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Devil wrestlers make their mark at state meet Soroptimists collecting diapers. — Page A4
Peer-to-peer and sharing economies are kind of a mess — Page A3
— Page B1
enterprise THE DAVIS
SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2020
Investigators seek new clues in 2018 killing BY LAUREN KEENE An overhead view of the proposed Aggie Research Campus in East Davis shown by developers at the Feb. 26 meeting.
Enterprise staff writer
“A large part of the problem
WOODLAND — Who killed John “Mike” Hawk? More than a year-and-a-half after Hawk’s murder, Yolo County sheriff ’s detectives are seeking fresh clues as to who fatally shot the 80-year-old inside his rural Woodland home. “Our main goal is that it doesn’t turn into a cold case,” sheriff ’s Sgt. Gary Hallenbeck said. “We want the family to know that this is not a case we’re going to stop investigating.” A concerned relative found Hawk dead from a gunshot wound on July 19, 2018 — four days after his 80th birthday — inside his residence in the 36000 block of County Road 20. Hawk had been staying there alone, his wife Jan vacationing with the couple’s daughters and other family. At the time, sheriff ’s officials said they didn’t believe Hawk’s killing to be random, but didn’t specify as to why. Now, they’re releasing more specific details. “We do believe the suspect knew the victim,” and that they possibly shared a close relationship, Hallenbeck said, noting there were no signs of forced entry or a struggle at the house. Valuables, sitting in plain view, were left undisturbed, eliminating robbery as a likely motive.
SEE ARC, PAGE A6
SEE CLUES, PAGE A5
RAMCO ENTERPRISES/ COURTESY GRAPHIC
Debate kicks off on ARC proposal BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY Enterprise staff writer A proposed innovation center and housing development that would bring 2.64 million square feet of office and research space and 850 housing units to 200 acres of land east of Mace Boulevard — north of I-80 — could go before Davis voters as soon as November. But before citizens can weigh in under a Measure R vote, the City Council must vote to place the Aggie Research Campus plan on the ballot, and must do so by July in order to meet the November ballot timeline. Thus, the next several months will see multiple city commission
meetings, public hearings and opportunities for the public to weigh in before the council will even take up the matter, possibly as soon as May. With many among the public — not to mention city commissioners themselves — having questions about the Aggie Research Campus and what exactly it would mean for Davis, the city’s Planning Commission held a public workshop last week to hear from the developers, ask questions and give Davis residents a chance to do the same. All of that happened over the course of about three hours on Wednesday evening.
Yet to be answered are questions about how the development would impact a part of town that is already suffering from heavy peak-time traffic on Mace Boulevard and other surface streets thanks in large part to congestion on I-80. Some answers should be forthcoming in a traffic analysis being prepared as part of that supplemental EIR, as will possible mitigation measures. “Traffic is obviously going to be the real issue we have to look at,” said Matt Keasling, a land use attorney representing the developers, who include Ramco Enterprises, Buzz Oates and Reynolds and Brown.
Person found dead in burning house Enterprise staff writer
VOL. 123, NO. 27
Keasling said during Wednesday’s workshop that one of the reasons including housing in the project makes it the environmentally superior option is that many people who would work at the innovation center can live on site, minimizing traffic flowing into and out of the location, particularly during peak commute times. Additionally, he told planning commissioners, a byproduct could be reducing some traffic on the freeway.
A cyclist is turned away Saturday from the scene of a house fire on North Campus Way as police and fire officials set up a perimeter to investigate the incident after fire crews found a dead body in home.
BY LAUREN KEENE Davis fire crews battling a structure fire Saturday morning on North Campus Way found a deceased person inside the residence, according to the Davis Police Department.
Environmental impact
OWEN YANCHER/ ENTERPRISE PHOTO
Scant information was available as of early afternoon, as police had yet to make their way into the residence pending further
INDEX
Calendar . . . . . A4 Forum . . . . . . . .B4 Op-Ed . . . . . . . .B5 Classifieds . . . .B3 Living . . . . . . . . A3 Sports . . . . . . .B1 Comics . . . . . . .B5 Obituaries . . . . A6 The Wary I . . . . A2
safety precautions, Deputy Police Chief Paul Doroshov said. The Davis Fire Department posted on social
WEATHER Tod Breezy. Today: High 61. Low 44. Hi More, Page B8 M
media that both its crews and the UC Davis Fire Department responded at
SEE BURNING, PAGE A5
Cost-of-living standoff enters a new phase BY CALEB HAMPTON Enterprise staff writer As Santa Cruz fires grad students, new strikes pop up at Davis and Santa Barbara Teaching assistants at UC Davis began a grading strike Thursday, removing information from online gradebooks and vowing not to submit end-ofquarter grades for undergraduates until their demand for a cost-of-living
salary adjustment (COLA) is met. The grading strike at UC Davis is part of a growing movement that began in the fall at UC Santa Cruz and has spread across the University of California system. The graduate students say they cannot afford to live on the salaries UC is paying them — about $2,400 per month before
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SEE STANDOFF, PAGE A6
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