Memo to California's Next Governor: Rural Places Matter
Briefly

Memo to California's Next Governor: Rural Places Matter
Del Monte’s closure of a peach cannery in Modesto eliminated 600 full-time and 1,200 seasonal jobs and left 70 growers without a buyer for contracted peach production. The town’s unemployment rate rose to 7.4%, underscoring the severity of rural economic shocks. Despite multiple gubernatorial debates, farming and other rural issues were largely absent, including energy and water demands from large data centers, right-to-repair farm equipment, and declines in manufacturing, fishing, and logging. Rural Californians and Native communities lacking safe drinking water were also not raised. Trade schools and apprenticeship pathways for rural youth were not mentioned, and the Save Our Bacon Act targeting Proposition 12 received no attention.
"On April 7, Del Monte shuttered a peach cannery in Modesto, a town in California's Central Valley. It was the company's last remaining factory in California, and its closure left 600 full-time and 1,200 seasonal employees suddenly out of work and 70 growers without a buyer for their contracted 50,000 tons of peaches. In a town with a 7.4% unemployment rate, the plant closure was a gut punch."
"Across all those debates, one or more of the seven Democrats and Republicans on the stage might have brought up Modesto's plight as emblematic of the economic challenges that California's rural communities face. Democrats, in particular, should have welcomed the opportunity to chip away at Republicans' rural dominance, following in the footsteps of the DCCC's new rural outreach program. But that's not what happened."
"There was zero discussion of farming or other rural issues, such as energy-and-water-sucking hyperscale data centers, the right-to-repair farm equipment, and the decline of manufacturing, fishing, and logging. There was no mention of the 735,000 rural Californians and 13 Native American reservations that lack safe drinking water. A few candidates called for free college, but no one mentioned trade schools or apprenticeship programs that provide vital pathways for rural youth."
"There was also no discussion about the Save Our Bacon Act, which was passed by the US House shortly before the May 5 and 6 debates. The act takes direct aim at California's Proposition 12, which bans the sale of products from inhumanely confined animals. Prop 12 was endorsed by the United Farmworkers and the Center for Food Safety alongside numerous animal welfare organizations."
Read at The Nation
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