Green Page
Sports
Food Schouten fuels huge Davis High upset Strawberries are the happiest berries — Page A6
— Page B1
Tuleyome Tales: Clear vision for Clear Lake — Page A3
enterprise THE DAVIS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2020
ArtAbout gets romantic
City launches potholerepair crew BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY Enterprise staff writer City officials this week announced the launch of a four-person public works patrol that will respond to resident requests for pothole repairs. “A dedicated four-person crew from the city’s Public Works Utilities & Operations Department will respond to customer-reported potholes daily and will scan the streets throughout town to proactively repair additional potholes,” according to a city press release. Residents can report potholes by phone, email or on the city’s website at https://cityofdavis.org/potholes. Potholes are created when cars drive over damaged pavement, causing the damaged sections to break apart and form a hole. Areas of roadways with poor drainage and/or with heavy traffic are more prone to potholes. In Davis, those holes are filled using cold-patch asphalt repair where a premixed asphalt is poured into the pothole. According to the city, “this is a quick, simple and costefficient fix.” The process can be completed in wet conditions, allowing potholes to be fixed when it’s raining. According to the city, pothole repairs will be done on a rolling basis without significant traffic impacts. Last week alone, the patrol repaired 86 potholes proactively and two that had been reported to the city. Since December, 455 potholes have been patched, the city reported. “We encourage Davis residents to reach out to the city about pothole locations,” said City Manager Mike Webb. “City staff wants to do all that it can to be responsive and repair our roads.” The city press release notes that not all roadway issues are potholes — faulting, when there is a difference in the elevation across a joint of the roadway, or pavement failure, which is cracked, broken, depressed or sunken pavement, may look like
Marieke DeWaard’s work is among the offerings at the Pence Gallery for Friday’s ArtAbout. Below right, Local artist Sid S. Ganesh shows watercolors and mixed media on cold press canvas at Cork It Again winery. COURTESY PHOTOS
Enjoy love and wine in downtown Davis BY KATY KARNS Special to The Enterprise Have a night out on the town. This month the downtown Davis art walk lands on the day of love. Whether you’re celebrating Valentine’s or Galentine’s, come with your loved one or your best friend. Bringing back the wildly popular Wine Walk, wine glasses and stamp cards are available to the first 200 visitors at the Pence Gallery. Go on a selfguided scavenger hunt through various art venues, enjoying wine tastings and treats along the way. Complete your stamp card with a final stop at the Co-op for more art, music, tastings and a chance to win the ultimate gift basket. This month’s new comedy night is at Parkside Bar & Lounge, showcasing
talent from near and far. The entertainment doesn’t stop there; enjoy musical performances at the newly renovated Armadillo Music, Three Ladies Cafe or Three Mile Brewing Co. For more information, visit davisdowntown.com. For a copy of the ArtAbout guide and map, visit Pence Gallery, 212 D St., or davisdowntown.com/2ndfriday-artabout.
Receptions ■ The Artery, 207 G St., 7-9 p.m.: “North Coast Visions: A Photographer and A Painter.” For this show, photographer Jock Hamilton and painter Adele Shaw take one dramatic aspect of California — the North Coast — and illustrate how two different artistic mediums capture the
SEE ARTABOUT, PAGE A4
UC Davis student workers back strike in Santa Cruz BY CALEB HAMPTON Enterprise staff writer UC Davis graduate student employees rallied on campus Monday, joining workers from across the University of California system in demanding a salary increase on par with the cost of living. Rallies were held on several campuses in solidarity with student workers at UC Santa Cruz, who began an indefinite strike this week after telling administrators they had reached a breaking point. The student employees at UC Santa Cruz are demanding a cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, worth $1,412 per
VOL. 123 NO. 19
month. The general strike began after failed attempts to negotiate with campus administrators. Since December, UCSC teaching assistants have refused to submit grades for undergraduate courses they taught last quarter, totally about 12,000 missing grades, according to a spokesperson for the striking students. Roughly half of UCSC’s 800 teaching assistants are now on strike, withholding all teaching and grading. “We have the capacity to bring this university to a grinding halt,” the UCSC COLA campaign said in a statement Tuesday.
INDEX
Classifieds . . . .B3 Forum . . . . . . . .B2 Obituaries . . . . A4 Calendar . . . . . A5 Green Page . . . A3 Sports . . . . . . .B1 Comics . . . . . . .B4 Living . . . . . . . . A6 The Wary I . . . .A2
SEE POTHOLE PAGE A4
CALEB HAMPTON/ENTERPRISE PHOTO
UC Davis grad student Beshara Kehdi rallies march participants on a blustery Tuesday on campus. The action — called a wildcat strike because it has not been authorized by UAW 2865, the union that represents UC student employees — violates a no-strike
WEATHER T Thursday: S Sunny and warm. H High 65. Low 42.
clause in the student workers’ collective bargaining agreement that was negotiated with the university in August 2018.
SEE STRIKE, PAGE A4
ANNE TERNUS BELLAMY/ENTERPRISE PHOTO
To report a pothole on Davis streets, call 530-757-5686, email PWWeb@ cityofdavis.org or visit www.cityofdavis. org/potholes.
HOW TO REACH US www.davisenterprise.com Main line: 530-756-0800 Circulation: 530-756-0826
http://facebook.com/ TheDavisEnterpriseNewspaper http://twitter.com/D_Enterprise
WED • FRI • $1