The Press 05.29.2020

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Home & Garden Edition Page 1B

YOUR HOMETOWN NEWS | SERVING EAST COUNTY

Vol. 22, No. 22

WE’RE BACK With a new name and new look!

REGIONAL After 21 years of printing your hometown newspaper, the Brentwood Press and its sister papers — the Oakley Press, Discovery Bay Press and Antioch Press — we are excited to announce we are now folding our local names into one easily recognizable masthead: The Press. Many of you already refer to us as The Press, so we have updated our newspaper banner to reflect the name and keep our branding simple. We plan to

keep gathering all the news for you as we have done in the past, and as we go back to printing the paper this week, we want you to know the rebranding was not a decision we took lightly. We are dedicated to providing an even stronger voice for the community. Meaning you, our readers, our advertisers, Delta supporters, fire and school districts, local heroes — everyone who calls East County home! Our numbers reflect that many of you (80,000+ a month) are enjoying our daily news website, www.thepress.net. If you haven’t checked it out yet, you should! Get your local news updates 24/7, with more photos, videos and breaking news, all online, all the time.

Even more exciting, and in keeping with our new branding, we have also officially launched our brand-new, free app. We are excited that we were able to secure the name “The Press” in the worldwide Apple app store and Google play stores. Of all the newspapers around the globe with the word “Press” in their name, we were able to secure “The Press,” as our app name! All you have to do is download The Press to keep up with your local news. “The release of our new app coinciding with the rebranding of our newspapers was a great opportunity for our team to expand and enrich our presence in East County while offering our readers the most up-to-date

applications for receiving their news,” said Ruth Roberts, managing editor. “It’s a very exciting time at The Press for us and for the community.” The addition of the new Press app serves as another means to represent the residents of East County. “Providing our readers fast access to the most recent local news is very exciting,” said Lonnie Tapia, associate publisher. “The Press app makes it simple to get all local news you can trust all day, any day, anywhere. We invite you to download The Press app and check it out.” Accessing the app is simple, and it offers some exciting apsee Back page 22A

Closed Brentwood golf course could have future as an organic garden by Kyle Szymanski Correspondent

BRENTWOOD The future of Brentwood’s permanently closed Deer Ridge Golf Club may yet sprout and grow strong. The nonprofit World Business Academy is exploring turning the Foothill Drive property into a working farm with a host of other features. World Business Academy representative Robert Shelton, a consultant hired last year by the golf club’s owner, said the possible project is still in the preliminary stages, but the club’s ownership (Deer Ridge Golf

The Deer Ridge Golf Club could possibly become the site of a working farm and other agricultural amenities.

see Golf page 22A

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Adopt A Pet.................................18A Classifieds..................................... 20A

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Cop Logs........................................ 19A Education ......................................9A

Legals............................................21A Milestones.................................... 11A

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May 29, 2020

City council process may change by Kyle Szymanski Staff Writer

OAKLEY Legal pressure is expected to prompt Oakley leaders to change the city council selection process. The switch, likely to take effect in time for the 2022 election, would replace the current at-large election process with a system in which councilmembers are elected by a district that each would represent. The move comes amid a Southern California attorney’s legal threats alleging that Oakley’s current voting system violates the California Voting Rights Act (CVRA) by fostering an arrangement that dilutes the Latino vote. The CVRA, signed into law in 2002, bans at-large election methods that impair a protected class’s ability to elect its selected candidates or influence an election outcome. Attorney Kevin Shenkman sent a letter to the city threatening legal action if it did not voluntarily change its at-large election system. Shenkman represents the nonprofit Southwest Voter Registration Education Project — the nation’s largest and oldest nonpartisan Latino voter participation organization — which he says includes Oakley residents. “The mundane decisions at the local level really affect us,” said Shenkman. “It’s important that the elections for these (council) positions are fair and legal — that no one is kept out see Council page 22A

Opinion.......................................... 14A Sports............................................. 16A

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Boating Safety

Cannabis Sales Up

www.thepress.net/news/webextras

www.thepress.net/news/press_releases

The Office of the Sheriff Marine reminds boaters to be safe, alert and obey the rules.

State announces revenue numbers for first quarter cannabis sales are up.


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