Bill Buchanan

Davisville

Davis has interesting people, ideas, connections, and events. On Davisville, host Bill Buchanan presents stories that have some connection to Davis. The program has won 17 Excellence in Journalism awards from the San Francisco Press Club since 2018, including first place in radio/podcast public affairs programs for 2025, plus a national Hometown Media Award for excellence from the Alliance for Community Media in 2024, and first place nationwide in news/public affairs programs among small stations from the Public Media Journalists Association in 2026. Contact: davisville @ dcn.org

Author

Bill Buchanan

Category

Uncategorized

Podcast website

kdrt.org

Latest episode

Jun 30, 2026

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Episodes

Davisville, June 29, 2026: Measure V, unsafely dark streets, a lovely place to live, and other opinions of Davis 30.06.2026

Today we talk with two accomplished people at different stages of life about their experiences of Davis: Ken Wagstaff, a former mayor who moved here in the 1960s, and Adithi Sumitran, who just graduated from UC Davis and heads to law school at UC Berkeley this fall. The subjects include Davis, the recent defeat of the Measure V housing measure, and what they think the community needs more of, and...

Davisville, June 15, 2026: House prices are rising, and it’s a good year for renters in Davis 16.06.2026

2026 is a pretty good year for renters in Davis. The city’s vacancy rate has continued to grow, to around 10 percent, says real estate professional Kit Boschken on today’s Davisville . Rents are down from last year. Parts of the market are shifting, she adds— students are less interested in sharing a large house as a place to live, and students coming out of campus housing want leases that start i...

Davisville, June 1, 2026: In bike town Davis, e-devices have altered traffic safety 02.06.2026

Almost anyone listening today is likely to have an opinion about the topic — namely, how well are bicycles, powered scooters, e-bikes, vehicles and pedestrians co-existing in Davis? In terms of safety, courtesy, observing the rules … and what are the current laws for powered scooters and bikes? Probably not what you think, and the Legislature is looking at changing them. Two people have been hit a...

Davisville, May 18, 2026: Adding homes in Davis that more young families could afford 19.05.2026

Today on Davisville we talk with two of the five people who recently wrote “A Long-Term Pragmatic Plan for a Livable and Sustainable Davis.” Don’t let the dry title dissuade you — the article is clear, light on jargon, usefully specific, and all about Davis. Their ideas include developing denser homes along transit corridors in Davis, including along Anderson Road (pictured) , over several decades...

Davisville, May 4, 2026: Dating by painting at the Arts Center 05.05.2026

There are lots of ways to get to know someone you like, lots of ways to date. What if your outing consisted of you painting pictures together with your friend, partner, perhaps prospective spouse? Call it a paint date. The Davis Arts Center offers a Paint Date workshop as one of its events this spring, on May 16. It’s a clever idea for getting people to think about taking up a paint brush in front...

Davisville, April 20, 2026: Look closer before deciding to close any Davis school, skeptics urge 21.04.2026

With enrollment in Davis schools declining, the Davis school district is looking at shutting at least one elementary school. So far, two concepts have emerged — to close Patwin and possibly also Birch Lane — and to move programs and shift attendance boundaries. The School Board expects to decide in spring 2027, with any closure starting in fall 2028.  Colleen Zern, a local attorney and UC Davis le...

Davisville, April 6, 2026: New plan to build Davis economy talks about student influence, poor customer service, more 07.04.2026

The new economic development strategic plan for Davis might be an obscure document, but its pages include interesting goals for Davis and observations about the city, such as insights into how college students shape the city’s economy. Today on Davisville we talk about the plan with Katie Yancey, the city’s economic development director since 2024. Customer service is a core concern. She wonders i...

Davisville, March 23, 2026: Insights from decades of reporting overseas … plus Americans tolerate too many chatbots 24.03.2026

Pat McDowell (pictured) grew up in Northern California. I worked with him at the Fairfield newspaper 40 years ago before his career took him all over the world, working for the Associated Press, Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg. The experience helped shape his views on journalism, on how well Americans know the rest of the world, and how the United States has changed. We talk about this, plus one...

Davisville, March 9, 2026: Yolo’s news picture starts looking a little brighter 11.03.2026

After years of dwindling news coverage in Yolo County, two regional news outlets — the Sacramento Bee and Abridged , a news source started by Sacramento public TV station KVIE in 2025 — have each launched free Yolo weekly newsletters this year, using stories written by journalists assigned to cover the county. Today we talk with one of the reporters, Daniel Hennessy of Abridged , about how he find...

Davisville, Feb. 23, 2026: From gray walls at MIT to colors in California 27.02.2026

Davis architect Maria Ogrydziak, whose designs include the Davis Food Co-op building (pictured) on G Street downtown, was born in Stockholm to Estonian parents, lived in Taiwan for two years while growing up, and began to make her mark as an architect when she recreated a gray classroom at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology — her alma mater — “to be more exciting, more inspiring.” Architect...

Davisville, Feb. 9, 2026: Think of homes in Davis in the 2030s and ’40s — what do you see? 10.02.2026

Davis is updating its General Plan, which is meant to guide Davis’ physical development as a community through 2050. The update is a classic, easy-to-overlook civic project that works better when more people know about it and add their ideas about what they want for Davis. The Davis Community Action Network, a local nonprofit, has spent the last couple of years meeting with people in Davis and Yol...

Davisville, Jan. 26, 2026: You have four weeks to make a short movie. On your mark … 27.01.2026

One of the new events in Davis for 2026 is a competition, led by a Davis marine biologist whose awards include an Emmy for his camera work, that’s open to anyone willing to make a short movie during the next month. The film must include a Davis-centric prompt to be announced this Wednesday, Jan. 28, and run no longer than 7 minutes. You’ll have about 4 weeks to get it all done. The goal of the Dav...

Davisville, Jan. 12, 2026: With research cuts, ‘this is what you’re giving up’ 13.01.2026

The Trump administration’s deep cuts to federal spending on university research have prompted Ed Kiggins, who leads communications for the UC Davis College of Letters and Science, to start the Minds Over Matters podcast highlighting research at UC Davis. Every two weeks, he talks with a different UC Davis faculty member about their work and why it matters. “Think about reducing Alzheimer’s from a...

Davisville, Dec. 29, 2025: Three ideas about Davis 30.12.2025

The turn of the year is a natural time to step outside the usual stream of events, and that’s what we do today. We asked three previous guests of Davisville to each offer an observation about Davis as 2026 begins — something they like about the town, or would change, or think is misunderstood or overlooked. Their choices could be serious, light or anything in between.  On today’s program you’ll he...

Davisville, Dec. 15, 2025: Crest movie palace focuses on its next era 16.12.2025

The Crest movie theater in downtown Sacramento has changed its mix of attractions several times during its long history — the vaudeville-era graffiti near the top of the curtains is one sign of that — and owner Bob Emerick has begun to revise the mix yet again.  Emerick, who bought the theater in 2011 and resumed managing it this year, says it’s still possible to run a movie palace like the Crest...

Davisville, Dec. 1, 2025: The silver lining is the public’s response 02.12.2025

It’s been a strange year for food relief, marked most recently by the sporadic suspension of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) aid during the federal government shutdown this fall. Today on Davisville we talk with two people deeply involved in different areas of Davis food relief: Liane Moody, executive director of the Short Term Emergency Aid Committee, and Max Morgan from the Davi...

Davisville, Nov. 17, 2025: Davis critic Derrick Bang sizes up 2025’s year-end movies 18.11.2025

Today we enjoy Davisville’s annual fall movie show in which Davis film critic Derrick Bang (pictured at KDRT on Nov. 16) tells us about movies he’s looking forward to as 2025 ends, plus ones he’ll dodge if he sees them sauntering his way. Unless they’re playing in Davis, in which case he feels obliged to review them as the hometown critic. We also talk about why major movies are trending longer, d...

Davisville, Nov. 3, 2025: Yolo Local news and information project takes another step forward 04.11.2025

Yolo Local, an emerging Davis Media Access project to create a new place for local information and news -- with the goal of countering the decline of local news outlets -- has wrapped up several months of conversations and research to learn more about what people in Yolo County want and need. This fall the project published a  report  with insights and ideas, and early next year they'll start usin...

Davisville, Oct. 20, 2025: Explorit might have found a way back 21.10.2025

The Explorit Science Center in Davis, which suspended operations this year after the death of a major donor, has begun to form plans for how it might return. It has a $50,000 pledge from one of its founding families — the nonprofit started in 1982 —  and, says Explorit board President Ken Kaplan, a rough-draft idea for the center to evolve into an “education hub” focusing on science, nature and te...

Davisville, Oct. 6, 2025: When you’re feeling stressed, amber light can help you feel better 07.10.2025

With all the anxiety loose in the land, this discovery is timely and practical: Amber lighting reduces your stress. That’s the gist of recent research at the University of California at Davis that touches on psychology as well as lighting and design, and today on Davisville we talk with two of the people involved in the work: Sreenivasan Meyyappan, an assistant project scientist in the Center for...

Davisville, Sept. 22, 2025: Useful but dull information + humor = attention 23.09.2025

You’ve got information. People need to hear it. It’s useful ... and it’s dull. This circumstance is a common problem for people who work in communications, such as today’s guest, Mark Deamer. One way to draw the disinterested is humor, if you get the balance right, which is why we open this week with Floppy and Cow . They’re a couple of screwball characters — well, Cow is deeper than that — that M...

Davisville, Sept. 8, 2025: We talk with Benjy Egel, food editor for Abridged, a major new source of regional news 09.09.2025

Greater Sacramento will gain a promising new source of news and information when Abridged, part of Sacramento public TV station KVIE, officially debuts on Sept. 16. Benjy Egel (pictured), who grew up in Davis and formerly wrote about food for the Sacramento Bee , is Abridged’s senior food editor, and he describes the new journalism project today on Davisville . The venture employs several journali...

Davisville, Aug. 25, 2025: About 7 percent of rentals in Davis are vacant, says broker, who sees lower rents in '26 26.08.2025

About 7 percent, and maybe as much as 10 percent, of rentals in Davis are currently vacant, says Davis real estate broker and manager Kit Boschken on this week’s Davisville . That's highly unusual for Davis, especially in August. The rate was under 1 percent a few years ago. Why is the rate this high now? Kit lists several reasons on today’s program, where she’s joined by her husband Steve and the...

Davisville, Aug. 18, 2025: Remembering an important book by the late Davis journalist, Joel Davis 19.08.2025

This interview was recorded in January 2013 Few journalists have had as much impact in Davis as Joel Davis, who died in April at 62. In 2005 he wrote his book Justice Waits about the kidnapping and murders of two UC Davis students, John Riggins and Sabrina Gonsalves, in December 1980. His book helped sustain interest in solving the crime, ending in the conviction of Richard Hirschfield for first-d...

Davisville, Aug. 4, 2025: ‘I want him (Guaraldi) to become one of our Tchaikovskys’ 05.08.2025

Vince Guaraldi’s music continues to have a wonderful afterlife, thanks to the successful recent releases of the Peanuts soundtracks that Guaraldi recorded before he died at 47 in 1976. Today we update the story with Derrick Bang, who wrote the book about the San Francisco jazz pianist and writes liner notes for the Peanuts soundtrack producers Jason and Sean Mendelson . Bang believes there’s likel...

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