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What Price Paradise?
That's
the question posed by The Boomtown Chronicles, an hour-long
radio documentary from award-winning producer RACHEL ANNE GOODMAN
about what the county's housing crisis is doing to our community.
Goodman describes
the show, which will be broadcast Monday, Jan. 24, on KUSP-FM (88.9),
as "a snapshot of how we're doing." She says Santa Cruz is not unique
in its situation--just unique in how extreme the situation has become.
With the median
price of a home hitting $639,000 and prices rising 26 percent last
year, Goodman notes that a couple each need to earn $21.50 an hour
to afford the average mortgage here.
All of which
makes for great, "tell me abouddit!" listening, as Goodman pieces
together the transition from $50 rents a few decades ago to million-dollar
cottages today, and how this staggering leap has found some people
living in chicken coops and worse just to survive.
Featuring
interviews with fifth generation rancher DIANA COOLEY, author
JAMES HOUSTON, historian J.S. HOLLIDAY, Salinas Mayor
ANNA CABALLERO, U.S. Rep. SAM FARR, house hunter JUAN
MENDOZA, PAUL JOHNSON of the CENTRAL LABOR COUNCIL,
JANE BARR of the MID-PENINSULA HOUSING CORP., and
community advocate SABINO LOPEZ, not to mention Realtors
and surfers, the show has already been picked up by stations in
Chicago and Seattle, perhaps in an effort to learn from what we're
going through.
Either way,
The Boomtown Chronicles captures the heat on the street here,
in ways Nüz could definitely identify with. Take the guy who
says, "If you can find a house for under 400,000, it's going to
be a shack," and James Houston, saying of the Keep Santa Cruz
Weird bumper sticker, "There's something dangerous about that,
but at the same time, it's kind of wonderful." Or Goodman asking,
"How can you be a street artist with a $3,000 mortgage?"
So what to
do when the average rent is $1,800? Goodman concludes that affordable
housing, first-time home buyer programs, self-help housing, deed
restrictions and intergovernmental cooperation help, but do not
address what she calls "the elephant in the room," namely PROP.
13.
The Boomtown
Chronicles airs Jan. 24 at 6pm on KUSP, and Feb. 10 at 10pm
on KAZU-FM (90.3).
Nader Hotbed
RALPH NADER--the
man Democrats blame for giving us the BUSH presidency in
2000, is at the Rio Theater 7pm, Jan. 24. "We never got here during
the campaign, yet Santa Cruz was one of the most supportive towns
in the country," explains Nader.
The activist-turned-candidate,
who ran as an independent last year, hopes funds raised at his talk
will help defray expenses incurred in his 2004 presidential bid,
costs which Nader says include fighting "21 phony lawsuits filed
by Democrats around the country to keep us off the ballots."
Noting that
he won nine out of 12 of those battles, Nader says, "We're winding
down our election campaign to ramp up the antiwar, anti-occupation
movement."
In Ralph's
opinion, the antiwar movement made a "serious mistake" by taking
2004 off to unite in an ANYONE BUT BUSH campaign.
"The 'least
worst' mind-set is dominant, but that way you give up all your leverage,"
says Nader. He believes this show of unity left Sen. JOHN KERRY
believing he could "move towards Bush" on Iraq.
Nader also
blames the Democrats for the almost complete silence that followed
the IRAQ SURVEY GROUP's acknowledgment last week that SADDAM
HUSSEIN destroyed any WMDs and ended Iraq's nuclear program
after the PERSIAN GULF WAR in 1991.
"Little fuss
is being made because the Democrats were complicit, and voted heavily
for the war," claims Nader. Nader sees the race for chair of the
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE chair as "a good test" of where
the party is now.
"If the Democrats
reject HOWARD DEAN, as they likely will, then it'll be business
as usual," says Ralph.
While he's
not saying which political umbrella he'll be running under next,
he believes the GREEN PARTY's future lies in local candidates.
"The exclusionary
power of the two parties is extraordinary at national level, but
there were 2.5 million electoral seats at local level, many of which
went uncontested."
SCAP Flap
Holding signs
that claimed the SANTA CRUZ AIDS PROJECT is "Unfair to Workers,"
"Unaccountable to the Community" and "No Valera Latinos," a dozen
people demonstrated outside SCAP's Cooper Street office last Friday.
Former SCAP
employee LORALYN SOLOMON said she was picketing "because
SCAP's board fired the whole education and prevention team without
cause and without interviewing them," a move she found "insulting,"
she said, especially since the state has replicated in nine counties
the SCAP drop-in model that a freshly fired TIMOTHY MARONI
developed and put into practice here in Santa Cruz County.
Solomon also
claimed that SCAP staffers were told the firings were due to budget
restraints," adding that "supposedly executive director CHRISTOPHER
SMITH is hiring two friends from the Arizona AIDS project, which
is where he worked before."
Meanwhile,
a beanie-wearing Maroni, holding a sign that said "SCAP RIP 1985�2004,"
claimed that "90 percent of the words coming out of the mouths of
SCAP leaders are patently false, including the statistic that 63
percent of the budget has been cut. In reality, only one contract
has been cut that much."
Gesturing
at SCAP's office (which sits on the first floor above Metro Santa
Cruz's Cooper Street office), Maroni said, "No one in there
has proven anything, while we have our years of dedication and service
to the community to stand by."
When Nüz
ventured upstairs into said office to hear SCAP's side of the story,
a receptionist told us that Smith was "out sick," while incoming
board vice chair REBECCA HANSON said, "No comment."
All of which
means, Nüz supposes, that we must attend SCAP's Jan. 20 board
meeting, 6:30pm, First Floor, 113 Cooper St., to find out more of
what's going on.
Hot Dates
Even as Condi
Rice is being confirmed as the 66th secretary of state, despite
all those nagging questions about WMDs and Iraq, don't forget to
reclaim our democracy, Thursday, Jan. 20. That's when You the People
will be sworn in as Collective U.S. President Pro-Tem at a 4:30�5:45pm
rally at the county courthouse, 701 Ocean St., followed by a march
to the Collateral Damage Sculpture/Town Clock Park to mourn the
victims of war and call for an end to the Iraq Occupation. Participants
are asked to "wear white and bring drums, noisemakers, flowers,
a flashlight." Jan. 20 is also NOT ONE DAMN DIME DAY, a 24-hour
boycott to oppose what's happening in Iraq.
And please
remember "An Evening of Gospel Music," Friday, Jan. 21, 7pm, courtesy
of the local NAACP in honor of MARTIN LUTHER KING JR., at
Garfield Park Church, 111 Errett Circle on Santa Cruz's West Side,
and the annual MLK Jr. Banquet and Dance, Saturday, Jan. 22, 6pm,
at the Holy Cross Hall, 170 High St. Call 831.429.2266 for more
details.
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