enterprise THE DAVIS
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 2020
Photo Courtesy sy of of R Rik Keller
RE-ELECT
DISTRICT 3
LUCAS FRERICHS for DAVIS CITY COUNCIL O c tob er 2, 2020
YOLO C OUNT Y NEWS
RETURN FRERICHS TO OFFICE Learn more moore about abbout our November 3rd Election: YoloElections YoloElections.org org or o LucasForCityCouncil.com/Election-News Paid for by Lucas Frerichs Davis City Council 2020 / FPPC ID# 1419165 / 216 F Street #30, Davis, CA 95616
UCD kicks off $2B fundraising campaign
280 voters receive incorrect ballots
Special to The Enterprise
BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY
UC Davis publicly launched a $2 billion fundraising campaign today (Oct. 9), the largest philanthropic endeavor in its history. This bold goal will propel the university’s work to prepare future leaders, sustain healthier communities and bring innovative solutions to today’s most urgent challenges. The campaign, “Expect Greater: From UC Davis, for the world,” will harness the power of philanthropy to address defining issues of our time such as pandemic response, climate change, public safety and more. “While the COVID-19 pandemic and other current events have significantly impacted our community, they have also brought out the best of our unique UC Davis strengths in innovation and collaboration,” Chancellor Gary S. May said. “I’m tremendously proud of the remarkable work that happens here every day — work that our philanthropic partners are central to
Enterprise staff writer
identified three students who were positive for COVID-19. The positivity rate for students tested during the first week of the quarter was around 0.1%. In comparison, Yolo County, whose positivity rate is lower now than it has been since June, had a positivity rate of just under 4% the last week of September, during which 61 county residents tested positive. By the end of the week, six
Nearly 180 households in Davis received incorrect vote-by-mail ballots this week, the county elections office announced Friday. The 280 voters in those 178 households received ballots containing incorrect races, including for the Davis City Council. The vast majority of those voters (252) live in two places: Covell Commons Condos or 8th and Wake Apartments. Countywide, 581 voters in 317 households received the wrong ballots. “The error is due to a transitioning of data systems, where not all streets were correctly carried over into the appropriate precinct as expected,” the elections office said in a press release. Davis Vice Mayor Lucas Frerichs, who is seeking reelection in District 3, said he first heard of the problem when he was contacted by several voters Friday morning. “I was quite concerned
SEE CAMPUS, PAGE A5
SEE BALLOTS, PAGE A4
UC DAVIS/COURTESY PHOTO
Students scan their IDs after showing their daily symptom survey at the front door before entering Shields Library on Sept. 30, the first day of classes for the Fall Quarter.
Few virus cases on campus Widespread testing identifies three cases
community members about the risk of students sparking new outbreaks, as has happened in college towns across the country.
BY CALEB HAMPTON
UC Davis students appear to have returned to campus largely virusfree, according to testing data released this week by UC Davis. From Sep. 28 through Oct. 2, the first week of the quarter, UC Davis tested 2,137 students for COVID19. The quick-turnaround tests, which are processed on campus at the UC Davis Genome Center,
Enterprise staff writer Two weeks have passed since many UC Davis students returned to campus to begin the fall quarter. They arrived after months of planning by campus administrators, scientists and health experts and amid vocal concern from
SEE FUNDRAISING, PAGE A9
Betsy Hyder aiming for South Davis seat on school board
Council gets fast-food application
BY JEFF HUDSON
A Louisiana-based fast-food chain specializing in chicken fingers wants to open a restaurant in the downtown building previously occupied by Watermelon Music. Raising Cane’s is seeking Planning Commission approval on Wednesday of a conditional use permit to convert 4,000 square-feet of the existing ground-floor retail space at 207 E St. into a new restaurant. City zoning code requires a conditional use permit for formula fast-food restaurants in the central commercial zoning district. As city staff note in the report prepared for Wednesday’s meeting, “the primary issues related to formula fast-food restaurants are the general concern about
Enterprise staff writer School board candidate Betsy Hyder feels she’ll bring “broad experience as a parent and a professional,” to the Davis school board as a new school board trustee, as well as “the right analytical skills to make pragmatic decisions.” Hyder grew up in the Midwest, the youngest of four children and the first in her family to go to college — in her case, Purdue University. After graduating, she spent a decade in
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the corporate world, working for manufacturing companies in positions that took her to Brazil for a year, and two years living in the United Kingdom, as well as travel to several other countries. She studied engineering at Purdue, and began her career doing international corporate work in product design and delivery. She and her family initially settled in the Atlanta area, where she and her husband worked with at-risk youth and foster youth at a local level. Hyder attended law
INDEX
school and became a HYDER child Running in advocate District 5 attorney, and also a foster parent. The family settled in the Davis area, where her kids attended Pioneer Elementary, where Hyder became a member of the Pioneer PTA board, and served as PTA president. (Her kids are now in their late teens.) “I’m familiar with our school system, and I’ve worked on a number of
SEE HYDER, PAGE A4
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Business . . . . . A7 Forum . . . . . . . B4 Obituaries . . .A10 Classifieds . . .B10 Green Page . . .B7 Sports . . . . . . .B1 Comics . . . . . . .B9 Living . . . . . . . . A8 The Wary I . . . . A2
Tod Sunny. Today: High 79. Low 56. Hig More, Page B11 Mo
BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY Enterprise staff writer
standardization and corporate requirements and the more specific concern about waste.” Founded in 1996, Raising Cane’s has around 500 outlets across the country with a menu consisting primarily of chicken fingers, chicken sandwiches, fries and toast. Proposed hours for the Davis location would be 9 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to 3:30 a.m. Friday and Saturday. The restaurant expects to employ about 16 people. “The applicant notes that the demographics of their clientele draws from a wide range of ages and is not limited to college students,” according to the staff report. “They expressed their eagerness to fill a
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