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Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara: “I wouldn’t say it’s crisis mode yet, but it’s definitely a different story for people living in a high-risk area.”
Odd allies in fight for PG&E

Parties seeking to end the current ownership’s exclusivity aren’t necessarily siding with bondholders. Rather, they contend competition could result in a better deal and more money for fire victims. Attorneys representing fire victims offered a different view, saying the bondholders’ offer isn’t rich enough but suggesting they might be welcome at the table if they sweeten the deal.
The Sacramento Bee’s Dale Kasler offers a summation : “The bondholders’ takeover attempt reflects the belief on Wall Street that a well-run PG&E, once it clears up its liabilities, could be a profit machine.”
Early education’s missing link

“There’s people who are cashiers at McDonalds that make more than (preschool) teachers. We’re completely underpaid, by far.”
Assembly Bill 125 by Assemblyman Kevin McCarty of Sacramento would pay more per kid for programs that meet specific quality standards.
Senate Bill 174 by Sen. Connie Leyva of Chino would raise reimbursement rates for early childhood providers.
Pushing UC to divest in oil

UC Academic Senate Chair Robert May : “A thousand years from now, our generation will be remembered only for what it did or did not do to address the climate crisis.”
UC’s response: “UC takes the issue of climate change very seriously, and as a shareholder, works to advance corporate progress on disclosing greenhouse gas emissions and on developing emissions strategies consistent with the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.”
A housing crisis to come

The wildfires that devastated Santa Rosa and Paradise show what could happen to housing demand after a major quake hits a major city, only more so. 400,000 people could be displaced by a 7.0 earthquake on the Hayward fault, which runs from Oakland to San Jose. An 8.0 quake on the San Andreas fault could affect Northern and Southern California simultaneously, damaging up to 3.5 million homes.
Police officers’ dangerous work

Witness the killing of Sacramento Police Officer Tara O’Sullivan, who was gunned down in June while responding to a domestic violence call.
Or Davis Police Officer Natalie Corona, who was ambushed in January while helping at the scene of a traffic accident in that city’s downtown.
Take a number: 100 billion

Houston: “Dubbed ‘Faster Bay Area,’ the proposed ballot measure is in its early planning and outreach stages but seeks to raise $100 billion from nine Bay Area counties over several decades to overhaul and integrate the region’s transit services.”
“While the Bay Area is often associated with blazing the trail for others, in this effort, we are actually following Los Angeles to the south and Seattle to the north.” L.A. and Seattle voters approved taxes in 2016 to generate $125 billion and $45 billion, respectively, for transportation.