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  • City Council Special MAPA Meeting: Why an Otherwise Civil if Contentious Night Collapsed into a Walkout

    The following article is compiled from Davis Vanguard comments by Ron Glick regarding the special City Council meeting held on Tuesday, April 28. Ron Glick did not wish to author a formal article, but granted me permission to compile his comments into this essay.

    Last night was awesome. The Jewish and Muslim communities of Davis met in the Town Hall and for almost three hours [and] respectfully listened to each other speak. Each person was allowed to speak for two minutes and everyone adhered to the time limit. Getting all these people together within one room and everyone being respectful and listening was an achievement in and of itself.

    It has been a long two and a half years. There has been much pain, suffering and strife. Many people . . . in this town have been touched by that suffering and when the war will end is still anybody’s guess. So getting the people of this community together, with their disparate opinions, each having a voice, and listen to each other, can hopefully be a step forward towards healing.

    While many words have been spilled about the MAPA report . . . another important study was conducted . . . It showed that people connected to events half way around the world can be traumatized by those events. It is clear many in Davis have been traumatized by this ongoing horrific war. Last night was an opportunity to share that pain and hopefully it was cathartic for some people. But even if it wasn’t it provided a space for a divided community to sit together and share their humanity.

    The Mayor did an outstanding job of running the meeting and the staff should also be commended for respectfully setting the tone. All in all, Davis should be proud of being a place where a meeting like the one that took place last night could happen.

    So much for the positive. I have a concern about one aspect of what was passed. I worry that political opinion will find its way into the training program . . . Time will tell, but as always, the devil will be in the details.

    One moment from last night needs to be noticed . . . because it was off camera. After hours of testimony it was finally time for the council members to speak. . . . [Mayor Neville] spoke for a long time and remained respectful throughout as did most of her colleagues. Next came Council member Vaitla. He began by addressing what he thought the CC should do and that was fine. Then after some time he veered off and started lecturing the community about genocide. About 20 people who had patiently and respectfully sat through over three hours of the meeting all got up together and walked out.

    What compelled Vaitla to go there at that moment I have no idea . . . On the other hand I think I have a good understanding of why so many walked out. The Jewish community of Davis doesn’t need to be lectured about genocide. We have plenty of experience with genocide. In fact . . . he was addressing people, some of whose families survived the Shoah . . . Vaitla has a knack for pissing people off and lecturing community members from the dais. I don’t know why he somehow consistently screws up. Last night was another example of him sadly and badly misreading the room.

    [Addressing another commenter] Interesting that you would lump Jews and blacks together . . . because those are the two groups who experience the most acts of racial and religious violence in America according to Department of Justice statistics. While you may not see such bigotry and therefore don’t think it’s a problem that doesn’t mean its not a real problem.

    [Addressing that same commenter] Huh? What are you talking about? The people who walked out . . . have not committed any acts of genocide. They are upstanding law abiding members of this community who are well aware of what is going on in the world and share a desire for the killing to stop. They do not need to be lectured . . . about international law. He was not saying anything they haven’t already heard and they certainly were not obligated to stay while being lectured from the dais. The people who left had politely followed the rules and respectfully sat there for almost four hours until Vaitla started lecturing them.

    What amazes me is that Vaitla has a way of insulting community members from the Dais. This is not the first time I have watched him act up there in such a way that totally turned people off. While everyone else on the City Council was trying to walk the line of trying to bring the community together Vaitla decided to lecture the community about the meaning of horrific acts committed in warfare that the people he was lecturing have no control over whatsoever. Its truly bewildering to me why he thinks its appropriate to act the way he does in meetings. I think he misunderstands the job of being on the CC.

    [That same commenter says, in the quotes] “He’s an activist,…”

    [Ron Glick responds] Oh I thought he was a city council member.

    [Addressing that same commenter] So the people who left are bullies? They didn’t say anything, they simply left. How does that make them bullies? No the bullying repeatedly is Vaitla who seems to not understand that attacking people from the dais is not a productive strategy.

    [Addressing that same commenter] Well we finally agree on a point. The city should focus on potholes instead of international politics. But its not the Jews of this community who produced the MAPA report. Its not the Jews of this community who wanted the CC to take this up. Yet after behaving appropriately, according to the rules, and acting with the appropriate decorum, they got lectured . . .

    What you probably don’t know is that the Mapa (sic) report made many recommendations to the CC. Many of these recommendations were outrageous, inflammatory and inaccurate. So much so that the CC wouldn’t even take up the report itself. Of the 11 original recommendations the CC adopted only three.

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  • Two issues about Willowgrove Project need to be addressed

    [The following email by Dan Carson and Elaine Roberts Musser was sent to the Davis City Council today and is posted to the Davisite at the request of the authors]

    Dear City Councilmembers,

    As you move toward final action on Tuesday on the Willowgrove project, which could provide new housing our community needs, we urge you to address two significant issues (both referenced in your new city staff report) that we strongly believe will undermine its chances of winning voter approval this November.  

    Fourth City Fire Station

    Last month, at a Planning Commission hearing on the Willowgrove project, a city planning staff member suggested the city has decided to build a fourth city fire station. For weeks city staff has since declined to answer specific questions posed to them about the city’s intentions. We believe this is an important matter for you to consider, given the findings of a city consultant in a 2018 study, that our community does not need an expensive fourth fire station the city cannot afford. 

    Additionally your new city staff report contains a strong hint city staff are still pursuing a four-fire station plan. Notably, it cites a fiscal analysis by BAE Urban Economics that analyzes the projected net operating costs to the city from just such a new fourth city fire station. Staff selectively cites a version of the BAE fiscal analysis that assumes the 15 year fiscal impact of such a  project “would be slightly negative at $190,422”. This is based on the assumption that other city residents gained from future new development projects would shoulder most of the costs of the operation of a fourth new fire station. 

    Why is this matter relevant to your consideration of Willowgrove?

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  • In support of Measure V

    By Ron Glick

    At the beginning of the 21st century, after a period of strong growth, concerned citizens of Davis passed two major reforms to preserve farmland. The first was the Measure J ordinance that requires a popular vote to rezone agricultural land to other uses. This is the reason Measure V, which I support, is on the June ballot. The second reform was a parcel tax dedicated to the preservation of open space around Davis. 

    Together, these two reforms have been incredibly successful in preserving farmland in the area directly surrounding the city of Davis. In the last 25 years, and with little acrimony or fanfare, thousands of acres of land have been purchased by the city or otherwise preserved under conservation easements. The City of Davis Open Space Commission deserves the thanks of everyone in Davis who cares about land preservation.

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  • A Long-Term, Pragmatic Plan for a Livable & Sustainable Davis

    By The Davis Citizens Planning Group

    The Davis Citizens planning group would like to present our vision for a pragmatic, realistic, and sustainable way to develop our city going forward.   This vision represents several months of work and builds upon a series of articles we have published over the past two years on the topics of how we might plan our city to have housing that is  more affordable, sustainable, and a city that is more liveable and economically viable.

    In the past we have framed our commentary in a reactive way with respect to the developments in the housing proposals being considered.   Going forward, we have decided to be more proactive, starting with best practices, and advocating for a top-down city-wide vision for how we develop our city not just for the upcoming 25-year general plan cycle, but looking towards the end of the century.

    Over the past few decades, more and more thinkers in the field of urban planning have come around to endorsing what is essentially the same set of strategies for urban planning:

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  • It’s A “May” Day for Village Farms

    Words Do Matter

    By David Thompson

    To: Citizens of Davis on May Day
    From:  David J Thompson. Affordable Housing Advocate
    Re: Recent words used by or about Village Farms

    Text in recent mailer from Village Farms reads as follows:

    “Davis Needs Housing – Village Farms is the Answer, Housing for All…construction of 360 Permanently Affordable Homes.”

    140 high density rental apartments very low-income families (max income family of 4 = $31,450)

    140 high density rental apartments low-income families, (max income family of 4 = $83,900).

    80 permanently restricted for sale units for moderate income families (max income for family of 4 = $136,800.

    As a long-time co-developer of affordable housing in Davis, I see a real problem in getting these units being built except  possibly as high density apartments with a very hard to get substantial subsidy. These will not be single family homes and there is no subsidy for this income group.

    These “360 Permanently Affordable Homes” imply houses, however 280 of these units would be apartments, not houses only for lower income qualified residents. Also, this developer is not building any of these affordable units except he “may” build 100 lower income affordable rental apartments in the last phase (Phase 3) in 10 years or more down the road. But he “may” not. Let me explain this disingenuous affordable housing “plan”.

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  • Super PAC has now poured over 1.1 million dollars into ads supporting Eric Jones

    The latest venture-capital funded mailer is downright Orwellian

    By Roberta Millstein

    Mailer received 27 April 2026. Annotated by the author.

    Eric Jones’s campaign to unseat Mike Thompson in Congressional District 4 has repeatedly promised not to take money from special interests and PACs.  As I have already documented in detail (see earlier articles here and here), that promise is essentially meaningless.  A former partner of the Dragoneer Investment Group, Jones has received large individual donations and repeated campaign advertising funded by massive donations to the New Leadership Now Super PAC from his fellow venture capitalists, including a huge donation from the family of Dragoneer’s founder, Marc Stad.

    Expenditures for ads in support of Eric Jones’s campaign (mailers, TV, internet, etc.) from New Leadership Now currently exceed 1.1 million dollars, as this screenshot from the FEC website shows:

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  • MAPA Report – Full Dissenting Minority Opinion,by Amir Kol

    When the HRC sent the MAPA Report to the City Council for approval, one of the HRC members wrote a dissenting opinion, as is his right. Astonishingly, the Human Relations Committee, a group that is supposed to help minority groups, decided to NOT include that minority opinion.  Here, in full, is that dissenting opinion.  With permission of the author.

    To Davis City Council,

    As a Commissioner on the HRC, I believe it is important to provide you with my minority opinion regarding the “Report on MAPA Climate & Experiences in Davis” recently approved by the HRC.

    At first glance, the report appears to simply document feelings of concern and alienation among members of the MAPA community and recommends that the City of Davis, DJUSD, and UC Davis demonstrate solidarity and provide training on anti-MAPA bias. On the surface, this seems like a straightforward and unobjectionable request from an oppressed and marginalized community.

    However, a closer reading reveals a very different and deeply troubling narrative. The report does not document systemic discrimination against MAPA community members across Davis institutions. Rather, it focuses overwhelmingly on allegations of harassment by individuals identified as ‘Zionists’. The implicit — and at times explicit — message throughout the report is that Zionism is equated with fascism, and that Zionist individuals have no legitimate place in the Davis community.

    It is important to clarify what Zionism actually represents. Zionism is the belief that the Jewish people, like all other peoples, have the right to self-determination in their ancestral homeland, the Land of Israel (Eretz Israel). It is a movement rooted in the pursuit of safety, dignity, and national liberation for Jews following centuries of persecution, displacement, and genocide. To demonize Zionism is to deny a fundamental aspect of Jewish identity and to delegitimize Jewish aspirations for freedom and security.

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  • UCD Sustainable Transportation Plan Open for Public Review Through May 4

    Students navigate a mix of bikes, e-scooters, skateboards, and foot traffic on campus—illustrating the growing complexity of how people move through the Davis campus. (Courtesy photo / UC Davis)

    (From press release) UC Davis is inviting the broader Davis community to review and comment on a draft of its updated sustainable transportation plan through May 4.

    The plan—called Moving Forward Together—has been in development for over a year and outlines more than 100 possible improvements for how people get to and move through campus, from safer crossings and separated bike paths to better transit connections. It marks the first comprehensive update since 2009, with recommendations supported by input from more than 3,000 people, along with an analysis of travel patterns, infrastructure gaps, and collision data.

    Why this plan matters

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  • What Justice Looks Like in Davis

    We find out at the April 28th City Council Meeting

    By Scott Steward

    July 1, 2024, UCD Student Encampment – Popular University of Liberation of Palestine
    One sign reads: “As You Go to Class Today, remember that there are no Universities Left in Gaza

    City Staff released its version of the Muslim, Arab, and Palestinian and Allies (MAPA) recommendations this past Friday. (provided below)

    Discrimination against Muslim, Arab, and Palestinian bodies, families, and cultures has been an unfortunate project that has accelerated since the First World War. This bias is also evident in the colloquial, systemic, unequal, and dehumanizing treatment of our Muslim, Arab, and Palestinian residents and students in Davis.

    City email boxes are filling with canned opposition emails leading up to the April 28th special City meeting to hear Muslim, Arab, Palestinian, and Allies (MAPA) antidiscrimination recommendations, recommendations made by our own City Human Relations Commission (HRC).  The HRC recommendations were made after months of surveys, hearing testimony, and careful consideration. 

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  • Eric Jones’s close ties to a Super PAC

    Jones criticizes Mike Thompson for taking PAC money, but is he being hypocritical?

    By Roberta Millstein

    Flyer in support of Eric Jones’s run for Congress, paid for by the New Leadership Now Super PAC

    Among the small deluge of flyers Davisites have received promoting Eric Jones’s candidacy for Congressional District 4, some may have noticed that one was different from the others: It indicated that it was paid for by a group called “New Leadership Now.”  Who is New Leadership Now, and what sort of connection does it have to Eric Jones, if any?  This article aims to shed a bit of light on these questions.  It is a follow-up to my earlier article discussing the direct campaign contributions from Jones’s former venture capitalist co-workers and other individuals from the high tech industry.

    New Leadership Now is registered with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) as a Super PAC.  What is a Super PAC?  Wikipedia has a helpful definition:

    Independent expenditure-only political action committees, commonly known as super PACs, are a type of political action committees (PACs) in the United States. Unlike traditional PACs, super PACs are legally allowed to fundraise unlimited amounts of money from individuals or organizations for the purpose of campaign advertising; however, they are not permitted to either coordinate with or contribute directly to candidate campaigns or political parties. However, in practice, restrictions on such coordination are considered flimsy and poorly enforced.[1]

    The unlimited expenditures coupled with not really knowing if the committees are actually coordinating with candidates make Super PACs controversial.  Eric Jones has touted his campaign as “Powered by People, Not Special Interests: Not a Dime from Corporate PACs”[2]  What I will describe below casts some serious doubt on that slogan, however.

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