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Tag: Solano County

  • Letters: Battle over Prop. 50 is a fight that’s worth having

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    Prop. 50 is a fight
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    Re: “Passing redistricting plan will be uphill battle for governor” (Page A16, Aug. 31).

    This opinion piece lists the difficulty of getting voters to the polls for an off-year election, but this is one very special election. For one thing, voting for redistricting is almost as critical as voting for a president. It impacts the entire nation, not just Californians.

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  • Kaila Charles finds redemption with Valkyries in career night vs. Wings

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    Twice this year, the Dallas Wings told Kaila Charles she wasn’t good enough to keep a roster spot

    Her WNBA journey looked about finished for the 2025 season until the Valkyries gave her an opportunity just after the All-Star break after a plethora of injuries left the expansion team shorthanded. Now, the Valkyries can’t imagine a rotation without her. 

    Following three hardship contracts, the Valkyries guaranteed the 27-year-old shooting guard’s contract for the rest of the season. 

    On Sunday, she had her best game of the season as she locked up former teammate and rookie of the year candidate Paige Bueckers while tying a career-high 16 points in a 90-81 win over the Wings

    “I think it was a full circle moment,” Charles said after Sunday’s win. “I started the season here, and to be cut was sad, but it also gave me the opportunity to get film and get picked up by the (Valkyries). So even though it didn’t work out here like I wanted to, it gave me another opportunity where I fit in a little bit more.

    “So it just shows that everything happens for a reason, and I’m really glad that I was able to win with my team and do well and help them.”

    Dallas Wings guard Paige Bueckers (5) loses control of the ball against Golden State Valkyries guard Kaila Charles during the second half of a WNBA basketball game in Arlington, Texas, Sunday, Aug. 24, 2025. (AP Photo/LM Otero) 

    When the Valkyries first signed Charles on Aug. 1, the former University of Maryland standout was tasked with learning a new system and teammates on a team that’s in the midst of trying to make a playoff push. 

    On the morning she joined the team, Charles boarded a plane to Chicago and had a few hours to learn the Valkyries’ playbook before a 7 p.m. tipoff against the Sky. The Valkyries coaching staff quickly briefed Charles before the game and the shooting guard was immediately in the rotation that night. 

    That night against, Charles played 17 minutes, scored five points, grabbed five rebounds and closed the fourth quarter in her first game with the team. 

    “Sometimes it’s on the fly,” assistant coach Landon Tatum told this news organization in a recent interview about how they fit players like Charles into their rotation the day of a game. “We know this person can do this really well. So, let’s see if this works. I wouldn’t necessarily say we know ahead of time going into games this is going to for sure work, but I think because we do a solid job of knowing what players do well, we can kind of plug and play specific people with certain people.” 

    Since then, Charles has been a rotation regular. She’s played in every game and been a valuable piece off the bench for Nakase as a defensive stopper and consistent catch-and-shoot player. 

    In her first start with the Valkyries on Sunday, Charles was tasked with guarding Bueckers, who came into the game with a streak of 30 consecutive double-digit scoring games. 

    Charles shadowed Bueckers for every minute she was in the game. Her active hands bothered the rookie star and her quick feet kept Bueckers away from the basket. 

    Charles held Bueckers scoreless in the first half and eventually limited her to just nine points on 3-of-12 shooting. 

    “Credit to Kaila for coming and doing what she does,” Valkyries coach Natalie Nakase said. “Locking people up, and also on the offensive end, just being confident in her shot making. She makes quick decisions, taking it hard to the basket. Credit to Kaila because she’s really only had two practices with us.”

    With the injuries the Valkyries have, Charles’ role will only get larger in the coming weeks as the Valkyries try to secure a playoff spot. 

    Golden State is currently in eighth place with a half-game lead over the ninth-place Los Angeles Sparks for the final playoff spot. The Valkyries are also a half game behind the sixth-place Indiana Fever and seventh-place Seattle Storm with matchups against both franchises in the coming weeks. 

    The battle to make the playoffs makes Charles’ presence, and her ability to step in when her team needs her most, all the more valuable.  

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    Nathan Canilao

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  • Fairfield police arrest Vacaville man for fatal hit-and-run

    Fairfield police arrest Vacaville man for fatal hit-and-run

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    The Fairfield Police Department arrested a man Thursday for a fatal hit-and-run that occurred more than three months ago, officials said. Jaered Diago, 21, of Vacaville, is accused of fatally hitting a woman with his car and fleeing the scene without rendering aid. He was booked into the Solano County Jail, the Fairfield Police Department said. (Watch the video above to see KCRA 3’s previous reporting on the case)On April 23, a Fairfield police officer was driving on Air Base Parkway near Wylie Lane when around 1 a.m. they noticed a woman lying on the ground along the road’s shoulder, Fairfield police said. The officer stopped to check on her and saw she had been hit by a vehicle. The incident happened in front of the Pick-n-Pull. There were no other vehicles in the area when the officer arrived. Air Base Parkway was shut down for around six hours while investigators processed the scene, Fairfield police said. Officers tracked down the suspected vehicle to a Vacaville residence the following day and spent several months collecting enough evidence to obtain an arrest warrant, Fairfield police said. It was unclear what kind of evidence officers collected. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

    The Fairfield Police Department arrested a man Thursday for a fatal hit-and-run that occurred more than three months ago, officials said.

    Jaered Diago, 21, of Vacaville, is accused of fatally hitting a woman with his car and fleeing the scene without rendering aid. He was booked into the Solano County Jail, the Fairfield Police Department said.

    (Watch the video above to see KCRA 3’s previous reporting on the case)

    On April 23, a Fairfield police officer was driving on Air Base Parkway near Wylie Lane when around 1 a.m. they noticed a woman lying on the ground along the road’s shoulder, Fairfield police said. The officer stopped to check on her and saw she had been hit by a vehicle.

    The incident happened in front of the Pick-n-Pull. There were no other vehicles in the area when the officer arrived. Air Base Parkway was shut down for around six hours while investigators processed the scene, Fairfield police said.

    Officers tracked down the suspected vehicle to a Vacaville residence the following day and spent several months collecting enough evidence to obtain an arrest warrant, Fairfield police said. It was unclear what kind of evidence officers collected.

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  • Denverton Fire burns near Travis Air Force Base in Solano County

    Denverton Fire burns near Travis Air Force Base in Solano County

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    SOLANO COUNTY RIGHT NOW NEAR TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, YOU CAN SEE THERE’S SOME SORT OF A VEGETATION FIRE BURNING RIGHT NOW. AND WE’RE WORKING TO GET MORE DETAILS AT THIS TIME. BUT YOU CAN SEE THERE IS A WIND PUSHING THAT SMOKE, AND YOU CAN SEE THAT SMOKE CLEARLY MOVING IN ONE DIRECTION, LAYING DOWN AGAINST THE GROUND. AND YOU CAN SEE THERE’S JUST A LOT OF YELLOW AROUND IT THAT MEANS THAT’S JUST A LOT OF DRY GRASS. THE POTENTIAL FOR THAT TO BURN VERY, VERY EASILY, THAT’S A LOT OF FUEL. PRETTY CLOSE THERE TO TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE. WE

    Denverton Fire burns near Travis Air Force Base in Solano County

    A vegetation fire burning Tuesday near Travis Air Force Base and Highway 12 in Solano County has died down, according to Alert California camera footage. The Denverton Fire had burned at least 25 acres, as of 1:12 p.m., according to the Montezuma Fire Protection District. An Alert California camera initially showed a plume of smoke on a field near the base. The fire comes as the region is under a red flag warning through Wednesday. A dry north breeze combined with air temperatures above 100 degrees increases the risk for dangerous grass and brush fires to spread, our weather team says.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

    A vegetation fire burning Tuesday near Travis Air Force Base and Highway 12 in Solano County has died down, according to Alert California camera footage.

    The Denverton Fire had burned at least 25 acres, as of 1:12 p.m., according to the Montezuma Fire Protection District. An Alert California camera initially showed a plume of smoke on a field near the base.

    The fire comes as the region is under a red flag warning through Wednesday. A dry north breeze combined with air temperatures above 100 degrees increases the risk for dangerous grass and brush fires to spread, our weather team says.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

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  • Guns, marijuana, cocaine found in Northern California gift shop

    Guns, marijuana, cocaine found in Northern California gift shop

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    (FOX40.COM) — A six-month police investigation recently led to the discovery of illegally owned guns, marijuana, cocaine, and stolen property at a gift shop in Northern California.

    According to the Fairfield Police Department, The Field Gift Shop opened its business with “misleading information” and committed various criminal and fraudulent activities.

    The store, located in Fairfield on Pennsylvania Street and West Texas Street, says on its front door that it sells pipes, bongs, clothing, “exotic candy,” accessories, and more. But Fairfield police say that it was all “smoke and mirrors.”

    Fairfield police said a six-month investigation led to them finding drugs, guns, and more inside of a local gift shop. (Credit: Fairfield Police Department)

    On Tuesday, the Fairfield Police Department said officers executed three search warrants related to controlled substance and marijuana sales in the city on May 2. That search led to the uncovering of two illegally owned pistols, marijuana, cocaine, a stolen bike, and a “code enforcement case.”

    Police added that a 24-year-old man and a 29-year-old man were arrested due to their findings.

    “Leveraging local municipal codes, law enforcement was able to enforce fines and recommend the [removal] of the [gift shop’s] license,” Fairfield police said. “The gift shop will be given a fair opportunity to appeal within 15 days, after which we will proceed with the closure.”

    Police did not specify the amount of drugs they found nor did they release the names of the men who were arrested on May 2.

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    Aydian Ahmad

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  • EXCLUSIVE: New renderings show California Forever’s plans for new city in Solano County

    EXCLUSIVE: New renderings show California Forever’s plans for new city in Solano County

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    Officials behind a new city proposed for Solano County shared new renderings of what the community would look like, including residential options and the public transit system.The images, provided exclusively to KCRA 3 by California Forever, show row houses with private backyards. Residents could decide to have a garage and an accessory dwelling unit in the backyard, or they could opt for more open space. In an exclusive interview with KCRA 3’s Orko Manna, California Forever Head of Planning Gabriel Metcalf said the idea is to provide residents with several choices.“It’s up to each homeowner what they want to do. Do they want a private garden? Do they want to have it be grass? They all face onto an alley in the back, and in the alley, you can of course park your car, but it can also be where you put an accessory dwelling unit, so it can be an office, it can be where your mother lives, or you can just have a bigger backyard. So, what we’re showing here is that range of options of very private intimate quiet backyards but also opening up onto an alley where all kinds of different things are going on,” Metcalf said.Metcalf added that the unnamed city, with an estimated residential population of 400,000 people, would have a wide variety of options when it comes to types of housing, including starter homes.“We really are focused on enabling first-time homeownership. We think there’s a really big need for that, it’s a very big market for us to try to serve. The Bay Area has gotten so expensive. We think if we can find a way to provide homeownership at a more affordable price point, it’s going to be really popular,” Metcalf said.Another new rendering given exclusively to KCRA 3 shows the bus rapid transit system that would be available for people to get around the city. Metcalf said the buses would function more like trains.“They have their own right of way in the middle of the street, they have boarding islands and they’re never stuck in traffic,” Metcalf said. “This is going to be a quality of public transit service that people have not seen before in this part of California.”Metcalf said another main goal of the proposed city is to have each resident only about a 5-to-10-minute walk away from schools, parks and shopping streets. Metcalf also said that people would still be able to drive, adding that there would be ample parking throughout the city including communal parking structures for each neighborhood.“What’s different from most of America is in this community, you have a choice. You can drive when you need to drive, but you don’t have to drive for everything. You can also get to things other ways, so this is going to be quite eye-opening for some people to experience that kind of freedom of choice on how they get around,” Metcalf said.But not everyone supports the proposal. In order for the new city to be built, the roughly 17,500 acres of land north of Highway 12 in between Travis Air Force Base and Rio Vista would need approval for urban development. Currently, the land is zoned for agriculture. Solano County Farm Bureau President William Brazelton said the bureau wants to keep it that way.“There’s a long, long history of agriculture in this county,” Brazelton said. “We’re not opposed to new housing. There’s a lot of, there’s actually quite a bit of space inside the city limits around the county, and that’s what we will advocate be built out before there’s sprawl, not just planting a brand-new 400,000-member community in the middle of ag land.”The Solano County Farm Bureau is part of a recently formed group called the Solano Together Coalition, which has concerns about what they call “California Forever’s sprawl development plans.”Suisun Mayor Pro Tem Princess Washington is also part of the coalition. She wants more details about the proposal, which she said she has not received from California Forever.“There is opposition to the overall plan, but I think that’s coupled with the lack of transparency when questions are asked. No answer is given. For example, the question of what would be the price point for housing. There has been no direct answer,” Washington said.Washington also said she wants people to understand that while the ideas for the proposed city may look good in renderings, the implementation of the plan would entail going against longstanding agriculture practices that have served Solano County well for years.“Everyone wants a good paying job, everyone wants affordable housing, but I think it’s very dangerous to use that as a carrot to change a policy,” Washington said.In response to the criticism, Metcalf said opponents should trust the process and understand that the new city could be a game-changer in helping solve the region’s housing crisis.“I think we have to look at the state of housing honestly in the Bay Area and in Northern California. What we’re doing right now is not working. Saying ‘no’ is not working. We need to create a place where we can say ‘yes,’” Metcalf said. “I am very hopeful and very cautiously optimistic that as people learn more about how this new community could work, that people are going to be really excited about it.”KCRA 3 confirmed with the Solano County Registrar of Voters office that California Forever has submitted a petition with more than 20,000 signatures, in an effort to allow urban development on the land where they want to build the new city. Election officials are in the process of verifying the signatures to make sure they are from valid Solano County voters. They said they expect to have a final determination by mid-June on if it can be put on the ballot in November.Even if the land-use change gets on the ballot and voters approve it, Solano County officials said a development agreement would need to be reached between the county and California Forever before any construction could begin.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

    Officials behind a new city proposed for Solano County shared new renderings of what the community would look like, including residential options and the public transit system.

    East Solano Plan

    Exclusive new rendering of examples of residential backyards for the proposed new city in Solano County.

    The images, provided exclusively to KCRA 3 by California Forever, show row houses with private backyards. Residents could decide to have a garage and an accessory dwelling unit in the backyard, or they could opt for more open space.

    In an exclusive interview with KCRA 3’s Orko Manna, California Forever Head of Planning Gabriel Metcalf said the idea is to provide residents with several choices.

    “It’s up to each homeowner what they want to do. Do they want a private garden? Do they want to have it be grass? They all face onto an alley in the back, and in the alley, you can of course park your car, but it can also be where you put an accessory dwelling unit, so it can be an office, it can be where your mother lives, or you can just have a bigger backyard. So, what we’re showing here is that range of options of very private intimate quiet backyards but also opening up onto an alley where all kinds of different things are going on,” Metcalf said.

    Metcalf added that the unnamed city, with an estimated residential population of 400,000 people, would have a wide variety of options when it comes to types of housing, including starter homes.

    “We really are focused on enabling first-time homeownership. We think there’s a really big need for that, it’s a very big market for us to try to serve. The Bay Area has gotten so expensive. We think if we can find a way to provide homeownership at a more affordable price point, it’s going to be really popular,” Metcalf said.

    exclusive new rendering of bus rapid transit system for the proposed new city in solano county.

    East Solano Plan

    Exclusive new rendering of bus rapid transit system for the proposed new city in Solano County.

    Another new rendering given exclusively to KCRA 3 shows the bus rapid transit system that would be available for people to get around the city. Metcalf said the buses would function more like trains.

    “They have their own right of way in the middle of the street, they have boarding islands and they’re never stuck in traffic,” Metcalf said. “This is going to be a quality of public transit service that people have not seen before in this part of California.”

    exclusive new rendering of a business plaza for the proposed new city in solano county.

    East Solano Plan

    Exclusive new rendering of a business plaza for the proposed new city in Solano County.

    Metcalf said another main goal of the proposed city is to have each resident only about a 5-to-10-minute walk away from schools, parks and shopping streets. Metcalf also said that people would still be able to drive, adding that there would be ample parking throughout the city including communal parking structures for each neighborhood.

    “What’s different from most of America is in this community, you have a choice. You can drive when you need to drive, but you don’t have to drive for everything. You can also get to things other ways, so this is going to be quite eye-opening for some people to experience that kind of freedom of choice on how they get around,” Metcalf said.

    But not everyone supports the proposal. In order for the new city to be built, the roughly 17,500 acres of land north of Highway 12 in between Travis Air Force Base and Rio Vista would need approval for urban development. Currently, the land is zoned for agriculture. Solano County Farm Bureau President William Brazelton said the bureau wants to keep it that way.

    “There’s a long, long history of agriculture in this county,” Brazelton said. “We’re not opposed to new housing. There’s a lot of, there’s actually quite a bit of space inside the city limits around the county, and that’s what we will advocate be built out before there’s sprawl, not just planting a brand-new 400,000-member community in the middle of ag land.”

    The Solano County Farm Bureau is part of a recently formed group called the Solano Together Coalition, which has concerns about what they call “California Forever’s sprawl development plans.”

    Suisun Mayor Pro Tem Princess Washington is also part of the coalition. She wants more details about the proposal, which she said she has not received from California Forever.

    “There is opposition to the overall plan, but I think that’s coupled with the lack of transparency when questions are asked. No answer is given. For example, the question of what would be the price point for housing. There has been no direct answer,” Washington said.

    Washington also said she wants people to understand that while the ideas for the proposed city may look good in renderings, the implementation of the plan would entail going against longstanding agriculture practices that have served Solano County well for years.

    “Everyone wants a good paying job, everyone wants affordable housing, but I think it’s very dangerous to use that as a carrot to change a policy,” Washington said.

    In response to the criticism, Metcalf said opponents should trust the process and understand that the new city could be a game-changer in helping solve the region’s housing crisis.

    “I think we have to look at the state of housing honestly in the Bay Area and in Northern California. What we’re doing right now is not working. Saying ‘no’ is not working. We need to create a place where we can say ‘yes,’” Metcalf said. “I am very hopeful and very cautiously optimistic that as people learn more about how this new community could work, that people are going to be really excited about it.”

    KCRA 3 confirmed with the Solano County Registrar of Voters office that California Forever has submitted a petition with more than 20,000 signatures, in an effort to allow urban development on the land where they want to build the new city. Election officials are in the process of verifying the signatures to make sure they are from valid Solano County voters. They said they expect to have a final determination by mid-June on if it can be put on the ballot in November.

    Even if the land-use change gets on the ballot and voters approve it, Solano County officials said a development agreement would need to be reached between the county and California Forever before any construction could begin.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

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  • Tech Billionaires’ Plan for a New City in California Doesn’t Include a Local Government

    Tech Billionaires’ Plan for a New City in California Doesn’t Include a Local Government

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    From the moment I heard about tech billionaires’ weird plans to create a bustling new city in the heart of California’s Solano County, I was preoccupied with one basic question: Who is actually going to run this thing?

    Libertarian dreams of creating a new community from scratch are all well and good but, at the end of the day, you can’t operate a municipality of any real size without a team of boring, dysfunctional bureaucrats to decide what the local zoning laws are and how to spend the tax dollars. Bulldozers and construction workers could, hypothetically, build a bunch of new buildings, sure, but it wasn’t immediately apparent—at least not from the statements made by the project’s backers—who would be in charge of the city once it was actually built.

    Early on, California Forever made it known that they had some pretty radical ideas about how to run a city. Developers let it slip that they wanted to fund the community entirely through private sector money and that the whole urban project was viewed, more or less, as a business opportunity. From these statements, it didn’t seem out of the realm of possibility that the city would be some terrible, dystopian version of Disney’s Storyliving, where a company effectively called the shots and residents were just passive prisoners inside its overly priced walls. The question of how the city would be run was an open one, with more than a few unappealing answers.

    Now, however, it appears that this pivotal question has been answered: California Forever’s new city will not have a local government at all. Instead, the developers plan to keep their new urban hub as an unincorporated area and leave the governing to the pre-existing county government that already controls the region. In a recent interview with YIMBY (“Yes In My Backyard” ), an online outlet that promotes development in the Bay Area, California Forever’s Head of Planning, Gabriel Metcalf, revealed that there would be no local government to regulate the activity within the city’s borders:

    YIMBY: So, there won’t be any kind of local government that runs this city apart from the county government?

    Gabriel Metcalf: Yes, our intention is to remain part of unincorporated Solano County. So, the political body that will have jurisdiction is the county board of Supervisors. We’ll have a very close cooperative working relationship with the county to provide police and fire services, all the services, and work on economic development projects together. I expect we’ll be very close partners.

    This is interesting—and not unprecedented. There are a lot of unincorporated territories throughout the U.S. Many of them are small, impoverished communities, though there are a number of large and thriving metropolitan areas that are unincorporated and that, similar to California Forever’s hypothetical city, rely on the county government for regulation.

    Yet if there is some precedent to the new city’s proposed governmental organization, it does beg a lot of questions about how the project will actually function. If the Solano County government is suddenly beset with vast new responsibilities and has to help regulate every part of a blossoming (and, likely, chaotic) city-building process, how will the extant bureaucracy handle that? And, as the city develops and becomes populated, won’t the county’s resources be stretched thin—particularly in how it relates to essential services, like police and firefighters—with a special preference for the new community?

    In his interview with YIMBY, Metcalf revealed another interesting aspect of the project, which is that residents of the new city (and Solano County writ large) don’t really have much of a say in the direction of the new community. When asked about how county voters would be able to maintain some kind of “checks and balances” over the new development, which is expected to take 40 years to effectively mature, Metcalf replied:

    There are two primary ways that voters in Solano County maintain democratic oversight. One is the terms of the voter initiative themselves, which are legally binding. Those have been developed through intense consultation with the people and elected leaders in the county. It includes funding commitments, a zoning envelope, and a development footprint. So, all of that is locked in by a vote of the people.

    In other words, whatever is inside the ballot initiative (which voters will vote on in November) is what will come to pass. But Metcalf had more to say:

    The second main way voters in the count will exert control is through the terms of the development agreement. After our process and the voter initiative, we do a full EIR (Environmental Impact Report) and then negotiate a development agreement with the county board of supervisors. A development agreement is a voluntary contract in which both parties can agree to whatever they choose.

    In other words, voters won’t really have that much control over this development at all. If county residents vote for it, they will get whatever is in the ballot initiative. The development agreement, meanwhile, will be hashed out between the county board of supervisors and the company. A lot of the rest of this scenario—and the way everyday people fit into it—remains something of an open question.

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    Lucas Ropek

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