
- Written by: Mark Prell
A Sonoma County sheriff's candidate forum drew in a capacity crowd of 100 to the Zoom platform on January 25.
For just over ninety minutes, South Park community members weighed the words of three candidates running for Sonoma County sheriff. Each candidate was asked a similar set of prepared questions, after their initial remarks.
Annette Arnold of the South Park Coalition neighborhood group, which hosted the forum, started off by clarifying why she didn't invite all candidates...
"Because I didn't invite any of the candidates," Arnold explained to forum attendees. "The candidates contacted me."
Arnold said Dave Edmonds first contacted her back in November, Carl Tennenbaum called her in December, and she heard from Kevin Burke in the weeks leading up to the event. Arnold said she set the format of the forum not knowing who all is in the race and gave each candidate thirty minutes to speak and answer questions.
The fourth candidate for sheriff, current Sonoma County Assistant Sheriff Eddie Engram did contact Arnold the weekend before the event and had to be turned down.
"I said no because we already had this arranged and it's already going an hour and a half long, and I know from past experience with these meetings that we lose people after a while," Arnold said. "So, that wouldn't have been fair to anybody that came on too late."
With that clarification out of the way, Dave Edmonds spoke first. Retired San Francisco police officer Carl Tennenbaum spoke second. You'll hear from him today.
Former Healdsburg police chief Kevin Burke was third to speak. His comments are included in a separate story.
Tennenbaum said he worked his entire career in San Francisco.
"I joined the San Francisco police department in 1981," Tennenbaum said. "I spent the two years prior to that as a paramedic on the city ambulances working the streets of San Francisco. Throughout my 32-year career as a police officer, I worked in many diverse communities in San Francisco: Chinatown, North Beach, the Tenderloin, the Bayview/Hunters Point, Japantown, the Mission District... and in every one of those neighborhoods, I learned the different needs of those communities, and the one common denominator was that everybody in those communities wanted to be heard. And that's something that I Iearned was very important. Having done that for thirty-two years, when I retired eight years ago, I left the city that I loved, and I adopted Sonoma County as my new community. And since I've been here, I've been very involved in a lot of the issues that we face like every other community in the United States, and I want to take my expertise and my experience as a San Francisco police officer and bring it here and address the problems with the sheriff's office."
Tennebaum was asked about how he would improve relations between the sheriff's office and the Latinx community. He says the simple answer is "outreach," and he drew on his experience walking the beat.
"The best thing that a deputy can do, or that I can do as the sheriff is to be out there in the community listening to what the community needs, hearing what issues are plaguing the community, what the problems are, and also trying to get people to understand it's going to be a kinder, gentler sheriff's office where people are going to feel comfortable and comforted by seeing us,” he said.
When asked if, as sheriff, he will promise to release the data necessary to determine if systemic racism exists in the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office , Tennenbaum's answer was succinct.
"Yes, I do," he said.
Tennenbaum is a long-standing supporter of IOLERO, the county's Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach, which has an official mission to strengthen relationships between the sheriff's office and the community. He said he was active in getting it created by the county board of supervisors in 2015. When asked about holding deputies accountable for their actions, Tennenbaum leaned-in to that relationship.
"I would hold deputies accountable for their actions by partnering with IOLERO and with whatever internal affairs or inner investigative body that we have and legitimately holding those deputies accountable," he said.
He also believes that most officers and deputies go to work and maintain professional standards but the scope of police work is often complicated.
"There are going to be encounters with people that are hostile or violent, and there are also going to be days when the deputies are not on their best behavior," Tennenbaum said. "However, when a deputy makes an error or mistake, or screws up, or even if it's something done maliciously, they're going to have to be held accountable for it,."
Tennenbaum was also asked how he would combat the "good old boys club."
He chuckled briefly, then said it's a sad commentary on where we are that people have a justifiable perception that the club even exists. He added if elected sheriff, he would combat that perception with a top to bottom change in philosophy and command staffing.
"I will bring in high-ranking administrative officials who embody the new spirit of what we are doing," Tennenbaum said. "Police work is changing. Police work is evolving. People have higher expectations of more professionalism. And breaking up or impacting the good old boys network would also be manifested on the ground level by actively and aggressively recruiting people who represent the community, who are not part of the good boy's network, or syndrome, or system, or whatever you want to call it."
When asked about how he would deal with white supremacy in law enforcement, he had this firm answer.
"There's no place for it," Tennenbaum said. "There's no place for any hate-based or extremist views of any type. And that's a matter I think of national security concern right now, with the domestic terrorism we have going on right now. Yes. So, it's something that has to be rooted out right away."

- Written by: Mark Prell
It was a capacity crowd on Zoom for a Sonoma County sheriff candidate forum held January 25.
One hundred members of the South Park community appeared attentive to what each candidate for Sonoma County sheriff had to say, and each candidate was asked a similar set of prepared questions, after their initial remarks.
Annette Arnold of the South Park Coalition neighborhood group, which hosted the forum, started off by answering why she didn't invite all the candidates.
"The reason is because I didn't invite any of the candidates. The candidates contacted me," Arnold said.
She explained Dave Edmunds contacted her back in November, Carl Tennenbaum called her in December, and she got a call from Kevin Burke just a few weeks ago.
Arnold said she set the format of the forum not knowing who all is in the race and gave each candidate thirty minutes to speak and answer questions.
The fourth candidate for sheriff, current Sonoma County Assistant Sheriff Eddie Engram, did contact Arnold the weekend before the event and had to be turned down.
"I said no because we already had this arranged and it's already going an hour and a half long,” she explained. “And I know from past experience with these meetings that we lose people after a while. So, that wouldn't have been fair to anybody that came on too late."
With that clarification out of the way, Dave Edmonds was up first. Retired San Francisco police officer Carl Tennenbaum and former Healdsburg police chief Kevin Burke also participated in the forum. Their comments are included in a separate story.
Edmonds is a retired 32-year veteran of the very department he now wants to lead. Save for two years as a police officer in Hanford, California, his entire law enforcement career was with the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office.
"I did nine years on patrol and while I was there I was in the field training program,” he said. “I was a field training officer. In fact, I trained many new recruits. I was on the SWAT team. After patrol I did four years in the violent crimes/homicide unit and I worked on a lot of cases that all of you have heard about if you've been in Sonoma County for a while, including I was the lead investigator on the Ramon Salcido mass murders. I pushed hard as a detective for four years and then I was promoted to sergeant. I did that for eight years and while I was there, I was in charge of the field training program. I was the lieutenant in charge of the investigation bureau for three years. And then finally I did six years at the command rank of captain."
Edmonds said his depth and breadth of experience within the department sets him apart and makes him uniquely qualified to now lead the sheriff's office.
He said he didn't really want to get out of law enforcement when he retired eight years ago, but felt it was time to move on to something new. Edmonds said he disdains politics, and said he was asked to run in this election by folks who see him as a positive change agent.
"I am the change candidate," Edmonds said. "I've got big visions. I write about these things nationally. Almost every chief and sheriff gets a copy of the magazine that I'm the content director and editor for."
Edmonds said we are in a truly unique time in law enforcement.
"These calls to reform law enforcement, I'm deeply involved in that on the statewide-level right now," Edmonds said. "I want to create a Sonoma County Sheriff's Office that is widely respected by this community. That is a model even nationwide. It is doable and I'm excited about it. I want to be your sheriff and cause that to happen."
When asked about improving relations with our Latinx community, he said he believes it is a recruitment problem.
"Our staff needs to mirror the community we serve," he said. "I am going to change the recruitment program so we invest in that community. Especially so that the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office can represent the demographics that we serve."
When asked about releasing data necessary to determine if systemic racism exists in the department, his answer was unequivocal.
"Absolutely. I think the brighter you turn up the lights, the better we need to look," he said. "And I need to get back in there and have a close look for myself. That should not be secret information right now."
Edmonds also said he would support independent oversight of his office.
"The director of IOLERO is a department head," Edmonds said. "There's 28 departments in the county. I will be one department head. The director of IOLERO is equal to me at that level with the county. He or she is going to be a partner for me, and you're going to see a positive relationship with them."
Edmonds also praised the city of Santa Rosa's new InResponse program, which sends mental health professionals to some calls, rather than armed officers. He said he hopes he can create partnerships to deploy a similar program county-wide.
He expressed unity with health department orders like mask mandates, and says he would foster a "guardian" spirit among deputies and staff, rather than a "warrior" mindset.

- Written by: Marc Albert

Read more: Regulators to help cannabis growers navigate path to permits
- Written by: Katy St. Clair/Bay City News
Growers, normally required to pay taxes quarterly, have been given an extension from the original due date of Jan. 31 to April 30, with no penalties or extra fees.
Problems for legal growers in the county stem from its plants-per-square foot taxation model rather than taking the taxes from a cultivator's gross profits. Basically, if you grow 1,000 plants, you are taxed based on the square feet they take up, not how much money you earned from them. So when the price of your crop drops from, say $900 to $300 per pound, as was mentioned at the supervisors' meeting, you are paying the same taxes for the same volume of plants but bringing in much less money.
Green Market Report, a cannabis industry publication, said that prices in California went into "freefall" last year, declining 34% from June to December of 2021.
But not even the tax reprieve in Sonoma County will help farmers there who have seen cannabis retail prices drop precipitously while state and local taxes either rose or gobbled up a chunk of their bottom line.
Andrew Douglas "Doug" Gardner is a grower in Sonoma County who entered the cultivation business seven years ago after discovering the healing powers of CBD, he said, which he swears by for management of his epilepsy.
Gardner claims that he has the largest legal cannabis farm in the county, at 45,560 acres. He has the capacity to grow 4,000 pounds worth of product. He also has an MBA and a proud cannabis pedigree--his father, Fred, has been a long-time proponent of cannabis and edits "O'Shaughnessy's", a journal focused on the health and medicinal properties of the plant.
Gardner may have the brains, skill, and passion for the business, yet he says that crippling overhead coupled with having to compete with a robust black market will most likely push him out of the business.
"Most of the farmers including myself have lost money this year," he said.
He and his wife have had to take out a second mortgage on their house and have maxed their home equity line of credit in an effort to remain in the cannabis business in California, he said, and the County of Sonoma is not helping matters.
On Jan. 4, Gardner told the board of supervisors that it makes more sense financially for him to destroy entire crops instead of selling them.
He explained it this way: Let's say he grows a crop with very little overhead---he has his own seeds, a natural water supply, etc. He would still have to pay someone to process his plants, which involves trimming, drying, and getting them ready for sale. That costs about $200 per pound, he said. Then he has to pay the county $80 per pound because he grew the plants in 36 square feet. Add on other costs, and he is nearing $300, which is the average price per pound currently, he said. He not only makes zero profit, he's actually put $300 per pound of his own money into getting the pot to market and paying the taxes.
Sonoma County cultivator Eric Pearson also spoke to the board of supervisors at the Jan 4. meeting. He said that in 2017, when the cultivation tax was first being discussed, a pound of cannabis was worth $1200. The square-foot taxation model translated to about 3% of someone's gross at that time. Now that pot is worth $300 a pound, the tax rate is, for all intents and purposes, 10% to 12%, he said. At a 25% profit margin, he's looking at nearly 50% of his profits going to county taxes.
All of this is just fueling the black market, says Gardner, which is sadly one of the easiest ways to make a profit in the business. Illegal growers can cut corners and avoid taxes and other fees, which results in a product that is cheaper than that which is sold in dispensaries.
Gardner has a few ideas that he hopes will take hold in Sonoma County. His first hope is that cannabis cultivation can evolve the way that the wine business has, with vintners selling directly to their consumers through "wine clubs" and the like, eliminating any middlemen or liquor stores.
He envisions something like a $420 "My Bud Club" where an annual or monthly rate connects a customer with a quality product--sort of the Hello Fresh or Netflix of cannabis.
As for the board of supervisors, he has the following ideas: First, significantly increase the penalties for illegal grows. Second, reduce or suspend the square foot tax so that people entering into the legal marketplace can compete.
"By allowing the legal growers to actually compete with the black market growers, maybe that would eliminate the black market naturally," he said
County tax collector Erick Roeser told the board of supervisors that there are approximately 170 legal cannabis cultivators in Sonoma County. The median annual tax revenue collected by them is $2.5 million, according to the county.
The board agreed to a discussion about more long-term relief options for growers at its March 15 meeting.

Read more: SoCo cannabis growers get tax reprieve, though for some it may be too late
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- What We Need to Know: COVID in Sonoma County
- Santa Rosa Nurses Demand Safe Staffing
- Sonoma County Opens its First Clinic for Oldest Seniors
- County Strategizes Reopening Schools
- PBS Employee Makes Controversial Statements on Hidden Camera
- Sonoma County Extends Stay-At-Home Order
- Understanding the New Regional Stay-At-Home Orders
- Radio Special: Democracy In Santa Rosa's First District
- Groups Come Together Dec. 9 to Consider Grief, Healing
- Rohnert Park Welcomes Three New Council Members
- ‘She’s From Oakland!’ Photos Capture Bay Area Celebrations of Biden-Harris Win
- California Protects Homeowners From Having Fire Insurance Dropped — Again
- Slated For Deception? Beware of All Those Glossy Mailers Telling You How to Vote
- SCHOOL CLOSURE Announcement for Tuesday, October 27, 2020
- Election 2020: Results, Voter Guides and More
- Santa Rosa Metro Chamber Hosts City Council Candidate Forum
- Annual State of the Latino Community Covers Gaps in Home Ownership
- Photojournalist Describes Monday Night's Firefight
- Sonoma County Learns From Past Botched Care Home Evacuations
- Watch Cal Fire and Sonoma County's Glass Fire Updates
- Sonoma County Glass Fire Evacuation Map: Updated Live
- Evacuation Orders Lifted for Some Santa Rosa Neighborhoods
- SCHOOL CLOSURES for Thursday, October 1 & Friday, October 2, 2020…
- Sonoma County Supervisors Vote on 2020-2021 Budget
- Could Strong DAs Be a Solution to Police Accountability?
- Conversations on Race Series Addresses Policy Reform (Aired: September 3, 2020)
- The West Is Burning, So California Struggles To Find Help Fighting Its Wildfires
- Kaiser Begins Phase 3 COVID-19 Vaccine Trial in Northern California
- LNU Lightning Complex Online Structure Damage Map Now Available
- Crew Shortage Reveals California's Reliance on Incarcerated Firefighters
- Farmworkers Risk Hazardous Air to Continue the Harvest
- Timely Film Tells Story of Napa, Sonoma Essential Workers
- Concern Workers Are Being Asked To Harvest Despite Smoke
- Sonoma County Reassures Voters Ahead of Election
- In Sebastopol, Out in the Streets for the Post Office
- Sonoma County Celebrates Centennial Of Women's Suffrage
- Make Your Voice Count! Community Meeting Sept. 9, 7:00 pm
- Officials Urge Residents to Prepare for High Fire Conditions
- Trump Withheld Calif. Wildfire Aid Says Former DHS Official
- Vox Video on Changing Approaches to Election Coverage
- Board of Supervisors Rejects County Sheriff's Request to Fund Legal Services
- Community Action Partnership Hosts Discussion on Law Enforcement Accountability
- Health Officials Warn Against Ending Protections For Renters
- CEO Discusses Racism and Starting a Sonoma County Business
- Changes to Police Oversight Set for November Ballot
- Local High Schoolers Are Finalists in NPR Podcast Contest
- Sonoma County School Districts Move Carefully To Reopening
- Sonoma County Report Finds Santa Rosa Police Violated Protesters' Rights
- Sebastopol Celebrates Black Lives Matter in Art - Photos
- Could Looser Cannabis Permit Requirements Help Boost Tax Revenue?
- Local Organization Works To Get Everyone Counted On The 2020 Census
- Board of Supervisors To Vote On Ordinance To Strengthen Sheriff's Office Oversight
- KBBF Informe: Licencia Por Enfermedad Remunerada, Paid Sick Leave
- Lawyer in Voting Rights Cases Faces Death Threats
- Cómo postularse para ocupar un cargo para el consejo municipal en su ciudad o pueblo
- BLM @ SRJC - July 11, 2020 - Photo Essay by Diane Askew
- Santa Rosa Activist Describes What Defunding The Police Could Look Like
- Filing Period For Running For Santa Rosa City Council Now Open
- Board of Supervisors To Consider Ordinance Strengthening Law Enforcement Oversight
- San Francisco Mime Troupe Pivots to Radio This COVID Summer
- Sonoma County Reports 14 Covid Related Deaths With Five Tied To Skilled Nursing Facilities
- Independence Day? How About Interdependence? Photo Story
- Lawsuit Against County Sheriff's Office Points to Numerous Brutality Cases
- Santa Rosa City Council to Vote on Emergency Sick Leave
- Hope, Strength, Protest. Another Story in Photos
- Cycle for Life Celebrates Black Lives Matter and Pride
- Applications for CalFresh Double During the Coronavirus Pandemic
- DACA Recipient Reflects On Supreme Court Decision to Uphold Protections for Dreamers
- Informe en Español: KBBF Hosts Special On Black Lives Matter Movement
- Could Racially Motivated 911 Calls Become Hate Crimes?
- Community Action Partnership Hosts Conversations On Race Series
- North Bay Report: Santa Rosa City Schools Board Considers Making Ethnic Studies A Requirement
- BLM Protests Continue in Santa Rosa - Candlelight Photos
- Supreme Court DACA Decision Gives Hope in Tough Time
- Supreme Court Bars Trump From Ending DACA — What It Means For California ‘Dreamers’
- Healdsburg Mayor Resigns Over Failure To Address Police Reform
- Protesters Remember Silent Parade of 1917
- ‘Things have gotten ugly’ — pandemic pushback drives health directors to quit
- County Coronavirus Health Disparities Continue To Grow
- Supreme Court LGBTQ Decision To Have Profound Impact
- Radio Update: Why Latinx Community Bears COVID Burden
- Santa Rosa's Draft Budget Shows An Increase In Funding For The Police Department
- Radio Update: School Board Statement, Supervisors Commit
- Radio Update: Podcast Discusses Disproportionate Impacts of COVID-19 on Latinx Community
- Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office Bans Use Of Carotid Holds
- Minority Leader Schumer Tackles Pandemic Housing Issues
- Even In A Pandemic, WHO Believes That Public Protests Are Important
- Police Monitor Applauds Cooperation, Seeks Truth on Arrests
- Author Ibram X. Kendi Speaks About His Book "How To Be An Antiracist"
- Diane Askew's Images Capture Anger, Grief in Sonoma
- Community College Chief Wants Police Training Changes
- NorCal Outreach to Latinx Community Recognized Nationally
- Your Coronavirus Questions, Answered: Recent Protests, Access to Testing And More
- Is Now the Time to Bring Back Affirmative Action in California?
- In Information Age, Many Californians Struggle to Stay Informed