POLICY & POLITICS
Newsom recall basics: How to vote in California’s election
CalMatters
A FAQ on the California election on whether to recall Gov. Gavin Newsom.
See also:
● Key Recall Dates in San Joaquin Valley Counties
● Recall Ballot Tracking
● Voting options for those affected by wildfires or other emergencies
North SJ Valley:
COVID Update:
● Coronavirus update, Aug. 31: Stanislaus posts vaccine schedule, offers $20 gift cards Modesto Bee
● Modesto mayor says she has tested positive for COVID-19, will work at home until well Modesto Bee
● Editorial: Modesto Mayor Sue Zwahlen: `I would be more sick if I hadn’t gotten COVID vaccine’ Modesto Bee
Turlock executive cleared of ethics complaint, California retirement system reports
Modesto Bee
The California Public Employees’ Retirement System determined an ethics complaint against Gary Hampton was unsubstantiated. A complaint submitted in June alleged Hampton worked more than his allowed hours while employed as Turlock’s acting city manager.
As Turlock Fire interim chief retires, is the city considering contract with Modesto?
Modesto Bee
Interim Chief Gary Carlson’s retirement announcement comes after Turlock budgeted a study to evaluate contracting Modesto for fire services.
Nosrati, organizers reflect on failed City Council recall attempt
Turlock Journal
As voters throughout the state decide whether or not to recall California Governor Gavin Newsom, Turlock City Councilman Andrew Nosrati is able to breathe a sigh of relief eight months removed from a failed attempt to remove him from the dais.
President Junn welcomes students to a delayed start at Stanislaus State
Turlock Journal
Stanislaus State President Ellen Junn shared the university’s plan for managing the fall semester amidst rising cases of COVID-19 in her virtual welcoming address on Aug. 19.
See also:
● Renovations for Stanislaus State library reach final touches Turlock Journal
Former student, advocate for people of color is Modesto schools’ new equity specialist
Modesto Bee
A former student has returned to Modesto City Schools in a newly created position to help school leaders advance their equity goals and build relationships with families of color.
Central SJ Valley:
'God Help You If You Have A Car Crash Today' – Health Officials Warn Of Overflowing Hospitals
VPR
Coronavirus infections are now spreading faster in the San Joaquin Valley than in any other region of the state. And as hospitals reach critical capacity, health officials are warning that patient care is at risk.
COVID Update:
● Deadly weekend in Fresno, Valley. COVID delta surge fuels grim milestones for region Fresno Bee
● What does the continuing summer COVID surge look like in Fresno, Valley? Here’s the data Fresno Bee
● COVID cases continue to climb in Fresno-area schools amid chaotic meetings, uncertainty Fresno Bee
● Fresno City College’s vaccine vote made one day after drop date. Can students get refunds? Fresno Bee
● Fresno doctors baffled by patients’ COVID skepticism, belief in unproven ‘cures’ amid surge Fresno Bee
● 535 Visalia teachers and students in quarantine as schools end second week Visalia Times Delta
Fresno faces more unhealthy air, triple-digit heat. When to expect cooler weather
Fresno Bee
Fresno and the rest of the central San Joaquin Valley can expect to see at least two more days of triple-digit temperatures, according to the National Weather Service in Hanford.
See also:
● California wildfires continue to impact Valley air quality Hanford Sentinel
● 'It's suffocating': Valley residents cope with smoky air due to California wildfires abc30
The Supreme Court ended the federal eviction moratorium. What does it mean for Fresno?
Fresno Bee
Fresno renters, if you are concerned that the Thursday Supreme Court decision that ended the federal eviction moratorium will get you thrown out of your rental immediately, you have some time.
Fresno Co registrar sees big return of mail-in recall ballots. What does that tell us?
Fresno Bee
The Fresno County Clerk and Registrar of Voters has received more than 90,000 ballots through Monday morning in the recall election of Gov. Gavin Newsom.
See also:
● How to track your ballot in California’s recall election of Gov. Gavin Newsom Fresno Bee
Terry Slatic accuses Fresno school leaders of failing to protect teachers, violating laws
Fresno Bee
In a statement to reporters, Trustee Terry Slatic said he filed a formal complaint with the Fresno County District Attorney’s Public Integrity Unit, accusing Superintendent Bob Nelson and four trustees of violating California education laws related to student privacy.
See also:
● He won the fight over Fresno High’s mascot. The backlash has been ‘weird’ and ‘racist’ Fresno Bee
Madera County residents and farmers face groundwater challenge of a lifetime
Fresno Bee
Madera County is running out of time as groundwater levels plummet to new depths. Wells are going dry everywhere. Drillers have months-long waitlists. Residents are scrambling for water tanks.
Warszawski: Bill would give public more sway over Fresno river parkway — and that’s a good thing
Fresno Bee
Assembly Bill 559, authored by state Assemblyman Joaquin Arambula, helps balance the scales. If signed into law, the bill would give the public more sway over the development of the 22-mile river parkway between Friant Dam and Highway 99.
Kings to hold third redistricting hearing 10 a.m. Tuesday
Hanford Sentinel
Kings County will hold the last public hearing before the release of draft redistricting during next Tuesday’s board meeting at 10 a.m., allowing residents to make testimony on communities or interest and learn about mapping tools.
Tulare will see federal funding, plans to boost infrastructure and address homelessness
Visalia Times Delta
Federal relief funding, a new Highway 99 interchange to the Ag Show and homelessness were the biggest topics at the State of the City luncheon in Tulare.
See also:
● Tulare County's $90M cut of American Rescue Plan will prioritize infrastructure, public health Visalia Times Delta
Study: Proposed Biden tax plan would cut taxes for average Tulare County taxpayer
Visalia Times Delta
The average taxpayer in the three Congressional Districts that comprise parts of Tulare County would see a decrease in taxes if President Joe Biden’s tax plan passes, a study by the Tax Foundation has found.
Retiring Tulare Fire Chief Luis Nevarez leaves behind 'Inspiration,' 'Legacy' and 'Leadership'
Visalia Times Delta
Luis Nevarez believes the passion he feels for firefighting includes a spirit of community, station pride, family, relationship building, and courage.
‘Hazards’ around site of Mariposa family’s death prompt Sierra forest closure order
Fresno Bee
Sierra National Forest closed numerous hiking trails, picnic areas and campgrounds, citing “unknown hazards found in and near the Savage Lundy Trail,” where a Mariposa family was mysteriously found dead two weeks ago.
South SJ Valley:
COVID Update:
● Kern Public Health: Five new COVID deaths, 564 new cases reported Friday Bakersfield Californian
Appeals court rules against Valley Ozone Plan
Bakersfield Californian
Federal approval of a 2019 contingency measure for cutting ozone emissions in the Central Valley has been rejected by an appellate court, which called the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's acceptance of the provision "arbitrary and capricious."
Faulconer stresses experience in government during campaign stop in Bakersfield
Bakersfield Californian
Republican gubernatorial candidate Kevin Faulconer visited Bakersfield on Friday for a campaign event. As the election enters its final weeks, he stressed his political experience as well as his success in reducing homelessness while mayor of San Diego.
Editorial: Wake-up call: California’s water is running out
Bakersfield Californian
Mandatory limits on water use are likely to be imposed in the near future on California residents, businesses and farms. Get ready. You can’t change the weather, which has deprived the state of its necessary rain and snowfall. But you can change your response.
State:
COVID Update:
● COVID in California: Highly mutated C.1.2 variant may be more infectious, report says San Francisco Chronicle
● Vaccinations are increasing in California. Here's where San Francisco Chronicle
● Golden State restaurants would require vaccines for guests under proposal The Business Journal
● California could require COVID vaccines at indoor restaurants, bars, gyms and more Public CEO
● This chart of the delta surge in California vs. the U.K. may contain a warning sign San Francisco Chronicle
● Should California expand its COVID vaccine mandates? Here are 3 industries that could be next Modesto Bee
● Rural California counties tighten mask rules as COVID patients flood hospitals Sacramento Bee
● California Democrats drop plan to require COVID vaccines to work, go to most public places Sacramento Bee
● Editorial: California should pass model COVID-19 mandate law Mercury News
Here’s what to know about voting in the California Governor recall election
Sacramento Bee
Registered voters should have already received their mail-in ballots. As of this week, about 2.8 million ballots, or 13% of the approximate 22 million ballots sent out to Californians, have been returned, according to tracker by Political Data Inc.
See also:
● The Tale of California’s Recall Election New York Times
● What will California Democrats do if Gavin Newsom loses? Here’s what happened to Schwarzenegger Modesto Bee
● Californians are returning their recall ballots. Here’s who is voting so far Sacramento Bee
● Fact check: Will voting ‘yes’ on the California recall elect an ‘anti-vaccine Republican’? Sacramento Bee
● California recall: Here’s what a Republican governor can accomplish if Newsom loses Mercury News
● Recall fact and fiction: What you need to know about the election fraud rumors you’re seeing CalMatters
● Opinion: Connecting California: Don't fix the recall. Fix all elections Ventura County Star
● Column: I oppose this foolish gubernatorial recall. Does that make me a hypocrite? Los Angeles Times
● What California’s Recall Election Says About America The Atlantic
● Why Aren’t Democrats Talking About the Worst Possible Outcome of the California Recall? Slate
● Opinion: The Recall Election to Oust Gavin Newsom Is Undemocratic Newsweek
● Opinion: California’s Recall Is a Blow to Democratic Change New Yorker
● Newsom Recall: Voter Apathy, Confusion May Lower Turnout KMJ Now
How Gavin Newsom went from landslide victory to fighting for his political survival Los Angeles Times
Whether the future belongs to Gavin Newsom, 53, is now an open question. Voters on Sept. 14 will decide whether to cashier the governor before he has even completed his first term, in the second gubernatorial recall election in the state’s history.
See also:
● California Gov. Newsom is taking cues from a tea party darling to fight the recall Los Angeles Times
● Newsom grabs a broom and talks homeless policy at an S.F. encampment San Francisco Chronicle
● Are young voters the key to Gavin Newsom surviving the recall? CalMatters
● Walters: If recalled, what’s next for Gavin Newsom? CalMatters
● Opinion: Gavin Newsom thought he could override the Constitution — now he faces a recall The Hill
● Why the California recall is within the margin of error and what that means for Gavin Newsom CNN
GOP's Larry Elder looks for shock win in California recall
Bakersfield Californian
California’s next governor could be a Black conservative who would erase state vaccine and mask mandates, is critical of gun control, disputes the notion of systemic racism in America and opposes the minimum wage because he says it tramples the free market.
See also:
● Everything you need to know about Larry Elder Los Angeles Times
● Larry Elder’s views cost him listeners and even his best friend. But he won’t waver Los Angeles Times
● Will the LAPD’s investigation of leading recall contender Larry Elder derail his campaign? Mercury News
● Elder advocated denying education, emergency care to undocumented immigrants San Francisco Chronicle
● California Democrats alarmed as GOP's Elder threatens Newsom AP
Longshot recall candidate Kiley may emerge as a GOP leader
Bakersfield Californian
The race to recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom has attracted a nationally syndicated radio show host, an ex-Olympic champion turned reality TV star and the former mayor of one of the nation's 10 most populous cities who has deep ties to the Republican Party establishment.
See also:
● Recall candidate Kiley may emerge as a GOP leader Sacramento Bee
Commentary: State Must Maintain Election Security Momentum
Little Hoover Commission
The Little Hoover Commission, California’s independent government watchdog, is recommending that the state increase its investments in securing election infrastructure.
Bills to increase housing density in California head to Newsom
San Francisco Chronicle
Gov. Gavin Newsom will decide whether to loosen zoning rules in California to allow duplexes and lot splitting in residential neighborhoods across the state.
See also:
● As bill on deporting freed inmates hits CA Senate, Navy vet in Newman shares experience Modesto Bee
Walters: Will Gavin Newsom release Robert Kennedy’s killer?
CalMatters
As he battles to avoid being recalled, California Gov. Gavin Newsom faces another issue: whether Sirhan Sirhan, who assassinated Robert Kennedy, should be paroled.
Walters: Who will control sports betting in California?
CalMatters
Legal wagering on sports is coming to California but dueling ballot measures will determine who controls and profits from the potentially huge amounts of money involved.
Commission Confirms Appointments to Courts of Appeal
California Courts Newsroom
Chief Justice Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye, chair of the Commission on Judicial Appointments, announced that the commission today confirmed four nominations to the California Courts of Appeal in San Francisco and San Jose.
Event: 2021 Speaker Series on California's Future
PPIC
A panel of top political journalists will talk about the recall process and explore the implications of the election and its outcome.
Federal:
COVID Update:
● Hospitals see more unvaccinated, younger, healthier people with COVID-19 Fresno Bee
● More COVID-19 shots, studies offer hope for US schools Sacramento Bee
● The U.S. Has A Long Precedent For Vaccine Mandates VPR
● The U.S. reaches a daily average of 100,000 Covid hospitalizations for the first time since the winter peak New York Times
● U.S. Covid-19 Hospitalizations Approach a Peak as Delta Variant Spreads Wall Street Journal
● More states embrace vax passports without waiting for Biden Politico
● CDC vaccine panel: Let regulators lead on Covid-19 booster shots Politico
● Axios-Ipsos poll: Vaccine hesitancy may be crumbling Axios
● Vaccine Hesitancy: It's Not About Knowledge American Bar Association
68 House Democrats urge more reconciliation money for Interior
Roll Call
Nearly 70 House Democrats have urged party leaders in both chambers of Congress for more funding in the reconciliation budget to combat climate change through the Interior Department.
U.S. regulator tells White House it will step up enforcement of oil and gas conglomerates
Washington Post
The Federal Trade Commission plans to ramp up enforcement of anticompetitive practices by oil and gas companies, as the Biden administration presses for ways to alleviate unusually high fuel prices for motorists.
Editorial: Bernie Sanders Runs Out of Billionaires
Wall Street Journal
Bernie Sanders held a rally in Iowa over the weekend to sell his $3.5 trillion budget proposal, and he also had kind words for President Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure plan. As usual, Mr. Sanders assailed America’s “billionaire class,” which he said is refusing to pay its “fair share” of taxes.
See also:
· America’s Racial Wealth Gap Is Enormous and Getting Worse Capital & Main
Opinion: Let a Biden Reappraisal Include Antitrust
Wall Street Journal
Ms. Khan, now 32, made her name with a 2017 law-student article arguing that Amazon should be broken up because it should be broken up. Now she’s getting to put her urges to work, first with Facebook, and we can already anticipate the results.
Other:
Commentary: How we can close the digital divide in California
CalMatters
Use partnerships to leverage existing broadband internet networks and create scalable and economic “middle mile” services to 463,000 largely rural unserved households.
Commentary: Speeders should not set speed limits
CalMatters
Each year, nearly 4,000 Californians die in car crashes. More than three times that number are severely injured. The difference between death and injury is speed — and with every mile per hour, the risk only grows.
MADDY INSTITUTE PUBLIC POLICY PROGRAMMING
Sunday, September 5, at 10 a.m on ABC30 – Maddy Report: "State Auditor's Report: Evaluating Affordable Housing Programs" - Guest: California State Auditor Elaine Howle; John Myers - LA Times; Dan Walters - CalMatters. Host: Maddy Institute Executive Director, Mark Keppler.
Sunday, September 5, at 10 a.m. on Newstalk 580AM/105.9FM (KMJ) – Maddy Report - Valley Views Edition: “Building More Affordable Housing: What Works and What Doesn’t"- Guests: CA State Auditor Elaine Howle; John Myers - LA Times; Dan Walters - CalMatters; Matt Levine - CalMatters; Dan Dunmoyer - California Building Industry Association. Host: Maddy Institute Executive Director, Mark Keppler.
AGRICULTURE/FOOD
Farmworkers may be able to vote at home in union elections
CalMatters
California lawmakers are looking to pass a bill that would give farmworkers more ways to vote in union elections. Business groups have labeled it a job killer but United Farm Workers, which sponsored the bill, says it’s akin to the state’s new vote-by-mail system.
Scorching Heat Is Killing America's Farmworkers
Pew Trusts
Federal regulators have issued no standards to protect workers from heat-related hazards, even as climate change increases the risk of deadly heat waves and extreme weather conditions. Some states are stepping in.
Washington Post
This small town in California’s agriculture-rich Central Valley advertises itself as the “Cantaloupe Center of the World.” But as relentless drought punishes California and the West, the land is drying up and the cantaloupes are disappearing.
CRIMINAL JUSTICE/FIRE/PUBLIC SAFETY
Crime:
Washington Post
In all, the federal agency tallied 7,759 hate crimes last year, a tumultuous 12 months marked by a global pandemic, a divisive presidential election and upheaval in the economy.
See also:
● U.S. Hate Crimes Rose in 2020 With Jumps in Racially Motivated Incidents Wall Street Journal
Public Safety:
Fact-checking a claim about the FDA’s role in approving pesticides in food
Politifact
After the U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave final approval to the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, a health and wellness Facebook group shared a post that seeks to discredit the agency.
High Gun Sales And More Time At Home Have Led To More Accidental Shootings By Kids
VPR
Accidental gunshot deaths by children handling a gun jumped 31% during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic compared to a year earlier, new data shows.
Fire:
Interactive map shows where every wildfire is burning in California
Fresno Bee
This interactive map shows where major fires are burning in California and the rest of the nation, including updates on the Caldor Fire burning near Lake Tahoe.
See also:
· Air resources help slow spread of Walkers Fire Porterville Recorder
· Northwest flank of French Fire proves difficult to contain Bakersfield Californian
· Devastating fires could damage Lake Tahoe’s iconic blue waters CalMatters
● Governor Proclaims a State of Emergency in El Dorado County due to the Caldor Fire State of California
● Caldor Fire reaches basin, jumps Highway 89 as South Lake Tahoe evacuates Fresno Bee
● Why top California fire expert is so worried about Caldor Fire as it approaches Tahoe Sacramento Bee
● This is what satellite imagery shows us about the Caldor Fire's growth San Francisco Chronicle
● Lake Tahoe faces disastrous ‘urban conflagration’ if Caldor fire reaches communities Los Angeles Times
● Why the Lake Tahoe area is vulnerable to wildfire Los Angeles Times
● A summer of terror, heartbreak for those in path of California wildfires. ‘The worst’ Los Angeles Times
Wildfire, drought and chainsaws: California’s iconic trees are casualties in the war on fire
San Diego Union-Tribune
Scientists say California’s imperiled forests need more wildfire, not less. Newsom’s $1.5 billion plan for wildfire prevention will fund logging to mimic the effects of naturally occurring blazes.
To Stop Extreme Wildfires, California Is Learning From ... Florida?
NPR
In early May, flames began to spread through a pine forest, consuming a dense carpet of leaves and underbrush. The burn was the definition of a "good fire," intentionally ignited to clear vegetation that could fuel future infernos.
Wildfire Terms Defined: What It Means When a Blaze Is “30% Contained”
New York Times
When fire officials report that a fire is, say, 30 percent contained, that means that 30 percent of the blaze’s boundary is hemmed in by barriers like rivers, streams, interstate highways or areas that are already scorched
ECONOMY/JOBS
Economy:
California Defies Doom With No. 1 U.S. Economy
Bloomberg
When misfortunes multiplied during the coronavirus pandemic, observers seized on a four-letter word signaling end of days for the largest state with one-eighth the U.S. population and 14% of its gross domestic product.
See also:
· Opinion: California Business HQs Now Leaving Twice As Fast, With No End In Sight Hoover Institution
Lithium fuels hopes for revival on California’s largest lake
AP News
California’s largest but rapidly shrinking lake is at the forefront of efforts to make the U.S. a major global player in production of the ultralight metal.
Washington Post
Drug makers, big banks, tech giants and others are preparing to fight the party’s reconciliation package, including its plans for raising taxes.
See also:
● Opinion: It’s clear America can afford Biden’s investments at home. Just look at how much it spent on wars. Washington Post
AEI
We investigate how material well-being has changed over time for single mother headed families—the primary group affected by welfare reform and other policy changes of the 1990s.
What has happened to the American working class since the Great Recession?
AEI
What did more than a decade of economic expansion following the GR do for the working class and various groups of disadvantaged workers?
Jobs:
Q&A: Unemployment Insurance, Labor Day Cliff & the Costs of Unemployment
California Budget and Policy Center
Millions of California workers turned to unemployment insurance benefits over the last 18 months after suddenly losing their jobs – a reality that can hit workers, families, and communities, pandemic or not.
See also:
● Modernizing Employer Payroll Taxes & Covering the True Costs of Unemployment Benefits for Workers California Budget and Policy Center
Opinion: Californians can’t afford to lose good-paying jobs
CalMatters
Assembly Bill 701 could harm California’s warehouse employers by nudging business owners to move out of state, a trend we already are seeing in other sectors of our economy.
Opinion: For many workers, work is a threat to well-being
CalMatters
The use of automation technologies to track and monitor safety or productivity is widespread in supply-chain management, and it is now seeping into grocery stores, other retail settings, and even knowledge work. That is bad news for workers.
EDUCATION
K-12:
Terry Slatic accuses Fresno school leaders of failing to protect teachers, violating laws
Fresno Bee
In a statement to reporters, Trustee Terry Slatic said he filed a formal complaint with the Fresno County District Attorney’s Public Integrity Unit, accusing Superintendent Bob Nelson and four trustees of violating California education laws related to student privacy.
See also:
● He won the fight over Fresno High’s mascot. The backlash has been ‘weird’ and ‘racist’ Fresno Bee
COVID cases continue to climb in Fresno-area schools amid chaotic meetings, uncertainty
Fresno Bee
As of Monday, Fresno Unified has reported 394 cases among staff and students in August; up from 252 a week earlier. Clovis schools have seen 222 cases this month; up from 80 cases a week ago. Central Unified reported 139 cases in August; up fro 80 last week.
State mask bans face federal civil rights inquiries
Fresno Bee
The Education Department opened civil rights investigations into five Republican-led states that have banned or limited mask requirements in schools, saying the policies could amount to discrimination against students with disabilities or health conditions.
See also:
● Education Dept. Announces Civil Rights Investigations Into 5 States' Mask Mandate Bans VPR
● Education Department to Investigate Five States That Ban Mask Mandates in Schools Wall Street Journal
● Editorial: The Covid Civil-Rights Mask Wall Street Journal
As Schools Reopen, Child Psychiatrists Expect To See A Surge Of Kids Who Need Help
VPR
As schools across the country reopen, mental health professionals are anticipating a surge in the number of kids seeking help in the coming weeks. That's not unlike previous years.
See also:
● Kids Head Back to School—and Bring Covid-19’s Mental-Health Scars With Them Wall Street Journal
As districts mandate vaccines, some teachers push back
Mercury News
Some of the biggest school systems in the U.S. are taking a hard line with teachers and staff members who are not yet vaccinated against COVID-19: Get a jab or lose your job.
See also:
● L.A. teachers union calls for vaccination mandate for eligible students, stricter quarantines Los Angeles Times
Higher Ed:
The Maddy Institute
On September 13, Robert Maxim, Senior Research Associate in the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program, will discuss how regional public universities can have a large role in economic growth.
President Junn welcomes students to a delayed start at Stanislaus State
Turlock Journal
Stanislaus State President Ellen Junn shared the university’s plan for managing the fall semester amidst rising cases of COVID-19 in her virtual welcoming address on Aug. 19.
See also:
● Renovations for Stanislaus State library reach final touches Turlock Journal
Cal State's incoming freshman Class of 2025 key to meeting system's graduation goals
EdSource
For California State University, this fall’s incoming Class of 2025 is particularly important. That’s because of a 10-year plan — known as Graduation Initiative 2025 — that started in 2015 to increase freshman and transfer students’ graduation rates across all 23 campuses.
Fresno City College’s vaccine vote made one day after drop date. Can students get refunds?
Fresno Bee
When State Center Community College trustees decided Monday to mandate the COVID-19 vaccine at all campuses, they did so one day after the drop date, meaning students could no longer get a full refund if they chose to drop out of school to avoid immunization.
Fake student bot accounts at Calif colleges tied to suspected COVID-19 relief scam
Los Angeles Times
The California Community Colleges system is investigating potentially widespread fraud involving fake “bot students” enrolled in active courses in what officials suspect is a scam to obtain financial aid or COVID-19 relief grants.
Opinion: Public Colleges Reach Across State Lines for a Tuition Windfall
Wall Street Journal
America’s public universities, designed to offer affordable college education to residents of their states, have been engaged in a “student swap.”
ENVIRONMENT/ENERGY
Environment:
US health agency will prod hospitals to cut carbon emissions
The Business Journal
The Biden administration on Monday launched a new health office that will prod hospitals to cut carbon emissions, aiming to provide greener, more environmentally friendly medical care.
Washington Post
A federal judge Monday threw out a major Trump administration rule that scaled back federal protections for streams, marshes and wetlands across the United States, reversing one of the previous administration’s most significant environmental rollbacks.
The Air Quality Index Explained: What It Means and How to Stay Safe
New York Times
Having an understanding of the Air Quality Index can help you protect yourself from the harmful effects of air pollution. Here’s a guide to how it works.
How Climate Change Is Fueling Hurricanes Like Ida
VPR
Climate change helped Ida rapidly gain strength right before it made landfall. In about 24 hours, it jumped from a Category 1 to a Category 4 storm as it moved over abnormally hot water in the Gulf of Mexico.
See also:
● Editorial: Hurricane Ida’s Climate Resilience Lesson Wall Street Journal
Appeals court rules against valley ozone plan
Bakersfield Californian
Federal approval of a 2019 contingency measure for cutting ozone emissions in the Central Valley has been rejected by an appellate court, which called the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's acceptance of the provision "arbitrary and capricious."
California’s Plan to Make New Buildings Greener Will Also Raise Costs
New York Times
A recent building code change for new construction could reduce emissions by requiring use of solar panels and batteries, raising prices in an already expensive state.
Climate Change to Be Treated as Public-Health Issue
Wall Street Journal
The Department of Health and Human Services is preparing to launch an office that will treat climate change as a public health issue.
See also:
● Opinion: Biden’s Coming Climate Commission Wall Street Journal
● How to Reduce Your Carbon Footprint New York Times
● How Much Hotter Is Your Hometown Than When You Were Born? New York Times
Energy:
Opinion: The dubious Senate proposal to bail out nuclear power plants
The Hill
Let us reduce rather than increase the distortions created by government economic policies. A failure to keep that principle in mind will yield ongoing economic losses for all of us.
HEALTH/HUMAN SERVICES
Health:
Immunity To COVID-19 Could Last Longer Than You'd Think
VPR
All around the world, there seem to be signs that immunity to SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes the disease COVID-19, doesn't last very long after you're vaccinated.
Covid-19 Booster Shots Get Support From Expert Panel
Wall Street Journal
Health experts advising the U.S. government on vaccines expressed initial support for giving booster shots to people vaccinated against Covid-19, starting with healthcare workers, nursing-home residents and others immunized earliest.
See also:
● Will Booster Rollout Avoid Initial Vaccine Chaos? Pew Trusts
What's the latest science on all the COVID hygiene measures still used in public spaces?
San Francisco Chronicle
Health officials still consider masking and vaccination key to curbing the pandemic, so much so that the CDC and California health officials still recommend universal indoor masking for everyone, and with the exception of a few Bay Area counties, it’s required nearly everywhere in the region.
See also:
● What’s the risk of indoor dining if you’re fully vaccinated? Here’s what one expert says Mercury News
Delta’s ‘R naught’ contagiousness rate doesn’t mean entire US will get COVID-19
Politifact
According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the delta variant is more than twice as contagious as previous variants of the coronavirus and caused nearly 99% of recent coronavirus cases in the U.S.
Human Services:
Nurse shortages in California reaching crisis point
Bakersfield Californian
In the past month, four emergency room nurses — exhausted by the onslaught of patients and emotional turmoil wrought by COVID-19 — have quit at the Eureka hospital where Matt Miele works.
Children's Mental Health Gets Millions In Funding From The Biden Administration
Valley Public Radio
As students head back into another pandemic school year, the Biden administration has announced nearly $85 million in funding for mental health awareness, training, and treatment.
See also:
● Commentary: California must address impact of COVID-19 on children’s mental health Press Enterprise
● Report: COVID-19 and Children's Mental Health: Addressing the Impact Little Hoover Commission
Judge approves Sutter Health antitrust deal. What that means for California health care
Sacramento Bee
Sutter Health is $575 million poorer — and now must operate under new rules designed to curb its ability to dictate the price of health care in Sacramento and Northern California.
The need for a US national clinical trial infrastructure in a public health crisis
AEI
To prepare for the next pandemic, the US should empower the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institutes of Health to steer patients into trials that are more likely to yield actionable evidence that can inform clinical practice and improve outcomes.
Stop using these N95 masks, FDA says. There are ‘serious concerns’ with their quality
Sacramento Bee
Federal health officials are warning health care professionals about “serious concerns” regarding the quality of certain N95 masks made by Shanghai Dasheng Health Products Manufacturing in China.
IMMIGRATION
Afghan refugees arrive in Stanislaus County as families try to get more people out
Modesto Bee
Resettlement centers in Stanislaus County are inundated with refugees and a local congressman’s office is receiving hundreds of calls as Afghans desperately seek a pathway to get their families to the U.S.
With Loved Ones Stranded In Afghanistan, Afghan Families In Fresno Face An Excruciating Wait
NPR
An Afghan woman who asks to be called Sana places a spread of dried fruit and nuts on the dinner table in her small apartment. It’s in keeping with Afghan culture.
LAND USE/HOUSING
Land Use:
Warszawski: Bill would give public more sway over Fresno river parkway — and that’s a good thing
Fresno Bee
Assembly Bill 559, authored by state Assemblyman Joaquin Arambula, helps balance the scales. If signed into law, the bill would give the public more sway over the development of the 22-mile river parkway between Friant Dam and Highway 99.
New owners to breathe life into neglected Fresno shopping center
The Business Journal
A North Valley father-son duo hope to turn around a neglected Fresno shopping center with a significant remodel and visible ownership.
Washington Post
A federal judge Monday threw out a major Trump administration rule that scaled back federal protections for streams, marshes and wetlands across the United States, reversing one of the previous administration’s most significant environmental rollbacks.
Housing:
The Supreme Court ended the federal eviction moratorium. What does it mean for Fresno?
Fresno Bee
Fresno renters, if you are concerned that the Thursday Supreme Court decision that ended the federal eviction moratorium will get you thrown out of your rental immediately, you have some time.
See also:
● Evictions to hit 750,000 households, Goldman says Politico
Bills to increase housing density in California head to Newsom
San Francisco Chronicle
Gov. Gavin Newsom will decide whether to loosen zoning rules in California to allow duplexes and lot splitting in residential neighborhoods across the state.
See also:
● Who pays the price for California’s affordable housing? Mercury News
● California’s housing crisis: How much difference will a zoning bill make? CalMatters
● What could the end of single-family zoning mean for California’s affordable housing crisis? CalMatters
● Commentary: To house the homeless, California must re-imagine housing CalMatters
● After Years of Failure, California Lawmakers Pave the Way for More Housing New York Times
California’s Plan to Make New Buildings Greener Will Also Raise Costs
New York Times
A recent building code change for new construction could reduce emissions by requiring use of solar panels and batteries, raising prices in an already expensive state.
Senior Housing Industry Faces Higher Costs as It Plays Lead Role in Vaccine Mandates
Wall Street Journal
The senior housing business, which was one of the hardest-hit commercial property sectors early in the pandemic, is now getting hammered by rising labor costs as it takes a lead role in mandating vaccines for employees.
House Rents Pop Up as New Investors Pile In
Wall Street Journal
Would-be home buyers priced out of the sales market are finding little consolation when they turn instead to the single-family rental market. Prices are soaring there as well.
PUBLIC FINANCES
Tulare will see federal funding, plans to boost infrastructure and address homelessness
Visalia Times Delta
Federal relief funding, a new Highway 99 interchange to the Ag Show and homelessness were the biggest topics at the State of the City luncheon in Tulare.
See also:
● Tulare County's $90M cut of American Rescue Plan will prioritize infrastructure, public health Visalia Times Delta
Study: Proposed Biden tax plan would cut taxes for average Tulare County taxpayer
Visalia Times Delta
The average taxpayer in the three Congressional Districts that comprise parts of Tulare County would see a decrease in taxes if President Joe Biden’s tax plan passes, a study by the Tax Foundation has found.
Axios
Biden will outline an array of tax proposals beginning on Wednesday — an opening bid ahead of months-long negotiations mostly within the Democratic Party — but these are his priorities.
Opinion: Guaranteed income is the next great US social experiment. California should lead the way
Sacramento Bee
The pandemic caused a sea change on universal basic income as people across the ideological spectrum realized the power of direct cash payments under federal and state COVID relief bills.
TRANSPORTATION
MapLab: Visualizing the Legacy and Future of Urban Highways
Bloomberg
This past year, the Biden administration’s proposed infrastructure bill brought highways into the national conversation, highlighting the inequity built into the U.S. interstate system with a proposal to “reconnect communities cut off by historic disinvestment.”
Charging Drivers for Road Use Is Popular With Economists, Less So With Drivers
Wall Street Journal
London started charging drivers a fee to drive on the city center’s narrow streets. Studies have documented reduced traffic congestion, better bus service, fewer accidents and an improved overall quality of life.
WATER
Madera County residents and farmers face groundwater challenge of a lifetime
Fresno Bee
Madera County is running out of time as groundwater levels plummet to new depths. Wells are going dry everywhere. Drillers have months-long waitlists. Residents are scrambling for water tanks.
Many California farmers have water cut off, but a lucky few are immune to drought rules
Los Angeles Times
Due to decades-old agreements with the federal government, rice farmers are going relatively unscathed by unprecedented emergency water cuts to farmers this month as others fallow fields, wells go dry and low water levels imperil Chinook salmon.
Editorial: Wake-up call: California’s water is running out
Bakersfield Californian
Mandatory limits on water use are likely to be imposed in the near future on California residents, businesses and farms. Get ready. You can’t change the weather, which has deprived the state of its necessary rain and snowfall. But you can change your response.
Public Policy Institute of California
In California’s water market, buyers and sellers trade water through short- and long-term leases as well as permanent sales of their water rights. Trading enhances flexibility in water management.
Public Policy Institute of California
Recharge occurs when water seeps into the ground to replenish underground aquifers. Although some recharge happens incidentally—water flowing into the ground from rivers, unlined canals, or excess irrigation—intentional recharge can restore groundwater levels and store water for later use
“Xtra”
Fresno artists, community members repaint Tower District's crosswalk art
abc30
A group of artists helped bring some fresh new color to Fresno's Tower District. Community members came out to repaint crosswalk art at the corner of Echo and Weldon Avenues on Saturday.
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