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Gilroy
January 14, 2026

Ivy blocking the view and cell tower

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iTAN Morgan Hill Grand Opening Sets the Glow Standard in Northern California

iTAN Sun Spray Spa, California’s leading health and beauty salon, will open its first Northern California location, iTAN Morgan Hill, at 106 Cochrane Plaza, Morgan Hill, CA 95037 on Sept. 23-24, 2017. To celebrate its grand opening, iTAN Morgan Hill will offer its services for $1 to local community members on Sept. 23-24, 2017 from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Council selects Blankley for seat

The Gilroy City Council appointed Marie Blankley to an open council seat at Monday’s regular meeting. Council members voted earlier this month to appoint a person to the council to replace Paul Kloecker, who died in December. The new city council member was interviewed alongside three...

It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s Garlic

How much garlic do you want with that?That was one question Emeryville artist Scott Donahue had to answer before he started the sculpture called Garlicgeese that welcomes visitors to Gilroy on the west side of Monterey Road a few blocks from the entrance to Hwy. 101.It’s hard to resist the vegetable that’s put Gilroy on the map, but he, along with the developer the arts commission wanted something a bit less garlicky.Thus was born Garlicgeese (one word, says the artist), a statue of a mother and her five half-garlic, half-goose creatures sculpted from brass, epoxy and stainless steel, weighing 500 pounds and mounted on a 20-foot-long concrete platform. It’s put smiles on the faces of children and been the site of an international geocache contest, where contestants flocked to find a hidden message.“Public art is specific to a place unlike art in a gallery,” said Donahue. “Originally, we thought, garlic and Gilroy. But then we thought, maybe people in Gilroy will think they’ve seen enough garlic. I thought if I could do something a little different, a little extra, I thought the general public would like a different presentation. This is our place, but it’s open to interpretation.”The geese, which cost $50,000, are a sign of the times as Gilroy ponders how to handle public art. Everyone wants art, but few can agree on the merits of individual pieces, or how they should be paid for.L. Mattock Scariot, the chair of the city’s Arts and Culture Commission, said she’d like to see new developers pay a fee for art to decorate their projects. However, she said, a proposal to charge in Gilroy is on hold while the city awaits the results of a developer’s lawsuit against the city of Oakland for trying the same thing.Gilroy’s new proposed General Plan, which will be heard by the council Jan. 4 and outlines the city’s intent for its future, lists public art as a priority and suggests finding funding sources that include corporate sponsorships, joint use agreements, private donations, user fees, bonds or fees on new developments.The downtown is decorated with four historical sculptures that cost $83,000 and were paid for in 2009 by a mix of city funds and private donations.Planners have placed requirements on some new developers to add art to their projects. The geese were paid for by K. Hovnanian Homes, which built the 60-unit Monterey Manor community on Monterey Road. They were unveiled a year ago.Donahue, the artist, was considering something about garlic but wanted to add something more. A former employee at the home builder suggested a theme of ducks, based on a statue he’d seen in Boston. Donahue took off with it.“I was thinking about marching garlics,” said Donahue, who got so into government policies as a public artist that he ran for city council in Emeryville and was elected. He’s now the city’s vice mayor.But the developer wanted to add something that wasn’t just garlic. And there was some feeling on the city’s art commission that the city needs to include other themes.“This is how public art works,” said Donahue. “If an artist is just slavishly going to one idea, they can’t make it something better.”The process took months of review by two city art committees, the planning department and finally the city council, before it was approved. Then it took five months to build. Donahue kept refining the piece, modeling it in clay, long before he used the permanent materials.The 64-year-old artist and UC-Berkeley lecturer has seen his share of controversy. His Berkeley Big People sculpture on a pedestrian bridge over Hwy. 80 is loved and hated. A review in SF Gate said it “fails every test” in sculpture and criticized the image of campus protesters as being “politically correct.”Garlicgeese has less controversy. Reviews on the Dispatch’s Facebook page were all positive.“So creative, simple and beautiful! Well done and thank you mystery artist,” wrote Barb Beaumont Siordia.Added Scarriot, the arts commissioner: “A lot of people think we have too much garlic. I don’t think so. I love how it’s abstract. You can’t tell it’s geese and it’s garlic. It’s really, really good.”“It’s a great way to be welcomed to Gilroy,” said city planner Melissa Durkin, who is working with other new art projects on Hecker Pass.

Hirokawa blames county for snafu

For a contest marked by so much scandal and mudslinging leading up to the June primary, the Santa Clara County sheriff’s race seemed oddly quiet lately. But Sheriff Laurie Smith’s challenger, retired Department of Corrections chief John Hirokawa, was apparently scrambling behind the scenes...

City’s smokers could get snubbed

California voters and the Gilroy City Council could deliver a one-two punch to smokers this week.

UPDATED: Gilroy public employee union set to strike

GILROY—Mayor Don Gage is unflinching at a public employee union’s threat to strike for two days next month, following an impasse reached during negotiations that began six months ago. In response, a union representative said Wednesday future strikes could be avoided if the city agrees to a few concessions.

New RV dealership has Gilroy grinning from ear to ear

When Randy Scianna announced in April he planned to move his

Gilroy protests as city council puts immigration, human rights on the agenda

As protests sprung up in airports across the nation last weekend in response to President Donald Trump’s latest executive action targeting refugees and immigrants from seven majority Muslim countries, a group of about 30 Gilroyans took to the street on Sunday to show their solidarity.

Council rejects trucking company’s move to northeast Gilroy

Residents persuade council to reject truck lot in their

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