‘Prius Page’: Drive more to save more
Don’t expect perfection at Khodas used car lot behind the old DMV building on Church Street.
Disabled Vet Sues Downtown Apartments for Discrimination
The man known as the “King of Downtown Gilroy” has filed a federal lawsuit against a landmark hotel he called home for 15 years, alleging he was evicted in 2015 because he is disabled and needs a wheelchair.
Despite change of clothes, GPD finds their man
Gilroy Police nabbed a suspect who held up the McDonald's at the Outlets, even though he changed his clothes and tried to escape by bicycle.
Police Investigating Fatal Accident
Gilroy Police are investigating the death of an 87-year-old woman who was struck by a 30-year-old man in a Mercedes on the 800 block of 5th Street Tuesday at 9:20 p.m.
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.
Winged window whackers
Injuries caused from flying into windows are one of the most common reasons for birds being brought to wildlife rehabilitators. Over the years, WERC, the Wildlife Education and Rehabilitation Center in Morgan Hill, has received countless window-bangers ranging in size from tiny hummingbirds to a huge turkey vulture.
New Laws for Kennels
A bill that would set health and care standards for the state’s pet boarding facilities—including stables—has been introduced in Sacramento by State Senator Bill Monning, whose 17th district includes Gilroy.
Local group crafts smart growth ballot initiative
Worried about sprawl and impacts to the city due to unmitigated growth, a group of Gilroy community members ranging from longtime residents to recent arrivals are in the process of drafting what they call a “smarter growth” ballot initiative that would give voters control over how much the city can grow.“The complete language of the initiative is still being authored as we speak,” explained Sandie Silva of the new advocacy group, Gilroy Growing Smarter, via text message.“We are making it so that the voters will be the decision-makers for the overall limits to Gilroy's growth and leave the responsibility for smart use of limited land within our boundaries to the elected officials.”Forged out of the controversy surrounding the 721-acre Rancho Los Olivos housing project proposed for an area north of Gilroy, Gilroy Growing Smarter includes the same folks that created the online petition in December that generated more than 2,200 signatures from people opposed to the 4,000-home development.Silva, who is part of a Gilroy farming family, said she has never been political before, but was dismayed watching people go to City Council meetings and voice their opinions, only to be rebuffed and have their concerns ignored by elected officials. So she decided to get involved.“We started because of the 721 acres and I started the petition,” Silva recalled. “And [the City Council] decided to vote against what the people wanted anyway.”She said the council’s actions raised “a lot of flags” with people who were left wondering what was going on at the council and why they were not being heard.Overwhelmed by public criticism and two lawsuits, the developers behind the large-scale development rescinded their application in January, deciding to take more time to sell the project to the public. But for those who understand it is too late to complain about new construction when the tractors have already rolled in, the battle to save Gilroy from being another bedroom community for Silicon Valley has just begun.“We are a very diverse group,” said Silva. “We come from downtown and unincorporated areas; we are business owners, parents, and we feel we speak for the vast majority of Gilroy who want the city to grow in a compact and responsible way. We are not anti-growth.”In addition to working on the initiative and gathering enough signatures of registered Gilroy voters to make the November ballot, the group plans on forming sub-committees to tackle other pressing issues relating to Gilroy’s growth, including the state of downtown and infrastructure.“Downtown has been a thorn in everyone’s side for years, so we would want that area revitalized,” said Silva.“It is very complicated today to do something innovative downtown,” said David Lima, a member of Gilroy Growing Smarter. Gilroy resident, Lima has written on development issues for the Dispatch before. “There are a lot of rules and adversarial relationships that developed since 1989 when the buildings were damaged—a lot of factors have made it difficult to do clever things downtown.”“Existing infrastructure is another thing we want to look at,” said Silva. “Schools are already overcrowded and there are the poor street conditions.”On its website,www.gilroygrowingsmarter.org, the group lays out its aims: elect a responsive city council that will honor the wishes of the citizens; combat suburban sprawl through careful redevelopment of downtown, with gradual residential infill; preserve agricultural and open space land and encourage the creation of high-quality jobs in Gilroy for Gilroy residents.Asked if it was all the current construction underway which has made folks in Gilroy jittery (some projects were approved more than 10 or 15 years ago and delayed due to the 2008 economic downturn), Lima replied yes, that was part of it, but it was more to do with the potential impacts to the city and its residents that got people concerned.“All of the projects that have been approved, are in the planning process or under construction have the potential to add 15,000 people to Gilroy (about a 30 percent increase to its current population of 53,000),” he said. “That is a huge increase.”And with all that growth, he added, there will be impacts to traffic, water and air quality that have not yet been felt.Lima said he’s probably spoken to hundreds of people over the last couple years about why they live in Gilroy and what it is about living in a “small town” that people love.He said that overall people wanted a definite boundary, a green boundary of farmland or open space around their city. They also wanted a “clearly identified center in downtown” where you can find grocery stores and restaurants. Traffic should also manageable with motorists usually being able to get through the traffic lights with one change.“And you know quite a few of the faces you see at the store,” he said.“People are really concerned that if we grow beyond our 53,000 all of those lovely, small town characteristics will simply disappear, which will make people very unhappy.”
Leading Ladies, Gilroy’s downtown business owners
They sell antiques, piñatas and medical supplies, organize princess parties and major home repairs; they pour coffee, give facials and lead pottery classes, they are the women of downtown Gilroy, part of the fastest-growing segment of small business owners in the country.




















