San Jose Inside

Supreme Court Decision a Minor Setback in Medical Marijuana Legalization Push

May 8, 2013 by Jennifer Wadsworth Politics, Business, Culture Comments (18)

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The California Supreme Court decided Monday to uphold a ruling that allows cities to ban medical marijuana collectives. (Image by Kara Brown)

Monday’s state Supreme Court ruling that cities can choose to ban medical marijuana dispensaries counts as a setback—assuming setbacks can be measured by nothing lost, nothing gained. According to local medical marijuana collective operators and advocates, the court’s unanimous decision did little more than uphold the status quo, after the city of Riverside’s decision in 2009 to declare a moratorium and shutter 56 dispensaries. The ruling now upholds bans in about 200 other California cities, including local municipalities such as Palo Alto and Gilroy. But the same industry experts who dismiss the court’s decision as inconsequential also see a silver lining.

Hamann Park Neighbors Preserve the Family Ambiance

May 8, 2013 by James P. Reber Politics, Culture Comments (0)

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A family gathers for a picnic at Hamann Park during last year’s National Night Out event.

Marijane Hamann Park is a spacious green expanse of 10.5 acres ensconced in a suburban enclave of San Jose that borders the city of Campbell. The park’s amenities include a children’s playground, a large green carpet of lawn, picnic tables and barbecues. But not too long ago, neighbors of Hamann Park had some tough choices to make to reclaim the park.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan Says Washington Gridlock Hinders Students

May 7, 2013 by Joseph DiSalvo Politics, Culture Comments (4)

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U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan believes there is plenty of work to be done in fixing the teacher pipeline from universities to classrooms. (Photo by Ralph Alswang)

It is so difficult to get things done in Washington that one has to wonder why we wanted to get here in the first place, uttered a pensive U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan last week. It was a tragically sad but candid comment about where we are in this fractured system of democratic government.

Rules to Discuss Legislation Targeting Chronic Homeless

May 7, 2013 by Jennifer Wadsworth Politics, Culture Comments (12)

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Homeless residents in San Jose sit in their tent, which was set up last summer along Guadalupe creek in downtown San Jose.

Of San Jose’s 5,000 or so homeless residents, nearly 30 percent are chronically on the streets, according to city housing officials. Most of the chronically homeless suffer from mental illness, physical disability, addiction or some combination of the three. On Wednesday, the San Jose’s Rules and Open Government Committee will discuss legislation that could address such problems.

Resolution on Citizens United Case Goes to San Jose City Council

May 6, 2013 by Jennifer Wadsworth Politics, Business, Culture Comments (15)

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Lawmakers across the country are signing resolutions in opposition to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in the Citizens United case. (Photo by ithnmsrtkn, via Flickr)

As lawmakers around the county urge Congress to create a constitutional amendment to overturn the controversial Citizens United decision, the City Council on Tuesday may vote in favor of supporting a resolution to overturn the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case. Other items on Tuesday’s agenda include lawsuit settlements, a new contract for Microsoft software and state taxes.

Investor Owned Utilities Bad for Your Health

May 6, 2013 by Peter Allen Politics, Business, Culture Comments (3)

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Investor owned utilities often receive criticism for putting profits above public safety and sustainability.

In my last column I noted that prominent Southern California physicians and solar energy companies have teamed up to fight Assemblyman Steve Bradford and powerful utility interests seeking to kill net metering—and cripple the solar market. This is a major step for the renewable energy movement, as an upstart industry challenges entrenched interests by saying what many have been afraid to say in the past: Investor owned utilities are bad for your health.

Cindy’s Hendler: South Bay Labor Council PR Flack Flips Out

May 4, 2013 by The Fly Politics, The Fly Comments (8)

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Stacey Hendler Ross attempted to have a local radio station kill an unflattering story about her former boss, Cindy Chavez.

Stacey Hendler Ross used to be KNTV’s late night anchor, and later worked as a globetrotting KGO journalist, covering everything from the Columbine massacre to Princess Diana’s funeral. But now her life is less exciting and she’s on the other side of the First Amendment, plying her trade as the spin manager for the South Bay Labor Council. Apparently since she no longer has a captive TV audience—her March 2012 Democratic TV video got a whopping 131 views on YouTube in the past 13 months—she doesn’t think others should be able to inform the public either. At least if it involves sullying the pristine reputation of former SBLC head Cindy Chavez, who’s running for her good buddy George Shirakawa Jr.’s supervisor seat.

County to Focus on Unfunded Liability in Budget Workshop

May 3, 2013 by Jennifer Wadsworth Politics Comments (1)

Unfunded retiree healthcare benefits threaten to take a $1.7 billion bite out of the Santa Clara County budget, a drastic uptick from the $425 million liability seen a decade ago. This and other matters will be on the Board of Supervisors agenda for a three-day budget workshop starting Tuesday next week.

City Manager’s Budget for 2013-14 Hedges on Pension Reform Lawsuits

May 3, 2013 by Jennifer Wadsworth Politics Comments (10)

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The city is expected to adopt a balanced budget plan, using recommendations from the mayor and city manager, on June 18.

City Manager Debra Figone released her 2013-14 budget proposal, which was balanced, she says, through fiscal reforms, layoffs and switching to cheaper retiree healthcare. Still, the city remains in “a fragile situation,” partly because of litigation it faces over Measure B pension reforms.

Rural Metro Could Lose County Ambulance Contract; Sunnyvale Responses Lag Most

May 2, 2013 by Stephen Layton Comments (3)

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Rural Metro could lose its ambulance contract with Santa Clara County if it doesn’t meet its required response times.

County ambulance provider Rural Metro missed its monthly response times for emergencies in Sunnyvale all but once during a 17-month period ending Novemebr 2012, according to internal documents. This and other system failures have placed the company’s contract in jeopardy.

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