Daily Republic: Monday, Sept. 5, 2022

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TriBune ConTenT AgenCy The managers of Cal ifornia’s power grid warned that blackouts are possible Monday as a punishing heat wave sends electricity consumption into nearrecordFiveterritory.daysinto the heat wave, Elliot Mainzer, chief executive of the Independent System Operator, said Sunday the grid was looking at significant shortfalls in electricity in the days“Weahead.are looking at deficits for tomor row, Monday, in the 2,000 to 4,000 megawatt range between the hours See Panel, Page A7 See Energy, Page A7 glen FAison GFAISON@DAILYREPUBLIC.NETFAIRFIELD—Relief remains days away as a stagnant air mass is fixed over much of Solano County and the central region of the state, creating triple-digit temperatures that will last much of the week and an increased threat of wildfires. The high Monday at the Nut Tree Airport is projected to reach 114, top out at 118 Tuesday and dip back to 112 Wednesday, the National Weather Service reports. The mercury hit 108 Friday, 103 Saturday and 108 Sunday. Highs at Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield are projected to reach 110 Monday, 113 Tuesday and 106 Wednesday, the weather service reports. The high Friday was 97: It was 100 Saturday and 109TheSunday.extended forecast calls for highs of 108 Thursday and 103 Friday before dropping to 90 Saturday and 84 Sunday in Fairfield; and 113 Thursday and 108 Friday before dropping to 96 Saturday and 89 Sunday in Vacaville.County libraries, shopping malls and other similar public venues remain good places for area residents to go to escape the

BloomBerg WASHINGTON — Flood maps used by the Federal Emergency Management Agency are out of date and under state the risks to homes and businesses from flooding and extreme rain triggered by climate change, FEMA Director Deanne Criswell said. Those risks are in focus after flooding in Jackson, ago,mentmainoverwhelmedMississippi,thecity’swatertreatplantaweekleavingmorethan150,000residentsoftheregionwithoutsafewater.Criswellsaidthere’snotimelineforrestoringservicetoJackson,thecapitalcity.“Ithinkthepartthat’sreallydifficultrightnowisthefactthatourfloodmapsdon’ttakeinto account excessive rain that comes in,” Criswell said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday. “And we are seeing these record rainfalls that are happening.”Complicating the matter is that climatefueled extreme weather can be hard to predict, as well as whether a city or town’s infrastructure can hold up, she said. “We have to start thinking about what the threats are going to be in the future as a result of climate change,” Criswell said.

TriBune ConTenT AgenCy WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep. Jamie Raskin on Sunday said he assumes former Vice President Mike Pence will voluntarily give tes timony to the special committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot, but didn’t rule out a subpoena. “He has a lot of rel evant evidence, and I would hope he would come forward and testify about what happened,” the Maryland Democrat said on CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “In no one’s case is a sub poena out of question, but I would assume he’s going to come forward and testify voluntarily, the way the vast majority of people Raskinhave.”led the impeachment of thenPresident Donald Trump in the aftermath of last year’s insurrection at the U.S. Capitol by Trump’s supporters.Pencesaid last month in New Hampshire he would consider testi fying if invited by the panel, and the panel’s top Republican, Liz Cheney of Wyoming, also said she hoped he would testify. Time is running out on the panel’s probe and on this Congress, however, with midterm elections in November. The House commit tee already has heard from Pence’s former chief of staff Marc Short and former legal counsel Greg Jacob, and it has presented some of that testimony publicly. Short said last week on “The Takeout” podcast that Pence has “profound concerns” regarding executive privilege with the prospect of revealing personal conversations with Trump, as well as concerns about partisan

A 2020 evaluation of flood risk by nonprofit group First Street Foun dation that analyzed every property in the 48 contiguous U.S. states found that federal maps underestimate the number of homes and

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It is the Daily Republic’s policy to correct errors in reporting. If you notice an error, please call the Daily Republic at 425-4646 during business hours weekdays and ask to speak to the editor in charge of the section where the error occurred. Corrections will be printed here.

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T he MuseumVacavilleopened to the public Satur day, May 5, 1984, with much fanfare and showcased its very first exhibit titled “Rivers, Railroads and Rolling Hills: Solano County 1875-1915.” It featured everything PatwininformationfromontheIndians,who were here before 1875, to the travel trunks that belonged to immigrants from Europe, India, Russia and China, who settled here, to agricul turalCurrentartifacts.Vacaville Museum Board of Trustees President Jean C. Cox moved to Vacav ille from Iowa in 1981 and got involved with the thenfledgling organization, which was incorporated that same year. While the collection now includes more than 30,000 artifacts, it started with 250 sad irons. Sad irons are heavy – some times up to 9 pounds – antique household irons that got their name because “sad” in Middle English used to mean “solid” or “heavy.”“Agentlemen in town had a collection of sad irons and he put them up for sale. Eleanor Nelson, who was a longtime local teacher, didn’t think they should leave Vacav ille so she raised money to buy them. Well, then we had to figure out what to do with them,” Cox said. A committee was formed and Eva Buck, philanthropist and wife of U.S. Rep. Frank Buck, gave the city of Vacav ille the land next to her house to build a museum. Two stip ulations were that it be named the Vacaville Museum and that it be dedicated to the pres ervation of history from all of SolanoWhileCounty.those involved with the preservation and exhibition of history to the public appreciate the immense generosity of Eva Buck, the first stipulation has caused more than a little con fusion ever since the museum opened. “Mrs. Buck, God love her, didn’t do us any favors when she insisted on it being called the Vacaville Museum. People tend to think that it is just about Vacaville. It has been a problem when we try to get people from, say, Fairfield to serve on the board. That’s why everything we send out mentions our mission of the cultural and historical preservation for all of Solano County,” Cox said. "On top of that, people also sometimes think we are the Nut Tree museum. We do have a lot of materials from the original Nut Tree, but we are not the Nut TreeCoxmuseum."canpoint to a number of exhibits over the years that were her personal favorites. “I was a real fan of ‘Solano Women,’ and ‘Victorian Dining’ was another one that was fun – I didn’t know you could put so much silverware on a table. Another favor ite was ‘From Rising Sun to Golden Hills,’ which was the story of Japanese residents in Solano. That was super inter esting because in 1942 we lost a huge part of that popula tion when they were rounded up and sent to internment camps,” Cox said. “ ‘Spanish Voices’ was another one that was interesting because it explored how Spanish speak ers came to this area. People assumed that it was just going to be about the Mexican migra tion north, but it was so much more than that. Some of them came from Spain directly, some went from Spain to Hawaii, and others came from New Mexico. I think it has always been about the stories behind the exhibits.”

CORRECTION POLICY

Fairfield freelance humor col umnist and accidental local historian Tony Wade writes two weekly columns: “The Last Laugh” on Mondays and “Back in the Day” on Fridays, although they some times are swapped one for the other. Wade is also the author of The History Press books “Growing Up In Fairfield, California” and “Lost Restau rants of Fairfield, California.”

A2 Monday, September 5, 2022 — DAILY REPUBLIC

Caroline Whyler is the rel ative new kid on the Vacaville Museum block as she started as the Artifacts & Exhib its manager in August 2021. She replaced Heidi Casebolt, who had been in the position for 25 years before retir ing. Whyler’s first exhibit is called “Under Where? Vintage Undergarments from 1850-1980,” which opened May 17 and will run until Sept. 24. According to press materials, it explores the purpose and misconceptions of underclothes through the decades and delves into how they were influenced by evolv ing cultural ideals, and linked to events such as the Industrial Revolution, World War II and the changing roles of women in society.Themuseum typically has an exhibit in the gallery, and volunteers are working on the next exhibit and thinking about the one after that. Their calendar timelines already go through 2024. After “Under Where?” closes, the next exhibit in the on-deck circle is “Solano Skies: The History of Aviation in Solano County,” which opens Nov. 5. When that has run its course, an exhibit with the working title of “Fruit of the Vine” about the wine industry in Solano County is on tap.

changes to Daily

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Paper newsletters may have sufficed in the past, but Ins tagram, TikTok, Facebook and other social media plat forms have bolstered the 38-year-old museum’s online presence thanks to volunteer SarahTheOlsen.upstairs storage and research space of the museum is jam-packed with everything from Vacaville Reporter newspapers from the 1880s-1929 (1930s and on are at the Vacaville Heritage Council), an extensive collec tion of items from the original Nut Tree, the aforementioned sad irons that helped birth the place, fabrics, antique house hold artifacts and much more. They even have some vintage comicUltimately,books. the artifacts, when exhibited in eye-catch ing and inventive ways, are there to serve a much larger“Wepurpose.arepushing to tell the cool stories that we discover. It’s rewarding when you find interesting takes on things,” Whyler said. “Sometimes people think of us as just histo rians or collectors, but we have to be storytellers, too.” The museum is located at 213 Buck Ave. It’s open from 1 to 4:30 p.m. Thurs day through Saturday. For more information on the Vacaville Museum, call 707-447-4513 or visit vacavillemuseum.org.www.

“I like the fact that every exhibit that goes up is going to be completely different. ‘Under Where?’ is more artsy and whimsical in the design aesthetic that I chose for it, but ‘Solano Skies’ will lean more toward the military under tones and be more uniform and conservative,” Whyler said. “There’s no cookie cutter formula here. I like having the ability to be creative.” While the Vacaville Museum is tasked with pre serving history, the way they communicate with the public has recently been given a modern upgrade.

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Vacaville Museum a center for Solano history

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n Fairfield City Council, 6 p.m. Tuesday, City Council chamber, 1000 Webster St. www.fairfield.ca.gov/govInfo:

FAIRFIELD — The week will see several public government meet ings. Some are offered online and in-person. Check the websites of each agency for more information.The meetings coming up are: n Suisun City Council, 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, City Council chamber, 701 Civic Center Blvd. Info: government/city-council.www.suisun.com/

Active attrainingshootingsetSaturdaySolanoCollege

meetingsGovernmentdot holiday week’s calendar

FAIRFIELD — A car show and lunch are available Saturday for a nominal donation at the 9th Annual Ball Metal Car and Bike Show. The car show serves as a donations drive to support local schools. The “entry fee” is a donation of school supplies: back packs, tablets, notebooks, dry erase markers, pens and so forth. Those who donate may enjoy the show and a fee-free lunch. A DJ will provide music during the event. Gates open at 8 a.m. Vehicle registration closes at 10 a.m. Lunch begins at 11:30 a.m. A prize drawing starts at 12:30 p.m., with the presentation of awards at 1 p.m. Ball Metal is located at 2400 Huntington Drive. For more information, send an email to Brandon Thornton at ballmetalcarshow.visitalcarshow@gmail.comballmetorwww.facebook.com/

VACAVILLE — The Vacaville Jazz Society will host a “Jam Session” fun draiser to help pay for music camps for middle and high school stu dents in Solano and Yolo counties, as well as to help defray the cost of the 21st annual Vacaville JazzARCFestival.Angels, for merly the American River College Vocal Jazz Ensemble, and Delbert Bump & Trio will perform at the event, which will take place from 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday at Makse Restau rant, 555 Main St. Make a reservation at www.vacajazzsociety. org. If unable to attend, donations and sponsor ships also can be made via the website. Click the QR Sponsorship Code. The Jazz Fes tival is scheduled Sept. 16-18 at various times and locations in the downtown area and at the Nut Tree Plaza. More than 30 bands will perform the sounds of blues, gospel, swing, big bang, bebop, funk, Latin and pop.

Aaron Rosenblatt/Daily Republic file (2019)

The city is hosting the 30th annual Fairfield Tomato & Vine Festival from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday in the city’s downtown. The Fairfield Tomato & Vine Festival cele brates Solano County’s once leading cash crop by showcasing Californiagrown heirloom tomatoes. Nearly 25,000 visitors participate in this yearly tradition, according to a press release from the city. The festival will fuse the traditional with the nontraditional, result ing in the celebration of the humble tomato through multicultural food, music, dance and art installations.Thisyear’s festival will feature the appearance of gourmet food artisans, live entertainment on multiple stages, children’s activ ities, and beer and wine gardens featuring local establishments.Newthisyear will be art exhibits by local arti sans, multicultural stage performances, interna tional cuisine, a car and motorcycle show sponsored by Budweiser Families Helping Fam ilies, and a revamped ticketed VIP Wine and Food event hosted by the Suisun Valley Vintners and Growers Association. For more information, contact Andrea Azurdia at 707-399-4101 601County2tinyurl.com/y3xkz7wz.tickets,$125tothe$70VIPTomatourdaywhichTasteduringmusic,andofca.gov/events.ca.gov,aazurdia@fairfield.ororvisitfairfield.Inaddition,thebesttheregionalwinesfoods,aswellaslivewillbeshowcasedtheVIPevent,ofSuisunValley,willtakeplaceSatduringtheFairfield&VineFestival.Ticketsfortheeventwillcostinadvanceand$75atdoor.Reserveticketsassureaspotareperperson.Togetgotohttps://Thetastingwillbefromto5p.m.attheSolanoEventsCenter,TexasSt.,inFairfield.

SCC hosts talk with attorney Pamela Price

n Solano Commu nity College Governing Board, 6:30 p.m. Wednes day, Administration Building, Denis Honey church Boardroom 626, 4000 Suisun Valley Road, Rockville. Info: board/meetings.php.solano.edu/governing_www.

Ball Metal Car Show returns for 9th year

Downtown Fairfield will host annual Tomato and Vine Festival this weekend

Fashion show on track to children’ssupporthospital

ROCKVILLE — Solano Community College will host a free talk with attor ney Pamela Price, one of the nine people who shaped Title IX and edu cational equity. The talk will take place at 5 p.m. Thursday, in the Solano Community College Theatre (Build ing 1200), 4000 Suisun Valley Road. There will be free parking in Lot 2 at the Rockville campus. The event, titled “In Conversation with Pamela Price, 50 years of Title IX,” will feature Price speaking on joining the 1977 landmark case of Alexander (Price) v. Yale, 459 F.Supp. 1 (D.Conn. 1979) 631 F. 2d 178 (2nd Cir. 1980), the first case to challenge sexual harassment as a form of sex discrimination in education.Thecourts dismissed all five other plaintiffs and Price was the only plaintiff to proceed to trial in January 1979, in the U.S. District Court in New Haven, Connect icut. In June 1979, the court rendered a verdict in favor of Yale. In Sep tember 1980, the Second Circuit affirmed the Dis trict Court’s decision in favor of Nonetheless,Yale. the case established that sexual harassment in educa tion constitutes illegal sex discrimination. Solano College welcomes all to attend this talk discussing a groundbreaking event that shaped the nation. Price graduated from Yale with a bachelor’s degree in political science in 1978. She came to Cali fornia where she attended the University of Cali fornia, Berkeley School of Law and received her juris doctorate and a master’s degree in jurisprudence and social policy in 1982. She was admitted to practice law in California in 1983, and is a survivor of the Ohio juvenile justice and foster care system. Walker Ranch to host hoedown to support efforts

Daily Republic Staff DRNEWS@DAILYREPUBLIC.NETFAIRFIELD—

Pints for Paws helps Solano Animal Shelter Daily Republic Staff vendorstion,animalsThe5500towillinhostBrewingDRNEWS@DAILYREPUBLIC.NETVACAVILLE—SolanoCompanywillPintsforPawsSeptember.Theinauguraleventoccurfromnoon4p.m.SaturdayatWeberRoad.eventwillhaveupforadopprizedrawings,petandmore.SolanoAnimalCareislookingfordonationsofeithercashoritems.Todonate,visitwww.solanocounty.com/depts/sheriff/animalcare/donations.asp?.Formoreinformationontheevent,call707-999-7221orvisithttps://solanobrew.com/event/pints-paws.

SUISUN VALLEY — B Walker Ranch will host a fundraising hoedown bar becueTheFriday.event will be an opportunity for vis itors to check out the Suisun Valley on a his toric working farm where B Walker Ranch is looking to build a space for a day program for adults withThisautism.fundraiser has 100% of the proceeds go directly into the program; no salaries are paid. The ranch is a 501(c) (3)Thenonprofit.evening will include a Taste of the Valley with local fine wines and beer, silent auction, live music with Randy Coleman and Friends, and dinner hosted by Grillmas ters Andy Alfonso and DeanTheLangston.event will take place from 5 to 10 p.m. Friday at 4303 Abernathy Road in rural Fairfield. Tickets are on sale www.BWalkerRanch.org.at

Robinson Kuntz/ Daily Republic file (2016) The Alive Music Orchestra performs at the Nut Tree Plaza for the Vacaville Jazz Festival, in 2016.

Suicide prevention walk, resource fair set Saturday

Tomatoes were for sale during the Tomato and Vine Festival in downtown Fairfield, Aug. 17, 2019.

SOLANOA3 Monday, September 5, 2022 — DAILY REPUBLIC (707) 428-9871 1371-C Oliver Road, Fairfield PREPARATIONDOCUMENTSERVICEDivorce.............. $399-$699 Living Trusts ..... $599/$699 Incorporation / LLC ... $399 Tammy & Rene Bojorquez LD A #12009 - Solano County Did You Know?… We Help with PROBATE DOCUMENT PREPARATION SERVICES By The People is independently owned and operated. They are not lawyers, cannot represent customers, select legal forms, or give advice on rights or laws. Services are provided at customers’ request and are not a substitute for advice of a lawyer Prices do not include court costs. Helping You... Help yourself

Jazz Festival primer set at Nut Tree Plaza

Suicide is the 12th leading cause of death in the United States, the third leading cause of death for ages 10 to 19, and the second leading cause of death for ages of 20 to 34,” organizers said in a statement, citing informa tion from the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.Therewere 54 suicide

Aaron Rosenblatt/Daily Republic file (2019) Revelers peruse the cars on display during the Ball Metal Car Show at the Ball Metal Beverage Packing Company plant in Fairfield, Sep. 7, 2019.

FAIRFIELD — The Lilac Branch is hosting its annual Fashion Show and Luncheon to raise money for the UCSF Benioff Chil dren’s Hospital Oakland. The event is scheduled from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday at the Hilton Garden Inn, 2200 Gateway Court in TicketsFairfield.are$85 per person and may be pur chased at https://auctria. events/lilac or by sending a check to Lilac Branch, 5055 Business Center Drive, Suite 101-PMB 261, Fairfield, CA 94534. A prize drawing and a silent auction are part of theTheevent.fashion show will feature Helen Lyall’s clothing for women and Scott Lyall’s cloth ing for men. For more information, send an email to lilacbranch.org.Thebranchch@aol.com.lilacgroup’swebsiteis

n Fairfield-Suisun School District, 6 p.m. Thursday, first floor boardroom at Central Office, 2490 Hilborn Road, Fairfield. Info: fsusd/board.nsf/public.go.boarddocs.com/ca/https://

city-council-meetings.ernment/city-council/ n Rio Vista City Council, 6 p.m. Tuesday, City Council Chamber, City Hall, 1 Main St. citycouncil.www.riovistacity.com/Info: n Vacaville Parks and Recreation Commission, 6 p.m. Wednesday, City Council chamber, City Hall, 650 Merchant St. Info: city-commissions.ca.us/government/www.ci.vacaville.

BENICIA — The Kyle Hyland Memorial Walk for Suicide Prevention and Resource Fair is planned Saturday in Benicia. “The Kyle Hyland Foundation is hosting this event to spread aware ness and messages of hope about suicide prevention.

deaths in Solano County in 2021, an 8% increase from 2020. There have been 34 deaths so far this year. Kyle Hyland took his own life in 2014. He was 16. The event will begin at 10 a.m. at the Benicia Teen Center, 135 Church St. “We will walk to Ninth Street Park where we will gather at 11 a.m. for a brief cere mony including a dove release. We will then return to the Benicia Teen Center for light refresh ments. There will also be a resource fair with several community organiza tions present to distribute information about mental health services and suicide prevention efforts across Solano County,” the organizersParticipantssaid. are asked to wearDonationspurple.will benefit Sources of Strength, a peer-led suicide preven tion program at Benicia School District second ary schools.

ROCKVILLE — The Solano Community College Department of Public Safety is partnering with the local Red Cross to offer active shooter/killer and emergency prepared ness training to residents of Solano County. The training event will take place on from 10 a.m. to noon Satur day at the rural Fairfield main campus, 4000 Suisun Valley Road. The college’s Depart ment of Public Safety training team will present survival strategies for active shooter/killer inci dents. The goal of this training is to provide individuals with survivalenhancing options for those critical moments between when a violent situation begins and when law enforcement arrives on scene, according to a press release about theTrainingtraining.will follow the Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter and Evacuate – or ALICE – protocol, which is described in the press release as “a useful strategy for everyone: law enforcement, schools, universities, hospitals, businesses, places of worship, etc.” The tradi tional lockdown response is passive in nature (lock doors, turn off lights and wait for help), while the ALICE raining is designed to provide people with options to increase their chances of survival during an active shooter/ killerChiefemergency.BrianTravis and elements of this training team have been provid ing ALICE active shooter/ killer training to hundreds of students, faculty and staff at Solano Commu nity College. Travis and his team have also pro vided ALICE training to a nearby university and various local businesses. “We want to educate as many residents as possible by providing them with options to increase their chances of survival during an active shooter/killer incident. A human life is so precious so we have to do everything we can to safe guard it,” Travis said in the press release. “And with so many wild land fires occurring in our state recently we reached out to the local Red Cross chapter to see if they would like to partner with us in providing our community with valuable preparedness information in case of an emergency or a disaster.”“Thelocal Red Cross chapter enthusiastically accepted the offer from us to partner with them to provide this valuable training,” Travis said in theForrelease.more information or to reserve a seat for the training program, call the Solano Commu nity College Department of Public Safety at 707-864-7131 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

After 31 of the 60 boards of this year’s Spingold Knockout Teams at the Summer North American Championships in Providence, Rhode Island, Pierre Zimmermann-Fernando Piedra, Sjoert Brink-Sebastiaan Drijver and Piotr Gawrys-Michal Klukowski led Bridge

Groups are lucky for you. Three gatherings will be particularly significant, altering your course with special connections. Augmented fortunes come from small, disciplined acts repeated over the course of the year. It takes optimism to commit to a unique goal, but happy thoughts will come easily to you. Aries and Virgo adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 8, 16, 4, 44 and 18.

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, with no repeats. That means that no number is repeated in any row, column or box. Solution, tips and computer program at www.sudoku.com Solution to 9/3/22:

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You have discerning taste and good instincts about when and how to share it. Others will be watching you for cues. You are a trendsetter, and you use this power responsibly so when people imitate you, it will benefit them.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21). You’d love to learn as much as you can before you launch an endeavor so that you may approach from an optimal position and get it right the first time. This is rarely possible. Today, you’ll dive in blind and hope for the best.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19). Like Superman, you’ll be strong, happy and confident until someone enters the scene with a pocket full of kryptonite. Hang in there. Just like Super man, you will find a way to prevail in the end.

A NEW LEADER IN THE SPINGOLD

Here’s how to work it: ANSWERSLEUTHWORD Word SleuthDaily Cryptoquotes Annie Lane Dear Annie

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). It’s normal to complicate a problem when it leads to a con clusion you don’t prefer. The sooner you accept an answer, the sooner you’ll move on to the next stage. Avoid doing any thing fancy to avoid the work; just get it done quick.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). We all need to know how we fit in. We also need our existence to be celebrated from time to time, or at least acknowledged. Other people are the mirror we see ourselves in. You’ll help someone see themselves today.

BridgeCrossword

Columns&Games

Dear Annie: My brother and I are in our early 50s, and our mom has dementia. Our per sonal lives could not be more different. I have kids and have been married for 25 years. I returned to the work force full-time five years ago after having been a stay-at-home mom. My brother is a newlywed of three years, no kids, and works on big projects for his line of work. He also has had some gaps between projects. My brother is adamant that our mom not live in a nursing home, so he took her in about three months ago. Prior to that, we shared care taking in Mom’s home for about nine months, but we knew we couldn’t sustain it. We found ourselves leaving our spouses and children. Our work suf fered, and we were exhausted. Now my brother has gotten overwhelmed and told me he is tired of doing more than me, which I acknowledge because she lives in his house. His wife won’t come out to greet me when I visit to get my mom every weekend, and my brother will only communicate by text furiously – if at all. He is physically exhausted and emotionally over whelmed and seeing a doctor for anxiety and depression. He angrily confronts me (on text) and accuses me of being the cause of his anxiety, and then in front of our mom pretends he hasn’t accused me of awful things. He won’t meet with me and says he wants a mediator to work out what to do. I have said I will not have her move in because I know I cannot handle it – emotionally or logistically. There is bad history between my mom and me, and while I have mostly put it aside to assist, I know I cannot handle her in my home. I did take her in (pre-dementia), and it took a toll on my well-being, and I felt unable to take care of my kids and myself ultimately. I have to say no to taking on the care of my mom. How do I live without feeling terri ble when my brother has called me evil and demands more of me than I have to give? — Good Mom, Wife, Friend, and Evil Daughter and Sister Dear Good Mom: Why did you sign your letter “Evil Daughter and Sister”? You are a wonderful daughter, trying the best you can. It sounds like you and your brother have dif fering opinions on what is in the best interest for your mother and her health. You both want what’s best for her and need to get on the same team. Perhaps you should meet with a media tor, as your brother proposed, and if you are dissatisfied with the meetings, you might seek a professional doctor who can best advise as to what would help your mother live the best life she possibly can. As for your brother blaming you for his depression and anxiety, that is unfortunate. He is clearly hurting and needs professional treatment. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.

CELEBRITY PROFILES: Raquel Welch has said, “Pri vately, I am understated and dislike hoopla.” Truer words to the Virgo nature were never spoken. Also, in keeping with her sign is Welch’s endur ing allure and all the vitality earth signs are known for. An evergreen figure in Holly wood, and now in the world of beauty, Welch carved out her own niche, and it’s one that only she can fill. Write Holiday Mathis at HolidayMathis.com.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). It’s easy to put someone you don’t know well on a pedes tal, but to elevate the status of someone familiar means more. You treasure your relationship with those who earn your admi ration and prove themselves to you over time.

A NEW LEADER IN THE SPINGOLD

COPYRIGHT: 2022, UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE Sudoku by Wayne Gould by Phillip Alder Difficulty level: BRONZE

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After 31 of the 60 boards of this year’s Spingold Knockout Teams at the Summer North American Champion ships in Providence, Rhode Island, Pierre Zimmermann-Fernando Piedra, Sjoert Brink-Sebastiaan Drijver and Piotr Gawrys-Michal Klukowski led Paul Street-Nicolas L’Ecuyer, Massimil iano di Franco-Andrea Manno and Ron Pachtman-Piotr Pawel Zatorski by 76 international match points to 38. However, now the tide turned. Over the next 13 boards, Street scored 38 IMPs and lost only 4, to reduce the Zimmermann lead to 4. Then came Board 45. At the other table, Zatorski (East) raised four diamonds to five, which silenced Gawrys (South). To make matters worse for the Poles, Klukowski (North) led the spade two, and Pachtman (West) immediately claimed 11 tricks: two spades and nine diamonds.Inthisauction, Brink also opened four diamonds. I was surprised that neither West opened five diamonds. Drijver (East) passed, and di Franco (South) balanced with four hearts. East liked his defense enough to pass it out. West led the diamond ace. Declarer ruffed on the board, drew trumps, cashed the club ace and continued with the club jack. When West discarded a diamond, South won with dummy’s king. Now you might have expected di Franco to ruff a club and lead a spade toward the dummy. However, confident that West had started with 1=2=9=1 distribution (East surely would have bid with four diamonds), declarer led dummy’s spade queen, pinning West’s jack and gaining an overtrick. Plus 600 and plus 450 gave Street 14 IMPs and the three-quarters lead by 90 IMPs to 80.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Societal rewards seem juicy, but that’s because market ers are experts at creating desire. Your profound satisfac tion will come from something there’s no commercial for. The rewards are well within your power to fulfill.

Mom’s dementia taking a toll on relationship with brother

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). In movies, the points of destiny get a soundtrack. The violins swell, or the drums kick in with a feelgood beat. Real life features moments of destiny without fanfare. You have to “get it” to get it. You get it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Powers come to your aid, but not right away. Once people become aware of you and see you in motion, they’ll under stand better what you need and how they can help. By that time, you may no longer need the help.

Horoscopes by Holiday Mathis

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20Feb. 18). Effective leaders are perpetual students, figuring out what they need to know so they can show the way. The old goals no longer serve the inter ests of the group. Investigate and explore to learn where best to take this.

A4 Monday, September 5, 2022 — DAILY REPUBLIC

CANCER (June 22-July 22). Constant novelty is expen sive, not just in dollars but in the time and attention sacri ficed to distractions. The benign pressures of boredom are an expected obstacle in worthy aims. Work through it to build something substantial. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Many people simply don’t know you well enough to predict what you’ll do next. That’s how you like it. Like a magician, you will lead attention purpose fully. The trick you have in mind will involve their surprise and delight.

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Repertory player Villaseñor joined “Sat urday Night Live” in the show’s 42nd season in 2016. The actor and musician from Whittier, California, was known during her time on the program for deliver ing lively impressions of Dolly Parton, Lady Gaga, Gwen Stefani and Alex andria ingtoshstand-upimprovoutanddiantheDuringandJamessideduringdayjustCriticBoughtacters“WeekendZuckerberg,Ericwithtainedcomic42.debut“SaturdayMoffatRepertoryOcasio-Cortez.playeralsomadehisNightLive”duringSeasonTheChicago-bredandwriterenterfansoftheseriesimpressionsofTrumpandMarkaswellasUpdate”charGuyWhoJustaBoatandFilmTerryFink.FeaturedplayerAtharistartedon“SaturNightLive”lastyearSeason47alongfellownewcomersAustinJohnsonSarahSherman.hisshortstintonprogram,thecomeandwriterfromL.A.TexasplayedstandcharacterssuchasartistAngeloandrobotLaugh3000.

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Fallon 4 4 4 $ KRON 4 News KRON 4 News KRON 4 News EditionInside Ent. nightTo- KRON 4 News at 8 (N) ’ (CC) KRON 4 News at 9 (N) ’ (CC) KRON 4 News at 10 (N) EditionInside Ent. nightTo- Law Order& 5 5 5 % KPIX News5 KPIX News5 NewsEvening KPIX News5 FeudFamily’ borhoodNeigh- AbisholaBob- NCIS “The Brat Pack” ’ NCIS: Hawai’i “Switchback” ’ KPIX News5 Late Show-Colbert 6 6 6 & NewsWorld PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) BeyondOutside: Rob on the Rd Antiques Roadshow (N) (CC) Antiques Roadshow ’ (CC) When StrikesDisaster ’ (CC) Amanpour and Company (N) ’ The FourFab 7 7 7 _ NewsWorld ABC7 6:00PMNews (N) (CC) dy!Jeopar(N) FortuneWheel The Bachelorette (N) ’ (CC) (DVS) Claim to Fame (N) ’ (CC) (DVS) NewsABC7 Jimmy Kimmel Live! ’ (CC) 9 9 9 ) NewsWorld PBS NewsHour ’ (CC) CountryCook’s Please!Check, Antiques Roadshow (CC) Antiques Roadshow ’ (CC) POV “Love & Stuff” A multigenerational love story. 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As of July 21, the select committee has presented eight public infor mation sessions. The presentations were finely crafted for public accep tance. Most information presented was hearsay, not allowed in court tes timony but accepted by Congress. An example was testimony by a member of president’s staff, Cassidy Hutchin son. She referenced hearsay that President Trump physically assaulted the Secret Service driver while sitting in his limousine, grabbed the steering wheel from the rear seat, choked the driver’s throat, and demanded to join the march to the Capitol. For safety the president was returned to the White House. Impressive story but refuted hours later by the driver. Did the committee admit the misinforma tion? Of course not. Without apology at the next meeting, they changed the story to “a heated discussion.” Failures of the incompetent select committee to investigate specified questions for Congress and the public will be addressed next week. Earl Heal is a retired Air Force officer, Vacaville resident and member of The Right Stuff committee formerly of the Solano County Republican Central Committee. Reach him at heal earlniki2@gmail.com.

at arms of the House of Rep resentatives and Senate, the government of the District of Columbia, the Metropol itan Police Department, the National Guard and regional federal, state and local law enforcement agencies on or before Jan. 6, 2021. What is the select com mittee’s activity to date and are they following the resolu tion’sThemandate?firstnotable activities of the select committee were Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s rejection of two of the five Republican nominees. Denying the minority party’s authority to select its committee members vio lated longstanding custom and the mandatory requirement of House Resolution 503. Unable to satisfy Pelosi, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy appointed no replace ments. The “bipartisan” committee is now 11 Democrats and two Repub licans; but the two serving are Republicans in name only. No crossexamination of witnesses will occur, so the committee is incapable of finding the full truth and nothing but the truth. It is a “star chamber” with an already drawn conclusion. The Sixth Amendment requires the right of cross-examination in a court trial, but Congress does not require this in investigative hearings. The committee vice chairwoman, Rep. Liz Cheney, a Republican, dem onstrated the investigative sham of the committee with her opening statement in the first public report. “Tonight, I say this to my Republi can colleagues who are defending the indefensible: There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone, but your dishonor will remain,” a disqualifying statement for any juror or any investi gator. (American rule? Innocent until proven guilty.) The select committee announced it would not interrogate Pelosi although she and Sen. Chuck Schumer as well as both House and Senate ser geants at arms figure prominently in responsibility for security of the Capitol. Why?

L abor Day may mark the informal end of summer, but it’s also supposed to be a holiday honoring the nation’s workers, par ticularly those who belong to unions.

Opinion T he U.S. House of Repre sentatives voted June 30, 2021, to establish a select committee to investigate the Jan. 6 attack on the United States Capitol. The resolution required the Speaker of the House to appoint 13 biparti san committee members, five Republicans after consulta tion with the minority leader. Prior to the resolution passing, the inspector general for the U.S. Capitol Police stated that the agency: n “Lacked adequate guidance for operational planning. n “Failed to disseminate relevant information obtained from outside sources and disseminated conflicting intelligence information regarding planned events for Jan. 6, 2021. n “First Responder Unit did not have the proper resources to com plete its Notably,mission.”among numerous other functions, the resolution required the select committee to investigate facts related to: n Activities of intelligence agen cies, law enforcement agencies and the Armed Forces. n Command, control and commu nications of the U.S. Capitol Police, the Armed Forces, the National Guard, the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Colum bia and regional federal, state and local law enforcement agencies on or before Jan. 6, 2021. n Policies, protocols, processes, procedures and systems for the sharing of intelligence and informa tion and to enhance interoperability among agencies of the United States, the U.S. Capitol Police, the sergeants

Jack Batson is a former member of the Fairfield City Council. Reach him by email at jsbatson@prodigy.net.

ON THE LEFT THE RIGHT STUFF

Failure, corruption evident in Jan. 6 Committee: Part 1

A6 Monday, September 5, 2022 — DAILY REPUBLIC

Dan Walters Earl Heal Jack Batson

CALMATTERS COMMENTARY

California unions can celebrate on Labor Day 2022

DAILY REPUBLIC

Hypocritical? Absolutely. CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how Califor nia’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more columns by Dan Walters, go to calmatters. org/commentary.

We’re witnessing a madcap political circus

J oe Biden finally got the word. We’re no longer in the political environ ment of bipartisanship, good will and compromise that he was raised in. We’re in a war for the survival of democracy. You’re late, Joe, but you’ve finally got it. “The MAGA Republicans are semi-fascists.” Whoa, dude. But it’s true. I recall a guy who wrote in 2016, “We will become a soft Americanstyle fascist state.” After Jan. 6, I’m not sure how soft it will be. The Jan. 6 pistol-packing Three Percenter Guy Reffitt was just sen tenced to seven years in prison. He wanted to drag Nancy Pelosi out of the Capitol. “I just want Pelosi’s head to hit every single step,” he said, not so Alsosoftly.notvery soft was one of the Jan. 6 militiamen who tweeted, “Why don’t we just kill them? Every last Democrat down to the last man, woman, and child!” Have the Democrats finally gotten alarmed enough to fight back against the lies, threats and distortions of the past 15 years? Will we finally call what is going on by its name? A fight for democracy. Fascism versus democracy. Hannity versus Truth. Fascism is a loose term that describes the right-wing extrem ists that arose in Europe after World War I. Fascist movements have many things in common. First, a charis matic leader who creates a mythical past and a glorious future. Fascists are always supported by Big Busi ness. Fascists glorify violence. There is always thuggery involved in suppressing criticism. In the 20th century, there was alwaysThisconquest.lastseems missing from the Trump portfolio and think I know why. Trump’s most adored dic tator, Vladimir Putin, told him to pull in America’s claws citing “forever wars.” I think this was to give Putin more room to exercise power in Eastern Europe. Otherwise, the word “fascist” fits Trump well. It took six years, but we are now staring fascism right in the face. And the showdown is coming. Donald Trump performed his most outrageous act of all when he took 40-some boxes of presidential docu ments home to Mar-a-Lago. His own lawyers told him before he left office to give them back. They should have all gone to the National Archives. But since in his mind Trump is above the law, he took Archiviststhem.found within weeks that documents were missing. Where were North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un’s so-called “love letters”? Where was President Barack Obama’s letter to Trump? The Archives’ attorney called Trump’s attorneys asking repeatedly to return them, but no luck. Finally 15 boxes were returned in January. The archivists were shocked by theAcontents.tipsterapparently told the FBI that there were more. In June, after a subpoena, Trump’s personal attor ney returned 38 more documents and signed an affidavit declaring that a search was done and that was all. But the FBI was apparently tipped off again – there were more. So a search warrant was issued showing probable cause of a felony, followed by the early August search and seizure when 26 more boxes were discovered.IgnoreTrump’s claim that he was “cooperating” and “all they had to do was ask.” He wasn’t cooperating and they had asked – repeatedly. Ques tion: Is that obstruction of justice? Notice that I didn’t discuss “secret” or “confidential.” He was simply a private citizen with stolen archives in this telling. But it turned out there were top secret documents that he withheld (why?), putting him in apparent violation of the Espionage Act. This case is so serious and clear cut that I predict a criminal charge can’t be avoided – unless former presidents are above the law. There should be a trial. There, the defense can try out all the what-about-isms that Hannity – that world-class dema gogue – is screaming about. Is Hillary Clinton’s home server the equiva lent to Trump’s actions? A jury should sort that Trumpout.toady Sen. Lindsay Graham has predicted (called for?) violence if his man is indicted. I say, “Indict,” and lance the boil. Those who stand for rule of law, stand up and get Justiceready.matters.

California’s unions haven’t had much to cel ebrate in recent years. They hit their peak in 1989, when 18.9% of California employees were members of unions and saw membership decline to as low as 14.7% in 2018, before rebound ing a bit to 15.9% in 2021. While they have a core mem bership among government workers, declines in manufac turing and other traditional sectors have stymied unions’ growth and they have been markedly unsuccessful in orga nizing post-industrial industries such as high technology. That said, Labor Day 2022 finds California’s unions on something of a roll. Nationally, and in California, the psycholog ical effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, inflation and other factors are injecting new vigor into organizational efforts. Starbucks, Amazon and other previously union-free employers are facing demands for more pay and better working conditions. The just-concluded 2021-22 session of the Legislature turned up the heat on employers by passing a number of union-backed bills. Last year, then-Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, who had been unions’ fiercest and most successful advocate in the Capitol, won passage – and Gov. Gavin Newson’s approval –for a measure, Assembly Bill 701, that sets workplace standards for warehouse workers, one aimed directly at Amazon, the immense onlineThisretailer.year,Gonzalez resigned from the Legis lature and took the helm of the California Labor Federation, which joined individual unions in a full-court press on the Capitol. Their most important achievement – one that could reverberate in other states and in other industries – is legislation creating a state council to set industry-wide wages and working condi tions for fast-food workers, essentially ignoring the franchise system and its assumption that the restaurants are individually owned businesses. Unions see it as an opening to unionize as many as 700,000 fast-food workers. The legis lation, Assembly Bill 257, still needs Newsom’s signature and business groups are pressing him for a veto. A third major union bill would make it easier for the United Farm Workers Union, which is barely surviving, to organize agricultural employees by using so-called “card check” or mail ballots to win organizational elections. The union says it’s needed to counter farmers’ efforts to thwart the union during in-per sonNewsomballoting.vetoed an earlier version of the bill, saying it was flawed. Just before the Legislature passed the newer version, he again signaled his opposition. “We cannot support an untested mail-in election process that lacks critical pro visions to protect the integrity of the election,” Newsom spokesperson Erin Mellon said in a statement.Newsom’s declaration on Assembly Bill 2183 came just as his Plump Jack restau rant, hotel and wine business announced the purchase of a vineyard in Napa County, thus potentially making his own workers a UFW target – a juxtaposition that advocates quickly noted. With California’s acute housing shortage a major agenda item for the legislative session, the state’s construction unions busily – and often successfully – made sure that housing leg islation contained boiler plate language giving unionized contractors a preference, or even a mandate, in building projects. At one point, two bills aimed at encouraging housing construction on unused or dilapidated commercial parcels, such as shopping centers, were stalled in a conflict between two construc tion union groups. Unable to resolve the conflict, legislative leaders finally decreed that both bills, Assembly Bill 2011 and Senate Bill 6, would be placed on Newsom’s desk. The Legislature’s union-friendly demeanor, however, had its limits. Once again, a bill to allow the Legislature’s own workers to unionize, Assembly Bill 1577, was sidetracked.

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The Solano County Office of Emergency Ser vices asks residents to be mindful of the fire danger and avoid using equip ment that creates sparks, not to drive onto dry grass or brush, to use caution with grills and camp fires, and to check chains for proper installation whenThetowing.county also advises residents to stay informed, and to keep friends and family informed, by fol lowing local news sources.

businesses in significant danger by “FEMA’s67%.maps right now are really focused on riverine flooding and coastal flooding and we work with local jurisdic tions to update the maps,” Criswell said. The water crisis in Jackson illustrates how America’s water systems were built for a climate that no longer exists. The majority-Black city has also been plagued by a combination of under investment, crumbling infrastructure and more extremeFederal,weather.state and local authorities have been passing out bottled drinking water in Jackson and are working on increasing pressure and getting the treatment plantJacksonoperational. Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba said on ABC’s “This Week” he was “opti mistic” about progress toward restoring safe water within days. “Even when the pres sure is restored, even when we’re not under a boil-water notice. it’s not a matter of if these systems will fail, but when the systems will fail,” he said. “There are so many points of failure.”“We’reseeing not only the age . . . and the wear and tear on our system but we’re seeing the effects of climate change,” Lumumba added. “We have colder winters, hotter summers and more annual precip itation, and all of that is taking a toll on our water infrastructure.” Lottery

California’s increasing reliance on solar power and other renewable sources has made the grid susceptible to black outs in the early evening, when solar panels go dark but the weather stays hot. The state had two straight nights of rolling blackouts in August 2020 and nearly had a repeat during the July 2021 heat wave. During a Flex Alert, Californians are urged to cool off their homes ahead of time and then turn up thermostats to 78 degrees. They also are asked to defer using heavy appliances. The alert is in effect from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. “We know this has been a long haul,” Mainzer said, “and it’s going to get more difficult.”Temperatures are expected to stay well above 100 degrees in the capital region for the bulk of the week after the National Weather Service extended its excessive heat warning through Thursday night.

Brad Vest/Getty Images/TNS file Personnel from the Mississippi National Guard organize inside of the Mississippi State Fairgrounds in response to the water crisis in Jackson, Mississippi, Thursday. Jackson has been experiencing days without reliable water service after river flooding caused the main treatment facility to fail. Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times/TNS file Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., during a House select committee hearing on the Jan. 6 attack, June 16.

Solano County Public Health recommends n Stay in air-con ditioned buildings and shelters, including a mall, library or public cooling center. n Do not rely on a fan as your primary cooling device. n Limit outdoor activ ities, especially during midday, and avoid direct sunlight. n Reschedule strenu ous activities to the early morning and evening. n Wear loose, lightweight, light-col ored clothing. n Take cool showers or baths to lower body temperatures. n Do not leave chil dren or pets unattended in vehicles under any circumstances. n Wear sunscreen. Sunburn affects the body’s ability to cool down and can add to dehydration. n Drink more fluids than usual and do not wait until you are thirsty to drink. Drink two to four cups of water every hour while working or exercis ing outside. n Avoid alcohol or liquids containing high amounts of sugar.

Meanwhile the Califor nia Independent System Operator, which over sees the electrical grid, extended its multiple-day rolling call for residents to conserve power from 4 to 9 p.m. Monday. There’s every indication the flex alert will be further extended as the ISO projects power use will approach record peak levels Tuesday. That peak use record was set in 2006. Emergency services personnel warn about the danger of sparking a fire due to the high heat and low humidity conditions.

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| Sunday

Climate From Page One Heat From Page One Panel From Page One

Energy demand for Sunday was expected to peak at around 45,000 mega watts – and then jump to 48,817 megawatts on Labor Day. The biggest crunch on the power grid is expected Tuesday, when temperatures in the Sacramento Valley could reach 115 degrees. Mainzer said electricity demand could top out at 50,099 megawatts. That would be just shy of the record 50,270 megawatts consumed July 24, 2006.

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n Make sure your family, friends and neigh bors drink enough water. Visit mationsummerreadysolanocounty.com/www.forinforaboutarea ship on the committee. “I don’t think any of those concerns have abated,” Short said, but added a formal invita tion has yet to be issued. “I think he’s consistently said if we get that, then our lawyers and our team will duly consider it.” Raskin also said he’d like to see former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Ginni Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, voluntarily testify about what they know of the efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. The committee has planned to release an interim report as soon as this month and its final findings by year-end. That’s expected to the Electoral Count Act is “a good first offer,” while saying he has a broader view of what needs to be“Wedone.need to look far more systematically at what Donald Trump was trying to do,” he said. “This was a far more sweeping plot than just what happened in the last couple of hours there.” The Senate bill, spon sored by Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine and Demo crat Joe Manchin of West Virginia, already has 10 Republican sup porters needed to end a filibuster, though it’s not clear when it might come up for a vote. It would raise the thresholds in Congress for challeng ing electoral votes and clarify that the vice pres ident doesn’t have the power to unilaterally reject electoral votes, among other changes.

Robinson Kuntz/Daily Republic file Children play in the fountain in front of the Solano County Government Center, Saturday.

Randall Benton/Tribune Content Agency file (2012) The California Independent System Operator in Folsom, December 6, 2012. Cal ISO issued a “Flex Alert” for Tuesday afternoon.

excessive heat should they wish to do so. Official cooling centers are open at several sites on Labor Day to serve this purpose.

DAILY REPUBLIC — Monday, September 5, 2022 A7 California

n Fairfield Civic Center Library, 1150 Kentucky St., 1 to 6 p.m. n Three Oaks Com munity Center, 1100 Alamo Drive in Vacaville, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. n Dixon Library, 230 N. First St., 1 to 6 p.m. n Rio Vista Library, 44 S. 2nd St., 1 to 6 p.m. n Benicia Library, 150 E. L St., noon to 8 p.m. n John F. Kennedy Library, Vallejo Room, 505 Santa Clara St., Vallejo, 2 to 7 p.m. The rest of the library is closed. Slash play areas are open Monday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Gary Falati Park and at Mankas Neighborhood Park. The Walter Graham Aquatic Center at 1100 Alamo Drive in Vacaville will be open from 1 to 7 p.m. Monday. City officials in Fairfield closed the Aquat ics Complex at Allan Witt Park in Fairfield after the morning swim time. The site was expected to reopen Tuesday for morningSolanoswim.County and a large swath of the central portion of the state remain under an excessive heat warning issued by the weather service. The warning remains in effect until 8 p.m. Thursday. High temperatures across the region have contributed to unhealthy levels of smog. The Bay Area Air Quality Management Dis trict on Friday issued an air pollution warning, known as a Spare the Air alert, for Saturday across the nine county Bay Area. The district on Satur day extended the warning through Labor Day. The district includes central and western Solano County from FairfieldSuisun City to the Bay in Vallejo and Benicia. The smog is caused by a strong high-pres sure system leading to triple-digit temperatures combined with light winds and vehicle exhaust. No such alert was called for the Yolo-Solano Air Quality Management District, which includes central and eastern Solano County from Vacaville through Dixon to the county line and past Winters in neighboring

up their thermostats and ramp down their energy use to prevent blackouts. But Mainzer said it’s almost a certainty that stronger measures will be needed in the coming days to avoid rolling blackouts of the sort Cal ifornia experienced in 2020. Those include power curtailments for commercial and indus trial customers who have so-called interruptible rates, in which they receive cheaper power but agree to have their energy use curbed during crunchMarktimes.Rothleder, the ISO’s chief operating officer, said Californians have done an admirable job so far of responding to the Flex Alerts. “We are going to need people to step up and sustain those efforts,” Mainzer said.

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Ryan Sabalow/Tribune Content Agency Homes are seen burned in the Lincoln Heights neigborhood of Weed, after the Mill Fire tore through the historically Black neighborhood the day before, Sept. 3.

State’s firefighters still battling two wildfires amid high heat, winds

Northern California fire fighters endured another scorching day Sunday as the Mill and Moun tain fires continued to punish Siskiyou County. The two fires have burned nearly 20 square miles, destroyed as many as 100 homes and still threaten hundreds more as California’s mammoth heat wave continued to turn much of far Northern Cali fornia into kindling.

With a heat wave straining power grid, energy regulators urge Californians to conserve energy Tribune ConTenT AgenCy State regulators have urged the public to conserve energy this weekend, issuing a string of emergency alerts that will remain in place until dusk Saturday and Sunday. The notices issued by California Indepen dent System Operator, which oversees the state’s power grid, signify that high demand has over-taxed the system and jeopardized operators’ ability to keep it running safely. Forecasters worry that demand could exceed 49,000 megawatts, the heaviest use on record since Sept. 2017, as consumers turn on air conditioners to beat back the heat. Elliot Mainzer, the president and CEO of Cal ISO, warned that warned during a news conference Saturday that electricity use and stress on the state’s energy reserves will “continue to escalate” into next week, as people return to work. Consumers can help alleviate the load by taking small measures, such as setting thermostats to 78 degrees, avoiding major appliances and turning off unneces saryPowerlights.plants have already failed this week due to oppressively hot weather, while some generators have sputtered and shut down. At the same time, multiple wildfires are burning throughout the state, including two in Los Angeles and San Diego that pose a threat to transmission lines. On Saturday, Cal ISO put an emergency alert “watch” into effect until 7 p.m., and set another one from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, aiming to stretch limited reserves until twi light, when solar panels no longer generate electricity.Officials have kept “emergency power capabilities” on standby throughout the state in case of outages, Mark Ghilarducci, director of California’s Office of Emer gency Services said during Saturday’s news conference.Withenvironmental conditions likely to grow more intense, Mainzer said his agency will do everything it can to uphold its fleet of power plants and lines, though officials will likely keep asking people to modify theirThisbehavior.isa developing story and will be updated.

The Mill Fire, which began in the Siskiyou County city of Weed on Friday, had burned 4,254 acres and was 25% contained as of early Sunday, Cal Fire reported.

The blaze has injured at least three civilians, burned 50 structures and was threatening 411 others, Cal Fire says. At least 1,000 people have been told to evacuate, and the nonprofit Rescue Ranch dog facility in Yreka said it had taken in 90 dogs, 71 of them on Friday in less than six Weedhours.Mayor Kim Greene has said the damage may be greater, with reports of at least 100 homes destroyed, many of them in the Lincoln Heights neighborhood. Cal Fire says 132 structures “have been affected” and that ground crews will be working Sunday to inspect damaged areas to confirm actual“Thelosses.fire currently has hose, hand line and dozer line in all areas around it,” said Kent Cunningham, a deputy operations official with Cal Fire, in a video briefing Sunday morning. “We’re continue to work to strengthen lines and mop up and keep the fire in its current footprint.” On Sunday, firefighters in Siskiyou County turned their focus to the Mountain Fire, which began Friday afternoon 10 miles north west of the Mill Fire and just outside of the commu nity of Gazelle. Firefighters were working Sunday to secure lines around the fire’s north and west flanks, Cal Fire Capt. Matt Ryan said at an opera tionalThatbriefing.fire was at 8,460 acres and 10% containment Sunday afternoon. There were 690 structures threatened and 332 people evacuated. On Sunday afternoon the Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office expanded the evac uation orders to include two more zones south west of Gazelle zones 2334B and 2331A on Zone haven. Residents in both zones were directed to take Highway 3 to Yreka. Firefighters worried that winds that could push flames and blow embers onto the drought-plagued landscape. Temperatures were expected to climb into the mid-90s over the next two days – and up to 103 degrees by Tuesday. On Sunday morning in Gazelle, where an evac uation warning remained in effect, Dawnia Deegan, 51, sat in her front yard with her sister and brotherin-law, Dania and Brian Landis, sipping coffee and watching convoys of fire trucks and heavy equip ment head to and from the Mountain Fire, burning on the hills west of town. She works at a gas station in Weed, but has been forced to stay home due to the power being out in that corner of the city. The last two nights she’s been keeping an eye on the orange glow from the fire –and hoping for the best. “We have our bags packed,” she said. “If they tell us we need to go, we Officialswill.” in Weed have said the Mill Fire began Friday in a warehouse in an unused portion of the Rose burg Forest Products mill that was scheduled for demolition, although offi cials at Cal Fire haven’t said how or where the fireRebeccastarted. Taylor, Rose burg’s spokeswoman, said Sunday that Cal Fire is investigating the mill property, and “we are cooperating fully in that investigation.”OnSunday, two days after the fire prompted the frantic evacuation Weed, wisps of smoke were still drifting up from the tangled girders and twisted sheet metal at the ruined warehouse. Crime scene tape had been strung across Railroad Avenue, which heads north toward the ruined Lincoln Heights neighborhood, just east of the mill property. Debbie Cummins, who has lived on Alamo Avenue across the railroad tracks from the Roseburg property since 1988, said her neighborhood turned chaotic Friday when the big warehouse caught fire as the wind howled. “I heard the popping sound and everything,” she said Saturday. “And then pretty soon the wind starts blowing, and the wind and the smoke and everything started going that way.” She pointed left, toward Highway 97 and Lincoln Heights. City officials declared a state of emergency Sat urday and were working to get food from a local grocery store to evacuees. Gov. Gavin Newsom also declared a state of emer gency to help in the response effort. Weed residents had been without power since Friday, but Pacific Power said that as of Saturday morning it had restored electricity to about 75% of its customers.

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“In some ways, Jimmy being there, holds your own feet to the fire that can be productive. It depends how he takes in in. It seems he takes in productively, and it can be thought in of the positive.”

SECTION B Matt Miller . Sports Editor . 707.427.6995

Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group/TNS file (2016) Former San Francisco 49ers quarterbacks Steve Young, left, and Joe Montana mingle on the field before Super Bowl 50 between the Denver Broncos and Carolina Panthers at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Feb. 7, 2016.

Steve Young on 49ers QBs Garoppolo, Lance: ‘This is hairy stuff’

See Young, Page B7

Daily Republic Tribune ConTenT AgenCy SAN FRANCISCO — Carlos Rodón’s brilliant season reached new heights Sunday after noon, eclipsing 200 strikeouts for the first time in his career and recording his ninth game with double-digit punchouts over six shutoutRodóninnings.walked off the mound to a standing ovation and his warm-up tune, Alice In Chains’ “Rooster,” blaring over the Oracle Park loud speakers after his 106th and final pitch sailed past the bat of Bryson Stott to escape the most vola tile of high-wire acts. With runners at first and third and no outs, he fired 98 mph at the letters past Bryce Harper for No. 199; after loading the bases, he coaxed Jean Segura to swing through a low slider for No. 200. A congratulatory message flashed across the center field score board, prompting the first of the 41,189 on hand to rise to their feet. In a scene that could have been plucked out of any World Series run or 107-win season, they all remained standing for Rodón’s bases-loaded showdown with Bryson Stott, and Rodón struck him out, too. On a picture-per fect afternoon at Oracle Park, Rodón’s latest elec trifying performance jolted energy into a sold-out crowd that appeared to be blissfully unaware of their team’s playoff standing. Yet, Rodón had to settle for a nodecision after John Brebbia served up a game-tying, threerun home run to J.T. Realmuto in the eighth inning. That, however, only set up Wilmer Flores’ heroics in the bottom of the ninth. Flores hooked a line drive down the left-field line, barely clearing the wall and the foul pole, for a two-run walk-off home run that delivered a 5-3 win and completed a three-game sweep of theThePhillies. Giants, who were once bat tling with Philadelphia for the final National League wild card spot, instead had to settle for the role of spoilers with their sweep of the Phillies this weekend. They have not lost in September but still trail Philadelphia by eightWithgames.10 strikeouts Sunday, Rodón secured his ninth game in double digits this season, match ing Tim Lincecum’s 2008 Cy Young campaign for a San Franciscoera franchise record. His final strikeout of Stott elevated him past Milwaukee’s Corbin Burnes for the National League lead, trailing only the Yankees’ Gerrit Cole for the most in theWithmajors. 201 strike outs this season, Rodón became the fourth Giants pitcher with at least 200 in their first season with the club. And with six more starts left, he ought to have his sights on Sam Jones (209, 1959) and Tim Keefe (227; 1885),Rookietoo. out fielder Bryce Johnson picked an opportune time to collect his first major-league hit to cap the Giants’ first scoringJohnson,rally. who took injured starter Alex Wood’s spot on the roster, laced an 0-1 cutter into right field with two outs and two on in the third, driving home LaMonte Wade Jr. from second for the Giants’ third run of the inning. Austin Wynns, who worked a 10-pitch at-bat and singled home their second run, was thrown out at third to end the muchGiantsandtakenbyrally,Untilframe.thethird-inningwhichwasstartedback-to-backwalksbyJ.D.DavisThairoEstrada,thehadn’tmanagedofanythingagainst

See Giants, Page B7 See A’s, Page B7 move veteran to bullpen, then see rookie shine

A’s

Martínez’s performance matched his effort against the Yankees last Sunday when he struck out a career-high six strikeouts in 5⅓ innings in a 4-1 A’s victory. The outing gave Martínez a chance to remain in the A’s rotation during a road trip in which they started six different pitchers. “Last time, I made sure to focus on the batter,” Martínez said through a Spanish-lan guage translator. “Just making sure to continue to do that. I’m just focusing more on that rather than the negative outcome. I’m just really happy that things played out this way.” Now, Martinez will likely get another start next week when the A’s are at home for six Withgames.a two-game series with Atlanta Braves upcom ing, the A’s have lefty Cole Irvin starting Tuesday and rookie Ken Waldichuk going Wednesday, taking Kaprielian’s spot in the Kaprielianrotation.struggled in August, going 1-4 with a 5.59 ERA in six starts. In that stretch, he had 23 strikeouts to go with 17 walks, as his season

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Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group San Francisco Giants pitcher Carlos Rodon (16) reacts after striking out Philadelphia Phillies’ Bryson Stott (5) in the sixth inning of their MLB game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Sunday.

Rodón gives another masterclass as SF Giants sweep Phillies

Hey, Trey, ‘the job’s a job’ Lance inherits a playoff con tender and takes on a starting role that Garoppolo went 35-16 in since December 2017, including a 4-2 playoff mark.

Young: “Despite the rigor, I September 5, 2022

Monday,

SANTA CLARA — Steve Young was winding down from a 20-minute, enthralling phone inter view on the 49ers’ quarterback dynamic when he captured his own“I’vefeelings:got my fingers crossed. This is great. This is hairy stuff.” Young is 30 years removed from the NFL’s gold standard in quar terback controversies, back when he competed against and even tually succeeded Joe Montana amid the 49ers’ Super Bowl-win ningHedynasty.seesthe parallels – “sure, of course” – from those Joe-vs.-Steve days to this past week’s Trey-andJimmyShockedevolution.that Jimmy Garop polo could not find a starting job elsewhere, Young says the 49ers now own a “perfect scenario” in welcoming Garoppolo back – at a reduced salary – to back up Lance, last year’s No. 3 overall draft pick who’s entering his first full season as the 49ers’ starting quarterback. “If Jimmy is a problem, it kind of speaks to the ability to do the job,” Young said in an exclusive interview with this news organi zation. “He doesn’t seem like it’s bugging him, and I would say ‘hal lelujah,’ because if it does, we have a problem.”Young, an ESPN analyst who lives in Palo Alto, hasn’t approached Lance with any advice on Garoppolo’s sudden return to the 49ers’ quarterback room. But Young said Lance knows he’s an absolutely willing mentor, just as Lance said Thursday he sees Garoppolo as a resource, too. Here are the topics Young fever ishly spoke on Friday afternoon:

Jimmy ‘referendum’Garoppolo’s Garoppolo prolonged his 49ers tenure by taking a pay cut Monday and agreeing to return as Lance’s backup, but only after months of speculation amid a wild market and discussions with other teams. Garoppolo opted not to ask for his release, and he’s slated to hit free agency next year for the first time after nine seasons. Young: “With his record and with how crazy the market is for quarterbacks, I’ve got to believe Jimmy’s thinking that’s not a good place to be. ‘The only market I can find is as backup? That’s not the news I wanted to find out in the offseason.’“Itake Kyle (Shanahan) at his word: he loves Jimmy as a backup. That’s a true statement. He loves Jimmy as a backup. If I was Jimmy, clearly, there’s two jobs in the NFL as a quarterback: processing and delivery. They’re both necessary elements. He can do “Something’sthat. not right. He just had a referendum on him. Something either perceptually or really is not resonating. If I’m Jimmy, I take the opportunity to change whatever narrative teams have – words, whispers, scouts, whatever – right now, it’s not good, because no one wants him to start for them. “If I’m him, I can’t keep playing the same music and thinking I’m getting a starting job somewhere. This is a period of time he can start change narrative, whether it’s first guy in, last guy out, memoriza tion, owning the data, processing. Whatever’s out there that’s keeping him from getting a starting job, he needs to change. “He can do that from a backup role by showing his diligence, showing ‘I’m the hardest working guy, I’m in the film room, I’ve never owned more data in my life, I’m memorizing.’ Coaches would talk: “Jimmy’s really different.’ “If I’m Jimmy, I just got punched in the face. I’m 34-14, been to the Super Bowl and two (NFC) championship games and was just told by the league, now people say the timing, the shoul der – this is the quarterback world.

If you are a starting quarter back, you would have found a job. So you’ve got to do something to change the narrative, and maybe somebody gets hurt and then there’s (a market).”

Tribune ConTenT AgenCy

Understanding the job After sitting behind Montana most of his first four seasons on the 49ers, Young started 10 games in 1991, won NFL MVP honors the next season, and then repeated as MVP in 1994 en route to the 49ers’ fifth Lombardi Trophy win.

The Oakland A’s will have no choice but to keep Adrián Mar tínez in their starting rotation if the rookie right-hander keeps pitching like he did Sunday. Maybe that’s the A’s plan regardless, with strug gling James Kaprielian moving to theMartínezbullpen.allowed three hits and struck out four over six scoreless innings as the A’s fin ished a week-long road trip with a 5-0 victory over the Bal timore Orioles (71-62) at Camden Yards. Shea Langeliers drove in two runs with a third-inning single and Seth Brown had his second two-home run game of the season as the A’s (50-85) snapped a four-game losing streak and ended the trip with a 2-4“Werecord.played a good baseball game today, a clean baseball game,” A’s manager Mark Kotsay said. “We talk a lot about how playing clean gives us the best chance to win and we threwMartínez,strikes.”hoping to follow up his impressive start from Aug. 28 against the New York Yankees at the Coliseum, faced just one batter over the minimum from the second to the sixth innings after he got out of a first-inning jam. In the sixth after walking rookie Adley Rutschman, Mar tínez got Anthony Santander to ground into a 3-5-1 double play. After he caught the throw from Vimael Machín at first base, a fired-up Martínez pumped his fist and spiked the ball into the infield“Hegrass.kept the fastball in the (strike) zone,” Kotsay said, “and had enough velocity to make his changeup effective and keep it down below the zone.”

Young: “The job that Trey’s being asked to do on a Super Bowl-ready team, without having really ever played much, even in college, the job they’re asking him to do is pretty amazing, right, and we’re all expecting him to do it. That’s a really, really hard job. All the hurdles he’s got to go over and all the filters he’s got to go through, we’re going to be eyewit nesses to it “Havingall.Jimmy there or not doesn’t change the degree of dif ficulty. The only thing that would change it is if Trey allowed it to be. In the end, the job that Trey’s asked to do, he’ll get booed just as fast, he’ll be criticized just as fast. It doesn’t“That’smatter.whatI would tell Trey: it doesn’t matter. The job’s a job. You’ve got do it. If you don’t do it, you have to pay the price.

Backup battery storage

The act also extends a $7,500 tax credit for electric and other green energy vehi cles, but imposes new North American assembly rules that immediately disqualified some previously eligible models. On top of the tax credit savings, Americans who take advantage of all upgrades incen tivized in the act – installing a modern electric heat pump to cool and heat their home, a heat pump for water heating, rooftop solar, and switching to an electric vehicle – will save $1,800 a year on energy bills, according Rewiring America, a nonprofit organization “focused on electrifying everything in our communities.”Someof the incentives, which consumers will be able to subtract from their 2022 tax bills next spring, took effect on Aug. 16, the day Biden signed the $739 billion act. Some won’t take effect until Jan. 1. Others, including two separate pack ages of rebates for energy saving upgrades, won’t be available until states set up a process to accept and review applications.It’simportant to know that a tax credit is different from a tax deduction. While a tax deduc tion is subtracted from taxable income, a tax credit is sub tracted from the amount of tax owed and can result in a hefty refund or a smaller tax payment at filing Here’stime.what we know so far about green energy incentives enacted this week as part of the Inflation Reduction Act: Rooftop solar systems The federal tax credit for purchase and installation of res idential solar energy systems has been increased from 26% to 30% and extended through 2032. That means that a home owner who spends, for example, $20,000 on a solar system at any time over the next 10 years will be able to subtract $6,000 from the taxes they owe for that year. Before the new law was enacted, the credit was set to be reduced to 23% in 2023 and eliminated the following year. The 30% tax credit took effect immediately and can be applied retroactively to installa tions since Jan. 1. There’s no cap on how much a solar system can cost to be eligible for the 30% credit. If you spend $100,000 on your system, for example, you’ll get a $30,000 credit. It’s a nonrefundable tax credit, though, meaning you won’t get a $25,000 refund if your tax bill is only $5,000. But, continuing our example, you will be able to carry forward that remaining $25,000 credit and spread it over future tax years through 2032.

Starting next year, homeown ers with existing solar systems will be able to claim a 30% tax credit for adding a backup storage system with a capacity of at least three kilowatt hours. Erin Hellkamp, spokes woman for Solar United Neighbors, a non-profit that amasses groups of homeown ers to negotiate bulk deals with solar installers, said the tax credit can also be claimed by homeowners who install backup battery systems without solar panels. Standalone systems can be used to keep power flowing during outages or to cut costs in areas where utilities charge higher rates during peakusage periods.

How to cash in on the feds’ new green energy stimulus package

Save on solar, home improvements and electric vehicles

Electric and ‘clean’ vehicles Effective on the day Presi dent Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act, a $7,500 tax credit for purchase of new elec tric vehicles has been extended through 2032, while buyers of used electric vehicles can get a credit for 30% of the purchase price up to $4,000 starting Jan. 1. The credit can also be applied to models that meet the govern ment’s definition of “clean” vehicles, including plug-in hybrids with four to seven kilo watt hours of battery capacity, and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. However, some new electric vehicles previously eligible for the credit will no longer be eli gible, and consumers will have to do some homework to figure out whether specific vehicles on an eligibility list released Tuesday by the U.S. Depart ment of Energy actually qualify for the credit. The list shows models that likely meet a new requirement: Only models that undergo final assembly in North America are eligible for the tax credit. But models on the list aren’t guaranteed to be eligi ble because some models are assembled in multiple locations. To ensure eligibility of any specific vehicle on the list, buyers must look up the Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) using the department’s online VIN Decoder at www.nhtsa. gov/vin-decoder, then locate the final assembly location in the “Plant Information” field at the bottom of the page. The final assembly location might also be available on an informa tion label affixed to the vehicle, usually on the inner frame of the driver door. In addition, some of the most popular electric vehicle models on the list aren’t eli gible for the credit for the rest of 2022 because they have already reached a sales cap of 200,000 units. These include 2022 models Chev rolet Bolt EV, Chevrolet Bolt EUV, GMC Hummer Pickup, GMC Hummer SUV, and Teslas models 3, S, X and Y, plus 2023 models Chevy Bolt EV and Cadillac Lyriq. That leaves 21 eligible vehi cles, including plug-in hybrids, as long as they pass the VIN lookup test, including Audi Q5, BMW 3-series Plug-In, BMW X5, Chrysler Pacifica PHEV, Fort F Series, Ford Mustang MACH E, Jeep Grand Chero kee PHEV, Nissan Leaf, Lincoln Aviator PHEV and others. The manufacturer sales cap will be lifted at the end of the year, reinstating eligibil ity for the Chevy Bolts, the Teslas, the GMC Hummers and CadillacBuyersLyriq.who signed a written binding contract for a no-lon ger-eligible vehicle prior to Aug. 16 but have not yet taken delivery will still be able to claim a $7,500 tax credit for thatBeginningvehicle. in 2024, buyers will be able to transfer their credit to the dealer at the point of purchase and take advan tage of the price reduction immediately.Additional requirements will be phased in beginning next year. One will remove eligibil ity of cars with a manufacturer’s suggested list price (MDRP) of more than $55,000 and trucks with MSRPs of more than $80,000. Another new rule will restrict who can take the credit to single filers making less than $150,000, single heads of households making less than $225,000 and married couples making less than $300,000.

Susan Stocker/Sun Sentinel/TNS Boynton Beach resident Fred Closter shows off his $40,000 rooftop solar power system, which includes $24,000 in solar panels and two $8,000 Tesla storage batteries that enable Closter and his wife to live almost completely free of Forida Power & Light’s grid. Congress and the Biden Administration made it easier for other Floridians to achieve the same goal by increasing the 30% federal tax credit for solar systems through 2032.

B2 Monday, September 5, 2022 — DAILY REPUBLIC

Tribune ConTenT AgenCy H ouseholds can save thou sands of dollars on air conditioning, heating, appliance, and vehicle upgrades by taking advantage of green energy incentives within the Inflation Reduction Act signed Aug. 16 by Presi dent Joe Biden. One of the most valuable green energy incentives in the legislation is a 10-year exten sion of a federal tax credit that reduces the cost of installing a rooftop solar system by 30%.

Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit Home improvement credits will change significantly from 2022 to 2023. For the remainder of 2022, the new law revives a 10% credit for specific energy-efficient improvements, including insula tion, roofs, doors, and windows. Homeowners could claim credits totaling no more than $500 over their lifetime for qualifying water heaters, heat pumps, central air condition ing systems, air circulating fans, hot water heaters, and hot waterStartingboilers.in 2023, the credit will be increased to 30% of the cost of qualifying improve ments made during the year, and consumers will be able to claim up to $1,200 a year for their improvements, creating an incentive to spread them out over coming years to maxi mizeAnnualsavings.tax credit limits will apply for specific improve ments, including $150 for a home energy audit; $250 for an exterior door ($500 for all exte rior doors); $600 for exterior windows and skylights, central air conditioners; $600 for elec tric panels; $600 for natural gas, propane or oil water heaters; and $600 for natural gas, propane, or oil furnaces or hot water boilers. An exception to the $1,200 annual cap will be a $2,000 credit for electric or natural gas heat pumps (heaters and air conditioners) – electric or natural gas heat pump water heaters, and biomass stoves and boilers.

It’s anyone’s guess as to when rebates funded by the Infla tion Reduction Act will be made available to consumers. A $4.3 billion program called High Efficiency Electric Home Rebates is being laid on the shoulders of individ ual states to figure out how to run, with guid ance from the federal government. Floridians who waited to apply for federal Covid-19 assistance for renters and homeowners know it can take months for states to figure out how to distribute large tranches of federal money. It remains to be seen whether homeowners will be able to claim rebates for the same improvements incentiv ized with federal tax credits or state-funded rebates, Consumer Reports stated in a recent story. Once up and running, the rebate program will provide up to $14,000 over 10 years for energy-efficiency improve ments by households making between 80% and 150% of their area’s median income. Available rebates will include up to $8,000 for a heat pump (air conditioner and heater); $1,600 for insulation, air sealing and ventilation; $1,750 for a heat pump water heater; and $840 for an elec tric range or electric heat pump clothes drier. Older homes will need to upgrade their electri cal systems to handle the new equipment, so the program will also offer rebates up to $4,000 for upgrades to a home’s electrical panel and service and $2,500 for Householdswiring.making between 80% and 150% of their area’s median income will qualify for a rebate of 50% of their purchase and installation cost, up to the limits listed above. Households making less than 80% of their area’s median income can get up to 100% of their project costs. States will also administer a separate $4.3 billion rebate program, called Home Owner Managing Energy Savings (HOMES) program, that will provide rebates based on the percentage of total energy savings achieved with retrofits. On top of the tax credit savings, Americans who take advantage of all upgrades incentivized in the act – installing a modern electric heat pump to cool and heat their home, a heat pump for water heating, rooftop solar, and switching to an electric vehicle – will save $1,800 a year on energy bills, according Rewiring America, a nonprofit organization “focused on electrifying everything in our communities.”

Rebate programs

See Hammer, Page B4

DAILY REPUBLIC — Monday, September 5, 2022 B3

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The 60-board final of the Spingold Knockout Teams at the Summer North American Championships was between multinational teams captained by Paul Street of Delray Beach, Florida, and Pierre Zimmermann from Switzerland. With one quarter to go, Street led by Bridge

Armie Hammer Armie allegedly has a history of abusing women while playing it off as kinky sex or fetish play. Courtney Vucekovich, a Dallas business owner and a former girlfriend of Armie’s, alleges on-screen that he tied her up with ropes with only her vague consent, disregarding the common BDSM rule requiring consistent, reaffirmed mutual consent. The documentary also shows footage of another woman, “Effie,” alleging in a video that Armie violently raped her for more than four hours on one occasion in 2017. Paige Lorenze, a model and influencer, alleges that Armie wanted to find a doctor who could remove her ribs so he could eat them. She also alleges that Armie branded her with a hot iron and licked the wound while it was bleeding. All three women also describe control ling, surveilling behaviors that sometimes scared them. Damiana Chi, a professional dominatrix and a BDSM edu cator, makes an appearance in the documentary, and is shown some footage of Armie’s former girlfriends describ ing his behavior. Someone who is aroused by “somebody else’s fear, when that person feels uncomfortable about it, is not a kinkster doing BDSM,” Chi says after watching. “That person is an abuser.” The Los Angeles Police Department investigated Effie’s rape allegation for nine months in 2021 before handing it over to the district attorney. At this point, no criminal charges have been filed.

Julius Hammer Armie’s great-great-grand father, Julius, was a Russian Jewish immigrant to the United States who was a founding member of the American Com munist Party. He named his son Armand, born in 1898, for the symbol of the Communist Party in Russia (“arm and hammer”). Over the years, the Soviet Finder of the Harvard Russian Research Center explains in the docuseries that the CIA con cluded that Armand Hammer was brought into the fold, too; Armand was used to collect information for the KGB and therefore was considered to be an agent of the Soviet Union. Thanks to Julius, Armand “was a money launderer and courier of funds channeled to Soviet espionage in the U.S.,” Finder says. “It was secret, it was illegal, it was dangerous.” “Behind every great fortune is a great crime. Behind the Hammer fortune there were a great number of great crimes,” says Edward Jay Epstein, who wrote a biography of Armand and whose conclusions and thoughts are referenced throughout the series.

Michael Hammer Michael, Armie’s father, is understood to be the chief keeper and defender of the Hammer family legacy. As a young man, he worked for Occidental Petroleum, and after Armand died in 1990, Casey tells the documentarians that Michael entered Armand’s home before his body was even taken away to remove several cars’ worth of expensive items and heirlooms. At Armand’s funeral, Michael’s father-in-law father declared that Armand became a Christian on his deathbed, despite the funeral being facilitated by Jewish rabbis; Michael and his thenwife Dru (Armie’s mother) Matt McClain/The Washington Post(2018)file Armie Hammer in 2018. Hammer and his family are the subject of Discovery Plus’s new docuseries “House of Hammer.”

The 60-board final of the Spingold Knockout Teams at the Summer North American Championships was between multinational teams captained by Paul Street of Delray Beach, Florida, and Pierre Zimmermann from Switzerland. With one quarter to go, Street led by 10 international match points. Board 46 (rotated to make South the declarer) was dynamite. With three players having long suits, there rated to be fireworks and guesswork. In this auction, the Street team sat North-South. One club by Andrea Manno (North) was either natural or any balanced hand out of the range for a one-no-trumpMassimilianoopening.diFranco (South) responded with the obvious(!) one spade, which was three-way: 4 or more points and denying a four-card major, or five or more diamonds and game-forcing values (perhaps with a four-card major), or game-invitational with five or more clubs. After Sjoert Brink (West) jumped to four spades, North naturally rebid five clubs.South did not fancy that contract, although six clubs was cold, and it would have taken a heart lead to defeat seven. When South removed to five diamonds, everyone passed. West led the spade nine, hoping his partner would ruff and return a heart. However, declarer won with dummy’s ace. At first glance, with clubs 3-3 and the heart finesse working, declarer can take all of the tricks. However, West ruffs the first round of hearts. At the table, di Franco cashed the club ace for one discard. Then he overtook the diamond king to draw trumps. When he cashed the heart ace and West discarded, declarer conceded two heart tricks. Plus 600 to Street.

COPYRIGHT: 2022, UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE Sudoku by Wayne Gould

ANSWERSLEUTHWORD

Armand Hammer Armand, Armie’s greatgrandfather, later became a mega-wealthy oil tycoon – and, according to the docuseries, was known to be abusive toward his wives and mistresses, involved in corruption schemes and disturbingly ruthless with his business interests. Armand used his third wife’s (Frances Barrett Tolman) money to invest in Occidental Petro leum, an oil company, and make it a massive success. During his divorce from his second wife, Angela Carey Zevely, she alleged that Armand willfully and maliciously “destroyed her will” and threatened to “beat her brains out” while brandish ing a metal pipe. “My husband is a master of psychological warfare,” she wrote. During his marriage to Frances, Armand had a mis tress named Martha Kaufman. When Frances discovered the affair and told her husband to get rid of Kaufman, Armand ordered Kaufman to change her name to Hilary Gibson and dye her hair platinum blond. Armand kept Kaufman, now known as Gibson, as an employee, and according to Epstein, “what he demanded was control of her entire life and identity.” Gibson always had to be available on short publicly, Lyndon says, but didn’t show much interest in the victims or the aftermath in private, and celebrated the suc cessful handling of the incident with Champagne and caviar.

9/6/22 WILD EXCITEMENT IN SPINGOLD FINAL

BridgeCrossword by Phillip Alder Difficulty level: SILVER Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 grid contains the digits 1 through 9, with no repeats. That means that no number is repeated in any row, column or box. Solution, tips and computer program at www.sudoku.com

WILD EXCITEMENT IN SPINGOLD FINAL

Hammer’s sordid family drama greedily, and harming others. Here are the series’ most jarring revelations about each.

Julian Hammer Armie’s grandfather Julian also abused women and was known to be violent, his ex-fian cee and daughter allege in the docuseries. He often lounged around in luxury pajamas, earning the nickname “the Hugh Hefner of Pacific Pali sades,” and allegedly sometimes helped his father, Armand, bug telephones. On his own time, the documentary says, he liked to host cocaine-fueled orgies at home, sometimes with his young daughter Casey around. He also violently abused his wife, Glenna Sue, while Casey and her brother Michael were home. Casey alleges that her mother would take the children to a motel until Julian cooled down. “Women were disposable in the Hammer family,” Casey says. Julian was left out of Armand’s will almost entirely; Armand instead left the major ity of his estate to Julian’s son Michael. Casey, Armie Ham mer’s aunt, went on to write the 2015 book “Surviving My Birthright” about the seemingly hereditary toxicity of the men in five generations of her family.

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donated much of the $40 million they inher ited from Armand to Christian groups, includ ing Jews for Jesus and Italy for Christ. The docuseries also alleges that Michael pos sesses a 7-foot-tall “sex throne” with a hole in the seat and a cage underneath. According to a 2021 Vanity Fair story about the Hammer family, Michael has been photographed sitting in it and holding the head of a blond woman; his lawyer, in response to that and other ques tions from the magazine, referred to “unsolicited gag“Michaelgifts.” Hammer, Armie’s father,” says one TikToker, in a clip included in the docu mentary, “seems like he may have passed on some of his proclivities to his son.”

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Daily Republic Staff DRNEWS@DAILYREPUBLIC.NETFAIRFIELD — Opening at local theaters this week are “Medi eval,” a fictional telling of a real warrior, Jan Ika, from the Middle Ages; “Barbarian,” a tale of terror about a young woman who rents an Airbnb; and the fourth installment of the After series, “After EverOpeningHappy.” nationwide are: “Medieval,” which was inspired by the true story of Jan Ika (Ben Foster), a leg endary warrior from the Middle Ages. The Holy Roman Empire is plummeting into chaos while feuding brothers –King Wenceslas of Czech and King Sigismund of Hungary – battle for control of the empty throne after the reign ing king’s death. Lord Boresh hires Ika to kidnap the powerful Lord Rosenberg’s fiancée, Lady Katherine (Sophie Lowe) to prevent Rosen berg’s rise to power alongside the corrupt King Sigismund. Jan falls in love with Kath erine and decides to flip the tables and save her instead of delivering her. The fate of the empire will be decided by his love for Lady Katherine. The film is rated R. “Barbarian,” in which a young woman (Geor gina Campbell), in town for a job interview, arrives at her Airbnb late at night only to find that her rental has been mistakenly dou ble-booked and a strange man is already staying there. She decides to stay one night, but finds the evening anything but peaceful. The film is rated R.

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CABLE CHANNELS 49 49 49 (AMC) (4:30) ››› “The Goonies” 1985 Sean Astin. (CC) Movie ›› “Road House” 1989, Action Patrick Swayze, Kelly Lynch, Sam Elliott. (CC) Movie ››› “The Green Mile” 1999, Drama Tom Hanks, David Morse, Michael Clarke Duncan. (CC) 47 47 47 (ARTS) The First 48 The First 48 “Runner Runner” (CC) The First 48 ’ (CC) The First 48 “The Girl Next Door” The First 48 “House of Cards” The First 48 “Bloodline” (CC) The First 48 ’ (CC) The First 48 51 51 51 (ANPL) RescueHomesteadHomesteadHomesteadHomesteadHomesteadHomesteadRescue 70 70 70 (BET) FamCelebrity The Murder Inc Story (N) (CC) Tales “C.R.E.A.M.” (N) Tales “C.R.E.A.M.” Martin ’ (CC) Martin ’ (CC) Martin ’ (CC) Martin ’ (CC) Martin ’ (CC) Martin ’ (CC) PrinceFresh 58 58 58 (CNBC) Shark Shark Tank ’ Shark Tank ’ Shark Tank (CC) Shepard SmithJay Leno’sDateline “Toxic” Dateline 56 56 56 (CNN) AC 360CNN Tonight (N) Don LemonDon LemonAnderson CooperDon LemonDon LemonNews 63 63 63 (COM) The Office (CC) The Office (CC) The Office (CC) The Office (CC) The Office Earlymorning deliveries. The Office (CC) The Office (CC) The Office (CC) The Office (CC) The Office (CC) The Daily Show With Trevor Noah Seinfeld ’ (CC) 25 25 25 (DISC) CatchDeadly Deadliest Catch ’ (CC) Deadliest Catch: On Deck (N) (CC) Deadliest Catch “Ghosted” (N) ’ Deadliest Catch (CC) Deadliest Catch (CC) Kiddie Kai “Sneak” ’ (CC) CatchDeadly 55 55 55 (DISN) LearnBunk’d: &LadybugCat &LadybugCat &HamsterGretel Big GreensCity Big GreensCity Big GreensCity The lainsVil- VioletUltra Big GreensCity Big GreensCity &LadybugCat &LadybugCat Jessie ’ (CC) 64 64 64 (E!) “Grown Ups” (CC) Movie › “Grown Ups” 2010 Adam Sandler. Game FaceCelebGame FaceNightlyHonest 38 38 38 (ESPN) (4:00) 2022 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s & Women’s Quarterfinals (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) 39 39 39 (ESPN2) WNBA Basketball Chicago Sky at Connecticut Sun (N) WNBA Basketball Las Vegas Aces at Seattle Storm Semifinal, Game 4. (N) DC & RC (N) TalkTrash theAroundHorn tionInterrup- NFL Live (CC) UFC loadedRe59 59 59 (FNC) TuckerHannity (N) (CC) IngrahamGutfeld! (N) (CC) News at NightTucker CarlsonHannity

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“After Ever Happy,” the fourth film in the “After” franchise, which finds Tessa (Josephine Langford) has changed so much since she met Hardin (Hero Fiennes Tiffin), the couple find they both have grown and these changes may not make for a happy life of love. The film is rated R. Opening in limited release are: “About Fate,” in which Margot (Emma Roberts) is in love with love. She find herself with Griffin (Thomas Mann) on New Year’s Eve. Both believe in love but fail to see what is right in front of them. The film is rated R. “Hockeyland,” a film about Minnesota’s favor ite sport: hockey. Senior boys of rival teams compete for the right to be the champs of the local league. The film is not rated. “Hold Me Tight,” in which Camille (Vicky Krieps) abandons her husband Marc (Arieh Worthalter) and chil dren for an unknown reason. Camille’s adven tures follow a woman who is deeply disturbed but the question is, why? Her husband struggles at home to keep things afloat all the while wor rying about Camille. The film is not rated. “Lifemark,” in which David’s (Raphael Ruggero) life gets turned upside down when his birthmother decides to contact him when he turns 18. His parents support the relationship but soon they find truths they wished were never revealed. The film is rated PG-13. judge. (CC) (CC) Show-J. Fallon at (N) (CC) at 9 (N) (CC) 4 at 10 (N) nightTo’ (CC) FBI: International “Uprooting” (CC) FBI: Most Wanted “Incendiary” (CC) KPIX News5 Late Show-Colbert PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) ArtsKVIE EuropeSteves’ Finding Your Roots With Henry Frontline Choices that threatened democracy. 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Classifieds: 707-427-6936 Online: dailyrepublic.com/classifieds Daily Republic - Monday, September 5, 2022 B5 NOTICEOFLIENSALE NoticeisherebygivenpursuanttoCaliforniaBusinessandProfessionalCode#2170021716,Section2328oftheUCCofthePenalCode,Section535theundersigned SmartstopSelfStoragelocatedat660GardenHwy,SacramentoCA95833willsellat publicauctionbycompetitivebiddingthepersonalpropertyof: D355BriannaParra D356ElijahMontue D414MichelleMaule D418JavierCorella D432KeyonaTravis A109LevortiaVernon C125HenryWilliams C126CatherineFields C151VeronicaGarcia C189KristopherMiller C219NatalieFlores C256JesseSchoonoverRodriguez C264JoleneChambers C268EstephanVillegas C299LindaSueJohnson D116LeonaSpivey D181AmberWoods D185ValeriaGonzalez D190DarlWatson D216MarvinBenton D226RichardBishop D229CarenLevene D334JoseChavez Propertytobesold:householdgoods,furniture,appliances,clothes,toys,boxes&contents.AuctioneerCompanywww.selfstorageauction.comTheSalewillendat10:00AM September21,2022.Therundatesare09/05/2022and09/12/2022..Goodsmustbe paidincashatsiteandremovedatcompletionofsale.Saleissubjecttocancellationin theeventofsettlementbetweenownerandobligatedparty. 9/5,9/12/22 CNS-3617874# THEDAILYREPUBLIC DR#00057363 Published:September5,12,2022 0103 LOST AND FOUND Disclaimer:LOSTAND FOUND ads are published for 7 days - FREE. Call PetHarbor.comVisitDept.Republic'sDailyClassi-fiedAdvertisingfordetails.(707)427-6936Mon.-Fri.,8am-5pmCONTACTUSFIRSTSolanoCountyAnimalShelter2510ClaybankRdFairfield(707)7841356solanoshelterpetfindercomUnitingPets&People 0107 NOTICESSPECIAL Disclaimer:PleaseCheck Your Ad The First Day It Is Published and notify us immediately if there is an error. The Daily Republic is not responsible for errors or omissions after the first day of publication. The Daily Republic accepts no liability greater than the cost of the ad on the day there was an error or omission. Classified line ads that appear online hold no monetary value; therefore, they are not eligible for credit or a refund should they not appear online. 0501 HELP WANTED Locksmith willing to train. F/T, clean DMV Send resume to: P.O. Box 3452, Fairfield, CA, 94533.

OtherCaliforniastatutesandlegalauthoritymayaffectyourrightsasacreditor.Youmay wanttoconsultwithanattorneyknowledgeableinCalifornialaw. Youmayexaminethefilekeptbythecourt.Ifyouareapersoninterestedintheestate, youmayfilewiththecourtaRequestforSpecialNotice(formDE-154)ofthefilingofan inventoryandappraisalofestateassetsorofanypetitionora ccountasprovidedinProbateCodesection1250.ARequestforSpecialNoticeformisavailablefromthecourt clerk.

Petitioner:JONTEMCQUEEN,28REDONDOSTREET,SANFRANCISCO,CA94124, Telephone:415-845-6404 9/4, 9/5,9/11/22 CNS-3621535# THEDAILYREPUBLIC DR#00057654 Published:September4,5,11,2022

0501 HELP WANTED Rio Vista Delta Breeze hiring FT & PT bu s drivers. Great oppor tunity starting at $20 plus benefits, Monday thru Friday only. Must have class A or B with P endorsement Send resume to tca concepts.comral@transportationbTheCityOfVacavilleIsHiringLeadEquipmentMechanicwww.cityofvacaville.com/jobsFinalfillingdate:Sept.6,20225:30pm

Nobidmaybewithdrawnforaperiodofsixty(60)daysafterthedatesetfortheopening forbidsexceptasprovidedpursuanttoPublicContractCodesection5100,etseq.

EachbidshallbemadeonformspreparedbytheDistrictintheContractDocuments.Bid packetswillbeavailableonSeptember7,2022by4:00pmwhichcanbeaccessedon theFairfield-SuisunUnifiedSchoolDistrict/Purchasingwebsiteat https://www.fsusd.org/Page/15594.

0629 FIREWOOD Informational: A cord of wood shall measure 4x4x8 and be accompanied by a receipt. Please report any discrepancies to: The Department of Agricultural / Weights and Measures at (707) 784-1310 0631 FURN. & HSH LD. GOODS GENERAC Standby Generators provide backup power durin g utility power outages so your home and family stay safe an d comfortable. Prepare now. Free 7-year extended warranty ($695 value!). Request a free quote today! Call for additional terms and conditions. 1-707-716The0674Generac PWRcell, a solar plus batter y storage system. SAVE m oney, reduce you r r eliance on the grid prepare for power out a ges and power you r home. Full installation services available. $ 0 D own financing Op tion. Request a FREE n o obligation, quot e today. Call 1-844-923 2348 0633 GIVEAWAYS GIVEAWAYSDisclaimer: is FREE advertising for merchandise being given away by the advertiser (not for businesses, services or promotional use). Limited to 1 ad of like item(s) per customer in a 60 day period. 4 line max. for all ads. Ads are published for 3 consecutive days in the Daily Republic, 1 time in Friday's FREETailwind.Rabbit Hutch and pick up at end of drive 674 Hillside Dr. Antique Stove, 192030 Wedgewood, gas wood, call 707-673-2591

FREE WOOD PICKPALLETSUPATBACK OF DAILY REPUBLIC 1250 TEXAS ST. TUESDAY - FRIDAY, 8AM -5PM. 1st COME, 1st SERVE 0639 LAWN & GARDEN Eliminate gutter cleaning forever! LeafFilter the most advance d debris-blocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estim ate today. 15% off En tire Purchase. 10 % Senior & Military Dis counts. Call 1-888 652-3798 0641 MISC. FOR SALE OR TRADE SELL YOUR STUFF Daily Republic Classifieds dailyrepublic com 0645 MISC. WANTED DONATE YOUR CAR OR TRUCK TO HERIT AGE FOR THE BLIND F ree 3 Day Vacation T ax Deductible, Fre e Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care of. CALL 1-855-656-0695 0677 PETS & SUPPLIES YORKIE, AKC Born 06/06/2022 Papers & 1st shots dew claws & tail s docked. Available now Call 916-934-6086 must leave message, will call back. 0808 PICKUPS, 2WD 2 004 Ford F-150 X Cab. sm. V8, 4.6L, A/T a ll pwr., A/C, smog $ 7,900 obo. DL R # 42203. (707)280 6 816 Quinterosaut o sales.com2007Toyota

B6 Monday, September 5, 2022 - Daily Republic Online: dailyrepublic.com/classifieds Classifieds: 707-427-6936 Published:DR#00057503August 29, September 5, 2022 T.S.No.102389-CAAPN:0030-071-060NOTICEOFTRUSTEE SSALEIMPORTANT NOTICETOPROPERTYOWNER:YOUAREINDEFAULTUNDERADEEDOF TRUST,DATED11/24/2017.UNLESSYOUTAKEACTIONTOPROTECTYOUR PROPERTY,ITMAYBESOLDATAPUBLICSALE.IFYOUNEEDANEXPLANATION OFTHENATUREOFTHEPROCEEDINGAGAINSTYOU,YOUSHOULDCONTACTA LAWYEROn9/15/2022at9:30AM,CLEARRECONCORP,asdulyappointedtrustee underandpursuanttoDeedofTrustrecorded12/5/2017asInstrumentNo. 2 01700104836ofOfficialRecordsintheofficeoftheCountyRecorderofSolanoCounty, StateofCALIFORNIAexecutedby:KERRYSBOOKER,ASINGLEWOMANWILLSELL ATPUBLICAUCTIONTOHIGHESTBIDDERFORCASH,CASHIER SCHECKDRAWN ONASTATEORNATIONALBANK,ACHECKDRAWNBYASTATEORFEDERAL CREDITUNION,ORACHECKDRAWNBYASTATEORFEDERALSAVINGSAND LOANASSOCIATION,SAVINGSASSOCIATION,ORSAVINGSBANKSPECIFIEDIN SECTION5102OFTHEFINANCIALCODEANDAUTHORIZEDTODOBUSINESSIN THISSTATE;AttheSantaClaraStreetentrancetotheCityHall,555SantaClaraStreet, Vallejo,CA94590allright,titleandinterestconveyedtoandnowheldbyitundersaid DeedofTrustinthepropertysituatedinsaidCountyandStatedescribedas:MOREACCURATELYDESCRIBEDINSAIDDEEDOFTRUST.Thestreetaddressandothercommondesignation,ifany,oftherealpropertydescribedaboveispurportedtobe:219E WYOMING ST,FAIRFIELD,CA94533Theundersign edTrusteedisclaimsanyliabilityfor anyincorrectnessofthestreetaddressandothercommondesignation,ifany,shown herein.Saidsalewillbeheld,butwithoutcovenantorwarranty,expressorimplied,regardingtitle,possession,condition,orencumbrances,includingfees,chargesandexpensesoftheTrusteeandofthetrustscreatedbysaidDeedofTrust,topaytheremainingprincipalsumsofthenote(s)securedbysaidDeedofTrust.Thetotalamountofthe unpaidbalanceoftheobligationsecuredbythepropertytobesoldandreasonableestimatedcosts,expensesandadvancesatthetimeoftheinitialpublicationoftheNoticeof Saleis:$294,435.95IftheTrusteeisunabletoconveytitleforanyreason,thesuccessfulbidder'ssoleandexclusiveremedyshallbethereturnofmoniespaidtotheTrustee, andthesuccessfulbiddershallhavenofurtherrecourse.Thebeneficiaryundersaid DeedofTrustheretoforeexecutedan ddeliveredtotheundersignedawrittenDeclarationofDefaultandDemandforSale,andawrittenNoticeofDefaultandElectiontoSell. TheundersignedoritspredecessorcausedsaidNoticeofDefaultandElectiontoSellto berecordedinthecountywheretherealpropertyislocated.NOTICETOPOTENTIAL BIDDERS: Ifyouareconsideringbiddingonthispropertylien,youshouldunderstandthat therearerisksinvolvedinbiddingatatrusteeauction.Youwillbebiddingon alien,not onthepropertyitself.Placingthehighestbidatatrusteeauctiondoesnotautomatically entitleyoutofreeandclearownershipoftheproperty.Youshouldalsobeawarethatthe lienbeingauctionedoffmaybeajuniorlien.Ifyouarethehighestbidderattheauction, youareormayberesponsibleforpayingoffallliensseniortothelienbeingauctioned off,beforeyoucanreceivecleartitletotheproperty.Youareencouragedtoinvestigate theexistence,pri ority,andsizeofoutstandingliensthatmayexistonthispropertyby contactingthecountyrecorder'sofficeoratitleinsurancecompany,eitherofwhichmay chargeyouafeeforthisinformation.Ifyouconsulteitheroftheseresources,youshould beawarethatthesamelendermayholdmorethanonemortgageordeedoftrustonthe property.NOTICETOPROPERTYOWNER:Thesaledateshownonthisnoticeofsale maybepostponedoneormoretimesbythemortgagee,beneficiary,trustee,oracourt, pursuanttoSection2924goftheCaliforniaCivilCode.Thelawrequiresthatinformation abouttrusteesalepostponementsbemadeavailabletoyouandtothepublic,asacourtesytothosenotpresentatthesale.Ifyouwishtolearnwhetheryoursaledatehasbeen postponed,and,ifapplicable,therescheduledtimeanddateforthesaleofthisproperty, youmaycall(800)758-8052orvisitthisInternetWebsiteWWW.HOMESEARCH.COM, usingthefilenumber assignedtothiscase102389-CA.Informationaboutpostponementsthatareveryshortindurationorthatoccurcloseintimetothescheduledsalemay notimmediatelybereflectedinthetelephoneinformationorontheInternetWebsite.The bestwaytoverifypostponementinformationistoattendthescheduledsale.NOTICETO TENANT:EffectiveJanuary1,2021,youmayhavearighttopurchasethispropertyafter thetrusteeauctionpursuanttoSection2924moftheCalifor niaCivilCode.Ifyouarean “eligibletenantbuyer,”youcanpurchasethepropertyifyoumatchthelastandhighest bidplacedatthetrusteeauction.Ifyouarean“eligiblebidder,”youmaybeabletopurchasethepropertyifyouexceedthelastandhighestbidplacedatthetrusteeauction. Therearethreestepstoexercisingthisrightofpurchase.First,48hoursafterthedateof thetrusteesale,youcancall(855)313-3319,orvisitthisinternetwebsitewww.clearreconcorp.com,usingthefilenumberassignedtothiscase102389-CAtofindthedateon whichthetrustee ssalewasheld,theamountofthelastandhighestbid,andtheaddressofthetrustee.Second,youmustsendawrittennoticeofintenttoplaceabidso thatthetrusteereceivesitnomorethan15daysafterthetrustee ssale.Third,youmust submitabidsothatthetrusteereceivesitnomorethan45daysafterthetrustee ssale.If youthinkyoumayqualifyasan“eligibletenantbuyer”or“eligiblebidder,”youshould considercontactinganattorneyorappropriaterealestateprofessionalimmediatelyfor adviceregardingthispotentialrighttopurchase.FORSALESINFORMATION:(800)7588052CLEARRECONCORP4375JutlandDriveSanDiego,California92117

Tacom a Crew Cab Prerunner SR5. A/T, all pwr., V-6 super clean & smog $13,900 obo DLR #42203. (707)2806816 ales.comQuinterosautos 0811

Ifyouareacreditororacontingentcreditorofthedecedent,youmustfileyourclaimwith thecourtandmailacopytothepersonalrepresentativeappointedbythecourtwithinthe laterofeither(1)fourmonthsfromthedateoffirstissuanceofletterstoageneralpersonalrepresentative,asdefinedinsection58(b)oftheCaliforniaProbateCode,or(2)60 daysfromthedateofmailingorpersonaldeliverytoyouofanoticeundersection9052of theCaliforniaProbateCode.

SUVS - 4WD

2010 Cabot LS. A/T A/C, great on gas ! 127k mi., $4,900 + fees. DLR terosautosales.com(707)280-6816#42203Quin 0827 HONDA 2 008 Accord LX-P. 4 c yl., A/T, 217k mi. $ 6,900 obo. DL R # 42203. (707)280 6 816 Quinterosauto s ales.com 0838 MERCEDES BENZ 2 011 E-350 Sport 1 88k mi., blk., lthr $ 8,800 DLR #42203 ( 707)280-6816 terosautosales.comQuin

PERSONALPROPERTY NoticeisherebygiventhatpursuanttoSection21700oftheBusinessandProfessions Code,StateofCalifornia,theundersignedwillsellatpublicsalebycompetitivebidding. Thisliensaleshallbeconductedonlineatwww.storagetreasures.comwhereadditional informationaboutthesaleandthecontentstobeauctionedwillbepostedatleastseven (7)daysbeforethesaledate.Thecontentswillbesoldtothehighestbiddero n 09/14/2022at12:00PM. A0020 KyleChristianSkillman I0005MaryLeach B0010MaryLeach Thissaleissubjecttocancellationwithoutnoticeintheeventofsettlementbe-tween ownerandobligatedparty. SECURITYPUBLICSTORAGE606ParkerRd,Fairfield,CA94533 DR#00057420 Published:Aug.29,Sept.5,2022

TheDistrictreservestherighttorejectanyandallbidsandtowaiveanyinformalitiesor irregularitiesinthebidding. DR#00057655 Published: September5,12,2022 NOTICEOFPETITIONTOADMINISTERESTATEOF TRINALAVERNEMCQUEEN CASENO.P051622 Toallheirs,beneficiaries,creditors,contingentcreditors,andpersonswhomayotherwisebeinterestedinthewillorestate,orboth,of:TRINALAVERNEMCQUEEN APetitionforProbatehasbeenfiledbyJONTEMCQUEENintheSuperiorCourtofCalifornia,CountyofSOLANO. ThePetitionforProbaterequeststhatJONTEMCQUEENbeappointedaspersonalrepresentativetoadministertheest ateofthedecedent. ThePetitionrequestsauthoritytoadministertheestateundertheIndependentAdministrationofEstatesAct.(Thisauthoritywillallowthepersonalrepresentativetotakemany actionswithoutobtainingcourtapproval.Beforetakingcertainveryimportantactions, however,thepersonalrepresentativewillberequiredtogivenoticetointerestedpersons unlesstheyhavewaivednoticeorconsentedtotheproposedaction.)Theindependent administrationauthoritywillbegrantedunlessaninterestedpersonfilesanobjectionto thepetitionandshowsgoodcausewhythecourtshouldnotgranttheauthority. Ahearingonthepetitionwillbeheldinthiscourton9/28/2022at9:00A.M.inDept.22 RoomN/AlocatedatOLDSOLANOCOURTHOUSE,580TEXASSTREET,FAIRFIELD, CA94533. Ifyouobjecttothegrantingofthepetition,youshouldappearatthehearingandstate yourobjectionsorfilewrittenobjectionswiththe courtbeforethehearing.Yourappearancemaybeinpersonorbyyourattorney.

NOTICEINVITINGBIDS

2001 Chevy Tahoe LS Seats 8, V-8, A/T, 4X4 165k mi., $6,900 obo DLR terosautosales.com(707)280-6816#42203Quin 0819 CHEVROLET

BidsshallbedeliveredandaddressedtotheFairfield-SuisunUnifiedSchoolDistri ct,Attention:MelissaIriarte,DirectorofPurchasing&ContractServices,3rdfloor,2490HilbornRoad,FairfieldCA94534,andshallbelabeled“Bid#2155-23DistrictVehicles”,due nolaterthanOctober4,2022onorbefore11:00a.m.,localtime.Bidswillnotbeconsideredunlesstheyarereceivedbythepropertime.Nooral,telegraphic,electronic,facsimile,ortelephonicbidsormodificationswillbeconsidered.Itistheresponsibilityofthe BiddertoseethatanybidsubmittedshallhavesufficienttimetobereceivedbythePurchasingOfficebeforetheBidSubmittalDeadline.Bidsreceivedafterthedeadlinewillbe returnedunopened. Bids mustbearoriginalsignaturesandfigures.

NOTICEOFSELFSTORAGESALE PleasetakenoticeCentralSelfStorageEastTravis837ETravisBlvdFairfieldCA 94533intendstoholdanauctionofthe goodsstoredinaself-servicestorageunit bythefollowingpersons.Thesalewilloccurasanonlineauctionviawww.storagetreasures.comon9/21/2022at12:00 PM.Unlessstatedotherwisethedescriptionofthecontentsarehouseholdgoods andfurnishings: CarlaBelion BobbyCarias DebraBatiste-Jackson ShonMWinstead QuindellaMEspree JagjeetSandhu Jennifer Sturghall DonaldMurphrey Allpropertyisbeingstoredattheabove self-storagefacility.Thissalemaybewithdrawnatanytimewithoutnotice.Certain termsandconditionsapply.Seemanager fordetails. 9/5,9/12/22 CNS-3619143# THEDAILYREPUBLIC DR#00057459 Published:September5,12,2022

0509

DENTALINSURANCEfromPhysi ciansMutualInsur anceCompany Coveragefor35 0 plusprocedures Realdentalinsur ance-NOTjust a discountplan.D o notwait!Callnow ! GetyourFRE E DentalInformatio n Kitwithallthede tails! 1-855-993-041 3 www.dental50plus.c om/republic#6258 Offer your GUpinpertiseimprovementhomeex-&servicesSolanoCounty'slargestcirculatednewspaper.Achievegreatresultsbyad-vertisinginServiceSourceCallMF9am5pm(707)4276922to$15,000.00ofUARANTEEDLifeInsurance!Nomedicalexamorhealthquestions.Cashtohelppayfuneralandotherfinalexpenses.CallPhysiciansLifeInsuranceCompany-866-6040688orvisitwww.Life55plus.info/dailyrep

FAIRFIELD-SUISUNUNIFIEDSCHOOLDISTRICT

NOTICEISHEREBYGIVENthattheGOVERNINGBOARDOFTHEFAIRFIELDSUISUNUNIFIEDSCHOOLDISTRICT,OFTHECOUNTYOFSOLANO,STATEOF CALIFORNIA,willreceiveupto, butnotlaterthan,October4,2022at11:00a.m.localtimethatwillnotbeopenedpublicly,attheFairfield-SuisunUnifiedSchoolDistrict,PurchasingDepartmentat2490HilbornRoad,Fairfield,CA94534,bidsforthefollowingProject: Bid #2155-23 District Vehicles

InterestedBiddersarereferredtotheFairfield-SuisunUnifiedSchoolDistrictwebsitehttps://www.fsusd.org/Page/15594,fordetails,instructions,bidforms,andaddenda.Itis theresponsibilityofthebiddertovisitthewebsiteforalladdenda,communication,deadlines,and/orupdates.AllquestionsregardingthisBidaredueonorbefore4:00p.m.on September15,2022viaemailto:MelissaIriarteatmelissair@fsusd.orgthe subjectlineof BID#2155-23Questions/RFI”.Onlyquestionssubmittedthroughthisprocesswillbeaccepted.

NOTICEOFLIENSALE NoticeisherebygivenpursuanttoCaliforniaBusinessandProfessionalCode#2170021716,Section2328oftheUCCofthePenalCode,Section535theundersigned, SmartStopSelfStoragelocatedat2998RockvilleRd.Fairfield,CA94534willsellatpublicauctionbycompetitivebiddingthepersonalpropertyof: A022-Moore,Earl E102-EricaVelasco F051-Pander,Nicole G006-Ford,Jay G008-LisaJohnson G049-JoiCollins G084-ShirleyAnnHampton Pr opertytobesold:householdgoods,furniture,appliances,clothes,toys,boxes&contents.AuctioneerCompanywww.selfstorageauction.comTheSalewillendat10:00AM, September21,2022.Therundatesare9/5/2022and9/12/2022.Goodsmustbepaidin cashatsiteandremovedatcompletionofsale.Saleissubjecttocancellationinthe eventofsettlementbetweenownerandobligatedparty. 9/5, 9/12/22 CNS-3617873# THEDAILYREPUBLIC DR#00057362 Published:September5,12,2022

NOTICEOFPUBLICSALEOF

DR#00057258 Published Aug.22,29,Sept.5,2022

NEOUSMISCELLASERVICES

Game of the Day: Ace of the Month/Low Putts There was a tie for Ace of the Month: Sharon David and Barb Bellamy both had a net 70. Three chip-ins: Lynn Traver had two on holes 8 and 18.Diane Scholz on holeJackie9. Evans was closest to the pin on hole 2 at 9’ 4”. Broke 100: Thea Rock, 97; Mitch Ybarra, 96. Flight 1: 7 players First Place: Thea Rock, 33 putts Second Place: Marsha Berry, 35 putts Third Place Tie: Mitch Ybarra and Denise Sargent-Natour, 37 putts Flight 2: 8 players First Place: Jackie Evans, 31 putts Second Place: Barb Bellamy, 32 putts Third Place Tie: Lynn Traver, Diane Scholz and Loretta Orten blad, 35 putts Flight 3: 7 players First Place: Sharon David, 34 putts Second Place Tie: Jan Benner, Cathy Warr and Paula Davis, 35 putts Flight 4: 7 players First Place: Darl McCarthy, 34 putts Second Place Tie: JoAnne Smith and Lynn Grace: 37 putts Niners Game: Sweeps 1st Flight 7-12, Net 1st, Mona Begell, 29 2nd, Genny Lopez, 34* 3rd, Ann Rollin, 34* 2nd Flight 14 - 16, Net 1st, Kay Bone, 21 2nd, Rene Romiski, 29 3rd, Barb James, 30* 4th, Kim Weaver, 30* 5th, Chris Robertson, 30* 3rd FLIGHT 17 -20, Net 1st, Megan Kramer, 24 2nd, Jodene Nolan, 29 3rd, Linda Perry, 30 4th, Marge Tye, 31 5th, Julie Smith, 32 4th FLIGHT 21 - 23, Net 1st, Judy Horan, 30 2nd, Barb Rigdon, 32 3rd, Shirley Helmich, 35* 4th, Liz Dykstra, 35* 5th, Pat Alvestad, 39 5th FLIGHT 24 - 25, Net 1st, Becky Ramirez , 29 2nd, Terri Denton, 34 3rd, Shirley Morris, 39 4th, Willa Sheppard, 41 Birdies Mona Begell, No. 14 Nine Arounders Game: Sweeps. Here are the winners. First Flight 15 - 17 1st, Genny Lopez, 50/33 2nd,Deb Baker, 56/41 3rd, Kitty Lockwood, 59/42 4th, Rene Romiski, 60/43 Second Flight 18 - 21 1st, Stephanie Adams, 55/36 2nd, Sandy Austin, 55/37 3rd, Barbara James, 59/38 4th, Kim Weaver, 65/44 Paradise Valley Women’s Golf Club

LA UPDATE:UREANO It appears outfielder Ramón Lau reano will return this week after a short rehab assignment with Low-ALaureano,Stockton. on the injured list since Aug. 15 with a strained left oblique, was 2-for-8 with two singles in his first two games with Stockton since the rehab assign ment began Thursday. He played right field Sat urday after a day off and went 0-for-4, and was slated to be the Ports’ designated hitter Sunday night in their game with San Jose.

record slipped to 3-9. Perhaps this is an opportunity for Kapri elian to rediscover his mojo after he went 8-5 last season with a 4.07 ERA. Plus, the A’s could use some bullpen reinforcement with Zach Jackson out for at least another week or so with right shoulder inflammation.Oakland had two blown saves Thursday in its 7-5, 10-inning loss to the Washington Nationals, and had four blown saves in their last 14 games before Sunday. The A’s bullpen before Sunday had the third-highest opponents’ OPS in the American LeagueKaprielian(.713). warmed up in the late innings but didn’t enter the game as A.J. Puk worked a scoreless ninth. The A’s took a 1-0 lead in the second inning on a Sheldon Neuse single that scored Brown from second base on a headfirstAfterslide.

Phillies starter Ranger Suarez. Wilmer Flores’ first-inning double was the only ball off their bats that reached the out field, until Wade poked a single into left that scored Davis for the first run of the inning.

Game: Best Nine 1st Flight: 1st: Claudia Archer, net 32.5 2nd: Jackie Smith, net 33 3rd: Darlene Goodman, net 34 4th: Lisa Hoekwater, net 34.5 2nd Flight: 1st: Oksun Parrott, net 35 2nd: Sandy Handel, net 35.5 3rd: Vicky Flandi, net 36 4th: Joan McCluskey, net 36.5 3rd Flight: 1st: Kim Greer, net 33.5 2nd: Lisa Finnegan, net 33.5 3rd: Rita May, net 34.5 4th: Joan Dominguez, net 36 4th Fight: 1st: Karen Moore, net 34 2nd: Debbie Dahl, net 34.5 3rd: Henrie Newland, net 35 4th: Becky Carroll, net 36 Closest to the Pin, #8: 1st: Kathryn Houk, 19’1” 2nd: Darlene Goodman, 34’1” Closest to the Pin, #10: 1st: Elaine Hahn at 1’8” 2nd: Oksun Parrott at 1’8-1/2” BIRDIES: Jackie Smith, #2 CHIP-INS: Jackye Harbert, #10 Karen Moore, #13 Joan McCluskey, #11

CALENDAR

• ITF, U.S. Open, quarterfinals, ESPN, 4 p.m.

Game: Odds or Evens Low Gross: Lisa Hoekwater 89 Low Net: Terri Cameron 70 First Flight: Terri Cameron, 1st Jody Knight, 2nd Second Flight: Berly Bridges 1st Mary Johnsen 2nd Closest to the Pin: Terri Cameron #8 47’1’’ Terri Cameron #15 6’1’’ Birdies: Terri Cameron #15 Chip Ins: Jody Knight #15 (Birdie) Rio Vista Women’s Golf Association

• MLB, Atlanta at Oakland, NBCSCA, 6:30 p.m.

SPORTS DAILY REPUBLIC — Monday, September 5, 2022 B7 5-day forecast for Fairfield-Suisun CityWeatherSun and Moon Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset New First Qtr. Full Sept. 25 Sept. 3 Sept. 10 Source: U.S. Naval Observatory WednesdayTuesdayToday FridayThursdayTonight110 Sunny then haze 11372|69 106|71 108|72 103|66 HotHot HotHotMostly clear Rio 113Vista | 112Davis74 |75 112Dixon |75 114Vacaville |80 109Benicia |109Concord69 | 110Walnut72Creek |72 90Oakland |65 San Francisco 85|62San Mateo 95|64 Palo Alto 96|70 San Jose 101|73 100Vallejo |67 Richmond90 |62 00Napa |00 Santa Rosa 104|68 Fairfield/Suisun City 110|72 forecastRegional Shown is today’s tonight’stoday’sTemperaturesweather.arehighsandlows. Bocce Fairfield FederationBocce Summer League Standings As of TuesdaySeptember-1AMLeagueWL Pts Do It Again 29 16 465 Plan B 27 21 477 Bocce Friends 27 18 444 Capitani 17 28 385 No Mercy 14 31 313 Tuesday PM LeagueWLPts The Untouchables 38 10 520 Bocce Buddies 26 19 475 La Bocce Vita 26 25 468 New Bee’s 23 25 437 Casino Royal 20 25 410 Slow Rollers #1 16 29 390 Bells & Beaus 16 32 380 Wednesday AMWLeagueLPts Sons & Daughters 39 18 611 Bocce Bulldogs 33 24 553 Roll’Em 28 26 489 Holey Rollers 27 27 480 Oh Sugar 23 34 467 Andiamo Amici 18 39 432 Thursday AM LeagueWLPts What If 42 12 593 Red Devils 37 20 592 Bocce Cruisers 37 20 552 Mama’s & Papa’s 29 28 534 Real McCoys 19 38 435 Slow Rollers #2 4 50 260 Tuesday AM Weekly Results Bocce Friends 2, No Mercy 1 Do It Again 2, Plan B 1 Capitani Bye Tuesday PM Weekly Results Rollers #1 2, Bells & Beaus 1 New Bee’s 3, Bocce Buddies 0 Untouchables 3, La Bocce Vita 0 Casino Royal Bye Wed. AM Weekly Results Bulldogs 2, Holey Rollers 1 Sons & Daughters 3, Oh Sugar 0 Roll’Em 3, Andiamo Amici 0 Thursday AM Weekly Results Cruisers 2, Slow Rollers #2 1 Red Devils 2, Real McCoys 1 What If 3, Mama’s & Papa’s 0 Golf Rancho Women’sSolanoGolfClub

Monday’s TV sports Baseball • MLB, San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, NBCSBA, 7p.m. Football • College, Clemson at Georgia Tech, ESPN, 5 p.m. Motor Sports • NHRA, U.S. Nationals, 2, 40, 11 a.m. Tennis • ITF, U.S. Open, Round of 16, ESPN, 8 a.m. • ITF, U.S. Open, Round of 16, ESPN2, 4 p.m.

Scoreboard didn’t ever doubt what needed to get done. In that way, it keeps you focused. You can try to convince yourself the job is not as much as it really is, and that’s a “Treymistake.can’tdo enough. If he takes the team to the Super Bowl and loses, oh well,“Ifarggh.Jimmy is a problem, it kind of speaks to the ability to do the job. He doesn’t seem like it’s bugging him and I would say hallelujah, because if it does, we have a problem. I’m not gleen ing through and seeing someone, ‘Oh crap, now how do I deal with this in the locker room?’ The truth is that Trey’s job in the locker room is not that different. Yeah there are guys that like Jimmy and guys will moan if Trey struggles. Whether Jimmy is there or not … “To get the job done, it doesn’t matter who’s sitting there. Jimmy is not going to play defense against you. All he can be is a mentor and help. There’s the emotional, the noise and the media, and if that keeps you from doing the job … “The job, how do I put it, it’s like climbing Everest. It’s for experts only. ‘Oh, Sir Edmund Hillary is sitting in the tent with me. I still have to climb Everest. It doesn’t matter.’ “It helps because Jimmy is not toxic per sonality, and if Trey needs help, he can ask him.

“Trey needs to see that he’s in the perfect situa tion, with a mentor around him, an incredible, inno vative offense, and a Super Bowl-ready team, (that) ‘This is everything I could ever ask for to see how good I could get.’ “I would ask Trey one question: Do you want to see how good you can get? If he can deep down say he’s willing to take the risk, then there’s no better place than this, right now.”

The SteveJoe-vs.-parallel

Young and Montana coexisted on the 49ers from 1987-92 en route to their spots in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The Garop polo-Lance dynamic obviously doesn’t offer such sterling credentials, yet. Young knows what they’re in for, however.

BASEBALL

tradeGaroppolo’soption Garoppolo’s revised contract includes a notrade clause, and while he could waive that if an alluring opportunity arose, the 49ers have the power to keep him, at a $6.5 million base salary.

Young: “The 49ers now have you exactly where they want you – as a backup. They love it, as part of their push for a Super Bowl. Now that’s it’s played out this way, for the 49ers, it would take a really bigger offer before the trade deadline to take him away from right where they want him to “Everyonebe.” knew in end Jimmy had the right to be asked to be cut. You knew Jimmy had control of his destiny, and if cut, someone would give him a chance to start. The shock is that didn’t happen. Now the 49ers have the perfect scenario: They have Jimmy as a backup and it will take a lot to trade“Whathim.”are we asking (Lance) to do? We’re asking to take an NFL franchise with a Super Bowl-ready roster and Super Bowl-ready coach ing staff to the Super Bowl. You ask that of a 35-year-old and that is a heady job description. You’re here. Let’s go. We can parse it all you want. The job is right in front of you and it’s an incredibly difficult one for anybody, as proven through ages in time. Very few people can do this “Thejob.idea you might fail at this job is kind of a given. By definition, it’s very rare. You’ve got to attack and believe you can go do it. If you think it’s going to get easier, this incredibly difficult job, is somehow easier if Jimmy somewhere else, then you don’t understand the job. “Is it harder now? More difficult? It’s already a death-defying job.” On advising Lance Young crossed paths with Lance during the offseason at the 49ers’ facility and is always willing to serve as a mentor. But not in a proactiveYoung:way.“I’ve been careful not to (contact him). I reached out in the summer and will reach out before the start of year. The last thing, ‘Oh yeah, Steve is going to make this better . . . “He knows I’m very willing to take any resource to give him, and he knows to ask at a drop of the hat. There’s no need for me to affirmatively try to bug him. “I guarantee you if Trey had a question, Jimmy would not turn his back on it. Trey has a resource.“Ihope Trey goes to Jimmy, I hope he comes to me, goes to John and Kyle. We all want to help him do this nearly impossible job.”

Local scores

• MLB, San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, NBCSBA, 7 p.m. Basketball • WNBA Playoffs, Chicago vs. Connecticut, ESPN2, 5 p.m. Soccer • FIFA, Nigeria vs. U.S., International Friendly, ESPN2, 3 p.m. Tennis • ITF, U.S. Open, quarterfinals, ESPN, 9 a.m.

Langeliers’ two-RBI single in the third inning, Brown hit his first home run in the sixth inning off Orioles starter Spenser Watkins. Brown’s second homer, in the eighth inning off Nick Vespi, traveled 397 feet and wound up on Eutaw Street behind the right field wall. Brown snapped a 25-game homerless drought and now has a team-high 19 home runs this season. His last homer before Sunday came Aug. 7 against the“MartinezGiants. threw really, really well, and (the Orioles) have a lot of arms in the bullpen,” Brown said. “Putting a good game together against those guys is def initely a good feeling.”

Saturday’s Games SAN FRANCISCO 5, Phila. 4 Baltimore 8, OAKLAND 1 Boston 5, Texas 3 Kansas City 12, Detroit 2 Tampa Bay 2, N.Y. Yankees 1 Toronto 4, Pittsburgh 1 Colorado at Cincinnati, Postponed Washington 7, N.Y. Mets 1 Seattle 4, Cleveland 0 Chicago White Sox 13, Minnesota 0 St. Louis 8, Chicago Cubs 4 Atlanta 2, Miami 1 Milwaukee 8, Arizona 6 L.A. Angels 2, Houston 1 L.A. Dodgers 12, San Diego 1 Sunday’s Games OAKLAND 5, Baltimore 0 SAN FRANCISCO 5, Phila. 3 Toronto 4, Pittsburgh 3 Boston 5, Texas 2 Atlanta 7, Miami 1 N.Y. Yankees 2, Tampa Bay 1 Colorado 8, Cincinnati 4, Game 1 Cincinnati 10, Colorado 0, Game 2 Kansas City 3, Detroit 2 Washington 7, N.Y. Mets 1 Minnesota 5, Chicago White Sox 1 St. Louis 2, Chicago Cubs 0 Seattle at Cleveland (n) Houston 9, L.A. Angels 1 Arizona 5, Milwaukee 1 San Diego at L.A. Dodgers (n) Monday’s Games SAN FRANCISCO at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Pittsburgh, 9:35 a.m. Toronto at Baltimore, 10:05 a.m., first game Toronto at Baltimore, TBD, second game Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 1:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Colorado, 1:10 p.m. Washington at St. Louis, 1:15 p.m. Arizona at San Diego, 3:40 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Seattle, 3:40 p.m. Texas at Houston, 4:10 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Detroit at L.A. Angels, 6:38 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Atlanta at OAKLAND, 6:40 p.m. SAN FRANCISCO at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Pittsburgh, 3:35 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 3:40 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 3:45 p.m. Toronto at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 4:40 p.m. Washington at St. Louis, 4:45 p.m. Texas at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. Detroit at L.A. Angels, 6:38 p.m. Arizona at San Diego, 6:40 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Seattle, 6:40 p.m.

Young From Page B1 Giants From Page B1 A’s From Page B1

Notable The Giants added more upper-level depth with a waiver claim on Sunday. They added util ityman Jose Rojas after he was designated for assignment by the Angels. Rojas, 29, has seen action at every infield spot but short stop and both corner outfield positions and has a batting line of .277/.344/.524 across four Triple-A seasons but only a .542 mark in limited MLB action. He also has an option remaining after this year, meaning the Giants can cycle him between their bench and Triple-A Sacramento next season if they choose. To make room on the 40-man roster, Brandon Belt was transferred to the 60-day injured list. Belt, 34, had successful knee surgery on Saturday and won’t play again this season.

Tuesday’s TV sports Baseball • MLB, Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, TBS, 4 p.m.

Young: “When Joe was hurt, he’s sitting on the sideline, and every mistake you make, every one turns and says, ‘Well, Joe wouldn’t do that.’ It can drive you crazy, or it’s super important you see the truth, that this is an incredible opportu nity so don’t get distracted by all the noise, the whis pers in the locker room, the issues with the media, the boos you start to hear after a couple of picks, starting slow and every one wonders, ‘Are we going to play Jimmy? Let’s play“There’sJimmy.’ a level of performance that’s nec essary. You have to have the discipline to not see it, ortherwise you can be driven to distraction.” Most laymen see the situation and go, “Oh! Trouble! Trouble! I don’t want that guy spying on me, talking behind my back.” Laymen would say it’s a disaster, when the truth is if you really step back, it’s an incredible opportunity.

B8 Monday, September 5, 2022 — DAILY REPUBLIC

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