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A Great Year

Having a Great Year

Image: bayut.com

By JC Newman

Rancho Cotate Varsity Football is having a great year. Just ask Wayne Thomas, home field announcer for the Cougars for the past twenty-one seasons.

Nearly forty years ago Thomas was asked first to become involved with the Rancho Cotate Football Program, and then in 1989 to act as the official home field announcer.

“One year led to another,” Thomas says during halftime of the NCS Quarterfinal game against Eureka, and as the saying goes, he’s been at it ever since.

At the time of this interview, the score was 27-21, Eureka. Either way, the game ended he knew this was his last night in the booth. “Seems like the right time. I’d rather go out on a winning season.”

Thomas had initially planned to retire from announcing last year. “I stayed this year because of this team. I thought this team had a chance to win it all.”

The veteran home field announcer will build weekend RV trips with his wife around the games saying it’s common to drive back to the announcer’s booth from places like Willits, Bethel Island, or Sacramento, then drive directly after the game to rejoin his wife, who stays behind and near her cell phone, where she’ll watch for texts of game updates.  

In relatively recent years, Thomas pulls off the play-by-play with his son, Jeff, who has been assisting since 2000. Thomas says, “He’s ready to take over.” 

“That’s the plan!” Jeff responds from across the booth.

At the time of this story, the team, 10 and 1 Overall and 4 and 1 in the League won against Eureka 38-35 and is moving into the semifinal round of the NCS Championships.

The Big Games

Image: Creative Commons 2.0

By JC Newman

Rancho Cotate High School hosted the 2017 NCS Football Semifinal Championship Game on December 2nd, which featured Cardinal Newman and Marin Catholic high schools. Sitting in the bleachers with a friend cheering on Sonoma County’s local team, Cardinal Newman, I became curious:

Given that Cardinal Newman and Marin Catholic were in the semifinals, how did the game end up at Rancho Cotate’s stadium?

In an interview Monday, Gil Lemmon of the North Coast Section (NCS), provided insight:

He said it has been the policy since 1998 for the North Coast Section (NCS) to allow schools to host games through the semifinals. It assigns the game location to the most geographical area of the higher seed first. In order to host a championship game a facility needs to fulfill a set of requirements established by NCS. If they don’t meet the requirements and can’t host, the offer goes to the next highest seed school.

What are the requirements? Parking is a huge factor. The NCS wants to be sure that in a big game, there is plenty of parking to accommodate the fans. There also needs to be adequate seating in the stadium. Lighting isn’t mandatory as they can play the game in the daytime, but it is preferred. And since the NCS staff is only seven people, they rely on the facilities to provide the staffing such as the game announcer, site director, ticket takers, and ticket manager.

For various reasons, Marin Catholic, who was the top-seeded team in the semifinals, did not meet these requirements. NCS would have chosen to play the game in the area of Marin Catholic but there wasn’t another site available in the Marin County area. San Marin in Novato is also near but was not available. And as many are aware, Cardinal Newman High School was unable to host due to fire damage. Rancho Cotate was approximate to both teams, has great parking, good seating, and in the case of questionable weather [the NCS] likes the turf.

“So for the good of the tournament and all factors weighed in, Rancho Cotate was the best choice. The game was always going to be at Rancho regardless of semifinal teams. Bishop O’Dowd [high school] would have traveled to Rancho Cotate, for example, [had they been in the semifinal game],” Lemmon said.

Historically, [NCS] knows the facility that will host before the bracket is even decided, and as the bracket develops they adjust the location. Ultimately, they may go back to a facility they’ve reserved and cancel due to the location changing.

This begs another question. Who runs the show and where do the profits go?

Rancho Cotate and Technology High School Athletic Director Scott McKeon explains, “Entities within the Cotate Rohnert Park Unified School District (CRPUSD) can use any facility in the district without paying a fee. Entities outside the district may also use the field but pay a nominal fee.” So the facilities request submitted by the NCS to use Rancho Cotate’s field drew a small fee which went to Rancho’s athletic department.

McKeon continues, “When a facility hosts an NCS game, all gate money, which pays for NCS approved officials, goes to the NCS.” At the championship game on December 2nd, Marin Catholic was the hosting school. So they designated officials to collect the gate fee and that money went to NCS. Rancho ran the snack bar and the profit went into Rancho’s Athletics. Security is arranged by the site director and is typically composed of school administrators, coaches, teachers and other school employees. Local law enforcement is encouraged to show up for larger games. Should there be a need for an ambulance the 911 system is utilized.

National Night Out

Image: JC Newman

By  JC Newman

National Night Out, a 35-year nationwide celebration, was well represented in Rohnert Park this year as community members younger and older mingled with local police, firefighters, rescue professionals, and other hosts at City Center Plaza.

Rohnert Park community members milled about the plaza stopping at the tented kiosks set up by the Police and Fire Departments and others, asking questions and chatting with friends. Eventgoers could sit on a police motorcycle or check out Fire Engine 9982 which was on site flashing lights and doors open to anyone wanting to sit in the driver’s seat or try on a firefighter suit.  Sonoma County Search & Rescue was represented by Kodiak the search and rescue K9 who brought along Community Service Officers Moffitt, Thompson, Hayes, and Poe to answer questions while he charmed the public. The Rohnert Park Animal Services Pet Adoption Wagon gave out information and showed future family members looking for forever homes. Kids could participate in a bike rodeo, play in the plaza fountain mister, or work off steam in a giant police car bounce house. There was lots of activity yet when the National Anthem was sung it became quiet – hands on hearts and eyes on the flag.

Taking a break from the festivities located in the parking lot outside the Department of Public Safety, Rohnert Park Police Chief Brian Masterson, explained the philosophy at the core of National Night Out, which the city first joined nine years ago.

“The idea [for NNO] is the police communicating with citizens, they can work together to make the community safe,” he said Tuesday night. “We have a lot of partnerships with businesses and schools and that’s what you want. You want to be able to not just point to an officer but hopefully, you know that officer and that’s what makes trust relationships.”

Chief Masterson tells his officers to get out of their cars when they can and go into businesses for visits. “It’s an opportunity for the law enforcement and local community members to build relationships – to talk.”

He said he tells his officers, “Go up to the front counter, talk to people, ask them what’s going on. And then they get to know you and they feel good about the department. Then we’re going to build good relationships and we’re going to be safe.”

Masterson described citizens who partner with police to reduce crime as “force multipliers.”

“Criminals want to go into a neighborhood where nobody cares. [But] we have 40 thousand citizens that aren’t going to tolerate crime. They’re not going to tolerate people misbehaving in Rohnert Park and they call us,” the Chief explained.

National Night Out’s origin stems from the efforts of a man named Matt Peskin. In the late 1970s, Peskin volunteered for a Community Watch Program in Philadelphia. Community Watch was started by the National Sheriffs’ Association back in 1972 in an effort to curb a severe increase in crime that had begun in the late 1960s.  Most are familiar with the Community (Neighborhood) Watch Program as generations have seen the signs posted in neighborhoods for over four decades.

Matt Peskin saw the importance of keeping the community enthusiastic about the program so started the Community Watch Newsletter to inform the community of the program’s successes. The monthly publication expanded to surrounding communities and in the process of reaching out to other places, Peskin discovered there were many Community Watch programs with nothing really connecting them. Skip ahead a few years – the National Association of Town Watch (NATW) is established with local police departments and community members all contributing to the association. A few years later the NATW presented the National Night Out celebration proclaiming it be held annually on the first Tuesday in August.

Today, the annual event is attended by 38 million neighbors in 16 thousand communities nationally.

“We have some of the highest citizen surveys in Rohnert Park,” Chief Masterson said proudly. “Last year 2400 people were surveyed, pretty good survey for a population of over 40 thousand. People were asked about the trust and confidence of their public safety department and 86% of the people said high trust/high confidence. On the fire side, 98%. So that tells me that our officers, our firefighters are building good relationships when they have that opportunity with the citizens.

Sources: NATW.org, NNO.org.

 Little Window, Big World 

 

Image: Wikimedia Commons

By JC Newman 

It was always down during the day- a barrier to the world. Why? What else had he to look at while she was away? How could he explore the world from his perch if the shade was down? So he decided to tell her. First with just an eyehole. But she didn’t hear. Then he told her with a corner. Still, she didn’t notice. So he tried again. Day by day, bite by bite he told her of his hope to widen his world if only from his lonely window.

Local Luau Island Festival

 Local Luau Hosted by the Warriors Youth Group 

Image: Wikimedia Commons

By JC Newman 

Terms compliments of: HawaiianWords.com, Ulukau 

The Polynesian lifestyle is what many dream of when letting go of their pilikia. But if you have the pōmaika`i to live in or near Sonoma County you may have attended the Rohnert Park Warriors Pacific Islanders Festival and set aside your troubles a little nearer to home. For the past eight years the Warriors luau has celebrated Polynesian food, dance and art in true island tradition. The festival is a fundraiser for the non-profit Warriors Youth Football and Cheering organization. Funds raised go towards insurance, park rentals, rental of Rancho Cotate field for home games, gear replacement and scholarships for families without funding. 

“It’s amazing how many people have embraced the festival,” said Raquel Kilmarten, fundraising director for the annual event. “Its been a great contribution to community. One woman came from Quincy to see the [Rohnert Park] festival.” 

Kilmarten is no haole to Pacific Islander traditions. Her husband is of Samoan ancestry and she had attended many such events before becoming involved with the Warriors festival. Her connection with the Pacific Island festival circuit simplified finding vendors who could put Rohnert Park’s festival into their schedules. 

Pacific island festivals are popular family events in the region, no fewer than six including Rohnert Park, all who coordinate their event dates so as to not conflict with each other. Despite the number of this style festival, the Koas festival gets bigger every year. And it is manuahi for attendees, made possible because of the volunteer network in place and the vendors who pay a booth fee to sell food and drinks. This year’s mea hoʻohauʻoli included; the Junior Wellspring Church Santa Rosa who cooked and danced, Poti aka DJ Five O, O Hina’aro Nui, Faith Thompson Ako and Taimalietane Islands of Polynesia. Also at the festival were ‘ono authentic Polynesian food. 

Yet the festival is more than a fundraiser, it is a networking venue for community members where community organizations can attend and provide information to the public. 

“We give the opportunity for other organizations to share information about their programs for Asian Pacific students, as well as all students,” said Kilmarten, who started with the festival in 2010 as a field project for a degree in Public Administration at University of San Francisco. 

“It was when the economy was getting bad and people were getting laid off,” she remembers. “[At that time] parents would receive tickets to sell but usually would buy them themselves.” 

“We were trying to keep it free so anyone can enjoy it,” Kilmarten refers to Tracey Poueu-Guerrero, who has been the kahuna of the festival from its inception in 2007 until just this July. Together they had their own version of the epiphany: If you build it they will come. They decided, if people could volunteer instead buying, they will. And they were right. Parents have been volunteering every year and eight years later it remains a free event for community. And with pōmaika`i the festival will continue making ‘ohanas feel hau’ oli for years to come. 

Haole- a foreigner; Hau’ oli- Happy, glad, joy; Hō‘ike- show, display; Kahuna- expert; Kaikaina – sister; Kālā- money; Koas- Warriors; Kōkua- help, assistance; Manuahi- free; Mea hoʻohauʻoli- entertainment; ‘Ohana- family; ‘Ono- delicious; Pilikia- troubles; Pōmaika`i- good fortune. 

ExSqueeze Me?

 

Image: Wikimedia Commons

By JC Newman 

The 28th Annual Cotate Accordion Festival squeezed into La Plaza Park last weekend with a heavy turnout to the tune of over five thousand individuals. 

In the American mainstream pop or rock-n-roll world, the accordion is not common. You just don’t see them in bands, and they don’t hang in a lot of instrument stores either. So seeing so many of these strangely designed instruments on stage and displayed in the vendors’ tents sparkling new and playfully mysterious was an awesome sight. But seeing them is one thing – the accordion’s sound when one truly listens to it is mesmerizing and conjures one’s free spirit and stirs joy in one’s heart. 

“That’s the one thing people mention more than anything else, is how much joy is in the park,” 

said Scott Goree, Executive Director of the Cotate Accordion Festival. Goree took over as Executive Director of the festival in 2004 when original founders, Clifton Buck-Kaufmann and Jim Boggio, retired. Is anyone familiar with the accordionist statue in the La Plaza Park? That’s Jim. It has become a representation of the festival itself and of the Cotate musical community in general. 

Goree and festival coproducer, Linda Conner, work all year booking musicians, lining up vendors, working with the city, and designing the program. Lisa Benz is the coordinator of over one hundred volunteers. Many more contribute their time to the festival’s success. 

“It’s really a lot of fun and it’s really a joy to see all the smiles and how happy everybody is,” said Goree who has incorporated the help of his wife and two daughters who volunteer at the festival every year. 

The Cotati Accordion Festival is a non-profit organization established in 1991 to promote the love of the accordion and to support local youth service organizations. As of last year, they had contributed nearly $500,000 to the youth of the community. Proceeds are donated to the Cotate / Rohnert Park Education Foundation, the Thomas Page music program, the Outdoor Education program at Penngrove Elementary, the Nursery School Cooperative, which incidentally provide security, and Boy Scout Troop #4, which set out donated hay bales for seating, and do the generally gritty work. Many more volunteers make the festival possible. 

The average American may associate the accordion with local genres: Cajun, Tejano, zydeco, jazz, or polka music. But the accordion is used in hundreds of countries for as many types of music: the Merengue of the Dominican Republic, the Inuit of Canada, the Tango of Argentina, the Tarantella of Italy, the Trot music of Korea, the Norteno of Mexico, the Baladi of Egypt, the Horo “Xopo” of Bulgaria and the Klesmer of Eastern Europe and the list goes on and on. 

Over three days there were uncountable variations of accordion music at La Plaza, representing hundreds of genres, countries and cultures. Cotate’s is a tiny festival compared to many around the world but the musicians attending those are typically regional and play the same genre of music. By Goree’s research, Cotate’s is the largest multi-cultural accordion festival at least in the western United States, as he purposely brings in accordionists and genres from all different cultures. 

“The last six years or so, the festival has become known worldwide. This year there were world-class performers that came from Germany, Italy, and Finland. The accordion world is a very close world,” Goree explained. “Accordion people know about each other. Performers come to Cotate from other countries just for this festival. Netta Skog, arrived from Finland where she plays primarily “battle metal”, which is the Finnish version of “heavy metal” music. (Little known fact, arguably the “father” of heavy metal, Jimi Hendrix’s first instrument was the accordion. It’s true.) 

“The Accordion Festival [and music in general] has become a big part of the city’s history and identity,” said Goree. (Cotate was the city that had music notes added to the sound barrier walls along 101.) He went on to say, “A lot of respect to the music community, in general, is paid by the city of Cotate. [And] the Accordion Festival being the biggest festival of the year, has become the hub that it all spins off. It’s just a general uplifting of spirits. It’s a community event and people working together. And of course, the central part is the accordion, but you don’t even have to be an accordion fan to come to the park and experience it all.” 

There’s definitely a vibe of happiness and goodwill at the festival. 

Goree concluded, “It’s the general joy you experience going through the festival. You know, joy is contagious!” 

Maybe the love of the accordion is contagious too?