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Friday, March 13, 2026 at North Beach Restaurant: Sac Sem Roundtable

  • tarmour2
  • Mar 10
  • 5 min read

This Friday, March 13 (Friday the 13th!) Chair Ryken will be leading a Sac Sem roundtable. It’s even possible that the IRAN WAR will arise as a discussion topic.

 

RSVP TO ATTEND any upcoming seminar. To assist the kitchen staff with planning for our Friday lunchtime meetings, please notify DENNIS WHEATLEY at dennis@triticum.com NO LATER THAN MID-DAY ON the WEDNESDAY BEFORE EVERY SEMINAR if you plan to attend and indicate if you’ll be bringing a guest. Dennis DOES NOT need to know if you are not attending.

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UPCOMING SEMINARS:


On Friday, March 20 Mongolia’s Consul General is confirmed to meet with us to discuss the state of Mongolia's diplomatic, economic, and cultural relations with Russia. Learn a bit about Mongolia at https://sanfrancisco.consul.mn/subcategory/250

 

On Friday, April 10 U.C. Davis professor and author Ethan Scheiner will be Sac Sem’s guest. https://ps.ucdavis.edu/people/ethan-scheiner Prof. Scheiner will discuss the (often overlooked) connection between politics and sports—both in the U.S. and internationally—since the modern Olympic Games began in 1896. Scheiner is Professor and Co-Chair of the Department of Political Science at U.C. Davis, where he teaches and writes on the intersection of politics and sports. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, Stars and Stripes, Politico, and The Daily Beast. His latest book, Freedom to Win: A Cold War Story of the Courageous Hockey Team That Fought the Soviets for the Soul of Its People—And Olympic Gold, was featured in the Wall Street Journal 2023 Holiday Gift Guide and was a finalist for the 2024 Northern California Book Awards. He’ll be introduced by chair Greg Ryken.

 

Marc Levine, a past member of the California State Assembly from the Marin-Southern Sonoma 12th Assembly District will be Sac Sem’s guest on Friday, May 8. Marc is currently Regional Director of the Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL). https://www.adl.org/ Central Pacific Region (Northern California, Utah and Hawaii). Fighting the growing threat of antisemitism from both the political far right and far left is ADL’s assignment. He will be introduced by Seminarian Bruce Raful.

 

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OTHER THOUGHTS: “Soldiers quartered in a populous town will always occasion two mobs where they present one. They are wretched conservators of the peace.” John Adams while as defense attorney for British soldiers charged after the Boston Massacre.

 

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FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION: Your editor’s column continues in the print MAIRN Independent Journal and MarinIJ.com each Sunday & Wednesday. Many Seminarians are on my “complementary list” to receive the politics & government column. IJ honchos have now decided to enforce the paywall. As they say, “Newspapers’ business model is now about subscriptions, not so much advertising.” The good news: There’s a one-time digital subscription deal: $1 for one year for the first year. After twelve months, it bumps up. Check it out at https://checkout.marinij.com/  In addition, for Seminarians only I’ll occasionally run a one column from the past week right here in your Weekly Update.


Flood-control fee funded district destined to fail

Sunday Marin Independent Journal, March 8, 2026

 

On the morning of Dec. 31, 2005, downtown San Anselmo was under 4 feet of flood water. That inundation caused millions of dollars in damage to homes and businesses across Ross Valley. According to the Hub City’s Historical Society, San Anselmo Creek overflowed its banks eight times during the last 100 years. The 2005 disaster wasn’t so much a shock as it was a wake-up call. The cry was “do something.”


The late Supervisor Hal Brown represented the area. Brown, well regarded for his consistent response to community concerns, understood that flood control would require a local source of funding. Leading county staff at the time was Marin’s “can do” Public Works Director Farhad Mansourian.


Brown proposed a “storm drainage fee,” essentially a parcel tax, to pay for flooding mitigation. When the “fee” measure narrowly passed, details of what was to be accomplished on site from the proceeds were unknown. In retrospect, construction details should have been developed before, not after, the measure was submitted to property owners.


The tax’s narrow victory resulted in creation of Marin County Flood Control District Zone 9. The levy was $120 per year per real estate parcel for 20 years. It’ll expire in 2027. Approximately $50 million has been expended mostly for paperwork including environmental reviews, engineering studies, public outreach and litigation. Today, about $7.8 million remains available to complete already committed projects.


Ross Valley flood control stumbled after Brown died in 2012 and Mansourian retired in 2011.

The result is a fiasco. Little that will mitigate flooding was accomplished during the past decade. The public became so disillusioned that in 2024 San Anselmo voters passed Measure F withdrawing the town from the district.


Last week, Marin County Department of Public Works “suspended” its Corte Madera Creek flood-control programs to “determine if its goals can be accomplished.”


That suspension was a prudent move so far as it went. It needs to be expanded so that the separate San Anselmo Creek flood control project is also suspended. Corte Madera Creek has a bureaucratic definition.


It runs from San Francisco Bay near the Larkspur Ferry Terminal past Greenbrae and College of Marin to Ross where two creeks merge. North of that, the stream is named San Anselmo Creek.


It’s time for a reset of all Zone 9 projects with a start-from-scratch planning process before efforts are made to garner new funding. Impacted residents need to be on board at the start by providing them with full project details. If not, the American public’s inclination to litigate land use disputes will result in another 20-year fiasco.


Much has changed since the 2005 New Year’s Eve flood. Marin residents have begun to see the predicted effects of sea-level rise on Marin’s shoreline, including Corte Madera Creek, much of which is impacted by tidal flow.


The January confluence of king tides with stormwater runoff demonstrated that long-term effort to mitigate Ross Valley flooding needs to start at the bay, then proceed through the tidal zone and finally into upstream creeks. Flood mitigation that fails to factor in a 100-year sea-level rise horizon is worthless when on stormy days flood waters collide with an upstream flowing king tide.


There are a preposterous number of government agencies involved in infrastructure efforts. Ross Valley flood control is typical of those chronicled in Ezra Klein and Derek Thomson’s book “Abundance.” They describe the avalanche of well-intentioned regulations that make new U.S. public works projects virtually impossible.


Along Corte Madera and San Anselmo creeks, these agencies with veto power over aspects of the project include municipalities, Marin County, state and federal governments with the Army Corps of Engineers at the top. Getting them to all agree on details is impossible. Don’t blame the public, creek-adjacent homeowners or those most impacted. Blame a process that’s designed to fail.


 
 
 

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