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  • Plan submitted to increase Bay Area city from 30,000 to 400,000 residents

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    A rendering of the Suisun Expansion Project in Solano County, part of the proposal by California Forever.

    California Forever/Handout

    A year after pulling a measure from the ballot amid catastrophic polling numbers, the team behind California Forever has presented a new plan to Solano County. If approved, the Suisun Expansion Project would annex 22,873 acres of unincorporated Solano County to become part of Suisun City.

    Last year, a secretive group of investors were outed for buying up 65,000 acres of land in Solano County, making them the largest landowners in the county. Once the purchases became public, the group came forward under the name California Forever, announcing their intention to build a new city of 400,000 people largely in rural areas around Suisun City and Rio Vista.

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    The announcement was widely unpopular in the county and, amid dire polling numbers, California Forever pulled the November 2024 ballot measure that would have allowed the project to bypass certain zoning restrictions to develop the area. At the time, California Forever CEO Jan Sramek said they would be back to the drawing board with plans to resubmit the project in 2026.

    Instead, they’re now offering over 22,000 acres to Suisun City for incorporation. The plan is an incredibly ambitious one: The design emphasizes mixed use spaces, with blocks containing housing, restaurants, parks and shopping, along with easy access to public transit. The document submitted to the city calls it “the first time in a century that anyone has tried to create a new walkable city of this scale.”

    The application broadly calls for two, 20-year buildouts of neighborhoods, commercial, mixed-use and greenspace that would ultimately include about 400,000 residents, with phase one initially preparing for up to 150,000 residents. The document says it would become “comparable to other Solano cities, such as Fairfield, Vallejo, and Vacaville.” Solano County currently has about 455,000 total residents; Suisun City has a population of about 30,000.

    A map showing the Suisun Expansion Project in Solano County submitted by California Forever.

    A map showing the Suisun Expansion Project in Solano County submitted by California Forever.

    California Forever/Handout

    The proposal says the housing would be “medium-density.” “It follows the patterns that have created some of the most beloved neighborhoods in the country, whether in smaller towns like Charleston, South Carolina, Savannah, Georgia, and Davis, California, or in neighborhoods of large cities like Noe Valley and Marina in San Francisco,” the plan reads.

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    The incorporation would add a huge swath of land to the city, from Highway 12 to the south, Creed Road to the north and the edge of Rio Vista to the east. 

    Suisun City manager Bret Prebula said the city will take 30 to 45 days to start the environmental review process, and once that first phase, known as “scoping,” is done, a draft environmental impact report will be prepared and submitted for public feedback.

    “In the months that we’ve been having really high-level conversations with them about our interest with jobs and housing, transportation, and to have open space as part of this process, among other very big picture items, they’ve really listened,” Prebula said.

    The first phase would use existing and increased supply of groundwater and surface water and rely on recycled water for non-potable uses. The project proposed to build three water intake stations, with two in Lindsey Slough and one in Carpenter Slough, along with a surface water storage pond and two water treatment facilities that could potentially treat more than 26 million gallons of water per day. The plan calls for relying on those sources for the first phase, before the second phase would require imported water from outside sources, according to the proposal.

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    It’s not clear if locals want Suisun City to go from a relatively quiet suburb of 30,000 to a bustling metro of 400,000. A public meeting on the project is scheduled for Oct. 27 at the Vault Event Center in Suisun City.

    Bay City News Service contributed to this report.

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    Katie Dowd

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  • Woman beaten unconscious by Calif. deputies as kids watched wins $17M settlement

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    Earlier this week, Nakia Porter’s attorney announced that Solano County had agreed to settle with her and her family for $17 million.

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    A roadside stop in the city of Dixon that ended with a Solano County woman beaten unconscious by deputies as her young family members watched in the back seat will now cost the county $17 million.

    Four years after Nakia Porter and her family filed a federal civil rights lawsuit, court filings show a deal was finalized earlier this year, as her attorney announced to the press this week.

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    In January 2024, a federal judge separately approved a portion of the settlement set aside for Porter’s daughters and niece, who had witnessed Porter’s arrest. Additional agreements were placed under seal in May 2025, Porter’s attorney, Yasin Almadani, told SFGATE. The county did not admit wrongdoing as part of the settlement. “There was no admission of liability,” he said.

    Although the settlement offers some relief, he noted it cannot account for the “immeasurable loss” Porter and her family endured. “We can never restore what Ms. Porter really lost, but at least we can try to prevent it from happening somewhere else,” Almadani said. “Putting this to bed is going to help with the healing process itself.”

    Solano County spokesperson Matthew Davis told SFGATE that the decision to settle came after the county evaluated the expense, length and uncertainty of continued litigation. He noted that by reaching an agreement, the county avoids the unpredictability of a jury trial and is able to focus on moving forward alongside the community.

    Davis emphasized that the county disputes the underlying facts of the case but takes such matters “very seriously” and remains “firmly committed [to] the highest standards of public safety.” He said that officials continuously review training, policies and practices “to strengthen community trust and prevent future incidents.”

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    On the night of Aug. 6 2020, Porter and her father, Joe Berry Powell, were driving from Oakland to Sacramento with Porter’s two daughters, ages 3 and 4, and her niece, 6, when they pulled over in Dixon to switch seats. As Porter and her father made the change, two Solano County sheriff’s deputies, one male and the other female, approached the family, the complaint said.

    Deputies later said they approached the car because of a mismatched license plate. However, the complaint noted that the rear plate, which displayed the state of Maryland, had already been checked and confirmed as matching the vehicle, and there were no reports of the car having been stolen. Porter had recently moved to California and had yet to change her registration. 

    In the complaint, Almadani argued deputies forced Porter away from the patrol car’s dash camera and beat her, striking her in the head, neck, back and stomach. Before the blows led her to collapse unconscious, Porter allegedly cried out, “God, bless me! Bless me, God!” She remained unconscious for more than five minutes, which her lawyers argued was consistent with a severe, “Grade III” concussion.

    “As the officers dragged me away and beat me, all I could think of was my children. I thought I was going to die and never see them. I struggled for my life, praying to God to save me. Then everything went black,” she said in a 2021 news release. When she regained consciousness, Porter found herself handcuffed inside a sheriff’s car, noting her head was spinning and her body hurt.

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    Meanwhile, Porter’s father, Powell, was detained at gunpoint and allegedly forced to walk backward more than 30 feet with his hands on his head as his granddaughters sat alone in the back seat of the car. Powell would later describe the events as “torture.” 

    “As a father and grandfather, every bone in my body wanted to jump out of that vehicle and save my daughter. But I knew if I got out, they might shoot her and me,” he said in the release. “We did everything right and they still violated our dignity.” 

    Deputies booked Porter into Solano County Jail overnight based on reports that she had “slipped the cuff” and “punched” the male deputy. In her deposition, the female deputy acknowledged that her only basis for saying that Porter had struck the male deputy was that he had told her “after the fact.” The district attorney later declined to file charges against Porter. 

    Almadani noted that body camera footage played a pivotal role in exposing what happened. 

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    “When things move from protection into abuse of power, that’s when things go awry,” Almadani said. “Officers are given tremendous authority and power under the law … but when there’s not a need and they’re overstepping their bounds, the body camera gives you some very powerful evidence of that.” 

    He said that broader change requires a culture where officers hold themselves and their colleagues accountable.

    “What we hope is that other law enforcement pay attention to this case and then train their officers so that this doesn’t happen again, because it was entirely preventable just by following the law.”

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    Olivia Hebert

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