May 3, 2021

03May

POLICY & POLITICS

 

What does leadership look like in your community?

James Irvine Foundation

The James Irvine Foundation is now accepting nominations for the 2022 Leadership Awards – a $250,000 grant for California leaders. Accepting nominations at IrvineAwards.org through May 7, 2021.

 

North SJ Valley:

 

COVID Update:

 

Almond acreage continues to increase in Stanislaus County

Turlock Journal

Stanislaus County’s top-producing crop continued to grow in acreage last year despite the pandemic, according to two reports recently released by the Almond Board of California.

 

Merced awarded nearly $900K for program focusing on impacts of cannabis on youth

Merced Sun-Star

Merced officials announced this week the city was awarded $885,546 three-year Youth Pilot Mentorship Program Grant for the purpose of focusing on the individual and systemic impacts of cannabis legalization on youth.

 

Turlock businesses benefit from state tax credit awards

Turlock Journal

Turlock businesses are among the over 100 companies from across California that will be able to hire additional employees due to a tax credit award aimed at economic recovery.

 

Turlock plans to clear next homeless camp. How much has the city spent on crisis?

Modesto Bee

Turlock employees are preparing to clear a homeless encampment in northwest Turlock, but as of Friday have not set a date for the third sweep of the city’s 120-day emergency.

 

Central SJ Valley:

 

COVID Update:

 

Will Gavin Newsom make emergency drought declaration statewide? Valley lawmakers say it’s a must

Fresno Bee

More than a dozen Central Valley lawmakers and elected officials met on Friday to declare a regional drought emergency and urge Gov. Gavin Newsom to do the same statewide.

See also:

 

Fresno-area parents are angrier with schools — and Gavin Newsom — than most Californians

Fresno Bee

Residents polled from California’s Central Valley are more unhappy with schools and with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s handling of schools during the height of the pandemic than parents in other parts of the state.

 

Fresno City Manager Presents $25 Million Homeless And Housing Development Plan For Next Budget Year

VPR

Esqueda presented a $25 million housing development plan for the next fiscal year. That includes potential tiny home villages, and the state program, Project HomeKey which funds the purchase and renovation of existing motels for housing units.

 

Veterans hospital is looking to expand, possibly move to Clovis. Here are the details

Fresno Bee

The VA Central California hospital, currently located in central Fresno, is considering moving some of its major functions to Clovis on 9.1 acres of land on the northeast corner of Herndon and Armstrong avenues.

 

Visalia starts cleanup projects along Highway 198

Visalia Times Delta

Following numerous resident complaints, city and state officials started cleanup projects along Highway 198.

 

Warszawski: Election conspiracies and sanitizing Proud Boys — this Fresno politician had quite a day

Fresno Bee

During Tuesday’s Board of Supervisors meeting, Brandau continued to sow doubts in the integrity of our local elections — without a shred of evidence any votes had been tampered with or miscounted.

 

Nunes tops Ways and Means fundraising as GOP weathers PAC ‘pause’

Roll Call

Calif Rep. Devin Nunes and his fellow Republicans on the House Ways and Means Committee outraised their Democratic counterparts in the first quarter of the year, despite many corporate donors hitting the pause button on giving campaign cash to GOP lawmakers.

 

South SJ Valley:

 

COVID Update:

 

City of Bakersfield launches 2021-22 budget process

Bakersfield Californian

The city of Bakersfield is gearing up to establish its budget for fiscal year 2021-22, and departments will soon begin presenting their proposed budgets.

 

Give Big Kern looks for biggest year ever after nonprofits ravaged by COVID

Bakersfield Californian

After an unprecedented year, Tuesday’s Give Big Kern aims to provide a huge boost to nonprofits that have struggled through the coronavirus pandemic.

 

Compressed-air energy storage project proposed in eastern Kern

Bakersfield Californian

California's ambitious climate goals have attracted interest from an international business partnership looking to build a groundbreaking, 500-megawatt compressed-air energy storage project in the Rosamond area.

 

Commodity upswing helps alfalfa growers, but the timing could be better

Bakersfield Californian

Only one of the county's top-10 crops — alfalfa — has benefited noticeably from recent bad weather in Brazil and strong Chinese demand for grains that feed livestock. And unfortunately for local alfalfa growers, the timing's all wrong.

 

After three decades of asking the same questions, anti-gang marchers demanding answers

Bakersfield Californian

"It's a fight for the community, a fight for the people in this community," said Xenia King, president of Mothers Against Gang Violence, a grassroots organization trying to bring a new kind of attention to an old problem.

 

Kern's rent relief program distributes more than $2.7 million

Bakersfield Californian

The Housing Authority of Kern County is administering a rent and utility relief program for Bakersfield and Kern County, which will ultimately disperse close to $50 million in state and federal funds.

 

CNN’s New Day Thoroughly Mocks Kevin McCarthy’s Ever-Evolving Position on Trump Election With Brutal Montage

Media ITE
CNN’s New Day illustrated exactly how hard it has been for the California Republican leader of the GOP congressional leader by airing a rather damning montage of his shifting positions on the 2020 general election, former President Donald Trump, and in particular, the baseless claims that the election results were due to some unfounded malfeasance.

 

State:

 

COVID Update:

 

California Democrats sharpen messaging against Newsom recall

Fresno Bee

California Democrats sharpened their anti-recall messaging Saturday during the state party's annual convention, arguing removing Gov. Gavin Newsom from office early would roll back immigrant rights and criminal justice reforms, stall progress on the housing crisis and waste taxpayer money.

See also:

 

Newsom’s $1-billion wildfire plan favors logging over homeowners, critics say

Los Angeles Times

Robert Garant proudly showed off a collection of chain saws he’s used to maintain the nearly 2 acres he and his wife Gladys have lived on for 47 years in San Diego County’s bucolic mountain hamlet of Julian.

 

How a $1-million donation on behalf of Newsom was hidden in plain sight

Los Angeles Times

The seven-figure gift was made from a donor-advised fund, a type of charitable giving account offered by some nonprofit foundations and for-profit investment firms that provides more generous income tax deductions and anonymity.

 

Kamala Harris’ California successor proves to be an ‘unchecked’ liberal

Sacramento Bee

Alex Padilla is a liberal. That’s become clear during his first three months as a U.S. senator. The California Democrat has embraced the Green New Deal, appearing with liberal star Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez recently to tout the plan.

 

Turmoil shakes California National Guard with firing, suspension of top generals

Los Angeles Times

Turmoil has gripped the leadership ranks of the California National Guard, with the firing of the general who commanded its air branch, the suspension of a second key general and new limits placed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on the organization’s use of fighter jets for civilian missions.

 

‘Safe space’ email at California agency turns into reply-all melee about race, police

Fresno Bee

A mass email sent by a California environmental agency to announce a “safe space” discussion after Derek Chauvin’s murder conviction sparked a reply-all marathon as employees voiced support for police, accused management of “caving to the mob” and asked to be removed from a “racially based” email list.

 

Paid Family Leave and State Disability Insurance Benefits in California Are Lower Than Similar Programs in Other States

California Budget & Policy Center

Over the span of a career, most adults need time away from work to care for a new child, a family member, or for their own health. The majority of California workers contribute to the state’s paid family leave and state disability insurance programs and are eligible for paid time off as care needs arise.

 

California Bar cited for inefficient discipline reforms

AP News

The State Bar of California inefficiently reorganized its discipline system, leading to a bigger backlog of cases and allowing bad lawyers to keep practicing longer while under investigation, a state audit said Thursday.

 

Federal:

 

COVID Update:

 

White House Proposes $1.8 Trillion Plan For Children And Families

NPR

On the eve of his 100th day in office, President Biden will lay out the latest plank in his economic agenda, a massive spending package that senior administration officials say would improve the lives of millions of Americans.

See also:

 

Biden To Establish $15-An-Hour Minimum Wage For Federal Contractors

NPR

President Biden will require federal contractors to pay their employees a minimum wage of $15 an hour — a hike that will benefit a few hundred thousand people and underscore the broader Democratic push to raise the federal pay floor to the same level.

 

Biden, Republicans Set Talks Over Competing Infrastructure Plans

Wall Street Journal

Lawmakers and administration officials signaled on Sunday that they expected negotiations over an infrastructure package to ramp up this week, as Republicans and President Biden work to see if a bipartisan agreement is within reach.

See also:

 

The ‘temporary’ Biden pause on fossil-fuel leasing on federal lands

AEI

Soon after assuming the presidency, however, he stated clearly that “we’re not going to ban fracking” and, presumably, other forms of fossil-fuel production on federal lands. So, which is it? Answer: The “ban” will not be formal, but very real nonetheless.

 

Opinion: The Chamber of Commerce’s Bill Comes Due

Wall Street Journal

Joe Biden’s address to Congress was slippery as soap, but on one issue the president was extremely direct: He’s coming after corporate America. Oh, and he sends his thanks to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce for helping make that possible.

 

For Republicans, fealty to Trump’s election falsehood becomes defining loyalty test

Washington Post

Debra Ell, a Republican organizer in Michigan and fervent supporter of former president Donald Trump, said she has good reason to believe the 2020 presidential election was stolen.

See also:

 

Biden’s first 100 days and the federal judiciary: Prompt action and a Supreme Court controversy

Brookings

In his first 100 days in office, President Biden has put forth a substantial number of judicial nominees earlier than any of his recent predecessors.

 

How Kamala Harris is forging her own path as vice president — while not overshadowing Biden

Sacramento Bee

Whether she wants it or not, being the first Black person, first woman, and first person of South Asian descent in the second-highest elected office has already put an unusual amount of focus on a vice president.

See also:

 

2020 Census Apportionment Results Delivered to the President

United States Census Bureau

The U.S. Census Bureau announced today that the 2020 Census shows the resident population of the United States on April 1, 2020, was 331,449,281.

See also:

 

Other:

 

20 small steps to restore faith in American elections

Roll Call

These changes and the postelection reaction to them have spawned confusion and a raft of self-defeating policy proposals in states across the country. But there are commonsense reforms that our election system still needs.

 

At 100 Day Mark: Coverage of Biden Has Been Slightly More Negative Than Positive, Varied Greatly by Outlet Type

Pew Research Center

About two-thirds of news coverage dealt with Biden’s policy agenda, while about three-quarters of early Trump coverage was framed around leadership skills

 

Joe Biden Warns Truth Is 'Under Attack' in World Press Freedom Day Message

Newsweek

President Joe Biden warned the truth is "under attack" and said that "authoritarians" are trying to undermine the media in a statement issued for World Press Freedom Day.

 

MADDY INSTITUTE PUBLIC POLICY PROGRAMMING

 

Sunday, May 16, at 10 a.m on ABC30 – Maddy Report"Eliminating Fraud, Waste & Abuse: Who You Gonna Call?" - Guests: Gabriel Petek - Legislative Analyst's Office; CA State Auditor Elaine Howle; Pedro Nava, Chairman - Little Hoover Commission; John Myers - LA Times; Dan Walters - CalMatters. Host: Maddy Institute Executive Director, Mark Keppler.

 

Sunday, May 16, at 10 a.m. on Newstalk 580AM/105.9FM (KMJ) – Maddy Report - Valley Views Edition"Keeping them Honest: The Role of State and Local Watchdogs" - Guests: Jim Boren, Executive Director - Institute for Media and Public Trust at Fresno State; Dympna Ugwu-Oju, Co-Editor - Fresno Bee's Fresnoland. Host: Maddy Institute Executive Director, Mark Keppler.

 

AGRICULTURE/FOOD

 

Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine is back. Will Fresno-area farmworkers take it?

Fresno Bee

This story is part of the Central Valley News Collaborative, which is supported by the Central Valley Community Foundation with technology and training support by Microsoft Corp.

 

Commodity upswing helps alfalfa growers, but the timing could be better

Bakersfield Californian

Only one of the county's top-10 crops — alfalfa — has benefited noticeably from recent bad weather in Brazil and strong Chinese demand for grains that feed livestock. And unfortunately for local alfalfa growers, the timing's all wrong.

 

Almond acreage continues to increase in Stanislaus County

Turlock Journal

Stanislaus County’s top-producing crop continued to grow in acreage last year despite the pandemic, according to two reports recently released by the Almond Board of California.

 

Food Prices: Add One More Hurdle To Restaurants Reopening

Business Journal

At the surface, the 1%-2% food price increase Lorraine Salazar sees for restaurants might not seem significant. But for an industry that reinvests 95% of its income back into itself, paying more for food is yet another hurdle for an industry desperate to recover.

 

Pepsico Unveils Ambitious New Agriculture Goals

Pepsico

As Threats From Climate Change Mount, The Company’s Positive Agriculture Strategy Focuses On Regenerative Farming Practices And Empowering Farming Communities.

 

CRIMINAL JUSTICE/FIRE/PUBLIC SAFETY

 

Crime:

 

Use-of-force cases prompt state debates over officer records

Bakersfield Californian

Lawmakers in more than 20 states have considered bills this year to make the disciplinary records of police officers public or to share them with other agencies, a push that comes amid high-profile deaths at the hands of law enforcement.

See also:

 

Costly illegal dumps in Fresno County are growing. What’s behind it and what’s being done

Fresno Bee

Trash illegally dumped along roads is increasing, Fresno County employees say, and a new partnership has been formed with the Sheriff’s Office to address it.

 

A better path forward for criminal justice

Brookings

George Floyd’s death at the hands of police in May 2020 and frequent events like it across America have added new urgency and momentum to the drive to reform our criminal justice system. Unfortunately, the debate has too often collapsed into an unhelpful binary: “support the blue” or “abolish the police.”

 

Public Safety:

 

Gun violence at Fashion Fair isn’t stopping shoppers, but it is changing behaviors

Fresno Bee

Several shoppers at Fashion Fair said Saturday that they were being extra careful as they walked a mall that has seen a recent spike in gun violence. “Oh, it’s in the back of mind, that’s for sure,” said Sandra Gamez, who was at the mall with partner Jazmine Garcia.

 

After three decades of asking the same questions, anti-gang marchers demanding answers

Bakersfield Californian

"It's a fight for the community, a fight for the people in this community," said Xenia King, president of Mothers Against Gang Violence, a grassroots organization trying to bring a new kind of attention to an old problem.

 

76,000 California inmates now eligible for earlier releases

Fresno Bee

California is giving 76,000 inmates, including violent and repeat felons, the opportunity to leave prison earlier as the state aims to further trim the population of what once was the nation’s largest state correctional system.

See also:

 

Child abuse can be prevented, CPS assistant director says. Here’s how.

Modesto Bee

Child abuse can be prevented if resources are used by caretakers and people report concerning behavior, said the assistant director of the Stanislaus Community Services Agency.

See also:

 

Oakland, S.F. see spike in untraceable ghost guns: 'Anybody can get these'

San Francisco Chronicle

It was probably a wrong turn that led Brandi Barnes to the corner of Courtland and San Carlos avenues in East Oakland in the dead of night on Dec. 14, 2019. But the mistake would prove fatal.

 

Is There a Case for Legalizing Heroin?

New Yorker

The addiction researcher Carl Hart argues against the distinction between hard and soft drugs. In 2013, the Columbia psychologist and drug-addiction researcher Carl Hart published a book that was a specific kind of success: it made him into a public character.

 

Fire:

 

Resource fair held for those impacted by Creek Fire

abc30

Dozens of agencies teamed up to offer assistance to people affected by the Creek Fire. Several exhibitors gathered in Prather on Friday to offer their services as part of the Creek Fire Recovery Collaborative's mission to rebuild the mountain community.

 

Fire threat creates issues insuring, renovating Sierra properties

Business Journal

In a state with a constant housing crisis, the Covid-19 pandemic didn’t help with California’s lack of vacant homes. California has also had another catastrophe that is causing issues for housing: wildfires.

 

Newsom’s $1-billion wildfire plan favors logging over homeowners, critics say

Los Angeles Times

Robert Garant proudly showed off a collection of chain saws he’s used to maintain the nearly 2 acres he and his wife Gladys have lived on for 47 years in San Diego County’s bucolic mountain hamlet of Julian.

 

ECONOMY/JOBS

 

Economy:

 

Sequoia Regional Economic Summit: Recovery 'not what you think it is'

Business Journal

The Tulare County Economic Development Corporation hosted the 2021 Sequoia Regional Economic Summit Friday with presenter Christopher Thornberg, an economist and founding partner of Beacon Economics.

 

City of Bakersfield launches 2021-22 budget process

Bakersfield Californian

The city of Bakersfield is gearing up to establish its budget for fiscal year 2021-22, and departments will soon begin presenting their proposed budgets.

 

Give Big Kern looks for biggest year ever after nonprofits ravaged by COVID

Bakersfield Californian

After an unprecedented year, Tuesday’s Give Big Kern aims to provide a huge boost to nonprofits that have struggled through the coronavirus pandemic.

 

The price of the stuff that makes everything is surging

Los Angeles Times

From steel and copper to corn and lumber, commodities started 2021 with a bang, surging to levels not seen for years. The rally threatens to raise the cost of goods from the lunchtime sandwich to gleaming skyscrapers.

 

Americans Can’t Get Enough of the Stock Market

Wall Street Journal

Individual investors are holding more stocks than ever before as major indexes climb to fresh highs. They are also upping the ante by borrowing to magnify their bets or increasingly buying on small dips in the market.

 

How Black-owned businesses can make the most out of the Biden infrastructure plan

Brookings

Alongside much-needed investments in the nation’s roads, bridges, and water systems, President Joe Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure proposal, the American Jobs Plan, promises to create more opportunities for small businesses and advance racial equity.

 

Jobs:

 

Job fair held at cannabis farm in Mendota

abc30

Mendota's first cannabis farm hosted a job fair today, and they're still looking for good help. Boca Del Rio Farms and California Harvesters had about 50 people turn out to submit their resumes.

 

Shortage of truck drivers worries local ag producers as harvest nears

Bakersfield Californian

A worsening shortage of truck drivers is raising concerns among local farmers that, unless a solution emerges soon, there might not be enough hauling capacity to bring this year's harvest to market.

 

How can California help laid-off retail workers find jobs? This state’s approach may work

Sacramento Bee

The COVID-19 pandemic was one for the record books for the retail industry. More than 40 major retailers declared bankruptcy, and more than 11,000 stores closed in 2020 across the U.S., according to CoStar Group.

 

From Apple to Domino’s Pizza, U.S. Companies Scramble to Meet Surge in Demand

Wall Street Journal

Consumers are splurging on cars and furniture—and facing extended waits for delivery. Restaurants and gyms are reopening—and struggling to find workers. Factories and home builders are trying to ramp up—but are short on semiconductors or raw materials.

 

Biden’s Jobs Plan Could Build Racial Equity With One Simple Fix

Capital and Main

The ambitious Biden-Harris infrastructure proposal, called the American Jobs Plan, is not yet law — not even a bill — but there’s already great enthusiasm about the millions of jobs it could bring.

 

More than relief: How unemployment insurance can limit community transmission in a pandemic – and what to do next

Brookings

"Like a vaccine, the benefit of staying at home is far greater than just the benefit to the individual." New research from Mallika Thomas demonstrates how expanding unemployment insurance can help limit community transmission of COVID-19.

 

EDUCATION

 

K-12:

 

Clovis schools to end distance learning in the fall. Here’s how classrooms will work

Fresno Bee

The Clovis Unified School District plans to return to a pre-pandemic schedule for the upcoming 2021-2022 school year, Superintendent Eimear O’Farrell announced on Thursday evening.

See also:

 

Fresno-area parents are angrier with schools — and Gavin Newsom — than most Californians

Fresno Bee

Residents polled from California’s Central Valley are more unhappy with schools and with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s handling of schools during the height of the pandemic than parents in other parts of the state.

 

Virus, technology, unrest make stressful year for teachers

Fresno Bee

The school bell rings, and about a dozen masked first-graders turn to the monitor and wave hello to their classmates — each a tiny Zoom square representing the other half of the class.

See also:

 

Elevating STEM Education in 2021

EdNote

Although most students and schools experienced widespread disruptions in 2020, education stakeholders have commented on an unexpected silver lining for STEM education.

 

COVID-19, the educational equity crisis, and the opportunity ahead

Brookings

The return of students to campus is worth celebrating, but we cannot forget that the pandemic and related school disruptions have and will continue to have a profound impact. Heather Hough shares recommendations for a restorative education restart.

 

Higher Ed:

 

Community Input Requested To Select New State Center Community College District Chancellor

Fresno City College

State Center Community College District (SCCCD) has scheduled four virtual community forums to gather public input regarding the search for the next Chancellor. This search is underway as current Chancellor Dr. Paul Parnell retires on July 6, 2021 and Dr. Douglass Houston serves as interim chancellor beginning May 1, 2021.

 

Fresno State President Saúl Jiménez-Sandoval: Together, our efforts enabled over 6,000 graduates to soar

Fresno State Campus News

To commence means to begin or to start, and for 110 years, May has always represented new beginnings for Fresno State graduates.

 

Fresno State Commencement keynote speaker is Dr. Lynda Resnick

Fresno State Campus News

Those in attendance will hear a special message to students from keynote speaker Dr. Lynda Resnick, who along with her husband, Dr. Stewart Resnick, is one of this year’s four honorary doctorate recipients.

 

April 'Showers' Accolades on Stan State, Students and Faculty

Stanislaus State

This month’s recap of recognitions, accolades and awards includes Warriors who advanced to the California State University’s systemwide student research competition, student employees honored for stellar on-the-job performance and winners of the Academic Senate’s 2020-2021 Faculty Awards.

 

Is it time to rethink college savings?

Los Angeles Times

Politics is the art of the possible. Although some student debt relief is possible, as is some expansion of free college options, it’s hard to imagine a U.S. where college educations are entirely free for everyone.

 

Postsecondary to Prosperity

California Competes

Enabling Californians to have a high quality of life, including economic and social factors, is an individual and public goal. Yet, this opportunity is uneven across the state. Where you

live and your demographic characteristics shape your likelihood of being able to thrive.

 

Opinion: California needs a new Master Plan for Higher Education

CalMatters

California is in the midst of a crisis in higher education. At first glance this may seem paradoxical, as many in California and around the world continue to perceive the UC system in particular as the gold standard for public higher education.

 

ENVIRONMENT/ENERGY

 

Environment:

 

Air district issues health caution due to gusty winds

Bakersfield Californian

The San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District issued a heath caution Saturday night that lasts through Monday due to blowing dust from strong northwesterly winds.

 

'Poster Child' Of The Climate Crisis: CA County Seeks Justice For Area Hit Hard By Air Pollution

VPR
One place experiencing all of this firsthand is Imperial County, California, an agricultural community near the Mexico border that has a majority-Latino population and some of the worst air pollution in the country.

 

This California Climate Solution Actually Adding Millions of Tons of CO2 Into the Atmosphere

ProPublica

New research shows that California’s climate policy created up to 39 million carbon credits that aren’t achieving real carbon savings. But companies can buy these forest offsets to justify polluting more anyway.

 

Corporate secrecy over climate change targeted by Washington and California

Merced Sun-Star

California clean tech innovator Bloom Energy, with its noncombustion, low-emission fuel cells, is hardly taking the same approach to powering the planet as oil giant Chevron, but one thing the companies have in common are slick promotional campaigns defining them as environmental pioneers.

 

Biden administration to propose first rule requiring cut in climate pollutants

Washington Post

The new Environmental Protection Agency rule targets hydrofluorocarbons, greenhouse gases that are thousands of times more powerful than carbon dioxide.

 

Energy:

 

Compressed-air energy storage project proposed in eastern Kern

Bakersfield Californian

California's ambitious climate goals have attracted interest from an international business partnership looking to build a groundbreaking, 500-megawatt compressed-air energy storage project in the Rosamond area.

 

Viewpoints: Is Gov. Gavin Newsom faking it on fracking and climate change?

Sacramento Bee

British journalist James Bartholomew is widely credited with creating the phrase “virtue signaling” to describe positioning oneself on the popular side of an issue without actually doing anything about it.

See also:

 

When the Good News From Oil and Gas Isn’t So Good

Capital and Main

In late March, New Mexico’s largest newspaper ran a story about how 2020 set records for oil and gas production in the state: More fossil fuels were pumped out of the ground last year than ever before.

 

Locals Worry Wind and Solar Will Gobble Up Forests and Farms

PEW

Massachusetts has installed solar panels faster than almost any other state as it seeks to reduce its carbon emissions. But some activists say the state’s transition to renewable energy has come at a cost.

 

Opinion: Homeowner solar-energy program unfairly benefits the few and needs to be more equitable

Fresno Bee

The Fresno Bee editorialized that the state’s rooftop solar incentive program, the 25-year-old Net Energy Metering (NEM) program, has been a “smashing success” at getting people to install rooftop solar. That’s a good thing.

 

HEALTH/HUMAN SERVICES

 

Health:

 

More Stanislaus County kids died in 2020 and not from COVID-19. What caused their deaths?

Modesto Bee

In 2020, the number of Stanislaus County infants who died in their sleep doubled compared to the previous five-year average. Last year, eight infants died in their sleep, with five attributed to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome or asphyxia and three babies with the cause listed as “unknown/undetermined,” by the coroner.

 

Counties at Highest Risk for COVID Harm Often Have Lowest Vaccination Rates

ProPublica

The vaccine rollout was meant to prioritize vulnerable communities, but four months of data shows healthier — and often wealthier — counties have been faster to vaccinate.

See also:

 

If you had COVID-19, do you need to get the vaccine? Fresno doctor shares the latest

Fresno Bee

In other words, if you had COVID-19, are you now naturally immune, or should you still get vaccinated? The short answer is, ‘yes,’ doctors say you should still receive a coronavirus vaccine. It’s still unclear how long natural immunity lasts.

See also:

 

How risky are indoor spaces during COVID pandemic? This tool helps you figure it out

Fresno Bee

Since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, health officials have been telling the public to maintain a 6-foot distance from others to curb the spread of COVID-19.

 

California’s flavored tobacco ban up in the air as Biden moves to prohibit menthol cigarettes

Fresno Bee

The move by President Joe Biden’s administration to ban the sale of menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars is unlikely to disrupt California’s upcoming referendum on a state law prohibiting sales of those and other tobacco products.

 

Community Medical Centers HealthQuest: The Truth About Taking Supplements

abc30

ABC30 and Community Medical Centers have teamed up to present Community Medical Centers HealthQuest, a series of FREE community forums designed to help you and your family make informed and healthy life decisions.

 

Human Services:

 

California Native Americans won health care settlement. Federal government hasn’t delivered

Fresno Bee

Finally, California’s Native American population — the nation’s largest — would receive its rightful share of federal health care funding. Leaders in the California Native community journeyed to Washington to negotiate the process of opening the funding pipeline.

 

California hospital leaders seek legislative reprieve for industry ‘broken’ by COVID-19

Fresno Bee

The COVID-19 pandemic has “left a majority of California’s hospitals financially challenged, unstable and in some cases, broken,” while proposed and existing state regulations are pushing them further over the brink, said the CEO of California’s top hospital trade group.

 

Plan to save California money could take health care away from most vulnerable patients

Fresno Bee

The most underserved patients — young and old, including migrant workers and the uninsured — in California could lose access to critical health care services under looming changes that leaders say would put federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) at risk.

 

Kaiser plans 200 layoffs in Northern CA; union says unexpected move terrified members

Sacramento Bee

Kaiser Permanente will lay off 200 workers from its workforce in Northern California as it changes up how some departments will operate, resulting in the need for fewer staff in some positions.

 

Democrats seek narrow path to rein in cost of medicines

AP News

President Joe Biden’s call for authorizing Medicare to negotiate lower prescription drug prices has energized Democrats on a politically popular idea they’ve been pushing for nearly 20 years only to encounter frustration.

 

IMMIGRATION

 

Annual May Day March for immigration rights held in Downtown Fresno

abc30

Dozens gathered in Downtown Fresno for an immigration rights rally. For the last 15 years, people have gathered in Fresno every May 1 to make their voices heard.

 

Growing Number of Migrant Families Allowed Into U.S. to Seek Asylum

Wall Street Journal

The Biden administration is allowing a growing number of migrant families seeking asylum to enter the U.S. at legal border crossings, in a change from a year-old Trump-era policy aimed at blocking them entirely, according to people familiar with the process and government data.

See also:

 

Biden administration to return Trump’s border wall money to Pentagon accounts

Roll Call

A Biden administration official said in a statement that to the extent possible, what remains of the more than $14 billion tied up in border wall projects would be restored for use as Congress intended.

See also:

 

LAND USE/HOUSING

 

Land Use:

 

Veterans hospital is looking to expand, possibly move to Clovis. Here are the details

Fresno Bee

The VA Central California hospital, currently located in central Fresno, is considering moving some of its major functions to Clovis on 9.1 acres of land on the northeast corner of Herndon and Armstrong avenues.

 

Visalia starts cleanup projects along Highway 198

Visalia Times Delta

Following numerous resident complaints, city and state officials started cleanup projects along Highway 198.

 

Housing:

 

Fresno City Manager Presents $25 Million Homeless And Housing Development Plan For Next Budget Year

VPR

Esqueda presented a $25 million housing development plan for the next fiscal year. That includes potential tiny home villages, and the state program, Project HomeKey which funds the purchase and renovation of existing motels for housing units.

 

Turlock plans to clear next homeless camp. How much has the city spent on crisis?

Modesto Bee

Turlock employees are preparing to clear a homeless encampment in northwest Turlock, but as of Friday have not set a date for the third sweep of the city’s 120-day emergency.

 

California’s housing market smashed another record. Here’s how much it costs to buy a home

Sacramento Bee

The California housing market keeps smashing its own records. The median price for a single-family home in the Golden State reached a new high of $758,990 in March, according to state figures announced Friday by the Department of Finance.

 

Issue Brief: COVID's Impact on California Housing

Little Hoover Commission

The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly affected California renters, landlords, and homeowners, hindering their ability to make their housing payments and threatening potentially devastating socio-economic impacts due to foreclosure. Some of California's most vulnerable populations - people of color, low-income households, and those with less formal education - have been disproportionately affected.

 

State-Supported “Clean Energy” Loans Are Putting Borrowers At Risk of Losing Their Homes

ProPublica

Dozens of Missouri homeowners who used PACE loans to fix up their houses ended up trapped in debt and could soon see their homes sold at auction.

 

PUBLIC FINANCES

 

California parents would get big tax breaks under Biden proposal. Here’s how much to expect

Fresno Bee

Low and middle income families struggling to pay for child care and other expenses would see big new tax breaks through 2025 under the White House’s new child tax credit plan, according to a new analysis.

 

California keeps millions in child support while parents drown in debt

CalMatters

Half of Stacy Estes’ pay disappears every month before it hits his bank account. Each check is about $500 lighter than it should be, intercepted in the name of child support — which he wouldn’t have a problem with, if it were going to his kids.

 

Biden’s corporate tax plan takes aim at income inequality

Business Journal

Now, President Joe Biden is training the government’s sights again on the loopholes, shelters and international havens that have long allowed multinational companies to dodge taxes in ways that ordinary households cannot.

See also:

 

Is it really too expensive to raise a family?

AEI

Policies to subsidize parenting are all the rage these days. The recent COVID relief package included an expanded tax credit that many Democrats want to make permanent.

 

Opinion: At last, some action on misleading retirement income statistics

AEI

New federal government research shows that many common factoids on retirement income adequacy are just plain wrong. And federal agencies are finally starting to recognize the problem.

 

TRANSPORTATION

 

Is Fresno ready for bicyclists rolling through stop signs? California bill would make it legal

Fresno Bee

Bicyclists in Fresno and other central San Joaquin Valley cities may soon have the option to roll though stop signs at intersections, if safe to do so.

 

Fresno air travel was hit hard by the COVID pandemic. But how much has it recovered?

Fresno Bee

For the first couple of months of 2020, it looked like Fresno Yosemite International Airport was in for a record-breaking year.

 

Micro Bus now available for passengers in Merced County’s westside communities

Merced Sun-Star

The Bus has launched a pilot micro transit service to westside communities in Merced County, including Los Banos, Dos Palos, Gustine and Santa Nella. The serviced called the Micro Bus began Saturday.

 

TSA extends mask requirement for planes, other public transportation in U.S. until September

Washington Post

The Transportation Security Administration announced Friday that it has extended through Sept. 13 its orders requiring people to wear masks in transportation settings, including at airports, on commercial aircraft, and on buses and trains.

 

How 'Amtrak Joe' Biden's infrastructure push could put rail back on track in the US

abc News

President Joe Biden campaigned on sparking the "second great railroad revolution" in a car-centric nation where rail infrastructure has languished for decades.

See also:

 

WATER

 

Will Gavin Newsom make emergency drought declaration statewide? Valley lawmakers say it’s a must

Fresno Bee

More than a dozen Central Valley lawmakers and elected officials met on Friday to declare a regional drought emergency and urge Gov. Gavin Newsom to do the same statewide.

See also:

 

City urges water conservation as dry conditions persist

Bakersfield Californian

As dry conditions persist, the city of Bakersfield's Water Resources Department is calling on the public to conserve water.

 

Is California Ready for Drought?

PPIC
Drought isn’t an equal opportunity crisis—some sectors and communities are more affected than others. Join the 
PPIC Water Policy Center and state and local experts for a panel discussion about how to reduce its impacts to the most vulnerable sectors.

 

“Xtra”

 

Disneyland reopening marks California’s COVID-19 turnaround

Fresno Bee

Disneyland swung open its gates to cheering visitors donning sequined Minnie Mouse ears and snapping selfies Friday, marking a dramatic turnaround in a state so overwhelmed with coronavirus cases just four months ago that patients were being treated in outdoor tents.

See also:

 

Three local nonprofits holding Concert for the Causes fundraiser next month

KGET
Wounded Heroes Fund Executive Director Wendy Porter and League of Dreams Executive Director Jessica Mathews spoke with 17 News at Sunrise to talking about their upcoming event Concert for the Causes.

 

Bethany Clough: Fresno’s water tower could become home to a coffee shop – and more. Here’s what we know

Fresno Bee

Fresno’s historic water tower has been closed since the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic started. It’s taken some damage from vandals, who have broken lights and damaged one of the doors.

 

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Maddy Institute Updated List of San Joaquin Valley Elected Officials HERE.

 

The Kenneth L. Maddy Institute was established to honor the legacy of one of California’s most principled and effective legislative leaders of the last half of the 20th Century by engaging, preparing and inspiring a new generation of governmental leaders for the 21st Century. Its mission is to inspire citizen participation, elevate government performance, provide non-partisan analysis and assist in providing solutions for public policy issues important to the region, state and nation.

                                                     

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