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The Billion Dollar Lie: Part 3

What did city officials not know, and when did they not know it?

The 1996 Measure I Initiative called for the “relocation and consolidation of civic offices in the downtown.”  But the new City Hall complex at Fourth and E. Santa Clara St. was not built large enough to provide the consolidation of city offices called for in the ballot measure.

Library System Is One of Our Greatest Community Assets

Like just about everyone else, I am glad that we have a new regime at City Hall in the mayor’s office and on the council. However, in the euphoria of the demise of the old and arrival of the new, we shouldn’t forget one of the biggest accomplishments of the past few years: the Dr, Martin Luther King, Jr. Library joint venture between the city and San Jose State University and the process that is creating the new and vastly improved San Jose library system. This is a legacy worth celebrating.

No Blame Game

The action is now largely finished and the captains, the kings and one mayor are ready to depart. It is time to look ahead. What lessons can we learn from the tragedy of Ron Gonzales and this painful era?  Some have suggested that it was preordained—we all carry the seeds of our own mistakes and tragedies within us—but the public portions of this episode did not have to be this way.

Some Planning Options

It is time to look at the City as a whole and think of how it can be reconfigured and improved.  Of course, there can be a look again at some hallowed tenets of sound growth and planning for our future. To what extent do they continue to serve us well?  Additionally, we can try to imagine new and innovative ideas as well, that can lead us into the brave new world of the twenty-first century.

Development 101 – Part Two

Why do we need the Coyote Valley?

The answer to this question is pivotal to the future of the city and a key to determining who the next mayor of San Jose will be.  Why indeed.  It seems that the reason for developing the virgin valley that was called into being to redress the historic imbalance that San Jose has in a tax base, i.e., the ability to provide quality services like police and fire and libraries and youth workers for our citizens, has been forgotten.