Latest News

Unsung Heroes

A Voice for Those Who Have None

Mortgage meltdowns, soldiers leaving for war, higher rents, additional rents for pets, large pet deposits, natural disasters, allergies, animal behavior problems, the high cost of living, and people moving out of the area have created victims rarely acknowledged. People are surrendering their unwanted pets to shelters and animal rescue groups in record numbers. Over the last 18 months, thousands of additional healthy, adoptable animals have been killed in our local shelter because there is not enough space in shelters or with animal rescue groups to handle this growing catastrophe.

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A Needless Battle Revisited

Something being proposed in Florida and Michigan for the Democratic primary selection is often utilized in golf where it’s called a “mulligan.” It is, indeed, a very human reaction and a plausible escape route. But beware the easy route—it’s full of peril. We have seldom seen it in San Jose politics before, but in the battle for “Little Saigon,” we may have another look at the concept of the “do-over” and the results may be anything but satisfactory.

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Single Gal and Making Sense of the Democratic Process

So Super Tuesday came and went, and are we any closer to knowing who might run against John McCain in the presidential election? I have watched the analysts take apart the data and put it back together every which way they can. I have read all the articles and seen interviews with both Obama and Clinton vowing to forge ahead. All signs are pointing to the fact that this election is far from over and, in reality, has only just begun. The real question is: was there really a point to voting in the primary? 

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The Benefits of a Beard

City Hall Diary

As some of you many know via Sal Pizarro of the Mercury News I have grown a beard. I stopped shaving the morning of the mayor’s State of the City speech. I joked with Sal that I was not going to shave until we fixed the structural budget deficit. Getting our city’s finances in order is the number one priority and will take hard work and more community outreach. By that time, my beard will end up competing with Moses or the members of the band ZZ Top.

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Council Members Told to Keep Calendars Private

After Reviewing the Embarrassing to the Boring, Meetings to be Sheltered from Public View

Just a day after San Jose officials demanded the posting of council members’ calendars online, the vacuous and inane entries dictated that they relent and allow them to be kept private.

“After reviewing the meetings these public officials are taking,” said city attorney Rick Doyle, “we have decided it reflects badly on our city’s image. We will therefore quarantine them until further notice, even if that means losing track of Gallo and Strangis.”

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The Viewing of Pornography in Public Libraries is a Problem

Over a year ago, an ABC 7 News I-Team report exposed San José’s failure to protect children from pornography and those who would openly view pornographic material in their presence. The investigation revealed that there have been a number of individuals arrested for viewing child pornography in libraries, and still others have been arrested for performing lewd acts such as masturbating in public while viewing pornographic material. Please take the time to see the reports here and here.

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Tea Leaves

The tumult and the shouting have died. The captains and the kings have departed. The election is over. What happened?

The impressive showing and meteoric rise of Obama across the nation served notice to the entire country and world that a new era has arrived—an era marked by renewed hope and optimism about the future. The old hackneyed tactics are no longer good enough. In fact, this time, fed by the reckless behavior of powerful people, they backfired. It was indeed a historic election.

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Single Gal and Being Inspired

Today is the presidential primary. Hope is in the air that change can be made and things will be better with a new president. Optimism and inspiration have never been higher for me than with the candidacy of Barack Obama. He has inspired me in a way that most politicians never have, and it seems young people in our country and city have been energized by him as well.

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Millions vs. Billions

City Hall Diary

At the General Plan Task Force meeting last week, we discussed transportation and how future VTA projects will guide San Jose’s land use. The VTA budget for new projects is funded out of the voter-approved half-cent sales tax. The tax provides partial funding for BART, light rail extension, bus rapid transit improvements, some road paving, trails and bike lanes.

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Supervisors Pass Death Fee in County

Expiring on Weekdays Will Cost You

As if dying is not bad enough, in the small print of a county plan that assesses a phone fee to cover 911 emergency response services, the supervisors have included a provision that places a tax on people who have the audacity to die on weekdays.

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Pete Constant: Self-Appointed Censor-in-Chief

If our city council’s holier-than-thou moral army member Pete Constant really wants to put a stop to any opportunities for “sexual misconduct and lewd behavior” in the Martin Luther King Jr. (MLK) Library, why doesn’t he advocate the installation of men’s room toilet stalls with walls all the way to the floor in case Larry Craig comes to town? Or why doesn’t he work to stop distribution of applications for the Congressional page program there in case some hapless San Jose student gets an intern position with the likes of Congressman Foley or Senator Vitter? Oh, wait: Craig, Foley, and Vitter are members of the Republican moral army too. Ironically, Constant’s plan to restrict internet access at the library will presumably mean that the more than 1.25 million websites mentioning the extracurricular activities of these three men—Craig (778,000 Google hits), Foley (75,000 Google hits) and Vitter (400,000 Google hits)—will be on his porn censorship list.

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Print the Legend

There is a line from an old John Ford movie that explains much of the mythology of America and, indeed, the current deification of celebrities: “This is the West … when the legend becomes fact, print the legend!”

I visited the Mexican Heritage Plaza on Friday to see the play, “School for the Americas,” concerning the last day in the life of Che Guevara. It was entertaining and enjoyable, in spite of a degree of anti-Americanism. The next day, a subsequent conversation with the play’s author, Jose Rivera, sponsored by the Commonwealth Club, was low key but nice.

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Single Gal and Private vs. Public Schools

Our conversation about parcel taxes and schools last week leads me to another important question: Is a private school education better than a public school one in San Jose?  Many people talk about the schools in this city as not being good enough for their kids; therefore, they send them to private schools where they pay thousands of dollars a year for their education. But is the actual education itself a better one? If not, then what are they really paying for? One argument would be to say that they are paying to be in a school where education is a priority and where you get to be with like-minded people who feel the same way. Is that enough?

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Ask and You Shall Receive—A Savings of $1.475 Million, That Is

City Hall Diary

Several months ago I wrote a blog “Try It Before You Buy It,” where I spoke about the importance of making sure that the city has the option of using technology before actually purchasing it. I shared how large organizations struggle with information technology (IT) implementations when dealing with vendors who often make promises that differ from the actual results received. I also pointed out how the VTA and City of San Jose have spent millions on unwise technology decisions to purchase software.

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County Supervisors Mistakenly Shipped to “Body Worlds” Exhibit

Skin-ectomy Cancelled After Pulses Found

A tragedy was averted early Friday morning when an alert night watchman, guarding the Body Worlds exhibit at the Tech Museum of Innovation, recognized several Santa Clara County supervisors in a corner of the basement laboratory who were tagged for the initiation process of de-skinning in order to be prepped for display in the anatomical exhibit.

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The New Mexican Heritage Plaza: Sustainability Within a “Circle of Innovation”

By Marcela Davison Aviles

Prior to addressing the Mexican Heritage Plaza’s (MHP) sustainability model to operate successfully now and in the future, we believe the community should also ask the following: Is the Plaza making significant improvements and is it better off today than four years ago? The answer lies in the Plaza itself.  Four years ago the new board of directors and CEO inherited substantial debt; the Plaza also suffered from six years of deferred maintenance and heavy wear and tear. Critical equipment and systems no longer functioned. The garden was in decay. The administrative offices were unkempt and dirty. The parking lot was rented as a used car sales lot. The Mexican Heritage Corporation’s (MHC) finances were in complete disarray. The Plaza’s reputation, as characterized by one prominent arts program officer, “was a joke.”

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