basquez wrote a testament for the auto museum wall:

“I was born into lowriding on September 16, 1981. My father, Martin Basquez Sr., has always had a passion for rebuilding cars and cruising… I remember bonding with my dad over watching the movie ‘Boulevard Nights’ and seeing the cars and culture. I was always wanting to be right there in the

garage helping hand him the tools he needed while working on his cars.”

The museum exhibit features more than cars. There are lowrider bicycles and pedal cars, religious symbols, lowrider artifacts and works by local artist Cecelia Perez.

Lowriders aren’t all about nostalgia. The culture is going green. Rodriguez’s car club was involved with a high school project that converted a 1964 Impala into an electric vehicle. More than 200 kids signed up for the class.

“This would never have happened with a Tesla or a Prius,” Rodriguez says.

“Rucas y Carruchas: Ladies in Lowriders” runs through April at the California Automobile Museum, 2200 Front St.; (916) 442-6802; calautomuseum.org. Open daily except Tuesday. Tickets are $6-$12.

Inna Tysoe can be reached at tysoe@ tysoes.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram @insidesacramento. n

MANY CARS ON DISPLAY ARE HEIRLOOMS, WORKED ON BY GENERATIONS OF FAMILIES AND CHERISHED BY WOMEN IN A CULTURE HISTORICALLY REGARDED AS MALE DOMINATED.

32 IES MAR n 24
Cali Life Photo by Aniko Kiezel

CHECK THE

EL DORADO ADVANTAGE:

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No Closing Costs on Qualifying Transactions

Flexibility and Convenience

Have Funds Available for Current and Future Needs

Home Improvement, Debt Consolidation, College Tuition

Interest May be Tax Deductible (Please consult your tax advisor)

33 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
% Initial APR* 5 YEAR FIXED RATE Home Equity Line of Credit Loan www.eldoradosavingsbank.com *The initial Annual Percentage Rate (APR) is currently 6.75% for a new Home Equity Line of Credit (HELOC), and is xed for the rst 5 years of the loan which is called the draw period. After the initial 5 year period, the APR can change once based on the value of an Index and Margin. The Index is the weekly average yield on U.S. Treasury Securities adjusted to a constant maturity of 10 years and the margin is 3.50%. The current APR for the repayment period is 7.625%. The maximum APR that can apply any time during your HELOC is 15%. A qualifying transaction consists of the following conditions: (1) the initial APR assumes a maximum HELOC of $200,000, and a total maximum Loan-to-Value (LTV) of 70% including the new HELOC and any existing 1st Deed of Trust loan on your residence; (2) your residence securing the HELOC must be a single-family home that you occupy as your primary residence; (3) if the 1st Deed of Trust loan is with a lender other than El Dorado Savings Bank, that loan may not exceed $300,000, have a total maximum loan-to-value (LTV) of 65% and may not be a revolving line of credit. Additional property restrictions and requirements apply. All loans are subject to a current appraisal. Property insurance is required and ood insurance may be required. Rates, APR, terms and conditions are subject to change without notice. Other conditions apply. A $525 early closure fee will be assessed if the line of credit is closed within three years from the date of opening. An annual fee of $85 will be assessed on the rst anniversary of the HELOC and annually thereafter during the draw period. Ask for a copy of our “Fixed Rate Home Equity Line of Credit Disclosure Notice” for additional important information. Other HELOC loans are available under different terms. Se Habla Espanol 800.874.9779 6.75 NMLSR ID 479256 for Perfect Moulding, Trim and Custom Doors! Mouldings · Custom Interior/Exterior Doors · Hardware Come See our 3,000 sq. ft. Door and Moulding Showroom Monday-Friday 7-5 | Saturday 9-1 916.381.0210 6015 Power Inn Road Over 2500 Moulding Pro les/ Species Options Available Your Source for Custom Doors 10% OFF Moulding Valid for moulding only. Cannot be combined with any other discount. Must mention this ad. Expires 3/31/24 for Peerfec e t 2nd Location 2538 Mercantile Drive #A Open M-F: 7-3:30 916-541-3522

Best Kept Secret

FAIR OAKS HORTICULTURE CENTER IS A MUST FOR GARDENERS

Want to know a secret?

Sacramento’s best bargain is not Costco’s hotdog lunch or thrift store discards. It’s the Fair Oaks Horticulture Center, tucked into the back of Fair Oaks Park on a 1-acre spit of land.

The center has been called “Disneyland for Gardeners,” but there are no long lines and triple-digit tickets. Admission to public events and parking is free. UC Master Gardeners staff the events and maintain the gardens. Next event is an Open Garden

D V DV

on Saturday, March 16, from 9 a.m. to noon.

At the Open Garden, visitors roam demonstration gardens for ideas on landscaping plants and groupings, and boost knowledge for growing edibles. Bring problem insects (in a sealed baggie or bottle, please!), damaged and diseased foliage, and other problems for identification and advice.

Only the front gardens are accessible daily. All the demonstration gardens, plus dozens of Master Gardeners, are at your service during scheduled events.

Public service doesn’t end at aiding the gardening community. The demonstration vegetable garden, occasionally supplemented by the onsite orchard, has donated nearly 12,000 pounds of produce to the River City Food Bank in Midtown the past seven years.

“This is extraordinary, given most of what we donate from the veggie garden is comprised of leafy greens, lettuces and, of course, tomatoes,” vegetable

perennials, shrubs and trees, herbs, fruit and citrus trees, vegetables, berries, a vineyard, and an area for composting and vermiculture (worm composting). Kids love worm composting.

A pond and shady pergola adorn the property, which is bordered by the sprawling Fair Oaks Community Garden. Plants are labeled and tended by Master Gardeners. Informational handouts are available during events. Questions are encouraged. Problemsolving advice targets the Sacramento region.

“The public is our main focus,” says Curtis Purnell, co-project leader for the vegetable garden and maintenance team. “We are not here to sell the public things or enroll them in something or other. We are here to say, ‘Come in and we will try to help you, no strings attached.’ Gardening should be fun, and we try our best to help people enjoy their efforts.”

Established in 1998, the center is a Sacramento County UC Cooperative Extension project site and collaborative effort with Regional Water Authority and Fair Oaks Recreation & Park District. The park district provides the land, plus water and electricity.

Most Open Gardens are Saturday mornings, but a couple each year are Wednesday mornings. Next month’s Open Garden is Wednesday, April 17, followed by Saturday Open Gardens May 11 and June 15.

group co-project leader Linda Sanford says.

When I ask people if they have visited the Fair Oaks center, I am often reminded that many have never heard of this treasure.

“FOHC is a unique outdoor classroom, showcasing a diversity of edible crops and landscape plants,” says Judy McClure, program coordinator for Sacramento’s Master Gardener program.

She suggests multiple visits per year for seasonal inspiration. The seasonal transitions in each garden are a living showcase of how local gardens can be gorgeous year around.

“We provide an opportunity for informative conversations with UC Master Gardeners who are dedicated to helping our community grow productive landscapes and gardens,” McClure says. “We offer practical, science-based information, plus you can learn from our experiences, both successes and challenges.”

Wandering the center, visitors encounter gardens teeming with

No event is scheduled in July because Master Gardeners are busy at the State Fair. But August’s Harvest Day is the biggest one-day gardening event in the region. It’s always the first Saturday of August—Aug. 3 this year. While events are free, the Master Gardener program accepts donations. Plan ahead to attend one or more Fair Oaks Horticulture Center gardening events.

For a list of gardening events stretching into October, visit sacmg. ucanr.edu.

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 and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

34 IES MAR n 24
Fair Oaks Horticulture Center Photo by Jan Fetler

This sweet, delicately flavored vegetable is from the onion family and is related to garlic, chives and scallions. Clean them well before using to remove grit between the leaves.

usin

To eat: Braise them whole or slice and sauté for a soup or stew.

To eat: Bra

The leaves of the fava bean plant are mildly sweet and buttery. Early in the season, they are tender and can be eaten raw. Later in the season, it’s best to sauté or wilt them.

To eat: Mix them into a salad or add to pasta or risotto.

CARNIVAL CAULIFLOWER

These multicolored cauliflowers come in vivid orange, green or purple. They are a great source of vitamins C and B6 and are high in folate and potassium.

These multicolored caulifl a great source vitamins

To eat: Boil the whole head briefly in salted water, then drizzle with olive oil and roast at high temp.

To eat: Boil the whole hea roast at temp

Monthly Market

A LOOK AT WHAT’S IN SEASON AT LOCAL FARMERS MARKETS IN MARCH

NANTES CARROTS

California grows 80 percent of the nation’s crop. Broccoli is packed with vitamin C and dietary fiber.

To eat: Boil, sauté, steam or stir-fry.

This French heirloom variety has an almost perfectly cylindrical shape, smooth skin, crisp texture and sweet taste.

To eat: Use in stocks, soups, braises and salads.

Asparagus plants are perennial; the edible spears are the new shoots that appear in spring.

To eat: Steam, grill or roast them and serve with hollandaise or lemon vinaigrette.

35 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
LEEKS
ASPARAGUS BROCCOLI FAVA GREENS before

Listen Up

HE HEARD THEIR GRIEF WHEN THEY NEEDED HIM MOST

Some of my most rewarding years in chaplain work were spent as chaplain for women and children at Sutter Medical Center from 2002 to 2008.

My rounds often took me onto the high-risk maternity unit. Rooms were filled with scared, pregnant women whose doctors confined them to bed in hopes of avoiding a miscarriage.

One afternoon, our unit secretary, Jeannette, told me about a patient expecting twins. Her 23-week pregnancy was threatened by severe complications.

“Her husband is a youth minister, so she has a lot of church friends in her room now,” Jeannette told me.

Jeannette’s quiet demeanor meant she was worried. “Maybe you could go introduce yourself. Might help if things go south.”

N B NB

Inside the room, the minister greeted me with the typical chorus of religious platitudes.

“These twins are in God’s hands. I’m not worried,” he said in a dismissive manner. “We know God will heal these babies.”

I was nearly convinced. The room was adorned with religious books, greeting cards and Bibles. The family played sacred music and wore pious jewelry.

I took the minister’s hint and excused myself, figuring my time would be better spent elsewhere.

Forty-eight hours later, I returned to the nurses’ station. Jeanette whispered, “They’re really going to need you now, chaplain. The twins didn’t make it.”

“They’ll need me, but will they want me?” I muttered.

Jeanette dared me to “give it a shot.”

I said, “I’m betting they don’t give me five minutes.”

Prayerfully, I entered the room. It’s a risk going where you aren’t wanted, even when you wear the chaplain’s badge.

The room was a stark contrast from its previous state. Gone were the church visitors and religious music.

The couple remembered me and invited me to sit.

“We’ve been in church work for years,” the pastor said. “Why couldn’t God help us?”

For a moment, I assumed they didn’t want a chaplain. I leaned forward to signal my willingness to leave. Yet they continued to unload.

“No, chaplain, stay,” insisted the grieving mother.

They wanted someone to hear the case they’d built against God, so I stayed and listened.

They believed God shortchanged them. They swore they’d never return to church. God wasn’t fair. We deserve better. Is God really love? If God loves us, why does he hurt his children?

I was uncomfortable, but stayed through the barrage, listening to it all.

My visit lasted 45 minutes. During the next few days, I was invited for more visits. I lost my bet with Jeanette.

When our patient was discharged, her youth-pastor husband said to me, “You probably wonder why we let you stay after we’d dismissed our congregants.”

I did.

“You were the only one willing to listen to our gripes about God,” he said.

“I was taken by your honesty,” I said. “You voiced your complaints directly to God. Often people aren’t that authentic.

Instead of telling God exactly what they are feeling, they talk smack about God behind his back.

“I think God understands your talk. After all, God saw his son die, too.”

They nodded and thanked me for not trying to change their minds or judge them.

“Just make sure you keep up the conversation with him,” I said.

I phoned a few times and found they were still having daily conversations with God. And while those conversations didn’t sound much like usual church prayers, I know God heard every word.

I bet Jeanette I wouldn’t be allowed into the couple’s room, much less their lives. But because I listened without trying to defend or explain God, the couple allowed me a place in their sacred grief.

That’s a gamble I’ll take every time.

Norris Burkes can be reached at comment@thechaplain.net. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook 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

36 IES MAR n 24
37 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM If you enjoy our print magazine, you’ll love what else Inside Sacramento has in store... Social Media Restaurant Guide Story Archives E-Newsletters InsideSacramento.com Always 100% Local. More Options to Read & Share. Readers Near & Far Scan Using Your Phones
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HAZEL’S STORY

HER BRAVERY CHANGED THE CITY, BUT SHE’S FORGOTTEN

There must be something we can do for Hazel Jackson. Her bravery brought a reckoning that inspires today.

She forced Land Park gentry to confront their indifference to racism.

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She shamed local business leaders for their ownership of a sports facility that refused to serve Black people.

Hazel Jackson made a difference. Thanks to her, part of the city’s recreational and sporting life untethered itself from an anchor of institutional bigotry.

She didn’t make racism disappear, but she made it tougher for respectable citizens to support racist policies or pretend those policies didn’t exist.

In January, I wrote about the ugly history of Land Park Plunge and Riverside Baths, a recreational facility enjoyed by generations from 1909 to 1955.

The plunge and baths were a gathering place, a swimming pool filled

with “artesian” waters. The facility sponsored swim teams and swim meets. There were dressing areas and picnic grounds.

Delightful on summer days, the pool stayed open almost to midnight. But there was a catch. No Black people were admitted morning, noon or night.

Hazel Jackson ended that. She was 14, a student at California Junior High School. She lived at 2754 Second Ave. in Curtis Park with her grandmother Hattie Jackson.

On May 23, 1952, Hazel’s class visited Land Park Plunge for a picnic. Other students were welcomed, but not Hazel. She was Black. Pool staff said she couldn’t enter.

When Hattie Jackson heard what happened, she contacted Nathaniel Colley, the only Black lawyer in town. Three years out of Yale Law School, Colley was building a reputation as a warrior against discrimination.

Colley filed a $10,000 damage suit against Land Park Plunge on behalf of the Jacksons. The case was settled for $250 plus attorney’s fees.

The agreement applied only to Hazel. Presumably other Black people would still be turned away. But decades of unchallenged racism were over at Land Park Plunge.

In an era of emerging civil rights, the pool became an embarrassment among enlightened Land Park families.

38 IES MAR n 24
Hazel Jackson (top row, second from left) in 1956 edition of McClatchy High School‘s Nugget yearbook.

READERS NEAR & FAR

1. Kathy Kingsbury in the Dolomites mountains at Corvara in Badia, Italy.

2. Corky Mau, Bonnie Cornwall and Liz Allen at Iguazu Falls, Brazil.

3. Steve Williamson and Cecily Hastings in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

4. Patrick Powers on three-day trek in the headlands of Mendocino, California, for 78th birthday.

39 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM Take a picture with Inside and email a high-resolution copy to travel@insidepublications.com or submit directly from our website at InsideSacramento. com. Due to volume of submissions, we cannot guarantee all photos will be printed or posted. Find us on Facebook and Instagram: InsideSacramento.

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4617 U ST $560,000

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2720 43RD ST $689,000

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124 44TH ST $785,000

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95864

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40 IES MAR n 24
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It closed in 1955. Congregation B’nai Israel stands there today.

Years passed and Colley gained fame for his legal skill and courtroom eloquence. He was honored by presidents and Supreme Court justices.

Colley was a sportsman who owned a stable of racehorses in Elk Grove, Priscilla Belle Farms. He was chairman of the California Horse Racing Board. He died from brain cancer at his ranch in 1992, age 74. His legacy endures with a high school named for him.

Hazel Jackson wasn’t so fortunate. When I researched this story, I hoped Hazel might still be alive, maybe a great-grandmother, still in town. That’s not what I found.

Hazel advanced from Cal Junior High to McClatchy High School. After her 1956 graduation, the trail grows cold.

I followed leads down winding roads, mostly to nowhere. There were many Hazel Jacksons born in California around 1938. There’s a marriage in Reno in 1958. Our Hazel? Doubtful.

I tracked Hazel to Philadelphia and a three-story, red brick row house. The address is 2129 Christian St., near Graduate Hospital in Center City. She worked as a key punch operator. The

Cecily Hastings Publisher

row house is where Hazel Jackson died Aug. 2, 1969.

On the bright yellow death certificate, the medical examiner typed, “Ingested overdose of multiple drugs while temporarily mentally ill.” Cause of death was suicide. She was 31.

Authorities turned to Hazel’s pastor, the Rev. Cecil Dubois Gallup of Holy Trinity Baptist Church, for background.

The pastor said Hazel lived alone four blocks from church. She was single, no family. She was buried at Mount Zion Cemetery in Collingdale, Pennsylvania. Today Mount Zion has no record of Hazel Jackson.

Like she never existed.

But Hazel Jackson did exist. Sacramento owes her. She did something incredibly brave at age 14, stood up to a half century of racism at a popular sports and recreation facility.

If the city can’t find a way to honor her memory, it’s up to the rest of us.

R.E. Graswich can be reached at regraswich@icloud.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

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Locals Only Locals

WINE MERCHANT KEEPS IT HOME GROWN, FARM TO BOTTLE

On many blocks in the grid, a range of restaurants serve food with valleygrown ingredients. Local wine bars and craft breweries develop their own presence using grapes and hops from around the region.

A true community spirit is on display when the city comes together for a night out.

Thriving businesses in the grid win over customers with cutting-edge flavors and a love of how diverse cultures make us strong. Voluptuary & Lucid Wines reflects the inventive farm-to-bottle flair.

Founder Kevin Luther was born and raised in Sacramento and educated at UC Davis. After traveling the world to learn the wine business,

Luther returned and put his experience to work. He enjoys giving back to his community.

“I believe in virtuous cycles,” he says. “In a community, we can feed each other with mutually beneficial relationships.”

Luther was raised in a working-class family of farm and wood workers. He tells of his grandma rearing 12 kids on her own after her husband died. Luther’s father picked fruit in Clarksburg and Lodi to help make ends meet.

Using his knowledge from winemaking in Paso Robles, Sonoma, Oregon, Australia, New Zealand and Argentina, plus more than 10 years working in a Sierra foothills winery, Luther began making his own wines in 2017.

Lucid Wines was set to open in March 2020, but pandemic lockdowns forced Luther and his brother to adapt their approach to save their business.

MGGM

They held virtual wine tastings that caught on among people stuck at home. The brothers turned what could have ended their dream into a way of expanding their reach. Lucid sent customers samples in small bottles and led people in online tastings.

Between Thanksgiving and Christmas 2020, the strategy produced $1 million in sales.

Other companies saw potential in virtual tastings. The market shifted when lockdowns eased, and

42 IES MAR n 24
Kevin Luther

Lucid adjusted its approach by opening an event space and tasting room at 10th and R streets.

The event space and tasting room, next to Fox & Goose, offer a piece of history and warehouse setting with plants, books from Luther’s father, art, wine barrels and stainless-steel tanks.

Luther has developed more than 20 varieties of wine and three types of port. His eyes light up when he discusses combinations and flavor profiles created with woods such as cherry, maple, chestnut, cypress, peach, apple, mesquite and even grapevine cuttings.

He uses wood cubes, staves and chips to influence the taste as wines age in Lucid’s stainless-steel vats. Finesse allows the wine to retain bold fruit flavors accented with infused woods.

Pink and red ports are aged in neutral oak barrels. White port and most of Lucid’s wine ages in stainless steel. To cut down on glass bottle waste, wine is moved into taps in the tasting section and poured into glasses. Bottles are refillable.

Lucid either grows its own organic grapes or buys from local organic farmers. By pulling grapes from small lots from Lodi to the foothills, Lucid captures the region’s distinctive agriculture. Only wild and organic yeasts and minimal sulfates go into the product.

Lucid emphasizes its regional legacy with gifts to local nonprofits. A dollar of each bottle sale goes to a nonprofit, and the shop offers case giveaways. So far, $60,000 has been donated, with a goal to reach $100,000.

Lucid Winery is open daily except Monday at 1015 R St.; (916) 384-0076; lucidwinery.com.

Gabrielle Myers can be reached at gabriellemyers11@gmail.com. Her latest book of poetry, “Too Many Seeds,” can be ordered from fishinglinepress.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

43 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM

Warm & Welcoming

44 IES MAR n 24
M I D D L E E A S T E R N C U I S I N E S H I N E S AT F U LTO N A V E N U E R E S TA U R A N T MIDDLE EASTERN CUISINE SHINES FULTON AVENUE RESTAURANT

Basha Taste of Jerusalem is a vibrant example of Palestinian cuisine. Marrying flavors of the Middle East and Mediterranean, the Fulton Avenue restaurant delivers punchy spices and expert cooking from the Levant. It’s dished out with warm and welcoming service.

When I grew up in the 1980s and 1990s, Fulton Avenue cuisine was burgers, pizza and cheesesteaks. Tiny’s Drive-In and The Buggy Whip spoke with meat and potatoes and cooking from another era.

Now, Fulton Avenue draws from around the world. The street features foods from Southeast Asia, India, Latin America and especially the Middle East.

Gone are most of the steak and burger joints. You’re more likely to find kebab, falafel, hummus and biryani.

Restaurant owners from Persia, Afghanistan, Morocco and Lebanon put a cultural spin on their homeland’s food while designing menus for American palates.

Among these expressions of Middle Eastern cooking, Taste of Jerusalem is a gem. The food is stellar, the whitetablecloth atmosphere refined.

From the busy avenue and petite parking lot, a broad, heavy wooden door leads to an airy, happy interior. White walls and deep blues of the Mediterranean envelop guests. Murals

cover the walls. Plush fabrics soften every sound.

Two dining rooms offer plenty of space for parties of two or 22. On a rainy weekday night, the restaurant was busy but calm. A peek at owner Mohamad Abboushi’s social media shows Taste of Jerusalem is perfect for a wedding, retirement party or other celebration. They know how to party.

Not expecting guests well-versed in Palestinian cuisine, servers at Taste of Jerusalem are welcoming and full of advice. I felt cared for at my visits.

The menu is extensive, reflecting the bounty of the Mediterranean. Fish and shrimp preside alongside lamb and beef. Chicken is the star in several traditional preparations, including Maqluba. This crowd pleaser is a pot of stewed chicken, rice and fried vegetables cooked and flipped onto a platter in a delightful structure of deliciousness.

One of my favorite foods, lamb shank, is prepared with a slow simmer. Meat falls from the bone. A generous, citrusy helping of sumac brings the dish to life.

A whole roasted sea bass nearly overwhelms. Served with pickles and relishes, lemon wedges and rice, it’s a huge dish that works.

Simpler, more American-focused dishes can be found for a lighter lunch or less formal meal. A well-seasoned kufta burger or lamb kebab wrap with fries make for a solid midday meal.

Every meal is accompanied by a basket of “Jerusalem bread.” The flatbread, baked fresh on hot stones every day, is an expression of traditional Palestinian baking and worth the trip by itself.

One surprise is a simple dessert called warbat. Think of a large baklava stuffed with sweet cheese. It’s the flaky,

crispy, soft, sweet, chewy dessert you might have skipped. Trust me, you should try it.

I’ve eaten at many casual kabob and pita places in Arden-Arcade and arrived at Taste of Jerusalem with modest expectations. I was wrong. The food was wonderful, and I was delighted by the warm atmosphere and kind service. I hope to return often.

Basha Taste of Jerusalem is at 1833 Fulton Ave.; (916) 486-1944; bashasacramento.com.

Greg Sabin can be reached at saceats@gmail.com. Previous reviews can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

45 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM

Star Struck

A BROADWAY LEGEND BRINGS HER TALENTS TO TOWN

You’re working at Sacramento Theatre Company during tough times. Live theater audiences are declining. Budgets are tight. You wonder what the future holds.

The phone rings. It’s Stephanie J. Block, Tony Award-winning star of Broadway hits “Wicked,” “9 to 5,” “The Cher Show,” “Falsettos” and “Into the Woods.”

She wants to help.

This isn’t the plot of a musical. It happened a few months ago.

“I had a visceral reaction when I hit STC’s website,” says Block, a Southern California native and longtime New Yorker who relocated to Sacramento during the pandemic.

“Reading about its transitional status, its passion and youth focus, I thought, I want to help this beautiful company that’s existed for nearly 80 years. So, I picked up the phone and left a message saying, ‘I’m in the area, I have time, talent and a lot of practical knowledge. I have no idea if I can be of service to your institution, but I’d like to try.’”

STC called her back minutes later. Block is now working with the theater company on a solo concert that will bring together her love of performing and her affection for her new hometown.

“I love doing these intimate concerts,” Block says. “It’s a real gift when you get to stand in your own body and shoes and sing songs that you know express yourself in such an intimate way.”

Block has local connections. Her sister married a Citrus Heights native. Block starred in several Music Circus productions, including “Bye Bye Birdie,” “Crazy for You” and “Damn Yankees.”

When COVID hit, Block and her husband, actor Sebastian Arcelus, put on their parental hats to figure

46 IES MAR n 24
Stephanie J. Block Photo by Christopher Boudewyns
L JL

out what would be best for 5-year-old daughter Vivienne, who was about to start kindergarten.

“All arrows pointed to Northern California,” Block says. “We didn’t know if it would be just for a year, two years or indefinitely. It was a huge leap of faith and a big, bold choice, but we did right by our girl.”

Vivienne attended kindergarten and first grade in person thanks to outdoor classes. She experienced horseback riding and skiing for the first time.

But New York beckoned when Block and Arcelus were cast in the Broadway revival of “Into the Woods.” They moved back to the East Coast, undertook the show’s national tour as a family for a year, then returned to Sacramento.

“When we came back, we wanted to invest a little more of ourselves into this community,” Block says. “This way of life was not just a bookmark or placeholder. It was the way we were going to move forward as a family.”

Now she’s focused on getting resettled in the region and finding

new outlets for her artistry. “These kinds of concerts are a literal conversation between the audience and performer,” Block says. “It’s dictated by who’s in the room, and that’s what live theater has always been. It’s only happening in the here-and-now, which is so rare and so beautiful and so connected.”

“Stephanie is far more than amazing talent. She embodies what we believe live theater represents: integrity, empathy, professionalism and forward-looking,” says Carol Wieckowski Dreyer, longtime STC board member. “For us, Stephanie embraces the best of theater, and we are profoundly grateful to her for her time, dedication and desire to support us.”

For information, visit sactheatre. org.

Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profiles can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

WEEKEND ONE LIVE!

Saturday, March 9 & Sunday, March 10

Veterans Memorial Theatre, 203 E. 14th St., Davis

WEEKEND TWO LIVE!

Saturday, March 16 & Sunday, March 17

The Center at 2300 Sierra Blvd., Sacramento

STREAMING! March 11–24

Virtual films from the comfort of your home

47 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
Full Schedule, Tickets & Passes available online sacjewishfilmfest.org Visit lovelaundry.com for store info | Hours: 6am - 10pm (Last Wash 8:30pm) Expert Drop-off Laundry Service available Free Dry with Wash Largest machines around! Check out locations nearest you Now Serving two locations in midtown/ downtown New location 2101 S St. Sacramento

TO DO

THIS MONTH'S CULTURE & ENTERTAINMENT HIGHLIGHTS

LIVE PERFORMANCE

Sacramento Jewish Film Festival

Streaming online March 9–24

March 9–10, Veterans Memorial Theater (201 E 14th St., Davis)

March 16–17, The Center at 2300 (2300 Sierra Blvd.)

sacjewishfilmfest.org

Tickets: $12–$36 (50% off student discount)

The festival showcases 39 international films in person and online, plus Q&As, mini-concerts, special panels and in-person receptions.

Visions

Sacramento Ballet

March 22–24

The Sofia (2700 Capitol Ave.); sacballet.org

Tickets: $30–$70

Discover new commissions and company premieres from forward-leaning and inspirational choreographers, including Marika Brussel, Ihsan Rustem and Ma Cong.

Zora & Langston

Celebration Arts

March 1–17

2727 B St.; celebrationarts.net

Tickets: $25 general admission, $20 seniors, $15 students

Meet novelist Zora Neale Hurston and poet Langston Hughes as they grapple with the complexity of relationships, passion of artists and literary heart of Harlem in the 1920s.

European Masterworks

Sacramento Choral Society & Orchestra

Saturday, March 2, 3 p.m.

SAFE Credit Union Performing Arts Center (1301 L St.); sacramentochoral.org

Tickets: $54–$79

Lend an ear to the powerful music of Morten Lauridsen and Antonin Dvorak,

performed with projected supertitles, and soloists Olivia Smith, Maggie Renée, Salvatore Atti and David Soar.

Folk Songs and Music for Kings and Queens

Sacramento Symphonic Winds

Sunday, March 3, 2:30 p.m.

El Camino High School Center for the Arts (2340 Eastern Ave.); sacwinds.org

Conducted by Dr. Matthew Morse, the concert features “English Folk Song Suite” by Ralph Vaughan Williams, “One Life Beautiful” by Julie Giroux, “Acadiana” by Frank Ticheli and more.

48 IES MAR n 24
“Seven Blessings” at Sacramento Jewish Film Festival.

ART

EXTRAORDINARIES: Bud Gordon

Twisted Track Gallery

March 1–30

First Friday Reception March 1, 6–10 p.m.

Second Saturday Reception March 9, 5–8 p.m. 1730 12th St.; (916) 639-0436

Enjoy new oil and acrylic paintings inspired by natural landscapes, agriculture, urban milieu and people.

Contemporary Nostalgia: Leslie McCarron and Carol Mott-Binkley

Archival Gallery

March 1–30

Second Saturday Reception March 9, 5–8 p.m.

3223 Folsom Blvd.; archivalgallery.com

Two California natives share their memories and impressions of the state. McCarron presents contemporary oil paintings and Mott-Binkley features her iconic street photography.

For the Words I Couldn’t Say ARTHOUSE

March 8–April 9

Opening Reception Saturday, March 9, 5–8 p.m. 1021 R St.; arthouseonr.com

Dive into abstract oil paintings by Sayako Dairiki in this solo show curated by Arthouse resident artists June Daskalakis and Sarah Whyte.

She Laughs Back: Feminist Wit in 1970s

Bay Area Art

Sacramento State University Library Gallery

Through April 13

6000 J St.; csus.edu/university-galleries

Nearly 100 narrative artworks by 19 women use subversive humor to advance women’s personal and political liberation.

Friends and Family Show

The Art Studios

Saturday, March 9, 2–8 p.m.

1727 I St.; theartstudiossacramento.com

See the creations of 18 artists in their four adjoining studios, and admire work by their friends and family hanging alongside resident artists’ work in the main gallery.

Group Show

5 Sips Coffee & Tea

March 1–31

2104 11th Ave.; 5sips.com

Artists present interior or exterior views of the café as an homage to their neighborhood gathering place.

Lottery For The Arts

Blue Line Arts

Thursday, March 21, 5–9 p.m. 405 Vernon St. Roseville; bluelinearts.org

Lottery Ticket: $350

This fundraising event lets art enthusiasts acquire original works by professional and emerging artists. Buy a ticket. When your name is drawn, choose your favorite artwork from juried exhibition. Preview art during gallery hours.

FAMILY FRIENDLY

City of Trees Parade & Mardi Gras Festival Curiosity Collaborative

Saturday, March 9, 2–9 p.m.

Capitol Mall between 5th and 7th St.; curiousitycollaborative.org

Tickets: $5–$150

Celebrate Mardi Gras with dancers, marching bands, light-up vehicles,

classic car parade, pet parade and more.

Gardener’s Market

Sacramento Perennial Plant Club

Saturday, March 9, 9 a.m.–3 p.m.

Shepard Garden & Arts Center (3330 McKinley Blvd.); sgaac.org

Regional nurseries and garden artisans sell plants, sculptures, pottery, paintings, books and more to raise money for the club’s grants program.

Spring Sale

Shepard Garden & Arts Center

Saturday, March 16, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.

Sunday, March 17, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. 3330 McKinley Blvd.; sgaac.org

Find plants, jewelry, crafts, flowers, art, food and more for sale.

Free Museum Weekend

Sacramento Area Museums March 2–3, 10 a.m. to closing sacmuseums.org

To reserve free entry to nearly 25 museums, visit the website. Advance registration is required and capacity is limited.

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 and Instagram: @insidesacramento. n

49 IES n INSIDESACRAMENTO.COM
insidesacramento.com
VISIT
“D Street” by Bud Gordon at Twisted Track Gallery. “Overflowing Red” by Leslie McCarron at Archival Gallery.

53 Minnesota’s

55

56

58

61

68 Suffix with “puppet”

69

70 Lil 71 Nickname that drops “An”

DOWN

1 Napes

2 Call made to an iPhone?

3 Civil rights advocate Roosevelt

4 Bygone Sony game console: Abbr.

5 Keen judgment

6 Achy

7 Like skin creams

8 Ga. airport

9 Must-___ TV

10 Beach-day drink holders

11 Vienna State Opera’s country

12 50-50, say

15 Tach reading

19 Norah’s sitarist dad

21 Throws for a loop

25 Dal legume

27 Makes way on the highway

28 “Here” en espanol

30 Snake whose middle letter is snaky

32 “Nope” star Kaluuya

33 Salt Lake City resident

38 Elbow-towrist bone

40 Upper parts of costumes

41 “How Far ___ Go” (“Moana” song)

42 Documentary fodder

43 Sought new talent

45 “Totally rad!”

47 In need of a jump start, maybe

48 Scottie, e.g.

49 Removal from existence

51 Actress Hathaway

52 “Ships of the desert”

57 Core muscles

59 “Sign me up!”

61 Where you might have chemistry with your partner?

62 Pull-down muscle, briefly

63 Have debts 64 “r u srs??”

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

© 2023 Andrews McMeel Universal www.upuzzles.com

The Right Flower Arrangement by Shannon Rapp and Will Eisenberg

50 IES MAR n 24 Get A New INSIDE CROSSWORD Delivered to Your Inbox Each Week! Sign Up For Our Weekly 100% LOCAL Newsletter InsideSacramento.com ACROSS 1 That woman 4 Farfalle and linguine, e.g. 10 Snowbell in “Stuart Little,” for one 13 Animator’s sheet 14 Two-wheeled ride 16 French agreement 17 Whiskey type 18 Flowery language 20 Mil. branch with a Colorado Springs academy 22 “Turning Red” protagonist 23 Milkshake addition 24 Grand closing? 26 Texter’s “Ta-ta!” 29 Aloe ___ 31 Blended beverages at a beach bar 34 Fire truck wailer 35 Alaskan native 36 It’s boiled to make maple syrup 37 Leave slack-jawed
Brother of Chris Hemsworth
Uncertain factors
Homer epic
What to make when time is short?
Many a morning anchor
39
41
44
46
50
state
54
alternative
bird
Lager
Capital
of Turkiye
Fish in some melts
Character
a virtual city
Some fancy cameras,
short
in
60
in
oping
own rate, or a hint
the last
letters
18-, 31-
50-Across
One devel-
at their
to
few
of
or
Shang-Chi
65 Simu who portrayed
66 Get on in years
67 Place for cutting boards?
It might be made of rice or nails
3/7
3/8
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