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By Sharan Street
Published Oct 30, 2023

Image credit: Beloborod, Shutterstock

Truck or Treat! A Halloween Grab Bag

Greetings, and happy Samhain—a Celtic tradition that’s aligned with two of California’s favorite holidays: Halloween and Dia de los Muertos. The kickoff to winter, Samhain was the night when ancient Celts believed that the veil between the living and the dead was especially porous. In modern times, it’s the portal to the holiday season, when seasonal spending really kicks into high gear.

A few fun financial facts show that while Halloween can’t compete with “Santa’s big day” for sheer volume of consumer spending, it’s no small potatoes (metaphor chosen to honor the Irish immigrants who brought Halloween to the United States).

Consolidated Credit reports that 87 percent of Americans plan to celebrate Halloween this year.

• According to the National Retail Federation, “Total Halloween spending is expected to reach a record $12.2 billion, exceeding last year’s record of $10.6 billion.”

CapitalOne Shopping research tallies show the “average American has a $108.24 budget for Halloween 2023 supplies, such as costumes and candy.”

• The most popular sweet treat in the Golden State? CandyStore.com says that M&Ms are this year’s winner, followed by Reese’s Cups and Skittles.

• The U.S. Census gets into the holiday spirit with a “spooky 16” list of place names, including Casper, Kill Devil Hills, and Slaughter Town. 

WalletHub reports that “57% of Americans say they would consider purchasing a haunted house to live in (but only 18% would pay full market value for it).”


From Rush to Bust

Speaking of haunted houses, here at California Local we’re marking Fright Night with a list of 10 of the most interesting ghost towns in our state, compiled by California Local reporter Graham Womack, an enthusiast of abandoned mining towns, boarded-up stagecoach stops and other relics of the Golden State’s civic history. There’s nothing like contemplating the eerie remnants of Bodie, where 8,000 souls labored to extracted more than $38 million in gold and silver in the late 19th century (more like $85 million in today’s dollars).


Explore the Past in 10 California Ghost Towns

A state park since 1962, Bodie is one of California’s best-known ghost towns. Read about nine more below.
It’s happened more than 300 times in the state’s history: a once-bustling town is abandoned, leaving behind ramshackle houses, crumbling roads and forlorn tableaux.

Logistics Go Boom

California’s past may have been built on extractive industries such as mining for ore and drilling for oil, but this century many fortunes have been made in the field of logistics. A term taken originally from the military, the industry encompasses all aspects of the “supply chain,” a term that was batted around a lot during the pandemic—when some links in the chain broke down.

In our state, as California Local’s Jonathan Vankin reports, “the ‘trade, transportation and utilities’ sector—which encompasses the core of supply chain logistics—is the second-largest industry in the state, accounting for 14.5 percent of GDP.” In his explainer on how the industry works, Vankin looks at the darker side of this sector of the economy, which enriches many at a great cost to the residents of the Inland Empire and the San Joaquin Valley.

These days we’re all treated to a plethora of products, available at the drop of a mouse. Last-minute Halloween costume? No problem—there’s one-day delivery. But these treats come with a trick for those along the pathways of modern logistics: diesel particulate matter swirling in the air, highways snarled by big rigs, and valuable agricultural land lost beneath sprawling warehouses.


Logistics: the Crucial Industry You’ve Never Heard Of

Warehouse storage is just one aspect of the highly complex logistics industry that keeps supply chains running.
Logistics is one of the largest industries in California and keeps the state economy running. But it also comes with a heavy cost to the environment. Here are the facts on the most important industry you don't know much about, but should.


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(10/29/2023) → CapPublicRadio

• Heat Waves Harm Bird Reproduction on Ag Lands

A team of UC Davis researchers found that birds nesting near farmland were half as likely to have at least one fledgling successfully leave the nest when temperatures spiked. However, forests seemed to provide a protective buffer against high temperatures.

(10/28/2023) → Daily Democrat

• Hasan Minhaj Issues Rebuttal to New Yorker Article

A video released by comic Hasan Minhaj, who grew up in Davis, tackles elements of a critical article that left the impression he had made up or exaggerated racism in his life.

(10/27/2023) → CapPublicRadio

• Embattled Sacramento Councilman Sean Loloee Will Not Seek Re-election

Sacramento City Councilman Sean Loloee will not seek re-election to his North Sacramento seat. Loloee, whose grocery stores and homes were raided by federal agents, told state Sen. Angelique Ashby that he would not seek re-election next year, Ashby said.

(10/27/2023) → Read the full The Sacramento Bee report

• How to Get a Permit to Cut Down a Christmas Tree in Northern California

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(10/25/2023) → CapPublicRadio

• Inside a Sacramento Resident’s Fight to Save a Giant Tree

Susan Christian lives in the Boulevard Park section of midtown. She loves trees, especially the over 100-year-old American elm that towers 70 feet above her house on 22nd Street. But in August the city deemed the tree a safety hazard and said it had to come down.

(10/24/2023) → Read the full The Sacramento Bee report

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(10/30/2023) → CalMatters

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Prison Policy Initiative released a new report that delves into the sheer magnitude of criminalization in the U.S., where reliance on incarceration outpaces most of the globe.

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(10/26/2023) → YubaNet

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• California Joins States Suing Meta

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(10/24/2023) → CapPublicRadio

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(10/24/2023) → Grist

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(10/23/2023) → Read the full report