The Gilroy City Council is considering moving its regular meeting time from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Will that make a public participation difference?
• No. I think that is too late to start, considering how long some of the meetings last. The community will participate if they feel the issue impacts them significantly. Otherwise I don’t think you can make these meetings compete for attention in an average resident’s day. For those who have to attend, the time change just makes it more painful. • Yes, in a negative way as most people are busy during the day and sometimes evening meetings are difficult to attend- the earlier start the better. • No. If an interested party has an item on the agenda they would like to hear or address in person, there’s plenty of time to get to the hearing by 6 pm (at least 6:30 after opening matters, interviews, presentation, proclamations report, etc.). Quit your whining and skip dinner if you need to like the rest of us! Citizenship is a duty, not a convenience. • No, I believe it will allow those with a long commute to attend and staff should be able to adjust their work schedules. • It could impact in both directions, more participation if you don’t work in town and want to be heard but can’t get home in time to participate or, less participation if you get home, have time to eat supper and then end up not feeling like going down to City Hall. Your topic’s position on the agenda is a major concern for deciding to attend Council meetings, can’t spend all night there and really shouldn’t have to miss supper. Starting a little later is a good thing. • I would like to think so, as it would give commuting residents time to get home and maybe have some dinner before they come to a meeting or watch it on
One trustee got it right on CAB bonds
We’re still flabbergasted over the Gilroy Unified School District Board of Trustees’s approval five years ago of a Capital Improvement Bond that netted $2.4 million at an ultimate cost of $28.2 million.
3 letters: Pasta feed example of why Gilroy’s great; Frivilous complaint about ‘Men at Work’ signs; Assemblyman Luis Alejo out of touch with small business
Pasta feed benefit for the choirs another example of what makes Gilroy great
Community Pulse: Will downtown Gilroy will be a thriving place in five years?
Do you believe Gilroy will be a thriving place in five years?
Community Pulse: Was jail sentence for Arias appropriate?
Regarding the one-year jail sentence for Sandra Arias in the hit-and-run accident that left Joshua Valdez severely injured, was justice served?
3 letters: Vet grateful for support, residential rezoning, Shirakawa outrage
Marine and Iraq war vet grateful for all the support she’s received from Gilroy
Community Pulse: What should be done about illegal immigrants?
What best characterizes your view about illegal immigrants working in the U.S. 1) Allow them to stay in their jobs and apply for U.S. citizenship, or 2) Stay in their jobs, but only as temporary guest workers and not be allowed to apply for U.S. citizenship, or 3) They should be required to leave their jobs and leave the U.S.
Clarion call for Economic Summit
Gilroy has all the pieces in place to really start making “economic hay” in the next 5 years. And there’s every reason in the world to start that economic engine ASAP.
2 letters: $6.50 too much for popcorn, Obama ‘required’ to raise debt ceiling
$6.50 popcorn – it’s not the theater owners, but the spoiled Hollywood stars



















