$26.5 Million For 30 Acres of Bonfante Land
The land includes five acres on the north side of Hecker Pass,
Police incidents: Thief steal disabled person’s parking placard
A thief stole a disabled person's placard from an unlocked 1997
Proposal to rezone school land postponed
Neighbors living near the old Las Animas School site who were
Pondering the departure of QB Jeff Garcia
We're reacting to the sad tale of Jeff Garcia's departure from
Morgan Hill Courthouse to close traffic, small claims, civil courts
Starting in October, South County residents will have to drive to Santa Clara or San Jose to contest traffic citations or file civil claims. Starting Oct. 6, Santa Clara County Superior Court will close the traffic, civil and small claims courts at the Morgan Hill Courthouse, according to a press release from Superior Court Presiding Judge Brian Walsh. The same court services will also close at the Palo Alto courthouse. Residents with traffic violations will have to travel to the Santa Clara Courthouse to contest their citations or pay fines. Those filing or fighting small claims or civil suits will have to go to the downtown San Jose courthouse. The closures are part of the local court’s effort to close an $8.5 million operating deficit due to “significant and continuing” cuts by the state of California, according to Santa Clara County Superior Court Executive Officer David Yamasaki. The closures won’t fill that entire gap, but the court is looking at other ways to reduce the remainder of the deficit, Yamasaki said. “Obviously, personnel represents the core of our budget, about 85 percent,” Yamasaki said. “We have to look at our personnel costs to help remedy this problem.”Currently, 22 staff people deliver traffic, civil and small claims court services out of the Morgan Hill and Palo Alto facilities. The loss of traffic court services will likely produce the heaviest impact on South County residents. The Morgan Hill facility serves about 22,000—or 13 percent—of the county’s total traffic cases, Yamasaki said. Civil and small claims in South County represent about 3 percent and 6 percent, respectively, of the county’s total, Yamasaki said.
Fighting secondhand smoke
A homeowner’s pleas to the city to protect his family and others from the health dangers of secondhand smoke—in his case, marijuana smoke—might be gaining traction nearly four months after he appealed to the mayor and City Council.“I am very happy, at last they are going to listen,” said Dr. Douglas Gillard, 55, a medical professor, licensed chiropractor, father of five and grandfather of nine who lost his mother to cancer when he was 11 years old.He was reacting to a Feb. 8 email from Councilwoman Cat Tucker, in which she wrote, “I will be glad to bring this issue [up] again at our upcoming goal setting session.”Called the annual Strategic Planning Session, it takes place this year on April 8 and 9.In the same email, however, Tucker added, “I am not sure what the outcome will be though.”Gillard conceded the latter comment “didn’t sound very promising.”And that might be an understatement, according to an advocate for nonsmokers who has tried for years to convince Gilroy politicians and business leaders to adopt smoke-free ordinances to protect outdoor diners and apartment dwellers.“It’s a good way to shelve it,” said Hewitt Joyner III of Breathe California of the Bay Area, one of five offices statewide of the nonprofit group that advocates for the rights of nonsmokers, including those with lung and heart disease.“The only thing that has been holding this up has been the city of Gilroy,” Joyner told the Dispatch on Feb 9.Compared with other cities in Santa Clara County, including Morgan Hill and San Jose, Gilroy gets an F when it comes to looking out for the health of its residents on the issue of smoke-free buildings, Joyner said.Even at Gilroy Manor on Sixth Street, a few blocks from City Hall and seemingly Gilroy’s most visible multi-unit seniors’ residence, the city has ignored residents’ wishes and refused to make it a smoke-free building, Joyner said.“I recently had a meeting with the Gilroy Downtown Association, and [former] Mayor Don Gage [was] a part of that. I actually asked for help on outdoor dining and multi-unit apartments and they turned me down. What is Gilroy’s problem?” Joyner asked.Gilroy Mayor Perry Woodward said he is not aware of public sentiment to enact the kind of city rules that Joyner seeks.But he has an open mind on the topic, he said, and believes it’s an “important” discussion the city should have. He suggested a study session, soon, with input from the public, the Chamber of Commerce and organizations such as the American Lung Association.As for Joyner’s F grade for Gilroy, Woodward said it’s “hard-pressed to justify.” He cited the city’s bans on smoking in public buildings and parks. Beyond that, he said, state law already prohibits smoking in restaurant outdoor dining areas, Woodward said.City Clerk Shawna Freels confirmed Wednesday that city ordinances ban smoking in public buildings, businesses and park spaces, except in designated smoking areas in parks.Woodward and Joyner agreed that prohibiting people from smoking in their homes is, as Woodward put it, “problematic.“If someone has a legitimate need to choose medical marijuana, are we going to tell them they cannot [smoke it] in their own home? That’s pretty intrusive,” the mayor said.In terms of apartment buildings, however, he said, if secondhand smoke drifts and “impacts the health of others, maybe there is a balance that can be struck” between the parties’ rights.Gillard has pushed for a better balance after his home was routinely inundated with marijuana smoke that drifted from a nearby home with renters in a subdivision which includes about 30 single family homes.When Gillard tried to resolve the matter through his homeowners association, he was told there were no rules about secondhand smoke.If it’s illegal to play music so loud that it disturbs your neighbor, why isn’t it illegal to allow dangerous smoke to drift onto a neighbor’s property or into her home, Gillard asked.“In this day and age, how can Gilroy be like this, it seems like [city officials] are not sensitive to it,” Gillard said.
Teen Still Missing After Hollister Sighting
A missing teen was spotted Wednesday morning in Hollister
Hoops: CHS girls top SBHS, go to 7-1 in MBL Gabilan
Hanna Tabron had 12 points and Cydney Caradonna scored 11 to lead Christopher’s girls basketball team to a 35-25 home win over San Benito on Thursday night.
Kenneth F. Peer, Sr.
Kenneth F. Peer, Sr., passed away Sunday evening at St. Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy at the age of 85. Memorial services are pending from Grunnagle-Ament-Nelson funeral Home in Hollister.
















