Tri Counties Bank Announces Recipients of Additional $1 Million Camp Fire Fund Donation

Tri Counties Bank announced today the recipients of the $1 million donation by the Lytton Rancheria Tribe to the Tri Counties Bank Camp Fire Fund in 2018 to assist with long-term rebuilding and recovery programs. These funds were in addition to the more than $900,000 raised through GoFundMe and Tri Counties Bank branch donations, which were previously distributed to local non-profit emergency relief agencies directly serving fire victims with immediate needs.

This additional $1 million donation will be used to build affordable housing, provide infrastructure, purchase a new fire truck, assist small businesses affected by the Camp Fire, and assist with victims’ overall recovery. Funds from the Lytton Rancheria Tribe donation will be distributed to the following organizations:

  • United Way of Northern California
  • Enloe Foundation
  • GRID Alternatives
  • Community Housing Improvement Program (CHIP)
  • Hope Crisis Response Network
  • PEP Housing
  • North Valley Housing Trust
  • Center for Learning & Resilience (BCOE)
  • Town of Paradise
  • Rebuilding Paradise Foundation
  • 3Core

“The Lytton Rancheria is thrilled to see that our donation will be used to directly aid the Camp Fire victims and their families as they begin to recover and rebuild their lives,” said Lytton Tribal Chairperson Margie Mejia. “Our Tribe looks forward to working with the community to uplift and restore Butte County.”

“We are proud to be a part of the rebuilding of Butte County after the devastating Camp Fire and facilitate this vital support,” said Richard Smith, President and CEO of Tri Counties Bank. “The people of this community are resilient. We will overcome this tragedy together and come out stronger on the other side.”

About TriCo Bancshares and Tri Counties Bank

Established in 1975, Tri Counties Bank is a wholly-owned subsidiary of TriCo Bancshares (NASDAQ: TCBK) headquartered in Chico, California, serving communities throughout Northern and Central California with assets of $6.4 billion and a more than forty-year record of financial success and stability.

Tri Counties Bank provides a unique brand of Service With Solutions® for personal, small business and commercial banking along with convenient access to it all through an extensive California branch system, a surcharge-free network of more than 32,000 nationwide ATMs, advanced online and mobile banking, and live banker support by phone 24 hours a day, seven days a week. For more information about Tri Counties Bank, call 1-800-922-8742 or visit www.TriCountiesBank.comMember FDIC

About the Lytton Band of Pomo Indians

The Lytton Band of Pomo Indians owns and operates San Pablo Lytton Casino. The casino employs over 500 people from the San Pablo area. The casino spends millions each year on local goods and services and provides over half of the City of San Pablo’s operational general fund.

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20191212005729/en/Tri-Counties-Bank-Announces-Recipients-Additional-1 

Recology Adds Robotics to Produce Cleaner Plastics

A West Coast operator installed four artificial intelligence units at its high-tech San Francisco MRF. A company manager explained how the machinery is working in conjunction with optical sorters to boost recovery and reduce contamination.

An employee-owned company, Recology provides garbage and recycling service to San Francisco and many other West Coast cities. Its Recycle Central MRF serves as a key cog in San Francisco’s recycling program.

In September, four Max-AI AQC (Autonomous Quality Control) robots were installed at the 200,000-square-foot sorting facility. The robots are just the latest upgrade for a MRF that has seen a number of improvements. Over the past three years, Recology has invested $20 million into the facility, said Robert Reed, spokesman for Recology. The MRF, which sorts about 600 tons per day, is now home to seven optical sorters.

In a recent interview with Resource Recycling, Maurice Quillen, general manager for Recology San Francisco, explained how the new container-line robots are providing plastics-sorting backup for the optical sorters. The upgrade project came with a number challenges, which could only be overcome by contributions from three parties: Recology; the technology provider, Bulk Handling Systems (BHS); and a third-party MRF integrator, Titus MRF Services.

After the successful installation, the robots are cleaning up bales and recovering plastic that would otherwise be lost to residue, Quillen explained. The higher-quality products are helping Recology maintain its place in a buyers’ market.

Interdependence of robots and opticals

Crews installed one robot each weekend in September, and all four were operational by Oct. 1. The robots are all working on the MRF’s container line after the optical sorters. They are doing the following tasks:

  • Robot No. 1: This unit is providing QC for PET bottles, removing contaminants and thermoform PET. Unlike optical sorters’ typical sensors, the robots’ visioning system can differentiate between thermoform and bottle PET.
  • Robots No. 2 and 3: These units are recovering any natural and color HDPE that was missed by the optical sorters.
  • Robot No. 4: This unit is positively sorting out black plastics that the optical sorters couldn’t identify. The black plastics go into mixed-plastic bales.

In addition to the robotic sorting arms, BHS also installed a standalone visioning system, called “VIS,” for “Visual Identification System.” Quillen said the VIS is examining and classifying the MRF’s residue, providing waste characterization on materials destined for disposal (VIS is looking at residual from sorting equipment, not material manually removed in the presort area).

The VIS helps Recology determine the sorting equipment’s effectiveness, he said. For example, if it sees a lot of HDPE in residual, the operations group can circle back to the issue by working on the optical sorter for HDPE, he said.

In the months before the robots arrives, BHS installed a small visioning system to log what the robots would be needed to sort, Quillen said. That allowed the equipment to arrive nearly ready to go.

“When they were delivered, it was simply install the hardware and upload into them the data that they had acquired from the test period,” Quillen said.

When asked if that meant they “hit the ground running,” he agreed. “Not sprinting, but running, as opposed to crawling or jogging,” Quillen said.

Facility-specific challenges

Before the robots were installed, there was some concern they wouldn’t be able to handle the sorting burden they’d be facing, Quillen said. So, as part of the project, Recology also worked with Van Dyk Recycling Solutions to upgrade the facility’s Tomra optical sorters on the container line, Quillen said. The units, which were some of the earliest models, had their air bars and reader units replaced, he said.

“The engineer and I both knew that we were going to present these [robot] sorters with a challenging situation, but with the optical change out, it really made everything a little bit better,” Quillen said.

Given San Francisco’s geography and population density, it may come as no surprise Recycle Central, which is located on Pier 96, is short of free space. It also has a complicated material storage and baling system that can’t be easily moved.

“So for me to all of a sudden introduce a new commodity or move something around means I really have to get into some pretty significant infrastructure modifications,” he said.

The space constraints and inability to move the baler presented a challenge when it came to installing the robots. Recology hired Titus MRF Services to widen platforms to ensure required safety clearances where the robots were installed, Quillen said. BHS also did a lot of work re-engineering this generation of robots to have a smaller footprint, which was crucial to Reclogy installing them, he said.

Then came getting the robots into the building. Recology had to “peel back” the side of the MRF, he said. Titus installed a temporary gantry system to bring the equipment through the gap and then shuttle the equipment into position.

The constraints added to costs. In fact, Recology spent $670,000 on commissioning, $500,000 for installation, and $50,000 to close the hole in the side of the MRF. Those costs that totaled more than the robot equipment, which was $1.1 million, Quillen said (he noted that some of those numbers include 8.5% sales tax. The robot purchase was taxed, for example, but not commissioning expenses).

Benefits the robots bring

The first robot, the PET QC unit, is achieving about 65 picks per minute, which is close to 80% of what the manufacturer established as the maximum picks per minute under optimal conditions, Quillen said.

The other robots are performing fewer picks per minute, not because they can’t do more, but simply because they’re being presented with less material to sort, he said.

The plastics-sorting robots are being asked to look at a lot of different materials, including paper that gets into the container line and metals – Recycle Central removes ferrous and nonferrous metals after the plastics, Quillen noted.

Before the first robot was activated, Recycle Central had a lot of PET thermoforms in its PET bottle bales. PET reclaimers generally dislike a high percentage of thermoforms in bottle bales for a number of reasons: Some are made of other polymers that aren’t compatible with PET, the packages can include problematic labels and adhesives, and PET in thermoforms has different properties than bottle-grade PET.

Quillen said the robot is boosting the value of PET bottle bales by removing thermoforms, and it’s increasing the amount of thermoform-only bales the facility generates. The thermoform bales aren’t a high-value product, but “it helps us increase the quality and saleability of the PET,” Quillen said.

The HDPE robots are serving a different role: Instead of removing contaminants from the HDPE stream, they’re providing a backstop to the opticals by picking any natural and color plastic that the opticals missed.

“A lot of times they use the robots as quality control post-optical to pull out prohibitives. Then you’re assuming that your optical is getting 100% of everything,” Quillen said. “We’re in a position where we want to push the opticals to really fire on a product with high certainty, and if it’s not quite sure, let it go and let the robots decide how that happens.”

The robots have also allowed Recology to speed up the opticals a little bit, Quillen said.

The fourth robot is targeting black plastics because opticals generally don’t do a good job of recognizing black plastic, Quillen said. It is diverting the black plastics from residue into mixed-plastic bales. When asked about the cost to install that robot versus the low value of black and mixed plastics, he said the fourth robot is more about trying to maximize diversion from landfill, rather than generating revenue.

By boosting bale quality, the equipment is helping Recology survive difficult recycling markets.

“In the case of my operation, we obviously want to try to maximize the value because that just makes sense,” Quillen said, “but we also want to make sure that we ensure our place in the market so that we don’t experience any issues with our ability to operate the facility and sell our product.”

Sonoma Raceway Spreads Holiday Cheer to More than 300 Children at “Race to the Holidays” Christmas Party

Nearly 300 Sonoma Valley children enjoyed a day of holiday cheer under sunny skies at Sonoma Raceway on Saturday at the 15th annual “Race to the Holidays” Children’s Christmas Party.

The raceway teamed up with the Sonoma chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities (SCC) to host the children and their families at the event, which featured a race-car display, balloon animals, face painting, caroling and a visit from Santa Claus, who arrived via Schell-Vista Fire Protection District fire truck.

The event, which has drawn more than 3,600 children since its inception in 2005, culminated with Santa Claus presenting each child with a full bag of toys and a stuffed animal, as well as a toiletry kit courtesy of Verizon. Children ranged in age from newborn to 12 years old.

“Today is our first time (at Race to the Holidays Christmas Party) and it’s our new Christmas tradition,” said Sonoma resident and mother of three, Deanna Oliveros. “The highlight of the day was seeing Santa. My kids love singing and so they really enjoyed singing the Christmas songs and I did too!”

Upon hearing the children singing his favorite tune, “Santa Claus is Coming to Town,” Santa greeted the children on his way into the event hall before handing out gifts. The children left the raceway with new toys and wide smiles after a complimentary lunch at the Raceway Café.

“My favorite part of the day is the balloons and seeing Santa,” said eight-year-old Camila, who attended the party for her third consecutive year. “I always get the pink poodle balloon animal. I like getting presents, but I also like seeing my family happy and together.”

All children were pre-registered through five Sonoma Valley youth groups, including the El Verano Elementary School, Friends in Sonoma Helping (F.I.S.H.), La Luz, Stand By Me Sonoma Mentoring and the Sonoma Valley Teen Parent Program

The raceway received a generous outpouring of support from the community as more than 1,200 toys were donated for the party. Supporters of this year’s event included: Clover Sonoma, Exchange Bank, Gundlach Bundschu Winery, Levy Restaurants, Patterson Dental, Pat Milligan, The Save Mart Companies, Schell-Vista Fire Protection District, Sonoma Brands, Sonoma Greens, Sonoma Valley Fire and Rescue Authority, Verizon and Viansa Sonoma. SCC, the charitable arm of Sonoma Raceway, has distributed $6.8 million in grants to Sonoma County youth organizations since 2001.

Sonoma Raceway Hosts 9th John’s March Against Stomach Cancer, Jan. 11

Walkers and runners alike can join Sonoma Raceway and No Stomach for Cancer in the battle against gastric cancer at the 9th John’s March Against Stomach Cancer on Saturday, Jan. 11.

John’s March offers the once-a-year opportunity to walk or run around Sonoma Raceway’s 2.52-mile road course, all in the name of charity. This unique fundraising event has raised more than $133,000 over its eight-year history, and is the only major fundraising walk for gastric cancer on the West Coast. It is named in honor of longtime raceway spokesperson, John Cardinale, who passed away in 2013 after a two-year battle with stomach cancer.

Participants and donors are encouraged to raise awareness and increase their impact by registering and creating a team page at www.johnsmarch.org. Registration is $40 per person, which includes the walk/run, a T-shirt and light refreshments following the March.

For those looking for more of challenge, 5K and 10K race distances will be also marked. A shorter, less hilly course is available for those who do not wish to complete the full 2.52-mile circuit. This is an all-inclusive event – children, pets, everyone is welcome. No scooters or skateboards are allowed on track; bicycles are permitted.

Participants can also bring pictures of loved ones affected by gastric cancer to share on the Warrior Wall, which will honor those affected by the disease.

No Stomach For Cancer is a non-profit group that works to increase awareness and education about stomach cancer, provide a support network for affected families and support research efforts for screening, early detection, treatment and prevention of stomach cancer. Gastric cancer is the fifth most common cancer type worldwide.

Day-of registration begins at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 11, and the March begins at 9 a.m. Advance registration is not required; walk-ups are welcome and encouraged. For more information about John’s March, visit www.johnsmarch.org or contact Diana Brennan at dbrennan@sonomaraceway.com or 707-933-3918.

Sonoma Raceway Thanksgiving Food Drive Nets 2,500 Pounds of Food

Sonoma Raceway took the checkered flag on its 19th annual Thanksgiving Food Drive today, delivering nearly 2,500 pounds of food to two North Bay food banks.

The holiday bounty included more than one ton of non-perishable food items and $2,400 in cash donations, which were divided between the Redwood Empire Food Bank (REFB) in Santa Rosa and Friends in Sonoma Helping (FISH) in Sonoma. The raceway’s annual food drive has distributed more than 40 tons of food since its inception in 2000.

Items were generously donated at the raceway, Sonoma Valley Fire & Rescue Authority, Schell-Vista Fire Station, Sonoma Market and Glen Ellen Village Market, as well as Viansa Sonoma. Donations were also provided by Pedroncelli Mobile Bottling LLC, the National Auto Sport Association and The Save Mart Companies. As has become tradition, the food drive concluded with the annual RKA Wine Country Motorcycle Ride on Saturday, Nov. 23, featuring nearly 80 riders who enjoyed a beautiful ride from Windsor to the race track, as well as a cruise around the raceway’s 12-turn road course. The riders also delivered food and monetary donations to the track.

The deliveries arrived at the perfect time, as both food banks are facing peak holiday season demand.

“Food and Funds Drives are an integral part of the puzzle here at the Redwood Empire Food Bank. With one in every six people in Sonoma County facing hunger, every can, every bag, and every dollar makes a direct and immediate impact to our neighbors in need,” said Cassidy Jourdan, a hunger relief worker at REFB. “A donation of this weight equates to 577 meals now available to our neighbors in need.”

“I can’t tell you how much we appreciate all that Sonoma Raceway does for us,” said Dee Weaver, volunteer coordinator for the F.I.S.H. Holiday Food Basket Program. “This is a lot of food and it will make a lot of people happy. The monetary donations will help with gift certificates for meat and produce for each participant, as we will have about 450 families sign up for food baskets.”

To find out more ways to get involved, visit refb.org or www.friendsinsonomahelping.org. The raceway’s Season of Giving continues with the High-Speed Toy Drive, which is now under way through Dec. 11.

Kaiser Permanente’s Patricia Kendall Honored in Marin Women’s Hall of Fame 2020

2020 Marin Women’s Hall of Fame

Annual Induction & Celebration Dinner

Thursday, March 26, 2020  |  Peacock Gap, San Rafael

Doors & Cash Bar 5:00pm  |  Dinner & Program 6:00pm

REGISTER TODAY!

Join Us to Honor Marin Women of Distinction 

Patricia Kendall, Medical Group Administrator, Kaiser Permanente

Eva Long, Ph.D., Founder, President and CEO, Center for Longevity Transition & Renewal

Tamra Peters, Founder & Executive Director, Resilient Neighborhoods

Amy Reisch, Executive Director, First 5 Marin

Cecilia Zamora, Executive Director, Latino Council

 *To learn more about this year’s inductees please read our Press Release here

Join us as a Marin Women’s Hall of Fame Awards Sponsor to receive exclusive sponsor benefits.

View the Sponsorship Package here

Becoming Independent Opens Office in San Rafael

Becoming Independent, a nonprofit serving adults with disabilities for more than 50 years in Sonoma County, is expanding its services to Marin.

The organization is set to unveil its San Rafael campus on Dec. 5.

“This has been a multiyear effort in the making,” said the organization’s chief executive, Luana Vaetoe. “We’re ready to go.”

Becoming Independent works with adults who have a range of developmental and intellectual disabilities, including autism, Down syndrome and cerebral palsy. The organization offers job training classes, helps its clients find employment and provides support for adults with disabilities living independent lives, Vaetoe said.

“When it comes to services for people with disabilities, there’s a lot of resources put into the early years, which is absolutely necessary,” Vaetoe said. “But those kids grow up, and they deserve to have a robust offering of services.”

The Marin County Office of Education provides “transitional” programs for students with disabilities after high school. Those programs include life-skills classes, job training and community college courses, according to Mary Jane Burke, the county’s superintendent of schools. But transitional programs, which are offered at no cost, are only available to students who are between the ages of 18 and 22.

Nonprofits help fill the gap for people who need additional support after they age out of those programs, Burke said.

“Our community is stronger whenever we provide more opportunities to those that, with support, can flourish,” she said.

In an effort to generate revenue and provide job opportunities for its clients, Becoming Independent runs several businesses that are staffed in part with people who have disabilities. The organization operates a cafe and a document shredding service, and it has run the concession booths on the Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit trains since 2017, providing dozens of jobs for adults with disabilities.

“They do a wonderful job,” said SMART’s general manager, Farhad Mansourian.

The organization runs on a $14 million annual budget, which comes from grants, state funding and private donations, according to Vaetoe. Roughly 250 staff members work for Becoming Independent in Sonoma County, and about 20 will work in Marin when the San Rafael campus opens at 777 Grand Ave.

“There’s always a need for helping people find jobs,” said Nancy Dow Moody, chief executive for Lifehouse, a San Rafael organization that provides housing and support for people with disabilities. “It’s helpful to have new resources and perspectives.”

In addition to job training, Becoming Independent offers life-skills classes, including pedestrian safety, budgeting, health and wellness, nutrition, cooking, art and self-advocacy.

“Becoming Independent believes in the innate value of every human being,” Vaetoe said. “When every one of us can exercise our right to live a life of dignity, integrity and independence to the best of our abilities, the whole community is elevated and benefits.”

Sonoma Chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities Distributes $378,000 to Sonoma County Youth Groups

Fifty-four Sonoma County non-profit organizations will benefit from nearly $380,000 in grants recently awarded by the Sonoma chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities (SCC), the charitable arm of Sonoma Raceway.

In total, $378,000 was distributed to youth-serving organizations in Sonoma County, bringing the chapter’s total distribution of funds to nearly $6.8 million since 2001. The amount raised this fiscal year includes $30,000 donated to the Fire Resilience Fund by Comcast after Sonoma Raceway President and General Manager Steve Page was named as a finalist for the 2018 Comcast Community Champion of the Year Award. The Fire Resilience fund supports youth-serving non-profit organizations that continue to work on recovery and rebuilding after the 2017 Northern California fires. The chapter’s Board of Trustees recently approved the distribution of 2019 funds at its annual meeting.

“The Sonoma Chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities grant for the Family Support Center is a key source of funding enabling us to provide preschool and educational support to the most vulnerable families in our community,” said Toni Horde Abraham, Children’s Resource Manager, Catholic Charities of Santa Rosa.

“Additionally, the Fire Resilience Grant will help fund the development of Catholic Charities’ Disaster Preparedness Plan for the Family Support Center, the largest family emergency shelter serving homeless families with children north of the Golden Gate to the Oregon border,” said Len Marabella, Executive Director, Catholic Charities of Santa Rosa. “Clearly, such a plan is needed now more than ever, especially for this highly-vulnerable population that lacks a safety net.”

SCC’s success was due to several fundraising events and partnerships in 2019, the majority of which are held during the raceway’s major-event weekends, including NASCAR and NHRA race weekends. The highlight of the year included the Speedway Children’s Charities NASCAR Banquet and its Fund-a-Need fundraiser at Viansa Sonoma, which combined to raise $145,000 during the Toyota/Save Mart 350 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series weekend in June. SCC’s NASCAR live auction at the banquet combined with its online charity auction raised more than $28,000 in donations prior to race weekend.

The 13th annual Eric Medlen Nitro Night, which is held Thursday evening prior to the NHRA Sonoma Nationals at Viansa Sonoma, honored Funny Car driver Jack Beckman with the Eric Medlen Spirit Award and generated another $20,000 for the Sonoma chapter. Additionally, SCC launched its first SCC Red Bucket Brigade sponsored by First Republic Bank on Friday evening. Volunteers from First Republic Bank and Sonoma Raceway filled the grandstands to pass red donation buckets through the crowds, which raised more than $9,300 for Sonoma County children.

SCC is also the beneficiary of the Classic Sports Racing Group’s (CSRG) Charity Challenge, which netted $20,000 for Sonoma County non-profits from its 2018 race weekend. This brings CSRG’s donations to SCC to more than $960,000 since 2004.

SCC is also supported by 14 businesses that serve as Children’s Champions sponsors, including Ahlborn Fence & Steel, Inc., American Asphalt, Beck Communications, Bleyco Inc., Blue Star Gas, CSW/Stuber Stroeh Engineering Group, ESP & Alarm Inc., LifeWest, Inc., Kaiser Permanente, Ramekins, Pacific Highway Rentals, Pacific Satellite Inc., United Site Services and Verizon.

“Thanks to Speedway Children’s Charities, over 400 children, including those in our county’s child welfare system and children impacted by the 2017 wildfires, will manage their grief and trauma through our horticulture-assisted therapy program, called Project HOME: Healthy Organic Meals & Education,” said Carol Rathmann, executive director of Forget Me Not Children’s Services. “The generosity of Speedway Children’s Charities will also allow us to provide animal- and horticultural-assisted therapy for 120 child fire survivors suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. Most of these children lived in fire-affected areas or lost family members in the fire. By providing this therapy, we will be able to provide a unique and powerful form of healing and hope for these child fire survivors as they and their families and friends rebuild their lives.”

The Sonoma Chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities is part of a national non-profit organization dedicated to raising funds for qualified children’s organizations. Founded in 1984 by Bruton Smith, chairman of Speedway Motorsports, SCC originated at Charlotte Motor Speedway in North Carolina and the Sonoma chapter is one of eight chapters at Speedway Motorsports facilities throughout the country. Since its inception, SCC Chapters have cumulatively distributed more than $55.3 million nationally to youth-serving organizations.

The following Sonoma County youth groups will receive funding from Speedway Children’s Charities in 2019: 10,000 Degrees, Action Network, Art Escape; Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Sonoma County; Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Santa Rosa, Inc.; California Parenting Institute; Inc.; Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Santa Rosa; Ceres Community Project; Committee On The Shelterless; Community Action Partnership of Sonoma County; Conservation Corps North Bay; Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) of Sonoma County; Food for Thought;  Forget Me Not Children’s Services; Friends in Sonoma Helping (F.I.S.H.); Girl Scouts of Northern California; Girls on the Run Sonoma County; Hanna Boys Center; Hope Counseling Services; Individuals NOW dba Social Advocates for Youth; Jewish Community Free Clinic; Kid Scoop News; Legal Aid of Sonoma County; LifeWorks of Sonoma County; LIME Foundation; Luther Burbank Memorial Foundation; Matrix, A Parent Network and Resource Center; Mentor Me; On The Move; Paws As Loving Support Assistance Dogs; Petaluma Health Center; Petaluma People Services Center; Petaluma Policing Foundation; Power to Soar Foundation; Presbyterian Church of the Roses; Redwood Empire Food Bank; River to Coast Children’s Services; Roseland Charter School; Santa Rosa Symphony Association; SEEDS (dba Seeds of Awareness); Sonoma County Public Library Foundation; Sonoma Ecology Center; Sonoma Valley Mentoring Alliance; Sonoma Valley Teen Services; Sunny Hills Services; Support Our Students; The Center for Social and Environmental Stewardship; The Living Room Center, Inc.; The Salvation Army; Transcendence Theater Company; Valley of the Moon Children’s Home Foundation; Verity – Compassion.Safety.Support; and the Young Women’s Christian Association.

For more information on the Sonoma chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities, visit www.speedwaycharities.org/sonoma/ or contact Cheri Plattner at cplattner@SonomaRaceway.com or 707-933-3950.

Bank of America Celebrating Women Photographers at Napa Valley Museum

Napa Valley Museum’s latest exhibit, “Modern Vision, Modern Women: Selections from the Bank of America Collection” almost didn’t happen. Laura Rafaty, the museum’s executive director, said that the exhibit she had planned fell through at the last minute. So she reached out to Amy Loflin, senior vice president for local markets, at Bank of America to see if there was anything available from the bank’s extensive art collection.

“Typically the waiting list for an exhibit like this can be a couple years long,” Loflin said. “It just happened to be a lovely coincidence, that she reached out suddenly at a time when it unexpectedly became available.”

Loflin is a senior vice president for local markets at the bank. She wears many hats, but summarized her position with, “we make a big bank feel like a community bank.”

“We want to be a place that supports the community and that supports the arts. If this can bring tourism up here, if we can get people to come here from Sacramento and San Francisco, we’re going to help the economy and the community. The arts are so important. Everybody wins,” she said.

The exhibit is a fascinating study of the depth and breadth of American life, as presented solely by women photographers. It is a collection of photographs that is serious, insightful, imaginary, and at times, like the very life that we have lived in the past century, heartbreaking.

Perhaps the most significant coup in the exhibition is Dorothea Lange’s “Migrant Mother” taken in 1936 in Nipomo, California. You may have seen this photo before; it’s a veritable personification of the desperation people felt during the Great Depression. Her confoundedness, her hopelessness, the perplexity evident in her face, as her three boys snuggle around her, is one of the greatest, most arresting portraits ever taken. And you can see it in Yountville.

There are several photographs by Diane Arbus, the sometimes awkward, but provocative photographer who killed herself in 1971. She was famous for treating marginalized groups — LGBTQ people, dwarves, nudists, the elderly, and some middle-class working folks — as friends and capturing them in moments of unguarded intimacy.

Arbus’, most provocative work may be “Boy with Straw Hat.” It is a picture of a young man with an earnest look on his face, fedora on his head and bow tie at his chin who wears a pin that says, “Bomb Hanoi.” He is advocating for the Vietnam war, which today is an American equivalence with the Holocaust in its tragedy and inhumanity. Seeing someone so young want something so violent for people he has never even met only underscores the extent to which we brainwash our young with our own arrogance and misconceptions. Visitors at the show turned away at the image in horror.

Some photos, like “Migrant Mother” are candid, taken in a split second as a result of a photographer’s heightened instincts. But others are studied, calculated.

In “ID400” Tomoko Sawada, a Japanese artist, meditated on the identification cards endemic in modern society by taking hundreds of self portraits in a photo booth, changing her hair, make-up and facial expression in an impossible variety. The photos, like what you would submit for a government issued ID card, are presented in a huge rectangle, one after another, so that you get a sense of the multiplicity of humanity, as it is codified by the one inch square black and white image on our driver’s licenses and passports.

The fact that none of the photos look alike, yet they are all the same person, speaks to Sawada’s inventiveness and ingenuity, giving her a rightful place, even at 42 years old, among the works of these other artists.

Sandy Skoglund’s “Revenge of the Goldfish” is another calculated photograph. Skoglund often takes several months to construct what she is going to photograph, such that often in her exhibitions the rooms are recreated as art installations themselves. Close examination of this photograph shows the attention to detail—the aquatic blue of the entire room, juxtaposed with many, bright gold koi. The koi are ceramic, not rubber, adding an additional dimension of planning.

Perhaps the most arresting photo — one that Harmony Plenty, of Cope Family Services,and the mother of two young boys said broke her heart — was “Olivier” by the Dutch photographer Rineke Dijkstra. “Olivier” is a young man who enlists in the French Foreign Legion. On July 21, 2000, he is photographed in Marseille in a navy T-shirt. His young, innocent face is callow, but somehow knowing, anticipatory.

The next photograph is taken in Corsica on June 28, 2001. In uniform now, with a box hat and chin strap that frames his young jaw, seeming to constrict his ability to open his mouth in protest. His shirt is too big for him and the bright red tassels hanging from the epaulets on his shoulders are absurd, a holdover from the 19th century when fashion in war was more important than one’s ability to move. They are an ornament, contrasted with his, bitter determined face, personify the paradoxical painfulness and inevitability of war.

In the third photo, taken in Djibouti on July 13, 2003, he is a hardened warrior. Crows feet between his eyebrows that did not exist in the first picture, are now hardened creases. He has lost the tassels from his epaulets and he is more muscled — his shirt fits him this time. He stares at you directly in the face, defiant, but resigned. An air of sadness, but determination. Is he thinking of other things he could have done with his life? Has he seen things he would have rather not seen and will never be able to unsee?

The Foreign Legion is known for its psychologically intense training, and you can see it on his face. France was the first country in the world to mandate military service as a result of the Revolution. It was phased out in 2001, so it is possible he is there only as a condition of citizenship, which, given the expression on his face, was against his will. At any rate, he carries the weight of the world on his shoulders, as most soldiers do, their fate determined by people far removed from the horror they experience every day.

This is the magic of the photographer. While painters create from their imagination, photographers use the real things, real people in the real world to do their work. These photographs are much more relatable than, say, the recent exhibition of surrealists at the Napa Valley Museum, because they are faces, hands, feet, torsos, bellies and legs all in situations we are familiar with, rather than just interesting designs sprouted from the imagination of one artist.

Or they are recognizable things in positions we never thought of, that are provocative. They are split seconds of time, in place, captured by the photographer’s eye, a particular point of view.

Some of the photographs, like Lange’s “Migrant Mother” are time capsules. Berenice Abbott’s 1934 photograph of the New York Stock Exchange, from an angle down Wall Street, may have been the first time that angle of the facade of that cathedral to the religion of capitalism was captured. The Corinthian columns and greco-roman frieze above are illuminated by the sun and 1930s- era cars with square windshields and big fenders are parked on the street.

There is a quiet majesty to the photograph. A reverence. The New York Stock Exchange is the soul of the American economy, the very progenitor of our affluence. But, when this photo was taken, six years after the 1929 crash and two years before 1936’s “Migrant Mother,” the building in this photograph is the seat of a great tragedy, a symbol of the market’s fickle vicissitudes, the mob mentality and unbridled greed that plunged the United States into the most traumatic time in its history since the Civil War.

In this case, the building is indifferent to the suffering it has caused. Its stately facade echoing the dignity of the Athenian enlightenment, or Roman civility, is now the opposite of those things. The facade is just a mask, insincerely, fraudulently cloaking the ruthlessness of capitalism with the architectural trappings of another time, millennia ago.

Remember, these photographs are taken by women. The sensitivity, ingenuity and sensibility are all feminine. Though, that really should not matter. The work should stand on its own, and be judged for its own sake, not based on the sex of its creator.

However, in a world dominated by men in most areas, we can’t help but celebrate, as the curators of this show have, the equality of women’s work with men’s — its sensitivity, ingenuity and sensibility are not sex-based; instead they are nothing but, universally human.

https://napavalleyregister.com/entertainment/arts-and-theatre/review-celebrating-women-photographers-at-napa-valley-museum/article_937d6eaa-623e-5b5e-bdee-6fd6ad870d6a.html

Marin Sanitary Looks to Turn Trash into Power as Business Changes Rapidly

The waste business isn’t what it used to be.

If you ask Marin Sanitary Service President and CEO Patty Garbarino however, that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

“It would seem as though it would be quite simple, the waste management business, but it’s no longer what it was,” Garbarino said.

Her grandfather started hauling burlap sacks of trash up the hills of San Francisco. Her family partnered with other Italian-American families to establish Marin Sanitary Service in 1948.

Today the company encompasses four divisions, which handle waste and recycling from the curb through almost its entire lifecycle. The company’s divisions now include Marin Sanitary Service, the Marin Recycling Center, the Marin Resource Recovery Center and the Marin Household Hazardous Waste Facility.

Garbarino said the changing business model of recycling in California and worldwide means the company has expanded how it generates revenue and serves customers, always with an eye on renewability.

Using technology like generating power from overlooked sources like processing food scraps and wood chips is an opportunity “for us not only to bring waste material back into the manufacturing stream, but also to be able to … reuse in the way of energy while at the same time teaching the public not to waste as much as we do as Americans,” Garbarino said.

Innovation has become key in an industry buffeted by falling prices for key recyclables like cardboard and paper, a trend largely attributable to China’s National Sword policy. In January of last year China declared it would no longer accept mixed paper recycling, which can be anything from newspaper to office paper, as well as certain plastics due to waste contamination.

Companies like Marin Sanitary have had to find ways to keep cash flowing in despite China refusing to take recycled material like office paper which Garbarino said, “Has absolutely no market right now.” She added the company now gets about a tenth of what they were once paid for the materials. “So it’s affected us not only in terms of having a stable market, but also in terms of the cost,” she added.

That has meant raising rates on residential customers for services like curbside pickups. “The ratepayer now supports within the rate an amount that fluctuates each year, depending on the commodity markets,” she said. Garbarino estimated that the most recent rate increase was under 10% for curbside hauling, noting the National Sword program accounted for roughly half of that.

POWER OFF, FOOD WASTE UP

In addition to losing power itself for five days, the recent PG&E outages put a huge strain on Marin Sanitary as residents tossed out thousands of pounds of spoiled food.

“And that was a concern of the health department because a lot of what we do is to protect health and safety via the sanitation issue,” Garbarino said.

She added that to avoid a buildup of gaseous materials in any one landfill, the company trucked waste north to its operation in Windsor in Sonoma County. The power outage also created problems for the company since they could not sort waste and recycling but can legally only have materials on their premises for 24 hours.

Despite these recent calamities, Garbarino said the company continues to invest in renewable sources of energy. “We’re mandated by the California Air Resources Board to reduce our energy footprint each year,” she said, noting the company already has a solar array and is looking into increasing their investment in sun power. Marin Sanitary also uses renewable diesel in its fleet of garbage trucks.

The company is also looking into permitting and building a small plant at its San Rafael facility that would allow it to go “off the grid” by digesting biomass and turning it into clean power. “That would then make us energy independent and not dependent upon these swings that we’ve seen in the paper market, the cardboard plastic markets, and so forth,” Garbarino said.

CHANGE COMING TO FAMILY BUSINESS

Looking to the future of the company does not just mean focusing on prices and energy, however. Garbarino said while the current board of the company includes her, her father, and her cousin, “like a lot of other companies we have been bringing in more independence into the board structure and people with other talents.”

She floated the idea of bringing in people with backgrounds in human resources or banking when those needs arise.

Those who know and work for Garbarino say she is particularly adept at building partnerships. She is welcoming but also direct.

But she focuses on constructive criticism according to Kathy Wall, household hazardous waste program manager at Marin Sanitary.

“She will be direct in terms of what she needs and what she wants,” Wall said, adding that Garbarino “will ask you directly what you can do for her.”

Garbarino is also fastidious about congratulating her employees on a job well done, and following up when something does not reach her standards, Wall said.

“If it’s something that she wasn’t happy about she will also tell you,” Wall said, adding those conversations always included guidance on how to improve a result next time or who to reach out to for guidance.”

Wall said the agreement hammered out years ago between Marin Sanitary and the City of San Rafael to operate the household hazardous waste facility is a good example of the kind of results-focused partnerships Garbarino is adept at forging.

In the late 1980s, many drivers were hauling dangerous waste like motor oil, paint and batteries, Wall said, noting some were sustaining injuries from the waste. Because private companies cannot have permits to handle hazardous waste, to have a program to handle the issue Garbarino needed to partner with the local government, Wall said.

After lobbying the Marin County Board of Supervisors and other officials, a local fire marshal offered to obtain the permit if Garbarino was willing to operate the facility. “That’s one of the things that I admire about her,” Wall said. “Those partnerships really make a difference within our community.”

Cynthia Murray is the president and CEO of the North Bay Leadership Council and has known Garbarino for years. She praised her for her efforts in everything from renewable energy to her work on the county school board as well as her other civic engagements.

“She’s a woman in a male-dominate industry,” Murray said. “Being the first woman to do any of those things is always a challenge.”

https://www.northbaybusinessjournal.com/northbay/marincounty/10273672-181/patty-garbarino-marin-sonoma-napa-waste-management