Sports
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What’s this? Two of them?
Luci needs a new home
77 Aggies on academic allconference team
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enterprise THE DAVIS
FRIDAY, JULY 8, 2022
Colleagues praise Partida as ‘a rock’
Tahoe blues
By Anne Ternus-Bellamy
Lake Tahoe in the winter. The lake’s famous clear water remains imperiled by evolving environmental threats.
Enterprise staff writer
“We are working with other researchers at Lake Tahoe and with agency partners to not only keep track of clarity,” Schladow said, “but to adapt management approaches for improving clarity in future years.”
As she turned over the gavel on Tuesday to incoming Mayor Lucas Frerichs, the outgoing mayor of Davis, Gloria Partida, was honored by her colleagues, other elected representatives, city staff and members of the public for leading the city through some of its most PARTIDA challenging years. Challenging She has been a tenure rock, they said, with an incredible moral compass. But it hasn’t been easy. Months after taking office following her election to the council in 2018, Partida found herself along with her council colleagues in a conference room at the Davis Police Department awaiting more information after Officer Natalie Corona had been shot in the line of duty downtown.
See TAHOE, Page A5
See PARTIDA, Page A4
Brant Allen, UC Davis/ Courtesy photo
Twenty years of data mark evolving threats to clarity
feet, while winter averages were 71.9 feet.
By Kat Kerlin
While clarity in winter months is invariably better than during the summer, the trend from the past two decades indicates that neither summer nor winter clarity levels are improving over time.
Enterprise staff writer The cobalt-blue waters of Lake Tahoe were about as clear in 2021 as they were in 2020. But a broader look at clarity measurements shows there is no pattern of consistent clarity improvement over the past 20 years. The lake also has not fully recovered from a spike of fine particles that flowed into its waters after the extremely wet year of 2017. That’s according to the data collected through 2021 by the
UC Davis Tahoe Environmental Research Center. UCD has measured clarity and other health indicators at Lake Tahoe since 1968, helping to inform policymakers and stakeholders on strategies to protect the lake and stabilize the decline in clarity that dates back to the region’s development boom in the 1960s. Recent years have presented evolving and new threats to Lake Tahoe as climate warming, floods, droughts and wildfires impact the lake in ways that are
not fully understood. “The lake itself is changing internally, and the external inputs that impact clarity and lake health are changing at the same time,” said Geoffrey Schladow, director of the Tahoe Environmental Research Center.
A perplexing pattern Lake Tahoe’s average annual clarity in 2021 was 61 feet compared to 63 feet in 2020. Summer measurements were 54.8
Survey tracks Davis’ top concerns By Anne Ternus-Bellamy Enterprise staff writer Davis residents remain largely satisfied with the quality of life and city services in Davis but cite the lack of affordable housing as the city’s biggest problem, followed by homelessness and crime. That’s according to a survey conducted by EMC Research during the week of April 12-19 via telephone (both landlines and mobile phones), text and email. The city hired EMC to conduct the survey, as it has several times in the last decade. A total of 500 interviews were conducted this year with residents within the city’s boundaries and
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Arts ������������������B1 Explorit ������������ A3 Obituary ���������� A4 Classifieds ������ A4 Forum ��������������B4 Sports ��������������B6 Comics ������������B4 Pets ������������������ A9 The Wary I �������� A2
UCD grad receives Presidential Medal of Freedom in D.C. By Caleb Hampton Enterprise staff writer
results come with a margin of error of about 4.37 percentage points, according to EMC. The findings: n Overall, residents report high satisfaction with the quality of life and city services with 77 percent of residents reporting being somewhat or very satisfied with the job the
WEATHER Saturday: Sunny and hotter. High 93. Low 59.
city is doing, nearly unchanged from the 78 percent during the last city survey in 2019, and 87 percent reporting being satisfied with the overall quality of life in Davis, down from 93 percent in 2019. n Affordable housing remains the top concern
See SURVEY, Page A5
On Thursday, UC Davis alumna Sister Simone Campbell, class of 1977, was one of 17 people awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in a ceremony at the White House. Campbell was given the nation’s highest civilian honor in recognition of her lifelong commitment advocating for social justice. “Campbell is a longtime social justice advocate who has worked tirelessly to fight for racial and economic justice, the Affordable Care Act, immigration reform and
other causes,” UC Davis said this week in a news release. “She was the executive director of NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice for 16 years and was instrumental in organizing ‘Nuns on the Bus’ where nuns travel across the country advocating for federal policies.” Campbell was born in Santa Monica and worked as a community organizer in Portland during the 1970s. “She realized she needed a legal education in order to best serve underrepresented communities,”
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