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September 17, 2025

Monthly Archives: January 2016

Early morning high speed chase through Gilroy ends in major accident on 101

An early morning police in Gilroy led to the shutdown of Highway 101 Saturday when the suspects reportedly crashed through a fence and into at least three vehicles, police reported.

“Jersey Boys” – The Story of Four Seasons

“Jersey Boys” is a show you can see over and over and never tire of the music, story or presentation.

Back in Time

If you're ever walking around San Juan Bautista on a Saturday and feel a bit out of place, there’s an explanation for it.

National Park Service turns 100 this year

THE NATIONAL PARK Service turns 100 on Aug. 25. Pinnacles National Park invites everyone to celebrate with them by finding your park. Find Your Park is an opportunity about more than just national parks; it's about the NPS working in your community through education programs, community assistance projects and more.  It's about state parks, local parks, trails, museums, historic sites, and the many ways that the American public can connect with history and culture, enjoy nature, and make new discoveries.

Join the Elkhorn Slough Volunteer Program

Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve (ESNERR) welcomes the community to its 2016 Volunteer Training Classes. Discover the wonders of the Elkhorn Slough Reserve and learn more about the ecology, and history of the Elkhorn Slough. Classes are open to everyone.

Kid Couture Free

So you lost your job and times are tough; maybe the kids wear threadbare clothes because this week the choice was food or shoes.The Keeper’s Closet is here to help. And it’s free.Almost a year old, the Gilroy nonprofit serves the clothing needs of newborns to six-year-olds, a segment of the population its founder said was not being served in Gilroy when it comes to free clothing for the needy.The founder and board president of The Keeper’s Closet is retired attorney and former city councilman Brian Cunningham, 73. He has long been involved in charity work, including a stint as president of Martha’s Kitchen and as a leader in the St. Vincent de Paul Society of South County in Morgan Hill.In was while with the latter organization that he saw the unmet need that led to the founding of The Keeper’s Closet last February. It’s part of a larger nonprofit called Life Advocates that helps young women facing unplanned pregnancies, young people contemplating suicide and those in need of food and clothing.It costs about $50,000 a year to run The Keeper’s Closet, including rent and a half-time outreach manager. Cunningham pays for it all out of his own pocket.“He not only has a heart for helping and serving people, he definitely is a dreamer and a doer,” said Rochelle Henson, 25, the group’s outreach manager and only employee.The mainstays among the volunteers are Julie Gozzo, Cunningham’s legal assistant, Debbie Molyneaux, Mary Fierro Lisa Menge and Lisa Dimas Jessen.The mission of The Keeper’s Closet is “to serve families who can’t afford clothing,” to provide it for free and to unite the community to recycle and reuse clothing, according to Henson, an Aromas resident.“By doing that,” she said, “we are helping families who are going through tough times.”The group takes donations of clothing and shoes typically in large plastic bags, then sorts and stores the clothes by type, gender and size.Two of its greatest needs are consistent donations and increased visibility. For now, their go-to outreach tool is Facebook, at facebook.com/TheKeepersCloset/.In its 1,800-square-foot headquarters in a modest Gilroy office building on West First Street, Henson has created an elaborate but simple and orderly system that uses stacks of cardboard file boxes to store and easily find each category of clothing. Nearby shelves hold scores of shoes, while dozens of colorful jackets and coats hang on racks. In another room are dozens of bags of donated clothing awaiting sorting.The clothing is handed out, no questions asked, every few months at distribution events at the office. Those in need also can drop in during the week but must call ahead and make an appointment. The same goes for donors, because the office is not always staffed.“Because this is our first year it has been kind of a trial year and we still are planning which days are best,” Henson said, regarding the big distributions.“For our very first, nobody knew about us so we only had eight kids but at our second we served 92 and the third it was 75,” she said.The next events will be Feb. 22 and April 2.Needy families can receive shirts, shoes, pants, shorts, sweatshirts, jackets, dresses, socks and underwear. The Keeper’s Closet often also has a selection of strollers, high chairs and toys. Sometimes there are diapers and cribs.And all of those are the items that the group encourages people to donate, preferable gently used, clean and in large plastic bags.The group accepts sizes up to 8-year-olds because some 6-year-olds are bigger than average, Henson said.The biggest need is for boys clothing, according to Cunningham.“We are always running out of clothes, especially for young boys, sometimes we have to buy then from the Salvation Army,” he said.He hopes people who dump clothing in street bins around town will consider The Keeper’s Closet and its collection bins instead. They are located in USA Gymnastics and Strandz Beauty Salon in Gilroy, Artistry Hair Salon in Morgan Hill and at Aromas Free School in Aromas.Cunningham would like to hand out modest, free food packs with nonperishable staples such as beans and rice, for families really in a bind. He hopes someone in Gilroy’s food industry will come forward and help with that idea.The name, The Keeper's Closet, was inspired in part by the divine and in part by the whimsy of word play, Cunningham said.“The idea was that Keeper refers to God the Father and how He cares for us, and Closet was just sort of alliteration,” that they liked.Henson and Cunningham voiced similar sentiments when asked what they get out of the services provided by The Keeper’s Closet. Cunningham put it this way: “There is a certain uplift I get and others that join me get in helping others,” he said.“It’s a dramatic life lift you feel. There is no other human activity that matches helping others; in the autumn of my life I have found it to be one of the most rewarding things I have done.”To donate or receive clothing, The Keeper’s Closet is at 1335 First St., Suite C, across from Mama Mia’s restaurant. The office is on the second floor. Call ahead at (408) 847-2018 or contact them via email atinfo@keeperscloset.com.

Wrestling: Balers dominate Christopher, 51-18

The San Benito High wrestling team took all of the drama out of Wednesday night’s Monterey Bay League Gabilan Division match against visiting Christopher. The Haybalers won nine of the first 14 individual weight classes en route to a 51-18 victory.

Save the Fading Trains

It started right after the Civil War and helped put Gilroy on the map, but much of the city’s railroad history is a faded and forgotten puzzle of the past.

Local PR pro takes on a big local development challenge

As the local public relations professional behind the 247-megawatt Panoche Valley solar project and the No on Measure J campaign, which failed to stop a citizen-led effort to ban fracking in San Benito County in 2014, Kristina Chavez Wyatt is no stranger to controversy.

Guest Column: Growth doesn’t mean sprawl

When I came to Gilroy in 1980, the Gilroy Dispatch was filled with letters about rampant growth. The development at the time was the Northwest Quadrant. The claims were that Gilroy was sprawling, we were becoming another San Jose and we were losing our small town charm.