Monday, March 23, 2009

Morning News Round-Up -- 3.23.09:

Odd couple Mayor Chuck Reed and Councilmember Nora Campos are itching to move a few Redevelopment dollars away from traditional tasks of repairing dilapidated buildings and code enforcement into the City’s general fund. Not everyone agrees, (ever the contrarian) Councilmember Pierluigi Oliverio calls it “not fiscally prudent.” He didn't say that he would like to move all Redevelopment funds to fund crossing-guards, however.

Speaking of Code Enforcement...San Jose’s East Side has taken a battering from gangs, crime, and neglect. For a while it looked like the riches of the Silicon Valley were starting to help. But the economic crisis and the housing crash have made the East Side the epicenter of San Jose home foreclosures. Code Enforcement Division Manager/Santa Clara Councilmember Jamie Matthews spends his days picking through bullet riddled houses tossing out teenage lovers and squatters.

Sunnyvale’s grand plans for downtown are being battered by the economy. Sand Hill Property is asking for more loans and trying to figure out what to cut or delay. Looks like Sunnyvale gets a Target but the high end hotel might have to wait until the recession is over.

The rumor about Wal-Mart violence pops up every few years. This year the urban myth merged with the violence at Evergreen Valley High and kept students home Friday. Parent William D. Brockmeyer III kept his daughter home and is pissed that principal Cari Vaeth and the Board of Trustees haven’t offered counseling or shut the school down. Trustee/President Patricia Martinez-Roach says it’s up to the public to be more alert, and principal Vaeth (apparently) prefers to ignore the whole thing.

San Jose’s former Mayor Susan Hammer has partnered with Councilmember Nora Campos and the Executive Director of People Acting in Concert Together’s (PACT) Matt Hammer to bring a new charter school to the embattled Alum Rock School District. Hammer (son Matt not Mayor/Mother/Baseball fan Susan) said 70% of Alum Rock’s children cannot read well or do math when they leave 8th grade and he wants to change that. (Luckily the plans don’t call for MACSA to manage the finances for the new school.)

San Jose’s unions have to be watching the public beating Gilroy’s administration is taking for automatic raises and wondering: will they get their raises in light of San Jose’s growing deficit? Councilmember Pierluigi Oliverio seems to be sending a lightly veiled threat – skip the raise or lose jobs

The Merc’s Scott Herhold isn’t happy some of his City Council seem to take off just when the going gets tough. Herhold calls out Councilmembers Kansen Chu, Pete Constant, Ash Kalra, Rose Herrera, and Madison Nguyen (and Liccardo and City Manager Deb Figone) for missing out on painful Council meetings.

Some of Merc columnist Joe Rodriguez’s neighbors live on top of a toxic sludge left behind by a turn-of-the-century San Jose city dump. Parents and homeowners are pissed about what they say was partial and vague information relating to clean-up while San Jose faces another legal challenge. City attorney Rick Doyle (unsurprisingly) says the City has done it’s job properly while Councilmember Sam Liccardo says he hopes to rebuild trust before the mediation starts.

The Merc’s Internal Affairs muses over a possible Silicon Valley (wonky) brain drain as the new administration in D.C. taps area wonks. IA doesn’t seem to know whether San Jose should be flattered or pissed off by the loss of staff. San Jose’s battered employee pension fund was honored by Money Management Letter – of course if they hadn’t lost a Billion dollars the award might not have been as a mid-size plan…Failed Santa Clara Council candidate Ciaran O’Donnell forgot to check his mail or read the reg’s – he got dinged by the city for fouling up the last of his campaign paperwork.

It’s all about the Merc’s Editorial pages…

From Charter schools to sun power there’s a lot to digest this week with your elected officials…


  • Tonight the Los Altos School District will cut jobs and review a Bullis Charter School proposal...

  • The Supervisors will figure out if the sun will power their future...

  • San Jose’s City Council will review $4.5 million in overruns for a South San Jose Police Substation, approve the Mayor’s budget, honor Cesar Chavez with a walkway, and argue over outsourcing City jobs...

  • The Santa Clara Valley Water District will decide if we’re really in a drought, and (finally) decide whether to let voters choose term limits or not. Sorry Sig, Watch Dog sides with the Merc and Assemblymember Joe Coto on this one...

  • San Jose Unified School District meets Thursday to (also) talk Charter Schools.

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