Month: February 2011

Commentary: Can Calmer Heads Prevail in Controversy Over Fired Coach?

basketball-court.jpgMy initial view on the firing of Davis High’s basketball coach was formed watching dozens of parents, community members, and former players of the coach speak on his behalf.  It was an emotional and moving appeal from a lot of people who clearly have a huge amount of passion and even love for the coach.

At the same time, I am viewing this as an outsider.  I have never watched a girl’s basketball game at Davis High.  I could not have told you the name of Jeff Christian – nor do I think most people in this community could.  I was at the meeting for another issue and stumbled upon this cauldron.

Greed and Sloppy Police Work Costs Both DA and Yolo Taxpayers

Yolo-Count-Court-Room-600In December, a Yolo County jury found Jose Valdivia guilty of two counts of drunk driving, plus they found him guilty of evading a peace officer and resisting arrest.  This was not the only set of charges that Mr. Valdivia faced. 

In a separate case, he also faced felony charges for transportation and possession of a controlled substance per Yolo County’s practice of double-charging possession of drugs as both possession and transportation.

Just a Week Until the Council Selects Fifth Councilmember

council-appointment

As difficult as it may be to believe, by the end of the day a week from Tuesday, the Davis City Council is scheduled to have appointed its replacement to Don Saylor.  A lot has to happen, as well as go right,  for that to actually occur, but that is the schedule.

Before we get to that point however, we have to learn more about the candidates.  The Vanguard ran an early series of questions for the candidates – most recently this one which has backlinks to the previous interviews.  The Davis Enterprise ran a profile piece on all ten of the candidates.

Fee Item Shows Need For Unified Budget Approach by City

pension-reform-stockWe have spent much time on these pages talking about pensions and unfunded liabilities.  We have also spent numerous columns and articles talking about employee compensation.

But one of the biggest issues that we have not spent nearly enough time discussing is in producing a unified budget.  Part of that will be the creation of multiyear budgets, which will force the city to budget and plan across time.

Lawsuit by Former UCD Officer Alleging Race and Sexual Orientation Discrimination Moves Forward After Two Years

police-lineIt has taken two years and untold amounts of money, but the lawsuit filed by former UC Davis Police Officer Calvin Chang is going forward with the key provisions intact.

In 2009, former UC Davis Police Officer Calvin Chang filed a lawsuit against the UC Regents and UC Davis Police Chief Annette Spicuzza, alleging complaints of racial and sexual orientation discrimination, housing discrimination, and retaliation.

Commentary: Justifying the County Conaway Vote

Conaway-Ranch.pngIt was an interesting week at the county level, as watching the Conaway Ranch water agreement vote was so instructive.  The problems that this agreement presents for the Yolo Basin are troubling, as laid out by both Supervisors Jim Provenza and Duane Chamberlain.  This agreement threatens wildlife and agriculture and also threatens to compromise the spillway’s flood control capacity.

It was a week in which we saw Senator Lois Wolk come forward to the Board of Supervisors with a modest proposal, and the Board basically did not give the Senator the time of day.  It is not that they rejected her proposal, it is that they failed to even discuss it.

 

Attack in Sacramento Jail Exposes Huge Flaws in Handling of Mentally Ill Prisoners

main_jail.jpgLast week, we reported on the death of Evaristo Ramirez, an immigrant who had been arrested for a DUI and held in the Sacramento County Jail.  He became the victim of Richard Harden, who somehow ended up in the same jail cell as Mr. Ramirez despite evidence that his hammer attack on a Latina female was motivated by hatred towards immigrants.

According to court testimony, when the Home Deport store security subdued Mr. Harden by taking him to the ground, the perpetrator indicated that race was the motivation behind his attack on the Latina female whom he had attacked with a hammer.

CHA Remains Deaf to the Reality That They Have Already Lost the Debate

covell_village-600It was last spring, and Choices For Healthy Aging (CHA) had a candidate’s forum for the city council candidates.  They had a chance to show that they were a full seniors advocacy group and they blew it horribly.  Instead, as Jon Li put it, “the answer to every question was Covell Village.”

Moreover, no candidates bit on support for such a project – an 800-unit project that would serve senior housing needs that somehow could only be build on the Covell Village site.

A Note on Egypt: The People Overthrew a Dictatorship Armed Only With Their Voices

Egypt

People will have to forgive me for weighing in on Egypt and the essentially bloodless revolution.  I have two points and both of them link well to local issues.

The people of Egypt brought down a long and at times brutal tyranny armed only with their voices.  They achieved their objective in 18 days primarily because they could not be mollified by promises of incremental change and partly because the military refused to turn on the people of Egypt as militaries have in places like China’s Tiananmen Square.

Further Discussions on the Elimination of State Subsidies for Redevelopment

davis-bike-underpass.jpgCity to Maximize Borrowing Ahead of Redevelopment Closure –

The Governor’s proposal to restructure the state’s $5.7 billion-a-year redevelopment program has spawned some very good discussion the Vanguard and in other sectors of the community.

This week the city council is hearing an item in which city staff is recommending that the city confirm a list of priority programs and projects for Redevelopment Agency for both housing and capital and operating programs.

 

Analysis: Yolo County with a Higher Rate of Reversals by Third DCA Than Other Counties

Yolo-Count-Court-Room-600We have noted in recent weeks the seemingly larger than usual number of cases that have been overturned from Yolo County.  During the course of our reporting of these cases the question has arisen – “out of how many.”

The “out of how many” standard is a difficult number to assess for reversals, just as it is for problematic cases, prosecutorial misconduct and wrongful convictions.  After all, one person in prison unnecessarily is too many.

Union Pacific Appears Ready to Construct Fence, City Still Trying to Stall For Time

train-richardsOne of the most contentious issues in recent months is a proposed fence that Union Pacific Railroad is applying to the Capitol Corridor Joint Powers Authority (CCJPA) to receive funding for.  Making this issue far more difficult is the fact that the City of Davis has no direct authority to control when and how the fence would be constructed.

However, the CCJPA will not agree to help fund the fence over the objections of the Davis City Council.  That gives the city some leverage, although it is also believed that at some point the railroad will build the fence with their own money regardless of the city’s objections.

Court Case Backup Threatens To Bog Down Yolo County Court System

Yolo-Count-Court-Room-600Last Friday, we sat in Judge Stephen Mock’s court as he began calendaring long cause trials – those trials that will last into a second court week – for this year.  We were stunned to find out that, as of the first week of February, Judge Mock’s calendar was completely backed up until September.

Yolo County officials have for several years now bragged about an improved efficiency that has allowed the number of cases to the be handled to more than double with 55 trials occurring in 2005 and 121 in 2008.  The number of trials remained high, with 121 again in 2009 and a slight drop to 112 in 2010.

32 Businesses Have Signed Onto the Picnic Day Covenant

citycatYesterday the Davis Downtown Business Association announced that 32 business with licenses to sell alcohol have signed a 13-point Picnic Day Community Covenant, agreeing to responsible hospitality practices that highlight moderation and appropriate use of alcoholic beverages on Picnic Day 2011, scheduled for Saturday, April 16.

According to their release, 25 of those 32 businesses are based in the Davis Downtown area, which was the site of the majority of Picnic Day-related disturbances in 2010.

Commentary: Another Brown Act Violation by the Board of Supervisors?

Conaway-RanchSenator Lois Wolk must have been stunned when she attempted to meet with county staffers, in advance of Tuesday’s meeting that would first rescind the actions of December 17 that approved an agreement over Conaway Ranch, and then reconsider the agreement. 

According to her public testimony on Tuesday, she was told the Board, “A week or two ago, we did try to work on the staff level to share our substantive concerns but we were told that there really was no interest in discussing the substance of our concerns, that in fact this was a formal proceeding to deal with the Brown Act issue.”

Jury Acquits Defendants in “Taliban” Case

Yolo-Count-Court-Room-600It took seven years to come to trial, a month to try the case, but the jury was ready late Tuesday afternoon with their verdict after just over two days of deliberation.

As the verdicts were read, one by one, defendant by defendant, a wave of relief swept over the Niazi brothers and Qumar Ashraf for the first time in seven years.

County Now Reviewing Autopsies In Wake of Last Week’s Revelations About a Forensic Pathologist

forensic-pathology-1The California Report today has published a follow-up to last week’s bombshell that was accompanied by NPR and Frontline coverage, which showed the questionable history of Dr. Thomas Gill, who worked with the Forensic Medical Group, a private company commissioned by the Yolo County’s coroner’s office to do autopsies.

According to the report, the Coroner’s Office will review the work in five homicide cases handled by the doctor.

Supervisors Ignore Senator Wolk’s Concerns; Rubber Stamp Conaway Ranch Agreement

Conaway-RanchThe Board of Supervisors went into the meeting on February 8, where the issue of the Conaway Ranch Agreement was revisited, acknowledging that the meeting was in place not to revisit substantive concerns but rather to deal with the formal issue of erring on the side of caution, regardless of whether the first meeting violated the Brown Act.

But if the first meeting did violate the Brown Act, this one may have as well because the Board of Supervisors really was not taking in new information and opening up a true public process, instead it was rubber stamping the results of the previous meeting.

Yolo Judge Orders Man Freed From Life Sentence After Third Court of Appeals Throws Out Conviction

Yolo-Count-Court-Room-600Aaron Ray Wilson this week was ordered free by Judge Arvid Johnson, following a late December ruling by the Third District Court of Appeals which threw out his convictions for carrying a concealed dirk or dagger which constituted a third strike and had him in prison for 28 years to life.

Mr. Wilson appealed the verdict that would have sent him to prison for a minimum of 28 years “contending, among other things, that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress a knife (the alleged dirk or dagger) seized from his back pocket during a pat down search initiated after a police officer was dispatched to a public park to investigate “five subjects [possibly] smoking H and S [sic] in the men’s restroom.”