a progressive Reform Jewish congregation |
2600 Bennett Valley Road, Santa Rosa California 95404(707) 578-5519 fax: (707) 578-3967 email: [email protected] |
Martin Stein, Melissa Kort, Sue Lewis, Bruce Falstein, Judy Freedman, Jay Peretz, Marcy Pluznick-Marrin, Reed Ferrick, John Weinstein, Garry Goodman, Jeremy Olsan, Arnold Rosenfield. Not pictured: Paula Duran, Jan Gilman, Cynthia Nestle, Fran Posner
ART COMMITTEE: Anne Matalon
BUILDING & LAND STEWARDS: Dianne Smith
BUTTONS: Chuck & Debbie Tesler
CARING: Muncie Harper
CHAVERIM ADVISORY: Deborah Cutler
CHAVURAH: Judy Carlin and Marsha Jacobs
CHOIR: Leira Satlof, Director
COMMUNICATIONS: Jay Peretz
COMMUNITY IN CONVERSATION: Sue Lewis
E-SCRIP / COMMUNITY SMART: Ilene Moran
ENDOWMENTS & GIFTS: Dianne Smith
ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION: Meryl Fischer
FINANCE: Garry Goodman
HUMAN RESOURCES: Jan Gilman
JUDAICA SHOP: Marlene Stein / Diana Klein, books
LIFELONG LEARNING: Melissa Kort
MEMBERSHIP: Cynthia Nestle
MEN�S BAGEL CLUB: Rick Reisman and John Harris-Bloom
ONEGS: Fran Posner
RELIGIOUS SCHOOL: Dan Weinberg
RITUAL: Paul Munson
SECURITY: Arnold Rosenfield
SOCIAL ACTION: Stephen Harper and Larry Carlin
TORAH COMMITTEE: Marlene Stein
TOT SHABBAT: Tricia Goldberg
VOICE NEWSLETTER: Bruce Falstein and Bill Skoonberg
WOMEN TO WOMEN: Jan Gilman
Click here to see the complete list of congregation lay leaders and committees.
When I was in my late teens, my grandmother died. My father (whose mother she was) sat shiva, and then proceeded to go to temple for the next six months, every morning and evening. This was shocking to me, for a number of reasons: First, although he had been brought up as an Orthodox Jew in Maine, our family in New Jersey belonged to a Reform congregation. To my knowledge, his attendance at temple consisted of twice a year, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Second, he and my mother had a very busy social life, and this put a huge damper on that; yet, he, without any discussion, changed his whole lifestyle. Third, this occurred during the summer, where we lived in southern Maine in a touristy, beach town. The only temple in town was a tiny Orthodox shul, where it was difficult to even scrape together 10 Jewish men to form a minyan.
Nevertheless, every single day, twice a day, this small Jewish community rallied around my father, everyone stopping what they were doing, and someone making sure that there were ten Jewish men gathered for shul. This made a huge impact on me � both seeing this serious, religious side of my father, and seeing how this small Jewish community could come together to help someone in need.
A few years later, my father became president of this shul. I found this hilarious, mostly because I couldn�t imagine what a president�s duties would be there. There were probably 10 year-round families that belonged to the temple, and every one of them was in an ongoing argument with someone else at the temple. (In the summer, the size maybe tripled, due to both tourists passing through and to the Syrian Jews who owned seasonal shops in town.)
The actual service at this synagogue was a complete mystery to me: the women sat, grouped, in the back on one side, gossiping, and the men sat on the other side, davening (praying), mostly separately from one another. The service was entirely in Hebrew, and the men on the bimah faced the Torah, davening in a way that I couldn�t understand at all. Periodically, during the service, some relative of mine on the bimah would feel sorry for us female folk, and turn around and yell �page 136� so loudly that we�d all jump, dutifully turn to the page, continue being mystified, and then go back to chatting.
Another interesting thing to me about this temple was that people tolerated practically any kind of behavior from children. They just loved having kids there. So, in the midst of this incomprehensible praying, punctuated by periodic shouts of page numbers, you would also see kids running up and down the aisles, and older adults smiling away at them. It was quite a scene.
I would say that the temple my father became the president of, is quite different from Shomrei Torah (thankfully). Yet the two synagogues have a number of things in common: an overriding feeling of warmth and communal spirit, dedication to those in need, and a commitment to continuing the tradition of Judaism.
As I step into this role of President of the congregation, I feel a strong link with my father, �alava hashalom�, and I also feel as I do whenever I hold the Torah, or as I did when I wrote a letter in our new Torah, recently: I feel that immediate connection with all of our Jewish ancestors who have done this very same thing, in their own way, and with all of those who will come after us, carrying on our Jewish tradition when we are gone.
I am honored to be President of this unique and remarkable congregation, and look forward to getting to know all of you better.
Jews all across the world are once again approaching the High Holy Days, a time that for many of us is �Jewish prime time� � the time that we reconnect with our faith, or our Jewish community, or our true selves, or all of them, by participating in Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services. Whatever our connection to Judaism, and whatever our High Holy Days customs and habits, we know that this is a serious and introspective time when, together as a community, we welcome the new year and ask for God�s forgiveness and compassion for our behavior in the year that has just passed. It is also a time when, as individuals, we personally ask for forgiveness from those whom we may have hurt or offended.
Catching Up
Just as there are many ways to perform acts of T�shuvah (repentance), there are also many ways that we, as members of the progressive Reform Jewish community at Congregation Shomrei Torah, can reconnect with Judaism. Shomrei Torah is an easy place to make new friends and catch up with old friends, all while taking part in activities that are educational, spiritually fulfilling, and which keep Judaism vibrant for us and for our future generations.Out of approximately 15,000 Jewish households in Sonoma County, only 1,000 or so support synagogue life with memberships�and over 400 of them are at Congregation Shomrei Torah. Our temple is here for us 365 days a year. This is where we celebrate a bris and a bat mitzvah. This is where we see our children married, and where we mourn the loss of our loved ones. It is where we pray and remember and sing and laugh, and where we go to know that we are a part of something bigger�a part of our community. It is where we share the events that are our lives.
Join Us
In the coming year, make a pledge to yourself to come and experience more of what Shomrei Torah has to offer. And whether you will be here for the first time or the 30th time, please come share High Holy Days with your community.
I look forward to seeing you at services, and wish each of you Shanah Tovah, a good year.
One of my good friends, an observant Catholic with an open mind, heard a presentation about the Israeli/Palestinian conflict presented by a Palestinian Christian woman at his church in Sonoma County. He left feeling confused by what she said about the State of Israel and Jews in general. He told me it was contrary to what he understood about the Jewish people and about history, but he didn�t have a firm grasp of Judaism�s history with or connection to the Promised Land, nor did he have enough of an understanding about Middle East politics between World War II and the present. He asked me if there were any reading materials available that would present the Jewish perspective.
What follows is the reading list and list of websites I gave him. It was provided to me by the Jewish Community Relations Council in San Francisco. I�ll be exploring them myself, as I feel less than well-educated on these issues, and I would not be surprised if some of you might have had need for some of this information yourselves.
I don�t often get publicly political about Israel, as it�s a hot button for most of us, and I�m not going to start now, but it is clear that anti-Semitism is having a resurgence not only in Europe, but in our own community, and it is being fed by some of the comments made about the Israeli/ Palestinian conflict during �educational� forums like the one my friend attended. Regardless of your feelings about the actions of the Israeli government, we as Jews need to understand the religious/social/political issues if we are to help stem the tide of anti-Semitism that is being fomented, right here and right now, in our own backyards.
Good reading!
We are fortunate to live in one of the most beautiful areas in the world. This is, no doubt, one of the reasons many of us choose to live here. With the arrival of Spring, we are reminded of the natural beauty of our home as our natural environment renews itself each year.
The concept of environmental sustainability refers to the potential longevity of vital human ecological support systems, such as our planet�s climatic system, and our systems of agriculture, forestry, fisheries, and industry (yes, even industry), as well the sustainability of human communities in general. We frequently talk at Shomrei Torah of our commitment to Tikkun Olam, repairing the world. We all want our planet and our human community to be sustainable for future generations, and we feel the same way about our local Shomrei Torah community. I am proud to say that at Congregation Shomrei Torah, we walk our talk on sustainability.
In recent memory, there has been no greater testament to Shomrei Torah�s dedication to environmental sustainability than our participation in the Santa Rosa Creek Cleanup Day on March 9. Thanks to the efforts of the Congregation Shomrei Torah Environmental Action Committee, more than one hundred people turned out on a beautiful, warm day to scour the banks of Santa Rosa Creek from the beginning of the Prince Memorial Greenway at Santa Rosa Avenue all the way down to Pearson Street. We collected scores of bags of garbage, and enjoyed spending time with our families and friends in the spring sunshine. Representatives of the City of Santa Rosa, who instructed us and supervised our efforts, said that this was one of the largest groups � if not the largest � of creek cleanup volunteers they had ever seen.
None of this would have been possible without the remarkable efforts of Susan Richter, who spearheaded the event, coordinating our participation with the City and with the Chaverim Jewish Teen Program (a joint program of CST and Congregation Beth Ami). Susan was ably assisted in the planning by Lorna Myers, Franny and Scott Posner, as well as the co-chairs of the Environmental Action Committee, Sue Lewis and Roy Sparrow. Several other members of the Environmental Action Committee also worked to make this event run so smoothly: Billie Blumenthal, Fran Danoff, Sherry Fink, Meryl Fischer, Wendy Horn and Bill Skoonberg.
Thanks also to Rick Concoff, the Director of the Chaverim Program, for leading our community�s teens in their creek cleanup efforts. More than thirty teens from Chaverim came out to help. They did a lot of hard work, and had a good time doing it. We appreciate their participation and great attitude, and look forward to partnering with them more in the future.
Because part of sustaining our environment is sustaining our human communities, and particularly our Shomrei Torah community, we also thank those who are doing so much to provide the critical financial support our Congregation needs. Our growth, our new building, and related staffing requirements have presented your Board of Directors and its Finance Committee with budgeting challenges, so remember that your financial commitments to CST are more important than ever. Your annual membership pledges are by far the single largest source of revenue for the Congregation. That is why it is necessary for everyone to do their fair share. For those of you who are able to do more than your fair share, please know how appreciated you are.
A smaller, but no less important source of general fund revenue for CST is fundraising events. On March 30, Congregation Shomrei Torah held its annual spring fundraiser. This year, thanks to event co-chairs Melissa Jason- Ike and Lisa Ehrlich-Giglio, the event was fruitful and a lot of fun. They did a tremendous amount of work to put it together, and it was a success by any standard. What makes it so amazing is that both Melissa and Lisa work full-time and are the parents of young children. Thank you for showing us that even people as busy as you can take leadership roles at CST. Many hands make the work a lot lighter, and Melissa and Lisa had great help from a large cadre of volunteers, including Leira Satlof, who selected and directed our many talented CST members who performed, and Shirley Liberman, who again came through and did a great job organizing the raffle.
As part of our ongoing efforts to sustain our Congregation in perpetuity, CST�s Endowment and Gift Group is seeking to honor all of the Shomrei Torah members who have remembered the Congregation in their will or trust, or by making a major gift. For more information on how to remember Shomrei Torah in your will, trust or by a major gift, please contact Dianne Smith .
Congregation Shomrei Torah was wellrepresented at the Union for Reform Judaism�s Biennial Convention in San Diego in mid-December. Joining me and my wife, Ann, were Rabbi George, Fran Brumlik, Melissa Kort, Dianne Smith and Ben Benson, Marcy Marrin, John Weinstein and Heidi Stewart, Cynthia Nestle, Sue Lewis, Paul Munson, Miriam Marlin, and Sheila Katz Feiwell.
My thanks to each of you for spending the time and going to the expense to attend this important event, and for sharing the ideas and energy you have brought back from Biennial with the entire congregation.
In a separate article in this Voice, Ben Benson has gathered reflections from many of the CST members who attended. Please spend a few moments to read about what they learned.
It was simply wonderful to spend five days with over 5,000 Reform Jews from across North America. We sang, learned, prayed, and laughed. We were entertained by and got to sing along with the greatest musicians and vocalists in our movement (including Debbie Friedman). We shared congregational and personal stories and ideas during some of the sessions, and gained new insights into congregational life from hearing others� stories and ideas.
Then there was Shabbat. The emotion and inspiration of praying along with 5,000 other Jews is something you have to try for yourself. We shared the music that, for me, makes prayer come alive. We used the new Reform prayerbook, Mishkan T�filah. We also learned beautiful new melodies for several prayers, and these were mixed with the ones that just a few years ago were new to us at Shomrei Torah, but which are now as familiar to us as those from childhood. The entire experience was deeply moving, and I was sad to see Shabbat end.
Every Reform Jew should attend a URJ Biennial once in his or her lifetime. There is nothing like it in the American Jewish experience.
In my adolescence, I was fortunate to have spent several summers at Jewish camps, and camp was the single most defining Jewish experience of my life (even more than my bar mitzvah). To have shared Biennial with such a terrific group of people from Congregation Shomrei Torah made it the closest thing to my experiences at Jewish summer camp that I�ve had as an adult. Being at the Biennial will continue to define my adult Jewish experience.
As great as Biennial was for me, the best part was sharing it with Ann. We already plan to go to the next Biennial in Toronto in 2009. I hope you will join us.
Shalom, and Happy Chanukah!
As the President of Congregation Shomrei Torah, I am deeply honored this afternoon to welcome all of you to the dedication of our new sanctuary.
As many of you know, the word �Chanukah� means �dedication�. This holiday is a time to remember the Maccabees rededicating the temple in Jerusalem after their struggle for religious freedom.
For me, and hopefully for each of you, during every Chanukah from this time forward, we will remember this very day, when we gathered to dedicate our own temple and celebrate our own 21st century version of what it is like to experience true religious freedom. Today, as Jews in America, we are free to not only build a Jewish temple, but to build it up here, on this hill above our entire City, where it stands proudly�and where we stand with it�saying that we are proud to be Jews; that we are proud of the beautiful light we have created in our lives by being part of this caring, warm group; that we are proud of sharing that light, which radiates both literally and figuratively from this building; and that we are proud of our history as a people of remaining true to our faith and passing it l�dor v� dor, from one generation to the next, too often against unimaginable challenges and risk.
Before I go any further, let me ask you to please stand or raise your hand if you were a member of the Congregation when it began in 1974. Thank you for starting us on the road which has led us to this joyous occasion! Please stand or raise your hand if you joined the Congregation in the 1970�s.The 1980�s? The 1990�s? And please stand or raise your hand if you joined within the past 7 years. Thanks to all of you. Each of you deserves the honor of this moment, because each of you, by becoming part of our Shomrei Torah community, have, in some way, furthered our collective vision of this day.
And each of you in your own way have helped fulfill our congregation�s mission to create a sensitive, caring and supportive congregational community where all are welcome and included; to act with responsibility and compassion in our community, and to support the principles of equality, freedom and shalom among all peoples.
Finally, who here helped�in any way�with our efforts to build this beautiful home we have created for ourselves? Please stand or raise your hands.
Thanks to each and every one of you�.
By being here today, and by returning here to pray, to learn, to cook, to celebrate, to mourn, to plant, and yes even to pull weeds or paint or fix fences together, all of us here�together�will continue to build both this building and more importantly, what lives and thrives inside this building: a community of kind, caring, and so very generous people.
For most of us, today will be the only time in our lives when we will dedicate our own sanctuary. Let�s stop for a moment. Look up at this space. Then turn around and look at this entire beautiful sanctuary. This is our holy place. And while we each may have other individual holy places in our lives, this sanctuary is our community�s holy place.
Now, please join me in singing the schecheyanu:
Baruch atah adonai eloheinu melech ha'olam shecheyanu v'kiy'manu v'higyanu lazman hazeh.
Blessed are you God, creator of time and space, who has supported us, protected us, and brought us to this moment in our lives and in the life of our congregation.
In reflecting on the High Holy Days just past and looking to this New Year as it is beginning to unfold in our Jewish community, I am awestruck by the depth of talent and energy in our congregation, and in the incredible opportunities that we have at Congregation Shomrei Torah, thanks to our volunteers and to our Rabbi and staff.
We have talked in Board of Directors� meetings about what we envision for our synagogue now that we are �homeowners.� One theme that keeps rising to the top is the hope that we would become the center for progressive Judaism in Sonoma County. We have only been in our new home for six months, and a quick look at our website (www.shomreitorah.org) will confirm that we are well on our way to realizing that goal.
A synagogue has three traditional functions. It is a Beit
T�fillah (House of Prayer), a Beit Midrash (House of Study),
and a Beit K�nesset (House of Gathering). Our being a
Beit K�nesset is part of our becoming the center for local
progressive Judaism, and we are well on our way to serving
both of these roles. I see the evidence of our success in each
of the following:
� The largest religious school enrollment in Shomrei Torah
history (150 kids) and one of the largest B�nei Mitzvah
classes ever (28);
� The largest attendance ever at our High Holy Day
services this year (the LDS Church ran out of chairs to
accommodate us!);
� 90 Sonoma County teens enrolled in our new Chaverim youth program (which itself is an historical partnership
between Congregation Shomrei Torah and Congregation
Beth Ami);
� Our Women-to-Women group is bringing the
internationally-recognized author Anita Diamant, author
of The Red Tent, to Shomrei Torah.
� In the last two months, we have had lectures from Rabbi
Dr. Donniel Hartman, co-director of the Shalom Hartman
Institute in Jerusalem, and Dr. Hermann Simon, director
of the historic Neue Synagogue in Berlin, an event which
we co-sponsored with the German Consulate.
And just look at the other activities that are listed in the November 2007 calendar and on the pages of this edition of The Voice: Judaism and the Environment classes are being taught by Rabbi George; Jewish Philosophy and Ethics classes are being taught by Rabbi Jerry Danzig; Rabbi Geoff Dennis, author of The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic and Mysticism, will speak on Judaism and the Occult. And that�s just in November!
With these rich and varied adult education courses, including our Pathways to Judaism course, which concluded this past month, our Shabbat services on Friday and Saturday, our Men�s Bagel Club meetings, and activities with our many committees including Caring, Social Action, Environmental, Membership Involvement, Youth, and Recreation, there is truly something for everyone at Congregation Shomrei Torah in the New Year.
Please be sure to take a look at our new website, where you will always find the most current and also recent versions of The Voice so you can stay in touch with upcoming activities, and where you can listen to one of Rabbi George�s sermons, look up the location of the next Chaverim dinner, check the religious school schedule, or even hear podcasts of our choir and the blowing of the shofar on Rosh Hashanah. A special thanks to Shomrei Torah member Jay Peretz for designing and building the new website.
As part of your commitment to yourself for the New Year, please spend some time taking advantage of one of the above opportunities to connect with your Jewish community. Come to our Beit K�nesset, and help us as we become the center for progressive Judaism in Sonoma County.
URJ BIENNIAL
Please join me, Rabbi George, and the fun and diverse
group of our congregation leaders who will be attending
the URJ Biennial, which takes place in San Diego, Dec.
12-16, 2007. Our group includes Temple Administrator
Fran Brumlik, Dianne Smith and Ben Benson, Melissa Kort,
John Weinstein and Heidi Stewart, Jan Gilman, Cynthia
Nestle, Marcy Marrin, and Paul Munson.
There is so much to experience and you will treasure spending time with the largest gathering of Reform Jews in America. It�s for everyone in the congregation. You will really feel a part of our American Reform Jewish Community, and you will have the opportunity to learn, sing, pray and be inspired about what we are doing together at Congregation Shomrei Torah. For a terrific video and information on the Biennial, go to www.urj.org.
HIGH HOLY DAYS THANKS
There is no such thing as too much thanks and praise
for all of you who volunteered your time and energy to
make our High Holy Days services so inspiring and run so
smoothly. It would take another page to list all of you here,
so please know how much your community appreciates
what you have done. Thank you again!
We are now approaching that most serious and introspective time when, together as a community, we welcome the New Year and ask for God�s forgiveness and compassion for our behavior in the year that has just passed. It is also a time when we personally ask for forgiveness from those whom we may have hurt or offended.
Just as there are many ways to perform acts of teshuvah (repentance), there are also many ways that we, as members of the progressive Reform Jewish community at Congregation Shomrei Torah, can support our communal Jewish life.
Out of approximately 15,000 Jewish households in Sonoma County, only 1,000 or so support synagogue life with memberships�almost 400 of them here at Congregation Shomrei Torah. Our community is here for you 365 days a year. This is where we celebrate a bris and a bat mitzvah. This is where we see our children married, and it is where we mourn the loss of our loved ones. It is where we pray, and where we go to know that we are a part of something bigger--a part of our community. It is where we share the events that are our lives.
The Shomrei Torah community has incredible heart. We pitch in and make our world a better place. We show our heart in many ways: by building a home together; by being politically active on many fronts, whether it is housing and homelessness, civil rights, the environment or the State of Israel; we visit, give rides to, and care for our elders and the infirm, Jewish and non-Jewish alike; we take food and give comfort to our members in their times of need; we host programs for our teens as well as our toddlers; and we have many active Chavurot. Thanks to Leira Satlof and our many talented congregational musicians and vocalists, we sing, we play music at Shabbat, and have a great choir.
We have fun together. We care deeply for each other and it shows. It shows in our fine administrative staff, and in the great leadership and staff of our excellent and very popular religious school. It shows in the gratitude, respect and admiration I hear in Rabbi George�s voice when he talks about us as a group. It shows in the gratitude, respect and admiration and the genuine love I hear in the voices of our congregation and its leaders when they talk about Rabbi George.
It�s a fact that Shomrei Torah has tons of heart. But there�s never enough of such a good thing, and we need even more of it. We need you. If you�re already helping with your time, then the Congregation thanks you very much. We look forward to your continued help this year, and ask that you commit yourself again to being as active as you can be.
If you aren�t involved right now or haven�t helped in awhile, we need your energy and participation. As it says in Pirke Avot, �If I am only for myself, what am I? And if not now, when?� Just a few hours total a year would make a huge difference. We�d like your help so that we keep improving on our annual membership pledges. And we�d like your help, if you are able, so that you can say, by the time our capital campaign ends in December 2007, that you are a founding donor in the building of our beautiful new home.
Please make these goals a part of your commitment to yourself for the New Year. Please get involved in this, your temple community. Bring your friends, your spouse or partner, and please bring your kids. Many hands make light work, and there are always good, kind people here to do the lifting with you.
I look forward to seeing you and your families at our High Holy Days services, and wish each of you Shanah Tovah, a good year.
Reviewed the financial statements for the month of May, presented by Gary Goodman, VP for Finance, and noted we are currently on track to meet our 2008-09 budget projections. Discussed planned fundraising events for the coming year, including publication of a CST cookbook, chaired by Bruce Falstein, and a call-a-thon, to be chaired by John Weinstein and Reed Ferrick. Temporary Fundraising Chair, Sue Lewis mentioned a few other options.
Discussed the last two events of our Year of Our Torah project: Last letter-writing will be August 30 and 31, and the Dedication Event is on November 15. A Congregational BBQ is on August 30.
Discussed the Community in Conversation project moving into its next phase, a series of one-on-one conversations to further identify members� interests and energy for action. Several trainings are occurring this summer, and the Sponsoring Meeting for all of the North Bay member organizations will be at CST Aug. 26.
Discussed the upcoming Concert In the Tower event, July 12, chaired by Cynthia Nestle. Over 90 people have bought tickets, including a number of non-CST members. Jay Peretz, webmaster, was acknowledged for the beautiful Concert page he designed for the website.
Bruce Falstein, Voice Editor, noted that the Voice will be back in action this coming month.
Approved for membership Lacey and David Fichera, and their children Sofia, 6, and Amelia 1.
Approved the new Integrated Membership Program, which combines the functions of recruitment, welcoming and integration of new members into a single membership team. The volunteer coordinator position, currently held by Franny Posner, will become part of this program. Members who would like to be part of the �membership team� may contact Membership chair, Cynthia Nestle.
Fran Brumlik, Executive Director, noted that an art collection is possibly being donated to CST, and is awaiting appraisal. Melissa Kort, Chair of LifeLong Learning reported that Rabbi Sanford Ragins will speak at the upcoming Rabbi Michael Robinson Memorial Lecture on August 14. Planning is also beginning for the Congregational Retreat at Camp Newman, in April 2010.
Marcy reported that funding for Chaverim has been delayed, due to a shortfall in Federation fundraising. Chaverim will continue next year in its current format, should minimal funding be received. Enrollment is ahead of last year�s schedule.
Arnie Rosenfield reported on traffic barriers to be selected by the Security Committee to protect religious school kids playing in the circle.
Jeremy Olsan reported on progress in dealing with continuing building and property issues. David Barkin, a Jewish organizational consultant, has been hired to consult with leadership regarding High Holy Day location issues. This was the first Board meeting led by Marcy Pluznick- Marrin as new CST president. Marcy reported on her activities in this new position, including visiting committees and meeting individually with Board members. She would like it noted that the meeting ended on time :)
Board members gratefully enjoyed refreshments provided by Beth Goodman, director of the JCC of Sonoma County, and ice cream bars hand-delivered by Arnie Rosenfield.