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Driver pulled over for running stop sign in San Mateo arrested for murder

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San Mateo police investigating fatal hit-and-run collision

A 29-year-old driver who was pulled over in San Mateo Monday night for failing to stop at a stop sign was then arrested on suspicion of murder, police said.

Curtis Green, a San Francisco resident, is the suspect in a homicide in Oakland, according to the San Mateo Police Department.

Police had been patrolling the area of the Residence Inn at 200 Winward Way when officers said they saw the SUV driven by Green commit a stop sign violation at about 6 p.m. Monday.

Green was arrested without incident and Oakland police responded to take him into custody and to book him into Alameda County Main Jail.

San Mateo County suspends rule requiring minimum 25-cent charge for shopping bags

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San Mateo County suspends rule requiring minimum 25-cent charge for shopping bags

The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors today voted to temporarily suspend the county’s reusable bags ordinance that requires retailers to charge at least 25 cents for paper or reusable bags provided to customers.

In 2012, the County adopted a ordinance prohibiting retail establishments from providing reusable or recycled paper bags to customers at point of sale without charging them a minimum fee per bag, which is currently 25 cents. Subsequently, all cities and towns in the county with the exception of Woodside, Hillsborough and Atherton adopted analogous provisions.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, however, shoppers aren’t given the option to bring their own bag to shop for items for health reasons. Despite that, “retail establishments countywide are still required to charge, and may still be charging, customers a minimum of 25 cents,” the county states. Anecdotally, county officials have heard some retailers are not presently charging for shopping bags. The county felt the charge was unfair, particularly amid a difficult economic time.

“Many county residents have experienced sudden and substantial income loss due to business and school closures, layoffs or reductions in work hours and extraordinary out-of-pocket medical expenses, making it extremely burdensome for them to pay any additional living expenses, however small,” the county said.

Photo credit: Whole Foods Market media image library

San Mateo County offering online wedding ceremonies

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San Mateo County now offering online wedding ceremonies

San Mateo County is now offering marriage licenses and wedding ceremonies over videoconference amid the COVID-19 shelter-in-place orders.

The San Mateo County Clerk Division will administer ceremonies. Appointments are available Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., excluding holidays, the county said.

Mark Church, the County’s Assessor-County Clerk-Recorder, said the new service follows “positive responses to online wedding services” from the public during the shelter-in-place period.

Find out more information, visit the county’s website by clicking here.

Photo by cottonbro from Pexels

Curbside pickup opens at Hillsdale Shopping Center

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Curbside pickup opens at Hillsdale Shopping Center

Starting today, nearly 30 stores at Hillsdale Shopping Center will fulfill curbside pickup orders daily from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Macy’s, Nordstrom, West Elm, Old Navy, Belcampo Meat Co., UNIQLO, DSW, and The LEGO Store are among those participating in curbside pickup. See the full list of stores here.

Customers can place their order online or by telephone and receive instructions on driving to pre-designated curbside pickup zones, according to a statement by Hillsdale Shopping Center. While staying in their vehicle, customers can text the store and an employee will bring their purchase to them.

The launching of curbside service follows San Mateo County’s amended public health order on May 22 that aligns with Phase 2 of the state’s gradual easing of the COVID-19 shelter-in-place order. Shopping center officials say they’re actively preparing for a time when they can fully reopen. When that happens, shoppers can expect to see hand sanitizer stations and spaced-out seating in common areas, among other changes.

Larry Ivich, general manager of Hillsdale Shopping Center, called the launch of curbside service “terrific news for the staff and their families who have been waiting 10 weeks to return to work.”

Photo credit: Hillsdale Shopping Center

Disclaimer: Adam Alberti, the publisher of Climate Magazine, is Managing Director at Singer Associates, Inc. Hillsdale Shopping Center is represented by Singer Associates.

San Mateo County gets $750K state grant to fund Project Roomkey initiative

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A $750,000 state grant will enable San Mateo County to sustain and increase homeless shelter capacity during the COVID-19 pandemic, the county announced Thursday.

The California Department of Social Services (CDSS) funding specifically applies to Project Roomkey, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s initiative providing non-congregate shelter to high risk homeless individuals in order to prevent the spread of the virus. As part of that initiative, the County is housing homeless individuals at a local, leased hotel. The temporary shelter program, called Bayfront Station, is currently housing about 90 people.

The CDSS funds can be used to support continued operations at Bayfront Station and for expanding shelter capacity in the county at alternative locations, among other related functions. Near the onset of the pandemic, the County began moving highly vulnerable residents from local shelters into motels and hotels to promote social distancing. It then added four large trailers to serve 20 more at-risk individuals near the Maple Street Homeless Shelter. The County is also partnered with other alternative care sites to shelter individuals needing to quarantine when exposed to COVID-19 or testing positive for the virus.

“The County of San Mateo is committed to offering and expanding shelter and housing to our homeless residents who want it,” said County Manager Mike Callagy.  “We are grateful of this funding from the state to support the mission of Project Roomkey and the County’s commitment to protecting the entire community while we are required to shelter in place.”

Jay Paul Company contributes $250K to Boys & Girls Club culinary program

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Photo by Dương Nhân from Pexels

Jay Paul Company has contributed $250,000 to support the Boys and Girls Club of the Peninsula’s (BGCP) culinary program, which has stepped up its services to community members in need during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Silicon Valley-based company added $70,000 to the $180,000 it contributes annually to the Redwood City clubhouse’s culinary program. The additional funding will cover one whole month of meals for the BGCP Community Meals program. Which has grown to serve 2,200 dinners to the community every weeknight, according to Eileen Tsai, director of donor relations for BGCP.

On March 19, shortly after the shelter-in-place orders began, the BGCP transitioned their programming to support a growing community need by serving to-go dinners out of their Redwood City and East Palo Alto club houses. That day alone, over 550 meals were served in just an hour, according to BGCP CEO Peter Fortenbaugh. Free meals are offered Monday through Friday. BGCP is also partnering with Second Harvest Food Bank to provide produce to-go boxes that are distributed on Wednesdays and Thursdays at the Redwood City club house and Fridays at the East Palo Alto club house.

The BGCP culinary program had proven its value long before the COVID-19 crisis. It serves to provide local youth with nutritious meals along with culinary arts and nutrition education programs. The Jay Paul Company has been a longtime supporter, having funded the renovation of the Redwood City Clubhouse’s kitchen in 2017, along with an outdoor garden area and gym.

“We see the value in having a state-of-the art kitchen,” said Maia Haris, Special Projects Manager, Jay Paul Company. “It not only provides a space to teach the students vocational training, but also allow the chefs on staff to cook amazing meals for the students to come together and eat on a daily basis.”

Those interested in contributing to BGCP’s program can click here. One to-go meal costs just $3, so donations both small and large can have a big impact. BGCP also encourages volunteers to assist the program. To learn more about getting involved as a volunteer, visit the organization’s Community Meal Volunteer page.

For more information about the Community Meals program, click here.

Photo by Dương Nhân from Pexels

Disclaimer: Adam Alberti, the publisher of Climate Magazine, is Managing Director at Singer Associates, Inc. The Jay Paul Company is represented by Singer Associates.

Man injured in Redwood City stabbing

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Redwood Ciy police announce new chief

A 32-year-old man has been arrested in connection with stabbing and injuring a 41-year-old man in the rear parking lot of a tire repair shop in Redwood City early Wednesday.

Officers responded to a report of a stabbing in the 1600 block of Broadway and found the victim in the rear parking lot of America’s Tire, according to the Redwood City Police Department. The victim told officers he was walking through the parking lot when the suspect approached and, without provocation, stabbed him in the neck and on the hand, police said.

The victim underwent emergency surgery for his injuries at Stanford Hospital.

Officers canvassed the neighborhood for witnesses and learned that 32-year-old Dennis Rodriguez had been walking near the scene. A witness who had been working on a car in the parking lot at the time of the attack positively identified Rodriguez as the attacker, police said.

Rodriguez was subsequently arrested and booked into the San Mateo County Jail for assault with a deadly weapon causing great bodily injury. The weapon used in the attack hasn’t been recovered.

Anyone that may have additional information regarding this incident is encouraged to contact Redwood City Police Detective Victor Figueroa at 650-780-7129 or the Redwood City Police Department’s Tip Line at 650-780-7107.

San Mateo County to launch online disaster evacuation tool this summer

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This summer, San Mateo County is set to install an online tool that provides both first responders and the public immediate evacuation information in the case of a wildfire, tsunami or other disaster.

The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors this week approved a three-year, $294,000 contract with Zonehaven to implement the new platform that allows agencies countywide to decide when and where to evacuate and to monitor evacuation route traffic in real time. It is also available in real time for the public to see if their zone is evacuated.

Last year, Supervisors Don Horsley spearheaded the effort to put the technology in place after observing a lack of “standardized and comprehensive evacuation planning and management process,” officials said. Since then, emergency response agencies throughout the county have spent hundreds of hours developing standardized emergency evacuation zones.

“This new evacuation platform ensures all of our emergency responders throughout the county have the ability to quickly and efficiently call for evacuations.” Horsley said. “This is particularly crucial for our Coastside residents, who have limited access points along Highway 1.”

The new platform is a “game-changer” in the ability to make quick decisions during a wildfire, said Deputy Fire Chief Jonathan Cox of CAL FIRE San Mateo County (pictured).

“It will empower us to get evacuation orders to the public quicker, and more importantly it will provide live evacuation information to the public we serve,” Cox said.

Redwood City Library offers virtual parrot show

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http://www.happybirds.com/

The Redwood City Library will present the final of three free online parrot shows on Saturday, May 23.

Happy Birds Live, which showcase parrots that can talk, sing, and perform over 25 tricks, will take place from 11-11:30 a.m.

RSVP to secure your spot, as there is a limited number of Zoom access codes. Email Heriberto Madrigal at hmadrigal@redwoodcity.org to confirm interest for the May 23 show, and state how many people in your household will be watching.

Access codes will be granted on a first-come-first served basis, and will be emailed out by 5 pm the day before each performance. This event is sponsored by Friends of the Library Bookstore.

To visit Happy Birds and learn how to book virtual shows, visit its website by clicking here.

Photo credited to the Happy Birds website.

Theaters and nightclubs are closed, but performers and impresarios look for ways to soldier on

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This spring and summer should have brought new plays and music, the Redwood City Fourth of July Parade, concerts and movie nights in Courthouse Square, the San Carlos Chickens’ Ball and Hometown Days, and a wealth of other cultural activities on the mid-Peninsula.

Instead, theaters and clubs went dark, and people got reacquainted with Netflix.

In mid-April, as this is being written, the usual nighttime bustle of Broadway in Redwood City and Laurel Street in San Carlos has disappeared. Music haunts like Angelicas Bistro and Savanna Jazz are shuttered. Likewise the Fox Theatre, the Dragon Theatre and Broadway by the Bay. The Fourth of July Parade and the Chickens’ Ball have been cancelled. Hometown Days has been switched to August.

If it’s not quite the day the music died, then it’s close.

Ernie Schmidt, general manager of the Fox Theatre on Broadway in downtown Redwood City, says the organization has already lost around $100,000 in bookings since the coronavirus shutdown order came in March. Up the street at the Dragon, co-directors Max Koknar and Alika Spencer-Koknar put the worst-case estimate at $300,000, assuming the theater doesn’t reopen until possibly September.

Among the hardest-hit are performing artists whose income has largely evaporated. Local folk singer Jim Stevens earns the bulk of his living playing for residents of elder-care facilities. In an average month, he books 25 performances. Except for one monthly session over Facetime, that has all gone away. For the foreseeable future, he’s relying on his position as a part-time musician at St. Charles Church in San Carlos, along with his wife’s salary from her job as a nurse scientist at Stanford Healthcare.

Palo Alto-based Wiley Rankin operates Jump for Joy Music, which provides musical education and entertainment, mainly to preschools. He has seen his income dip by two-thirds, with the remaining one-third coming from gigs via “Zoomcasts” and other online forums.

This story was originally published in the May edition of Climate Magazine. To view the magazine online, click on this link.

Through that, however, Rankin senses opportunity. His performances over Zoom have reached more than 90 families each, leading him to a greater exploration of Internet-based production. That, in turn, has opened him to the potential for expanding his business beyond the Bay Area, and he hopes to re-establish his full income by mid-summer.

“Adversity,” he says, “is a good teacher.”

The combination of tough times and technology has brought together performers from throughout the Bay Area on a Facebook site called, “Quarantined Cabaret.” Founded by Saratoga actor Becky Owens, the members-only site has attracted more than 600 thespians, musicians and other creative people. It offers open-mic-style, livestreamed performances on Friday nights, as well as numerous songs, dramatic scenes and readings recorded by members. An especially poignant performance features South Bay actor Geoffrey Silk singing “MacArthur Park,” the oft-recorded 1968 song by Jimmy Webb that fuses feelings of love, loss and hope.

Tough Times

Owens says the Friday-night shows give participants and audience members “something to look forward to” during a time when every day seems to fade into the next. She notes that the performers, many of whom have played leading roles in local theater productions, “are really taking the time to practice. They’re still staying in touch with their craft. I think that’s really important, when it’s easy to just fall into being depressed or unmotivated when the thing that you love comes to a sudden stop, like it has.”

Many of the performances on the site, she says, have been family acts, including one from a friend and her children in Owens’s native New Hampshire. Of that, Owens says, “I think even beyond being able to give us a chance to practice, it gives us a chance to connect, even with the people in our own home, in a new way.”

In San Carlos, the 100-plus volunteers in the Chickens’ Ball had completed their dress rehearsal and were preparing for a March 13 opening night when the show was cancelled. Modeled after the event of the same name on 19th-century San Francisco’s Barbary Coast, the lavishly costumed, biennial program raises money for cultural education in the San Carlos public schools.

Even with the seven-night show called off – for the first time in its 80-year history, according to General Chair Mona Klein – the event still performed in the black. Sponsorships and advance ticket sales netted $16,000 for the school district, with many sponsors and ticket holders converting their investments into donations. The amount raised compares with $40,000 from the previous show, in 2018.

Klein says no decisions have been made about a possible future performance, noting that the ball’s steering committee currently “does not have a pathway. With shelter-in-place, we don’t know what the next few months will bring.”

Falling Back

Also in San Carlos, the directors of the city’s annual Hometown Days celebration are betting that life will be back to some version of normal by the end of August. Originally set for May 15 to 17, the three-day event, including its colorful parade along Laurel Street, has been rescheduled for August 28 to 30.

Board Chair Adrienne Werner notes that, early in its 40-year history, Hometown Days was held in the fall, so this year’s new dates represent at least a brief return to the past.

“We hope that moving the date will not impact our participation and the feel of our event,” Werner says. “With it being a week and a half after school starts and right before Labor Day, it will kind of be hopefully something fresh, something new, something for people to look forward to, and fill the start of the school year with a little bit of hope and community pride.”

In Redwood City, fans of floats, marching bands and silver-laden horses won’t be so lucky. Soon after the shelter-in-place order in March, the Peninsula Celebration Association cancelled its annual Fourth of July Parade. Chris Beth, Redwood City’s director of parks, recreation and community services, says that will also be the case for city-sponsored events during the two or three months.

“We want to be very conservative and cautious, and as we are following the (San Mateo County) health order, see what makes sense,” Beth says. “We can make assumptions, too, that we won’t have regular programming through the first part of the summer, and I would say that would be June and July. But nothing’s been formalized or announced yet. This is in discussion (among city officials throughout San Mateo County and the county health department), this is what we are thinking, and we’re really going to get our cues from the county health official.”

Even when entertainment venues reopen, the question remains: Will audiences return? What will an audience look like? Will social distancing still be required? Savanna Jazz in San Carlos holds just 50 patrons, squeezed into a tight space. The Dragon Theatre seats only a few dozen more. Alika Spencer-Koknar of the Dragon and Pascal Bokar Thiam, proprietor of Savanna Jazz, both worry that people will be reluctant to come back.

Afraid to Gather

“There’s a kind of a feeling that, until there’s a vaccine, people are going to be afraid to congregate and go back into a small theater,” Spencer-Koknar says. “And also, coming back, when we are allowed to congregate again, there will most likely be a lot of regulations, so we’re trying to keep all of those permutations in mind.”

Thiam observes that jazz audiences tend to be older, and thus more at risk to the virus than younger listeners. He’s concerned they might be wary about jamming into a small venue, even after some sort of all-clear is given.

For the present, like many small-business owners, Thiam is just hunkering down.

“Right now, it’s very difficult to make any kinds of plans,” he says, predicting Savanna might feel the effects of the virus for up to two years. In the meantime, he has income from music-teaching positions at the University of San Francisco and City College of San Francisco, and his wife, Vicki Lawlor, also a teacher, has her salary from the Redwood City public schools.

Even so, the club is closed, and bills are stacking up. It’s the same at the Dragon, where Max Koknar says the theater’s patrons and friends donated $12,000 in the last two weeks of March to cover rent. Koknar says the theater’s landlord, Premier Properties, has been both understanding and committed to helping keep the organization in business.

To stay afloat, he says he and Spencer-Koknar have been “throwing things at the wall to see what sticks.” That includes, among other offerings, online theater and playwriting classes, and readings of public-domain works (Edgar Allan Poe has been an audience favorite).

For Koknar, the issue is not just the Dragon’s continued existence, but also a mandate that he feels to help people through a troubled period.

“I think now is a time more than ever where people are stuck in their homes and are feeling isolated and lonely and looking for ways to make sense of what is happening in the world around them,” Koknar says. “And that’s what the arts are supposed to do. And we are a nonprofit organization. Dragon is a service organization. If we don’t have a way to serve, why do we get to survive this when – let’s be honest – there are so many organizations in the small, nonprofit arts sphere that are going to get hit by this and are likely not going to survive this?”

Audiences aren’t the only ones who need the arts. Actors and musicians don’t just perform to live; they live to perform. Lacking venues with viewers, that has become a problem. For the most part, performers – and promoters – have taken a stunning financial hit. And what the future brings, nobody knows. But with a bit of ingenuity and a liberal dash of technology, it appears that in a few corners, at least for now, the show may go on.

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