FAIRFIELD-SUISUN, CALIFORNIA Katie Davidson helps feed cattle at the Brazelton Ranch following the recent LNU Lightning Complex Fire. In 2018, the ranch received an easement grant through the Sustainable Agricultural Lands Conservation Program, about $2 million, to purchase 280 acres that brought the four-generation ranch back to its original footprint. (Robinson Kuntz/Daily Republic file) Report: Covid-19 could slow climate-investment progress CalCAN highlights Middle Green Valley Specific Plan FAIRFIELD — More than 10,000 affordable housing units have been funded and 100,000 acres of agricultural land have been protected through two programs identified in a new report issued by the California Climate and Agriculture Network. The report also states that the Covid-19 pandemic “threatens to undermine the state’s smart growth efforts, and more is needed to bring a regional approach to these investments that provide the housing, public transit, jobs and food security Californians need,” Jeanne Merrill, policy director with CalCAN and one of the report’s authors, said in the statement released along with CalCAN’s report.