California Sun Podcast

Jeff Schechtman
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Sep 3, 2020 • 21min

Buffy Wicks in her own words

Assemblywoman Buffy Wicks wanted to make sure legislation on housing and family and medical leave had her vote. When she was denied a request to vote by proxy, she drove with her 1-month-old girl in tow from her home in Oakland to the State Capitol in Sacramento. What happened next has become a rallying point for working women.
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Aug 24, 2020 • 31min

Geoffrey King: Vallejo Police Department on the brink

Geoffrey King, an attorney and native of Vallejo, cared deeply about his city. He said he could no longer stand by and watch the underreported killings of civilians by one of the most violent police forces in the nation. So he launched Open Vallejo, a nonprofit newsroom focused on local accountability journalism. He details why he felt it was so important to shine a light on a police department that uses more force per arrest than that of any other police force in California's major cities.
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Aug 19, 2020 • 32min

Dr. Jennifer Brokaw on keeping our first responders healthy

Dr. Jennifer Brokaw, daughter of the news anchor and author Tom Brokaw, is an emergency care physician and patient advocate. In February, she was appointed as the physician for San Francisco's first responders. She explains how her job overseeing the health of firefighters and paramedics has taken on dimensions she never could have imagined before the pandemic.
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Aug 4, 2020 • 25min

Anthony Rendon on California's shifting priorities

Anthony Rendon, a Democrat from Lakewood, became California's 70th Assembly speaker in 2016. He talks about his work with two very different governors and how the legislative focus has changed from budget surpluses, housing, wildfires, affirmative action, and the gig economy to deficits, eviction, unemployment, health care, and a no-frills future. He also shares the personal journey that prepared him for his role.
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Jul 23, 2020 • 27min

Alia Volz's homebaked journey

Alia Volz reminisces about growing up in the family business in the 1970s and '80s, where her mom baked and sold 10,000 "magic" brownies per month in San Francisco. It was a time when growing a single marijuana plant was a felony offense. The business that started selling to hippie craftspeople in Aquatic Park became a cultural icon.
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Jul 14, 2020 • 22min

David Randall on the last California pandemic

David Randall, author of "Black Death at the Golden Gate," tells a story that reminds us that history may not repeat itself, but it often rhymes. He details how the bubonic plague overran San Francisco and the West Coast in 1900, fueling denial of emerging science, quarantines, anti-Chinese racism, and fears of a second wave.
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Jul 9, 2020 • 33min

Dr. Robert Wachter on Covid, California, and the future of medicine

Dr. Robert M. Wachter is a professor and chair of UC San Francisco Department of Medicine. The author of more than 300 articles and six books, he's been ranked as one of the most influential physician-executives in the U.S. He discusses California's original success in dodging the Covid-19 bullet, and why it now may be catching up with us. He discusses how much smarter we've become in four months, how much longer Covid-19 may be with us, and how medicine will be transformed forever.
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Jun 25, 2020 • 31min

Connie Rice on policing and economic despair

Connie Rice, the long-time Los Angeles civil rights lawyer and activist, has played an important role in the transformation of the LAPD. Yet she looks at our current moment and reminds us that the police rank-and-file still have a long way to go. In minority communities, she says, police are the preeminent symbol of systemic oppression and racism further fueled by a lack of economic justice.
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Jun 17, 2020 • 33min

Lt. Ben Kelso on the blurred lines between Black and Blue

Lt. Ben Kelso, a 30-year veteran of the San Diego police force and the president of the Black Officers Association of San Diego, gives us an inside view of policing and race in Southern California. Sitting astride two worlds, he details the pain, anger, and opportunity of the moment. It's a view of law enforcement from inside the squad room.
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Jun 11, 2020 • 23min

Peiley Lau on how staying at home made a difference

Peiley Lau a researcher at the UC Berkeley Global Lab explains a new study showing that nearly 1.7 million coronavirus infections may have been avoided in California — and many more throughout the world — thanks to policies that kept people at home. It was a collective action unlike anything that has ever happened.

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