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The view from two wheels Davisite’s book looks back on cycling journey across Africa, 1994 Rwandan genocide BY OWEN YANCHER Enterprise staff writer All Davisites have their own cycling story. But it’s probably safe to say Faustin Rusanganwa’s takes the cake. For the better part of five years during the 1970s, the native Rwandan made his way across Africa by bike. What began as a plan to visit five countries became a storybook journey that led Rusanganwa to well over a dozen as civil unrest across the African continent kept him from returning home. Some days, he traveled through war-torn lands, while on others he learned the true definition of hunger, thirst, heat and solitude. Some 40 years removed from the experience, the longtime Davisite’s new book chronicles the multi-year adventure — one that ultimately led him to California where he was forced to watch helplessly from across the world as genocide swept Rwanda in 1994.
Elections office mails out new ballots BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY Enterprise staff writer
Through the 258 pages of “My Exile to the World,” Rusanganwa retraces everything — from his time as a teenager riding across the Sahara (on tires scorched from the desert heat) to learning new languages, battling malaria and evading an elephant attack in the Central African Republic. “My family decided to let me (leave Rwanda) since it was too dangerous to stay,” Rusanganwa explained last month, in an interview with BBC’s Newsday. “I got around by hitchhiking, walking and went through the Congo to Burundi, which was where I started with the bike.” That was back in 1977. He made stops in Tanzania, Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, Uganda, Sudan, Egypt, Central Africa, Cameroon, Nigeria, Niger, Algeria, what’s now called Burkina Faso, Mali, Senegal, the Canary Islands and Morocco before landing in Europe. Eventually, he enrolled at Duke University, making his
way to the U.S. in 1985. Then, after two years in North Carolina, moved to California to be closer to the multicultural community he discovered at UC Davis.
Rusanganwa watched as civil unrest in Rwanda flared into a full-fledged civil war by 1990 — one that waged on until
The county elections office on Monday mailed out 581 new vote-bymail ballots to county residents who received incorrect ballots last week. Affected voters, including 280 Davis residents, should receive the new ballots and voter information guides by mid-week, the elections office said in a press release Monday. The new ballots were required after it was discovered late last week that data system errors caused some streets to be placed in the wrong precincts. In Davis, that led to some voters receiving ballots with the wrong City Council race. Because of the switch to by-district elections last year, Davis residents have been divided into five districts and will only vote for council candidates in the district in which they reside. For the November election, three City Council districts — Districts 2, 3 and 5 — are on the ballot. Residents can see which council district they are in by visiting https://www. cityofdavis.org/city-hall/city-clerk/ elections/district-elections Late last week, it was discovered some residents of District 2 had received ballots with the District 3
SEE VIEW, PAGE A4
SEE BALLOTS, PAGE A5
Campus Community Book No progress toward Escamilla-Greenwald looks to represent Area 5 Project all about mental health orange tier for Yolo County Special to The Enterprise
BY JEFF HUDSON Enterprise staff writer Cecilia EscamillaGreenwald is a candidate for the school board seat representing Trustee Area 5 (covering most of South Davis) — a chunk of territory that has diverse voter demographics. “It’s very diverse, and becoming more diverse,” said Escamilla-Greenwald. “Roughly half of the students in Trustee Area 5 are students of color (Hispanic, Asian, Black, etc.) “And with two children at Marguerite Montgomery Elementary, and another studying at Davis High School, she said. “I know firsthand what my kids are going through, and what other kids and their
parents are going through. You want someone like that on the school board.”
ESCAMILLAGREENWALD Running in South Davis
Consequently, she puts a high value on “promoting equity and inclusion (at school) ... studies show that when students see themselves in the curriculum, it raises their aspiration for the future. We want to promote the whole child, regardless of race, socio-economic
SEE AREA, PAGE A5
It was more than a year ago when the UC Davis Campus Council on Community and Diversity chose the topic of “mental health” as the theme for the 2020-21 Campus Community Book Project. The council at that time had no way of knowing about the pandemic that would arrive in March 2020, making the “mental health” theme all the more important. UC Davis curtailed operations (except for health care), and many employees started working from home. Students switched to remote learning. Many employees continue to work remotely,
INDEX
THE HUB
Business Focus A10 Forum . . . . . . . . A6 Obituaries . . . . A4 Classifieds . . . . A8 The Hub . . . . .A12 The Wary I . . . . A2 Comics . . . . . . . A7 Living . . . . . . . . A3 Weather . . . . .A11
Check out the work of Davis High School’s journalism students, ts Page A12
VOL. 123 NO. 125
BY ANNE TERNUS-BELLAMY
At a glance ■ What: Campus Com-
munity Book Project ■ When: Fall and winter quarters ■ The book: “Marbles” is available from UC Davis Stores at the discounted price of $12.99 balancing their job and child care responsibilities (including being their children’s schoolteachers). Then came the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, and the resulting protests. Then came the wildfires, some of the biggest the state has
SEE BOOK, PAGE A10
Enterprise staff writer Yolo County remains at least two weeks away from moving into the less restrictive orange tier on the state’s blueprint for reopening. Data released by the state on Tuesday showed the county’s daily new COVID-19 case rate rose from 3.3 per 100,000 residents a week ago to 4.2 this week. In order to move from the red Tier 2 to orange Tier 3, where additional businesses can reopen and greater capacity will be allowed in others, the county’s daily new-case rate must remain below 4 for two consecutive weeks.
The county’s test positivity rate also rose — from 2.2 percent to 2.4 percent — but does meet the metric of below 5 percent required for the orange tier. Likewise, Yolo County’s health equity metric, which measures the test positivity rate in a county’s most disadvantaged populations based on zip code, remained below the 5.2 percent required for the orange tier. In order to move to the orange tier, the county must meet all three metrics. Moving to the orange tier would allow businesses that were able to
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SEE ORANGE, PAGE A4
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