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December 21, 2025

First Taste of Santa Clara Valley celebrates farmers, local food

The Community Alliance with Family Farmers (CAFF) will host a farm to table fundraising dinner—“The Taste of Santa Clara Valley”—on Sept. 14 at Guglielmo Winery in Morgan Hill. The catered dinner will highlight produce from Santa Clara and San Benito County farmers, with proceeds benefiting CAFF’s program work. A portion of all ticket sales will allow farmers to attend the event, who will share personal stories about farming in the region.

Cougar fans pack stadium for opening

It took nearly $4 million, 736 days and the work of more than 300 people from 52 companies for the vision of seven men to become a reality.

The gift of sight

For the first time in 18 years, Jose Rivera didn't wake up and see the world as a vague blur. He finally saw his girlfriend and two young children clearly without needing to first reach for his glasses.

Logan Couture, Sharks teammates to raise funds for Sierra Search Center

San Jose Sharks forward Logan Couture and teammates will sign autographs in Morgan Hill Sept. 17 to raise money and awareness for the ongoing search effort for Sierra LaMar.

Support group for neurological movement disorders blossoms

When Lynda Dome, of Gilroy, was in a car accident overseas in 1989, she had no idea that it would lead to a painful condition she'd carry with her the rest of her life.

Sting operation yields three citations for selling tobacco to minors

The Gilroy Police Department, in cooperation with the Santa Clara County Department of Public Health, conducted a sting operation Aug. 29 to check whether local tobacco retailers would sell to minors. Of the 26 businesses checked-23 or 88 percent-refused to sell tobacco to minors, while three retailers sold to underage decoys, police said.

War of Lions sparring tournament descends on Gilroy

GILROY—The War of Lions 3 Modified MMA Sparring Tournament is taking over AntDawg’s MMA gym.

Mt. Madonna YMCA set to open two new produce markets

The Mount Madonna YMCA will open two new produce markets in Morgan Hill and Gilroy, where all produce will be sold at wholesale prices that are up to 50 percent lower than those available elsewhere, according to an Aug. 27 announcement by the YMCA of Silicon Valley.

Second annual SV Gives online fundraiser set to return in May 2015

The Morgan Hill Community Foundation and the Gilroy Foundation—along with their many partnering organizations—stand to raise even more funds at the second annual Silicon Valley Gives charitable event in May 2015.

Gavilan in line to offer four-year degree program

Gavilan College hopes to be one of 15 community colleges allowed to offer bachelor’s degrees as early as January 2015, after the California Legislature’s Aug. 20 approval of Senate Bill 850.The bill, which is awaiting the signature of Governor Jerry Brown, would establish a baccalaureate degree pilot program with 15 community colleges offering bachelor’s degrees in select workforce majors, according to a press release from the San Diego Community College District.“At this point we do not know which colleges will be participating or what the (selection) process will look like,” Gavilan spokesperson Jan Bernstein-Chargin said.California Community Colleges is the largest higher education system in the nation with 72 districts and 112 colleges, serving more than 2.6 million students, according to the CCC Registry.Chargin added that changes to the state’s master plan for higher education must be approved first, and then an implementation plan can be established for the community college system.“It’s definitely something we’re very interested in,” said Gavilan President Steve Kinsella back in February when the bill was introduced by State Senator Marty Block (D-San Diego). “I think it will happen. It needs to happen.”If approved California would join 21 other states already allowing community colleges to grant bachelor’s programs. Brown has until Sept. 30 to act on the bill. “Unlike previous bills, however, SB 850 enjoys bipartisan support and is widely touted as a way for the state to address its need to be competitive in areas of high workforce demand,” the release states.There have been four failed attempts since 2004 to pass a similar bill granting community colleges permission to offer bachelor’s degrees, according to an EdSource report. That same report says the proposal faces likely opposition from CSU, UC and even some corners of the community college system.Stipulations to SB 850 include community colleges can only offer bachelor’s degrees in areas where public universities do not offer such a program, cannot accommodate student demand, or do not have the interest. Such workforce programs include dental hygiene, radiologic technology, health information science/informatics and automotive technology.“The California pilot will allow the legislature to explore this possibility and study the results in a thorough report before making a full commitment that the other states have made,” the release reads.

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