‘I Don’t See Anything Changing’: Wary of the Past, Some Northtown Business Owners and Residents Want HACHR’s New Office Far Away from Them
Dezmond Remington / Yesterday @ 3:42 p.m. / Business , News
A window display at the new office. Photos by Dezmond Remington.
Adrianna Tatom had just started her own business, and she was excited. She’d sunk over $100,000 into a building a few blocks from the Arcata Plaza, outfitting it with all the equipment necessary to turn it into a bubble tea shop, Boba Monster. Sales hadn’t been astronomical, but she was hopeful that they’d grow.
At about the same time she moved in, so did another tenant, the Humboldt Area Center for Harm Reduction, who rented an office in the back of the building she shared with one other tenant. It was business as usual for a while, but she began to notice changes. People started sleeping in the bushes outside her storefront. The screen on her door went missing, as did the floor mats. Needles started showing up in her trash, and human feces on the outside of the building. Loose dogs ran rampant in the parking lot and added their own waste to the mix. People started leaving their trash in the lot and on her doorstep, “constantly” smoking cigarettes and hitting pipes. A van showed up one day; three people were living in it. Others congregated outside the office, out in the parking lot, around the clock, day and night, sometimes yelling at people walking by or her customers.
Many of them, parents or young students, told Tatom that they were uncomfortable with what was going on. Several of them said they were too scared to park in the back. Sales dropped. Tatom began to fear for her own safety.
“There were times in the winter, when it gets dark earlier, and I’m the only person here, and I’m leaving — I never know what’s gonna happen,” Tatom told the Outpost. “I remember, even in the daytime — the other day, there’s a girl out there, and I was bringing stuff in, and one of the workers was like, ‘Hey, you be nice to her.’ And I could hear her walking up behind me. And so I turned around, because she’s just out of her mind, you know? You never know what people are gonna do.”
This May, the organization left the office on 11th Street, as did the people sleeping in the bushes and frightening the customers and Tatom. Half a dozen employees and owners of businesses surrounding the lot HACHR occupied for two years shared similar stories with the Outpost. Many of the people who live and work near their new location, concerned about their safety or the health of their businesses, don’t want them there either.
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Usually called by their acronym HACHR, the Humboldt Area Center for Harm Reduction is an advocacy group for the homeless and for people struggling with drug abuse. Founded in 2014, they provide harm reduction services, distributing free toiletries, fentanyl and xylazine testing kits, Narcan, and “safer use kits” with sterile tools for drug use.
HACHR is well known for its needle and syringe exchange program, which allows drug users to give them their used needles and syringes and swap them out for new ones. People are going to do drugs regardless of whether their tools are clean or not, the thinking goes, so it’s sensible to make using safer. Proponents argue that it’s also a public health issue. Dirty needles can transmit diseases like HIV and hepatitis, and stopping their spread helps the community at large.
It’s hard to assess the efficacy of the programs. A 1994 metastudy done by a group of Washington-based epidemiologists concluded that designing a study that could accurately judge how well a needle-exchange program stopped the spread of HIV would be extraordinarily difficult: the number of confounding factors researchers would have to factor in would be gargantuan, and asking subjects to participate in a truly randomized trial (asking one group of drug users to exchange their needles and telling another control group not to) would be unethical and logistically unfeasible. Other research has been more positive, though researchers noted similar hindrances.
HACHR’s program has a history pocked with controversy. An EPD investigation in 2020 found that they were “complicit” in allowing their clientele to use and traffic narcotics next to — and on — their property. Undercover officers reported that HACHR employees allowed people to get high in a bathroom on their premises. A long series of back-and-forths between HACHR and the city of Eureka followed, and HACHR eventually ended up leaving. It moved to a location in Valley West in 2022, next to the Harbor Freight and the Kebab Cafe gyro shop.
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During the course of the Outpost’s reporting, many of the sources interviewed requested anonymity because they were afraid of HACHR’s ability to mobilize against organizations and officials it has deemed are working against it. Last summer, HACHR, among other organizations, brought dozens of people to two meetings of the Arcata City Council and managed to halt city business almost completely. Many of the people the Outpost interviewed are business owners and employees with thin margins; any retaliatory actions could put them in the red. “If they took an activist approach against the small business,” one said, “it could be the death knell of them.” Several residents who live nearby HACHR’s new offices, fearing damage to their personal life and homes, also requested anonymity.
Reached via email last Thursday, Ethan Makulec, HACHR’s executive director, declined a request for an interview, but, in addition to sending a short statement, they asked us for a list of questions. As of publication, they haven’t responded.
HACHR spent two years in Valley West before moving to its location next to Tatom in May 2024, at 625 11th Street in Arcata. Things were quiet for the first year and a half of their tenancy, employees at several nearby businesses said, but near the end of 2025 things started to change. People loitering in the parking lot next to their offices became a “constant” presence at all hours, playing music and dancing late into the night. They “spilled” out of the building, one person said. They camped in the parking lot, both in a van (and underneath it) and outside, in the lot and in the bushes. Cars idled for hours; human and animal waste cropped up everywhere. The list stretches on. “This place is a cesspool of filth,” one business owner said in a letter to city councilmember Alex Stillman. “…Do not be sentimental about this facility.”
Their behavior often went beyond merely soiling the parking lot. Several people told the Outpost that the campers often screamed at people walking by, sometimes forcing them to duck into a building until it stopped. They got into fights. Drug use was rampant. They smoked pipes and injected in plain sight, according to several eyewitnesses. Two sources told the Outpost that they saw the campers taking turns using the public bathroom down the street; they passed an “oily” children’s backpack between one another when they traded off using the bathroom.
The back staircase at HACHR’s previous location on 11th Street.
HACHR’s role in allowing and perpetuating the behavior is hard to pin down. When they moved in, they told the building’s owner, Patrick Buckwalter (CEO of a local solar panel company) and its manager, Complete Property Management, that HACHR was only going to use the office for administrative purposes. HACHR operates a mobile syringe and needle exchange service out of a van as well, and told the property managers and Buckwalter that it wasn’t going to exchange paraphernalia out of the office.
Though HACHR has been accused of side-stepping needle-exchange regulations in the past, Arcata City Manager Merritt Perry sent the Outpost a statement clarifying that the city has notified the California Department of Public Health that HACHR has conducted harm reduction services outside the areas its permit allows it to, like on private property and near city parks. Arcata asked the state to “communicate with their permittee” that HACHR can only “conduct their business within the authority of their permit and only in authorized locations.”
“So far that approach seems to be working,” Perry said.
People who looked unhoused often went into the office and came out with packages, sources said. They don’t know what was inside. One source said she saw people leave items in a red tent someone set up in the parking lot and enter the building. They looked intoxicated when they left, she said.
“This is a party,” one employee of a business near the office told the Outpost. “It’s a nightclub for transients. Like, not office space. I don’t know what office space has transients partying at 10:30 at night. That isn’t an office.”
HACHR dealt with similar problems when it had office space in Valley West, sources said. Sherilyn Munger, the owner of Complete Property Management (CPM), told the Outpost that she was aware of HACHR’s reputation when they moved in, but Ethan Makulec, HACHR’s executive director, told CPM that they were looking for another place that they’d offer their harm reduction services from. Munger said Makulec was easy to get along with and paid the rent on time. “It seemed like a good idea at the time,” she said. “They qualified.”
Buckwalter, the owner, told the Outpost that he had never heard of HACHR, but he was sympathetic to what it did; he had had a friend that died from an overdose. HACHR does good work, he said, and it’s important to weigh the negative impacts they have on the community with the good ones as well.
“I was torn,” he said. “We’re very sympathetic with the work HACHR does. But, you know, I don’t want the neighborhood to suffer because of them being there.”
Neighboring businesses reached out to Buckwalter and CPM, asking them to force HACHR to clean the lot up and stop people from loitering outside and harassing store customers and passersby. Munger said that, despite Makulec’s efforts, they were unable to make a large difference. Munger said it was Buckwalter’s decision to not renew HACHR’s lease; Buckwalter said he wasn’t sure whose decision it had been. Both parties said it had been made several months before the lease ended in May.
HACHR wasn’t generally very receptive to complaints, sources said. A group of HACHR employees burst into one of the businesses that contacted Buckwalter and CPM, asking them why they “told on them” to the landlord.
The city wasn’t very helpful either, they said; one person claimed the police department told her that they couldn’t do anything about it, and she felt ignored by the officials she contacted. Tatom, fearing retribution, didn’t reach out to the city or the police.
City hall knew about the situation and was monitoring it, Perry said; police issued citations if they saw someone violating city code. “It is always harder to follow up on complaints after a violation occurs,” he wrote, “which I think may have led to perception about lack of enforcement in this situation.”
“The vast majority of our relationships with nearby businesses, our property managers, and other neighbors has been positive at both our previous and new office location,” Makulec wrote in a statement sent to the Outpost. “I would happily reach out to any of these people if you’re interested in hearing their perspective. The complaints you have listed are not supported by the reality of our time there, and sound like the commonplace prejudice and fear-mongering that the communities of marginalized people we serve are made to suffer every day. This stigmatization can threaten the health, well-being, and survival of marginalized people, so I hope this article will not spuriously exacerbate such stigmas.”
Not everyone near HACHR’s 11th Street office had bad things to say about their former neighbor. An employee of a nearby business told the Outpost that he respected HACHR for doing a job no one else wanted to do. Nobody messed with their stuff; his employer didn’t take a hit because it’s appointment-based. He didn’t enjoy seeing the poverty and drug abuse outside his window every day, but he said he recognized the need. “They’re the first line of resources that I don’t want to provide,” he said. “I’m cool with them. Fuck it! It’s gonna happen next to someone.”
“Poverty isn’t an easy thing to see,” he continued. “You look at that, you think, ‘That could be me someday.’”
Casey Waterman, the owner of New World Water across the parking lot, said that “Bobby,” one of HACHR’s employees, planted flowers and became her friend. She saw the refuse in the parking lot, saw the drugs, saw the dogs running amok, but said her experience with HACHR was mostly positive. Bobby cleaned up dog and human waste from the parking lot and near her back door, and he helped her move heavy pallets.
But Waterman had her limits, too: she later sent a letter to Arcata City Hall asking that HACHR be banned from occupying the building it’s now moved into, at 750 16th Street. It’s a few blocks from Arcata High School, and she and many other people interviewed by the Outpost are worried that its proximity, combined with the likelihood the same people will be hanging around, could have drastic effects on the hundreds of teenagers that flood by every day.
“They do attract a really rough crowd (that seems to be increasing all the time) who do hang about the premise day and night,” Waterman wrote. “Beyond their presence I haven’t personally been affected. But I have spent enough time observing that it is absolutely an inappropriate group to parade high school students past on a daily basis.”
“But mostly it is absolutely a danger to young children,” she continued. “After a year of being across the parking lot I can one hundred percent say with confidence that the safety and wellbeing of children has to come before the needs of the folks this establishment is helping…I agree their services are needed but that location is wildly inappropriate.”
Buckwalter, the owner of HACHR’s old location, agreed. He wrote a letter to the city that the Outpost obtained, claiming that HACHR told him that its use of his building would be “administrative” in nature. However, he wrote that he saw many of the things people contacted him to complain about; the amount of foot traffic the location got was also higher than he anticipated. He said he thought that a different location, farther away from the high school and the many businesses in Northtown, would be a better fit.
The parking lot behind the old office.
Almost all of the business owners and residents near HACHR’s new location the Outpost contacted, about a dozen total, had similar reservations. They don’t want the kids anywhere near the office, even if its tenancy is only going to be “administrative” like the previous office was supposed to be.
“Every community has drugs in it, but we have a prevalence of drugs in our community, and I don’t think it’s a wise move for the city of Arcata to expose the kids to something like that on their lunch break,” Holly Ameline told the Outpost. Her business, Northtown Coffee, is around the corner from HACHR’s new office, and she has a child graduating from Arcata High this year. “…When people are hanging out, they’re gonna talk. And if the high school kids start chatting with them, and — I just don’t know if the exposure on their lunch break is the best idea.”
Roger Macdonald is the superintendent of the Northern Humboldt School District, which includes Arcata High. He told the Outpost that he was meeting with Makulec soon to talk about the district’s expectations. Macdonald’s aware of the issues that plagued HACHR at its previous location, he said, and the district will do what it can to prevent them from repeating.
Many of the business owners are already struggling to make ends meet, and they’re worried about their bottom lines as well. Justin Brown, owner of Revolution Bicycles, said that he didn’t think the office was a good fit in Northtown. He’s dealt with multiple break-ins over the years and isn’t excited about the prospect of dealing with more.
“It’s just not what we need in this neighborhood,” Brown told the Outpost. “If they want to support that community, they should be where that community is, down by Samoa Boulevard. It’s just unfortunate. It’s really, really hard to do business in this town right now, just to keep the lights on, and it’s just expensive. I can’t afford the customers being turned away because they are being harassed, getting out of their car or whatever.”
Another businessman nearby said that a HACHR employee had visited him recently and told him that he wouldn’t see an impact. If he’s right, then he’s not against it, but, considering HACHR’s past promises, he’s not certain that’ll be true.
“There are people that, if they come here, and they have a bad experience, and there’s some scary dudes out there or something, someone’s passed out, they’re not going to stop,” he said. “They’re leaving.”
Most of them noted HACHR’s history of skirting the law and breaking rules set up for them by landlords or by the government; they don’t think any real changes in HACHR’s behavior are likely.
“I don’t see anything changing with their past patterns,” one business owner told the Outpost. “Something keeps happening in a cycle. I feel like that’s going to continue to happen. I don’t believe that it’s going to — all of a sudden — going to change their way, to rectify things.” Brian Kaneko, owner of True Nature Tattoo, pointed out that even HACHR’s business card advises that people calling 911 to save someone from dying of an overdose avoid telling first responders that an overdose happened, instead asking callers to say that they’re “with someone who is unresponsive.” [The bolding is theirs.] Kaneko said that Makulec had told him they were only moving because they wanted a bigger space, and denied that Buckwalter and CPM decided not to renew HACHR’s lease. Kaneko had seen Buckwalter’s letter, and knew that wasn’t true.
The outside of HACHR’s new office on 16th Street.
Kaneko is one of about 16 signatories of a petition being passed around the area calling on the city to force HACHR to acquire a conditional use permit that would, in their minds, stop it from allowing people to loiter outside their office, and preclude them from offering any services that attract people in the first place. (Buckwalter also signed it.) The petition’s creator, business owner Jesse Almas, told the Outpost that he hoped it would allow the public to have some input over HACHR’s operations, and also force HACHR to clarify what it’s planning on doing in its office.
“If there are conditions of approval that have taken public input into consideration, then city would actually have some teeth to ask HACHR to rectify the issues,” Almas wrote in a statement sent to the Outpost. “Other businesses are required to follow rules required by their CUP’s and there is a public process that helps officials arrive at those rules. I don’t see why HACHR should be any different.”
City Manager Perry said it was unlikely HACHR would be able to provide harm reduction services out of its offices on 16th Street. Because so many businesses and residents have expressed their apprehensions, the city would probably notify the California Department of Public Health to request that it deny HACHR permission to operate them there. Arcata doesn’t require anyone to have a conditional use permit to maintain an office.
All of the business owners the Outpost talked to said they thought the services HACHR provides are important, maybe even necessary; they just don’t want them offered anywhere nearby. A few of them suggested somewhere near a hospital would be a more appropriate location.
Not everyone cares. Ted Marks, the owner of Norcal Tattoo, down the street from HACHR’s new offices, said the uproar reminded him of his own start when he began tattooing.
“I had to deal with the same stuff,” Marks told the Outpost. “People envisioned a tattoo shop was going to be the worst thing in the world: bikers hanging out, drug addicts. I dealt with the same discrimination. They go and try and get petitions. I’ve been on the other side of that Frankenstein-kinda thing.”
Another shop employee agreed. James Kerr said he was once a “street kid on drugs”; his wife, Sarah, “saved” him, he said. Sarah was on HACHR’s board of directors from its founding in 2014 until last year. Kerr said he doubted HACHR moving to Northtown would change anything, and said what the people near their previous location were dealing with couldn’t definitively be proven to be HACHR’s fault.
“It’s hard to argue with the argument that they’re enablers, that they’re enabling drug addicts,” Kerr said. “However you define that term, it’s definitely true, right? However, they’re not gonna stop them from using. That’s a fact.”
“It’s a little more nuanced and subtle, and it’s not so black and white when you dig into the whole issue,” he continued. “It’s a very complicated issue, very emotionally charged on both sides, because, I think, both sides, all we’re trying to do is keep our community safe.”
The Outpost spoke to several nearby residents, most of whom also aren’t thrilled about their new neighbor and the people it often attracts.
“They’re not going to get in a cab and drive 10 miles away and do drugs,” one said. “No. They’ll be a foot off the curb, and they’re going to do it in the neighborhood.”
Ranika, a Cal Poly Humboldt student who lives near the office, said that she was glad HACHR was moving in. Homeless people are people too, she said, and even if they’re not well mentally, it’s still possible to reason with them and sympathize with them. She’s willing to wait and see how things go. She’s from Oakland, and she said she knows how to deal with it.
“I’m just pretty desensitized to homelessness,” she said. “Honestly, that would probably make it feel more like home for me.”
BOOKED
Today: 8 felonies, 9 misdemeanors, 0 infractions
JUDGED
Humboldt County Superior Court Calendar: Today
CHP REPORTS
Sr255 / K St (HM office): Assist with Construction
ELSEWHERE
RHBB: Juvenile Taken to Hospital After Bicycle Struck by Vehicle in Eureka
County of Humboldt Meetings: Human Rights Commission Agenda - Hybrid Meeting
KINS’s Talk Shop: Talkshop May 13th, 2026 – Rex Bohn
County of Humboldt Meetings: Human Rights Commission Agenda - Hybrid Meeting
(UPDATE: FOUND!) MISSING: Officials Searching for 14-Year-Old Boy Last Seen in McKinleyville
LoCO Staff / Yesterday @ 9:30 a.m. / Missing
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UPDATE, May 13: The Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office says the missing juvenile has been found safe and reunited with his family. In keeping with the Outpost’s policy on missing kids, the previous post and identifying details have been deleted
Guy in Hummer Shoots Gun at House in Willow Creek, Sheriff’s Office Says
LoCO Staff / Yesterday @ 9:26 a.m. / Crime
Press release from the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office:
On May 9, 2026, at approximately 7:40 p.m., Humboldt County Sheriff’s deputies were dispatched to a residence located in the 1000 block of The Terrace Road in Willow Creek to investigate a report of shots fired into an occupied residence.
Upon arrival, deputies contacted the resident, who reported he was inside the home when shots were fired into the residence. No injuries were reported. During their initial investigation, deputies developed information indicating that a red Hummer drove in front of the residence and that shots were fired from the vehicle into the home.
This case remains under investigation, and additional information will be released as it becomes available.
Anyone with information about this case or related criminal activity is encouraged to call the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office at (707) 445-7251 or the Sheriff’s Office Crime Tip line at (707) 268-2539.
Panicked California Democrats Are Pushing a Risky Strategy: Wait ’til the Last Minute to Vote
Maya C. Miller / Yesterday @ 7:16 a.m. / Sacramento
From left, candidates Xavier Becerra, Katie Porter, Matt Mahan and Antonio Villaraigosa on stage for the gubernatorial debate on the campus of Pomona College in Claremont on April 28, 2026. Photo by Jules Hotz for CalMatters
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Some California Democrats have a plan to avoid disaster in the governor’s race: Wait until the last minute to vote.
With no one candidate emerging as a clear favorite and an open primary where the top two advance regardless of party affiliation, panic has set in for some who plan to vote Democratic.
To avoid a dreaded scenario in which Democrats are locked out of the November general election, many Democrats coalesced around former Rep. Eric Swalwell, who ultimately flamed out after multiple women accused him of sexual assault.
That fear has morphed into wariness, leading some party activists and influencers to encourage people to hold off on voting early, watch the polls, then vote for the candidate with the most support just before Election Day.
In a “normal year,” Katie Evans-Reber of San Francisco said she would probably back former U.S. Rep. Katie Porter even though the Democrat is not likely to advance to November given her current polling. But this year the stakes are higher, she said, and as a lesbian woman, any of the Democrats would be more aligned with her core values than a Republican.
She fears supporters of President Donald Trump who have soured on him could back Republican Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, giving him enough of a boost to match the power of Trump’s endorsement for Steve Hilton, the former Fox News host who is leading all other candidates in the polls. That would send both Republicans to the runoff.
“The thing that flipped for me was going from, ‘I don’t really know what to do,’ to, ‘I strategically am not making a decision,” Evans-Reber said.
In pole position is Xavier Becerra, the former Health and Human Services secretary who surged from single digits to the top of the polls following Swalwell’s downfall. As his popularity soared, so has the scrutiny of his record at HHS and as California’s former attorney general.
Behind Becerra are progressive Democratic challengers Tom Steyer, a former businessman turned billionaire activist and Porter. San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan has also positioned himself as a tech-friendly moderate and ally of Silicon Valley.
Evans-Reber and other impassioned Democrats have been urging others to follow the “same “wait and see” strategy by sharing videos and posts on social media.
One post even falsely attributed the strategy to Heather Cox Richardson, a political historian and popular Democratic influencer who writes the substack “Letters from an American.” That erroneous post was the first one Evans-Reber saw and forwarded. She later had to follow up with a disclaimer that Cox Richardson was not the author.
“It’s not like, bad advice, but it’s 100% not coming from me,” Cox Richardson told CalMatters in an interview.
Democratic political consultant Paul Mitchell disagrees.
“It’s just a bad message,” he said. “I think they should always have a message of, ‘As soon as you get your ballot, fill it out, turn it in, mail it in and get it done.”
Mitchell said although activists might talk about and push for a strategic voting plan, trying to organize a movement like that at scale would likely not produce significant results.
“I think people vote for whoever they were going to vote for anyway,” said Mitchell, whose company tracks how many ballots are turned in each day statewide.
The push to vote late flies in the face of recent pleas from election officials and Gov. Gavin Newsom for voters to get their ballots in early in the hopes of speeding up California’s notoriously slow vote-counting process. Attorney General Rob Bonta, a fellow Democrat, told reporters last week that the social media posts urging late voting could be misinformation, disinformation, and “potentially unlawful,” and Secretary of State Shirley Weber said her office would “look into” those social posts.
“Time is of the essence in preventing election lies from taking hold,” Newsom wrote in a recent letter addressed to all 58 county registrars urging them to “tabulate and release results quickly and accurately.”
Turning in a mail-in ballot on Election Day, as some activists propose, is the worst possible scenario for election administration officials.
It creates what Kim Alexander, president of the California Voter Foundation, calls the “pig in the python effect.” County election offices are inundated with in-person ballots on Election Day, as well as mail-in ballots that require a meticulous process of signature matching, envelope opening and extracting the ballot before it can be counted.
Returning ballots even a few days earlier can give counties a head start, Alexander said at a recent CalMatters forum on election integrity.
Mark DiCamillo, who runs polling for the Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies, said pollsters are doing their best to produce accurate results, but in an election with so many variables, even the best surveys could be off-base.
The past trend of low voter turnout in gubernatorial primaries, plus a potentially confusing array of 61 candidates for governor alone, make it difficult to determine who the likely voters will be and account for that in their surveys.
“This election’s got all the elements you have to deal with,” DiCamillo said. “It’s a challenge for the polling profession.”
Despite the concerns about a slow vote count and imprecise polling, Evans-Reber says she still plans to stick to her last-minute voting strategy. She doesn’t trust that mailing her ballot will reach the county elections office in time. She plans to bring her completed ballot to the office or one of the county’s vote centers and hand it directly to an election official.
“I am going to cast the ballot at the very last possible moment,” Evans-Reber said. “I’m going to wait until polling day.”
California Colleges Went Big on Online Learning Tools. Then the Worst Happened
Colin Lecher and Mikhail Zinshteyn / Yesterday @ 7:11 a.m. / Sacramento
The breach of online education platform Canvas hit especially hard in California, where the software is used at all 24 California State University campuses and all 116 community colleges. Tina Rocha’s laptop displays a maintenance screen as she tries to log into Canvas at her home in Stockton on May 7, 2026. Photo by Larry Valenzuela, CalMatters
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Esther Mejia and Kelly Merchant had a question Friday afternoon for their professors: Where were you?The UC Riverside public policy students were among the likely hundreds of thousands in California who lost access to the all-important academic software Canvas when it was brought down by a hacker group Thursday afternoon. Losing Canvas meant losing assignments, tests, and required reading material along with a way to communicate with instructors. The timing was especially bad for UC students, who were hunkering down for midterms or finals.
“This is a very crucial time for students to be able to access their coursework. So I definitely do think that professors should reach out,” Mejia said in an interview. “And they did not.”
Merchant heard from only one professor by Friday who addressed the downed website. She learned about the hack attack on the social media site Reddit after she was logged out of her account while finishing an assignment.
“Professors should reach out. They did not.”
— Esther Mejia, student, UC Riverside
The Riverside students’ experience underscores just how central Canvas has become to higher education in California — the outage likely affected more than 1 million of the state’s university students. The hack has raised serious questions about how schools should be vetting and balancing their use of online platforms, to what extent they may be held liable for breaches, and what role policymakers should play in protecting student data and regulating edtech.
The attack seems to have begun on or around April 29, when Instructure, the company behind Canvas, “detected unusual activity,” according to a class-action suit filed in a Texas federal court. It exploited a vulnerability in Canvas’s free tool for teachers, the company later disclosed.
On May 4, some Cal State campuses experienced a brief shutdown but were operational within 20 to 30 minutes, the university system said.
By May 7, Thursday, the platform was offline. The University of California system blocked access to Canvas the same day, and wrote on its website that it won’t “be restored until we are confident the system is secure. We understand this disruption is concerning.”
The hackers, a group calling itself ShinyHunters, claimed to have obtained sensitive data, including billions of messages, and threatened to release the data if they weren’t paid a ransom. The CEO of Instructure has said that core “learning data (course content, submissions, credentials) was not compromised” and Cal State has said that Canvas does not store social security numbers.
One of Merchant’s professors, she said, created a Discord group for the class at the beginning of the term and on Thursday evening shared the material students needed to complete an assignment due Friday. She appreciated the initiative, though observed that not every student checks Discord as regularly as they would their email account.
By May 9, Saturday, UC Riverside mostly restored access to the platform, with other universities coming online in the following days. Mejia had a quiz and assignment due Monday at 2 p.m. She received a note from the professor of that class only at 9 a.m. that day through Canvas, she said. The professor granted a two-day extension.Merchant wants more professors with a communication back-up plan, especially since Canvas has been down before. “Whether it’s a cybersecurity thing or routine Canvas maintenance, it’s going to continue to be a risk. And we have to prepare for it.”
UC Riverside and the systemwide UC Office of the President did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
For many colleges and high schools, Canvas has become indispensable, with teachers using it to give quizzes, message students, post grades, and more.
Almost 9,000 colleges, K-12 schools and school districts, and offices of education around the world were reportedly affected by the Canvas outage, according to the hacker group and other media, along with likely millions of students and teachers. California seemed to be hit especially hard. The institutions relying on the system and affected by the cyberattack included Stanford, at least some campuses at the University of California, USC, all 22 California State University campuses and all 116 of the state’s community colleges.
The number of students ultimately affected by the breach could be staggering. The Cal State system alone enrolls more than 400,000 students. The UC system, where hackers claimed to hit six of 10 campuses, enrolls about 300,000. The hacker group listed the Los Angeles Unified and Fresno Unified school districts as among their targets — they too enroll more than 400,000 students combined.
Deputy chancellor of the LA Community College District, Nicole Albo-Lopez, told CalMatters that Canvas was being used by students in thousands of courses, including as a “repository for gradebooks, sharing of course materials, and messaging.” The district is among the largest community college districts in the country, with nearly 200,000 students annually.
Canvas, she said Friday, still hadn’t informed them of what’s been exposed in the hack. “We’re supposed to receive specific information about what was accessed in our specific system, but we have not received that yet,” she said.
‘Eggs in one basket’
One expert said the incident highlights the problem of relying on “all-in” solutions for online education tools.
The attraction of software like Canvas is that it allows institutions without technical expertise to easily manage everything on a single platform. But the hack shows the danger of relying on such centralized systems, where a breach of one company exposes the data of the countless institutions that rely on it.
“The beauty of these software as a service systems and what they sell is, ‘Hey, your staff members don’t need to run this, we’ll just handle it,’” said Jake Chanenson, an education technology researcher and PhD student at the University of Chicago.
In the best case, those companies have diligent cybersecurity teams protecting student data.
Many schools without tech departments, by contrast, may only be equipped to give any new tools “a cursory, at best, privacy and security assessment,” Chanenson said. Small schools, especially, may then struggle to recover from a breach or outage.
But a centralized system also means that only a single point needs to be hacked for every school that uses the software to be affected.
Chanenson, who is currently researching “critical infrastructure” in schools, said that
“when you put all your eggs in one basket across schools, it makes these targets very attractive.”
One state lawmaker wants a legislative audit into California’s heavy reliance on Canvas. “The Canvas breach exposes the growing risks of concentrating massive amounts of student records, academic systems and institutional operations into a single platform,” said Sen. Melissa Hurtado, a Democrat from Bakersfield, in a written statement.
What now?
It may be too early to identify the consequences of the hack for schools and for Canvas. It’s still not clear, for example, how the breach happened, or the full extent of data that was compromised.
At minimum, schools will want to reassess how much information they’re willing to give over to third-party software companies in the name of efficiency. Those companies, Chanenson said, should also take a look at their policies around data collection and retention to minimize how much sensitive information they store.
“You think in your head that any data set that you have has a non-zero probability of being leaked or breached or some sort of privacy loss, then you want to start thinking about things like data minimization,” he said.
Past data breaches have led to legal consequences for the companies and institutions involved, including action by state attorneys general. There are federal legal protections for data belonging to children under 13, through the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, as well to students, under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. In California, the Student Online Personal Information Protection Act protects data for K–12 students. Lawmakers in the state are also actively considering additional data protections.
The state has grappled with previous compromises of school data. Los Angeles Unified School District has faced a series of class-action lawsuits related to data privacy breaches. Most recently, the district disclosed last year that a telehealth vendor it worked with experienced a breach.
Chanenson points out that schools are prime targets for hackers since they hold immensely sensitive data but often lack the technical prowess of other large institutions, like banks.
“They’re happening with enough of a frequency that it’s more of a when, not an if,” he said.
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CalMatters reporter Adam Echelman contributed to this story.
OBITUARY: Brooks Otis, 1938-2026
LoCO Staff / Yesterday @ 6:56 a.m. / Obits
Brooks Otis
May 3, 1938 –
May 9, 2026
Brooks Otis, a beloved husband, father, musician and pillar of the Humboldt County community, passed away peacefully at his Arcata home on May 9, 2026. Born on May 3, 1938, in Geneva, New York, to Brooks and Christine Otis, he was the eldest of five children, joined by Molly, Cheney, Irene, and Paul. From his earliest years, Brooks moved through the world with curiosity, warmth and an abiding love of music.
Brooks spent his high school years in Geneva and abroad, living with his family in Rome and Beirut in the 1950s. After studying history at Columbia University, Brooks was drafted into the Army, serving from 1961 to 1963 as a medic in Germany, and, true to form, keeping himself sane by playing music. During those years he formed friendships and musical connections that would last a lifetime.
Returning from the Army to Palo Alto, Calif., Brooks worked at the Stanford Press and studied part-time at Stanford University. His interest in Latin America drew him to the Peace Corps in 1966. At the initial training in Seattle, he met the love of his life, Carolyn Chaffee, and the two were posted to a rural Aymara Indian village in Bolivia, where they helped establish a food cooperative, build a new school, and taught literacy and English classes.
Brooks and Carolyn returned to the United States and married. At 30, he went to work for California Indian Legal Services in Escondido, California. That work brought them north to Eureka, where Brooks served as a Project Director for United Indian Health Services. They put down roots in Humboldt County in 1970, and their son Dan was born in 1971.
In September 1974, Brooks and his partner Mike Manetas opened the doors of Wildwood Music in Arcata. For thirty years, Wildwood was a hub of musical life in the region, offering lessons, instrument sales and repairs, and a gathering place for the community. Brooks was also a longtime radio host and Music Director at KHSU, edited the Humboldt Folklife Society newsletter for many years, and was an avid gardener and photographer.
Throughout his time in Humboldt County, Brooks remained an active musician. He was a member of the seminal bluegrass band Fickle Hill, the dance band Swing Shift, and played in many other bands, including the Country Pretenders, Kenny Ray and the Mighty Rovers, the Horn Band, the Continental Drifters, Loafer’s Glory, Rosanne and Kentones, Bayside Quartet, the Timber Ridge Boys, just to name a few. He played flute, clarinet, saxophone, banjo, guitar, fiddle and pedal steel guitar.
Brooks gave generously to everyone around him. He was always ready to fix an instrument, share a melody or mentor a young musician. His vast, curated music collection brought joy to all who encountered it. He touched lives quietly and without fanfare, which was entirely his preference.
Brooks is survived by his son, Dan Otis; his two sisters, Molly Barnes and Irene Otis; his brother, Paul Otis; and by the many musicians, students, friends and neighbors whose lives he touched. A memorial for both Brooks and Carolyn is being planned for some time in August.
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The obituary above was submitted on behalf of Brooks Otis’s family. The Lost Coast Outpost runs obituaries of Humboldt County residents at no charge. See guidelines here. Email news@lostcoastoutpost.com.
Off-Leash and Out of Control: Can Humboldt County Do Anything to Stop Dog Encounters From Turning Violent?
Isabella Vanderheiden / Monday, May 11 @ 3:58 p.m. / Animals , Community
Photo by Mornie Jeremiah via Pexels.
Fifteen months after Eden Goldberg was attacked by a neighbor’s dog — a traumatizing ordeal that left her with bite marks and gashes on her face, arms and legs — the Shelter Cove resident is still seeking justice.
Despite months of back-and-forth with the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Animal Control Division, Goldberg feels the county hasn’t done enough to resolve her case or address her concerns about “unsafe dog culture” in rural communities. Now, she’s launching a public safety campaign and pushing for changes to local policies to increase accountability for dog owners.
Goldberg, a local performer and emcee, is one of several Humboldt County residents who’ve spoken with the Outpost in recent months about encounters with off-leash or uncontrolled dogs that resulted in serious injuries to people and, in some instances, pets being maimed or killed. Those who sought help from animal control often said they were frustrated by the outcome of their investigations and disappointed to learn that the county’s current policies place the blame on the dog rather than the owner.
“There’s a real gap in understanding going on here,” Goldberg said. “This wasn’t a case of bad dogs … [or] a case of dangerous dogs; this was a case of negligent human beings. … [The owner] made a negligent choice of who she left her dogs with … and he was negligent. It’s about the humans — that’s who I want to [be held accountable].”
‘That Dog Started Attacking Me’
Goldberg was attacked on the morning of Jan. 12, 2025, while walking her two leashed dogs — both Rhodesian Ridgeback mixes — on a Bureau of Land Management trail near her home in Shelter Cove. Minutes into their walk, an unleashed dog came bounding toward them “as if to play.” She could see a man a little ways up the trail holding the leash of a German Shepherd, and she called out to him, “Please leash your dog!”
The man either didn’t hear her or didn’t listen. She called out again, “Please call back your dog! Put him on a leash; we do not want to engage. I do not want your dog coming near us!”
“And then it started a dog fight,” Goldberg said, adding that she was shouting at the man to take control of the unleashed dog as she struggled to hang onto her own dogs. She would later learn that he wasn’t the owner of the dogs, but a pet sitter. “This guy … he just kind of froze. … And as soon as he walked [up to me] with the leashed dog, that dog started attacking me.”
“It mauled my left arm and … my right calf, and then came back around on my left side, and sank its teeth in my left nostril about an inch under my right eye. It was trying to shake my face to rip my face off,” she continued. “When I ripped my face out of the dog’s mouth, it slit open a one-inch gash … right under my eye … and I tucked my face in so it couldn’t go for my main vein.”
After a few minutes, the man was able to leash both dogs and get them under control. Goldberg, gushing blood and surging with adrenaline, said she needed to get herself and her dogs back to her truck immediately, and asked the man to meet her at the main road to swap information. There, he explained that he didn’t own the dogs, but was watching them for another Shelter Cove resident who was on vacation. He gave her his name and phone number, adding that he would tell the property owner about the incident. When Goldberg tried to call him later that day, she said the call didn’t go through and assumed he had given her a fake phone number.
The Outpost has omitted the names of the dogs’ owner and their handler in this story. According to Goldberg, both parties have been “non-responsive and non-compliant” since the attack occurred.
After getting herself home and checking her wounds, Goldberg asked a friend to take her to the Shelter Cove Volunteer Fire Department for an initial medical assessment before heading over the hill to the emergency room in Garberville. A first responder took a dog bite report, and she was asked if she wanted to press charges against the owner or pursue a potentially dangerous dog hearing, which could result in anything from fines to court-ordered euthanasia.
“That was not the time to make that decision,” Goldberg said, later adding that she spoke to an attorney after the incident and is still weighing her legal options.
After completing the report, Goldberg was taken to Jerold Phelps Memorial Hospital, where staff assessed and treated her injuries. She sustained numerous bites on her face, including a gash under her right eye and several puncture wounds ranging from a quarter-inch to a half-inch deep. She also recorded puncture wounds and “severe” bruising on her upper arm and leg.
She would later discover that her bite report, which was filed with the county’s animal control division a couple of weeks after the incident, did not mention the wounds to her face. Frustrated, she contacted an animal control officer after she received a copy of the report in April 2025 and informed them of the error. She received a copy of the amended report in February of this year, 13 months after the bite report was taken.
“I don’t know how many times I called them asking for an amended report,” she said. “I just remember feeling very frustrated, like, why is this a hard thing to accomplish?”
In the weeks and months that followed the attack, Goldberg struggled with psychological trauma and was diagnosed with Acute Stress Disorder by a therapist. The experience impacted her grad school studies and derailed her plans to care for her ailing mother, who had been diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer.
“It [was] extremely traumatic, and I’m a tough cookie, but I am still struggling,” Goldberg said. “It’s to the point where I have not hiked my dogs the one to two miles a day [that they had gotten used to] for over a year now. I don’t walk my dogs anymore, and … that is the best part of mine and my dog’s day. And I thought I was just the only one, [but] as I’ve started to talk to people, I’m finding everybody else feels that way.”
To get a better sense of the feelings surrounding local “dog culture,” Goldberg started talking to her friends and neighbors about their experiences with dogs in different areas of the county. At the time of our interview, she had spoken with about 50 people about negative experiences with off-leash dogs.
“Moms expressed fear about their babies being on the beach [while] multiple dogs run around off-leash,” she said. “I’m not saying you have to live your life in fear, but moms are definitely concerned. An elder who’s lived here for 43 years was getting out of her car, and this black and white dog that’s been running free-range in our neighborhood bit her arm. … I’ve talked with doctors and nurses and grocery store owners who are like, ‘I can’t walk my dogs when I get home because there’s vicious dogs roaming.’”
While working on this story, I came across a Facebook post from Shelter Cove resident Kierstin Fernandez alerting her neighbors about two loose dogs that had killed her family’s cat.
“I am creating this post to hopefully help the next family, but also because I am truly so sick to my stomach over what has just happened at my home,” she wrote in the March 4 post. “We had two dogs come onto our deck and kill our beloved cat and leave with her. … I have two small children, my daughter runs around outside my home all the time. How am I supposed to feel safe with these animals loose?”
In a follow-up interview with the Outpost, Fernandez said she didn’t know who the dogs belonged to, adding that no one had come forward to claim them after her Facebook post.
“At the end of the day, I’m not trying to do anything to these people or their dogs,” she wrote. “I was hoping my community would come together and maybe know who the owners were before making a formal report. … I know accidents happen, and maybe the owners really never meant for their animals to get out but the dogs being that aggressive on an ‘accident’ does worry me still. I just have to hope that the owners are taking better precautions.”
Fernandez decided not to file a report with animal control. It seemed as though she just wanted to move past the traumatic incident.
Reached for additional comment on the issue of local dog attacks, Christopher Christianson, the general manager of Shelter Cove’s Resort Improvement District (RID), acknowledged that the coastal community “has no shortage of loose dogs,” but said they are generally well-behaved and accompanied by an owner.
“This isn’t a very common complaint,” Christianson wrote, referring to the prevalence of reported dog attacks. “In my experience as the General Manager, I’ve talked to one dog owner in the community after we received a complaint about his loose dog. Both he and his dog were very cooperative, understanding, apologetic and accommodating. On a personal level, a nearby neighbor’s two dogs were coming over to where I live in Shelter Cove and chasing my cats. That neighbor was also very apologetic and nice.”
Of course, that’s the best-case scenario. While dog-related disputes are often settled between neighbors without the involvement of city officials or local law enforcement, unchecked bad behavior can lead to horrifying outcomes.
Many of our readers will recall in 2021 when a mother of five was viciously attacked by two pit bulls while helping a neighbor in Myers Flat. Her injuries were so severe that one of her legs was amputated. The dogs were declared “vicious” and euthanized, and their owner was prohibited from owning any other dogs for three years.
In March of 2023, Ted and Brenda Pease were attacked by a loose dog while walking their dog Stella in Trinidad. The dog bit a half inch of Ted’s finger off, bit Brenda in the calf and maimed Stella, turning her “face into hamburger and crush[ing] her foot,” according to Pease. A court hearing determined the off-leash dog, a 70-lb mixed-breed named Claudia, to be “vicious,” and required the owner to confine the dog and notify animal control officers if he moved.
One year later, Claudia attacked again. The incident occurred at a home in Eureka where the dog’s owner had been staying with a friend. The dog attacked the homeowner’s brother-in-law during the commercial break of a football game, leaving him with facial injuries so severe that he was airlifted to UC Davis Medical Center for treatment.
Another hearing was held, and the dog was determined to be vicious, yet again. The owner didn’t attend the hearing and animal control officers weren’t able to track down Claudia after the attack, according to Eureka Police Department spokesperson Rachel Sollom.
Similar to Goldberg, Pease believes humans should be held to account when a dog attack occurs.
“There are no bad dogs,” he told the Outpost. “That may be an overstatement, but most of bad dog behavior results from inattentive humans, training or lack of it. … In our case, the attack by a known aggressive animal [occurred] because the owner failed to restrain her on his property. The owner of the dog had no penalties that I know of, and returned with the animal to Humboldt a year later, when the dog attacked someone else. … Clearly, the owner was not held accountable.”
Pease acknowledged that “law enforcement has more pressing matters to attend to than dog issues,” but felt the “system failed in this case.”
The Humboldt County Civil Grand Jury explored this very issue in its 2018 report, “Dogs on the Run: Do County and City Animal Control Codes, Policies, and Procedures Adequately Protect Our Residents?” The report, which came about in response to a countywide uptick in dog attacks, urged local animal control agencies to increase staffing and communication across jurisdictions and improve follow-through with victims.
While strides have been made to improve staffing and interagency communication, there hasn’t been any substantial update to county code that increases accountability for the owners of dogs involved in violent attacks.
‘Public Safety is Our Primary Concern’
How a dog attack is handled depends on the severity of the situation, Animal Control Facilities Manager Andre Hale told the Outpost. Generally speaking, victims are given two options when a dog bite occurs: 1) request a hearing for a “potentially vicious, dangerous or nuisance” dog or 2) file a civil claim against the owner of the dog.
“If the situation meets the criteria/definitions in the county code for ‘dangerous’ or ‘vicious’, the victim can request an administrative hearing,” Hale wrote via email. “Animal control may take the dog for quarantine at the shelter and may hold the dog at the shelter pending the outcome of the administrative hearing. At the conclusion of the quarantine and/or hearing the dog may be returned to the owner. If a hearing was held and the dog was declared as dangerous or vicious, the owner will be required to meet the restrictions set forth in the code.”
Hale added that the dog’s owner “may be issued a citation for any violations that occurred,” but that doesn’t happen in every situation.
Goldberg declined animal control’s offer to pursue a potentially dangerous dog hearing in her case, asserting, “If that other dog was on-leash, there would have been no dog fight, and there would have been no dog mauling.” She reiterated that “this was a case of negligent human beings.”
Goldberg argued that the county is failing to enforce laws that hold dog owners accountable, including California Penal Code 399, which imposes criminal liability for owners of “mischievous” animals that kill or cause “serious bodily injury” to a human. Penalties range from misdemeanor charges to felony convictions, depending on the severity of the incident.
“The negligence in this matter stems from the owner’s decision to entrust a powerful animal to an unqualified and untrained caretaker,” Goldberg said. “[PC] 399 requires that ‘ordinary care’ be taken to prevent an animal from causing injury. By delegating this responsibility to someone incapable of managing the animal, demonstrated by the lack of leash control, the absence of basic dog recall, then walking the second dog to my side causing me to be severely mauled, the owner created a preventable hazard.”
Asked why the sheriff’s office or animal control didn’t pursue changes under PC 399 in this case, Hale said there was no evidence that the dog that attacked Goldberg had a history of biting.
“[PC 399] requires that the owner knew of the dog’s dangerous tendencies and failed [to] take necessary steps to prevent someone from being injured,” she wrote in her emailed response. “We do not have any evidence that is the case in this situation, as there is no known history of the dog biting.”
Goldberg pushed back, asserting that current interpretations of the code “often lean too heavily on the animal’s prior history.” In this case, the “mischievous” nature of the event was “not inherent to the dog, but was created by the human handler’s lack of training and situational awareness,” she said. “The law must hold individuals accountable for the negligent management and improper supervision that allow these dangerous encounters to occur.”
Hale acknowledges that there are “limitations to what animal control is able to do” in certain cases, “which often results in the complainants being frustrated or upset.” She emphasized that animal control officers strive to “do everything we can to address these issues.”
“Public safety is our primary concern,” Hale said.
Reached for additional comment on the matter, Undersheriff Justin Braud explained that animal control officers may issue citations in some cases, but they don’t have the authority to arrest people. If Goldberg were to pursue charges under PC 399, the case would have to be turned over to the sheriff’s office, he said.
“Should it have been? I don’t know,” Braud said. “I don’t know the details of the case, but it’s a possibility [that charges could be filed] and I would encourage her to call us. … If there is a chance that it could still be or should have been investigated … I think that’s something that we can still try to fix and maybe create some clarification going forward.”
But to make that determination, Braud said Goldberg would probably have to go through a dangerous dog hearing.
“I’m on her side about this,” he continued. “I think that people who have dogs not on leash out in public are super unsafe and not responsible at all. … I would be fully in support of there being changes to the county codes to put some sort of mechanism in place to hold owners liable, because I do agree that although animals are unpredictable — pet or not — that danger needs to be considered by people around them, but also the people that are maintaining them and taking them in public.”
While frustrated by her previous interactions with animal control, Goldberg said she is “fully open to working side-by-side with all agencies and sectors involved with dog-attack cases,” and hopes the sheriff’s office “can open a path for justice” for local victims of dog attacks. She noted in our interview that she’s filed a complaint with the Humboldt County Civil Grand Jury.
Yellow Ribbon Campaign and Initiative
Hoping to “open channels of communication” around the issue and reduce bad interactions between dogs and people, Goldberg is launching the Yellow Ribbon Campaign and Initiative. The educational campaign, rooted in the Yellow Dog Project that began in Sweden in 2012, uses a yellow ribbon or bandana, often tied around the collar or leash, to indicate that the dog needs space and should not be approached.
“When you have a yellow ribbon on your leash, what that symbolizes to the community is your dog does not want to be approached in any way,” Goldberg said, adding that there are a variety of reasons a dog would not want to be approached by strangers. While some yellow ribbon dogs may have a history of aggressive behavior, others may be in training, recovering from surgery or fearful of other dogs.
“My mission statement is to reorder the disorder of community dog safety through survivor-led advocacy, clinical reform and rigorous stewardship,” she continued. “We bridge the gap between education and accountability to ensure that space is respected, victims are supported, and the agency run-around ends. Our end goal is a healthy, vibrant community.”
Goldberg acknowledged that the initiative will have little to no effect on loose dogs, but hopes the educational campaign will drum up conversation about the issue and change the way people handle their dogs in public.
Curious to hear a professional dog handler’s take, I got in touch with Janna Campillo, a longtime dog trainer and founder of the Redwood Coast K9 Academy in Fortuna. She acknowledged that it’d probably take some time for the Yellow Ribbon Initiative to gain traction, but thought it sounded like “a really good concept” that would be especially helpful in teaching children how to interact with dogs.
“It reminds me of when I was a little kid showing horses,” Campillo said. “We would put a little red ribbon on the tail of a horse that could potentially kick another horse, and as little kids, we figured out really quickly that we better keep our horses farther away from horses with red ribbons. … This would be a fantastic thing to teach children. … I think it’s a great visual way to start spreading the word and allow dog owners to basically back up and support their dog if their dog is nervous and anxious.”
Like Goldberg, Campillo acknowledged that the initiative wouldn’t do much to solve Humboldt’s problem with off-leash and roaming dogs. Still, she felt that more conversation around the issue could only help dogs and their owners.
“When people approach [yellow ribbon dogs], it only makes them more fearful. They need space, they need time and they need to acclimate to situations that make them afraid. People approaching them and trying to make friends, a lot of times, only makes that behavior worse. … I think it could be a good marker for social settings, especially for classes, public events or anything where dogs are respectfully on leash. It could take some time, but it might actually help owners who are a little bit shy about speaking up for their dogs.”
During our interview, Campillo underscored the importance of keeping dogs on leash in public spaces, “unless the dog has an impeccable recall.” One of the main focuses of her training classes is to get dogs used to walking on a leash. When an off-leash dog approaches an on-leash dog — especially one that is already fearful or struggling with anxiety — it can result in a dog fight.
“There’s an assumption that it’s OK — and this is my least favorite quote — because they’re shouting ‘my dog’s friendly’ as they’re running towards your dog that’s on a leash,” Campillo said. “Even my friendly Boston terriers will get defensive, and they’ve been around thousands of dogs in my training. … If a big dog runs up to them, they’re going to jump up and snap at them. And guess what? If that other dog doesn’t appreciate them snapping at them, then there’s going to be a dog fight, and then my dogs might get attacked. … The loose dog may very well be friendly, but the dynamic is unfair.”
Campillo described a recent interaction she had witnessed between a client’s dog and a stranger’s dog during an acclimation exercise at a local park with leash laws. She was seated about 20 feet away from her client and their muzzled dog when an off-leash dog came bounding toward them.
“I said, ‘Don’t let your dog come over here,’ and here comes the dog,” Campillo said, adding that the owner of the off-leash dog claimed her dog wouldn’t have come toward them if she hadn’t said anything. “The dog proceeded to circle my client and her dog, while her dog was lunging and lashing out, and she was getting dragged all over the place. Luckily, the dog eventually ran over to my dog and me, and I was able to catch it and hand it back to [the owner]. … The progress we had made with my client’s aggressive dog had been completely wiped away.”
Campillo gave the dog’s owner a bit of a lecture, emphasizing that dogs should not run off-leash in public spaces unless they have recall. Even so, if there are leash laws in effect, she felt dogs should stay on-leash to be respectful to other dog owners.
“I’m not going to say that my dogs are constantly on a leash, but I’m very diligent and very aware,” she said. “I don’t let them off leash on trails and places where we can’t see around the next corner. It’s very appropriate when I do let my dogs off leash, and they’re very well trained.”
Goldberg couldn’t agree more, especially about dogs being leashed on trails.
“It’s imperative that you have your dogs close to you,” she said. “It came out of nowhere, and this dog came running right at my dogs and me. It just happened so fast.”
Goldberg is still fleshing out the details of her Yellow Ribbon Dog Campaign and Initiative, which she hopes to one day present to the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors. Eventually, she plans to partner with other local organizations to create a response network dedicated to survivors of dog attacks that can connect victims with legal aid, mental health resources and financial assistance.
You can read more about it on Facebook and Instagram. Want to share your encounter with a dangerous dog? Fill out Goldberg’s survey at this link.
