By Shepherd Bliss
Rural
folk from four Northern California counties came in mid-April to a magical juncture
where the life-giving Russian River empties into the majestic Pacific Ocean.
Though the small, unincorporated village of Jenner is a popular recreational
destination, pleasure was not the intention.
Jenner, CA by Sarah M. Kanzler |
Our
mission was to preserve agrarian lifestyles and environments from further
colonization by industrial wineries. Large corporate wineries--owned mainly by outside
investors--were the main target.
Water
and California’s worsening drought were discussed. Some reported that wells had
gone dry after large wineries dug as much as 1000 feet into the ground to
extract precious, limited water for their factories.
It
takes about 30 gallons of water to make one glass of wine. “Our water is being
exported,” reported one person.
Misleading message. |
FROM
AGRICULTURE TO MONOCULTURE
Sonoma
County currently has 70,000 acres (and growing) of wine grapes and only 12,000
acres of food crops. As grapegrower Bill Shortridge says, “We've
gone from an agriculture that benefitted all, to a monoculture that benefits a
few.” Modifying
an old statement, “One cannot live by wine alone.”
So
what’s the beef? Big Wine controls around 80% of the market in Sonoma County.
They take more than their fair share of the water we all need to survive,
garden, hydrate our families, pets, plants, and farm animals.
Forty
activists from Napa, Sonoma, Lake, and Mendocino counties circled up outside that
afternoon and began describing their diverse local situations. The grill soon
started for the potluck. After an hour and a half, “Let’s eat!” could be heard.
Get rid of weeds and fertilize the crop. |
After
dinner, our numbers had doubled to around 40 for the public part of our time
together. Our host Ken Sund explained why he initiated this gathering, “After
seeing our coastal hills get industrialized, I decided to invite people here.
Jenner has a history of community activism.”
Agriculture to Monoculture. |
Six
people spoke about their respective struggles, mainly with wineries doing
things such as creating event centers, cutting redwood forests, crawling up
hills, snarling traffic by tasting rooms on dangerous, narrow rural roads, hording
limited water supplies, and a host of other problems.
Will Parrish. |
Mendocino
County’s Will Parrish is an investigative reporter, who writes for AVA
(Anderson Valley Advertiser). He is featured in the acclaimed new documentary
“Russian River: All Rivers.” It reveals how the over-proliferation of the wine
industry damages the Russian River watershed. Parrish described the extensive
power of the wine industry in our region and the many ways it influences land
use and other decisions that directly impact people and the environment.
PRESERVE
RURAL SONOMA COUNTY
Former
Sonoma County Planning Commissioner Rue Furch spoke for the new Preserve Rural
Sonoma County. It focuses on the recent application by the Napa Wagner wine
family for the Dairyman Winery and Distillery on the fast-moving, two lane Highway
12, a greenbelt community separator between Santa Rosa and Sebastopol. “It’s
already a commute deadlock on that highway. People back up for miles,” Furch
observed.
Rue Furch. |
“We
need a cost/benefit analysis,” said Furch. “The drought is a tipping point
moment. We know the benefits of agriculture, tourism and tax dollars. We need
to fully understand the costs, such as water use, traffic, air quality, and
changes in land use. We enjoy the benefits
of agriculture and open space, and need to support those while we deal with the
expanding impacts of tourism,” Furch added.
“You
are not alone,” Furch said, citing community groups from around the region. One
of the main accomplishments of this gathering was that participants saw the
similarities and differences in our diverse struggles.
A
primary objection expressed at the meeting was regarding wineries that become
event centers, complete with restaurants. They host all kinds of non-agricultural
events in areas zoned for ag. and as rural. As someone said at another meeting,
“The right to farm is not the right to party.”
BIG
WINE IS OUT OF CONTROL
“The
wine industry is out of control today. It pushes for maximum profit,” explained
Geoff Ellsworth of St. Helena, Napa County. He was raised in a wine family.
“Our town has become an adult spring break. This is like an invasive species.
The big corporations do strip mining.”
“Our
issue is an application by Wild Diamond Vineyard by a Miami developer,”
explained Karl Giovacchini of the Hidden Valley Lake Watershed group. It wants
to border a subdivision of 6000 people. “Water issues are key for us. We are a
small, poor county and vineyards represent a lot of money coming in. But they
top off mountains and draw water from our limited aquifers.” As wineries run
out of land and water in Sonoma and Napa, they move to nearby Lake and
Mendocino, buying cheaper land, to further colonize them.
Giovacchini
addressed the “burn-out issue.” He reported on a five-year struggle against a
vineyard. One of the things that can work against burn-out is the development of
friendships, where people support each other as they work against vineyard and
winery over-extension. The Jenner gathering contributed to building community and
sharing information across county lines, thus making new allies.
"You can make water into wine, but
you can’t make wine into water,” is a tag line that Giovacchini’s partner
Alicia Lee Farnsworth came up for their website Vineyard Wine Watch.
Audience members asked questions and
made comments after the six panelists spoke. “Development in general and its impacts on
our natural resources must be attended to,” commented Charlotte Williams of
Citizens for Green Community in Calistoga. After meeting in Lake and Sonoma,
the third meeting of the group is scheduled for Calistoga in Napa for May 2.
BIG
WINE VIOLATIONS
Paul Hobbs clear-cutting of old Redwoods is typical of vineyard operations. |
Big
Wine regularly violates its permits and other rules, and is seldom held
accountable. Dairyman settled for $1 million with Napa in 2013 for bottling 20
times as much as their permit. “Bad apple” Paul Hobbs settled for $100,000 with
Sonoma County for three violations, including clear cutting redwood trees and
soil erosion, for which he was liable for millions of dollars in fines.
It
is illegal to have restaurants in areas zoned for agriculture, yet Big Wine
does it regularly. St. Francis even brags about doing so on its website: http://www.stfranciswinery.com/culinary/wine-food-pairing/.
They flaunt their
excessive power.
As one
person at the meeting said, “If
it walks like a restaurant and it quacks like a restaurant, it is a
restaurant.”
“We
favor town-centered development. That is the purpose of small towns. We are
losing that,” mentioned one person.
(Shepherd
Bliss {3sb@comcast.net} teaches college, farms, and has contributed
to 24 books.