Opinion

Question Mark Hangs Over Mexican Heritage Plaza Consultants

The $100,000 consultants’ report to the city on the Mexican Heritage Plaza (MHP) has been completed and is available on the city’s website. However, its more than one hundred pages raise more questions than they answer. Many of those questions have to do with the consultant who wrote the report, Maribel Alvarez, and her qualifications, conflicts of interest, methods of data collection and how she was chosen.

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A Million Here, a Million There

Today is Mayor Reed’s State of the City and it is easy to predict an issue that will be paramount in his speech. Like the swallows returning to Capistrano, the budget woes of the City of San Jose are never far from us. Far from crying wolf, the wolves may be howling too late and not too inappropriately. San Jose has faced multimillion dollar deficits for the last few years. The mayor has decided to try and fix this one quickly, and, he hopes finally, in the next three years. As the front page story in the Mercury News reported yesterday, the mayor has performed quite well on the reforms that he promised the citizens in the last election. It is a refreshing and significant achievement.

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Single Gal and Ideas that Fizzle

Is it me, or does it seem that all good, big ideas in this City are here today, gone tomorrow?  I think so many good ideas fizzle in San Jose, and I really want to know why.

A music hall was once on the forefront of the city council agenda and there were debates in both the council and supervisors chambers on whether to build it downtown or at the county fairgrounds, and then: nothing.  It was a great idea but it seemed to vanish into thin air. House of Blues was pumped-up for a time and never materialized. We are all still waiting for another music venue.

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Saving Money and Keeping Promises

City Hall Diary

Last week the San Jose City Council discussed the issue of co-payments for retired city workers and their dependents. The recommendation from the city manager was to defer adding co-payments for one year to allow more time for this issue to be researched. Whatever the outcome, the decision will affect 3,000 retired city employees, including dependents, and the city budget.

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The Phantom of the Opera Lives

The San Jose Mercury News is beginning to remind me of one of those aging Hollywood stars—male and female—who convince themselves that they are once again youthfully beautiful with their pumped-up lips and reconstructive plastic surgery, but actually resemble the “Phantom of the Opera” or Jack Nicholson’s “Joker” to everyone else. More plastic surgery won’t reverse the disastrous facial consequences to sixties TV stars, and a new editor-in-chief—the third in the past few months—from the corporate bowels of Denver-based MediaNews won’t fix their science experiment gone bad. And just like the old movie stars that do nothing and insist on aging naturally, the San Francisco Chronicle is now winning the Bay Area newspaper beauty contest. Go figure.

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Building for Tomorrow

Purchasing the Future

The year of 2008 is already shaping up as a fascinating one, but tough decisions are ahead. BART, professional sports and our incredibly increasing deficits—state, local and national—are going to loom very large.

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Single Gal and New Year’s Resolutions

As I am making my own resolutions to lose weight, hit the gym more often and eat less carbs, I think that the San Jose City Council should make a few resolutions of their own in 2008. Here are some ways they could really improve our city this year.

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Let’s Not Let District Lines Divide Us

City Hall Diary

As I bid 2007 goodbye and welcome 2008, I think of the many issues that my colleagues and I will be working on in one way or another. Whether balancing the budget, protecting our resources like industrial land or implementing the mayor’s Green Vision, among others, it will take collaboration, perseverance and, above all else, a good sense of humor to keep us all in check.

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Mandatory Evacuations Urged With Storm Warnings

Thousands Flee San Jose in Panic as Forecasters Predict Winds and Rain

As weather conditions deteriorated late Thursday with hundreds of tiny raindrops and breezy winds, an otherwise calm and subdued holiday season turned into panic and mayhem as thousands frantically took to the roads, trying to get out of the city in search of dry land.

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Are DUI Penalties Tough Enough?

For some people the Christmas and New Year holidays were a little too happy; 792 arrests were made in Santa Clara County for DUI during the seasonal crackdown from December 14 until January 1, up from 716 last year. There were 165 arrests in San Jose and one death in the county related to drunk driving, down from four last year. That may seem like a lot of arrests, but I wonder how many drunk drivers didn’t get caught?

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Purchased by the Present

As a New Year dawns (I love using that phrase so full of hope), it is time to take stock of our city and community. There are things that we should hope for in the New Year; and, more than that, we should work fervently for them to occur. It is critical to build in the present if you want a future to be proud of.

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Single Gal and Kite Running

Because with every new year we should have renewed optimism, I thought I would talk about a very inspiring movie I just saw about a man who left his native Afghanistan and found a new life in San Jose. Khaled Hosseini, the bestselling author of the book “The Kite Runner,” made his way by receiving political asylum in San Jose, first going to Independence High School and then finishing his college degree at Santa Clara University. He is surely one of the most talented writers and graduates in our area, yet I am sure when he was here as a refugee, he wasn’t always treated as if he would one day be a world-class writer with two movies optioned from his books. Now that I know his beginnings, I wonder about what his experiences here must have been like.

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Working on the Holidays

When it comes to the holidays, many of us expect to have them off.  Whether it’s Hanukah, Christmas, Thanksgiving, New Years, etc., the assumption is that the holidays are automatically a day off of work or that one can request religious days off and the request is granted. However, this is not always the case.

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Walgreens to Manage New Downtown Parking Program

Confusing Rules to be Sorted by Retailer’s Scanning Technology

Despite a high, six-figure settlement relating to allegations that its cash register scanning technology was overcharging customers, the San Jose City Council has decided to move forward with a multi-year contract for the Walgreens drugstore chain to manage its new downtown parking fee structure.

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