68 F
Gilroy
March 20, 2026

The circus is in town

Jose Dominguez, 25, spent the two hottest days of the year this week putting up a giant castle-shaped circus tent across from auto row in Gilroy. He’ll spend the weekend riding a bicycle across a 50-foot-high tightrope..

Free Comic Book Day

As if you needed more reasons to go to the Gilroy Library, which has so many great activities these days, here's one no kid should miss. FREE COMIC DAY!!!!

Save the Date: Paseo Opens May 20

Gilroy’s long-awaited Paseo needs a few more final touches and then all will be ready after years of waiting for the ribbon cutting that will turn the alleyway officially into the downtown’s newest “old” attraction.

Family of murdered former Gilroy man seeks help

The family of a Jose Mireles, a former Gilroy man who was shot to death in Merced in front of his three children, has set up a Go Fund Me site for expenses at https://www.gofundme.com/3pt1l6g

GPD Busts Two Massage Parlors for Prostitution

Two Gilroy massage parlors were busted April 27 for soliciting prostitution, after citizen complaints.

Police rack up traffic tickets during April 26 special operation

Morgan Hill Police and agencies that participated in a morning crackdown on traffic violations earlier this week issued nearly 200 tickets in a four-hour period, according to authorities.During the special operation, which took place 7 to 11 a.m. April 26 in the city limits of Morgan Hill, officers wrote between 190 and 200 citations for various traffic violations, according to MHPD Cpl. Scott Silva. He said Thursday he is waiting for final numbers from a couple other participating agencies.Officers from Campbell, Sunnyvale, Santa Clara County, Mountain View, Milpitas, San Jose, Santa Clara and Los Altos law enforcement agencies joined MPHD officers in the April 26 traffic enforcement crackdown. The aim of the operation was to “conduct a high-visibility traffic enforcement effort” in an effort to reduce pedestrian, bicycle and vehicle collisions, according to police.Silva said most of the citations written to motorists during the special operation were for speeding. Other common violations cited included running stop signs, and failing to stop for a school bus stop sign.Similar operations will take place monthly throughout the year in other communities, rotating through participating agencies, police said.The April 26 effort in Morgan Hill was organized by Silva, MHPD Officer John Kuhlen, Officer Sergio Pires and Sgt. Troy Hoefling.The operation was indeed highly visible as authorities planned. Comments of praise and complaint filled social media pages on the morning of April 26, as many residents left their homes to be almost immediately flooded with the sight of a blanket of police officers.Some commenters were pleased to see the active enforcement, while others thought it was an overkill of misplaced public resources.A Times reader who wanted to remain anonymous described the saturation of police as “harassment,” and said he had to “go through the gauntlet” of officers when he exited his neighborhood on the way to work April 26. He said his wife was pulled over and written up for going 5 mph over the speed limit.“I had to go through three speed traps just getting out of Morgan Hill,” the reader said.Distracted driving violations up in AprilThe month of April has been a busy one for MHPD, as the month has been declared by law enforcement agencies nationwide as Distracted Driving Awareness Month.Morgan Hill officers have written almost 300 citations for distracted driving in April so far, Silva said. These violations primarily consist of drivers using their cell phones while driving.  

Downtown clock and watch biz keeps ticking

For Larry DeMoss, time is ticking towards retirement, but like the hundreds of timepieces on display in his store, he's not slowing down yet.

Big Political Summit Hit Gilroy

Immigration, housing and a state road in terrible disrepair topped the agenda when elected officials from just about every level gathered in Gilroy to share views on key issues facing city, county, state and federal governments and constituents.

Gilroy Road Rescuers Risk Lives Daily

High up on Pacheco Pass, Danny Rubalcava, 33, has a few inches with which to work. Those few inches separate this Bracco’s tow truck driver from speeding semi-trucks, distracted teens on their cell phones and drunk drivers--or those who just rubberneck at accidents and cause others. It's like fixing a tiger's cage, from the inside.

So that’s what those red hats are about

Not long ago, at a concert or something like that, Margaret Myers of Gilroy caught sight of a big group of women dressed in purple and wearing red hats, each more outlandish than the next, with feathers and flowers and ribbons and bows.

SOCIAL MEDIA

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