10 MONTEREY COUNTY WEEKLY NOVEMBER 27-DECEMBER 3, 2025 www.montereycountynow.com NEWS On Nov. 18, Salinas City Council approved allocating $620,000 to increase lighting in East Salinas with a goal of reducing prostitution and human trafficking in the area. It’s an issue that residents report worsened after California decriminalized loitering for the purpose of prostitution in 2023. Lisa Brinton, Salinas’ community development director, told the council it won’t be an overnight fix. “This is really a deterrent. It is a step toward making the neighborhood feel more safe,” Brinton said. Residents have organized a protest and attended council meetings to bring attention to this matter and demand a solution. In response, the Salinas Police Department increased its presence in the area and city departments began working together toward a recommendation. In addition to the lighting, staff proposed adding no-parking areas and investigating if food trucks were a contributing factor. Residents rejected both ideas, saying they would have negative impacts and they don’t think there is a link between vendors and prostitution. (Council adopted lighting improvements, not changes to parking or food trucks.) In addition, city officials will install nine cameras at intersections, at a cost of $94,234. That includes $840 for the first year of operations; future operations costs will be covered by Salinas PD. Salinas Police Sgt. Zachary Dunagan notes calls reporting suspected prostitution have increased since the law changed. He says 24/7 surveillance and lighting could contribute to reducing illegal activity. “Increased visibility, surveillance cameras will not necessarily completely get rid of any problem, but it will help,” Dunagan says. Human Cost Salinas City Council approves $620,000 to combat prostitution and human trafficking. By Celia Jiménez On Aug. 5, Arable Capital Partners, a private investment firm focused on food and agribusiness, announced that its company organicgirl had acquired Braga Fresh through a merger, followed by the acquisition of Dole Fresh Vegetables/Bud Antle, a former division of Dole plc. Less than four months later, Tim Stejskal, CEO of organicgirl, announced they would be closing the Braga Fresh processing facility in Spreckels, resulting in the loss of 260 jobs. “Employees have been informed,” Stejskal says in a statement. “Throughout the phase-out, the company is committed to working closely with them in an environment of respect, fairness and support.” Industry experts note that layoffs are often a result of consolidation, and consolidation in agriculture—both in the processing facility space and in farming—is part of a larger trend driven by market pressures. According to James Sayre, an assistant professor of cooperative extension, agricultural and resource economics at UC Davis, mergers may be necessary to survive by increasing profit margins that are notoriously razor-thin. Mergers also allow companies to further flex economies of scale and market power. Braga Fresh, which has historically handled a majority of the packaging and processing for grower Braga Ranch, could expand services to the other companies within the organicgirl portfolio. “It’s resilience,” Sayre adds. “Maybe they’re looking to expand their supply chain, to have a basin in the Central Coast.” Braga Ranch, a third-generation family-owned farm, manages over 20,000 acres of farmland in the Salinas Valley and Imperial Valley. Its main crops are leafy greens such as romaine, spinach and spring mix, as well as broccoli and cauliflower. Over three-quarters of the business is dedicated to organic production, sold under the flagship retail brand Josie’s Organics. Starting on Nov. 10, Braga’s processing plant in Spreckels began moving operations to other locations in the network, initially impacting about 21 employees. The next phase is anticipated mid-January 2026, followed by additional phases until a planned 2026 completion, according to Stejskal. “Bringing these companies together creates an exciting new chapter,” Rod Braga, president and CEO of Braga Fresh, said in a press release. “It allows us to continue offering exceptional value to our customers, expand opportunities for our worldclass grower partners, and support the growth and development of our talented employees.” Taylor Farms has also followed the consolidation trend in recent months. On Nov. 3, it announced plans to expand into the United Kingdom by acquiring Natures Way Foods, adding 1,300 new employees. In April, the company acquired FarmWise, a robotics company specializing in precision weeding. This comes six years after acquiring Earthbound Farm. “We’re excited to partner with Natures Way Foods and expand our global footprint,” Bruce Taylor, CEO of Taylor Farms, said in a statement. “Agriculture is becoming larger, farms are becoming larger. It’s harder to keep up if you’re a small farm,” Sayre says. “You’re not going to buy a laser weeder if you’re a one-acre farm.” According to the Agricultural Commissioner’s 2020 ranch map atlas, Braga Ranch farms over 6,000 acres in Monterey County. Above, CEO Rod Braga. Mergers and Shakers Recent acquisition and staff cuts at Braga Fresh reflect larger trends in the ag sector. By Katie Rodriguez Sex workers have been routinely observed in a residential Salinas neighborhood. A plan includes installing cameras at major intersections, including Roosevelt and King streets. “It’s harder to keep up if you’re a small farm.” NIC COURY DANIEL DREIFUSS
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