Davisite Banner. Left side the bicycle obelisk at 3rd and University. Right side the trellis at the entrance to the Arboretum.

Category: Business

  • Have a Rebellious Rebellious Christmas. la la la la

    (Sung to the tune of Rosie O’Donnell’s album holiday hit “Have a Rosie Christmas (Donna Summer’s lyrics). 

    By Scott Steward

    Perhaps Rosie O’Donnell, the abrasive and enduring talented comedian/artist, who also has a famous feud with Trump (dating back to 2004), will accept the recalcitrant Marjorie Taylor Greene, should Trump make becoming an expat in Ireland all the more attractive for Greene, too.  Mmmmm – except that Greene has been very mean about LGPTQ (and other people) until very recently. 

    O’Donnell and Greene are far apart, but share a talent for the spotlight, a caring for kids and families, and their persona non grata status with Trump.  You decide if this tumultuous declaration of Greene’s reconciliation is a path toward common ground, and while you’re mulling it over, here are some other rebellious pre-holiday actions to consider.

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  • Supporting Sensible Security at the Davis Food Co-op (Counter Petition – sign it!)

    COOP CopRoberta Millstein is correct that the COOP should have timely sent an email, perhaps with the text from the sign out in front of the store (see below). 

    However, the text with the petition calling to remove the guards drifts into anti-cop and demilitarization rhetoric that is far-far-left even for the average COOP shopper.  The statement "Security personnel in military-style equipment . . . creates the perception of shopping as a criminal act and makes the store feel like a space under occupation." is extreme. 

    Below is link to a counter-petition, thanking COOP management for their leadership on this matter.  Importantly, this petition refers to the guard as a guard (not a militarized occupation), this petition makes no list of demands, and this petition makes no threat of a boycott.  Choose the petition that fits your thoughts/opinion and sign one of them.  The link to the text and to sign the petition are here:

    https://chng.it/jMmWXHDtdh

    ENHANCED SECURITY MEASURES
    AT THE DAVIS FOOD CO-OP

    As many of you have noticed, the retail environment has changed significantly in the past year. Several staff members have expressed concern about safety and the increase in theft incidents in the store. Management has stepped up to become mitigators and although we are grateful for their leadership, it is not sustainable and our priority is safety. Many Members have also expressed their concerns about the changing environment. The overall sentiment is that the Co-op is losing its welcoming and safe atmosphere.

    We have done our best to mitigate the increased activity, however, it is becoming a bigger task than we have capacity and at times, training for.
    Therefore, after careful consideration, a third-party security company will be engaged to enhance the safety and security of staff, customers, and assets.

    This change may feel different to some members who may not be aware of the situations that have been discreetly addressed. However, this partnership will help create a more secure environment for everyone.

    The selected company is highly recommended by Sacramento Natural Foods Co-op. Additionally, the owner is a member of SNFC and is committed to incorporating the Davis Food Co-op's policies and values into how their team will engage with the community and handle situations involving theft or disturbances.

    This measure is essential to ensure that the Co-op remains a safe and welcoming space for all members, staff, and shoppers. We appreciate your understanding and support as this important change is implemented.

    Cooperatively,
    Laura Sanchez, General Manager

  • The General Plan won’t be a Genial Plan

     

    Screenshot 2025-07-30 8.22.55 PM"The goal is to manipulate

    Heavy hands to intimidate

    Snuff out the very idea of clarity

    Strangle your longing for truth and trust

    Choke wisdom sapience and prudence

    The war economy is inviolable violently

    Suppresses all intelligence that conflicts

    With the stakes of those who drive it."  - 

    From "Melodie is a Wound" by: Laetitia Sadier, Tim John Gane. Performed by Stereolab. Album: Instant Holograms On Metal Film. Released: 2025.  https://youtu.be/Nndpg90P2O8?

  • Reform the DDBA to Avoid a Costly Lawsuit

    Commentary by Heather Caswell with Jonathan Greenberg

    Our decision to threaten the City of Davis with a class action lawsuit on behalf of members of the Downtown Davis Business Association (DDBA) was not made easily, or quickly. For years, an organization that was created to support the interests of hundreds of dues-paying businesses has instead been co-opted to support controversial political positions promoted by the Davis City Council, as detailed below.

    As stated in the California Supreme Court’s landmark 1976 Stanson v. Mott decision, a “fundamental precept of this nation’s democratic electoral process is that the government may not ‘take sides’ in election contests or bestow an unfair advantage on one of several competing factions.”

    This means that it would be illegal if the Davis City Council, even indirectly, allowed a special tax dedicated to promoting the interest of downtown businesses be used to promote political speech benefiting city council positions on public initiatives.

     

    We believe that this is what the DDBA has done,  through an unaccountable board of directors, which holds its power through irregular and potentially illegal elections

    The DDBA has done this through an un-accountable board of directors, which holds its power through irregular and potentially illegal elections. Fewer than 10% of the organization's members voted in the January 23 election that I ran in. Three quarters of the dozens of DDBA businesses that I spoke to never received email notifications of the election. Not a single one was notified by the organization that they could run for its board. And at a time when all DDBA Board meetings are held over zoom, members, for no good reason, were required to vote in person within a one hour period, instead of online, at their convenience.

    When Ezra Beeman and I ran to help create a more responsive board, the existing board members and the DDBA Executive Director colluded to change the election rules at the last minute, while they selectively recruited other former board members to show up to run or vote against us. Without any mention during the board meetings prior to the election, they added four seats to the seven member board two days before the election (the DDBA website today still states that they are a seven member board). They then delayed the printing of ballots for three days to print them just hours before the election, so that the names of their friendly candidates could be included.

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  • DDBA Board Prioritizes Rights of Repeat Offending Criminals Over Safety for Businesses, Women and Children

    By Jonathan Greenberg

     

    It is unfortunate that Kevin Wan, as Chair of the DDBA, resorted to lies and distortions in defense of a board majority that shamefully refuses to take an active part in responding to the worst public safety crisis in Davis history.

     

    In his column in yesterday's Davis Enterprise, Kevin is lying about the Davis Safety Empowerment Network system that my wife, Heather Caswell, owner of the Wardrobe, have spent three meetings discussing with the DDBA board. We propose to empower Davis businesses with an innovative system that would help them more effectively prosecute the small number of mentally unstable, dangerous men who repeatedly terrorize downtown businesses and their customers (especially women and seniors), without consequences, by a “catch and release” process that allows them to stay out of drug treatment, mental institutions or prison. 

    Kevin wrote in the Enterprise that we propose “a PUBLIC database of POTENTIAL criminals.” 

     

    Yet we have told Kevin that the system would be accessible only to participating DDBA businesses, not the public. And that it would ONLY include people whose images were taken from security cameras of DDBA businesses AFTER they ACTUALLY COMMITTED CRIMES in Davis stores and restaurants, such as threatening peoples’ lives, as one did twice, without consequences, to Heather. 

     

    The database would provide the names of these dozen or so repeat criminal offenders, and add PUBLICLY AVAILABLE but difficult to access Davis Police Department incident reports, as well as past arrest records and local restraining orders against these individuals. 

     

    The Davis Police have told us that 10 to 20 people are responsible for almost all criminal incidents downtown, and that the police themselves have a dossier with the record of each one. But that the government is unable to share this information with businesses, because it might taint prosecutions. These same mentally disturbed or drug addicted men also terrorize the 240 other unhoused people in Davis. Removing them from our streets would make life safer-and more compassionate-for everyone. 

     

    Yet Kevin, and the DDBA Board members are more concerned with prioritizing what he misleadingly cites, in his column, as the “civil rights” and “privacy” of these repeat violent offenders over the rights of our community’s most vulnerable citizens, women, seniors and children, to be protected against violence by a small number of dangerous, mentally-disturbed unhoused men.

     

    DDBA is clearly part of the problem when they cite the illusory rights of criminals as more important to their organization than the rights of those who are victims of violence, week after week. Many women, especially seniors, have told us that they no longer feel safe in downtown Davis. Some downtown businesses have even shortened their hours because their female employees do not feel safe in the evening.

     

    Yolo County District Attorney Jeff Reisig reviewed and supports our program and does not question its legality. He wrote, “I think any business association that is able to improve information sharing with each other AND police as described would be very helpful. Our success in policing and prosecution would absolutely be enhanced by better information sharing among businesses/retailers on prolific offenders." 

     

    Indeed, most successful criminal prosecutions by businesses rely on store video footage. Every store has a right to video its premises for security, and use those videos to protect themselves. The incident and past offense and restraining order data that this system would aggregate are all public information, but very difficult to access. This system would empower a network of DDMA members with the information about the past records of the criminals who repeatedly terrorize their customers and employees, allowing them to prosecute them more effectively.

    Multiple companies sell records of past arrest records for businesses to run background checks when hiring.  And for generations, businesses have provided employees with photos of repeat offender shoplifters. This solution brings this strategy into the 21st century.  

     

    Kevin also distorts reality when he writes, in his Enterprise column, that “for the past year, we have been working tirelessly with the Davis City Council and Davis Police Department to restore the presence of a dedicated, downtown-based police officer.”

    Heather Caswell, and I participated in the last three DDBA meetings to urge the DDBA to take an active role in helping member businesses address crime. Not a word was mentioned of supporting a beat cop at any of these meetings. Nor can any mention of it be found in the DDBA minutes for the past 12 months.

     

    Instead, it was Heather who, on December 16, after a special meeting with Council Member Donna Neville and Chief Todd Henry in which a new position assigned to the downtown was discussed, wrote to Kevin Wan and the Board to urge them to quickly pass a resolution supporting the new funding allocation at the next day’s city council meeting. Even though the December 17 full council meeting was the first to discuss how $11 million in new sales tax revenue would be spent, the DDBA Board and its Executive Director Brett Lee had no plan to mention the beat cop position to the city council. Heather convinced the DDBA board to pass a resolution overnight, and for Brett Lee, DDBA’s executive director, to join her in making a statement supporting the position. 

    Davis businesses deserve better from the Chair of the DDBA. That is why Heather, along with Ezra Beeman, Shelly Ramos and Kellie Palmer, are running to replace the existing DDBA Board leadership with a women majority board that is willing to take an active part in resolving the most important problem facing every Davis retail business, restaurant and resident of Davis today: public safety. 

     

    Jonathan Greenberg is a widely published investigative legal and financial journalist, and the founder of Progressive Source Communications.

  • Compassion Must Not Enable Crimes Against Women and Downtown Businesses

    By Heather Caswell and Jonathan Greenberg

    Commentary

    January 18, 2025

    Since writing my December 18 Enterprise column about the public safety crisis in downtown Davis, I have heard feedback from dozens of my customers, most of them older women.

    Some, like former Assembly Member Helen Thomson, asked how they could support the effort. Many thanked me for paying attention. Nearly all of them told me that they now feel unsafe in downtown Davis for the first time in their lives.  

    Who are we, as a community, when we cannot protect our most vulnerable members? After decades of progress in curtailing violence against women, how is it that our legal system today tolerates mentally unstable younger men menacing women, children and the elderly with violent threats, week after week, with no consequences?

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  • Voting for Harris is Voting for These Power Women

    Wonderfulwomen
    Venessa Chang – Department of Energy, Lina Khan – Federal Trade Commission, Julie Su – Department of Labor

    By Scott Steward

    I am motivated to keep Venessa Chang, Lina Khan and Julie Su in power (see bios below). These women are in charge of our government’s renewable energy future, market, and wage equity.  That goes very much away if Trump wins. 

    Against Trump’s authoritarian challenge, good men and good women have come together in associations where differences are put aside to elect Harris/Walz.

    Indivisible Yolo (Indivisibleyolo.org) has built a platform of action here at home. For the next two weeks, the aim is to prevail in defending democracy.

    Get involved. IY has already paved the way – training at no cost.  indivisibleyolo.org.  Weekdays and weekends. Canvassing to win congressional districts in California. Calls to win abortion rights in Arizona. Volunteers virtually go where they are needed.   You need a computer and a cell phone to be fully able to help.   It's the most important 2 weeks ever.

    When we call, text, knock we win!  Come join in!    

    (this message is provided by the author alone and not any organization)

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  • Rebuttals to arguments for and against Davis tax increase (Measure Q)

    By Roberta Millstein

    Yesterday, I posted the ballot arguments for and against Measure Q, which would increase Davis's current retail transactions and use tax from 1% to 2%.  Here are the rebuttals to those arguments that will also appear on the November ballot.  See the County's website (where these arguments are also posted) for more details: https://ace.yolocounty.gov/417/Measure-Q—City-of-Davis

    Rebuttal to argument in favor of Measure Q:

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  • Arguments for and against increasing transactions & use tax from 1% to 2% (Measure Q)

    By Roberta Millstein

    This November, Davisites will vote on Measure Q:

    To support essential City services, such as public safety and emergency response; crime prevention; pothole repair; parks, road, sidewalk, and bike path maintenance; and addressing homelessness, affordable housing, and climate change, shall the City of Davis's Ordinance be adopted establishing an additional 1¢ sales tax providing approximately $11,000,000 annually for general government use until repealed by the voters, subject to annual audits, public disclosure of all spending and with all funds staying local?

    This would increase Davis's current retail transactions and use tax from 1% to 2%.  To pass, a majority (50% + 1) of the votes cast by City of Davis voters must approve the measure.  As implied by the text above, the tax has no automatic sunset date; it will be in effect until repealed by voters. 

    Further details are available at the County's website: https://ace.yolocounty.gov/417/Measure-Q—City-of-Davis

    Here is the argument in favor that will appear on the ballot:

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  • New Commissions are Opportunity for more public participation and Innovation

    By Alan Hirsch, Davis Lorax

    The controversial city council plan for commission consolidation and refocus is going into effect this summer. This is a rare opportunity for reform I hope is not missed. 

    Let us begin by restating the overarching goals council set forward in this reform: 

    Davis Council Resolution 24-079 May 2024

    Guiding Principle for New Commission Structure

    . City Commissions should act at all times with the understanding that guiding principles are at the core of their work.

    1. Promote and embrace diversity, equity, and inclusion
    2. Prioritize environmental and social justice
    3. Make space for community engagement
    4. Balance environmental and fiscal sustainability
    5. Strive for innovation and human progress

    The first meeting of the new Climate and Environmental Justice Commission on 7/22 Monday is precedent setting as it can begin to put implementation meat on the bone of these principles by:

    1. Better Prioritize Environmental  Justice than in the past  (principal B)
    2. Change meeting practices to allow more public participation. (principle A & C)  
    3. Speed surfacing of new ideas and follow through on their implementation.  (principle E

    As a first step in embracing council principles for this reorganization,  I suggest the  commission’s pass a resolution to  establish these ground rules for operation

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