By Scott Steward
All the Davis City Council candidates, and incumbents, face a civil servant and first responder debt load, A housing crises, that is shared with the state, but is controlled by checked out residential and business space rent collectors (a windfall owners tax to pay for redevelopment would be welcome). And not a whisper from the City objecting to the NO-HOUSING option for Brixmor University Mall re-development. From 2,000 units to 700 units to zero Brixmor housing units – what kind of tragedy are we taking part?
What can City Council Members accomplish? Seemingly not a lot if they want to be re-elected and begin to enter the paternity of electeds. For that reason, because of their youth, strength of character and willingness to dislodge the status quo, I would like to have either Bapu Vaitla or Kelsey Fortune as my City Council Member for District 4. What? Can't happen. Vaitla and Fortune are the two best candidates running out of the five.
Fortune is a economics PhD <http://www.fortunefordavis.com/> candidate who dives deep into sustainability and community resilience and Bapu Vaitla's work <https://www.bapu4davis.org/about> at UCD is complementary to Fortune's as a professor of Economics. He also works with women and girls health policy and is a member of the Davis Social Services Commission (one of 16 Davis volunteer citizen Commissions.)
Both are running against each other in District 1 where, unfortunately, Dan Carson is also running (Dan's record of damaging City governance is well documented <https://newdavisite.wordpress.com/2022/09/25/davis-deserves-better-than-carson/>.) I hope District 1 voters nod politely when he asks and then vote for Bapu or Kelsey.
Gloria Partida and Adam Morrill are well meaning, and will serve District 4 to the best of their ability, but I can't say one would be markedly better than the other. Partida has not attempted to tell the unions and first responders no more raises. She did not use her authority as Mayor to separate the council from measure H or increase City decision making transparency and she followed the lead of Dan Carson much to readily. That said I am hopeful that Gloria will find more of her voice without Caron's presence. Gloria has been part of most every social justice event that I have attended and has addressed the youth climate movement, though we hope she becomes more comfortable pressing for more rigorous progress on both these fronts.
With Morrill, he is new and suggests he will reform the City's habit of hiring expensive consultants (to tell us all about what we won't ultimately do – again.) I am troubled by what feels like Morrill's antagonistic stance to Davis' build-it-green legacy. Davis is still the town that brought us the earliest implementation of title 24 (building energy efficiency ordinances) and Morrill said some pretty silly (being kind) things about the wrong-headedness of energy rebates (rebates that built the trillion dollar solar industry and Tesla).
Morrill, Partida, Fortune and Vaitla, two of these will need to combine with Frerichs, Arnold and Chapman and together they would need to be fierce in their unity if they are to go against the might of first responder and city professional unions to reshape fair agreements. I think it might take more than just this council's fierce agreement, it might take a coalition of city councils to reset the bargaining that delivers $500K to a five department fire chief <https://newdavisite.wordpress.com/2022/10/09/effects-of-excessive-increases-in-city-of-davis-employee-compensation-from-2011-to-2021-on-the-citys-1/>. I'm glad there are unions and good pay, but it takes away from any momentum, to create fiscal sustainability, and it takes away from public engagement when the leaders just shrug and say "that's the way it is."
Cost control is one half of managing budgets, but we know our city needs more businesses. Retail and services are great but we could use private agriculture, IT, and manufacturing as well. Tim Keller's article What Economic Development Looks Like in Davis (and What It Doesn’t <https://www.davisvanguard.org/2022/10/guest-commentary-what-economic-development-looks-like-in-davis-and-what-it-doesnt/>) provides good ideas of where we need to go. So who among our City Council candidates are equipped to make the 5th street corridor an in-fill innovation park and stop shopping old notions of business development? That and who has the skill and desire to see that developer agreements stick? Finally, we don't want Woodland and Davis to merge into some kind of dystopian freestanding single family home suburb of the Bay Area – so housing needs to be built up – attractively, affordably and in a way that preserves farmland.
I believe we have more to hear from both Gloria and Adam before District 4 can decide.