The fish—classified as threatened species—needed to be relocated before the agency starts to drain Anderson Dam on Oct. 1.
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Business
This Cupertino Teen is Tackling the Mental Health Crisis Twofold
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San Jose State Establishes Nation’s Largest Academic Wildfire Research Center
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Sen. Jim Beall’s Bill to Spur Infill Development, Protect Coyote Valley Moves to Governor’s Desk
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New SJ District to Offer LGBTQ+ Community a Place to Call Home
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San Jose Quakes Cancel Match to Protest Jacob Blake’s Shooting
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Ex-Cisco Employee Pleads Guilty to Damaging Company’s Network
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Sharks Captain Logan Couture Claims He Was ‘Sucker Punched’ for Saying He’d Vote Republican
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Rose Garden Resident Urges City to Ramp Up Code Enforcement, Even During Pandemic
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Future Minds Fund Helps Hundreds of South Bay Students Crowdfund Their College Tuition
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SJSU Sorority Delta Sigma Accuses Parent Organization of ‘Financial Exploitation’
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PGA Gives HOPE to Veterans
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SCC Housing Authority Employees Balk at Demand to Return to Covid-Exposed Office
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SEIU 521, elected officials lead caravan protest demanding billionaires to ‘pay their fair share’
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With horns blaring non-stop, a caravan of 100 cars led by a local union made its way through Atherton on July 11 to demand that billionaires do their part to help the racial and social inequities that have risen to the forefront of the nation’s consciousness during the Covid-19 crisis. SEIU 521 led a brigade of Bay Area workers, labor leaders and elected officials on a 2 ½ hour ride through Atherton, specifically targeting four billionaires—Jan Koum, George Roberts, Mark Stevens and Douglas Leone—three of the four whose wealth reportedly increased during the coronavirus pandemic. Assemblymember Ash Kalra [D-CA 27 District 27] was in one of the caravans to voice his support to raise taxes on billionaires.
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