San Francisco Bay Guardian - Essential Bay Area News, Politics, Arts, and Culture http://www.sfbg.com/ en Localized Appreesh: Wild Hunt http://www.sfbg.com/noise/2012/05/16/localized-appreesh-wild-hunt <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/Wild Hunt by James Burkhart.png" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"><div class="aef-image-infos-title-credits"><div class="aef-image-infos-title">In the darkness, there is Wild Hunt.</div> <span class="aef-image-infos-credits">PHOTO BY JAMES BURKHART</span></div><div class="aef-image-infos-title-legend"></div></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><em>Localized Appreesh is our weekly thank-you column to the musicians that make the Bay. To be considered, contact <a href="mailto:emilysavage@sfbg.com">emilysavage@sfbg.com</a>.</em><span class="read-more"><a href="http://www.sfbg.com/noise/2012/05/01/localized-appreesh-b-sea"><strong></strong></a></span></p> <p>The essence of Oakland's <a href="http://www.facebook.com/WILDHUNTBAND" target="_blank">Wild Hunt </a>could summed up thusly: doomy, progressive metal that perches in the cerebral cortex during a waking nightmare. A ghoulish nightmare from which you don't necessary wish to wake. It's black magic behind fluttering eyelids.&lt;!--break--></p> <p>Along with more traditional metal riffs, there are drawn-out, heavy breakdowns that lend easily to slow, deliberate head banging, blended with modern hypnotic ambiance that gives it that dream-like quality. It doesn't hurt that drummer-vocalist Harland Burkhart sounds like he's growling underwater. I've seen Enslaved noted as a point of reference here, and agree with that assessment. </p> <p>So now you need to hear it, right? Well, you've chased it down and speared it. The quartet's debut album, Before the Plane of Angles, which was mixed by Laudanum's Salvador Raya and mastered by Justin Weis (Hammers of Misfortune, Ludicra), is out now on Kemado. And the album release show is this weekend at El Rio. <br /> <div class="eminline-wrapper"> <div class="emvideo emvideo-video emvideo-youtube"> <div class="emfield-emvideo emfield-emvideo-youtube"> <div id="emvideo-youtube-flash-wrapper-1"> <object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="350" width="550" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/ihzeCQWlMHc&amp;rel=0&amp;enablejsapi=1&amp;playerapiid=ytplayer&amp;fs=1" id="emvideo-youtube-flash-1"> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/ihzeCQWlMHc&amp;rel=0&amp;enablejsapi=1&amp;playerapiid=ytplayer&amp;fs=1" /> <param name="allowScriptAcess" value="sameDomain" /> <param name="quality" value="best" /> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /> <param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /> <param name="scale" value="noScale" /> <param name="salign" value="TL" /> <param name="FlashVars" value="playerMode=embedded" /> <param name="wmode" value="transparent" /> </object></div> </div> </div> </div> <p>I caught up with the Wild Hunt in that unsettling space between wake and sleep. Here's what Burkhart had to say: </p> <p><strong>Band name origin:</strong> "Wild Hunt" refers to the ancient European myth of a phantasmal cavalcade of dead folks seen madly flying through the sky, usually around Yuletide. There are a variety of different versions of the legend; some believe the Norse god Odin leads the pack, others believe King Arthur, others believe Ronald McDonald.</p> <p><strong>Band motto:</strong> You got fourteen cent?</p> <p><strong>Description of sound in 10 words or less:</strong> Heavy, melodic, dreamlike. At times jarring, at times tranquil.</p> <p><strong>Instrumentation:</strong> Two guitarists, one bassist, one drummer/vocalist.</p> <p><strong>Most recent release: </strong><em>Before the Plane of Angles </em>(Kemado Records, 2012)<br /><strong><br />Best part about life as a Bay Area band: </strong>Being situated in such a hotbed of creative activity.</p> <p><strong>Worst part about life as a Bay Area band:</strong> Paying rent.</p> <p><strong>First album purchased:</strong> For me, possibly Oingo Boingo, <em>Only a Lad</em>.</p> <p><strong>Most recent album purchased/downloaded:</strong> Allseits, <em>Hel</em>.</p> <p><strong>Favorite local eatery and dish: </strong>Southie has become my lunchtime destination. That dang fried rock shrimp sandwich has changed my life, tell you what.</p> <p><strong><a href="http://wildhuntband.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">Wild Hunt </a><br />With Giant Squid, Black Queen<br />Sat/19, 10pm, $8<br />El Rio <br />3158 Mission, SF<br />(415) 282-3325 <br /><a href="http://www.elriosf.com" target="_blank">www.elriosf.com</a></strong></p> <p></p> http://www.sfbg.com/noise/2012/05/16/localized-appreesh-wild-hunt#comments Band of the Week Localized Appreesh Music Wild Hunt Emily Savage Wed, 16 May 2012 23:07:02 +0000 emily 24798 at http://www.sfbg.com High Sierra Music Festival July 5-8 http://www.sfbg.com/promo/2012/05/16/high-sierra-music-festival-july-5-8 <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/aef_image_original_format/high sierra.jpg" alt="" title="" width="300" height="300" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:px"></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>High Sierra Music Festival, a.k.a. The Ultimate Intimate Festival Experience, is set for an unforgettable year with Ben Harper, STS9, Railroad Earth, Galactic &amp; many more!</p> <p>Taking place July 5-8, 2012 in Quincy, CA just 4 hrs from the San Francisco Bay Area.&nbsp; Featuring four daytime stages, yoga/dance classes, on-site camping, artist playshops and your new favorite band.</p> <p>Music goes into the wee hours with a late night schedule includes STS9, Galactic &amp; The Motet, Railroad Earth &amp; Brokedown in Bakersfield, Big Gigantic &amp; Paper Diamond, The Devil Makes Three &amp; Split Lip Rayfield, and more!</p> <p>Great for families too with a designated Family Camp, expanded Kidzone and the Rockin’ Nannies.</p> <p>Full details and tickets available for purchase <a href="http://www.highsierramusic.com" target="_blank">here</a>.</p> <p><iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/ZNmsEdCTJSY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> </p> Wed, 16 May 2012 22:55:35 +0000 jackie 24797 at http://www.sfbg.com Housing for the super rich approved, 8-3 http://www.sfbg.com/politics/2012/05/16/housing-super-rich-approved-8-3 <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/51620128wash.jpg" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"><div class="aef-image-infos-title-credits"><div class="aef-image-infos-title">Construction workers line up to promote 8 Washington. Guardian photo by Steven T. Jones</div></div><div class="aef-image-infos-title-legend"></div></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>The progressive movement and the battle for housing balance and economic justice in San Francisco got walloped May 15 when eight supervisors sided with a developer who wants to build <a href="http://www.sfbg.com/2012/03/06/case-against-8-washington" target="_blank">condos for the massively rich on the waterfront.</a></p> <p>I watched it all, minus a few minutes while I was putting the kids to bed, all seven and a half hours of testimony and discussion, winding up with a series of pro-developer voters a little after midnight. It was stunning: Opponents of the project came out in droves, many of them seniors, others tenant activists and neighbors. Former City Attorney Louise Renne, who is by no means an anti-development type or any sort of economic radical, led off the arguments in favor of scrapping the environmental impact report and denying the conditional use permit that are needed for 8 Washington to move forward. They brought up so many points that by the end there was nothing more to say: This meets no housing need in San Francisco, further screws up the city’s own mandates for a mix of affordable and market-rate housing, <a href="http://www.sfbg.com/politics/2012/05/14/why-may-15-vote-8-washington-matters" target="_blank">caters to the top half of the top half of the 1 percent</a>, is too tall and bulky for the site, offers the city too little in community benefits and is one of the great development scams of our time.</p> <p>Then the other side spoke -- the city planners who defended the EIR and, briefly, developer Simon Snellgrove. His supporters lined up -- and almost all of them talked about the same thing: Construction jobs. I get it, we need construction jobs -- but is that a justification for such a bad project? As Sup. David Chiu pointed out, “apartment construction is booming.&nbsp; There are 22,000 units under construction and 50,000 more in the pipeline.”</p> <p>Both sides were organized, but only one paid people to show up: At least five people seated in the front row, wearing pro-8 Washington stickers, confirmed that they’d been paid $100 each -- in cash -- to show up. They didn’t even speak, leaving once they realized that they were misled about the project. One source heard a construction worker say he knew nothing about the project and had been bused in from Sacramento.</p> <p>And after hearing all of that, the supervisors did what they clearly had decided to do long before a word of testimony was uttered.</p> <p>The vote to overturn the EIR went like this: favoring the developer were Supervisors Mark Farrell, Jane Kim, Eric Mar, Christina Olague, Malia Cohen, Carmen Chu, Sean Elsbernd and Scott Wiener. Opposing the project were Chiu, John Avalos and David Campos.</p> <p>Approving the conditional use went along the same voting lines. Chiu couldn’t even get a continuance after arguing that there was no report from the budget analyst and no financial information about whether this is a good deal for the city.</p> <p>That’s the lineup: Eight votes for the 1 percent. Three votes for the rest of us. I haven’t seen anything this bad in years.</p> <p>Some fascinating information came out of the discussion. Chiu made clear that the developer doesn’t need the height-limit increase to make a profit off the deal. He estimated that the total sales revenue from the project would be around $470 million and construction costs about $177 million. That’s a huge profit margin, even if you add in another $25 million for upfront soft costs.</p> <p>Snellgrove’s lawyer, Mary Murphy, tried to duck the financial issues, talking around in circles. Evenutally Chiu got Snellgrove to respond, and he said the costs would be higher and his profit would only be about $80 million. “The capital markets require a high return on these projects,” he said.<br />Still: $80 million is a lot of money. And while Snellgrove and his allies love to talk about the $11 million in affordable housing money for the city, that’s about 2.3 percent of his total revenue. Which doesn’t sound quite as juicy.</p> <p>Chiu raised another good question: “Should a condo that sells for $5 million pay the same affordable housing fees as one that sells for $500,000?”<br />Mar, who is usually a strong progressive, was the big surprise of the night, not only voting the wrong way but teeing up softball questions for the city planners to make the project sound better. It was as if he was reading from the developer’s talking points.</p> <p>In the end, he said he saw “a lot of benefits from this project,” but promised to work with the developer to advocate for “less bulk and less height.” Olague said the same thing.</p> <p>But even if it’s a little smaller, this will still be a completely misalignment of housing priorities, a project entirely for the very rich. That’s not going to change.</p> <p>If anything, they should push for more affordable housing money -- a whole lot more. Because what we’re getting is enough for maybe 25 or 30 units, which means 80 percent of the new housing related to this project will be for multimillionaires and 20 percent for everyone else. Keep that pattern going -- and there are few signs that it’s about to change -- and imagine what this city will be like in 20 years.</p> <p>It's not over, not yet: The actual development agreement and the height-limit changes still have to come to the board early in June. And if the mayor signs off on it, opponents are talking serious about a ballot referendum that would be before the voters in November -- just when Olague, Mar, Avalos, Campos, and Chiu will be up for re-election.</p></p> http://www.sfbg.com/politics/2012/05/16/housing-super-rich-approved-8-3#comments 1 Percent 8 Washington Housing Waterfront Tim Redmond Wed, 16 May 2012 22:15:00 +0000 tim 24796 at http://www.sfbg.com Fresh Cuts: Sunshine-y jams take spotlight as summer approaches http://www.sfbg.com/noise/2012/05/16/fresh-cuts-sunshine-y-jams-take-spotlight-summer-approaches <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/FreshCuts051612.jpg" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"><div class="aef-image-infos-title-credits"><div class="aef-image-infos-title">Craft Spells: steeped in deep love</div></div><div class="aef-image-infos-title-legend"></div></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>With dream-pop favorites and a randy R. Kelly, this week is both guilt-free and not-so-innocent. Fresh Cuts has selected the finest new records to blast at your next barbecue; the following truly sizzle.</p> <p>&lt;!--break--><br /><strong>Beach House: <em>Bloom</em></strong> (Sub Pop)</p> <p>Baltimore's dreamy pop duo Beach House flourishes this week with the release of new record Bloom. The easy, breezy album sees the pair doing what they do best: pretty melodies. Larger sounding than its predecessor on the Sub Pop imprint, Bloom picks up where Teen Dream left off. The band's signature hazy and ethereal sound is more powerful this time around. With her distinct mid-to-lower register, singer and keyboardist Victoria Legrand's voice becomes an instrument that propels the music forward, asking the listener to both lean in closer and lie back.</p> <div class="eminline-wrapper"> <div class="emvideo emvideo-video emvideo-youtube"> <div class="emfield-emvideo emfield-emvideo-youtube"> <div id="emvideo-youtube-flash-wrapper-1"> <object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="350" width="550" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/Uvwl7INZykc&amp;rel=0&amp;enablejsapi=1&amp;playerapiid=ytplayer&amp;fs=1" id="emvideo-youtube-flash-1"> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Uvwl7INZykc&amp;rel=0&amp;enablejsapi=1&amp;playerapiid=ytplayer&amp;fs=1" /> <param name="allowScriptAcess" value="sameDomain" /> <param name="quality" value="best" /> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /> <param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /> <param name="scale" value="noScale" /> <param name="salign" value="TL" /> <param name="FlashVars" value="playerMode=embedded" /> <param name="wmode" value="transparent" /> </object></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><strong>Craft Spells: <em>Gallery EP</em></strong> (Captured Tracks)<br /> <div class="eminline-wrapper"> <div class="emvideo emvideo-video emvideo-youtube"> <div class="emfield-emvideo emfield-emvideo-youtube"> <div id="emvideo-youtube-flash-wrapper-2"> <object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="350" width="550" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/vE5-tMrJuPs#&amp;rel=0&amp;enablejsapi=1&amp;playerapiid=ytplayer&amp;fs=1" id="emvideo-youtube-flash-2"> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/vE5-tMrJuPs#&amp;rel=0&amp;enablejsapi=1&amp;playerapiid=ytplayer&amp;fs=1" /> <param name="allowScriptAcess" value="sameDomain" /> <param name="quality" value="best" /> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /> <param name="bgcolor" value="#FFFFFF" /> <param name="scale" value="noScale" /> <param name="salign" value="TL" /> <param name="FlashVars" value="playerMode=embedded" /> <param name="wmode" value="transparent" /> </object></div> </div> </div> </div> <p>Craft Spells is a quartet from Seattle started by Justin Vallesteros, a musician from Stockton, Calif. who briefly lived in San Francisco. The band's new EP Gallery is now available for consumption and is a fabulous homage to new wave. Steeped in a deep love for '80s synth-pop, the record is reminiscent of all the greats: New Order, Pet Shop Boys, and Depeche Mode.<br /><strong><br />Violens: <em>True</em></strong> (Slumberland)<br /> <div class="eminline-wrapper"> <div class="emvideo emvideo-video emvideo-vimeo"> <object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="550" height="350" data="http://www.vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=22249548&amp;server=www.vimeo.com&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color="><param name="quality" value="best" /><param name="wmode" value="transparent" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><param name="scale" value="showAll" /><param name="movie" value="http://www.vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=22249548&amp;server=www.vimeo.com&amp;fullscreen=1&amp;show_title=1&amp;show_byline=1&amp;show_portrait=1&amp;color=" /></object></div> </div> <p>Violens' sophomore effort True is an indie pop release with all the fixings. With smooth and polished vocals and heart-squeezing harmonies, True manages to both tap the toes and spin the head. Driving crescendos in songs such as "Microarc" and "Unfolding Black Wings" uplift while darker tunes such as "Lavender Forces" and "Lucent Cares" offer a reprieve from the atmospheric trip Violens is bound to take you on.</p> <p><strong>R. Kelly: "Feelin Single" </strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>R&amp;B don Robert Kelly's latest single was released last week in anticipation of his new album Write Me Back on June 26, which was just announced Tuesday. The ladies man's 11th full-length record will be the follow-up to 2010’s Love Letter. Kelly garnered critical acclaim on his previous album for its retro sound, and if the disco-esque "Feelin Single" tells us anything, it's that Kelly intends for his new LP to follow suit.</p> <p><em>Julia B. Chan is a writer and hosts "Play for Today," a radio program about new music on <a href="http://www.radiovalencia.fm" target="_blank">www.radiovalencia.fm</a> every Friday from 6-8pm. Follow her on Twitter <a href="http://www.twitter.com/OnTheBeat" target="_blank">@onTheBeat</a>.</em></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> http://www.sfbg.com/noise/2012/05/16/fresh-cuts-sunshine-y-jams-take-spotlight-summer-approaches#comments Fresh Cuts Music Julia B. Chan Wed, 16 May 2012 19:33:24 +0000 julia 24794 at http://www.sfbg.com SF needs healthy housing http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/16/sf-needs-healthy-housing <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>It's time to get beyond Band-Aids</p> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>My greatest frustration as a tenants' rights and affordable-housing advocate in San Francisco is that, despite all the good efforts by a lot of good people, we never address the root cause of our housing crisis. We routinely enact laws and ballot initiatives, organize endless demonstrations and elect progressive politicians, but in the final analysis, these efforts are just a Band Aid on a bad system that leaves a lot of people without a roof over their heads.</p> <p>A few years ago, Brian Basinger of the AIDS Housing Alliance and I pushed "no fast pass to eviction" legislation to stop the eviction of seniors and people with AIDS and other disabilities through the state Ellis Act.</p> <p>Ellis allows a landlord to override just-cause eviction protections and evict all of the tenants in a building. It's often used by speculators to flip properties — that is, buy them, evict the tenants, and create a tenancy-in-common (where there's the same number of owners as there are apartments). The new owners apply for condo conversion so that, instead of sharing a percentage in the building, they actually own their own units.</p> <p>No Fast Pass says that if someone uses Ellis to evict tenants, then the building can't convert to condos for ten years. If any of those tenants are seniors or disabled, it can never be converted. The legislation helped. There was a drop in Ellis evictions. Unfortunately, landlords and speculators now employ intimidation, harassment and buy-outs to get rid of tenants, so that they don't have to Ellis.</p> <p>It's time to get beyond Band-Aids. Housing should be a human right, guaranteed for all, as healthcare is in other nations.</p> <p>When former Supervisor Tom Ammiano realized that 65,000 San Franciscans (15% of the population) were without health coverage, he (not former Mayor Gavin Newsom, who takes credit for it) introduced legislation to create what is now "Healthy San Francisco," our city's version of universal healthcare. It's not perfect, but it tackles the problem the way it should be tackled: by making healthcare a human right and not a luxury.</p> <p>The same needs to be done for housing.</p> <p>As long as housing is a commodity, affordable only to those who have the dough, there will always be people left out in the cold — literally. Our city has more than 10,000 homeless people, not to mention scores of others living (through no choice of their own) in deplorable conditions. The city builds more market-rate housing than it needs, while units for those below 50 percent of the city's median income fall far short of the demand.</p> <p>A mandate to house everyone in the city has never been tried. I don't have an exact plan, but a "Housing SF" (like Healthy SF) might be created by pooling together all of our housing resources and aggressively working to pull in more. If the proposed Housing Trust Fund happens, it should be initially used only for those who need it most — the homeless and the poor, remembering that shelters are not housing, even if they're considered such under Care Not Cash.</p> <p>Put a moratorium on market-rate housing. Turn all abandoned properties (both city and privately owned) into affordable units. Raise money by letting the big businesses (including the tech companies) cough up some dough. Use land trusts as much as possible to keep the new places affordable into perpetuity.</p> <p>It's time to dream big.</p> <p><em>Tommi Avicolli Mecca, editor of Smash the Church, Smash the State: The Early Years of Gay Liberation, is a longtime affordable housing advocate.</em></p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/16/sf-needs-healthy-housing#comments Opinion Volume 46, Issue 33 Tommi Avicolli Mecca Wed, 16 May 2012 17:44:06 +0000 marke 24793 at http://www.sfbg.com Our 2012 Small Business Awards http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/16/our-2012-small-business-awards <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>Honoring the local, independent entrepeneurs who make the city a better place to live, work, and play</p> </div> </div> </div> <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/4633kelly2_0.jpg" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"><div class="aef-image-infos-title-credits"><div class="aef-image-infos-title">Kelly Malone of Workshop and Indie Mart, our 2012 Woman in Business</div> <span class="aef-image-infos-credits">PHOTO BY MIRISSA NEFF</span></div><div class="aef-image-infos-title-legend"></div></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">WOMEN IN BUSINESS</span></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">KELLY MALONE, WORKSHOP AND INDIE MART</span></p> <p>In a tech-obsessed society, our hands navigate today's gleaming gadgets more often than those of yesteryear: a sewing machine, say, or a manual drill. DIY goddess Kelly Malone has spent years trying to change that — and in so doing has created a business that serves as a cultural touchstone for the budding Divisadero Street corridor.</p> <p>Malone's brick-and-mortar shop is named Workshop (1798 McAllister, SF. 415-874-9186. <a href="http://www.workshopsf.org" target="_blank">www.workshopsf.org</a>), and it's a place where aspiring crafters receive hours of instruction in oft-neglected skills like sewing, knitting, and terrarium-making — all while drinking Pabst Blue Ribbon and meeting new friends. After receiving an enthusiastic response from her Indie Mart (<a href="http://www.indie-mart.com" title="www.indie-mart.com">www.indie-mart.com</a>), a handmade craft fair she started six years ago in the backyard of her Mission digs, Malone saw a need for a hub for would-be crafters.</p> <p>"I wanted to create a space that was super 'hit it and quit it,'" she says. "Where you could come in and take a class, but you didn't necessarily need to become some expert knitter. A place for people to sit down and get their hands dirty, learn to make something, and get inspired."</p> <p>Malone started Workshop on scant funding. Instead of relying on bank loans, she looked to her immediate community for investors. "I've started every business without money, which has forced me to really put myself out there and grow my businesses by meeting people and being super-passionate about what I do," she says.</p> <p>Malone says having a big budget to open her businesses would have been fun, but saving her pennies and having flea markets and garage sales to pay for sewing machines gives her more street cred, DIY all the way.</p> <p>And like our favorite kind of businesspeople, Malone hardly sees her enterprises as a sterile way to make a quick buck. "I'm never going to get rich off these businesses, but if I get to the point where I can have a couple people on staff like I do now, and have enough to pay bills and go get some beers, hey, that's good enough for me." <strong>(Mia Sullivan)</strong></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">CHAIN ALTERNATIVE</span></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">SPORTS BASEMENT</span></p> <p>Although based locally, Sports Basement (<a href="http://www.sportsbasement.com" title="www.sportsbasement.com">www.sportsbasement.com</a>) <em>is</em> technically a chain, as it now boasts four locations: an 80,000 square-foot building at the old commissary in the Presidio, SoMa's brick-and-wood location, a store in Sunnyvale that once mimicked the inside of a computer (look for the remaining "ESC" keyboard sign), and another nearing Mount Diablo in Walnut Creek. But beyond the fact that it offers the only real alternative to national conglomerates when it comes to one-stop athletic and outdoor gear, the retail company is fiercely dedicated to its Bay Area community. Plus, its cozy, with hand-painted cardboard signs detailing specials, comfy couches, and super-friendly staff.</p> <p>Founder Eric Prosnitz came up with the Sports Basement idea in an effort to create a more personalized experience in an off-price retail outlet, something tailored more closely to Northern California's environment. Products change every week, discounts rule, and employees are encouraged to treat customers as individuals with a continuum of outdoor lifestyle needs. And the Basement recognizes that it's an expansive company with the power to affect various neighborhoods. Last year, its locations hosted more than 2,000 community groups at 7,000 events, averaging around four events per store per day. Ten-15% of the retail space serves as free community space. Examples: Walnut Creek holds a fundraiser in the form of a kid apparel fashion show, Sunnyvale hosts ASHA for India, an organization dedicated to providing education for underprivileged children in India; Bryant St. houses the AIDS Lifecycle organization, and Presidio is the meeting spot for Golden Gate Mother's Group — just to mention a few.</p> <p>Aaron Schweifler, Director of Operations at Sports Basement, says the staff is encouraged to be creatively autonomous, and hopes each store will provide a shopping experience that can "wow" local residents. We are wowed! <strong>(Soojin Chang)</strong></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">TENANT ADVOCATE</span></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">GREG MARKOULIS, AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL CENTER<br /></span></p> <p>In 1975, Greg Markoulis of American Industrial Center (2345 Third St., SF. <a href="http://www.aicproperties.com" target="_blank">www.aicproperties.com</a>) was scouring San Francisco to find a new home for his family's 25-year-old shoe manufacturing company. When American Can Company, one of the city's oldest and busiest industrial complexes, offered an attractive deal on a vacant Third Street building, Markoulis gladly took them up. The new abode reinvigorated the company, transforming it from a street corner location to a community space housing more than 285 businesses — now including graphic designers, commercial photographers, architects, light industrial manufacturers, a winery, a yoga center, a martial arts studio, and a medley of Web-based companies and art collectives. That expansive spirit soon spread, helping to reinvigorate the entire Dogpatch area, which had suffered a lengthy period of industrial decline.</p> <p>Thirty-seven years later, AIC still keeps the family ethos alive. When making executive decisions, Greg Makoulis says the company's priorities align much more with how relatives interact with one another rather than those of a typical business. "The ideas of the oldest generation with the most experience are considered first," says Markoulis.</p> <p>As this side of town is rapidly undergoing gentrification, he could very well have sold the building to a corporation. But he sees his tenants as valuable community members, not just paychecks. Markoulis thrives on finding working solutions to accommodate his tenants, and respects the fact that people's needs are ever-changing. Markoulis describes AIC's priority to be "giving everyone a stable place to operate in."</p> <p>In Markoulis' experience, one of the biggest challenges that AIC has faced over the years has to do with the cost and time for newly opening businesses to acquire permits. He hopes to see changes in San Francisco's building and planning department, because he thinks a faster turnaround would help foster employment opportunities. <strong>(Soojin Chang)</strong></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">CULTURE CHAMPION</span></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">DON ALAN, HEMLOCK TAVERN AND CASANOVA LOUNGE</span></p> <p>"I think the challenge for San Francisco is to take care of the venues that its got," says Don Alan of the ever-shrinking live music scene here. Alan has contributed enormously to the preservation of live rock in the City by the Bay with his raucous Hemlock Tavern space in Polk Gulch (1131 Polk, SF. 415-923-0923, <a href="http://www.hemlocktavernsf.com" target="_blank">www.hemlocktavernsf.com</a>) on the site of former gay bar the Giraffe. He's also a preservationist of dive bar ambiance, opening Mission District favorite Casanova Lounge, full to the brim of attractive indie young 'uns on the make.</p> <p>Alan got his rock start in the on community radio in Madison, WI, soon coming to SF and opening storied live bluegrass and jazz cafe Radio Valencia. "We opened the Casanova while we still had Radio Valencia and we realized that a bar format would work better for live entertainment than a cafe format," Alan says. "We opened the Hemlock in 2001 after we closed Radio Valencia. I was really excited about having a space like this. I was very interested in having a kind of old Wisconsin tavern feel because that's where I grew up. It was perfect for me, finding a space that had a small venue so we didn't have to be concerned about getting 200 people in every night, so we could book the kind of music that we wanted and to have a big enough bar to support that."</p> <p>"But basically this is a subsidized entertainment operation. The money is made at the Hemlock's bar and the culture happens in the back room with the shows. The culture wouldn't happen without this up here." So go buy a beer or eight, already, and then take in one of those rarer-and-rarer raging shows. <strong>(Mirissa Neff)</strong></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">EMPLOYEE-OWNED BUSINESS AWARD</span></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">MANDELA FOODS COOPERATIVE</span></p> <p>"In high school, all I wanted was there to be a place to find fruits and vegetables," says Mandela Foods Cooperative (1430 17th St., Oakl. 510-452-1133, <a href="http://www.mandelafoods.com" target="_blank">www.mandelafoods.com</a>) worker-owner James Berk. "I never thought I'd be the one that could provide that. It's an interesting place to be in."</p> <p>Before the store opened, Berk's native West Oakland was a food dessert. A dependence on convenience stores for nutrition was leading to rampant bad health in his community, so when the opportunity arose to be a part of a for-profit, organic-heavy grocery store in Mandela Marketplace, he took it. Responding to the neighborhood's request, the shop employs and is owned by community residents. These worker-owners make all the shop's decisions in group meetings, aiming for consensus when it comes to many essential issues.</p> <p>Now, nearly three years after opening its doors, Mandela Foods Cooperative is a neighborhood staple. The majority of customers live within a radius of a few blocks and come to snap up bestselling items like orange juice, coconut water, and kale (a vegetable Berk said he had never heard of before working at the store.)</p> <p>Ready-made food is also popular, from full plate meals to sandwiches that neighbors drop in to buy, despite a Subway next door. Though the shop's focus continues to be on organic, naturally-produced foods, worker-owners see a need for a greater diversity of products: cheap staples alternating with more spendy products geared towards sustainable foodies. Business is stronger than ever right now, too — Berk says the small shop is on pace to break even this year.</p> <p>So how is it banding with your neighbors to bring the rest of the block ingredients for a healthy diet? About as positive as you'd imagine it to be. "There's a unity here that I'm not accustomed to," says Berk. (Caitlin Donohue)</p> <p>ARTHUR JACKSON DIVERSITY IN SMALL BUSINESS AWARD</p> <p>CHERYL BURR, PINKIE'S BAKERY AND CITIZEN'S BAND</p> <p>Cheryl Burr has no idea why her first bakery boss left her 16-year old self in charge of the pastries. "I would never have let a teenager do that at my business!" she chuckles. But really, the guy was showing prescience — Burr and business partner Chris Beerman, who originally shared space in a bakery-bento retail window in Potrero Hill, opened the doors of their Pinkie's Bakery (1196 Folsom, SF. 415-556-4900, <a href="http://www.pinkiesbakerysf.com" target="_blank">www.pinkiesbakerysf.com</a>) in SoMa nearly three years ago and have been tickling sweet teeth with their skills there ever since.</p> <p>"I've always been a super-strong personality," Burr tells us, sitting in the sunny table area of Pinkie's. Though the Asian American breadsmith built a respectable career in high-class kitchens around the city, there came a moment when she wanted to be able to execute her own vision. "I've gotten to this point in my career where I didn't want to answer to anybody."</p> <p>So she took control of her own trajectory, renting space in a commercial kitchen, starting her own hustle. Burr supplied pies to wholesale accounts, mainly friends of friends she'd met through her years in the restaurant business. Her commercial space is part of a culinary reinvigoration of the neighborhood around Seventh Street and Folsom. Pinkie's is a stone's throw from Bloodhound Bar, Sightglass Coffee, Radius restaurant, Terroir wine bar and more. "There is definitely a sense of community and partnership around here," says Burr, who will sometimes refer to the strip as "Folsoma."</p> <p>Pinkie's is also a room away from Citizen's Band, Beerman and Burr's freshly-sourced diner. The same customers that come for Burr's famous levain bread and apple butter morning buns can now also order a dinner of poutine with wild mushroom gravy and crispy pork belly right next door.</p> <p>"We want to continue to refine what we're doing here," Burr says when asked about her future business plans. Did that young woman on her first baking job envision the success of her own bread basket? She smiles. "I'm not entirely sure what I envisioned, but it's different." <strong>(Caitlin Donohue)</strong></p> <p>GOLDEN SURVIVOR AWARD</p> <p>PHIL'S ELECTRIC</p> <p>During World War II, Phil Sidari was commissioned to make artificial limbs for disabled US veterans returning home. The shortage of finished goods during wartime also prompted Sidari to begin constructing small appliances out of spare parts. Thus, 61 years ago, Phil's Electric (2701 Lombard, SF. 415-921-3776, <a href="http://www.philselectric.com" target="_blank">www.philselectric.com</a>) was born.</p> <p>Sidari passed away at the ripe old age of 103, but his friends Vicki and Bob Evans took the reins in the 1970s when Phil decided to retire. Vicki says the store has gone through quite a few changes over the years, including a relocation 28 years ago from Fillmore Street to a quiet corner near the gates of the Presidio.</p> <p>The shop is intimate, homey, and entirely a family affair. Bob and Vicki's sons Tom and Ken help their parents run the business and provide excellent customer service to their patrons. Phil's Electric specializes in the repair of vacuums and lamps but also sells coffee makers, blenders, vacuums, razors, and a host of other small electronic items.</p> <p>Yet the rise of cheap, disposable electronics has made it difficult a business that's founded on, well, fixing things. "In the past, almost everything got repaired, but that's changing," says Vicki. "For example, you can buy a Cuisinart coffeemaker that, after its warranty, there are no parts for it. So you throw it out. Whereas, say 12 years ago, we would have had a part for that and fixed it for you."</p> <p>Phil's Electric also faces stiff competition from the Internet and larger stores. But it does have some advantages. "Internet companies are working out of a warehouse somewhere, so they don't really have any commitment to the neighborhood or the city or the community," Vicki says. And the unique thing about San Franciscans, according to Vicki, is our interest in supporting neighborhood businesses. "If we moved this to a suburban area, I don't know if we'd have that many loyal customers."</p> <p>Vicki's favorite part about the business? The human aspect and her autonomy. "You can interact with your customers and really try to be flexible and meet people's needs." (Mia Sullivan)</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">SMALL BUSINESS ADVOCATE</span></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">CALIFORNIA MUSIC AND CULTURE ASSOCIATION</span></p> <p>Two years ago, during the climax of the police and regulatory crackdown on San Francisco nightlife that we dubbed the "War of Fun," the California Music and Culture Association (<a href="http://www.cmacsf.org" title="www.cmacsf.org">www.cmacsf.org</a>) was formed to advocate for all the club owners, promoters, DJs, and other creatures of the night who create our urban soundtrack and culture.</p> <p>Since then, CMAC has become powerful advocate on behalf of nightlife, demonstrating an influence on Mayor Ed Lee and other city leaders and promoting an understanding at City Hall of the important role played by nightlife, which a recent Controller's Office report found accounts for $4.2 billion in annual economic activity.</p> <p>"As the recent Controller's report demonstrated, the small businesses that make up the nightlife economy have a huge impact on the overall economy, and we're happy the city is starting to realize this," Alix Rosenthal, co-chair of the CMAC board, told us.</p> <p>Now, with the help of newly hired Executive Director Laura Hahn, CMAC hopes to move from playing defense against crackdowns and punitive legislation to playing offense by expanding its membership and developing a proactive agenda that will help nightlife and its purveyors flourish.</p> <p>"Now that we don't have our back against the wall, we're trying to expand," Hahn told us. "We want to bring it to even smaller business owners like individual DJs, promoters, and individual musicians — the backbone of nightlife in San Francisco."</p> <p>But not matter what new realms CMAC gets into, small business advocacy will always be at the core of its mission. As Hahn said, "We want to focus on standing up for the little guys who don't have people fighting for them in City Hall." CMAC will host the 2012 San Francisco Nightlife Awards, Thursday, May 31 at Mezzanine, doing even more to bring local nightlife to the fore. (Steve Jones)</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">GOOD NEIGHBOR</span></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">SHANNON AMITIN, FARM:TABLE</span></p> <p>"People always ask me if I ever consider expanding," Shannon Amitin, owner of farm:table (754 Post, SF. 415-292-7089, <a href="http://www.farmtablesf.com" target="_blank">www.farmtablesf.com</a>) says over the phone, although I swear I can hear his eyes twinkling. "I usually laugh and say, 'Yes, but only if I can find a much smaller space.'"</p> <p>The joke — or rather the good fortune — here is that Amitin's bustling Tenderloin cafe and restaurant squeaks just shy of 265 square feet, with a large communal table for sharing some of the best gourmet dishes in the area. Those dishes are delectably evanescent: the three-year-old resto's changing daily menu is Tweeted each morning for your rising and shining appetite. Featured as I write this: polenta cake + yukon potato hash + soft egg, asiago + rooftop herb frittata.</p> <p>"Rooftop"? Yep, farm:table harvests most of its herbs and many greens from its roof, adding a bit of green to the neighborhood. Coming soon, another bit of green in the form of a farm:table parklet, whose funding was secured via, what else, Kickstarter. Farm:table itself has become a community hub for nightlife characters, nonprofit advocates, and office workers.</p> <p>And yes, there is delicious coffee. Amitin cut his teeth dripping cups of Blue Bottle behind the original's counter, but became disillusioned when Blue Bottle tipped from a friendly experiment into a chain-aspirational juggernaut. "I saw what I didn't want to do," he says. "That's what led me to something small and personal. I have really good people working for me, in a vibrant area, with a crowd that's open to new flavors. I want to keep that magic." (Marke B.)</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">READERS' CHOICE</span></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">PINK BUNNY</span></p> <p>It's been open less than a year, yet Marina luxury erotic goods boutique Pink Bunny (1772 Union, SF. 415-441-7399, <a href="http://www.pinkbunny.biz" target="_blank">www.pinkbunny.biz</a>) has hopped into our readers' hearts — and possibly other parts as well. Founder and CEO Serene Martinez showcases quality adult toys from the likes of Jimmyjane and gorgeous lingerie in a lovely, well-curated space. Union Street, get kinky!</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/16/our-2012-small-business-awards#comments News Volume 46, Issue 33 Small Business Awards 2012 Guardian Staff Writers Wed, 16 May 2012 17:32:05 +0000 marke 24792 at http://www.sfbg.com Alerts http://www.sfbg.com/listing/2012/05/15/alerts <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">WEDNESDAY 16</span></p> <p><strong>Occupy the Auction</strong>, City Hall steps, 1 Dr Carlton B Goodlett Pl, SF; <a href="http://www.occupytheauctions.org" target="_blank"><em>www.occupytheauctions.org</em></a>. 1:45pm, free. This event may not be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity -- organizers at Occupy the Auction have been showing up the City Hall every single weekday since April 27 -- but it<strong>'</strong>s definitely worth checking out. Occupy the Auction works with people facing unjust evictions from their property, including homeowners that have been fraudulently foreclosed on and renters facing eviction because of their landlord<strong>'</strong>s mortgage issues. Talk about focused and effective: this campaign stops the majority of home auctions it targets.</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">THURSDAY 17</span></p> <p><strong>Beautiful Trouble &amp; Organizing Cools</strong>, Planet Sub-mission, 2183 Mission, SF; <a href="http://www.tinyurl.com/pmpress" target="_blank"><em>www.tinyurl.com/pmpress</em></a>. 7pm, free. This is a book launch for two books at once. <em>Beautiful Trouble </em>is part history and part manual for activism, art, and creative protest. <em>Organizing Cools the Planet </em>is a pamphlet on environmental organizing that has won praise with the likes of Vandana Shiva and Noam Chomsky. Celebrate the books and rock out to the Brass Liberation Orchestra at this event. There will also apparently be <strong>"</strong>super special surprise happenings.<strong>"</strong></p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">FRIDAY 18</span></p> <p><strong>Decolonized Yoga, </strong>16th and Mission BART Station Plaza, SF. 5-7pm, free. The Occupy movement in San Francisco is tumultuous and ever-changing, but the yogis and radicals who host decolonized yoga have maintained a calm and consistent outdoor free yoga practice for months now. If you've ever wanted to do yoga for free with talented teachers and guides, and you don't mind doing so on colorful rugs laid out next to the BART steps, decolonized yoga could be the best way for you to decompress Friday evening.</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">SATURDAY 19</span></p> <p><strong>Malcolm X Jazz Arts Festival</strong>, San Antonio Park, 1701 East 19th St, Oak; <a href="http://www.eastsideartsalliance.com" target="_blank"><em>www.eastsideartsalliance.com</em></a>. Free. Fun for the whole family at a truly grassroots festival by and for East Oakland. The annual festival honors Malcolm X on his birthday and features an impressive lineup of local musicians, dancers and performers and community activists, along with a children<strong>'</strong>s section and food stands.</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">SUNDAY 21</span></p> <p><strong>Straight Outta Hunters Point 2, </strong>Bayview Opera House, 4705 Third St, SF; <a href="http://www.tinyurl.com/kevinepps" target="_blank"><em>www.tinyurl.com/kevinepps</em></a>. 2-5pm, free. The film, a sequel to 2003's Straight Outta Hunters Point, once again showcases filmmaker Kevin Epps' ability to capture the mood and story of the neighborhood he grew up in. The film screened in theaters in February, but now Epps partners with the SF Arts Commission for a screening at the Opera House. As Epps said in a press release: "As a filmmaker and activist, this is the most important screening of all, premiering the film in the neighborhood where it all started." The event will also showcase local organizations such as the San Francisco Black Film Festival and will be catered by Old Skool Café.</p> <p><strong>Eco-sexual hike</strong>, Redwood Park, 7867 Redwood Rd, Oak; <a href="http://www.tinyurl.com/sprinklemarks" target="_blank"><em>www.tinyurl.com/sprinklemarks</em></a>. 1pm, $25. Annie Sprinkle has helped shape San Francisco's sex activist and cultural world for years. Now an advocate of eco-sexuality, Sprinkle will host Kim Marks, owner of a new all-green sex shop in Portland for an eco-sexual hike right here in SF. Explore the redwoods and your sexuality with this eco-sexy hike.</p> <p><strong>Long Haul oral history project: The Rodney King riots</strong>, Long Haul infoshop, 3124 Shattuck, Berk; <a href="http://www.thelonghaul.org" target="_blank"><em>www.thelonghaul.org</em></a>. 7:30-9pm, free. The Long Haul provides a center for anarchist and radical media and organizing in the Bay Area, and produces the famous <em>Slingshot </em>newsletter. They also have an oral history series on the third Sunday of every month, discussing Bay Area events "with people who were there recalling what happened and how lessons we might have learned then could apply to the struggle now.<strong>"</strong> This Sunday, the focus is on the Rodney King riots in the Bay Area, where 1400 were arrested and a 9pm citywide curfew declared all the way back in 1992.</p> Alerts Wed, 16 May 2012 05:14:19 +0000 marke 24791 at http://www.sfbg.com Challenging the duopoly http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/challenging-duopoly <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>Green Party presidential candidates lay out their visions during a debate in the Mission District</p> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><em><strong>By Adam Morris</strong></em></p> <p><a href="mailto:news@sfbg.com">news@sfbg.com</a></p> <p>On May 12, the Green Party held a presidential debate between Massachusetts physician and longtime progressive activist Jill Stein and comedian turned TV star turned macadamia nut farmer Roseanne Barr. The debate was moderated by Rose Aguilar, host of KALW's <em>Your Call</em>, and took place at San Francisco's historic Victoria Theater.</p> <p>Outside the theater before the event, a battalion of senior-citizen canvassers collected signatures to petition Gov. Jerry Brown to take up single-payer health care. Inside, the audience steadily grew to about 100 people, nearly filling the Victoria, but still was a grim turnout for what was once the Valhalla of progressive politics in America.</p> <p>The audience was primarily gray; notably absent were the 20- and 30-something Occupiers, indebted students, and underemployed ranks of America's youth, a political class actively courted by the Green Party and its candidates.</p> <p>Barr read her opening remarks straight from her laptop computer, in a hurried monotone that nevertheless reached a crescendo as she called for "an end to the system of slavery, war, and usury" in America, and pledged to "make getting food to the hungry our final cause." Ending hunger resurfaced later in the debate, when Barr observed that the military could be used to distribute food. She also claimed that "there would be no global warming" if humans chose to get their protein from nuts rather than eating animals. This would only happen, she charged, by getting Monsanto "off the necks of small farmers."</p> <p>Cribbing lines by turn from JFK and Jesus (via Lincoln), Barr continued, "I beseech the debt creators to ask not what this country can do for them, but what they can do for this country," and asked America to give the 1 percent a chance to be our partners and not our adversaries, "for a house divided against itself cannot stand."</p> <p>Stein's opening statement indicted the Obama administration for adopting the policies of the Bush administration and called for a Green New Deal to reform transportation, health care, and environmental standards. Throughout the night, Stein repeatedly invoked the power of grassroots social movements witnessed across the globe, asking the audience to help her and the Greens "go viral" with their message of environmental and social reform.</p> <p>Both candidates demanded vengeance on Wall Street, with Stein calling for a breakup of the banks and the establishment of public banks. Barr said that current laws allowed for the prosecuting of what she called "the biggest heist in history," which is how she referred to the "transfer of wealth upward" of the last decade. "Everything filthy and disgusting originates right there on Wall Street," she said, "and we want our money back."</p> <p>On the military, Stein vowed to "bring our dollars home to stop being the exploiter of the world," and to turn the bomber factories into windmill factories for green jobs. Barr warned against the militarization of the police and the dangers of what she called the "prison-military-industrial complex," which she said will be "holding a gun on your neighbor while your neighbor does free labor for a corporation." Barr's condemnation of the prison complex continued into the debate on legalization of marijuana, which Barr said would thrust the "tip of the spear into the beast" of the incarceration industry.</p> <p>Stein echoed Barr's support of legalization, leaning on her authority as a physician to proclaim that "marijuana is dangerous because it is illegal, not illegal because it is dangerous." As a doctor, Stein also called for a real health care system involving bikeable cities and reform of the FDA to replace the current "sick-care" system favored by the major parties. Barr said that she too would "lift the curse on single payer universal health care."</p> <p>The candidates also came out strong in their support of labor reform, slamming NAFTA and suppression of workers' rights. Stein called for "fair trade" over "free trade," faulting the Obama administration for its recent free trade deal with a "union-destroying country" like Colombia. Barr choked up when she told the audience that she is able to "represent the people from whom I came," quickly adding "and I'll fight hard too—I've got balls bigger than anybody." Women's rights also drew fiery proclamations from the candidates, with Stein vowing to "resurrect the Equal Rights Amendment," and Barr stating flatly that "patriarchy needs to go."</p> <p>The signature issue of the Green Party—the environment—was a minor if constantly underlying thread to the discussion, emerging as a topic only later in the debate. While Stein repeated Barr's jabs at Monsanto and pledged to "deny the Keystone Pipeline on Day 1," Barr grew solemn, acknowledging the possibility that it might be too late to save the environment from impending catastrophes. We would need to learn, she said, to create "a new system that is not money dependent."</p> <p>Both candidates broke debate protocol on time limits and turns of speech, but the atmosphere was collegial and supportive, with Barr chiming in "yeahs" to many of Stein's remarks. Each woman repeatedly said she "agreed completely" with what the other said. "Our greatest weapon," Barr said, is to "resist the fear they force-feed us," linking her remarks to Stein's claim that "the politics of fear has brought us everything we were afraid of."</p> <p>Stein railed against a mainstream press that has effectively sequestered discussion of political alternatives. "We do not have a functioning press," she told the audience, "We have an o-press. We have a re-press." She repeated her call for Greens to mobilize online to get the word out about alternative party movements. Barr said that she was being very careful not to bring any discredit to the Green Party. Though biting and at times sarcastic, Barr said she her campaign was "dead serious. And the message is dead serious too."</p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/challenging-duopoly#comments News Volume 46, Issue 33 Wed, 16 May 2012 05:09:58 +0000 marke 24790 at http://www.sfbg.com Obama: gay OK, pot not http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/obama-gay-ok-pot-not <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>Obama's sudden nod to "states' rights" somehow doesn't include medical marijuana</p> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><a href="mailto:steve@sfbg.com">steve@sfbg.com</a></p> <p><strong>HERBWISE</strong> President Barack Obama made big news last week when he became the first U.S. president to state his support for same-sex marriage, taking a states' rights position on the issue and telling supporters "where states enact same-sex marriage, no federal act should invalidate them." So why is his administration so aggressively going after medical marijuana providers that are fully compliant with state law?</p> <p>As a presidential candidate, Obama said that his administration wouldn't go after medical marijuana patients or suppliers that were in compliance with the laws in the 19 states where medical marijuana is legal or decriminalized, a position that his Department of Justice reinforced with a 2009 memo restating that position.</p> <p>But then last year, the administration reversed course and began a multi-agency attack on the medical marijuana industry in California and other states, with the Drug Enforcement Administration raiding growers, dispensaries, and even Oaksterdam University; the Department of Justice and U.S. Attorneys' Offices threatening owners of properties involved in medical marijuana with asset seizure; and the Internal Revenue Service adopting punitive policies aimed at shutting down dispensaries that are otherwise paying taxes and operating legally under state law.</p> <p>Recently, Obama tried to explain his evolving stance on medical marijuana in a Rolling Stone interview: "What I specifically said was that we were not going to prioritize prosecutions of persons who are using medical marijuana. I never made a commitment that somehow we were going to give carte blanche to large-scale producers and operators of marijuana — and the reason is, because it's against federal law. I can't nullify congressional law."</p> <p>Yet statements like that only reinforce the idea that Obama has a double standard. After all, same-sex marriage is also against federal law, specifically the Defense of Marriage Act that President Bill Clinton signed in 1996. The Obama Administration last year refused to continue defending DOMA in the courts, whereas it has proactively and aggressively expanded enforcement of federal laws against pot.</p> <p>When I asked Obama's Press Office to address the contradiction, they referred to the Rolling Stone interview, provided a transcript of a press briefing from last week, and refused further comment.</p> <p>Press Secretary Jay Carney spent much of that briefing discussing Obama's "evolving" position on same-sex marriage, and said the president has always been supporter of states' rights. "He vehemently disagrees with those who would act to deny Americans' rights or act to take away rights that have been established in states. And that has been his position for quite a long time," Carney said.</p> <p>Assembly member Tom Ammiano, who has sponsored legislation to improve protections for those in the medical marijuana industry and criticized Obama's crackdown on cannabis, said he was happy to hear Obama's new stance on same-sex marriage. But he said that position of federal non-intervention in state and local jurisdictions isn't being following with medical marijuana, or on immigration issues, where the federal government has circumvented local sanctuary city policies with its Secure Communities program targeting undocumented immigrants.</p> <p>"Good move, Mr. President, now let's work on that states rights issue," Ammiano told us. "I don't want to water down the significance of this, but I do want to treat it holistically."</p> <p>Ammiano praised House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi for her May 3 public statement criticizing the federal raids on medical marijuana patients and suppliers, but he said federal leaders should act to remove marijuana from the list of Schedule 1 narcotics, a classification of dangerous drugs with no medical value.</p> <p>"Pelosi was good to put that statement out, but now we need the next step of changing federal law," Ammiano said.</p> <p>David Goldman, a representative of Americans for Safe Access patient advocacy group who serves on the city's Medical Cannabis Task Force, called Obama's double-standard hypocritical: "If Obama is affirming federalism and states rights, then he's inconsistent with state-regulated medical marijuana."</p> <p>But Goldman also said, "Why should we be surprised that politicians take contradictory positions on issues?"</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/obama-gay-ok-pot-not#comments News Volume 46, Issue 33 Herbwise Steven T. Jones Wed, 16 May 2012 05:01:31 +0000 marke 24789 at http://www.sfbg.com Sonic attack on the poor http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/sonic-attack-poor <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>Concert promoter blasts industrial noise at illegal levels to drive away homeless people</p> </div> </div> </div> <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/4633-news_homeless.jpg" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><a href="mailto:news@sfbg.com">news@sfbg.com</a></p> <p>It was 11pm on Thursday, May 3, and the ballet was just letting out. Affluently dressed dance enthusiasts streamed arm in arm down Grove street towards the Civic Center BART station chatting about the evening performance. That night's show of Don Quixote at War Memorial and Performing Arts Center was likely excellent judging by the theatergoers' exuberance.</p> <p>As they passed by the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium, a half-dozen homeless people seated along the route begged the procession for change. Across the street and a block down Grove, a few homeless individuals had bedded down for the night in front of the Main Library.</p> <p>It is these encounters, normal to urban life, that are at the center of a controversial strategy by Another Planet Entertainment, which leases the auditorium from the city, to drive the homeless away. They hope that by blasting a late night sampling of industrial noise through the venue's sound system between the hours of 11pm and 7am, making sleep nearly impossible, that the homeless will be discouraged from congregating there.</p> <p>A women selling the <em>Street Sheet</em> newspaper on the corner sums up the social tension that invoked the strategy. "They're doing it to keep the homeless from sleeping there. All these people don't want to see the homeless when they come through here," she said, gesturing to the now thin stream from the ballet.</p> <p>She had heard the noise over the past few nights and described it as deafening. "The first time I heard it I thought the building was under construction, then I thought a motorcycle gang was coming through. It is so bad it makes the windows of the building shake."</p> <p>Another Planet had no comment on the racket and would not say if the strategy would continue. But in an interview with the <em>San Francisco</em> <em>Chronicle</em>, company founder Gregg Perloff said the venue has had "an enormous amount of complaints" from their patrons about the homeless.</p> <p>Late at night, police are powerless to respond to such complaints. The city's carefully crafted sit-lie ordinance, which bars people from assuming either of those postures on city sidewalks during the day, is lifted between the hours of 11pm and 7am to satisfy constitutional concerns that have overturned similar ordinances in other cities.</p> <p>"This it the first time I've heard of a strategy like this used against the homeless," Bob Offer-Westort, civil rights organizer with the Coalition on Homelessness, said of the noise. "It is really problematic for a business to say that people on public property not breaking the law are a public nuance. It is a intrusion of a private company on public space."</p> <p>Standing in front of the building late on a foggy night, it's easy to see why the homeless would gravitate to here. The building's huge awning, covering much of the broad sidewalk, must be the easiest place to stay dry outdoors for many blocks. And since the demolition of the city's old central bus terminal last year, it is perhaps the largest dry public space in the city's core.</p> <p>But is this sonic attack even legal? That's a question that the Mayor's Office and the San Francisco Police Department, neither of which answered our repeated inquiries, don't seem to want to address.</p> <p>San Francisco's noise ordinance is a weighty document. Most cities suffice with a paragraph or two to regulate noise, while San Francisco's ordinance runs nine pages. Noise, or rather the relative lack of it, seems of great importance to the city. There is even a city committee on noise.</p> <p>The reason for the seriousness the city gives the issue of controlling excess noise is expressed in the very first paragraph of the noise ordinance: "Persistent exposure to elevated levels of community noise is responsible for public health problems including, but not limited to: compromised speech, persistent annoyance, sleep disturbance, physiological and psychological stress, heart disease, high blood pressure, colitis, ulcers, depression, and feelings of helplessness."</p> <p>Many of the cities homeless already suffer acutely from conditions on this list. Asked how an already vulnerable population could be affected by random industrial noise known to (and in this case intended to) cause agitation, Offer-Westort said, "It's crazy to try to create these conditions, they are quite literally trying to create a civil disturbance, and not on their own property, but in a public space."</p> <p>With the adverse effects of noise pollution well-outlined, the ordinance goes on to state, "In order to protect public health, it is hereby declared to be the policy of San Francisco to prohibit unwanted, excessive, and avoidable noise."</p> <p>The ordinance pays particularly attention to licensed entertainment venues like the Bill Graham auditorium: "No noise or music associated with a licensed Place of Entertainment shall exceed the low frequency ambient noise level defined in Section 2901(f) by more than 8 dBC."</p> <p>As a matter of comparison the difference between a whisper and a quiet conversation is roughly an eight decibel increase, a relatively narrow margin. It seems reasonable that if you're standing outside a venue, and the music coming from inside sounds louder than the person talking next to you, the city's noise ordinance has been exceeded.</p> <p>So motorcycles, saws, and other industrial sounds that were described at the auditorium late at night would range around 100 decibels without being amplified. Amplify it enough to shake the window in the building, one can assume it's louder than a power tool, louder by far than the noise ordinance permits.</p> <p>Everyone who has ever held a loud late night event in the city know the consequences of breaking the noise ordinance. A knock on the door by the SFPD that comes with a ticket and the end of your gathering. Do it again in a year and the fines doubles.</p> <p>The strategy at the auditorium seems to be having some effect, but where the homeless will be shuffled off to is anybody's guess. The reality of the homelessness crisis is there is no place for the homeless to simply move off too. With their numbers in the thousands, only bold political action on behalf of the city's leadership can solve the problem.</p> <p>"The root of the problem is that people can't afford rent. Everyone who rents in San Francisco knows that it is way too expensive to live in this city," says Offer-Westort. "We stopped creating public housing. Housing has become a commodity, an investment rather then a home, and that has driven up prices."</p> <p>Passing back through the area later at night, the building was quiet for the moment. A tow truck was loading a car out front with a beeping alarm, a motorcycle roars by, a boombox is playing across Civic Center Plaza, a man is yelling around the corner only to be drown out by a broken wheeled shopping cart clanking by. If this is the normal late night quiet of the streets, it's a wonder the homeless get a moments sleep at all. But the building itself remains quiet right now.</p> <p>A lone homeless man has bedded down in front but has not yet fallen asleep. Young and dreadlocked, he tells me that he has been in town only two days and is unaware of the controversial blasts of noise.</p> <p>"God I hope they don't do that," he said from his sleeping bag. "It's supposed to rain tonight. Why would they do that? As long as you are up before sunrise and move on, who are you bothering?"</p> <p>And here in front of the auditorium in the middle of the night, with the concert patrons at home getting a comfortable night's sleep, the question seemed valid. "It's mean spirited. I think that we as society agree noise should be maintained at a reasonable level to not bother your neighbors," said Offer-Westort. "The fact that their neighbors are homeless doesn't mean they are not part of society."</p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/sonic-attack-poor#comments News Volume 46, Issue 33 Shawn Gaynor Wed, 16 May 2012 04:56:57 +0000 marke 24788 at http://www.sfbg.com Tax equity http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/tax-equity <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>With the business community divided, can labor and progressives force a business-tax reform that actually increases revenue?</p> </div> </div> </div> <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/4633-news_labor.jpg" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"><div class="aef-image-infos-title-credits"><div class="aef-image-infos-title">SEIU workers staged a massive rally on April 18 as part their campaign calling for downtown to pay more taxes</div></div><div class="aef-image-infos-title-legend"></div></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><a href="mailto:steve@sfbg.com">steve@sfbg.com</a>, <a href="mailto:yael@sfbg.com">yael@sfbg.com</a></p> <p>A broad consensus in San Francisco supports reforming the city's business-tax structure by replacing the payroll tax with a gross receipts tax through a November ballot measure. But the devil is in the details of how individual tax bills are affected, which has divided the business community and given a coalition of labor and progressives the opportunity to overcome the insistence by Mayor Ed Lee and other pro-business moderates that any change be revenue-neutral.</p> <p>Service Employees International Union Local 1021, San Francisco's biggest city employee union, last month launched a campaign demanding that the measure increase city revenue, setting a goal of at least $50 million, which represents the amount the city has lost annually since 2001 when 52 large downtown corporations sued to overturn the last gross receipts tax. The union is threatening to place a rival measure on the fall ballot.</p> <p>"This call for it to be revenue-neutral didn't make a lot of sense given all the reductions in city services in recent years," said Chris Daly, the union's interim political director. "It's fair to at least get the money back that we lost in 2001."</p> <p>The union and the city recently agreed on a new contract that avoids more of the salary cuts that SEIU members have taken in recent years, but workers could still face layoffs under a new city budget that Lee is scheduled to introduce June 1. Lee, Board of Supervisors President David Chiu, and business leaders working on the tax-reform proposal have until June 12 to introduce their ballot measure.</p> <p>But they don't yet have an agreement on what the measure should look like — largely because the technology sector (led by billionaire venture capitalist Ron Conway, the biggest fundraiser for Lee's mayoral campaign last year), the traditional businesses represented by the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, and the small business community are pushing different interests and priorities.</p> <p>"The technology industry has to realize they have a tax obligation like any member of the business community does," Jim Lazarus, the Chamber's vice president for public policy, told us.</p> <p>Conway is reportedly using his influence on Lee to push for a model that keeps taxes low for tech companies — even if that comes at the expense of other economic sectors, such as commercial real estate and big construction firms, which will likely see their tax obligations increase. Yet some Chamber counter-proposals could end up costing small businesses more money, creating a puzzle that has yet to be worked out.</p> <p>But one thing is clear: The business leaders don't want to see overall city revenue increase. "If there's anything that is unifying in the business community is that it's revenue neutral," small business advocate Scott Hauge told us. "We're not going to increase revenues, that's just a given, so if we have to do battle then so be it."</p> <p>SEIU and other members of progressive revenue coalition that has been strategizing in recent weeks are hoping to exploit the divisions in the business community and arrive at a compromise that increases revenue, and if not then they say they're willing to go to the ballot with a rival measure.</p> <p>"We're working on trying to recover what we lost in the 2001 settlement and then some," Sup. John Avalos, who has been working with the progressive coalition, told us. "We have to have something going to the ballot that is revenue generating."</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <h4>LABOR'S CAMPAIGN</h4> <p>For labor and progressives, this is an equity issue. Workers have been asked to give back money, year after year, despite the fact that big corporations have been doing well in recent years but haven't contributed any of that wealth to the cash-strapped city. Labor leaders say that after they supported last year's pension-reform measure, it's time for the business community to support city services.</p> <p>"When we talked about Prop C, we said if our members are doing this with our pensions now, we'll see next year what businesses do with business tax," said Larry Bradshaw, vice president of SEIU Local 1021. "Then we read about secret meetings where the labor movement was excluded from those talks."</p> <p>Anger over the "secret meetings" of business leaders that Lee assembled to craft the tax reform measure — meetings at which no labor leaders were included — helped inspire the fierce protest campaign that defined the SEIU's recent contract negotiations.</p> <p>In the first weeks of negotiations, workers were already up in arms. Protest marches at SF General Hospital and Laguna Honda Hospital brought hundreds of hospital workers to the streets. These hospitals serve some of the city's poorest populations: Laguna Honda patients are mostly seniors on Medi-Cal and General is the main public hospital serving the city's poor.</p> <p>On April 5, city workers got creative with a street theater protest that involved six-story projections on the iconic Hobart Building. Protesters dressed as rich CEOs and handed out thank-you cards to commuters at the Montgomery transit station. SEIU's "The City We Need, Not Downtown Greed" campaign included a website (<em>www.neednotgreed.org</em>), slick video, and direct mailers portraying CEOs as panhandlers on the street asking city residents, "Can you spare a tax break?"</p> <p>The most dramatic civil disobedience came on April 18, when more than 1,000 workers rallied outside City Hall — along with several progressive supervisors — and then marched to Van Ness and Market. Protesters blocked the street, resulting in 23 arrests. At that point, increases in health care cuts and pay cuts to city workers were still on the table.</p> <p>That was followed the next week by hundreds of workers staging noisy demonstrations in City Hall, and then again on May Day when SEIU workers were well represented in actions that took over parts of the Financial District.</p> <p>In the end, the demands of union representatives were met in the contract agreement. Health care cost increases and pay cuts were eliminated, and a 3 percent pay raise will kick in during the two-year contract's second year, a deal overwhelmingly approved by union members. Labor leaders hope to use that momentum to force a deal with the Mayor's Office on the tax reform measure — which some sources say is possible. Otherwise, they say the campaign will continue.</p> <p>"We may end up on the streets gathering signatures soon," Daly said. "We need to figure it out in the next few weeks."</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <h4>THOSE DEVILISH DETAILS</h4> <p>The Controller's Office released a report on May 10 that made the case for switching to a gross receipts tax and summed up the business community's meetings, and the report was the subject of a joint statement put out by Lee and Chiu. "After months of thorough analysis, economic modeling and inclusive outreach to our City's diverse business community, the City Controller and City Economist have produced a report that evaluates a gross receipts tax, a promising alternative to our current payroll tax, which punishes companies for growing and creating new jobs in our City'" the statement said. "Unlike our current payroll tax, a gross receipts tax would deliver stable and growing revenue to fund vital city services, while promoting job growth and continued economic recovery for San Francisco."</p> <p>Daly and Avalos say progressives agree that a gross receipts tax would probably be better than the payroll tax, and they say the controller's report lays out a good analysis and framework for the discussions to come. But despite its detailed look at who the winners and losers in the tax reform might be, Daly said, "We haven't seen an actual proposal yet."</p> <p>Lazarus made a similar statement: "Nobody likes the payroll tax, but the devil is in the details."</p> <p>But it's clear some businesses those with high gross receipts but low payrolls — would pay more taxes. For example, the finance, insurance, and real estate sector now pays about 16 percent of the $410 million the city collects in payroll taxes. That would go up to about 21 percent under a gross receipts tax.</p> <p>"Several industries that could face higher taxes under the proposal, such as commercial real estate, large retailers, and large construction firms, felt the increase was too sharp," the report said under the heading of "Policy Issues Arising From Meetings with Businesses."</p> <p>The report highlighted how the change would broaden the tax base. Only about 7,500 businesses now pay the payroll tax (others are either too small or are exempt from local taxation, such as banks), whereas 33,500 companies would pay the gross receipts tax, which the report identified as another issue to be resolved.</p> <p>"While some businesses appreciated the base-broadening aspect of the gross receipts proposal, others felt that too many small businesses were being brought into the Gross Receipts tax," the report said. Hauge also told us that he fears a tax increase on commercial real estate firms could be passed on to small businesses in the form of higher rents. "I don't want to see the business community split," Hauge said, although it's beginning to look like that might be unavoidable. The big question now is whether progressives and labor can find any allies in this messy situation, and whether they'll be able to agree on a compromise measure that all sides say is preferable to competing measures.</p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/tax-equity#comments News Volume 46, Issue 33 Labor taxes Steven T. Jones Yael Chanoff Wed, 16 May 2012 04:52:39 +0000 marke 24787 at http://www.sfbg.com Undercover Sabbath http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/undercover-sabbath <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>Fifty local musicians expand the tracks off 'Paranoid' in a one-off performance</p> </div> </div> </div> <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/4633-acopen_sabbath.jpg" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><a href="mailto:emilysavage@sfbg.com">emilysavage@sfbg.com</a></p> <p><strong>MUSIC</strong> It's pouring outside and the roads are slick with rain. In a warm red room bordered by the soundproof walls of Faultline Studios, a musician stands at a microphone, arching his back and throat singing for a background track to be incorporated in an exhaustive 16-minute cover of "Electric Funeral" off Black Sabbath's magnum opus,<em> Paranoid</em> (1970).</p> <p>This weekend at the Independent, that musician — bass clarinetist and composer Cornelius Boots — will perform the song live with his band Sabbaticus Rex &amp; the Axe-Wielders of Chaos, just once, then the group will be shooed off the stage so another act can perform the next track on the album.</p> <p>This is "Black Sabbath's Paranoid," co-produced by Faultline Studios and UnderCover Presents, and co-announced by KALX. There will be eight local bands containing a total of 50 musicians, correspondingly heavy visuals, heavy metal sandwiches, and one classic, influential heavy metal album that battled the Vietnam War and the status quo with doomy despair and Ozzy's bottomless pit screams.</p> <p>The covers are almost shockingly disparate, especially taken one after the other on the preview sampler — the complete album, recorded and mixed at Faultline, will be included in the $20 door price of the show. On it, brassy horns explode in the intro to Extra Action Marching Band's "War Pigs," buzzy synth and otherworldly bleeps and pings tangle in Uriah Duffy's "Paranoid" tribute, Charming Hostess plunks out those memorable opening notes of "Iron Man" on airy wood blocks, and Surplus 1980 shreds through a noisy "Rat Salad."</p> <p>"We really wanted a lineup that reflected the Bay Area music community as a whole, and didn't cater to just one dynamic" says organizer Lyz Luke, of UnderCover Presents.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Now in its fourth go around at the one album-one show concept, UnderCover has its system down. During its 2010 beginning — <em>The Velvet Underground and Nico </em>at Coda (now Brick and Mortar)<em> — </em>the live show was recorded on the spot then sold online after it was mixed. For two of the four album cover shows — the Pixies' <em>Doolittle</em> and now <em>Paranoid</em> — the songs have been prerecorded at Faultline with engineer-producer Yosh!, who is now an official co-organizer of the events.</p> <p>Yosh!, who also owns Faultline, has spent countless hours recording and mixing these tracks so they'd available in time for the show. He estimates 200 hours over 30 days dedicated to the patchwork remaking of <em>Paranoid</em>. Luke has been busily organizing every minor detail, down to pacing rapid set changes between songs (there'll be a backline) and ushering bands to the studio the month before.</p> <p>"Yosh! and I donate a lot of our time," says Luke, sitting on a couch behind Yosh!'s mixing board. She's quick to point out the sacrifices of the artists and the venues as well. "I think we're all trying to break even on this project. It's more about the spirit of it, and the doors it opens afterwords." Along with UnderCover and managing local band DRMS, Luke just signed on as director of performance programming at the Red Poppy Arthouse.</p> <p>In the recording room — having spent the day doing textured throat singing and playing the shakuhachi flute with a trio for more tracks on "Electric Funeral" — Boots says he was as surprised as anyone that he's been an ongoing participant in this project.</p> <p>"I don't like wasting my time these days, playing gigs — if I'm only going to make $20 over four rehearsals and one show and pay for tolls and parking, that's like, .20 cents an hour or something," he says. "But after I did the first one, I was like wow, this really has a feeling of an intensive, unified, collaborative, artistic event."</p> <p><em>Paranoid</em> will be his third UnderCover event, and this time he signed on as guest music director — hell, he's even the one who chose the album, after spending a year mostly listening to only Black Sabbath. For his epic, 16-minute cover, he augmented one of his regular bands Sabbaticus Rex (the other being Edmund Welles), to include the aforementioned shakuhachi flute trio, and gongs. He slowed down the tempo, adding to the doom of the song about nuclear destruction and drug escapism, and had Gene Jun of Sleepytime Gorilla Museum predecessor Idiot Flesh sing in a higher range and build to a thrashing guitar solo. At Faultline, Jun sits behind Yosh!, forever tinkering with an electric, wailing guitar line.</p> <p>As guest music director, Boots was also in the studio for most of the other recordings; he played clarinet on psychedelic "Planet Caravan" and did the arrangement for Extra Action Marching Band's "War Pigs" on brass. That song, the rather monumental single that opens the album and hence, the show, has some added bells and whistles. In recording, it was one of the most difficult to capture. "Lots of player and lots of layers," says Yosh!, "after the first full day of recording I wasn't sure it was going to work. Then suddenly...it held together and sounded like the group I knew from their shows. It was sort of like the difference between two people clapping and a full room of applause."</p> <p>It includes drums, bells, trumpets, trombones, tuba, vocals, and bull horn, along with marching cymbals for "that iconic hi hat pattern." The modified bull horn comes into play when Mateo uses it to read transcripts of the Collateral Murder Wikileaks video. Coincidentally, Bradley Manning got a hearing the week they finished the song. "For me, it really made the whole project hit home," Yosh! says. "These songs were written 30 years ago and are still relevant today."&nbsp;</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">BLACK SABBATH'S PARANOID</span></p> <p><strong>Sat/19, 9pm, $20</strong></p> <p><strong>Independent</strong></p> <p><strong>628 Divisadero, SF</strong></p> <p><strong>(415) 771-1421</strong></p> <p><strong><a href="http://www.theindependentsf.com" target="_blank">www.theindependentsf.com</a></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/undercover-sabbath#comments Music Features Volume 46, Issue 33 Music Undercover Emily Savage Wed, 16 May 2012 04:48:30 +0000 marke 24786 at http://www.sfbg.com Comforts of the flesh http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/comforts-flesh <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>Meat's a treat at Presidio Social Club, American Eatery, and O3</p> </div> </div> </div> <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/4633-food_appetite.jpg" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"><div class="aef-image-infos-title-credits"><div class="aef-image-infos-title">Meatloaf with mashed potatoes and carrots at Presidio Social Club</div> <span class="aef-image-infos-credits">GUARDIAN PHOTO BY VIRGINIA MILLER</span></div><div class="aef-image-infos-title-legend"></div></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><a href="mailto:virginia@sfbg.com">virginia@sfbg.com</a></p> <p><strong>APPETITE</strong> Oxtail three ways, a hammy biscuit, gourmet meatloaf... comfort comes in each of these forms at new spots (or in the case of Presidio Social Club, with a new chef) in meat dishes for breakfast, lunch and dinner.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <h4>BREAKFAST: HAM HEAVEN</h4> <p>Prather Ranch is to be commended for raising sustainable, humanely-reared meats with a whole-animal (let no part go to waste) sales model. I've long enjoyed sausages and quality meats from the Ferry Building butcher. A few months ago, Prather opened American Eatery, providing meats to go in drool-worthy dishes like Chuck Wagon chili ($6.50), a mixture of pork, pinquito beans, sharp cheddar, scallions and sour cream, or Munich-style white brockwurst sausage ($7) with whole grain mustard sauce and sauerkraut.</p> <p>American Eatery executive chef Erica Holland-Toll came from the former ACME Chop House and Lark Creek Inn. Long using Prather Ranch meats at her restaurants, she was well-qualified to oversee the Ferry Building menu. Breakfast is playful with unusual offerings like braised pork scrapple ($8), a traditional Pennsylvania Dutch mix of pork trimmings, cornmeal, flour, and spices in a sort of panfried loaf. Burgers tempt, even at breakfast, particularly The Stonebreaker ($12), laden with cheese curds and meat gravy.</p> <p>I go for maple-smoked ham. Try it on an Acme Torpedo roll ($10) joined by avocado and Eatwell Farms egg, perfected with basil and cheese curds. I'm particularly smitten with the maple-smoked ham and cheese biscuit ($8). The thick biscuit cushions Prather Ranch's thinly shaved slabs of ham, San Joaquin Gold cheese, a fried egg and red eye gravy mayo. Biscuit Bender's flaky buttermilk biscuit is the right choice. A local baker whose biscuits can also be found at Mission Cheese and Hollow, Bender wisely makes larded and non-larded versions. Ah, lard! Kudos for keeping tradition alive. I devour the sandwich with a Blue Bottle cappuccino, then sigh with contentment.</p> <p><strong><strong>AMERICAN EATERY</strong> Ferry Building, SF. 415-391-0420 <a href="http://www.prmeatco.com/american-eatery" target="_blank">www.prmeatco.com/american-eatery</a></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <h4>LUNCH: OXTAIL THREE WAYS</h4> <p>The Civic Center's O3 Bistro and Lounge opened in January in the former, transformed California Pizza Kitchen. The sleek, open space in tones of black, silver, and purple exudes an Asian cosmopolitan feel with open windows offering a view of busy Van Ness Ave., not an obvious foodie stretch. While there's a range of small plates ($7-12), including hoisin-glazed short ribs and ahi tuna crudo, dinner adds on pricier ($18-28) entrees such as seared scallops with lobster garlic noodles.</p> <p>It's fall-apart tender braised oxtail that calls out to me. At lunch there's oxtail hash ($13), a mixture of caramelized onions, roasted red bell pepper, and russet potatoes over kimchi dirty rice, topped with bacon dust and a fried egg. At both lunch and dinner, find it in wonton shell tacos ($8-10) with jicama slaw. Does it get much more comforting? At a recent lunch I indulged in an oxtail grilled cheese sandwich on thick, rustic slabs of bread, sweetly glorified with five spice raisin jam. Braised oxtail any which way? Bring it on.</p> <p><strong><strong>O3</strong> 524 Van Ness Ave., SF. 415-934-9800, <a href="http://www.o3restaurant.com" target="_blank">www.o3restaurant.com</a></strong></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <h4>DINNER: (SORTA) LIKE MOM WOULD MAKE</h4> <p>Possessing one of the more beautiful, unique SF dining rooms, Presidio Social Club is set in a 1903 military barracks like a sunny, white, 1940s clubhouse with hints of red and chrome. Grabbing a bar stool for an Anejo Sour or Aviation from bar manager Tim Stookey and crew is a timeless respite. The rotating barrel-aged menu pleases, particularly the Aged Reasons Rye: rye, Punt e Mes vermouth, Cointreau, orange bitters.</p> <p>New chef Wes Shaw hails from Texas, working with longtime chef-owner Ray Tang on a new menu that doesn't neglect PSC classics like a Dungeness crab Louis sandwich ($18) or above-average mac n' cheese ($10). But he also adds vitality with TX nods, like 8-hour smoked brisket on Tuesdays or marinated calamari, kicked up with butter beans and chiles. Fresh Monterey sardines ($10) come flaky over chickpea puree, shrouded in celery, while cracked Dungeness crab or a platter of oysters (Thursdays are $1 oysters, 4-7pm) remain ideally suited eats in PSC's crisp space.</p> <p>Surprisingly, two vegetable sides ($6) are among my favorite menu items, both deftly prepared, as fresh and healthy as they are palate-satisfying. Broccoli di ciccio is tossed in lemon with garlic and chiles, while smashed peas in mint oil are brightly seductive. How about that meat? One of the best dishes on the menu remains classic meatloaf ($17), infused with new life — a seemingly bigger slice than I remember in years past. Like mom would make if mom was a gourmand, the juicy, meaty loaf rests atop a sea of mashed potatoes, crowned with slivered carrots and fried shallots for a pseudo-light finish.</p> <p><strong><strong>PRESIDIO SOCIAL CLUB</strong> 563 Ruger, SF. 415-885-1888, <a href="http://www.presidiosocialclub.com" target="_blank">www.presidiosocialclub.com</a></strong></p> <p><em>Subscribe to Virgina's twice-monthly newsletter, The Perfect Spot, <a href="http://www.theperfectspotsf.com" target="_blank"></a></em><a href="http://www.theperfectspotsf.com" target="_blank">www.theperfectspotsf.com<em>&nbsp;</em></a></p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/comforts-flesh#comments Restaurant Review Volume 46, Issue 33 American Eatery Appetite O3 Presidio Social Club Virginia Miller Wed, 16 May 2012 04:42:27 +0000 marke 24785 at http://www.sfbg.com Sichuan healing http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/sichuan-healing <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>Hurting for the delicious no-frills delights of Sichuan Home in the Richmond</p> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><a href="mailto:le.chicken.farmer@gmail.com">le.chicken.farmer@gmail.com</a></p> <p><strong>CHEAP EATS </strong>Hedgehog tried to play flag football with my pink team, and before the game even started she broke her wrist, both bones, and had to have surgery.</p> <p>All she did was trip over her feet and fall wrong.</p> <p>Boom: Titanium rods.</p> <p>The week that week was hard, and then it was Tuesday again and I was going to play flag football with my pink team without her, after dinner.</p> <p>"Whatever you do," she said, over my first-ever attempt at a summer gumbo, "don't get hurt."</p> <p>The advantage to being a complete and total lifelong klutz, I assured my Hedgehog, is that you get really good at falling. Your body just knows where to go, and how to hit. "You wouldn't understand," I said.</p> <p>And it's true: Hedgehog is solid. Grounded. She never even drops anything, let alone drops. Whereas I am bruised and scraped all over, all the time, but have never (knock knock) broken a bone.</p> <p>My gumbo was good. A little over-okra-y, and not juicy enough, but — .</p> <p>I'll get it down. Next time.</p> <p>"Don't. Get. Hurt," Hedgehog said again when I kissed her and left her on the couch with everything she would need for the next couple hours: ice pack, ice water, open pain-pill bottle, and baseball on TV.</p> <p>I promised I wouldn't get hurt, then went and threw my 49-year-old body around the football field. I played offense and defense, but not special teams, because that's where, yeah, I do tend to get hurt.</p> <p>And, as you know, I couldn't. For at least another week, I was going to have to take care of Hedgehog. Do all those two-handed things that need done, in life. Drive her to work, to the doctor. Wake up with her at night, there-there her, and go get more ice.</p> <p>We won! Nobody got hurt! Not even me! We're 2-0 now.</p> <p>I was T-boned pulling out of the parking lot. Don't be hurt, pleeease, don't be hurt, my head said to my body as we 360'd across three lanes and crunched onto the neutral ground.</p> <p>What the world needs now, as far as Hedgehog and me are concerned, is a new favorite Chinese restaurant. That's not going to happen in New Orleans. For one thing, we no longer have a car to go out and eat with. For another, it's just not going to happen. It isn't. Like me getting hurt. (I didn't.)</p> <p>Our new favorite Chinese restaurant is in San Francisco, and we can't wait to be back there, home home, at Sichuan Home in the Richmond. Poor Hedgehog. The broken wrist, the broken car, me for a partner, and she hasn't even eaten at Sichuan Home yet.</p> <p>Yet, it was she who referred to it just now, over lunch (leftover gumbo) as our new favorite Chinese restaurant. That's because she knows. That's because I can't shut up about it, ever since I've been back — how the fried calamari was almost all tentacles, and just perfectly crispy, exploding into salty, spicy holidays on your tongue.</p> <p>Well, mine.</p> <p>Oh, and the special vegetable combo, which was an unlikely mix of taro root, lotus root, and sweet potaters, all slivered into a nest of little sticks — orange, tan, and green. Such a strange and wonderful variety of textures, colors, and tastes. And sweet potatoes are Hedgehog's favorite kind of potato.</p> <p>The chicken salad, which is warm and lettuceless, and the spicy beef ribs with baby almonds are other must-haves.</p> <p>Must not necessarily haves include "pig blood, fish fillets &amp; intestine stew."</p> <p>But, honestly, this is a great little no-frills, awesome-food, and extensively-menued kind of place. Over 150 things. Friendliness... "nutritional mutton soup" .. .</p> <p>Props to my secret agent lady, Sal the Pork Chop, for turning me on to it, and for eating there with me, and for reminding me what we ate when I texted her just now and asked — not to mention what I thought about it.</p> <p>I mean, I didn't get hurt, but, really: where is my mind?</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">SICHUAN HOME</span></p> <p><strong>Wed-Fri 11am-10pm; Sat-Sun 11am-11pm</strong></p> <p><strong>5037 Geary Blvd., SF</strong></p> <p><strong>(415) 221-3288</strong></p> <p><strong>MC,V</strong></p> <p><strong>Beer and wine</strong></p> <p><em>Follow L.E. on Twitter @lechickenfarmer</em></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/sichuan-healing#comments Cheap Eats Volume 46, Issue 33 Cheap Eats Food and Drink Sichuan Home L.E. Leone Wed, 16 May 2012 04:37:22 +0000 marke 24784 at http://www.sfbg.com Street sense http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/street-sense <div class="field field-type-text field-field-sub-head"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p>'Streetopia' thinks positively about the latest tech boom</p> </div> </div> </div> <div class="field field-type-aef-image field-field-uberimage"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item odd"> <div class="aef-image"><img src="http://www.sfbg.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/Full_325_wide/4633-visart_streetopia.jpg" alt="" title="" width="325" height="275" /><div class="aef-image-infos" style="width:325px"></div></div> </div> </div> </div> <p><!--paging_filter--> <p><a href="mailto:caitlin@sfbg.com">caitlin@sfbg.com</a></p> <p><strong>VISUAL ART </strong>When I moved back to San Francisco as an adult, writer Erick Lyle taught me about my city. He didn't tell me about the earthquakes, the mayoral assassinations, or the hills, but rather how to recognize the social forces that would push and pull life in San Francisco over the years to come. And right now, that's an important thing to know about.</p> <p>Lyle came up in the SF zine scene in the 1980s and '90s, the milieu that was gutted and dispersed by the time the first tech boom exhaled its final shuddering gust of pixels and order-by-Internet groceries — and, full disclosure, his words can often be found right here in Guardian feature articles. His book <em>On the Lower Frequencies: A Secret History of the City</em> (Soft Skull Press, 224 pp, $14.95), which he wrote based on those years working at the Coalition on Homelessness and on his zine Scam in the muck and magic of Sixth Street, was to be an essential text for any creative, "scruffy 'cause I'm broke not because of expensive hair product" types scrapping around in a city that was trying to price them out of living there.</p> <p>"Streetopia," the boundless art show and event series curated by Lyle and based in and around the Luggage Store Gallery (Fri/18-June 23) takes note of the struggle for a San Francisco where underground art doesn't mean street artist David Choe's murals in the Facebook offices and rents are far beyond the reach of anyone without stock options. But the month-and-a-half-long extravaganza is going to be far from a bummer.</p> <p>This is what Lyle is quick to impress on me when we meet up to chat at Mission Pie. "This show is not a protest," he says. "I believe strongly in what you're for, not what you're against. This show is for showing what we're for."</p> <p>Judging from "Streetopia"'s lineup, that's a tactic that is resonating with SF artists. To list everyone who is getting in on the show would take up the rest of this article, but I'll name drop a few. Ex-Guardianista and ace investigative reporter A.C. Thompson is teaching a class on amateur public investigation ("Muckraking for Anyone" June 5, 7:30pm, free.) A film festival is planned showcasing movies by queer auteurs Travis Matthews, Veronica Majano, Lares Feliciano, and others ("Queer Filmmaking in SF in the Era of Gentrification" June 2, 8pm, free. Luggage Store Gallery). May 18's opening celebrations will feature streetside dance by Brontez Purnell and Amara Tabor Smith, and other live works by Lovewarz, Strawberry Smog, and Shaun O'Dell.</p> <p>As for space-making: Sy Wagon will be turning the Tenderloin National Forest into a free cafe, a space for all to come make, eat, or donate food. "It's not the soup kitchen model," says Lyle. "It's a place where people can actually share recipes, cook food together." Vacant storefronts will be commandeered to show art along Market Street (much like the Art in Storefronts program that is orchestrated by SF Arts Commission.) The Luggage Store itself will be filled with a temporary theater, library, and of course, artwork made by the likes of three-dimensional wunderkind Monica Canilao.</p> <p>For a stretch of Market Street that has become a battleground in the conflict over whether the rapidly-expanding tech bubble actually benefits SF residents, "Streetopia" could be an excellent representation of an alternative — a community-based look at how we can better SF.</p> <p>We can at least share a rueful laugh while comparing the TL National Forest's free cafe with its oh-so-techie counterpart, the ninth-floor cafeteria that Twitter is building for its workers at its new office site on Market between Ninth and 10th Streets. If that company's employees are really going to be reinvigorating the local businesses, Lyle asks, why construct private eating quarters?</p> <p>"We're giving tax breaks to companies that allow people to meet in a virtual space," Lyle tells me in a rare deviation from the positive language he uses to describe his high-aiming community arts project. "But this show will really show that vibrancy that is right here." Deeper than the ninth floor, natch.</p> <p><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: large;">"STREETOPIA"</span></p> <p><strong>Fri/18-June 23</strong></p> <p><strong>Various times and locations</strong></p> <p><strong>Opening celebration: Fri/18, 7-11pm, free</strong></p> <p><strong>Luggage Store Gallery</strong></p> <p><strong>1007 Market, SF.</strong></p> <p><strong><a href="http://www.streetopiasf.com%3C/B%3E%0A%3CP%3E%3CB%3Ewww.luggagestoregallery.org" target="_blank">www.streetopiasf.com</a></strong><a href="http://www.streetopiasf.com%3C/B%3E%0A%3CP%3E%3CB%3Ewww.luggagestoregallery.org" target="_blank"> </a></p> <p><a href="http://www.streetopiasf.com%3C/B%3E%0A%3CP%3E%3CB%3Ewww.luggagestoregallery.org" target="_blank"><strong>www.luggagestoregallery.org</strong></a></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> http://www.sfbg.com/2012/05/15/street-sense#comments Visual Art Volume 46, Issue 33 Wed, 16 May 2012 04:31:26 +0000 marke 24783 at http://www.sfbg.com