The Davis Enterprise Wednesday, August 10, 2022

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Home again, home again — Page B3

Sports

Aggie football grabs No. 25 spot in poll

Forum

— Page B1

Republicans will regret overturning Roe — Page B2

Living

enterprise THE DAVIS

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 2022

Attempted rapist gets 17-year term

Students go through campus at UC Davis on Feb. 2. Likewise at UCLA, inset top, and UC Riverside, bottom. Across the University of California system, students and employees are finding out this week how much money everyone makes.

By Lauren Keene Enterprise staff writer

At UC Davis, employees of

WOODLAND — A Sacramento man received a 17-year state prison term last week, the maximum punishment for two sexual-assault attempts in Davis and Santa Rosa. A Yolo County jury convicted Jose Trinidad PerezMeza in May of multiple felony charges including assault PEREZ-MEZA “Absolute with intent to compredator” mit rape, attempted rape, forcible assault, sexual battery and robbery. “Jose Perez-Meza is an absolute predator,” Yolo County District Attorney Jeff Reisig said in a news release. “Through the tremendous investigation conducted by both Davis PD and Santa Rosa PD, California is a safer place and the victims were able to obtain justice.” In addition to the prison time, Yolo Superior Court Judge Tom Dyer on Friday ordered Perez-Meza to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life. Perez-Meza’s attorney, Jesse Ortiz

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See TERM, Page A5

Miguel Gutierrez Jr./ CalMatters photo

UC releases payroll charts By Caleb Hampton Enterprise staff writer On Friday, the University of California released its annual payroll report, providing systemwide wage data for 2021. The UC system discloses payroll information on a yearly basis “as part of its commitment to transparency and public accountability,” the UC Office of the President said in a nes release.

In 2021, salaries and wages accounted for roughly 45% of the university’s $41.17 billion annual operating expenses, with employee benefits accounting for an additional 19%. “The delivery of educational services, research, and health care is labor-intensive,” the university said in a summary of the report. In total, the university’s payroll was $18.95 billion, an

increase of 4.6% over the previous year. “The rise can be attributed to academic and instructional personnel growth to support the growing student enrollment, expanding medical centers, and responding to the COVID-19 pandemic,” the summary stated. Employee benefits cost an additional $3.95 billion, an increase of 12% over the previous year.

The highest paid employees systemwide were athletic coaches and health sciences faculty members, the university said, many of whom are “worldrenowned specialists in their fields.” About 5% of all employees earned more than $200,000.

Partida announces re-election bid By Anne Ternus-Bellamy

but so far Adam Morrill, who works for the city’s Public Works Department, has announced he is running in District 4, while Kelsey Fortune and Bapu Vaitla have announced they are running in District 1.

Enterprise staff writer The city’s first Latina council member and mayor has officially filed for reelection. Councilwoman Gloria Partida, who was first elected in a citywide vote in 2018 and served as mayor from 2020 to 2022, is seeking to represent District 4 now that the city has switched to by-district elections. District 4 includes East Davis, from Wildhorse south to the freeway, and is one of two districts on the Nov. 8 ballot, the other being District 1 in West Davis where Councilman Dan Carson is seeking reelection.

VOL. 124 NO. 95

INDEX

Business Focus B6 Forum ��������������B2 Sports ��������������B1 Classifieds ������B5 Green Page ������B6 The Wary I �������� A2 Comics ������������B4 Living ����������������B3 Yolo Ages ��� A5-A6

Courtesy photo

Davis City Councilwoman Gloria Partida has made her re-election bid official. Both Partida and Carson face challengers in November. The nomination period doesn’t close until Friday,

WEATHER Thursday: Sunny and not so hot. High 94. Low 59.

In a press release issued Monday, Partida said, “Four years ago, I ran to ‘bring out the best in Davis.’ Looking back at how we got through the COVID-19 crisis, I believe that together we made that happen. I am running again because leading our community through a global pandemic has solidified my commitment and love for this city.”

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County urges older residents to get 2nd booster right away By Anne Ternus-Bellamy Enterprise staff writer Yolo County has a message for all older residents not up to date on their COVID-19 vaccinations: Get your second booster shot now. Adults 50 and older are eligible for — and urged to get — a second booster shot four months after receiving their first. But only about a third of Yolo County residents older than 50 have received that second shot, “leaving thousands of older adults at risk of severe COVID19 disease, hospitalization, and death,” the county noted in a press

release Monday. The importance of being up to date on COVID-19 vaccinations is evident in the latest data: Four recent deaths in Yolo County were among older adults who had not received all the boosters they were eligible for, and of the seven COVID-19 deaths among county residents in July, all involved individuals older than 70, only one of whom was up to date on boosters. “Being up to date with boosters may have prevented these tragic deaths,” the county noted

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