Mountain View
Sacramento News & Review
Equity in the Capital: Trish Kelly and Sam Greenlee on the gap between ‘agricultural abundance’ and hunger in Sacramento
Does it ever cross your mind how the food you eat gets to your plate? Getting produce and more from farms to stores is one part of the journey. How fresh food gets to people who need it is another — and both are part of a larger conversation about food system equity.
Citrus Heights completes its first affordable housing project in two decades
Citrus Heights’ first affordable housing development in 20 years now sits on what used to be a vacant Christmas tree lot. Sunrise Pointe Apartments was completed and fully leased by June of 2023, with an official grand opening at the start of this year. The development provides 46 units of permanent supportive housing to 144 residents, including 85 children, according to Jamboree Housing, which co-owns the complex.
Big Tech cheers as A.I. gets better at gaslighting America
A couple of months ago, newsrooms began discovering that the algorithm for Google News is now boosting articles that are plagiarized by Artificial Intelligence bots – and Google is boosting them in its search results above the work of flesh-and-blood journalists who broke the stories in the first place, not to mention the reporting outlets who paid for all that labor.
Soul Project creates paths for Sacramento-area youth in the solar industry
Dariyn Choates came to Sacramento from Monterey County’s Seaside on a full-ride scholarship to play football for Sacramento State from 2016 to 2019. After graduating with a degree in sociology, he went into the solar industry, eventually starting his own company. Choates described getting into the solar industry by...
A legend’s story: Apple TV+’s two-part documentary on Steve Martin is a gem
What an excellent idea — a Steve Martin documentary told in two parts, entitled “Then” and “Now,” covering two very important periods in the man’s legendary career. Both parts are directed by Morgan Neville. “Then” is basically Martin’s origin story, covering his days as...
Breakthrough Sacramento celebrates 30 years of education
Maricela, a 7th grade student at the Language Academy of Sacramento, said she feels more prepared for school each year because of the tutoring and educational experience she receives through Breakthrough Sacramento, a six-year college preparatory program for middle and high school students. “Over the summer, I took one of...
Quality of Life
For 25 years, Rahim Opeyany has been a voice for those unable to speak for themselves. As a Deputy Conservator with the County of Sacramento, he is responsible for ensuring the safety and dignity of clients under his care, all of whom struggle to care for themselves. “Conservatorship actually saves...
Serving the future at the Sacramento Youth Center
Raquel Shipp said that throughout the years she has often struggled to find a space for her three young children to play sports or participate in art classes. She found that she had to leave her North Sacramento neighborhood in order to access these kinds of enrichment activities. She envisioned...
Economist Michael Reich on why California fast-food wages can rise without job losses and higher prices
A tight labor market and local minimum wages that are already close to the new $20 minimum are among the reasons. This story is produced by the award-winning journalism nonprofit Capital & Main and co-published here with permission. California on April 1 raised the minimum wage to $20 an hour...
Equity in the Capital: Kacey Lizon and Kendra Macias Reed on transportation equity and what it takes to get from point A to everywhere else
We can see how Sacramento gets to work. We get to school, we get to the grocery store, or conversely, we have the groceries get to us, and on and on and on, innumerable examples. Ubiquitous doesn’t begin to describe the need for transportation in this country, in this region.
Adult school leaders rose to save their programs in 2014, will they do it again
When Luma Dadwood left Iraq for safer living in the United States, she said she “left everything behind.”. “I felt shy and lonely and had no friends,” she said. After enrolling her children in school, she learned about Corona-Norco Adult School and enrolled in the English as a Second Language (ESL) program, and then signed up for a Career Technical Education. She is now working for that same school as a paraeducator and community assistant, and helps other adult students find employment.
Here’s to the freaks
On the advice of SN&R’s publisher, I just read the new book “The Freaks Came Out to Write: The Definitive History of The Village Voice, the Radical Paper that Changed American Culture.”. It’s the saga of a now-diminished institution, complied by Tricia Romano, a former “Voice” columnist who...
Growing pains: Folsom’s population has risen at more than triple the rate of Sacramento’s since ‘South of 50’ broke ground
Since Folsom voted to annex 3,500 acres of land in 2004, the city has grown dramatically – and many long-time residents are unhappy about it, saying it creates traffic problems and environmental concerns. After a unanimous vote by city leaders 20 years ago, Measure W was passed to annex...
Nurses union says state watchdog does not adequately investigate staffing crisis
The California Department of Public Health says the agency is enforcing state requirements, despite deep budget cuts. This story is produced by the award-winning journalism nonprofit Capital & Main and co-published here with permission. Pediatric nurses at the UC Davis Medical Center say they are in the midst of a...
Advocates assert that sweeps of Sacramento’s homeless camps hinder the ability to provide healthcare
At least 227 people died on Sacramento County’s streets in 2023, despite increased spending to address homelessness. Advocates say that limited access to healthcare remains a serious challenge that can prove fatal to the vulnerable unhoused population. They also argue that a continued focus on enforcing laws against street camping may be making the problem worse, calling on city leaders to provide more “safe ground” and focus on prevention tactics.
Essay: Repealing Prop. 47 is a misguided battle cry. It won’t make California safer
Fourteen years ago, my younger brother, Vinnie Edwards, was fatally shot as he left football practice at his college. Six years later, another brother, Vaughn Edwards, was also murdered. He was shot in his car in a random attack while leaving a Juneteenth celebration with his pregnant girlfriend and daughter.
Arts & Culture Summit coming to the Capital City
Passionate artists, arts organizations, supporters, and advocates will descend upon the capital city on April 16 and 17 to highlight why arts are essential to both local communities and the state of California. This will be the second year that California for the Arts will hold its CA Arts &...
Panelists advocate for mixed-use development strategies and eliminating vacancies in Downtown Sacramento revitalization effort
Housing, homelessness and safety identified as areas of focus during “Suds & Solutions” event. Experts and community members convened at Touchstone Brewing Company for Solving Sacramento’s “Suds & Solutions” talk on revitalizing downtown Sacramento in a post-pandemic economy, on Wednesday evening, March 27. Housing, homelessness...
Conductor Timothy Myers discusses his upcoming night with the Sacramento Philharmonic on April 6
The Sacramento Philharmonic is continuing to showcase some of the most able musicians that the area has to offer, and lately doing so at ticket prices that any tax bracket can probably afford. For those looking for a perfect entry point into classical music, this weekend’s program couldn’t be more...
California insurance market ‘in chaos,’ says former insurance chief. Can this chief fix it?
With more California homeowners just discovering their insurance policies are getting canceled — and hundreds of thousands of others stuck with a pricey option of last resort — state Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara’s efforts to fix the home insurance market can’t come quickly enough. Lara has...
Sacramento News & Review
2K+
Posts
2M+
Views
The Sacramento News & Review is an award-winning alt-weekly publication providing local news, arts and entertainment coverage of the Greater Sacramento area.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.