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Cabrillo College students are among the 20,000 incarcerated or formerly incarcerated students served by the Rising...

For the second consecutive year, Cabrillo College robotics club wins first place in world competition

As old guard passes baton on Santa Cruz arts scene, how will new leaders weather generational shift?

Santa Cruz Shakespeare
A file photo of a Santa Cruz Shakespeare performance. Credit: Via Santa Cruz Shakespeare

Many of the steady hands that have guided the likes of the Cabrillo Festival and Santa Cruz Shakespeare for years are stepping down even as the performing arts are at a crossroads nationally. There’s no guarantee it will be business as usual as a diverse group of millenials and Gen Z makes up larger shares of potential audiences, and whatever comes next will be fascinating to watch. Read Wallace Baine’s Sunday column.

MORE FROM WALLACE: Civic minded: Will Santa Cruz ever get the proper performing arts arena it needs and deserves?

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Santa Cruz County Asian Americans support Cabrillo College name change: Let’s empower the next generation

Asian American activists support the Cabrillo College name change.
Asian American activists support the Cabrillo College name change. Credit: Via Ami Chen Mills

Local Asian American activists write that they believe changing the name “Cabrillo” to one of Indigenous origins is a positive step toward a stronger, more inclusive future. “Standing in solidarity with the Indigenous community,” they write, “we state that this name change is a small but crucial step toward righting a grievous historical wrong.” Read their Community Voices opinion piece here.

LATEST: Cabrillo College governing board set to vote Monday on delaying name change

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Santa Cruz County 2023 point-in-time count shows lowest homelessness level in over a decade — but ‘still a lot of gaps’

An unhoused individual stands outside his tent in a section of Pogonip that was not yet slated to be cleared out on June 5.
An unhoused individual stands outside his tent in a section of Pogonip that was not yet slated to be cleared out on Monday, June 5. In the foreground is the remains of a campsite that was within the area that was cleared out early Monday morning. Credit: Kevin Painchaud / Lookout Santa Cruz

Santa Cruz County’s homeless population decreased by more than 20% compared to last year, according to a February survey. But local officials point to ways the county can continue to improve, including better financial-assistance resources and tenants-rights education, paired with more support from federal and state governments. The one-day count has its limitations, and one advocate says “it doesn’t feel like there have been a lot of big wins” in the past year. Max Chun reports.

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