Category Archives: Featured

Sacramento Helps Eateries Re-Open

Sacramento has launched a new program called Farm to Fork Al Fresco to facilitate the reopening of restaurants for dining in.

The program allows restaurants to apply for a city permit to extend their dine-in service to public sidewalks, streets, and parking areas. This will enable restaurants to adhere to social distancing regulations and reach nearly 100% serving capacity.

Sacramento is showing ingenuity and flexibility to reopen restaurants.

Paragary’s in midtown Sacramento, for example, was one of the first eateries to apply and receive a permit. The city erected barriers on the sidewalk outside the shop and the owners have already set up tables and chairs.

This type of flexibility and accommodations are helping Sacramento’s restaurant scene get back to business.

Target’s Drive-up Offers To-Your-Car Delivery to Mobile App Users

Photo courtesy
Mike Kalasnik

Sacramentan’s lives are about to get even more convenient. Target announced that it is enlarging its parking lot pick-up service. When the upgrade is done, over 1100 stores nationwide, including more than a dozen Target stores in the Sacramento area.


Target is calling the new service “Drive-up.” It is a free service that lets shoppers pick up their purchases made from their mobile phone app without having to enter the store. Mobile app shoppers just pull up into designated spots, and within “two minutes” the item/items is/are delivered straight to your car.


Not everything is available for Drive-up service, however. Groceries, flowers, and alcohol will still require the buyer to enter the store for purchase.


The following stores in the Sacramento area offer Drive up service now:
• Arden
• Citrus Heights
• Elk Grove
• Folsom
• Rancho Cordova
• Auburn
• Lincoln
• Roseville (1925 Douglas Blvd.)
• Roseville North (10451 Fairway Drive)
• Rocklin
• Davis
• West Sacramento
• Woodland
• El Dorado Hills
• Fairfield
• Lodi
• Stockton (4707 Pacific Ave.)
• Stockton North (10424 Trinity Parkway)
• Vacaville
• Yuba City

Phantom Auto Comes to Sacramento

A car was filmed driving across Sacramento’s Tower Bridge, but it appears driverless.  In actual fact it was being driven by a human being but that human was not sitting in the driver’s seat or indeed anywhere in the car. They were driving it from the company’s headquarters at Phantom Auto’s Mountain View – more than 100 miles away!

This system is called teleoperation; which is the step before safe driving can be conducted autonomously on highways and city streets within all driving conditions.  So until that time – which experts purport is decades away – remote monitors and operators will be used by human beings and the wheel can be grabbed if the computer attached to the car gets stumped.  According to Elliot Katz, co-founder of Phantom Auto and Chief Strategy Officer:

“We believe you will always need a human in the loop. There are so many oddball scenarios multiple times a day.”

Until then, Phantom Auto will be showcasing what it has in Sacramento and locals will seecompany reps “geo-mapping” the roads from downtown to Sacramento State.

Enhancing Quality of Life in Sacramento

How do you go about enhancing your quality of life?  For 20-year-old Clay Stevens and 19-year-old Dylan Hill it’s simple: post signs up around the County with one question: “If you were given one year to live, how would you live it?” On the sign is the website: How Would You Live It, directing the public to an event on a documentary that is being shown at Crest Theatre on April 30.  They are trying to get people to “really just kind of take life and live it,” without sweating the small stuff. As well as enhancing people’s quality of life, Chris’s friends are trying to increase awareness about the importance of bone marrow donations which they did on another website by getting a further 10,000 individuals to join the bone marrow donor list.

On a smaller – but still important – level for making Sacramento a better place, a project is currently underway to clean up trash on the streets.  Given that the area has a large number of homeless, this is a continuing issue but this does not excuse the necessity to clean up our sidewalks.  Especially when one considers the consequences of not cleaning up and how that negatively impacts tourism, quality of life and even business.

Earlier this year a 6-month program called Better Way Anaheim was implemented in order to kill two birds with one stone as it were.  $60 gift cards (to be exchanged at grocery/department stores) were given to participating workers for every 5 hours they spent cleaning up city parks and painting trash cans.  Likewise, Downtown Streets Team provided funding for 25 homeless individuals to work four hours five days a week collecting trash around North Sacramento in return for gift cards for food/living expenses as well as housing assistance. This program was so popular that within less than 2 months there was already a waiting list of more than 12 people.

Both these cases are examples of taking bad and turning it into something good and having a positive impact on people’s quality of life.