logo
Foundational Bay Area Japanese restaurant closes after 35 years

Foundational Bay Area Japanese restaurant closes after 35 years

A seminal Bay Area Japanese restaurant has closed permanently after 35 years.
Hana Japanese Restaurant owner Emiko Tominaga announced the permanent closing of the Rohnert Park restaurant through a post on social media. She and son Kosuke have managed the restaurant for the past three years, following the death of the restaurant's original owner Ken Tominaga in 2022.
'We have worked hard for the past three years, but have decided to close Hana for the time being,' the message reads. 'I am sure Ken is also conveying his gratitude from heaven.'
The Santa Rosa Press-Democrat reported the space has been dormant since late December for renovations, with no timeline for a reopening.
Ken Tominaga opened the restaurant in 1990. He was said to be the first chef in Wine Country to offer high-end Japanese cuisine and sushi. The restaurant was a favorite among locals and workers in the culinary industry.
The restaurant will continue some capacity through popups, the post said. A Ramen Tomi popup is listed on the restaurant's website. It is planned for Aug. 18 at wine bar Maison in Healdsburg.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japanese auto giant aims to make Africa's richest country the hub of continental truck production
Japanese auto giant aims to make Africa's richest country the hub of continental truck production

Business Insider

timean hour ago

  • Business Insider

Japanese auto giant aims to make Africa's richest country the hub of continental truck production

The South African arm of Japanese automaker Isuzu Motors is positioning itself as a manufacturing hub for commercial trucks on the continent Isuzu Motors South Africa plans to become Africa's hub for truck manufacturing to boost production and local sourcing. The company conducts discussions with Japan to relocate more commercial truck production to South Africa. Isuzu is targeting West Africa for scaling up truck exports and aims for 45% production localisation. The South African arm of Japanese automaker Isuzu Motors is positioning itself as a manufacturing hub for commercial trucks on the continent, part of a strategy to boost production volumes and deepen the use of locally sourced parts. Billy Tom, President and CEO of Isuzu Motors South Africa, told Reuters that he has been in discussions with Japan regarding the relocation of more production to Africa. Isuzu has already run successful trials of locally building truck bodies, though it still imports some from China and the Middle East. While export volumes for trucks remain small, Isuzu already ships pickups to more than 30 countries in Africa. Tom said the company is targeting West Africa as a starting point for scaling up truck exports. Isuzu has set an ambitious target to grow its African production volumes to 45%, up from about 15% six years ago and the current 22–23%. South Africa's auto industry, home to seven major manufacturers including Volkswagen, Toyota, and Mercedes-Benz ( faces mounting pressure from surging vehicle imports, particularly from China. Low domestic sales of locally assembled cars, coupled with sluggish local content levels, have already forced 12 company closures and wiped out more than 4,000 jobs in the past two years, Trade Minister Parks Tau said. The country produced 515,850 vehicles in 2024, well below the South African Automotive Masterplan 2035 target of 784,509. Adding to the pressure, South Africa's vehicle exports to the U.S. have collapsed this year, plunging 73% in the first quarter and falling even further, 80% in April and 85% in May, industry data shows.

Adam Schiff paying just 3% mortgage on homes at center of mortgage fraud probe
Adam Schiff paying just 3% mortgage on homes at center of mortgage fraud probe

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

Adam Schiff paying just 3% mortgage on homes at center of mortgage fraud probe

Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) is paying just 3% on both his Maryland and California homes since refinancing his mortgages in 2020, even lower than the 5.625% rate at the center of a federal mortgage-fraud investigation against him, newly released documents reveal. The Department of Justice is accusing the junior senator from California of claiming two homes as primary residences for more than a decade – to score lower mortgage rates and property taxes. A grand jury in Maryland is currently weighing a criminal indictment against the former 12-term congressman. 5 Schiff, a 12-term congressman, is in his first term as a Senator of the Golden State. AP Advertisement The newly released annual financial documents show that even after Schiff finally designated his Potomac, Maryland property as a second home in 2020 – after 16 years – he got the exact rock-bottom mortgage rate as his California residence when he refinanced both that year. The average 30-year mortgage interest rate in 2020 was 3.10% for primary residences in the US, with secondary residences usually subject to rates up to 0.5% higher. Those terms padded his wealth, since the California Democrat would have saved somewhere between $30,000 to $50,000 over 16 years, an analysis by The Post found. Advertisement That spacious 3,420-square-foot home, in one of DC's most affluent suburbs, where neighbors say Schiff actually spends most of his time, is now worth $1.4 million – almost double what he paid for it in 2003. Schiff also benefited from a homeowner's tax exemption by declaring his much smaller 650-square-foot one-bedroom, one-bathroom condo in Burbank, California a primary home, resulting in a $7,000 reduction in property taxes. 5 Schiff listed the Potomac, Maryland, home as a primary residence for 16 years. Google Maps The Senator's bank assets soared to between $1.18 million and $2.63 million in 2024, the records also show. Advertisement That's up from between $1.02 million and $2.37 million in 2023, and from $578,000 – $1.35 million in 2022, the year before he bought the Maryland home. 5 Schiff also owns a condo in this building in Burbank, California, near Los Angeles. Google Earth Schiff, 65, who led the first House impeachment inquiry into President Trump and has repeatedly said 'no one's above the law,' has also failed to disclose his mortgages on annual financial disclosures until 2011, a Post review found, even though he bought the Potomac property in 2003 and the California condo in 2009, an omission he has not explained. He's been called 'crooked' and 'low-life' by President Trump. Advertisement 'I have always suspected Shifty Adam Schiff was a scam artist,' Trump wrote in July on Truth Social. 5 President Trump has slammed Schiff as 'shifty' and 'crooked.' Getty Images Schiff is accused of wire fraud, mail fraud, bank fraud and making false statements to financial institutions, charges which carry prison terms of up to 30 years. He has denied wrongdoing and called the investigation a political witch hunt. 'Since I led his first impeachment, Trump has repeatedly called for me to be arrested for treason,' Schiff wrote on X when news of the investigation broke in July. 5 Schiff has slammed the federal investigation against him as politically motivated. REUTERS 'This is just Donald Trump's latest attempt at political retaliation against his perceived enemies.' Advertisement 'Adam Schiff's baseless smears of corruption against President Trump and Republicans have one simple explanation — he's projecting,' Republican National Committee Press Secretary Kiersten Pels told The Post. 'Schiff is a proven liar, a con man, and a fraud,' Pels added. Schiff did not return requests for comment.

Trump tax law could cause Medicare cuts if Congress doesn't act, CBO says
Trump tax law could cause Medicare cuts if Congress doesn't act, CBO says

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Trump tax law could cause Medicare cuts if Congress doesn't act, CBO says

Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Democrats, who requested the analysis from CBO, jumped on the potential cuts. Advertisement 'Republicans knew their tax breaks for billionaires would force over half a trillion dollars in Medicare cuts — and they did it anyway,' said Rep. Brendan F. Boyle, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, in a statement. 'American families simply cannot afford Donald Trump's attacks on Medicare, Medicaid, and Obamacare.' Hospitals in rural parts of the country are already grappling with cuts to Medicaid, which is available to people with low incomes, and cuts to Medicare could exacerbate their shortfalls. Advertisement As Republicans muscled the bill through Congress and are now selling it to voters back home, they have been highly critical of how CBO has analyzed the bill. They have also argued that the tax cuts will spur economic growth and pointed to $50 billion in funding for rural hospitals that was included in the package.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store