From the archives, Post Ranch Inn:

From the archives, Post Ranch Inn:

I got 2 things in my inbox this afternoon about Fracking …
The first came via Dick Whittington from CREDO:
“The California Senate just caved to the fracking industry.
Dear Dick,
Yesterday, our fracking moratorium bill died on the floor of the California Senate because eight cowardly Democrats voted against it or chose not to cast a vote.
Democratic Senators Lou Correa, Cathleen Galgiani, Ed Hernandez, and Norma Torres joined Republicans in voting against the bill. And Democratic Senators Marty Block, Ben Hueso, Ricardo Lara and Richard Roth abstained from the final vote.
By caving to pressure from the oil industry, these senators made it clear that they care less about their constituents’ health, safety and prosperity than Big Oil’s money and political clout.
We always knew the fight in the Legislature would be difficult. The oil industry spent a jaw-dropping $15 million on lobbying during the 2013-2014 legislative session buying influence in Sacramento. But it’s still appalling, disappointing and deeply frustrating to see Democrats vote with Big Oil.
Still, this is just a temporary setback, not the end of the fight to ban fracking in California. An overwhelming majority of Californians oppose fracking, and they will not stop fighting to protect their communities from the public health risks, earthquakes, and climate change caused by this toxic method of oil extraction.
We want to hear from you about what CREDO should do next to fight fracking. Please click here and take a 30-second survey to help us decide what big fights to take on next.
CREDO activists played a key role in the fight to pass SB 1132. We submitted nearly 22,000 letters of support for the bill, reported making more than 2,300 calls in support of the bill, packed every committee hearing to speak out for the bill, and led a dozen meetings with our legislators to urge their support.
And, although the bill failed, most Democrats listened. Of the 16 Democrats who voted for Senator Holly Mitchell’s and Mark Leno’s bill, six — Senators Ellen Corbett, Mark DeSaulnier, Loni Hancock, Hannah-Beth Jackson, Ted Lieu and Lois Wolk — signed on as co-authors. Eight more — Senators Jim Beall, Kevin de León, Noreen Evans, Carol Liu, William Monning, Alex Padilla, Fran Pavley and Darrell Steinberg — voted for the bill yesterday. Senator Jerry Hill voted for the bill earlier in the week, but, according to his office, missed the vote yesterday because he wasn’t in the room.
We can’t afford to dwell on this defeat. The oil industry has a lot of power to get its way in Sacramento and a lot of money, but from the fight against the Keystone XL pipeline to local campaigns to ban fracking in cities across the country, we’ve seen the power of grassroots activism to overcome Big Oil — so we have to double down and keep organizing to protect California from fracking.”
The second came to me from the State of California:
“The California Department of Conservation (DOC) today is giving public notice regarding the re-adoption of interim regulations to govern oil and gas well stimulation treatment until DOC’s proposed permanent regulations are completed and become effective. The interim well stimulation regulations were initially established on January 1, 2014. The proposed permanent regulations were publicly noticed on
November 15, and DOC anticipates that the permanent regulations will be effective on January 1, 2015.
These interim regulations were established under an emergency rulemaking process to ensure that they were in place when Senate Bill 4 became effective on January 1, 2014. These interim rules ensure that there is a regulatory structure consistent with Senate Bill 4 in place for well stimulation activities between January 1, 2014 and January 1, 2015. However, state law states that emergency rulemaking such as these interim regulations only have a 6-month lifespan before they must be extended. This readoption of the Interim Regulations serves to extend those rules. The Notice of Proposed Emergency Rulemaking Action and the text of the SB 4 Interim Well Stimulation Treatment Regulations are attached. The emergency rulemaking process includes a limited opportunity to submit comments on the proposed regulations. Information about the process for submitting comments is included in the attached notice. (I have not included them here in this post.)
For more information about well stimulation treatment and DOC’s proposed regulations please visit http://www.conservation.ca.gov.”
I had meant to get this up this past weekend, but … I was busy dealing with jet lag. From the Sacramento Bee about a prior Big Sur Resident, who lived in Gorda, raising her children there. Her son, Paul, died here on the South Coast, when the car he was driving went west from Highway One.
Obituary: Betty Jo Rivers, 88, pursued adventure in life and archaeology
By Robert D. Dávila
bdavila@sacbee.com
Published: Sunday, May. 25, 2014 – 12:00 am
Betty Jo Rivers, an adventurous woman who mingled with intellectuals in post-war Paris and recorded stories of American slaves, pioneers and indigenous people on archaeological projects at California state parks, died May 9 of cancer, her family said. She was 88.
Before moving to Davis in 1976, Mrs. Rivers enjoyed a romantic life that took her from Paris to New York to the California coast. She went to France in 1949, studied at the Sorbonne and joined a community of artistic and literary expatriates, including James Baldwin and Richard Wright. She married a painter, returned to America in 1954 and worked for about a year as a copy editor at Sports Illustrated in New York.
Twice divorced, she was raising five children alone by the late 1960s in the Big Sur area, where she met and volunteered with archaeologists doing early survey work. She joined the California Department of Parks and Recreation and participated in digs that led to the discovery of remains from prehistoric villages along the rugged coastline.
Skilled at writing, researching and field work, Mrs. Rivers devoted herself to preserving the roots, history and culture of people on archaeological projects at state parks throughout California. During the 1970s, she edited publications about findings from excavations in Old Sacramento. She also took on personal projects, including a series of interviews she conducted with Ramsay Blake, an elder of the Pit River Indian tribe and one of the last remaining speakers of his Atsugewi band’s language.
Her most notable work included efforts to restore Colonel Allensworth State Historic Park, which the state purchased in 1974. The site marks the historic town of Allensworth, a Tulare County settlement founded in 1908 by former slave and Army chaplain Allen Allensworth and other settlers as a planned agricultural utopia for African Americans.
Besides shoveling dirt, Mrs. Rivers interviewed contemporary and past residents of the settlement, which had declined by the 1920s. She collected and shared stories about the community for the state parks website, including an overview about the the town’s First Baptist Church at tinyurl.com/RiversFBC.
“Betty was a very good listener,” retired state archaeologist Glenn Farris said. “She framed excellent questions, and she had a really good rapport with people. She came across as someone people could trust and feel good about.”
The daughter of an oil field pipe fitter and a schoolteacher, Betty Jo Robirds was born April 28, 1926, and raised in the Los Angeles area. A gifted child who learned to read at 2, she earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English and folklore at UC Berkeley.
A woman ahead of her time, she won a Fulbright scholarship to study in Paris and fell in love with Haywood Bill Rivers, an African American painter. To circumvent French laws forbidding interracial marriage at that time, they traveled to England and married in 1951.
They had four children and lived in Berkeley before the marriage ended in divorce. She married Donald Anderson in 1964 and had another child before the couple divorced after two years.
In her work as an archaeologist, Mrs. Rivers conducted research that was instrumental in the preservation of 9,000 acres in the Ventana Wilderness of the Los Padres National Forest. In Davis, she advocated for preservation and relocation of two historic homes to J and Third streets for use as cooperative housing.
Slight in build and quiet by nature, she was a warm, upbeat woman with a curious mind and genuine interest in people, friends said. A cancer survivor for more than nine years, she hosted annual gatherings for friends at her Davis home and pursued interests in the arts, history, literature, music and politics.
She performed marriages for more than 40 couples as an ordained Universal Life Church minister since 1970. Last year, she taught a popular class, “Paris in the 1950s,” for UC Davis Extension.
“Betty was a woman who grabbed a hold of life with gusto,” friend Tammara Norton said. “I think she was fascinated people and history and culture, and it just seemed to come together in her ethnographic and archaeological studies. She traveled in so many circles and had so many friends, and she just wove it all together into quite a beautiful tapestry that was a very rich life.”
Mrs. Rivers was predeceased by her son Paul. She is survived by four daughters, Cezanne Totton, Maya, Bela and Renata Anderson; five grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
A private memorial is planned. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Doctors Without Borders or to the Davis Heart of Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at UC Davis Extension.
I got home to my fur kids on Friday afternoon. I’ve wanted to post about Africa, about the trip home, about being home on my beloved coast, but jet lag has kicked my butt. I have so much to do to get “back on track” with the life I lead here on this side of the globe. I’m waiting for my body to catch up.
Today, I woke early, but was able to get back to sleep until 5:30, unlike yesterday morn when I woke at 2 – for the day, not temporarily. I missed getting Don Harlan’s Highway One report up for this morning. I should be back on track next Monday.
Lastly, I want to thank my “blog sitters” Deb and Mike – my “tag team” – I can’t thank you enough. Internet in Africa was variously slow, intermittent, to non-existent. So catch up this week with coverage of the Muster on Saturday. See you there, I hope!

Remember –

Original photo by Sterling Doughty
Hello again, Mike here. Thank you again Kate for allowing me to share some of my images over the past few weeks.



I am in love with Africa, as I am in love with Big Sur … Differently, but with the same passion. It is big. It is beautiful. It is like no other. It is raw. It is life and death itself.
My trip is almost at an end, and I will be back in my beloved Sur this Friday. I miss my fur kids, my own bed, my view, but am so very grateful I got to experience even just a bit of this great place.


The Big Sur Grange introduces Slade Rivers Band with Beans Sousa. June 7, 2014 at 6:00 p.m.. This is a benefit for the Big Sur Grange at Juan Higuera Creek. $10 donation requested. Hope to see you there.