Billionaires want to build a new city in rural California. They must convince voters first

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By Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Silicon Valley billionaires behind a secretive $800 million land-buying spree in Northern California have finally released some details about their plans for a new green city, but they still must win over skeptical voters and local leaders.

After years of ducking scrutiny, Jan Sramek, the former Goldman Sachs trader spearheading the effort, launched a website Thursday about “California Forever.” The site billed the project as “a chance for a new community, good paying local jobs, solar farms, and open space” in Solano, a rural county between San Francisco and Sacramento that is now home to 450,000 people.
He also began meeting with key politicians representing the area who have been trying unsuccessfully for years to find out who was behind the mysterious Flannery Associates LLC as it bought up huge swaths of land, making it the largest single landholder in the county.

An all-star roster of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and venture capitalists are backing the project, including philanthropist Laurene Powell Jobs, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, and venture capitalist Marc Andreessen. The New York Times first reported on the group’s investors and plans.

California Forever, the parent company of Flannery, has purchased more than 78 square miles (202 square kilometers) of farmland in Solano County since 2018, largely in the southeastern portion of the county, with parcels stretching from Fairfield to Rio Vista. According to the website, Sramek fell in love with the area over fishing trips and he and his wife recently purchased a home in the county for their growing family.

The project issued a poll to residents last month to gauge support for “a new city with tens of thousands of new homes,” solar energy farm and new parks funded entirely by the private sector.
But to build anything resembling a city on what is now farmland, the group must first convince Solano County voters to approve a ballot initiative to allow for urban uses on that land, a protection that has been in place since 1984. Local and federal officials still have questions about the group’s intentions.

Two area congressmen who sought for years to find out whether foreign adversaries or investors were behind the buying spree around a U.S. Air Force base vital to national security and the local economy are furious that Flannery kept its identity hidden for so long. The website say 97% of its funding is from U.S. investors and the rest are from the United Kingdom and Ireland.
“The FBI, the Department of Treasury, everyone has been doing work trying to figure out who these people are,” U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson, who represents much of the county, said this week after meeting with Sramek. “Their secrecy has caused a lot of problems, a lot of time, and a lot of expense.”

The investment group said secrecy was required until enough land was purchased, in order to avoid short-term speculation, but that it is now ready to hear from Solano households via a mailed survey and creation of a community advisory board. Past surveys showed parents were most concerned about their children’s future, the website said.
“Instead of watching our kids leave, we have the opportunity to build a new community that attracts new employers, creates good paying local jobs, builds homes in walkable neighborhoods, leads in environment stewardship, and fuels a growing tax base to serve the county at large,” it said.

California is in dire need of more housing, especially affordable homes for teachers, firefighters, service and hospitality workers. But cities and counties can’t figure out where to build as established neighborhoods argue against new homes that they say would congest their roads and spoil their quiet way of life.
In many ways, Solano County is ideal for development. It is 60 miles (96 kilometers) northeast of San Francisco and 35 miles (56 kilometers) southwest of California’s capital city of Sacramento. Solano County homes are among the most affordable in the San Francisco Bay Area, with a median sales price of $600,000 last month.

But Princess Washington, mayor pro tempore of Suisun City, said residents deliberately decided to protect open space and keep the area around Travis Air Force Base free of encroachment given its significance.
She’s suspicious that the group’s real purpose is “to create a city for the elite” under the guise of more housing.
“Economic blight is everywhere. So why do you need to spend upwards of a billion dollars to create a brand new city when you have all these other things that can be achieved throughout the Bay Area?” she said.

Flannery further infuriated locals in May when it sued several landowners in court, accusing them of conspiring to fix prices for their properties. The company disclosed it had purchased or was under contract to buy about 140 properties for more than $800 million.
Then last week, residents began receiving a push poll gauging voter support for “a major new project” that would include “a new city with tens of thousands of new homes.” The poll asked if they would be more likely to support the project if county residents were given priority and financial assistance to lease or purchase one of the new homes.

Thompson, the congressman, was unimpressed after meeting with Sramek, saying that the developer was vague on details and failed to display an understanding or appreciation of the county or its values.
Asked how he would help residents finance new homes, Thompson said Sramek told him he planned to use “all of his knowledge as a finance guy” to generate savings. Development in California is convoluted, but Thompson said Sramek told him they’re hoping for expedited permitting “because their project is so good and their intentions are so great.”
“He doesn’t have a plan, he’s not there yet,” Thompson said.

U.S. Rep. John Garamendi, whose district includes Travis and immediate areas around it, said base and county officials reached out roughly five years ago for help in figuring out who was buying up land. Garamendi, who is scheduled to meet with Sramek Friday, was appalled to learn who was backing the project.
“You big wealthy Silicon Valley billionaires, you’re party to all of this. This is the kind of people you are? This is how you want to operate?” he said. “What they’ve managed to do is to totally poison the well.”

Hoffman and Andreessen did not respond to emailed requests for comment, nor did Jobs through her business Emerson Collective.

Project developers said they will protect the military base and farmers who want to keep farming on their parcels can do so.

Flannery has purchased virtually all the land surrounding the small city of Rio Vista, said Mayor Ron Kott.
He suspects older people who make up half of the city’s 10,000 residents won’t appreciate the added congestion and noise, but others might like the improved medical care, nightlife and shopping that a sophisticated city nearby might bring.
“If it’s done correctly, I think there’s a lot of opportunities for the county. Their tax revenue base will increase quite a bit. So there’s going to be a big windfall from that. Property values would probably go up around here as well even further. And so I think from those perspectives it’s good,” Kott said.
“But again, I think you’re giving up a quality of lifestyle that’s kind of unique to this area.”
 
On one hand, this is terrible for the environment and will probably hurt the economy in some way.
On the other hand, it'll be a money sink for the California elite and its spectacular failure will be really really funny.

So I'm all for it. I would also like to propose an Anti-Fascist Protective Wall to keep all those pesky transphobes out.
 
Be funny if they went completely mask off with the whole thing AND THEN got the buy in they need.

"Yeah, we're making our own city. Its gonna have no crime, no open drug use, and great schools cause we are gonna not allow any black/hispanic people in (except as low income labor) and even if they do get to live here we are gonna have a totalitarian police department that will throw out any one that cause problems.

Or you can live in current day San Fran."

Basically go full New York Giuliani.
 
This is that 15 minute city slave shit.
Urgh. They’re trying very hard to bring that in here. Not ‘let’s build local amenities for you’ but ‘let’s divide the city into wedges and fine you if you leave.’
I hope they try it. I hope they have to live in what they build. I hope it bankrupts them.
Needs a name. It’s a hub. Maybe Hub-ris would do?
 
Keep Silicon Valley the fuck out of Northern California.

Northern California is an unspoiled, beautiful region with good old-fashioned conservative values. Rather than become an extension of Silicon Valley, which singlehandedly has done more to destroy California than even the Democrats have, the people of Northern California would like to secede from the state and form a new state. Can't say I blame them one bit. Their needs have been ignored for decades as they pay taxes through the nose that go to fund projects like transing the kids and freeing felons. The last thing they want is those same morons building a city to dominate Northern politics.
 
“a chance for a new community, good paying local jobs, solar farms, and open space”
They already have a community, good paying jobs, solar farms, and open space. Solano county has been a bedroom community for Bay Area for the last 30 years. People live there rather than SF because they don't want to be surrounded by techie faggots.
The website say 97% of its funding is from U.S. investors and the rest are from the United Kingdom and Ireland.
If that's true then release a full list. You won't because a good chunk of those investors are chinks and sandniggers.
“Instead of watching our kids leave, we have the opportunity to build a new community that attracts new employers, creates good paying local jobs,
The kids leave because they don't want to raise their kids in liberal insanity, not because of lack of jobs. They leave because of clogged infrastructure and cost of utilities, which will become worse with more building.
Their tax revenue base will increase quite a bit.
I-80 is a parking lot between Sacramento and SF because so many people are commuting already. Water is costly and gets rationed most years because the water infrastructure wasn't meant to serve the current massive population. The aging electric grid causes fires every few years, Fairfield has come close to being the next Santa Rosa a few times. Not too mention the intentional rolling blackouts, because again the infrastructure is old and not designed for the current population.

If Solano was able to increase is tax base, it would have done so already. The demand for housing in the area is massive. Houses get a dozen offers, all over asking, the first day on the market. Because of infrastructure issues they can't, not to mention NIMBYs, regulations, and the cost of building.

@Dutch Courage
Solano is already full of Silicon Valley faggots, it's been a bedroom community for the Bay Area for decades. The southern part of Yolo is already infested thanks to UC Davis and commuters. They have been slowly crawling north for a while.
 
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They had plans for this in Troononto Canada but I think it fell by the wayside. They were going to use old factory lands on the lakeshore to build a yuppie mini city with SMART features (basically surveillance). I guess they didn’t realize when you dump a bunch of refugees into a city to erase the wypipo; the support for a yuppieville will dwindle. Maybe this will happen in Cali too.
 
They released a PR post about their plan:

Starting a conversation about eastern Solano County​

A chance for a new community, good paying local jobs,​

solar farms, and open space​

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Solano County sits at the crossroads of Northern California. Nestled between Sacramento, the Delta, San Francisco, and Napa Valley, Solano perfectly captures the diversity of California’s landscapes and its people. It is the home of agriculture and green energy industries that sustainably feed and power our state, strong middle-class communities, and our nation’s busiest Air Force base. Eastern Solano County is also an area ready for a new community. We’re excited to tell our story.

California Forever is the parent company of Flannery Associates. Over the last few years, Flannery has purchased over 50,000 acres in Solano County. To date, our company has been quiet about our activities. This has, understandably, created interest, concern, and speculation. Now that we're no longer limited by confidentiality, we are eager to begin a conversation about the future of Solano County – a conversation with all of you. Like much of our state, Solano County faces many challenges - but also presents countless opportunities. Over the past few years, we have completed surveys and interviews with about 2,000 residents of Solano County and your voices were clear. Residents want more opportunities to buy homes in safe, walkable communities. Good paying local jobs, so they can both live and work in the county. Better funding to improve schools, promote public safety, and reduce homelessness, as well as resources to invest in infrastructure for transportation, water, and wildfire protection.

Last month, 81% of Solano parents we surveyed said that their kids won’t be able to find a future in their own neighborhood when they grow up.​


These challenges often have separate, unrelated causes. But they could share a common solution. Instead of watching our kids leave, we have the opportunity to build a new community that attracts new employers, creates good paying local jobs, builds homes in walkable neighborhoods, leads in environment stewardship, and fuels a growing tax base to serve the county at large. And, Solano has the right location for a project like this in the eastern part of the county.

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The area today.

This is not just our idea. In the past, when preparing long-range plans for the Bay Area, the Association of Bay Area Governments ("Regional Plan 1970-1990") and the U.S. Department of Commerce ("Future Development of the San Francisco Bay Area, 1960-2020") both concluded that to keep our region affordable, prosperous, and balanced, new industries and communities could be built in eastern Solano. The area had low fire risk, access to water, and was strategically located in the middle of the larger Northern California region. All that remains true today.


Let’s dust off those plans,​

and breathe new life into them.​



California Forever was founded in 2017 by our CEO, Jan Sramek. After moving to California a decade ago, Jan spent time in Solano County during fishing trips on the California Delta and fell in love with the area. Having previously lived in many of the world’s most walkable, livable, and sustainable towns and cities, Jan became interested in fusing what he learned about those livable communities with those old plans for eastern Solano. He became committed to a vision for the future of Solano County. Jan and his wife Naytri recently purchased their first-ever home in Solano, and they are excited to live here with their toddler daughter, her soon-to-arrive little brother, and golden retriever Bruce.

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This idea of building a new community and economic opportunity in eastern Solano seemed impossible on the surface, but after spending a lot of time learning about Solano and its people, Jan became convinced that with a thoughtful design, the right long-term patient investors, and strong partnerships with all stakeholders, there would be an opportunity to build a remarkable place for Solano residents, both current and the many generations to come.

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To make sure we could do this right, our company raised capital from people who shared our long-term vision and belief that California’s best days are still ahead. Investors in California Forever include Marc Andreessen, Patrick and John Collison, Chris Dixon, John Doerr, Nat Friedman, Daniel Gross, Reid Hoffman, Michael Moritz, Laurene Powell Jobs, and the California investment firm Andreessen Horowitz. Our company is committed to Solano and this project for the long term.

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Over the past few years, we have purchased over 50,000 acres in eastern Solano County, between Fairfield and Rio Vista. California Forever owns about half of the properties in this area. Other landowners own the remaining half. Our project would not change the zoning of other landowners’ properties – they would remain zoned for agriculture, and those landowners would be able to continue their agricultural operations. In addition, on our lands, the project would include a variety of land uses – a new community, but also solar farms and open space, including both agriculture and habitat conservation. Our project would protect and support Travis Air Force Base, including by respecting Solano County’s official Travis Reserve Area, which is a security buffer for the protection of Travis Air Force base established by Solano County in its General Plan, and subsequently clarified through a recent ordinance.

We have also assembled a team of experts to design this project in partnership with all of you. In doing so, we intentionally found people who are not only world-class, but also local to the Bay Area, with a deep connection to this area and a shared commitment to solving Northern California’s most important challenges. Our growing team includes Gabriel Metcalf, B.H. Bronson Johnson, Jay Primus, AKQA, Carlson, Barbee & Gibson, CMG Landscape Architecture, ENGEO, EKI Environment & Water, Holland & Knight, Fehr & Peers, Sitelab Urban Studio, and many others.

With the land and team assembled, we are excited to finally close this first chapter and begin the phase of our work that matters most: our conversation with you.

Next, a conversation​

This is the beginning of our decades-long collaboration with Solano’s residents, elected officials and agencies, as well as the many Solano stakeholders, including Travis Air Force Base, labor, business, agriculture, educators, police, fire, conservation, and many others.

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To start, we are meeting with the elected representatives of Solano County. Second, so that we hear from each of you directly, we will be mailing a survey to every Solano household. Third, we are forming a Community Advisory Board of Solano citizens. Please send any nominations to community@californiaforever.com. Finally, we are working on opening offices in Vallejo, Fairfield and Vacaville, and will announce the locations once open. Visit us in person.

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This is a project that must be not just designed with, but also approved by, all Solano residents. Solano County’s Orderly Growth Measure directs development into cities, and asks that new projects outside of cities be submitted to the voters for approval. We fully support these principles, and we will ultimately ask the voters to approve the project. The Orderly Growth Measure is the right approach to safeguard Solano, including our project, from sprawl and disorderly growth for many years to come.

California was built on its pioneering spirit, its boundless optimism, and the utter conviction that if we work hard, and together, that our best days still lie ahead, waiting to be built, for our children, and their children, and for all the generations to come. California Forever is committed to building a place that embodies these ideals. Join us.

Design principles​

Ultimately, this is about practical ways to improve the day-to-day lives of the people who already, or will one day, live in Solano County. We are committed to five principles about what to build, and what to protect based on our conversations with the people of Solano.​

Create good paying local jobs, and paths to get those jobs, for Solano’s residents. image-design-05.6b5d5e88_b34y9.jpg

This project can bring new employers to Solano, and independently create thousands of permanent, good-paying local jobs in construction, energy, services, and other industries. We are also interested in building trade schools and other educational paths that help Solano residents learn the skills they need to get those new jobs and build long-lasting careers

Build walkable neighborhoods and new paths to homeownership. image-design-01.6b4e8df9_Z1PexIv.jpg

Our goal is to build homes of different sizes and price points integrated in the same walkable neighborhoods, with homes, shopping, dining, and schools all within walking distance. We are also interested in exploring new paths to homeownership for Solano residents through down-payment assistance programs and other solutions

Help solve regional infrastructure needs, including energy, transportation, water, and wildfire protection. image-design-03.0cce54f4_Z1dOI1F.jpg

Eastern Solano benefits from existing transmission lines that could make it possible to build a large solar farm that creates hundreds of jobs and accelerates California’s transition to clean energy. Improvements to Highway 12 could make it safer and less congested. The North Bay Aqueduct needs major upgrades to deliver cleaner and more reliable water to over 400,000 people in Solano and Napa counties. Solano’s rural fire districts need more money to keep communities safe from wildfires. We cannot solve any of these issues on our own, but we want to be part of larger regional solutions.

Protect and support Travis Air Force Base. image-design-04.ed7b1606_168z4i.jpg

Travis Air Force Base is critical to both our national security and to Solano County. We fully support its mission and always will. For example, when California Water Service and Travis were building a new water pipeline to Travis in 2021 and asked us to sell them a right of way for the pipeline, we immediately offered to donate the right of way for free instead. We are just beginning our dialogue with Travis about the right safeguards, but we are committed to respecting its boundaries both on the ground and in the air. We also hope to work with the Air Force in other ways, including by helping provide homes to base personnel, and training and career options for veterans.

Protect Solano’s open space and prime agricultural lands. image-design-02.70ad598a_ZWbROS.jpg

Solano County has a long history of city-centered growth. We believe building a compact community away from prime agricultural lands, surrounded by open space, is the best way to achieve that objective. Many nearby landowners are committed to agriculture, and have told us they do not want to sell or develop their properties. Their properties will, along with some of our properties, form this agricultural green belt around the new community.

Frequently Asked Questions​

What is California Forever?​

California Forever is a company founded in 2017. Our Founder & CEO is Jan Sramek. Our investors include Marc Andreessen, Patrick and John Collison, Chris Dixon, John Doerr, Nat Friedman, Daniel Gross, Reid Hoffman, Michael Moritz, Laurene Powell Jobs, and the California investment firm Andreessen Horowitz. Approximately 97% of our capital comes from U.S. investors. The remaining 3% comes from Patrick and John Collison, and other UK and Irish investors.

What’s the relationship between California Forever and Flannery Associates?​

California Forever is a parent company of Flannery Associates.

Why did you operate in stealth mode for so long? Why did you need to buy so much land?​

We knew that to build a complete, sustainable community, we would need to assemble a large holding. The only way to avoid creating a rush of reckless short-term land speculation was to not share our specific plans until we finished acquiring the properties. We are now excited to move on to the real work of building a thoughtful and consensus-minded plan for eastern Solano.

Will this impact the operations of Travis Air Force Base?​

No. Any project we may propose in Eastern Solano County, and that County residents may elect to support, would protect and support Travis Air Force Base, including compliance with requirements enacted by Solano County for the Travis Reserve Area. We are committed to working closely with the Air Force to make certain that we protect and support the base. The City of Fairfield’s eastern neighborhoods are only 0.8 miles and the One Lake neighborhood currently under construction is only 0.7 miles from the base. Any proposed project neighborhood would be located further away from Travis than these communities.

How does this project affect agriculture in eastern Solano?​

Our investments have not reduced agricultural production in this area. All of our properties continue being leased to local farmers and ranchers, and continue being used for agriculture. If a potential project is approved, over several years, land that may currently be used for grazing in the area would be developed. Grazing would be maintained in large portions of eastern Solano County, including within permanent agricultural preserves that would be created by the project.

What about fire risk?​

State law requires that moderate, high, and very high fire hazard severity zones be identified by the State and each County. No part of the entire area between Fairfield and Rio Vista has been designated as moderate, high, or very high fire zone in the current Solano County fire hazard severity zone map.

Any approved project will provide new fire protection services, including state of the art equipment and new fire response personnel to meet all applicable fire protection standards for the project and other communities in the county.

What about water?​

There is no path to building a new town without securing adequate water supplies. We anticipate that water for an approved project would consist of multiple sources that we have obtained or that will be more fully developed.

We hope to contribute towards water supply and quality enhancements that benefit the entire county, including necessary upgrades to water supplies drawn from the North Bay Aqueduct just north of the project area. The aqueduct currently supplies drinking water for over 500,000 people in Solano and Napa counties but has recently been identified as having “the poorest drinking water quality in the State Water Project” (source). Plans have long been proposed to upgrade the aqueduct and deliver cleaner and more reliable water, but major im provements have not yet been made. We cannot, of course, solve a multi-county drinking water supply problem on our own, but we want to be part of a larger solution to bring clean and reliable water to existing cities as well as our project.

How will highways and other transportation services be affected?​

We also know that many in the local community already want to see infrastructure as such Highway 12 improved, in order to improve safety, prevent deadly accidents, and improve the interface between the highway and existing communities. We believe that our project can help improve existing regional roadway and public transit services and create capacity for new growth.

How will the California Delta and Suisun Marsh be affected?​

Strong environmental stewardship is essential to our planning. Open space and ecological habitats are absolutely essential to the health and well-being of our environment and ourselves. Our goal is to build a compact community that avoids and protects the most sensitive habitat. Any approved project will comply with all applicable requirements for protecting the Suisun Marsh and Delta areas.

Will there be a vote on this?​

Yes. Solano County’s Orderly Growth Measure directs development into cities, and that new projects outside of cities be submitted to the voters for approval. We fully support these principles, and we will ultimately ask the voters to approve any proposed project. We believe the Orderly Growth Measure, most recently reaffirmed by Solano voters in 2008, is the right approach to safeguard Solano County, including our project, from sprawl and disorderly growth for many years to come.

How do I give feedback or get involved?​

We will be working closely with the community and opening local offices soon. In the meantime, you can reach us through our contact form. Or, email us at contact@californiaforever.com.
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Airbnb originally could have fairly inexpensive rentals allowing them to rival hotel chains, but eventually people had to raise their prices primarily because the low prices attracted low class bullshit like shootings or people wrecking the place.

So the idea of safe and low cost housing doesn't quite compute as low cost housing attracts low class people that commit more crime. Thing is the people behind it will probably notice all the problems like this and end up just making a bunch of mixed-use apartment buildings clustered together (shops/entertainment on bottom with apartments up top) and imagine they've invented the wheel.
 
They released a PR post about their plan:
They want to build a new city with Hwy 12 being the only major artery in or out? That's insane. For those of you who don't live North of Hell, 12 is a 2 lane (occasionally 4 lane) hwy that has a nearly perpetual traffic jam. If there's an accident, it can take residents of Rio Linda hours to get home. This happens regularly.

Also that area is part of the San Joaquin-Sacramento river delta. It's a flood plain full of marshes, creeks, wetlands, and a river. Rio Linda regularly floods every few years and it's considered a high risk flood area. One of the biggest floods in the state's history happened there.

All those marshes, creeks, and wetlands are full of protected species and there are laws about keeping and restoring the natural wetlands in the Delta. Some of this is because of environmentalists, but a big reason is to help reduce flooding upriver in places like Sacramento. It's incredibly unlikely this could pass an environmental impact study. Even if they grease lots of palms and get it past all the bureaucracy, I can't see insurers, who are pulling out of California faster than I pull out of the fat chick I brought home from the bar, actually insuring any of the new development. Jan Sramek and his investors are either total morons or this is some kind of scam.
 
How? These people will refuse to build public transit or affordable housing.
The whole plan is to build dense affordable housing with public transit for the plebs to live in. Read the PR piece I posted.

They want to live in single family houses and drive cars, though:
“Subject line: IMMENSELY AGAINST multifamily development!” the email from the Andreessens to the council read.

“I am writing this letter to communicate our IMMENSE objection to the creation of multifamily overlay zones in Atherton…Please IMMEDIATELY REMOVE all multifamily overlay zoning projects from the Housing Element which will be submitted to the state in July,” the couple wrote.

“They will MASSIVELY decrease our home values, the quality of life of ourselves and our neighbors and IMMENSELY increase the noise pollution and traffic.”
Source
(Marc Andreessen is one of the investors in this new city)
 
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