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Al’s Corner August – “Vanguard News Group” New Website Still Sucks

B06d68e7-1808-4726-a1a3-c4b40600b925After years and years of anticipation and false promises of 'any day now' going back years, the 'Vanguard News Group' new website landed last week with a 'plop', like the sound of a human turd dropping on a San Francisco sidewalk.  I honestly wanted it to be better, but it wasn't.  In some ways it was worse.  Why spend so much time to get it right, and then roll out something that is less functional and still has many of the problems of the old site?

The old site was bad and getting worse.  It would load so slowly it would often time out.  The site used massive RAM memory that would drain a laptop battery.  The pages would skip while you were reading them, and then when you went back (if you could find where you were), the page would skip again. 

Towards the end the site had some sort of virus/malware that would cause the page to spontaneously skip to unwanted ad pages, and it would replace the recent history with six steps of the same ad page address with the original address eliminated.  Usually it was unwanted ads, or Bing, for some reason.  A couple of times it was straight up porn.  Without giving it in full the domain address it skipped to once began with "https://da.check-tl-ver-176-2.com/my-adult-video/ . . . ".   This should have been stopped at once, but it happened 2-3 times.

One piece of good news, the new site hasn't spontaneously skipped to ads or porn or replaced the short-term history.  It has, however, had the same loading issues and even said, "The site you are trying to reach is taking too much memory and is slowing down your browser.  Would you like to leave?".  It also still spontaneously skips text as it is trying to load text, and still does it again when you go back.  Others have told me this was the worst part of the old site to them as well, and it's amazing DG rolled out the new site without fixing this.

Certain things about the new site are worse:  It's too plain.  While the old site had too much color, it would have been nice to have kept the old color scheme, just as borders and highlight, but it's just plain with no character.  For some reason, the "Davis Vanguard" livery is replaced with "Vanguard News Group".  Like so many things with the Vanguard, I'm sure this has some meaning to DG, but to the common person it's just confusing. 

There is no ability to click on comments so you have to scroll through the whole article to reach them.  Honestly, the so-called articles are so often dull and predictable and/or copied from elsewhere, so I'd often read the comments first or don't read the article at all.  Having to scroll to comments, if there are any at all, which increasingly there are not, is just more than I feel like doing.  In addition, there is no 'new comments' box, so you'd have to keep track of each article and keep clicking on it to see if anyone added a new comment.  And again, that's more than me or most people are willing to do.  And as people learn that no one knows they posted a new comment, they won't bother to post at all.

The banner at the top only hides one article at a time, and it moves at a weird rate, and it's too big and obscures to those not familiar that the most recent news is below.  The articles are still repetitive crap on housing in Davis, how someone is going to sue on measure J, and on why cutting school costs actually costs money, and how more housing will save schools.  And there are the usual copy articles on the evils of 'carceration' by the ACLU.  And by the way, if you liked the ACLU of years ago, join F.I.R.E..  It's like the old ACLU without all the new utlra-progressive crap.

DG say:  "The website highlights the various segments of the Vanguard. My focus will continue to be heavily on Davis issues and multiple commentaries each week."  Let me guess:  Recycled crap about  housing in Davis, how someone is going to sue on measure J, on why cutting school costs actually costs money, and how more housing will save schools.

DG say:  "we now have a team member who is working exclusively on grants which we see as part of the long-term financial sustainability for the Vanguard."  It's good to have a team member doing this, so they can get grants that will partially cover their own salary  :-|   And bye bye Sparkplug Foundation:  you exhibit poor judgement.

KO say:  "I remember the days when there would be 50 comments by 9am. There were robust conversations. The fact now that comments often sit in the moderation queue for hours kills any chance of that ever happening again."   Yup.

KO say:  "Where are the several conservative commenters that used to post? Having diverse views used to generate more commenting. I thought progressives were supposed to be all about diversity."  Diversity of skin color, not diversity of ideas.

KO say:  "What you need are the Alan Millers, Ron Oertels, SOD’s and Frankly’s to return."  Not to mention Rik Keller, that spacey woman who talked about space aliens, and that drunkard musician who doxxed RO with the global coordinates of his house.

And yes, bringing back Alan C. Miller would be the savior of the Vanguard.  He is more interesting then the entire blog and its staff combined and can bring you joy and eternal life.  Alan C. Miller says:  "I am the resurrection and the life.  He who believes in my will never die!"  [Actually Alan C. Miller does not say that.]

But it is true that bringing back the robust community comments would bring more clicks and more eyes.  Apparently that doesn't interest the Vanguard.  Having developers, H.A.L.'s, useful idiots, startup foundations and civil-rights lawyers fund the thing is all that matters in the new business model, apparently, and community engagement and discussion or even clicks really don't matter.  Is that sustainable?  Especially with a tax lawsuit to fight?

I would have gladly served as a site-tester for the new website, but no one asked me.  Apparently DG never even had a normal person look at it, as surely they would have said, "Dude . . . "

Well, DG, your savior awaits.  DG deep down knows I am the savior, that my comments are the best, most humorous, and most interesting and will save all blogs whom I touch.  DG knows my terms.  DG knows the real problem.  But until he deals with it . . .

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Comments

103 responses to “Al’s Corner August – “Vanguard News Group” New Website Still Sucks”

  1. Alan C. Miller

    KO say: “I tried to log into the Vanguard this morning and I got sent to a site called Bento4D. I hope I’m not getting my phone hacked by trying to access the Vanguard.”
    HUBUNGI KAMI, KO!

  2. Ron O

    This is the third day in a row, regarding the problem with the Vanguard’s “new and improved” website. One wonders if they’re even aware of it – maybe no one brought it to their attention.
    Maybe no one other than the “Three Musketeers” (or is it the Three Stooges?) even tries to read it.
    It does still work if you have a direct link to an article.

  3. Keith

    “One wonders if they’re even aware of it – maybe no one brought it to their attention.”
    David knows, he reads the Davisite.

  4. Ron O

    Comment from Keith Echols, in the Vanguard today:
    But as long as there is a stranglehold on peripheral development of any type the myopic and misinformed as well as those idiotic retail store size restrictions (seriously the Bel-Air in Woodland is a much bigger and nicer grocery store than anything in Davis. The Nugget in Vacaville is much bigger and nicer than the ones in Davis.) the this town will slowly gasp for air fiscally speaking in trying to keep up it’s current standard of living.
    The Bel-Air in Woodland (two of them, actually) can’t hold a candle to the Nugget on Covell in Davis. It’s o.k., but the Nugget is way-more busy (and attractive) compared to Bel-Air. So is the Nugget in “South” Davis.
    The Nugget in Woodland also does not generate the same per-floor-space sales as those in Davis, I’m sure.
    The Nugget started in Woodland – but Davis is a better fit for this type of chain. Which, no doubt, was also a reason that they recently moved their headquarters to Davis.
    The underlying reason for that, of course, has to do with the respective populations of the cities themselves. They’ve also expanded into Marin, which makes sense for that same reason.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nugget_Markets
    But neither one of them generate much in sales tax, since groceries aren’t taxed as such – with some exceptions (e.g., “hot prepared products).
    As far as peripheral business parks, still no sign whatsoever of that in regard to the one that supposedly “escaped” from Davis. On the site that was apparently previously-zoned for a business park, but will now also include 1,600 housing units – of course.
    Developers hold their noses when they’re asked to build anything other than more sprawl.

  5. Ron O

    On the subject of taxes, I found the following video interesting. Apparently, the state of California is rolling-out a device that would “allow” (aka, “force”?) drivers of older vehicles to report the number of miles they drive, in order to tax them.
    And of course, drivers of new vehicles would already have a “built-in tattle-tale”.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_NmR8JJUBo

  6. Ron O

    Comment from Tim Keller, in today’s Vanguard:
    I have a family member who drove her daughter to davis from Rio linda so she could go to DHS, All of these people are migrating, some pretty extreme distances, because they cant afford to live here.
    Let me “correct” that for you. You have a family member who drives her daughter to DHS because she apparently doesn’t want her daughter to attend school in Rio Linda. So, she decided to take advantage of Davis schools, without paying parcel taxes into that system. And since DJUSD is desperate to avoid “right-sizing” its system, it willingly goes-along with that.
    And you think that Davis not only “owes” your family member an education subsidized by Davis property owners; you think it owes her a cheap house as well.
    While also ignoring the fact that DJUSD parcel taxes are part of the cost of housing in Davis.

  7. Alan C. Miller

    Yeah Ron, you pretty much nailed it.
    Subsidized, by whatever means, (“affordable”/”Affordable”) housing is an inconceivably ginormous political scam and mass brain-washing of the sheeple.
    It’s expensive to live in much of California because a lot of people want to live here, and a lot of them don’t want to pay for that.
    Now government does have a place in the system, to set up an actual market by stopping collusion, and now A.I. controlled price-fixing. But stupid people listen to politicians speak of ‘price controls’ and ‘rent control’. Never worked, never will. Except to pooch the very people it is meant to help.
    Put that in your pipe and smoke it 😐

  8. Ron O

    True, Alan.
    But I was actually referring to subsidized education (the “extra” amount paid by Davis property owners – especially single-family dwellings which pay a disproportionate share of the cost), and “cheap” housing – in any form.
    That’s how I understood Tim Keller’s comment, at least. His relative drives her kid all the way to Davis, apparently just to attend Davis’ school system.
    I don’t have any problem with some locales being more-expensive than other locales. Probably half the people in Davis from somewhere that’s more-expensive.
    Truth be told, David himself correctly noted that (families in particular) who are moving to the area have been choosing somewhat cheaper, nearby locales (such as Spring Lake) – where they get “more bang for their buck”.
    What I don’t understand is the reason that any given community would purposefully pursue more families, since they are some of the most-expensive, most-impactful populations that exist. (Generally requiring/preferring schools, libraries, recreational facilities, 3-car garages, yards, etc.)
    Fortunately, it seems that some of the younger generations have (finally) figured out how expensive it is to start a family, despite all of the tax breaks and subsidies that our system already provides to them.

  9. Alan C. Miller

    What I don’t understand is anyone who thinks that subsidizing a small number of people to live in an expensive community like Davis actually helps people of lower income overall. The dangerous neighborhoods in Sac and the Bay Area will still exist. It would be more beneficial to invest gov’t money into those neighborhoods, than subsidize a select few to escape those neighborhoods.
    The reason that DG is seeing the Davis not doing “enough” on ‘A/a’-ffordable housing is that any subsidy that would ‘make a difference’ (whatever the f*ck that means) would break the budget — the City budget that is, that is already broken. Pumping government money of that quantity only inflates the market, and overall inflation is just a tax that most affects the poor.
    That’s one of many reasons I will not vote for the City sales tax doubling. Anything that goes into a/A-ffordable (subsidized) housing just goes into a black hole that will never be enough and actually and overall makes the problem of high rents even worse.

  10. Ron O

    I was getting ready to respond to Alan’s comment (mostly in agreement), but just saw this comment from Matt Williams:
    Further, looking at Darryl Rutherford’s comment earlier this week, Tim Keller’s approach is actually a way forward economically as well. Darryl sad the following in his comment, “Our tax revenue challenges can clearly be linked to the lack of diversity in this town. The communities who continued to thrive during economic recessions are those who have a very diverse population of race, incomes and affordable homes to live in.
    Just to clarify, Matt and Darryl think that communities like Tiburon and Atherton are having trouble “thriving” – despite their relative lack of “diverse populations of race, incomes and affordable housing to live in”?
    Really?

  11. Keith

    Alan states:
    “That’s one of many reasons I will not vote for the City sales tax doubling. Anything that goes into a/A-ffordable (subsidized) housing just goes into a black hole that will never be enough”
    Now come on Alan, everyone knows that if all Davisites are willing to pay higher taxes the housing “crisis” will come to an end just like if Davis bans gas stoves that the climate “crisis” will be over.

  12. Ron O

    In response to the Vanguard’s “housing shortage” article today, thought I’d take a quick look to see if there’s any articles challenging this claim. Note that the claims regarding a housing shortage are based upon increased “supply” (compared to prior years), and generally do not examine “demand” (compared to prior years) – including the chart cited in today’s Vanguard article. This a glaring and obvious flaw in these assumptions. And yet, few seem to question this.
    In any case, here’s some text from the first article that popped up during a brief search. I bolded some of the relevant sections:
    “The United States is experiencing a housing shortage. At least, that is the case according to common belief — and is even the basis for national policy, as the Biden administration has stated plans to address the housing supply shortfall.
    But new research from the University of Kansas finds that most of the nation’s markets have ample housing in total, but nearly all lack enough units affordable to very low-income households.
    The numbers showed that from 2010 to 2020, household formation did exceed the number of homes available. However, there was a large surplus of housing produced in the previous decade. In fact, from 2000 to 2020, housing production exceeded the growth of households by 3.3 million units. The surplus from 2000 to 2010 more than offset the shortages from 2010 to 2020.
    The numbers also showed that nearly all metropolitan areas have sufficient units for owner occupancy. But nearly all have shortages of rental units affordable to the very low-income renter households.
    When looking at the number of housing units available, it becomes clear there is no overall shortage of housing units available.
    Our nation’s affordability problems result more from low incomes confronting high housing prices rather than from housing shortages,” McClure said. “This condition suggests that we cannot build our way to housing affordability.”

    https://www.aau.edu/research-scholarship/featured-research-topics/study-finds-us-does-not-have-housing-shortage

  13. Alan C. Miller

    KO,
    Davis-CAN! Davis-CAN! D-CAN D-CAN D-CAN D-CAN!
    Do the Davis CAN CAN !
    https://tenor.com/view/can-can-gif-23923681
    In case you want to join in the fun with your fellow dewy-eyed Davisites:
    https://www.daviscan.org/
    “Catalyzing Housing and Climate Justice Advocacy for the Future of Davis and Beyond” Bleeeeeeech!
    Davis CAN solve both the housing ‘crisis’ for the state and the climate ‘crisis’ for the word, if it just really really really really really really really really wants to 😐
    Actually, the City listening to the likes of Davis CAN is a big reason I will be voting “NO” on Measure Q. Because Davis can flush a lot of money down the toilet subsidizing housing in numerous ways, trying to solve the state housing ‘crisis’, and trying to solve the world climate ‘crisis’.
    Davis TRY
    Davis FAIL
    Davis FEEL GOOD ABOUT ITSELF
    Davis FLUSH money down the toilet
    Join me and my like-minded blokes at “Davis CAN’T” !
    Davis CAN’T save the world — so stop TRY-ing!!!
    And . . . . . . . NO on Measure Q

  14. Ron O

    Regarding CAN, I can draw some conclusions solely based upon the board members. Some of these people seem to be the same ones who would support DISC – the biggest “climate emitter” proposed in recent years.
    Not to mention Covell Village, Shriners, . . .
    Much like the line from Soylent Green, it’s “people” (combined with modern technology) who are the problem. (Or more accurately, the lack of a sustainable plan regarding their numbers.) But the number of people on this planet would not even exist without that technology.
    There is no way to avoid this, without addressing population. And yet, our major environmental organizations refuse to even talk about it, for the most part.
    In any case, I hope that everyone is enjoying “Cool August in Davis”. (It’s really unfortunate when that happens, as it kind of messes up the “crisis” message.)
    Hopefully we’ll go back to a drought again (after two wet winters – which also screws up the message). Then again, we’re apparently never “out of” a drought these days, due to (you guessed it) – too many people relying upon the supply.
    https://www.daviscan.org/what-we-do

  15. Alan C. Miller

    RO, you got it wrong. It’s not just the heat that proves we are in a climate crisis, it’s the cool, too. You see, the extremes are just getting extremier! It’s scientific proof, don’t you know. It’s science, and Davis represents science. Just like (name removed to avoid removal) who also represents science. Who? Yeah, ¿Who? That’s who.
    Of course, if a wall of fire hits Davis, that will be hot.

  16. Ron O

    Alan: True – they didn’t have floods, fires and tornados in the old days. It was quite peaceful and serene.
    For sure, the houses that Native Americans lived in didn’t get flooded. For that matter, they never had problems with parking or traffic, either.
    The Wizard of Oz (and Dorothy’s flying house) was intended as a “predictor” of the future, I understand. 🙂

  17. South of Davis

    Does anyone know who is funding the Davis Community Action Network (Davis CAN)?
    Most YIMBY groups are funded by the guys building $1mm+ homes on small lots who also build a small number “affordable” homes (that seem to end up going to people like DG or others that helped them build lots of profitable $1mm+ homes rather than “regular” poor people) and most “Climate” groups are funded by guys making piles of “green” from “green” business.
    Just like the Climate Crisis people are sure that if we just ban gas stoves or fund more “climate justice” groups the “climate crisis” will end the YIMBY Housing Crisis people tell me that all we need is a few thousand more homes like this in Davis and it will end the crisis.
    https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1725-Heirloom-St-Davis-CA-95616/249657281_zpid/
    Few people grew up dreaming of living in Davis where it is over 100 for days on end every summer and homeless people are alowed to set up camp and smoke meth (when they are not out stealing bikes and breaking into cars). Most (but not all) of us live here because of a job or because it was where we could afford to buy a home and was “cheaper than Moraga, but not as crappy as Woodland”. Rather than tax everyone that lives here to build “affordable” housing we should tell the people that live here to look for a place they can afford that is cheaper than Davis bur not as crappy as Downtown Stockton)

  18. Ron O

    “Another one bites the dust – hey hey, and another one gone and another one gone, another one bites the dust”. (Queen, of course.)
    And now, the last one.
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/valley-locals-furious-as-century-old-orange-grove-is-set-to-be-razed/ar-AA1pgANm?ocid=msedgntp&pc=NMTS&cvid=f276feddfb9747aabf37fe3d2249c068&ei=9

  19. Ron O

    Was just looking at Beth’s Facebook page, and found that she referenced an article that could (almost) be from my perspective (regarding population AND gender):
    “That message doesn’t go over well on the left, right, or center. Whether folks believe in democratic socialism or the magic of the market, they rarely acknowledge the relevance of population (which we should, for starters, aim to cut at least in half) or the need to reduce the material standard of living in affluent sectors of the world (again, a good start would be cut at least in half). Instead, most everyone has their favorite technological fix (endless renewable energy, “clean coal,” carbon capture) that they believe will allow 8 billion people to consume at the current aggregate level. Even with a more just and equitable distribution of wealth, which my left comrades and I agree is crucial, we should plan for a down-powering.”
    Though where I might differ with this author is that we all might be able to drive Hummers, if there were fewer of us. Assuming one wants to drive a Hummer. (And assuming there were enough engineers and workers left to design and build a Hummer.)
    https://juliebindel.substack.com/p/how-to-lose-friends-and-influence?r=gnrei&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&triedRedirect=true&fbclid=IwY2xjawE0zflleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHe_OGNYL7D2JRt3WPTUCHqZh2NAWmPvnb8P9CCL8tOj76Ep2ZNHvaZZVww_aem_SfKs2EK7US8bdM0pZXGuMg

  20. Ron O

    South of Davis: “Most (but not all) of us live here because of a job or because it was where we could afford to buy a home and was “cheaper than Moraga, but not as crappy as Woodland”.
    I believe that’s Davis’ official motto. Either that, or “we’re in-between some nice places”. (Though the latter might also be Sacramento’s official motto.)
    Though there is “North, North Davis” these days, which might be sort of a somewhat lesser-version of Davis. On the other hand, able to attend DJUSD schools without paying DJUSD parcel taxes and CFDs.

  21. Keith

    ” Just like (name removed to avoid removal) who also represents science. Who? Yeah, ¿Who? That’s who.”
    LOL, for some reason I smell “foul cheese”.
    That has to be one of the greatest hoaxes ever pulled on our nation and the world.

  22. Alan C. Miller

    To me, the sin was in being ‘strategic’ in what was told to the American people (about masks early on, to avoid a shortage in the medical field, for example), because once started down that road, the people knew they had been lied to, and the trust was lost, so in the long run more harm was done. When dealing with a pandemic, this is unforgivable. I forgot which country did the following, but one was famous for just saying, ‘this is what we know, this is what we don’t know, we’ll update you when we know more.’

  23. Ron O

    Alan: That is absolutely true – they pretty much admitted it (downplaying masks at first for that reason) as I recall.
    “It turns out Fauci almost certainly didn’t believe what he was saying. In an interview with InStyle several months later, he admitted that trying to preserve the mask supply for doctors and nurses was his first motivation. “We were told in our task force meetings that we have a serious problem with the lack of PPEs and masks for the health providers,” he said.”
    https://theweek.com/coronavirus/1008155/noble-lies-are-a-public-health-hazard
    But I think we can all agree that the REAL tragedy is that those who hoarded toilet paper are no longer able to sell them for a dollar/square, anymore.

  24. South of Davis

    I’m hoping that more people (on BOTH the right and left) will realize that when people are paid to tell you something they are probably not telling the truth. When drug companies pay politicians (and the “experts” paid by politicians) to say something they will say it (they will work to stop anyone from saying you will be fine if you do not get Covid boosters and flu shots every year) just like when defense companies pay politiciuans (and the “experts” paid by politicians) to say something they will say it (and work to stop anyone from saying things like Sadam does not have “weapons of mass distruction”). If anyone wants to see this in action drive to South Davis and go into the Honda dealer and ask them if Honda it better than Toyota, then go across the street and ask the Toyota guys if Toyota is better than Honda.
    P.S. Any idea what the deal is with all the colored cans of paint that have been splattered on the road over the last month or so? Driving from the South Davis Nuggett to Recology today there are probaly 20 splatters of paint over the overpass and down 2nd past Target. The number has been growing by a few cans a week on both sides of the road so it is not from a truck tith the tailgate down.

  25. Ron O

    Just got back from University Mall / Trader Joe’s, and was pleased to see the metal frame of the new mall.
    Davis is fortunate to have a developer that’s interested in this type of infill. I’ll be a customer, for sure (e.g., Nordstrom Rack). How many developer/owners of retail malls would be willing to do this in the first place?
    https://properties.brixmor.com/p/retail-real-estate/Davis-CA-95616/universitymalldavis?_ga=2.258467274.1980187910.1724538592-475599411.1724538592
    And honestly, you can thank the student population for this interest. Including those who are (or will be) living in what looks sort of like a prison about a block down Russell, on UCD’s land. Not sure of the name of that development, or whether it’s fully occupied at this point. (Orchard Park?)
    In any case, Davis is truly a great town – mostly due to UCD’s adjacent presence.

  26. Ron O

    Forgot to mention: I was truly impressed by the crews who were “chipping” entire half-stumps of what I believe were pine trees, in what used to be a parking lot that was parallel to Sycamore.
    All I can say (regarding that stump-chipping equipment) is that I “want one”.

  27. Keith

    Alan, there were many lies told to us and if you tried to resist you were called xenophobic and a science denier. Conservatives saw through the lies but for some reason the Democrats bought it hook line and sinker.

  28. Ron O

    So today, David is putting forth “evidence” of a housing shortage, by citing (among other statistics) that rents have risen by 10% in San Francisco over the past nine years.
    The question I’d ask is, how does that compare with the general rate of inflation for all products and services, during that time period?
    Seems to me that it’s well-below the general inflation rate. And if it’s not even keeping up with inflation, wouldn’t that be an indicator of an “over-supply” of housing in San Francisco – using David’s own logic?
    Regardless, there is an actual “over-supply” (a glut) of housing underway in places like Florida these days. It has tripled in some areas over the past year.
    David frequently conflates “housing supply” with “new housing”. “Housing supply”, of course – refers to all housing that’s on the market – including “pre-owned” housing. When “inventory” increases, it’s usually “pre-owned” housing which creates the bulk of the increase.
    https://www.newsweek.com/florida-housing-market-inventory-triples-1914520
    And again, one has to question the claims of a “housing shortage” in the first place.
    “In fact, from 2000 to 2020, housing production exceeded the growth of households by 3.3 million units. The surplus from 2000 to 2010 more than offset the shortages from 2010 to 2020.”
    https://www.aau.edu/research-scholarship/featured-research-topics/study-finds-us-does-not-have-housing-shortage

  29. R Keller

    In addition to their website still sucking, here is a reminder that David Greenwald and the Vanguard continue to violate federal law by posting statements supporting/opposing political candidates.
    This is just the latest example from today: https://davisvanguard.org/2024/08/horton-endorsed-by-california-working-families-party/
    See: https://www.irs.gov/charities-non-profits/charitable-organizations/frequently-asked-questions-about-the-ban-on-political-campaign-intervention-by-501c3-organizations-overview
    “What is the ban on political campaign activity?
    It is a requirement imposed by Congress for the privilege of being recognized as exempt from federal income tax under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
    For an organization to be tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) it cannot “participate in, or intervene in (including the publishing or distributing of statements) any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for public office.”

  30. Ron O

    DJUSD superintendent Matt Best is apparently STILL trying to force Davis to change (in regard to declining enrollment), rather than advocating for DJUSD itself to change.
    Compare/contract Matt’s comments with those of the other superintendent speaker in the video below.
    For Matt, it’s all about approving more sprawl. Right out of the gate. For that matter, he also suggests that California itself needs to change, in regard to a total declining student population.
    That, my friends, take some “chutzpah” for a self-interested school district representative to say.
    Unlike what Matt apparently believes, schools exist to serve communities, not the other-way around.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiFaBONhbxk

  31. Walter Shwe

    Breaking News: The IRS agrees with the Davis Vanguard that they have not violated federal law or IRS regulations. Vindication against housing obstructionists and conservatives is golden. Let the whining and crying commence.

  32. Alan C. Miller

    Not breaking news, WS. We’ve all known this for a week. I haven’t seen any whining and crying, as you put it, just a great big quiet nothing which is all that is deserved. And as much as anyone cares. Of course the joke is actually on you and the Vanguard, since for the last two days and for many days before that, we get an Indonesian lottery page on the Vanguard’s URL. Put that in your vindication pipe and smoke it :- |

  33. Walter Shwe

    Alan C. Miller’s devices or ISP must have gotten screwed up royally. No Indonesian site was pointed to the Vanguard’s domain name.
    Your attempt to take down the Davis Vanguard failed spectacularly. Ponder that for eternity.

  34. Ron O

    Regarding 501(c)(3) organizations (like the Vanguard), this has to be one of the most-abused sections of the IRS code. Note the following passage from the IRS:
    “In addition, it may not be an action organization, i.e., it may not attempt to influence legislation as a substantial part of its activities and it may not participate in any campaign activity for or against political candidates.
    Organizations described in section 501(c)(3) are commonly referred to as charitable organizations. Organizations described in section 501(c)(3), other than testing for public safety organizations, are eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions in accordance with Code section 170.
    The organization must not be organized or operated for the benefit of private interests, and no part of a section 501(c)(3) organization’s net earnings may inure to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual.”
    https://www.irs.gov/charities-non-profits/charitable-organizations/exemption-requirements-501c3-organizations#:~:text=To%20be%20tax%2Dexempt%20under,any%20private%20shareholder%20or%20individual.
    I have no idea why the IRS allows businesses such as the Vanguard (and more importantly – business-supported YIMBY organizations) to claim this status.

  35. Keith

    ” just a great big quiet nothing which is all that is deserved”
    Yup, which is also how I now view the Vanguard. A great big quiet nothing with monotonous housing and otherwise repetitive articles.

  36. Keith

    “Alan C. Miller’s devices or ISP must have gotten screwed up royally. No Indonesian site was pointed to the Vanguard’s domain name.”
    Walter, I was subject to the same thing. I would try to access the Vanguard and it would take me to a “Bento4D” gambling site.
    Then I was leery that the site might put a virus in my computer.

  37. Alan C. Miller

    WS say: “Alan C. Miller’s devices or ISP must have gotten screwed up royally.”
    Nope
    WS say: “No Indonesian site was pointed to the Vanguard’s domain name.”
    You have that backwards, but regardless I confirmed this with someone who has “worked” for the Vanguard for decades.
    WS say: “Your attempt to take down the Davis Vanguard failed spectacularly.”
    What attempt to ‘take down’ the Vanguard ? I’ve done nothing to ‘take down’ the Vanguard except laugh at it. Please describe the nature of my ‘attempt’ and describe how that ‘attempt’ ‘failed’.
    WS say: “Ponder that for eternity.”
    You’re full of ****. Ponder that for eternity.
    And WS, may I be the first to say to you: “Bento4d > Situs Toto Togel Resmi & Bo Toto 4D Hadiah Terbesar | Daftar dan Login”

  38. Ron O

    “Your attempt to take down the Davis Vanguard failed spectacularly. Ponder that for eternity.”
    It wasn’t an attempt to “take down the Vanguard”. It was an attempt to get them to pay their taxes – like the Enterprise is required to do.

  39. R Keller

    The Vanguard continues to violate federal law in publishing endorsements of political candidates. It doesn’t matter what kind of disclaimer they attach—.this is an egregious violation of their nonprofit status.
    https://davisvanguard.org/2024/08/local-dems-announce-endorsements-for-november/

  40. South of Davis

    Ron asks: “I have no idea why the IRS allows businesses such as the Vanguard (and more importantly – business-supported YIMBY organizations) to claim this status.” I’ll give you a hint it is the same reason that the IRS goes after conservative groups the administration does not like (and the DOJ is cool with left of center people violently taking over a a neighborhood and police station in Seattle but if a guy in a MAGA (Make Affordable Groceries Again) hat walkes into the US capitol after getting invited in by the guards he will spend years in jail).
    Alan needs to remember that “silence is violence” (so if he does not say how great the Vanguard is every day it is like a “violent attack”) and laughing at anyone (or a pro developmet website) is a “super violent attack” that abously means you want to “take down” the site.

  41. Keith

    SOD, great post, you nailed it.

  42. Ron O

    “They say that the gravel roads can’t safely handle the increasing volume of traffic, and that preserving them could choke development.”
    Uhm, yeah – isn’t that the primary reason to preserve them as is? It’s not actually about the “composition” of the road itself.
    I see at least some similarities to “preserve” I-80 as a three-lane (in each direction) freeway.
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/a-radical-plan-to-save-a-rural-oasis-don-t-pave-the-roads/ar-BB1hUREf?ocid=msedgntp&pc=NMTS&cvid=cea211cdb28740b69564e151829a7017&ei=24

  43. Ron O

    “They say that the gravel roads can’t safely handle the increasing volume of traffic, and that preserving them could choke development.”
    Uhm, yeah – isn’t that the primary reason to preserve them as is? It’s not actually about the “composition” of the road itself.
    I see at least some similarities to “preserve” I-80 as a three-lane (in each direction) freeway.
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/a-radical-plan-to-save-a-rural-oasis-don-t-pave-the-roads/ar-BB1hUREf?ocid=msedgntp&pc=NMTS&cvid=cea211cdb28740b69564e151829a7017&ei=24

  44. Ron O

    Sharla Cheney (from today’s Vanguard):
    “This creates very few options for families to house themselves, much less their elderly parents, so the grandparents go to age-restricted senior housing or assisted living and the families leave the community in search of less expensive options.”
    None of that is happening. Who, exactly, is suddenly trying to house their “elderly grandparents” (who don’t live in Davis in the first place) into a separate house in Davis? How many of those grandparents already live in a more-expensive, more-desirable community than Davis in the first place? (And can easily afford just about any place in Davis – with money left-over to spare?)
    Families who own houses don’t experience rising housing costs, other than those foisted upon them via parcel taxes and CFDs (e.g., from DJUSD). Along with the annual increase in property taxes and insurance, but those generally aren’t forcing people out of their own houses. (At least, not in Davis.)
    You seem to be referring to families who don’t live in Davis in the first place.
    But if anyone is having trouble finding a house to purchase (or rent) in Davis, I’d refer them to Zillow. New listings appear on there on a daily basis.
    At this point, I have zero empathy for those who whine about not being able to “afford” Davis. If anything, it’s probably slightly less-costly than the state average.
    Look – if folks want Davis to grow to accommodate non-residents, why don’t they just honestly say so in the first place? Wouldn’t that cut back on a lot of nonsensical arguments?

  45. Ron O

    Ooh – the “NIMBYs” win again! 🙂
    https://www.sfchronicle.com/outdoors/article/tiburon-land-park-19734557.php
    “Today, after longtime efforts to develop the scenic hillside, visitors no longer have to worry about trespassing. The nonprofit Trust for Public Land, with several partners, orchestrated the $42.1 million sale last week of what’s commonly known as the Martha Property, or Easton Point, from a local family to the Marin County Open Space District.”
    “The land deal also contended with criticism from housing advocates, who have faulted wealthy communities for putting parks before needed affordable homes. Marin County has lagged in meeting its state-mandated housing targets.”

  46. Ron O

    More “NIMBY News” out of Marin. Yay – Go NIMBYs!
    Seriously, it’s not just residents who are affected by such decisions. Visitors are, as well. Sausalito is already over-run with traffic, visitors, etc. – and has been since I was a child (and probably prior to then, as well).
    Truth be told, I’m surprised that there hasn’t been more opposition to the state’s “housing targets”. I’m not sure that the average person is fully aware of what the state is trying to foist-upon cities.
    “Opposition is mounting to a condominium development along Sausalito’s historic waterfront.”
    “A petition with more than 1,700 signatures started by a nonprofit called Save Our Sausalito urges members of the City Council to reject the proposal.”
    “Boom, now we start to get Miami Beach,” Collier said. “Starting something like that would destroy Sausalito. Sausalito is this funky, bayside kind of property of different types. Having Sausalito turn into this kind of glass, high-end Miami Beach, the only people that could afford to buy that are very wealthy.”

    https://www.marinij.com/2024/09/05/sausalito-housing-project-faces-growing-opposition/

  47. Ron O

    From today’s Vanguard housing article:
    After more than two years and an equal number of lawsuits, the state’s battle against the city of Elk Grove for its refusal to build affordable housing is over,” Robin Epley writes. “But the war is not, unless the rest of the state is sufficiently cowed into building the units that low-income residents desperately need to call home.”
    This approach is not going to work. Ultimately, state officials are elected by the voters whom they’ve “declared war on” – as you’ve described it.
    But perhaps the most-glaringly incorrect claim is that the state’s housing targets are focused on “affordable” housing. In fact, it’s largely market-rate housing that they’re pushing – in a state whose population isn’t growing in the first place.
    “Now the city is falling behind in actually producing that housing – again – at least now the state is monitoring it.”
    The paid YIMBY shills are certainly monitoring it. The “problem” (from the YIMBY perspective) is that just about every city across the entire state is not “actually” producing that housing.
    “Yes, the city of Davis was briefly in builder’s remedy status. But it turns out for a city like Davis, that might not be such a big stick after all.”
    True.
    “One limitation with Builder’s Remedy is the 20 percent affordable housing requirement – which for a lot of infill projects is a non-starter.”
    Uhm, I thought that the point of the Builder’s Remedy (and the state’s efforts) is to provide affordable housing. If so, how is 20% a “limitation”?
    “And redevelopment with a required 20 percent affordable housing would frankly be welcomed by the city – not feared as a punishment.”
    Uhm, wouldn’t that show that Davis (unlike many other cities) actually is committed to affordable housing?
    “In a place like Davis, they do have a big potential stick but it’s not Builder’s Remedy, but rather Measure J. If the state were to take away that tool from the voters, many would stand up and listen. That would be a huge gamechanger.”
    How about if you and your developer friends “put up, or shut up”? Go for it, and see what happens. Something about the boy who cried wolf, at this point.
    And what makes you doubt that one of the reactions (in addition to a whole host of others) might be to put a slow-growth council in place?
    There are similar “growth controls” across the state. Is the state going to take them all down – including their own Williamson Act? If so, the state is going to further expose itself regarding who is really behind this effort and what the goal actually is.
    The goal being to return to 1950s-1960s sprawling growth patterns (which are actually still occurring across most of the region and state in the first place.) And the reason that this is “preferred” can be seen in the media just about every day – when they bemoan a stable population. Business interests (who are behind the YIMBY’s claims) have no tolerance for that.
    But again, the state is not going to win, for several reasons (e.g., elected by the people whom they’ve declared war on, a slowdown in the economy, flight to other states where the costs are lower, a drastic reduction in the number of people having kids, etc.).
    The only thing “saving” the growth monkeys at this point is the 9 million or so illegal immigrants that have been allowed into the country, over the past few years. But they tend to congregate where costs are lower, or where housing is subsidized for them. Below is one such example:
    https://www.sfchronicle.com/sf/article/rent-scam-evict-19731082.php

  48. Ron O

    David Greenwald’s response to Matt Williams (primarily in regard to Matt’s observation that the state is offering very little assistance in regard to its Affordable housing targets):
    September 8, 2024 at 12:49 pm
    From Matt: “Or conversely, the local jurisdictions like Davis need a more impactful stick to hold the State accountable”
    From David: “Good luck with that”

    Well, good luck trying to overturn Measure J, as well. For that matter, good luck in trying to force the entire state to adhere to the state’s mandates. (Which you yourself have already noted are failing. Not even close, for that matter.)
    It could be that the Scott Wieners and the rest of the YIMBYs are going to have to relocate to places like Texas, where they (and Elon Musk) are already welcome with open arms.
    Too bad the housing market there is tanking, so I guess you can’t claim a shortage there. Or in the entire state of Florida.
    Or, how about the ENTIRE rest of the Sacramento region, where the YIMBY interests are already welcome (and have been for decades, as evidenced by the patterns of ongoing development).
    Why is it that they can’t be $atisfied with that?
    The “Austin Vanguard” has a nice ring to it. Hey, it’s also a college town, so it would fit right in. But since it’s in Texas, the Vanguard’s “free the criminals” campaign might not be as good of a fit, so there is that.
    But in regard to the state’s war against its own cities, this is not a war that the state will win in the long run.
    It sometimes takes awhile to “rile up” the citizenry, but when it finally does occur – you get something like Proposition 13.
    Ultimately, the people themselves have the power – it’s just a question of when they finally use that power.

  49. Ron O

    From today’s housing/candidate article:
    I have been a teacher in Davis for 11 years, and am serving my third term as President of Davis Teachers Association.
    Already a bad sign, given the school district’s advocacy for sprawl.
    I have seen how our lack of available and affordable housing has affected students’ and teachers’ families alike. Young families just starting out have to buy in Woodland, West Sacramento, or Sacramento.
    Oh, the horror. Probably even “worse” if their kids attend school there and some members of their household work there – especially Sacramento.
    Last I heard, UCD hasn’t added any significant numbers of employees in the first place. Shouldn’t that be the FIRST THING TO EXAMINE, before making outlandish claims? Followed the the SECOND THING – which is, “what happened to the employee housing that was planned for the campus?
    Renter families can’t save enough to transition to becoming homeowners.
    Ever hear of rent control? Of course, once it’s implemented – the deal is often “too sweet” to leave.
    Maybe they should try renting in one of the cities you just mentioned, first.
    Seniors can’t afford to downsize and struggle with their family-sized homes as they age.
    None of this is true. Not one bit. These people are homeowners, and have paid off their homes a long time ago.
    Truth be told, the reason that most seniors don’t downsize is because THEY DON’T WANT TO. That, plus the transaction cost and hassle which are also factors.
    Ever hear of Bretton Woods, by the way?
    UC Davis students struggle to stay housed while they get their degrees, then can’t settle here after graduation even if they wish to.
    Regarding the first part, maybe they should speak with UCD about that. Regarding the second part, where’s that “world’s smallest violin” when you need it?
    Then there’s the others, who claim that growth is needed for downtown, etc. Can someone explain to me how a city which has NEVER STOPPED GROWING suddenly has a downtown that is reportedly dysfunctional – but wasn’t in the past when the population was SMALLER?
    Housing is a COST to cities, especially AFFORDABLE housing.

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