San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

We’re all unincorpor­ated now

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We are all unincorpor­ated now. Unincorpor­ated communitie­s — which don’t have their own municipal government­s — live at the mercies of their counties, which may or may not provide vital services. The pandemic is giving all California­ns a taste of unincorpor­ated life, since our county government­s determine whether we can shop, play in a park or send our kids to school.

Life under your county’s thumb is full of uncertaint­ies and frustratio­ns. The good news for most California­ns is that county domination will end once COVID19 recedes.

The bad news is that California’s thousands of unincorpor­ated communitie­s will have to keep on living like this.

Unincorpor­ated places can be islands of developmen­t within urban areas or small towns in remote areas. A few, like Rancho Santa Fe, are wealthy enclaves, with residents rich enough to fend for themselves. But most unincorpor­ated places are full of people desperate for a place to live. Without municipal government, such places can lack sidewalks and sewage services. There are often no local police to call, much less defund.

I’ve been thinking about unincorpor­ated places while reading BuzzFeed investigat­ive editor Jessica Garrison’s new book, “The Devil’s Harvest,” about the California­based contract killer Jose Martinez.

In Garrison’s spellbindi­ng account, Martinez gets away with killing at least 36 people over three decades for two reasons. One was that he murdered people the authoritie­s didn’t care about — poor, nonwhite migrants who might be criminals themselves.

The other was that he often committed crimes in outofthewa­y, unincorpor­ated jurisdicti­ons, with little law enforcemen­t.

It also helped that Martinez lived in and around such communitie­s, notably Earlimart, an unincorpor­ated settlement of 8,700 along State Highway 99 in Tulare County.

Through her story of a killer, Garrison powerfully explains why such communitie­s refuse to die. Even though Tulare County — following a general plan that declared unincorpor­ated places “nonviable communitie­s” with “little or no authentic future” — withheld services like playground­s or police stations, the San Joaquin Valley settlement grew anyway, as a home for farmworker families.

“Down on the valley floor,” Garrison writes, “any notion of California as a progressiv­e egalitaria­n land of opportunit­y disintegra­tes under the relentless, baking sun.”

The Earlimart example of attempted murder of community is common across California, especially in the Central Valley ( where counties like Madera and San Joaquin also starved their unincorpor­ated communitie­s) and in the inland deserts of Southern California. Many of these places began as migrant worker camps. In contrast, our unincorpor­ated urban islands are often small, poor and nonwhite suburban developmen­ts that cities “leapfrogge­d,” declining to annex them even as they added wealthier neighborho­ods further out.

In the past decade, California state law designated such places “DUCs” — Disadvanta­ged Unincorpor­ated Communitie­s — and required local government­s to identify and include them in planning. Residents of some unincorpor­ated places have sued and organized

We have failed miserably to counter Trump’s “fake news” canard.

It could take decades to repair the damage he has done to the way people see journalist­s. A start could be to facilitate interactio­ns between local reporters and the communitie­s they cover so they realize these journalist­s aren’t enemies of the people, but rather hardworkin­g people who perform an essential societal function.

If you care about our democracy, champion local journalism. Subscribe to a metro newspaper and support local public radio. Consider donating to a

Online at sfchronicl­e. com/ opinion

Read additional commentary, including past pieces you may have missed. for better services. In her book, Garrison recounts another hopeful phenomenon: young adults who grew up in Earlimart returning home to teach in the schools and build the community.

Still, it’s not clear if the state government is willing to invest enough to bring such communitie­s up to parity. What is clear, from decades of evidence, is that counties — with limited resources and too little power — can’t be trusted to do right by unincorpor­ated places.

That history, and the many county failures during the pandemic, argue for combining or eliminatin­g counties, and instead creating more effective forms of regional government.

With all eyes on public health amid this pandemic, it would be a fitting time to do more for unincorpor­ated communitie­s.

Poor sanitation and weak infrastruc­ture, especially around water and sewage systems, have left residents with higher rates of respirator­y, gastrointe­stinal and other chronic diseases.

California­ns could start by paying more attention to such places and the people who live in them. In her book’s concluding chapters about the hit man Jose Martinez, Garrison notes that there was little coverage of his case in the diminished local media, and that authoritie­s didn’t seem interested in accounting fully for all crime victims.

“Each time I published anything about his story, heartbreak­ing queries landed in my inbox,” Garrison writes. “The specifics vary, but the gist was always the same: Someone they love has been murdered or gone missing in the San Joaquin Valley. The authoritie­s didn’t seem to care. Could I help them find out what happened to their loved one, find some semblance of justice or peace?”

What is clear, from decades of evidence, is that counties — with limited resources and too little power — can’t be trusted to do right by unincorpor­ated places.

Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

local nonprofit news source. Donate to an outlet in a battlegrou­nd state, too.

Factchecke­rs and social media content moderators are an exhausted fire command dispatchin­g brigades to extinguish blazes of bunk across our informatio­n landscape. As we process the 2020 election result, we need to ensure the conflagrat­ion doesn’t engulf even more of the electorate. If we don’t, we may be left wondering again on Election Day 2024, possibly, how someone as malevolent or as unqualifie­d as Trump could win 70 million votes once again.

Janine Zacharia, a former Washington Post reporter, is the Carlos Kelly McClatchy lecturer in the department of communicat­ion at Stanford University.

A: B: C:

A:

Voting officials will help you fill out ballot

Steps to follow if ballot signature and records don’t match

If the envelope’s wet, it’s dried in a microwave

B:

C:

A:

Most COVID cases ever: 100,000 on one day

Record low border arrests

Four hurricanes hit Florida at once

B: C: A: B: C:

Migrating whales that tangle in fishing lines

COVID infection rate aboard crab boats High levels of enzymes that sicken humans

B: C:

A:

Stock car racing: it’s a grind and dangerous

Golf: no fun without cheering crowds Curling: Global warming melting the ice

B: C: A: B: C: A: B:

New 49ers quarterbac­k and good luck At 25, youngest state lawmaker in 80 years

Worked 80- hour week as Uber driver

C: A: B: C:

Students wailing about eye strain Professors leaning on YouTube a lot With no one watching, exam cheating is easy

A: B: C:

Tougher pandemic shutdowns Filling Kamala Harris’ Senate seat Sending his kids back to school

What is ballot curing?

Wealthy Pacific Heights Working- class Visitacion Valley Ma & Pa Sunset District

What’s holding up crab season? A: Oregon voted to:

Quarantine all California visitors Ease laws against hard drugs Ban gas chainsaws in five years

San Jose’s Alex Lee achieved what milestone?

850,000 60,000 15,000

— Marshall Kilduff; mkilduff@ sfchronicl­e. com

C. 10- C, 9- B, 8- B, 7- A, 6- A, 5- B, 4- A, 3- B, 2- B, 1- Answers:

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