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Winters Express: Wednesday, September 18

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City intern projects foster connections News, Page 2

International collaboration crafts guitars Features, Page 1

Volume 141, Number 33 — Locally-owned since 1884

The hometown paper of Patricia Rivas

Winters, Yolo County, California, Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Crystal Apilado/Winters Express

Paying tribute to 9/11 victims, first responders Express staff The Winters Fire and Police Departments held a bell-ringing ceremony on Wednesday, Sept. 11 to mark the 23rd anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and to honor the victims in New York, the Pentagon building and on United Airlines Flight 93. Police Chief John P. Miller said, “Sept. 11 is a reminder to us all of our higher calling and our duty. Despite the readily apparent and imminent danger, first responders fulfilled their obliga-

tion to run toward the danger.” Miller said 343 firefighters and 72 law enforcement officers died and “hundreds more succumbed to related illnesses in the years that followed.” He also said it should be remembered that “a few citizens also chose to stand their grand to assist others in selfless acts, both in the Twin Towers and on Flight 93 — 2,977 people perished that day and many more would have if not for the actions of the first responders and these citizens.”

Winters FFA competes in showmanship at county fair By Jackson Bronson Winters FFA Reporter

EXPRESS

The fairgrounds were yet again filled with the sights, sounds, and smells characteristic of mid-August. Blue-corduroy-clad teenagers moved in waves from barn to barn; their livestock projects clucked, mooed, and bahed; and that infamous mixture of feces and funnel cake comforted nostrils for miles around. In a long-standing tradition, Winters FFA students participated in the Yolo County Fair from Aug. 16 to 21. Winters High School junior Nico Novello raised five

Crystal Apilado/Winters Express

Nico Novello and Lauren Back handle turkeys for the judges to inspect at the Yolo County Fair on Aug. 14. turkeys over the summer and showed two at the fair this year. “I’ve learned so much about the biology of turkeys and how to handle an animal,” Novello said about his summer with the birds. “I had never done livestock showmanship before. It’s really made me understand how the food industry works

Features ........................ B-1

See FAIR, Page 5

We at he r Rain

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Low

Sept. 11

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94˚

55˚

Sept. 12

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Sept. 13

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Sept. 14

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92˚

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Sept. 15

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Sept. 16

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Opinion ......................... B-3

Sept. 17

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72˚

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Real Estate ................... B-2

Rain for week: 0.00 in. Season’s total: TRACE Last sn. to date: 0.01 in.

Community .................. A-2 Eventos hispanos ....... A-3

Sports ........................... B-6

By Crystal Apilado Editor-in-Chief The city of Winters released the draft environmental impact report for the proposed Farmstead development for public review last Friday. In his weekly update, City Manager Jeremy Craig announced that publishing the draft EIR of the proposed housing and retail project along Highway 128 (Grant Avenue) is one of the “first steps in the planning process for future develop-

Winters rainfall season began 7/1/24. Weather readings are taken at 9 a.m. daily by local weatherman Joe Bristow.

ment.” “That impact report will be the first step in reviewing the environmental impacts of the proposed project and the mitigations that will be employed to mitigate those impacts,” Craig said. “This is a long process, and there will be opportunities at both the Planning Commission and City Council, so please look for more information over the next few months as the process begins and look for a work session item on a future City Council agenda to

introduce the project to the council in more detail.” The Draft EIR and other project materials are now available for public download on the city of Winters website at https:// www.cityofwinters. org/179/Community-Development.

Public review details

The public can obtain printed copies of the document at Winters City Hall in the Community Development

See DRAFT, Page 5

Parent advocacy workshop sparks gender ideology debate Editor-in-Chief

Date

Classifieds ................... B-5

City releases Farmstead draft EIR for public review

By Crystal Apilado

a little bit more and how to take care of an animal.” Novello won thirdand fourth-place market turkeys, first place in novice turkey showmanship, and second place in small animal master showmanship. WHS senior Eden Miller has been

Index

City of Winters/Courtesy graphic

The proposed Farmstead development, identified as no. 8 on the map, includes zones for neighborhood commercial, single-family residential and open space.

There was standing room only in The Margaret Parsons Room at the Winters Community Library on Saturday, where residents from Winters and across Yolo County gathered for a parent advocacy workshop on gender ideology. A little more than 80 people — a mix of those who wanted to hear what was said and others who attended to protest the presence of the Yolo County chapter of Moms for Liberty — packed into the room leaving the standing room along the walls filled. About a third of the group in attendance were Winters residents representing each side of the topic at hand, while the rest of the attendees were protesters from across Yolo County. Posts rallying protesters to attend encouraged them to join in silent protest or

to turn their chairs around and occupy their focus during the workshop. Many of them united the cause with signs supporting people who are part of the LGBTQIA+ community and some specifically to show their support for children who identified as part of it. Yolo County Moms for Liberty chair Beth Bourne opened the workshop by stating that their goal is to protect parental rights at all levels of government by educating them about what those rights are and how and who to reach out to within their community. Additional speakers on the agenda included Meg Madden, an area advocate, and Amy Anderson, of Sac-Terf Central, who spoke about preserving and protecting the rights of women, girls and their families.

Workshop topics The workshop event, sponsored by

Yolo County Moms for Liberty, was advertised on social media platforms to address gender identity and social transitioning-related policies and practices within Winters Joint Unified School District school sites, as well as books focusing on gender and LGBTQIA+ topics available at the libraries of schools and Yolo County. Although a majority of Bourne’s presentation portions focused on her personal experiences and observations detailing gender ideology policies and curriculum within the Davis Joint Unified School District and other examples from other states, she eventually addressed how Winters JUSD’s compliance with California state policies through the Student Support Services LGBTQIA+ page, the family and staff resources page and the Rights of

See EVENT, Page 5

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Contact David DeLeon at David@WintersExpress.com


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